Oregon fishing reports
131 reports for Oregon — what's biting, water temps, and where to focus.
Columbia Transitions to Summer Chinook as Spring Kings Wind Down
Drought-driven fish kills spreading across western reservoirs — covered this week by Wired 2 Fish in reporting on Arizona's San Carlos Lake and broader western declines — provide sobering regional backdrop to a Columbia River cycle that arrived with no live buoy or gauge readings and no in-river catch reports from any citable source. Absent real-time data, conditions below reflect typical mid-June patterns for this stretch. Spring Chinook, which peak below Bonneville in April and May, are winding down by the second week of June; the focus shifts to early summer kings moving into the lower and mid-Columbia. White sturgeon hold year-round in deeper tailouts and below each dam, and the New Moon on June 15 historically corresponds with increased bottom-feeding windows in slack-current zones. IFish.net produced only lost-gear posts for this cycle with no verifiable Columbia River bite intel. Check ODFW current rules for your zone before harvesting salmon or sturgeon — regulations vary significantly by section and run timing.
Columbia smallmouth peak as mid-June warmth settles in
USGS gauge 14211720 logged 67°F on Sunday afternoon, putting the lower Columbia River squarely in prime smallmouth bass territory. That reading aligns with what Outdoor Hub reports from the broader Columbia Basin: the summer tournament calendar is running full tilt on Washington's side of the system, with Moses Lake, Potholes Reservoir, and Banks Lake all hosting events through August, and Oregon anglers on the south bank should find parallel conditions along rock shelves and channel edges. On the Rogue, the picture is more guarded. Hatch Magazine's recent drought coverage warns that rising summer temperatures and low water are stressing trout across the West; the Rogue's upper reaches are almost certainly sharing that pressure, and early-morning sessions before the warmth builds are the practical response. New moon this weekend typically tightens feeding windows to low-light hours at dawn and dusk. Specific Oregon catch reports are sparse this cycle.
Summer Chinook Opening as Spring Push Tapers on the Lower Columbia
Water temperatures at 63°F and flows holding at 127,000 cfs (USGS gauge 14105700) place the Columbia River in a familiar mid-June transitional window. The spring Chinook run, the river's signature migration, typically crests in April and May; by mid-June that push is winding toward its close while early summer Chinook begin staging in the lower river. Direct catch reports for salmon and sturgeon are thin in this week's regional intel feeds, so conditions here draw on gauge readings and established seasonal patterns for this stretch of the lower Columbia. White sturgeon, present in the river year-round, are the most reliably active target right now, holding in deeper slots and back eddies that offer relief from the current at these flow levels. Tonight's new moon opens a favorable low-light feeding window over the next several days. Check current state regulations before targeting Chinook, as retention rules shift with weekly escapement counts and hatchery-wild accounting.
Columbia and Rogue summer steelhead arriving as smallmouth hit peak
USGS gauge 14211720 recorded 26,500 cfs and 66°F on the morning of June 14, marking the Columbia system's mid-June snowmelt flow. Water at 66°F sits at the upper comfort margin for salmonids. Field & Stream's temperature guide notes that trout face increasing physiological stress as readings approach the high 60s, making early-morning sessions essential on exposed mainstem reaches. Summer steelhead are entering their seasonal push on Columbia tributaries and the Rogue, best targeted in riffles and tailouts during low-light windows. Smallmouth bass are in prime season across the Columbia basin's rocky structure at these temperatures. Spring Chinook, which typically peaks by early June on Oregon's major rivers, is winding down as fish push into upper holding lies. Hatch Magazine flags drought-driven warming across Western river systems this season as a pattern pressing salmonids toward cooler, oxygenated water, worth keeping in mind on the Rogue's more exposed lower stretches.
Columbia Smallmouth Peak as Summer Chinook and Steelhead Begin to Show
USGS gauge 14211720 logged 66°F and 15,400 cfs on the lower Columbia on June 13 — water temperatures that push smallmouth bass squarely into their prime summer feeding window while raising caution flags for cold-water species. Field & Stream's recent trout temperature guide notes that fish approaching and above 65°F face mounting physiological stress, making early-morning outings essential for any Rogue trout angler who wants fish to survive release. Summer Chinook are in their June push through the Columbia mainstem, and early summer steelhead have begun entering the Rogue system. Hatch Magazine's current feature on fishing through drought and warming water across western rivers underscores a theme relevant here: know your temperatures, fish before the heat builds, and give cold-water species quick, clean releases. With the new moon arriving June 14, low-light windows around dawn and dusk are the best shots across all species. Check state regs before retaining any salmon or steelhead, as selective fishery rules typically apply on summer runs.
Columbia River transitions to summer Chinook as high flows persist
USGS gauge 14105700 recorded the Columbia River running at 208,000 cfs and 62°F on June 13, elevated flow consistent with late-season snowmelt that shapes angler strategy heading into the summer Chinook window. Spring Chinook (springer) season is winding down across most Columbia mainstem reaches, and early summer-run Chinook are beginning their push upriver. At 62°F, water temps remain within a comfortable range for salmon, though continued warming through late June will factor heavily into fish holding and biting behavior. The new moon arriving June 14 historically correlates with stronger tidal pull in the lower Columbia, which can consolidate bait and nudge both salmon and sturgeon into more active feeding postures near bottom structure. Specific on-the-water reports from Columbia River guides or tackle shops were limited in this reporting cycle; the conditions picture below is grounded in gauge data and established seasonal patterns for this fishery.
