Omslagafbeelding van de show Columbia River Portland Fishing Report Today

Columbia River Portland Fishing Report Today

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Over Columbia River Portland Fishing Report Today

The "Columbia River, Portland Fishing Report Today" podcast delivers up-to-the-minute fishing conditions, expert tips, and local news for anglers in the Portland area. Tune in daily to get the latest updates on water levels, fish activity, and the best spots to cast your line on the Columbia River. Whether you're a seasoned fisherman or a weekend warrior, our comprehensive reports will help you make the most of your fishing adventures. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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

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

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

11 jun 2026 - 4 min
aflevering Late Spring Columbia River: Smallmouth Heat Up, Salmon Still Early Morning Bite artwork

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

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

Gisteren - 4 min
aflevering Early Summer Columbia River: Prime Time Fishing in Portland's Low-Light Windows artwork

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

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

9 jun 2026 - 4 min
aflevering Columbia River Portland: Steady Tide, Mixed Bag—Chinook, Walleye, and Bass All Active artwork

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

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

8 jun 2026 - 3 min
aflevering Spring Chinook Fade & Summer Steelhead Rise on the Portland Columbia artwork

Spring Chinook Fade & Summer Steelhead Rise on the Portland Columbia

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

7 jun 2026 - 4 min
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