
It’s been a good thirty years since I took a dedicated American Shad fishing trip from a boat. Year after year, “We should go shad fishing…” never seems to pan out. However, this year I finally dropped the hammer and set up a shad fishing trip with my dad.
On May 22nd, I launched at dawn on the Sacramento River with my dad and two kids. We motored upstream to a bend in the river known locally as ‘The Minnow Hole’. I have a lot of family history at this location, as my dad grew up in nearby Land Park and fished there often.
My Grandpa used to make and sell shad darts at The Minnow Hole after he retired back in the ‘60s. Located in Sacramento, it’s several miles upstream of Garcia Bend off of 43rd Avenue. It’s a popular spot for both shad and salmon anglers because of its easy bank access.
I anchored in about eighteen feet of water a few hundred yards downstream from the bank fishing area. The fact that nobody was lined up casting for shad had me kind of worried. Classic fishing quotes like, “They went through last week” and “It’s a late run” started churning through my head.
Before hitting the water, I did some research and learned some new techniques I wanted to try out. Back in the day, we would just cast and retrieve small lures called ‘shad darts’ three feet behind a half-ounce barrel sinker. I learned that nowadays, many folks vertically lower rock-fishing style rigs into the current and wait for schools of shad to pass by.
During our trip, we employed dropper loop surf leaders similar to what would normally be used for catfishing or ocean bottom fishing. There is a sinker clipped to the very end of the line, which rests on the bottom. Above this sinker, there are a pair of six inch leaders coming off of the main line. These two leaders are spaced about a foot apart above the sinker.
You drop the rig straight down until the