Red Drum Tackle shop fishing report, Buxton 1-5
Rumors of stripers staying caught on hopkins up at Oregon inlet. But what I do know is that puppy sharks and skates are hitting anything at all that hits the drinking water down the following. Black drum was at the jetties this early morning. Speckle trout was becoming caught, but no keepers reported. One flounder was caught by Kevin along with all the dinks specks out by the narrows. If I get a true report about the stripers up north, than I will update the board.
Monday’s Report
Joyful Monday!!!! I’ve had one report nowadays, but it was a excellent a single. That is if you like "trout tales"……
Nice Huge trout this am, the in which component is unidentified, possibly the LHJ (lighthouse jetties) or NOB (north of Buxton) anyways….. would seem trout like to consume tiny, teeny tiny trout. That’s what the massive boys have been chasing. If your fortunate ample to figure it out and catch em, then you are lucky sufficient!
Those birds that are functioning up at Oregan Inlet….I heard it was massive blues!!! Even now, that’s greater than none
That’s all I obtained for you right now. Remain tuned, tomorrow may be better…………………….
Kristie
Tuesday’s Brrrrr report!!
Not much to report these days. Winds had been really powerful previous night time and whilst I did stroll more than to the jetties for a appear see there was no a single hoping. Water color was not bad. It is supposed to relaxed down a minor tonight and tomorrow and perhaps we can get something heading.
Very best,
Bob
Wednesday and oh so good!!!
The very best of today was the shell hunters. Scotch Bonnetts are considerable and fairly a number of big conchs or whelks.
Fishing, nobody down below attempting from what I can see. I examined out the Frisco spot this early morning and the drinking water was calm and half thoroughly clean. Do not think it would be too difficult to occur up with a great speck or pup.
See ya tomorrow,
Bob
Thursday Fishing Report
With the warmer temps nowadays individuals were out and about,Trout ended up noted at ramp 34 this morning.Blowtoads have been caught at ramp forty three these days.Shelling appears to be the favored previous time on the south seaside.The weather seems fantastic for the week-finish "Come Get You Some" HOOP-DEE!
Reddrum Tackle
Buxton, NC
252-995-5414
http://reddrumtackle.com/
Sport Fishing Forums – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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Oregon Inlet Fishing center report 1-5
by Affie
Attachment 210941
Happy New Year!! What a gorgeous day! We had three offshore boats out today. They arrived back again in with boundaries of yellowfin tuna, a few blackfin tuna, an 80lb mako shark and a 34lb wahoo. One of the boats went bottom fishing and had a wonderful day with catches of seabass, tilefish and a number of huge bluefish. Their catch involved a 10lb citation tilefish.What an fantastic day of fishing. One of the offshore charters was a make-up group. If you don’t have a get together of six indicator up on the internet or come by to indication up.
FISHING REPORT 1-five-twelve
by Affie
Weather has kept the boats in this week. We did have a nearshore boat out yesterday. Plenty of dogfish but no sign of stripers. The stripers are operating about 3 weeks late due to this kind of a moderate wintertime so significantly. Friday weather looks excellent and we have an offshore charter likely out. If you would like to go fishing there is lots of availablity and make-up charters are availableif you will not have a entire get together of 6. Much more news as we have fish.
Activity Fishing Discussion boards – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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Ocean Isle Fishing Center report 1-5
David Ciesla of Provide sent these great images from a excursion he took on New Year’s Day.
– Capt. Rickey Beck
Attachment 210948Attachment 210949Attachment 210947
"Hard Core" | Get Occupied | 01/03/twelve
It’s 34 degrees with a NW wind of thirty gusting to forty, but Kevin Sneed is trout fishing. I say challenging core, with a touch of ridiculous!
– Capt. Rickey Beck
"NEW Years EVE trip" | Get Active | 01/01/12
What a way to conclude one particular of the greatest fish catching a long time of my lifestyle. twelve/31/11 and 65 degrees w/ a h2o temp of 56 and the fish are even now biting. Falling tide built for a fun time casting some gulp baits. pearl shrimp and new penny shrimp. I had a number of mullet minnows left in my bait pen so for kicks I baited up a carolina rig and in much less then a second I had a flounder bite ambigu heading flounder and trout. Insane!!!!! Allows do it again in 2012 Joyful New Year to All.
– Capt. Jeff Williamson
Ocean Isle Fishing Middle- Ocean Isle Seashore, NC for far more reports and approaching fishing information go to www.OIFC.com —
910-575-FISH
Activity Fishing Discussion boards – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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The Southern Fishing report by Ken Sturdivant 1-6
By Ken Sturdivant
106 Hickory Ridge
770 889 2654
Cumming, Georgia 30040
January 6, 2012
LAKE LANIER IS DOWN 11.18 FEET, THE BACKS OF CREEKS ARE STAINED AND THE MAIN LAKE IS CLEAR & 50 DEGREES.
This Lake Lanier Bass report is from Jim Mathley, www.jimboonlanier.com 770 542 7764
Bass fishing is good and Lake Lanier water level has risen only slightly over the past week and the surface temperature has dropped 4 degrees. The fishing has remained good as we have been catching big fish deep and shallow through the week. We have been focusing on rocky pockets near the mouths of the creeks and back in the creeks, as well as steeper main-lake rocky banks and points in the lower lake for the majority of our fish. There is also a growing concentration of fish in the creek channel ditches which are present throughout the lake and range from shallow to deep depending on the location. We have caught the shallow fish on shaky head worms, jigs, crank baits, jerk baits, and the Fish Head Spin. Early morning, late evening, prior to a weather front passage and during times of a predominant wind are the best times to throw the moving baits and to work shallow for some big bites. If there is wind blowing, fish your moving baits where the wind is the strongest and most direct into the bank and use a slow to moderate retrieve. Don’t expect to get many bites, but the ones you get will be quality. There are fish out deep relating to the timber in ditches, and these fish can be caught on a spoon, drop-shot, and a shaky head worm. The timber is your best bet for numbers of fish right now, and some bigger fish are definitely moving out deep, especially with the recent colder weather. The upper lake/rivers are really holding fish in certain creek ditches in 10 to 30 feet of water. When searching for these fish, use your Lowrance electronics to identify subtle structure changes to include creek ditch depressions. Where there is bait, there is or will soon be fish. As always, once you find a creek, pocket, or main lake area holding bait and fish, you may have success by rotating that area with other areas you find holding bait and fish. Fish move up and down in the water column throughout the day, and in the same context move from deep to shallow. Given that, if you have success at one point in the day in a particular location, you may return again later and enjoy further success in the same area.
