
by Jack Naves
I often find myself driving through Downtown Sacramento on Interstate 5. I never pass up the opportunity to peer over the rail to see if any boats are anchored up on the river. When I see groups of tightly packed boats in the springtime, I know what time it is. Shad fishing has arrived.
I’ve always heard of “100 shad days” and kind of rolled my eyes. Is it is even possible to catch 100 shad in a day? On May 8th, I learned that not only is it possible, but it is a whole lot of fun.
I met my fishing partner Mick Berklich on the morning of May 8th at the Miller Park boat ramp near Downtown Sacramento. We motored upstream against the ripping current and anchored above the I Street Bridge. With the roar of the freeway in the background, we lowered our offerings using four and eight ounce sinkers to create a spread.
I was trying to explain to Mick that shad usually don’t start striking until mid-morning, when one of the rods went down. As Mick battled the first shad of the day, another rod buried towards the water - a double to start the day.
We began to realize that 100 shad days really are possible. The fishing was so good that we couldn’t keep one or two rods in the water at any given time. We had doubles, triples and even landed two shad on one rod, when both lures on a high-low setup hooked shad. Mick even picked up a nice keeper-sized striper on the shad rig.
For American Shad, I run a high-low setup similar to what would normally be used for surf fishing or ocean bottom fishing. You fish vertical, with a sinker clipped to the very end of the line that rests on the bottom. Eighteen inches above the sinker, there is a ten-inch dropper leader coming off the main line.
A second ten-inch dropper leader is spaced 24 inches above this. You slowly lower the rig down.