June 26
Santee Cooper water levels are at 75.90 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 75.48 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Water temperatures range from about the mid-70s to low 80s because of all the cool freshwater coming into the lakes, and overall clarity is good.
Even though water temperatures are relatively mild on the Santee lakes, Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that bass are starting to get a little deeper. There is still some action shallow beating the banks with topwater lures first thing in the morning, and fish will take buzzbaits, frogs, Pop-Rs, Spooks, and more.
However, more fish are starting to be caught around deeper brush piles in 6-12 feet of water. Big worms and jigs are the best way to target them.
With all the water coming into the lakes – as well as high water levels for summer - there are also some fish being caught in the swamp in areas with current. Spinnerbaits and jigs are working well around trees, grass and other areas where current is flowing.
Finally, Brett points out that there are always fish on trees in 3-5 feet of water in Santee, and worms have been working the best for them.
The crappie bite is pretty steady on Santee, and Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that they still catching some good fish even though the numbers are not spectacular. The fish are around relatively shallow and medium-depth brush, from 8-14 feet down over 15-25 feet of water. Jigs and minnows are working about equally well, and typically minnows work better early and things come on later once the sun is up. A barrel swivel will help avoid line twists when jigging.
The bream have not been piled up in the shallows recently, but Steve reports that on the next full moon July 5 there should be another wave of fish spawning shallow. While bluegill and shellcracker will both eat worms and crickets, bluegill show a preference for crickets while shellcracker show a preference for worms. You can generally sit right on top of shellcracker beds and fish for them, while bluegill will scatter if you get too close.
The catfish bite has picked up a little, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that drifting in 20-30 feet of water has been the best pattern. You can also catch some fish drifting in the canal since they are pulling a lot of water through, but generally these have been smaller fish. Anchoring at the mouths of the canal is a good pattern for bigger fish.
While Steve has not been doing it anchoring shallow around trees early and late can also work.
Cut herring has been the bait of choice.
June 9
Santee Cooper water levels are at 76.38 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 75.20 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Surface water temperatures are in the mid-80s in the morning. The lower lake is clear while the upper lake has improved from muddy to just dingy.
There have been some really good bass catches recently on Santee, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that in the Sunday Showdown Series finale the best boat had 3 fish for an impressive 18 pounds. Second place had 16, and there were a bunch of 12-13 pound bags with a 4+ pound average.
The best action still seems to be shallow, and the lower lake seems to be producing better fish.
In both lakes there is topwater action beating the banks in the morning, and fish are taking buzzbaits, frogs, Pop-Rs, Spooks, and more. You still have to mix it up because they continue to show a preference for different baits on different days. During the day most of the fish are on trees in 3-5 feet of water, and worms have been working the best.
The crappie bite has picked up a little on Santee, and Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that they are not catching a ton of fish but some good ones over 2 pounds. The fish are still on mid-depth brush in the 15-25 foot range, and they have even caught some shallower fish 7 feet down over brush in 13 feet. Minnows and jigs are still working about the same.
Around the full moon they found some really good bream beds, with a mix of bluegills and shellcracker on them. Even after the full moon fish will continue to bed in certain areas, and a sure way to know when they have left is that the channel cats move in which will also eat crickets.
In the past few days the catfish bite slowed down a little, but Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that they are still able to get some good fishing drifting herring in 12-20 feet of water. You can also anchor shallow on both ends of the mouth of the canal when there is not too much wind for an effective anchor.
Anchoring at night has also been pretty good in the shallows, and drifting in 25-35 feet of water has also been working.
June 2
Santee Cooper water levels are at 76.72 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 74.89 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Surface water temperatures are around 80.5 in the morning, and the upper lake is very muddy which is also coming to the lower lake.
Even though it could come back on the next full moon the shad spawn seems done for right now, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that fish have settled into a pretty normal seasonal pattern. The best action is shallow.
There is some topwater action beating the banks in the morning, and fish are taking buzzbaits, frogs, Pop-Rs, Spooks, and more. You have to mix it up because they show a preference for different baits on different days.
During the day most of the fish he is catching are on trees in 3-5 feet of water, and worms have been working the best. Both lakes are fishing about the same.
The crappie bite has slowed down on Santee, although Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that the best action still seems to be on mid-depth brush 10-14 feet down over about 18 feet.
Minnows and jigs are working about the same.
Bream fishing has been a little tricky the last couple of days because of a major mayfly hatch, but it is expected that there should be good fish on beds as the June 5 full moon approaches. Today they had left their bedding areas to go eat mayflies and it was hard to get the fish to eat.
