Puget Sound delivered a classic late summer day for anglers around Seattle on Thursday, August 28, 2025. The weather stayed friendly—light south winds at 5 knots, waves 2 feet or less, and partly cloudy skies. Temperatures hovered in the upper 60s with comfortable humidity, perfect for a long day on the salt. Sunrise came at 6:23 AM and sunset hit at 7:56 PM, providing generous daylight for both sunrise-timers and those squeezing in a last cast after work.
Tides ran moderate today, with an early morning low at 2:52 AM, peaking to a strong high tide at 9:12 AM near 9.5 feet, holding steady through a mid-afternoon ebb, and pushing back up to 10.9 feet at 8:45 PM—a cycle that set up productive shoreline fishing windows around both highs.
The pink salmon run remains the headline. Local footage posted just this morning from Puget Sound beaches showed anglers landing pinks right off the sand, alongside the spectacular sight of orcas cruising close to shore. It’s a banner season—Alan Liere’s latest outdoors report confirms that this near-record pink run is still bending rods all around the Sound and should keep going strong into September. Whichever pier or beach you’re working, you’re sharing the grounds with a pile of humpties. Expect most catches to be pinks, though a handful of silvers (Coho) are showing in the mix as well, especially for boaters working deeper rips.
Hot spots today include Lincoln Park’s north shore, where beach and pier anglers have been congregating right alongside commercial purse-seiners scooping pinks by the net load. Edmonds Pier and Les Davis Pier are local favorites, with non-stop action reported. In the rivers, Puyallup and Skagit are producing consistently in the lower tide cycles, with Green and Snohomish pushing solid numbers as well. Picnic Point and Point No Point are busy and fishing well for shore casters seeking pinks and some bonus coho.
Best approach for the pink madness: pink lures—spoons, spinners, or jigs up to 1/2 ounce. Chartreuse and white variations are worth a try if the bite slows, but the classic pink pattern is king. Most bait anglers are doing well with small pieces of shrimp, but honestly, hardware is outperforming bait. If you’re chasing coho or bonus Chinook, try blue and silver Krocodile spoons or standard cut-plug herring trolled at 60-80 feet if you’ve got a boat.
Elsewhere in the Sound, a few Chinook are coming in from deeper marks, especially in the shipping lanes and South Sound near Point Defiance—but these fish are scattered and require patience. Reports from West Seattle indicate commercial activity targeting pinks, and recreational anglers should keep an eye out for purse-seine nets.
Bottom fishers found decent luck on the usual suspects—flatfish sitting tight to the bottom near Elliott Bay and Des Moines. Lingcod and rockfish are present but patchy, and most anglers continue to focus on salmon.
With the moon waxing and barometric pressure stable, expect fish activity to persist for twilight and into the late evening incoming tide. If you’re launching after dark, remember to bring extra light and respect local closures. Sea lions, seals, and even orcas have been sighted in close, chasing pinks and putting on a show. Tide-forecast.com reports productive tide cycles aligning with strong feeding windows, so plan your trip to match the highs.
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