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Columbia River March Steelhead Run: Tides, Tactics, and Sandy River Conditions
Published 1 month, 2 weeks ago
Description
# Artificial Lure's Saturday Morning Fishing Report
Well folks, it's your boy Artificial Lure coming to you live this Saturday morning on the Columbia River. Water conditions are looking pretty decent out here, and I've got the full rundown for you.
Let's talk tides first. According to NOAA Tides and Currents, we're looking at a low tide at 3:38 AM—that's already passed—then a high tide hitting at 9:39 AM with about 6 feet and 6 inches of water. We'll see another low at 4:48 PM with just 10 inches, and the evening high around 11:29 PM. The sunrise came in around 7:30 AM, and we're looking at sunset at 7:21 PM, so you've got a solid 12 hours of daylight to work with.
Weather-wise, it's chilly this morning. Sandy River area is reporting 36 degrees, so bundle up. You might get some cloud cover, but nothing that should keep you off the water.
Now, here's the thing about the Columbia right now—March is transition time. You've got your early spring steelhead moving through, and they're hungry after their long journey upriver. The recent activity in these waters shows anglers are connecting on both wild and hatchery fish. For your presentation, you're going to want to throw spinners—those little Mepps and Panther Martins work great—or if you're a traditionalist, go with some classic spoons. Live bait? Sand shrimp and smelt are your bread and butter in the lower Columbia right now.
I'd recommend hitting around Warrenton and the Skipanon area—it's a proven producer. Also, don't sleep on the Saint Helens stretch upriver if you want to avoid the crowds. With that morning high tide coming in at 9:39, you'll have good water movement pushing baitfish around, which means active fish.
That's your Saturday morning intel. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure you subscribe for your next fishing adventure.
This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Well folks, it's your boy Artificial Lure coming to you live this Saturday morning on the Columbia River. Water conditions are looking pretty decent out here, and I've got the full rundown for you.
Let's talk tides first. According to NOAA Tides and Currents, we're looking at a low tide at 3:38 AM—that's already passed—then a high tide hitting at 9:39 AM with about 6 feet and 6 inches of water. We'll see another low at 4:48 PM with just 10 inches, and the evening high around 11:29 PM. The sunrise came in around 7:30 AM, and we're looking at sunset at 7:21 PM, so you've got a solid 12 hours of daylight to work with.
Weather-wise, it's chilly this morning. Sandy River area is reporting 36 degrees, so bundle up. You might get some cloud cover, but nothing that should keep you off the water.
Now, here's the thing about the Columbia right now—March is transition time. You've got your early spring steelhead moving through, and they're hungry after their long journey upriver. The recent activity in these waters shows anglers are connecting on both wild and hatchery fish. For your presentation, you're going to want to throw spinners—those little Mepps and Panther Martins work great—or if you're a traditionalist, go with some classic spoons. Live bait? Sand shrimp and smelt are your bread and butter in the lower Columbia right now.
I'd recommend hitting around Warrenton and the Skipanon area—it's a proven producer. Also, don't sleep on the Saint Helens stretch upriver if you want to avoid the crowds. With that morning high tide coming in at 9:39, you'll have good water movement pushing baitfish around, which means active fish.
That's your Saturday morning intel. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure you subscribe for your next fishing adventure.
This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI