NEWS RELEASE
May 22, 2006
DNR News (803) 734-3950
Freshwater Fishing Trends:
Mountains Area
Lake Jocassee: Largemouth Bass: Good, casting crankbaits
and dark green plastic worms up rivers. Trout: Good, fishing nightcrawlers
and minnows 40 to 55 feet deep or trolling with Sutton or Doctor spoons
early in morning. Good, at night using large minnows and cut bait.
Smallmouth Bass: Fair. Try drifting large minnows along red clay and rocky
points. Crappie: Slow. Try small minnows and jigs. Catfish: Good, using
nightcrawlers or frozen herring at night. Bream: Good, using crickets around
banks and brush.
Lake Keowee: Largemouth Bass: Good, casting to schools
in early morning with soft jerkbaits like Super Flukes. Crappie: Excellent.
Try small minnows and jigs in 5 to 10 feet of water around brush piles and
bridge pilings. Catfish: Good, using nightcrawlers and cut bait on the
bottom. Bream: Fair. Try using worms and crickets in sandy pocket 4 to 5
feet deep.
Lake Hartwell: Largemouth Bass: Good, casting topwater
lures on humps and points. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Good, casting to schools
with Super Flukes humps and points. Crappie: Good, using medium and small
minnows in about 10 feet of water. Catfish: Good, using cut herring on the
bottom. Bream: Excellent, using crickets and worms 5 to 8 feet deep.
Piedmont Area
Lake Russell: Largemouth Bass: Fair casting
Carolina-rigged worms and lizards. Yellow Perch: Fair. Try fishing minnows
deep. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Good. Try using bucktails, cut bait and jigs
below the dam. White Bass: Slow. Try bucktails and spinners below the dam.
Crappie: Slow Try minnows and jigs around brush piles. Catfish: Good,
fishing cut bait on the bottom. Bream: Good, fishing with red wigglers and
nightcrawlers.
Lake Thurmond: Largemouth Bass: Good, casting plastic
worms, crankbaits to the banks. Striped and Hybrid Bass: Good, casting jigs
and trolling and fishing big minnows. Crappie: Excellent, around docks using
jigs and minnows. Catfish: Good, using worms on the bottom. Bream: Fair. Try
crickets and worms 3 to 8 feet deep around brush.
Lake Wylie: Largemouth Bass: Good, casting
Carolina-rigged worms along shallow points and banks. Striped Bass: Good,
below Wylie dam using bucktails, jigs and spoons when water is running.
Crappie: Good, using jigs and minnows around piers about 10 to 15 feet deep.
Catfish: Good, using nightcrawlers on the bottom. Shellcrackers: Fair. Try
using redworms and crickets on the bottom. Bream: Good, using earthworms and
crickets around the banks.
Midlands Area
Lake Greenwood: Largemouth Bass: Good, casting topwater
worms, plugs and buzzbaits. Striped Bass: Good, casting flukes and topwater
plugs behind the dam. White Perch: Good, using berryspoons in 12 to 15 feet
of water. Also some schooling activity reported. Crappie: Fair. Try using
minnows and mini jigs over brush in deeper water. Catfish: Good, using cut
bait and worms on the bottom. Bream: Good, using crickets and worms along
shore and docks and fishing from banks.
Lake Wateree: Largemouth Bass: Fair. Try casting
spinnerbaits worms and crankbaits on structure in deeper water. Striped
bass: Excellent, using bucktails, cut bait and live shad fish moving
downriver from Cedar Creek dam. White Bass: Good, using small live shad and
jigs. Crappie: Excellent, using minnows and grubs around piers and in
shallows, also trolling and drifting with jigs. Catfish: Good, using live
minnows or worms in the creeks. Bream: Fair, using crickets and earthworms
in warmer areas of coves.
Lake Murray: Largemouth Bass: Excellent, using
spinnerbaits, number 5 or 7 Shad Raps or Carolina-rigged worms around rocky
points and grass. Striped Bass: Good, try drifting shiners in 6 to 8 feet of
water. Crappie: Fair, using jigs and minnows in 20 feet of water 12-15 feet
deep. White Perch: Fair, jigging small tuffies, worms or spoons 20 to 60
feet. Catfish: Good using cut herring and nightcrawlers on the bottom.
Bream: Good, using crickets and worms shallow around docks and bushes.
Santee Cooper System
Lake Marion: Largemouth Bass: Slow. Try lizards and
worms in the shallows. Striped Bass: Slow. Try casting bucktails to fish
schooling in creeks or cut bait off the bottom. White Perch: Slow. Try
jigging off the bottom with Hopkins spoons. Crappie: Fair, using medium
minnows around deep brush piles ledges. Catfish: Good, using cut shad in the
shallows. Bream and Shellcrackers: Excellent, using crickets, red worms,
wigglers and nightcrawlers.
Lake Moultrie: Largemouth Bass: Fair. Try topwater lures
and plastic worms early and late. Striped Bass: Fair, using live herring
from anchor and casting light spoons to schooling fish. Crappie: Fair. Try
minnows around fish attraction areas. Catfish: Good, using cut bait 20 to 35
deep. Bream: Fair. Try using crickets, redworms, and small minnows, around
manmade fish attractors. Shellcrackers: Fair. Try using crickets around fish
attraction areas.
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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