Quabbin Reservoir is the crown jewel of Massachusetts freshwater, a vast, deep, gin-clear public water supply that produces trophy smallmouth and largemouth bass along with lake trout and landlocked salmon. It is a special place, and the same protections that keep it pristine also mean specific access rules.
The water
Quabbin is enormous, with countless rocky points, drop-offs, humps and coves. Smallmouth relate to the rock and gravel; largemouth to the weedier coves; and the cold, deep water holds lake trout and salmon. The clarity means finesse and stealth pay off.
How to fish it
For smallmouth, work rock with drop shots, Ned rigs, tubes and crayfish flies. Largemouth in the coves take stick worms and Texas rigs. The cold water below the dam feeds the famous Swift River trout fishery.
Tip Quabbin’s clarity is the challenge and the key. Go lighter on line and more natural on presentation than you would elsewhere, and use that clear water to your advantage by sight-fishing rocky points for cruising smallmouth.
