Kansikuva näyttelystä Puget Sound, Washington Fishing Report Today

Puget Sound, Washington Fishing Report Today

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"Puget Sound, Washington Fishing Today" offers anglers the latest updates on fishing conditions, tips, and hotspots in the Puget Sound area. Tune in daily for expert insights, local weather forecasts, and the best bait and tackle recommendations to enhance your fishing adventures in Washington's stunning aquatic landscape. Stay informed and make the most of your time on the water with this essential fishing podcast. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock Also check out https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/time-in-city-news-info/id6692631879 and https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/what-to-do-in-city-guides/id6615091666 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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jakson Puget Sound Morning: Incoming Tide, Bait Stacks, and Early Summer Salmon kansikuva

Puget Sound Morning: Incoming Tide, Bait Stacks, and Early Summer Salmon

Morning report from **Artificial Lure** for Puget Sound: the tide picture this morning is working against a lot of shallow-water bite, with a **low around 2:10 AM** followed by a strong **incoming** through the sunrise window and a **high around 8:50 AM** in the central Sound. With that push of water, look for bait to stack on current edges, ferry lanes, points, and eelgrass drop-offs, especially where the tide starts to pinch down after daylight. For the weather, the early-morning pattern across Puget Sound is classic early-summer fishing weather: cool start, light marine influence, and generally stable conditions, which usually favors salmon moving and feeding shallow if the wind stays calm. Sunrise is around **5:15 AM**, and sunset is around **9:00 PM**, giving anglers a long window, with the best action often coming first light and again on the last push of light. Recent local chatter points to **steady chinook and some coho** showing in the broader Sound, with incidental **flounder, dogfish, and bottom fish** in the mix depending on location. In the better salmon stretches, anglers have been taking fish on tide turns and current seams rather than flat slack water, and that lines up with the bait-driven bite many locals are seeing right now. If you’re getting blanked, move until you find bait: birds dipping, bait balls on sonar, or a little surface chop over deeper water. For lures, the best producers right now are the old reliable North Sound tools: **hoochies**, **scented spinners**, **small spoons**, and **plug-cut herring setups**. If the water is green and moving, I’d run a **green/glow hoochie** or a **white and chartreuse spoon**. If it’s a little clearer, go smaller and cleaner: **silvers, blues, and subtle baitfish colors**. For bait, **fresh or brined herring** is still the standard, and when salmon are finicky, a properly cut plug herring with a bit of scent can outfish most hardware. A couple of hot spots to check: - **Point No Point** on the tide change, especially if bait stacks outside the rip. - **Shilshole to Jefferson Head** for moving-water salmon traffic and bait concentrations. - If you want a backup plan, work the **Point Defiance and Tacoma Narrows edges** where current funnels hard and fish like to travel. Local move: don’t camp too long. If you don’t mark fish or bait within 15 minutes, slide to the next seam, hump, or tide break. In Puget Sound, the bite is usually less about brute force and more about finding the exact lane the fish are using that morning. Thanks for tuning in, and please 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

9. kesä 2026 - 2 min
jakson Puget Sound Fishing Report: Early Morning and Sunset Bites kansikuva

