Went again yesterday and had a good day. Water temps are up to 78-82 now. Still cool considering surrounding lakes are 89-92. Started the day up the Taxway (big river arm) and got into some good Largemouth on buzzbaits, popping frogs, fluke and a 6th Sense Catwalk and then big football jigs and magnum shaky heads with Magnum Trick Worms when the surface bite quit. The LM were all something you would want to weight in for a tournament! The bite slowed and I got hungry. Found some shade and ate lunch then rode around and graphed some new stuff and marked some new waypoints to try. Then headed back towards Bad Creek. Jocassee is just absolutely amazing! Having the gas power to get around and see what the entire lake has to offer is unreal!
I learned something yesterday about Bad Creek that may be consistent every time they generate; I've just never spent the amount of time there that I did yesterday. They sound a loud 20 second horn before moving water, so its audible and heard far off. So it seems they pull from Jocassee/pump up to Bad Creek first for about 2.5 hours and then they reverse and release back into Jocassee. If you fish near the station long enough, you actually see the current change directions unannounced. Never knew this. I could not fish some of my normal favorite spots due to all the kayak and SUP traffic near the bank up towards Devil's Fork so I moved down closer to Bad Creek starting just off the big point for the arm in. Glad I did, fishing was good. I did not get a single fish out of the blow downs and mind you there are a ton. I pulled fish out mere feet off the bank where trees overhung 15-25' of water. The key was rocky transitions under those trees and anywhere water flowed in from the hills (you can hear it when you get close). I was skipping Ned Rigs and finesse jigs under the trees and slack lining for a straight fall. Watching my line for subtle changes. I will tell you, you will feel a ton of bites; its the aggressive bream attacking your lure. They have little man syndrome and will annihilate your plastic. I was throwing the Ned rig but the bream were stripping the plastic off the hook, even with it super glued. I was catching some 12-13" spots pretty consistent on the Ned but the bream were becoming annoying. Bream peck and feel very erratic. Spotted Bass just sort of inhale the bait and hold it. sometimes they swim off and its easy to see and sometimes you just feel the weight and if you pull to hard without setting the hook, they spit it out. Also got two small perch on the Ned; gorgeous fish. Might be fun to use an ultralight to fish for the bream. Some of them looked HUGE! I changed to a 1/2 ounce Keitech Tungsten Football Jig (Dark Green Pumpkin with a Morning Dawn Strike King Ned Bug as a trailer - nice contrast). The bite for bigger fish really turned on with this change and I was able to fish water faster. Size of the Spotted Bass were all 15" or better on the jig; biggest being 3#. Smallmouth were not hitting yesterday. Caught one small one on a 2.8" Keitech swim bait (Blue/Chartreuse) on an Okashira Screw Head in some large chunk rock in about 10' of water; that was it. When the current changed yesterday about 5pm, it seemed like the bite turned off in the pockets, so I got up closer to the generators and the current was kicking. Fish were lighting up the graph. The little Keitech fished just before the rip rap started getting crushed; granted nothing of any noteworthy size, but quantity. I would point the boat towards the generator and cast back and let out line to give it a bit of depth and then just held it in the current. Every now and again, a twitch of the rod tip and they would pounce on it. Now, granted, I was in a bass boat with a trolling motor, so this may not be as easy in a paddle craft. The current could move my 20' boat at 1.9mph. I was at 40% trolling motor power to hold the boat.
Skies were blue and clear most of the day, but a front was moving in and the thunder was rocking so it was a comin! I took out at about 1900 and the storm was picking up and the lightning at the ramp was scary. A bass tournament was blasting off as I was trying to take out at the main Devil's Fork ramp. Kinda surprised given the severity of the lightning.
Anyway, hope this helps. The baits mentioned are not a must. Many similar will work just fine. A tube or small jig worm or a small shaky head would all be worth trying. Seems sub 4" plastics do best near bad creek. The fall on the presentation is key. Heck, I kinda wish I woulda threw a nail weighted wacky rig (Neko) now.