Good morning folks, this is Artificial Lure coming to you with your Saturday, September 20, 2025, fishing report for Lake St. Clair and the surrounding Michigan waters.
Today’s sunrise kicked off about 7:13 AM and you can expect sunset around 7:33 PM. The weather right now is sitting crisp and ideal for fishing, with air temps holding at *66°F* and the water temp a refreshing *68°F*, based on the latest National Data Buoy Center readings from buoy 45147. Winds are coming in out of the northeast at a steady *7 to 8 knots*, nothing too hard for most anglers, and wave action is pretty tame, with wave heights less than a foot—plenty comfortable for getting out on the lake.
There aren’t any real tides to speak of here on Lake St. Clair due to its freshwater nature, but wind-driven water movement will be just enough to keep those bait balls scattered and the predators on patrol.
Now for the action: fish activity this week has been noticeably solid, especially with the recent stretch of stable weather. According to Spreaker's Daily Michigan Fishing Report, anglers have been landing healthy numbers of smallmouth bass, perch, and walleye—especially during the early morning and late evening bites. Reports from St. Clair Shores as late as yesterday highlight a hot smallmouth bite in the 12- to 18-foot breaks, with fish up to 4 pounds making a regular appearance in the catch[Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily - Spreaker].
Yellow perch schools are scattered but thick where you find them—try moving until you hit one and then anchor up. Guys dragging minnows around the weed lines and near the dumping grounds have been putting together good numbers, and if you like your panfish, now’s a great time to fill a cooler.
Walleyes remain steady, primarily along the south channel and up toward the Belle River Hump, with best action coming to those bouncing crawler harnesses and even crankbaits in the low light windows. Stay mobile and don’t be afraid to zig zag your troll between 10 and 18 feet.
Big muskie reports continue as well, with several fish over 40 inches coming from the Metro Point to 400 Club stretch. Trollers running big jointed plugs in perch or firetiger color have pulled the better fish, especially over deeper weed beds.
Best lures this week? For bass, local experts suggest sticking with *green pumpkin tubes*, *drop-shot rigs* with smaller plastics like flukes or Gulp minnows, and spinnerbaits when the wind chops up the water. Try a white or chartreuse spinnerbait in windy pockets, which produced a 17-fish morning for one group Thursday. For perch, you can't beat a *live minnow* under a slip bobber or a small gold jig. Walleye want night crawlers on harnesses (copper blades have done best lately), with #7 Flicker Shads getting bonus fish.
For bait, lively emerald shiners are top choice for perch; bass are keying on goby imitations and tubes around the rocky points and humps, while crawler harnesses out-fish most artificial for walleye day in, day out.
Hot spots right now:
- *Grosse Pointe Yacht Club drops*: Smallmouth are on fire around the rockpiles at 14 to 16 feet.
- *Metro Beach weed edges*: Perch schools are thick, and the occasional walleye is holding nearby.
- *Belle River Hump*: Great mix of walleye and some bonus pike taken trolling.
- *Anchor Bay*: For numbers of bass and lots of juvenile muskie—perfect for family outings.
Local chatter on the Michigan Sportsman Forum confirms what we're seeing on the water: limits of perch are possible for those who move often and target the cleanest weedbeds, and muskie bite windows have been short but intense—don't leave your best baits in the box!
Thank you all for tuning in today—remember to subscribe so you never miss a report, tips, and the latest hot bite on Lake St. Clair. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out
Published on 3 months ago
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