Potomac River, Washington,
DC, May 7, 2010
I could hear that little voice in the back of my mind
telling me that Big Hunting Creek might be a better choice.
But I didn't want to listen.
I arrived at Fletcher's Boat House around 5:30am
and in the dim morning light I could make out two
people on the dock loading their equipment into
rowboats. I quickly dumped my gear out of the car and
soon had everything stowed away and was ready to push
off into the cove and out onto the Potomac River.
During this time I noticed that we, the two other
anglers and myself, were the only people leaving the
dock to go fishing. And I was the only one with a fly
rod and the only one with equipment light enough to
fish for shad. The other two guys were obviously after
bigger game. The voice in the back of my mind pushed
itself forward and began screaming.
I quickly dropped anchor at the spot Jin and I fished
two weeks ago and began casting. On
the second retrieve I drew a strike. The fish put a
good bend on the rod and when I brought it alongside
the boat it turned out to be a small striped bass, not
a shad as I expected. But it was a good start. I
released the fish and threw another cast into the
river. Cast and retrieve. Cast and retrieve. The sun
began to rise above the trees as the sound of rush
hour traffic into the District began to build along
Canal Road. Cast and retrieve. Cast and retrieve. The
voice in my head was saying, "You idiot."
Despite reading on other blogs and bulletin boards that the
shad season might be over, I still decided to come and fish
at Fletcher's hoping for one last glorious fishing day on
the Potomac River. I knew the day might be a bust, but
after scoring a schoolie striper on the second cast my
anticipation of having an exceptional day on the river was
high. However after two hours of casting, fly changes,
moving the boat to different locations and covering the
water column from top to bottom I realized the best of the
shad fishing was probably over for this year. And watching
the few other boats that came out onto the water, at least
those that seemed to be targeting shad, those anglers
weren't having much luck either. I saw a few catfish
landed, but nobody was tearing up the shad.
So I moved to 'Plan B'. I sort of knew, but didn't want to
believe, that shad fishing might be a bust so I also
brought along an 8 weight rod and some large bass flies to
target snakeheads. According to other anglers the Northern Snakehead has been seen
and caught in the quieter water above Fletcher's Cove.
This fish first appeared in Virginia around 2003 and
has steadily spread up and down along the Potomac
River.
I decided to fish some of the coves just below Chain Bridge
so I pulled anchor and slowly motored upriver. As I sailed
past the First Beach I noticed a huge pile of trash left by
anglers and about half a dozen buzzards eating the
leftovers. Very disgusting. I can't understand why folks
insist on trashing the places they fish. I wouldn't like
coming back to my favorite fishing spot if it was covered
with piles of garbage, flies and buzzard poop.
As I neared Chain Bridge I saw that I was too late. All the
good spots had bass boats parked in them. I took a
quick look around and after speaking with two fly
fishers in a Fletcher's rowboat I headed back
downstream to fish. Along the way I pulled close to
shore and put the trolling motor into slow reverse and
cast the 8 weight into quiet water trying to draw a
strike with a purple and black rabbit fly tied on a 2/0 hook. I
fished this way down to the point below Fletcher's
Cove then worked my way back up to the dock, slowly
fishing some drop offs and shore structure. I also
tried throwing Deceivers and various Wooly Bugger
patterns but all I drew was a strike from a small
bass, which was almost the same size as the fly, and a
follow by what looked like a small catfish. After a
few hours of this, I decided to call it a day and went
back to the dock.
Paula Smith, the Mistress of the
Dock, helped me unload the boat and we talked a bit
about fishing. She told me the big run of shad is
over.
"Take a look at all these boats sitting here at the dock,
honey," she said. "If them big shad schools was in, you
think they'd still be here all tied up? The problem is, if
folks ain't catchin' 50-60 fish a day, they ain't
interested. But there's still fish to catch, you're just
not going to catch them in big numbers and you gotta work
for 'em."
She pointed out several spots where the fish will hold
later in the season. Most of the Hickory shad have spawned
and left Fletcher's Cove but the larger American shad are
still around but they hold deep, hugging the bottom.
"The problem is most folks aren't fishing deep enough.
You've got to get the lure down to the bottom and keep it
there, " Smith explained. She showed me a rig where the
bottom lure was heavy, really heavy, and a lighter lure was
tied about 14 inches above it on a short leader. Another
variation was a heavy sinker on the bottom with two size 10
shad lures tied 14 inches apart, the lower lure on a longer
leader than the top one.
We also talked about snakeheads and where to catch them.
She pointed out several places that she knew about and
added that three were caught recently in Fletcher's Cove.
One 20 inch fish was caught at the mouth of the small
stream that trickles into the cove, another was caught
opposite the docks on a six inch white Rapala lure and another by a guy
fishing off the rock at the entrance to the cove. She
said none of the anglers were specifically targeting
snakeheads. They just caught them by accident while
fishing for bass.
Since I quit fishing by lunchtime I headed over to El Pollo Rico for a Peruvian
chicken lunch then headed over to the Urban Angler fly shop to kill some
time before beating the Friday rush hour traffic home.
EQUIPMENT: I used a fast action 6 and 8
weight rods. Shad flies were in sizes 4 to 10. The
bass-snakehead flies were size 1 to 2/0. You need a
Washington, DC, fishing license. Boat rental is $23 a day.
DIRECTIONS: Fletcher's Boat House is
located on the Potomac River in Washington, DC, two miles
north of Key Bridge and one mile south of Chain Bridge, at
the intersection of Reservoir Road and Canal Road. You will
know you have reached the entrance to Fletcher's when you
see the Abner Cloud House, an old white stone building,
which is next to the canal on your left.
From 66 East, take the Rosslyn exit to Key Bridge. Stay in
the left lane. Take a left onto Canal Road after crossing
over Key Bridge. Stay in the left lane and turn left on
Canal Road, and continue until you see the Abner Cloud
House on your left. That narrow ramp is the entrance to
Fletcher's. Go down the ramp and either park in the upper
lot or go through the tunnel to the lower parking lot and
dock access. During shad season the boat rental office
opens at 6:30am. Boat rental fee is $20 for the day. You
need a DC fishing license ($10 DC residents. $13
non-resident) to fish and Fletcher's sells this at the
rental kiosk along with fishing equipment, bait, hot dogs,
drinks and ice cream.
WARNING: Both lanes of Canal Road become
ONE WAY into and out of DC during morning and evening rush
hour during the weekdays. If you're hitting Fletcher's in
the morning and following the route above you have until
5:30am to get there. If you miss it you must wait until
10:20am. Once it's one way you must come down Canal Road
via Chain Bridge way and trying to make that turn into
Fletcher's from that direction is a killer because that
ramp is the only road into and out of the Boathouse parking
lot and it faces towards Key Bridge. Canal Road becomes one
way going towards Chain Bridge from 2:30 to 7pm, so you
have to hang a sharp U-turn when you leave.