The top fishing guides and
charter boats in the Tillamook area are listed on this website.
Tillamook Bay Fishing Guides
Tillamook Bay fishing guides catch fall
Chinook Salmon at Tillamook Bay.
Tillamook Bay Fishing Guides / Local area fishing guides
catch more fish
Call a Tillamook Bay fishing guide today for best dates.
Tillamook Bay fishing guides
Tillamook Bay fishing guides and
local resorts for salmon, steelhead fishing guides and
outfitters from all over the northwest. Find a Tillamook
Bay fishing guide below and book a trip to catch Salmon,
Steelhead, or Sturgeon at Tillamook Bay, The Pacific
Ocean, Nehalem Bay, the Kilches, Wilson River, the Trask
River, Siletz River or a nearby river using popular
methods of fishing like trolling, back bouncing,
drifting eggs, casting lures, bovver fishing, using side
planers jigging, float tubing, fly fishing or select
your favorite method for catching the King Salmon which
are most popular for the fall Chinook run every year.
Big Fish Guide Serviceoffers full day fishing trips on the Columbia River for Salmon,
Steelhead and Sturgeon, Fall Chinook, Spring Salmon, Kings and Coho in
the Portland area and popular nearby rivers up to John Day dam.
Brett's Salmon & Steelhead Fishing
Guide Service offers guiding fishing trips for Salmon,
Steelhead, Trophy Steelhead, Pink Salmon, Humpies,
Chum Salmon and Dolly Varden on the Skagit river, Skykomish river,
Snoqualmie river, Snohomish river, Stillaguamish river and the Cowlitz
river.
TJ's, Guide Service
Tom Jones offers fishing guide service for Salmon & Sturgeon at
Tillamook Bay, Oregon coastal rivers, & Northwest Oregon rivers &
streams in addition to Astoria area Sturgeon on the lower Columbia.
Tillamook Bay
Tillamook Bay
is a small inlet of the
Pacific Ocean, approximately 6 mi (10 km) long and 2 mi (3 km) wide, on the
northwest coast of the
U.S. state
of Oregon. It
is located just north of
Cape
Meares in eastern
Tillamook County approximately 75 mi (120 km) west of
Portland.
The bay is protected from the open ocean by shoals and a 3 mi (5 km) sandbar
called the Bayocean Peninsula. It is surrounded closely by the Coastal Range
except at its southeast end, where the town of Tillamook sits near the mouths of
the Kilchis, Wilson, Trask and Tillamook rivers, which flow quickly down from
the surrounding timber-producing regions of the Coastal Range to converge at the
bay. The short Miami River enters the north end of the bay. The small fishing
village of Garibaldi sits near the cliffs opening of the bay in the ocean. The
rivers that feed the bay are known for their prolific steelhead and salmon runs.
The mixing of freshwater from the rivers with the ocean's saltwater makes the
bay an estuary.
The name "Tillamook" is Coast Salish word meaning "Land of Many Waters",
probably referring to the rivers that enter the bay. At the time of the arrival
of Europeans, the area along the coast was inhabited by the Tillamook and other
related Coast Salish tribes. Historians believe they entered the area around the
year 1400 and Lewis and Clark estimated the population south of the Columbia
River along the coast at approximately 2,200.
Marv's Guide Service
Marv's Guide Service - Oregon fishing Guide . I fish for Salmon,
Steelhead , Sturgeon. Tillamook Bay, Buoy 10, Rivers: Columbia,
Willamette, Wilson, Trask, Kilchis, Nestucca, Clackamas, & Siletz .
We fish from a 23' Alumaweld Jet Sled & a 17' Drift Boat.