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Puget Sound Seattle Fishing Report Today

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Tune in to "Puget Sound, Seattle Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of the latest fishing conditions, expert tips, and local hot spots. Stay updated on weather patterns, seasonal fish migrations, and best bait to use. Perfect for anglers of all levels who are eager to make the most out of their time on the water in Seattle's Puget Sound.

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Artificial Lure here with your Puget Sound fishing report for Wednesday, November 5, 2025. Today’s sunrise in Seattle hit at 6:59am, and sunset’s dropping early at 4:45pm, signaling real November action on the Sound. We’re working with a big morning high tide at 4:44am, peaking around 11.6 feet, then sliding into a mid-morning low at 10:08am (5.8 feet), before another high at 3:20pm. That evening ebb will be prime for shore-based casting and squid jigging, with the late dusk bringing those squid in close[10].Weather’s classic fall Puget Sound—expect cool temps in the mid-40s to low-50s, persistent cloud cover, and light northwest wind at 10 knots. Rain is spotty but not drenching, just enough to remind you it's proper Seattle fishing weather according to the National Weather Service.Salmon chatter is quiet. Puget Sound Anglers note the closure of most salmon fishing, lining up with recent reports showing sparse Chinook returns and most local runs below recovery targets. Biologists—and some hungry southern resident orcas—are still waiting for better numbers. If you’re out for salmon, focus on river mouths where late chum sometimes show, but don’t expect much. Chinook are down, and recent surveys from the Center for Whale Research underscore their importance, not only to anglers but also to orca survival. If you do find one, count it a win and snap a pic for the boat log.Squid jigging is the biggest November draw right now. Evenings around the Edmonds pier and downtown Seattle lights are firing up, especially on the incoming tide after sunset. Classic jigs in pink, green, or glow are top producers—drop ‘em under the lights and bounce gently off bottom for best results. Reports from Puget Sound Anglers say numbers are solid, with buckets filling up after dusk, especially on calm nights[6].Bottom fishing’s a reliable fallback, with plenty of ratfish, flounder, and dogfish on tap. “Salish Current” reports ratfish are almost an accidental certainty when bouncing bait along the bottom. If you’re after flounder or sole, stick with a high-low rig baited with herring strips or squid; offshore structure near West Point and Shilshole always delivers steady action. The ratfish, bizarre as they are, make up the bulk catches on trawl surveys, so don't be surprised by their frequency.Crabbing’s closed in most spots, but don’t forget the clamming. WDFW has razor clam digs running daily through the ninth at Long Beach, Twin Harbors, and Mocrocks; Puget Sound beaches aren’t open, but the tides are right for checking legal locations. Check toxin levels before heading out—domoic acid closures are still in effect depending on last-minute tests[3].Today’s hot spots:- **Edmonds Pier:** Squid action after dark. Lure up with pink and glow jigs for best results.- **Elliott Bay:** Early morning and late afternoon for mixed flounder and ratfish. Use herring or squid strips near the grain terminal pilings.- **Shilshole Marina breakwater:** Good bets for bottom fish at high tide, especially for family-friendly dock fishing.Best lures and bait for Puget Sound this week:- Squid jigs (pink/glow)- Herring strips and squid for bottom fish- Sabikis if you want a mixThanks for tuning in to today’s Puget Sound fishing report with Artificial Lure! Be sure to subscribe and check back daily for the latest on tides, catches, and gear. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure with your Tuesday, November 4, 2025 Puget Sound fishing report, coming at you local and live from rainy Seattle.Sunrise this morning was at 6:49 am with sunset at 4:45 pm, so anglers have just about 10 hours of daylight to get their lines in. The tides are swinging nicely: we saw a low at 4:45 am down to -0.7 feet, and expect a high hitting around 1:26 pm peaking near 7.9 feet. The prime bite window today is late morning into early afternoon, with solid tidal push and lunar rise stacking the deck just right—especially between 9:45 and noon, plan your casts accordingly according to local tide charts and NOAA.Weather is signature November Sound: steady rain, full-on cloud cover, and a cool 54°F. Winds are gentle, under 5 knots from the east, and humidity is near-total. Water temps are holding cold at about 49°F, so rain gear and some fingerless gloves will keep you fishing comfortably. The marine forecast from the National Data Buoy Center echoes the local chatter—expect rain all day, with barely a ripple at 2 feet or less on the water.Despite the chill, fish activity remains solid. Late-run **coho salmon** are still rolling through—recent reports from Edmonds Pier and Shilshole Bay have been packed with locals picking up silvers averaging 4 to 8 pounds. Bank and kayak anglers are reporting daily limits if you hit the right tide, with some bonus **blackmouth chinook** (immature kings) caught outside Elliott Bay. Evergreen shorelines like Lighthouse Park and the Tacoma Narrows are giving up mixed bags: expect **flounder, true cod, and rockfish** for those working drop-shot rigs or bait along the bottom.South Sound—Point Defiance and the mouth of the Duwamish—has seen a bump in **sea-run cutthroat** and occasional bullhead. According to Gone Fishing Northwest, bullhead schools are moving shallow this week with the temperature drop.As for lures and bait, today’s theme is downsized and bold. With stained water and low light, **3-inch chartreuse and pink hoochies** with flash skirts are crushing coho. For cutthroat, classic **Dick Nites** or minnow-profile soft plastics—the Sand Lance swimbaits—are getting solid strikes. Trollers are having best luck slow-rolling **fresh herring strips**, while bait anglers around Mukilteo and Alki are seeing action with **sand shrimp under a float**. For bottom fish, nightcrawlers and squid chunks are the ticket.If you want to maximize your odds, target these two hotspots:- **Shilshole Bay Marina Breakwater**: Coho and blackmouth are holding deep and mid-depth. Metal spoons jigged vertically or mooched cut-plug herring have been the go-to.- **Edmonds Pier**: Dawn to mid-morning is best for salmon; try a blood-red spinner blade tipped with shrimp for a fast bite.Keep an eye out—nearly all of the region’s endangered Southern Resident killer whales were spotted off Vashon Island this weekend. As CBS News and the Center for Whale Research note, it’s crucial to fish with care—use barbless hooks and handle any wild fish gently. Salmon numbers matter for these whales’ survival, so mind area closures and selective gear rules.As we wrap, don’t forget: the health of our fisheries is everyone’s responsibility, especially as this rain brings runoff and contaminants into the Sound, as WDFW and the University of Washington have been tracking. Respect the resource, pack out your trash, and support local conservation.Thanks for tuning in! Remember to subscribe for your daily tides, tactics, and hotspots. This has been a quiet please production, for more, check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, reporting live for Monday, November 3, 2025, with your Puget Sound fishing roundup. We kicked off the day with a sunrise at 6:48 am and expect the sunset to hit at 4:45 pm, giving us a crisp 10 hours of daylight on the water according to local tide charts and NOAA. Tidal movement is moderate today: low tide swung through early at about 4:45 am (around -0.7 ft), with the next high cresting at 1:26 pm, reaching about 7.9 ft. That means best fishing windows fall late morning and early afternoon, especially from 9:48 am to 11:48 am coinciding with the lunar influence.The weather? Classic fall Seattle damp—steady light