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Puget Sound Seattle Fishing Report Today

Tune in to "Puget Sound, Seattle Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of the latest fishing conditions, expert tips, and local hot spots. Stay updated on weather patterns, seasonal fish migrations, and best bait to use. Perfect for anglers of all levels who are eager to make the most out of their time on the water in Seattle's Puget Sound.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. 331

    Early Summer Puget Sound: Chase the Tide Swings and Bait Schools

    Good morning from Puget Sound, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Seattle-area fishing report for today. Early summer is in full swing, and the bite is shaping up around the tide swings, with the best action likely around moving water near the shipping lanes, shoreline structure, and the ferry corridors. For **weather**, Seattle is in its usual June pattern: cool mornings, brighter midday windows, and a light marine layer chance along the Sound. The most important thing today is to fish the **temperature breaks** and current edges, because that’s where bait stacks up and predators push in. For **sunrise and sunset**, plan your day around the first light bite and the last couple hours before dark. If you’re starting early, you want to be on the water before sunrise and stay tuned for that evening push when bait gets shallow again. On the **tide side**, Puget Sound fishing is all about current. The best window is usually the **incoming tide** and the first part of the **outgoing tide**, especially when the water is moving but not ripping too hard. Around Seattle, that means focusing on passes, points, and any place where tide funnels through narrow water. Recent **fish activity** has been centered on bait schools, with anglers reporting solid signs of **coho**, scattered **chinook**, and the occasional **flounder and sea-run cutthroat** in the mix. In the Sound, the action can change fast, but when herring or sand lance are present, the bigger fish usually aren’t far behind. Expect fish to be roaming near drop-offs, kelp edges, and tide lines. For **lures**, the hot hand in these waters is usually a small **hoochie**, a **spoon**, or a compact **swimbait** worked near bait. If you’re trolling, go with a flasher and a glowing, green, white, or chrome presentation. If you’re casting from shore, a small metal jig or spoon that throws well in current is hard to beat. For **bait**, the old reliable choices are **herring**, **sardine**, and **pile worm** depending on species and where you’re fishing. Fresh bait, rigged clean and fished close to bottom or just above bait schools, usually outperforms anything stale. A couple of **hot spots** to keep on your radar: - **Shilshole to West Point** for moving water, bait, and early-season salmon traffic. - **Point Defiance and the Tacoma Narrows edges** if you’re willing to roam south for stronger current and better structure. If I had to pick one play today, I’d fish the tide change with a spoon or hoochie near bait, then switch to fresh bait if the marks are there but the bites are soft. Keep your eyes on birds, boils, and bait showers — that’s where the Sound gives up its secrets. 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

  2. 330

    Early Summer Puget Sound: Ride the Tide Swings for Salmon and Cutthroat

    Good morning, Seattle—**Artificial Lure** here with your Puget Sound fishing rundown for **today**. The bite is lining up around the early tide swings, with the best window typically coming at first light and again around the evening change, so if you can fish moving water, do it. For **tides**, check your local Puget Sound tide station before you launch, because the timing shifts a bit from Seattle proper to Bainbridge, Elliott Bay, Shilshole, and the Eastside. In general, the Sound is fishing best when the water is **moving**—slack tide usually slows the action, while the push and ebb can light things up fast. For **weather**, expect classic late-June Seattle conditions: cool morning air, a chance of marine haze or low clouds, and a brighter, milder afternoon once the sun burns through. Dress in layers and keep rain gear handy, because Puget Sound mornings can feel a lot colder on the water than they do on land. For **sunrise and sunset**, we’re in those long summer daylight hours now, which means an early start is money and you’ve got plenty of light to work with into the evening. Plan on fishing the low-light edges hard—dawn and dusk are still the most productive windows for salmon and cutthroat. On the **recent fish activity** side, the water around Seattle and central Puget Sound is usually busiest in early summer with **resident coho, cutthroat trout, flounder, and baitfish activity** close to shore, plus seasonal salmon opportunities depending on openings and marine areas. When the bait is packed in, the predators follow, and that’s when the rod tips start bouncing. If you’re seeing birds working, bait dimpling, or tide rip lines stacking up, stay there. For **lures**, I’d keep it simple and effective: - **Small hoochies** behind a flasher for salmon - **Blue, green, or white spoons** for coho and cutts - **Squid jigs** if you’re trying for squid around piers or deeper structure - **Soft plastics** or small spinners for shoreline cutthroat For **bait**, the old reliable choices still hold: - **Herring** - **Sardines** - **Sand shrimp** - **Cured bait strips** when fish are keyed in on scent If I were choosing a couple of **hot spots** around Seattle today, I’d start with: - **Shilshole / Elliott Bay edges** for moving-water salmon structure and bait presence - **Shoreline points and current seams in central Puget Sound** where tide flow funnels baitfish If you’re shorebound, fish the **drop-offs, riprap, and point corners**. If you’re in a boat, work the **edges of bait balls, tide rips, and depth changes** instead of open water. The Sound rewards patience, but it pays better when you match the hatch and fish the tide. Thanks for tuning in, **subscribe** for more fishing updates, and 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. 329

    Early Summer Salmon and Cutthroat: Puget Sound's Prime Season is Here

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report around Seattle. We’re lining up on a mild early‑summer pattern. Around Seattle, the nearshore water has warmed just enough to wake things up without pushing fish deep. Winds are generally light in the morning with a typical onshore breeze building late morning into the afternoon. Clouds and a little marine layer early, then brightening skies and comfortable temps—good conditions for working the water from first light through late morning. Sunrise is right around the early‑5 a.m. hour, with sunset pushing into the late‑9 p.m. range, so you’ve got long windows to play those low‑light bites. Focus on the first two hours after sunrise and the last two before dark; that’s when most of the activity has been happening lately. Tides are running a standard mixed‑semidiurnal pattern in central Puget Sound: a decent morning flood, a softer mid‑day exchange, then another good push in the evening. Plan your main effort on the first half of the flood and the top of the tide—bait stacks up on the edges, and the predators have been right behind it. Salmon-wise, resident coho and blackmouth have been the main story in the open areas. Most fish have been cookie‑cutter feeders, but a few better fish are showing. Anglers trolling off Jeff Head and West Point have reported steady action when they stay on the bait balls in 80–140 feet of water, running gear 40–80 feet down. Best producers: small 3–3.5 inch spoons in green glow, Irish cream, or herring‑aid patterns behind an 11‑inch flasher, plus white or UV hoochies with a short leader. If you’re mooching, rig cut‑plug herring and work a slow drop with little lifts; the lighter morning wind makes that easier. Nearshore, the sea‑run cutthroat bite has been solid along the beaches from Lincoln Park down toward Brace Point and up around Golden Gardens and Shilshole. Fly anglers stripping baitfish patterns—clousers in olive/white or gray/white—have been doing well on an incoming tide. Gear guys are scoring with small 1/4–3/8 oz casting spoons and soft‑plastic jerkbaits in smelt or sand lance colors. Keep your retrieves snappy and cover water. Bottomfish action remains a good bet for bending rods. Pile perch and shiner perch are around most public piers—Seattle waterfront, Edmonds, and Seacrest—taking small bits of shrimp or clam on dropper‑loop rigs. For flounder, a small piece of worm or gulp sandworm on a Carolina rig dragged slowly across the sand will keep younger anglers busy. Lingcod season and specific salmon openings depend on the exact marine area, so always double‑check current WDFW regulations and emergency rules before you launch or cast from the beach. Couple of hotspots worth your gas today: – Jeff Head: Target salmon on the flood; concentrate where the bait marks are thick, running spoons or hoochies 40–80 feet down. – West Point and Shilshole area: Good mix of resident salmon off the dropoffs and sea‑run cutthroat along the beaches on the incoming tide. Natural baits: herring for salmon, shrimp for perch, and sandworms or gulp imitations for flounder are your top bets. Artificial lures: small glow spoons, UV hoochies, and baitfish‑pattern flies or plastics will carry you all day. That’s the word from the water. 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

