Site icon Georgia Wildlife Blog

Georgia Fishing Report: August 21, 2020

Walleye are rare on Toccoa. Most commonly found below Blue Ridge Dam.

Don’t you just love the guarantee of a weekend happening each week? The lure of those few “relaxing” days can really put some pep in that step as it gets closer. Yes, I know the lawn has to get mowed, groceries must be bought, cars must be washed…all those chores. But still…the thought of an upcoming weekend can really make the mind wander to all the things I WANT to do – like go fish somewhere!

News to Know:

This week, we have reports from Southeast and North Georgia. Satisfy that weekend wanderlust as you Go Fish Georgia!

SOUTHEAST GEORGIA

(Fishing report courtesy of Bert Deener, fisheries biologist and Region Fisheries Supervisor, with help from Region Staff and local experts)

First quarter moon is August 25th. To monitor all the Georgia river levels, visit the USGS website HERE. For the latest marine forecast, click HERE.

ALTAMAHA RIVER

The river has jumped back up and muddied some, but you should still be able to find some clearer water in the backs of the oxbow lakes. A group of anglers caught a good mess of bluegills from shoreline cover in the back of an oxbow in the Jesup area on Saturday. They were pitching crickets. Catfishing has been consistent in the rising and falling river. Put shrimp or worms on the bottom for channels, cut bait for blue cats, and live bait for flatheads. You can also run limb lines with good success right now for whiskerfish. The river level was 5.4 feet and falling (84 degrees) at the Baxley gage, and 6.7 feet and rising (86 degrees) at the Doctortown gage on August 20th.

SATILLA RIVER

The river rose again after recent rains and is falling back out to where you can expect to drag a boat over shallow areas for the weekend. Floating is your best bet right now, and you should start picking up panfish again if we don’t get rain between now and the weekend. Unfortunately, it has rained about the whole time I have been writing the report on Thursday night. The river level on August 20th at the Waycross gage was 6.2 feet and falling (81 degrees). The Atkinson gage was 5.8 feet and falling.

ST. MARYS RIVER

The river has started falling this week but has a long way to go before its back in good, fishable shape. Expect the tidal area to be the most fishable portion, and catfish would be your main target. Put shrimp, worms, or livers on the bottom for your best chance at success. The river level at the MacClenny gage on August 20th was 10.6 feet and falling after cresting at just shy of 14.5 feet earlier in the week.

LOCAL PONDS

Jason caught this and a bunch more nice brown bullheads from a Charlton County pond this week. Shrimp fooled the fish for him.

Chad Lee caught a few small bass on his fly rod over the weekend from Alma area ponds. His best day was Monday during his lunch break, when he fished a swamp crawler worm (baby bass hue). He ended up with 6 bass up to 3 pounds and had 3 others get off. That worm was the ticket in the Camden County pond. The catfish bite has been good for both bullheads and channel cats. Shrimp and worms have worked best for the folks I’ve talked with. During the dog-days, fish early and late in the day for the best bass and bream fishing and at night for catfish.

OCMULGEE PUBLIC FISHING AREA (near Hawkinsville, more info HERE)

The reports slowed some this week from the torrid pace of the last few weeks. I did not hear of any 10’s being caught, and the biggest bass I heard of was only a 4 1/2-pounder. But, I’m sure bigger fish were caught and I just did not hear about them. This area is your best shot at a trophy bass, but remember it is catch-and-release for the bass. Take a quick photo and release them, as it doesn’t take long out of the water to be lethal in this heat.

OKEFENOKEE SWAMP

According to Okefenokee Adventures staff, the swamp is still high and the fishing on the slow side. Bowfin fishing by casting an in-line spinner down the middle of the canal is still your best bet right now.  Check the Okefenokee Adventures website for the latest on their services.

