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AHQ INSIDER Hilton Head Island (SC) 2024 Week 29 Fishing Report - Updated July 19

  • by Jay

July 19

Inshore surface water temperature temperatures are in the upper 80s around Hilton head, and bait remains abundant. Water clarity varies depending on tide.

It’s still very good inshore fishing, but Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that the he can already tell that the big full moon tides are going to change the bite. For a while now the tides have been very moderate, but the bigger tides yesterday dirtied the water and clearly had the fish moved around. 

Nonetheless, overall it’s a still a good bite for both trout and redfish with the best action coming fishing deeper water in the 8-foot range where there is a steep drop-off. They have also picked up a few keeper flounder this week. 

Free-lining finger mullet and small menhaden (when available) on small circle hooks with a split shot has been very effective.  In a reversal, yesterday the high outgoing tide was the best because the water was cleaner than on the low incoming. 

A happy family fishing with Captain Trent Malphrus

July 18

Inshore surface water temperature temperatures are in the upper 80s around Hilton head, and bait remains abundant. Water clarity varies depending on tide.

It’s been a banner week of inshore and surf fishing for big game for Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475), who reports that in the Broad River they are having good success floating live baits and throwing big soft plastic swimbaits into the large schools of 5-6 inch menhaden. They are catching tarpon, jack crevalleand sharks with these techniques, and tide doesn’t really seem to matter as long as there is some moving water.

At the same time they are still catching (small) cobia around the Broad River Bridge and other, lesser known, structure on live menhaden, while just off the beaches at structure and current rips they are catching bull red drum on live and cut bait. 

More to follow. 

July 12

Inshore surface water temperature temperatures are in the upper 80s around Hilton head, and bait is again abundant. Water clarity varies depending on tide.

Apologies for the late Friday evening report… It’s been steamy weather, but Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that inshore fishing around Hilton Head has been just as hot. The best bait right now has been small finger mullet not much more than about 2 inches long, and both the trout and redfish have been devouring them. The best action has come fishing deeper water in the 8-foot range where there is a steep drop-off.

Free-lining the bait on small circle hooks with a split shot has been very effective. The incoming tide has fished better because the water is dramatically clearer, but they are also catching some fish on the outgoing when the water is dirty. Captain Trent’s boat did get one gator trout on a big bait fishing a main point near the ocean at high tide.  A lot of smaller flounder are also being picked up while targeting trout and reds. 

An awesome Hilton Head trout with Captain Trent Malphrus

Trent has also been seeing a few jack crevalle around in the sound running from spot to spot, and those have been a target species for Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475). He reports that big jacks are abundant in the Calibogue Sound. They are in big schools on the surface and will readily take big poppers.

This week with Captain Kai Williams

Finally, the tarpon action has really come on this week and the bite is now wide open. Captain Kai says that fish will be anywhere there is bait, but the most productive areas have been current rips and other areas where there is highly oxygenated water. Mullet and menhaden will both work.  

 
Silver kings are back - with Captain Kai Williams

June 27

Morning surface water temperatures around Hilton Head are around 83 in the ocean and 86-87 inshore. Water clarity has dropped and bait has been surprisingly hard to find. 

The inshore bite changed dramatically in the last two weeks around Hilton Head, and Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that the hard wind changed the color of the clear points he was fishing for trout to chocolate milk – and the trout bite died. The water is finally starting to clear again, and he is certain that the bite will turn back on, but for the last week they have been focused almost solely on redfish. 

Luckily the inshore reds have been cooperative, and Captain Trent reports that as long as you stay out of the still backs the fishing has actually been surprisingly pleasant with the ocean breezes. The go-to patterns have been free-lining live menhaden and mullet (which are around but take a lot of work to catch) along points and grass edges on the incoming tide, although the best action has come on the dropping tide fishing the same way at the mouths of creeks. You can also catch fish on cut bait, but anchoring with cut menhaden or mullet you will catch mostly bonnethead sharks and far less reds. 

The creeks are full of tiny two-inch shrimp, which the redfish are no-doubt gorging on, but they are so small that it’s impossible to not catch pinfish with them. As they grow to a size where they can avoid the pinfish a little better Trent may switch over to using them before they eventually leave the creeks and it gets back to a mullet bite. 

