This is Artificial Lure coming to you live on April 19, 2025, with your Savannah River fishing report, covering both the Georgia and South Carolina banks.
We’ve got a classic spring morning with light winds, the water running in the lower 60s, and clear to lightly stained conditions across most stretches. Expect sunrise just after 6:45 a.m. and sunset around 7:58 p.m. Tides today are in your favor if you’re heading for the saltier stretches near the mouth, with a decent flood tide peaking mid-morning and dropping out before noon, bringing those baitfish in tight to the bank.
Fish activity is hot, especially with the recent warming trend waking up everything that swims. Bass fishing is on fire—most largemouth are up shallow, either spawning or staged nearby. Red clay and pea gravel banks are loaded with hungry fish right now. Jerkbaits, ChatterBaits, and square-billed crankbaits are pulling plenty of strikes. Don’t overlook a shaky head worm or Carolina-rigged lizard if the sun gets higher and the bite slows down. Folks have been catching some real tanks this week so don’t be surprised to see a five-pounder or better shake your net.
Crappie are still biting well, though the prime spawn is wrapping up in many areas. You can find males guarding beds along the banks or chase suspended fish trolling in 8 to 20 feet with curly-tail jigs or minnows. Reports of 40 to 80 fish days are still coming in, so now’s the time if you want to fill a cooler. For colors, Lemonade and Sour Grape patterns have been popular with the long-liners.
The early morning and late evening are prime for stripers and hybrids especially up the river arms and creek mouths. Try live herring, shad, or big swimbaits. Catfish are moving into shallow flats and backwater oxbows—cut bait or chicken livers on the bottom will do the trick.
Your best bets for hot spots today are the backwater oxbows near Clyo on the Georgia side and the mouths of feeder creeks south of Augusta. On the South Carolina side, look for deep bends and sandbars near the Little River confluence, as both stripers and cats are patrolling these areas.
To recap, today is all about covering water and matching your lure to whatever’s swimming shallow. Top choices are jerkbaits and chatterbaits for bass, curly-tail jigs or small minnows for crappie, and live or cut bait for cats and stripes. Get out early, pay attention to the tide, and you’re likely to put a mess of fish in the boat.
Good luck and tight lines from Artificial Lure, your Savannah River fishing expert.