SALTWATER (GA COAST)

Shane and Joshua Barber fished the Brunswick area on Saturday. They had 10 trout and 2 redfish, but only one of each was a keeper. Most fish were on live bait, but the reds ate dead shrimp for them. Fishing around oyster beds was the key for them. Capt. Greg Hildreth’s charters had some great tarpon fishing this week. Jim Mercer fished with him this week and went 2 for 4 with artificials. They caught them on a Bait Buster plastic rigged on a 1/2-oz. Tarpon Tamer Jighead (a jighead designed specifically for the BaitBuster and built on a strong Gamakatsu hook designed to hook and hold a giant tarpon). A pair of Waycross anglers fished the St Marys Jetties on Saturday and pitched bucktails for bull reds to no avail. They moved in some and threw Gulp shrimp on jigheads and caught a handful of flounder and a few black sea bass. Dominic and Luke Guadagnoli and Justin Bythwood fished the St Marys Jetties on Sunday and caught a dozen flounder up to a few pounds and 2 keeper black drum. They were using a 1/2-oz. jighead and mudminnows and live shrimp around the rocks. Luke broke off a MONSTER flounder before they could get the net under it. A Waycross angler fished Sunday afternoon in the Brunswick area and caught 4 black drum up to 18 inches and a whole host of other species on dead shrimp fished on a 3/16-oz. and 3/8-oz. Catfish Catcher Jighead. They fished around shells and docks for their fish. For guide trip information, call Capt. Greg Hildreth at (912) 617-1980 or check out his website. Check with the Jekyll Island Fishing Center (912-635-3556) for the latest on the Jekyll Island Pier or St. Simons Bait & Tackle (912-634-1888) for the latest on the St. Simons Pier.

NORTH GEORGIA

(Fishing report courtesy of Hunter Roop, fisheries biologist, with help from Region Staff and local experts)

Surprise, surprise, it is hot! Actually, it’s really hot, and the afternoon thunderstorms are making late-day fishing excursions a challenge. Best bet for calm, successful fishing has been to hit your favorite local waterbody early before the sun and the waves get up. The forecasted rain this weekend might put a damper on your fishing plans, but the heat and humidity will no doubt return and stick around for several more weeks, so plan to fish the summer patterns a while longer. Mountain trouting opportunities are plentiful thanks to abundant rains this summer, so if still water is not your thing, aim high and find some mountain jewels among the shady rhododendron. Or, you can hit up your local tailwater (think Blue Ridge, Lanier, or Hartwell) for a lower elevation trout fishing excursion. The typical summer patterns are in motion on the North Georgia reservoirs: catfish and panfish are active and fishing well, black bass are taking cover or seeking deeper structure, and the linesides are trying to find their comfort zone amidst an evolving summer environment. The options are there, and below are a handful or proven tactics to put fish on in the summer. Good luck to the kiddos returning to schooling this week, it’s obviously not going to be a “normal” school year, but it can still be great, fun, and productive. A fishing trip might be the perfect way to reward the kids (or, yourself) after a long week of in-person or virtual learning. Thanks for your purchases of fishing licenses, trout stamps, and TU vehicle tags. It’s anglers like you that help conserve and protect Georgia’s fishery resources for now and generations to come, and that’s something worth celebrating (see Sarah’s “Ode to Anglers” in the trout section below)!

RESERVOIR REPORTS

(North Georgia reservoir and reports are brought to you this week courtesy of GON and other contributors specified below)

LAKE LANIER IS 0.35 FEET OVER FULL POOL, THE MAIN LAKE AND CREEKS ARE SLIGHTLY STAINED & 80S.

Lanier water quality: (brought to you by Fisheries Biologist Hunter Roop): Vertical temperature & oxygen profiles were collected last week at three locations from Flowery Branch down to Buford Dam. Figures of these profiles can be accessed on Lake Lanier’s Fishing Forecast Map (click the most recent attachment on each temperature icon throughout the lake).  This information helps resource managers gather information about suitable striper habitat during stressful summer periods, and also helps anglers pursuing summer stripers. The vast majority of Lanier’s stripers (especially larger stripers) are now confined to the lower reservoir from Flowery Branch to Buford Dam. Target main stem and major creek channels from the Flowery Branch to the dam at depths of 25’ – 40’ to target stripers feeding at the thermocline. Tom Becker, President of the Lanier Striper Club, recently reported the deep bite has fallen off and this past week all of his stripers were caught in ~30’ of water over a shallow bottom (40’ – 50’). The recent cooler weather and rain might even open up some shallower habitat as the surface has cooled a bit, but expect to continue catching stripers at the thermocline until we start to see consistent fall-like temperatures, especially at night.    

LAKE HARTWELL IS 0.75 OVER FULL AND 80S.

Bass & Linesides:  Guide Preston Harden reports, “Hybrids and stripers have migrated to colder, oxygenated water from mid to lower lake. Good electronics are important to locate the schools of fish in the deep water. It is mostly hunting until you get on top of the school. A lively herring is hard to beat. Big spoons and swimbaits on a 1-oz. jig head also catch them. Bass also move to deeper water. Look for bass around brushpiles put out by other fishermen. You can make your own and have fish around it within days. Good places to look are around long points and humps. Look from 15 to 30 feet deep. The spots rule the lower lake. As the water gets hotter, the spots school up like the hybrids and stripers. They are very aggressive and are easy to catch. The afternoons can be better than mornings as the dam releases are usually in the afternoons. When water is generated, it gets the fish more active.”

BURTON IS FULL POOL AND LOW 80S. 

LAKE ALLATOONA IS FULL, 80S. 

CARTERS LAKE IS NEARLY FULL AND LOW 80S. 

LAKE WEISS AT FULL POOL AND 80S.   

LAKE CHATUGE IS 1.40 FT BELOW FULL AND 80S.  

Lake Chatuge Water Quality: Hybrid striped bass, like stripers, are confined to cooler waters with minimum oxygen concentrations near 2.0 mg/L. Water quality profiles on Chatuge were collected this week, and these profiles can be view on Lake Chatuge’s fishing forecast map (click HERE). Near the dam, there exists a wide column of suitable hybrid habitat from 25 feet down to 80 feet. Contrast the profile at the dam with the profile obtained near the stateline, and you’ll see that the thermocline (25’ – 35’) is the best depth to troll from hybrids.

NOTTELY LAKE IS 2.68 FT BELOW FULL AND 80S.  

Lake Nottely Water Quality: Water quality on Lake Nottely is supported by TVA’s oxygen diffusor system, which was operating this week when we collected water quality profiles. This oxygen boost supports a greater volume of habitat for stripers, and many other species in the reservoir and the lake’s tailwater benefit from this system. Check out Nottely’s water quality profiles HERE, and keep an eye out for the bubbles on your electronics next time you are on Nottely!

LAKE BLUE RIDGE IS 3.2 FT ABOVE FULL POOL AND 80S.  

WEST POINT IS FULL, CLEAR AND 80S.  

BEAR CREEK RESERVOIR (brought to you by Fisheries Biologist Hunter Roop) Bank fishing from the public access at Bear Creek has been productive lately. It’s not a huge area to spread out and fish, but the evening fishing has been worth the short pause required to identify a respectful and socially distant fishing spot. Quality largemouth bass can be caught when water is moving in from nearby feeders, and when the water is calm, bluegill are abundant and biting. The bluegill in particular are a great opportunity to introduce young kids to fishing. I’ve taken Lulah and Paisley to Bear Creek many times recently, and they are thrilled when I hand them the rod to reel in endless numbers of bluegill (we are catching big numbers on a foam ant fly, but crickets and worms are just as effective). Consider Bear Creek as a viable option, especially if you have a young one you’d like to introduce to fishing.    

RIVER REPORTS

Etowah River (by Cohutta Fishing Co.): The Etowah River below Allatoona Dam is fishing great right now. Popper fishing for spotted bass is hot! Take a 6 or 7 weight rigged with a tropical floating line like Rio’s Bonefish or Scientific Angler’s Grand Slam and a 7.5 foot, 0X Powerflex Leader and a cup full of Boogle Bugs. We’re also throwing white and olive gurglers, clouser minnows, Lunch $’s, and Sparkle Minnows in gold or copper. Bass fishing should remain good through October on the river, and this time of year and topwater activity is a guide favorite. There are still some striper around, so if you want to catch one of these fish you can take a 9 weight with you and some bigger patterns, but the striper fishing should start tapering off.

