Once I saw them holding in that greenish water I ran around to find some more of the same. I fished the green water near a mudline break and found some more. The pattern paid off as I loaded the boat! I took minnows and had some caps and coleman rigs but the fish wanted a slabtail and bg minner. Casting at 30-40 feet was the ticket with the big fish. Ended the day with 9 fish over 2lbs. (released) and a 21lb sack of bass (released) and few big blue cats. (almost kept as those fish are excellent table fare but didn't want to get the boat slimy!) Kept a bucket full of nice fish and went to clean with my new R12 Rapala and the darn thing would not cut through a fish! I reached out to Rapala and they are sending me a new knife. These will get the old fashion treatment! (dexter) I thought if I figured out that pattern earlier it would have helped so hopefully this helps someone.
For those that have never fished Santee Cooper and see the pics and think oh Ill fish there and get easy big fish. easssssy there fella. Santee (either lake) can be dangerous so you have be very careful with the winds. Check Navionics and if it says the wind is over 6 knots do NOT go. 7 knots doesn't sound like a lot but that lake will get rollers because there is nothing to block the wind. I have a big deep V boat and was scared out there my first time because I thought 6-10 knots aint no big deal, but it is on Santee! I was taking waves hitting the windshield and I live on Norman and never had that happen and will go out there when its bad because I have a dock I can pull into. But if you treat her with respect she can reward you with a magical day.
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