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 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.
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    3 m
  • "Coastal Spring Bounty: Salmon, Halibut, and Bottomfish Bite Strong in Oregon"
    May 21 2025
    Artificial Lure here with your Pacific Ocean Oregon fishing report for Wednesday, May 21, 2025.

    Tidal swing today is moderate with an early morning high tide giving way to a dropping tide by midday, making the morning hours a prime window for chasing salmon and bottomfish. Weather’s looking classic coastal spring: cool and partly cloudy, with a light west breeze building in the afternoon. Sunrise was at 5:37 am and sunset will be 8:37 pm, giving us a long day to work the water.

    Ocean Chinook salmon season is open from Cape Falcon down to Humbug Mountain right now, with a daily bag limit of two salmon, but remember it’s closed to coho retention at the moment. Most folks are running deep-diving plugs or hoochies behind flashers to coax up those king salmon. With water temps around 52 degrees, trolling 30-60 feet down has been producing best, especially near drop-offs and current seams. Down Brookings way, the port is reporting lots of coho showing up in the catch, and the king bite’s slowly coming on, so be ready for some mixed-bag action if you’re trolling the southern coast[4][1].

    Halibut opened May 1 and is running strong along the central and southern coast. Depoe Bay, Newport, and Charleston all saw good halibut success this past week, averaging just over one fish per angler. Garibaldi and Brookings were a bit slower, with few reports of fish landed. If you’re targeting halibut, go big with herring or large salmon bellies on a spreader bar bottom rig, and try to be on anchor during the slack tide windows for best results[1][2].

    Lingcod and rockfish fishing has been hot, with full limits common over the past couple weekends, especially out of Brookings and around the reefs near Port Orford. Swimbaits in blue and white or rootbeer have been killer, along with large jigs tipped with squid or cut bait. Lingcod have been aggressive, hanging close to rocky structure and biting best on a slow retrieve[4].

    For hot spots, try the reefs just west of Depoe Bay and the Point St. George Reef Lighthouse area for a mix of big rockfish, lingcod, and halibut. The nearshore waters off Charleston are another solid bet, particularly for bottomfish.

    To sum up: the bite is on for lingcod and rockfish, halibut action is solid in central and southern ports, and salmon season is ramping up, with kings showing in catches and lots of coho down south. Best bet is to get out early, take advantage of the morning tide, and bring your A-game lures—hoochies and spoons for salmon, herring or big jigs for halibut, and swimbaits for those aggressive lingcod. Good luck out there and tight lines.
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    3 m
  • Oregon Pacific Ocean Fishing Report: Salmon, Halibut, and Bottomfish Action Heating Up
    May 19 2025
    Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Oregon Pacific Ocean fishing report for this beautiful Monday morning, May 19th, 2025.

    The salmon season is in full swing with the ocean Chinook fishery open from Cape Falcon to Humbug Mountain. You can keep two salmon per day, but remember coho retention is closed right now. Those Chinook need to be at least 24 inches to take home. Good news is the selective coho season starts soon on June 7th, so mark your calendars.

    Pacific halibut action opened earlier this month on May 1st, and the reports have been promising. If you're heading out of Depoe Bay, anglers are averaging over 1.5 fish per person, while Newport and Charleston are seeing just over 1 fish per angler. The Columbia River subarea is open Thursdays through Saturdays at all depths, with the nearshore fishery running Mondays through Wednesdays. Both the Central and Southern Oregon subareas are open daily for all-depth fishing.

    For those targeting bottomfish, it's open to all depths year-round now. Don't forget about the offshore longleader fishery outside the 40-fathom line with a daily bag limit of 10 fish and a sub-limit of one canary rockfish.

    Surfperch fishing has been decent with the smaller ocean swells lately. Try hitting Horsfall Beach, Bullards Beach, or the area near Cape Blanco. Those redtails are starting to transition toward river mouths, so keep that in mind over the next couple months.

    Hot spots: Point St. George Reef along the California-Oregon border just reopened and should be absolutely on fire for giant lingcod and rockfish. Brookings is also reporting spectacular lingcod action with charter boats limiting out consistently.

    Bait and lures: For salmon, herring is always a good bet, but don't overlook anchovy rigs when the bite gets tough. For halibut, salmon bellies and octopus are producing well. Surfperch anglers are having luck with Berkley Gulp sandworms and small pieces of shrimp.

    The lingcod bite is as good as it's been all year, so if you're targeting those toothy predators, try large jigs in the 8-12 oz range with twin tail plastic grubs in white or chartreuse.

    Weather looks decent today with moderate swells, but as always, check the latest marine forecast before heading out. We're gaining daylight every day, so take advantage of those longer fishing hours.

    That's it for today's report. Remember to sign up for in-season salmon updates so you don't miss any regulation changes. This is Artificial Lure signing off until next time. Tight lines!
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    3 m
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