This Lake Lanier Striper report is from Captain Ken West and Captain Mike Maddalena of Big Fish On! Guide Service, 404 561 2564. www.bigfishonguide.com
Striper fishing is very good both in terms of size, numbers and species. Stripers, spots, catfish, largemouth bass and walleye are all biting free line and down rod herring. It is not unusual to catch multiple species and sizes all out of the same area. Not much has changed in terms of technique. Find the large continuous strings of bait and fish there. Also, keep your eyes open for birds and follow their lead. If they are diving at bait and you can get to the fish before they disperse throw a Mack Farr 1/2 ounce buck tail with a small fluke trailer. You can also use a spinning rod to toss a herring, small gizzard shad or threadfin on a weighted float into the center of the activity. Keep your bait about three feet below the float. When a quality striper nails the bait on the surface; hang on! If the birds are actively searching an area set out a spread with baits 40 feet behind your boards, free lines 80 to 100 feet back and a couple down rods. Try both weighted and non weighted free lines. You can also use umbrella rigs to quickly search an area. In the absence of birds, find the bait and set up a spread. When the sun gets up your best bet is to switch to down rods from 17 to 30 feet down. Keep your down rods just over the bait. If possible, take a variety of Herring, Trout and Gizzard shad to the lake. Remember to keep your hook size matched to the size of your bait. Big Creek, Flowery Branch Creek, Six Mile Creek and Flat Creek are good places to start on the south end. On the north end try Wahoo Creek, Little River and Sardis Creek. Due to the low lake level a significant number of ramps are closed.
http://www.sam.usace.army.mil/lanier…Elevations.htm
We teach ON THE WATER SCHOOLS for SONAR and Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass. Call for details. Call for details.
January 6, 2012
WEST POINT LAKE IS DOWN 6.38 FEET, DIRTY & 52 DEGREES BY CHRIS BELL
Bass fishing has been slow. With the changing water levels, cooler temperatures, and dirty water has made the bite a day to day opportunity. There are two main patterns working with the current conditions. One is covering plenty of water with shallow water crank baits similar to a Bandit 200 series or a Bomber 4A, the better colors have been either chartreuse or red crawdad color. Cast these baits as close to shoreline rocky points as possible and then slowly reel them back in with a reel and pause pattern. This pattern has been producing more largemouths but do not look for many bites. The second pattern has been using a drop shot rig or jigging spoon on humps and road beds lake wide. With the higher water levels and water current fish have positioned on tops of these locations.
Hybrid and striper fishing is great. Fish have positioned on top of humps and road beds. Using live shad dropped down to schools of fish is working the best. Use your depth finders to locate fish. You may have to check multiple areas before locating fish with the recent changes in water levels.
Crappie fishing has been fair. Fish have begun pulling into creeks and pockets about half way in. These fish are following shad that have migrated in with the new water depths. Troll minnow tipped jigs in black/chartreuse or pink/white colors. Look for fish to be positioned in the twelve to fifteen feet depths. Troll jigs at depths ten to twelve feet to catch feeding fish.
January 6, 2012
LAKE ALLATOONA IS DOWN 14.24 FEET, 51 DEGREES AND CLEAR
This bass fishing report is from Matt Driver 404-456-6094 www.proanglerradio.com
Bass fishing is good and there has been little change al nights being below freezing. The first few days of the cold snap were not that great for fishing due to a lot of shallow fish shut down with such a drastic change in temps but now things are getting back to normal January fishing on Allatoona. The bait is more concentrated and suspending in the 15 to 20 ft range. As we all know where the bait is so will the bass be. Use your electronics to find bait ball, and use drops shot rigs and the float n fly. Use a slower approach than we’ve used in earlier weeks. I believe we will see some bigger fish caught in the near future with more cold fronts forecasted in coming weeks. January is a great time to catch a trophy spot on Lake Allatoona.
This Lake Allatoona Fishing Guides Fishing Report Is Bought to You by Robert Eidson of First Bite Guide Service 770 827-6282 www,firstbiteguideservice.com.
Line side fishing is good. The bait is starting to move back into the Creek and so are the Striper and Hybrids. Mid lake seems to be holding better numbers of fish then the south end and the north end but we think all the creeks on the lake will produce line sides. Shiners fished on free lines and planner boards are producing better then trout and shad right now. Remember to down size your hooks to match your shiners for more strikes. After the sun comes up, switch to pulling umbrella rigs. We have had our best luck this week pulling these rigs 145 feet behind the boat at 3.1 to 3.4 miles and hour. And have caught fish weighting up to 21 pounds. As the lake starts to clears the umbrella rig bite will get great. We teach ON THE WATER SCHOOLS for SONAR and Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass. Call for details. Call for details.
January 6, 2012
LAKE HARTWELL IS DOWN 8.43 FEET, CLEAR & 53 DEGREES
Bass fishing is fair Look on the and over the old structure on main lake points for any schoolers but they are 10 to 19 feet deep. Later in the day, use a large Culprit dark worm over the deeper grass lines a later in the day. Spinner baits and flat sided bright crank baits will work after the sun warms shallows in the backs of the creeks. The Flat A Bomber in lime and orange colors has been fair and add some extra scent. Use this bait in the mouths of the creeks right off the river. Be sure to watch the Lowrance for bait schools as the fish will stay with them the rest of the month. Learn how to use the Lowrance Structure Scan and Down Scan technology with Southern Fishing On the Water fishing schools.
