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Columbia River Portland Fishing Report Today

The "Columbia River, Portland Fishing Report Today" podcast delivers up-to-the-minute fishing conditions, expert tips, and local news for anglers in the Portland area. Tune in daily to get the latest updates on water levels, fish activity, and the best spots to cast your line on the Columbia River. Whether you're a seasoned fisherman or a weekend warrior, our comprehensive reports will help you make the most of your fishing adventures.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 330

    Columbia River Portland: Summer Smallmouth and Walleye Guide

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River, Portland fishing report. We’re coming off a steady stretch of early summer conditions on the lower Columbia around Portland. River levels are moderate and clarity has been decent, with a light green tint and a bit of debris along the edges after recent upriver flows. Water temps are sitting in that mid‑60s sweet spot where smallmouth, walleye, and panfish stay active most of the day, while salmon and steelhead action is more hit‑or‑miss. Weather today is seasonable: cool, overcast morning giving way to broken clouds and mild afternoon temps, generally in the 70s with a light west wind building by midday. Mornings are calm, with enough ripple later to put a little chop on the flats. Sunrise is right around the early 5 o’clock hour, with sunset close to 9 in the evening, so you’ve got long low‑light windows at both ends of the day. Down here we don’t fish ocean tides, but the Columbia still feels those tidal swings. You’ll notice soft current and slight reversals in the lower reaches near St. Helens and Sauvie’s; around Portland, focus your efforts on the edges of current seams as the river “slows” and speeds back up. Those slackish periods have been good for walleye and for getting smallmouth off deeper structure. Recent reports from local anglers and shop talk around the Portland area say smallmouth bass have been consistent from Cathedral Park down to the mouth of the Willamette and on east toward Government Island. Folks are putting decent numbers in the boat: a mix of cookie‑cutter 10–14 inchers with the occasional 2–3 pound fish. Walleye catches have been steadier upstream toward Camas and near the deeper mid‑river trenches, with eaters in the 15–20 inch range and a few bigger fish for those trolling slowly along breaks. Shad are tapering but still around in pods, especially near Bonneville and down into the main Portland stretch in softer lanes. Panfish and perch are showing in the backwaters and marinas, good targets if you’ve got kids or just want fast action. Best producers right now: - For smallmouth: 3–4 inch green pumpkin or brown tube jigs, Ned rigs in natural colors, and small craw‑pattern crankbaits banged off rock. Early and late, small walking topwaters in bone or shad colors have been money on calm surfaces along riprap. - For walleye: bottom‑bouncers with worm harnesses in chartreuse, silver, or perch patterns, crawled upstream at a crawl; also 3–4 inch paddle‑tail swimbaits in white or smelt tones fished tight to the bottom on the drops. - For shad: small bright spoons, shad darts in chartreuse, pink, or white, swung just off the main current line. - For bait: nightcrawlers and sand shrimp are still hard to beat, especially for walleye and odds‑and‑ends on the bottom. Pieces of worm or small bits of shrimp under a float will keep panfish and perch rods bent in the sloughs. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Government Island area:** Work the rocky points and current seams on the north side for smallmouth, then slide off to deeper slots for walleye as the sun climbs. Plenty of structure, humps, and bait around. - **Sauvie Island and the Multnomah Channel mouth:** Backwaters and sloughs have been good for panfish and the occasional bass; the main river edges hold smallmouth along riprap and wing dams when current is right. Fish the mornings and evenings for the most consistent bite, especially on clear, bright days. Midday, slow down, go deeper, and lean on finesse rigs. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  2. 329

    Columbia River Summer: Smallmouth and Walleye Bite Strong on the Portland Stretch

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River fishing report for the Portland stretch. We’ve got a cool, cloudy morning on tap with light wind and highs working up into the upper 60s to low 70s by afternoon. Local forecasts call for a weak marine push, so expect some breeze funneled up the Gorge later in the day, especially east toward Troutdale. Air temps stay comfortable, but that afternoon wind can stack a little chop along the main channel. Tide-wise, around the I‑205 and I‑5 bridges you’re looking at a typical mixed river‑tide pattern. The best bite windows have been on the **first push of incoming** and the **top of high slack**, with a noticeable slowdown on the hard outgoing. That slight upstream push has been just enough to kick bait around the ledges and wake the predators up. Sunrise hit early, just after 5 a.m., and sunset will be late, around 9 p.m., so you’ve got a long day to work that low‑light bite. Water’s running cool for summer and still a bit off‑color in spots, especially where the Willamette dumps in. Visibility has been a couple of feet on average, better on the Washington side and in quieter back channels. Boat reports out of the local tackle shops say **smallmouth bass** and **walleye** are carrying the show, with a sprinkling of **shad** still around and the odd **summer steelhead** picked off the edges. Bass anglers working the riprap from Vancouver down to the airport have been seeing decent numbers of 1–2 pound smallmouth with an occasional 3–4 pound kicker. The pattern: current seams on rock, 8–15 feet deep. Top producers have been **green pumpkin tube jigs**, **3–4 inch swimbaits** in baitfish colors, and **ned rigs** in natural browns and greens. For low light, a **bone or shad‑pattern walking topwater** has been pulling some explosive strikes tight to the bank. Walleye guys trolling the main river lanes have been quietly putting fish in the box, especially just above and below Kelly Point and down toward the mouth of the Willamette. Bottom‑bounced **nightcrawlers on spinner harnesses** in chartreuse, gold, or perch patterns behind 1–2 ounce weights have been consistent. Smaller **crankbaits** in silver, firetiger, or clown colors are also producing when you can hold 1–1.5 mph in that softer, inside current. For bait, it’s hard to beat **live nightcrawlers** and **softshell crawdad imitations** for both smallmouth and walleye right now. If you’re chasing the last of the shad, small **bright spoons** or **shad darts** in chartreuse, hot pink, or orange under a modest current line will still pick them up, though that run is tapering. Couple of hot spots to circle on your map: • **Hayden Island / I‑5 Bridge area** – Work the riprap, pilings, and current breaks on both the Oregon and Washington sides. Good mix of smallmouth and incidental walleye, plus plenty of boat access and consistent summer current. • **Government Island stretch** – The rock lines and drop‑offs along the south side toward the airport have been giving up steady smallmouth action. Slide out a little deeper on the humps and lanes if you’re targeting walleye with ‘crawler harnesses. Bank anglers: look to the **Vancouver waterfront**, **Marine Drive accesses**, and anywhere you can reach rock and moderate current. Toss small swimbaits, tubes, or even a simple jig‑and‑worm combo and cover water until you bump into a school. That’s your Columbia River rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  3. 328

    Early Summer Columbia River: Smallmouth, Walleye, and Late Springers Firing Up Around Portland

