Rogue River fish runs are second only to those on the Columbia, thanks to the Cole Rivers fish hatchery, the largest hatchery on the West Coast.

The Rogue River flows 215 miles from Crater Lake to the Pacific Ocean and is one of the most consistent fisheries in Southern Oregon.

The Rogue is one of the original eight wild and scenic rivers and luckily remains so, lined with evergreen forests and much wildlife including black bear, river otter, black tail deer, bald eagles, osprey, great blue herons, water ouzel, Canadian geese, beavers, and mink. The Rogue is also known for its salmon and steelhead. Chinook king salmon, Coho silver salmon and both winter and summer run steelhead make the Rogue River an angling destination. There isn’t a month of the year that you can’t catch either salmon or steelhead on the Rogue River. A guided fishing trip is a great way to see and experience what the Rogue has to offer.

FishingTheRogue.com