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Georgia Fishing Report: November 22, 2019

Thankful. So thankful. I hope as this week draws to a close and Thanksgiving Week begins, that you have the time to stop (even briefly) and enjoy it.

I hope it brings together family and friends, and (of course) food. Enjoy what you have been given. Hopefully, you are able to urge that family member or friend into spending a little time with you outside and do a little fishing. Make some memories!

On to our reports – this week we have reports from North and Southeast Georgia. Read up, bundle up and Go Fish Georgia!

NORTH GEORGIA

It’s less than a week until Thanksgiving, and it looks like Saturday’s forecast will likely put a damper on North Georgia fishing opportunities. For the die hards, the rain is inconsequential and only offers some excellent pre-front fishing conditions on Friday and Saturday morning. For others that will choose to dodge the deluge, the silver lining might be extra time in the garage or shop to prep your gear and tackle in hopes of better weather Thanksgiving week. Among so many things, one thing to be grateful for this Thanksgiving is this here fishin’ report, bringing you the latest fishing intel and advice complied just for you, courtesy of WRD fisheries staff, local guides, professional anglers, and everyone else with an interest in getting more folks out on the water more often, and catching more fish. Whether you’re dodging the upcoming weather, or dodging interstate traffic for the upcoming holidays, we hope you get out and put some of this fishin’ intel to good use at some point during your Thanksgiving break. Here it is:

RESERVOIRS 

North Georgia reservoir reports are brought to you courtesy of Ken Sturdivant, and other contributors specified below.

Lake Lanier is down 3.8 feet, clear, and 60’s.

Lanier GONtel:

Lake Allatoona is down 9.9 feet, clear, and 60’s. 

Lake Hartwell is down 4.2 feet, 60’s. –

Lake Weiss is down 3.6 feet, clear, and high-40’s. 

TROUT 

DH Reports:

Toccoa Tailwater & DH (by Cohutta Fishing Co.)The Toccoa Tailwater is fishing well! This time of year, I like to focus on subsurface presentations, but we’ve been seeing some smaller caddis and Blue Winged Olives, so bring along some dry flies with you. Bigger, size 6-10 Pat’s Rubber legs and stonefly patterns, BWO Nymphs like smaller pheasant tails, split case BWOs, and Galloup’s baetis, caddis patterns, and red, black, and cream midges will cover your natural patterns. Have some flashier patterns like lightning bugs and rainbow warriors as well. If you aren’t catching fish, chances are you need to adjust your depth – change your depth with your strike indicator and split shot any time there is a depth change on the bottom!

The streamer bite should be excellent especially on rainy and overcast days, so pack along a 6-8 weight with floating or intermediate fly line on low water. I like to throw flies that have a built in action (dungeons, zoo cougars, etc) on intermediate/streamertip lines to get them down without killing the action. I also like to use either heavily weighted flies or I will throw unweighted flies with 1/16 slip sinkers/heavy split shot (use the non-lead kind!) on a floating line with a 9-12 foot leader, as this allows the fly to sink quickly and fish at depth more effectively than sinking line when fishing shallow rivers like the Toccoa. If you’re not comfortable with big streamers, smaller dungeons, sparkle minnows, and wooly buggers thrown under an indicator work great! Keep your eye on the fly as well as the indicator if you dead drift a streamer and twitch it every so often.

The Toccoa Delayed Harvest has also been fishing well. The river is at good wading flow. Have a selection of egg and worm patterns, wooly buggers, hot bead pheasant tails/hare’s ears, Holy Grails, and sparkle minnows. I also like throwing out some flashier bugs like El Diablos and Rainbow Warriors. If you’re unfamiliar with the Delayed Harvest system, be sure to check out the blog post from last week HERE!

Chattahoochee River: Lanier tailwater’s brown trout are fishing really well this fall, as I’ve received many reports of some beautiful and hefty browns donning their fall spawning colors. Technicians Mark Rigglesford and Leon Brotherton have been out on the tailwater the past two weeks verifying anglers’ reports with electrofishing surveys of our own. Well, consider the reports verified, and then some! While they saw good numbers of quality fish at the dam, Settles, and Jones sites, they had to do a literal double take while netting these two trophy browns on a certain unnamed stretch of the Lanier tailwater! These 12.5 and 18 lb beauties were quickly weighed, measured, and then returned to the river to (hopefully) be caught by a lucky Georgia angler in the near future. Where exactly were these fish? As Dredger would put it, “I don’t believe I said.” 

Hatchery Reports: (from Buford trout hatchery manager Pat Markey) — Buford Hatchery continues to stock quality DH trout for anglers as we head into the holiday season. Keep in mind, a unique family-friendly activity for you to consider this holidays might be taking the family on a trout fishing excursion to one of our five DH streams (Amicalola, Smith, Hooch, Toccoa, and Chattooga). Just plan to leave the stringer behind!  Pictured, Kinsey Girard, our newest Fisheries Technician at Buford Trout Hatchery, stocks trout into the Delayed Harvest section of the Chattahoochee River at Pace’s Mill (Cobb Co.) Tuesday afternoon 11/19.

