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http://www.dfw.state.or.us
Anglers can catch rockfish around the jetties in the lower Coos Bay estuary. Best fishing is typically near slack tides with good fishing one day and fair fishing the next. A jig fished with a twister tail trailer is always a good option to catch bottomfish.
The 2024 daily general marine fish bag limit is 5 fish plus 2 lingcod with no retention of yelloweye or quillback rockfish. Anglers are allowed to harvest 1 cabezon per day as part of the general marine fish bag limit.
Salmon anglers are restricted to 2 wild adult Chinook per day and 10 for the season (July 1 – Dec. 31) in the Coos Basin. Salmon anglers are catching Chinook from the jetties all the way up to Chandler Bridge on the Coos River. Chinook fishing has been best around the slack tides below the California Street boat ramp and in Marshfield Channel/SOMAR sections of the Coos River.
There are a few coho salmon in the lower Coos estuary just in time for the wild coho season which begins on Sept. 14 and goes through Oct. 10. Anglers are allowed 1 wild adult coho per day and 3 for the season (no more than 5 wild adult coho may be harvested per year in the Northwest and Southwest Zones with open wild coho salmon fisheries).
Boat anglers are catching walleye surfperch and pile surfperch using sand shrimp along old pilings or along the edges of eel grass beds.
Trout fishing is open in rivers and streams through Oct. 31. River temperatures are starting to drop and trout fishing will start to pick back up again, especially for sea-run cutthroat trout moving upstream into the larger rivers.
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Had some really good reports from Tim and Rich and also from Phil coming from Hosmer Lake this week. Scuds and Damsel nymphs......