January 6, 2012
CLARKS HILL IS DOWN 8.90 FEET, 52 DEGREES & STAINED
Bass fishing is fair and there is still fresh water flowing into the lake. This water is cooling down and stained slowing the main river fish. A bright crawfish red or brown Rat L Trap or a big jig and pig can draw strikes. Look for the clearer waters in the deep creeks. Float a large green u tail worm on and over any shallow grass after mid day. The bass are tight under the heavy grass and use a large Rat over this grass. For river bass, head into the cuts and creeks that have any clearing waters. Spinner baits and large red shad Zoom U tail worms will work or grass beds later in the day. The Rat L Traps in the bleeding shiner or red crawfish will work for the bass. See our web site for Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass DVD on sale.
January 6, 2012
LAKE RUSSELL IS DOWN 2.88 FEET, CLEAR & 53 DEGREES
Bass fishing is fair and use spoons, jigs and worms. Look for the bass in the mouths of the main lake and main river creeks. The lower lake creeks are clearing and the blue and silver crank baits have been working for anyone that is trolling. Down lake use the 3/8 ounce jigs in black and silver with a small pork. Fish any bank cover with the crank bait all the way to the boat working the lures slowly in cover. Also use the Carolina rig with a small Zoom lizard on the loner points down lake. Find any warming water in the northwest coves later in the afternoons. Up the rivers, use a Gator Tail worm in dark colors and add a Venom glass rattle and flip and pitch any wood. The fish are tight on wood and look around blow downs in the major creeks. See our web site for Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass DVD on sale.
January 6, 2012
LAKE SEMINOLE IS DOWN ONE FOOT, CLEAR, 55 DEGREES BY MATT BATY
Bass fishing is good. His month the best search bait to use is lipless crank bait such as a Spro Aruku Shad 75 in MudBug Red. You don’t have to change the hooks on this bait because it comes out of the package with number 2 Mustad. We have been having more success by allowing this bait to sink all the way to the bottom before retrieving. It will get hung up in the grass, but with a good rod and some 20 lb. Sunline FC Sniper, you can fish it and rip it free from the hydrilla. Some of the hydrilla will still be alive, and some dead. If the fish aren’t biting in the ditches, then start moving up on the flats and fishing the shallower water. A good bait for the flats is the New Spro Fat John in Nasty Shad. This bait allows you to fish a little slower and more methodical. The flats will be pretty thick with grass, so you can slow down and even stop the bait when you feel grass so that it will float up and out of the hydrilla. This is a deadly technique for cold water bass. With the warmer days ahead, look for the fish to start moving into the backwater to spawn. When this occurs, the flipping bite will start to get really good. Look for dead vegetation such as hyacinths and flip a Big Bite Baits 4" Yo Momma in Hematoma on a 1 ounce Tungsten and a New 5/0 Gamakatsu Flipping Hook. Use at least 60 pound. Sunline Braid. Learn how to use the Lowrance Structure Scan and Down Scan technology with Southern Fishing On the Water fishing schools.
January 6, 2012
LAKE GEORGE IS DOWN .8 FEET, 58 DEGREES AND CLEAR
Bass are changing daily with the weather. Some fish have made a move up shallow while most fish are still out deep. The shallow fish are biting Spro Aruku Shad Jr.’s on main lake hydrilla flats in 4 to 6 feet of water. The bites are coming when you rip the Aruku Shad through the patches of hydrilla. Good fluorocarbon is a must when ripping the trap through the hydrilla because it cuts through the hydrilla better than regular monofilament. There is also a jig bite going on up the river around River Bend. Throw a Spro K finesse jig in black blue with a green pumpkin Big Bite Baits trailer on steeper channel swing banks. The bites have been coming as close as you can flip a jig to any cover. When the cold front hits mid next week look for the fish to back out to the first drop off and the deeper bite to be the more reliable bite. Throw a Carolina rig with a 7" Kriet Tail worm in tilapia or a Picasso football jig on the first drop off around the hydrilla flats. The deep fish can still be caught on jigging spoons in 25 to 35 feet of water up the lake around Cowikee Creek. Look for bait off the edge of the ledges and the bass will be suspended below the bait. Good electronics are a must when fishing for these fish. We teach ON THE WATER SCHOOLS for SONAR and Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass. Call for details. Call for details.
January 6, 2012
LAKE WEISS IS DOWN 5.70 FEET, 45 DEGREES & STAINED
Now available for sale 50 of my proven GPS waypoints for off shore structure for Bass and Crappie fishing on Weiss Lake, Alabama. E mail ken@havefunfishing.com
Bass fishing is fair and the bass have moved to a deeper winter pattern, some Bass are being caught on rip rap rocks on jigs. A Carolina rig is working well for the deeper fish on main lake points and ledges. Very few largemouth are being caught, most all are spots. Little River and the Chattooga River are producing some great spot fishing with a lot of 2 to 4 pound fish, A drop shot rig with a 4 inch craw or a mini fluke is working most any deeper rocky river channel ledge. The smaller spots are up shallow on the rocks and the larger Spots are on the deeper parts of the ledge 10 to 16 feet deep.
Striper fishing is poor and the fish are due to turn on any day.
Crappie fishing is fair and the fish are starting to bite again on the old river ledges in 8 to 16 feet of water. Spider rigging with live minnows is producing and the float and fly is also producing well. The Chattooga River is producing a lot of under size fish with a few keepers. Little Spring Creek is producing some crappie long line trolling with 1/24 ounce Jiffy Jigs in 4 to 8 feet of water, a float and fly is also working well in the stumps in Little Spring Creek. The bays near Riverside are producing some crappie long line trolling also.
January 6, 2012
LAKE SINCLAIR IS DOWN 1.82 FEET, 58 DEGREES, MOSTLY STAINED.
