|
|
|
|
January 10, 2005 DNR News (803) 734-3950 FRESHWATER FISHING TRENDS MOUNTAINS AREA LAKE JOCASSEE: Largemouth Bass: Fair, casting Carolina-rigged worms, and jerk baits with slow retrieve. Trout: Good to excellent, trolling from near surface to 50 feet with Sutton, Doctor and Apex spoons. Also try drifting large minnows from surface to 50 feet of water. Big ones biting better. Stocked trout have been biting nightcrawlers fished from bank. Smallmouth Bass: Fair. Try drifting large minnows and brown hair jigs around rocky points and banks. Crappie: Slow. Try small minnows and jigs around brush piles. Catfish: Poor. Try nightcrawlers or cut bait on bottom. Bream: Poor. Try redworms deep around banks and brush. LAKE KEOWEE: Largemouth and Spotted Bass: Good, fishing with medium to jumbo minnows on bottom and free lining 50 to 60 feet deep. Also doodling with drop-shot rigs in 30 to 70 feet of water. Sizes averaging one to 1.5 pounds. Limits being caught. Crappie: Fair, using small minnows and jigs in 20-25 feet of water around brush piles and bridge pilings. Catfish: Good, using minnows, nightcrawlers and cut bait on the bottom. Many catfish being caught in baskets. Bream: Slow. Try using redworms and crickets around brush piles, stumps and bridge pilings. LAKE HARTWELL: Largemouth Bass: Good. Try casting crankbaits off points and jigs around structure. Good catches with live large minnows. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Good, free-lining live herring and large minnows in about 38 feet of water, also jigging at same depth. Crappie: Poor. Try using small minnows and small crappie jigs over brush and structure. Catfish: Good, using cut herring, large shiners, nightcrawlers, shrimp and chicken livers on the bottom. Bream: Slow. Try using redworms and crickets under boat docks and bridges.
PIEDMONT AREA LAKE RUSSELL: Largemouth Bass: Good, jigging spoons and deep-running crankbaits in river and creek channels. Yellow Perch: Good, fishing deep with medium minnows and jigging spoons. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Good, using with bucktails, cut and live herring and jigs below the dam when water is running. White Bass: Good, using bucktails, spinners and live bait below the dam when water is running. Crappie: Excellent, using minnows and jigs around brush piles and bridge pilings as long as cold weather continues. Catfish: Fair, using cut bait and nightcrawlers on the bottom. Bream: Slow. Try using crickets and earthworms around bridge pilings. LAKE THURMOND: Largemouth Bass: Slow. Try casting plastic worms, deep-running Rebels, ShadRaps, Yozuri plugs and Challenger plugs. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Pretty Good, using Little Cleos, Berry Spoons, 1/2 ounce yellow and white RoadRunners with bucktails and KastMasters around the dam. Also, try large minnows. Crappie: Fair, using small minnows and jigs around deep brush tops. Larger fish being caught. Catfish: Good, using cut bait and nightcrawlers fishing on the bottom. Bream and Shellcrackers: Slow. Try using earthworms deep around brush-tops. LAKE WYLIE: Few people fishing due to cold weather. Largemouth Bass: Good, casting bass jigs and medium-running crankbaits along points close to the bottom. Striped Bass: Good, using spoons and bucktails behind Lake Wylie dam. White Bass: Good, below the dam casting smaller bucktails and spoons. Crappie: Good, using small minnows and jigs around brush tops in 20 to 30 feet of water. Catfish: Good, fishing on the bottom with a variety of baits. Shellcrackers: Slow. Try using redworms and crickets on the bottom. Bream: Slow. Try using earthworms and crickets around the banks.
