Puget Sound Seattle Fishing Report Today

Tune in to "Puget Sound, Seattle Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of the latest fishing conditions, expert tips, and local hot spots. Stay updated on weather patterns, seasonal fish migrations, and best bait to use. Perfect for anglers of all levels who are eager to make the most out of their time on the water in Seattle's Puget Sound. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

  1. 10h ago

    Early Summer Puget Sound: Long Days, Moving Water, and Steady Bottomfish Action

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re rolling into a classic early-summer pattern around Seattle. Light morning marine layer, then partial clearing with highs in the mid‑60s to low‑70s, and a light onshore breeze most of the day. Typical Sound stuff: calmer early, a little chop and wind in the afternoon as the tide starts running. Around Seattle, sunrise is right around 5:10 in the morning, with sunset near 9:10 in the evening. That gives you long low‑light windows; first light to about 8 a.m. and then 7 p.m. to dark have been the best bite periods. Tides in central Puget Sound today are running a moderate exchange: a decent morning ebb, a softer mid‑day flood, then a stronger evening ebb. Think “fish the moving water” – the last half of the ebb and first half of the flood have been most productive. On the near‑slack turns, drop to the bottom for flounder, sand dabs, and the odd dogfish. Resident coho and sublegal blackmouth are still poking around. Most folks trolling from Shilshole down toward West Point have been seeing a mix of shaker chinook, small coho, and some nice sea‑run cutthroat closer to shore. Nothing red‑hot, but enough action to keep rods moving when you stick with it. Lingcod is wrapping up, but the structure spots are still holding fish. Anglers working the rocky humps outside Elliott Bay and off Fourmile Rock have been picking up lings and cabezon earlier in the day before the boat traffic wakes everything up. Closer to the beaches, pile perch, shiner perch, and the occasional greenling are giving shore anglers some steady fun. For numbers, bottomfish have been the most consistent: multiple reports of anglers boxing limits of flounder and sand dabs in 60–120 feet off Alki and Bainbridge edges, with by‑catch of small rockfish in the mix. Salmon catches are more scattered: a handful of legal‑size resident coho and a few keeper‑size blackmouth per boat on the better tides if you cover water and work the contours. Best lures right now: – For salmon: 3–3.5" white, herring‑aid, or Irish cream spoons behind an 11" flasher; small hootchies in UV white or glow green with a 30–36" leader. – For surf and beach cutthroat: olive‑over‑white Clouser minnows, small baitfish patterns, or 1/4 oz metal jigs in candlefish colors. – For lingcod and structure fish: 4–6" swimbaits in rootbeer, motor oil, or white, and 4–6 oz pipe jigs in glow or chrome. Best bait: – Herring, either plug‑cut or whole, is still king for trolling. – Sand shrimp and squid strips for perch and bottomfish off the piers. – A chunk of herring or squid on a sliding rig will find flounder fast on the flats. A couple of local hot spots to put on your list: – **West Point / Discovery Park**: Fish 80–140 feet on the edges for resident coho and blackmouth on the morning ebb, then slide shallower toward the beach in the evening for sea‑run cutthroat with light tackle or the fly rod. – **Alki Point to Alki Reef**: Troll the contour break for bait and salmon early, then drop bait rigs straight down for flounder and sand dabs once the sun gets higher. On calmer evenings, casting small metals from shore can surprise you with cutthroat and the occasional coho drive‑by. If you’re heading out from a kayak or smaller skiff, stick tight to shorelines early, watch those tide rips around points, and keep an eye on the afternoon wind bumps. That’s it from Artificial Lure today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

    4 min
  2. 1d ago

    Puget Sound Early Summer: Stable Conditions, Solid Bottomfish, and Early Salmon Rumors

