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Columbia River Winter Grind: Sturgeon, Walleye, and Steelhead Tactics for the Portland Stretch
Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River report for the Portland stretch.
We’re sitting in a classic December pattern: heavy rain, high rivers, off‑color water, and more storms stacked up in the Pacific. The National Weather Service out of Portland is calling for steady showers, breezy south wind, and highs in the mid‑40s. According to the same forecast, expect gusts pushing 25 to 30 mph at times and river levels running high, so pick your launches carefully and watch for debris.
Sunrise this morning is right around 7:40, with sunset close to 4:25, so you’ve got a tight daylight window. Low, gray light most of the day means fish aren’t as spooky; it also makes the morning and late‑afternoon tide swings prime time.
Tide-wise, using Vancouver and St. Helens tables as a proxy, we’ve got modest Columbia swings today, with a low early, building to a mid‑day high, then easing off again toward dark. Around Portland that translates to softer current in the late morning and again late afternoon—exactly when you want to be working ledges, inside turns, and any soft seams behind pilings or wing dams.
Recent action: local reports and shop chatter from places like Fisherman’s Marine and Sportsman’s Warehouse have sturgeon carrying most of the load. Anglers are putting up decent numbers of keeper‑sized fish below the I‑205 bridge and down toward Kelly Point, with some oversize showing when the river isn’t chocolate milk. Walleye catches have been fair out of the Multnomah Channel and down toward Kalama—nothing on fire, but enough eaters to make it worthwhile if you grind. Steelhead and late coho are scattered, mostly caught by folks targeting them specifically with patience and persistence.
Best offerings right now:
- For **sturgeon**: fresh or brined smelt, sand shrimp, herring chunks, and squid strips on 6/0–8/0 circles. With the color we’ve got, add a small glow bead or chartreuse hoochie above the hook. Shorten leaders in the heavy current and anchor on current breaks, not in the main fire hose.
- For **walleye**: 3/8–1/2 oz jig heads with 3–4" plastics in chartreuse, glow, or motor oil, bounced slow along the bottom. Slow‑trolled deep‑diving cranks in gold, perch, or clown patterns have also been putting fish in the box when the wind lets you control the boat.
- For **steelhead/late coho** in the side channels and trib mouths: smaller presentations—pink or orange soft beads, size 3 spinners, and 2.5–3.0 mag‑lips or similar plugs in metallic greens and pinks. Run them tight to the breaks where cleaner water is pushing in.
Couple of local hot spots to consider:
- **Gobble’s to Frenchman’s Bar / Caterpillar Island**: Classic winter sturgeon water. Anchor above the drops, cast back to the edge where that hard current meets softer inside water. Keep an eye on floating logs; it’s busy out there after big rain.
- **Mouth of the Multnomah Channel / Sauvie‑side flats**: Good bet for both eater sturgeon and walleye. Work the 20–35 foot contour, especially on the softer side of the tide when the river lays down a bit.
If you’re bank fishing, the beaches at **Broughton** and down around **Waud’s Bluff/Kelly Point** can still kick out sturgeon on a day like this—just bring enough weight to stay pinned and keep your rod tips high out of the debris line.
Overall, call it a grindy but very fishable day: high, dirty water, but enough activity to justify getting wet if you rig right and stay flexible. Life jackets on, nav lights working, and don’t push your luck around floating timber or flooded ramps.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more river intel and lure talk.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to
We’re sitting in a classic December pattern: heavy rain, high rivers, off‑color water, and more storms stacked up in the Pacific. The National Weather Service out of Portland is calling for steady showers, breezy south wind, and highs in the mid‑40s. According to the same forecast, expect gusts pushing 25 to 30 mph at times and river levels running high, so pick your launches carefully and watch for debris.
Sunrise this morning is right around 7:40, with sunset close to 4:25, so you’ve got a tight daylight window. Low, gray light most of the day means fish aren’t as spooky; it also makes the morning and late‑afternoon tide swings prime time.
Tide-wise, using Vancouver and St. Helens tables as a proxy, we’ve got modest Columbia swings today, with a low early, building to a mid‑day high, then easing off again toward dark. Around Portland that translates to softer current in the late morning and again late afternoon—exactly when you want to be working ledges, inside turns, and any soft seams behind pilings or wing dams.
Recent action: local reports and shop chatter from places like Fisherman’s Marine and Sportsman’s Warehouse have sturgeon carrying most of the load. Anglers are putting up decent numbers of keeper‑sized fish below the I‑205 bridge and down toward Kelly Point, with some oversize showing when the river isn’t chocolate milk. Walleye catches have been fair out of the Multnomah Channel and down toward Kalama—nothing on fire, but enough eaters to make it worthwhile if you grind. Steelhead and late coho are scattered, mostly caught by folks targeting them specifically with patience and persistence.
Best offerings right now:
- For **sturgeon**: fresh or brined smelt, sand shrimp, herring chunks, and squid strips on 6/0–8/0 circles. With the color we’ve got, add a small glow bead or chartreuse hoochie above the hook. Shorten leaders in the heavy current and anchor on current breaks, not in the main fire hose.
- For **walleye**: 3/8–1/2 oz jig heads with 3–4" plastics in chartreuse, glow, or motor oil, bounced slow along the bottom. Slow‑trolled deep‑diving cranks in gold, perch, or clown patterns have also been putting fish in the box when the wind lets you control the boat.
- For **steelhead/late coho** in the side channels and trib mouths: smaller presentations—pink or orange soft beads, size 3 spinners, and 2.5–3.0 mag‑lips or similar plugs in metallic greens and pinks. Run them tight to the breaks where cleaner water is pushing in.
Couple of local hot spots to consider:
- **Gobble’s to Frenchman’s Bar / Caterpillar Island**: Classic winter sturgeon water. Anchor above the drops, cast back to the edge where that hard current meets softer inside water. Keep an eye on floating logs; it’s busy out there after big rain.
- **Mouth of the Multnomah Channel / Sauvie‑side flats**: Good bet for both eater sturgeon and walleye. Work the 20–35 foot contour, especially on the softer side of the tide when the river lays down a bit.
If you’re bank fishing, the beaches at **Broughton** and down around **Waud’s Bluff/Kelly Point** can still kick out sturgeon on a day like this—just bring enough weight to stay pinned and keep your rod tips high out of the debris line.
Overall, call it a grindy but very fishable day: high, dirty water, but enough activity to justify getting wet if you rig right and stay flexible. Life jackets on, nav lights working, and don’t push your luck around floating timber or flooded ramps.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more river intel and lure talk.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to