Other Trouting News:

“Waste Not, Want Not” — A few dead fish is an inherent part of all hatchery programs, but Buford Trout Hatchery has partnered with a local wildlife rehabilitator to put some of those inevitable mortalities to good use.  Melanie Herr, a licensed wildlife rehabilitator in Newton County, uses a portion of the hatchery’s fish mortalities to nourish several River Otters she is currently rehabbing near her home along the Yellow River. What better way to turn rainbow and brown-colored lemons into lemonade than to partner up and help rehabilitate our furry river friends down on the Yellow River.

Be Part of the Bucket Brigade: Final reminder that we need your help to stock delayed harvest trout in the Chattahoochee River! Our bucket stocking at Whitewater Creek (directions here) on the Chattahoochee River will be Tuesday, November 26 at 10:30 AM. The stocking truck should be arriving between 10:00 AM and 10:30 AM, and volunteers should bring a five-gallon bucket, waders, and a fishing pole for some post-stocking fun. These events are great for kids to have a chance to help get trout in the water and catch a few fish once they are stocked. We hope to see you there next week!

Ladies-Want to Learn to Fly Fish? For the ladies out there interested in the art of fly fishing, but simply don’t know where to start, Dredger highly recommends Fly Girl Fish as an entry to the sport. FGF is a platform for novice and seasoned female anglers to learn and share in their fly fishing experiences. A recent post on the blog even gives some great holiday gifting ideas for all fly fishers!

SOUTHEAST GEORGIA

(Fishing report courtesy of Bert Deener, fisheries biologist with Georgia DNR Wildlife Resources Division, with help from Region Staff and Local Experts) 

New Moon is November 26th. To monitor all the Georgia river levels, visit the USGS website HERE.  For the latest marine forecast, click HERE.

ALTAMAHA RIVER

The water was rising pretty fast and cooling this week, but anglers still caught some crappie. The best reports were from Jesup and Altamaha Park, and minnows in the backwaters produced the most bites. Jigs also produced some specks, especially before the front this weekend. Check with J.J. or Lance at Altamaha Park (912-264-2342) for the latest information. The river level was 4.0 feet and rising (56 degrees) at the Baxley gage, and 6.7 feet and rising (57 degrees) at the Doctortown gage on November 19th.

PARADISE PUBLIC FISHING AREA (near Tifton)-More Info HERE

Sherron Williams of Valdosta caught this 2-lb.,5-oz. crappie on a jig while fishing at Paradise Public Fishing Area on Monday. It earned him an angler award from the Georgia Wildlife Resources Division. He also caught an angler award brown bullhead during the trip.

Sherron Williams of Valdosta fished the area on Monday and had a trip to remember. Fishing a jig in one of the many lakes he landed a 2-lb., 5-oz. crappie that earned him an angler award from the Georgia Wildlife Resources Division of DNR. He wasn’t finished, though, as he earned another angler award by catching a 2-lb., 1-oz. brown bullhead catfish. The catfish ate a minnow. With the coming warm-up, expect the bass and bluegill fishing to pick up as well as the crappie fishing.

LOCAL PONDS

I only got a few reports this week from pond trips. One angler caught a bass on a crappie jig while targeting specks. He also lost a couple fish on crankbaits. Another angler fished Monday evening and had a good catch of bass on plastic worms. The crappie fishing was ok except right after the cold front passed this weekend. Winds kept most folks from trolling minnows in the open water of ponds. The crappie bite should be great in ponds during the warm-up late this week. Fish afternoons for the best bite.

LAKE BLACKSHEAR (NEAR CORDELE)

Crappie fishing late last week was very good for anglers fishing both minnows and jigs. Of course, with a big tournament coming, a strong cold front came in just ahead of the derby and slowed the bite. It was tough for the anglers fishing over the weekend, but this warming trend should have them biting well again. Minnows and jigs both should produce slabs.

SALTWATER (GA COAST)

Joshua and his father Shane put it on the seatrout, redfish, and sheepshead a couple weeks back while fishing the St. Marys area. They caught their fish on fiddlers, shrimp, and electric chicken plastics.

The cold front just in time for the weekend brought winds and colder temperatures. Even so, a few anglers got out and caught fish. On Monday a group fished out of Crooked River and caught a couple dozen seatrout and a few redfish. Winds kept most folks off the big water since last weekend, but the forecast is for winds to die back late in the week and temperatures to climb. If you can get out before the next cold front, the trout, redfish, and flounder bites should be great. Redfish are still in the sounds spawning, so give them a try from one of our piers if you like fishing for them. Expect cut bait on the bottom to fool the bull reds. The sheepshead bite should improve over the next few weeks, also. Check with Mike and Trish Wooten of St. Simons Bait & Tackle (912-634-1888) for the latest on the St. Simons Pier.

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