Here is an interesting read from two years ago...... Doesn't look good at all.
Originally published Thursday, September 11, 2008 at 12:00 AMPuget Sound coho fishery shows mixed results
The coho fishery in Puget Sound is turning into a soap opera. Anglers find good fishing one day and then get stood up the next.By Mark Yuasa
Seattle Times staff reporter
The coho fishery in Puget Sound is turning into a soap opera.
Why are anglers finding good fishing one day and then stood up the next? Did they show up early, and is this the peak of what may be a lackluster return? And why is Lake Washington seeing such a strong early run?
We may never get the answers to all our questions, but those who keep plugging away are finding enough coho to keep the saga interesting.
"We didn't do so good Sunday and ended up with two coho, but then Monday we got eight off West Point [south of Shilshole Bay]," said Gary Krein, owner of All-Star Charters in Everett. "Guys in Edmonds are getting some too, and there have been a few fish off Richmond Beach."
Places like the Shipwreck area just south of Mukilteo and Possession Point were somewhat slow, but more coho appeared of late.
The bright spot is that the coho numbers returning to Lake Washington continue to look strong with 6,244 being counted at the Ballard Locks through Sept. 8. The biggest single-day count was Sept. 7, when 1,157 coho were counted.
Biologists say the lake's coho return has definitely started off well, and it will be interesting to see if it builds over the next 10 days. But most remain cautious as to how it will turn out. The historical peak in the lake is Sept. 18-23.
The Edmonds Coho Derby was held this past Saturday, and 750 tickets were sold with 200 coho weighed in.
"It was a little on the slow side for the derby, but 200 fish is respectable for this time of year and it will only get better," said Tony Floor, director of fishing affairs for Northwest Marine Trade Association.
Derby results: 1. Bill Ward, 14-pound, 7.5-ounce coho, $5,000; 2. Scott Rippel, 12-7, $2,000; 3. Randy Antonio, 10-13.5, $1,000.
Anglers in northern Puget Sound [Area 9] and Sekiu [Area 5] will be allowed to keep all coho [hatchery and wild fish] starting Sept. 16.
In North Sound, anglers at Point No Point, Possession Bar's west side, and Bush and Lagoon points on Whidbey Island have reported releasing larger wild coho.
The bad news is that the Strait of Juan de Fuca, particularly the Sekiu area, has slowed significantly in recent days."The Sekiu area has dropped way down for coho, and it was actually pretty dead [Tuesday] where it was barely a fish per boat average," said Larry Bennett, the head state Fish and Wildlife sampler in the Strait area. "Hopefully that [last week's good fishing] wasn't the peak of the coho run and more will come."
Bennett says Port Angeles is slow with just a few coho caught at midweek.
Followed by a report on October 9, 2008 from the Seattle Times.....[/color]
"Salmon in Puget Sound: Blackmouth fishing in the Tacoma area is fair off the Clay Banks.[color:#3333FF] Coho fishing remains very poor in Central and northern Puget Sound, and from Mukilteo south to the Shipwreck. Blackmouth fishing in Central Sound opens Oct. 16. The Port Angeles area is open for chinook and coho."
Don't want to believe this since I am headed here on Wed. but I guess I should keep my fingers crossed.
Here is one more article from the PI, sorry Mark, detailing 2008. Booooo! And it was sunny and dry that year. So through out too much rain as a theory.
http://www.seattlepi.com/othersports/379532_out18.html