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River Portland fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up on the big river. Around Portland, the Columbia is running a bit colored but fishable, with decent visibility along the edges and softer current seams. Water temps are sitting in that low-60s sweet spot, which has the smallmouth and panfish pretty fired up and the remaining springers and summer steelhead sliding through. Weather-wise, plan for a cool, damp start and a mild, partly cloudy afternoon. Expect light wind in the morning building to a noticeable west breeze later, so fish that early window if you can. Sunrise comes early and sunset is late this time of year, giving you a long low-light bite at both ends of the day. Tides don’t swing as hard up here as they do downriver, but you’ll still see that subtle push and drop that moves bait and perks up the bite. Focus on the first couple hours after the morning tide change and again late afternoon when current softens along the edges and behind the islands. Recent action: local anglers have been picking off a mix of **summer steelhead**, a few late **spring Chinook**, plenty of **smallmouth bass**, plus **walleye** in the deeper slots. Reports from regulars at the ramps and shop counters say smallies are coming 10–25 feet on rocky points and riprap. Walleye catches have been steady in the classic mid-river trenches and below dropoffs. Steelhead and the odd Chinook are showing on the upstream troll and for folks plunking from the beaches. Best producers right now: - For salmon and steelhead: 3.5 spinners in greens, chartreuse, and copper, 3.0–3.5 cut-plug herring behind short leaders, and Brad’s-style Super Baits in green chrome and watermelon. For bait, cured coon shrimp, sand shrimp, and plug-cut herring are your go-tos. - For smallmouth: 3–4 inch green pumpkin or brown tube jigs, Ned rigs, and small swimbaits along riprap and rock piles. Topwaters like small walking baits and poppers can be fantastic early and late. - For walleye: nightcrawler harnesses with chartreuse or glow blades, small paddle-tail plastics on 3/8–1/2 ounce jig heads, and blade baits hopped along bottom. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Government Island area**: Lots of structure, side channels, and current seams. Good for smallmouth on the rocks, walleye on the drops, and a shot at traveling steelhead or Chinook on the troll. - **Sauvie Island / Kelley Point confluence**: That mix of Columbia and Willamette water creates great current breaks. Plunkers hit steelhead and the occasional Chinook off the beaches, while boaters work walleye and smallmouth along the edges and humps. Overall fish activity has been best in the low light and whenever the wind lays down. Midday can still produce if you tighten up to structure and slow your presentation, especially for walleye and smallmouth. That’s your Columbia River Portland report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  4. 327

    Columbia River Summer: Walleye, Smallmouth & Shad in the Tidewater Zone

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River Portland fishing report. We’ve got a cool, gray start along the river this morning with temps in the low 50s climbing into the upper 60s later, light northwest breeze, and just a slight chance of a sprinkle midday. Cloud cover will help keep fish comfortable a little longer into the morning bite. Sunrise came right around a quarter past five, and sunset will be just after nine tonight, giving you a long window to work the edges. The Columbia here is a flow‑driven river, but tides still nudge things below Bonneville. Expect a softer, slower feel on the early morning low, then a better push and more defined current seams late morning into afternoon on the incoming. Plan your moves around those current changes—walleyes and smallmouth especially key in on that. Recent action has been mixed but promising. Local anglers have been picking up **keeper walleye** in decent numbers on the Washington side flats and ledges in 20–35 feet, with a few fish nudging the 5–7 pound class. Smallmouth bass are solid along rocky banks and riprap near Portland, with lots of 10–14 inch fish and the occasional 3‑pounder. Shad counts have been good enough that folks swinging shad darts below the dams are still filling coolers. A few late spring Chinook and summer steelhead are trickling through, but expect those to be low‑numbers, quality‑over‑quantity fish. Best producers for walleye right now are **bottom bouncers** with crawler harnesses in chartreuse, orange, or hammered silver blades, trolled just off bottom at a slow creep. When the wind lays down, vertical jigging 3/8–1/2 ounce jig heads with nightcrawlers or soft plastics in motor oil or green pumpkin will mop up stragglers. For smallmouth, think **tubes, Ned rigs, and 3–4 inch swimbaits** in natural baitfish colors. On overcast afternoons, shallow cranks and small topwaters along shaded banks can be a blast. If you’re chasing shad, stick with classic **shad darts and small spoons** in chartreuse, hot pink, or combinations of the two behind one or two small split shot. For the odd Chinook or steelhead, anchor up on a travel lane and run **plug‑cut herring** or **spinners** in green, chartreuse, or copper behind divers, or back‑troll K15–K16‑size plugs in metallic and fluorescent patterns. Hot‑spot wise, two areas stand out: - **Gobblers Knob / Lady Island area near Camas–Washougal:** Good walleye structure with classic ledges, scattered rock, and current breaks. Troll the 20–35 foot contour along the channel edges and watch your electronics for bait clouds and arcs tight to bottom. - **Sauvie Island / mouth of the Willamette confluence zone:** Current seams, baitfish, and mixed depth give you a real grab bag—smallmouth along riprap, sturgeon deeper in the holes, and occasional salmonids passing through. Work the rocky points for bass, then slide out and drag gear for walleye when the sun gets higher. Live **nightcrawlers** remain top bait for walleye and a solid option for panfish and incidental smallmouth. For scent, wrap your plugs or add a small strip of herring or anchovy to keep them honest. Fluorocarbon leaders and lighter wire hooks help in the clearer summer flows. That’s the word from the big river in our backyard. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  5. 326

    Columbia River Dawn Bite: Chase Moving Water and Summer Salmon

    Good morning, anglers — this is **Artificial Lure** with your Columbia River, Portland fishing report for today. The **river bite is best around dawn and the low-light windows**, with moving water, soft seams, and current breaks giving you the highest odds right now. For **tides**, the lower Columbia around Portland is still influenced by the ocean, so the best fishing usually tracks the incoming push and the slack-to-turning-water periods. I don’t have a live tide table in front of me today, so check the local river gauge and tide chart before you launch, but plan your day around **moving water** rather than dead slack. For **weather**, early June in Portland typically means mild mornings, warming afternoons, and enough cloud cover or breeze to keep the surface from getting too slick. If you’re headed out at first light, dress for a cool start and expect the bite to improve as the sun gets up. **Sunrise** is around the early 5 o’clock hour, and **sunset** will be near the late 8 o’clock hour, giving you a long summer window to fish the seams, points, and deeper edges. Recent action in these waters has generally centered on **salmon, steelhead, sturgeon, walleye, bass, and panfish** depending on reach and season. On the Columbia, the most consistent reports lately have favored anglers working for **salmon and sturgeon** in the deeper channel edges, with **walleye** showing on current breaks and **bass** more active around rocky structure and slower backwater edges. The key is to match the water: fast current for sturgeon and salmon travel lanes, and softer water for walleye and bass. If you want to put fish in the boat, the **best lures** are usually: - **Kwikfish-style plugs** or other wobbling plugs for salmon - **Blade baits** and **spinners** for walleye - **Jigs tipped with bait** for sturgeon and bottom-oriented fish - **Soft plastics** in natural colors for bass around cover The **best bait** right now is hard to beat with: - **Herring** - **Sand shrimp** - **Cured roe** - **Nightcrawlers** for walleye and panfish - **Cut bait** where legal and appropriate for the target species For **hot spots**, I’d keep it simple and local: - **The port and shipping-channel edges near Vancouver and the lower Columbia reaches by Portland**, where current seams hold traveling fish - **The confluence and adjacent deeper holes**, especially where faster water meets softer lanes - **Rocky points and long seam lines below bridge influence**, where bait gets pinned and predators stack up If you’re fishing from shore, focus on **eddy lines, dock corners, and current breaks**. If you’re in a boat, work the **outer seam of the main flow** and make repeated passes until you find bait. That’s the story for today: fish the **moving water**, start early, stay patient, and let the river tell you where the bite is stacking up. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to **subscribe**. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  6. 325

