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My
List of the Most Productive spots in the NW
By
User Member Dale
FYI: I live in Puget Sound, so I know this list is biased,
but I do try to go where ever the fish are.
Firstly, SW British Columbia (Harrison River, Chilliwack/Vedder,
Fraser, Squamish/Cheakamus, Stave, etc.) generally has better
river fishing than Washington State. Its mostly where
I go for river salmon.
I reviewed Washington States catch statistics pamphlet
for salmon in a recent year, and the Columbia River (lotsa
water, however), Sekiu (saltwater),
Ilwaco (saltwater), and the Samish River
(consider its tiny size, folks!) jumped out at me
as some of the most prolific salmon fisheries in Washington
state.
The Columbia River is arguably the best spring-time
King salmon fishery in Washington. Bright spring fish. During
the peak, at the best spots, 5 or more kings for some guide
boats has not been terribly unusual in 2001 and 2002. Some
of its river mouths can be great, too. Drano Lake
is good. In Oregon, try the Willamette R. Many people think
Vernita area has the best AUTUMN King river-fishing in Washington.
50-100+ smallmouth bass per day around July 22nd is no
big deal on scenic Umpqua and John Day Rivers. I saw two
guides who guaranteed 75-100 per day in late
July on the Umpqua
where else have you ever seen that
before! Snake R. and Columbia R. can be outstanding too.
Fly-fishing is more fun, but often not as productive as
gear fishing. Be careful on the John Day R.
in summer, however (sometimes 100+ degree air temperatures,
and low flows mean you might have to DRAG or row your boat
for a total of miles.) 30+ SHAD per day on the Umpqua May
30th is no big deal either.
30-100 smallmouth per day, during its peak, is not
unusual on St. Mary's Lake on Saltspring Island. This is
just north of the San Juan Islands.
Where locally can you catch EIGHT-FOOT long fish with consistency?
specifically
its Bonneville in June, from a boat, for oversized
sturgeon that can run 6-10 FEET
..I got a 9 footer
my first day out. Shad is the best bait for the BIG fish.
Sometimes catch a shad almost every cast, then later that
same day catch a fish thats longer than any human
alive
if this isnt world-class fishing, I dont
know what is.
If you want to fish with a real young kid, forget salmon/steelhead/trout
and take him to Lake Terrell near Ferndale Washington. My
5 year-old nephew averages MORE THAN ONE tiny panfish PER
CAST when we use 3 baits/hooks on his line. Yes, its
legal. Little kids dont mind tiny fish
they want
action. Fish from a boat, in theWARMEST months of the year.
Use a bigger bait/lure on the bottom of the 3 baits/lures
if you want to also catch the occasional decent sized bass,
too. Fish the deepest water on Terrell if you do want the
largest panfish. My last 2 solo trips in September I found
two spots where it usually took no more than FOUR SECONDS
for a tiny panfish to strike. So far, winter fishing completely
stinks, however.
At Moses Lake I almost had one tiny panfish per cast in
September 2002, standing on the north side of the I-90 bridge.
Fish Moses Lake the 3rd week in March, w/in 200 of
the NW side of the I-90 bridge, and you can see your line
twitch often
sometimes just from so many huge perch
bumping into your LINE down below!
where have you ever
heard of that happening? One guy caught 80 fish himself
the day before I got there, and he felt the fishing had
slowed down.
Real easy for a Seattle-based salt-water angler is pink
salmon at Humpy Hollow by Mukilteo. Our boat always hooked
15-30 humpies per day there the 3rd week of August 2001.
Troll 50-100 down on the downriggers. F15
mini-squid, behind a 0 LJ white dodger. Have
your trolling speed over the water (Im
not talking about your trolling speed over the ground)
be only 0.7 knots. Always troll in the direction that is
towards Point No Point (SW probably) as opposed to trolling
towards (NE probably) Everett
trust me.
Big Sabin Lake in British Columbia, w/in 90 of the
outlet. I was getting fish w/in 4-7 SECONDS after my chironomid
hit the water there May 29, 2001. More often than not, while
fishing lakes on Douglas Lake Ranch, weve had the
entire lake to ourselves, the entire day, if you can believe
that. I know of two people who have had 2 fish on at once,
before. 30 trout per day is LOW for a knowledgeable fly-fisher
w/experience on this lake, in the spring. One man, whos
opinion I trust, said he got 200-300 one day. Mid-summer
water temps are too warm for the best fishing, however.
Jameson Lake in central Washington, around April 30th,
is often considered the best trout lake in Washington, for
numbers of fish especially. For the fly-only crowd, Lenice/Merry/Nunallys
large bows might be Washingtons best
lake trout option
but dont overlook Dry Falls
Lake.
Detroit Res. is arguably the most planted lake
in Oregon
..and yes, folks catch gazillions of trout
there. Action can be pretty fast at times.
Memorial Day weekend, Omak Lake in central Washington is
great if you like catching/releasing lots of monster 3-5+lb.
cutts with no one else around (and who wouldnt!)
