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Bites Abound on Lake St. Clair - Smallies, Drums, and Panfish on the Bite

Bites Abound on Lake St. Clair - Smallies, Drums, and Panfish on the Bite



This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report for Friday, October 3, 2025. The morning kicked off crisp and calm, with a sunrise right around 7:28 AM and sunset expected tonight at 7:10 PM. Conditions on the lake are choice: according to NOAA’s Station 45147, we’re sitting at 67 degrees in the air, and the water’s a cool 66.6°F. Winds are out of the southeast at just under 12 knots, making for one-foot waves and comfortable drift fishing. No tidal swing to worry about here—just good ol’ fashioned freshwater action.

Smallmouth bass continue to dominate the scene, both in size and in numbers. Last weekend’s Four Flags Classic was a barnburner, with Dan Posey and Jeff Bostic weighing in a two-day total of 31.59 pounds. Their key? Ned rigs, flat worms, minnow baits, and grubs fishing in 8 to 12 feet. The runners-up, Rob and Kim Swem, got it done with tubes from 4 to 15 feet. Scott Solomon took third, also on tubes, and hauled in a tournament-big 4.95-pound smallie. Across the board, the top-producing baits are Ned rigs, tubes, and finesse presentations like drop shots with flat worms.

Local guides report strong results this week, with artificial lures and light tackle being the tickets. Anglers who can dial in a slow drag on a tube or drop shot are seeing double-digit catches, with plenty of bass in the 3-4 pound range and some pushing near 5. For those targeting drums or even the odd walleye, a gold blade bait or a small jigging spoon tipped with a minnow has been productive, especially around the the channels and the mouth of the Detroit River.

Hot spots this week? Start your morning in the Mile Roads area, especially around 9 and 10 Mile, working the drop-offs from 8 to 14 feet. Anchor Bay also continues to put up numbers—focus near the deeper weed edges and isolated rock clusters. If you’re more adventurous, the Belle River Hump is still holding schools of decent-sized bass, with best results drifting the edges with a Ned rig or working a dropshot along the transition lines.

With stable weather and minimal boat traffic after the summer rush, you couldn’t ask for a better window to hook into some Lake St. Clair giants. Remember, subtle color shifts—like green pumpkin or watermelon with a touch of gold—are making a difference as the lake clears up. Don’t be afraid to slow down your retrieve and target those windblown points.

If you’re heading out for panfish, perch are beginning to school up on the deeper flats—small minnows or wax worms below a slip bobber are classic, but a pink or chartreuse jig will get you plenty of action too.

That’s your on-the-water report for Lake St. Clair, Michigan. Thanks for tuning in! Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite. 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 2 months, 2 weeks ago






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