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Fraser River, Canada Fishing Report Today

Fraser River, Canada Fishing Report Today

Written by: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Fraser River, Canada Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from British Columbia's legendary salmon and sturgeon river. 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 the Fraser River's world-class fishery—home to epic salmon runs, ancient white sturgeon, and year-round multi-species action—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 Daily
Episodes
  • Early Summer on the Lower Fraser: Tides, Trout, and First Light Bites
    Jun 21 2026
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fraser River fishing report from a local’s point of view. We’re sliding into a classic early-summer pattern on the lower Fraser and its sloughs. Overnight temps have been cool, but the day is warming fast, with light morning winds and a mix of sun and cloud. Expect mild to warm conditions and generally calm water early, with a bit more breeze on the afternoon outgoing. Around the mouth and up past New Westminster, the river is still carrying some snowmelt, so visibility is that typical Fraser green‑brown. Not muddy enough to shut things down, but you’ll want lures with flash and vibration, and bait that throws a strong scent line. Sunrise is just after 5 a.m., with sunset around 9:20 p.m., giving a long window, but the most consistent bite has been first light through mid‑morning, and then again in the last two hours before dark. Midday has been slower unless you’re targeting deeper runs or shaded back‑eddies. Tides down by Steveston and the North Arm have been giving a nice morning flood and an afternoon ebb. The key has been fishing the start and end of those stronger tide swings: on the flood, work the edges where the current breaks; on the ebb, focus on seams off the main flow and the mouths of back channels where bait funnels out. Recent catches on the lower river have been a mix of: - Good numbers of **pikeminnow** and **peamouth chub** for the kids off docks and bar rigs with dew worms. - **Cutthroat trout** showing up in side channels and sloughs, especially where small fry are stacked. - The odd **bull trout** in deeper, colder runs for folks drifting spoons or bait. Salmon openings are tightly regulated, so check the latest DFO notices before you even think about targeting them, and release any incidentals quickly and carefully. Best producers this week: - For cutthroat and bull trout: small **silver or brass spoons**, size 0–2 spinners, and 3–4 inch **minnow‑style soft plastics** in smelt or perch patterns. A slow swing across current seams or a twitch‑pause retrieve along the bank has been deadly. - For coarse fish: simple wins. **Dew worms**, deli shrimp, or scented dough baits on a sliding weight rig have been putting steady bends in rods. - In the slightly dirtier main stem, bright chartreuse or orange patterns with a hint of flash out‑fish natural tones. If you’re running plugs from a boat, small **Kwickfish or Flatfish** in silver/blue or flame/chartreuse pulled just off bottom in softer edges have raised a few quality fish in the deeper outside bends. A couple of local hot spots to consider: - **Deas Island / Canoe Pass area**: current seams and back‑eddies around the island have been holding bait and cutthroat, especially on the late‑flood tide. - **Stave River confluence**: where the Stave meets the Fraser, work the gravel bars and drop‑offs; good for trout and the usual coarse fish, particularly in the evening when the wind dies and bugs come off. Water safety note: levels and flow can change quickly this time of year, and the banks can be undercut. Give yourself extra room, wear a PFD if you’re anywhere sketchy, and keep an eye on kids and dogs near the edge. That’s the Fraser report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a run. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    3 mins
  • Early Summer on the Fraser: Soft Water, Solid Bites
    Jun 20 2026
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fraser River fishing report. We’re sitting on a soft early‑summer pattern. Environment Canada has the lower Fraser sitting in the mid‑teens Celsius, light morning cloud giving way to broken sun, and just a whisper of wind out of the west. Air temps climbing into the low 20s later, so pack layers and sun protection. Sunrise is right around 5 a.m., sunset close to 9:20 p.m., giving a long window to work the tides and current seams. Down near the mouth, the Fraser River Port Authority tide tables show a decent morning flood pushing in from the Strait, then easing to a slower ebb mid‑day. That morning push has been key for anglers working the South Arm and around Steveston for feeders and bottom fish. On the freshet‑swollen mainstem, current is still heavy, water coloured but not chocolate, with decent two‑ to three‑foot visibility along the softer edges and back eddies. Fish activity has been solid for resident species. Local shop chatter out of Steveston and Richmond reports good numbers of **pikeminnow**, **peamouth**, and smaller **cutthroat trout** in the side channels, with the odd **bull trout** showing where cooler tributary water dumps in. Farther upstream near Mission and Chilliwack backwaters, anglers drifting bait have been into **sturgeon** consistently, with several fish in the 3–6 foot class this past week and the occasional bigger one that took two people to tail and release. For gear, the river is still running big, so think heavy and visible. Spin anglers have been doing well with 3/8 to 3/4 oz **spoons** in copper or fire‑tiger, and **Colorado or French blade spinners** in size 3–5 for cutts