NEWS RELEASE
November 28, 2005
DNR News (803) 734-3950
Freshwater Fishing Trends:
Mountains Area
Lake Jocassee:Largemouth Bass: Good, casting
Carolina-rigged worms, Gary Yamamoto sinkos in morning and late evening.
Trout: Fair, try drifting large minnows from surface to 100 to 115 feet and
trolling with minnows. Night fishing is fair with minnows. Fish at 80 to 115
feet with nightcrawlers and at 100 to 115 feet with Sutton, Doctor and Apex
spoons. Smallmouth Bass: Good. Casting minnows around rocky points. Crappie:
Poor. Try small minnows and jigs around brush piles. Catfish: Good. Try
nightcrawlers or cut bait on bottom. Bream: Excellent, fishing with redworms,
popping bugs and crickets around banks and brush.
Lake Keowee:Largemouth and Spotted Bass: Fair, try using
jigging spoons, doodling with drop-shot rigs in 30 to 40 feet of water. Bass
are hitting topwater plugs in schools. Crappie: Fair, fishing with minnows
at night and jigs in 10 to 15 feet of water around brush piles and bridge
pilings, best under bridges with lights early in the day and night. Catfish:
Good, basket fishing for catfish still productive. Use minnows,
nightcrawlers and cut bait on the bottom. Bream: Good, using redworms and
crickets around brush piles, stumps and bridge pilings.
Lake Hartwell: Largemouth Bass: Fair, try white flukes
and topwater flukes in morning and evenings and using 8 to 10 inch blue
worms at night and live large minnows. Casting spinnerbaits and crankbaits
off points and jigs around structure. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Fair,
schooling early morning and evening. Catches around the dam with live
herring at 40 to 60 feet. Fair at daybreak on cut bait on points or breaks.
Trolling umbrella rigs, free-lining live herring and large minnows and
jigging in about 38 feet of water. Use blue umbrella lures when trolling.
Crappie: Fair, some catches at 25 to 30 feet with small to medium minnows.
Also, try using mini-umbrella rigs. Catfish: Fair, using cut herring, large
shiners, nightcrawlers, shrimp and chicken livers on the bottom. Bream:
Fair. Try using redworms and crickets under boat docks and bridges and brush
piles.
Piedmont Area
Lake Russell: Largemouth Bass: Fair, shallow running crankbaits.
Yellow Perch: Fair, try fishing deep with medium minnows, worms and jigging
spoons. Also use worms and lizards. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Fair, using
bucktails, cut and live herring and jigs below the dam when water is
running. White Bass: Fair, 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 at 10 to 12 feet. Better at night. Catfish:
Good, using cut bait and nightcrawlers on the bottom and around the riprap
at bridges. Bream: Good, fishing with crickets and earthworms around bridge
pilings and structure.
Lake Thurmond: Largemouth Bass: Fair, casting
Rattletraps, CountDown lures, deep-running Rebels, ShadRaps, plastic worms,
Yozuri plugs and Challenger plugs. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Fair, using
Sidewinder spoons, medium and large minnows and 1/3 and 2/5 ounce Cleos.
Also, Berry spoons, KastMasters and Hopkins spoons. Crappie: Fair, mostly
using small minnows and greenish mini-jigs and Wobbly-eye jigs around deep
brush tops. Catfish: Fair, using cut bait and nightcrawlers fishing on the
bottom, particularly around structures like riprap and bridge pilings. Bream
and Shellcrackers: Fair, using earthworms and crickets around banks and
brush along the bottom as well.
Lake Wylie: Largemouth Bass: Good, casting spinnerbaits
and medium-running crankbaits along points close to the bottom. Also
topwater baits good in morning and late afternoon. Striped Bass: Excellent,
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 docks, piers and brush tops in 10 to 15 feet of
water. Catfish: Good, fishing on the bottom with a variety of baits.
Shellcrackers: Good, using redworms and crickets on the bottom. Bream: Good,
using earthworms and crickets around the banks.
