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Fishing report for May 19

This weekend anglers are getting an extra opportunity to fish for chinook on a 163-mile stretch of the Columbia River. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is reopening the section of the river upstream of Bonneville Dam today and Sunday after the run forecast for upriver spring chinook was raised from 202,000 to 216,500 fish.

Published: May 19, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDTUpdated: May 19, 2012 at 2:59 a.m. PDT
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This weekend anglers are getting an extra opportunity to fish for chinook on a 163-mile stretch of the Columbia River. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is reopening the section of the river upstream of Bonneville Dam today and Sunday after the run forecast for upriver spring chinook was raised from 202,000 to 216,500 fish.

Anglers can keep two marked hatchery adult chinook today but must release all wild and unmarked chinook.

“All eyes are on the fish counts at Bonneville Dam right now,” said Cindy LeFleur, the WDFW’s Columbia River policy manager.

“This run is one of the latest on record, so we really have to gauge from one week to the next how many spring chinook are still coming.”

RIVERS

Cowlitz: Spring chinook are biting here for patient anglers. The Fish Country staff suggests boaters run divers with eggs or shrimp, back-bounce eggs, or use plugs with herring or sardines. Bank anglers are using eggs with shrimp, corky and yarn, spoons or sand shrimp alone.

Kalama: Chinook and steelhead are being caught.

Lewis: Not many people fishing the river.

Snake: The WDFW closed sections of the lower river to spring-chinook fishing on Friday night because the “allowable salmon catch ... will be reached sooner than we estimated,” WDFW regional manager John Whalen said. Check wdfw.wa.gov for more information on what areas are closed.

Yakima: The WDFW expanded the salmon fishery from the I-82 Bridge at Union Gap to the railroad bridge below Roza Dam. WDFW manager John Easterbrooks estimates the lower river will stay open until June 30 and the upper section could continue through July.

LAKES

American: David Anderson of Bill’s Boathouse says fishing is outstanding. His son-in-law, who runs a guide service, caught his limit of five silvers on Thursday in less than an hour and twice had fish on both lines at the same time. Rainbows and perch are also biting, Anderson said. He recommends garlic-flavored PowerBait.

Spanaway: Bud Herlitzka of the Spanaway Park Boat House reported this week that trollers using Wedding Rings and worms or a fly trailing behind a Wedding Ring were catching their limit quickly. For still-fishing, he suggested using worms and marshmallows or PowerBait in the southeast corner of the lake.

Mayfield: Fishing has been slow.

Riffe: Salmon fishing has been good for those using cocktail shrimp, worms and white corn.

Sammamish: Bass fishing has been excellent lately.

Stevens: The Lake Stevens Kokanee Derby is today. For information, visit GregsCustomRods.com.

Chelan: Anton Jones of Darrell and Dad’s Family Guide Service says kokanee fishing is slow but that trout fishing is good for trollers between Sunnnybank and the Monument.

Potholes: Reports on walleye-fishing success have been mixed, according to a report from Mike Meseberg at MarDon Resort. With temperatures in the 70s and 80s, fishing has been best early morning or just before dark, Meseberg said.

SALT WATER

Tacoma: Lingcod is “popular with some and frustrating for others,” according to the staff at the Point Defiance Boathouse Marina. The area is closed to salmon fishing north of the Narrows Bridges until June 1.

South Sound: Salmon fishing is allowed south of the Narrows Bridges, with the Point Defiance Boathouse Marina recommending trolling with spoons in Wollochet Bay. Mooching and jigging is working for some near Point Gibson. Mike Zittel of Zittel’s Johnson Point Marina says anglers are catching a few lingcod and the occasional salmon. He says salmon are biting best near Devil’s Head.

North Sound: Some anglers are catching large halibut. Lingcod fishing requires patience right now.

Fly-fishing: The Gig Harbor Fly Shop reported earlier this week that fishing for catch-and-release cutthroat has been good in Puget Sound.

craig.hill@thenewstribune.com

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