I've lived in the Sac Area for almost seven years now, but have never caught a shad. I tried for them 2 or three evenings 2 years ago but only had one LDR to show for my efforts. This year I got tired of listening to my friends talk about all the shad they were catching and decided to break down and put a little effort into it.
Following the information from my favorite message board, I stopped by the shop Saturday and picked up a couple of Bloody Marias. By coincidence, I happened to meet Jeff Ching while I was there.
Tonight I finally made my way down to the river at a spot suggested by a friend who lives nearby. Hit the water around 7:45 below two fly guys who had already landed a couple. Started off with an orange fly while I made sure my type 6 head wasn't too heavy. (I only had a couple of Bloody Marias, so I didn't want to lose one on the bottom.) Fifteen minutes with the orange fly, nothing. Switched to the Bloody Maria and hooked up on the first cast.
I farmed that fish after a couple of jumps, but hooked another two casts later. The action was steady until I quit around 9:20, with several stretches of hook ups on multiple casts in a row. I ended the evening with about 10 to hand, about 10 more LDR's--several of which got off while airborne or after one or more jumps--and many more missed strikes. Lots of caddis around and many fish were up on top after sunset. I picked up one fish near the surface by casting quartering downstream for a short, shallow drift. Might need to take a second rod with a floater next time.
I was using my main trout rod: an 8.5 foot 5-wt TFO Pro Series because that's what I have a multi-tip line for. Biggest fish was about 20 inches and most were around 15 or so. The little guy was 12. Great fun putting the (lightish) stick to these hard fighting fish--like playing schoolie stripers with a 7-wt but with the current as an added element.
I think I have another habit to feed....
Mike
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