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schnur07
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I know they're starting to go over the Willamette Falls. I've read people fish for them in the Clackamas and Santiam. What about the mainstem Willamette - particularly in Salem/Keizer?
jhop111 said:Rumor also has it that if you double check the regs on salmon over the falls, one may punch quite a few coho if they find coho to be better table fare than chinook. This is for the mainstem river only. The hardest part is finding the coho.
jhop111 said:I never asked a question and this information is for above the falls only.. The special regs state Willamette Falls upstream to Hwy 20 bridge located at Albany • See Health Advisory on page 22 • Open for adipose fin-clipped Chinook salmon and adipose fin-clipped steelhead all year. • Open for coho salmon all year.
If you read around page 58 for Willamette river upstream of the falls you may tag a daily total of 2 salmon plus 1 steel. Here is the confusion. You may tag an annual limit of coho clipped or not. The annual limit on the Willamette is.......20 per year.
There is no annual limit on fin clipped salmon as long as the appropriate number of hatch cards have been purchased.
There is good news in these waters above the falls when the coho are in if you want to seasonally punch out more than if you were to say fish only the slaw..and siltcoos. That is my interpretation of the regs
jhop111 said:Correct, I'll add that I'm not seeing a difference. Just pointing out a often under looked fishery. Many people think that the Coastal Coho Regulations that are set year to year are for all bodies of water. Many people don't know that in the willamette river above the falls one can punch 20 annual coho. The catch is your gonna have a hard time finding 20 clipped coho if you wish to tag more than your combined tag will let you. I hope this round about way of answering the OP's questions which I originally did, gives him some incentive to get out and nail a few coho that are in the area's he's interested in. I'll further this threads original intent with adding that if he has boat access, the coho are good at giving themselves away by jumping and rolling in the frog water. Casting plugs and spinners is a very productive way to fish the Willamette for them near the mouths of the feeder rivers .
jhop111 said:Rumor also has it that if you double check the regs on salmon over the falls, one may punch quite a few coho if they find coho to be better table fare than chinook. This is for the mainstem river only.
jhop111 said:Correct, I'll add that I'm not seeing a difference. Just pointing out a often under looked fishery. Many people think that the Coastal Coho Regulations that are set year to year are for all bodies of water. Many people don't know that in the willamette river above the falls one can punch 20 annual coho. The catch is your gonna have a hard time finding 20 clipped coho if you wish to tag more than your combined tag will let you. I hope this round about way of answering the OP's questions which I originally did, gives him some incentive to get out and nail a few coho that are in the area's he's interested in. I'll further this threads original intent with adding that if he has boat access, the coho are good at giving themselves away by jumping and rolling in the frog water. Casting plugs and spinners is a very productive way to fish the Willamette for them near the mouths of the feeder rivers .
jhop111 said:the coho are good at giving themselves away by jumping and rolling in the frog water. Casting plugs and spinners is a very productive way to fish the Willamette for them near the mouths of the feeder rivers .