『Vancouver Island, Canada Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Vancouver Island, Canada Fishing Report Today

Vancouver Island, Canada Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
無料で聴く

Tune in to the "Vancouver Island, Canada Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from this world-class Pacific fishing destination. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on Vancouver Island's unique ecosystem—from legendary salmon runs and trophy trout rivers to productive coastal waters teeming with bottomfish—and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI 日次 生物科学 科学
エピソード
  • Vancouver Island Fishing Report: Spring Salmon Heating Up in the Strait
    2026/06/22
    This is Artificial Lure with your Vancouver Island fishing report. Let’s start with the conditions. Environment Canada is calling for a mix of cloud and sun over much of the Island today, light to moderate westerlies on the outer coast, and lighter variable winds in the Strait of Georgia through the morning, picking up in the afternoon. Temperatures are sitting cool early, pushing into the high teens later. Sunrise is around 5:10 a.m., with sunset close to 9:25 p.m., giving you a long fishing window. Tides around the Nanaimo–Georgia Strait side are running a decent morning flood followed by a mid‑day high and a falling afternoon tide. Over on the west side, from Ucluelet up to Tofino, expect a similar cycle offset by roughly half an hour to an hour, with the stronger current pushes lining up late morning and again toward evening. Plan your saltwater sets around those turns — the bite has been best one hour on either side of the change. Saltwater first. Local reports from tackle shops and charter docks around Nanaimo, Campbell River, and Comox say the chinook fishing has been fair to good, with more legal-size fish showing and fewer undersized shakers mixed in. Anglers are also seeing a scatter of coho, mostly smaller but aggressive, plus some decent-sized lingcod and a steady pick of rockfish off the structure. Productive depths for chinook in the Strait have been 120–180 feet on the downrigger. Anchovy teaser heads in chartreuse, glow green, or Bloody Nose patterns behind a flasher are still the top producers, especially in slightly off‑colour water. Skinny G and Coyotes in glow/green, Herring Aid, or Irish Cream spoons trolled 20–30 feet behind the flasher are also putting fish in the box. On brighter days, many locals are switching to more natural baitfish finishes and dropping slightly deeper. On the west coast around Barkley and Clayoquot Sound, offshore halibut and lingcod have been solid when the swell allows. Most halibut are coming on spreader bars with salmon bellies, herring, or pink and white grub tails bounced just off the bottom in 200–300 feet. Nearshore, chinook are cruising points and contour breaks in 80–140 feet, hitting medium spoons and anchovy. A couple of hot spots to focus on: - Off the Five Fingers and Entrance Island outside Nanaimo: working the edges of bait schools in 130–170 feet has produced consistent chinook and the odd coho on anchovy and glow spoons. - Campbell River’s Lighthouse and the Hump: trolling the contour edges at first light and again on the evening tide has been good for springs, plus lings on nearby structure with large jigs and herring. For bait, herring and anchovy remain kings offshore and in the Strait. Add a bit of scent — anise, herring, or anchovy — to your baits and hoochies for an edge, especially on slower tides. Jigging paddletails and metal jigs over pinnacles has also produced bonus lings and rockfish when the trolling cools off. Freshwater anglers working Island rivers and lakes are finding trout and char more active during the cooler morning and evening windows. Small spoons, spinners, and woolly buggers in olive or black are producing consistent action, with worms and single eggs doing well under floats in slower runs. Overall fish activity has been best around dawn, dusk, and the top and bottom of the tides. Mid‑day can be quieter, especially on clear, calm afternoons, so slow your troll, get a bit deeper, and downsize your presentation. That’s your Vancouver Island fishing update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
    続きを読む 一部表示
    4 分
  • Vancouver Island Early Summer: Chinook Deep, Coho Rising, Lakes Firing Up
    2026/06/21
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Vancouver Island fishing report. We’ve got a stable early‑summer pattern setting up. Environment Canada is calling for light morning winds, building to a gentle westerly this afternoon, with partial cloud and mild temps along the east coast of the Island from Nanaimo up through Campbell River. Inland lakes will warm quickly once the sun’s up, so expect that classic mid‑day slowdown. Tides around the Strait of Georgia side are running moderate today, with a decent morning flood and an afternoon ebb. Near Nanaimo and French Creek, that flood sets up nice current seams off points and reef edges; around Campbell River and Discovery Passage, as always, check local tables carefully because flows get pushy and timing matters for both safety and bite windows. Sunrise is early and sunset late this time of year, meaning long light. The most consistent action has been first light to mid‑morning, then again in the last two hours before dark when the surface cools and bait rises. Saltwater first. Local guides are reporting chinook in the teens, with the odd bigger fish, picked up off Nanaimo, Five Fingers, and up around Entrance Island, 120–180 feet down on the riggers. Best producers have been glow‑green hootchies, UV white hootchies, and small anchovy teaser heads in chrome or glow. Run them behind chartreuse or green “moon jelly” flashers. Coho are starting