rain punctuated by total cloud cover, temp around 54°F, winds gentle at 4 mph, humidity near 99%. Water temps are chilly at 49°F, so dress for wet, cool conditions and don’t forget those rain layers.Fish activity in the Sound is steady; late-season coho salmon are still being taken, though they’re getting smart, so presentation counts. Locals report solid action near Edmonds Pier and down at Shilshole Bay, with bank anglers and kayak fishing both producing. Puget Sound Beach Fishing maps confirm these spots as reliable access points for chinook and coho, while the Duwamish mouth and Point Defiance in Tacoma are showing some surging sea-run cutthroat and bullhead schools this week, too, per Gone Fishing Northwest’s latest updates.Catch counts for the weekend leaned into silver: several boats reported limits of coho averaging 4–8 pounds, with an occasional blackmouth chinook in the mix, especially outside Elliott Bay. Evergreen shoreline regulars have been scoring mixed bags—flounder, true cod, and rockfish showing up for those working drop-shot rigs off Tacoma Narrows and Lighthouse Park.On lures and bait, the ticket today is downsizing. With murky water and low light, chartreuse and pink 3” hoochies rigged with a twinkle skirt are reliable for salmon. For cutthroat, minnow-profile soft plastics, like the classic Dick Nite or Sand Lance swimbaits, are turning heads. Don’t ignore bait: fresh herring strips trolled slow or sand shrimp under a float are producing around Mukilteo and Alki. Bank anglers swear by nightcrawlers for flounder and perch.Two hotspots to hit:- **Shilshole Bay Marina Breakwater**: Coho and blackmouth are staging for out-migration; jigging with metal spoons and mooching cut-plug herring have been hot.- **Edmonds Pier**: Morning bite is best for salmon, with blood-red spinner blades paired with shrimp-tipped hooks.Pay attention to conservation—the Southern Resident killer whales are still hanging in the Sound, only 73 left per CBS News and conservation reports. Their fate is tied to salmon success, so mind closures, use barbless hooks, and handle wild fish with kid gloves.That wraps it for today’s Puget Sound fishing report—thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, bringing you the Sunday morning report for Puget Sound and the Seattle waterfront, November 2nd, 2025. The sun popped up right at 6:55 a.m., with sunset rolling in at 4:49 p.m., giving us just shy of 10 hours of daylight to put lines in the water before things get dark and chilly. Weather’s on the classic fall side: low 40s early, mid-50s for the high if we’re lucky, mostly cloudy and a light south breeze at 5–10 knots according to the Marine Weather Service, but no major storms rolling through.Tides are moving in steady cycles today. Our highs are at 1:47 a.m. (8.8 feet) and a heavier 1:58 p.m. (11.7 feet). Lows hit at 7:35 a.m. (2.1 feet) and 8:37 p.m. (1.6 feet), so prime bites will cluster around the early morning ebb and the afternoon fill—watch those transitions for heavy movement. The tidal coefficient sits pretty low through the morning, which means smaller currents and subtle swings, so finesse and slow presentations will get more attention.The big story on the saltwater lately has been the burst of late-season coho rolling south, with anglers seeing solid numbers around Elliott Bay, Shilshole, and down toward Tacoma’s harbors. Reports from The Outdoor Line and local forums back this up, with most boats tacking on at least a couple nice silvers per trip. Blackmouth (resident chinook) action has begun to pick up as water cools, especially off West Point and further out near Kingston, though most keepers are just under 10 pounds. Lingcod season’s closed now, but plenty of folks are switching to fall flounder and sole near the shallows off Des Moines and Alki.Pier anglers have found dependable catch rates for surf perch and smaller flatfish using bits of sand shrimp and clam, especially around the downtown piers. Squid jigging off the piers after sunset has been red hot the last few evenings—classic pink and glow tube jigs are the consistent winners for getting buckets filled.If you’re chasing coho, go with a 3-inch silver or blue-green spoon—Coho Killers and Needlefish have been the top hardware, trolled behind a seven-ounce sinker from 40 to 80 feet deep. Herring strips rigged with a small dodger are also drawing strikes in the morning on a slow troll. For blackmouth, small chrome-plated hoochies and white glow flashers are the ticket, with downriggers set tight to the bottom contours off West Point and Restoration Point.Hot spots worth a mention today:- **Elliott Bay**: Trollers are finding action near the ferry lanes and terminal piers, especially from dawn till 9 a.m.- **Shilshole Marina**: Deep water off the breakwall’s been productive for coho and blackmouth, and the public fishing pier sees steady squid catches after dark.- **Des Moines Marina**: Surprising numbers of flounder and sole within an hour after the morning low tide.Bait selection is all about matching the hatch: cut-plug herring is still unbeatable for boaters. Bank anglers should stick with sand shrimp, clam bits, or natural-colored grub jigs. If you’re working the piers for squid, swap your regular jigs for a UV glow after sunset—locals swear by it, and the catches prove it.Before heading out, double-check for minor localized flooding in low-lying Snoqualmie areas according to King County reports, and look out for slick launch ramps—better safe than sorry.That’s today’s Puget Sound run-down—good luck out there! Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more fishing reports and insider tips.This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Fishing friends, today’s report from Puget Sound Seattle kicks off with classic November conditions. Sunrise is at 7:55 a.m. and sunset drops early at 5:52 p.m., so plan your casts accordingly. The weather’s calling for a gusty, wet morning with a Small Craft Advisory in effect; south winds start mild but climb up to 25 knots, so boat anglers: keep safe, hug the shorelines, and scout your leeward bays.For Saturday, November 1st, local tide charts peg a 2.23 ft low tide around 7:41 a.m., rising to a 11.09 ft high at 2:25 p.m., with another falling tide by evening[Seattle Puget Sound tide chart]. That mid-day flood brings prime water movement—fish will be active during this swing, especially around flats, creek mouths, and edges of submerged structure.Now to what’s biting. Week’s headlines have been about the late chum salmon run—these bruisers are swirling near estuaries like the mouth of the Duwamish and along Lincoln Park's shoreline. Reports from Northwest Fishing Magazine say chum catches have been steady; most boats are finding five to seven fish per outing, though some bank anglers have landed even more on strong outgoing tides. Don't overlook coho, either; resident silvers are holding deeper around Bainbridge Island and West Point, most weighing in at two to eight pounds lately. Crabbing closes soon, but pots last weekend near Shilshole, Edmonds, and Vashon were stuffed heavy with keeper Dungeness—locals are hauling doubles.For gear, match your lure to the bite: chum are slamming 3/8 oz pink corky setups or chartreuse marabou jigs, especially tipped with shrimp. Coho are switching between white hootchie rigs and mini pink spoons; troll these just above the kelp beds for best results. Herring cut-plug remains the classic Puget Sound bait for both salmon species—brined overnight for firm presentation, then run slow behind a dodger for flash. Shore casters should toss glow spoons at first light, especially after the recent rainfall has muddied the water.Top hot spots for today: - Lincoln Park south beach is putting up steady numbers of chum on both tides, with bonus cutthroat in the mix when fishing the softer pockets.- Richmond Beach is seeing an uptick in coho action—try working directly off the point during peak incoming, where the bait schools stack.- Golden Gardens jetty is productive for mixed bag: try there late in the afternoon when high water clears in, tossing jigs or plunking shrimp-tipped gear.As November pushes on, temperature drops and daylight shrinks, but that makes mid-day fishing windows extra sweet. Remember to double-check those regulations on salmon and crab before heading out—closures come fast this time of year.Thanks for tuning in to this Puget Sound fishing update! Remember to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Friday, October 31, 2025 Puget Sound fishing report. If you’re heading out this Halloween morning, get ready for a classic chilly, gray Seattle start—temps hovering in the mid-40s, patchy fog, and some drizzle possible. Winds will pick up this afternoon, with a Gale Warning already posted from 8:00 AM to 8:00 PM, favoring those early birds on the water, so keep an eye on conditions—especially smaller craft (according to NOAA Marine Weather).Sunrise hit at 7:52 this morning and you’ll have daylight until 5:52 tonight. As for tides, today’s first low was about 6:40 AM at just under 2 feet, giving way to a big high at 1:59 PM—over 11 feet—then an evening low around 8:30 at a little under 5 feet. These hearty fall swings bring strong moving water—the afternoon flood tide is a prime window for hungry fish on the bite (from Tide-Forecast and TidesChart).Water’s cooling off but there’s fire in the action. We’re still catching late-run coho and the very last of the pinks higher up the Sound and in certain rivers, but much of the attention is turning to the classic fall chum salmon push. These brutes are rowdy and showing up strong from the Green River mouth up through Possession Bar and over at Hoodsport. Reports the past couple days show limits coming in the mornings when anglers find the current breaks—look for rolling pods if the light is good. Herring-pattern spinners, purple/chartreuse hoochies, and eggs under a float near river mouths are top producers. Several locals scored limits by 10 AM yesterday near Edmonds tossing orange Vibrax spinners.Blackmouth (resident chinook) are becoming more active, especially in the morning ebb around Elliott Bay, Shilshole, and Southworth. Trollers picking up 6-8 pound fish dragging green and white glow flashers with 3" to 3.5" Coho Killers or Cookies and Cream spoons 80–120 feet down.Bottomfish fans: spiny dogfish sharks are thick and providing non-stop action almost everywhere—great fun for light tackle, especially in the area south of Vashon and Point Defiance. You’ll find some healthy cabezon and pile perch in the rockier shallows. If you’re just looking to bend a rod, a chunk of herring or even squid strips will keep you busy.Lingcod are closed in Marine Area 10, but keepers are coming up further north near Deception Pass in deeper water. Always make sure you’re checking this year’s regs before targeting any bottomfish.For crabbing, it’s late in the season but pots are still pulling up firm Dungeness in West Seattle (Alki), Port Orchard, and by the Edmonds ferry dock—chicken a top bait right now. Remember, check for updates on legal areas and limits.Today’s hot spots:- **Hoodsport**: Chum thick in the salt and scent baits work best—try eggs or shrimp.- **Possession Bar**: Late coho and early blackmouth, best on the morning tide change.- **Shilshole Bay**: Steady mixed-bag action—salmon, dogfish, and good crabbing near the locks.- **Point Defiance**: Chum salmon near the sand spit, solid blackmouth off the flats deeper.Grab your Gore-Tex, pack some hand warmers, and don’t forget the net—these fish don’t quit easy! For lures, think flashy and noisy: orange and chartreuse for chum, smaller spoons or hootchies for blackmouth, and if it’s perch or dogfish, bait is king.Thanks for tuning in! Make sure to subscribe so you never miss a beat from the Sound. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Puget Sound daily fishing report for Thursday, October 30th, 2025. We're rolling into late fall, and while mornings start crisp, the fish and local scene are still showing plenty of life.First, your **tidal report**: Today we saw a **morning low tide around 5:34 a.m.**, with the next **high tide peaking at 1:22 p.m.** before dropping off to another low at 8:08 p.m. Tidal coefficients are sitting low, meaning only mild current, so fish might be holding deeper or tighter to structure—expect subtle shifts rather than dramatic runs of action according to Tides4Fishing. We’re in those typical short days; **sunrise was at 7:51 a.m. and sunset clocks in tonight at 5:53 p.m.**, so plan your outings accordingly.**Weather-wise**, expect typical late-October vibes. According to NOAA, it's a cool start in the 40s, climbing to the mid-50s, with patchy clouds and a slight east wind. Should be dry today, so you'll have comfortable conditions for casting.On to **fish activity**: Salmon season is winding down, but the late run of **chum ("dog") salmon** is creating a commotion in estuaries and river mouths, and local anglers are still pulling a few hard-fighting coho in open Sound. Reports from recent days suggest **chum are thick around the Nisqually delta**, and folks are still picking up some **coho in the shipping lanes** off Edmonds and Shilshole—mostly early or late in the day. The big October push of pinks is long gone; the last holdovers are now way upriver or spawned out.If it’s bottomfish you’re after, the **lingcod bite remains respectable within the 120-foot contour,** especially near rocky reefs off West Seattle and Southworth. **Pier anglers** at Seacrest and Des Moines are still landing **flounder and an occasional cabezon.** For the crabbers, Dungeness have been moving, and pots set near Alki or Possession Bar on an incoming tide are worth checking.**Recent catches**: According to Puget Sound Fishing Report, yesterday saw a couple of limits of coho salmon come off the boats trolling near Edmonds. Beach fishers reported a handful of decent chum near Lincoln Park in West Seattle, mainly turning up at dawn. Lingcod and flounder continue to bend rods along the city piers, with squid jiggers on the Elliott Bay waterfront also doing well at night.**Best lures and bait** this week:- For salmon, try a **purple/chartreuse hoochie behind a green flasher** or a **cut-plug herring**, especially if the water’s a bit murky from recent rain—tips endorsed by Gone Fishing Northwest.- Chum salmon respond well to **pink yarn flies or jigs tipped with scent** near river mouths.- Lingcod are hammering **white swimbaits and large herring** on a dropper rig. - For flounder and general bottomfish, a **simple chunk of squid or sandworm** on a Carolina rig is a go-to.- Squid jigs in natural or pink patterns have found success lately for the nocturnal pier crowd.For **hot spots**, I'd set my sights on:- **Edmonds Marina breakwater:** coho and an occasional blackmouth.- **Lincoln Park shoreline:** best at sunrise for chum and possibilities for late coho.- **West Seattle’s Alki reefs and Seacrest pier:** productive for flounder and squid at night.And if you’re feeling lucky, remember there’s still one day left to enter the WDFW Trout Derby across local lakes, winding up October 31st—grab that tag if you land a winner.Thanks for tuning in, anglers. Stay sharp, fish safe, and remember—a true Puget Sound bite can come anytime you least expect, especially as we slide into these chilly fall mornings. Subscribe for your next fresh report and don’t miss tomorrow’s tide and catch info.This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Puget Sound fishing report for Wednesday, October 29th, 2025, fresh from the heart of Seattle.Let’s kick things off with the tides: Seattle is seeing a low at 4:35 am today at 0.62 feet, and a strong high rolls in at 12:29 pm, peaking near 10.4 feet, followed by a 7:04 pm low at 7.25 feet. The best bite windows fall in sync with these movements—so plan those casts around lunch and early evening. Today’s sunrise hit at 7:49 am, with sunset expected at 5:58 pm. That gives us about ten hours of daylight to make the most of a mild fall bite.Weather’s typical October Sound: 46°F with a gentle 7 mph breeze and cloud cover at just 6%. Even with the water temperature locked at 54°F, a light windbreaker is smart—morning hours will feel chilly near the