Puget Sound, Washington Fishing Report Today Podcast Por Inception Point Ai arte de portada

Puget Sound, Washington Fishing Report Today

Puget Sound, Washington Fishing Report Today

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"Puget Sound, Washington Fishing Today" offers anglers the latest updates on fishing conditions, tips, and hotspots in the Puget Sound area. Tune in daily for expert insights, local weather forecasts, and the best bait and tackle recommendations to enhance your fishing adventures in Washington's stunning aquatic landscape. Stay informed and make the most of your time on the water with this essential fishing podcast.

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  • Puget Sound Fishing Report: Chasing Blackmouth and Coho as Winter Fronts Roll Through
    Dec 5 2025
    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report.

    Down on the central Sound, that incoming morning tide is the play, with a decent push mid‑morning that’s been lining up nicely with the low‑light window. Work the first couple hours after daylight, then again on the afternoon ebb if the wind lets you stay out. Winter fronts are marching through, so expect gray skies, scattered rain, and a stiff southerly that can stack up a short, ugly chop once it gets above 15 knots.

    Sunrise is landing in the mid‑7 o’clock hour, with sunset creeping in just after 4, so your productive window is tight and favors early birds and last‑light grinders. Cold surface temps and short days have pushed most action deeper; think 80–140 feet on the main basins, with fish pinned to structure edges and drop‑offs rather than roaming the top.

    Resident coho and blackmouth (resident Chinook) have been the main story, with bonus flounder and the odd lingcod (where open and within rules) for folks working the humps and ridges. Catches have been modest but steady: a couple legal blackmouth per boat is realistic on a good tide, plus undersized shakers that keep rods bouncing. Squid are still around in the evenings off well‑lit piers, and crabbing effort is light, but folks dropping pots where open are scratching out enough Dungeness and reds for a weekend boil.

    For lures, keep it classic and local: 3.0–3.5 green‑glow and Irish cream spoons behind an 11‑inch flasher are money for blackmouth, especially run tight to the wire at 2.2–2.6 knots. Coho have been chewing small white hoochies and needlefish‑style spoons, with a strip of herring or anchovy to seal the deal. If you’re soaking bait from shore, fresh‑cut herring, sand shrimp, or small strip baits on a sliding rig will pick up flounder and the occasional bonus feeder salmon.

    A couple hotspots to circle on the chart: Jefferson Head has been giving up legal blackmouth on the morning flood, with boats working the contour line and staying just off the pack to find their own lane. Down south, Point Defiance and the Clay Banks continue to fish like home water—run your gear just off bottom along the ledge and be ready for that classic winter Chinook thump as the tide starts to move.

    That’s the word from around the Sound—bundle up, pick your weather window, and fish smart around tide changes. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing talk. 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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    3 m
  • Puget Sound Fishing Report: Chinook Salmon Biting, Seals Hunting, Stay Safe Out There
    Dec 4 2025
    # Artificial Lure's Puget Sound Fishing Report – Thursday, December 4th

    What's up, fellow anglers! This is Artificial Lure bringing you today's Puget Sound fishing report for December 4th, 2025.

    Let's start with the conditions. We're looking at south winds around 5 knots early today, with waves holding around 2 feet or less – pretty manageable stuff. Rain moves in later this morning and sticks around all day, so bundle up out there. Tidal-wise, we've got moderate conditions today that should keep things interesting around the key spots.

    Here's what's been happening in the Sound lately. There's been solid activity on Chinook salmon, which is fantastic for us anglers. Small baitfish patterns have been working like a charm – think sand lance, herring, and smelt imitations if you're working the fly. For conventional gear, pink salmon and Chinook are your target species right now. Winter conditions favor shrimp and euphausiid patterns, so don't sleep on those if you're experimenting.

    Fair warning though – marine mammal activity has been significant around Puget Sound. Harbor seals have been managing a healthy appetite out there, so don't get discouraged if you're seeing fewer returns than expected. It's just nature doing its thing.

    For your hot spots today, I'd suggest hitting the Puget Sound beaches for sea-run cutthroat – bring those small baitfish patterns and work methodically. The Columbia River tributaries like the Cowlitz and Lewis Rivers are also firing for steelhead if you want to venture that direction, though predation pressure remains heavy.

    Urban water quality in the Sound has been a concern lately, so consider staying in the cleaner tributaries if possible. Your best bets are proven producers – live bait, sand eels, and herring work great for Chinook. Keep your presentation tight and your expectations realistic given current conditions.

    Thanks for tuning in to today's report! Make sure to subscribe for your daily updates on what's biting around the Pacific Northwest. Get out there safely and respect the water.

    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
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    2 m
  • Puget Sound Fishing Report: Cutthroat Trout, Crab, Whitefish, and Squid in December
    Dec 3 2025
    Good morning, I'm Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report for Wednesday, December 3rd, 2025.

    Weather's looking solid today, folks. We're expecting south winds around five knots this afternoon with waves around two feet or less in the Sound itself—fair conditions for getting out there. But heads up, Friday night's bringing some weather with southwesterly winds picking up to ten to fifteen knots, so get your fishing in while you can.

    Let's talk tides. Today we've got some excellent slack water periods coming up, which is prime time for sea-run cutthroat trout in South Puget Sound's bays and estuaries. The baitfish bunch up during those soft tides, making it a golden opportunity.

    December's absolutely packed with opportunities right now. Sea-run cutthroat are active on rocky beaches in fifteen to twenty feet of water. Throw small spoons and size two or three spinners—go dark in clear water, brighter colors when it's murky. If you're a fly angler, Marabou Clouser Minnows are crushing it. Remember, barbless hooks only in Puget Sound marine fisheries.

    Winter crabbing's been solid. 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. Anglers averaged 3.9 crabs per person last winter season.

    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.

    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.

    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.

    Hot spots to hit: South Puget Sound bays for cutthroat, Banks Lake for whitefish, and the lit piers around Tacoma for evening squid jigging.

    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.

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

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