NEWS RELEASE
February 13, 2006
DNR News (803) 734-3950
Freshwater Fishing Trends:
Mountains Area
Lake Jocassee:Largemouth Bass: Fair, casting
Carolina-rigged worms and Hopkins, Berry or flexing spoons. Trout: Good,
trolling from 60 feet to surface with Doctor, Sutton or Bad Creek spoons or
drift fishing 30 to 40 feet deep with large minnows. Smallmouth Bass: Fair,
casting brown hair jigs or drifting live bait on rocky points and rocky
banks. Crappie: Slow. Try using small minnows. Catfish: Fair, using night
crawlers or cut bait on bottom. Bream: Slow. Try using worms deep around
brush.
Lake Keowee: Largemouth Bass: Good, doodling plastic
worms, jigging spoons on the bottom 25 to 40 feet down. Crappie: Fair. Try
small minnows and jigs in 10 to 15 feet of water around brush piles and
bridge pilings. Catfish: Fair, using nightcrawlers and cut bait on bottom.
Bream: Slow. Try red-worms around brush piles and around stumps.
Lake Hartwell: Largemouth Bass: Fair, using buzzbaits
and planer boards to get bait close to shore. Also try using spinnerbaits
20-30 deep. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Fair, with live herring on down line,
drifting and anchored. Crappie: Fair, using medium minnows in about 10 feet
of water. Catfish: Good, using shrimp and chicken livers, cut herring, large
shiners, and nightcrawlers on the bottom. Bream: Good, using red worms
around brush piles.
Piedmont Area
Lake Russell: Largemouth Bass: Slow. Try deep-running
crankbaits and spoons. Yellow Perch: Slow. Try fishing minnows deep. Striped
and Hybrid Bass: Fair. Try early morning with bucktails, cut, live herring
and jigs especially when water is running below dam. White Bass: Poor. Try
bucktails, spinners and live bait below dam. Crappie: Fair. Try using
minnows and jigs around brush piles and bridges. Catfish: Fair, using cut
bait on the bottom. Bream: Slow. Try fishing deep with crickets or live
worms.
Lake Thurmond: Largemouth Bass: Fair. Try casting
plastic worms and Cleos. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Good, using Roadrunners,
Mr. Champ spoons or deep-running Rebels. Crappie: Good, around docks using
jigs and minnows. Catfish: Slow, try using worms on the bottom. Bream: Fair,
using earthworms around the banks.
Lake Wylie: Largemouth Bass: Excellent, using large
spinnerbaits and lures casting around deep points and drop-offs. White Bass:
Good, using small spinners and jigs. Crappie: Excellent, using small minnows
and jigs in 20 to 30 feet of water. Catfish: Good, fishing on the bottom
with a variety of baits. Shellcrackers: Try using redworms and crickets on
the bottom. Bream: Slow. Try red-worms and nightcrawlers from the bank.
Midlands Area
Lake Greenwood: Largemouth Bass: Fair. Try using
crankbaits off main points or jigging around brush piles and deep holes and
using crankbaits in mixed schools from mid-lake on down. Stripers: Fair,
using live bait, herring or shad 20 to 25 feet deep. White Perch: Fair,
jigging bucktails and berry spoons 15-20 feet deep. Crappie: Good, using
small minnows in 12 feet of water over brush. Catfish: Fair, using cut bait
and worms on the bottom. Bream: Poor. Try using crickets and red worms.
Lake Wateree: Largemouth Bass: Fair. Try using
artificial worms and crankbaits. Striped bass: Good. Try fishing with
down-rods 14 feet deep with small shiners in 25-35 feet of water. White
Bass: Slow. Try trolling shad-like baits or same as striper fishing.
Crappie: Good, trolling jigs, grubs and minnows 10 to 15 deep in creeks.
Catfish: Slow. Try using live bait. Bream: Slow. Try crickets and worms
deep.
Lake Murray: Largemouth Bass: Fair, using shallow
running crankbaits in the back of coves in running baitfish or jigging
spoons deep water. Striped Bass: Good, try dragging free lines along banks
also using topwater plugs and drifting shiners. Crappie: Good, using jigs
and small tuffies around bridge pilings and brush piles. White Perch: Good,
using live minnows near the bottom. Catfish: Slow. Try cut herring near the
bottom. Bream: Slow. Try red worms deep.
Santee Cooper System
Lake Marion: Largemouth Bass: Slow. Try topwater lures..
Striped Bass: Slow. Try casting bucktails to schooling fish or fishing live
small blueback herring, shad or shiners. White Perch: Fair. Try jigging off
the bottom with Hopkins spoons in the lake and up into creeks. Crappie:
Fair, Try using small and medium minnows over deep brush piles, bridge
pilings and piers. Catfish: Good, using cut shad off the bottom in deep
water. Bream and Shellcrackers: Slow. Try using crickets.
Lake Moultrie: Largemouth Bass: Fair. Try using or
Carolina-rigged worms, spinnerbaits or Sammie lures. Striped Bass: Good,
trolling with artificial worms. Crappie: Fair. Try using small to medium
minnows and Beetlespins around fish attraction areas and brush piles.
Catfish: Good, using cut bait 25-30 deep. Bream: Fair. Try using crickets,
redworms, and small minnows, around manmade fish attractors. 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 - 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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