Johnsfolly Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Ever since I planned my recent trip to Maryland this late in April, I have been researching about trying to go after the shad that run the rivers throughout the state. Maryland has both American and Hickory shad. When I lived in PA back in college, I never once headed to the Delaware river to fish for shad. It was often a rite of spring in that part of PA with many folks more excited about shad than the trout opener. In those days I knew about using shad darts, even had a few in the day, but never fished them. I researched some spots, read articles, watched videos, and picked up some darts that appealed to me. I asked around at work when I got back in Maryland and read fishing reports. I decided on trying out the confluence of Deer Creek and the Susquehanna river with access in Susquehanna State park in Cecil county Maryland. I drove up to the park on Saturday. I knew going in that this would not be a trip of solitude fishing. If there were no fisherman then there were likely no fish in that area. As I was driving along sight of the river there were cars parked in all of the parking areas. A good sign. I kept driving past the confluence to check out the creek and get a feel for the water. What was apparent that the shad had not gone too far up the creek and that the spot to fish would be the confluence area. As I pulled into the parking area, I saw a couple of bent rods and watched shad being landed. I started with a tandem rig with a 1/4 oz lower dart and a 1/8 oz upper shad dart. The lower one was white with a red tip and the upper dart was a green head with chartreuse body. I could reach a spot with a decent current run and got hung on the bottom on my second cast. I lost both darts. It took losing a few more darts before I got a feel for the rocks and bottom structure. The guy up at the actual confluence gave up and headed off to breakfast. I moved to his spot and got the two dart tandem rig set up. I went with two 1/8 oz green/chartreuse darts. I could see guys on the other side of the creek catching shad. I was watching their cadence and retrieve speed. I tried to emulate that and I got a hard bite. What a fight. This is one feisty fish species. I horsed the fish and pulled the hook. Second cast and same thing. Hard fight and pulled hook. After several casts I had a third hard bite. With this fish, I had to channel Phil Lilly and opted to back reel instead of relying on the drag system. I was able to keep good pressure on the fish, which jumped a couple of times before I finally landed my first hickory shad ! Even with landing only a single fish, I could start to see why people get excited about catching them. What a sleek and gorgeous looking fish. They are a powerful fighter. I couldn't wait to catch another. I switched up colors and I hooked and lost a couple of fish after counting down the rig before reeling it in. What I didn't notice was I was pulling off a scale or two from the hooks. Then I hooked a strong fish and noticed that it fought differently than the previous fish. I also saw that It also was not a silver fish but was golden brown. I was thinking of a carp, but ended up landing my first ever shorthead redhorse sucker! A couple of cast later, I figured out just what I was hooking into when I snagged this gizzard shad with the lower dart. I ended up with five gizzard shad at this location. I watched a guy next to me begin catching several hickories with the majority of them being caught on a #13 silver and green Tony Accetta PET spoon. Another guy down stream was also catching shad on spoons as well. I finally hooked and landed my second hickory of the day on my darts. It was a female loaded with eggs. It was after noon and I was getting hangry. I had a couple of guys move in on me. I had enough and went to get something to eat. I left the river with a few folks still fishing. I learned a lot and had ideas on what I might need if I were to get back and fish this area again. I dropped by the Bass Pro shop in Baltimore on the way back to the hotel to pick up some spoons and a few more darts. I also picked up a medium weight rod to have a second rod for Sunday, but that's another story ! This post has been promoted to an article MoCarp, Ham and JestersHK 3
JestersHK Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Keep knocking out those species buddy! Looks like an awesome place to fish. Johnsfolly 1
Ham Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Another victim of the Hangies Every Saint has a past, every Sinner has a future. On Instagram @hamneedstofish
Johnsfolly Posted April 24, 2018 Author Posted April 24, 2018 21 minutes ago, JestersHK said: Keep knocking out those species buddy! Looks like an awesome place to fish. JHK - Thanks buddy! I have 27 species for the year thus far (since March 3rd) and 6 new species. I want to catch another 11 new life species by the end of Feb. I need to hit the briny waters this summer to get some new guys ! Livie is up to 18 different species. Just 22 more for her goal this year of 40 different species. JestersHK 1
Ham Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Gotta get you on the 1/1 to 12/31 time line Every Saint has a past, every Sinner has a future. On Instagram @hamneedstofish
MoCarp Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 eels, bet they have a few of those as well there MONKEYS? what monkeys?
Gavin Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 That's awesome John. Thanks for the report as always.
Johnsfolly Posted April 24, 2018 Author Posted April 24, 2018 2 hours ago, MoCarp said: eels, bet they have a few of those as well there I don't mind catching eels, but hate having to try to remove a hook (which in my experience tends to be swallowed). Slimy critters for sure. May as well throw out any clothes that they slime up! MoCarp 1
ness Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Interesting report about a type of fishing I know nothing about. Thanks. Johnsfolly 1 John
MoCarp Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 sea run shad are a blast to catch, never ate one though just tossed them back Johnsfolly 1 MONKEYS? what monkeys?
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