Puget Sound Fishing Report: Early Morning and Sunset Bites

Morning, anglers—**Artificial Lure** here with your Puget Sound fishing report for today. The **best window** looks to be the early morning push into the changing tide, with another solid bite often showing around the last hour of daylight. Around Puget Sound, **moving water** is the key: salmon, sea-run cutthroat, and resident coho all tend to feed better when the tide is working. With no live tide table provided in the search results, check your local station before you launch and plan around the first safe ebb or flood you can fish cleanly. For **weather**, June in Puget Sound usually means cool mornings, brighter midday light, and a chance of a marine breeze by afternoon. That kind of weather often pushes bait tighter to structure, which is exactly where the fish set up. If the wind comes up, focus on protected shorelines, points, and current seams rather than exposed open water. **Sunrise and sunset** matter this time of year because the evening bite can stretch late, and the low-light periods are prime time for feeding fish. If you can fish dawn or the last two hours before dark, you’re covering the best natural windows. Recent catches around the Sound typically include **chinook, coho, sea-run cutthroat, flounder, perch, and occasional squid or bottom fish**, depending on the exact area and season. When the bite is on, anglers report the best action on tide exchanges, especially near bait balls, rip lines, and ferry lanes where currents sweep forage into a narrow lane. For **lures**, I’d keep it simple and local: - A **small white or pink hoochie** behind a flasher for salmon - A **silver spoon** for covering water when fish are scattered - A **small minnow plug** or twitch bait for cutthroat along shoreline edges - A **jig head with soft plastic** for perch and near-bottom feeders For **bait**, the classics still produce: - **Herring** for salmon - **Squid strips** when you want a tougher bait on the hook - **Sand shrimp** or **small worms** for cutthroat and bottom fish - **Baitfish-style presentations** worked slowly near eelgrass, rock, or dock edges If I had to pick a couple of **hot spots**, I’d start with **Jefferson Head** for moving-water salmon opportunities, and **Shilshole/Ballard area structure** for bait, current, and mixed-species action. **Point No Point** is also worth a look when the tide lines up and the bait is there. Fish the edges, not the middle. Watch for birds, bait spray, and nervous water. If the water’s green and the tide’s working, keep your rig in the zone and be ready—Puget Sound can turn on fast. Thanks for tuning in, **subscribe** for the next report, and remember: **This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.** Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

Eilen - 2 min
jakson Early June Coho and Blackmouth: Long Days, Moving Water, and Hot Spots Around the Sound kansikuva

Early June Coho and Blackmouth: Long Days, Moving Water, and Hot Spots Around the Sound

Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re on a classic early‑June pattern: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and a mix of clouds and sun across the Sound. Local marine forecasts from the National Weather Service call for light onshore flow, morning clouds burning off, and highs in the low to mid‑60s around the central Sound. Winds are generally under 10–15 knots with a light chop—fishable in most small boats and comfortable for bank anglers if you’ve got a light jacket. Sunrise today is right around 5:10 a.m. with sunset just after 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those tide changes. WDFW and local tide tables for Elliott Bay and Tacoma Narrows show decent morning ebb currents and an afternoon flood—prime times for moving‑water bites around points, rips, and current seams. Resident coho and blackmouth are still the headliners. Local charter reports out of Shilshole and Edmonds say anglers have been picking up a mix of shakers and keeper‑size resident coho, with a few legal Chinook in the deeper slots. Most boats are running small 2–3 inch spoons and hoochies behind flashers in 60–120 feet of water. Green‑glow, Cop Car, and Irish Cream spoons have all been producing, especially trolled 20–30 feet off bottom on the downrigger. Inshore, the bottomfish bite has been steady. Tacoma and South Sound reports mention good numbers of pile perch, flounder, and the occasional legal lingcod still coming from rocky structure and steep drops. A simple high‑low rig with strips of herring, squid, or sand shrimp is putting fish in the cooler for pier and kayak anglers. Around Seattle piers, it’s been mostly flounder and dogfish, but the kids are staying busy. Cutthroat trout have been active in the upper reaches and South Sound beaches. Local beach anglers have been doing well on the flood tide, casting small olive‑over‑white baitfish patterns on fly gear or 1/4‑ounce metal jigs and small soft plastics on spinning rods. Work the creek mouths, gravelly points, and current lines and keep your retrieve quick and erratic. Early morning and the first couple hours of the flood have been best. As for bait and lure choices, if you’re trolling for salmon, pack: - Small glow or UV spoons in green, chartreuse, and white. - Mini hoochies in green spatterback or purple haze behind 11‑inch flashers. - Herring or anchovy rigged in helmet or whole for a slower, more natural presentation. From shore or small boat: - 1/4–1/2‑ounce metal jigs in herring, candlefish, or anchovy patterns. - 3–4 inch paddle‑tail swimbaits on 3/8‑ounce jigheads in natural baitfish colors. - For perch and flounder, bits of shrimp, clam, or herring on small bait hooks. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: First, **Point No Point** on the Kitsap side. It’s been a consistent producer for resident coho and surfperch. Work the morning ebb just off the point in 80–140 feet, dragging spoons or hoochies close to bottom. Beach anglers can fan‑cast metal jigs along the drop‑off on the flood. Second, **Dalco Passage** between Point Defiance and Vashon. With today’s moving water, that slot can light up for blackmouth and bait‑chasing coho. Troll along the east side of Vashon or the Tacoma side break in 100–160 feet, following the contour lines and watching your sonar for bait balls. If you’re staying closer to town, the **Edmonds oil docks and just north of the ferry lanes** have been quietly giving up a few nice resident coho early and late in the day for anglers trolling small spoons tight to the bottom. That’s the word from around Puget 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