    Early Summer Columbia River: Shad, Bass, and Sturgeon in the Portland Stretch

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River Portland fishing report. We’re sliding into that early summer pattern on the big river. Overnight lows sat in the mid‑50s with daytime highs pushing into the low to mid‑70s under mostly clear skies and just a light west breeze. Local forecasts call for another stable, dry day, which usually means consistent fishing rather than on‑fire or dead slow. Sunrise hits a little after five in the morning and sunset lands close to nine in the evening, so you’ve got a long window to work with. The most productive bites have been in that first two‑hour gray light and again the last hour before dark, especially when that low‑angle sun lines up with a moving tide. Tidewise, even this far upriver we still feel the push. Expect a modest morning flood, peaking mid‑morning, then an ebb sliding into the afternoon. That outgoing water has been the ticket for getting fish to stack on current breaks, especially around mid‑river humps and the ends of wing dams. Fishing pressure’s shifted. The main spring Chinook push has tapered, but there are still a few late springers and early summer Chinook caught in the deeper travel lanes. Most recent reports from local shops and marinas say the action now is dominated by **shad**, **smallmouth bass**, and some **oversize and keeper sturgeon** in the deeper slots. Shad are thick below Bonneville and still very catchable through the Portland stretch. Folks swinging light darts and tiny spoons on 1/8‑ to 1/4‑ounce heads are putting big numbers in the boat when they find that sweet conveyor of current. A chartreuse or hot pink shad dart has been money. Scale down your gear and you’ll stay hooked up. Smallmouth are waking up on the rocks from Kelly Point up past Sauvie and into the sloughs. Best reports are coming from anglers working 8–18 feet of water off riprap and rocky points. For lures, think classic Columbia: **3–4 inch green pumpkin or brown tube jigs**, **Ned rigs in natural baitfish colors**, and small crankbaits in craw or shad patterns. When the sun’s high and the wind lays down, a finesse drop‑shot with a 3‑inch minnow plastic can really clean up. Sturgeon anglers soaking bait around the deeper bends and ledges are finding a mix of shakers and some decent keepers where open. Fresh **sand shrimp**, **anchovy chunks**, and smelt have been the top baits. Make sure to double‑check current regs for retention, slot limits, and closed areas before you drop anchor. A couple local hot spots to circle for today: • **Government Island area** – Work the drop‑offs and rocky edges for smallmouth with tubes and Ned rigs, and slide into the mid‑river lanes with small spoons if you’re chasing shad. • **Kelly Point down to the Interstate Bridge** – Good current seams for shad and the occasional Chinook in the deeper slots, plus plenty of structure tight to shore for bass when the boat traffic picks up. If water clarity stays decent, run **natural greens, browns, and smoke** for bass. If the wind kicks up sediment or boat wake muddies things, don’t be shy about switching to brighter chartreuse, orange, or something with a bit more flash. For bait anglers on the bank, **nightcrawlers**, **sand shrimp**, and small **anchovy pieces** under enough lead to hold bottom are still putting fish on stringers, especially early and late. That’s the word from the Columbia around Portland. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  7. 324

    Early Summer Columbia River: Bass Bite Heating Up, Walleye Slow Near Portland

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River Portland fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer setup on the big river. Around Portland the weather today is mild and stable: morning temps in the low 50s, climbing into the upper 60s to low 70s by afternoon with partial clouds, light west to northwest breeze 5–10 mph, and only a small chance of showers. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m. and sunset near 9:00 p.m., giving you a long window to work the changing light. The Columbia here is still running big and cold, with decent visibility but some stain along the banks where feeder creeks dump in. Flows are pushing harder on the Washington side seams and around the major bridges. No big barometric swings or storms, so fish behavior is mostly tied to current and light rather than weather shocks. This stretch isn’t truly tidal like down near Astoria, but you do feel river “pulses.” Expect the bite to perk up on the softer current windows: early morning, late evening, and any slight drop in outflow. Midday, when the sun is high and boat traffic ramps up, the action tends to back off and push fish a bit deeper or tighter to structure. Recent chatter from local tackle shops and docks has the warmwater bite improving. Smallmouth bass are waking up on rocky banks, riprap, and wing dams from the I-205 bridge downstream toward Government Island and along the Vancouver side. Numbers have been decent with lots of 10–14 inch fish and the occasional 3–4 pounder. Best bets are **1/4–3/8 oz tube jigs** in green pumpkin, **Ned rigs**, and **small crankbaits** bumped along the rocks. Early and late, a **topwater walking bait** or popper can draw some explosive strikes on calm surfaces. Walleye reports have been fair but not red hot right in Portland; most of the heavier stringers are still coming from the gorge and below The Dalles. That said, a few local anglers are quietly picking up eaters around deeper bends and channel edges near Government Island and just upstream of the I-5 bridge. Slow-trolled **worm harnesses with nightcrawlers**, or **1/2–3/4 oz jig heads** tipped with crawlers or soft plastics, are the go-to. Keep those presentations near bottom, just ticking, at a slow crawl. On the salmonid front, main pushes of spring Chinook are tapering, but there are still a few late fish and summer steelhead sliding through. Catch rates have dropped compared to peak season, so think of it as a bonus fishery rather than a numbers game. Trolled **spinners** or **herring** in the main travel lanes at first light, or **prawns** and **cured eggs** on anchor near travel slots, can still turn a fish if you put in time. Most of the success now is coming from anglers who know the lanes and are patient. For multispecies fun, don’t overlook the panfish and pikeminnow in the sloughs and backwaters. Worms under a bobber or small jigs will keep rods bending, especially if you’ve got kids onboard. A couple of solid hotspots to consider today: • **Government Island area** – Work the rocky points and drop-offs for smallmouth with tubes and cranks, and probe the deeper edges with crawler rigs for the occasional walleye. The mix of current seams and structure keeps bait and gamefish stacked here. • **Vancouver waterfront / I-5 bridge area** – Classic urban fishery: riprap, pilings, and current breaks. Great for smallmouth along the rocks with plastics and small cranks, and a decent shot at roaming salmonids if you troll the main channel edges at dawn. Best overall lures and baits right now: • For bass: green pumpkin tubes, Ned rigs, small squarebill crankbaits, and walking topwaters at low light. • For walleye: crawler harnesses with blades in gold or chartreuse, jigs with nightcrawlers. • For salmon/steelhead: spinners, plug-cut herring, prawns, and well-cured eggs where legal and in season. Wherever you set up, think seams, edges, and shade: the current breaks behind points, the dark side of pilings, and those little inside turns on the channel are holding fish as the sun climbs. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  8. 323