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report for the Seattle area. We’re sitting on an early-summer pattern now: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and generally stable conditions. Expect morning temps in the low to mid‑50s, climbing into the mid‑60s later, with light onshore breeze and a mix of clouds and sun typical of June in the Sound. The National Weather Service is calling for only a slight chance of light showers and manageable winds under about 10–15 knots, so small boats and kayaks should be fine—just watch that afternoon chop. Sunrise is right around 5:10 a.m., with sunset near 9:10 p.m., giving you a big window to work both low‑light bites. Dawn has been the prime time for bigger fish, with a smaller but steady evening flurry once boat traffic dies down. Tide-wise, Puget Sound tide tables show a decent early morning outgoing followed by a midday low and a good flood pushing in through the afternoon. That moving water around points and pinch‑zones is what’s lighting things up—slack tides have been pretty dead. Salmon action inside the central Sound is still spotty, but there are rumors of early resident coho and the odd blackmouth showing along West Point and Possession Bar. Most of the better hookups have come working 80–120 feet with small green‑splatterback hoochies or 3‑4 inch white/green spoons behind an 11‑inch flasher, trolled tight to the bottom on the outgoing. Bottomfish are carrying this week. Local reports from tackle shops around Ballard and Edmonds say there’s been solid lingcod and cabezon earlier in the season and now consistent kelp greenling and rockfish in legal areas, plus strong catches of pile perch and shiner perch off piers. Shore anglers on the Seattle waterfront, Edmonds, and Des Moines have been seeing schools of surf smelt and herring pushing bait close, which in turn brings in the predators. For bait and lures, think small and natural. Herring strips, sand shrimp, and pile worms under a sliding float have been money for perch and piling‑oriented species. For lings and bigger rockfish in open areas, 3–6 ounce lead‑head jigs tipped with curly‑tail grubs or whole herring have produced. Folks tossing from shore are doing well with 1/2‑ to 1‑ounce metal jigs in candlefish colors—silver, blue, and green—and small white soft‑plastic paddletails on 3/8‑ounce heads. A few hot spots to put on your list: • West Point, off Discovery Park: Fish the edges of the drop‑off on the outgoing tide for early coho and the occasional resident chinook, along with good bottomfish. Troll or jig right along the contour. • Possession Bar: Classic structure, strong currents. Work the top and edges of the bar on the flood for salmon, or jig metal vertically for lings and rockfish where regulations allow. Closer to town, Elliott Bay piers and the Seattle waterfront are producing mixed perch and the occasional flounder for folks soaking bait. Light leaders, small hooks, and fresh bait are key—this isn’t power‑trolling water, it’s finesse time. Overall fish activity is moderate but consistent: not a wide‑open bite, but anglers putting in a tide or two with the right gear are coming home with good numbers of perch and some quality bottomfish, plus a shot at early salmon if they work deeper structure. That’s the word from your local waters. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget 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

    4 min
  3. 2d ago

    Early Summer Coho and Cutthroat: Puget Sound Tides Turn On This Week

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report for the Seattle area. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern. Light morning winds, mostly calm seas, and mild temps topping out in the mid‑60s with cloud cover burning off into some sun this afternoon. Sunrise was right around 5:10 a.m., with sunset close to 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work the tide swings. Tides around Seattle today are running big enough to matter. Expect a decent morning ebb, a midday low, then a flooding tide pushing bait right up onto the edges of points, rips, and current seams. Focus your serious fishing around the last two hours of the ebb and the first two of the flood. That’s when the predators wake up. Inshore, resident coho and blackmouth-sized Chinook have been nosing around West Point, Meadow Point, and the shipping lanes off Elliott Bay. Anglers have been quietly picking up small keepers and shakers trolling 3–3.5 inch needlefish and herring‑pattern spoons behind flashers, plus white or glow hootchies. Run your gear 60–120 feet down, just above the bait balls. Sea‑run cutthroat reports from the east side beaches of Bainbridge and the south end of Whidbey have been solid. Folks wading the pockets and drop‑offs are seeing fish slashing bait, especially on the turn of the tide. Strip small olive‑over‑white Clouser minnows, sand lance patterns, or cast 1/4‑oz metal jigs and 3-inch soft plastics in sand lance colors. Keep moving until you find birds, bait, or surface pops. Lingcod and rockfish action has been steady on the deeper structure while the season’s open. The artificial‑reef edges, Tacoma Narrows, and the rocky humps off Point Jefferson are worth a look. Drop 4–6 oz leadheads with big white or root‑beer grubs, or yo‑yo metal jigs tight to the bottom. Keep it slow and close to the rocks, but watch your snags. On the bait side, herring is still king offshore—either cut‑plug or whole behind a flasher. Closer to the beach, think sand lance imitations: small profile plastics, slim spoons, and small bucktail jigs. Tip jigs with a little strip of herring or squid if you want extra scent in the slower periods. Couple of hot spots to put on your short list: - West Point to Meadow Point: troll the 90–140 foot contour with spoons and hootchies on the morning ebb. - Lincoln Park to Brace Point: excellent for beach cutthroat on the early flood, casting toward current seams and little points. Overall fish activity has been best at first light and again on the evening flood. Midday can get quiet, so either go deep for lings or switch to finesse tactics for cutts and resident coho. That’s the rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget 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

    3 min
  4. 3d ago

    Early Summer Puget Sound: Coho, Cutthroat, and Tide Changes

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool, gray early-summer pattern around Seattle today. Light on‑and‑off marine layer clouds, a light breeze most of the morning, and temps easing from the low 50s into the low 60s by afternoon. Sunrise is right around 5 a.m., with sunset close to 9 p.m., giving you a long window to work the tides. Tides in central Puget Sound are running on a decent swing today, so plan around those moving-water windows. Expect a solid morning ebb pushing bait off the beaches, then a mid‑day slack, with the afternoon flood setting up good currents along the points and rip lines. The best bite should line up with the first couple hours of each change. Resident coho and “blackmouth‑sized” Chinook are still scattered but very much around. Anglers working 60–120 feet with small spoons and hootchies behind flashers have been picking off fish off Jeff Head, West Point, and Possession. Productive colors have been green/white, Irish cream, and UV purple, especially when run 20–30 feet off bottom. Inshore, cutthroat fishing has been a bright spot. The east side of Bainbridge, the west side of Mercer Island, and the South Sound shoreline pockets have produced chunky sea‑runs. Beach casters and small-boat anglers are doing well with olive/white clousers, small sand lance patterns, and 2–3 inch minnow plugs in natural baitfish colors. Work the drop‑offs and current seams during the first half of the ebb. Bottomfish action has been steady. Pile perch and shiner perch are keeping light‑tackle anglers busy off piers and docks using small bits of shrimp and worms on hi‑lo rigs. Kelp greenling and the occasional legal lingcod are coming on soft plastics and herring‑imitating swimbaits fished tight to rock piles and artificial structure; just be sure you’re up to speed on current seasons and size limits. For bait, herring is still king offshore. Rig it whole or as a cut‑plug behind a flasher for salmon, or drop it straight down for anything on the structure. Inshore, sand shrimp, pile worms, and small bits of raw shrimp are doing work on perch and flounder. If you’re running hardware, think small: 2–3 inch spoons, needlefish‑style jigs, and slim profile soft plastics matching candlefish and small herring. A couple of hot spots to keep on your list: - West Point: Consistent morning action for resident coho and the odd Chinook when the tide is moving. Work 80–130 feet, zig‑zagging the edge of the bar. - Jeff Head: Still one of the best bets for salmon. Run the contour lines and stay near bait; birds and meter marks are your friends. Water’s still cool, so fish won’t be shy about feeding through the day, but the sharpest bites are lining up early and late, right around those tide changes. Downsizing gear, running lighter leaders, and matching local bait size has been the difference between a slow troll and a full fish box. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide or a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  5. 4d ago

