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"Lake Erie-Detroit Fishing: Perfect Fall Conditions for Walleye, Bass, and More"

"Lake Erie-Detroit Fishing: Perfect Fall Conditions for Walleye, Bass, and More"



Artificial Lure here with your Lake Erie–Detroit fishing report for Wednesday September 10, 2025.

Weather’s shaping up near perfect for fall fishing: sunny skies and a little chill in the air, with high pressure rolling out and the faintest hint of a cold front brushing through late tonight. National Weather Service Cleveland says winds today are light, south switching to north as the sun climbs, and waves are running steady at one foot or less. Water temps are comfortable—about 67°F off Toledo, 70°F off Cleveland, 68°F off Erie—which means active fish all through the shallows and deeper holes.

You’re looking at sunrise at 7:09 AM and sunset at 7:51 PM, giving almost 13 hours of daylight. With these clear, calm conditions and good visibility, morning and evening bites are definitely strongest. Midday slows, but if you’re targeting deeper humps or river mouths you’ll still find feeding schools.

In the Detroit River and just inside Erie’s western basin, walleye are biting well. Michigan Sportsman folks are reporting solid catches spring into early September, especially trolling crawler harnesses and flicker shads in 18-25 feet along the Ford Channel and up near Fighting Island. Trollers have boated plenty of 3–6 pound walleye and a handful tipping near 8 pounds this week—no monsters, but solid eaters and steady action. Jigging with emerald shiner tipped jigs works best early and late in the day when current picks up, while casting crankbaits or slow-rolling plastics is drawing bonus bites off the deeper banks.

Bass action is hot right now, too. According to the recent MLF Phoenix Bass Fishing League tournament wrap from Kimball’s Mandel out of the Detroit River, largemouth and smallmouth are moving shallow on rocky points and submerged weedbeds. Nolan Mandel hauled in ten bass totaling 47 pounds and change in two days just off the river mouth—spinnerbaits in chartreuse/white and tubes rigged natural goby style seemed to be the ticket. If you’re pounding shoreline structure, toss chatterbaits or soft jerkbaits early, then switch to drop-shot rigs as the sun climbs higher.

Yellow perch schools are tight in 12–18 feet all along the north side of Erie Metropark and near the mouth of the Detroit River. Locals report mixed bags, but plenty of hand-sized keepers with a few slabs for frying. Minnow rigs set a foot off bottom are the proven method, especially with the light northeast wind swinging south mid-morning. Best bite is from 8 AM to noon before boat traffic ramps up.

For northern pike and the occasional muskie, hit the weed edges and stumpy back bays off Gibraltar and near Pointe Mouillee. Big spoons, white or fire tiger spinnerbaits, and large soft plastics will draw strikes, particularly at first light or right before dusk. If you’re after panfish, smallmouth, or urban carp in the riverside marinas, try worms below floats along pilings—a steady bite almost all day as long as the boat noise stays low.

Best lures and baits today:
- Walleye: crawler harnesses, flicker shads, and shiner-tipped jigs
- Bass: chartreuse/white spinnerbaits, natural color tubes, chatterbaits, and drop-shot goby imitations
- Perch: live minnows on two-hook or crappie rigs
- Pike: big spoons, fire tiger spinnerbaits, large swimbaits
- Panfish: small worms, grubs, ice jigs

Hot spots for the day:
- Ford Channel up toward Fighting Island for walleye and bass
- North edge of Erie Metropark for perch
- Gibraltar and Pointe Mouillee back bays for pike, possible muskie
- Shoreline marinas for panfish and some urban bass or carp

If you’re coming out, expect steady fish activity all day with the best window turning on right after sunrise and again before sunset, thanks to the stable weather and calm water letting baitfish move shallow. The air’s crisp, water is lively, and the crowds thin—it’s a classic


Published on 3 months, 1 week ago






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