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Oregon fishing reports

125 reports for Oregon — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.

125
Current reports
4
Regions covered
6
Hot bites
59°F
Avg water temp
ORColumbia & Rogue
Freshwater

Columbia Smallmouth and Rogue Springers Roll as May Temps Surge

USGS gauge 14211720 recorded 7,770 cfs and 64°F before dawn on May 17 — warmer than typical for mid-May, pushing Columbia River smallmouth bass squarely into post-spawn feeding mode while keeping the Rogue's spring Chinook window open. Specific on-the-water catch reports for this corridor are limited this cycle, but Tactical Bassin's current content confirms the bluegill spawn is in full swing nationally, with big bass targeting shallow, heavy cover — a pattern that translates directly to Columbia smallmouth on riprap and rocky points. For fly anglers, Hatch Magazine's coverage of caddis emergences is well-timed: May is when Oregon's interior rivers typically ignite with caddis activity, and the Rogue canyon is no exception. Rogue spring Chinook remain the headline target for drift-boat and bank anglers through early June. At 64°F, fish will be seeking deeper, oxygenated lies — back-trolling plugs in canyon tailouts during early-morning windows is the typical approach. Verify current retention and hatchery rules before keeping any salmonid.

64°F
water · 7-day
Spring Chinook Salmon
Active bite
Spring Chinook SalmonSmallmouth BassSummer Steelhead
ORDeschutes & Upper Klamath
Freshwater

Deschutes redsides and Klamath trout enter prime mid-May window

Hatch Magazine's current deep-dive on caddis emergences is well-timed for the Deschutes corridor, where mid-May historically overlaps the salmonfly hatch and the season's first strong caddis push — the river's most celebrated dry-fly window. USGS gauge 14070500 returned no flow or temperature data for this report cycle, leaving us without a hydrograph. With today's New Moon, low-light windows at dawn and dusk should concentrate redside rainbows in riffles and tailouts. MidCurrent's pattern roundup this week highlights midge-style ties for clear, pressured tailrace water, a practical note for lower Deschutes sections where clear-water finesse often outpaces attractor patterns after heavy angling pressure. Upper Klamath Lake trout typically push into shallower margins through May before warming water encourages a deeper retreat. No shop, charter, or agency reports specific to this drainage appeared in this cycle — treat condition notes as seasonal baseline, not confirmed on-the-water intel.

N/A
water temp
Rainbow Trout (Redside)
Active bite
Rainbow Trout (Redside)Brown TroutSteelhead
ORColumbia River salmon & sturgeon
Freshwater

Columbia Spring Chinook Running as Snowmelt Pushes Flows High

USGS gauge 14105700 recorded 261,000 cfs and 58°F on the evening of May 16 — a reading that places the Columbia squarely in peak spring Chinook territory. Water at 58°F sits at the upper edge of the prime migration range for spring kings, and the elevated flow reflects active Cascade snowmelt typical for mid-May. No charter, tackle-shop, or state agency catch reports for this region appeared in this cycle's intel feeds; the assessment below is grounded in gauge data and seasonal patterns. IFish.net Fishing Reports posts for the Columbia corridor lean toward lost-and-found items rather than catch tallies, offering no specific current-conditions signal. White sturgeon are a year-round Columbia resident; elevated flows typically push them into deeper mid-channel structure and reward heavy anchor rigs over lighter setups. Verify current retention windows with state regulations before targeting either species — both spring Chinook and sturgeon seasons carry specific harvest rules that vary by reach.

58°F
water · 7-day
Spring Chinook Salmon
Active bite
Spring Chinook SalmonWhite Sturgeon
OROregon Coast
Saltwater

Spring Chinook and Nearshore Rockfish in the Mix on the Oregon Coast

NOAA buoys off the Oregon Coast recorded surface water temperatures of 54–56°F on May 17, a cool productive band that typically drives spring Chinook salmon and nearshore rockfish action. Western Outdoor News — Saltwater reported this week that similar 54°F readings off California's Half Moon Bay coincided with "vastly improved salmon conditions" after a temperature drop — a pattern that broadly mirrors Oregon's upwelling-driven spring dynamic. Dedicated Oregon Coast charter and shop intel is absent from this data cycle, so on-the-ground conditions should be confirmed with local operators before any offshore run. Bar crossings on the Oregon Coast deserve fresh intelligence regardless of season. That said, mid-May is historically a core spring Chinook window, nearshore rockfish are reliably active in these water temperatures, and the Pacific halibut spring season is typically underway — verify current ODFW quota status and slot rules before targeting halibut, as this fishery can close quickly once allocation is reached.

