Nick Adams Posted Saturday at 12:43 AM Posted Saturday at 12:43 AM Interesting article about Shad fishing on the East Coast. With all @snagged in outlet 3 and his Shad Spawn posts, I thought it was timely. A Fish, Yes, but Also a Forgotten American Hero snagged in outlet 3 and Quillback 2
snagged in outlet 3 Posted Saturday at 01:28 AM Posted Saturday at 01:28 AM That’s right in @Johnsfolly wheelhouse!
Nick Adams Posted Saturday at 01:36 AM Author Posted Saturday at 01:36 AM 7 minutes ago, snagged in outlet 3 said: That’s right in @Johnsfolly wheelhouse! My thoughts exactly. I eagerly await his reply. snagged in outlet 3 1
Ham Posted Saturday at 11:37 AM Posted Saturday at 11:37 AM I’m in the preliminary stages of planning a Shad Run trip with @Johnsfolly in 2027. We’ve been talking about it for years, but I let life get in the way too many times. snagged in outlet 3 1 Every Saint has a past, every Sinner has a future. On Instagram @hamneedstofish
tjm Posted Saturday at 12:59 PM Posted Saturday at 12:59 PM When I lived in RI there was an American shad run in a river about 4 miles from my house, I never heard about it from locals but read about it in a national magazine. I went several times over the next few years, but catching the run is kinda like finding the white bass run. "shoulda been here next week" or "shouda been here last year". I talked to guys that had caught shad on fly rod darts, heard tall tales of the runs they made, but never saw but one shad. That river had once supported a "Shad Factory" where they processed shad for export. Interesting enough, the shad was USA's major export to Europe for decades, either dried or pickled. Apparently every east coast river had huge populations of shad until the mid 1800s, but like market hunting of ducks and passenger pigeons, unregulated over harvest almost caused extinction. I read once that the importing and stocking of German Carp was an attempt at replacing the shad as a food fish. I believe that the founding of the US Fish Commission was the result of the shad decline.
snagged in outlet 3 Posted Saturday at 02:53 PM Posted Saturday at 02:53 PM 1 hour ago, tjm said: When I lived in RI there was an American shad run in a river about 4 miles from my house, I never heard about it from locals but read about it in a national magazine. I went several times over the next few years, but catching the run is kinda like finding the white bass run. "shoulda been here next week" or "shouda been here last year". I talked to guys that had caught shad on fly rod darts, heard tall tales of the runs they made, but never saw but one shad. That river had once supported a "Shad Factory" where they processed shad for export. Interesting enough, the shad was USA's major export to Europe for decades, either dried or pickled. Apparently every east coast river had huge populations of shad until the mid 1800s, but like market hunting of ducks and passenger pigeons, unregulated over harvest almost caused extinction. I read once that the importing and stocking of German Carp was an attempt at replacing the shad as a food fish. I believe that the founding of the US Fish Commission was the result of the shad decline. Happy birthday, @tjm! tjm 1
Quillback Posted Saturday at 04:41 PM Posted Saturday at 04:41 PM Columbia river is the place to go, estimated run of American shad in 10-20 million. No limits. They are spreading in the PAC NW, showing up in the Cedar River which is a tributary to Lake Washington which borders the east side of Seattle. They are also showing up in the Skagit river. snagged in outlet 3 and Nick Adams 2
Ham Posted Saturday at 09:31 PM Posted Saturday at 09:31 PM 4 hours ago, Quillback said: Columbia river is the place to go, estimated run of American shad in 10-20 million. No limits. They are spreading in the PAC NW, showing up in the Cedar River which is a tributary to Lake Washington which borders the east side of Seattle. They are also showing up in the Skagit river. I could spend a month fishing the Columbia River Quillback and snagged in outlet 3 2 Every Saint has a past, every Sinner has a future. On Instagram @hamneedstofish
Quillback Posted Saturday at 09:36 PM Posted Saturday at 09:36 PM 3 minutes ago, Ham said: I could spend a month fishing the Columbia River Yessir, you could start in April when the spring chinook come in and keep going until November on the anadromous fish runs. Plus the resident fish. snagged in outlet 3 and Ham 2
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