Drop Shot Fishing on Lake Hartwell
Lake Hartwell · South Carolina / Georgia · Southeast
Hartwell sits at the confluence of the Seneca and Tugaloo rivers, forming a sprawling two-state impoundment with over 960 miles of shoreline and water clarity that tends toward the clearer end of the Southeast reservoir spectrum—typically 3–6 feet of visibility outside of spring runoff. The fishery holds a strong largemouth population alongside respectable numbers of spotted bass, and the lake's deep timber, submerged creek channels, and expansive main-lake points give anglers a wide variety of structural options across the calendar year. Forage is dominated by threadfin shad and bluegill, with crawfish playing a major role in the rocky, harder-bottom zones.
The drop shot suspends a soft plastic bait above the bottom on a fixed line, keeping it in the strike zone longer than any other rig. Originally a West Coast technique, it now dominates clear-water and finesse situations nationwide. Works vertically over structure or on a long cast.
Drop Shot Setup for Lake Hartwell
| Rod | 7' medium-light to medium spinning rod, fast action |
| Reel | 2500–3000 size spinning reel, 6.2:1 or higher |
| Line | 6–8 lb fluorocarbon main line or 10 lb braid + 8 lb fluoro leader |
| Weight | 1/8–3/8 oz tungsten drop shot weight (heavier in current or deep water) |
| Hook | #1 or #2 Gamakatsu Finesse Wide Gap, 6–18 inches above weight |
Seasonal Tactics on Lake Hartwell
Lake: Pre-spawn largemouth stack on secondary points and the mouths of major creek arms in the 8–15 ft range through late February and March; as water temps climb through the low 60s, fish push to shallow flat clay banks and submerged timber inside coves to complete the spawn.
Drop Shot: Target staging fish on points and drop-offs in 8–20 feet. Nose-hook a 6" Roboworm or Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Flat Worm.
Lake: Post-spawn fish scatter but ultimately suspend over submerged channel timber and main-lake humps in the 18–30 ft zone; topwater and swimbait action on main-lake points at low-light hours can be exceptional, with deeper structure producing on drop shots and football jigs mid-day.
Drop Shot: Go deep — 20–40 feet on main lake structure. Shake in place with minimal movement. Shad colors dominate.
Lake: Shad migration into the back halves of creek arms drives some of the year's most aggressive feeding; spotted bass and largemouth both chase bait schools to the surface in the upper ends of major tributaries like Eighteen Mile Creek and the Tugaloo arm, making moving baits the first choice from September through November.
Drop Shot: Follow baitfish to secondary points and pockets. Faster retrieve works as fish get more aggressive.
Lake: Hartwell's clear-ish water makes jerkbaits the go-to cold-water tool from December through February; fish suspend over deep timber in the 20–35 ft range and respond best to long pauses on a Megabass Vision 110 or a Smithwick Suspending Rogue, particularly during the warming window of midday.
Drop Shot: Slowest presentation of the year. Dead-stick a 4" finesse worm at the bottom. Let it sit 10–15 seconds between shakes.
Best Conditions
Clear to stained water, pressured fish, cold fronts, post-spawn suspended bass, deep structure in summer
Use a Palomar knot and leave the tag end pointing up to keep the hook riding correctly. Most anglers tie it wrong.
More Techniques for Lake Hartwell
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