This week with Captain Trent Malphrus

Meanwhile Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475) has been concentrating his efforts mostly in the Port Royal Sound, where there is an abundance of life including cobia, jacks, sharks, bull reds, bluefish and more. The one drag is that the bait situation has not been good, and without giant schools of bait it’s both harder to get bait and there is less surface activity. 

As a result they are mostly fishing with live and cut menhaden on the bottom. The most productive areas have been current rips and other areas where there is highly oxygenated water. They have even seen a few tarpon, but the numbers aren’t around yet to fully target them. 

Finally, they are picking up a few trout under a popping cork in the cleaner areas.   

June 13

Morning surface water temperatures around Hilton Head are in the low 80s and water clarity is still very good. Bait is abundant.

It’s been a really good week of inshore fishing around Hilton Head, and Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475) reports that an influx of menhaden has clearly made the fishing better. The cobia are still around, and while most of the fish are short they are catching them both bottom fishing and float fishing with live menhaden around structure, shoals or sand bars. In general menhaden are far preferable to the threadfin herring they had been relying on.

Cut menhaden are still catching redfish over white shell flats, but their boat has also been finding a bunch of big trout in the area. Fishing menhaden on deeper cuts adjacent to flats in the current seams has been the trick to catch the trout, and they are also picking up a bunch of bonnethead and sharpnose sharks this way.

But the biggest excitement this week has been the arrival of tripletail, and Captain Kai’s boat managed to land one giant 15-pounder!  It’s basically a matter of randomly finding them on the surface, but once you spot them they will eat a bunch of different baits (live shrimp are a good choice) as long as you bother them enough!

This week with Captain Kai Williams

June 6

Morning surface water temperatures around Hilton Head are about 81 degrees and the water is unusually clear. Tons of bait including finger mullet and menhaden can be caught, and there seem to be more big white shrimp off the beaches than usual this year.

The inshore bite is outstanding around Hilton Head, and Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that in particular the early morning topwater bite is wide open for both trout and redfish. The big trout up to 6 ½ pounds and more have showed up.

They are catching both species on big 6-8 inch live mullet (or swimbaits), and cut mullet really isn’t fishable right now because there are so many sharks around – especially bonnetheads.  Beyond the early topwater bite, the best pattern for redfish and trout has been free-lining the big baits in good moving water, whether that is around main river white shell points or in funnel areas between shells and islands where bait is being flushed through. With big tides the incoming tide has been better because the water is cleaner. That’s a must for trout.  

 
A gator caught this week with Captain Trent Malphrus

Meanwhile Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475) has been concentrating his efforts in the Broad River mostly, and they are still catching cobia both bottom fishing and float fishing with live threadfin herring or menhaden around structure, shoals or sand bars. The same bait cut up is catching redfish over white shell flats.

There are also a bunch of bluefish and some Spanish mackerel in the Broad River. Casting jigs and spoons will work for both. 

Captain Kai has also seen some early tarpon but not enough to target them yet. 

May 23

Morning surface water temperatures just off Hilton Head are about 76 degrees while the creeks are a couple of degrees warmer. As a result bait is much easier to find now.  

The inshore bite is very good around Hilton head, and Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that each morning there is a really good bite on both topwater lures and live bait. Whether the tide is coming in or out the fish are feeding. Because the redfish are splitting up into smaller schools there are more opportunities to target them, and the bigger trout are also showing up.  Both species are shallow in about 3 feet of water or less, and they are mostly around big shell mounds that are isolated away from the bank. Closer to ocean the water has been too dirty for the main river shell points to be very productive, as most of the cleaner water has been back in the sound. 

 
A nice topwater trout caught this week with Captain Trent Malphrus

Live bait and artificials will certainly work, but Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475) is having the best results for reds fishing cut threadfin herring (available in the Broad River) on the lower half of the tide cycle. He is fishing them over hard white shell flats in the bigger waterways.

While most of the fish aren’t giants, the cobia seem to be abundant this year in the Broad River. Captain Kai’s boat caught three yesterday anchoring with cut threadfin herring on rips in the Broad River/ Port Royal Sound. You can throw the net for the baitfish but if you want them live (sometimes preferrable) it beats them up too much, and so Captain Kai is using Sabiki rigs to catch them. 

