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Secrets to Shad Fishing on the Columbia River
Welcome to the ultimate fishing adventure! From freshwater lakes to deep sea expeditions, we bring you epic catches, pro tips ...
After hitting it hard fishing for spring chinook through late April and well into the month of May, I like to flip the calendar to June, because the month brings with it some other fishing ...
PORTLAND, Ore. — Just in time for Father’s Day weekend: If there’s a better dream day for Dad than this fishing adventure, I don’t know where or when. We recently joined a fishing adventure in the ...
BONNEVILLE DAM, Columbia River, Wash. — There is a new king of the Columbia. Each spring, a chrome tide of fish native to the East Coast floods the Northwest’s mightiest river by the millions. Shad, ...
On the lower Columbia River from Rocky Point/Tongue Point line upstream to Bonneville Dam there were 441 salmonid boats and 791 Washington bank rods were tallied on the June 14 flight count. Section 1 ...
But over the past few decades, as their population has dwindled, salmon have been overtaken by a non-native species of fish hailing from the East Coast - THE SHAD. Shad runs now number in the millions ...
On the lower Columbia River from Rocky Point/Tongue Point line upstream to Bonneville Dam there were 261 salmonid boats and 397 Washington bank rods were tallied on the May 31 flight count. Section 1 ...
Spring chinook fishing was slowing down. The few crabs being caught were watery and thin. Even the low tides weren’t low enough. And so dawn last Thursday found me on the Columbia River fishing for ...
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