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Hartwell Linesides Quick Action In Spring

Guide Greg Beck shows a pattern that produces great number of hybrids and some hefty striped bass.

Brad Bailey | April 5, 2000

Lineside fishing guide Greg Beck snatched the rod from the rod holder and reared back to set the hook, but the fish was already gone. Before he could replace the rod, another planer board shuddered on the surface, then surged backwards, signaling a hit on the trailing blueback herring. Greg hurriedly set down the first rod and hustled to the opposite side of his center-console boat, pulled the rod from the rod holder and set the hook. This time the hook hit home and momentarily a flash of silver-sided hybrid was thrashing on the surface—our first fish of the morning.

As Greg unhooked the fish, his eyes were on the one line still in the water, expecting a hit any minute.

When the water temperature rises in the spring and the hybrid bass and striped bass in Lake Hartwell begin to make their false spawning run, live-bait fishing can be a lot like work.

Long before sunrise on March 7, 2000, Greg Beck, GON-TV cameraman Brad Gill and myself were halfway back in Big Beaverdam Creek for a preview of the spring lineside fishing—and a little ‘fish-catching work.’

As the predawn mist rose from the water, Greg set the trolling motor on his 23-foot Carolina Skiff on low and began putting out blueback herring. The master plan was to put out two lines on planer boards on each side of the boat and two free-lined baits withouts planers straight out the back of the boat. It would take more than an hour to accomplish this—the fish kept interfering with the preparations. As soon as two or three lines were in the water, one of them would get hit.

“This is the way fishing ought to be,” said Greg, as he hooked up another bait in another attempt to get at least the four planers out before that next hit.

Greg has been fishing Lake Hartwell for about 25 years, and he’s been a guide on the lake for six or seven years. He also runs a bait shop on HIghway 17 in Bowman. Greg catches his own bluebacks for bait and provides them to other live-bait dealers, as well.

Lineside fishing on Hartwell has been improving steadily this year after dead-as-a-stump fishing in January. As the water temperature climbed through the upper 50s and into the low 60s, the bait began to move into the creeks. The hybrids and stripers have been shadowing the bait, and the catch-rate has improved.

For most of April, Greg will use the same technique to catch fish—freelined live herring. He hooks the 3- to 5-inch baits through the clear spot above the nostril with a 2/0 style 42 Eagle Claw hook. He then plays out 40 or so feet of line and attaches a planer to the line. The planer pulls the line diagonally away from the boat so the baits remain separated to avoid tangling and cover a much-wider swath of water. Other than the hook, there is no weight on the line.

Fresh baits are critical, says Greg. He reeled in a bait that had been hit short and showed us the scraped scales and red spots on the herring.

“You don’t want any bait out with red spots or scraped marks on them,” he said. “Fresh bait is the ticket.”

Greg had located a concentration of linesides in Big Beaverdam Creek the day before we fished. As you head into this creek from the main lake, the creek dog-legs to the right, and in this sharp bend is where we began fishing. Greg’s graph was often blotched with both clouds of bait and bigger arches, indicating linesides.

Finding bait is the most important key to finding linesides, said Greg. “Stripers and hybrids don’t relate to structure, they relate to schools of shad.”

Good electronics will help locate bait. Many of the mid-lake creeks are worth a look—Big Beaverdam, Paynes Creek, Reed Creek and Big Shoal Creek are typically good. Watch for gulls that may lead you to bait, and when your graph lights up with bait, you are ready to fish.

On bright sunny days, you need to arrive on the lake early. “On a bluebird day, by the time most people are getting out of bed, the best fishing is already over,” said Greg. Sunshine drives the fish into the depths where they suspend and don’t feed much, according to Greg. On bright days, the best bite is from first light until 9  or 9:30 a.m. and then again in the afternoon from 4:30 or so until dark. On overcast days, the fish may stay up and feed all day. Rainy days can be excellent fishing days for linesides.

Our second fish of the day weighed about 3 pounds and it announced its presence when one of the planers ripped sideways across the water. Hybrids fight well, with strong, surging runs, but the 15-lb. test line prevailed and the fish was soon scooped into the net.

As luck would have it, while we were filming the fish, another bait was hit, but missed that fish. It seemed like every time you turned your back, the line behind you was hit.

On a typical March morning, Greg was averaging 15 or so fish in the boat, mostly hybrids in the 2- to 8-lb. range, with a striper or two mixed in. His best striper of the year, to date, was a 29-pounder.

