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Chicken Ranch is a part of an ocean located in Lincoln County, Oregon, United States. It is most popular for fishing Brown trout, Pacific halibut, and Black rockfish.
Learn what time of year and day to go fishing at Chicken Ranch. Download Fishbrain today to look for new fishing spots, scout new fishing access, or prep for your next trip.

Disclaimer: Always check local fishing regulations, water access rights and land ownership before fishing, regardless of any catches logged in that area by the Fishbrain community. Fishbrain has mapped millions of acres of government-owned land across the USA to help you identify potential fishing access, but you are responsible for ensuring compliance with all legal requirements.
Fishing regulations in Oregon can change throughout the year. Make sure to check this page before fishing for the most up to date rules and regulations for the current season. Local regulations govern when you can fish, the max size of the fish you can keep, how many fish you can keep, and more.
The maximum number of individual fish legally harvested per harvester per day. Bag limits are only for properly licensed anglers actively harvesting the species. People who are not actively harvesting or are not properly licensed (if a license is required) may NOT be counted for the purpose of bag limits.
OR Angling with Single Line or Spear
May be taken by angling with a single line, no more than 2 hooks; and by spear.
Check Pacific Halibut regulations before you fish.
Pacific halibut possession limit: 1 daily limit at sea, 3 daily limits on land.
Pacific halibut seasons are managed and enforced based on port of landing. Halibut may only be landed at ports located within areas currently open to halibut retention regardless of the area of catch.
When Pacific halibut are onboard the vessel during all depth halibut openers, there may be restrictions on retention of species in the groundfish group other than sablefish, other flatfish, and Pacific cod (which are
always allowed), in areas north of Humbug Mountain. Check regulations before you fish.
Catch limits and seasons are set in April but may change on short notice. In-season changes to regulations
are available from:
The maximum number of individual fish across an aggregate group of species legally harvested per harvester per day.
OR Marine Allowed Methods
Species may be taken by angling, hand, bow and arrow, spear, gaff hook, snag hook and herring jigs.
Seasons are set after the regulations are published. Check regulations before fishing at http://myodfw.com/fishing/marine-zone
Bag limit, season, and area regulations subject to change in-season. Check http://myodfw.com/fishing/marine-zone or call (541) 867-4741 before you fish.
Any vessel fishing for, or possessing, groundfish (bottomfish) in the ocean must have a functional descending device onboard, and use on any rockfish released outside of 30 fathoms. For more information go to myodfw.com/articles/rockfish-recompression
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Fishing in Oregon requires a valid state fishing license for anglers. Licenses include resident and non-resident, annual, short-term, and combination permits, available online or at licensed vendors.
In Oregon, no fishing license is required for anglers under 12. Residents 70 and older qualify for a discounted license. A few other exceptions worth knowing:
Free fishing days — most states designate 1–2 weekends a year where anyone can fish without a license
Tribal waters — tribal members fishing on tribal land operate under separate tribal regulations
Private ponds — landowners fishing their own water typically don't need a license
Non-residents usually pay more for a license than residents. Some species also require an extra stamp or endorsement on top of your base license.
Get license
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