Sport salmon fishing on the Columbia River has been extended again, from Oct. 1 to 13, following newly revised run forecasts echoing previous improvements in the upriver chinook salmon run.
On the lower Columbia River between Rocky Point/Tongue Point line upstream to Bonneville Dam there were 291 salmonid boats and 41 Washington bank rods tallied on Oct. 12. Sec. 1 (Bonneville) — 82 bank ...
On the lower Columbia River between Rocky Point/Tongue Point line upstream to Bonneville Dam there were 537 salmonid boats and 104 Washington bank rods were tallied on Sept. 28. Sec. 1 (Bonneville) — ...
Salmon fishing will reopen Monday off the mouth of the Columbia River after a week-long closure. Federal managers said there are enough hatchery coho remaining in the pre-season quota to allow more ...
The approach of September coincides with the arrival of coho salmon in the Columbia River. That means the fishery at Buoy 10 is now shifting from chinook, which has closed below Tongue Point, to the ...
With the days getting longer and the warmer, people are gearing up for an exciting season of fishing all the way till the end of fall. Tri-Cities offers an incredible number of places to go fishing ...
In addition to all those chinook, a monster run of coho totaling almost 1 million fish is forecast to return to the Columbia River this fall. In 2013, there were 316,900 Columbia River coho. “I think ...
As the weather becomes colder, water freezing in the guides of your fishing rod becomes a problem. Rather than picking it off, which can damage the guides, dip the rod in the water and then shake off ...
Another strong coho run is predicted to enter the Columbia River in 2015, although far smaller than the monster return of 2014. State, federal and tribal biologists have released the Oregon Production ...