Columbia and Rogue shift to summer mode as warmwater bite builds
USGS gauge 14211720 is reading 67°F on the Columbia system as of Saturday afternoon, signaling that the Pacific Northwest's summer fishing transition is underway on both the Columbia and Rogue. At that temperature, smallmouth bass and walleye are entering their most productive windows of the year, while trout face real midday thermal stress. Field & Stream's current water-temperature guide for trout flags this range as approaching the stress threshold for salmonids, reinforcing the case for dawn-and-dusk-only sessions on Rogue trout water. The broader western drought picture painted by Hatch Magazine and Wired 2 Fish adds useful context: rivers across the Pacific slope are warming earlier than in wetter years, and that trend appears to be showing up here. IFish.net Forum activity from Oregon anglers is present this cycle but limited to gear-loss posts along the Columbia corridor and coast rivers — no confirmed catch-count reports from either system this week. The new moon tonight historically keeps nights dark and can concentrate predatory fish on structure at first light.
Columbia River in summer transition as spring Chinook season winds down
The USGS gauge at site 14105700 logged 156,000 cfs and 63°F on June 13, above-average spring flows that are shaping access and holding-water quality across the Columbia mainstem. At 63°F, water temperatures are on the warmer edge for migrating spring Chinook, which can push fish to move faster through lower-river sections rather than holding in traditional lies. No specific charter-captain or tackle-shop reports for this stretch appear in this week's intel feeds, so conditions here draw on gauge readings and seasonal patterns rather than direct on-water testimony. Spring Chinook, the Columbia's marquee early-season run, typically taper through mid-June as hatchery returns plateau and river temps climb. Summer Chinook begin filtering in from the estuary in late June. White sturgeon offer consistent action through the season and represent the most reliable June alternative when salmon retention windows tighten. Check ODFW regulations carefully before keeping anything: retention rules and sturgeon slot limits shift frequently as in-season counts arrive.
Oregon Coast Salmon and Halibut Season Enters Mid-June Prime Window
No real-time buoy readings are available for this report cycle, and no Oregon Coast saltwater fishing intel reached our source feeds this week. IFish.net Fishing Reports confirms angler presence in the Tillamook corridor (Wilson River referenced in recent posts), though no offshore catch data was filed this period. Mid-June is nonetheless a historically productive stretch on the Oregon Coast. Ocean Chinook salmon trolling typically runs strong through June, with anglers working herring and anchovies near river-mouth upwellings in 30 to 50 fathoms off major coastal ports including Tillamook Bay and Newport. Pacific halibut season is generally open this time of year, with charter fleets targeting sandy-bottom flats in 100 to 250 feet. Rockfish and lingcod round out the bottomfish card year-round over nearshore reefs. Today's new moon will produce moderate tidal swings, a favorable window for longer offshore runs before the weekend builds. Verify current ODFW regulations and port bar conditions before departing.
Summer heat fires up Columbia smallmouth; Rogue steelhead moving
The USGS gauge registered 66°F water and 8,310 cfs on the evening of June 12 — a combination that puts Columbia River smallmouth bass squarely in their preferred thermal sweet spot. Field & Stream's current water temperature guide places this reading at the upper boundary of comfortable range for trout and firmly in the strike zone for warm-water species. Per Wired 2 Fish's summer bass breakdown, fish are pushing into shallow structure at first light before retreating to deeper ledges as sun climbs overhead, making dawn the critical window right now. On the Rogue, June historically marks the opening of the summer steelhead push, and with flow at moderate levels, wading access on the mainstem should be reasonable. Hatch Magazine's ongoing drought coverage across the West is a relevant backdrop — anglers targeting upper-basin tributaries should verify current conditions before committing to a long drive, as smaller feeders can warm and drop faster than mainstem gauges suggest.
Summer warmth opens the bass window as steelhead push into Oregon rivers
Water temps logged at 66°F on June 12 (USGS gauge 14211720) mark a meaningful seasonal turn on Oregon's freshwater systems — that reading sits in prime territory for Columbia River smallmouth bass, which thrive in the low-to-mid 60s. Mid-Columbia basin tournament circuits are already in full swing this summer, per Outdoor Hub, confirming warmwater species are the story right now. For salmonid anglers, 66°F is a number worth watching: Field & Stream's temperature guide flags the mid-60s as the threshold where trout begin showing physiological stress, and Hatch Magazine's drought-fishing roundup reinforces that warm, lower flows across Western rivers are pressing steelhead and trout into cooler tributary holds and deeper slots. Flow at 417 cfs reflects reduced early-summer conditions. IFish.net activity shows Oregon river anglers actively on the water this week. Summer steelhead are pushing into the Rogue and Columbia tributaries on schedule, but timing early-morning sessions will be key until temps moderate.
Summer steelhead push the Rogue as Columbia smallmouth heat up
USGS gauge 14211720 logged 66°F and 15,600 cfs at dawn on June 12, signaling mid-summer warmth arriving across the Columbia and Rogue drainages. That temperature puts valley-floor trout fishing in a caution zone: Field & Stream's current guide notes trout face meaningful thermal stress as water climbs into the upper 60s, making pre-dawn sessions on shaded canyon stretches the safest bet. No specific charter or shop reports surfaced in today's regional intel. Based on seasonal patterns for mid-June in Oregon, summer-run steelhead typically push into the Rogue's lower reaches through this period, with fish staging in deeper, cool-water pools during the heat of the day. On the Columbia, smallmouth bass enter one of their most productive summer feeding windows right now. The Columbia's American shad run, typically peaking mid-May through early June, is likely tapering, though fish may still be present near active current seams.