55°F
water · 7-day
Chinook Salmon
Active bite
Chinook SalmonRockfishPacific Halibut
ORColumbia & Rogue
Freshwater

Columbia and Rogue hit their spring stride for Chinook and steelhead

USGS gauge 14211720 logged 16,200 cfs and 64°F on the evening of May 16 — flows carrying the tail of Cascade snowmelt, water temperatures now squarely in the prime range for salmon and steelhead activity on the Columbia system. Spring Chinook are the headline species on the Columbia in mid-May, typically concentrated in deep mainstem pools and below tailraces as fish work steadily upriver. The Rogue follows a similar script, with spring Chinook reaching mid-river reaches by this point in the season and summer steelhead beginning to stage in the lower canyon. No specific charter, shop, or agency reports are available in our current intel feeds for these waters this week; conditions here reflect the gauge data and established seasonal patterns for the region. The new moon on May 17 can favor compressed low-light feeding windows — early morning and the final hour before dark are typically the most productive periods for both salmon and bass at this lunar phase.

64°F
water · 7-day
Spring Chinook Salmon
Active bite
Spring Chinook SalmonSummer SteelheadAmerican Shad
OROregon Coast
Saltwater

Spring Chinook Active at the Columbia Bar as Oregon Coast Season Hits Stride

Water temps along the Oregon Coast are holding in the mid-to-upper 50s — buoy 46029 near the Columbia River Bar logged 57°F on the morning of May 13, with offshore station 46002 reading 56°F. Winds are calm to moderate across the coastal buoy network (3–7 m/s), making bar crossings manageable for the salmon fleet. The headline angler intel comes from Saltwater Sportsman, which recently spotlighted the Buoy 10 fishery out of Astoria and Warrenton: Capt. Hugh Harris describes close-quartered battles with chinook and coho at the Columbia River mouth, noting these fish have faced down orcas, pinnipeds, and commercial fishing pressure without faltering. With the spring chinook run in its prime window and water temperatures sitting squarely in the productive mid-50s, salmon remain the clear priority. Nearshore halibut and rockfish are seasonally appropriate for mid-May but carry no direct angler reports in this cycle — check ODFW regulations before harvesting any flatfish or groundfish.

57°F
water · 7-day
Chinook Salmon
Hot bite
Chinook SalmonCoho SalmonPacific Halibut
OROregon Coast
Saltwater

Spring Chinook Running Hot at Oregon's Columbia River Mouth

Water temps are holding at 56–57°F along the Oregon Coast per NOAA buoys 46029 and 46002, with spring chinook and coho salmon pushing toward the Columbia River mouth. Saltwater Sportsman highlights the Buoy 10 fishery near Astoria and Warrenton, where Capt. Hugh Harris describes pre-dawn armadas of river sleds targeting fish that have survived orcas, pinnipeds, and commercial gear — setting up close-quartered battles at the lower Columbia. Offshore, seas are running 5–6 feet (NOAA buoys 46002 and 46050), which will keep many smaller boats in protected water for now. Halibut and rockfish remain seasonal targets along the nearshore banks when seas allow, though no current charter or tackle-shop intel arrived this cycle to sharpen the bite picture. Confirm current retention windows and area rules with Oregon regulations before heading out — halibut and salmon dates can shift with little notice in May.

57°F
water · 7-day
Chinook Salmon
Hot bite
Chinook SalmonCoho SalmonPacific Halibut
ORColumbia River salmon & sturgeon
Freshwater

Spring Chinook season peaks on the Columbia amid heavy snowmelt

Water temperature at 58°F on the Columbia (USGS gauge 14105700, May 12) places the river squarely in the productive range for spring Chinook salmon, while flows running at 178,000 cfs reflect a system elevated with mid-May snowmelt. This week's regional intel feeds returned no bite-specific updates for the main-stem Columbia — IFish.net Fishing Reports from the Oregon stretch posted only lost-gear notices rather than fishing updates, leaving conditions to be read primarily through gauge data and seasonal patterns. At 58°F, spring Chinook are metabolically active and moving through lower-river water; elevated flows will push fish tight to current seams, slack-water eddies, and slower pockets behind channel structure. White sturgeon remain resident in deep-water holes throughout the system and concentrate near prey-rich scour areas during high-runoff periods. Lower-river anglers should time presentations around incoming tide windows, when Columbia current briefly slackens and fish stack in predictable holding water.

