
Savannah River Fishing Report: Reds On Fire, Specks Biting, Cats & Bream in Action
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We kicked off this morning with sunrise at about 6:33 AM, and we’ll see sunset around 8:12 PM. Weather is sitting pretty, with clear skies and temps working toward the low 80s by afternoon. Light southerly breezes are making for comfortable boat rides. Water clarity is good but a touch stained from recent rain, especially in the main channel.
Tide today gives us a mid-morning high followed by a late afternoon low. Early and late are prime time, especially if you can work the moving water around those periods.
Redfish have been absolutely on fire all week. Look for them feeding around grassy points and creek mouths at higher tides. They’re hitting mud minnows and cut mullet hard, but if you prefer artificials, a gold spoon or a soft plastic in new penny is money right now. I’ve seen several reds in the slot and a handful over 26 inches being caught the last few days.
Speckled trout are also biting well, especially near shell beds and grass edges where the current moves through. Live shrimp under a popping cork is tough to beat, but those working soft plastic jerkbaits in pearl white have also filled limits this week—plenty of 15 to 18-inch fish reported.
Catfish action is solid throughout the river. Channel cats are eating cut herring on the bottom just about everywhere—points, pockets, and coves. Bring the stink bait if you want numbers, but fresh cut bait will get you the bigger fish. Folks are hauling in stringers of eating-size cats without much trouble.
If panfish are your game, the bream are staging and beginning to spawn. Hit 2 to 4 feet of water off points or in the backs of coves, and fish crickets or red wigglers under a cork. The bite’s starting to pick up and should only get better in the coming days.
Best bets for hot spots right now are the mouth of Abercorn Creek for redfish and the Shell Bluff area for trout and channel cats. If you want numbers, hit the grass edges on the incoming tide.
Quick lure rundown: for reds, gold spoons and new penny soft plastics; for specks, live shrimp or pearl white jerkbaits; for cats, cut herring or stink bait; for bream, crickets and red wigglers.
That’s your Savannah River update—get out and enjoy it, and tight lines to all y’all out there.
Artificial Lure signing off.
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