Bass fishing is fair. The rivers are heavily stained and its best to fish down lake. Work the heavy brush on points and docks on the lake. Use the Stanley dark green or all black 1/2 ounce jig and a larger Bo Hawg pork trailer, on the heavy cover. This is a great dock lake all year and especially mid fall into the winter. Just pick a creek and work every dock. Little River is also a great area for fall fishing with a bone or parrot colored crank bait. Cast a dark red and black Texas rigged Berkley Power worm in the larger sizes slowly worked on the docks on the lower lake. Slow roll a willow leaf blade combo in golds on points. Use larger dark worms over the grass and around docks can get a strike, but later each day with the warming waters. We teach ON THE WATER SCHOOLS for SONAR and Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass. Call for details. Call for details.
January 6, 2012
LAKE OCONEE IS FULL, 50 DEGREES.
Bass fishing is fair. The main lake is clear and stained to muddy up the rivers. The cold fronts have moved the fish tight to cover. A brown blue jig with a claw trailer has been working under boat docks and around wood structure. Start in the middle of the coves and creeks and work your way to the back. As the suns heats up the water during the day the fish will move to the back of the docks. A square bill crank bait worked along the rip rap has also been producing some extra fish. This works best in the afternoon and if Georgia Power is moving water.
Lake Oconee Line Side report brought to you by Mark Smith at Reel Time Guide Service. 404-803-0741. wwwreeltimeguideservice.com
Line side fishing is good. Over the past week the umbrella rig bite has taken off. The fish are on the south end of the lake in the mouths of the major creeks. We have been pulling a 4 arm 100 feet behind the boat. It is running about 15 feet deep. The spoon bite is starting to take off. The Capt. Macks spoons are out producing the others. Look for bait on your Lowrance and drop you spoon into the schools of bait. The stripers are under the bait. Stripers only feed up so keep your bait above the fish.
Crappie fishing is good. The fish are in the middle of most creeks and big coves. Spider rigging is working as well as finding the fish on your Lowrance and dropping live bait to them. Tip your jig with a minnow to increase your bite. Lick Creek and Sugar Creek have been out producing most of the other creeks. We will be starting my crappie trips this month. Give me a call and we will try and fill your cooler with big slabs. Remember to stop by Sugar Creek Marina for all your bass and striper needs. They have Capt. Macks umbrella rigs in stock along with the Capt. Mack spoons. Remember to come to the Atlanta Boat show for the free fishing seminars. Mark will be there on Thursday January 12, 2012 at 4 pm hosting a seminar on fishing on Lake Oconee. We teach ON THE WATER SCHOOLS for SONAR and Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass. Call for 770-889-2654 for details.
January 6, 2012
JACKSON LAKE IS DOWN 4.51 FEET, LIGHT STAIN & 51 DEGREES
Bass are biting better mid day. Go into the creeks up lake in the rivers for active bass. In the rivers, the bass are on the ends of shallower river points and deeper stump rows. On the main lake points and around the dam, use the shad colored Zoom Flukes over deep standing timber. A Zara Spook is good in blue shad or baby bass. All green trick worms in the stained water in creeks have been fair. Use a dark red and black Gilraker worm on a Texas rig on wood and brush very tight bank and river structure, can draw a strike. Cast or flip the river docks and shallow bank with a Zoom motor oil lizard. Sea walls mid lake are good place to use the Fish Head Spins with a small pearl Zoom fluke trailer. Use the lighter Sufix Elite line in the ten pound test and slowly reel this bait back to the boat right on the bottom. We teach ON THE WATER SCHOOLS for SONAR and Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass. Call for details. Call for details.
Our DVD, Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass are now on sale for only $ 25.00 including shipping. Send a check payable to Southern Fishing Schools Inc. to: Southern Fishing Schools Inc to 106 Hickory Ridge Drive, Cumming Georgia. Please allow 14 days for delivery.
The 2012 Atlanta Boat Show is January 12-15, 2012 at the Georgia World Congress Center. Come and see our fishing seminars. www.atlantaboatshow.com
fs
The Great Southern Fishing Show will be held at the North Atlanta Trade Center January 21-22, 2012. We have shallow water seminars; fly fishing, guide trips and much more. Seminars will be posted soon.
Ken Sturdivant, Lowrance Professional Fishing Staff will be conducting FREE! Sonar Seminars at Bass Pro Shops Outdoor World in Lawrenceville Georgia. The BASICS OF SONAR seminars are held on the last Saturday of each month at 2pm. All seminars are subject to change without notice.
If you would like to have a free set up sheet for your sonar, send me an e mail to kensturdivant@earthlink.net and ask for the Sonar Setup Quick List. See the new Lowrance machines at www.lowrance.com. Lowrance Announces HDS Gen2. See them in action at Bass Pro Shops in Lawrenceville this Saturday from noon until 5pm.
We have these BASS FISHING books for sale: BASS FISHING LAKE LANIER, BASS FISHING LAKE ALLATOONA, BASS FISHING WEST POINT LAKE, BASS FISHING LAKE RUSSELL, BASS FISHING WEST POINT LAKE and BASS FISHING LAKE HARTWELL. These books are written exclusively for Bass and each book covers every week of the year. Each book $ 39.00. If you would like a sample of any book, send us an e mail to kensturdivant@earthlink.net. Our mailing address is: Southern Fishing Schools Inc. 106 Hickory Ridge, Cumming Georgia 30040.
Copyright 2012, Southern Fishing Schools Inc. calls us to set up a school, Maps and Depth Finders or SONAR and Rods, Reels and Lures for Bass. Call for details.www.havefunfishing.com 770 889 2654.
