How To Bait Santee Cooper Fishing Guides

By Jeanette Riggs


There's a good reason why Santee Cooper fishing guides are so busy all round the year. Fishing at the SC Lakes is not just about a day out on Lake Marion or Lake Moultrie. The entire area is a paradise for anglers, coupling the lakes and a couple of other canals and rivers together into a huge interconnected body of water that weighs in at 756 billion gallons. If that's not enough, visitors can also explore the limitless coastline and a huge swamp.

The SC Lakes are well stocked with everything from striped bass and largemouths to bream and crappies that attract anglers from all over South Carolina and North America. The huge blue catfish are justifiably famous. Many state and world records belong to the SC Lakes, including the title of the world's largest channel catfish.

The intrepid angler may haul a boat and trailer out to the lakes and set up camp on the lakeshore. There are more than 1,000 campsites to choose from, so there's more than enough room for everyone in the outdoors to fish day and night. The fish are always going to be more plentiful during the day, but the night usually provides the record-breakers. The disadvantage is that the bugs can make life difficult at night, while the summer heat during the daytime takes a toll.

Thankfully, the catfish abound in these lakes throughout the year, hanging around near the shallow flats at r below ten feet. The stripers come back in March, while crappies can be hooked in the spring in blackwater ponds before they go for deeper waters. Bream spawns from May through July.

Bass fishing is booming at the SC Lakes around grass in shallow waters in the first half of the year. From June through October, they tend to hang out around deeper grass at depths of about 10 feet. An easier way to be in the right place at the right time is to get a guide with a boat for hire.

Hiring a guide is also helpful in many other ways, including for acquiring a fishing license and making sure anglers do not flout state law and local regulations. Along with the boat, the guide should be able to supply food, drinks, gear and will likely clean the catch afterwards. They're all residents of Santee or other communities nearby, and can navigate blindfolded through the waterways.

The guide should be able to find all the great spots for fishing and take visitors around through the lakes, Diversion and Re-Diversion Canals, the Santee River and even some salt water catch in the ocean. Do remember that most guides can only call themselves experts in one or two particular kinds of fish, so visitors need to choose the right one depending on the kind of catch they have in mind.

Recreational visitors can always take a break from angling to enjoy some of the other pleasures of the region. Santee Cooper fishing guides are just as good at guiding visitors to the best seafood restaurants offering a large helping of Southern hospitality. Enjoy the magnificent golf courses and do some sightseeing. History buffs can visit the battlefields and museums, while nature lovers may find bird-watching and walking trails at the National Wildlife Refuge extremely refreshing.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment