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Columbia River Fishing Report: Slow Down for Winter Steelhead and Sturgeon on the Rise
Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Columbia River, Portland fishing report.
We’ve got a classic winter river morning: low gray ceiling, cool mid‑40s air, light south breeze, and scattered showers rolling through according to the National Weather Service marine outlook. That damp chill is actually helping the bite; fish are holding tight but willing if you slow things down.
Tides up here are mild but still matter. Tide-Forecast’s Vancouver/Columbia River data shows a **low around 2:00 a.m.** and a **high around 6:50–7:00 a.m.**, then easing back late morning. That first push of incoming through early high tide is your best window for moving fish. After that, expect a softer, scratchier bite until late afternoon.
Sunrise is right about **7:15 a.m.** and sunset near **5:35–5:40 p.m.**, so your prime light is that first couple hours after daybreak and the last hour before dark.
Fish activity:
Local shop chatter and yesterday’s Columbia report say the focus is **winter steelhead**, **catch‑and‑release sturgeon**, and a few **late coho/early springer‑style holdovers** closer to Bonneville. Steelhead numbers aren’t crazy, but a steady trickle of bright hatchery fish has been coming from the Portland–Vancouver stretch, mostly ones and twos per boat for folks who grind. Sturgeon anglers working deeper ledges have reported decent action on shakers with an occasional slot fish when conditions line up.
**Best lures and baits right now:**
- For steelhead:
- 3.0–3.5 **Mag Lips** in metallic greens, oranges, and cop car patterns on the anchor.
- 1/8–1/4 oz **jigs** in pink/white or black/blue under a float with sand shrimp tails or coon‑stripe if you can get them.
- Small **Beau Mac or Spin‑N‑Glo** setups with cured eggs back‑trolled tight to the breaks.
- For sturgeon:
- **Sand shrimp**, **smelt**, and **squid** cocktails are the go‑tos.
- Fresh bait changes every 20–30 minutes are making the difference; the river’s cold and scent is king.
Couple of local hot spots to consider:
- **Gobblers Knob / Frenchman’s Bar stretch (Vancouver side):**
Work 30–50 feet for sturgeon on the ledges; steelhead guys side‑drifting soft seams along the Washington bank have been quietly putting some fish in the boat.
- **Sauvie Island down to the I‑5 Bridge:**
Troll plugs or side‑drift the softer inside bends for steelhead; anchor up on the deeper edges and soak bait for sturgeon. Those subtle current breaks are producing more than the obvious main‑channel holes.
Tactics for today: fish that early high tide push hard, slow your presentations, and don’t be afraid to downsize—clearer winter flows and pressured fish are responding better to small, natural profiles than big, flashy gear.
That’s it 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
We’ve got a classic winter river morning: low gray ceiling, cool mid‑40s air, light south breeze, and scattered showers rolling through according to the National Weather Service marine outlook. That damp chill is actually helping the bite; fish are holding tight but willing if you slow things down.
Tides up here are mild but still matter. Tide-Forecast’s Vancouver/Columbia River data shows a **low around 2:00 a.m.** and a **high around 6:50–7:00 a.m.**, then easing back late morning. That first push of incoming through early high tide is your best window for moving fish. After that, expect a softer, scratchier bite until late afternoon.
Sunrise is right about **7:15 a.m.** and sunset near **5:35–5:40 p.m.**, so your prime light is that first couple hours after daybreak and the last hour before dark.
Fish activity:
Local shop chatter and yesterday’s Columbia report say the focus is **winter steelhead**, **catch‑and‑release sturgeon**, and a few **late coho/early springer‑style holdovers** closer to Bonneville. Steelhead numbers aren’t crazy, but a steady trickle of bright hatchery fish has been coming from the Portland–Vancouver stretch, mostly ones and twos per boat for folks who grind. Sturgeon anglers working deeper ledges have reported decent action on shakers with an occasional slot fish when conditions line up.
**Best lures and baits right now:**
- For steelhead:
- 3.0–3.5 **Mag Lips** in metallic greens, oranges, and cop car patterns on the anchor.
- 1/8–1/4 oz **jigs** in pink/white or black/blue under a float with sand shrimp tails or coon‑stripe if you can get them.
- Small **Beau Mac or Spin‑N‑Glo** setups with cured eggs back‑trolled tight to the breaks.
- For sturgeon:
- **Sand shrimp**, **smelt**, and **squid** cocktails are the go‑tos.
- Fresh bait changes every 20–30 minutes are making the difference; the river’s cold and scent is king.
Couple of local hot spots to consider:
- **Gobblers Knob / Frenchman’s Bar stretch (Vancouver side):**
Work 30–50 feet for sturgeon on the ledges; steelhead guys side‑drifting soft seams along the Washington bank have been quietly putting some fish in the boat.
- **Sauvie Island down to the I‑5 Bridge:**
Troll plugs or side‑drift the softer inside bends for steelhead; anchor up on the deeper edges and soak bait for sturgeon. Those subtle current breaks are producing more than the obvious main‑channel holes.
Tactics for today: fish that early high tide push hard, slow your presentations, and don’t be afraid to downsize—clearer winter flows and pressured fish are responding better to small, natural profiles than big, flashy gear.
That’s it 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI