SHAD-stravaganza 2022

Evan B

Bobber Downey Jr.
Staff member
Admin
It's about that time again. The main event(s) happen on the Columbia and Willamette Rivers. While the Willamette pretty much requires a boat to have a hope of fly rod success, the Columbia does have a few spots that are friendly to the fly; especially near John Day Dam. But if you have a powered watercraft, there are a LOT of possibilities!

For those uninitiated: Shad are a reasonably sized, highly populated non-native fish that comes back up a few West Coast rivers each spring from the Pacific. They were transplanted here by bucket biologists from the East Coast along with striped bass. The main area they were introduced was the Sacramento River, but over the century or so since they were dumped in there, they have spread to just about every river that suits their conditions.

They will put a pretty good bend in a 6-7wt fly rod
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They're stinky, slimy, and hard to get to pose for photos (RIP my chips)
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It's not difficult to put up some big numbers, and if you have a plan for them, you can get a big haul to take home. Most common uses are crab bait and halibut bait. I can say from experience they actually taste really good, they're just extremely difficult to deal with. My favorite way to do it when I felt like putting in the effort was to do a light smoke on them then run them through the pressure canner. Makes for some REALLY good dips!

For those with an open mind: My absolute favorite part of making food out of shad is the roe. It's like a delicious fish meatball.

I know I'll convince exactly zero people with these photos, but will post anyways:

Shad roe skeins in a Chinese black pepper sauce
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Sauteed with brown butter and capers:
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Now on to technique:

It's all about getting to their level. The Willamette tends to have fish down deep, like 10-20' - in a few spots on the Columbia, including my favorite boat spot, you can get them in 5' deep water and swing your presentation about mid-water column. I run the fastest sinking line I can use without scraping bottom on the swing. I will cast out, dead drift until I'm at the dept I want, then do a slow retrieve as it swings all the way down. You can get a lot on the hangdown too!

For flies and "flies:" You'll have a hard time out-fishing a gold hook like a shad dart. Example:
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Though you can absolutely get creative. I've definitely had great success in more turbid conditions throwing something with a bit more profile. If purity is your thing, some flashy hair or bucktail on there. If not, sliding on a rubber grub tail will do the same job. The size of the jigs that see the most success in the gear world are 1/32 - 1/16oz size. My flies are in that same size range. like less than an inch in size.

Ok, let's share your knowledge or ask questions. There's plenty of shad to go around. We can give up the goods to help make someone's day.
 
Thanks for posting, this is on my short list of new fisheries to try. Need things to break right workwise to give it go though. Linewise, is an intermediate or 10' type 6 sink tip a reasonable choice at the Columbia bank spots?
 
Thanks for posting, this is on my short list of new fisheries to try. Need things to break right workwise to give it go though. Linewise, is an intermediate or 10' type 6 sink tip a reasonable choice at the Columbia bank spots?
I always went with like a 6wt spey and like 10' of T10 at John Day. Might want to keep trying things until it works. One day my buddy and I were swinging the same flies there and I caught 10:1 more fish because he couldn't be butchered to change tips.
 
I usually get out a couple times a season. We seem to see peak numbers in the middle-latter part of june, but it's probably an 8 week season or so if you want. I have not had much luck with flies yet. My go to is a triple teaser or dick nite. And yes, if you look I'm running my lure under a float. I've been a fan of floats for depth control for a long time.
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The nice thing about fishing the teaser at umatilla is I can usually score a nice haul of these, and throw all the shad back.
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The other place we favor is ice harbor
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I usually get out a couple times a season. We seem to see peak numbers in the middle-latter part of june, but it's probably an 8 week season or so if you want. I have not had much luck with flies yet. My go to is a triple teaser or dick nite. And yes, if you look I'm running my lure under a float. I've been a fan of floats for depth control for a long time.
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The nice thing about fishing the teaser at umatilla is I can usually score a nice haul of these, and throw all the shad back.
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The other place we favor is ice harbor
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Give flies a try. If you need to get really deep, I run an Airflo CCT 470 (like T26) right on a running line and do waterloaded casts. That's my Willamette rig and it crushes the deep fish.
 
Did it a few times with gear. Was pretty fun.
Didn’t catch a lot but they fight hard.

If anyone in the north Seattle or Kirkland area goes and decides to keep some and ends up with too many, I’ll take some off your hands.
They make great bait for my hillbilly crabbing technique.
Thanks
SF
 
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Give flies a try. If you need to get really deep, I run an Airflo CCT 470 (like T26) right on a running line and do waterloaded casts. That's my Willamette rig and it crushes the deep fish.
Thx. I have some of the standards tied up and lines that I feel will get down.. I think one problem is I've given up before we actually locate the seam with good numbers of fish we want to fish. The other being too many people and little ones on board to really be comfortable. Usually family outings.
 
Thx. I have some of the standards tied up and lines that I feel will get down.. I think one problem is I've given up before we actually locate the seam with good numbers of fish we want to fish. The other being too many people and little ones on board to really be comfortable. Usually family outings.
I know that all too well. I take my step son and his cousin out each year. But they're old enough to run their own programs and net their fish now, so I hide up on the bow with my fly stuff.
 
I want to go!! Have wanted to try shad fishing for a while! If anyone is willing to drag me around..I'm game! I have Sundays and Mondays off! I could try banking it, but have seen pictures of the crowds..
 
I want to go!! Have wanted to try shad fishing for a while! If anyone is willing to drag me around..I'm game! I have Sundays and Mondays off! I could try banking it, but have seen pictures of the crowds..
I’m with you on this, I am game too and don’t see why this year shouldn’t be the year I finally make it happen. I can make some time for some springtime sun-n-tugz.
 
I haven’t done it for a few years, but when I did we caught ridiculous numbers of fish. Also got some nice bycatch with big pikeminnows, walleye, and a couple of springers. 30’ of t-8 on a 7 weight was my favored rig, easy 50’ casts with a big mend to get it down a bit. Rather than retrieving through the swing, I found that twitching the fly worked better, 6” pulls then release that line back out.

The key thing, of course, is being on the fish. They move in lanes, which can be really tight depending on the current in the area. We made a lot of moves, sometimes as small as 10’ sideways, to make sure we’re were on them. We would often be anchored up in a spot catching a fish every cast, getting dirty looks from people three boat lengths away who were getting nothing whatsoever. You need a good anchor and good anchoring skills to make it work in the Columbia.

Back bouncing a dick nite spoon was the most effective non fly method for us, but most things worked, so long as you were on the fish.
 
You see, this is the problem. It's May. I've got the D going into salmonflies, the cascade lakes are icing off, the muskies are starting to wake up, and now you're getting me thinking about another fishery.
 
Perfect way to get kids into fishing!

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I think I was there last year. Upper end of that gravel bar has an endless supply of the best skipping rocks that’s I’ve ever seen.

Last year I headed out to fish for them locally in my area (Richland, WA) early one morning. Drove a short distance upstream of the house to a spot that I thought would produce. Heading over the crest of the river bank, I saw 5 boats anchored where I was planning to fish. Turns out in our area, the shad run happens at the same time as the sockeye salmon run. Returned home and enjoyed a nice cup of coffee.
 
Who makes a decent shad-appropriate size and strength gold hook to tie on?
 
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