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Columbia River Winter Woes and Wins: Steelhead, Walleye, and Sturgeon Update

Columbia River Winter Woes and Wins: Steelhead, Walleye, and Sturgeon Update

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River Portland fishing report.

We’re in classic winter mode on the big river. According to Tide-Forecast, Portland’s running a modest tide swing today with a low around late morning and a high close to midnight, so you’ll see a gentle push and pull rather than big coastal-style rips. Sunrise is about 7:15 and sunset about 5:35, giving a tight window where those gray first and last light bites matter most.

Weather-wise, National Weather Service guidance has us cool and unsettled: mid‑30s to low‑40s, clouds, leftover breeze after last night’s coastal wind warnings. Expect a damp chill, maybe showers. Layer up, bring gloves you can still tie knots in, and watch the wind forecasts if you’re launching a smaller sled.

Fish activity around Portland has shifted fully to winter patterns. Steelhead are starting to trickle through the system, with most of the better reports from anglers working the Multnomah Channel mouths and up toward the Willamette, but a few bright fish have been picked up plunking near I‑205 and down toward Government Island. Local shop chatter says catch rates are still spotty—think a fish here and there, not wide‑open—but the ones caught have been solid 6–10 pounders with a couple bigger.

Walleye guys are doing more consistent work. The Columbia River’s winter walleye fishery is waking up, especially down toward Camas and up around the Vancouver stretch and Caterpillar Island. Slow‑trolled worm harnesses and jigged plastics are putting fish in the box, mostly eaters in the 14–20 inch range with an occasional mid‑20s trophy.

Sturgeon is mostly a catch‑and‑release game in this reach, and a few locals soaking smelt and squid in the deeper channels are reporting steady action on shakers with an odd keeper‑class overslot that has to go back. Check current regs hard before you ever think about bonking one—ODFW has Columbia sturgeon on a tight leash.

Best offerings right now:

- For **steelhead**: 1/8–1/4 oz jigs in pink, white, or cerise under a slip float, tipped with a little shrimp. Small 2–3 inch soft‑plastic worms in pink or black‑and‑red are also producing. Plunkers are leaning on Spin‑N‑Glos with small spinwings and coon‑stripe shrimp or cured roe.
- For **walleye**: slow‑dragged 3/8–1/2 oz jigheads with 3–4 inch paddletails in natural shad, chartreuse, or purple. Nightcrawler harnesses behind a bottom bouncer in 25–40 feet remain a staple.
- For **sturgeon**: sand shrimp, smelt, and squid strips on heavy gear; sit tight on contour edges and let them come to you.

A couple hot spots if you’re heading out:

- **Government Island / I‑205 area**: good winter steelhead plunking bars and some jig water tight to the bank when flows behave. Mind the shipping lanes.
- **Vancouver to Caterpillar Island**: classic winter walleye stretch—deep slots, soft edges, and current seams that hold fish when the water’s cold.

The river’s busy with commercial traffic and the USCG’s been active on the coast after recent rescues reported by KATU and KPIC, so run your lights, wear that PFD, and keep a VHF or charged phone handy.

That’s your Columbia River update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports.

This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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