Sunday, September 2, 2018

Salmon fishing heats up on Southern Oregon Coast rivers

Fall has begun to arrive on the Southern Oregon Coast, and with it the best bay and estuary salmon fishing of the year.

Guide Andy Martin of Wild Rivers Fishing and Brookings Fishing Charters spent all of August on the Rogue River Bay in Gold Beach, where the salmon fishing has been good.

Salmon caught in the Rogue Bay in Gold Beach, Ore., in August, 2018, with guide Andy Martin.

A big run is expected back to the Rogue this year, and August didn't disappoint. Fishing was solid all month on the Rogue Bay, with a fish-per-rod average, limits some days, and a few slower days mixed in. The size of the salmon was good, with a solid 20-pound average.

The average size of the salmon on the Rogue Bay in 2018 has been around 22 pounds. Great fish.


Now that September has arrived, Andy is switching gears to the Coos and Coquille rivers. The Rogue will continue to fish well in September, but with cooler water upriver, the fish will not hold as long in the bay, instead they will quickly move upriver toward their spawning grounds.

The Coos has one of the biggest hatchery runs of king salmon on the West Coast, and limits are common in peak season in September. Anglers can keep two salmon a day, which can be wild or hatchery kings.

In October, Andy and the Wild Rivers Fishing crew will focus on salmon in the Chetco estuary, as well as the special ocean salmon season off the mouth of the Chetco, which runs Oct. 7-8 and 13-14. This is when the biggest salmon of the year are often caught. The biggest salmon in Andy's boat caught during the estuary was a 58-pounder caught several years ago. It is the biggest fish in recent memory from the estuary.

This 58-pound king caught in 2009 with guide Andy Martin is the largest in recent memory from the Chetco Bay.


In late October and November we begin our drift boat season on the Chetco and Smith rivers. This is by far our most popular fishery of the year. With several local, year-round guides working with us, we can still accommodate anglers for the 2018 season, but dates are filling fast. Visit www.wildriversfishing.com to learn more.

The first big rain of October will bring hundreds, or thousands, of salmon into the lower Smith and Chetco rivers. The run continues through December. The Smith will fish will first, followed by the Chetco, and then the Elk and Sixes rivers. Once fishing slows in the lower rivers, the Upper Chetco, where Wild Rivers Fishing guides Andy Martin and Travis Sallander have special-use permits from the Forest Service, will heat up. This is a limited-entry fishery for guides, so the Upper Chetco does not get anywhere near as crowded as the lower Chetco or Smith rivers.