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The beautiful southern state of Georgia offers anglers a vast variety of terrain to fish from. When you visit Georgia, you have the choice of fishing one of several mountain streams, beautiful lakes, or the pristine coastline. Banks Lake National Wildlife Refuge, near Lakeland, consists of a large backwater system that is home to a variety of fish. You will have more success fishing from a boat in this lake. Some of the fish caught here include bass, crappie, bluegill, pickerel, bowfin, and catfish. This refuge is comprised of cypress swamp land, marsh, and open water.
Lake Hartwell, which is located on the border between Georgia and South Carolina, is home to bream, crappie, largemouth bass, and striped bass. This lake is open year round. The Rocky Mountain Recreation Area is located near Rome, Georgia. It has two recreation lakes, and fishing is permitted from sunrise to sunset. Sunfish, bass, channel catfish, and crappie are often caught in these lakes. The Chattahoochee River is a favorite fishing area for fly fishermen. Trout is usually abundant in this crystal clear river. You aren¡¯t limited to fly fishing, however. Many anglers fish for bass, catfish, and several other species. The river¡¯s temperature rarely reaches above 50 degrees. Night fishing is not allowed. The river is open from thirty minutes before sunrise to thirty minutes after sunrise.
Another river that continues to gain popularity among fly fishermen is the Altamaha River. There are typically over thirty bass tournaments held yearly at this river. Bass, however, isn¡¯t the only abundant fish caught on the Altamaha. Flathead catfish are plentiful from the early spring to late summer, and there are some very large flatheads in this river. Other fish that are caught here include bream, crappie, and pickerel. Flint River is home to the shoal bass, which is a very unique bass caught only in a few rivers throughout the South. Most anglers fish for shoal bass in the fall months. Anglers are usually successful in their hunt for largemouth and striped bass, also. The flathead catfish population remains consistent in Flint River.
The Ochlockonee River, located in the southern part of Georgia, is a blackwater river. The redbreast sunfish are numerous here, and anglers also catch the Suwannee bass. During the summer, several varieties of catfish are caught in the Ochlockonee, including bullheads, channel catfish, and white catfish. The Ocmulgee River is home to a world record largemouth bass, which weighed in at 22 lbs. 4 oz. This river is large and slow, and it forms several lakes along the way. Along with the bass population, sunfish and bluegill are favorites here.
The lower section of the Oconee River is home to numerous largemouth bass. Crappie are also plentiful in the spring, and flathead catfish are often caught throughout the summer. Many fishermen use trot lines to catch the flatheads. The Savannah River has several different species of fish that live in its waters. Anglers¡¯ success, however, depends on the fluctuating water levels. This river is controlled by the Clarks Hill Dam, and its water provides hydropower. Black crappie, bluegill, and sunfish are caught here at various times of the year.
Finally, offshore and inshore fishing is popular up and down the coast of Georgia. However, St. Simons has built the reputation as a premier fishing spot. You can usually catch trout and redfish in one of the many backcountry areas of the Intracoastal Waterway. If sport fishing is what you crave, you can go out on one of the many charter outfits to catch king mackerel, sea bass, snapper, grouper, and many other types of fish. The state of Georgia offers a variety of fishing opportunities for every angler. |
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