    Early Summer Shoulder Season: Coho, Cutthroat, and Bottomfish in Central Puget Sound

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early-summer pattern around Seattle. Light morning breeze, cool starts in the low 50s, warming into the 60s by afternoon with a mix of high clouds and sun. Marine push is weak, so visibility’s good and the water has just a light chop in the main Sound, calmer inside the bays and ship canal. Sunrise hit right around the very early 5 o’clock hour, with sunset landing in the late 9 o’clock range, giving you a long window to work the edges of low light. The best bite has been that first two hours after dawn and the last 90 minutes before dark. Tides in central Puget Sound are running a solid mid-morning flood after an early low, then easing into an afternoon high and an evening ebb. Think “moving water or go home” today: work points, rips, and current seams where bait stacks up. Salmon-wise, we’re still in the shoulder season. Resident coho and a few blackmouth are nosing around Possession Bar, Jefferson Head, and the oil docks. Most fish are short, but there’ve been enough legal keepers to stay honest. Trollers running small 3-inch glow or green/white spoons behind a flasher 30–80 feet down over 120–180 feet of water have been picking off the better fish. If you’re mooching, cut-plug herring in a slow, lazy spin has outfished artificials on the softer tides. Bottomfish are the steadier bet. West Point and the edges off Alki have been good for lingcod and rockfish on the structure. Swimbaits in white or herring patterns on 2–4 oz heads, or flutter jigs bounced right on the rocks, are getting hammered. Remember to fish tight to the structure and be ready to lose some gear. Inshore, the sea-run cutthroat bite has been solid along the beaches from Lincoln Park down toward Seahurst and up around Golden Gardens. Small baitfish patterns, 3-inch olive-over-white soft plastics, and #8–#10 streamers have been the ticket. Focus on creek mouths and current breaks on the flood. For flatfish and table fare, Elliott Bay and inside Shilshole are giving up sand dabs and the odd sole to folks drifting small pieces of clam, squid, or shrimp on simple two-hook bottom rigs. Not glamorous, but great action for kids and a good way to put something in the pan. Hot spots to circle for today: – West Point: work the drop-offs for lingcod and the occasional salmon sliding by in the current. – Possession Bar: your best shot at a legal coho or blackmouth if you put in the trolling time. Best lures: – Small glow spoons and green/white hoochies for salmon. – White or glow swimbaits and metal jigs for lingcod and rockfish. – Slim minnow-style soft plastics for beach cutthroat. Best bait: – Fresh or properly brined herring for trolling and mooching. – Squid strips and shrimp for bottom rigs. That’s your Puget Sound report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next tide change. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    3 min
  6. 5d ago