Brownlee Res. May 8th (100 big crappie/day
not uncommon in the Powder R. arm), Silver Lake in Cowlitz
County (100 crappie/day not uncommon when water is 63 degrees
in spring - by those bushes in Streeters
Canal, or sometimes November can be good too), Henry Hagg
in Oregon, Potholes/Banks/Moses, and Willamette R. sloughs
are often considered the top warm-water lakes around. Brownlee
also made the list of top 15 catfish spots in the nation,
and its smallmouth are real hungry too
two more
reasons why its the best warmwater lake in the NW.
For Kokanee, among the best are Odell in Oregon, Dworshak
and Cour D Lane in Idaho, and Loon and Rimrock in
Washington. There are a ton of good ones in Central Oregon,
where 40/day isnt unusual.
The best Dolly fishing is on sections of the Upper Pitt
River (launch on Pitt Lake which is only 45 minutes north
of the Washington border) in March, or around November 1st.
Thirty per day is not uncommon then, and you probably will
see more bear tracks than human-beings in a day. Im
glad its catch and release only. Very scenic!
Within about 80 from the Shad Racks
pilings, below Bonneville, weve hooked hard-fighting
3+- lb. shad on almost every cast if we back-bounce red/gold
0 Dick Nites the 2nd week in June. Sometimes
I can get TWO fish on the same rod at once (using 2 lures.)
On the Columbia, a boat helps keep the crowding down.
The Willamette R. w/in 100 of the fishing deadline
by the falls can be almost unbelievable. In 1997 I saw a
kid toying around, and he scooped 2 shad out of the water
in one swoop of a short-handled trout net, while
standing on shore. I bet youve never seen a fishermen
do that with fish that arent minnows (shad are often
around 3lbs.) I fair-hooked 5 shad in 5 casts once where
my bait was just a bare hook
.thats
right, just a hook
there are a gazillion very dumb
fish there! These fish are as big as 90% of the trout or
warmwater fish that most people catch, I believe. They fight
as hard as almost any species, pound for pound. In most
years, the mouth of the Clackamas in 19 of water is
usually the hot spot, however.
At John Day dam, from the Oregon shore, 70 downstream
from that painted fishing deadline, I hooked into 124 shad
the first day I ever fished there. Most of the trips I can
get them every 3-4 casts. Move downstream a bit if flows
are above 290 KCFS. I dont do well if the shad counts
on the RIGHT-SIDE John Day fish ladder are not over 8,000/day,
however. Dont look at a calendar, look at the daily
shad counts on the right-side of the river.
In the park at Cascade Locks, about 200 downstream
from the parks bridge, I average 50-70 shad per day.
But I only go when the flows are between 385 and 440 KCFS,
and when Bonneville shad counts are at least 30,000 per
day...otherwise I almost get skunked.
Many people dont know this, but w/in maybe 20 minutes
from Lynden Washington is the MOST PROLIFIC salmon river
in the entire world (according to National Geographic magazine
and at least one other source!) On an odd numbered (pink
salmon) year, on a year when the sockeye run is also near
the peak of its cycle, something like 25-40 MILLION
salmon try to return to this one river. Is this more than
all of the salmon species in ALL the rivers in the entire
state of, say, Washington, COMBINED!? I honestly dont
know, but for fun, somebody might check on this. I saw a
guy hook 101 salmon (he counted) there by 4:30 PM one day,
and a guy upstream of him seemed to be doing even better.
Ken Kristian hooked 100+- sockeye one day there. In 2001,
my dad and I hooked into a total of 92 pinks in one day
where the Harrison R. hits it. That wasnt even my
personal best day there. In 2000, I saw maybe over 160 sockeye/kings
hooked w/in about 60 of me one day. The fishing can
stink when theres real low water-visibility, however.
For sockeye go August 24th. Im talking about the FRASER
RIVER.
In 2001 we caught/released pink salmon, often every 2-3
casts or so, on the Skagit R. in that first really long
hole downstream of Gilligan Creek. I like around September
12th. Jig 1.5 cerise curl-tail jigs from a boat! Skykomish
can be great for pinks too
I saw pictures of TWO different
alleged all-tackle all-time worlds record pink salmon
that were caught there in 2001!
For pink salmon, the Harrison R. a bit north of Sumas Washington
is arguably even BETTER than these...it's my top fishery
of all!! Once I had nineteen strikes in eighteen casts (yes),
with a fly-rod. Once, in a gigantic school of pinks I saw
eight different fish strike at my lure on one cast, as I
very very slowly reeled my lure through the water, just
enjoying watching all the fish go for my lure. We catch
and release almost everywhere we fish, by the way. Sometimes
I dont even need to let line off my reel. I can sometimes
just flip 7 or so of line (w/out even opening the
bail on the spinning reel) over the side of the boat and
the fish hit it every 12 seconds or so
w/in about 5
of the boat
these are some dumb fish! Sometimes, those
curl-tail jigs out-fish spoons and flies by at least 5:1.