The Great Southern Fishing Show is for fly fishing, shallow water and light tackle folks and will be at the North Atlanta Trade Center, January 21-22, 2012. Fly and Conventional Fishing gear at discount prices. Learn how to fish or hone your skills. Demo the latest rods and reels. Meet expert guides and learn what bait or fly to tie to catch any fish. Freshwater and saltwater vendors on site. Learn from the experts all weekend. FEATURES: KIDS 12 & UNDER FREE! Seminars: Twenty fly fishing & spinning tackle pros will be giving presentations for all types of fishing on the lakes, streams, and ocean. Fly Tying Presentations: Twelve expert fly tiers on site to tie and give you expert tips for the perfect fly. Casting Demonstrations: Ten expert instructors sharing their knowledge on the casting pond. Bring the Kids- 12 & UNDER ARE FREE! Casting classes will be available for the kids! Simms Product RV: On site all weekend with the latest merchandise. GUESTS: Our speakers will be talking about all kinds species for fresh and saltwater fishing: Ken Sturdivant: Lake Lanier guide and Lowrance Pro Staff instructor see the latest GEN2 Lowrance machines Andy Mill: Author of A Passion for Tarpon and winner of a record eleven tarpon tournaments. ONeill Williams: Star of ONeill Outdoors- bass and striper fishing techniques for the Spring. Henry Cowen: Nationally renowned fly & light tackle fishing guide. Also at the show: Deb Bowen, David Edens, Jimmy Harris, Jimbo Mathley, Tim Ivey, Kent Edmunds, Abby Jackson, John Rice and more! HOURS: Saturday 9-5, Sunday 10-5 TICKETS: Adults 17+ $ 8, Kids 13-16 $ 4, CHILDREN 12 & UNDER FREE SPECIAL FAMILY PASS: 2 Adults & Up to 4 Kids for ONLY $ 20. See the seminar schedule at www.northatlantatradecent.com
Sport Fishing Forums – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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The Great Southern Fishing Show 2012
Check out OUT YOUR SEMINAR Instances FOR YOUR SEMINARS AT WWW.NORTHATLANTATRADECENTER.COM
MARK YOUR CALENDAR NOW!
THE Excellent SOUTHERN FISHING Show FOR FLY, SHALLOW H2o, & LIGHT TACKLE Enthusiasts
Coming to The North Atlanta Trade Middle, January 21-22, 2012.
NOT JUST FOR THE FLY FISHERMAN! ALL Varieties OF FISHING GEAR ON Internet site!
Fly and Standard Fishing gear at low cost rates.
Learn how to fish or hone your skills. Demo the newest rods and reels.
Fulfill specialist guides and understand what bait or fly to tie to catch any fish.
Freshwater and saltwater suppliers on internet site. Find out from the authorities all weekend.
SEMINAR Schedule HAS JUST BEEN POSTED ON WWW.NORTHATLANTATRADECENTER.COM
Attributes: Youngsters 12 & Below Free!
Seminars: Twenty fly fishing & spinning tackle professionals will be supplying presentations for all varieties of fishing on the lakes, streams, and ocean.
Fly Tying Presentations: Twelve skilled fly tiers on site to tie and give you professional tips for the excellent fly.
Casting Demonstrations: Ten professional instructors sharing their information on the casting pond.
Provide the Youngsters- 12 & Underneath ARE Totally free! Casting lessons will be offered for the kids!
Simms Product RV: On site all saturday and sunday with the newest merchandise.
Visitors: Our speakers will be talking about all types species for new and saltwater fishing:
Ken Sturdivant: Lake Lanier guide and Lowrance Pro Team instructor see the most up-to-date GEN2 Lowrance machines
Andy Mill: Author of A Passion for Tarpon and winner of a record eleven tarpon tournaments.
ONeill Williams: Star of ONeill Outside- bass and striper fishing tactics for the Spring.
Henry Cowen: Nationally famous fly & light tackle fishing guidebook.
Also at the show: Deb Bowen, David Edens, Jimmy Harris, Jimbo Mathley, Tim Ivey, Kent Edmunds, Abby Jackson, John Rice and much more!
Hrs: Saturday 9-five, Sunday ten-five
TICKETS: Grownups 17+ $ eight, Youngsters 13-16 $ 4, Children 12 & Beneath Free
Special Household PASS: two Grownups & Up to 4 Young children for ONLY $ twenty
Activity Fishing Forums – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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Free Fishing Oceanography Seminar Beaufort January 12 at 7pm
WHO: MITCHELL A. ROFFER, PH.D., PRESIDENT OF ROFFS
WHEN: THURSDAY JANUARY 12, 2012 AT 7:00 PM (SOCIAL HOUR AT 6:00PM)
Where: RADIO ISLAND MARINA, BEAUFORT, NC
Roffers Ocean Fishing Forecasting Services, Inc. (ROFFS) and Radio Island Marina of Beaufort, NC (Monthly bill and Jane Newbern) are inviting you and your fishing pals and household to an evening seminar. Dr. Mitchell A Roffer (Ph.D.), President will be presenting an casual chat on how you can simply use fisheries oceanographic info to boost your catch rates. This is not a ROFFS infomercial, but a science discuss reviewing factors on how fish are influenced by the formation, situation, and place of their favored habitats. Such subjects as availability, vulnerability and catchability, in phrases of water temperature, salinity, density, dissolved oxygen, clarity/turbidity, color and bottom construction will be considered. He will examine which elements of the preferred habitats are most crucial in the waters off North Carolina for tuna, marlin, kingfish, wahoo, and dolphin.
The favorite habitat and catchability principles will be connected to distinct tactics and techniques that anglers really should get gain of to improve their catch prices. Roffer will describe how ocean convergence zones and their stability is crucial in forming concentrations of baitfish and locating concentrations of feeding fish. The importance of understanding local and regional ocean circulation and h2o mass boundaries will be stressed. Differences in the course of rotation of eddy functions and fish catchability will be part of the seminar. He will give a essential evaluation of some of the far more frequent strategies that are presently being employed to research for successful fishing grounds by local region fishermen, as nicely as, by others employing social networks, satellites, other oceanographic knowledge and models.