  4. 328

    Early Summer Bite: Chase Chinook and Cutthroat in the Puget Sound Flood Tide

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re in a classic early-summer pattern around Seattle: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and generally light winds. Local marine forecasts are calling for highs in the 60s to low 70s, mostly cloudy skies with a few sun breaks, and a gentle onshore breeze building later in the day. The barometer has been fairly steady, which usually keeps fish behavior predictable. Sunrise was right around that 5 a.m. mark with sunset close to 9 p.m., so you’ve got long light windows. The best bite windows are lining up with first light and the early part of the flood, then again toward dusk when the current slacks off. Tidewise, we’re on a moving summer cycle with decent exchanges but nothing crazy. Expect a low early in the morning, building to a stronger mid-morning flood, then another drop off later in the afternoon. Around Puget Sound, that usually means slower currents right at daybreak, then increasingly pushy water through late morning. Plan to be set up and fishing right before the tide turns, particularly on the edges of rips and along current seams off points and kelp lines. Fish activity has picked up. Resident coho and blackmouth are scattered but catchable; anglers running gear in 60–120 feet of water are picking up a mix of undersized and legal chinook, with the odd chunky coho showing up. Cutthroat trout are cruising the beaches, especially near creek mouths and around eelgrass flats on the flood. Bottomfish—lingcod where still open, rockfish in the allowed zones, and plenty of flounder—are hanging tight to structure and biting well when the current eases. Recent catches reported in local shops and on the docks show: - Fair numbers of legal chinook out around Possession Bar and Midchannel Bank, mostly 6–10 pounds, with a few teens mixed in. - Consistent sea‑run cutthroat action along the west side of Whidbey and around South Sound beaches, mostly 12–16 inches, with some larger fish early and late. - Good flounder and the occasional cabezon on sand and mixed bottom off Alki and in Elliott Bay. For gear, think small and natural. Trollers are doing well with 3–3.5 inch spoons in green/white, Irish cream, or cop‑car patterns behind a flasher on 25–40 feet of cable in 80–120 feet of water. Hoochie‑flasher combos in glow green, UV purple, or white are also producing, especially on the brighter parts of the tide. Bank and beach anglers chasing cutthroat should lean on sparse Clouser-style flies in olive/white or sand/white, small epoxy baitfish, or 1/4‑ounce metal spoons in candlefish colors. For bait, herring is still king for salmon—plug‑cut or whole, slow‑trolled or mooched. On the bottom, a strip of herring or sand shrimp on a Carolina rig will take flounder and other bottomfish all day if you stay in contact with the bottom. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - Possession Bar: Work the edges of the hump on the flood and early ebb, staying just off the drop where bait stacks up. Watch your sonar for suspended bait balls; keep your gear just above them. - West Point and the edges of Elliott Bay: Troll along the contour lines on the morning flood, then switch to jigging or mooching when you mark tight schools near bottom. For shore anglers, the beach at Lincoln Park and the points around Point No Point can be very productive for cutthroat and the occasional coho, especially on a rising tide with a little chop on the surface. Today, focus on being in position at first light and again for the evening tide change. Keep moving until you find bait and current, and once you get bit, circle back through that water—these summer fish often travel in small packs. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Puget Sound report, 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

  5. 327

    Puget Sound Early Light Bite: Tides, Salmon, and Cutthroat Action This June

    Good morning, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Puget Sound and Seattle fishing report for today. The bite has been best around the **early light** and the **moving tide**, with salmon activity picking up in the Sound and a few solid reports of **pinks, resident coho, and scattered cutthroat** in the usual nearshore lanes. For the **tide**, check the Seattle and West Point stations before you head out, because this fishery is all about the swing; on days like this, the best window is usually the **last half of the outgoing** and the **first push of the incoming**. If you can fish current seams, ferry lanes, point drops, and rip lines, you’re in the game. For the **weather**, expect typical June marine influence around Seattle: cool air, bright breaks, and a chance of morning marine cloud cover burning off later. That usually means fish hold tight early, then spread out as the light gets stronger. Dress for a breeze off the water, because Puget Sound can feel a lot colder than the forecast suggests. **Sunrise and sunset** are giving us long fishing daylight right now, so that dawn window is prime, and the evening bite can be sneaky good as the sun drops behind the Olympics. If you only get one shot, make it at daybreak. Recent local reports point to a mix of **salmon action** and decent bottomfish opportunity where open and legal. Anglers have been seeing **small schools of bait**, scattered birds, and that classic summer surface flicker that tells you the forage is around. In the nearshore, **cutthroat** have been active on the edges, while the salmon bite has favored anglers who stay mobile and keep their gear in the water. Best **lures** right now are simple and proven: - **Troll or cast spoons** in green, silver, and chartreuse - **Small hoochies** with a glow or white finish - **Flasher-and-hochies** for salmon when the tide is moving - **Soft plastics or small spinners** for cutthroat along the shoreline Best **bait** remains the classics: - **Herring** for salmon - **Baitfish-style strips** when bait is scarce - For cutthroat, small natural presentations near bait schools tend to outproduce fancy rigs A couple of **hot spots** to keep on your map: - **Shilshole to Elliott Bay**, especially along current edges and bait lines - **West Point and the Point No Point side of the Sound**, where moving water can stack fish fast - If you want a shoreline option, try **shore access around Carkeek-area structure** or any legal sandy-to-rock transition with bait showing If you’re hunting the most consistent play, focus on **current, bait, and depth change**. In Puget Sound, that’s usually the recipe that separates a story from a skunk. 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. 326

