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Fall Fishing Frenzy Heats Up Puget Sound 2025
Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
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Artificial Lure here with your Saturday Puget Sound Fishing Report for October 4th, 2025. The fall bite is heating up around Seattle, with cool October temps, morning mist, and a classic Puget Sound feel in the air. Before sunrise at 7:15 AM, shores around the Sound saw eager anglers setting lines, while today’s sunset wraps up at 6:44 PM—plan your trip to bracket those golden low-light periods, when most fish are actively feeding.
Tidal flows today will move plenty of bait and stir up the action: the morning low tide hits at 9:18 AM (0.75 ft), and the afternoon high surges in at 4:03 PM (10.86 ft). If you’re out around Pickering Passage, you’ll see similar swings, with a low at 10:11 AM and a monster evening high at 4:50 PM (over 14 feet)—that should drive a strong bite window for both salmon and sea-run cutthroat.
On the water, a waxing gibbous moon means bright night skies—with moonrise tonight at 5:46 PM, you might get an evening bite right under the moon. Water clarity is decent and visibility is running high at 92%, but keep your offerings in high-contrast colors—think black/purple or chartreuse—especially as rain is in the forecast later this weekend.
Now, let's talk fish. Coho are thick along rip lines and current seams right at first light. Most successful rigs have been small spoons and twitching jigs in pink, orange, or silver; the bite’s best before the mid-morning sun. Pink salmon—by far the most dominant species this odd year—are flooding rivers and estuaries. According to the Everett Herald, pinks are outnumbering Chinook across the region nearly 25-to-1 this season. If you’re targeting pinks, go for pink spinners or small hoochies under a float; move up to slightly oversize gear to get the attention of active fish in the shallows. Chinook catches have slowed due to the pink run but can still be found deeper; work main stem drop-offs with larger plugs or herring cut-bait.
Some chum salmon are showing up late in the month, especially where rainfall is starting to build. For chums, green and chartreuse patterns—especially big marabou jigs—are working near estuary mud lines. Steelhead are largely upriver, but locals have landed a few fresher fish lower down with swung spinners during green water periods.
Cutthroat trout and blackmouth (resident Chinook) are moving along pebble beaches and dock pilings; the best bite is at dawn and dusk, especially using small crankbaits or Krocodile spoons cast toward wind-blown shores.
Top lures this weekend:
- Small pink or orange spoons for coho and pink salmon
- Twitching jigs in chartreuse or black for chum and cutthroat
- Herring strips or larger plugs for Chinook
- For trout, small crankbaits, streamers, and chartreuse soft plastics
Live bait hasn’t produced as well as artificials lately; focus on matching the hatch with local forage—anchovy and candlefish imitations are especially good.
Hot spots worth checking out:
- Shilshole Bay: Coho and pinks thick near the rip line at first light.
- Point Defiance Boathouse: Great tide swing today and reliable salmon bite near the Tacoma Narrows current edge.
- Browns Point: Good for both cutthroat and salmon as the outflow brings food and fish toward shore.
Remember, with the pink salmon boom, rivers and shorelines will be active and often crowded, so give fellow anglers space and share the lane.
Thanks for tuning in to your Puget Sound fishing update. Don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Tidal flows today will move plenty of bait and stir up the action: the morning low tide hits at 9:18 AM (0.75 ft), and the afternoon high surges in at 4:03 PM (10.86 ft). If you’re out around Pickering Passage, you’ll see similar swings, with a low at 10:11 AM and a monster evening high at 4:50 PM (over 14 feet)—that should drive a strong bite window for both salmon and sea-run cutthroat.
On the water, a waxing gibbous moon means bright night skies—with moonrise tonight at 5:46 PM, you might get an evening bite right under the moon. Water clarity is decent and visibility is running high at 92%, but keep your offerings in high-contrast colors—think black/purple or chartreuse—especially as rain is in the forecast later this weekend.
Now, let's talk fish. Coho are thick along rip lines and current seams right at first light. Most successful rigs have been small spoons and twitching jigs in pink, orange, or silver; the bite’s best before the mid-morning sun. Pink salmon—by far the most dominant species this odd year—are flooding rivers and estuaries. According to the Everett Herald, pinks are outnumbering Chinook across the region nearly 25-to-1 this season. If you’re targeting pinks, go for pink spinners or small hoochies under a float; move up to slightly oversize gear to get the attention of active fish in the shallows. Chinook catches have slowed due to the pink run but can still be found deeper; work main stem drop-offs with larger plugs or herring cut-bait.
Some chum salmon are showing up late in the month, especially where rainfall is starting to build. For chums, green and chartreuse patterns—especially big marabou jigs—are working near estuary mud lines. Steelhead are largely upriver, but locals have landed a few fresher fish lower down with swung spinners during green water periods.
Cutthroat trout and blackmouth (resident Chinook) are moving along pebble beaches and dock pilings; the best bite is at dawn and dusk, especially using small crankbaits or Krocodile spoons cast toward wind-blown shores.
Top lures this weekend:
- Small pink or orange spoons for coho and pink salmon
- Twitching jigs in chartreuse or black for chum and cutthroat
- Herring strips or larger plugs for Chinook
- For trout, small crankbaits, streamers, and chartreuse soft plastics
Live bait hasn’t produced as well as artificials lately; focus on matching the hatch with local forage—anchovy and candlefish imitations are especially good.
Hot spots worth checking out:
- Shilshole Bay: Coho and pinks thick near the rip line at first light.
- Point Defiance Boathouse: Great tide swing today and reliable salmon bite near the Tacoma Narrows current edge.
- Browns Point: Good for both cutthroat and salmon as the outflow brings food and fish toward shore.
Remember, with the pink salmon boom, rivers and shorelines will be active and often crowded, so give fellow anglers space and share the lane.
Thanks for tuning in to your Puget Sound fishing update. Don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.