Good morning, anglers. This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Guntersville, Alabama fishing report for Wednesday, May 7, 2025.
We rolled into the day with sunrise at 5:51 a.m. and sunset set for 7:36 p.m., giving us plenty of daylight on the water. The weather is shaping up nicely – mild conditions, light breeze, and water temps holding steady in the mid-60s. Recent rain has helped keep the lake level stable, which is making navigation easy and keeping the fish active[5][1].
Bass are still the main event around Lake Guntersville this week. The post-spawn pattern is in full swing and the bite is shifting offshore. Most bass are pulling off the spawning flats and stacking up along the ledges, grass lines, and channel edges. Early mornings and late evenings are the ticket, with fish feeding hard during these low-light hours[3][5]. The shallow bite is still hanging on in isolated spots, especially in grass beds and around bluegill beds.
Crappie action remains strong near docks, brush piles, and bridge pilings. Anglers have been catching them on small jigs tipped with minnows, especially in 6 to 10 feet of water. Word is, a handful of limits came from the State Park area and near Waterfront[5][4].
Catfish are making appearances in the deeper channels. Folks are picking up decent numbers soaking cut bait or stink bait off the main river ledges.
Best Lures and Bait: Today, top picks for bass are deep-diving crankbaits, shaky head worms, and big swimbaits worked along the deeper grass and ledges. In the shallows or where you see bait busting, a topwater frog or popper can draw some explosive strikes. For crappie, stick with pink or chartreuse jigs, or just a plain old minnow under a float[5][4]. Catfish aren’t picky—cut shad or chicken livers will get the job done.
Hot Spots: Try the ledges near Goose Pond or the bridges at Browns Creek for bass. If you’re crappie fishing, hit the brush piles off Roseberry and the dock lights at night around the State Park[3][5].
No significant tides to worry about on Guntersville, so focus on those feeding windows at dawn and dusk. With fish moving and biting, it’s a prime time to get out—just remember to keep an eye on the weather and be safe on the water.
That’s the word from Lake Guntersville. Tight lines and hope you put a big one in the boat today.