Savannah River Georgia/South Carolina Fishing Report Today

Tune in to the "Savannah River, Georgia/South Carolina Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of expert fishing insights, local tips, and real-time conditions along the Savannah River. Learn about the best fishing spots, seasonal fish behavior, and gear recommendations to make your fishing trips successful. Join us and stay updated on everything you need to reel in the big catch! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 1h ago

    Early Summer Savannah River: Tide Timing and Prime Bite Windows

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Savannah River fishing report for the stretch from Savannah up through Port Wentworth and across to the South Carolina side. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up. Light southwest breeze most of the day, muggy, highs in the upper 80s to near 90, and scattered pop-up storms late afternoon. Skies start off partly cloudy and haze up as that heat builds. Sunrise came in just after 6 a.m. Eastern, with sunset around 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got a long daylight window, but the **prime bite** will be at daybreak, the last hour of daylight, and whenever the tide is moving. Down around Savannah and Thunderbolt, the tide’s running its normal big Savannah swing: strong flood that pushes a lot of color into the river, then a hard falling tide that really turns the fish on along drops, creek mouths, and those shell edges. Treat slack tide like a coffee break and plan your moves around the first and last hour of each tide cycle. Inshore and up the brackish stretches, anglers have been picking at **redfish**, **speckled trout**, and a few **flounder**, with bonus **sheepshead** around the bridges and pilings. Recent catches have leaned toward slot reds with a few overs, trout mostly keeper size, and enough flounder to keep it interesting. Up toward the fresher water above Port Wentworth and into the backwaters, folks are reporting steady **largemouth bass**, **stripers**, and a mixed bag of **catfish**. For artificials, keep it simple and local: - For trout and reds, a 1/4‑ounce jighead with a white or opening‑night paddle tail, or a shrimp‑imitating soft plastic under a popping cork. - For bass and stripers, a small white spinnerbait, squarebill crankbait, or a fluke‑style soft jerkbait worked along current breaks. - For flounder, slowly drag a Gulp‑style swimming mullet or paddle tail along the bottom near dock edges and creek mouths. Best bait right now: - Live or dead **shrimp** will catch just about everything in the salty and brackish stretches. - **Mud minnows** and **finger mullet** are money for reds and flounder. - **Cut mullet** or **menhaden** on the bottom for blue cats and channel cats. - Nightcrawlers or chicken liver if you’re targeting cats upriver. A couple of hotspots to circle on your mental map: - The **Elba Island area and the surrounding docks and creek mouths** on a falling tide for reds, trout, and flounder. Work the drops where that current rips off the flats. - The **Hutchinson Island and Talmadge Bridge stretch** for stripers and big cats, especially where you’ve got riprap, eddies, and deep holes. Water’s carrying its usual Savannah stain, so lean on **contrast and vibration**: darker plastics, rattling corks, and baits that thump. Scale down your leader when the sun gets high and clear, and don’t be afraid to bump up your jig weight to stay in touch with bottom in that heavy current. That’s your on‑the‑water rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  2. 1d ago

    Savannah River Summer: Reds and Trout on the Morning Tide

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Savannah River fishing report for the stretch from downtown Savannah up toward Port Wentworth and across to the South Carolina side. We’re riding a warm early‑summer pattern. According to the National Weather Service Savannah office, we’ve got morning lows in the low 70s, afternoons pushing upper 80s to around 90, light southwest breeze 5–10 knots, with a small chance of an afternoon thunderstorm. Skies have been partly cloudy, just enough cover to keep the bite comfortable mid‑morning. Sunrise is around 6:15 a.m. and sunset close to 8:30 p.m., giving you a long prime window at first and last light. Tide charts from NOAA for the Savannah River entrance are showing a typical 7‑ to 8‑foot swing. Expect a predawn high, falling out through mid‑morning, then a low around lunchtime and a strong incoming through the afternoon. That falling morning tide has been the ticket, pulling bait off the grass edges and concentrating fish on shell and current seams. Inshore on the river edges and side creeks, redfish and speckled trout have been the main story. Local anglers around Elba Island and Fields Cut report “good numbers” of slot reds with a few upper‑slot fish mixed in, plus steady trout action when the water’s got some movement. Most boats are seeing 5–10 keeper reds and a similar number of trout on a solid half‑day when they stay on the move and work the tide. Plenty of smaller rat reds in the mix keeping rods bent. Best baits have been classic Savannah River fare. Live shrimp under a popping cork is still king for trout on the edges of the ship channel and around creek mouths. Mud minnows and small finger mullet on a Carolina rig or jighead are producing reds tight to the grass and along shell bars on the last of the outgoing and first of the incoming. If you’re throwing artificials, tie on a 3–4 inch paddle tail in new penny, opening night, or natural mullet on a 1/8– to 1/4‑ounce jighead. A bone or chrome topwater plug at first light around current breaks has been drawing some explosive strikes from both trout and reds. Farther up‑river toward Port Wentworth and into the fresher stretches, folks are picking off a mixed bag of blue catfish, channel cats, and the occasional flathead. Local reports from bank fishermen along the public access spots mention stringers of 5–10 cats in an evening, with a few 10–20 pound blues caught after dark. Cut shad, chicken liver, and stink bait on the bottom are doing the work there. Just remember that current is strong on the big tides, so bring enough weight to stay pinned. A couple of hot spots to circle: – The bends and drops around Elba Island, especially where the smaller creeks dump in on a moving tide, have been holding solid trout and mixed reds. – Fields Cut and the nearby marsh drains on the South Carolina side are fishing well on the last two hours of the falling tide, with bait pouring out and predators stacked on the edges. Water clarity has been typical Savannah — a little stained, especially on the big tide swings — so don’t be shy about using scented soft plastics or tipping jigs with a piece of shrimp. Fluorocarbon leaders in the 15–20 pound range help around oysters and dock pilings. That’s the latest from the Savannah River. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  3. 2d ago

    Savannah River Summer: Tide the Trout and Reds from Dawn to Dusk

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Savannah River fishing report, coming to you like a local on the dock with a coffee in one hand and a cast net in the other. We’re working a **waning moon** and a **morning falling tide** on the lower Savannah River. Around Savannah and Port Wentworth, the tide’s dropping through mid‑morning, bottoming late morning and turning to a strong incoming through the afternoon. That means classic play: fish the creek mouths and points on the **outgoing**, then slide up onto shell, grass edges, and dock lines as that water rushes back in. Weather’s stable and summer‑muggy: warm overnight, climbing fast after sunrise with light southwest breeze early, ticking up by midday. Humidity’s high, so expect that hazy river glass at first light, then a little chop as the heat builds. We’ve got **sunrise right around 6:20 AM** and **sunset close to 8:30 PM**, giving a long window; best bites have been **first two hours after sunrise** and **last couple before dark**, especially tied to that tide swing. **Fish activity:** – **Speckled trout** have been solid on the lower river and sounds, especially where clearer water pushes in on the incoming. Anglers are picking up mixed sizes, with 12–18 inch keepers common, plus a few bigger fish near the jetties and channel edges. – **Redfish** (spottails) are hanging along shell bars, grass edges, and deeper dock pilings. Plenty of rat reds with some slot fish mixed in, especially where you’ve got current sweeping past structure. – **Flounder** are starting to show along sandy drops and around rip‑rapped banks, picking off bait pushed out of the grass. – Upriver, around Augusta and the freshwater stretches, folks are reporting **striped bass**, **largemouth**, and good **catfish** action at night and early morning along ledges and outside bends. **What’s been chewing:** – Inshore, folks have been putting **dozens of trout and smaller reds** in the box on good days, with better crews reporting limits of trout when they time the tides right and follow the cleaner water. – Catfish guys upriver have been seeing **steady 5–15 pound blues and channels**, with the occasional bigger blue mixed in on fresh cut bait. – Striper catches are spottier now with warmer water, but early risers tossing topwater or live bait at first light around current breaks are still picking off a few nice fish. **Best lures and baits:** – For trout and reds in the lower river: • **Paddle‑tail or jerk‑shad soft plastics** on 1/8–1/4 oz jig heads in natural or morning‑glory colors. • **Suspending hard baits and twitch baits** over shell and along drops on the incoming. • Early and late, **topwater walkers** in bone or mullet patterns can draw some explosive trout and redfish strikes. – Live bait: • **Live shrimp** under a popping cork is still king around the Savannah River mouth, grass edges, and rock piles. • **Mud minnows** and small **finger mullet** on a Carolina rig shine for reds and flounder around docks and rock. • Upriver cats: **fresh cut shad, bream, or mullet** on bottom rigs along deep bends and holes is the ticket. **Hot spots to try:** – **Old Fort Jackson to Elba Island Cut**: Work the grass points, creek mouths, and shell bars on the last of the outgoing and first of the incoming. Great mix of trout, reds, and the odd flounder. – **Around the Cockspur Island / jetties area** near the river mouth: cleaner water on the incoming, good current breaks, and a shot at better‑grade trout and reds. Mind the ship traffic and currents. Farther upriver, **around Augusta’s river shoals and bridge pilings**, focus on early‑morning stripers and bass with topwater and swimbaits before the sun gets high, then slide deeper for cats once it brightens up. That’s your on‑the‑water rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  4. 3d ago