water, and a little drizzle isn’t out of the question.Fish activity has been solid! Pink salmon and coho are dominating catches—according to recent local reports, it’s still prime time for those humpies, with many anglers landing limits from gravel bars and estuary runs. The Mountaineers and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife estimate more than 300,000 pink salmon running up Snohomish and nearby rivers this fall. Cohos remain active too, chasing those cooler tides, with two- to five-pounders common right now.For lures, the hot ticket remains pink buzz bombs, small spinners (think gold or pink patterns), and white or chartreuse hoochies if you’re trolling. Bank anglers have been swinging small pink jigs or using 1/8 oz spoons—especially during the major bite windows that align with the tide swing. If you’re after coho, try a blue or green flash fly behind a dodger, or toss larger spinners straight into tidal flows around creek mouths. Best bait on hand is still fresh shrimp, but cured salmon eggs are tempting those staging fish near the river mouths.Recent catches have spotlighted success at a couple of key hotspots:- Lincoln Park shoreline, West Seattle: consistent pinks in the mornings and again on the incoming afternoon tide.- Shilshole Bay Marina: hot for cohos, especially right at high tide and during dusk.You’ll also find action out around Edmonds Pier and at the mouth of the Snohomish for those late-season salmon. For the crabbers, heads up—crabs are still being pulled up in decent numbers, especially near Bainbridge Island and inside Elliott Bay.Remember, pinks are wrapping up their spawning, so treat the reds with respect and avoid wading through shallow gravel where eggs are set. Chums are just starting to trickle in, so keep an eye out for bigger, tougher fish as we step into November.Thanks for tuning in! For more daily fishing insight, don’t forget to subscribe right here. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Puget Sound and Seattle fishing report for October 28th, 2025.Out on the Sound today, we've got a classic late-October feel: partly cloudy and cool, with air temps in the upper 40s ramping toward the low 50s by midday. Winds are mild but picking up to 10 knots from the south in the afternoon, so keep an extra layer handy and watch for that breeze if you’re heading out in a smaller craft. Sunrise hit at 7:48 am and sunset’s expected at 5:57 pm, giving you a solid window for both morning and evening bites, especially with active tide movement during prime hours.Let’s check today’s tides for Seattle Puget Sound: low tide at 3:39 am (0.1 ft), rolling up to a high tide at 11:30 am (10.4 ft), then back down for another low at 5:33 pm (7.87 ft), followed by a late-evening high at 8:59 pm (8.17 ft). That strong midday high paired with a slow fall through afternoon spells out good current and water movement for chasing salmon and bottomfish all around Elliott Bay and Shilshole Bay.The hot talk this fall has been the historic run of pink salmon. Recent reports out of the greater Puget Sound area say rivers and the nearshore are flush with pinks, lighting up the waters all through October. Local anglers in the Everett and Tacoma corridors have been stacking up 3- to 5-pounders pretty much every trip, especially on the morning incoming tide. Silvers (coho) are still showing in respectable numbers around Point No Point and down toward Lincoln Park, with the best action concentrated at dawn and dusk as fish move in with cooler water[3].Pink salmon have been smashing anything flashy, but the consistent winner is a 1.5- to 2-inch pink or chartreuse Buzz Bomb, fished with a hoochie skirt for extra action. For the fly folks, a Clouser Minnow or Rolled Muddler in pink or white will get hit, especially as the water clears toward midday. Shore anglers working classic spots from Edmonds pier, Mukilteo, and Lincoln Park are finding success with small spoons in pink or copper, as well as jigs tipped with Berkley Gulp.If you’re planning a trip for bottomfish, blackmouth (resident Chinook) are taking smaller herring or anchovy trolled behind a green or chartreuse flasher. Drop a candlefish jig or light metal near the drop-offs at West Point for a legit shot at a keeper. Dungeness crab action is still steady off Alki and Shilshole—try chicken backs or salmon heads in your pots for best results as we close out the main crabbing season.A couple of hot spots worth hitting today:- **Shilshole Bay:** Big tide swings plus schooling baitfish—perfect for pinks, coho, and blackmouth. Find the rips and fish the tide turns for best results.- **Lincoln Park (West Seattle):** Excellent walk-on access. Cast buzz bombs or twitch jigs right at the edge of the kelp beds; coho and pinks are pushing in tight.- Close second: Mukilteo Pier for its salmon mix, or for solitude, push north to Richmond Beach for a shot at late-biting coho.In sum, the water’s alive with salmon, the tides are pumping, and the best lures are pink buzz bombs, small spoons, and for bait anglers, fresh herring or sand shrimp under a float. Don’t forget your crab pots—there’s still time for a limit or two before the season winds down.Thanks for tuning in to the Puget Sound fishing report with me, Artificial Lure. If you got value out of this report, make sure to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning, anglers—this is Artificial Lure coming to you with your Puget Sound fishing report for Monday, October 27th, 2025. If you’re headed out today in Seattle and greater Puget Sound, expect classic Northwest autumn conditions: cool, damp air in the low 50s at sunrise with cloud cover holding throughout most of the day, and a breeze out of the south. Sunrise at 7:47 AM and sunset at 6:02 PM set great bookends for your fishing, and the first-quarter moon phase should help keep fish active through the tidal swings.The tides are in your favor for a productive day on the water. NOAA lists a very early low tide at -0.45 feet around 3:42 AM, the morning high rolling up at 11:15 AM near 14 feet, followed by a dropping tide to 8.7 feet around dinner, and an evening high at 8:22 PM. These strong tidal changes, especially around the late-morning high, should push baitfish close to structure and pull in aggressive salmon and sea-run cutthroat. Tides.net and Tide-Forecast.com both confirm these timings, so it’s a good day for planning those prime hours in the mid-morning for saltwater action.Salmon are still the talk of the sound, with reports over the weekend of solid coho and late chum being caught from shore and by boaters, especially near the shipping lanes and creek mouths. According to Puget Sound Seattle Daily Fishing Report, there’s a solid “Salmon surge” right now, and shorecasters have also been bagging resident blackmouth on both spoons and herring. The chum are staging strongest near river mouths—the Duwamish and Snohomish inlets are seeing real action. Troll cut-plug herring or pink hootchies in 20-50 feet, and be sure to work the color wheel: purple haze and chartreuse have been hot. Don’t overlook mixed-bag bottom fishing. Reports from FishingReminder just north in Bellevue and Meydenbauer Bay call out a steady bite on flounder, sole, and even the odd Pacific cod around docks and reefs—especially during the evening tide push. If you’re looking for a livewell filler, sand shrimp under a sliding sinker or a white curly-tail grub are your best bets near these structures.Crabbing remains worth a few pots if you’re licensed, with Dungeness and red rock still moving in the sandy channels during these fat tides. Best bets are deeper off Edmonds and at the mouth of Shilshole Bay. Chicken backs or salmon heads are working best.Popular lures right now: - **For salmon:** 3-inch Coho Killers, purple/chartreuse Rotators, and dyed herring strips on 2/0-4/0 hooks.- **For cutthroat:** olive-and-white Clouser minnows or small silver Kastmasters.- **For bottomfish:** 2-4” curly tails in white or chartreuse, or natural bait like sand shrimp and squid strips.Today’s local hot spots to consider:- **Edmonds Pier:** solid chinook and coho by mid-morning, plus great squid at night under lights.