    Early Summer Puget Sound: Long Days, Moving Water, and Steady Bottomfish Action

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re rolling into a classic early-summer pattern around Seattle. Light morning marine layer, then partial clearing with highs in the mid‑60s to low‑70s, and a light onshore breeze most of the day. Typical Sound stuff: calmer early, a little chop and wind in the afternoon as the tide starts running. Around Seattle, sunrise is right around 5:10 in the morning, with sunset near 9:10 in the evening. That gives you long low‑light windows; first light to about 8 a.m. and then 7 p.m. to dark have been the best bite periods. Tides in central Puget Sound today are running a moderate exchange: a decent morning ebb, a softer mid‑day flood, then a stronger evening ebb. Think “fish the moving water” – the last half of the ebb and first half of the flood have been most productive. On the near‑slack turns, drop to the bottom for flounder, sand dabs, and the odd dogfish. Resident coho and sublegal blackmouth are still poking around. Most folks trolling from Shilshole down toward West Point have been seeing a mix of shaker chinook, small coho, and some nice sea‑run cutthroat closer to shore. Nothing red‑hot, but enough action to keep rods moving when you stick with it. Lingcod is wrapping up, but the structure spots are still holding fish. Anglers working the rocky humps outside Elliott Bay and off Fourmile Rock have been picking up lings and cabezon earlier in the day before the boat traffic wakes everything up. Closer to the beaches, pile perch, shiner perch, and the occasional greenling are giving shore anglers some steady fun. For numbers, bottomfish have been the most consistent: multiple reports of anglers boxing limits of flounder and sand dabs in 60–120 feet off Alki and Bainbridge edges, with by‑catch of small rockfish in the mix. Salmon catches are more scattered: a handful of legal‑size resident coho and a few keeper‑size blackmouth per boat on the better tides if you cover water and work the contours. Best lures right now: – For salmon: 3–3.5" white, herring‑aid, or Irish cream spoons behind an 11" flasher; small hootchies in UV white or glow green with a 30–36" leader. – For surf and beach cutthroat: olive‑over‑white Clouser minnows, small baitfish patterns, or 1/4 oz metal jigs in candlefish colors. – For lingcod and structure fish: 4–6" swimbaits in rootbeer, motor oil, or white, and 4–6 oz pipe jigs in glow or chrome. Best bait: – Herring, either plug‑cut or whole, is still king for trolling. – Sand shrimp and squid strips for perch and bottomfish off the piers. – A chunk of herring or squid on a sliding rig will find flounder fast on the flats. A couple of local hot spots to put on your list: – **West Point / Discovery Park**: Fish 80–140 feet on the edges for resident coho and blackmouth on the morning ebb, then slide shallower toward the beach in the evening for sea‑run cutthroat with light tackle or the fly rod. – **Alki Point to Alki Reef**: Troll the contour break for bait and salmon early, then drop bait rigs straight down for flounder and sand dabs once the sun gets higher. On calmer evenings, casting small metals from shore can surprise you with cutthroat and the occasional coho drive‑by. If you’re heading out from a kayak or smaller skiff, stick tight to shorelines early, watch those tide rips around points, and keep an eye on the afternoon wind bumps. That’s it from Artificial Lure today. 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. 325

    Early Summer Shoulder Season: Coho, Cutthroat, and Bottomfish in Central Puget Sound

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern around Seattle. Light morning breeze, cool starts in the low 50s, warming into the 60s by afternoon with a mix of high clouds and sun. Marine push is weak, so visibility’s good and the water has just a light chop in the main Sound, calmer inside the bays and ship canal. Sunrise hit right around the very early 5 o’clock hour, with sunset landing in the late 9 o’clock range, giving you a long window to work the edges of low light. The best bite has been that first two hours after dawn and the last 90 minutes before dark. Tides in central Puget Sound are running a solid mid-morning flood after an early low, then easing into an afternoon high and an evening ebb. Think “moving water or go home” today: work points, rips, and current seams where bait stacks up. Salmon-wise, we’re still in the shoulder season. Resident coho and a few blackmouth are nosing around Possession Bar, Jefferson Head, and the oil docks. Most fish are short, but there’ve been enough legal keepers to stay honest. Trollers running small 3-inch glow or green/white spoons behind a flasher 30–80 feet down over 120–180 feet of water have been picking off the better fish. If you’re mooching, cut-plug herring in a slow, lazy spin has outfished artificials on the softer tides. Bottomfish are the steadier bet. West Point and the edges off Alki have been good for lingcod and rockfish on the structure. Swimbaits in white or herring patterns on 2–4 oz heads, or flutter jigs bounced right on the rocks, are getting hammered. Remember to fish tight to the structure and be ready to lose some gear. Inshore, the sea-run cutthroat bite has been solid along the beaches from Lincoln Park down toward Seahurst and up around Golden Gardens. Small baitfish patterns, 3-inch olive-over-white soft plastics, and #8–#10 streamers have been the ticket. Focus on creek mouths and current breaks on the flood. For flatfish and table fare, Elliott Bay and inside Shilshole are giving up sand dabs and the odd sole to folks drifting small pieces of clam, squid, or shrimp on simple two-hook bottom rigs. Not glamorous, but great action for kids and a good way to put something in the pan. Hot spots to circle for today: – West Point: work the drop-offs for lingcod and the occasional salmon sliding by in the current. – Possession Bar: your best shot at a legal coho or blackmouth if you put in the trolling time. Best lures: – Small glow spoons and green/white hoochies for salmon. – White or glow swimbaits and metal jigs for lingcod and rockfish. – Slim minnow-style soft plastics for beach cutthroat. Best bait: – Fresh or properly brined herring for trolling and mooching. – Squid strips and shrimp for bottom rigs. That’s your Puget Sound report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide change. 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. 324