The audience will be proven how they can locate and use satellite data to comprehend the drinking water circulation to improve their catch rates. Roffer will highlight the methods needed to attain this, as nicely as, the difficulties and limitations when making use of satellite info along with the typical errors when trying to interpret the imagery. He will also evaluation some of the satellite fisheries oceanographic study and operational operate that he have been concerned with at ROFFS, NASA and NOAA, Office of Homeland Stability (such as search and rescue), and various state and federal environmental defense businesses (hazardous components checking).
Roffer, the founder of ROFFS, has a doctorate (biological oceanography fisheries oceanography) from the renowned College of Miamis Rosenstiel College of Maritime and Atmospheric Science. He was selected yet again (8th 12 months) to be on the prestigious, worldwide NASA Earth Sciences Biodiversity and Ecological Forecasting Science Group and participates as portion of the NASA Ocean Coloration and Sea Surface area Temperature Science Teams. He serves on the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors of the Southeast United States Coastal Ocean Observing Regional Affiliation (SECOORA), the Merchandise and Solutions Committee of the Gulf of Mexico Coastal Ocean Observing Regional Association (GCOOS), and is Chairman of the Florida COOS Consortium. Roffer is an Adjunct Professor at the Florida Institute of Technologies, Division of Maritime and Environmental Systems in Melbourne, FL.
There will be a social hour starting up at six:00 PM and a question and reply time period at the finish of the 60-75 second seminar. RSVP not necessary, but we suggest you arrive prior to the seven:00 PM begin of the seminar as seating is minimal. The Radio Island Marina is located on 156 Radio Island Road, Beaufort, NC 28516 which is south of Route 70 (Arendell St) just east of Morehead City, NC. There is no
charge for this insightful seminar. Some cold refreshments will be provided.
Activity Fishing Discussion boards – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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South Carolina DNR saltwater fishing report 12-29
Saltwater Fishing Tendencies:
(Sporadic reporting because of to winter problems)
Little River – Grand Strand – Charleston – Beaufort – Tides – S.C. maritime recreational fishing rules (PDF file). Saltwater Fishing License site.
Fishing trends courtesy www.SCFishingReport.com. Check the site for recent updates and in depth reports.
Tiny River
No new report
Grand Strand
No new report
Charleston
Offshore: Haddrell’s Point studies bottom fishing carries on to constitute the greater part of the offshore fishing reviews lately, but a few boats did make it out to do some trolling the past week and reported back again that there are even now a couple of wonderful wahoo hanging in 150-250 ft, specially if you can uncover a great "edge" with a temperature break on it. There are sound studies of grouper that have been coming from ninety-160 ft with some good triggerfish mixed in when you drop down some smaller baits.
Beaufort
Spottail Bass: Great to extremely very good. Bay Street Outfitters in Beaufort reviews that redfish are schooled up in massive winter colleges and sight fishing at very low tide in skinny drinking water is catching fish. On the fly LC Shrimp and Razzmatazz designs are working, and on spinning tackle reside shrimp, Redfish Magic, and Gulp! are effective. When the drinking water is moving on the soaring or falling tide fish can be caught around shell points and on the sides of creek drains in which they can ambush prey with out expending considerably power. On the dropping tide fishing along the edges of the grass can be quite good. Captain Dan "Fishin’ Coach" Utley in Hilton Head studies that when the wind lays down on the flats fish will be located in massive universities and will feed very properly on very low tide or when the h2o is out of the grass. Quarter ounce jigs or gold spoons are really successful. On higher drinking water fish the edges of the grass with reduce mullet, Gulp! Shrimp or mud minnows on a rattling cork and 18 inch leader. Equally incoming and outgoing tides are strong. When the wind is as well negative to fish on the flats fish can be caught in the backs of some creeks with steep banking institutions and fallen trees in the h2o on the final two hours of the outgoing and initial two hrs of the incoming. Mud minnows and Gulp! Shrimp fished on the bottom are excellent in this circumstance.
Sport Fishing Discussion boards – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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South Carolina DNR freshwater fishing report 12-29
Fishing Information
Mountains Area
Piedmont Area
Midlands Area
Santee Cooper System
SC Freshwater Fishing Regulations (Adobe PDF)
Purchase a fishing license
Boat Ramp Locations
State Fish Consumption Advisories
StriperFishing trends courtesy www.SCFishingReport.com. Check the site for recent updates and detailed reports.
Mountains Area
Lake Jocassee: (unchanged from Dec. 22)
Trout: Fair. Captain Steve Pietrykowski reports that fish can still be caught in the main lake, but the best concentration of fish will be found up the rivers. Troll from the surface down to 50 feet with live bait, including free lines far back from the boat, planer board rigs, and weighted baits at a variety of depths.
Black Bass: Fair. Captain Pat Bennett reports that bait and bass remain in the creeks and rivers. Try targeting bass related to shoreline cover proximate to deep water, where they can be caught on shakey head worms and crankbaits. As water temperatures drop further and fish move into a winter pattern the best action will come fishing over deep water for suspended fish. Look for bait schools on your graph, and then lower down a jigging spoon or drop shot rig.
Lake Keowee: (unchanged from Dec. 22)
Largemouth and Spotted Bass: Fair to good. Guide Brad Fowler reports that fish are still running bait up on main lake points, where there is sporadic topwater activity. Its hard to catch these fish on topwater lures, and jerkbaits and scrounger heads have been more effective for targeting them. Fish can be caught up the lake shallow and in the creeks, but Brads boat is catching most of its fish around deepwater structure. Jigging spoons have been working well, and drop shotting as well as fishing shakey head worms will both work.
Lake Hartwell: (unchanged from Dec. 22)
Black Bass: Good. Guide Brad Fowler reports that fish remain spread out, and bass continue to be caught on a variety of techniques. Because of the warm late fall/early winter temperatures more fish remain shallow than usual and its possible to catch fish on jigs, spinnerbaits, scrounger heads and other lures around shallow cover. Fish can be caught shallow in main lake pockets, at the mouths of creeks and partway back in the creeks. There continues to be a good deep bite, and in 25-40 feet of water fish are being caught on shakey head worms.
