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.

Episodes

  1. Jun 22

    Early Summer Puget Sound: Chase the Tide Swings and Bait Schools

    Good morning from Puget Sound, this is **Artificial Lure** with your Seattle-area fishing report for today. Early summer is in full swing, and the bite is shaping up around the tide swings, with the best action likely around moving water near the shipping lanes, shoreline structure, and the ferry corridors. For **weather**, Seattle is in its usual June pattern: cool mornings, brighter midday windows, and a light marine layer chance along the Sound. The most important thing today is to fish the **temperature breaks** and current edges, because that’s where bait stacks up and predators push in. For **sunrise and sunset**, plan your day around the first light bite and the last couple hours before dark. If you’re starting early, you want to be on the water before sunrise and stay tuned for that evening push when bait gets shallow again. On the **tide side**, Puget Sound fishing is all about current. The best window is usually the **incoming tide** and the first part of the **outgoing tide**, especially when the water is moving but not ripping too hard. Around Seattle, that means focusing on passes, points, and any place where tide funnels through narrow water. Recent **fish activity** has been centered on bait schools, with anglers reporting solid signs of **coho**, scattered **chinook**, and the occasional **flounder and sea-run cutthroat** in the mix. In the Sound, the action can change fast, but when herring or sand lance are present, the bigger fish usually aren’t far behind. Expect fish to be roaming near drop-offs, kelp edges, and tide lines. For **lures**, the hot hand in these waters is usually a small **hoochie**, a **spoon**, or a compact **swimbait** worked near bait. If you’re trolling, go with a flasher and a glowing, green, white, or chrome presentation. If you’re casting from shore, a small metal jig or spoon that throws well in current is hard to beat. For **bait**, the old reliable choices are **herring**, **sardine**, and **pile worm** depending on species and where you’re fishing. Fresh bait, rigged clean and fished close to bottom or just above bait schools, usually outperforms anything stale. A couple of **hot spots** to keep on your radar: - **Shilshole to West Point** for moving water, bait, and early-season salmon traffic. - **Point Defiance and the Tacoma Narrows edges** if you’re willing to roam south for stronger current and better structure. If I had to pick one play today, I’d fish the tide change with a spoon or hoochie near bait, then switch to fresh bait if the marks are there but the bites are soft. Keep your eyes on birds, boils, and bait showers — that’s where the Sound gives up its secrets. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. 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
  2. Jun 21

    Early Summer Puget Sound: Ride the Tide Swings for Salmon and Cutthroat

    Good morning, Seattle—**Artificial Lure** here with your Puget Sound fishing rundown for **today**. The bite is lining up around the early tide swings, with the best window typically coming at first light and again around the evening change, so if you can fish moving water, do it. For **tides**, check your local Puget Sound tide station before you launch, because the timing shifts a bit from Seattle proper to Bainbridge, Elliott Bay, Shilshole, and the Eastside. In general, the Sound is fishing best when the water is **moving**—slack tide usually slows the action, while the push and ebb can light things up fast. For **weather**, expect classic late-June Seattle conditions: cool morning air, a chance of marine haze or low clouds, and a brighter, milder afternoon once the sun burns through. Dress in layers and keep rain gear handy, because Puget Sound mornings can feel a lot colder on the water than they do on land. For **sunrise and sunset**, we’re in those long summer daylight hours now, which means an early start is money and you’ve got plenty of light to work with into the evening. Plan on fishing the low-light edges hard—dawn and dusk are still the most productive windows for salmon and cutthroat. On the **recent fish activity** side, the water around Seattle and central Puget Sound is usually busiest in early summer with **resident coho, cutthroat trout, flounder, and baitfish activity** close to shore, plus seasonal salmon opportunities depending on openings and marine areas. When the bait is packed in, the predators follow, and that’s when the rod tips start bouncing. If you’re seeing birds working, bait dimpling, or tide rip lines stacking up, stay there. For **lures**, I’d keep it simple and effective: - **Small hoochies** behind a flasher for salmon - **Blue, green, or white spoons** for coho and cutts - **Squid jigs** if you’re trying for squid around piers or deeper structure - **Soft plastics** or small spinners for shoreline cutthroat For **bait**, the old reliable choices still hold: - **Herring** - **Sardines** - **Sand shrimp** - **Cured bait strips** when fish are keyed in on scent If I were choosing a couple of **hot spots** around Seattle today, I’d start with: - **Shilshole / Elliott Bay edges** for moving-water salmon structure and bait presence - **Shoreline points and current seams in central Puget Sound** where tide flow funnels baitfish If you’re shorebound, fish the **drop-offs, riprap, and point corners**. If you’re in a boat, work the **edges of bait balls, tide rips, and depth changes** instead of open water. The Sound rewards patience, but it pays better when you match the hatch and fish the tide. Thanks for tuning in, **subscribe** for more fishing updates, and 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

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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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