- **Lincoln Park in West Seattle:** consistent for cutthroat and resident coho, best around the 11am high tide.- **Point No Point:** always a classic for trolling or shore casting salmon, especially with a swing toward noon high tide.Before you head out, check your license and stay up to date with the latest regs. Stay warm and fish safe—winter is right around the corner but there’s plenty of action left in the Sound.Thanks for tuning in to your local daily fishing report—be sure to subscribe so you never miss the bite window. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Puget Sound anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your Sunday, October 26th fishing report for the Seattle area. Let’s break it down like a true local, covering the tides, weather, recent fish action, and what’s working on the water right now.First, your **tide report**: This morning’s high tide hits Seattle Puget Sound at 9:35 a.m. with a solid 10.73 feet, then falls to a 7.97 ft low at 3:01 p.m., followed by another push up to 9.19 ft around 7:17 p.m. The tidal swing should spark fish activity, especially around those transitions.**Sunrise** was at 7:46 a.m. and we’ll have light until 6:01 p.m. **Weather** is chilly and classic fall—expect a damp 55°F, some drizzle, and cloud cover at 100%. Winds are brisk—22 mph, gusting up to 33, so bundle up and use caution on open water. A marine forecast from the National Weather Service calls for winds 10-15 knots, shifting to lighter SW in the afternoon, with rain on and off. It’ll keep things interesting, but keep an eye on those flags and check for marine advisories before launching.Moving to the **bite**: This week saw mixed action on resident coho and the tail end of fresh-run pinks. Reports from trusted boots-on-the-ground sources like The Outdoor Line say anglers working the southern and central Sound are still plucking a few nice late coho—especially in the morning or evenings, often close to the top of the flood. There’s also an uptick in squid jigging activity around the piers after dark, with squidders finding good numbers at places like Seacrest Pier and the Des Moines Marina. Crabbers are out in force too, hauling up plenty of Dungeness in legal numbers, so long as the pots are dropped deep enough and off hard structure.**Recent catches** have included:- Cohos running 4-6 lbs, with a few “football” hatchery fish mixed in- Resident blackmouth (immature Chinook) starting to show, especially off Jefferson Head and Possession Bar- A continued trickle of pinks—wind-down time, but still possible inside Hylebos and Elliott Bays- Squid limits coming fast at nights on pier lights- Dungeness crab pots coming up heavy south of the Narrows and off Edmonds**Best lures and bait**: For *salmon*, nothing beats trolling green or purple haze hoochies behind white or UV flashers, with a 36-inch leader. Cut-plug herring continues to outpace spoons and plugs, especially north of Alki. For blackmouth, 3” to 4” spoons like Coho Killers or Kingfisher Lites in “Cookies and Cream” or “Irish Cream” colors are top producers. Squidders are getting limits on #2.5 to #3.0 jigs in classic pink or chartreuse under the lights.If you’re after *crab*, jars stuffed with oily salmon heads and chicken legs are pulling the most pots.**Hot spots** right now:- Shilshole Bay and Meadow Point for coho on a flood tide, especially at dawn- Possession Bar holds blackmouth on the outgoing- Elliott Bay piers for squid after sunset- The Tacoma Narrows for Dungeness—just set your pots deep and watch your soak timesOne last local tip—cloud cover and choppy water mean fish push shallower, so don’t be afraid to run your gear in the upper 40 feet of the column during those low-light periods.Thanks for tuning in to your Sunday Puget Sound fishing fix. Remember to subscribe for more timely tips, and don’t forget to check local regulations before hitting the water. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, bringing you your Saturday fishing report for Puget Sound and the greater Seattle area. October 25th, 2025 is shaping up with moody autumn vibes: the sun comes up at 7:43 am and sets at 6:02 pm, perfect for chasing that early bite or winding down at golden hour.Today’s tides on Seattle’s shores set a rhythm for your angling: low tide at 1:22 am (-0.11 ft), a roaring high at 8:47 am (11.1 ft), then low again at 2:18 pm (7.8 ft), and a final high at 6:41 pm (9.4 ft). That morning high sets up excellent water movement—expect active fish through the first half of the day, especially with a waxing crescent moon above. NOAA’s marine forecast calls for southeast winds shifting from 15–20 knots and climbing, paired with steady rain later—there’s a gale watch from Saturday evening, so boaters should keep an eye on conditions and always wear that PFD. Land-based anglers, grab your rain gear and thermos; you’ll be out in the elements.On the bite front, fall means opportunity. Salmon are surging: local catches this week report solid numbers of **chum** and **coho** moving through the Sound. Winter blackmouth (juvenile chinook) are feeding aggressively in deeper channels—these Kings stick around all year, giving you a shot at big, feisty fish according to SeattleFishing.com. Chum are stacking up near river mouths, with anglers picking up fresh fish at Hoodsport and the mouth of the Duwamish.As for gear, **herring strips** and **anchovy** cut-plugs trolled on green or purple flasher rigs are top producers for blackmouth. Coho are hammering on **pink hoochies**, small spoons like the Silver Horde Coho Killer, and twitching jigs at creek mouths during dusk. Chum respond best to chartreuse or cerise marabou jigs just off estuary sand spits—don’t overlook a slow, subtle presentation if the water’s cloudy from rain.Hot spots worth swinging by today:- Shilshole Bay: Known for strong tide flows and weekend salmon catches, especially just west of the marina breakwater.- Sinclair Inlet Marina: Safe access and consistent bites for coho and the odd blackmouth on deeper mooch setups.- Hoodsport: Classic for shorebound chum. Try twitching jigs as the tide pushes in.- The Duwamish mouth: Urban spot for coho and sea-run cutthroat; best action early as tide peaks.Don’t forget about crabbing—October pots bring in hearty Dungeness, especially around deeper ledges near Bainbridge and Point Jefferson. Chicken and salmon heads are killer baits in pots right now.The weather’s blustery, but the fish are feeding hard. Try beach-casting before the wind picks up, focus on tide swings for top action, and adjust your lure color for that post-rain clarity shift. Local shops report that green and purple flashers are selling out fast, so grab your tackle early.Thanks for tuning in to the Puget Sound Daily Fishing Report. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss the bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your Friday October 24 Puget Sound fishing report.We’re heading into the heart of fall and today’s **tide cycle** starts with a low at 12:50am (-1.02 ft), followed by a high at 8:07am (10.89 ft), a moderate low at 1:27pm (7.28 ft), and another high at 6:17pm (10.07 ft). If you’re timing your launch, sunrise is at 7:43am and sunset wraps up the day at 6:05pm.The **weather** looks windy and wet—National Weather Service expects steady south winds at 15 to 20 knots in the morning, bringing rain showers throughout the day. Waves should stay around 2 feet or less, but keep a close eye on the forecast since Saturday evening brings another round of gusts and rain.**Salmon activity** remains the big story this week. There’s been a steady bite on coho and a late push of chum in the southern Sound. Point Defiance and the Narrows are producing limits for those braving the early morning chop. Most boaters and shore casters have had their best luck in the hour before peak high tide—keep that 8:07am window in mind. Reports from local shops say anglers landed a mix of silvers in the 3-7lb range around Lincoln Park and up near Edmonds, with some boats reporting over a dozen hookups on the drift.Considering the rain and rising barometer, switch to **bright and reflective lures**—White or chartreuse hoochies and Silver spoons are the current standouts. Try a pink mini-squid for chums or a green flasher with a cut-plug herring for coho. Early morning topwater action is best with needlefish patterns. Bait-wise, herring and anchovy remain the go-tos for trolling and mooching. Bank fishermen at Alki Beach are doing best with sand shrimp or cured eggs under slip floats.A few steelhead and sea-run cutthroat have shown up in the mouths of feeder creeks entering the Sound, especially in West Seattle and the Nisqually Reach. Nightcrawlers or small soft plastics (pink or orange) dragged near the bottom have taken the prize.Hot spots to target today:- **Point Defiance/Tahlequah**: Consistent coho and chum, especially at the outgoing tide swing. Overcast skies perfect for drift mooching.- **Lincoln Park/Lowman Beach**: Good numbers of coho staging just offshore. Casting off the point near creek mouths can pay off.If birdlife is your jam, the year of the shearwater continues! Dune Peninsula at Point Defiance is seeing regular flocks of short-tailed shearwaters and sooty shearwaters, often mixed with northern fulmars and Sabine’s gulls. Birders have spotted ancient murrelets diving after small baitfish—another sign the forage is abundant, which keeps salmon feeding aggressively.Keep safety in mind today. With wind and rain in the forecast, make sure all gear is stowed and lifejackets are on. Water temps are chilling fast and the chop can build quickly. Watch for debris if you’re running the western shoreline, as a few close calls have been reported near the ferry lanes.Thanks for tuning in to today’s Puget Sound fishing report. Be sure to subscribe for daily updates, and good luck out there—tight lines and safe travels! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Thursday, October 23, 2025 Puget Sound fishing report, serving up fresh details straight from the docks and shoreline around Seattle.Sunrise splashed over the Sound at 7:34 a.m., with sunset rolling in tonight just after 6:08 p.m. Light south winds began the morning with crisp air and scattered clouds. Temps held in the high 40s at dawn, rising to mid-50s this afternoon, with a drizzle chance late day. Dress layered and keep your rain gear handy.Tidal movement is key today—NOAA forecasts a high tide at 6:30 a.m around 8 feet, dropping to a midday low around 11:30 a.m at 5.46 feet, then climbing again for a late afternoon peak at 4:21 p.m. Anglers in the know will fish the incoming tide after that morning low; salmon cruise with the flood current, so plan to hit your favorite spot an hour before, and stick it out as that water rises for maximum action.Coho salmon remain the headliner, thick across the north Sound and running strong through the Duwamish and Snohomish river mouths. Chum are arriving in small schools—expect bites to heat up end of month. Recent catches report coho averaging 7–12 pounds, with some teens landed off West Point and Shilshole. Hiram Chittenden Locks fish ladder data confirms peak coho migration now, so it’s prime time to cast for silver.Out on the water, herring—either live or cut plug—has outperformed lately; drift them on a barbless stinger for best results (local YouTube anglers showed big fish netted using this method this week). Trollers should run maglips or small spoons behind flashers at 40 to 70 feet, dead slow. Early migrators respond to feeding triggers, so the roll and wobble matter: flashers with green or chartreuse paddles, leaders 36–54 inches, and bait trolled at a brisk walk.Terminal areas favor pink hoochies with short leaders—longtime guides swear by the “Qualicum Special” (Purple Haze hoochie with an MP2 insert). Territorial aggression drives coho bites now, so downsizing and keeping lures visible is working around Mukilteo and Point No Point.Don’t overlook Dungeness crab—pots filled up fast last week, especially near Alki and Vashon Island edges. Chicken and herring are top bait, but mix in fish heads if you’ve got ‘em from today’s fillet job.Rockfish and perch are biting well for shore anglers along Edmonds jetty using three-hook drop shot rigs. Toss worms or shrimp bits for steady action; the perch are chunky and schooling.For hot spots, West Point saltwater access remains productive for coho all week—troll the drop-off at flood tide with cut plug herring. Ballard Locks continues to be a draw for salmon-watchers and river mouth casting. Further north, Point No Point and the waters off Kingston have seen consistent coho and the first push of chum. For crabbers, the east side of Vashon is prime.Fresh rumors of small shark catches are circulating in northern Sound but remain incidental—bycatch in deeper waters.Remember, always check the latest WDFW regulations for area closures, selective gear rules, and emergency updates—they shift quickly during peak salmon and crab season.Thanks for tuning in to the report. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily local fishing insight, tips, and all the dockside news you need. This has been a Quiet Please production; for more, check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here, serving up your Wednesday Puget Sound fishing report for Seattle and the surrounding waters, October 22, 2025. **Sunrise today was at 7:39 a.m., sunset hits at 6:06 p.m.** Daylight is ticking down, so plan those casts accordingly. Seattle’s tidal activity is running high—expect strong currents with a morning high tide at 6:48 a.m. (10.8 ft), midday low at 12:12 p.m. (6.0 ft), and another high tide at 5:25 p.m. (10.5 ft). Good water movement means combative fish, especially near the mouths of rivers and harbors where bait piles up. According to Tides4Fishing, the coefficient today is 82, putting us in the prime range for big swings and energetic bites.**Weather:** Mild, typical mid-fall sets the scene, with cloudy skies and scattered drizzle predicted. Light winds, mostly from the southwest, calm but keeping clouds hanging low. Temp hovers in the upper 40s to low 50s. No major systems pushing through, so expect easy boating and good visibility until dusk. NOAA’s marine forecast shows stable conditions—no nasty chop, but bring that rain gear for passing squalls.**Fish Activity:** We’re in the tail-end of historic salmon runs—coho are transitioning from saltwater to rivers, but plenty remain in nearshore waters. Chinook reports taper, but a few fresh kings still cruise the deeper shipping channels. Recent catches have been solid, with anglers near Edmonds, Shilshole, and Point Defiance reporting limits of bright coho averaging 5-8 lbs, with the occasional 10-pounder. Beach cast reports from Lincoln Park and near Mukilteo pier show coho are aggressive on the change in tide, especially early and late.**Best Lures & Baits:** Holy Moly Outdoors highlights their top-5 coho jigs for this transitional season—try palmered marabou jigs with rabbit fur tails, blue and black colors with a hot pink or chartreuse Mad River worm tail. These combos breathe in the current and get coho fired up, especially when retrieved erratically. Rubber-skirted bass jigs with soft-plastic tails also produce. For trolling, mini-hoochie squids behind a white flasher or classic green/blue spoons. If you’re soaking baits, cured herring or anchovy get most consistent results, especially when fished off deep mooching rigs on the ebb. Gone Fishing Northwest also recommends Buzz Bombs in pink and chartreuse for pink salmon and aggressive coho.**Hot Spots:** Edmonds Pier has seen hot salmon action at high tide, with major bite windows aligning with tidal peaks. Shilshole Marina area—especially the north end—continues to produce both boat and bank limits, with bigger coho pushing through. Point Defiance is firing on afternoon outgoing tides, and the Green River mouth has also delivered scattered chinook and tons of silvers for those fly fishing or throwing jigs. If you’re more crab-minded, crabbing remains excellent just outside the shipping lanes off Alki and north Bainbridge.