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This is a great website and I'm not trying to hijack the focus from your excellent British Columbia waters, but there has been some interest and discussion about the fish we have in the Columbia River of Washington so I thought I'd post some basics here.
Here's where to look to see salmon, steelhead and shad numbers by day, year and for the ten year average as they climb over the fish ladder at the Bonneville Dam Fish (lowest of the hydro dams on the Columbia) as well as all of the dams upstream.
http://www.fpc.org/currentdaily/histfishtwo_7day-ytd_adults.htm
Here's the site for the fish counter's window at Bonneville, but it is down now for maintainence:
http://www.nwp.usace.army.mil/op/b/fishcam.asp
Heres a pic from September 21, 2006:
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There are three main runs of chinook salmon on the Columbia River: spring chinook (march - may), Summer Chinook (June - July), and Fall Chinook (August - October). The springers taste the best and can cost $30/lb. in the grocery stores; Fall chinook are more numerous, larger (every year fish in the 40s - 60 lbs. are caught) yet not as flavorful and cost about $8/lb. in stores. The Summer chinook is the smallest run but feature football shaped, plump fish with some weighing 40+ lbs. (called June Hogs). Methods for springers and fall fish vary (springers: trolled or back bounced herring or Kwikfish with sardine wrap - chrome and yellow or green, Fall fish: big wobbling spoons - Alvins, Brad's Wobblers, brass and red beaded spinners, Red U-20 flatfish etc.) with Summer fish caught using methods for each. CW
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Satisfaction: 23' Aluminum Thunderjet with Ford 460 salmon fishing the Columbia River
Here's where to look to see salmon, steelhead and shad numbers by day, year and for the ten year average as they climb over the fish ladder at the Bonneville Dam Fish (lowest of the hydro dams on the Columbia) as well as all of the dams upstream.
http://www.fpc.org/currentdaily/histfishtwo_7day-ytd_adults.htm
Here's the site for the fish counter's window at Bonneville, but it is down now for maintainence:
http://www.nwp.usace.army.mil/op/b/fishcam.asp
Heres a pic from September 21, 2006:

There are three main runs of chinook salmon on the Columbia River: spring chinook (march - may), Summer Chinook (June - July), and Fall Chinook (August - October). The springers taste the best and can cost $30/lb. in the grocery stores; Fall chinook are more numerous, larger (every year fish in the 40s - 60 lbs. are caught) yet not as flavorful and cost about $8/lb. in stores. The Summer chinook is the smallest run but feature football shaped, plump fish with some weighing 40+ lbs. (called June Hogs). Methods for springers and fall fish vary (springers: trolled or back bounced herring or Kwikfish with sardine wrap - chrome and yellow or green, Fall fish: big wobbling spoons - Alvins, Brad's Wobblers, brass and red beaded spinners, Red U-20 flatfish etc.) with Summer fish caught using methods for each. CW

Satisfaction: 23' Aluminum Thunderjet with Ford 460 salmon fishing the Columbia River