Lake lanier fishing report - Lake Lanier Fishing Report 11 January 2020

Lake lanier fishing report
Lake lanier fishing report


Lake lanier fishing report

2020 has started well with a good bite for all species. The mild weather has kept the surface temps slightly higher than normal and we are enjoying some March like weather in January! Of course, there is a slight downside with mild weather, in Georgia, you may not have hot temps in winter and periods of dry weather. Therefore, keep it suitable for rain, because we have a lot of rain in the long term forecast.

For the most part (after Saturday) the signal is for light rain with mostly cloudy, weather that is good! Very favorable for shing! The lake level is rising with our recent rains and is currently 1069.68, 1.32 feet below full pool. The surface temps are 53 degrees warmer in a season.

Read more: Lake lanier fishing report - Lake Lanier Fishing Report 11 January 2020

Striped bass

2020 Stripper! It was a great year for Shing! Okay, I know we're only in two weeks, but hey, you'll love the great start. The down lines are probably the largest manufacturer, with full-size sticks and mini Macs also in some good numbers. I am going with live bait as the most prolly simply C technique because we have so many deep, sh where the shingles depend on where the wood is trolling in deaths of over 40 feet and various. Cult. If you can locate a clean bottom over sh, deploy the mini to the depth where you see locate sh.

All you need is a small area because stealth trolling involves less speed, allowing you to run in tight patterns in smaller areas, at least relative trolling on larger engines as well. You can also make a mark on your chart to avoid trees. Troll over an area with minis of 20 or 25 feet, tra nd a trail that survives the trees, then deploy the minis to the desired depth and follow the designated trail. It is also effective to pull full size rigs, focus on getting the rig in the 15 to 30 feet range in 18 to 25 feet in sh.

Trolling on the coast or in creeks and drains, especially in the upper reaches of the lake, is also effective. If you look deep, sh, you can always clean the rigs and deploy down lines. The primary pattern for live bait is to set in creeks and drains on deep bait and send them to a herring. As always, hang the baits where you see the greatest activity, but a strong pattern is created by dropping the sinker downwards and repeating some cranes.

Shorter leaders of 3 to 5 feet may also have to take a few extra bites. Herring is probably the best bait, but small trout are also working well and mixing some shiners would not be a bad idea. We haven't really seen shi really locked in small batches, probably due to being warmer than normal tempers, but it wouldn't be a bad idea to keep some in the spread.

The shiners can be a plus if you encounter a variety of small also sh that also roam around these deep bait schools such as perch or white bass. If you want to catch the bus, sh, these small bait can be effective on two perch and white bass and may even get you a bonus walleye.

Smell

The bass recent shing is good, in fact there have been no changes in recent weeks, all good structures to target drains, stitches, stairs and bluffs. With water temples with slightly above average values, we have several other patterns that will also produce, but ing to shine those deeper structures from 25 to 50 feet, most seem to offer proli c and continuous cutting. is. Overall the best producer is probably still the worm on the shake, but a jig will also be quick to bite.

Tie your favorite spoon, a .60 it pre-it will be difficult to defeat but in a few days smaller sizes can produce the best. Traditional vertical jiggling can produce well, but in areas with clean floor try the "reel and kill" method. Cast the spoon, tuck it in the bottom, then quickly lift the spoon or a couple of reel handles and then allow the spoon to sink downwards on a relatively tight line. 

Another bait that does great for this application is Captain Mac Game Changer. The game changer is nothing but a blade attached to the blade on the back of the spoon, and is excellent for "reel and kill" technology. Using this method allows you to cover a greater amount of water, and it gives different forms a different shape and is different from what the bait is used to see.

As with vertical jigging, cutting usually occurs on the fall, and is often very subtle. Stay on top of your game or will sh grab your spoon and blow it out before reacting. The rocks are still very productive, maybe you need to be a bit darker than in previous weeks. For free-standing areas and targets of bluff, rock point or point of rock, ATS are good areas.

The biggest challenge of fi shing bluffs is saturation. These areas are often very physically large in terms of class view, so either an ND anomaly occurs with bluffs that can concentrate the focus, or simply slow down and make them work. Slow-down is the key here because with its quick retrieval the most trapping stone will pull away from the rock face and later away from here.

Worms and jigs are standard on the bluff, however, in the few days when the ares are really active, pulling shallow and ready to chase, spinnerbait and crank bait may also be good choices. Regardless of your choice, getting cliff-fed and using a parallel recovery can increase your odds.

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