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.
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