    Late Spring Salmon and Cutthroat: Puget Sound Tide Window Report

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report for the early-morning shift around Seattle. We’re sitting on a classic late‑spring pattern. A cool, gray marine layer is hanging over the Sound, light southwest breeze 5–10 knots, and air temps climbing from the low 50s into the 60s later today. Clouds will thin a bit this afternoon, but expect that typical on‑again, off‑again drizzle vibe. Sunrise is right around 5:10 a.m., sunset close to 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those tide changes. Tides are doing something worth planning around: a solid morning flood pushing in through mid‑morning, then a decent afternoon ebb that should get current rolling around points and rips. On Puget Sound, that moving water is your real clock. Aim to fish the last hour of the flood and the first couple hours of the ebb if you can swing it. Salmon-wise, resident coho and a few early ocean fish have been showing sporadically along the east side of the Sound. Most of the chatter from local gear shops has been 2–5 fish per boat on a decent tide, with plenty of shakers in the mix and a few keepers in the 4–6 pound range. Trolling small 3–3.5 inch spoons in green–glow, Irish cream, or herring patterns behind a flasher has been putting fish in the box. Hoochies in white, UV, or glow green with a short leader are also worth running. Cutthroat are quietly stealing the show for the beach crowd. Folks working the usual shorelines are reporting steady action on 10–16 inch sea‑runs with the odd bigger fish surprise. Small olive‑over‑white Clousers, sparse baitfish flies, or hardware like 1/4 oz Kastmasters and small spoons in perch or candlefish colors are doing damage. Remember to handle those wild fish gently and keep them wet. Bottomfish are a solid backup plan. Pile perch and flounder are biting along rocky structure and sandy flats; a simple drop‑shot with bits of shrimp, clam, or sandworms will keep rods bent, especially for kids. Out deeper, lingcod are tapering off with the season tightening, but jigging 4–6 oz metal jigs or big soft plastics near rocky humps can still turn up a few if you’ve got the depth and structure dialed. For bait, herring is still king for salmon. If you can get decent plug‑cut herring, run it behind a flasher or naked on a slow troll. Otherwise, scents on your spoons and hoochies help: anise, herring, or krill. For shore anglers, fresh shrimp pieces or Gulp sandworms under a sliding rig are hard to beat for perch and flounder. Couple of hotspots to put on your hit list today: • West Point, off Discovery Park: That morning flood piling into the point, then flipping to the ebb, can stack up coho and cutthroat tight to the contours. Work the 60–120 foot line trolling, or cast from the beach early with spoons and flies. • Meadow Point to Golden Gardens: A classic trolling lane for resident coho. Run a north–south pass straddling the dropoff, keeping gear just off bottom early, then mid‑column once the sun’s up. If you’re staying closer to town without a boat, Alki and the Seacrest area give you solid shore options for cutthroat, perch, and the occasional bonus salmon when bait pushes in. That’s the latest from around the Sound. 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

  9. 323

    Spring Tides and Glassy Mornings: Puget Sound Salmon and Bottomfish Report

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report around Seattle. We’re on a **big spring tide** cycle right now, with a strong morning ebb and a good afternoon flood pushing bait around the points and rip lines. That moving water is your friend: plan to fish the last half of the ebb and the first half of the flood for the best shot at active fish. Weather around the central Sound is classic early summer: cool, marine layer early, then breaking to partly sunny, light wind in the morning, picking up to a moderate westerly in the afternoon. Air temps are sitting in the low 50s early and climbing into the 60s later. Sunrise is early, sunset late, giving you a long low‑light window at both ends of the day. Those gray, glassy mornings have been money. Salmon-wise, resident **blackmouth and smaller feeder Chinook** have been showing in pockets, with the occasional legal fish mixed in. Most of the action has been coming 80–140 feet down over 150–250 feet of water, working contour breaks and bait balls. Productive gear has been **3–3.5 inch spoons** in green/white or Irish cream patterns, and **small hoochies** behind an 11-inch flasher in glow green or UV purple. Run herring strips if you’ve got them—natural scent is making a difference in the clearer water. **Lingcod** and **cabezon** reports from the rock piles and ledges around the islands and deeper points are still decent when the current allows. Big white or root-beer **swimbaits**, 4–6 ounce jig heads, and pipe jigs bounced close to the bottom are getting bit. Tip those plastics with a strip of herring or squid if you can; just enough to add smell without killing the action. For the bank and small-boat crowd, **sea‑run cutthroat** fishing has been solid on the incoming tide around creek mouths and gravel beaches. Stripped **clouser minnows**, small baitfish patterns, or 1/4‑ounce metal spoons in olive/white and sand lance colors are the ticket. Keep those retrieves erratic and cover water. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: • **Rich Passage and South Bainbridge edges** – The current lines there have been stacking bait, and trollers working tight S‑turns along the 150–200 foot contour are seeing the most consistent Chinook and blackmouth action. • **Possession Bar** – Still a standout hump in the central Sound. Work the edges on the drift with jigs or slow‑troll spoons just off bottom. When the bait shows on your sounder, hang on. Bait-wise, **fresh or properly brined herring** is still king on the salt. Green or red label on a tight roll behind a flasher will out‑fish almost anything when the fish get picky. On the bottomfish side, strips of squid, herring belly, or sand shrimp fished on sturdy leaders are all producing. Timing is key: be on your spot as that tide starts to move, especially around first light. Once the wind stacks up against the afternoon flood, things get bumpy and the bite usually tapers. That’s the word on the water 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

  10. 322

    Early June Puget Sound: Coho, Cutthroat, and Bottom Fish on the Bite

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report for the Seattle area. We’re riding a typical early‑June pattern: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and a mix of clouds and sun over the central Sound. Local marine forecasts are calling for light to moderate southwest winds with surface temps hovering in the low 50s and decent barometric stability most of the day. Sunrise is right around 5:10 a.m., with sunset near 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long fishing window to work the tides. Tides in the central Sound today are running a good morning flood pushing up into midday, then an afternoon ebb that really starts moving water through the narrows, passes, and point structure. Fish activity has been best on those first and last two hours of moving water. Midday slack has been on the slower side unless you’re dropping bait right on their noses. Out on the salt, resident coho and blackmouth have been showing in scattered pods. Most reports from local anglers over the last few days mention a handful of shakers for every keeper, with better numbers off deeper breaks in 80–140 feet. Troll small 2–3 inch spoons and hoochies behind an 11‑inch flasher, green/black, UV, or glow patterns. Herring‑aid, Irish cream, and green splatterback have been consistent producers. Run your gear 20–40 feet off bottom, 2.3–3.0 knots on the GPS. Marine Areas around Seattle have also given up good bottomfish bites where open: kelp greenling, flounder, and a few decent lingcod before the sun gets too high. Jigs tipped with a strip of herring, white or motor‑oil curly‑tail grubs, and small metal jigs hopped along rocky contour lines have been the ticket. If you’re chasing piling‑oriented fish, a simple dropper rig with a chunk of herring or squid will still get bit. Inshore, the cutthroat fishery has been classic early summer. Anglers working the beaches and creek mouths have reported solid action on 12–16 inch sea‑run cutthroat, with a few larger fish mixed in. Strip small olive or white baitfish patterns on a fly rod, or throw 1/8–1/4 oz spoons and soft‑plastic minnows in natural sand‑lance or smelt colors. Focus on current seams, points with tidal rips, and the first drop just off the beach. On the bait side, it’s hard to beat fresh or properly brined herring for salmon—green or blue label for trolling, smaller anchovy‑sized baits if you can find them. For bottomfish, squid strips and herring chunks work very well. Shore anglers should pack sand shrimp, nightcrawlers, or clam necks if they’re targeting surfperch and misc. bottom dwellers around the piers. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: • West Point, off Magnolia: classic Seattle salmon water. Work the outer edge of the bar on the flood and slide up onto the top on the ebb. Good for resident coho, blackmouth, and the odd ling on jigs. • Lincoln Park to Point Williams line: productive stretch for sea‑run cutthroat and the occasional coho cruising in tight. Hit it at first light with small spoons or clousers, especially when that flood tide nudges bait right up on the beach. If you’re launching local, keep an eye on the current tables for the Tacoma Narrows and Deception Pass if you roam north or south—those spots have turned on hard when the afternoon ebb starts ripping, with jigging spoons and mooched herring taking fish right on the breaks. That’s it from Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. 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. 321

