Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report - Daily Podcast Por Quiet. Please arte de portada

Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report - Daily

Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report - Daily

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Dive into the "Pacific Ocean, Oregon Daily Fishing Report," your go-to podcast for the latest fishing updates and insights along the stunning Oregon coast. Perfect for fishing enthusiasts and professionals, this podcast provides daily reports on weather conditions, fish activity, and expert tips for a successful fishing trip in the Pacific Ocean. Stay informed and enhance your fishing experience with timely updates and local know-how from seasoned Oregon fishermen.

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Episodios
  • Oregon Fishing Report: Chinook, Bottomfish, and Surfperch Action Along the Coast
    May 25 2025
    Good morning folks, this is Artificial Lure with your fresh Pacific Ocean, Oregon fishing report for Sunday, May 25th, 2025.

    The early bird got a real treat today, with sunrise around 5:35 AM and a sunset set for about 8:45 PM, giving plenty of daylight to chase after the big ones. Skies along the coast are mostly cloudy with moderate northwest winds picking up by midday and air temps sitting in the low 60s. Swells are moderate—watch for choppy conditions as the day goes on, especially by afternoon. Check the latest tide table for your launch, but expect a morning low and a rising tide through midday, which always helps fish activity near shore.

    For salmon anglers, Chinook season is open from Cape Falcon down to the California border, though coho is closed for now. Success has still been hit and miss this week due to some rougher weather days, but the best catches have been reported off Newport, with about 0.3 Chinook per angler. If you’re after salmon, troll herring or anchovy behind a flasher, or try a hoochie setup. Focus efforts from 80 to 150 feet of water just off the reef edges for your best chance, especially in the morning when the water’s a bit calmer.

    The bottomfish bite is solid. Lingcod and rockfish are showing up well on suitable days. Yesterday, charters out of Depoe Bay pulled in some nice lings and a healthy mix of black rockfish, with some limits hit early. For these guys, drop a lead jig or swimbait in white, rootbeer, or glow colors, or use a chunk of fresh herring or squid for bait. Canary rockfish are fair game now—just remember yelloweye and quillback are always off-limits. Flatfish action is steady for those focusing closer to the sandy bottoms.

    Halibut season is open and drawing good crowds. The best action has been reported out of Newport, with just over a fish per angler when boats could get out last week. If you’re halibut hunting, use large herring, salmon bellies, or octopus tentacles on a spreader bar rig, and soak them in 250 to 400 feet. Columbia River and Central Coast subareas are open at all depths, so there’s plenty of opportunity.

    Surfperch fishing continues to be productive along the beaches. Redtail surfperch are taking shrimp or sandworms at spots like Horsfall Beach, Bullards Beach, and near Cape Blanco. They’re easing toward the river mouths, so scout those transition zones.

    Hot spots today: Try the rock piles off Newport for both halibut and bottomfish, or the reefs near Depoe Bay for a solid lingcod bite. For surfperch, hit Bullards Beach or Cape Blanco near the river mouths.

    That’s all for now—tight lines, be safe out there on the Pacific, and send in those big fish photos!
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    3 m
  • Oregon Coast Fishing Report: Tackle the Tides for Surfperch, Salmon, and Bottomfish
    May 24 2025
    Artificial Lure here with your fresh Pacific Ocean Oregon fishing report for Saturday, May 24, 2025.

    Today dawned with a classic coastal spring chill. Sunrise hit the water at 5:34 AM and we’re looking at sunset around 8:45 PM, giving anglers a long window to chase fish. The weather is mild, mid-50s to 60s, with a light northwest wind building in the afternoon. Swells are currently steady and manageable, holding mostly under five feet, so ocean access is pretty fair for boats and shore anglers alike.

    Tides today play a big role—expect a high tide just after sunrise and the next low by midday, making the hours around the morning and evening slack tides prime for action, especially if you’re targeting surfperch, salmon, or bottomfish. Remember, fish like surfperch and herring follow the incoming tide into estuaries and bays, so time your efforts accordingly[1].

