2025 OFFISHALL Vancouver- Howe Sound-Sechelt Fishing Reports Thread

Too windy for us yesterday. Running out of Howe Sound around 11:30am and once south of Point Atkinson it was breezy and choppy. Didn't think it would be fishable out at T10 so we tucked in on the east side of Bowen at Cowans. Quite a few boats working the area trying to stay outta the wind and chop.

We got three fish to the boat; all unclipped coho. The first one was easily the biggest coho I've encountered around here...maybe 8-10lbs?? My son had fun with that one on the rod while standing on the bow. At one point the rod was bent all the way to the gunnel!

We had very poor ratio of getting hits to stick. Probably missed 10+ hits that were on and then gone. Very frustrating. Even tucked in behind Bowen the winds were strong and boat handling wasn't the easiest. Fished anchovies on one side and two different flash flies on the other side (white/clear and blue/white). Similar rates of hits on both sides of the boat.

We eventually went to Bowen and played on a beach for an hour before heading home. Cleanup is a lot faster when you don't have any fish to deal with. Homemade pizza for dinner was a consolation prize.
 
Too windy for us yesterday. Running out of Howe Sound around 11:30am and once south of Point Atkinson it was breezy and choppy. Didn't think it would be fishable out at T10 so we tucked in on the east side of Bowen at Cowans. Quite a few boats working the area trying to stay outta the wind and chop.

We got three fish to the boat; all unclipped coho. The first one was easily the biggest coho I've encountered around here...maybe 8-10lbs?? My son had fun with that one on the rod while standing on the bow. At one point the rod was bent all the way to the gunnel!

We had very poor ratio of getting hits to stick. Probably missed 10+ hits that were on and then gone. Very frustrating. Even tucked in behind Bowen the winds were strong and boat handling wasn't the easiest. Fished anchovies on one side and two different flash flies on the other side (white/clear and blue/white). Similar rates of hits on both sides of the boat.

We eventually went to Bowen and played on a beach for an hour before heading home. Cleanup is a lot faster when you don't have any fish to deal with. Homemade pizza for dinner was a consolation prize.
Had similar experience as you did. Stayed around Cowen away from the wind. Only hooked and lost one spring but hooked well over 20 coho within 5 hours fishing. Out of 20 or so coho, managed 4 clipped ones to the boat. One wild released must've been well over 12 lb. Used only white hootchie.
 
Had similar experience as you did. Stayed around Cowen away from the wind. Only hooked and lost one spring but hooked well over 20 coho within 5 hours fishing. Out of 20 or so coho, managed 4 clipped ones to the boat. One wild released must've been well over 12 lb. Used only white hootchie.
What did you guys get the ho’s on?
 
Early bite at sandheads was strong. Lines down at 7:40. Solo limit of 2 chinooks at 8:04. So what do you do then?

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Fished a bit more. Picked up a hatchery coho. Put back another 4 chinooks, including a low 20s chrome beauty. Tried some different tacks as the tide started to ebb.

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Flat calm, warm, super fun morning on the water.
 
The season had been quiet, the kind where the logbook has little worth writing about. But all that changed today.

Met up with the crew at 6:00 AM, and we were pushing off from the marina by 6:30. We made our way out to Sandhead, arriving around 7:20—perfect timing to catch the high slack and the first light bite. The weather report was spot-on; it was flat calm, and unsurprisingly, a fleet of at least 30 boats had the same idea.

We set up in 260-300 feet of water. I started with a green hootchie on one side, while my buddies ran bait on the other. Our downriggers were set at 78 and 108 feet.

Just ten minutes in, my rod slammed down. After a good fight, I landed a beautiful high-teen white spring. That kicked off a steady, productive bite for the next two hours. My buddies quickly switched to hootchies after some feisty, wild cohos kept stealing their bait!

We pulled the lines at 10:00 AM with an incredible haul in the box: a massive 35-pounder, a 28, a 21, a 19, and a 13 lb spring—a mix of white and marble. It was, without a doubt, the best two hours of fishing I've experienced in a long, long time.

Back at the marina by 10:45, we iced and cleaned our prize catch. Grabbed a well-earned lunch, and now I'm heading to work with memories that will last a lifetime.

The fish are out there, folks. Get after them
 

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