collapse

Advertisement


Author Topic: Help me understand these tides  (Read 4115 times)

Offline Pete112288

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Apr 2011
  • Posts: 1233
  • Location: Vancouver, WA
Help me understand these tides
« on: April 28, 2025, 06:15:11 PM »
So I have started fishing a place that is kind of a backwater of the lower columbia and just cannot figure out why the water flows the way it does. It is an interesting scenario for sure
It is a channel that is about 10 miles long. One end dumps right into the columbia, the other end is a large lake. On the far other side of the lake is a flushing channel that only allows water into the lake from the big river, it does not let water go from the lake towards the river.
I fish the fist couple miles of the long channel closest to the lake.
I get the tide predictions for a location within a mile of the mouth of the channel.
Where I fish, the tide kinda goes opposite of what I initially expected. When the tide is going out, the water flows in the direction of the lake, so into the lake from the river. When the tide is coming in, the water flows from the lake towards the river. I have only had good luck on outgoing tides here while the water is flowing into the lake.
To further make things odd, not only is it opposite direction as I suspected, the tide goes slack for longer on the low tide. If a tide says its going to be, lets say, minus 2ft, the water here is slack and still for the entire timeframe that the tides show a negative level. The water only moves when the tides are above zero.
Is there anyone that can explain this?

Online Stein

  • Non-Hunting Topics
  • Trade Count: (+11)
  • Explorer
  • ******
  • Join Date: Sep 2013
  • Posts: 12961
  • Location: Arlington
Re: Help me understand these tides
« Reply #1 on: April 28, 2025, 06:29:35 PM »
This happens in several rivers and around the islands of Puget Sound.  The Columbia is a huge river with a ton of water so it will dominate the tributaries and can easily overpower smaller flows.  When the tide is going out, sounds like that movement is pushing water up the tributary.  It may be due to the angle of where the trib and river meet or something else.  That movement may be pushing fish up into the trib increasing your catch odds.  There are also dams to influence flow.

I fish a place where the water moves in the same direction during both the ebb and flood.  There are other places where it will flow one direction in a small ebb and the opposite during a large ebb.


 


* Advertisement

* Recent Topics

Son drawn - Silver Dollar Youth Any Elk - Help? by HntnFsh
[Today at 08:09:48 PM]


Toutle Quality Bull - Rifle by HntnFsh
[Today at 08:09:14 PM]


Bear behavior by Brute
[Today at 07:50:36 PM]


AUCTION: SE Idaho DIY Deer or Deer/Elk Hunt by WoolyRunner
[Today at 06:39:13 PM]


2025 Montana alternate list by Wingin it
[Today at 06:28:33 PM]


A lonely Job... by AL WORRELLS KID
[Today at 03:53:25 PM]


MA-10 Coho by WAcoueshunter
[Today at 02:08:31 PM]


KODIAK06 2025 trail cam and personal pics thread by kodiak06
[Today at 01:52:01 PM]


Blue Mtn Foothills West Rifle Tag by Trooper
[Today at 01:18:40 PM]


GROUSE 2025...the Season is looming! by Dave Workman
[Today at 01:01:22 PM]


50 inch SXS and Tracks? by jrebel
[Today at 11:20:33 AM]


Sockeye Numbers by Southpole
[Today at 11:12:46 AM]


3 pintails by metlhead
[Today at 11:07:43 AM]


Modified game cart... 🛒 by Dan-o
[Today at 08:44:37 AM]


Velvet by Brute
[Today at 08:37:08 AM]


Calling Bears by hunter399
[Today at 06:12:44 AM]


HUNTNNW 2025 trail cam thread and photos by kodiak06
[Today at 05:43:11 AM]


Lizard Cam by NOCK NOCK
[Today at 04:48:54 AM]

SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal