The Siuslaw news. (Florence, Lane County, Or.) 1960-current, June 29, 2016, WEDNESDAY EDITION, Page 3B, Image 13

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    SIUSLAW NEWS ❚ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016
3 B
August ‘Cool at the Coast’ tees off with sold out sponsorship
It was over almost before it
began.
Rotary’s “Cool at the Coast”
golf tournament sponsorships
for tees, greens, KPs and other
prizes sold out at the June 7
tournament kickoff.
The presenting sponsors of
this year’s tournament is Three
Rivers Casino Resort and
Ocean Dunes Golf Links.
Three Rivers will also spon-
sor the hole-in-one prize on
hole No. 8, a 2016 Ford
Mustang.
“Three Rivers and Ocean
Dunes have been our lead
sponsors from the beginning,”
said tournament co-chair Deb
Lamb. “We could never have
enjoyed the success we have
had without their support.”
Fishing
from 1B
Casting spinners, drifting
bait or using a bobber and jig
can be effective. Cover water
and fish small and simple as
the river conditions are low
and clear. For cutthroat trout,
casting small spinners, spoons
or fly fishing streamers or dry
flies can be very effective.
WILSON RIVER: Steelhead,
Chinook, cutthroat
Fishing for steelhead and
spring Chinook is slow. The
water is low and clear, so use
lighter gear and target the
deeper holding areas. Trout
Premier sponsors of this
year’s tournament include
PeaceHealth, Oregon Pacific
Bank, ServPro of South Eugene
and Florence and Banner
Bank.
PeaceHealth and Oregon
Pacific Bank have been major
sponsors all seven years, and
this is ServPro’s third year as a
main sponsor as well.
“After six successful years,
we have a regional reputation,”
said co-chair Craig Sanders.
“Sponsors are anxious to be
involved, not only because it’s
for a great cause, but also
because they get fantastic pub-
licity and everyone has a great
time.”
In addition to supporting
Rotary International’s “End
angling should be fair.
YAQUINA RIVER:
Cutthroat
For cutthroat trout casting
small spinners, spoons or fly
fishing streamers or dry flies
can be very effective. Angling
for all species in streams
above tidewater is restricted to
artificial flies and lures until
Sept. 1.
COOS COUNTY LAKES
AND PONDS: Trout, warmwa-
ter fish
Legal and trophy size trout
were released earlier this
month in Empire Lakes, and
legal-size trout were put into
Tenmile Lakes. This was the
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Polio Now” campaign, some of
the funds raised with “Cool at
the Coast” go to support impor-
tant projects in Florence.
“Other Rotary clubs in our
district have become active par-
ticipants,” Sanders said. “One of
our premier sponsors is ServPro,
sponsored by Trever Kinney of
the Sutherlin Rotary Club. We
love it when other clubs send
teams. It makes the competition
that much more fun.”
The seventh annual “Cool at
the Coast” will tee off at Ocean
Dunes Golf Links Saturday,
Aug. 6, at 10 a.m. Call 541-997-
3232 to register or visit www.
coolatthecoast.com.
Registration forms are also
available at Ocean Dunes Golf
Links.
last trout stocking until fall.
Anglers that catch a tagged
trout in Empire Lakes can
report the tag number to
ODFW by stopping by the
Charleston Office, calling 541-
888-5515, or report tags
online.
A few of these tags are
worth a $50 gift card. Fishing
in the area lakes for trout has
been ok with anglers having
the best success using small
spinners, spoons, or garlic fla-
vored Powerbait.
The daily trout bag limit in
these lakes is five trout per day
with only one trout over 20
inches.
TENMILE BASIN: Trout,
steelhead, bass
Angling is restricted to arti-
ficial flies and lures in streams
and rivers above tidewater.
Tenmile Lakes is open all year
for trout. Anglers have been
catching rainbow trout trolling
wedding ring spinners. Use of
bait is allowed in lakes year
round.
Largemouth bass fishing has
been good over the past
month. Anglers are catching
bass near structure or on the
deep end of the weed lines
using spinner baits, jigs, or
rubber worms. Top water lures
have been effective in the early
COURTESY PHOTO
Bob Garcia (center) of Three Rivers Casino Resort shows off this year’s sponsor banner
with tournament co-chairs Craig Sanders and Deb Lamb.
mornings or evenings.
UMPQUA RIVER, SOUTH:
Bass, trout
Trout fishing should remain
viable in cold water areas.
Trout fishing is catch-and-
release only in the South
Umpqua and tributaries. Bass
fishing should be good with
warming water temperatures.
WINCHESTER BAY:
Bottomfish, perch
Fishing for bottom fish in
the Triangle and South jetty
has been successful.
PACIFIC OCEAN AND
BEACHES: Bottomfish,
Dungeness crab, surf perch,
salmon, halibut
Recreational harvest of crab
is open along the entire
Oregon Coast. It is still recom-
mended you discard the crab
viscera (guts/butter) before
cooking.
Anglers fishing the beaches
from Coos Bay to Bandon
have been catching redtail surf
perch. Sand shrimp or Berkley
Gulp sand worms have been
working the best for bait. Surf
perch fishing is usually best on
the incoming tide.
Recreational ocean salmon
fishing from Cape Falcon to
Humbug Mt. is open for all
salmon except coho salmon.
Anglers are allowed two
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O CEAN S ALMON
The Cape Falcon to
Humbug Mt. Chinook salmon
recreational fishing season
continues through Oct. 31.
This season is open for all
salmon except coho salmon,
with a bag limit of two salmon
per day, and minimum sizes
for Chinook at 24 inches or
larger, and steelhead at 20
inches or larger.
Ocean Chinook fishing so
far this season has been rela-
tively slow, due to overall low
effort levels. Most anglers are
concentrating on bottomfish
for now.
Just a reminder: Anglers are
restricted to no more than two
single point barbless hooks
when fishing for salmon, and
when fishing for any other
species if a salmon is on board
the vessel.
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salmon per day with a mini-
mum size for Chinook at 24
inches or larger. The selective
coho (fin-clipped) season
opened June 25 with a quota
of 26,000 coho.
The Nearshore Halibut sea-
son is open seven days a week
from Cape Falcon to Humbug
Mt.
Fishing for bottom fish is
now closed outside of a line
approximating the 30-fathom
curve.
Fishing for black rockfish
has been good from Coos Bay
south to Bandon. Fishing for
ling cod has been decent.
The marine fish daily bag
limit is seven fish and a sepa-
rate daily limit for lingcod (2).
Anglers can only keep 3 blue
rockfish and 1 canary rockfish
as part of their daily limit and
there will be no harvest of
China, quillback, or copper
rockfish.
PUBLIC NOTICES
Bottom fishing is good on
both the north and south coasts
last week. Anglers out of
Garibaldi averaged over five
fish per angler and south coast
catches averaged 3-5 fish per
angler on private trips, and
limits on charter trips.
Lingcod has dropped off
somewhat along the majority
of the coast, but Garibaldi
anglers averaged one lingcod
per angler and Depoe Bay
anglers brought in nearly two
lings per angler.
There were also some ling-
cod landed on the south coast,
averaging one lincod per
angler out of Charleston.
Lingcod move closer to
shore in spring to lay large egg
masses, which are guarded by
males.
To catch lingcod, try a white
plastic grub on a lead jig head
in rocky areas when the tide is
not running fast.
There’s a new rockfish in
town – the Deacon rockfish.
Deacon rockfish is a newly
identified species that was for-
merly referred to as the solid
version of blue rockfish.
What does that mean for
you? Nothing in 2016. Every
rule that refers to blue rockfish
(like the daily bag limit of 3)
now applies to blue rockfish
and deacon rockfish combined.
S URFPERCH
South coast surf perch fish-
ing has been excellent, with
lots of limits! Surfperch are a
diverse group of fish that pro-
vide a variety of angling
opportunities.
Striped Seaperch are found
year-round in rocky areas like
jetties; and ocean surf is the
place to find Redtail Surfperch
and Silver Perch.
R AZOR C LAMS
NOTICE: Razor clams are
closed from the north jetty of
the Siuslaw River to the
California border due to
domoic acid. Razor clamming
is open from the Columbia
River to the north jetty of the
Siuslaw River.
The Oregon Department of
Agriculture is continuing to
test for shellfish toxins.
C LAMS
Both razor clamming and
bay clamming have been
excellent all along the coast.
Check the ODFW Shellfish
website for where and when to
harvest your favorite bivalves.
Updated maps on where to
clam
Some recommended areas to
go are the Charleston Triangle
in Coos Bay for gaper clams
and Netarts Bay for butter
clams.
C RABBING
Ocean crabbing has been
slow on the south coast, and
good on the central coast.
Estuary crab catch has been
picking up as male crab molt,
grow into legal size, and move
into estuaries.
Red rock crab are caught
using the same gear as
Dungeness crab but have a
larger daily limit (24), and,
unlike Dungeness crab, any
size or sex of red rock crab
may be retained (although
most crabbers keep only the
largest crabs, which have a lot
more meat than small ones).
Always in your newspaper:
Now in your inbox, too.
I f n o b o d y k n o w s w h a t ’ s g o i n g o n ,
n o b o d y c a n d o a n y t h i n g a b o u t i t .
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