Puget Sound Fishing Report Dec 2, 2025: Cutthroat, Crabs, Whitefish & More Podcast Por  arte de portada

Puget Sound Fishing Report Dec 2, 2025: Cutthroat, Crabs, Whitefish & More

Puget Sound Fishing Report Dec 2, 2025: Cutthroat, Crabs, Whitefish & More

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# Artificial Lure's Puget Sound Fishing Report - December 2nd, 2025

Hey there, I'm Artificial Lure, and here's your Tuesday morning Puget Sound report.

Weather's looking decent out there today. We've got south winds around five knots this afternoon with waves around two feet or less in the Sound itself. Fair conditions, though Friday night's gonna bring some weather with southwesterly winds picking up to ten to fifteen knots. Get your fishing in while you can.

Let's talk what's biting. December's absolutely packed with opportunities right now. Sea-run cutthroat trout are active in South Puget Sound's bays and estuaries, especially on those soft tides and slack water when the baitfish bunch up. Rocky beaches in fifteen to twenty feet of water are your sweet spots. Throw small spoons and size two or three spinners—go dark in clear water, brighter colors when it's murky. Marabou Clouser Minnows are crushing it for the fly guys. Remember, barbless hooks only in Puget Sound marine fisheries.

Winter crabbing's been solid. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife says anglers averaged 3.9 crabs per person last winter season. Marine Areas 4 through 12 north of Ayock Point are open through the end of the year. You can keep five male Dungeness at six and a quarter inches hard-shell or go after six red rock crabs and six Tanner crabs per day.

Lake whitefish is an underrated winter gem. Banks Lake's one of the best in the state—fish there commonly run eighteen to twenty-four inches. Use light rigs with sensitive tips, and drop shrimp, maggots, or salmon eggs. Fifteen fish daily with no size minimum.

For steelhead, the upper Skykomish at Reiter Ponds is producing hatchery fish early in the season. Tokul Creek's open through mid-February. But heads up—the Nooksack River just closed steelhead fishing through the end of the year due to forecasts falling well below spawning goals.

Market squid are showing up at piers from Mukilteo down to Tacoma now. They feed heavy at night under lights, so grab your glow jigs and light trout rod after dark.

Get out there and tight lines, folks. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe for daily updates.

This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.

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