Striped and Hybrid Bass: Fair. Captain Bill Plumley reports that striper fishing is improving, and he is catching most of his fish relatively shallow in 0-35 feet of water. Fish are spread out, with plenty of fish up the big rivers and some in the creeks. Pulling umbrella rigs and following the birds is the most efficient way to locate fish.
Crappie: Fair to good. Captain Bill Plumley reports that crappie continue to feed pretty well around brush and bridge pilings. Fish minnows and jigs 15-20 feet down over brush or around bridge pilings in 20-25 feet of water.
Catfish: Fair. Captain Bill Plumley reports that decent numbers of channel catfish are being caught in 18-20 feet of water on cut herring and nightcrawlers. A few big blue catfish are also starting to show up in the creeks where they can be caught in 7-25 feet of water with cut gizzard shad, but water temperatures have not dropped enough for the bite to get hot.
Piedmont Area
Lake Russell: (unchanged from Dec. 22)
Black Bass: Good to very good. Guide Wendell Wilson reports that the bass pattern remains very similar, and bass are feeding well around bait schools 20-25 feet deep in large coves in the mid-lake. Whether the coves have brush or not is unimportant the presence of bait schools is the key. Drop shot rigs fished just off the bottom and baited with a plastic worm or live minnows will produce, and jigging spoons are also working. Another good pattern is fishing around flooded standing timber at the same depths (20-40 feet) where the bait is holding. Texas rigs and jigging spoons will both catch fish.
White and yellow perch: Good. Guide Wendell Wilson reports that fishing minnows just off the bottom in 25-30 feet of water, particularly in the lower lake around the mouth of the Rocky River, is the best pattern. Yellow perch are showing up in good numbers. Perch make of part of a mixed bag right now and will be caught along with bass and crappie.
Crappie: Fair to good. Guide Wendell Wilson reports that the crappie are mixed in with the bass and perch around bait schools in large mid-lake coves. Fish minnows to target crappie. Catfish: Fair. Guide Wendell Wilson reports that the best bet for catfish is fishing on the bottom around the large bait schools found in major coves. Anchor and put out cut herring offerings on the bottom, and dont be afraid to chum to draw in the cats. Lately catfish catches have been a bit off.
Striped bass: Fair. Guide Wendell Wilson reports that gulls have arrived on Lake Russell, and so there are visual clues to locate the bait and striped bass. Strong gull and striper activity has been seen in the Beaverdam area. Casting plugs or pulling free lined live herring remains the best technique.
Lake Thurmond: (unchanged from Dec. 22)
Crappie: Good to very good. Captain William Sasser reports that crappie are feeding well in the mid-lake area and the South Carolina Little River. Pulling minnows and jigs along the edges of the creek channels 15 feet down in 20 feet of water is producing.
Striped and Hybrid Bass: Good. Captain William Sasser reports that fish are feeding better up the lake towards the pumping stations and in the Raysville area. Buffalo Creek and the South Carolina Little River have also been strong. Good numbers of 8-12 pound fish have been caught pulling planer boards and free lines, and fish have also been caught fishing down lines 12-15 feet deep in 15-30 feet of water.
Black bass: Fair. Buckeye Lures in Augusta reports that bass are starting to move into a typical winter pattern on Clarks Hill. Fish are in ditches 15-25 feet deep where they can be caught on lead head fluke rigs, spin blades and possibly Alabama rigs. Fish are spread out all over and not especially active.
Lake Wylie: (unchanged from Dec. 22)
Catfish: Very good. Captain Rodger Taylor reports that winter catfishing on Lake Wylie is turning into a premier fishery, and fish are getting bigger and can be found spread out from dam to dam. Warmer air temperatures have kept the water temperatures from dropping as much as last winter, but shortened days and cooler water temperatures are still pulling fish deeper. Channel catfish can be caught on cut bait fished both deep and shallow, and blue catfish are roaming from the riverbed to ledges to shallow structure like points and humps. However, they still relate to the river more often than not. Dont overlook the warm water discharges which can offer some of the best fishing on the lake at this time of year.
White perch: Very good. Captain Rodger Taylor reports that white perch fishing is the most consistent that it has been in months, and fish are feeding in open water on the edges of humps 25-30 feet deep. Fishing small minnows on a modified Sabiki rig is the best technique.
Largemouth Bass: Good. FLW Professional and Guide Matt Arey reports that most of the bass are making their way back towards the main lake following the bait schools, and most are now about mid-way back in the creeks. Some have already arrived back in the main lake. Finding the shad is the key to finding the fish. Spoons and grubs fished around bait will catch fish, and most fish are suspended from the middle of the water column to the bottom in 15-30 feet.
Midlands Area
Lake Greenwood:
Catfish: Good. Captain Chris Simpson reports that drifting is the best way to put quantities of fish in the boat, while anchoring may lead to higher quality fish. The fish are holding very close and down in the river channel, and the upper half of the lake where the channel ranges from 20-30 feet has been most productive. Cut herring, gizzard and threadfin shad have been the most effective baits.
Crappie: Fair. Sportsman’s Friend reports that spider rig trolling in 6-15 feet of water has been most productive. Jigs have been outfishing minnows recently.
Lake Monticello:
Catfish: Good. Captain Chris Simpson reports that the big fish bite has been pretty good but should get even better in the coming weeks. Some big fish have been caught free line drifting and Santee-style drifting, but anchoring has been the most effective way to catch a trophy. 35-60 feet has been a good depth range, and some days the fish can get in a very narrow band such as 55-60 feet and fishing at any other depth can be a waste of time. Finding schools of bait balls on your depth finder is important, but finding bait balls that are smaller and more broken up (meaning fish are feeding on them) is more important. A variety of bottom structure has been productive, including deep flats, vertical ledges and everything in between. Gizzard shad, white perch, and crappie have all been good baits.