Our biggest fish came at about 9 a.m. One of the planers was sailing serenely along 40 or 50 feet from the boat when suddenly it was viciously jerked backwards with the hit. I was closest, so I grabbed the rod. The planer settled, then lurched again as the fish took off with the bait, and I set the hook. Instantly, there was little doubt that this was a good-sized striper. Hybrids are hard fighters, but they don’t match the power of a big striped bass. The medium-heavy rod arched over and line peeled off the reel as the planer, following the fish below, sped across the surface behind the boat. For a minute or so, all I was doing was holding on as the fish surged and bulldogged, but finally I regained some line when the fish came up to the whip a froth on the surface.

“You think it’ll go 10 pounds?” I asked.

“Easy,” said Greg, who was ready with the net.

The striped bass, which Greg estimated at 14 or 15 pounds, was soon flopping in the net.

While hybrids will take up most of the space in your ice chest, the stripers aren’t unusual. “If there is bait in the area, there will be hybrids and stripers around, too,” said Greg.

Guide Greg Beck (left) and GON’s Brad Bailey with a heavy string of Lake Hartwell hybrids–and a 14-lb. striped bass.

With the sun well over the trees, the bite slowed down considerably—but the catching wasn’t over quite over yet.

While Greg freelines herring, he also has a small bucktail jig ready on spinning gear. If he sees fish swirling on the surface near the boat, he will try to hit the spot with the bucktail.

“If you can hit the spot, let the bucktail drop 4 or 5 feet before you start to retrieve, and they will usually hit it,” Greg said.

Greg uses a 3/8-oz. white bucktail, and he does not dress it with a grub because he wants to maintain the small profile.

“Stripers and hybrids can be picky about the size bait they are taking. If they don’t want the herring, sometimes they will hit the smaller bucktail.”

Greg will often cast a bucktail to the bank as he slowly eases the herring along. I was doing just that at about 9:15 and had cast into 2 or 3 feet of water and was hopping the bucktail back when a fish thumped it and ran. On light spinning gear and 8-lb. test line, I had a ball landing a 3-lb. hybrid. Then, on my next cast to the same spot, another smaller hybrid hit the bucktail.

The quality of the fishing at Hartwell should hold up throughout April, but the area of the lake fished and the fishing technique changes. In early April, Greg recommends the mid-lake area up both the Tugaloo and Seneca River arms, and he continues to follow the linesides on their false spawning runs. By late April, on the Tugaloo side, the best areas will be above Eastanolee Creek.

Greg’s lineside fishing will change as the fish move farther up the rivers. Freelined baits will still attract hits, but Greg does much better anchoring out and fishing cut bait on the bottom.

Greg fishes main-lake points or red-clay banks near deep water, particularly where there are S-bends in the river channel that approach the right kind of bank. Sand banks will produce, too, but the bottom needs to be hard. Greg stays away from the muddy, silted banks because the mud fouls the baits.

Greg anchors his boat a medium-cast-length from the bank and fan-casts cut bait to various depths around the boat. He uses bluebacks for cut bait, cutting the fish into three parts—the head plus about an inch of the body, the midsection, and the tail. The tail he throws away, the other two sections he uses as bait.

Greg uses a Carolina-rig for fishing cut bait with a 1-oz. or 1 1/2-oz. barrel sinker above a swivel and a 3- or 4-foot leader. When he casts out a bait, he sets the reel clicker on and he leaves slack in the line so that wave action doesn’t move the bait. Greg may put as many as 10 rods into the rod holders, and he said catching a limit from one spot isn’t uncommon.

We caught our last fish at about 9:30 before stopping to take pictures. Between daylight and 9:30, we caught 15 hybrids from 2 to 8 pounds, plus the big striper. We also missed at least as many hits. In recent trips, Greg has been averaging between 15 and 20 fish per morning.

The fishing success has been holding up at Lake Hartwell in the days since our trip with Greg. On Monday, March 20, 2000, during four hours of fishing, Greg boated 18 linesides including hybrids up to 9 pounds and four striped bass. His biggest striper that day weighed 17 pounds.

Lake Hartwell Page: Archived Articles, News and Fishing Reports

Brad Gill is on top of the action with a GON-TV camera. The episode aired nationwide on The Outdoor Channel in April, 2000.

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