Toccoa River (this report by Senior Fisheries Biologist John Damer) Armuchee WRD staff were on the lower Toccoa River this week collecting smallmouth bass.  These smallmouth were taken to the Go Fish Education Center where they will be used as broodstock in producing future smallmouth fingerlings for stocking into Blue Ridge Lake.  While on the Toccoa we saw healthy numbers of rainbow, brown, and brook trout, along with some yellow perch and a few monster walleye.  Walleye like the 9-pounder pictured are rare on the Toccoa, but seem to be most common directly below Blue Ridge Dam. More helpful information on the Toccoa tailwater fishery and its history can be found here.

Tagged Shoal Bass on Upper Chattahoochee. Catch one? Let us know!

Chattahoochee River  (courtesy of Fisheries Biologist Hunter Roop) The river may be high and muddy this weekend, but keep an eye on the USGS gauge of relevance to you and as “low & clear” becomes a descriptor again, it’s time to hit the upper ‘Hooch for black bass (shoalies, hoochies, spots, and the occasional largemouth). Recaptured fish from the Upper Chattahoochee Shoal Bass project study are becoming more frequent this past week, indicating that the bite is heating up. A number of approaches can be used to target bass in the section of river from Helen down to Mossy Creek: trick worms, ned rigs, Texas rigs, spinning tackle, jerkbaits, shallow crankbaits, swimbaits, and any crawfish-patterned presentation will be successful. Try a popper or bomber if fishing high on the fly, or a clouser crayfish for subsurface presentations. If you catch a tagged fish, note your location, grab a quick (but accurate) length if possible, and give our Gainesville Fisheries Office a call with your data.

TROUT REPORT (courtesy of trout biologist Sarah Baker)

Ode to Anglers: “Angling is a sport for the novice or the wily veteran. No one is likely to forget that first or thousandth quiver of the rod, the sudden strike, the thrash of a catch in the boat’s bottom, the glint of sun on colorful scales and distant headlands. These are some of our most satisfying joys. Sport fishing is enjoyed by most people, but some participate only incidentally, while devoted anglers believe fishing is the highest form of recreation known to humankind. Many use spinning rod or bait-casting rod; others, a fine flyrod or simple cane pole or handline, or bow and arrow. But all enjoy the whole experience; not just meat and trophies but sun and fresh air, the birdsong and squirrel’s bark, the meditation and the peace of [Lake Burton], or the cold sting of wind and spray in a challenge to the angler” (National Survey of Fishing and Hunting, 1965).

How thankful I am that I decided to pick up a rod and reel and join millions of others in the quest to land a fish. It truly is an exhilarating and rewarding pastime. If you have a friend who doesn’t fish, I challenge you to invite them to join you on your next fishing adventure. Maybe it’s hard to believe, but many people haven’t gone fishing before, or haven’t gone since they were a kid, and have yet to experience the tranquility and excitement that fishing offers. Reach out, connect on the water, and share your fishing passion with someone else. It can be a lot more frustrating of an experience when you’re out on the water alone getting tangled up in fishing line, having your knots come loose, or simply not catching any fish because you’re not quite sure where to throw your lure. Maybe it’s a little more work for you (moms and dads know this too well), but I promise it’ll mean the world to the person who you’re enjoying the river with.

