Another piece of advice, if you do launch in Illwaco be sure to wait until the tide bottoms out or just starts to flood back in. It can be pretty treacherous in that area trying to get into the Columbia on a hard-running outgoing tide.
It should go without saying but it’s worth mentioning anyway. Please, wear your PFD’s (personal floatation device) anytime you’re boating in the Columbia, or anywhere for that matter…but especially in the Columbia or any of the coastal fisheries. Things happen, and when they do, they happen fast…be prepared.
Next, know the tides you’ll be fishing. Is it a big tide? That is, a big exchange between high and low tide? Is it a soft tide…which is exactly the opposite condition? Big tides will bring the fish but the soft tides make for easier, safer boating conditions.
If you’re fishing a big tide, fish the flood (incoming) and that hour of high slack then beat it. It’s generally not worth fishing a heavy outgoing tide and it can get very rough and dangerous. It’s best to call it a day. Also, if you have a stiff west wind on an outgoing tide it can be downright deadly. Conversely, an east wind can lay the river down on an outgoing tide.
Finding frozen green label herring may be an issue this year. You’ll likely be able to find appropriately-sized fresh herring. Either way, and especially if you have to drop down a size or two (red or orange label), fish them whole. I’ve long preferred the profile of whole herring over cut plug, unless it’s the big blues or purple label herring.
This is a fishery that generally opens with a whimper and builds to a crescendo. This year should be no different. Expect slow fishing to start the month and it will intensify through the month.
Read the regulations. Don’t (please) rely on Facebook posts and hearsay, do the reading so you know, yourself, what the rules of engagement are. For example, barbless hooks only. Treble or single hook, it doesn’t matter…barbless. These fisheries are heavily regulated so that we can have seasons. Without the proper buffers in place these fisheries would be shut down.