    Late Spring Columbia River: Smallmouth Heat Up, Salmon Still Early Morning Bite

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River fishing report around Portland. We’re sitting in a classic late‑spring pattern on the big river. Overnight temps dipped into the low 50s, with daytime highs pushing into the low 70s, light west wind 5–10 mph, and mostly clear skies with some high clouds drifting through. Local forecasts call for stable barometric pressure and only a slight breeze this afternoon, which should keep the river very fishable. Sunrise came just after 5:20 a.m. with sunset a little after 9:00 p.m., giving you a long window to work the low‑light bite. The best feeding periods today are first light through about 9 a.m., then again from roughly 7:30 p.m. to dark. Midday is slower unless you target deeper slots and current breaks. Down at the estuary and up through the lower river, tide swings are modest today, but you’ll still notice the push and pull below Longview. Around the Portland stretch the “tide” mostly shows up as subtle current changes: softer flows on the flood, a little extra push on the ebb. Expect your best action when flows are changing rather than dead‑steady, especially along wing dams and channel edges. Fishing pressure has eased a bit after the peak spring Chinook rush, but there are still some late springers around plus a growing number of summer Chinook and steelhead. Recent chatter from local shops and boat ramps has bank and boat anglers picking up a mixed bag: a few keeper Chinook early, some hatchery steelhead, plenty of smallmouth bass, and increasing numbers of shad below Bonneville. For salmon and steelhead, most of the catching has been early in the morning. Trollers working downstream runs with 360 flashers and small 3.0 spinners or Brad‑style cut‑plug crankbaits in green/chartreuse and chrome have found a few fish in 15–30 feet. Plug‑cut herring is still a solid bet where allowed, especially on the deeper outside bends. Steelhead are showing on plugs like Mag Lips and smaller Kwikfish wrapped with sardine, pulled along current seams and the edges of travel lanes. Smallmouth fishing has been the steadiest bite in the Portland pool. Rocky banks, riprap near bridges, and the mouths of tributaries are producing good numbers. A lot of locals are doing well with 3–4 inch soft‑plastic swimbaits, green pumpkin tubes, and drop‑shot worms in natural baitfish colors. Spinnerbaits and chatterbaits in white or shad patterns cover water quickly when there’s a little chop. If the sun gets high and the wind lays down, switch to finesse: Ned rigs, small jigs, and light line around rocks and pilings. Shad are stacked up below Bonneville when flows cooperate. Shiny little darts and tiny spoons in silver, chartreuse, or pink, fished just off bottom in the main current, are putting up fast numbers on light tackle. It’s a great option if you’ve got kids or just want steady action. Best baits and lures right now: - For salmon: plug‑cut herring, prawn spinners, and 3.0–3.5 spinners behind 360 flashers; chartreuse, chrome, and green glow are working. - For steelhead: smaller plugs (Mag Lips, Kwikfish) with sardine wraps, plus metallic spoons and spinners in slower seams. - For smallmouth: green pumpkin tubes, Ned rigs, small swimbaits, and shad‑pattern crankbaits. - For shad: 1/16–1/8 oz shad darts and tiny spoons in bright metallics. Couple of local hot spots to consider: - The Portland Harbor stretch from the St. Johns Bridge down toward downtown: good smallmouth along riprap and pilings, with the occasional bonus Chinook traveling the channel. - The mouth of the Willamette where it meets the Columbia: classic travel lane for salmon and steelhead, plus solid smallmouth structure on both sides of the confluence. As always, check the current Oregon and Washington regulations, pay attention to any emergency rule changes, and mind the shipping lanes—big water and big boats out here. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  9. 322

    Early Summer Columbia River: Prime Time Fishing in Portland's Low-Light Windows

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River fishing report for the Portland stretch. We’re sitting under a cool early‑summer pattern: overnight lows in the low 50s, afternoon highs creeping into the low 70s. The wind around Portland is light this morning, generally under 10 knots out of the north, building a bit in the afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, with just enough overcast early to keep things comfortable. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., with sunset close to 9:00 p.m., so you’ve got a generous low‑light window on both ends of the day. The Columbia here isn’t tidal like the estuary, but flows and level are still shifting with snowmelt and dam releases. River level is seasonally high, with a good push of current on the main stem and a little color to the water — not chocolate milk, but enough stain that fish aren’t line‑shy. Side channels and backwaters are clearing faster and running a touch warmer. Fish activity has been solid but very time‑of‑day dependent. The early morning bite has been best; that first couple of hours after daylight has out‑fished the rest of the day, with another small flurry near dusk. Midday has been slower unless you’re targeting deeper structure. Recent catches along the Portland reach have been a mixed bag: - **Chinook and summer steelhead**: Numbers are tapering from the peak, but folks working the travel lanes near the I‑205 and I‑5 bridges are still picking up the occasional hatchery chinook and some early summer steelhead. Trollers running plug‑cut herring behind flashers, or Pro‑Troll style flashers with 3.5 spinners, are doing the damage. Steelhead anglers drifting cured salmon eggs or shrimp under a bobber along current seams have quietly put a few in the box. - **Walleye**: Consistent producers right now. Deeper holes and drops, 20–40 feet, are giving up good eaters with a few bigger fish. Bottom‑bouncers with worm harnesses in gold, chartreuse, and perch patterns have been hot. For plastics, small paddle‑tails in natural shad or white with a hint of chartreuse, dragged slowly just off bottom, are working. - **Smallmouth bass**: Very active along rocky banks, riprap, and near‑shore structure from downtown up past Troutdale. Crankbaits in craw and shad patterns, small tubes in green pumpkin, and Ned rigs have been reliable. Early and late, a walking topwater or small popper around shallow rock and current breaks has been drawing explosive strikes. - **Shad**: If you want steady action, shad runs below the dams and in the main channels are providing plenty of rod‑benders. Small metallic shad darts or tiny spoons in silver, chartreuse, or hot pink, fished just off bottom in the main current, are the ticket. Best lure and bait choices right now: - For salmon/steelhead: 3.5 Colorado and spinner blades behind flashers in chartreuse, green, and copper; plug‑cut herring; cured eggs; coon‑stripe shrimp. - For walleye: bottom‑bouncers with nightcrawlers, smaller blade harnesses, and 3–4 inch soft plastics in natural baitfish colors. - For bass: 1/4‑oz crankbaits, 3–4 inch tubes, Ned rigs, and small walk‑the‑dog topwaters. - For shad: small shad darts and spoons, mostly silver with a splash of bright color. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: - **Government Island / I‑205 Bridge area**: Good travel lanes for salmon and steelhead, plus nearby structure for walleye and smallmouth. Work the edges of the shipping channel and the drops off the island. - **Cathedral Park to St. Johns Bridge** in the Willamette mouth zone and lower Columbia interface: current breaks, pilings, and rock hold smallmouth and the odd walleye; trollers also intercept moving salmon when the passage is on. Focus on first light till the sun gets up, then either go deeper for walleye or tuck into shade and structure for bass. Evenings, slide back shallow and throw reaction baits or topwater. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  10. 321

    Columbia River Portland: Steady Tide, Mixed Bag—Chinook, Walleye, and Bass All Active