    Early June Savannah River: Trout and Reds Heating Up on the Lower River

    This is Artificial Lure with your Savannah River fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑June pattern setting up on the Savannah around Savannah, Port Wentworth, and up toward Augusta. Around the lower river and sounds, the morning tide is a strong incoming, with a high around mid‑morning and a solid outgoing through early afternoon. Evening brings another push of water right before dark. Light winds, mostly under 10 knots, and muggy temps in the upper 80s to low 90s this afternoon, cooling into the 70s overnight. Skies are partly cloudy, with a slight chance of a pop‑up shower inland. Sunrise comes early and sunset lands late enough to give you a good evening bite window. Water clarity on the main river is typical Savannah: stained to muddy in the main channel, a little cleaner in the back creeks and rice canals. Salinity is pushing upriver on these stronger tides, so you can find a brackish mix a bit farther inland than you might in spring. Recent trips and local chatter say inshore trout and redfish are finally waking up on the lower Savannah and the mouths of the creeks off the ICW. Folks working the shell bars and current seams near Elba Island and Hog Marsh have been picking up speckled trout in the 14–18 inch range with a few keepers over that. Redfish are mixed sizes, from underslot rats to mid‑slot fish, with just enough drag‑pullers to keep things interesting. Top producers have been **live shrimp under a popping cork** on the edges of the grass at mid‑tide, especially where you’ve got a little shell or a feeder creek draining. If you’re throwing hardware, go with **soft plastic paddle tails** in natural or new penny on a 1/8‑ounce jighead, and **chartreuse/white swim baits** when the water muddies up. A small gold spoon will still call up a red on the flats when the sun gets higher. Up the river around Port Wentworth and into the fresher stretches, the **catfish** bite remains steady, with blues and channels coming off deeper bends and outside turns. Cut shad, shrimp, and chicken liver on a slip sinker rig have been putting fish in the cooler. If you sit on a hole more than 20 minutes with no love, slide to the next bend. Largemouth bass action is decent in the oxbows and backwaters off the main river. Think shady wood, laydowns, and any lingering pad fields. Texas‑rigged worms in junebug or black, plus small squarebill crankbaits banging off timber, are good bets early and late. Midday, slow down with a worm or jig on deeper wood. Striped bass are more scattered now, but you can still run into a few around current breaks below the lock and dam areas and bridge pilings. Try medium swimbaits, bucktail jigs, or live shrimp if you’re in the brackish zone. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar: - The shell bars and creek mouths around **Elba Island and the lower Savannah** for trout and reds on the last of the incoming and first of the outgoing. - The deeper outside bends north of **Port Wentworth** for blue cats using cut bait, especially on the outgoing tide when the current’s pushing hard. That’s the word from the river. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  5. 4d ago

