Page de couverture de Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report - Daily

Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report - Daily

Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report - Daily

Auteur(s): Quiet. Please
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de cet audio

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.

For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....

Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock

Also check out https://podcasts.apple.com/us/...
and
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/...Copyright 2024 Quiet. Please
Essais et carnets de voyage Politique Sciences sociales
Épisodes
  • Oregon Coast Fishing Forecast: Prime Conditions, Rockfish Limits, Crab Bounty
    Jun 22 2025
    Today’s fishing outlook for the Pacific coast of Oregon is shaping up to be prime, with long daylight hours and cooperative weather on tap. Sunrise came at 5:28 AM, and anglers can look forward to casting until sunset at 9:07 PM. Tides for Pacific City feature an early low at 5:05 AM (-0.9’), a midmorning high at 11:23 AM (5.4’), an afternoon low at 4:20 PM (2.6’), and topping off with a 10:19 PM high at a whopping 8.8 feet. These cycles suggest an extended mid-morning window for strong fish movement, especially as that high tide approaches, so plan your outings accordingly.

    After a spell of rougher ocean conditions, the weather has mellowed and forecasts call for continued fair, fishable seas into next week, according to Dockside Charters out of Depoe Bay. That’s been great news for local fleets, with limits of rockfish and near-limits on lingcod hitting the docks. Lingcod are biting aggressively on larger soft plastics like swimbaits, as well as classic lead-head jigs tipped with herring or squid. For rockfish, stick with shrimp flies, curly-tail grubs, and metal jigs in chartreuse or white. Don’t forget: cabezon are still off-limits until July 1, and yelloweye and quillback rockfish remain protected.

    Crabbing is hitting its yearly peak with averages of nine keeper crab per person on recent trips. For those targeting bottomfish, all-depth is open, and the daily bag limit for rockfish is holding at four, but increases to five per angler on July 1.

    Along the southern coast, Brookings Fishing Charters reports big catches on long-range trips to Point St. George Reef and Mack Arch—limits of lingcod, hefty rockfish, and a few hatchery coho salmon in the mix. Chinook salmon season is open from Cape Falcon south to the California border, with a daily limit of two salmon (but no coho retention right now). Most action for salmon has been around 40-80 feet down, especially around tide changes. Troll with hoochies in UV colors, cutplug herring, or flasher/spinner combos for the best shot at a take.

    Halibut season is open for the Central and Southern Coast subareas and fishing is best on soft tides or right around the high slack. Newport and Depoe Bay boats have reported moderate catches—target deep water and soak large herring or octopus.

    Hot spots this week include:
    - The reefs off Depoe Bay for top-tier rockfish and lingcod.
    - Point St. George Reef and Mack Arch out of Brookings for a chance at trophy lingcod.
    - The north jetty and mouth of the Nestucca for sunrise salmon runs and cross-tide rockfish action.

    Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe for the latest on Oregon saltwater fishing. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
    Voir plus Voir moins
    3 min
  • Oregon Coast Fishing Report: Salmon, Halibut, and Rockfish Abound on the Pacific
    Jun 21 2025
    This is Artificial Lure, with your Pacific Ocean, Oregon fishing report for Saturday, June 21st, 2025.

    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.
    Voir plus Voir moins
    3 min
  • Oregon Coast Fishing Report: Halibut, Salmon, and Surfperch Bite Strong
    Jun 21 2025
    Artificial Lure here with your June 21st, 2025 fishing report from the Oregon Pacific coast—let’s get right to the details for all you early risers and saltwater sharpies.

    We’ve got a classic late-June morning shaping up. For those checking lines near Pacific City, sunrise is right at 5:28am, and you’ll have daylight all the way to 9:06pm. Tidal swings are solid: expect low at 4:08am (zero feet), high at 10:09am (five feet), another low at 3:21pm (just over two feet), and a robust evening high at 9:30pm (over eight feet), according to Tides.net. This sets you up for good early-morning and evening action, especially with that strong incoming tide before dark.

    Weather’s been stable—expect morning clouds breaking into sun, highs in the upper 60s, and a manageable northwest wind. Swells have been moderate, so smaller boats can get out, but always check local marine forecasts before launching.

    Let’s talk fish activity and what’s been caught lately. The Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife notes halibut fishing is open and rolling with over 70% of the Central Coast quota still in play as of June 8. Depoe Bay anglers have seen above-average halibut action lately—over one fish per angler on good days, while Garibaldi and Newport are holding closer to half a fish per rod. Charleston and Brookings are a bit slower but still worth the effort if you can drift those deep flats.

    Ocean salmon season is heating up with Chinook available from Cape Falcon to the California border—remember, coho retention is closed for now, but that changes soon as the selective coho season (mark-selective fin-clipped) is also open until the earlier of August 24 or quota fill. Chinook are running strong, with a daily bag of two salmon (one Chinook, if you’re south of Humbug Mountain through July 15). Folks are putting solid numbers in the box, especially near Astoria’s Buoy 10 if you’re thinking about running north—Fast Action Fishing reports coho are already stacking up near the river mouth during high tides.

    Bottom fishing is a consistent option—Dockside Charters in Depoe Bay reported boat limits or near-limits on rockfish, along with plenty of lingcod and even some blackcod. Canary rockfish can be kept (one per angler daily), and cabezon season reopens July 1.

    Surfperch are a fantastic inshore target right now. Redtails are biting well on ocean beaches like Horsfall and Bullard’s Beach, and striped surfperch are coming from rocky shorelines. Sand shrimp, mole crabs, or artificial sand worms are the top baits—bring plenty and fish the incoming tide for best action.

    Hot spots to put on your list:
    - Depoe Bay for halibut and bottom fish—numbers have been great on those calmer days.
    - Astoria/Buoy 10 area for ocean salmon, especially on the big morning or evening tide.

    Best lures:
    - For salmon, run cut-plug herring, hoochies, and flashers in green or chartreuse—troll them deep early, then shallower as the sun gets up.
    - For halibut, classic spreader bars with herring, squid, or large white grubs are the ticket.
    - Surfperch love sandworms and shrimp, fished on a simple dropper rig near the breakers.

    That’s your on-the-water scoop for today. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe for more coastwise fishing action. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.
    Voir plus Voir moins
    4 min

Ce que les auditeurs disent de Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report - Daily

Moyenne des évaluations de clients

Évaluations – Cliquez sur les onglets pour changer la source des évaluations.