Georgia fishing reports
164 reports for Georgia — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Savannah River record bluegill headlines a hot mid-June Georgia bite
Seth Seckinger of Springfield landed a new Savannah River record bluegill on June 6 — 1 lb., 10.1 oz., taken on a white Beetle Spin tipped with a cricket, per GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News. That catch reflects what anglers across Georgia are experiencing this week: bluegill and panfish in full summer mode, with lakes and ponds drawing the strongest statewide reports. Captain Travis Harper has also been putting clients on nice trout, per the same source. The Savannah River is running 3.9 feet and steady at Clyo (June 11 gauge reading), with USGS gauge 02197000 upstream reporting 4,870 cfs — a manageable level for wading and bank access. Today closes National Fishing and Boating Week, and the Georgia Wildlife Blog notes that yesterday's Free Fishing Day brought new anglers to public waters statewide. Tonight's new moon should extend low-light feeding windows into early Saturday morning — a prime window for bass and panfish alike.
Summer Bass Patterns Setting Up on Hartwell and Russell as Lakes Produce
GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News' June 13 Southern Waters report notes that lakes and ponds have produced the best fishing reports across Georgia this week, a strong signal for reservoir anglers on the Savannah chain. USGS gauge 02192000 records the Savannah River below Russell Dam at 596 cfs, a stable and moderate release keeping lake levels steady for the weekend. No automated water-temperature readings are available today, though mid-June in the Georgia Piedmont typically pushes surface water into the upper 70s to low 80s°F. The New Moon falls today, concentrating feeding activity into low-light windows at dawn and dusk. A record bluegill weighing 1 lb., 10.1 oz. was caught on the Savannah River on June 6, per GA Sportsman, a benchmark suggesting panfish are actively feeding across the system. Bass are transitioning toward deeper summer haunts; early-morning topwater and offshore crankbaits are the patterns to lean on as heat pushes fish off the shallows.
Lanier & Allatoona bass hitting summer stride as Georgia lakes fire up
Lakes across north Georgia are fishing well right now: GA Sportsman's June 13 Southern Waters report notes that 'lakes and ponds have produced some of the best reports' of the week, a positive signal heading into peak summer on both Lake Lanier and Allatoona. USGS gauge 02334430 recorded 50°F water at 660 cfs on the Chattahoochee tailwater below Buford Dam — frigid cold-water discharge that sustains a productive trout fishery below the dam while reservoir surface temps run considerably warmer. Bass on both lakes are in a classic post-spawn transition, pushing shallow to feed at first light before sliding offshore to deep structure as the sun climbs, per Wired 2 Fish's summer bass breakdown. The New Moon today can sharpen feeding windows at dawn and dusk on both reservoirs. The Georgia Wildlife Blog notes National Fishing and Boating Week wraps up today (June 14), with yesterday a Free Fishing Day — expect boat traffic to ease as the holiday push winds down.
Seatrout Active in Tidal Marshes as Georgia's Summer Inshore Season Builds
Captain Travis Harper has been putting clients on solid trout along Georgia's coastal zone, per the June 13 GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News Southern Waters report — the clearest on-water signal available this week. No NOAA buoy readings or USGS gauge data were returned for this update period, leaving water temperature figures unavailable; pull current tide tables before launching. The Georgia Wildlife Blog confirms National Fishing and Boating Week runs through June 14, with a license-free Free Fishing Day on June 13 drawing additional anglers to Georgia's public waters. Inshore tidal creeks, oyster bars, and grass flats are classic mid-June staging habitat for spotted seatrout along the Georgia coast. Salt marsh edges from the Gulf to the Carolinas are holding red drum this time of year, per Sport Fishing Mag's inshore marsh guide. The new moon on June 14 will drive stronger tidal exchanges over the next 48–72 hours, typically one of the most productive windows for inshore predators.
Record bluegill on the Savannah as Georgia's summer freshwater bite heats up
A new Savannah River bluegill record set the tone for Georgia's summer season this week: Springfield angler Seth Seckinger landed a 1-lb., 10.1-oz. fish on June 6 using a white Beetle Spin tipped with a cricket, verified on certified scales at Richmond Fish Hatchery, per GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News. River conditions have been cooperative — the Savannah at Clyo held steady at 3.9 feet as of June 11, while USGS gauge 02197000 shows flow at 4,170 cfs as of Sunday morning. On the Chattahoochee side, Captain Travis Harper has been putting clients on quality trout, with the Georgia Wildlife Blog's June 12 report also noting that a few anglers found fish on the higher rivers this week. Both sources call out lakes and ponds as the standout producers right now. The New Moon this weekend cuts nighttime light to a minimum, pushing feeding activity toward dawn and dusk windows.
Summer bite on the Savannah chain: bream firing, bass shifting offshore
The June 13 GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News roundup reports that 'lakes and ponds have produced some of the best reports' of the week across Georgia — a bullish signal for Hartwell and Russell as the Savannah chain moves into full summer mode. Downstream Savannah River readings confirm a falling system: USGS gauge 02192000 shows 627 cfs, and the Clyo gauge was at 3.9 feet and dropping as of June 11 per GA Sportsman — modest outflows that typically point to stable, clearing conditions in the reservoir arms above. Bream are dialed in right now: on June 6, angler Seth Seckinger landed a new Savannah River record bluegill — 1 lb., 10.1 oz. — on a white Beetle Spin tipped with a cricket, per GA Sportsman. Bass anglers should expect the classic summer split: topwater through the first two hours of daylight, then a shift to offshore humps and submerged creek channels as the sun climbs. Today's New Moon sets up prime dawn and dusk feeding windows.
