
Oregon Coast Fishing Report: Salmon, Halibut, and Rockfish Abound on the Pacific
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Sunrise hit the salt at 5:28am and sunset’s set for 9:06pm, giving us a long, full day to chase the tides. Speaking of which, Pacific City saw a low this morning at 4:08am, peaking high at 10:09am to 5 feet, dipping again in the mid-afternoon at 3:21pm, and capping off the evening with a big 8.3-foot high tide at 9:30pm. These full swings make for great movement in the water, just what you want for active fish near structure and estuary mouths.
Weather today is classic early summer Oregon coast—morning fog burning off into sunny skies and west winds rolling in the afternoon, with a touch of chop but nothing you can’t work with. If you’re running offshore, pick your window and keep an eye on the breeze.
Let’s talk catch. The ocean Chinook salmon season is wide open from Cape Falcon south to the California border, and you’re allowed two salmon per day, but coho are still a “no keep” out there for a bit longer. According to the Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife, the ports of Depoe Bay have been the recent hot ticket, averaging just over one salmon per angler, with Garibaldi, Newport, Charleston, and Brookings all fishing a bit slower but still bringing home limits when the seas settle down.
Halibut’s another story—open everywhere now, Central and Southern subareas are seven days a week with a pile of quota left. Brookings and Newport are seeing fish, but Depoe Bay’s got some of the best reports right now. If you’re chasing the big flat ones, focus on the 150- to 250-foot contour lines. Large white jigs, herring, and octopus skirts have all been producing.
Lingcod and rockfish are the stars of the show on those nearshore reefs and pinnacles, especially on long-range trips out of Brookings. Rockfish limits are common, and the big lingcod are hanging tight to the boulders. If you’re hunting lings, toss large soft plastics or swimbaits in white, blue, or motor oil colors—fresh herring strips will do the trick too.
Surfperch action is steady along beaches from Horsfall to Cape Blanco, with redtails around in good numbers. Sand shrimp, mole crabs, or good ol’ Gulp! sandworms have all been hot. Watch the surf and don’t turn your back on those sneaker waves.
Hot spots to put on your list: Depoe Bay reefs for salmon and halibut, Brookings for rockfish and lings, and Pac City’s river mouth for surfperch on the incoming tide.
That’s your dispatch from the docks and jetties of Oregon’s Pacific coast. Thanks for tuning in—remember to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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