Lake Wateree:
Crappie: Good to very good. Will Hinson of the Southern Crappie Tournament Trail reports that crappie fishing remains strong on Lake Wateree. The best bite is from Dutchman’s Creek out towards the mid-river and up towards the dam at the top of the lake. Fish are all along the old river channel, and some days they are holding on top of the river ledge in 12-13 feet of water and other days they are flat on the bottom in 18-20 feet of water (particularly if the sun is high and bright). Fishing a maximum of 1-2 feet off the bottom has been a key, and both minnows and jigs are catching fish. Fish Stalker Jigs in Ugly Green and Pearl White have been working.
Lake Murray:
Catfish: Good. Captain Chris Simpson reports that the drift bite has been good and both blues and channel catfish have been feeding well. The best action has been in 30-40 feet of water, whether that depth is on a flat, a hump rising out of deeper water, or up a feeder creek in that range. Channels have been the bulk of the catch on flats, with blue catfish orienting to ledges near the flats and on the main river channel. Cut herring bas been the best bait, and a lot of striper are also being picked up.
Striped Bass: Good. Lake World reports that fish migrated up the lake towards the river a few weeks ago, and now many of the fish seem to have come back down and spread out along the north side of the lake. A variety of techniques will catch fish, including free lining live herring, downlining about 20 feet deep, trolling bucktails and fishing cut bait on the bottom. Be sure to look out for the birds and be ready to throw spoons and bucktails at schooling fish.
Shellcracker: Good. Lake World reports that the shellcracker bite is surprisingly good, including in very shallow water. Look for fish around points and fish worms on the bottom in 2-10 feet of water.
Crappie: Fair to good. Lake World reports that anglers are having success trolling minnows and jigs up the Little River and Big Saluda.
Largemouth Bass: No new report. Veteran bass angler Doug Lown reports that areas with rocky bottoms are producing much better than soft bottoms, probably because the food is there. Early morning working shakey head worms off secondary points is a good bet, and after the sun starts to get up fishing a worm or jig around docks may produce. After water temperatures drop further the deep bite should get strong.
Santee Cooper System (unchanged from Dec. 22)
Catfish: Fair to good. Captain Jim Glenn reports that most days the blue catfish bite is fair to good, and fish are being caught in various depths from 4-10 feet on down to 50 feet. The concentrations may be greatest in deeper water. Both anchoring and drifting with fresh cut gizzard shad, menhaden, perch or mullet will catch fish in the right places. There have been recent reports of good night fishing for anglers willing to brave night time lows and winds.
Largemouth bass: Fair to good. Captain Jimmie Hair reports that the primary pattern remains similar. Fishing around eel grass with Gambler Super Studs and swimming jigs will catch fish, and in the swamp working square-billed crankbaits around cypress trees is effective. Soft plastics will also catch fish around trees. In the Cooper River sizes are still small, but when temperatures drop just a few more degrees some big bass should be caught on bucktails and jigs thrown at breaks in the rice fields.
Striped Bass: Fair to good. Captain Jim Glenn reports that anglers are catching plenty of striped bass in both lakes, but very few 26 inch fish are being landed. Perhaps 1 in 50 is a keeper for most anglers, but the good news is that striper appear plentiful and most are robust and healthy. Fishing 35-50 feet deep with live baits including big shiners and gizzard or threadfin shad is working, and anglers are also having success trolling and chasing schooling fish on the surface with jigs, spoons and surface plugs.
Crappie and Bream: Fair to good. Captain Steve English reports that the crappie and bream bite is still pretty good around offshore brushpiles, but the fish are in deeper brush. Bream are around brush in 12-18 feet, and crappie are around brush in 18-24 feet. At the next cold front the bites should pretty well shut down so enjoy the fish while they will take minnows and crickets!
Sport Fishing Forums – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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Off the Hook Charters report , Hilton Head 1-3
This redfish pictured over was the big fish of the early morning caught with The Groth Family!
The action held heading all afternoon with The Bowen Family members as properly and all of the fish right now
were genuinely massive fish ranging from five-10 lbs! What a fantastic New Calendar year Day!!
Off The Hook Charters
Hilton Head Island, SC
http://offthehookcharters.com/
Capt Brian Vaughn
843-298-4376
Activity Fishing Forums – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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Hilton Head fishing tours fishing report 12-26
A single OF OUR Social gathering FELT WOOSEY SO WE Determined TO Arrive IN. WE HAD NOT GOTTEN A BITE IN AN HOUR AND HAD MOVED 2 times. THE TIDE WAS JUST Commencing TO Occur IN — SO WE HEADED UP Wide CREEK TO SHELTER COVE. WE HAD TO WAIT FOR THE TIDE TO FLOAT OUR BOAT SO WE COULD GET INTO THIS FISHING HOLE.
Eventually, WE HAD Enough H2o. WE ANCHORED ON A Little Position AND Started out FISHING— One ON FLOAT- TWO PITCHING ARTIFICALS AND One ON BOTTOM WITH A Reside SHRIMP W/ A SPLIT SHOT. In thirty MINUTES,
HOWARD Picked UP THE 1st FISH. THERE WAS A Confined Provide OF SHRIMP AND NO DIP Web-As well as A Handful of MUD MINNOWS.THE SHRIMP Have been Challenging TO CATCH IN THE Are living Well.
FISHING WAS Great !!! DRESSED 6 Nice REDS ALL 18-22. ALSO, WE Launched 3 SPOTS About 24 AND 3 THAT Were Over 26. THE More substantial REDS Strike THE Dwell MUD MINNOWS FISHED ON THE BOTTOM.
Hilton Head Fishing Tours
Hilton Head- Bluffington, SC
Capt Gudger
843-705-5339
http://www.hiltonheadfishingtour.com
Activity Fishing Forums – North Carolina, South Carolina & Georgia Fishing
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