Savannah River scores record bluegill as summer bite heats up
A new Savannah River bluegill record sets the tone for mid-June freshwater action across Georgia. Springfield angler Seth Seckinger landed a 1-lb., 10.1-oz. bluegill on June 6 — fishing a white Beetle Spin tipped with a cricket — and had it certified on scales at Richmond Fish Hatchery, per GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News. The same June 13 report notes Captain Travis Harper has been putting clients on nice trout, while lakes and ponds are delivering the strongest overall results this week. The Savannah River at Clyo was holding steady at 3.9 feet as of June 11; USGS gauge 02197000 recorded 4,240 cfs early Sunday morning — elevated but within fishable range. Rivers across the region are described as high but trending down, which should improve access and clarity as the week progresses. Georgia Wildlife Blog — Fishing notes that National Fishing and Boating Week runs through today, with June 13 a statewide Free Fishing Day.
Tailwater trout thrive below Buford Dam while summer bass go deep on Lanier
Cold tailwater discharge from Buford Dam (USGS gauge 02334430 reading 49°F at 4,030 cfs as of pre-dawn June 14) is creating prime trout conditions on the Chattahoochee River tailrace below Lake Lanier. That 49°F bottom-draw release also signals rapid thermal stratification inside Lanier itself, pushing largemouth and spotted bass off their post-spawn staging flats and onto offshore structure. The Georgia Wildlife Blog's June 12 report confirms National Fishing and Boating Week runs through this Sunday, with June 13 a Free Fishing Day for Georgia residents. GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News' June 13 Southern Waters wrap-up notes that lakes and ponds have produced "some of the best reports" across Georgia this week. Wired 2 Fish's summer bass breakdown points to crankbaits and deeper presentations as the go-to once bass abandon shallow spawning areas. The new moon tonight sharpens dawn feeding windows; plan early starts at both Lanier and Allatoona.
Bream peak on the Savannah chain; bass transitioning to summer structure
A state-record-class bluegill is already on the books from the Savannah system — Seth Seckinger pulled a 1-lb., 10.1-oz. fish from the Savannah River on June 6 using a white Beetle Spin tipped with a cricket, per GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News, signaling that bream are in peak-season form across the chain. Flow at USGS gauge 02192000 is running a moderate 727 cfs, keeping conditions stable on both Hartwell and Russell. Today (June 13) is Georgia's Free Fishing Day — residents can fish without a license, per Georgia Wildlife Blog — making it an ideal moment to get on the water. Largemouth bass are shifting to established summer patterns, moving off shallow spawning flats onto offshore structure as mid-June heat builds. Wired 2 Fish highlights crankbaits and swing-head jigs as the key summer bass presentations. The ongoing Georgia Bass Slam challenge, noted by Georgia Wildlife Blog, adds extra incentive to work Hartwell's varied habitat and target multiple black bass species before summer deepens.
State-record bluegill on the Savannah River: summer panfish bite is on
A new Georgia state record bluegill was pulled from the Savannah River on June 6. Seth Seckinger of Springfield landed a 1-lb., 10.1-oz. fish on a white Beetle Spin tipped with a cricket, per GA Sportsman / Georgia Outdoor News. That catch signals an aggressive summer panfish bite underway along this drainage. The Savannah River is flowing at 4,060 cfs (USGS gauge 02197000), a moderate summer stage that keeps access predictable and water clarity reasonable. Georgia Wildlife Blog notes the Georgia Bass Slam challenge is active through the summer, with anglers targeting Georgia's diverse black bass species across the Chattahoochee and Savannah systems. June 13 is a Free Fishing Day: Georgia residents can fish public waters without a license or trout license, making today an ideal opportunity to get on the water. With a Waning Crescent moon, the most aggressive feeding windows will cluster around pre-dawn and the first hour after sunrise. Bluegill and panfish are the clear standout bite right now; bass are active on early-morning and evening presentations.
Reds and Trout Lead Georgia's Atlantic Coast Summer Inshore Run
Redfish and seatrout are the primary targets as Georgia's coastal marshes enter peak summer form this week. The Georgia Wildlife Blog — Fishing highlights June 13 as a Free Fishing Day during National Fishing and Boating Week (through June 14), when Georgia residents can fish public waters without a license. No NOAA buoy or USGS gauge data was available for this cycle, but mid-June along the Georgia Bight historically delivers some of the season's best inshore action. Sport Fishing Mag's current salt marsh guide reinforces that redfish are the dominant inshore species from the Carolinas to the Gulf, holding tight to oyster bar edges, creek mouths, and grass flat margins. With summer heat building through the weekend, early morning and late afternoon windows will produce the most consistent bites. Coastal Angler Magazine notes king mackerel within reach nearshore for anglers working live bait on lighter tackle, adding an accessible offshore option to the weekend's menu.
Summer bass patterns lock in at Lanier and Allatoona as Free Fishing Day arrives
The Chattahoochee tailwater below Buford Dam is reading 49°F (USGS gauge 02334430) — cold hypolimnetic releases from the deep reservoir that create a productive trout reach downstream while Lanier and Allatoona's main bodies climb through the mid-70s this month. National Fishing and Boating Week runs through June 14, with June 13 a Free Fishing Day statewide: no license required on public waters, per the Georgia Wildlife Blog — an ideal window to bring someone new to the lake. Summer bass patterns are clicking into place across both reservoirs. Wired 2 Fish notes that largemouth push shallow at first light to chase bait near the surface, then slide offshore to deep structure as the sun climbs. Tactical Bassin highlights the swing-head jig paired with a shaky-head worm as the June two-bait combination most productive on offshore fish. No direct charter or tackle-shop reports from Lanier or Allatoona were available this cycle; verify specific hot spots locally before committing to long runs.