MIDLANDS AREA LAKE GREENWOOD: Largemouth Bass: Fair to Good, casting pig-n-jigs and crankbaits to structure in shallow water, fished slowly. Stripers: Good, behind the dam using Bombers, Charlie plugs, and Flukes. Also good catches in lower with bucktails and berry spoons. Good catches around bird activity over the water. White Bass and White Perch: Good, Try casting and jigging Berry Spoons. Fish are schooling well. Crappie: Good, using small to medium minnows and mini jigs over brush in the lake. Good catches below the dam using minnows. Catfish: Good, using redworms in 6 to 8 feet of water. Bream: Slow. Try using redworms along shoreline and docks. LAKE WATEREE: Largemouth Bass: Fair, casting pig-n-jigs around piers, fished slowly. Striped Bass: Good, using live shad in 10 to 15 feet around river channel. Schooling activity is slow. White Bass: Fair. A few fish being caught in striper schools. White Perch: Good, casting and jigging Twister-tail crappie, grubs and live minnows. Crappie: Good, fishing minnows 15 to 18 feet deep or using Wow grubs or Slider grubs trolled slowly and deep around mouths of creeks and in the river channel. Fish appear to be suspended in the water column around 12 feet deep. Catfish: Good, using earthworms, nightcrawlers, shrimp, small pieces of cut bait and live shad near bottom in river channel. Bream: Slow. Try worms fished around piers with brush. Water temperature in high 40s, water clear and low, down 2.5 feet. LAKE MURRAY: Largemouth Bass: Fair, fishing in shallow water with Carolina rigs and shallow-running crankbaits like ShadRaps. Striped Bass: Good, around Hollow creek ramps 3 and 4, using bucktails with Iceflies and jigging with spoons 8 to 25 feet deep. Watch for birds because baitfish and stripers are underneath. Crappie: Good, around brush piles using minnows and jigs, with some being caught around new flooded grass. Also try "dragging" or trolling with spider rigs using multiple jigs. White Perch: Good, jigging with small spoons, tuffy minnows and earthworms in 8 to 20 feet of water. Catfish: Fair, using cut herring and nightcrawlers on the bottom 5 to 15 feet deep. Bream: Fair, using redworms around new flooded grass.
SANTEE COOPER SYSTEM LAKE MARION: Largemouth Bass: Fair, using artificial worms, and bucktails fishing along the banks and points. Striped Bass: Fair, using live shiners with down rods in 25 feet of water. White Perch: Slow. Try jigging off the bottom with Hopkins spoons. Crappie: Fair. Try using small and medium minnows over deep brush piles, bridge pilings and piers. Catfish: Excellent, using cut shad off the bottom in deep water. Bream and Shellcrackers: Slow. Try using redworms and crickets in 4 to 8 feet of water. LAKE MOULTRIE: Largemouth Bass: Poor. Try casting spinnerbaits, plastic worms and lizards along docks and structure. Striped Bass: Fair, trolling with Stretch-25s. No one live bait fishing. Some schooling noted. Crappie: Fair to Good, using small to medium minnows and Beetlespins around fish attraction areas and brush piles. Catfish: Good, using cut herring, menhaden (which are schooling), 25 to 50 feet deep near the bottom along dike edges. Bream: Good, using crickets around fish attraction areas and crappie beds. Crickets can be kept alive in boat inside a thermos-type container. Shellcrackers: Slow. Try redworms and green worms along the banks along river runs and points. REPORTERS: The S.C. Department of Natural Resources appreciates the cooperation of fishing trend reporters for South Carolina's major lakes: Jocassee - Hoyett's Tackle; Keowee - Fishing Hole; Hartwell - Lake Hartwell Fishing and Marine; Russell - Tony's Bait and Tackle; Thurmond - Bladon's; Wylie - Catawba Tackle; Greenwood - Sportsman's Friend; Wateree - Wateree Marina; Murray - Dooley's Sport Shop; Marion - Lanes; and Moultrie - Atkins Boat Landing. - Written by G. Michael Willis - For South Carolina freshwater fishing regulations: http://www.dnr.state.sc.us/etc/rulesregs/img/freshfishing.pdf
Click Here To Return To The Previous Page |
|
| <%server.execute "/bottom.asp"%> | |