Coastal rivers have a special magic that courses through them. Something about flowing freshwater with a connection to the ocean brings a certain mystique, a quality that is hard to put into words and even harder to figure out on the water. They'll always throw you a curveball. Often times, coastal rivers will have a certain time of year when something is different, where a biological clock overtakes the survival instincts of ocean going fish and pulls an invisible thread that compels them upstream. In the Delaware, that time of year is the spring.
American Shad are true natives. Accounts from Amerindian tribes along the East Coast from the St. Johns River in Florida to the Connecticut River in New England tell about how the rivers would turn into churning masses of black and silver every spring as millions of shad tried to get up to spawn. A miraculous early run of American Shad saved General George Washington's troops from starvation at Valley Forge and enabled them to continue fighting in the Revolution, earning them the moniker, The Founding Fish. Every spring, dating back to before measurable time and language, shad brought millions of pounds of biomass from the Atlantic Ocean hundreds of miles upstream, where they would engage in their ancient primordial spawning rituals before dying and returning what they took from the ground, feeding the birds, racoons, foxes, and bears and nourishing the landscape. And every year, river rats like me look forward to the shad run where we can put the walleye gear aside after a long winter and kick off the spring season.
The reports trickle in slowly, like a summertime spillway. They start with rumors in the tidal section, hearsay over the tackle shop counters that a few sharpies picked off some bucks (male shad, smaller and skinnier). Maybe one or two even caught some roes (female shad, much bigger and fat with eggs). Then they enter the non-tidal waters. Soon, more and more guys start catching shad. This is when you say, fuck the reports, I'm finding my own fish. Usually, the first few shad trips are ghost hunts, swinging darts through old revisited riffles trying to figure out if they're here yet. It was on Friday, the last day of March, when I finally found them.
I pulled up to a familiar spot that I'd fished the previous year and a little bit during walleye season. There were silver and lavender scales on the rocks. I began swinging, and after a few minutes, I feel a thump. Setting the hook, I feel a few headshakes and then it goes slack, ending as quick as it began. They were here. I get set up again and this time, when I connected, I wasn't going to lose this fish. It turned broadside into the current and ran, ripping drag. I managed to turn her and slowly ease her in, yet each time she got near the net she bolted. Shad are fantastic fighters and can use the current to their advantage better than any other fish. Soon, I got her in the net, a 3 lb roe that was my first of the season.

Soon after that, I caught one more and lost a few fish before I had to leave. However, the very next morning, I was back. This time, the April showers were in full force. When I arrived, it was a torrential down-pour. Standing in the riffle, swinging darts and small curly tail jigs, were two guys I met earlier this winter fishing beating the banks for walleyes. After some greetings and sharing of info, I slid in next to them and began fishing. Soon, I picked off two more shad, a small buck and a bigger roe on the double-dart rig.
Shad bites often come in waves. These fish are moving from pool to pool, controlled by a one-track mind that carries them up river. In between, they rest in staging areas, eddies with deep water and a break along heavy sets of rapids. The spring rains must have carried a school through, breathing new life into the river. A juvenile bald eagle flew overhead as we were shad fishing, carrying on a tradition that sustained colonists and Native tribes for hundreds, likely thousands of years. I've never felt more American.
Cheers, fishy people.