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River Portland fishing report. We’re coming off the early morning low, so you’ve got a gentle flood building through mid‑morning and a softer ebb this afternoon. Around Portland, that means improving current lines on the channel edges and inside bends, but nothing too wild. Think “steady push,” not ripping tide — good for both boaters and bank anglers. Weather’s classic early‑summer mixed bag: cool morning, light wind, then warming into a comfortable afternoon with a northwest breeze. Skies are partly cloudy, enough sun to get the baitfish moving but not so bright that it kills the mid‑day bite. Sunrise was early in the 5 a.m. hour, sunset will land in the 9 p.m. neighborhood, giving you a long window to work the changing light. Fish activity has picked up nicely. Local reports from tackle shops and boat ramps over the past few days have been showing: - Decent **spring and early summer Chinook** action in the deeper Columbia channels, with most keepers coming on anchor or slow troll. - **Walleye** numbers solid below Portland, especially in slower current seams and along the edges of the shipping channel. - **Smallmouth bass** very active in the sloughs and rocky margins now that water temps are creeping up. - A mix of **shad** still pushing through, providing steady action on lighter gear. Chinook catches have been a steady pick rather than a full‑on slugfest: a handful of fish per boat is common when folks stick to the travel lanes and work the tide changes. Walleye reports from the gorge down toward Portland have been in that “good eater” range — plenty of fish, with some nice 20‑plus‑inchers mixed in. Smallmouth counts are almost “as many as you want” if you stay mobile and work structure. For lures and bait: - For **Chinook**, locals are leaning on 360 flashers pulling small spin‑fish or Brad‑style super baits packed with tuna, plus classic plug‑cut herring behind a triangle flasher. Chartreuse, chrome, and green‑dot patterns are getting bit. On anchor, Kwikfish or Mag Lips wrapped with sardine are still putting fish in the box. - For **walleye**, bottom‑bouncer rigs with worm harnesses in silver, gold, and perch patterns are a staple. Soft‑plastic grubs or paddle‑tails on 1/4 to 3/8‑ounce jig heads, tipped with a nightcrawler, are knocking out fish on the edges. - For **smallmouth**, it’s hard to beat a 3–4 inch green pumpkin tube, Ned rig, or small swimbait. Early and late, topwater walkers and poppers around riprap and wood are getting crushed. - **Shad** are predictable: small Dick Nite‑style spoons and tiny darts in chartreuse, pink, or silver, fished mid‑column in the current. A couple of local hot spots to circle: - **Government Island / I‑205 to I‑5 stretch**: Good travel lane for Chinook in the main channel, plus solid walleye on the drops and smallmouth on the rocky shorelines and wing dams. - **Multnomah Channel**: A great option when the main river gets busy or windy. Chinook still filter through here, and there’s consistent action for bass along docks and pilings, with occasional walleye in the deeper bends. Work the first couple hours of the flood for Chinook and walleye, then slide shallower for smallmouth as the sun gets up. Evening tide turns can surprise you with a late Chinook or a quick walleye flurry, especially if that northwest wind lays down. That’s the Columbia River Portland report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  11. 320

    Spring Chinook Fade & Summer Steelhead Rise on the Portland Columbia

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River fishing report for the Portland stretch. We’re sitting on a cool, mostly dry pattern this morning around town. National Weather Service Portland calls for clouds with a few sun breaks, light northwest breeze 5–10 mph, and highs pushing into the upper 60s to low 70s. That light wind and overcast is prime for working the river edges. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., sunset near 9:00 p.m., giving you a long low‑light window at both ends of the day. The Columbia isn’t a big coastal estuary here, but NOAA’s river stage info shows only mild tidal influence this far upriver. Think gentle up‑and‑down current swings rather than big tide rips. Plan on softer current and better boat control mid‑day, with a little extra push during the morning and evening exchange. That’s when bait and predators tuck tight to seams, points, and pilings. Fish activity has been steady but not lights‑out. Local reports from tackle shops along Marine Drive and in Troutdale say the tail end of the spring Chinook push is still producing a few quality fish, while summer steelhead and warm‑water species are picking up. Anglers working the main channel near the I‑205 bridge and down toward Government Island have scratched out some springers and early summers on the anchor. Meanwhile, bank anglers and small‑boat folks are seeing good numbers of smallmouth and a mix of walleyes and panfish in the softer water. On the salmonid side, most of the recent keepers have come on classic Columbia gear: 360 flashers with small 3.5 spinners in chartreuse, copper, or clown patterns; or cut‑plug herring and anchovy behind a triangle flasher. Pro‑Cure‑style herring or anchovy brine and a little UV scent have been the difference between lookers and biters more than once this week, according to several local guides. Fish the travel lanes: 18–28 feet on the edges of the shipping channel, paying attention to subtle depth breaks and current seams. Summer steelhead are starting to nosing around the lower Portland reach. Plunkers off beaches near Sauvie Island and along the Washington side have picked off a few on Spin‑N‑Glos with a bit of coon‑stripe shrimp or sand shrimp. Run bright colors early—chartreuse/cerise or flame—and slide to more natural chrome/blue when the sun gets high. For warm‑water action, the smallmouth bite has been the most consistent producer. Rocks, riprap, and any kind of broken structure from the mouth of the Willamette down past Blue Lake and out toward Chinook Landing have been kicking out numbers of 10–15 inch bronzebacks, with an occasional bigger fish. Ned rigs in green pumpkin, 3–4 inch tubes in brown or goby tones, and small squarebill crankbaits in shad patterns have all been doing damage. When the sun pops out and the surface warms, topwater walkers and poppers can light up the late evening—think bone or frog patterns along rocky points and current breaks. Walleyes are still very much in play, especially in deeper holes and along shelf edges. Bottom‑bouncers with crawler harnesses in chartreuse or firetiger are the go‑to. Slow‑troll those upstream just fast enough to keep the blade spinning and you’ll run into eaters. Some folks are also catching them incidentally while dragging jigs for smallies. If you’re after numbers with kids or new anglers, hit the backwaters and sloughs for panfish. Nightcrawlers under a float, small jigs tipped with bits of worm, or tiny curly tails will keep rods bending around docks and in the quieter marinas. Couple of hot spots to circle today: • **Government Island / I‑205 to Gleason area** – Good mix of salmon travel lanes and solid smallmouth structure. Work 18–30 feet for salmon on anchor or troll, then slide shallow and pound the rocks for bass when the sun gets higher. • **Sauvie Island beaches and the mouth of the Willamette** – Plunk for early summer steelhead and late springers, or run the edges for smallmouth. The current seams along those bars can be sneaky good when the river’s moving. Best all‑around offerings right now: for salmon and steelhead, 360 flashers with 3.5 spinners, cut‑plug herring, or Spin‑N‑Glos with shrimp; for bass and walleye, Ned rigs, tubes, small cranks, and crawler harnesses. Bring a mix and adjust to the water clarity and light. That’s the Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  12. 319