Midlands Area
Lake Greenwood: Largemouth Bass: Good, try plastic worms and
crankbaits off points in 6 to 10 feet water. Stripers: Good, catches behind
the dam using Bombers, Charlie plugs, and flukes. Also in lower lake with
bucktails and Berry spoons White Bass and White Perch: Good, try casting and
Beetle Spins and Panther Martins in school areas. Schooling activity
reported over the lake. Crappie: Good, best catches at night. Use small to
medium minnows, mini jigs and Slider jigs around brush in 12 to 15 feet of
water. Catfish: Good, try using redworms in 6 to 8 feet of water. Bream:
Fair, with redworms and crickets along shoreline structure and docks in 4 to
6 feet of water.
Lake Wateree: Largemouth Bass: Good, best caught with
shad-like lures on points. Some schooling activity reported. Striped Bass:
Good, Some schooling activity early morning and late afternoon. Best on
lower part of lake fish deep live shad. White Bass: Slow. White Perch: Good,
casting and jigging Twister-tail grubs and live minnows. Crappie: Excellent,
best fishing with jigging around brush piles. Also in shallow water in the
creeks, along edge old river channel and trolling Wow grubs, Sliders and
live bait. Catfish: Good, using earthworms, nightcrawlers, shrimp, small
pieces of cut bait and live shad. Bream and Shellcrackers: Good, using
crickets, worms and artificial lures fished around piers, structure and
brush.
Lake Murray: Largemouth Bass: Fair, best fishing early
in shallow water and late in deep water and some topwater schooling. Use
green pumpkin plastic worms and lizards, trick worms and Carolina rigs,
Texas rigs around shrubs and brush in 15 to 20 feet of water. Points and
secondary points in 10 to 15 feet of water. Striped Bass: Good, schooling
underway with best fishing all over the lake. Try dragging free lines along
banks. early fishing is best with free lines and down fishing to 30 feet.
Fishing with freelining live bait, Sammy's, Striper Delights and Pencil
Poppers. Also, trolling and down rods with live herring 60 feet. Trolling is
fair with bucktails and hard lures. Crappie: Good, using minnows and jigs
around brush piles in 8 to 20 feet of water and casting jigs. White Perch:
Good, jigging with small spoons in 8 to 20 feet and using worms. Catfish:
Good, using cut herring and nightcrawlers on the bottom 6 to 20 feet deep.
Bream and Shellcrackers: Excellent, using redworms, baby nightcrawlers,
crickets, Beetlespins around green grass in 20 feet of water and around
docks.
Santee Cooper System
Lake Marion: Largemouth Bass: Fair, using Carolina rigs, artificial
worms and live shiners, fishing along drops and creek banks, especially in
morning. Striped Bass: Good. Schooling started. Fairly well with live bait,
bucktail shiners in riverbed off dam or drifting along the dam. White Perch:
Slow. Try jigging off bottom with Hopkins spoons and with smaller
nightcrawlers on sand points. Use nightcrawlers at sunrise and sunset.
Crappie: Good, using small and medium minnows over deep brush piles, bridge
pilings and piers. Best fishing in the morning and evening. Catfish: Good,
use cut shad, herring and live shiners off bottom drifting in deep water and
at night in shallow water. Bream and Shellcrackers: Good, using redworms,
crickets and waxworms in 4 to 6 feet of water and fishing shallow.
Lake Moultrie: Largemouth Bass: Slow, cast spinnerbaits,
plastic worms and lizards along docks and structure. Also cast Rattletraps
and Rapala lures around Pinopolis Point and Old Hatchery. Striped Bass:
Fair, casting and trolling. Some schooling reported. Crappie: Excellent,
using crickets and small to medium minnows around fish attraction areas and
brush piles. Some crappie being caught on the bed with minnows and jigs.
Catfish: Excellent, 9 to 15 feet deep using cut herring, stink bait, chicken
livers and shiners 9 to 20 feet deep near the bottom dike edges and around
the dam. Bream: Excellent, try using crickets and redworms, nightcrawlers
around fish attraction areas and banks. Shellcrackers: Good. Try using
crickets and redworms along the banks in river runs and along points,
possibly in canals.
REPORTERS: The S.C. Department of Natural Resources appreciates the
cooperation of fishing trend reporters for South Carolina's major lakes:
Jocassee - Jocassee Outdoor Center; 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, Lake World; Marion -
Randolph's Landing; and Moultrie - Atkins Boat Landing.
- Written by Brett Witt -
For South Carolina freshwater fish regulations:
http://www.dnr.state.sc.us/regs/pdf/freshfishing.pdf
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