This is Artificial Lure reporting from the Lake Erie-Detroit corridor with your September 28 fishing outlook, straight from the dock as the city wakes up and lines hit the water.
First off, today’s weather is about as welcoming as you could hope for late September on Lake Erie. The National Weather Service says high pressure is hanging over the basin, so we’re looking at clear skies, sunshine, a high around the mid-70s, and calm winds shifting from west to north at less than 10 knots. Waves will be docile—just 1 foot or less—making for prime boat handling and safe wading. Sunrise came right at 7:20 this morning, with sunset due at 7:16 tonight.
Water temps are holding steady: 72 off Toledo, 70 off Cleveland—just perfect for late-season action and likely to keep fish active both shallow and deep, especially in that warm afternoon bite window.
Let’s talk catches. On Friday and Saturday, the word from Michigan Sportsman Forum is walleye remains king. One local group on a Friday night run pulled a three-man limit for a total of 18 good-sized walleyes, all on Rapala hardbaits—didn’t seem to matter much on color, just a steady pull and slow presentation did the trick. Reports are steady for larger fish in the 18-24 inch range, with the occasional bruiser.
Perch are picking up too—guys reported boating about 15 keepers over 10 inches but mostly tossing them back, suggesting there are still plenty of future slabs in the pipeline. Around the islands, expect decent numbers if you find the schools. Pro tip: try between Grosse Ile and the mouth of the Detroit River with spreaders tipped with emerald shiners, especially as the sun climbs higher.
Smallmouth bass are nipping as well, with some heartbreakers snapping off rigs—these are hefty river bronzebacks pushing three to four pounds. Live bait rigs, tube jigs, and drop-shot setups are all working, but for that Lake Erie clarity, goby-pattern tubes and green pumpkin plastics are the local bruisers’ favorites.
On the bait front, can’t go wrong with emerald shiners for perch and walleye, but don’t overlook a worm harness or nightcrawler on a slow-trolled spinner when the bite slows midday. For lures, Rapalas are top pick for walleye—jointed and deep runner styles, worked either by pulling wire or flatlining behind the boat. Early morning and dusk, switch to bright orange or firetiger if you want to stand out.
If you’re headed out and want the hotspots, make a beeline for the following:
- The Dumping Grounds south of Stony Point—perch stack up here near bottom structure.
- The Trenton Channel just east of Grosse Ile—prime walleye and smallie action, especially close to the shipping channel edges.
Tides aren’t a big player on Erie, but water is moving well from recent upstream flows, so current edges and channel drop-offs are good targets.
The fishing’s hot, the weather’s perfect, and boat traffic is light—don’t miss your window before that first real fall cold front barrels through later in the week.
Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Erie-Detroit fishing update with Artificial Lure. If you found this report helpful, make sure to subscribe for more on-the-water action and local wisdom.
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Published on 2 months, 3 weeks ago
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