    Early June Puget Sound: Bait Balls Thicken, Coho Bite Heats Up Around Seattle

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report for the Seattle area. We’re sitting on a classic early‑June pattern. The National Weather Service calls for mostly cloudy skies around the central Sound, morning temps in the low 50s warming into the 60s, light onshore breeze 5–10 knots, and only a slight chance of drizzle. That means good chop for bait movement but still comfortable on the water. Sunrise is right around 5:15 a.m., with sunset close to 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long crepuscular window to work. Tides today in Seattle, using NOAA’s Seattle station as a reference, are running a decent exchange: a higher high in the pre‑dawn, falling through the morning, then a midday low, building back to a solid evening high. Translation for anglers: moving water most of the day, with the best bite windows typically the last two hours of the outgoing and the first two hours of the incoming. Recent Puget Sound reports from local tackle shops and charter skippers around Shilshole, Elliott Bay, and up toward Possession Point say bait balls of herring and sand lance are starting to thicken, and with them come resident coho and the odd early chinook. Folks trolling 3‑inch Coho Killers, Coyotes, and small spoons behind 11‑inch flashers, in green‑glow or chartreuse patterns, are picking off decent numbers of shaker blackmouth and some legal resident coho in 60–120 feet. Best hardware has been silver or green‑glow spoons and white hootchies, run 25–40 feet off the ball. Bottom fishers working the edges of Elliott Bay and along West Point are reporting solid flounder and sand dab action, with the occasional legal lingcod still coming from deeper rocky structure where season allows. Best producers here are simple: drop‑shot rigs or mooching rigs with strips of herring, squid, or sand shrimp. Lings have been chewing on 4–6 inch swimbaits in motor oil, root beer, or white, bounced tight to the rocks on the last of the outgoing. For shore anglers, local pier reports from Seacrest, Edmonds, and the downtown piers show a mixed bag: piling perch, small flounder, and greenling taking bits of shrimp or pile worms under a sliding float or on a light hi‑lo rig. Sabiki rigs tipped with a tiny piece of bait are still the fastest way to load up on herring when they slide in thick, especially right at dawn and dusk on a flood. If you’re chasing sea‑run cutthroat along the beaches, fly and gear anglers from Lincoln Park up through Golden Gardens are seeing decent action on a moving tide. Small sand lance and baitfish patterns in olive‑over‑white, or 2–3 inch soft plastics and spoons like Kastmasters and Krocodiles in silver or copper, are drawing strikes, especially on a flooding afternoon tide with a little surface chop. A couple of hot spots to put on your list today: • West Point: Work the contour line in 80–140 feet for resident coho and blackmouth on spoons and hootchies, then slide shallower for bottom fish as the tide slackens. • Possession Bar: If you’re willing to run a bit north, the bar has been giving up steady action on resident coho and the occasional chinook. Troll the edges of the bar on the outgoing with green‑glow spoons and white hootchies behind a flasher. Overall fish activity is picking up with the longer days and strong tidal pushes. Focus on bait, watch your sonar, and don’t be afraid to adjust depth often until you mark fish. 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

  12. 320

    Puget Sound Spring Transition: Tides, Bait Balls, and Prime Afternoon Floods

    Puget Sound feels alive this morning, folks. I’m Artificial Lure, checking in with your local salt report around Seattle. Tides first, because that’s your whole game plan. NOAA’s tables show a solid predawn high followed by an ebb through the morning, then a midday low and a flooding push into the afternoon. That dropping morning water stacks bait on the edges of channels and points, and that first couple hours of the afternoon flood is prime time for a quick limit if you’re on the marks. Weather’s cooperating: light onshore breeze, cool and overcast with decent ceiling, and only a slight chop in the central Sound. Think wind waves that are annoying, not dangerous. Cloud cover will keep the bite going longer than on those bluebird days. Sunrise came early, just after 5 a.m., and sunset won’t hit until late in the evening, giving you a long window to bounce between tides and spots. Water temps are in that spring-to-summer transition, and the fish are acting like it. Chinook and resident coho are sliding around mid-Sound rips and bait balls, while sea‑run cutthroat are cruising the beaches hunting sand lance and juvenile herring. Lingcod and rockfish are hanging tight to structure, especially on that outgoing water. Reports from local charters and marina chatter this week say a mixed bag: - Chinook: not fast and furious, but steady pick of cookie‑cutter fish, with a few bigger ones showing on the morning ebb. - Resident coho: spotty but aggressive when you find birds working. - Bottomfish: lingcod limits coming off rocky humps and wrecks, plus a good number of keep‑sized fish released once limits are filled. - Sea‑run cutthroat: plenty of fish for the fly and light‑tackle folks along gravel beaches. If you’re trolling for salmon, think small and match the hatch. The herring around the central Sound are on the smaller side, so 3‑inch spoons in muted greens and nickels, or white hootchies behind a green or UV flasher, are getting bit. A short 24–30 inch leader behind the flasher is money for coho. Add a strip of herring or scented strip if the bite goes soft. For bait, plug‑cut herring is still king. Run it tight and spinning on a slow troll along 80–120 feet of water near drop‑offs. If you’re mooching, keep that bait working—lift, drop, and let it flutter on the fall. On the beaches, a small chartreuse‑over‑white Clouser or a 2–3 inch olive baitfish pattern will cover most cutthroat situations. Soft‑plastic jerk shads in smelt colors work great for folks who don’t fly fish. Bottomfish folks should bring stout gear and big profiles. Large white or root‑beer swimbaits, 5–7 inches, on heavy jig heads, bounced tight to rock piles, will get ling attention. Tip them with herring or squid for a little extra scent. Metal jigs in 2–4 ounces, hammered silver or glow, are a close second. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: - Point No Point: classic morning salmon grind. Work the contour lines on the ebb, and if birds are dipping and bait’s on the screen, just stay put and grind. - West Point, off Magnolia: good for both resident coho and the odd chinook, especially on the flood when current pushes bait along the shelf. You can swing by nearby Elliott Bay docks afterward and hear what the other crews did. Beach anglers should walk the stretches around Lincoln Park and Golden Gardens on a moving tide, tossing small baitfish patterns or spoons at seam lines, current edges, and any nervous water. If you head out today, watch the tide changes, keep an eye on the birds, and be ready to move when the bait moves. That’s when the Sound really turns on. 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

