Lake Rabon is 540 acre lake located in Laurens County. It has a park with a boat ramp, fishing pier, and picnic shelters.
Lake Rabon is located Laurens County about five miles south of Hickory Tavern. The lake was built in 1990 on Rabon Creek. Rabon covers an area of about 546 acres with a maximum depth of 27 feet and a mean depth of 13 feet. Lake Rabon’s primary purpose is to provide the city of Laurens with water service. Rabon is owned by Laurens Water & Sewer Commission. This lake is surrounded by some very nice private homes, but does have a park that is open to public access. Lake Rabon is located just off of South Carolina Highway 252 near the city of Laurens and has a large sign posted at the entrance to the park .
The park is full of everything needed for a day of recreation. The park has a double boat ramp, swings including porch swings, large covered picnic areas with large grills, and an amazing hillside view of the lake. In addition, there is a fishing pier that can accommodate a large number of people.
The fishing pier is ideal for taking the children fishing. There is a fish bouy located about 15 foot from the pier with submerged brush there to attract the fish. The pier also has plenty of benches to sit on.
For boating, you will need a permit. The price for an out of county boat permit is $ 35.00 and can be purchased at the Lake Wardens Office located at the lake. A photo of the warden’s office appears below .
Lake Rabon is a 546-acre reservoir in Laurens County, built and managed by the Laurens County Water and Sewer Commission as a public water supply. It is the kind of unhurried local lake where the parking lot fills with johnboats and kayaks rather than wakeboard rigs.
Lake Rabon Park, open seven days a week from sunrise to sunset, has a double boat ramp, a large fishing pier, a playground, picnic shelters and trails, all accessible. Boating runs on a permit with motors limited to 15 horsepower (30 on a pontoon) and boats up to 25 feet. Anglers work the shoreline and brush for largemouth bass and bluegill.
It covers 546 acres in Laurens County, South Carolina.
Motors are limited to 15 horsepower (30 on a pontoon), with boats up to 25 feet.
Mainly largemouth bass and bluegill, fished from a boat or the park’s fishing pier.
Channel catfish, common at the Draper WMA lakes (illustration, public domain). The Draper WMA lakes…
Bluegill, a popular panfish at the Bonneau Ferry lakes (public-domain illustration). Bonneau Ferry Wildlife Management…
Channel catfish, common at the Webb Center Lakes (illustration, public domain). The Webb Center Lakes…
Largemouth bass, a top catch at the Mountain Lakes (illustration: USFWS, public domain). The Mountain…
Bluegill, a popular panfish at Star Fort Pond (public-domain illustration). Star Fort Pond is a…
Channel catfish, common at Lancaster Reservoir (illustration, public domain). Lancaster Reservoir is a 60-acre fertilized…
View Comments
on lake Rabon can I remove the prop on a 17' foot boat and just use the trolling motor to fish?
I know you can use a 15 hp outboard engine on a boat with a larger engine if you remove the prop from the large engine. The game warden told me that.
You may now have a 15 hp on boats and 30hp on pontoons.
i have a 16 ft bass buggy with a 50 hp can remove the prop and used the trolling motor
Why not just impose a speed limit instead of HP limit? Many small fishing boats have 60HP engines from the dealer. Would love to fish this and would be happy to just idle around to get to places.