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Puget Sound Salmon Surge: Tides, Tactics, and Trophy Chasing for the Savvy Angler
Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description
September 20th, 2025, and your early morning finds Puget Sound graced with classic fall vibes—overcast skies lingering and temps pushing the mid-50s. A soft southerly breeze ripples the salt, making for nicely choppy water if you’re hunting returning salmon or those late-season cutthroats. Sunrise settles in at 6:56 a.m. with dusk at 7:12 p.m., so you’ve got about 12 hours to chase chrome.
Tides today are running big and fast. The first high tide crests at 5:03 a.m. right at 12.5 ft, then drops to a low at 11:31 a.m. at 0.68 ft, before powering right back up to a 14.4 ft high at 6:09 p.m. These strong tide swings mean bait will flush in and out, so expect fish to be active during those transition periods. Get your gear down within an hour and a half of both highs and lows for the sweet spot, especially near river mouths like the Duwamish or the Snohomish, where the bait gathers[Puget Sound tide chart].
Salmon, especially coho and a few late summer chinook, have been the stars this past week. Anglers working the West Point and Shilshole ledges reported solid pods of migrating coho stacking up around the incoming tide, with boats putting up three to six fish apiece. Most of the action’s been in the top 40 feet with trollers running glow hootchies, chartreuse Ace-Hi flies, and cut plug herring—best bets right now for matching the bait size. Downrigger folks are also scoring big with Silver Horde spoons in 3", particularly Cop Car and Irish Cream patterns.
Pink salmon are mostly finished up, but a few stragglers are still punching up from the deeper southern Sound if you want to target unusual catches or toss spoons in front of the Narrows. Resident blackmouth are scattered; jigging candlefish imitations near Tacoma or just outside Edmonds can pay off for the patient.
Around the piers and beaches, shore casters are seeing fair numbers of sea-run cutthroat and the occasional chum, particularly off Lincoln Park and Golden Gardens. Try small olive clouser flies or 2” pink casting spoons for the cutts, and if the water’s muddy from rain, run sand shrimp or herring strips under a float for the best results. Crabbers are reporting slower catches as the commercial season wound down, but if you drop traps in deeper pockets near Kingston or Bainbridge, you still stand a chance of decent keepers.
Top baits and lures today:
- **Coho/Chinook:** Chartreuse hootchies, Ace-Hi flies, Silver Horde spoons
- **Beach/shore:** Pink and green spoons, olive clousers, sand shrimp
- **Depth/jig:** Metal jigs (candlefish shape) near Edmonds/Tacoma
Hot spots for today:
- **West Point** (Shilshole) for fast-moving salmon near tidal shifts
- **Lincoln Park shoreline** for cutthroat and mixed beach action
The word from shore and boat anglers is to pay close attention to timing—those brief feeding windows around the tide swings are where you’ll hook up or go home empty-handed. River levels are running low, so salt returns remain strong as salmon stage in the Sound, waiting for rain and big water to head upstream—the next front will trigger a run, so be ready!
That wraps up your Saturday fishing forecast for Puget Sound. Thanks for tuning in and remember to subscribe for daily updates, tackle breakdowns, and on-the-water hot 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Tides today are running big and fast. The first high tide crests at 5:03 a.m. right at 12.5 ft, then drops to a low at 11:31 a.m. at 0.68 ft, before powering right back up to a 14.4 ft high at 6:09 p.m. These strong tide swings mean bait will flush in and out, so expect fish to be active during those transition periods. Get your gear down within an hour and a half of both highs and lows for the sweet spot, especially near river mouths like the Duwamish or the Snohomish, where the bait gathers[Puget Sound tide chart].
Salmon, especially coho and a few late summer chinook, have been the stars this past week. Anglers working the West Point and Shilshole ledges reported solid pods of migrating coho stacking up around the incoming tide, with boats putting up three to six fish apiece. Most of the action’s been in the top 40 feet with trollers running glow hootchies, chartreuse Ace-Hi flies, and cut plug herring—best bets right now for matching the bait size. Downrigger folks are also scoring big with Silver Horde spoons in 3", particularly Cop Car and Irish Cream patterns.
Pink salmon are mostly finished up, but a few stragglers are still punching up from the deeper southern Sound if you want to target unusual catches or toss spoons in front of the Narrows. Resident blackmouth are scattered; jigging candlefish imitations near Tacoma or just outside Edmonds can pay off for the patient.
Around the piers and beaches, shore casters are seeing fair numbers of sea-run cutthroat and the occasional chum, particularly off Lincoln Park and Golden Gardens. Try small olive clouser flies or 2” pink casting spoons for the cutts, and if the water’s muddy from rain, run sand shrimp or herring strips under a float for the best results. Crabbers are reporting slower catches as the commercial season wound down, but if you drop traps in deeper pockets near Kingston or Bainbridge, you still stand a chance of decent keepers.
Top baits and lures today:
- **Coho/Chinook:** Chartreuse hootchies, Ace-Hi flies, Silver Horde spoons
- **Beach/shore:** Pink and green spoons, olive clousers, sand shrimp
- **Depth/jig:** Metal jigs (candlefish shape) near Edmonds/Tacoma
Hot spots for today:
- **West Point** (Shilshole) for fast-moving salmon near tidal shifts
- **Lincoln Park shoreline** for cutthroat and mixed beach action
The word from shore and boat anglers is to pay close attention to timing—those brief feeding windows around the tide swings are where you’ll hook up or go home empty-handed. River levels are running low, so salt returns remain strong as salmon stage in the Sound, waiting for rain and big water to head upstream—the next front will trigger a run, so be ready!
That wraps up your Saturday fishing forecast for Puget Sound. Thanks for tuning in and remember to subscribe for daily updates, tackle breakdowns, and on-the-water hot 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.