Reedsport police chief hopeful for grant funding for new vehicles

REEDSPORT — The city police chief remains hopeful that he’ll get several new, much-needed vehicles for his department.

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Spring Chinook Fishing Very Good At Winchester Bay.

Spring chinook fishing on the lower Umpqua River continues to be productive for anglers casting large spinners at Half Moon Bay. The most consistent fishing is usually close to high tide, but salmon have recently been caught at all stages of the tide. In fact, more spring Chinooks have been caught at Winchester Bay this spring than any year in recent memory.

 Randy Walters, of Reedsport, holds up a 17 pound springer, the fourth salmon he has landed in a five day period. Photo courtesy of the Stockade Market in Winchester Bay.

Randy Walters, of Reedsport, holds up a 17 pound springer, the fourth salmon he has landed in a five day period. Photo courtesy of the Stockade Market in Winchester Bay.

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Oregon fishing report for April 22nd

Willamette Valley – Spring Chinook passage at Bonneville Dam is now concerning. It’s understandable that we’re lagging behind last years under-predicted run, but to lag behind the 10-year average by more than double, it makes you wonder. Regardless, either a late returning run or diminished returns will spell lower opportunity for sportanglers when that peak passage date actually does come, commonly, in the first week of May. We’ll need a strong uptick in passage really soon to remain optimistic.

Willamette River water levels and flow are good, Trollers are catching spring Chinook daily in the lower Willamette but not a great many of them although there was an 18 Chinook for 24 boat check on the lower Channel on Thursday. Catch-and release sturgeon fishing is still producing many fish.

McKenzie fly fishers will face a little challenge with rising water over the next few days but as the river comes into shape, trout fishing will be good.

North Santiam river levels are rising and will pit the river out of shape through much of the coming week. After recovery, there should be some steelhead available.

Sandy water conditions are good although it remains to be seen what effect rainfall over the next several will have. Up to now, steelheading and springer fishing have been slow. Much the same on the Clackamas River.

Northwest Oregon – Steelheaders have hung it up for the season on the north coast. There should be some summer steelhead available in the Wilson and Nestucca systems but anglers are starting to focus on spring Chinook in the region. Although it’s still a bit early, there have been reports from a few locations in Tillamook Bay and the Nestucca system. Peak season is still 3 weeks away.

Bottomfishing has been off the hook but consistent catches of lingcod are hard to come by. The mouth of the Columbia and the Port of Garibaldi have both been putting out easy limits of sea bass.

Low tides through the weekend could prove productive for razor clam diggers but if the ocean swell prediction comes through with the low pressure system, all bets are off.

Central & South Coast Reports – Fishery managers set salmon fishing seasons this week. Chinook on the central coast will last through Oct. 31. An un-marked coho season Sept. 3-30, or quota of 7,500 fish.The Oregon commission will be asked to approve an Elk/Sixes River ocean bubble fishery the same as last year, but reduce the Chetco bubble fishery to two weekends, Oct. 1-3 and 8-9.

Rockfish and lingcod catches are excellent off the central Oregon coast with ocean crabbing picking up slightly.

The lower Umpqua has produced a few spring Chinook and will be steadily picking up in the coming weeks as we move into the season. Crabbing is poor in Winchester Bay.

Spring Chinook will be entering the lower Rogue but anglers should be aware of fluctuating water levels and fish accordingly. The Grants Pass stretches have been producing some winter steelhead. Prospects for steelheaders are fair to good on the upper Rogue. The chance to keep one wild winter steelhead 24 inches or longer per day and five per year is over at the end of April.

Boats launching out of the Port of Brookings have been doing well for rockfish and lingcod. Anglers are reminded that the Chetco River is closed for now.

Fishing is closed for now on the Elk River.

Diamond Lake is nearly ice-free although trout fishing has been slow in the cold water here.

Central & Eastern – Trout fishing on the Deschutes has been fair to good although prospects look to be improving over the week to come.

Kokanee fishing has remained good all week at Odell Lake with jigs most effective.

Among other high lakes, Lava Lake will be accessible for the coming weekend.

The John Day River has been producing good catches of large smallmouth.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife will open the upper Snake River for spring Chinook fishing on Saturday, April 23rd. Be certain to check the regulations for this fishery.

SW Washington – The Cowlitz River continues to boot out fantastic catches of steelhead for boaters and spring Chinook fishing is good too. It may not be 25,000 returning adults good however. This writer is starting to speculate that the prediction of springers to the mouth may have been over-estimated. Bank anglers are doing well too, with both steelhead and springers hitting the bank.

There are some fish coming from the Kalama and pressure is much lighter here than on the Cowlitz.

The Wind and Drano Lake fisheries are under-performing, not unexpected given passage over Bonneville Dam. We should start to see numbers climb to 1,000 to 2,000 adults per day if this prediction is going to come through.

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Pete Heley Outdoors 4 / 20 / 2016

Bryan Gill, of the Umpqua Angler, reported very good springer fishing last Thursday when his clients boated four springers while fishing near Elkton. They were using spinner and anchovy rigs. For three of his four clients, their salmon were their first springers ever.

It’s somewhat of a secret, but there has been more springers caught in the lower Umpqua River this year than any recent year – and a good percentage of them have been finclipped fish. Most of the salmon have been taken by spinner flingers at Half Moon Bay, but a few have been caught by anglers trolling herring near Reedsport.The big fish in this year’s Wells Creek Inn spring Chinook contest is now over 32 pounds.

While no shad catches were reported last week at Sawyers Rapids, the early morning springer fishing has been good and several shad were caught near Yellow Creek.

The Fish Haven/Duckett’s dock at the upper end of Loon Lake has been fishing very good for crappie and surprisingly, at least this early in the season, for bluegills. Another lake ripe for excellent panfishing is Ben Irving Reservoir where the small coves on both sides of the boat launch are absolutely loaded with crappies and bluegills. Cooper Creek Reservoir should also be hot for panfish, but last week it seemed that every angler was targeting planted rainbow trout.

The sand dunes lakes between North Bend and Hauser are full and their future fishing looks promising, but their fish populations, reduced by last year’s late season low water, may be tough to find this year.

Always somewhat inconsistent, the beach angling for redtailed surfperch, also called “pinkfins”, has occasionally been very, very good – and a few pinkfins are starting to be caught above Winchester Bay.

The Triangle/South Jetty Area has had little fishing pressure directed at lingcod, but the fishing for greenling and rockfish is much improved. The excellent fishing for striped surfperch has dropped off, most likely due to their spawning season winding down.

Most of the area lakes are starting to produce good fishing for largemouth and while the fishing should hold up for the next several weeks, numbers-wise, the numbers of big bass caught will drop way off after early May.

Umpqua River smallmouth fishing is getting better and the river is clear enough to fish soft plastics effectively. Fishing for smallmouths with crankbaits might be better on the Coquille River, which is less clear than the Umpqua. Both rivers have no limits on the number of bass that may be kept.

Idaho’s Snake River produced yet another state record sturgeon for their new “catch and release division. This fish, caught on April 8th, measured 111-inches and replaces a 98.5-inch sturgeon caught less than a month earlier. Idaho catch and release records that will almost certainly be broken this spring are bluegill (9.5-inches) and white crappie (9.375-inches.

Virtually all of the Florence-area lakes were stocked this week as follows: Alder Lake (850 legals, 225 12-inchers and 36 16-inchers); Buck Lake (850 legals, 200 12-inchers and 36 16-inchers); Cleawox Lake (350 legals and 36 16-inchers); Dune Lake (850 legals, 225 12-inchers and 36 16-inchers); Elbow Lake (600 12-inchers); Erhart Lake (200 legals); Georgia Lake (150 legals); Lost Lake (500 12-inchers); Mercer Lake (2,250 12-inchers); Munsel Lake (3,150 12-inchers and 150 16-inchers); North Georgia Lake (150 legals); Perkins Lake (250 legals and 200 12-inchers); Siltcoos Lagoon (850 legals, 350 12-inchers and 106 16-inchers); Siltcoos Lake (1,000 12-inchers) and Sutton Lake (1,500 12-inchers).

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Kinetic Sand coming to Reedsport library

REEDSPORT — A $907 grant from the Douglas County Cultural Coalition will be used to purchase Kinetic Sand, a moldable type of sand for indoor play, and play implements to be used for summer programs at Douglas County Library System…

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The Donut Hole opens on Winchester

REEDSPORT — The Donut Hole co-owners Denise and Gary Robertson were a bit like jugglers on a recent Tuesday morning, helping customers, working with their son and daughter team and discussing their new business.

