2025/2026 OP SteelHead Rules

So the new rules came out. The press release indicates that most things are the same with just a few closure changes. I'm pretty new to this game with only last year to go on... In the phone app I see that the Sol Duc above the hatchery to the 101 bridge above the Klahoya campground is closed from 12/1 - 4/30, but in the press release it seems to state that is closed from April 1 - 30.

Any ideas what's going on here? It was open last year. The information seems confusing (I'm getting used to this).

In other news I see the Clearwater is open and the ONP also lists the Queets as open which would be exciting to fish... though I guess the rapidly developing WA cynic in me can assume these two will be closed again by the time I'm able to make it out there... see I'm learning fast ;-)
 
The actual emergency rules on the WDFW site show the (new) normal rules, open through March as I wistfully remember awesome April fishing...


Sol Duc River (Clallam County):
  • From mouth to concrete pump station at Sol Duc Hatchery:
    • Jan. 1–March 31:
      • All species: Bait prohibited.
    • April 1–30:
      • All species: Closed.
  • From concrete pump station at Sol Duc Hatchery to Highway 101 Bridge upstream of Klahowya Campground:
    • April 1–30:
      • All species: Closed.
 
The actual emergency rules on the WDFW site show the (new) normal rules, open through March as I wistfully remember awesome April fishing...


Sol Duc River (Clallam County):
  • From mouth to concrete pump station at Sol Duc Hatchery:
    • Jan. 1–March 31:
      • All species: Bait prohibited.
    • April 1–30:
      • All species: Closed.
  • From concrete pump station at Sol Duc Hatchery to Highway 101 Bridge upstream of Klahowya Campground:
    • April 1–30:
      • All species: Closed.
 

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ok I can sleep tonight. I emailed wdfw... here's the reply

Good afternoon and thank you for reaching out to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

For the Sol Duc River, from the concrete pump station at Sol Duc hatchery to Hwy. 101 Bridge upstream of Klahowya campground CRC (406), you are correct that it is still currently open for both trout and other game fish following statewide minimum size/daily limit (except: release cutthroat trout and wild rainbow trout) and that the all-species closure will go into effect via emergency regulation starting April 1st through April 30th.


I notified our regulations team regarding the FishWA app error, and they are working to get that corrected and it should be updated here very soon. Thank you again for bringing that to our attention and let me know if you have any additional questions!



 
I remember way back in the late 90’s fighting for wild release that the opponents of wild release always brought up April fishing, in that if we cared about wild steelhead why were we fishing that late? I guess we both won 😉
 
I remember way back in the late 90’s fighting for wild release that the opponents of wild release always brought up April fishing, in that if we cared about wild steelhead why were we fishing that late? I guess we both won 😉
Any rebuttals for that argument btw? The more I think about it the more not fishing in April kinda makes sense
 
Any rebuttals for that argument btw? The more I think about it the more not fishing in April kinda makes sense
I haven't fished in April for steelhead in a long, long time. I actually think the very last trip I ever took to the OP was 2011-ish in early April. Started off by catching 2 very obviously spawning/spawned out steelhead and threw in the towel.
 
Any rebuttals for that argument btw? The more I think about it the more not fishing in April kinda makes sense
The Queets, Hoh, and Sol Duc (and possibly other rivers) have fresh run steelhead in April. Of course there are kelts and actively spawning fish in April as well. Ethical anglers don't target actively spawning fish; they are easy to avoid. Kelts may be found most anywhere in the river, so hooking some is part of the price of admission to fishing. I once caught a wild winter run kelt in the Humptulips in January, so the possibility exists through most of the season.

I hate being regulated out of fishing in April on the Skagit (not on the OP, but bear with me). There are more fresh fish than spawners or kelts, and many seasons I've fished through to April 30th without hooking a single spawner or kelt. Peak spawning is in May, so that helps, unlike the OP where the spawning season looks to be spread out over a longer period of time.