    Columbia River Early June: Shad, Steelhead, and Walleye in Stable Conditions

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River Portland fishing report. We’re working a cool, stable early‑June pattern on the big river. Overnight temps dipped into the low 50s, climbing into the upper 60s to low 70s this afternoon with light northwest wind and just a slight breeze funneling up the gorge. Skies are mostly clear with some high clouds rolling through. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., with sunset close to 9:00 p.m., so you’ve got a long, workable window of low‑light feeding time at both ends of the day. The Columbia here is more flow‑driven than tide‑driven, but you still feel the coastal push. Expect a softer, “slack‑ish” period mid‑morning and again late afternoon that makes it easier to keep gear down and in the zone. The river is running a little high and colored with snowmelt, but visibility has improved to a couple feet in many main‑stem edges and inside seams. Fish activity has been solid. Local reports from the Portland stretch down to St. Helens say steelhead and a few late spring Chinook are still trickling through, with most folks now pivoting to summer steelhead, shad, and warm‑water species. Bank anglers have been picking off shad in decent numbers on the Oregon side, and boaters are finding pods out in 15–25 feet on the edges of the main current. Walleye catches upriver of Portland have been good, especially on the Washington side along drop‑offs and rock breaks. Bass in the sloughs and backwaters are active around reeds, wood, and riprap when the sun gets up. For salmon and steelhead, think hardware with some thump and color. Spinners in size 3–5 with chartreuse, flame orange, or copper blades, as well as metallic pinks in the softer water, are getting bit. Small wobbling plugs in green‑chrome, clown, or classic chrome‑blue do well in that 8–15 foot travel lane off the main current. If you’re running bait, cured coon‑stripe shrimp and sand shrimp behind a small spin‑n‑glo are still a go‑to for steelhead in travel slots and behind points. Shad are almost a numbers game. Light gear, 1/16–1/8 ounce shad darts, tiny spoons, or crappie jigs in chartreuse, hot pink, or white will keep rods bent once you’re on them. Let your offerings swing in the current with just enough weight to tap bottom. For walleye, slow and close to bottom is the ticket. Bottom‑bouncers with nightcrawlers on spinner rigs in chartreuse, orange, or gold are producing, especially in 18–35 feet along breaks and current seams. Jigging soft plastics or hair jigs in muted perch, goby, or plain white also works when the fish are belly‑down on the structure. Bass in the sloughs and marinas are chewing soft plastics and reaction baits. Weightless stickbaits in green pumpkin, small swimbaits, and squarebill crankbaits banged off riprap are reliable. Early and late, topwater walkers and poppers over weed edges and along shade lines can turn up some quality fish. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: - The mouth of the Willamette down through Cathedral Park and into the main Columbia current seams has been giving up mixed bags of shad, the odd steelhead, and some early‑season warm‑water fish tight to structure. - The stretch from Kelley Point down toward Sauvie Island and across to the Washington side has been a steady producer for shad and walleye, with subtle contour changes and rock edges worth probing carefully. Water’s still cold enough to demand respect. Wear a PFD, watch that afternoon wind chop, and give working boats plenty of room. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Columbia River report, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next one. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  13. 318

    Columbia River Spring Bite: Chinook, Steelhead, and Bass in the Portland Reach

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River fishing report around Portland. We’re sitting in a classic late‑spring pattern. A cool marine push overnight has temps starting in the low 50s, climbing into the upper 60s to low 70s this afternoon with a light west breeze. Skies are mostly cloudy early, breaking to sun by midday, with only a slight chance of a light shower sliding through. Barometer is steady to slowly falling, just enough change to keep fish moving rather than sulking. Sunrise is right around 5:20 a.m., with sunset about 9:00 p.m., so you’ve got a long fishable window. That early low‑light period and the last hour before dark are absolutely prime; mid‑day bite will taper unless you work deeper current seams and structure. Down at the I‑5 stretch and into the Multnomah Channel, folks have been picking up a modest mix of late spring Chinook and some summer steelhead, with a few keeper sturgeon coming from deeper slots. Recent dock talk has most boats scratching out 0–2 salmon, with the better rods getting into fish by staying mobile and working multiple travel lanes. Steelhead counts are still building, but a handful of bright fish are showing close to the Oregon shore. Smallmouth bass action has been very solid in the sloughs and along riprap from the Portland Harbor down toward St. Helens. Anglers working 5–15 feet are reporting double‑digit days when they hit the timing right, mostly 10–14 inch fish with the occasional chunky 18‑incher. Panfish are thick in the back bays, great if you’ve got kids aboard. Tidewise, that Portland reach gets a muted but important push. Expect a morning flood backing the current off and an afternoon ebb giving you that nice traveling‑lane speed. Plan salmon trolling to intersect the start and end of those swings: when the river just begins to slow or just starts to pick up, fish tend to slide into predictable lanes. As for what’s working: - For Chinook: run herring or anchovies behind 11‑inch flashers on 16–24 ounces of lead in 18–35 feet of water. Green‑and‑chrome and chartreuse patterns are still the staples. If you prefer hardware, spinners with chartreuse or copper blades and a bit of UV tape are getting bit. - For summer steelhead: 3.5 spinners in pink, copper, or chartreuse, trolled a bit faster along the Oregon side. Plugs like Mag Lips in metallic greens and pinks do well on the anchor in softer edges. - For sturgeon: sand shrimp, smelt, and squid strips on stout gear. Focus on 40–70 foot depressions at the edge of the main channel when the tide is not ripping. - For bass: this is a perfect morning for topwater and moving baits. Small walking baits, poppers, and buzzbaits along rocky banks at first light, then 3–4 inch soft‑plastic tubes, Ned rigs, and small swimbaits once the sun is up. Green pumpkin, brown, and baitfish colors are your go‑tos. A couple of hot spots to consider: - The stretch from Goble down to Kalama: strong chance at a mixed bag of late springers and early summer steelhead on the troll, plus good smallmouth along the shoreline rock. - The Government Island area and nearby sloughs: great for bass and panfish with the possibility of a steelhead sliding through the nearby main channel. Water clarity is decent with a typical spring stain; enough color that fish aren’t too line‑shy, but you still want some flash and vibration in your offering. With the long day length, staying patient and keying in on those tidal turns will make the difference between a slow day and a fish box that looks respectable at the ramp. That’s it from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  14. 317

    Columbia River Portland: Late Spring Stable Pattern, Chinook and Walleye Action

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River fishing report around Portland. We’re sliding into a stable late-spring pattern now. Along the Portland stretch, the river’s running a little colored but fishable, with decent visibility on the main channel and cleaner water in the side bays and sloughs. Flows have eased off enough that working ledges and current breaks is back on the menu. According to the National Weather Service Portland, we’re looking at a mild, mostly dry day: light morning clouds, then breaks of sun, highs in the upper 60s to low 70s, and a light west to northwest breeze building in the afternoon. Winds pick up downriver first, so plan your open-water trolling for the morning and tuck into the islands or inside bends later. Sunrise came early, just after 5:20 a.m., with sunset expected a bit after 9 p.m., giving you a long low-light window at both ends of the day. Those first and last two hours of light are your best bet for shallow feeders along riprap and flats. Tidal influence in Portland is mild but real. NOAA’s station at Vancouver shows a morning high pushing through mid-morning, easing to a lower stage by late afternoon. On the Columbia here, that translates to slightly softer currents and a subtle push-back on the inside bends around the tide turns. Fish those transition periods hard: slackish seams, eddies behind pilings, and the downstream side of islands. Recent catch chatter from local anglers’ reports and tackle shops up and down Marine Drive has been solid: - Spring chinook and a few early summer chinook are still showing, mostly below the I-205 bridge and down toward Caterpillar Island, with fish taken on herring and spinner rigs behind Pro-Troll flashers. - Walleye action has been very good in the deeper slots and wing-dam edges, particularly out toward Camas and downriver toward the mouth of the Willamette. - Smallmouth bass are post-spawn and chewing, especially along rocky banks and marina edges. - Shad numbers are strong, stacked in the faster lanes near the I-205 and Glenn Jackson bridges. Best offerings today: - For chinook: plug-cut herring or anchovy on a 5–6 ft leader behind a rotating flasher, trolled downstream just off bottom. Chartreuse/green or blue chrome blades are producing. Spinners with copper or 50/50 blades also taking fish when the sun’s higher. - For walleye: bottom bouncers with nightcrawler harnesses in chartreuse, perch, or watermelon patterns; also jigging soft plastics in natural shad colors when current eases. - For smallmouth: 3–4 inch green pumpkin or brown tubes, Ned rigs, and small crankbaits in craw or shad patterns tossed tight to rock and wood. - For shad: 1/16–1/8 oz shad darts or small spoons in hot pink, chartreuse, or silver, swung through the faster lanes. Couple of local hot spots to circle on your mental map: - The stretch around Government Island, especially the downstream points, drop-offs into the main channel, and the inside bays. Good mix of chinook, walleye, and smallmouth with plenty of current breaks. - The mouth of the Willamette and down toward the St. Johns Bridge, where mixing currents stack bait and salmon, plus plenty of bass along the industrial riprap. Conditions are lining up for a classic Portland Columbia day: manageable wind, long light, and fish spread from the shoreline rocks out to the main river slots. Keep your offerings near bottom for salmon and walleye, go lighter and tighter to structure for bass, and work the tide turns and low light for your best shot at a limit. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  15. 316

