Montana Fish Report
Coos River Basin Fishing Report
by OR Department of Fish & Wildlife Staff
2-13-2018
Website
Streams and rivers are now closed to trout fishing until May 22, 2018.
The West Fork Millicoma River is low and clear making steelhead fishing difficult. Steelhead will be holding in upper tidewater, the deepest pools, or in fast moving riffles. The East Fork Millicoma and South Fork Coos rivers are also low and clear. Steelhead anglers are having success fishing eggs or yarn balls along the bottom or by fishing a jig suspended below a bobber.
Anglers fishing the South Fork Coos River above Dellwood will need a permit from Weyerhaeuser, which allows the angler access up to the Seven Mile Bridge. Permits can be obtained at Weyerhaeuser’s Coos Bay office. In the Coos Basin, 1 additional hatchery steelhead may be retained per day for a total aggregate of 3 adult hatchery fish harvested daily.
Recreational fishing for bottomfish is opened on Jan. 1 in the ocean along with bays and estuaries. The daily bag limit will be 5 marine fish plus 2 lingcod. There will be no retention of cabezon until July 1. Anglers have reported catching rockfish near the north jetty of Coos Bay. Surf perch fishing from Coos County beaches has been successful when surf conditions allow.
Crabbing and clamming updates can now be found in the Crabbing and Clamming section of the Recreation Report.
The West Fork Millicoma River is low and clear making steelhead fishing difficult. Steelhead will be holding in upper tidewater, the deepest pools, or in fast moving riffles. The East Fork Millicoma and South Fork Coos rivers are also low and clear. Steelhead anglers are having success fishing eggs or yarn balls along the bottom or by fishing a jig suspended below a bobber.
Anglers fishing the South Fork Coos River above Dellwood will need a permit from Weyerhaeuser, which allows the angler access up to the Seven Mile Bridge. Permits can be obtained at Weyerhaeuser’s Coos Bay office. In the Coos Basin, 1 additional hatchery steelhead may be retained per day for a total aggregate of 3 adult hatchery fish harvested daily.
Recreational fishing for bottomfish is opened on Jan. 1 in the ocean along with bays and estuaries. The daily bag limit will be 5 marine fish plus 2 lingcod. There will be no retention of cabezon until July 1. Anglers have reported catching rockfish near the north jetty of Coos Bay. Surf perch fishing from Coos County beaches has been successful when surf conditions allow.
Crabbing and clamming updates can now be found in the Crabbing and Clamming section of the Recreation Report.