It’s a girl thing: 4 Sumter classmates all take deer
Four girls between the ages of 9 and 11 are the envy of every boy – and many other girls – at Sumter’s Wilson Hall School. […]
Four girls between the ages of 9 and 11 are the envy of every boy – and many other girls – at Sumter’s Wilson Hall School. […]
Deer season is in full bloom across North Carolina, but nowhere can match the Northern Piedmont when November’s rut approaches. […]
The November issue of South Carolina Sportsman will take deer hunters to places they’ve likely been — but never with a weapon. […]
Frankie Sanders of Mountain Rest didn’t wait too long after the 2012 gun season for bear opened on Oct. 17 to take one of the first bears taken this year in Oconee County. Sanders’ first bear weighted approximately 250 pounds. […]
North Carolina has a handful of lakes that feature active, year-round largemouth bass bites, and Belews Lake is perhaps the best. […]
The alligator had to be “11 feet plus,” Shanell Blewer of Orangeburg told guide Shawn Adkins – to match the big gators her husband and brother-in-law took last year in Florida. […]
A whitetail deer born and raised in captivity in Pennsylvania has tested positive for Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), prompting the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission to implement restrictions regarding importing deer heads from Pennsylvania. […]
A poor summer for king mackerel fishermen out of Little River has turned around in a big way over the past several weeks. […]
A poor summer for king mackerel fishermen out of Little River has turned around in a big way over the past several weeks. A poor summer for king mackerel fishermen out of Little River has turned around in a big way over the past several weeks.
Beginning at the end of September, kings showed up thick along South Carolina’s northern coastline, clobbering the huge schools of baitfish pooled up just off the beach.
Capt. David Cutler and Capt. Jim Bowen of Lowcountry Fishing Charters keep feeding these hungry beasts just what they want, and lots of it.
“Just last weekend, (Jim) went through 70 rigs on a trip and couldn’t keep a bait in the water for more than a few minutes,” said Cutler (843-222-7433). “The fish are eating everything they can get in their mouth.”
According to Cutler, kings were just off the beach just before the cool weather arrived last weekend, but that just shifted the schools around somewhat.
“The cool water has pushed them off a little bit in 50 to 65 feet of water to places like the Shark Hole and the 65-foot hole,” he said.
Anglers should expect to encounter schooling fish between 15 and 23 pounds, typical to the fall run. With all of the live menhaden and mullet found along the beachfront and in the Little River estuary, the easy choice is still live bait. But, the schooling fish will rarely turn down dead cigar minnow either. Cutler fishes naked rigs with the exception of a few glass beads placed just above the live bait hook.
“A few glass beads make a difference day-in and day-out,” he said. “We catch more on a naked, beaded rig than any other rig we’ve got.”
Cutler targets the schooling kings between the middle of the water column and the water’s surface, but the lower half of the water column can produce hefty rewards and dire risks.
“If you can stand weeding through all of the sharks, you can get a real big one of the downrigger,” he said.
Routinely, king mackerel make their monumental inshore run from September through November, but the past few years have frustrated king mackerel anglers to their limits. It appears the frustration is over, at least for the time being, and it’s over just a short boat ride from Little River. But don’t miss the chance; these speed demons won’t hang around indefinitely as the journey through fall conditions continues.A poor summer for king mackerel fishermen out of Little River has turned around in a big way over the past several weeks.
Beginning at the end of September, kings showed up thick along South Carolina’s northern coastline, clobbering the huge schools of baitfish pooled up just off the beach.
Capt. David Cutler and Capt. Jim Bowen of Lowcountry Fishing Charters keep feeding these hungry beasts just what they want, and lots of it.
“Just last weekend, (Jim) went through 70 rigs on a trip and couldn’t keep a bait in the water for more than a few minutes,” said Cutler (843-222-7433). “The fish are eating everything they can get in their mouth.”
According to Cutler, kings were just off the beach just before the cool weather arrived last weekend, but that just shifted the schools around somewhat.
“The cool water has pushed them off a little bit in 50 to 65 feet of water to places like the Shark Hole and the 65-foot hole,” he said.
Anglers should expect to encounter schooling fish between 15 and 23 pounds, typical to the fall run. With all of the live menhaden and mullet found along the beachfront and in the Little River estuary, the easy choice is still live bait. But, the schooling fish will rarely turn down dead cigar minnow either. Cutler fishes naked rigs with the exception of a few glass beads placed just above the live bait hook.
“A few glass beads make a difference day-in and day-out,” he said. “We catch more on a naked, beaded rig than any other rig we’ve got.”
Cutler targets the schooling kings between the middle of the water column and the water’s surface, but the lower half of the water column can produce hefty rewards and dire risks.
“If you can stand weeding through all of the sharks, you can get a real big one of the downrigger,” he said.
Routinely, king mackerel make their monumental inshore run from September through November, but the past few years have frustrated king mackerel anglers to their limits. It appears the frustration is over, at least for the time being, and it’s over just a short boat ride from Little River. But don’t miss the chance; these speed demons won’t hang around indefinitely as the journey through fall conditions continues.Beginning at the end of September, kings showed up thick along South Carolina’s northern coastline, clobbering the huge schools of baitfish pooled up just off the beach. […]
On Saturday, Oct. 6, some of the best local pier fishermen gathered at the Mount Pleasant Pier for the Cooper River Bridge Challenge tournament, put on by the Charleston County Parks and Recreation Commission. […]
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