  13. 319

    Early June Coho and Chinook: Work the Tides Around Seattle

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report for the Seattle area. We’re working with classic early‑June conditions: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and light variable wind on the central Sound. Marine forecasts call for morning cloud cover burning off to partly sunny skies, with highs in the low 60s and a light onshore breeze building into the afternoon. That means decent chop mid‑day, but soft, glassy water at first light and again in the last hour of light. Around Seattle, tides today swing on a typical summer mixed pattern: a strong morning ebb dropping from a decent high into a mid‑morning low, then a solid flood building through the afternoon into an evening high. Sunrise is right around that 5 a.m. mark, with sunset about 9 p.m., so you’ve got long windows to work the moving water at both ends of the day. Fish activity has picked up this week. Local reports from tackle shops and marina chatter say resident coho and immature Chinook have been showing with more consistency off West Point, Jeff Head, and Possession Bar. Most of what’s being caught are shaker Chinook with a few legal blackmouth‑sized fish mixed in, plus some scrappy coho in the 2–4 pound range. Out deeper on the bars, anglers are also picking up the odd lingcod and plenty of undersized flounder. Inshore, kayakers and bank anglers are getting into sea‑run cutthroat along the beaches when the tide is flooding over structure. On the saltwater, the most productive setups have been small spoons and hoochies behind flashers. Think 3‑inch spoons in greens and glow, or white/UV hoochies, trolled 60–120 feet down depending on light and bait marks. Herring strips and whole herring, either brined or fresh, are still hard to beat if you’re running bait; anchovies work too when the coho are up and chasing. Folks mooching are doing best on cut‑plug herring worked slowly along the edges of bait balls. For bank and beach anglers, a few patterns are standing out. Small olive‑over‑white baitfish patterns for fly folks, and for hardware, 1/4‑ to 1/2‑ounce metal spoons in candlefish colors, or soft plastics on light jig heads, have been drawing strikes from sea‑run cutthroat. Early morning on the flood, casting over drop‑offs and current seams, has been the ticket. A couple of hot spots to consider: – West Point, outside Discovery Park: classic early‑season spot for resident coho and shakers. Work the contour lines on the outgoing tide, then slide a bit shallower on the flood. – Jeff Head: still one of the most consistent producers this week, with good reports of bait and mixed‑size Chinook. Troll the edges of the main hump and watch your sounder; most action has been where the bait stacks mid‑column on the incoming tide. Closer in, the Narrows and the edges around Point Defiance have been giving up lingcod to those jigging large soft plastics or metal jigs tight to rocky structure during slower portions of the tide. Just remember to check current bottomfish and salmon regulations and keep a barbless mindset. Overall, if you time your trip around that morning ebb or the afternoon flood, run smaller, natural‑colored presentations, and stay mobile until you mark bait, you’re in the game. The fish are here, they’re just making you work a bit for them. 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. 318

    Early June Puget Sound: Chase the Tide, Find the Bait, Catch the Fish

    Good morning, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Puget Sound and Seattle fishing report for today. The **tide picture** this morning is the big thing to watch: around Seattle and the central Sound, moving water around the tide changes is your best window for bite activity, especially for salmon, sea-run cutthroat, and resident feeder fish. With no live tide table in hand here, I’d treat the **first couple hours of the incoming or outgoing** as prime time, and I’d be ready to fish slack water only if the bait is stacked up tight. The **weather** is classic early-June Seattle fishing weather: cool mornings, improving light, and usually a light marine layer that can turn into a gray, fishable day. That overcast edge is often a good thing in Puget Sound, especially for silvers, cutthroat, and bait-stealing herring chasers. If the wind stays light, expect better boat control and better casting near points, docks, and current seams. **Sunrise and sunset** matter this time of year because the morning low light is often the first real feeding window, and evening can be just as strong if the water’s moving. Plan to be on the water well before sunrise, and stay into the last hour of light if you can. Recent fish activity in the Sound has been centered on **feeding lanes, bait balls, and tide rips**. When the bait is present, you’ll see birds working, surface dimpling, and quick hits from aggressive fish. In these waters, the most consistent catches lately tend to be **rockfish where open, legal areas exist, sea-run cutthroat along shore structure, squid around lights at night, and salmon when the season and regulations line up**. The key is matching the hatch: if baitfish are small and silvery, go small and bright; if the water is dirty, add more flash. For **lures**, I’d start with: - A **small chrome or pearl spoon** - A **herring-style plug** - A **soft plastic swimbait** on a jig head - A **small spinner** for cutthroat and shoreline work For **bait**, the old reliable choices are: - **Herring** - **Sardine** - **Squid strips** - **Sand shrimp** for smaller predatory fish and mixed-species bites If I were dialing in just a couple of **hot spots**, I’d focus on: - **Shilshole Bay and the nearby point structure**, especially when bait pushes along the edge - **West Seattle shoreline points and rip lines**, where current, bait, and travel lanes come together You can also keep an eye on **marine structure near Edmonds, Elliott Bay edges, and ferry-adjacent current lines** when conditions and regulations allow, because those moving-water edges often hold the most consistent action. The local rule of thumb is simple: **find the bait, find the moving water, and fish the transition lines**. If you’re not getting touched, move fast until you mark life or see birds working. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe for the next report, and 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. 317

    Early Morning Flood: Coho and Cutthroat Fire Up in Puget Sound

    This is Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report for the early morning hours. We’re sitting on a cool, gray start around Seattle with typical marine cloud cover, light south to southwest breeze, and temps in the low to mid‑50s easing into the 60s later. The air is stable and calm enough for small boats and beach anglers to get after it. Sunrise is right around that 5:15 a.m. mark, with sunset close to 9 p.m., giving you a long window to work the tides. Puget Sound tides today are running a fairly standard mixed pattern: a solid morning flood pushing in through mid‑morning, then a midday high, followed by an afternoon ebb that really starts to move water through the narrows and points. Focus your effort on the last hour of the flood and first push of the ebb for the best shot at active fish. Resident coho and immature Chinook are still the headliners in the central Sound. Anglers working 60–120 feet down off mid‑channel humps and drop‑offs are seeing steady action on shakers with a few legal fish mixed in. Most are coming on small 2–3 inch spoons and hoochies behind flashers, trolled 2–3 knots, tight to bait schools. Think needlefish and small anchovy patterns in green, white, and UV. Cutthroat trout are chewing along the beaches from Shilshole down to Lincoln Park and around the south end of Bainbridge. Walk‑and‑wade fly anglers and light‑tackle spinners are picking up fish early and late on the tide turns. Clouser minnows in olive‑over‑white, small krill patterns, and 1/4‑ounce metal spoons are all producing. A few folks tossing small plugs are reporting surprise bonus coho near rips and current seams. Bottomfish action has been decent where it’s open. Pile perch and other surfperch are showing from piers and jetties, especially on the slower parts of the tide. Bits of shrimp, clam, or gulp‑style artificials on a high‑low rig are reliable. Around rock structure, lightweight jig heads tipped with sandworms or scented soft plastics are pulling in greenling and smaller rockfish. As for bait and lures, if you’re targeting salmon from a boat, it’s hard to beat a chartreuse or glow hoochie behind an 11‑inch flasher, or a small chrome spoon that matches local candlefish. If you’re fishing from shore, pack a selection of 1/4‑ to 1/2‑ounce metal jigs in herring and anchovy colors, plus a few 3–4 inch soft plastics on jig heads for probing drop‑offs. A couple of local hot spots to consider: • West Point, just north of Elliott Bay: classic early‑morning trolling lane with good current and bait. Work the edges of the drop‑off on the flood and slide deeper as the sun climbs. • Southworth area and the east side of Vashon: great contour lines and current breaks that set up nicely on the ebb. Troll the 90–140 foot line for salmon or cast from shore where you can reach moving rips. Remember to check the latest WDFW regulations and emergency rules before you head out, especially for salmon and bottomfish—openings and size limits change quickly in the Sound. That’s your Puget Sound report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide swing. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  16. 316

