Quahogging Clamming the New England flats

Guides

The basics, in the order they matter.

Tides and access, licenses and limits, technique, then gear. Get the first three right and you’ll come home with clams on almost any low tide.


Tides & access

Go when the water leaves.

Quahogs sit in the intertidal flats and just below the low-tide line. The couple of hours either side of low tide — especially a new- or full-moon spring low — is when the good ground is reachable. Learn the chart before anything else.


Licenses & limits

Get the permit. Carry the gauge.

Almost everywhere in New England, recreational shellfishing needs a town or state permit, and every clam has to pass a size gauge. The limits are what keep the flats productive next season — they are not optional.


Technique

Feel for them, then rake.

Two ways in: tread them out by foot in soft sand, or work a clam rake through the top few inches and feel for the click of shell. Quahogs sit just under the surface — you are reading texture, not digging holes.


Gear

A rake, a gauge, a basket, waders.

You can start with almost nothing, but four things make every trip better. We keep a running, honest list of the gear worth buying again — no gimmicks, no twelve-item roundups padded for the sake of it.


Next

Got the basics? Sort out the gear.

A rake, a gauge, a basket, and waders cover almost every trip. The short list — and where to get each — is on the gear page.