**Other catches:** Lingcod are out of season, but black rockfish and kelp greenling can be found nearshore jetties. Small sharks are occasionally mixed in with bottomfish catches around Everett and northern Sound—according to AOL News, most are dogfish and pose no threat, but provide good rod-benders for curious kids.**Pro Tip:** Tight lines depend on matching jig size to current speed—today’s high amplitude means upsize to 3/8–1/2 ounce. Fish deep troughs as they funnel bait at tide change.Thanks for tuning in to your Puget Sound report. Subscribe to stay sharp on tides, tactics, and the inside bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Good morning, anglers! This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report for Tuesday, October 21st.Let's talk tides first. We've got a high tide at 6:00 AM at 8.99 feet, followed by a low at 11:09 AM dropping to 4.79 feet. Another high comes in at 4:43 PM reaching 9.71 feet, and we'll see a late night low at 11:40 PM hitting negative 0.26 feet. That tidal coefficient of 83 to 85 means we're looking at strong tidal movements today, which is going to get those fish active.Sunrise was at 7:37 AM and we'll see sunset around 6:11 PM, giving us just over 10 hours of daylight to work with.Now for the good stuff. Pink salmon are absolutely surging right now in the Sound. We're seeing historic runs this fall, with salmon staging heavily at creek mouths. If you're targeting pinks from the beach, hoochies and buzz bombs are your go-to lures. The bright colors are working especially well in these conditions.For those of you after Dungeness crab, the conditions are prime. Focus your efforts in the deeper channels during these strong tide swings. The crabs are moving and feeding aggressively.Hot spots to hit today: First, check out the waters around the creek mouths along the eastern shoreline. The salmon are stacked up there waiting to move. Second, Carr Inlet has been producing consistently, especially around Horsehead Bay where the tidal action really concentrates the baitfish and brings in the predators.Weather-wise, we're looking at typical October conditions with some moisture in the air, so dress in layers and bring your rain gear. That wet weather actually helps with the fishing, keeping the water oxygenated and the fish active.For lures, stick with your pink and silver hoochies for salmon, and if you're jigging, those buzz bombs in chartreuse and pink are absolutely crushing it. Live bait anglers should focus on herring and sand shrimp for the best results.The key today is timing your fishing around those tide changes. That morning low around 11 AM and the evening high at 4:43 PM are going to be your prime windows when the fish are feeding most actively.Get out there and make it happen! Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Monday, October 20th, live fishing report for Puget Sound and Seattle. Let’s get right to what local anglers are seeing, where it’s biting, and what tackle’s turning heads.First up, the **conditions**: we're waking up to south winds at 5–10 knots across most of the central Sound, with morning showers lingering on and off (National Weather Service Marine Forecast). Waves are holding at 1–2 feet, settling out by midday, which should make afternoon fishing comfortable. Weather is classic October—chilly, damp, and variable, so bring that rain jacket and your patience. Sunrise is 7:36am and sunset is 6:11pm (Seattle Tides – Puget Sound), giving us a solid fishing window from first light to just about dinnertime.**Tides are prime** for targeting salmon and bottomfish today. The morning high hits at 5:24am (9.1 ft), the low at 10:54am (4.1 ft), and the afternoon high cycles in at 4:43pm (10.1 ft) before a near-zero slack at 11:24pm (Seattle Tides). With a substantial swing, expect fish to push up onto structure and funnel into creek mouths—classic fall staging.Let’s talk **fish activity**: Pink salmon are surging up the Sound, staging thick at creek mouths. Several locals reported solid catches near the mouths of Pipers Creek and Kennedy Creek over the weekend, with coho mixed in and the occasional bright chinook making a final run (Puget Sound Seattle Daily Fishing Report). In South Sound, cutthroat trout and resident blackmouth salmon are on the prowl—Cutts Island and the waters off Dash Point are producing for folks trolling and casting hardware (CoastView).Catch reports from Saturday and Sunday put pinks top of the leaderboard, especially for shore anglers using pink Buzz Bombs or small spoons. Boaters drifting herring at mid-depth or trolling flashers with white hootchies also took good numbers of coho and the odd chinook—mostly 24–28 inches, fresh and tight to the shore.As for **lures and baits**:- For pinks and coho, throw **pink** or **chartreuse Buzz Bombs**, Rotators, or Coho Killers.- Bait fishermen scored with **green-label herring** rigged below dodgers at 35–55 feet.- For cutthroat, try **small needlefish spoons** or live sand worms on ultralight gear off gravel beaches.- Bottomfishers jigging off Elliott Bay and Alki found flounder and a few keeper rockfish using curly-tail grubs tipped with squid.If you’re after saltwater trout, don’t miss the Derby lakes stocked until the end of October (WDFW Trout Derby info).**Hot spots for today**:- The mouth of Pipers Creek in Carkeek Park—salmon staging now.- Dash Point Pier—coho and sea-run cutties in the mix.- Shilshole Marina breakwater—solid resident blackmouth bite on the morning tide.Quick tip: With the showers, fish deeper and slow your presentation. Salmon will move shallow near creek mouths on a rising tide, so time your casts for those periods.That wraps it for today! Thanks for tuning in, and 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/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Artificial Lure here with your Puget Sound fishing report straight out of Seattle for Sunday, October 19, 2025.Lines in early, folks—**sunrise is at 7:36AM and sunset rolls in at 6:16PM** near Olympia, so you’ve got a solid day ahead to chase those fall fish. Classic autumn weather is back with rain on tap and a cool SW breeze of 15 to 20 knots this morning, easing off a bit in the afternoon. Waves are mellow, around 2 feet or less, but keep your rain gear handy because that Puget Sound drizzle is sticking around, especially early according to the National Weather Service.**Tidal action is rolling:**- **High** at 4:23AM, hitting 8.04 feet- **Low** at 9:48AM, down to 3.35 feet- **Another bullish high at 3:59PM at nearly 10 feet**- **Low again at 10:39PM at 0.92 feet**Slack tides near dawn and mid-afternoon—prime time for salmonid ambushes.**What’s biting?** This weekend, it’s all about the **chum and coho**. The rains have filled the creeks, bringing in big pods of OP coho—Mike Zavadlov of MikeZsguideservice.com says these fish are pushing hard, and Jeff Head saw a solid day of hook-ups just yesterday. Googly-Eye Fishing reported three nice chum landed at Jeff Head using a slow troll, working the current with a westward traverse during the running tide. Local legends Tom "Nelly" Nelson and Joe Pyburn on The Outdoor Line radio show noted that the action is consistent around typical mid-Sound hotspots, and with a forecast calling for a monster pink run this year, there’s extra life offshore too.For **best results:**- **Lures:** Go classic—chartreuse flashers and purple haze hoochies are money for coho, while anything with a green or blue tinge seems to trigger chums. When the bite is tough, switch to anchovy or herring strips behind a dodger.- **Bait:** Salted herring and UV-treated anchovies are hot right now—Ray’s Bait in Ballard has the freshest batch in town.- **Rigs:** For coho, try 36-inch leaders behind an 8-inch flasher. Chum prefer a slower presentation; try a pink mini-hoochie and add scent.**Reports from the north Sound** have seen the occasional small shark in accidental catches, but the focus remains on salmon, with consistent numbers being pulled out around Possession Bar and Kingston. This week has seen a solid average: most boats are getting at least a couple coho and a handful of chum, with a bonus stray pink mixed in.If you’re chasing something different, resident blackmouth chinook (immature kings) are showing in pockets from Shilshole down to Des Moines, especially on the early high tide—try a 4-inch spoon in white or herring aid pattern.