Our hatchery staff has recently stocked some streams which can help increase your odds of landing a fish- be sure to check out which streams were stocked this past week to plan your trip. If you have the time to make it up there, I recommend the Tallulah River in Towns/Rabun counties, along Tallulah River Rd. It’s a gorgeous river, and typically very productive. Remember that this August heat really nips the bite- so get there early. Thankfully, it looks like it’s going to stay a little bit cooler which will help out. Use Panther Martins (my personal favorite is yellow body with a silver blade) or if you’re using flies- go with anything a little flashy like a white Beadhead Flash Zonker. Another location to try out is Cooper Creek in Union County. But if you aren’t able to get up into the northern most part of the state to fish for trout, there are plenty of fishing opportunities closer by than you think. Poppers, streamers, or Pat’s Rubber Legs seem to be working well (GON-tel: Middle Oconee fishin’ recipe ). If you are taking someone on their first fishing trip, (or even if you’re not) remember to pack some good snacks (GON-tel: favorite fishing snacks ) . Food helps keep positive attitudes. 😊

Best of luck fishing and thanks for being Georgia anglers! Time on the water is never a waste.

Dredger’s UO report: He worked and fished hard for 30+ years as a biologist and region supervisor for North Georgia Fisheries. In retirement, the scale rightly tips more towards fishing, and his reports reflect his decades of experience working with trout and their habitats from headwater trickles to tailwater riffles. Check out UO’s Friday fishing report courtesy of Dredger HERE. 

Toccoa Tailwater (by Cohutta Fishing Co.)The Toccoa tailwater is still fishing well in the early morning, but the fishing slows down as the sun gets over the water around 10-11 o clock. You may be able to get some good fishing in the afternoon if you don’t mind fishing in the weather, as we’ve had fairly consistent afternoon showers that cool things off a bit and give us some cloud cover. Take a 4 or 5 weight fly rod rigged with floating line and a 5x 9 foot leader (or lighter), and try smaller, natural patterns like unweighted soft hackle pheasant tails and BWOs, TungStones, Flashback Hare’s Ears, Wooly Buggers with no flash, and Tungsten Jig Assassins. If the water stains from rain, switch to bigger profile patterns (stonefly nymphs, streamers, squirmy worms) and beef up your leader to 4x. Bring some yellow sally dry flies, midge patterns (Griffith’s Gnat), and Blue Winged Olive imitations in case of a hatch! 

Small Stream (NW) (by Cohutta Fishing Co.): Small streams are probably your best option to fish all day long for trout. Go up to higher elevation streams that have enough canopy to keep the sun off the water. We’re fishing 8 foot 3 or 4 weights, small 5 and 6x leaders, and wearing drab colors to camouflage our profiles when the water is low. Stay back off of pools and fish methodically – start at the tail out of the pool and work your way up, rather than casting to the very top of the pool immediately. You can get away with a dry-dropper consisting of a small Parachute Adams, Purple Haze, Yellow Stimulator, or small 12-14 Chubby Cherynobyl for the top fly, and drop an unweighted pheasant tail or hare’s ear below! If you’re using split shot, use the foam flies (chubby) and the largest shot you can get away with to keep the fly in the strike zone but without sinking these small dry flies, if possible. If the water level jumps from the rain, high stick wooly buggers and pat’s rubber legs with split shot in eddys near fast water, and don’t forget a net!

WALTON’S GREENHOUSE IN ACTION

Armuchee (courtesy of Fisheries Biologist John Damer): Armuchee staff collected seeds from American lotus plants this week.  These seeds will be sent to WRD’s aquatic greenhouse at Walton Hatchery to produce young plants for planting in Georgia’s large reservoirs.  American lotus is a native aquatic plant that can thrive in shallow water areas.  It has distinctive seed pods and large bowl-shaped leaves.  WRD Biologists hope to improve fish habitat by establishing new lotus stands in large reservoirs like Lake Allatoona.

Gainesville (courtesy of Fisheries Biologist Hunter Roop): Gainesville fisheries staffers recently teamed up with another green-thumbed cohort of Region 2 and guest planter Craig Sowers, Park Ranger for the USACE on Lanier, to distribute 1,800 waterwillow and 30 buttonbush plants along the shoreline near Don Carter State Park on Lake Lanier. Once established, these plants will serve as beneficial fish habitat and shoreline erosion control in years to come. These plants were provided and reared by the Region 3 Fisheries staff at the Walton Greenhouse.

 

 

Exit mobile version