to show offshore of French Creek and off the south end of Lasqueti; small spoons in nickel/blue, 3–3.5 inch, have been hot when the sun’s higher. Up north, out of Campbell River, anglers are finding good chinook and some early coho off the Hump and around Brown’s Bay. Plug‑cut herring and anchovy in UV heads are putting fish in the box, with green‑glow and purple haze patterns getting mentioned a lot in dock talk. Keep an eye out for balls of herring and needlefish on the sounder; the bite has been tight to the bait. Bottom fish are steady off Nanaimo bars, Lasqueti, and the reefs off Comox. Jigging 4–6 ounce metal jigs in white, chrome, or blue over hard bottom is producing legal lingcod and rockfish. Fresh herring or squid strips on spreader bars will also do the job when the current eases. Freshwater: Island lakes like Cowichan, Elk, and Brannen are still giving up rainbow and cutthroat, especially early and late. Trollers are doing well with small gang trolls and wedding bands tipped with worms, or tiny silver spoons. Fly anglers are finding fish on chironomids under indicators in the deeper holes during the day, then on small olive or black leeches as the evening sets in. Bass in the south‑Island lakes are waking up too—weightless soft plastics around timber and docks are getting bites. Couple of hotspot suggestions if you’re heading out: • Off **Five Fingers and Entrance Island** near Nanaimo: target 140–180 feet on the morning flood, running anchovy in glow teaser heads behind a green flasher for chinook. Work the edges of structure where the current breaks. • The **Hump off Campbell River**: classic spot when the tide eases. Troll spoons in green/white or watermelon down 150–200 feet for chinook, then slide shallower toward evening to intercept coho higher in the column. Best bait and lures right now: anchovy and plug‑cut herring, glow and UV hootchies, 3–3.5 inch spoons in green, blue, or chrome, and for bottom fish, heavy white jigs or baited spreader bars. In the lakes, worms, small spoons, and leech or chironomid flies are the go‑tos. That’s your Island roundup from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
    続きを読む 一部表示
    4 分
  • Vancouver Island Early Summer: Chinook at Constance Bank, Coho Off Nanoose
    2026/06/20
    This is Artificial Lure with your Vancouver Island fishing report. We’ve got a generally stable early‑summer pattern around the Island this morning: light winds, patchy overcast giving way to bright breaks, and mild temps. Environment Canada’s coastal summary calls for calm to light northwest winds with only a slight chop in most inside waters, ideal for both small boats and shoreline casting. Sunrise around the south Island is just after 5 a.m., with sunset close to 9:20 p.m., giving a long fishing window. The key bite periods have been the classic low‑light slots: first light to mid‑morning, and then again in the last two hours of daylight when the glare drops and bait pushes in tight. Tides in the Strait of Georgia and Juan de Fuca today are running moderate, not those huge spring swings we had earlier in the month. That’s meant softer currents through the late morning and a bit more action on the smaller points and secondary structure. Anglers working the turn and the first push of the flood have reported the best numbers. Out in saltwater, the focus is still on chinook and the usual mix of coho and feeder springs. Local tackle shops from Victoria to Nanaimo have been talking about solid bait marks in 120–180 feet, with most fish coming 20–30 feet off bottom. Productive setups have been 3–3.5‑inch spoons in green‑glow, cop‑car, and Irish cream, as well as anchovy in green or chartreuse teaser heads behind a glow or UV flasher. Herring‑aid and moon jelly patterns have been hot when the sun gets higher. Reports this week include steady numbers of legal‑size chinook off Constance Bank and the Humps, with plenty of undersize feeders keeping rods bouncing. Coho are starting to show in better numbers off the east side—off Nanoose and up toward French Creek—most of them on smaller spoons and hootchies in white, UV purple, and pink. If you’re targeting coho, speed up that troll and run your gear a bit higher in the water column. On the inshore and beach side, sea‑run cutthroat and bull trout have been cruising the estuaries and creek mouths. Small baitfish patterns, 2–3‑inch white or olive soft plastics, and little blue‑silver spoons have been the go‑tos. A slow, twitchy retrieve has outfished a straight crank. Freshwater action has been good with the stable weather. The Island’s stocked lakes are still giving up rainbows and cutthroat in the early hours. Folks are doing well with small spinner patterns, micro spoons, and the old standbys—dew worms under a float or a small bit of PowerBait off the bottom. Fly anglers stripping leech patterns and damsels along drop‑offs are reporting consistent hookups. A couple of hot spots to circle for today: • Around Oak Bay and the Gap: Good chinook marks in 140–160 feet, with bait stacked on the flood. Run anchovy or 3‑inch spoons right near bottom, and don’t be shy about fishing tight to the structure when the current eases. • North of Nanaimo toward Neck Point and up toward Five Fingers: Coho and feeders have been hitting smaller spoons and hootchies, especially on the afternoon flood, with birds working scattered bait balls on the surface. For bait, anchovy and herring strips remain top of the list offshore, while prawns, dew worms, and roe are doing the work in rivers and lakes. On the lure side, think compact and flashy in the salt, natural and subtle in the lakes. That’s your Island report from Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
    続きを読む 一部表示
    4 分
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません