Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service - We fish on Lake Chelan and other North Central Washington waters in year round comfort.
You catch them in COMFORT! Bring your family and/or friends out on our 24 foot Bayliner Ciera Express. For your comfort, it features: enclosed cabin; cabin heat; private/inside marine toilet; games and VCR for children; hot and cold running water available seasonally; stove; and a full line of safety gear. Families and couples are welcomed and encouraged to book our service. The boat accommodates a maximum of six.
Large parties are accommodated. We also offer lodging at our home through VacationinChelan.com for visitors to the Manson area.
Fished my annual shad run on the Columbia, Oregon side, on Bradford Island, facing the Washington shore. Did this a number of times in the late 90s/early 2000s, and after relocated out of and then back into the area, this is the second year I've revisited the shad run.
Let me get the negative stuff out of the way, because I want to end on a positive note (and the fishing really was superlative). First, that fishery is experiencing
extreme
pressure on weekends - ten years ago I could fish the tank boundary on Robins Island without having to sleep in my truck all night at the entrance. Bradford Island at 9:00 am had fisherman stacked up from the prohibited fishing sign closest to the dam all the way to the point, every 10 feet. It was awful - I had to wait around and race down the hill when somebody finally left. Second, there is a distinct lack of consideration and standard fisherman's etiquette going on there - I had people stealing my spot when I was retying a snapped rig, people parking themselves so close I could reach out and touch them with my hand, people casting over my line and getting tangled up or not stopping and looking what everyone around them is doing, etc. Again, ten years ago fishermen were much more considerate towards others at Bonneville, and you never saw the opportunistic, crude, selfish, ignorant behavior like you do today. This profoundly disturbs me, as I would never treat anyone else that way, given how frustrated it makes me to be on the receiving end.
OK, negatives out of the way. The run was really good today, and when i wasn't untangling my line or spitting nails at ass-clowns who jumped in my spot, the fishing was excellent - I'd have given it a 5 otherwise. As usual, there are probably 2-3 shakeoffs for every fish landed. My buddy and I took home 25 nice fish, but probably had 100 on. The difference between no shad and beaucoup shad seems small, and I always have to spend some time figuring out what presentation, colors, etc I need to do in the particular stretch of water I'm able to get a spot in. Today, it wasn't the typical straightforward left to right current I usually fish, and it kind of swirled around. Made it slightly more difficult to make an effective presentation, and we didn't start killing them until late afternoon once we figured out the "tricks". Pink seemed to be a slightly more effective color mid-day, with chartreuse towards late afternoon. As always, the fish came in waves, and you could see the fisherman downstream start to catch fish, and see the wave of fish being caught move upstream towards yourself.
My catch was inhibited by a rather catastrophic failure of a cheapie spinning reel I installed on a very good, fast action 8-17 lb test walleye rod, and by about 1:00 pm I had to fall back on a rod I use for bluegills and perch in the I82 ponds (not good - 6 lb test - I was lucky I even threw it into the pickup). This meant I couldn't stay close to the bottom like you have to, and I lost a number of complete rigs by snagging the rocks on the bottom. That said, catching shad on an ultralight with 6 lb test and overkill 3/4 oz weight was really quite exciting, and probably impressive to those around me ("wow, I didn't know you could bend a St. Croix rod into a 720° angle").
Shad are just plain fun - really fun. They go berserk when hooked, they are a challenge to bring to shore due to soft mouths and their circus side show antics when hooked, and the fight is exhilarating. They hit like a ton of bricks, and the fight has all the tricks (jumping, head shaking, runs, using their profile against the line pull). I usually smoke them, but this year I want to experiment with baking them.
All in all a fabulous day fishing, only tainted by the actions of inconsiderate fellow fishermen.....
BTW, I hope I don't sound sanctimonious or preachy - I was lucky enough to have a great Dad who sat me down and explained to me why one needs to be considerate around other fisherman, and fess up and apologize when I've made some (horrifically) dumb mistakes.
That seems completely lost on some folks these days. In fact, there is no modicum of understanding that their behavior might be taken as disrespectful of others...
I experienced the same thing with rude fisherman in the report I posted last week. I was going to go this today too but decided against it due to free fishing weekend. Kind of expected a lot of new shad fisherman snagging and fishing too close.
I hate to say it, but I won't be fishing shad on the weekend ever again. From now on, I'll just try to angle for mid-week (pun intended), when the pressure is horrific, rather than malefic.....
My best friend that I was fishing with today - his Dad and wife were fishing earlier during the week (when the numbers going over Bonneville were far less). They didn't have to battle huge crowds, and caught just as many fish as we did today during the malefic nightmare.
Just too many people with not enough experience have discovered the fishery. Not a bad thing (I don't begrudge new fisherman), but it does has consequences....
Don't remind me. I caught about 10X as many fish today as I had in ~10 trips before. Of course, it is nothing but cheating. Pleasurable cheating, but cheating nonetheless!! :-)
Responding to your comments in my report- i love the fight that these fish put up too. Never can tire out these fish as miuch as I try. But yeah, it felt good watching the spot stealer snag up. Its called karma.
Been there done that, incredible how some people/groups try to crowd you out. A couple years back, my brother & a friend were fishing and were just nailing them. A guy downriver decided to get in on the action, he decided to throw his line between my brother & I, except he was behind us, and every time he reeled up, his jig was right in front of our face. I told him to find somewhere else, I eventually had to grab his line and the tip of his pole and started cranking on it. I don't recommend doing this, but my point was taken, he moved on. Hopefully going Friday,...
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Darrell & Dads Family Guide Service - We fish on Lake Chelan and other North Central Washington waters in year round comfort.
You catch them in COMFORT! Bring your family and/or friends out on our 24 foot Bayliner Ciera Express. For your comfort, it features: enclosed cabin; cabin heat; private/inside marine toilet; games and VCR for children; hot and cold running water available seasonally; stove; and a full line of safety gear. Families and couples are welcomed and encouraged to book our service. The boat accommodates a maximum of six.
Large parties are accommodated. We also offer lodging at our home through VacationinChelan.com for visitors to the Manson area.