Fish Talk

American Shad are Overrated

Fishing the American shad run when they are “in” can be like trying to complete a long grocery list at Costco during the first weekend of the month. Occasional crowds, shoulder-to-shoulder contact, anger, frustration, and sometimes even fights reign in popular areas where these fish are present. Don’t expect to find yourself on the bank by yourself; shad season tends to be a combat fishing season.

I’ll admit that American shad are pretty damn fun to catch. They are strong, make good short runs, and from time to time will show you aerial displays that they are capable of making. American shad are a great fish to catch on a fly rod because they react well to fly patterns. More often than not, flies will produce better numbers than a typical grub rig. What’s not to like about this species?

Reasons why I think American shad are overrated:

  • Shad are easy to catch.
    • There isn’t too much of a match the hatch with American shad therefore a few different patterns and colors here and there will easily get the job done. If they’re there, they’ll bite.
    • Once I get the shad fever early in the season and catch a few during their arrival, the magic is quickly lost. Too much of a good thing I suppose…
    • Since they are so abundant and easy to catch during the run, sometimes it feels as if everyone is out on the river fishing for them.
The Combat Zone
  • Combat fishing is not fun.
    • Even boats have to play boat wars to get a spot.
    • Trying to swing a fly in a combat fishing zone can be difficult. I try to be a respectful angler and give others room but I always end up being the asshole with the 11ft fly pole taking up like 30ft of bank space. Being the odd duck is sometimes quite frustrating.
    • Nothing ruins the mood more than seeing 15 anglers shoulder-to-shoulder along the bank throwing their lines into the river.
  • Better coming than going.
    • The American shad run is like that really hot date you met at that party and went out with a couple of times only to forget that they even existed after a few weeks.
    • The shad hype is at it’s highest when they arrive. After a few weeks of their arrival the crowds tend to thin out.

The Silver Lining
Targeting these anadromous fish every spring is like a ritual. I’ve come to realized that even though guides and boat anglers will brag about 30 – 50 fish days, the most important concept for the average bank angler is to find a couple fish here and there and just have fun.

The majority of anglers out on the river are simply trying to have a good time by catching a few fish and letting them go. Many of the anglers I meet in the combat zone are very friendly and fun to talk to.

American shad are super easy to catch, can be found almost anywhere in the river during “prime-time”, and you get a good three month period when you can successful target them.

So get out there, catch a few, keep a few, release the rest, have fun, and when the crowds start rolling in just take a deep breath.

Feather River, Yuba River

Shad Colors Starting To Show

Poorman’s Tarpon

Summer is around the corner. How do I know? Well, the American Shad are in town. Unlike the coming of the salmon run in the fall, the coming of the American shad run is shrouded in mysticism.

Once every year when the cottonwood trees bloom…

Feather River at Star Bend

The American shad shares many similarities with California’s native steelhead. They both come in chrome, fight hard, taste great, and are fun to target. The biggest difference between the two is that one is easier to eat than the other.
The legend of the Micmac Indians tells that porcupine was discontented and asked the Great Spirit of Manitou to change him into something else. The Spirit responded by turning the creature inside out and tossed him into the river where it now had the new existence as a Shad.
Filleting an American shad is like trying to perform amateur surgery but if you can get some good meat out of them they taste like an anadromous catfish.

It’s no secret that the Feather River’s Shanghai Bend is one of the most popular places to fish for shad. The structure of the bend is a great spot for anadramous fish to hold as they make their way upriver. During a quick visit to the bend about a week ago, I saw a few gear anglers hook into some chrome shad. It was great to see the fish there but the water that they were holding in was near impossible to fish on a fly. Would it be possible to find these fish in a more fly rod friendly area?

I decided to take a chance this week. Despite rainy and off-color water conditions on this particular day, I was able to hook and land a big strong hen that almost got away. This marks my first shad from the Feather River.

FR Shad

Before I moved, the Sacramento River outside of Chico was my shad spot.
However now that I am in Yuba City, I have to find new spots to fish for
shad. Luckily both the Yuba River and the Feather River hold shad and
are only a few minutes away.
I will be exploring both rivers to find less pressured spots as the run continues. Early in the season is usually when anglers combat fish for shad in the more popular spots. The fish are still trickling in but once they get here it’ll be on. These chrome domes will keep my line tight until the flows on the Yuba go down.

Yuba River
The Yuba is at 2,700 CFS which is much more fishable than 3,000+ CFS. I was able to find three pissed off and jumpy fish before attempting to catch the evening hatch. In the evening I saw a few fish rise but unfortunately there wasn’t enough surface activity to have a enough fish looking up. No fish landed this trip but finding them was the next best thing.

Quite Flats…
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