Gamefish

Haddock

Melanogrammus aeglefinus

The backbone of New England bottom fishing. When the cod are scarce and closed, healthy haddock stocks keep the coolers full out on Stellwagen and the ledges.

Haddock are the fish that keep the New England groundfish tradition alive. As cod have declined and tightened up under regulation, healthy haddock numbers on Stellwagen Bank and the ledges give anglers a reliable, delicious reason to make the run offshore. It is meat fishing at its finest.

How to identify them

Haddock look a lot like a small cod but are cleaner and grayer, with a black lateral line (cod's is pale) and a dark smudge above the pectoral fin often called “the devil's thumbprint” or “St. Peter's mark.” They have the three dorsal fins of the cod family and a small chin barbel. Getting the ID right matters, cod and haddock have very different regulations.

Where and when

Haddock are a Gulf of Maine fish, caught over hard bottom, gravel and the edges of banks. From Massachusetts that means Stellwagen Bank, Jeffreys Ledge, and similar pieces. They are available much of the year, so the season is really dictated by weather windows and by the regulations. This is a run-offshore, watch-the-forecast fishery.

Tip Haddock feed on the bottom on small stuff, so downsize. Smaller hooks and baits like clam and sea worm outfish big offerings, and a dropper above the sinker often catches two at a time.

How to catch them

Haddock fishing is bottom fishing. The two mainstays:

Bait rigs

A high-low rig with a bank sinker heavy enough to hold bottom, baited with clam or sea worm, is the standard. Drop it down, hold bottom, and let the gentle taps tell you they are there.

Jigs

Diamond jigs and slow-pitch style jigs, sometimes tipped with a teaser or a strip of bait, are an active, effective way to fish them and can pick off the bigger haddock. A sensitive conventional or jigging Daiwa setup makes the deep-water fishing far more enjoyable.

Regulations Cod and haddock are managed separately, with different minimum sizes, bag limits, and open seasons, and the cod rules in particular are strict. Identify your fish correctly and confirm current groundfish rules with NOAA Fisheries and the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries before keeping fish.

Eating

Haddock is the fish in classic New England fish and chips and baked scrod for good reason: mild, flaky, white and clean. Bleed and ice them and they are as good as whitefish gets.

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.