    Savannah River Early Summer Bite: Reds and Trout on the Falling Tide

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Savannah River fishing report for the Georgia–South Carolina line. We’re sitting on a warming early‑summer pattern. Around Savannah, the National Weather Service is calling for morning temps in the low 70s climbing into the mid to upper 80s this afternoon, light southwest breeze around 5–10 knots, and only a slight chance of a pop‑up shower inland. Humidity’s up there, so expect that heavy, muggy river air. Sunrise over the river was right around 6:18 a.m., with sunset near 8:30 p.m. That gives you long low‑light windows; first light to about 9 a.m. and then 6:30 p.m. to dark should be prime. NOAA tide tables for the Savannah River entrance show an early morning high followed by a late‑morning falling tide and another high toward evening. That mid‑falling tide is your money window for pushing bait off the edges of the grass, especially around creek mouths and shell points. Recent reports from local shops along Highway 17 and around Port Wentworth say the **redfish** bite has been steady with slot fish holding on the shell bars and flooded grass edges on the Georgia side, and in the smaller feeder creeks on the South Carolina side. Folks are picking up half‑dozen to a dozen reds on a good half‑day when they hit the moving water right. **Speckled trout** catches have been a little spottier but improving; anglers drifting deeper bends and main‑river drops with live shrimp under popping corks are getting 5–10 keeper trout mixed with shorts. There’ve been **flounder** taken off sandy points and dock pilings, mostly smaller but with the occasional 18‑ to 20‑inch fish. Farther upriver, around the rice canals and the fresher stretches, locals are still into **striped bass** and **largemouth** early and late. A few nice schoolie stripers in the 3–8 pound range have come on topwater walkers and small swimbaits worked around current breaks and bridge pilings. Best producers right now: - For reds and trout: live shrimp or mud minnows under a popping cork, 18–24 inch leader to a 2/0 circle hook. Artificial‑wise, 3–4 inch paddle‑tail plastics in new penny, opening night, or natural mullet on a 1/8–1/4 oz jighead have been hot. - For flounder: mud minnows or finger mullet on a Carolina rig bounced slowly along sandy drops and the edges of docks. - For stripers: white or shad‑pattern swimbaits, small bucktail jigs tipped with soft plastics, and walking topwaters at first and last light. - If the water’s stained, go with darker plastics and add a little scent; if it’s clearer on the incoming, natural colors and lighter leaders help. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Elba Island and the nearby creek mouths**: work the shell bars and grass edges on the falling tide for reds and trout, especially where you see bait dimpling or birds picking. - **Back River and Lazaretto Creek area**: good mix of reds, trout, and flounder; target bends with visible shell and docks that sit right on the current. If you push farther upriver, the **Hutchinson Island bridges and pilings** can hold stripers when the current’s ripping. Given today’s conditions, I’d fish topwater or shallow‑running plugs at first light around points and grass, switch to popping corks and jigheads as the sun gets up and the tide starts to fall, then slide to deeper bends or structure mid‑day. Save some energy for that evening high and work the flooded grass for tailing reds with weedless plastics or live bait. That’s the word from Artificial Lure on the Savannah River. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  6. 5d ago

