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Georgia Fishing Report: February 3, 2017

EAST AND WEST CENTRAL GEORGIA

(Reservoir Fishing Reports Courtesy of Southern Fishing with Ken Sturdivant.  See  http://www.southernfishing.com/current-fishing-report.html for most recent updates.)

LAKE RUSSELL IS FULL, CLEAR, 50’s 

Bass fishing is slow and the cold fronts are back this week.  Small jigs, lightweight Texas rigs and spinner baits are best on points half way in the backs of creek.  Watch for any shad activity on the surface or on the Lowrance Down Scan technology.  Bait is the key this week.  Bass are showing up in deep water and some in large schools.  Look for bass on the sides of main river points and flats.  Jigging spoons like a ½ ounce Flex It, Hopkins Shorty 45 and Bomber slab spoon can work.  Chrome, white, and chartreuse are the best colors to try along with gold during cloud cover.  Crank baits can work later in the day but keep them small and use light lines.  Take along a few jig-head and finesse worm, the Carolina rig and the drop shot rig as well as the jig and pig.

CLARKS HILL IS DOWN 9.44 FEET, 50’s

Bass fishing is slow but despite the tough weather conditions last week a few fish are biting.  Fish up in the Little River near the Raysville area.  A #5 Shad Rap can work as well as a jerk bait for spots and a few largemouth.  When the crank bait bite dies off use a spinning reel and 8-pound test Sufix Elite line and a jig-head with a Fat Albert grub.  If you plan to head up into the Little River be very careful.  The water levels are low and trees are showing up everywhere.  Look for schools of shad in the mouth of the coves and fish a Flex It spoon.  Find the bait and find some bass.  Fish this bait under the school of bait fish you find.  The better bite is coming as the sun warms up the rock

LAKE OCONEE IS FULL, THE LAKE IS CLEAR ON THE SOUTH END STAINED UP THE LAKE AND INTO THE RIVER TEMPERATURE 50-54

Bass fishing is fair.  Spinner baits fished in the creeks and coves shallow will produce fish.  White and chartreuse have been the best colors.  When Georgia Power is pulling water the same spinner bait will work on the bridge riprap (they have been pulling early in the mornings).  Small crank baits fished along the side of the docks in the middle of the coves out to the main lake will also produce.  You can also add fishing a rattle trap around any deep dock and around riprap early.  Jigs fished around wood structure have also produced some larger fish.

Striper report by Captain Mark Smith, Reel Time guide service.  Call 404-803-0741, reeltime@bellsouth.net

Striper fishing is good.  The fish are mid-lake around river bend.  Use your Lowrance to locate the large schools of bait and the stripers will be close by.  Look for the birds diving; if you see birds go fish them.  Live bait as well as spoons will produce large numbers of fish.  Watch for any shad activity on the surface or on the Lowrance Down Scan technology.  Bait is the key this week.

Crappie fishing is fair.  The fish are staging in the creeks.  Long lining jigs over the fish will produce good catches.  Spider rigging will also catch some fish.

WEST POINT LAKE IS DOWN 4.5 FEET, CLEAR & 60’S

Bass fishing is fair and more cold weather will slow the action.  The lake is coming up after some rain up north.  Now, finesse fishing is still the way to go.  Throw a Shakey head rigged with a 5-inch Senko in 12 to 18 feet of water on the river channels.  Color doesn’t seem to matter but Watermelon has been the color of choice.  Crank baits are still doing well but it seems like it has to be sunny and clear for the fish to really start eating it good.  Watch for any shad activity on the surface or on the Lowrance Down Scan technology.  Bait is the key this week.  The crank bait will need to be a #5 Shad Rap or a Lucky Craft MR in the natural shad colors.  Fish the rocks and any point that has red clay around them.  This seems to be a little bit warmer around these areas.  Jigging spoons are still working on the humps and road beds down lake.  A silver ½ ounce spoon is the best bait this week.

LAKE SINCLAIR IS DOWN 1.05 FEET, CLEAR, 50’S

Bass fishing is slow as the area took a hit this week with the cold weather state wide.  A pattern or location today may not produce very well the next day.  Riprap and other rocky banks are holding fish that are being caught with small to medium crank baits, jigs, and soft plastics.  Any shallow rocks should be located very near much deeper water.  Some good cranking choices are a Shad Rap RS #5, Thunder Shad, Deep Little N, Rapala DT10, and Fat Free Shad #5 & #6.  Anglers should experiment with chartreuse, shad, and silver patterns.  Jigs should be in the ¼ to 3/8 ounce sizes with a plastic or pork trailer.  A Zoom Pro Chunk or a #11 Uncle Josh pork chunk will both work.  For soft plastics, try a Zoom finesse worm with a 1/8 ounce weight rigged Texas style or the same worm on a 1/8 or 3/16 ounce jighead.