7. kesä 2026 - 4 min
jakson Early June Flood Bite: Salmon and Lings On the Edge kansikuva

Early June Flood Bite: Salmon and Lings On the Edge

This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑June pattern: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and mostly light onshore breeze. Offshore marine forecasts from NOAA are calling for morning cloud cover burning off to filtered sun, with winds generally under 15 knots and only a light chop inside the Sound. Air temps are hanging in the mid‑50s at first light, pushing into the 60s later in the day. Tides today are in a good fishy rhythm, with a solid morning flood pushing bait up onto the points and into the rips, then easing into a mid‑day slack before a softer afternoon ebb. Local tide tables for Seattle, Tacoma, and Everett all show enough swing to move water but not so much that you’re fighting screaming currents. That’s prime structure fishing for both bottomfish and salmon where it’s open. Sunrise came early, just after 5 a.m., and sunset will land around 9 p.m., giving a long window of low‑light feeding. That first hour after dawn and the last hour before dark are your best bets, especially around the turn of the tide. Recent chatter from local anglers and shops around Shilshole, Narrows Marina, and Everett indicates decent mixed‑bag action. Folks are picking up resident coho and a few early migratory fish on the edges of rips and current seams, plus steady lingcod and cabezon on hard structure where seasons allow. Pile perch, rockfish where open, and flounder are keeping bottom rods busy, with the odd kelp greenling in tight to the rocks. Crabbing prep is in full swing even where the opener hasn’t hit yet, so expect more pots in the water soon. For gear, keep it simple and local. For salmon, 3‑ to 4‑inch silver or green‑glow hoochies and small spoons in Irish cream, cop car, or herring‑aid patterns behind a green or purple UV flasher are getting bit. Trolled 20–80 feet down, depending on bait marks, will cover most of the Sound this time of year. If you’re running bait, a cut‑plug herring or anchovy in a slow, tight roll is still king. Bottomfish are chewing on 4‑ to 6‑inch swimbaits in motor oil, root beer, and white, pinned on 2‑ to 4‑ounce lead heads. Add a strip of herring or squid if the bite is picky. Traditionalists working bait are doing fine with sand shrimp, clam necks, and herring strips on simple hi‑low rigs bounced just off the sand. A couple of hot spots to consider: • Possession Bar: Classic early‑season salmon structure. Work the edges of the bar on the flood, especially where you mark bait stacked on the drop‑offs. Keep your gear just above the marks and don’t be afraid to make tight, repeated passes. • Point Defiance / Tacoma Narrows: Strong current, tons of structure, and a consistent lingcod bite in season. Fish the slack edges and back‑eddies along the clay banks and humps, and keep your jig close to the bottom but moving—those lings want a chase. Closer to town, West Point off Magnolia and Jeff Head continue to put out fish when the bait shows. Watch for birds dipping and quick surface boils; that’s your cue to swing through with spoons or small plugs. Water temps are still cool enough that fish are comfortable up in the water column during low light, then dropping deeper as the sun climbs. Plan to start shallow with brighter, flashier gear, then go a bit deeper and more natural as the day wears on. That’s your Puget Sound update from Artificial Lure—tight lines out there, and be safe around the rips and shipping lanes. 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