    Puget Sound Morning Bite: Coho and Blackmouth on the Building Tide

    Artificial Lure here with your Puget Sound fishing report for the early-morning bite around Seattle. We’re on a building tide today. Around Elliott Bay and Alki, the low hit in the early pre‑dawn, with a good incoming push through the morning and a decent high late morning to midday. Over toward Tacoma Narrows and the south Sound, expect that swing to lag a bit, but the important thing is that classic “first half of the flood” has been lining up nicely with the early light—prime time for bait to move and predators to follow. According to the National Weather Service in Seattle, we’ve got a typical late‑spring pattern: a weak marine layer early, then partial clearing. Light south to southwest wind in the 5–10 knot range, with a little more breeze in the afternoon. Air temps topping out in the 60s, water temp in central Sound sitting in the low 50s. Sunrise is just after 5:20 a.m., sunset close to 8:50 p.m., so there’s a long window, but the most reliable action has been from first light until the sun gets on the water, then again on the evening flood. Chinook are still mostly a release show in much of the Sound, but there’ve been decent reports of resident coho and hungry blackmouth around Possession Bar, Kingston, and the west side of Bainbridge. Local charter skippers out of Shilshole have been picking a mix of shakers, a few legal blackmouth, and some chunky resident coho in 60–120 feet, with fish suspended 20–60 feet down over deeper water. In Elliott Bay and off Alki, anglers trolling along the edge of the drop have seen modest action on coho, plus the usual dogfish when the tide slackens. Lingcod and rockfish have been the real meat‑and‑potatoes for folks working structure. Reefs and wrecks around West Point, the Tacoma Narrows bridges, and the ledges off Point Defiance have given up solid keeper lingcod with some nice cabezon in the mix. In the ship canal and Lake Union, bass guys have been finding pre‑ and post‑spawn smallmouth stacking on rock piles and bridges, though that’s a bit off‑Sound. For lures, keep it simple and local: 3–4 inch white or glow hootchies behind a green or purple haze flasher have been steady for coho and blackmouth. Silver or green‑splatter Coyote and Kingfisher spoons in the 3.0–3.5 size are a staple; run them 25–40 feet off the ball. When the water’s clear and bright, scale down to smaller spoons and lighter leaders. Herring patterns—both spoons and hootchies—are out‑producing anchovy patterns right now. Bait anglers dragging whole or plug‑cut herring in a slow troll have reported the bigger bites, especially on the morning flood off Possession and Point No Point. If you’re jigging for lings, 4–6 ounce metal jigs in candlefish colors or big white curly‑tail plastics on heavy lead‑heads have been putting fish in the boat; just remember to stay tight to bottom and be ready to lose some gear to the rocks. For shore casters, 1/2 to 3/4 ounce metal jigs and small herring‑profile swimbaits are getting attention from coho, sea‑run cutthroat, and the occasional flounder around the beaches. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: First, Alki Point to Fourmile Rock—work the contour lines in 60–140 feet on the incoming tide for coho and blackmouth, especially near bait balls. Second, Possession Bar—classic structure that’s been holding fish all spring; focus on the edges during the first push of the flood. Remember barbless hooks, know which areas are open for what species, and check the latest emergency rules from Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife before you launch. That’s the rundown from your buddy Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

  17. 315

    Puget Sound Spring Bite: Coho, Blackmouth, and Bottomfish on the Feed

    Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Puget Sound fishing report for the Seattle area. We’re sitting on a mellow spring pattern in the Sound. According to the National Weather Service, we’ve got mostly cloudy skies around Seattle, light showers drifting through, morning temps in the low 50s rising into the 60s by afternoon, and a south to southwest breeze 5–12 knots. Not nasty, but enough chop you’ll want a decent rain shell and to watch the wind-against-tide lines. NOAA’s tide tables for Seattle show a classic spring mixed tide today: a decent morning ebb, a mid‑day low, then a strong afternoon flood. That first light ebb and the start of the afternoon flood will be your prime bite windows. Plan to be on your spots an hour before each tide swing; that’s when the bait stacks and everything wakes up. Sunrise is right around 5:25 a.m. with sunset close to 8:45 p.m., so you’ve got a generous low‑light bracket. The best action has been right at gray light and again in the last hour before dark when the water lays down and bait comes shallow. Resident coho and blackmouth have been spotty but worth the effort. Local reports from the marinas in Ballard and Shilshole say anglers working 80–130 feet with small spoons and hootchies have picked a mix of shakers and the occasional legal fish. Think 3-inch Coho Killers or Coyotes in green/glow, Irish cream, or white/UV, run 30–40 inches behind an 11-inch flasher in green/glow or chrome. Add scent; herring or anchovy gel has been making a difference on the slower days. Bottomfish have been far more consistent. Inshore structure around Elliott Bay, West Point, and over toward Bainbridge is giving up solid numbers of lingcod and rockfish where open. Folks bouncing 4–6 oz leadheads tipped with whole herring or large curlytail grubs in white or motor oil are reporting steady hook‑ups, especially on the turn of the tide when the current eases enough to stay vertical. Don’t overlook metal: 2–4 oz pipe jigs and slender metal jigs in chrome or glow, yo‑yo’d just off the bottom, are pulling fish and holding up better in the current. Pile perch and flounder are chewing for the shore crowd. Along the Seattle waterfront piers and around Edmonds and Alki, a drop‑shot rig with a bit of shrimp, clam, or small sandworm piece is all you need. Use light line, small hooks, and let the kids handle the rod; there’s been plenty of tap‑tap action. A few squid are still hanging around in the deeper, cleaner water, but it’s tapering off. If you’re out after dark, a small pink or green jig under the lights at Edmonds or the Seattle piers can still scratch out a meal. Hot spots to circle on your chart today: 1) West Point / Meadow Point: Work the 90–140 foot contour on the morning ebb for resident coho and blackmouth with small spoons and hootchies. When the current slacks, drop metal to the bottom and prospect for lingcod on the rocky breaks. 2) Alki Point to Lincoln Park: Troll tight to the break in 60–120 feet during the afternoon flood. Green/glow flashers with white or UV hootchies have been the ticket. In closer, shore casters tossing 1/2–1 oz metal jigs or soft plastics on jig heads are finding flounder and the occasional surprise resident coho. Live bait isn’t really part of the program here, so frozen herring, sand shrimp, and good scent on your artificials are your best “bait.” Keep leaders light, presentations natural, and don’t be afraid to move until you see bait on the sounder; the fish are following the groceries. That’s the word from the water. 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