The brightest spot for hungry fishermen has been the catfish bite, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that there are a bunch of good patterns and fish seem to be pretty hungry. Drifting relatively shallow in the upper lake has been effective even as it got so dirty, and anchoring at the mouth of the canal has also worked. You can still catch fish drifting in 10-30 feet of water, and anchoring both early and late has also been working. The night bite is also coming on.
Cut herring has been the most effective bait.
May 20
Santee Cooper water levels are at 75.90 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 75.07 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Water temperatures are around 74 degrees in the morning and the lakes – which have been dingy to clear – are about to get very muddy.
The bass are still shallow on Santee Cooper, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that he is still not aware of any deeper pattern. Most of the fish he is catching are on trees in 3-4 feet of water in both lakes. Soft plastics, crankbaits and spinnerbaits are all working.
The biggest change this week is that there seem to be a lot more fish protecting fry that are around the grass and so fishing baits like frogs is working better.
For now time of day does not seem to make a big difference although sun does pull the fish tighter to trees.
The crappie bite has picked up on Santee, and Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that they have had good numbers as well as some big fish. Fish are on mid-depth brush 10-14 feet down over about 18 feet.
Minnows and jigs have both been working.
It’s still in-between time for bream on Santee, but while the better shellcracker have gone deeper there are more big bluegill up shallow spawning. This will just get better and better as water warms and the June 5 full moon approaches.
The catfish bite has been decent, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that the main problem seems to be that fish are so spread out that finding concentrations is difficult. However, the upside is that fish can be found all over the lake in 4-30 feet of water.
Overall the best pattern seems to be anchoring early in shallow water, and then drifting in 10-30 feet of water after that. There are also a lot of fish being caught in the canal, although very soon it may be unfishable with all the water coming into the system. Stevie has been anchoring at the mouth of the canal early.
Cut bluegill and herring have been working the best.
May 12
Santee Cooper water levels are at 75.79 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 74.75 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Water temperatures are in the upper 60s. The upper lake is muddy while the lower lake is just colored.
The bass remain in a similar pattern on Santee Cooper, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that he still is not aware of any deeper pattern. Most of the fish he is catching are on trees in 3-4 feet of water in both lakes, although slightly deeper trees have picked up with the cool conditions. Soft plastics, crankbaits and spinnerbaits are all working.
Some anglers report a shad spawn and some early schooling, but Brett has not seen it. He is also not finding much of a topwater bite around grass, but once air temperatures get back into the 80s that should take off.
For now time of day does not seem to make a big difference although sun does pull the fish tighter to trees.
The crappie bite has been decent on Santee, but Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that it will get much better once conditions get warmer. He is catching fish around shallower stuff, particularly 8-12 feet down over brush in 15-20 feet of water.
Minnows and jigs have both been working.
It’s an in-between time for bream on Santee, and there are a few shellcracker and bluegill shallow. However, the shellcracker are starting to slow down while it has not gotten quite warm enough for the bluegill. The last full moon did not generate significant spawning activity because of the cold front.
The catfish bite slowed down a little with recent cold fronts, but Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that overall fishing has been pretty good once temperatures have a chance to stabilize. For example, Sunday the bite was much better than Saturday.
The best pattern has been drifting in less than 10 feet in the morning, and then drifting in 15-25 feet during the day. There has also been some good action anchoring early or late in shallow water around humps or drop-offs.
There are also a lot of fish in the canal, but the current is so hard that you basically need to drift. The flats in front of Black’s Landing have also produced at night in about 10 feet of water.
Herring or other cut baits are all working.
April 30
Santee Cooper water levels are at 75.71 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 75.26 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Water temperatures are in the upper 60s and both lakes are dingy with so much wind and some recent rain. The canal is muddy.
The bass fishing remains strong on Santee Cooper, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that the vast majority of the fish are still shallow. He is catching them around grass and trees out to about 3-4 feet of water. The spawn is winding down now, but while he has not seen much of a shad spawn yet it should be starting soon.
There has been a little topwater action early, but there has been so much wind that it has been tough. Spinnerbaits and jigs have been working the best.
The crappie bite is getting better on Santee Cooper, and Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that numbers are improving and they have been getting 20-25 fish on good days. Fish have pulled out a bit but they are still around shallower brush. The best action has come 8-12 feet down over brush in 15-20 feet of water.
Minnows and jigs have both been working.
