Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your September 13th Lake St. Clair fishing report. It’s just past 7:20 a.m. and the lake’s alive with crisp late-summer air, smooth water, and a solid bite—perfect conditions to get out there.
Today’s sun peeks over the horizon at 7:06 a.m. and you’ll have daylight until 7:47 p.m. Plenty of time for a double session if you want to get after ‘em. Right now, water temps sit comfortable at 68°F, air temps are matching, and the wind’s out of the ENE at a manageable 2 knots according to buoy 45147 from the National Data Buoy Center. Waves are almost non-existent, barely a third of a foot—so whether you’re launching at Harley Ensign or Metro Beach, you’re set for an easy ride.
No tides to speak of here, but low overnight winds and steady atmospheric pressure around 30.17 inches should keep the fish active in the early morning through midday. Pressure is falling slightly, which often puts gamefish on the prowl, looking for an easy meal.
Let’s talk fishing: According to the most recent angler chatter, Michigan Sportsman boards, and podcast checks, the big news this week has been consistent musky action—especially out by Belle River Hump and around Anchor Bay. Trolling large rubber baits like Bondy Baits, double 10 bucktails, and classic Drifter Believers in perch, shiner, or natural cisco colors has been hot. The evening musky bite has picked up with the moon phases, with several boats reporting three to five fish per outing. The average musky size has been solid, many in the low 40-inch range and one beast taped at 49 inches.
Smallmouth bass have stayed aggressive in the cooler water. Focus on the mile roads, the St. Clair Light, and the shipping channel edges. Drop-shot rigs with goby-pattern plastics, Ned rigs, and jerkbaits in natural tones are getting it done. Some boats reported 20 to 30 smallies in a morning session, with best action at 12–15 feet of water.
Walleye numbers aren’t what they were in midsummer, but they’re still catchable near the channels and by the dumping grounds. Early risers working crawler harnesses or trolling Flicker Shads at sunrise are pulling a mix of keepers and unders until about 9 a.m.
For panfish, perch are showing up best in Mitchell’s Bay and around the Metropark weed edges. Use minnows or small jigs just off bottom. The size is mixed but there’s plenty for a fry. White bass and even a few incidental pike are biting for folks vertical jigging silver spoons around current breaks.
Hot spots today:
- Belle River Hump: Best shot at big muskies, especially trolling deep edges, 14–18 ft.
- Mile Roads (9 to 13): Steady smallmouth bite, use finesse plastics tight to structure.
- Harley Ensign launch area and Metropark: Easy perch and occasional bonus walleye early.
On the bait front, large suckers are still a top choice for musky chasing and lively golden shiners or fathead minnows for panfish. Don’t overlook soft swimbaits in shiner or bluegill patterns for bass and even bonus pike.
With all the Metropark improvements and new marina access, boat traffic may pick up later, so get on the water early for prime fishing, and respect renovation areas near the ramps. Water quality’s steady, with recent greening projects helping keep things healthy and the bite strong.
Thanks for tuning in today. Subscribe for more spot-on reports and insider tactics. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 3 months, 1 week ago
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