    Late Spring Salmon and Cutthroat: Puget Sound Tide Window Report

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report for the early-morning shift around Seattle. We’re sitting on a classic late‑spring pattern. A cool, gray marine layer is hanging over the Sound, light southwest breeze 5–10 knots, and air temps climbing from the low 50s into the 60s later today. Clouds will thin a bit this afternoon, but expect that typical on‑again, off‑again drizzle vibe. Sunrise is right around 5:10 a.m., sunset close to 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those tide changes. Tides are doing something worth planning around: a solid morning flood pushing in through mid‑morning, then a decent afternoon ebb that should get current rolling around points and rips. On Puget Sound, that moving water is your real clock. Aim to fish the last hour of the flood and the first couple hours of the ebb if you can swing it. Salmon-wise, resident coho and a few early ocean fish have been showing sporadically along the east side of the Sound. Most of the chatter from local gear shops has been 2–5 fish per boat on a decent tide, with plenty of shakers in the mix and a few keepers in the 4–6 pound range. Trolling small 3–3.5 inch spoons in green–glow, Irish cream, or herring patterns behind a flasher has been putting fish in the box. Hoochies in white, UV, or glow green with a short leader are also worth running. Cutthroat are quietly stealing the show for the beach crowd. Folks working the usual shorelines are reporting steady action on 10–16 inch sea‑runs with the odd bigger fish surprise. Small olive‑over‑white Clousers, sparse baitfish flies, or hardware like 1/4 oz Kastmasters and small spoons in perch or candlefish colors are doing damage. Remember to handle those wild fish gently and keep them wet. Bottomfish are a solid backup plan. Pile perch and flounder are biting along rocky structure and sandy flats; a simple drop‑shot with bits of shrimp, clam, or sandworms will keep rods bent, especially for kids. Out deeper, lingcod are tapering off with the season tightening, but jigging 4–6 oz metal jigs or big soft plastics near rocky humps can still turn up a few if you’ve got the depth and structure dialed. For bait, herring is still king for salmon. If you can get decent plug‑cut herring, run it behind a flasher or naked on a slow troll. Otherwise, scents on your spoons and hoochies help: anise, herring, or krill. For shore anglers, fresh shrimp pieces or Gulp sandworms under a sliding rig are hard to beat for perch and flounder. Couple of hotspots to put on your hit list today: • West Point, off Discovery Park: That morning flood piling into the point, then flipping to the ebb, can stack up coho and cutthroat tight to the contours. Work the 60–120 foot line trolling, or cast from the beach early with spoons and flies. • Meadow Point to Golden Gardens: A classic trolling lane for resident coho. Run a north–south pass straddling the dropoff, keeping gear just off bottom early, then mid‑column once the sun’s up. If you’re staying closer to town without a boat, Alki and the Seacrest area give you solid shore options for cutthroat, perch, and the occasional bonus salmon when bait pushes in. That’s the latest from around the Sound. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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

    4 min
  7. 6d ago

    Spring Tides and Glassy Mornings: Puget Sound Salmon and Bottomfish Report

    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Puget Sound fishing report around Seattle. We’re on a **big spring tide** cycle right now, with a strong morning ebb and a good afternoon flood pushing bait around the points and rip lines. That moving water is your friend: plan to fish the last half of the ebb and the first half of the flood for the best shot at active fish. Weather around the central Sound is classic early summer: cool, marine layer early, then breaking to partly sunny, light wind in the morning, picking up to a moderate westerly in the afternoon. Air temps are sitting in the low 50s early and climbing into the 60s later. Sunrise is early, sunset late, giving you a long low‑light window at both ends of the day. Those gray, glassy mornings have been money. Salmon-wise, resident **blackmouth and smaller feeder Chinook** have been showing in pockets, with the occasional legal fish mixed in. Most of the action has been coming 80–140 feet down over 150–250 feet of water, working contour breaks and bait balls. Productive gear has been **3–3.5 inch spoons** in green/white or Irish cream patterns, and **small hoochies** behind an 11-inch flasher in glow green or UV purple. Run herring strips if you’ve got them—natural scent is making a difference in the clearer water. **Lingcod** and **cabezon** reports from the rock piles and ledges around the islands and deeper points are still decent when the current allows. Big white or root-beer **swimbaits**, 4–6 ounce jig heads, and pipe jigs bounced close to the bottom are getting bit. Tip those plastics with a strip of herring or squid if you can; just enough to add smell without killing the action. For the bank and small-boat crowd, **sea‑run cutthroat** fishing has been solid on the incoming tide around creek mouths and gravel beaches. Stripped **clouser minnows**, small baitfish patterns, or 1/4‑ounce metal spoons in olive/white and sand lance colors are the ticket. Keep those retrieves erratic and cover water. A couple of hot spots to circle on your chart: • **Rich Passage and South Bainbridge edges** – The current lines there have been stacking bait, and trollers working tight S‑turns along the 150–200 foot contour are seeing the most consistent Chinook and blackmouth action. • **Possession Bar** – Still a standout hump in the central Sound. Work the edges on the drift with jigs or slow‑troll spoons just off bottom. When the bait shows on your sounder, hang on. Bait-wise, **fresh or properly brined herring** is still king on the salt. Green or red label on a tight roll behind a flasher will out‑fish almost anything when the fish get picky. On the bottomfish side, strips of squid, herring belly, or sand shrimp fished on sturdy leaders are all producing. Timing is key: be on your spot as that tide starts to move, especially around first light. Once the wind stacks up against the afternoon flood, things get bumpy and the bite usually tapers. That’s the word on the water from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget 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

