Chris,
I fished for Shad last year at the Bonneville dam on the Columbia river. If you think the line ups on the Fraser are bad... you ain't seen nothin'.
We got to the spot late in the afternoon after fishing the Klickatat river for summer run steelhead. Mrs Randog found a comfy spot on the rocks and I started to fish. I received plenty of funny looks from the other fishermen around me as I was using my 10 1/2' drift rod with my centerpin reel. Everyone else was using ultralight spinning outfits. I heard mumbles of "he's using a mooching reel" ......
Every one around me was catching these little fiesty silver fish that weighed about 1 1/2lbs, every where you looked someone had a fish on. So heres this crazy Canuck float fishing roe and ghost Shrimp for Shad and never even got a sniff
. Finally after around 2 hours of not connecting, this friendly Russian dude and his wife took pitty on me and gave me their last green rubber jig which I quickly lost after the first few drifts. As there is no limit of how many of there fish you can keep, people were walkin' out with coolers FULL of shad, apparently the taste great smoked.
The Russian couple could see I was in dispair
not catching one Shad, stared talking with Mrs. Randog on shore and offered her some of their Shad, but we didn't want to keep any, just c&r some. The Russians couldn't understand why we would be fishing for Shad if no retention was planned. I was staring to wonder the same thing.
Anyways, it got to be dark out and all of the 400+ fishermen had left, but not The Randog, I was staying to the bitter end, with Mrs. Randogs patience wearing thin, I perservered through the lets go, lets go, lets go.... (I know you married guys know what I'm talking about) I was the lone fisherman standing on a rock at the base of the Bonneville dam NOT catching one stinkin' shad.
Not to worry, I'll be back with a whole truck load of those little green rubber jigs and then LOOK OUT SHAD!!!!!
I'll dig up some pictures and post them