I've read posts claiming that we shouldn't fish for fish making their spawning run. Uh, OK, where do you draw the line? Because the reason steelhead (north of Rogue River, Oregon) enter fresh water rivers is because they are making a spawning run. So maybe no one should ever be allowed to fish for steelhead in rivers? Without going into a philosophical essay on recreational angling, I'll just say that doesn't work for me.

As the collective "we" work to recover wild steelhead, both their run timing and spawn timing will expand, forming a wide bell-shaped curve. If you choose to prohibit fishing when fish are actively spawning, you will have to close seasons before the peak of the run has even occurred. Is that the intent? Not for me. Instead, I prefer that we focus on management for healthy populations and not get ourselves wound around the axle of incidental hooking of kelts and actively spawning fish. I advocate spreading the word that it's unethical to target actively spawning fish; besides it's illegal anyway and has been for as long as I can remember, going back to the 1960s when I first became aware that such a thing as fishing regulations even existed. And incidentally hooking a few kelts isn't going to set back steelhead population recovery. How do I know this? Look at the Skagit for an example.

The Skagit has a good steelhead data set going back to 1978 spawning escapement estimates. Over that time period increasingly restrictive recreational fishing regulations have been imposed. But limited directed harvest of wild steelhead was allowed almost to the end of the 1990s. During the period of record (1978 - today) there is no evidence suggesting that recreational fishing has in any way limited the wild steelhead population run size. All indications point to the extent of the freshwater rearing environment and especially the marine/ocean environment as the factors limiting the adult wild steelhead population size. Recreational angling amounts to statistical background environmental noise, not threat to population health and abundance. Recreational fishing needs to have an eye kept on it, something WDFW has done quite a bit better than most things relating to anadromous fish management that it is responsible for.

Rebuttal enough?
 
The fresh Sol Duc fish in April are fun...
Fishing in the lower river gets you a good shot at sea liced fish, but I don't ever catch really big sea liced ones at that time for some reason.
Always have a shot at an early Springer there, so that's fiun too.
 
The Queets, Hoh, and Sol Duc (and possibly other rivers) have fresh run steelhead in April. Of course there are kelts and actively spawning fish in April as well. Ethical anglers don't target actively spawning fish; they are easy to avoid. Kelts may be found most anywhere in the river, so hooking some is part of the price of admission to fishing. I once caught a wild winter run kelt in the Humptulips in January, so the possibility exists through most of the season.

I hate being regulated out of fishing in April on the Skagit (not on the OP, but bear with me). There are more fresh fish than spawners or kelts, and many seasons I've fished through to April 30th without hooking a single spawner or kelt. Peak spawning is in May, so that helps, unlike the OP where the spawning season looks to be spread out over a longer period of time.

I've read posts claiming that we shouldn't fish for fish making their spawning run. Uh, OK, where do you draw the line? Because the reason steelhead (north of Rogue River, Oregon) enter fresh water rivers is because they are making a spawning run. So maybe no one should ever be allowed to fish for steelhead in rivers? Without going into a philosophical essay on recreational angling, I'll just say that doesn't work for me.

As the collective "we" work to recover wild steelhead, both their run timing and spawn timing will expand, forming a wide bell-shaped curve. If you choose to prohibit fishing when fish are actively spawning, you will have to close seasons before the peak of the run has even occurred. Is that the intent? Not for me. Instead, I prefer that we focus on management for healthy populations and not get ourselves wound around the axle of incidental hooking of kelts and actively spawning fish. I advocate spreading the word that it's unethical to target actively spawning fish; besides it's illegal anyway and has been for as long as I can remember, going back to the 1960s when I first became aware that such a thing as fishing regulations even existed. And incidentally hooking a few kelts isn't going to set back steelhead population recovery. How do I know this? Look at the Skagit for an example.

