
The grab was so hard that the light spinning rod was nearly wrenched from my hand and I actually had to adjust my grip to keep from losing control.
For much of the morning I’d been shooting video of other folks catching fish and now it was my turn. I was hooked up and the cameras were rolling. The problem was that the current was ripping and the fish was far downstream when the hook up occurred.
The fish surged and gyrated and the rod was sharply bent. Ever so slowly I worked the reel as I spoke to the camera. The tactic almost worked. The fish was perhaps a boat length away when there was a surge and a flash and the line went limp. That’s why they earned the moniker of “Papermouths” long ago. Too much pressure and that tiny hook will pull right out!
The date was June 6, the location was the American River Parkway upriver of Sunrise Boulevard. The fish that just escaped me was an American shad. My partner for the day was Fish Sniffer contributor and trout fishing fanatic Tom O’Brien.
When Tom shared with me several days before that he’d never caught a shad, but wanted to, I immediately got on the phone to Captain Cameron Beck.
My buddy Cameron is the owner/operator of American River Charters. He is an avid river fisherman that also spends a fair amount of time chasing saltwater species both inside and outside San Francisco Bay.
I knew that Cameron had been putting his clients on big numbers of hard charging shad and I asked if he’d take Tom and me out to shoot some video and give me some fodder for a feature in the Fish Sniffer.
Cameron enthusiastically agreed, but shared that he had been feeling a little under the weather, but that he thought he’d be fine by the day of the trip.