and bull trout. Fly anglers are swinging sink‑tip lines with olive or black **streamers** and intruders along the seams. For sturgeon, it’s classic Fraser: 10‑ to 16‑oz lead, big circle hooks, and fresh **salmon bellies**, **eel**, **dew worms**, or **lamprey** where you can get it. Guides along the river are saying lamprey and fresh salmon scraps have outfished everything else this week. Best bite windows have lined up with first light and again as the evening shadows hit the bank. The morning flood at the mouth and the softer flow an hour before dark upstream have both produced. Mid‑day has been slower unless you’re soaking bait for sturgeon in deeper slots. A couple of local hot spots to circle on the map: - **Steveston / South Arm jetties**: Work the edges of the main current with heavier spoons and spinners on the flood, or soak bait for bottom species when the tide slows. Lots of life, and a good bet if you only have a few hours. - **Mission Railway Bridge and adjacent bars**: Classic sturgeon water. Deep troughs, strong current, and recent reports of steady fish. Anchor up, give each anchor set some time, and be ready for that rod to bury. Closer to Chilliwack, some of the **side channels and slough mouths** have been sneaky good for cutthroat and bull trout, especially where cooler water seeps in. Small spoons, #2–3 spinners, and woolly bugger‑style flies have been the ticket there. That’s your Fraser River update from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and 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
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    3 mins
  • Fraser River Early Summer: Light Bites, Long Days, and Tidal Timing
    Jun 19 2026
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Fraser River fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool early‑summer pattern: light to moderate winds, mixed sun and cloud, and temperatures running mid‑teens to low‑20s Celsius through the day. Coastal forecasts are calling for only a slight chance of showers, so it’s decent jacket‑off, jacket‑on weather. Morning starts crisp, afternoons warm up, and evenings cool fast once the sun drops. Sunrise is right around 5:00 a.m., with sunset close to 9:20 p.m., giving a long fishing window. The best bite has been classic Fraser timing: first light to mid‑morning, then again in the last couple hours before dark. Midday has been noticeably slower unless you’re working deeper seams or back eddies. Tidewise down in the lower river and estuary, we’re on a typical mixed coastal pattern with a good push of flood early and a solid ebb later in the day. That incoming tide has been key for fish sliding in from the salt, especially around the North Arm and south arm bars. Plan to be set up and fishing well before the main push of flood; the first hour of moving water has been out‑producing slack by a long shot. Recent reports from local anglers and shop chatter point to steady action on: - **Chinook** in the lower river and near the mouth, mostly smaller springs with the odd better‑class fish mixed in. Trollers running herring and anchovy behind flashers off the main channels have been picking at them, along with shore anglers swinging hardware off the bars. - **Coho and resident feeders** nosing around the estuary and just outside; smaller but aggressive, especially on brighter gear during low‑light. - **Chum and sockeye** are still largely a timing game; a few early‑movers and by‑catch being mentioned, but not a full push yet. - **Sturgeon** have been consistent from New Westminster up past Mission. Most are slot‑size fish with the occasional big one; action has been decent on the softer tides. - **Cutthroat trout and coarse fish** (pikeminnow, pea‑mouth, a few bull trout) in the side channels and sloughs, good fun on lighter gear. For gear, locals have been leaning on: - For salmon from shore: medium spoons in copper, brass, and silver; 2/5 to 2/3 oz. Gibbs‑style and Koho‑style spoons, plus mid‑size spinners in chartreuse, silver, and fire‑orange. Bar rigs with spin‑n‑glos in clown and chartreuse with roe or wool tags are still staples where allowed. - For trolling in the lower river and mouth: chrome or green flashers with anchovy or herring in glow teaser heads, plus hoochies in glow green, army truck, and white. Smaller cut‑plugs when the water’s clear have been getting the pickier fish. - For sturgeon: classic mix of salmon bellies, eulachon, lamprey, and dew worms on heavy gear. Fresh bait has been outfishing frozen; keep it changed often with that Fraser colour and flow. - For cutthroat and bull trout in side channels: small spinners, 1/4 oz spoons in silver or hammered brass, or streamer flies in olive and white; swing them along woody banks and in slower seams. Water clarity is typical Fraser: still carrying colour, but not the full chocolate. That means brighter, higher‑contrast lures and a bit of scent help, and bait size can stay modest rather than huge. A couple of current hot spots: - **Gravel bars near Island 22 and up toward Chilliwack**: solid bar fishing for salmon when they’re moving, and good access for sturgeon boats working the adjacent deeper slots. - **North Arm and main south arm bars and drop‑offs near Richmond**: productive on the incoming tide for salmon, plus a shot at early‑running fish sliding in from the Strait. Watch your regulations carefully: barbless hooks, area‑specific openings and closures, and retention rules can change quickly on this river. Always check the latest notice before you head out. That’s the word from the Fraser. 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
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    4 mins
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