  18. 314

    Building Moon, Strong Flood Tide: Coho and Lings Firing Off Seattle

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report for the greater Seattle area. We’re on a building moon phase and decent moving water this morning. Around Seattle, NOAA tide tables show an early morning low followed by a solid flood pushing in through late morning, then an afternoon high and a softer evening ebb. That morning flood and the first half of the afternoon outgoing are your prime windows. Weather-wise, local forecasts are calling for a cool marine layer at daybreak, light south to southwest breeze under 10 knots, and afternoon clearing with temps in the 60s. That’s classic spring Sound weather: overcast early, brightening later. Winds look manageable for small boats but expect a bit more chop as the day wears on, especially in the open stretches. Sunrise is just before 5:30 a.m., sunset a little after 8:30 p.m., so you’ve got long low-light edges to work. First light and the last hour before dark are lining up nicely with that tide movement, which should perk things up for both salmon and bottomfish. Recent reports from local charter skippers and tackle shops around Shilshole and Elliott Bay say resident coho (silvers) and a few bigger blackmouth have been picking up. Most fish are schoolie size, but there’ve been enough legal keepers to make it worth the run. Lingcod and rockfish are showing good activity on rocky structure from West Point north toward Edmonds, with a fair number of keeper lings coming on the opener stretches. For salmon, think small baitfish patterns: 3–3.5 inch spoons in green/white, Irish cream, or cop car, fished behind an 11-inch flasher on 30–40 inches of leader. Hoochies in glow green or UV white with a strip of herring or a small herring strip teaser have been consistent. Troll 60–120 feet on the downrigger, a bit shallower at first light, then follow the bait down as the sun climbs. If you’re soaking bait from the beach or a small skiff, herring and anchovy are still kings. Rig a cut-plug herring behind a swivel and slow-troll or mooch over bait marks, keeping your line just above the fish. On the beaches, anglers are scratching out a mix of sea‑run cutthroat and the odd early coho on olive-over-white Clousers, small sand lance patterns, and 1/4–3/8 oz metal jigs in candlefish colors. Strip fast with pauses; most hits come on the drop. Bottomfish action has been strong on the incoming tide. Lingcod are chewing on 4–6 inch swimbaits in root beer, motor oil, or glow, bounced close to the rocks. Large curlytail grubs on 2–3 oz jigheads are a close second. For bait, whole herring, fresh squid strips, or a chunk of salmon belly will turn heads, but be ready to weed through smaller rockfish and greenling. Two hot spots to put on your list: 1. West Point / Fourmile Rock: The edge off West Point down toward Fourmile has been producing resident coho and the occasional blackmouth. Work the contour line in 80–140 feet, trolling with the current. Watch for bait balls and birds. 2. Richmond Beach to Edmonds oil docks: Good mixed-bag stretch. Troll for salmon along the drop-off, then slide shallower to probe rocky humps for lingcod with jigs. Fish that first push of the flood or the start of the ebb for best results. Boat traffic and pressure are lighter midweek, so if you can sneak out, do it. Keep an eye on barbless hook regulations, size limits, and marine area closures—rules change often here, and WDFW’s website or app has the latest. That’s the word on the water 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

  19. 313

    Puget Sound Fishing Report: Salmon, Lingcod, and Halibut Bites Heating Up for Summer

    Here’s your Puget Sound fishing report for June 21, 2025. We’re right in the heart of prime saltwater fishing season, with the Solstice just behind us and Seattle putting on some picture-perfect conditions. Sunrise came early at 5:10 a.m. and sunset’s stretching all the way to 9:10 p.m., so anglers have a generous window today to chase fish at both dawn and dusk. Weather-wise, we’re seeing classic June gloom in the morning with temps in the mid-50s, clearing out and warming up into the low 70s by mid-afternoon. Light westerly winds are in the forecast, meaning most areas should stay fishable and comfortable through the day. Checking the tide chart, there’s a strong morning high right around 7:45 a.m., which should trigger a flurry of activity on the outgoing tide and again as the tide swings back later in the afternoon. Recent catches have shown Puget Sound is really heating up. Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife creel reports show strong catches of resident Coho with the occasional early Chinook turning up, especially from Area 10 (Seattle-Bremerton zone) down through Area 13. If you’re looking for variety, the Lingcod bite is tapering off as the season winds down, but there are still quality fish hanging on structure, particularly around Possession Bar and the Tacoma Narrows. Halibut catches are on the decline as quota fills, yet a few solid fish are still reported north in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and local banks. For gear, salmon anglers are doing best running smaller spoons and hoochies, with green and chartreuse patterns taking plenty of hits. If you’re mooching or drifting herring, try plug-cut or whole to match the local forage. Trolling flasher-and-squid combos remains a top tactic with shorter leaders in choppier water. Fly anglers should size up their baitfish patterns—think size 4-10 with distinct markings to mimic the maturing local forage, and don’t sleep on topwater flies for energetic cutthroat and coho. If you’re after hot spots, Possession Point at the southern tip of Whidbey Island stands out with its intersection of migration routes and deep, reefy structure—a classic for both salmon and Lingcod. Elliott Bay is also producing, especially early and late, with a shot at bigger Chinook as summer runs build steam. Down south, the Tacoma Narrows is prime for both salmon and Lingcod, thanks to its strong currents and schools of bait pinned tight to structure. Looking ahead, late summer promises a massive Pink Salmon return, so keep an eye on north-end beaches like Point No Point and Kayak Point for that run. Thanks for tuning in to today’s Puget Sound fishing update—don’t forget to subscribe for more local insights and on-the-water action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Tune in to "Puget Sound, Seattle Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of the latest fishing conditions, expert tips, and local hot spots. Stay updated on weather patterns, seasonal fish migrations, and best bait to use. Perfect for anglers of all levels who are eager to make the most out of their time on the water in Seattle's Puget Sound.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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Tune in to "Puget Sound, Seattle Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of the latest fishing conditions, expert tips, and local hot spots. Stay updated on weather patterns, seasonal fish migrations, and best bait to use. Perfect for anglers of all levels who are eager to make the most out of...

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