I cant do squat if I fish in water thats less
than 5 deep however (they wont touch it, for
some reason!) Go September 30th, and fish w/in 50
of that spot where the Harrison current meets the Frasers
current. People cant retain pinks above the bridge,
by the way.
The east side of Tatoosh Island (300 of water) west
of Neah Bay is so good the last week of August for COHO
that I've put my cut-plug herring six inches under the surface,
trolled only THREE FEET behind the boat, and SEEN a coho
hit it every 3 minutes or so! Fun! Gotta put a dummy flasher
off a downrigger about 30 inches below the herring.
Sekiu and Neah Bay out in the strait for PINK salmon around
August 16th is arguably the most prolific saltwater salmon
option in the state, for many people at least. If you dont
like the taste of pinks, consider Bouy 10 around that same
time for Kings/coho.
A boat hooking into 50-80+ black rockfish (black
sea bass) a day, the 3rd week in May, near Tatoosh
Island, is no big deal. Three to four lbs., often. Why should
I fish for largemouth bass in a lake when you can hook more
bass, and bigger bass, here?
Opening day on Lake Padden, straight out from the east-side
restrooms, I've sometimes had THREE trout on the same rod
at the SAME time when I use 3 (it's legal) lures on one
line at once. 100/day for our boat is not out of the question,
if we dont go later than the first Wednesday after
the opener. Its important to troll a floating fly-line
(not mono) as your mainline, with a 20 (mono) leader.
You wont believe this, but by my calculations, looking
at 1998 WDFW data, something like 30% of ALL the freshwater
chum caught in thousands of miles of rivers in the ENTIRE
STATE in the month of November in 1998 were caught in ONE
POOL, ON ONE CREEK (its not even a river!)
its
Whatcom Creek in Bellingham. Thats right, one POOL.
(You can only keep salmon in that one pool by
the Maritime park, basically.) Tell me if Im wrong
about this! Fish w/in 20 of where the creeks
flow hits the estuary and levels out..thats
where they stack up. Ive seen 7 people with salmon
on at the same time
.I cant remember seeing that
anywhere else in my life. Sometimes fishing is too
good, as the fishs backs sometimes stick out
of the water when they are so densely packed together
.probably
unsporting to fish for them right there.
Hood Canal salt-water creek mouths, around November 14th,
for chums, can yield some of the highest fish-checker catch
rates for salmon that Ive seen. Ive also seen
some boats play 25 to 40+ chums per day. Not all fish are
fair-hooked, however.
For those who dont mind someone else sometimes fishing
THREE FEET from you, then the Samish River in late Sept.
has very high catch rates, especially considering it's no
bigger than some creeks. Park at the lower bridge
and walk upstream 2 pools. Chinook and coho.
1900 salmon hooked a few years ago, in the fall.
I know that Lake Washington is hot for sockeye trolling
in some years. As with everything, you gotta hit them at
the right TIME! To my surprise, my informal internet survey
of best panfish lakes in the NW voted it the
#1 panfish lake in the NW too. (Good sized perch by the
bucketful sometimes but mostly only in the summer.)
The best resident rainbow trout streams are the Skagit
where its in CANADA (3 hour drive from Bellingham,
believe it or not), particularly by the Nepopakum parking
lot
.also the Yakima River in September (float it,
and take out at Roza,) and Rocky Ford near the fishing deadline,
in my (not so) humble opinion.
Maybe my top local reply to my informal internet survey
of "best fishing in North America" was the Chilliwack/Vedder
River (only 20 minutes north of Sumas Washington.) Except
for the crowds of people, it's truly world-class salmon
fishing, folks! I got 36 chums one day 200 below the
VC bridge. Dave Vedder got a King every 5 casts or so one
trip
I believe that. Go October 8th through November
3rd, in my opinion.
By that big rock at the mouth of the Harrison River, near
the 21st of October I often average a chum salmon every
4 casts (sometimes better) using #10 Rocket Red corkies
but
only when the Harrison doesnt have low-water.
Clearwater/Salmon Rivers in Idaho can give you 10-20 steelhead
hooked per day, at its peak.
If you don't mind crowds hit the Cowlitz by that clay cliff
below Blue Creek, w/in 100 hours of Christmas, for steelhead.
More steelies caught on the Cow than any other river in
the state, often. Summer can be good too.
The "Bogey" on the peninsula is maybe Washingtons
best river in January or so, for steelhead. Peninsula streams
can be great for salmon in October, too!
If youre bank-bound, then getting a 20 semi-v
jet boat will put you miles ahead in catching more fish,
at many fisheries anyway! Cant afford one?
theres
no law that says you cant spend you kids college-education
fund on a boat!
If shoulder-to-shoulder crowds are a problem, then also
use the above-mentioned boat to hit the saltwater
.or
hike well away from the main bridges on rivers.

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