The Skagit has a good steelhead data set going back to 1978 spawning escapement estimates. Over that time period increasingly restrictive recreational fishing regulations have been imposed. But limited directed harvest of wild steelhead was allowed almost to the end of the 1990s. During the period of record (1978 - today) there is no evidence suggesting that recreational fishing has in any way limited the wild steelhead population run size. All indications point to the extent of the freshwater rearing environment and especially the marine/ocean environment as the factors limiting the adult wild steelhead population size. Recreational angling amounts to statistical background environmental noise, not threat to population health and abundance. Recreational fishing needs to have an eye kept on it, something WDFW has done quite a bit better than most things relating to anadromous fish management that it is responsible for.

Rebuttal enough?
Shame on you for throwing some science out there!

Private funding? Don't like the idea of it. Lets WDFW off the hook for robbing us of opportunity. And I fear the 'funders' will start to feel ownership of the season which can lead to a lot of undesirable outcomes.
 
The fresh Sol Duc fish in April were fun...
Fishing in the lower river gets you a good shot at sea liced fish, but I don't ever catch really big sea liced ones at that time for some reason.
Always have a shot at an early Springer there, so that's fiun too.
Agreed but corrected one word for you.

As Salmo also noted, I've caught a double digits of kelts and well colored bucks the first week of January in the upper reaches of the Quilleute system.
And... have caught super bright, seas-lice covered steelhead in June fas bycatch while fishing for springers in the lower river.
And... it's very easy to avoid spawning steelhead by just not swinging flies through tail outs.

Thanks to Salmo for taking the time to craft the detailed response above. Always appreciate your perpsective.
 
So the new rules came out. The press release indicates that most things are the same with just a few closure changes. I'm pretty new to this game with only last year to go on... In the phone app I see that the Sol Duc above the hatchery to the 101 bridge above the Klahoya campground is closed from 12/1 - 4/30, but in the press release it seems to state that is closed from April 1 - 30.

Any ideas what's going on here? It was open last year. The information seems confusing (I'm getting used to this).

In other news I see the Clearwater is open and the ONP also lists the Queets as open which would be exciting to fish... though I guess the rapidly developing WA cynic in me can assume these two will be closed again by the time I'm able to make it out there... see I'm learning fast ;-)
View attachment 174735
So the new rules came out. The press release indicates that most things are the same with just a few closure changes. I'm pretty new to this game with only last year to go on... In the phone app I see that the Sol Duc above the hatchery to the 101 bridge above the Klahoya campground is closed from 12/1 - 4/30, but in the press release it seems to state that is closed from April 1 - 30.

Any ideas what's going on here? It was open last year. The information seems confusing (I'm getting used to this).

In other news I see the Clearwater is open and the ONP also lists the Queets as open which would be exciting to fish... though I guess the rapidly developing WA cynic in me can assume these two will be closed again by the time I'm able to make it out there... see I'm learning fast ;-)
Queets (Clearwater) probably should not be open. Park has been hampered, apparently, by all the federal shutdown and staffing loses.queets2026.png
 
View attachment 174735

Queets (Clearwater) probably should not be open. Park has been hampered, apparently, by all the federal shutdown and staffing loses.View attachment 174736

I would be surprised if it stayed open based on the forecasts.

I suspect NPS will issue an 'emergency' rule change to close it down before the season starts in earnest. The default regulation is for it to be open until they issue the closure. Last year the closure notice came on December 6th and started on December 16th. I think there is usually some behind the scenes horse trading with the tribe and WDFW that has to happen as well, so, as you say, the government shutdown may have slowed some of that process down this year.
 
I personally liked the no bait, no fishing from boats regulations. It's been a minute since I have fished over there. I need to see if any of the old regulations that I liked are still in effect. It might encourage me to cross the pass and drive around the sound again.
 
Was patiently waiting for the Queets to drop back into shape, but saw on FB this morning that the National Park shut the river down. Double checked (as I'm very skeptical with FB info) and the Olympic National Park website does confirm it had changed it as of last week. Miss this fishery so badly.

But found the Quinault Tribe Queets netting fishery for 2025-2026 season. Total of 52 days of netting (if the rivers aren't blown). Federally funded broodstock program that us sportsman cannot fish for. Go figure :mad:

 
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