Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report Today Podcast Por Inception Point Ai arte de portada

Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report Today

Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report Today

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Dive into the "Pacific Ocean, Oregon Fishing Report Today," your go-to podcast for the latest fishing updates and insights along the stunning Oregon coast. Perfect for fishing enthusiasts and professionals, this podcast provides daily reports on weather conditions, fish activity, and expert tips for a successful fishing trip in the Pacific Ocean. Stay informed and enhance your fishing experience with timely updates and local know-how from seasoned Oregon fishermen.

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  • Central Oregon Coast Bottomfish Bite Holds Strong Amid Changeable Conditions
    Dec 5 2025
    This is Artificial Lure with your Pacific Ocean Oregon coastal report, coming to you like a local standing at the rail with a thermos in hand. Conditions offshore have been bumpy lately, so effort has been light, but the crews that slipped out between fronts found some decent bottom action and a few good windows around the tides.

    Along the central coast out of Newport and Depoe Bay, bottomfish have been the main game, with black rockfish, deacon rockfish, and a fair mix of legal lingcod making up most of the coolers for the few boats that got out. Nearshore reefs in 60–120 feet are producing best when the swell drops and the wind lays down, especially on the flood tide. To the south, out of Charleston and Brookings, pressure has been spotty and catches slower, but patient anglers are still scratching out rockfish and the odd lingcod when seas allow.

    For tides, think early-morning low rolling into a strong mid‑day high, with a decent exchange that perks up the bite as that water starts marching in. Plan your launch so you’re set up on structure an hour or two before the high and ride that moving water for your best shot. Sunrise is roughly mid‑7s in the morning with early‑evening sunsets, so you’ve got a short winter day and want to make that prime mid‑day tide count.

    Weather along the coast is classic December: chilly, damp, and changeable. Expect cool temps in the 40s to low 50s, passing showers, and plenty of cloud cover, with lulls between fronts that give those small windows of workable ocean. Wind is your deciding factor—lighter morning winds shifting onshore and building through the afternoon are the pattern, and anything more than a modest breeze stacked on top of a long‑period swell will shut down most of the small‑boat fleet.

    Fish activity has followed the weather. When the bar is passable, rockfish have been willing on the first part of the flood, and lingcod are chewing better on days with a little color in the water and steady current. Ocean salmon and halibut are closed now, so it’s all about bottomfish and nearshore opportunities. Inshore, surf anglers poking the sandy pockets between rocky fingers are finding a few surfperch when the swell backs off enough to work a Carolina rig in the foam.

    For lures, think heavy and simple. Metal jigs from 4 to 8 ounces in blue, green, or glow patterns jigged tight to the bottom are solid for both rockfish and lingcod. Large swimbaits on stout leadheads—white, root beer, or motor oil—are producing well when slow‑rolled just off the rocks. Bait anglers are doing best with herring strips, squid, or sand shrimp on standard bottom rigs; adding a bit of scent is worth the extra step in that cold winter water.

    A couple of hot spots to circle on the chart:
    - The nearshore reefs just north and south of Depoe Bay, where short runs and tight structure give you a shot at mixed rockfish and lingcod when the swell window opens.
    - The rockpiles and nearshore humps off Newport, particularly the hard bottom west of Yaquina Head, which can fish very well around mid‑day high tides when the current lines up.

    That’s the word from the salt—tight lines, keep an eye on the bar reports, and don’t forget those reduced marine bag limits and species restrictions before you head out. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure 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
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    4 m
  • Oregon Coast Fishing Report: Steelhead, Tides, and Hot Spots for Thursday's Action
    Dec 4 2025
    Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Thursday morning fishing report for the Oregon coast. Let me break down what's happening out there today.

    **Tides and Timing**

    We've got some solid tidal action this morning at Pacific City on the Nestucca River. Low tide hit early at 5:05 AM with about 2 feet 9 inches, and we're looking at a high tide pushing 10 feet 50 inches around mid-morning. Sunrise was 7:38 AM, so you've got a short window if you're heading out at first light. Sunset comes at 4:33 PM, so make your moves while you've got daylight.

    **Fish Activity**

    The big story right now is winter steelhead. We're in prime season, and anglers are targeting these chrome-bright runners as they make their spawning runs. Sea lions have been hammering salmon at the dams, which means more pressure on wild fish, but the returning steelhead populations remain strong. Over in Coos Bay, guides are actively chasing winter steelhead through December, and conditions are atmospheric as the coast gets that classic winter edge.

    **What's Working**

    For steelhead, you'll want to go with classic presentations. Swimbaits in trout patterns are pulling fish—especially 4.8 to 6-inch options in natural colors. If you're working the drops, Roboworms in traditional patterns are absolutely reliable. Chartreuse and natural colors are your bread and butter right now. Don't sleep on jigs either—black and blue combinations are still producing when worked shallow along the banks.

    **Hot Spots**

    Hit the Nestucca Bay area where those tide changes are creating feeding windows, or head south to Coos Bay where the steelhead bite is consistent. Both spots offer good access and current-driven structure that puts fish in predictable zones.

    Get out there and tight lines. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe for more daily reports. 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
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    2 m
  • Pacific Ocean Fishing Update: Cooler Temps, Shifting Bite, and Manageable Conditions
    Dec 3 2025
    **PACIFIC OCEAN FISHING REPORT - WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3RD, 2025**

    Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Wednesday morning fishing update for the Oregon coast. Let me break down what's happening out on the water today.

    **TIDES & CONDITIONS**

    We're looking at some decent tidal movement this morning. Low tide came through early around 3:24 AM, and we've got a solid high tide building around mid-morning. Water temps are cooling down as we head into winter, which means the fish are shifting their behavior patterns. Conditions should be manageable today compared to recent weeks—the persistent northern winds that have been hammering the bay are finally easing up, so you should be able to get out without fighting too much chop.

    **WHAT'S BITING**

    Recent reports from around Nestucca Bay and the surrounding waters show sierra, trevally, and pompano are active when anglers can get windows between the wind. Jack crevalle and amberjack are showing up too. The cooler water temps we're seeing are actually triggering better feeding windows, especially during the slack tide periods.

    **GEAR & PRESENTATION**

    For lures, you'll want to throw some smaller profiles—artificial presentations are working well in these conditions. Light tackle with live bait is producing consistent results in the inshore areas. If you're working deeper water, try some jigging with natural-looking patterns. The key right now is matching the hatch and working areas where the bait is concentrated but not stacked so thick the fish ignore it.

    **HOTSPOTS**

    Nestucca Bay entrance is your prime zone today—good water movement on the incoming tide. Pacific City area is also worth investigating if you can handle the short run.

    Thanks for tuning in to your Wednesday fishing forecast. Make sure you subscribe for daily updates. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease 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
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    2 m
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