Finally, in the rips in the Broad River Spanish mackerel can be caught casting spoons.  They aren’t huge or in huge numbers, and the better concentrations of bigger fish are off the beaches. 

May 15

Morning surface water temperatures just off Hilton Head are about 75 degrees while the creeks are a bit warmer.  Big tides last week pulled the menhaden out of the rivers but other bait is around. 

It’s a pretty simple inshore pattern for Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634), who reports that when he can find finger mullet he is catching fish. Regardless of tide every morning he is finding an excellent topwater bite around bait, mostly for redfish but also with some trout mixed in. The best areas are generally broken shell bottoms – the kind of areas you would gig for flounder – not over live shell mounds. The fish have transitioned away from the deeper edges where he was catching them. 

During the day he is also catching both species on live bait under a popping cork around normal ambush spots like creek mouths and points. 

For Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475) the best way to catch bigger redfish has been pulling up on the flats and fishing in 2-3 feet of water with cut mullet or menhaden. These fish seem to be roaming in small groups of 2-3 fish, and they are generally in the 30-inch range or bigger.

The smaller reds in the slot are spread out around docks, sea walls, and structure, and they are eating about anything he puts in front of them. 

But the most popular thing going may be the cobia, and in the Broad River the season is going really well.  Fish can be caught in 5-35 feet around every rip, live bottom area, or the bridge. Kai is mostly anchoring and fishing live baits, but his boat did catch one nice cobia on an artificial lure that was in a school of fish swimming with a group of manta rays. 

Caught with Captain Kai Williams

May 2

Morning surface water temperatures just off Hilton Head are about 72 degrees and temperatures are frequently pushing well into the 70s in the creeks.

There is still really good live bait fishing around Hilton Head for redfish, and Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that he is now able to get finger mullet and small menhaden and the reds are blistering both. Recently the incoming tide has been better, especially around oyster points and deep banks, in part because that is when the cleanest water is coming through. When fish are on a live bait bite his boat always does better in clear water, while on a cut bait bite clarity does not matter as much. 

On the trout front Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475) has been having a lot of success fishing live shrimp under floats on higher tides. Once again they have had the most success fishing clean, moving water, and steep banks with current have held the most fish. They are also picking up redfish on this pattern.

This week with Captain Kai Williams

Captain Kai notes that they are also starting to see tripletails along grass lines. 

April 25

Morning surface water temperatures just off Hilton Head are about 69 degrees and frequently pushing well into the 70s in the creeks.

Live bait is now king around Hilton Head, and Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that for him the key to catching fish has been getting his hands on the smaller menhaden. Free-lining them down the deeper edges has been especially good on the dropping tide for redfish, which are pretty spread out by now. As the water has quickly warmed the big schools have broken up and they are hanging in smaller pods, but the fish have also gotten much more aggressive. 

While Captain Trent has not been targeting trout very much, some captains have been having success drifting live shrimp along deeper grass lines. 

Finally, as temperatures have warmed the lagoon bite has got really good for big redfish and more.

April 11

Morning surface water temperatures just off Hilton Head are about 67 degrees and about 65 in the creeks.

Inshore patterns are changing fast in Hilton Head, and Captain Trent Malphrus with Palmetto Lagoon Charters (843-301-4634) reports that he is no longer fishing grass patches. The better redfish action is now coming around creek mouths and points on the dropping tide when bait is being flushed out. He is also catching some fish on the rising tide around “hard edges” – steeper areas where the water doesn’t have as many places to fill back into the grass and so fish have to follow reliable routes. 

Finger mullet have been the best bait when he can get them, but if not cutting up larger mullet is also working.  

At the same time Captain Kai Williams with Awesome Adventure Charters (843-816-7475) has been having the best success with live shrimp, picking up redfish and a few trout this way. With strong tides he is having the best success fishing slack tides at either high or low water. 

But the most exciting action for Captain Kai’s boat has been nearshore, and in 30-50 feet of water they are having a field day with the sheepshead and black drum on fiddler crabs.  Smaller fish are on the closer end of the range while bigger ones are further out. They are also catching tons of undersized black sea bass.

 
This week with Captain Kai Williams

 

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