LAKE JACKSON IS DOWN 1.16 FEET, 50’s

Bass fishing is slow.  With the water temperatures ranging cold, finding bites is tough.  Still, a small number of bass will bite as the spots are the best bet on the lake.  Spots are more tolerant to the cold waters.  Fish the lower lake and take a variety of baits.  Worms and various other forms of plastic are best.  Fish light line on sea walls and any wood and then after midday go to the deep diving crank baits while working points and deep ledges off the points.  Wood will be the key as the colder waters are forcing them to hang tight.  Suspending bass are located just off main lake or river points in 15 to 20 feet of water.  Good lures to catch these suspending bass are the #5 jointed Shad Rap in the red crawfish color and the perch color Bandit.  Some bass were caught last weekend on these baits.  Any and all brush piles or stump beds that re holding fish need a good application of both the crank bait and Shakey head and worm combo.

FLAT CREEK PUBLIC FISHING AREA

Notice: The main parking area and boat ramp are temporarily unavailable due to a resurfacing project. The job should be completed by 12 Noon on Mon. Feb. 6. Detours to lake available, but the boat ramp will not be open until resurfacing is complete.

Resurfacing project underway at Flat Creek PFA parking lot

Surface Temperature: 60˚ F (15.6˚ C)

Water Level: 6’ 6” Below Full Pool

Water Visibility: 13”

With the heavy rain that we have had lately, the lake level is finally starting to rise up to previous levels.  While the lake was down, numerous fish attractors were placed around the lake providing great habitat and opportunities to possibly catch fish.  In between rains there have been several anglers catching crappie, and those fishing for catfish have not typically left disappointed with their catch.  The bream like the largemouth bass have been a little sluggish, and have required a little patience and a slow retrieval.

Additional information at http://www.gofishgeorgia.com/PFA/FlatCreek

MARBEN PUBLIC FISHING AREA 

Water temps. : High 40’s –Low 50’s

Additional Information:  http://www.georgiawildlife.com/PFA/CharlieElliott 

Licenses Required at a PFA:

FISHING

GENERAL ACCESS

To access a PFA for non-fishing activities, visitors age 16-64 must have one of the following (visitors under age 16 and/or over age 64 are exempt):

BUY A FISHING LICENSE HERE!

SOUTHEAST GEORGIA

(Fishing report courtesy of Bert Deener, fisheries biologist with Georgia DNR Wildlife Resources Division)

Fishing reports were few this week with the bad storms and rains. Saltwater and ponds produced some good reports, but the rivers (other than the St Marys) are too high. The high water will help the panfish populations for the spring fishing. New Moon is January 27th. To monitor all the Georgia river levels, visit the USGS website http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ga/nwis/rt.

ALTAMAHA RIVER – The river is flooded at Baxley and much higher than I would fish it in the Jesup area. Connie at Jaycee Landing Bait and Tackle reported that some crappie were caught in Morgan Lake (there is a ramp in the lake) by anglers using minnows. The Darien area is fishable, as the river spreads out in that area. You can catch channel, white, and blue catfish by putting cut baitfish or shrimp on the bottom. The river level was 13.5 feet (flood stage is 13ft) and rising (60 degrees) at the Baxley gage, and 10.6 feet and rising (59 degrees) at the Doctortown gage on January 24th.

SATILLA RIVER – The river is well into the floodplain. Don’t try it this week. Brentz McGhin went before the rains (the river was 8 feet at Waycross), and pitched minnows to land 9 bass (6 keepers to 3 1/2 pounds) and a big crappie. He also pitched crickets for a little while and caught 3 redbreasts and 4 bream. The river level on January 24th at the Waycross gage was 14.0 feet and rising (61 degrees) and at the Atkinson gage was 10.6 feet and rising.