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Road repairs set in Reedsport

REEDSPORT — The city of Reedsport’s public works department will temporarily close Winchester Avenue at Fourth Street to make utility and street underlayment repairs starting on Monday, April 18. The closure will last up to five days, and the work…

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Oregon Fishing Report for April 15th

Willamette Valley – With the recent Columbia River closure, spring Chinook effort will now shift to the Willamette and Multnomah Channel for the next 6 weeks. After the peak passage of upper Columbia bound springers, likely the first week of May. Fishery managers will evaluate whether the sport fleet gets any additional time in pursuit of the regions most prized salmonid.

Willamette water conditions have improved this week, with water clarity and temperature conducive to fishing for salmon, steelhead or sturgeon.

Fly fishers may expect to enjoy a good weekend on the McKenzie River, there won’t be swarms of hatches but there should be decent results.

Finally, the Santiam system is at good level and condition for anglers. There are both summer and winter steelhead in the system.

Clackamas levels will be rising overnight on Thursday, April 14th but will start dropping mid-day on Friday, the 15th, with water conditions continuing to improve over the weekend. Fish for steelhead or salmon with results expected to improve late in April.

Pro guide Jeff Stoeger of O2Bfishin Guide Service (503-704-7920), reporting on the Sandy River, tells us that stealth will be required as the water level will be dropping and is extremely clear. With winter steelhead winding down, summers are starting to enter.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife will host a free family fishing event Saturday, April 16 at St. Louis Ponds near Woodburn from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Northwest Oregon – Even though we’re on the waning days of winter steelhead season, a Thursday rain freshet should stimulate a last-ditch opportunity for hatchery and wild fish on North Coast systems.

It’s been a great steelhead season and anglers are likely to begin to find more spawned out fish than fresh ones in the coming weeks for the remaining systems that are still open.

Anglers will soon shift their attention to Tillamook spring Chinook but fishable numbers typically don’t show up until early May.

Bottomfishing remains predictably terrific with mostly limits of seabass falling to anglers. Lingcod success has been hit or miss in the nearshore but should become more consistent in the coming weeks.

Central & South Coast Reports – When boats have been able to launch out of central Oregon ports, bottom fishing has been good to excellent.

With a quota increase of 15% in 2016 over the 2015 quota, halibut anglers are anxious for the offshore opener scheduled for May 12th.

In his regular weekly report, author of several books on fishing, Pete Heley (PeteHeley.com) reports that bass fishing has been quite good in temperate coastal lakes while many lakes that receive trout have been planted this week

Coos Bay rock and jetty fishers have been catching bottom fish. Crabbers in the bay report poor to slow results.

Spring Chinook have started entering the lower Rogue with anglers taking a few this week. Catches will improve a few weeks into the season. There are a few winter steelhead on the Grants Pass stretch but the best steelhead remains on the upper Rogue. This time of year, many steelhead have spawned or are darkening.

The Chetco and Elk rivers closed for the season on April 1.

Diamond Lake Resort reported this week that ice is melting rapidly and trout fishers may soon be able to fish and ice-free lake.

Central & Eastern – While the Stone Fly hatch is some ways off on the lower Deschutes, Caddis and March Brown imitations continue to be effective.

Water levels at Crooked River are once again too high to fish.

Odell Lake, which reported good catches of kokanee last week, has continued to produce good numbers including some limits.

Smallmouth bass fishing has been good on the John Day River with several anglers landing larch fish recently.

SW Washington – on the Cowlitz, anglers continue to produce great catches of late-season steelhead and spring Chinook are starting to show with more regularity. Some anglers are questioning whether the return predicted on the Cowlitz will actually ever come through.

The Kalama is another district favorite but results here look disappointing. Hopefully summer steelhead make a stronger showing in the coming weeks.

Effort is climbing for the Wind River and Drano Lake fisheries. Once passage at Bonneville eclipses 1,000 adults per day, we’ll see a noticeable uptick in Chinook catch rates.

Get more Oregon fishing information at The Guide’s Forecast

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