    Lingcod and a variety of bottomfish are biting well all up and down the rocky shores, with reports of solid limits coming in from spots like Cape Arago, Simpson Reef, and north up toward Depoe Bay. Most anglers are scoring lingcod on simple setups: jig heads with curly-tail or paddle-tail rubber swimbaits in white, motor oil, or root beer color. For rockfish, smaller metal jigs and shrimp flies in pink or chartreuse are top picks[1][3][4].

    Surfperch fishing is heating up as they move toward river mouths. Beaches around Horsfall, Bullards, and close to Cape Blanco are producing big redtail perch, especially on sand crab, shrimp, or gulp sandworm baits. A light spinning rod with a carolina rig is the local favorite here. Fish the nearshore troughs on an incoming tide for best results[3].

    Salmon seasons are in a transition. From Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain, you can keep two salmon a day, but coho must be released until the selective season opens June 7. King salmon fishing out of Brookings just opened and early reports are promising, with trollers picking up quality Chinook on anchovy or plug-cut herring trolled behind flashers in 60 to 120 feet of water. Look for bird activity and bait balls to find feeding salmon[2][3][5].

    Halibut season kicked off in May and plenty of quota remains for the Central Oregon Coast. Boats working deep gravel and flat spots off Newport and Winchester Bay are seeing some steady action using large herring, squid, or octopus. If you’re patient and willing to run out to 200+ feet, your odds are solid[3][4].

    Hot spots this week:
    Depoe Bay for bottomfish and lingcod, Horsfall Beach for surfperch, and offshore Brookings for spring kings and early halibut.

    Stay safe out there, check your tides, and remember your measuring stick for lingcod. Good luck and tight lines from your local source, Artificial Lure.
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    3 m
  • Oregon Coast Fishing Heats Up with Lingcod, Rockfish, and Salmon Bites
    May 23 2025
    Good morning anglers this is Artificial Lure with your Friday May 23 fishing report for the Oregon coast and Pacific waters. Sunrise was at 5:34 AM and sunset will be at 8:39 PM so there is plenty of daylight to get in on the bite. Tides are moderate with a low around 8 AM and the next high coming in just before 2 PM making the mid-morning and early afternoon some of your best fishing windows today. Weather is classic late spring coastal fare with overcast skies keeping it cool early then breaking up for sun by midday and light winds out of the northwest—perfect for working those reefs and jetties.

    Fish activity has been hot in several categories. Lingcod are still on fire out of Brookings especially, with charter boats bringing in full limits. Rockfish are also coming up in good numbers including blacks, blues, and the occasional canary. Salmon fishing is picking up out of the southern ports as good numbers of coho are showing up in the catches alongside steady king salmon action. And if you are after halibut, the recent opener has brought solid catches along the central coast with effort peaking on those calm weather days[4][5].

    For best results on bottomfish, you can’t beat a white or motor oil swimbait for lingcod around rocky pinnacles and reefs, especially when worked early in the tide. Shrimp flies tipped with strips of squid or herring are pulling in mixed bags of rockfish. Salmon trollers are having success with hoochies and cut-plug herring behind flashers, with green or chartreuse being the hot colors in the morning switching to more muted tones as the sun gets higher. For halibut, large herring or octopus on spreader bars dropped deep are the ticket, especially on the slower parts of the tide[1][4][5].

    Hot spots for the day include the reefs just out from Port Orford and the productive waters off Brookings for both big lingcod and salmon. The mouth of the Siuslaw River is holding a good mix of feeder kings and coho close to shore, while Depoe Bay’s nearshore rocky structure is loaded with hungry rockfish.

    Catch sizes are looking strong—lots of lingcod in the 10 to 20 pound range, rockfish limits coming easy, and salmon pushing 12 to 18 pounds with a few much bigger kings showing up in the mix. Halibut running from chicken-size up to 40 pounds have been landed for those willing to chase them offshore.

    That’s your Oregon Pacific fishing report for today. Lines tight and keep those hooks sharp—there’s plenty of action out there.
    Más Menos
    3 m
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