58°F
water · 7-day
Spring Chinook
Active bite
Spring ChinookWhite SturgeonSummer Steelhead
OROregon Coast
Saltwater

Spring Chinook On the Move at Oregon's Columbia Mouth

NOAA buoys 46002 and 46029 both read 57°F offshore this week — solidly within the window that concentrates spring Chinook near Oregon's tidal zones. Saltwater Sportsman reports active chinook and coho fishing at Buoy 10 near Astoria and Warrenton, with Capt. Hugh Harris describing a fleet of river sleds converging on the Columbia River mouth for close-quarters battles with fish that have survived the full Pacific gauntlet. Offshore, a 4.6-foot swell at buoy 46002 and winds running 7–9 m/s across multiple stations will limit access for smaller craft; pick morning windows before the afternoon thermal builds. Bottom fishing for rockfish and lingcod typically picks up through mid-May as nearshore reefs settle into spring patterns, and Pacific halibut is typically in season now — check current regulations before heading out for bag limits and area closures.

57°F
water · 7-day
Chinook Salmon
Hot bite
Chinook SalmonCoho SalmonRockfish / Lingcod
ORColumbia & Rogue
Freshwater

Spring Chinook peak meets post-spawn bass on the Columbia & Rogue

USGS gauge 14211720 logged 65°F and 9,510 cfs on the evening of May 11, signaling a warming pulse that accelerates mid-spring transitions across the Columbia and Rogue systems. Spring Chinook remain the marquee fishery on both rivers through late May. The 65°F reading is especially significant for smallmouth bass: Wired 2 Fish notes that spring warmth consistently pushes bass into shallow, aggressive feeding windows — some of the best of the season. Tactical Bassin reports that bass are navigating the post-spawn and early-summer transition right now, with topwater and swimbait presentations both producing when anglers adapt quickly to the daily pattern. On the Rogue's fly-water reaches, MidCurrent's recent caddis emergence coverage points to improving dry-fly and swing-fly conditions as freestone temperatures rise. Flows above 9,500 cfs favor drift-boat and jet-sled access on the main stems; wade anglers should target shallower side channels and tributary mouths.

65°F
water · 7-day
Spring Chinook
Active bite
Spring ChinookSmallmouth BassAmerican Shad
ORDeschutes & Upper Klamath
Freshwater

Deschutes & Klamath enter prime caddis and dry-fly window in mid-May

Hatch Magazine's recent primer on fishing caddis emergences arrives right on cue for the Deschutes, which is historically entering its most productive dry-fly window of the year in mid-May. The piece delivers directly applicable advice: matching the ascending pupa in the surface film typically outperforms the adult caddis dry during peak evening hatch activity. MidCurrent's current tying content echoes the timing, featuring patterns designed for 'as hatches begin to fire' — including a midge-style tie recommended for 'clear, pressured water of stillwaters and tailraces' that maps cleanly onto Deschutes tailwater. USGS gauge 14070500 returned no flow or temperature data at report time; verify conditions locally before making the drive. Redsides are seasonally expected to be active on soft-hackle wets and elk-hair caddis. On the Upper Klamath side, warming spring temps should be pushing resident trout and bass into shallower structure. No direct on-the-water reports from this drainage arrived in this cycle — conditions below reflect seasonal expectations for the date.

N/A
water temp
Rainbow Trout
Active bite
Rainbow TroutBrown TroutLargemouth Bass
OROregon Coast
Saltwater

Salmon Stacking at Buoy 10 as Oregon Coast's Spring Chinook Push Arrives

Water temps at the Columbia River Bar are holding at 57°F (NOAA buoy 46029), and spring Chinook and coho are putting on a show at the river mouth. Saltwater Sportsman features current reporting on Buoy 10 action near Astoria and Warrenton, with Captain Hugh Harris describing pre-dawn armadas of river sleds targeting fish that have never faced a losing battle on their ocean run. The mid-May window is a prime one for spring Chinook along the Oregon Coast, and the angler intel this week matches that expectation. Winds at the Columbia Bar are running a manageable 6 m/s (NOAA buoy 46029), though the outer-coast reading at buoy 46050 is a stiffer 10 m/s—bar timing and sea-state awareness remain essential. Down the coast, rockfish and lingcod are typical mid-May targets over nearshore reefs at these water temperatures, though no current charter or shop reports are available to confirm bite quality. Verify Oregon state regulations before retaining any salmon.

57°F
water · 7-day
Chinook Salmon
Hot bite
Chinook SalmonCoho SalmonRockfish