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Fishing Report for Lake St. Clair, Michigan - October 1st with Artificial Lure
Published 5 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here with your October 1st fishing report for Lake St. Clair, Michigan.
Today’s sunrise greeted the water at 7:28 AM, and you’ll have light until sunset around 7:14 PM. The weather’s classic early fall—mild temps in the mid-60s, winds light out of the northwest at 7–10 mph, and mostly clear skies. There’s no tidal fluctuation to mention here, but water conditions are prime for steady action throughout the day.
Fish activity is ramping up as we ease past the equinox. Smallmouth bass are shifting into their fall patterns, feeding actively in shallower water and mid-depth rock piles. Recent reports, such as those on YouTube and local forums, describe 4-pound smallies biting as the water cools, and multiple anglers are seeing good numbers by working tube jigs and swimbaits along the sandy/gravel shorelines and breakwalls. Tube jigs in green pumpkin or smoke with gold flake are the ticket; pairing one up with a 3/8-ounce jig head is producing strikes, especially near Harsens Island and south of the Metropark Channel.
Perch action remains hot, with Michigan Sportsman Forum members filling buckets and noting “the jumbos hammered the cut bait.” If you’re targeting perch, cut minnows and pieces of nightcrawler worked along weed edges and drop-offs north of the 9-Mile Tower are bringing limits of fish, some up to 12 inches. Back by the Clinton River mouth and up toward Strawberry Island, the perch are schooling up, so set your anchor and use lighter tackle for best results.
Walleye have been caught near dusk and early morning, with several boats trolling flicker minnows and shad-style crankbaits over the deeper channels. Chrome-blue and perch patterns are the most productive, especially as walleye transition into the river mouths.
Muskie fishing is seeing a seasonal uptick too. Trolling large jointed plugs—like 10-inch believers or bulldawgs—has put some 40-plus inch fish in the net just off Anchor Bay. If you’re running wire or heavy braid, make sure you’ve got a solid leader and set your drag firm.
Best baits for today:
- **Smallmouth & perch:** Tube jigs, swim grubs, live/cut minnows, pieces of nightcrawler
- **Walleye:** Flicker minnows, shad rap crankbaits
- **Muskie:** Large jointed plugs, soft rubber bulldawgs
Hot spots for October 1st:
- **Metropark Channel:** Smallmouth action mid-morning, perch schools nearby
- **North of the 9-Mile Tower:** Jumbo perch on cut bait
- **Anchor Bay:** Muskies prowling weed edges and deeper troughs
Boaters report that fish were actively biting in 10–15 feet of water, especially during overcast periods, and the weather guarantee from local guides points to steady conditions through the rest of the week.
Before heading out, make sure to double check your license and size/bag limits with Michigan DNR, as fall can bring regulation changes, and pack both artificial and live bait for best results.
Thanks for tuning in to this morning’s Lake St. Clair report with Artificial Lure. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Today’s sunrise greeted the water at 7:28 AM, and you’ll have light until sunset around 7:14 PM. The weather’s classic early fall—mild temps in the mid-60s, winds light out of the northwest at 7–10 mph, and mostly clear skies. There’s no tidal fluctuation to mention here, but water conditions are prime for steady action throughout the day.
Fish activity is ramping up as we ease past the equinox. Smallmouth bass are shifting into their fall patterns, feeding actively in shallower water and mid-depth rock piles. Recent reports, such as those on YouTube and local forums, describe 4-pound smallies biting as the water cools, and multiple anglers are seeing good numbers by working tube jigs and swimbaits along the sandy/gravel shorelines and breakwalls. Tube jigs in green pumpkin or smoke with gold flake are the ticket; pairing one up with a 3/8-ounce jig head is producing strikes, especially near Harsens Island and south of the Metropark Channel.
Perch action remains hot, with Michigan Sportsman Forum members filling buckets and noting “the jumbos hammered the cut bait.” If you’re targeting perch, cut minnows and pieces of nightcrawler worked along weed edges and drop-offs north of the 9-Mile Tower are bringing limits of fish, some up to 12 inches. Back by the Clinton River mouth and up toward Strawberry Island, the perch are schooling up, so set your anchor and use lighter tackle for best results.
Walleye have been caught near dusk and early morning, with several boats trolling flicker minnows and shad-style crankbaits over the deeper channels. Chrome-blue and perch patterns are the most productive, especially as walleye transition into the river mouths.
Muskie fishing is seeing a seasonal uptick too. Trolling large jointed plugs—like 10-inch believers or bulldawgs—has put some 40-plus inch fish in the net just off Anchor Bay. If you’re running wire or heavy braid, make sure you’ve got a solid leader and set your drag firm.
Best baits for today:
- **Smallmouth & perch:** Tube jigs, swim grubs, live/cut minnows, pieces of nightcrawler
- **Walleye:** Flicker minnows, shad rap crankbaits
- **Muskie:** Large jointed plugs, soft rubber bulldawgs
Hot spots for October 1st:
- **Metropark Channel:** Smallmouth action mid-morning, perch schools nearby
- **North of the 9-Mile Tower:** Jumbo perch on cut bait
- **Anchor Bay:** Muskies prowling weed edges and deeper troughs
Boaters report that fish were actively biting in 10–15 feet of water, especially during overcast periods, and the weather guarantee from local guides points to steady conditions through the rest of the week.
Before heading out, make sure to double check your license and size/bag limits with Michigan DNR, as fall can bring regulation changes, and pack both artificial and live bait for best results.
Thanks for tuning in to this morning’s Lake St. Clair report with Artificial Lure. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI