Gamefish

American Shad

Alosa sapidissima

The poor man's tarpon. Every spring, American shad pour out of the ocean and up our rivers to spawn, and for a few electric weeks they give river anglers hard runs, wild jumps, and a run of pure fun.

American shad are one of the great seasonal events of Northeast freshwater. The largest member of the herring family, they spend their lives at sea and surge back up our rivers each spring to spawn, drawing anglers to the same riverbanks their grandparents fished. Shad do not feed on the run, but they will slash at a small lure reflexively, and pound for pound they pull and jump like fish twice their size.

How to identify them

Shad are deep, thin and brilliantly silver, with a dark shoulder spot (often followed by a faint row of smaller spots) behind the gill and a deeply forked tail. They look like a giant, chrome-plated herring, which is exactly what they are. Females (roe shad) run larger than the males (bucks).

Where and when: the spring run

Shad fishing is all about the spring spawning run. As the water warms, fish push up coastal rivers, the Connecticut and Merrimack are the classic New England shad rivers, along with other coastal systems. Timing shifts with water temperature and river flow each year, so the run is a moving target that is worth chasing down. Fish stack in current seams, tailouts and holding water as they move upstream.

Tip Shad hold in the current and want the lure down near them. Use enough weight to get your dart or fly ticking near the bottom in the seam, and swing it through slowly, most strikes come as the offering swings across the holding water.

How to catch them

Because shad strike reflexively rather than feed, small, bright, flashy offerings are the ticket:

  • Shad darts and small flutter spoons in bright colors, the traditional and deadly choice.
  • Small jigs bounced through the current.
  • Fly: weighted, flashy shad flies swung on a sink-tip or with split shot, a genuinely fun way to fish the run.
Regulations Shad populations are carefully managed, and on many rivers the fishery is catch-and-release or otherwise restricted to protect spawning stock. River herring, a close relative, are protected. Always confirm current rules for your specific river with Massachusetts DMF or MassWildlife before keeping fish, and release spawning fish carefully.

Handling

Handle shad gently and release them quickly to protect the run, they are here to spawn and rebuild the population. Keep them wet, support them, and let them continue upriver.

From the page to the water

Learn it here, land it out there

Reading is a great start. The fastest way to get good is a day on the water with someone who does it every day.

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Note: fishing regulations (size limits, bag limits, seasons, permits) change often. Always confirm current rules with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (saltwater), MassWildlife (freshwater), or NOAA Fisheries (offshore/HMS) before you keep a fish.