FISHING REPORT: Wednesday, July 31
Published 5:00 am Wednesday, July 31, 2024
OCEAN OUTLOOK
SOUTH COAST: Ocean conditions are great for fishing through at least Saturday, so it’s a perfect time to stalk lingcod, black rockfish and salmon out of Brookings. Wednesday’s forecast call for 5-knot winds and 4-foot seas, with the same forecast for Thursday. Friday sees things calming down a bit to 5-knot winds and 3-foot seas. Saturday see a bit of an uptick but still not bad at 8-knot winds and 4-foot seas.
The ocean chinook salmon season is still fairly hit and miss off the South Coast and catches of fin-clipped coho salmon have consistently been good out of Brookings. Most of the coho have been somewhat small this season, however. Anchovies are best. Remember, hooks must be barbless and only two hooks are allowed when salmon fishing. The limit is two salmon a day through Aug. 31, when the chinook season closes. All wild coho must be released unharmed.
Halibut fishing is open, and look for some decent catches in 180-200 feet of water on sandy bottoms near rock formations when the weather better cooperates. Jigs and large herring drifted off the bottom will be best.
Central Oregon halibut fishing has been slow, largely because of weather. But it should be great this weekend as anglers look to fill the spring poundage quota.
Jigging for rockfish and lingcod is best with lead-headed jigs with a multitude of skirt colors, with white and chartreuse great first and second options. Fishing has been very good for larger black rockfish, while lingcod fishing has been a little hit and miss.
The St. George Lighthouse reef in Northern California is open, and fishing there has been excellent when weather conditions allow for the travel from Brookings. Lingcod catches have been excellent, as are black rockfish, when boats can make the run from Brookings. Remember that California fishing license since it’s in California waters.
For bottomfishers, cabezon can now be kept through the remainder of the calendar year. All quillback rockfish must be released unharmed.
Surfperch fishing has picked up again because of better surf conditions. Focus off river mouths during the perch spawn, which is now waning. Fishing is best at the turns of tides, primarily around high tide. Shrimp, mussels and Berkley Gulp sandworms or shrimp are the best baits when the weather cooperates. There are a dozen varieties of surfperch along the Oregon Coast, and most are quite tasty.
The ocean is now open to recreational crabbing, and ocean effort has improved as salmon anglers are dropping off pots to soak while they troll for salmon.
Another set of good low tides start for clammers for the next two days. Wednesday’s 6 a.m. low tide is at -0.9, followed by -0.90 tides at 6:45 a.m. Thursday.
Shellfish regulations have finally stabilized. Razor clamming is closed on the South Coast now, but bay clamming is open statewide. Also, mussel harvest is now open from Coos Bay south to the California border as well as from the Yachats River north to the Washington border, but it remains closed for the rest of the state. However, the coveted Clatsop Beach clam beaches are now closed for the annual conservation closure. Before any digging, call the shellfish hotline at 1-800-448-2474 for the latest restrictions.
Scallops are available coast-wide, but they are not tested for domoic acid at this time. It’s safest to eat the adductor muscles of scallops. If you don’t know what the adductor is, you better pass on wild scallops.
LAKE OUTLOOK
AGATE: Fishing effort has tapered off with the high air temperatures that are also shooting water temperatures higher. Perch are dominating the catch. The reservoir is getting drawn down for irrigation and is 56% full. That constant drop leaves a ring of mud around some of the more popular bank-fishing areas near the boat ramp. The ramp is open. Boat anglers are doing best by wind-drifting worms or casting toward submerged willows and trees from the bank. Evenings are best. Electric trolling motors are OK but no gas motors. The park closes at dusk.
APPLEGATE: The lake received another 15,000 legal-sized trout a month ago and they continue to fan out more throughout the lake. The Seattle Bar area is losing its angling interest as water levels have sunk past the bar’s usefulness. Look for more trout fishing by trolling Wedding Rings or small lures from boats or still-fishing with worms or PowerBait along the lake’s far side past Seattle Bar. Bass fishing has been very good with crankbaits and rubber baits during the warm mornings. The lake is down to 65% full, with the elevation now down to 29 feet from full. Outflows are almost five times the inflows so look for the reservoir to drop quickly this month.
DIAMOND: The lake is still fishing very well for a mix of rainbow trout, tiger trout and brown trout, particularly at the lake’s southern end and around the shrimp beds straight across from the resort. However, smoke from the Trail Fire has severely hampered fishing days and makes it tough to judge whether it’s worth the drive. If you go, the bite is best early in the morning and at dusk. Tiger trout are preying on stocked trout fingerling. Look for some nice brown trout and tiger trout in the mix while fishing Rapala lures, Flatfish lures, worms under bobbers and some large streamer flies. Lots of brown trout over 20 inches are getting caught daily in the south end.
All tiger trout and brown trout must be released unharmed. Some are eclipsing 8 pounds.
EMIGRANT: The lake hasn’t had any fresh trout releases in a month and that has slowed trout fishing as well as effort. Fish off the bank near the county boat ramp and where Emigrant Creek pours into the reservoir with chartreuse or rainbow Power Bait or troll small lures. The lake has actually dropped somewhat significantly this past week to 34% full and look for it to continue to drop as the irrigation season is in full swing. However, that’s still much higher than in recent years. Bass fishing is improving as more warm and sunny days hit the area. Afternoons have been windy.