    Late Spring Columbia River: Shad Pods, Smallmouth Heat, and Long Twilight Windows

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River Portland fishing report. We’re sitting under a cool late‑spring pattern: morning temps in the low 50s, climbing into the upper 60s to low 70s by afternoon, light west breeze, and mostly clear skies with some high clouds drifting through. Local weather outlets are calling for stable barometric pressure and no significant rain, which usually means decent mid‑day bites, especially once that sun warms the top few feet of water. Sunrise comes in a little after 5:20 a.m. with sunset just before 9:00 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those early and late low‑light bites. Civil twilight stretches that even more, so being set up 30–40 minutes before first light is worth it. Out here near Portland, the Columbia is essentially a big, slow reservoir with only mild tidal influence this far upriver, but the online tide tables for the lower river still show a gentle morning ebb turning toward slack late morning, then a soft flood pushing in through the afternoon. Even up here, you’ll notice subtle changes in current seams and how the fish set up on edges when the main river flow “relaxes” a bit. Fish activity has been mixed but improving. Local reports from tackle shops and angler chatter say a few late spring Chinook are still trickling through, but the primary action has shifted to summer steelhead, shad, and resident smallmouth bass. Bankies are still picking up shad in good numbers on the deeper swing lines, and boaters are finding pods of fish stacked off the current breaks. Smallmouth are waking up in force on rocky breaks and mid‑depth flats; expect a consistent bite once the sun is up and the rocks warm. Recent catches have been something like this: shad in the “can’t‑count‑’em” category on good days, with boats reporting dozens in a morning when they stay on a pod; smallmouth from 10–14 inches common with a few chunky 2–3 pounders; steelhead a bit spotty but present, often a fish or two per serious boat that focuses on them. Sturgeon catch‑and‑release has been steady in the deeper channels for those soaking bait. Best lures and baits right now: - For shad: tiny **Dick Nite‑style spoons**, small bright **shad darts**, and **micro crappie jigs** in chartreuse, hot pink, or silver. Run them just off bottom in 12–20 feet on a three‑way or slider rig and let the current do the work. - For smallmouth: **3–4" soft plastic grubs**, **tubes**, and **Ned rigs** in green pumpkin, brown, or goby tones are money on the rocks. In the afternoons, shallow crankbaits and small squarebills ticking riprap can light up a reaction bite. If the wind slicks off near evening, subtle topwaters like **walking baits** or small poppers fished over rocky points can draw some explosive hits. - For steelhead/springers: smaller **spinners** in copper, brass, or chartreuse/green, and **plugs** or **spinners behind a diver** trolled through travel lanes. Folks running **prawn spinners** or cured **coho‑style shrimp** under divers are still scratching out some quality fish. - For sturgeon: **sand shrimp**, **smelt**, and **squid strips** laid in the deeper holes, focusing on edges where the current softens. Couple of hotspots to think about: - **Government Island area**: The seams, drops, and rocky points around the island have been producing solid smallmouth action and some incidental steelhead. Work the east and west ends where main current meets softer water, especially mid‑morning as the sun climbs. - **Cathedral Park / St. Johns Bridge stretch**: Known for strong shad numbers and mixed species. Target the deeper lanes for shad and steelhead traveling, and the adjacent riprap and pilings for smallmouth. The bridge pilings can concentrate bait and gamefish when current ticks along. Another honorable mention is the **mouth of the Willamette** where it joins the Columbia. Current breaks and temperature lines here often gather steelhead and the last of the springers; trollers running plugs or spinners at different depths can find fish moving through. Water clarity is generally decent, maybe a touch of color from upstream snowmelt and runoff, which actually helps—fish feel a bit less pressured. Fluorocarbon leaders in the 8–12 lb range for bass and shad, heavier for steelhead and sturgeon, keep you in the game without being too shy. That’s Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  16. 315

    Late Spring on the Columbia: Springers, Walleye, and Bass Below Bonneville

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River fishing report for the Portland stretch. We’re sliding into that late-spring pattern now. The river’s running cool but warming, flows still a bit pushy from upstream snowmelt, and the bite has been best when the water steadies out after tide swings. Weather first: local forecasts around Portland are calling for a mild, mostly dry day with morning clouds, highs in the low to mid‑60s, and light west to northwest wind building a bit in the afternoon. That breeze can stack up a chop on the main channel, so smaller boats may want to hug the Washington or Oregon shoreline, especially below I‑5. Sunrise comes around the early 5 o’clock hour with sunset just after 8:30 local time, giving you a long window to work those low‑light periods. Dawn and dusk have been the prime feeding slots for both smallmouth and springers. For tide, Portland’s far enough upriver that we just feel a softened version of the ocean push. Today you’ll see a slow flood overnight into early morning and a gentle ebb through late morning and afternoon. The key is to fish the ends of the swing: first hour of the flood and first hour of the ebb. That’s when the current seams set up cleanly off points and pilings. Now to the fish: Spring Chinook: Reports from local tackle shops along Marine Drive and down toward Troutdale say a steady trickle of springers, not a wide‑open bite but enough to stay interested. Most of the action has been from Government Island down to the mouth of the Willamette, and out toward Caterpillar Island on the Washington side. Trollers are doing best with herring or anchovies behind 360 flashers in 15–25 feet along the travel lanes, with Pro‑Cure herring oil or anise blends helping on the slower days. If you prefer hardware, plug‑cut herring‑pattern Super Baits and 3.5 spinners in greens and chartreuse have been producing a handful of fish each morning for persistent crews. Sturgeon: The oversize show is still decent for catch‑and‑release in the deeper slots. Anglers soaking baits near the I‑5 and railroad bridges report several fish a day, with a mix of shakers and the occasional bruiser. Best baits have been smelt, squid, and sand shrimp on heavy leaders, parked on the edges of 35–60 foot holes where the current softens. Make sure to check current regulations closely before targeting sturgeon; seasons and size rules change frequently. Walleye: As you push upstream toward Camas and further east, the walleye bite is quietly solid. Local river rats drifting worm harnesses on bottom bouncers along the sand breaks are putting nice eaters in the box. Chartreuse and purple blades have been out‑fishing others in slightly stained water. Low‑light or overcast periods have been the ticket; once the sun is high, you’ll need to slow down and stay tight to the bottom. Smallmouth bass: The warm, rocky stretches below Bonneville and along the islands near Reed Island and around Rooster Rock have been kicking out good numbers. Nothing crazy big lately, but plenty of 1–2 pounders. Ned rigs in green pumpkin, small tubes, and 3–4 inch swimbaits slow‑rolled along riprap are getting chewed. As the water warms through the day, switch to moving baits: squarebills and small spinnerbaits ticking the rocks. A couple of local hot spots to consider: 1. Government Island to the mouth of the Willamette: Great all‑around zone. Troll the main‑stem edges for springers at first light, then slide shallower for smallmouth once the sun is up. Work the current breaks off the island points where the tide and river flow collide. 2. Camas Slough and the main river just above it: A strong bet for walleye and smallmouth. Focus on the downstream ends of bars, dragging worm harnesses or slow‑rolling swimbaits. On calm evenings, you can find smallmouth chasing bait tight to the bank. Best overall lures and baits today: – For salmon: plug‑cut herring or anchovies behind 360 flashers, 3.5 Colorado spinners in chartreuse, green, and silver. – For walleye: nightcrawler harnesses, small jigging minnows, and blade baits fished vertically on breaks. – For bass: Ned rigs, tubes, small swimbaits, and white/chartreuse spinnerbaits in the afternoon breeze. That’s your Columbia River rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  17. 314