**Hotspots:**- **Jeff Head:** Strong reports of chum and coho action, best north/south drifts then turning west on the troll.- **Possession Bar:** Always a classic—converging currents stack the fish. Try the east edge on the afternoon push.- **Point No Point:** Good for the swing—you’ll have competition, but so do the fish!Always check local regs, watch for those “bubble” fisheries, and keep an eye for popping crab pots—word is a late-season haul is keeping the shellfishers busy too.That’s your local pulse for fishing Puget Sound today—get your lines in, stay dry, and aim for those tide windows. Thanks for tuning in! If you enjoyed today’s report, don’t forget to subscribe for more up-to-date fishing action. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Salmon City is living up to its name this morning, friends. First light is just creeping over the Olympic peaks—sunrise at 7:30 a.m. and we’ll wrap it up with sunset at 6:15 p.m. for those long-liners and dock dawdlers. Your local fishing report, straight from Artificial Lure, with all the details you need to get tight lines in Puget Sound.Let’s talk weather, because no angler should ever leave the dock unprepared. Today’s forecast is classic Seattle October—overcast, a light chop, and a gentle southwesterly breeze. No major storms brewing, but enough cool in the air to keep you reaching for that extra layer. The tide is just starting to move—low at 7:22 a.m. with 1.55 feet at Discovery Bay, high at 2:23 p.m. at 5.68 feet. That incoming tide midday? Prime time for hungry fish and hungry anglers alike.We’ve heard reports from across the Sound of a historic salmon run, with chum and pink staging at creek mouths and estuary drop-offs. The folks at QuietPeriodPlease have been tracking salmon stacking up in the Green, Duwamish, and Puyallup outflow zones. Pink salmon have surprised everyone with their surge this fall—silvery bright and feisty, just aching for a fight. And chum? According to local insiders, the run’s underway but fish are spread thin and competition is fierce, so patience and persistence will pay off. Over on the Union River, summer chum counts have just wrapped and biologists are smiling—numbers are up, but those fish are upriver now, leaving the salt for the rest of us to chase.Saltwater jigging has been the ticket for pinks—flashy gear like coho killers, pink Buzz Bombs, and spoons in the 2.5 to 3.5-inch range. For chum, try hoochie rigs tipped with herring or a scent-soaked yarn fly. The old-timers down at the marina swear by chartreuse, pink, and blue, and who am I to argue? If you’re after Dungeness crab, winter season started this month and the catch is strong—local Coupeville crabbers pulled 36 in one haul just this week, but remember, only male crabs with a hard shell over six and a quarter inches are legal to keep. Turkey legs, chicken drumsticks, or even a fish carcass in your pot will get those crustaceans crawling in—just be sure to have your license and crab card on you.Hot spots? Here’s a couple to set your sights on. For salmon, swing by the Point Defiance Boathouse—fish are hugging the drop-off as the tide comes in. The Alki Point ledge is another local favorite, especially for pinks with a few coho mixed in. If you’re hunting Dungeness, drop your pots off Polnell Point in Saratoga Passage, but be sure to mark your gear and check those pots quick—crabs have a way of walking out if you leave them too long.Best bait? Fresh herring or sand shrimp for salmon, no contest. But if you’re feeling fancy, that turkey leg in your crab pot does double duty—tasty for you, even tastier for the crabs. For artificials, never leave home without those Buzz Bombs, spoons, and hoochies. Fish activity is solid, folks. Pinks are aggressive, chum are here but finicky, and crab are straight-up plentiful. Dress warm, bring a buddy, and keep your wits about you—the Sound’s got a way of turning things on and off like a switch with the tides.Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the bite from Artificial Lure. Get out there and make some memories—and if you see me on the water, show me your catch! This has been a quiet please production—for more, check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Fishing this morning around Puget Sound is off to a calm and classic fall start—overcast skies, crisp air, and just enough drizzle to remind you you’re not in California. Sunrise hit at 7:27 a.m. and sunset will be rolling in at 6:18 p.m., giving us a good window of daylight to chase those autumn fish. Seattle’s tides saw a low at about 3:35 a.m., building to high at 10:14 a.m., with another low expected early in the evening. Tidal swing is moderate today, which means you’ll need to hunt around for moving water—find those tide rips near points and creek mouths for the best action, but leave the heavy gear at home because currents are mild, and waves are no more than a light two-foot chop in the main sound, as reported this morning by the National Weather Service Marine Forecast.Let’s talk fish: the real headline is the sockeye comeback up north on the Baker River, with nearly 92,000 sockeye returning this season, according to the Upper Skagit Indian Tribe. While most of those are miles from Seattle, it’s big news for the entire sound—run timing is trickling later, and even though the Baker sockeye are mostly upriver now, their cousins could be staging near river mouths or working deeper channels.Silvers (coho) are still being caught—though most are scattered, there are good reports from Edmonds down to Lincoln Park. Morning ebb and the last bit of flood seem to be the ticket. Resident blackmouth (immature chinook) action has picked up in deeper water off Jeff Head and Southworth. And if you’re itching for something different, the usual mixed bag of flounder, perch, and even the odd spotted ratfish are turning up near bottom structure—scientists at the University of Washington just discovered real teeth on the heads of these weird little chimaeras, making them the stuff of local legend and late-night fish tales.As for what’s been biting this week: boats working the rips off Point No Point have reported half-limits of hatchery coho, mostly running 4-6 pounds, with a few short chinook still in the mix. Shore anglers at Alki and Lincoln Park flipped buzz bombs and twitching jigs for a solid handful of late coho, especially during first light and late dusk. Lingcod and rockfish are slow, but juvenile cabezon have been showing closer to shore rocks.If you’re rigging up, best lures today remain the classics—try a green or white hoochie behind an 11-inch flasher for salmon if you’re trolling, or cast pink-patterned buzz bombs and curly-tail jigs from shore. For bait, nothing beats a plug-cut herring, but if you’re fishing from the beach, sand shrimp and nightcrawlers are catching the usual fall surf perch and flounder. Don’t forget prospecting with small swimbaits for searun cutthroat around creek mouths—they’re starting to stage and looking for an easy meal before heading upstream.Local hot spots to check out: - Jeff Head is producing the steadiest blackmouth numbers for boaters working 90-130 feet with spoons or hoochies.- Lincoln Park shoreline is kicking out bankable coho on pink jigs, especially during those prime dawn and dusk bites.Inland, Lake Washington is cooling quickly, but still coughs up cutthroat to slow-trolled wedding rings tipped with worm near drop-offs, per Gone Fishing Northwest. If you’re after weirdness or just want a guaranteed fish, spotted ratfish are abundant near Friday Harbor and around the ferry lanes—patience and a chunk of herring near bottom may land you one of these prehistoric oddities.Thanks for tuning in to this morning’s Puget Sound fishing report with Artificial Lure. Remember to subscribe so you’re first to hear what’s biting next. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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