    3 min
  8. Jun 8

    Early June Puget Sound: Coho, Cutthroat, and Bottom Fish on the Bite

    This is Artificial Lure with your Puget Sound fishing report for the Seattle area. We’re riding a typical early‑June pattern: cool mornings, mild afternoons, and a mix of clouds and sun over the central Sound. Local marine forecasts are calling for light to moderate southwest winds with surface temps hovering in the low 50s and decent barometric stability most of the day. Sunrise is right around 5:10 a.m., with sunset near 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long fishing window to work the tides. Tides in the central Sound today are running a good morning flood pushing up into midday, then an afternoon ebb that really starts moving water through the narrows, passes, and point structure. Fish activity has been best on those first and last two hours of moving water. Midday slack has been on the slower side unless you’re dropping bait right on their noses. Out on the salt, resident coho and blackmouth have been showing in scattered pods. Most reports from local anglers over the last few days mention a handful of shakers for every keeper, with better numbers off deeper breaks in 80–140 feet. Troll small 2–3 inch spoons and hoochies behind an 11‑inch flasher, green/black, UV, or glow patterns. Herring‑aid, Irish cream, and green splatterback have been consistent producers. Run your gear 20–40 feet off bottom, 2.3–3.0 knots on the GPS. Marine Areas around Seattle have also given up good bottomfish bites where open: kelp greenling, flounder, and a few decent lingcod before the sun gets too high. Jigs tipped with a strip of herring, white or motor‑oil curly‑tail grubs, and small metal jigs hopped along rocky contour lines have been the ticket. If you’re chasing piling‑oriented fish, a simple dropper rig with a chunk of herring or squid will still get bit. Inshore, the cutthroat fishery has been classic early summer. Anglers working the beaches and creek mouths have reported solid action on 12–16 inch sea‑run cutthroat, with a few larger fish mixed in. Strip small olive or white baitfish patterns on a fly rod, or throw 1/8–1/4 oz spoons and soft‑plastic minnows in natural sand‑lance or smelt colors. Focus on current seams, points with tidal rips, and the first drop just off the beach. On the bait side, it’s hard to beat fresh or properly brined herring for salmon—green or blue label for trolling, smaller anchovy‑sized baits if you can find them. For bottomfish, squid strips and herring chunks work very well. Shore anglers should pack sand shrimp, nightcrawlers, or clam necks if they’re targeting surfperch and misc. bottom dwellers around the piers. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental chart: • West Point, off Magnolia: classic Seattle salmon water. Work the outer edge of the bar on the flood and slide up onto the top on the ebb. Good for resident coho, blackmouth, and the odd ling on jigs. • Lincoln Park to Point Williams line: productive stretch for sea‑run cutthroat and the occasional coho cruising in tight. Hit it at first light with small spoons or clousers, especially when that flood tide nudges bait right up on the beach. If you’re launching local, keep an eye on the current tables for the Tacoma Narrows and Deception Pass if you roam north or south—those spots have turned on hard when the afternoon ebb starts ripping, with jigging spoons and mooched herring taking fish right on the breaks. That’s it from Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a tide. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    4 min

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Tune in to "Puget Sound, Seattle Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of the latest fishing conditions, expert tips, and local hot spots. Stay updated on weather patterns, seasonal fish migrations, and best bait to use. Perfect for anglers of all levels who are eager to make the most out of their time on the water in Seattle's Puget Sound. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/ Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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