    Savannah River Early Summer: Reds, Trout, and Topwater at Dawn

    This is Artificial Lure with your Savannah River fishing report for the Savannah, Georgia and South Carolina side. We’re sitting on a warm, muggy early-summer pattern. Overnight lows stayed in the low 70s, and this afternoon will push upper 80s to near 90 with high humidity and a light south to southeast breeze around 5–10 knots. Skies are partly cloudy, with a good chance of a pop-up thunderstorm inland by late afternoon, so keep one eye on the sky. On the coast near Savannah, sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., with sunset close to 8:30 p.m. That gives you long, workable low-light windows at dawn and again the last hour before dark, which have been the most productive times. Tide-wise in the Savannah River and nearby sounds, we’re on a typical semi-diurnal pattern with just under a 7-foot swing. Expect a strong incoming push mid-morning and another around late evening, with the lower water and start of the flood being the key feeding periods. The best bite has been from the first of the incoming through about mid-tide, when current is moving but not ripping. In the brackish stretches near Port Wentworth down toward Elba Island, anglers have been picking up a mixed bag: good numbers of slot **redfish**, scattered **speckled trout**, some decent **flounder**, and plenty of short **black drum**. Upstream toward Augusta, the freshwater reach has given up solid **largemouth bass**, **stripers** staging near current breaks, **catfish**, and a few **crappie** hanging tight to structure. Recent catch reports from local marinas and bait shops around Savannah and Thunderbolt say most inshore redfish are in the 16–22 inch range with a few overslot fish roaming the marsh edges. Trout have been running 14–18 inches on moving water around creek mouths and shell points. Flounder are still a bit scattered but folks are quietly putting limits together around docks and rock piles on the lower river. Catfish catches upriver include plenty of 2–5 pound channel and blue cats, with the odd bigger blue showing after dark. For lures, keep it simple and local: - Inshore, a 1/8–1/4 oz jighead with a 3–4 inch paddle tail in natural mullet or shrimp colors has been the workhorse. Chartreuse tails are getting extra bites in that tannic Savannah water. - Topwater walkers and poppers at first light over shallow mud flats and grass edges have produced some explosive trout and redfish strikes. - Around structure, a slow-rolled spinnerbait, squarebill crank, or soft plastic worm will tempt largemouth and the river stripers. Best baits: - Live **shrimp** under a popping cork is still king for trout and slot reds. - **Mud minnows** and **finger mullet** on a Carolina rig or jighead around docks and rock piles are taking flounder and redfish. - Upriver, cut **shad** or **bream** on the bottom is the ticket for blue cats, while live shiners or small bream around current seams will draw striper bites. A couple of local hot spots to keep in mind: - The mouth of **Wassaw Sound up into the lower Savannah River cuts** has been steady for trout and reds on the incoming tide, especially around shell bars and creek mouths. - The stretch around the **Talmadge Memorial Bridge down to Hutchinson Island** has produced mixed inshore action on the Georgia side and some good catfish and the occasional striper on the South Carolina side, particularly where there’s riprap, eddies, and deeper bends. Remember, that current can rip on the Savannah, especially on the lower river, so fish the edges of the flow, not the middle of it, and mind the big-ship traffic in the shipping channel. This is Artificial Lure, thanking you for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  7. May 21

    Savannah River Fishing Report: Incoming Tide, Redfish and Trout On the Move

    Good morning, y’all, this is Artificial Lure with your Savannah River fishing report for the Georgia and South Carolina side. The tide table for the lower Savannah River and nearby Savannah-area marshes is showing a classic moving-water bite window today, with the best action around the incoming tide and the first of the outgoing. On the river proper, that push of water should have redfish, trout, and flounder feeding along drains, points, and oyster edges. If you can fish the last hour of the incoming and the first two of the ebb, that’s prime time. Weather-wise, the coastal breeze looks workable, with warm May air, plenty of humidity, and a good chance of cloud cover at times. That kind of weather usually keeps the bite honest if the wind doesn’t get too ugly. Sunrise is around 6:21 AM and sunset about 8:20 PM, giving you a long day to chase them. Early light and the last hour before dark are your best windows. Recent reports from local anglers around the Savannah River and adjacent creeks have been steady on redfish, with several fish in the slot and a handful of larger bull reds showing up deeper and around current seams. Speckled trout have been mixed in near grass lines and creek mouths, and flounder are starting to show better on bottom around bait-rich areas. A few catfish and striped bass have also been reported in the main river, especially where current breaks off structure. If you want to catch fish today, I’d lean on live shrimp, mud minnows, and finger mullet for bait. For artificials, the old reliable soft-plastic paddletail in natural shrimp, white, or new penny is money. A 1/8 to 1/4 ounce jighead will cover most of the shallow to mid-depth water. Topwaters early can get the trout fired up, and a gold spoon or weedless paddletail is hard to beat around grass and mud edges for reds. If the water’s stained, bump up the vibration and scent. The hottest spots today are the mouths of feeder creeks on the Georgia side, the deeper bends and shell banks around the lower river, and the marsh drains off the South Carolina side where bait is pinched out on moving tide. Around harbor edges, bridge shadow lines, and any place with hard current and a softer eddy behind it, you’ve got a real shot at a quality fish. If I were making a quick plan, I’d start at daylight with topwater or a shrimp imitation near creek mouths, then switch to live shrimp under a cork or on bottom as the tide gets moving. As the water starts falling, work deeper cuts and current edges for reds and flounder. Keep your eyes open for mullet flicking and birds working bait, because that’s where the dinner bell’s ringing. That’s the word from the river today. Fish the tide, stay on the moving water, and don’t overlook the ugly little pockets where bait gets trapped. Thank you for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min
  8. May 20

