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Late Summer Transition on Lake St. Clair - Smallmouth, Perch, and Walleye Action Heating Up

Late Summer Transition on Lake St. Clair - Smallmouth, Perch, and Walleye Action Heating Up



Artificial Lure here, bringing you today’s Lake St. Clair fishing report straight from the water’s edge on this Friday, September 12, 2025. The late summer-to-fall transition is underway, and anglers are noticing subtle shifts in both weather and fish behavior.

Sunrise struck at 7:08 AM and sunset lines up for 7:49 PM tonight, so you’ve got around twelve and a half hours of daylight to work with. The air kicked off cool this morning—mid-50s at launch—but warming toward the low 70s and a light north breeze picking up as the day gets going. Water temps are sliding into the upper 60s. Skies are partly cloudy, and we dodged any serious rain overnight. There’s no tidal action here on Lake St. Clair, just steady, flatwater conditions, perfect for pitching lures in shoreline breaks and over grassy flats.

Fish activity’s holding strong in this seasonal shift. According to Lake St. Clair Michigan Fishing Report Daily, smallmouth bass are still feeding heavily on baitfish along rocky points and deeper edges[1]. Some real hawgs—four to five pounds—were hauled up around Metro Beach earlier this week. Chartreuse and natural-colored crankbaits have been the ticket, but the classic tube jig still hooks most of the bigger bass.

Yellow perch numbers are up in the southern bays, especially Anchor Bay and along the mouth of the Clinton River. Perch are biting best on emerald shiners fished under slip bobbers at 9-12 feet. Reports of limits are coming in from the regulars, with a nice mix of keepers up to 12 inches. For panfish seekers, crappie are starting to stack up in weed breaks off Harley Ensign.

Walleye are spotty as the water cools but remain catchable at dawn and dusk—try trolling small bombers or crawler harnesses near the shipping channel edges. Pike are feisty on large spinners close to marsh shorelines, especially in the afternoons when the sun peeks out.

In terms of numbers, most boats are seeing 10-20 perch per outing, with bass anglers bagging five to ten solid fish on a half-day run. A few trophy muskies were caught trolling big jointed plugs near the north channel earlier this week.

Best lures for smallies: chartreuse deep-diving crankbaits, green pumpkin tube jigs, and white spinnerbaits. Best bait for perch: fresh emerald shiners and fathead minnows. Walleye anglers, stick with gold or perch-pattern Bombers and harnesses.

A couple must-hit hot spots to check out:
- **Metro Beach break wall**: Smallmouth and perch action is steady here, especially in the mornings.
- **Anchor Bay north flats**: Perch and panfish numbers have been very good—anchor up and work the weed edges slow.
- **Mouth of the Clinton River**: Mix of perch, bass, and decent pike. Fish early.

A quick reminder—always check the latest Michigan DNR fishing regulations before you head out, and keep an eye on the Eat Safe Fish Guide for any consumption advisories, especially if you’re fishing tributaries or river mouths. According to the MDCH Eat Safe Fish Guide for Southeast Michigan, Clinton River and Lake St. Clair remain popular for fishing but always review the latest updates before taking fish home for the fryer[2].

Thanks for tuning in. Don’t forget to subscribe for your daily fix of local fishing intel and updates from Artificial Lure. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI


Published on 3 months, 1 week ago






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