    Spring Columbia River: Walleye Steady, Late Chinook and Steelhead Moving Through

    This is Artificial Lure with your Columbia River fishing report around Portland. We’re working a cool, overcast spring pattern this morning. Local forecasts call for temps in the low 50s at first light, climbing to the low 60s by afternoon, with light west winds 5–10 mph and a stray shower here and there. Sunrise came in right around 5:35 a.m., sunset will be close to 8:45 p.m., giving a long, fishy day with a nice low‑light evening bite. The Columbia here is still running on the high side with decent color, a green‑brown stain that’s actually been helping the bite. Flows are pushy, so look for inside seams, eddies behind pilings, and any soft pocket off the main current. Tides in the lower river influence things clear up through Portland. We’ve got a modest morning flood giving way to an outgoing mid‑day, then another push late. The best bite windows have been on the start of the outgoing and the first hour of the flood, when current changes get fish repositioning. Spring Chinook pressure has tapered after the main run, but there are still a few late springers and some early summer steelhead nosing through. Anglers trolling downstream of the I‑205 and I‑5 bridges have reported a handful of chinook the past couple days, mostly 8–12 pounds, plus a stray hatchery steelhead. Most were taken pulling herring or small triangle‑flasher rigs just off bottom. Walleye fishing has been the steadiest thing going. Folks working deeper edges and current breaks in 25–40 feet have been boxing nice eaters with an occasional 8–10 pounder. Nighttime and low‑light mornings have been best, but with the cloud cover you can stretch that bite a bit. Smallmouth bass are waking up along rocky banks and riprap in the Portland harbor and on the Washington side. Reports of numbers, not giants yet: lots of fish in the 1–2 pound class, with a few pushing three. When the wind lays down and the sun peeks out, they’re sliding shallower around chunk rock and pilings. For gear: • Salmon/steelhead – Trollers are doing well with green‑label herring behind 11‑inch flashers, plus 3.5 spinners in chartreuse, copper, and “Mexican hat” patterns. For bank anglers, try Spin‑N‑Glos with coon‑stripe shrimp or sand shrimp where open. • Walleye – Bottom bouncers with worm harnesses in chartreuse, perch, or fire‑tiger have been the ticket. On slower current, jigging 1/2‑ to 3/4‑ounce jigs with nightcrawlers or soft plastics in natural shad and smoke colors is producing. • Smallmouth – Tubes, Ned rigs, and 3‑inch swimbaits in goby, green pumpkin, and silver shad are working. When fish move shallow, a small crankbait or spinnerbait ticking rock can trigger reaction bites. For bait, it’s tough to beat good‑quality herring for salmon, fresh sand shrimp where legal, and nightcrawlers for both walleye and panfish. Scent has been making a difference in the colder water; a dab of garlic or anise on soft plastics and harness blades isn’t a bad idea. Couple of local hot spots to consider: 1. The stretch from the I‑205 bridge down to Government Island: good travel lane for late springers and steelhead, with troll lanes along the channel edge. Work 20–30 feet, keep your gear just off bottom, and follow the contour. 2. The mouth of the Willamette down through the Portland harbor: solid mix fishery. Walleye on the deeper drops, smallmouth along riprap and docks, and the occasional salmon moving through. Target current seams and the backside of wing dams where the flow softens. Action isn’t lights‑out, but if you time the tide, work the current breaks, and stay mobile, you can put together a respectable box. As always, double‑check the latest regulations and emergency rule changes from Oregon and Washington before you launch. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  18. 313

    Spring Chinook Bite Heats Up on Lower Columbia Near Portland

    Good morning, folks—Artificial Lure here with your Columbia River report for the Portland stretch. For today’s bite, the big river is still acting like spring trying to decide whether to turn into summer. Around Portland, water is running cool and a bit pushy, with Columbia and Willamette influence keeping the mainstem changing by the hour. According to NOAA tide and river data for the lower Columbia, you’ll want to pay attention to the tidal pulse and any slack-water window near the mouth and downstream reaches, because that’s when the bite tends to sharpen up. On the Oregon side, the best action usually comes around moving water rather than dead slack. Weather-wise, the Portland forecast from the National Weather Service calls for a mild late-spring morning with cloudy breaks and comfortable temperatures, which is good news for anglers who like a steady cast without the mid-day bake. Sunrise is around 5:36 AM and sunset near 8:48 PM, giving you a long window to chase fish. Right now, the main story is spring Chinook. Recent Oregon and Washington fishery updates have shown that the Columbia is still producing a mix of keeper-size Chinook and a fair number of hatchery fish, especially in the lower river and near tributary mouths. Shad are starting to show in the system too, and once those schools get thick, the river can turn into a grab-fest for anything willing to eat. You may also bump into smallmouth bass in the rockier seams and, in some side-water, the occasional walleye. If you’re hunting Chinook, the best producers lately have been plug-cut herring, spinners, and flashers with bait. Green and chrome, chartreuse and white, and blue-backed herring patterns are still money. For hardware, mooching rigs, size 4 to 5 spinners, and a tight, natural drift are hard to beat. If shad are the target, throw small darts, shad darts, tiny spoons, or a white curly-tail jig. For bass, a tube, Ned rig, or a crankbait worked along riprap can get it done. Best bait? Fresh herring, no contest, when Chinook are in the mood. If you can’t get herring, try sand shrimp, spinners with herring fillet, or cured eggs where legal and appropriate. Keep your presentation clean and your leader not too long if the water’s got color. Hot spots to keep on the map: the lower Columbia near the Hayden Island and Marine Drive stretches, especially around current seams and submerged structure; and the mouth areas near the Willamette confluence, where bait gets pinched and predators stage. If you want a little more elbow room, look for eddies and riprap banks below Bonneville and around the deeper bends where fish rest out of the main push. So that’s the word from the river: move with the tide, fish the seams, and don’t be shy about switching from bait to hardware if the fish get picky. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The "Columbia River, Portland Fishing Report Today" podcast delivers up-to-the-minute fishing conditions, expert tips, and local news for anglers in the Portland area. Tune in daily to get the latest updates on water levels, fish activity, and the best spots to cast your line on the Columbia River. Whether you're a seasoned fisherman or a weekend warrior, our comprehensive reports will help you make the most of your fishing adventures.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

HOSTED BY

Inception Point AI

Produced by Quiet. Please

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The "Columbia River, Portland Fishing Report Today" podcast delivers up-to-the-minute fishing conditions, expert tips, and local news for anglers in the Portland area. Tune in daily to get the latest updates on water levels, fish activity, and the best spots to cast your line on the Columbia River....

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