ST. MARYS RIVER – This is the only river in pretty good shape. The few anglers that reported back (they fished on Tuesday) caught bream, catfish, and a few crappie. If you want to fish a river this weekend, the St. Marys is your best bet. To catch about anything put worms on the bottom. If you want to target catfish exclusively, shrimp will probably produce a little better. The river level at the MacClenny gage on January 24th was 4.0 feet and falling.

OKEFENOKEE SWAMP – With the quickly rising water, I would stay away from the swamp this weekend. Usually the fish spread out and don’t bite well after a quick rise, but after it stabilizes another few days they will bite again. During next week’s warm afternoons, expect the fliers to eat pink or yellow Okefenokee Swamp Sallies suspended under a small balsa float and pitched with a bream buster pole. Fish the connections between the prairies and the canal, as the fish use these connections like a highway.

LOCAL PONDS– Pond fishing was great this week. Chad Lee of Alma fished Friday and caught 12 bass. Two of them were over 5 pounds, but most were just over a pound. He caught only 2 on Saturday, and then landed a nice 6-pounder on Tuesday evening. Most of his fish were caught on a ZOOM Ol’ Monster worm, but several, including Tuesday’s 6-pounder, inhaled a spinnerbait. Andy Trocheck figured out the big bass on Tuesday. He dragged shiners around the pond and casted a sexy shad colored Capt. Bert’s Swim Jig while waiting for a shiner to flush. He ended up catching 11 bass, with the biggest (an 8.9-pounder) eating the swim jig. He said “Tuesday was an awesome day to be bass fishing!” Michael Winge of Winge’s Bait and Tackle in Waycross said that the crappie bite was good below pond spillways. The spillway at Lake Ware was especially productive. Anglers fishing there also caught bream, catfish, and bass. Bass will stack up in the spillways and hammer anything worked past them, but spinnerbaits and worms lead the list.

Andy Trocheck caught this 8.9 lb bass in a Tifton area pond on Tuesday using a Swim Jig (sexy shad color)

SALTWATER (GA Coast) – A couple of Waycross anglers fished the Brunswick area between storms on Saturday and landed almost 30 seatrout. They were casting Mama’s 14K Sea Shads skewered on Flashy Jigheads to catch their fish. This time of year you need to slow-roll the lures near the bottom, and the trout slam it when they commit. Michael Winge reported that nobody reported fishing during the storms this weekend. Mike and Trish Wooten of St. Simons Bait & Tackle said that trout and sheepshead were caught around the pier and under bridges, but the bad weather kept almost everyone away. You can monitor the marine forecast at www.srh.noaa.gov/jax/.

BEST BET: Winter has returned, and pond fishing will likely be your best bet. With the cold mornings, the afternoon bite will likely be best. Fish a plastic worm or spinnerbait deep in a pond to catch a nice bass. Crappie should still bite minnows under float if you drag them around the deepest parts of the pond. If you want to fish a river, catfishing on the St Marys should be a good bet.

 

NORTHEAST GEORGIA

(Report provided by Jeff Durniak, fisheries biologist with the Georgia DNR Wildlife Resources Division)

Rise Up!  We have a couple of big shows and some decent fishing weather this weekend, so you have a lot of great activities to choose from.  Remember the Gwinnett fly show on Friday and Saturday, and the Big Show – the Falcons on Super Bowl Sunday.  Reservoir and trout stream fans should have some better water temperatures and improved chances at catching fish this weekend, when compared to last week’s cold, windy conditions.  Here we go with this weekend’s menu:

ALLATOONA

Water levels: http://water.sam.usace.army.mil/actframe.htm

LANIER

Better Lanier Angler, Note the gulls and swirls! http://forum.gon.com/showthread.php?t=891697

DELAYED HARVEST – TROUT

Hmmm, it’s the first of the month.  GAWRD trout stocking coordinator John Lee Thomson hinted that truck engines are idling at our state and federal trout hatcheries,

https://www.facebook.com/ChattahoocheeForestNFH/photos/pcb.782909565180542/782907808514051/?type=3&theater

and that Y2K’s and woolly buggers might be even more effective for weekend warriors on Georgia’s DH streams…and Lake Tralyta, too.

Trout Fishing on the Delayed Harvest Portion of Toccoa River

Good luck.  May you score an improved fly cast from a Friday fly show instructor, a coolerful of Toona crappie on Saturday, and a Super Sunday with a Falcons win.  Have fun as you Rise Up to all of the wintertime opportunities here in north Georgia.  As always, thanks for buying your fishing licenses and TU car tags.

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