EXPO: Another 1,000 legal-sized rainbow trout were stocked a month ago and they are still drawing good interest from valley anglers without too many close fishing options. Catch them on PowerBait, worms under bobbers or small spinners. Parking fees are required.
FISH: The lake received another infusion of 2,500 legal-sized trout again two weeks ago and they were stocked at the Forest Service ramp. That makes the lake the top destination for trout anglers now. Fish for them with worms or PowerBait in the cove immediately near the ramp as well as off the resort. Fishing interest will continue to rise, as an escape from heat and good water conditions. The lake was actually down a hair this week to 70% full Tuesday.
HOWARD PRAIRIE: Morning trolling for trout straight off the marina and all the way down the lake has been a hot ticket. Plenty of hold-over trout in the 16- to 18-inch level as well as legal-sized trout stocked last month at the marina. Anchor and fish for them with PowerBait outside the marina or troll near the shore with Tasmanian Devil lures or Wedding Rings spiced with a piece of worm. Also troll in the channel if you can find it with your electronics. The lake was listed Tuesday at 48% full, which is down just a hair from last week.
HYATT: The lake has dropped again and is now listed at 50% full Tuesday. It did receive another 7,450 legal-sized trout a month ago. Troll worms on Wedding Ring lures through the former creek channel for larger rainbows. Anchor and fish PowerBait off the bottom for the recently planted rainbows. Bass fishing has picked up in the shallows and coves near the Bureau of Land Management ramp. Lots of smallish largemouth, as usual.
LAKE OF THE WOODS: The lake received 1,000 legal-sized and 300 trophy-sized rainbow trout three weeks ago and there are plenty of holdovers around the resort area. Fish with worms, PowerBait or troll Rapala lures for big rainbows and the occasional brown trout.
LOST CREEK: The lake received another 10,000 legal-sized rainbows nearly a month ago and they were be split between the Stewart State Park ramp and the Takelma Ramp. The most recently stocked rainbows are biting worms and PowerBait fished off the bank near the Takelma ramp. Others are fanning out toward the face of the dam and along the lake’s southwest banks. Troll Wedding Ring lures spiced with a small piece of worm or a whole worm behind a flasher. Flows out of the reservoir were down 1,600 cubic-feet-per-second as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has slowed releases in preparation for the upcoming spike of water for fall chinook salmon migration. In-flows are down to 1,042 cfs. The lake, however, remains a healthy 67% full, despite dropping 2% in the past week.
MEDCO: The pond received another 1,100 legal-sized trout a month ago, and fishing is holding on. They are getting caught with worms or PowerBait off the bank near the ramp.
RIVER OUTLOOK
ROGUE: The upper Rogue is seeing improved summer steelhead catches while the spring chinook fishing is still holding on. The middle Rogue remains slow for steelhead. The Lower Rogue Bay has seen a little slow-down in the fall chinook fishery after a good start, but look for fresh fish to move in with ever rising tide now through September.
That keeps the best bet at the upper Rogue as spring chinook fishing continues to be good and summer steelhead fishing has improved.
Bank anglers are finding a few springers with corkies and beads farther up in the system like at Casey State Park and the Slide Hole (The Hatchery Hole remains closed), while drift boaters are doing best back-bouncing roe and sandshrimp or using MagLip 3.5 plugs spiced with anchovy scent or tuna bellies.
Intercept these migrating spring chinook along the inside corners of gravel bars and other clear migration lanes. Start fishing some of the classic holes now as well, since water flows have dropped as more riverside irrigation is occurring.
All wild chinook must be released unharmed upstream of Dodge Bridge, but wild and hatchery chinook can now be kept downstream of Dodge Bridge. This is outside of the main spring chinook spawning grounds.
Most anglers are focusing their springer effort downstream of Dodge Bridge to take advantage of this annual rule change. Early mornings have been best, and water temperatures are rising a bit. The upper Rogue flows have dropped this past week, with 1,600 cfs out of Lost Creek Lake providing the lion’s share of the water. Flows at Dodge Bridge were down to 1,840 cfs, the lowest they’ve been this summer. Ditto for the old Gold Ray Dam site, where the flows were down to 1,695 cfs. Grants Pass was just above 1,653 cfs. Those flows will continue to remain steady deep into next week and provide great conditions for summer steelhead fishing in the evenings with plugs, pink worms, small egg clusters, nymphs and streamer flies.
Trolling the Lower Rogue Bay for fall chinook has picked up again with lots of bright chinook in the mid 20-pound range. Anchovies with blades is best, as are Brad’s Cut Plug baits. Warm river water means there are very few, if any, fall chinook moving out of tidewater.
Rogue, Applegate and other South Coast steelhead anglers will need their new regional steelhead validation to fish. New $2 validations are needed each Dec. 1, even for those catch-and-release fishing. Those are valid to December.
Those validations are not necessary for chinook fishing.
All wild steelhead must be released unharmed for the remainder of the year river-wide.
The far upper Rogue in the Union Creek area on Thursday will receive its weekly installment of 2,500 legal-sized rainbows. Fishing is always best at the stocking sites along the upper Rogue and Union Creek. Focus around the Union Creek Campground and the main-stem Rogue near River Bridge. Worms, single salmon eggs and small pieces of worms are the traditional favorites.
APPLEGATE: The river is open to trout fishing but off-limits to all steelhead. Bait is allowed, but there is no fishing from a floating device. Take care not to trespass.