6. kesä 2026 - 3 min
jakson Early Summer Mellow Pattern: Salmon, Lingcod, and Cutthroat Heat Up on the Sound kansikuva

Early Summer Mellow Pattern: Salmon, Lingcod, and Cutthroat Heat Up on the Sound

This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re on a mellow early-summer pattern now. A weak onshore flow is keeping things cool and mostly dry around the central Sound. Morning temps are sitting in the low 50s, climbing into the low to mid‑60s this afternoon with a light southwest breeze 5–10 knots. Skies are a mix of clouds and sun, with the clearest window mid‑morning before the marine layer rebuilds toward evening. Sunrise hit just after 5 a.m., and sunset will be around 9 p.m., giving you a long, workable day. The best bite is lining up with the low‑light windows: first light through about 8 a.m., then again in the last two hours before dark, especially if you can match that to a tide swing. Across much of Puget Sound, tides today are on the softer side but still fishable. Look for a decent incoming push mid‑morning and another in the evening. Those changeovers are when the bait stacks on the edges of the humps and current seams, and that’s when the predators wake up. Salmon-wise, resident coho and a few early Chinook are showing from Possession Bar down toward Kingston and the east side of Bainbridge. Anglers working 80–140 feet with small silver or green‑glow spoons and hoochies behind 11‑inch flashers have been picking a modest mix of shakers and a handful of legal keepers the last couple of days. The bite’s not red‑hot yet, but action is steady enough if you grind and stay on the bait. Bottom fishers are doing well. Lingcod season is still kicking in many areas, and the rock piles off Point No Point and the edges off West Point have produced solid lings and cabezon. Heavy metal jigs in the 3–6 oz range, large swimbaits in white or black, and live or fresh herring or sand dabs are the tickets. Keep your jig right on the deck and be ready for that classic “dead weight then head shake” bite. Inshore, the sea‑run cutthroat and resident coho fishery along the beaches is waking up nicely. From Lincoln Park down to Point Defiance, folks are connecting on cutts in the 12–18 inch range with a few bigger fish mixed in. Small olive‑over‑white Clouser‑style flies, 2–3 inch minnow‑pattern streamers, or light spinning gear with 1/4‑oz casting spoons in silver, copper, or blue‑silver are producing. Work the rip lines, creek mouths, and points on the last half of the incoming and first push of the outgoing. Squid have tapered off in most of the central Sound, but there are still a few around the piers on the darker nights. If you’re out late anyway, a small pink or glow jig under a light will still scratch out a meal. A few hot spots to circle on your chart today: • Possession Bar: Work the edges in 100–140 feet for resident coho and the odd Chinook, especially on the flood. Watch your sonar and stay tight to the bait schools. • Point No Point: Great multi‑species zone. Troll for salmon on the outer edge during the tide swing, then slide in and jig the structure for lingcod as the current eases. For lures, think small and bright for salmon: 2–3 inch spoons in green‑glow, Irish cream, or straight chrome, and small white or UV hoochies pulled 20–40 inches behind a flasher. For bait, fresh or brined herring is still king. Rig it in a tight roll and keep an eye on your leader length; 32–40 inches is a good all‑around starting point behind a flasher. On the beaches, go light: 8–10 lb fluoro leaders, small barbless hooks if you’re running bait like sand shrimp or cut herring strips, and keep your offerings moving—those cutts love a fleeing baitfish. That’s your Puget Sound 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

5. kesä 2026 - 3 min
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