    Savannah River Heating Up: Reds, Trout, and Cats on the Move

    This is Artificial Lure with your Savannah River fishing report, coming to you like a buddy at the ramp. We’ll start with conditions around Savannah and Port Wentworth on the Savannah River. National Weather Service Savannah is calling for a warm, muggy late-spring pattern: morning temps in the upper 60s climbing into the mid 80s, light southwest breeze 5–10 knots inland, a bit more out near the sound. Skies are partly cloudy with a chance of a quick afternoon shower, but nothing that should blow you off the water fast. Barometer’s steady to slightly falling, which usually nudges the bite up around moving water. According to NOAA tide predictions for Savannah River entrance, we’re looking at a mid‑morning high and an afternoon falling tide. Around town docks you’ll see that water creeping up at first light, topping out mid‑morning, then easing out through early afternoon. That incoming around sunrise and the first push of the outgoing are your best windows. Sunrise is right around 6:20 a.m., with sunset about 8:20 p.m., so you’ve got a nice long day to work those edges. The cooler first two hours after sunup and last two before dark are still your prime time, especially up in the brackish stretches where the river gets a little “bass-y.” Local chatter from Savannah-area tackle shops says the inshore mix has been solid: redfish, trout, and a few flounder in the lower river and creek mouths, plus stripers and cats farther upriver. Anglers have been picking up slot reds along grass edges and shell bars on the last of the incoming and first of the fall, with speckled trout holding just off the current seams. Upriver near Augusta and below the dams, folks are still talking about good blue cat and flathead action, with some 20–30 pound fish caught overnight on cut bait. For the lower Savannah River around Garden City and Elba Island, a live shrimp under a popping cork has been the top producer for trout and slot reds. If you’re throwing artificials, a 3‑inch paddletail in opening night or new penny on a 1/8‑ounce jighead is hard to beat. Work it along current breaks and eddies off the main channel. Topwater walkers at first light over shallow shell have been getting explosive redfish strikes when the water’s high enough to push them up on the flats. Striper action in the brackish sections has been hit‑or‑miss but worth a shot at dawn or dusk. Try a white bucktail or small swimbait around bridge pilings and riprap where you’ve got good current. If they’re finicky, a live mullet or menhaden free‑lined just off the structure can turn lookers into eaters. Farther upriver toward Augusta, the catfish bite stays strong on the deep bends. Night crawlers will catch numbers of smaller fish, but if you’re hunting a big blue or flathead, locally folks are using cut shad, cut bream, or live sunfish on a Carolina rig. Focus on 20–40 feet of water with some wood or rock. Fish that late evening into the night; that’s when the bigger ones roam. A few hot spots to circle on your map: – The bends and creek mouths around Elba Island and Hog Island for reds, trout, and the occasional flounder on the tide changes. – The rock and bridge structure near the Talmadge Bridge and up toward the I‑95 crossing for stripers and mixed inshore action when the current’s pushing. If you’re fishing from shore, those public access points near the port and the small piers along the river can still produce, especially with live shrimp or cut mullet on a simple fish‑finder rig. Just mind the ship traffic and stay clear of the channel. All in all, with stable weather, good tide movement, and warming water, fish activity should be above average today. Keep your presentations natural, stay near moving water, and let the tide do the work. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    5 min

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Tune in to the "Savannah River, Georgia/South Carolina Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of expert fishing insights, local tips, and real-time conditions along the Savannah River. Learn about the best fishing spots, seasonal fish behavior, and gear recommendations to make your fishing trips successful. Join us and stay updated on everything you need to reel in the big catch! For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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