The bite for bream has gotten pretty strong, and working the grass for shellcracker in 2-3 feet of water has been good. The upper lake seems to be fishing a little better than the lower lake, and while you can catch them on other baits red worms are hard to beat.
Right now we are between spawns and some days they are mainly catching males, but around the full moon on the 7th it should be wide open again.
A few bluegill are being caught shallow but more seem to be deeper around brush. The next full moon should see wide open shallow bluegill fishing.
The catfish bite continues to be pretty good, but Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that the shallow bite has slowed down a little and the best action recently has been found drifting in 15-25 feet. While anchoring shallow has not been very good, there have been some fish caught anchored at the mouth of the canal. The shallow bite may improve when blue catfish get into the pre-spawn period around mid-May.
River herring are done, but small herring, bluegill and perch are all working.
There have not been a lot of good reports from night fishing.
April 15
Santee Cooper water levels are at 75.46 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 75.15 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Before the mud from Sunday’s rain arrives the lakes are clearing, while morning surface water temperatures have dropped back into the upper 60s and lower 70s with the cold snap.
The bass fishing remains excellent on Santee Cooper, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that there are fish at all stages of the spawn. The first waves of fish have completed the spawn and there is a smaller group of fish currently on beds, but there will be another big group on the next moon cycle. After that it will be pretty much stragglers.
While there are fish out deeper, particularly recovering post-spawn fish, there is really no reason to look anywhere besides 1-3 feet of water. They are around shallow stumps, assorted wood, grass and other cover.
Topwater lures, soft plastics including worms and Senkos, and spinnerbaits in cloudy conditions are all working.
There are some straggler crappie still winding up the spawn that can be found shallow, but Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that the bulk of the black crappie are starting to pull out to brush. They will be caught over brush at a variety of depths, ranging from 8 feet to about 25 feet, through the end of April.
In the upper lake, which has a larger population of white crappie in the standing timber, the spawn may not be as far along.
Bream are making their way shallower, and shellcracker fishermen on the early April full moon reported some good catches in just one or two feet of water around islands, grass and cover. Red wigglers are hard to beat. For now bluegill are still on shallower brush, but both species will be shallow in excellent numbers by the end of the month.
The catfish bite is picking up again, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that fish are shallow in the morning where they can be caught drifting in 5-10 feet of water. You can also anchor shallow early or late. During the day fish pull out a little deeper and drifting in about 10-20 feet is the best pattern. Drifting the canal or anchoring at the mouths has also been productive.
River herring may be becoming a less effective bait, but shad or other fresh cut bait are still working very well.
March 31
Santee Cooper water levels are at 76.25 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 74.43 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5) and the lower lake is dirtier than the upper lake. Water temperatures have gotten as high the low to mid-70s in places.
The bass fishing is wide open and pretty fantastic right now on Santee Cooper, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that yesterday they caught 20 fish ranging from 3-8.5 pounds. At least one wave of fish has already spawned but the vast majority of the fish have yet to do it. He believes the biggest wave of fish will probably spawn on the April full moon.
With the fishing so wide open you can pretty much pick your spots in 1-2 feet of water, and they will eat about anything. Frogs, soft plastics, spinnerbaits and more are all producing.
The fishing for crappie has picked up a little, although Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that they are still not killing the fish. While some anglers are fishing shallower, he is having the best luck fishing 8-12 feet deep over brush in 14-20 feet of water. These fish are a mix of pre- and post-spawn crappie.
With some more consistent weather the bank fishermen may do better for crappie, but right now there have not seemed to be a lot of people doing terribly well for them in the shallows.
The shellcracker are definitely moving shallower, even though it is just a little bit early for them to be wide open. Fishing worms on the edge of shallow water is the best pattern, and the fish seem to concentrate around grass.
It’s not clear why but the catfish bite has gotten tougher in the last week, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that it seems that the catfish have gotten into a transition period. It’s not as easy as just going out and catching fish for most people, although some very good ones have been caught.
The best pattern for right now is drifting shallow to mid-depths from about 5-20 feet during the day, and then anchoring in shallow water in the evening and at night. The fish have been a little picky about baits and so it’s a good idea to have shad, herring, bluegill and white perch all available.
March 25
Santee Cooper water levels are at 75.20 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 74.90 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Water temperatures have risen into the 60s and the lakes have cleared considerably.
There might be other ways to catch bass on Santee Cooper, but Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that when he catches five bass over 5 pounds in the shallows on a trip he sees no reason to do anything else. The first and perhaps second waves of fish are spawning in 1-2 feet of water, and you can throw soft plastics or pretty much whatever you want to catch them. Brett caught all five of those fish on a frog, and spinnerbaits and other topwater lures are also working.
The fishing for crappie has been a little bit slower, and Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that he has caught some fish in shallow water around laydowns, and some on shallow brush piles, but finding concentrations willing to feed has been difficult. There have also been some small fish on deep brush, but no big ones.
The better fish should turn on soon.
There are some early signs that shellcracker are moving shallower.
Part of the reason Steve may not have honed in better on the crappie is that the catfish have been biting so well it is hard to justify pursuing anything else. Steve has been anchoring in shallow water in the Rediversion Canal where they caught a half-dozen fish over 25 pounds on a recent trip. The canal has also come on, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that as the current has moderated they have caught some big fish there.
In the lakes generally Stevie reports that the best action has been in 9-20 feet of water on shallower flats, and as fish have spread out drifting has worked much better than anchoring. There have also been some good fish caught deep in 35-45 feet drifting at night.
River herring and gizzard shad have been the best baits.
March 12
Santee Cooper water levels are at 76.57 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 75.15 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Water temperatures range from the upper 50s to low 60s, and the whole lake is still muddy.
It’s March on Santee, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that bass are really starting to eat well. While you can catch fish working deeper trees and deeper brush, very few people are going to want to do that when fish are pulling up shallow in certain spots and you can beat the shallow pads and bushes. Until the next cold front Brett expects fish to stay around the blackwater holes and trees in 1-3 feet of water.
Most anything you want to throw is working, from Chatterbaits and spinnerbaits to jigs to soft plastics.
The fishing for crappie is also improving, and Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that fish are starting to get shallower and scatter out. On warm afternoons there have been some fish caught around shallow cypress trees, but generally fishing the creeks in 6-15 feet of water has been the best pattern. You can either target brush or troll with minnows and jigs.
It is unlikely that there are any fish actually spawning yet, but they are very close.
While a few nice catfish have been caught during the day, Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that generally the daytime bite both drifting and anchoring has been very slow. In contrast, shallow anchoring at night in 10-12 feet of water has been working well in the muddy water. Gizzard shad and herring have been outperforming everything else.
There is still so much water moving through the canal that it remains unfishable.
February 28
Santee Cooper water levels are at 76.36 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 75.01 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). The whole system is muddy, and water temperatures have dropped into the low 50s.
When bass are able to move away from extremely dirty water that is often what they will do, but when there is no clean water to be found they have no choice but to get used to it. And figuring out how to adapt to the mud is exactly what Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that the fish are having to do right now since there is really nowhere they can go to get away. Proof that they have adapted is that some good fish are being caught, and in the most recent Sunday Showdown Series tournament first place in the three-limit tournament was 20 pounds and second place had 17.
Because of the water conditions baits like Chatterbaits, spinnerbaits and crankbaits are the best choices right now. When temperatures were in the 60s in January fish had moved very shallow into around 2 feet of water, and they even stayed up there when temperatures dropped to around 55-58. Now that temperatures are more like 50-51 they have backed out into 4-10 feet of water, where most of the bigger fish are being caught. There are still some small fish shallow but it is rare to get one much over 2 ½ pounds. Brush and deeper stumps have been fishing well as most of the fish are related to wood right now.
With water conditions high and muddy it won’t take much warming for fish to move up shallower again.
In the muddy conditions crappie have been pretty finicky, but Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that before the latest cold snap anglers were having some luck long-lining the creeks for fish suspended in 12-20 feet of water.
This month he expects fish to move into the creek channels and stage over brush piles before finally moving to the banks to spawn. Expect the best bite to be early and late once fish are shallow.
Water conditions haven’t changed much and neither have the catfish, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that fish are still feeding well at night anchored in shallow water. During the day there has also been a decent anchored bite in 4-8 feet of water, and drifting in 15-35 feet has also been productive. Gizzard shad and herring have been outperforming everything else.
There is still so much water moving through the canal that it is unfishable.
February 18
Santee Cooper water levels are at 76.39 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 74.73 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Surface temperatures in the lower lake are around 55 degrees, but with so much inflow the upper lake is running closer to 50. The whole system is muddy, and even though some areas are slightly cleaner it is generally not much.
To say that the Santee Cooper lakes are muddy is really an understatement, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that the lake are as red and muddy as he has seen them in 10-15 years. Brett reports that the key to catching bassright now is to find some slightly cleaner water, and everything he has caught in the last couple of days has been very shallow in 2-3 feet or less. These fish are already close to their spawning areas, either because it is a wave of over-eager fish or because of water conditions, and they will eat Rattle Traps or spinnerbaits. If they won’t take those slow down and work soft plastics.
A secondary pattern is to look for fish that are chasing shad in the backs of pockets in 6-7 feet of water. This pattern is hit-or-miss because there is so much bait back there, but on some days it has been productive.
There are also some fish related to brush piles, although most of them are in such muddy areas that the fish will not bite.
While he has had some fair days where they caught 15-20 crappie, overall Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that with high, muddy water the bite has been pretty tough. For right now fish seem to be fairly scattered, and the best action has been over brush 12-14 feet down in about 20-25 feet of water. When clarity improves Steve expects to head shallow and look for suspended fish 8-14 feet deep in the creeks. On colder days they may be a little deeper, and if it is warm and sunny they may move up more.
It’s not really clear why, but recently Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that catfish on the Santee Cooper lakes have been feeding well at night anchored in shallow water. During the day there has also been a decent anchored bite in 4-8 feet of water, and drifting in 15-35 feet has also been productive. It seems that everything has moved shallower with the flooded conditions. Gizzard shad and herring have been outperforming everything else.
There is still so much water moving through the canal that it is unfishable.
January 24
Santee Cooper water levels are at 76.29 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 74.88 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Surface temperatures have dropped all the way into the low to mid-50s in some places, and there is still a ton of dirty water moving through the system.
It was always an anomaly to have almost a week in the 70s that pushed water temperatures into the 60s in January, and the cold front of the last week has been a reminder of just that fact. Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that similarly it was only a temporary situation to have bass up roaming around in the ponds chasing bait, and it could be until March that they move this shallow again.
This week fish have gone deeper, and instead of wanting fast moving baits they are eating soft plastics and jigs fished very slowly through wood and brush. If temperatures warm back up fish could eat crankbaits and spinnerbaits again, but it seems likely that fish will stay in more like 4-8 feet of water for the foreseeable future.
The last Sunday Showdown Series tournament on January 20 was won with a 3-fish limit of 13.4 pounds, with a big fish a little under 6 pounds.
The cold front has catfish on the Santee Cooper lakes on the move, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that most of the fish have moved deeper into 35-55 feet of water. Drifting cut bait has been the best pattern.
There is just so much water coming through the canal that it still seems virtually unfishable.
January 14
Santee Cooper water levels are at 75.83 in Lake Marion (full pool is 76.8) and 74.47 in Lake Moultrie (full pool is 75.5). Surface temperatures have risen into the low 60s in some places, and the water ranges from stained to muddy.
All of this warm weather has completely changed the bass bite on Santee Cooper, and Captain Brett Mitchell (803-379-7029) reports that even though the bite is still centered around shad with all of the warm, muddy water the fish have gotten much, much shallower. They are finding fish in 1-2 feet of water where they are following the schools of shad, and they are catching them on Chatterbaits, other fast moving lures, and even topwater baits! Fish are still heavily related to current, and they can be found from the mouths of pockets all the way to the backs.
Right now it is taking about 15 pounds to win the 3-fish limit Sunday Showdown Series tournaments which Brett hosts each Sunday afternoon out of Black’s Camp, and while there are obviously some very nice fish being caught the biggest Santee bass are not showing up yet. However, with more January days in the 70s than the 50s so far this month we are in uncharted territory as far as what to expect going forward.
As would be expected, Captain Steve English (843-729-4044) reports that the crappie and bream are scattered because of the warm weather – which is making it hard to locate and catch good numbers of fish. While he is still catching some deep fish 18-24 feet down around brush in the 35-foot range, there are also fish being caught as shallow as 6-8 feet. Fish don’t know whether to think this is still winter or spring, and if it keeps warming up more fish will go shallow regardless of the calendar.
Right now is a really good time to catch catfish on the Santee Cooper lakes, and Captain Stevie English (843-709-8138) reports that there are a lot of different ways to catch fish. With the warm weather there has been an excellent drift bite relatively shallow in 15-25 feet of water, and there have also been a lot of little fish caught out in 35-55 feet. At night there has been a good drifting bite in 35-45, but there are also fish that can be caught anchored shallower.
There have not been a lot of good reports from the canal, and so much water is being pulled that it is hard to fish.