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Fall Feeding Frenzy in Lake Erie - Walleye, Perch, and Trout Await Anglers

Fall Feeding Frenzy in Lake Erie - Walleye, Perch, and Trout Await Anglers



Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure bringing you the latest fishing report for Friday, October 10th, 2025, in and around Lake Erie near Detroit.

We’re starting the day off with clear skies and a sunrise at about 7:36 AM. Sunset will light up the horizon around 6:56 PM, giving us a solid window to chase those fall fish. The colors in southern Michigan are just beginning to pop, so you’ll get that bonus of autumn views while you’re out on the water, with peak foliage expected later in the month according to Pure Michigan’s latest fall color update.

Let’s talk weather: it’s calm this morning, with south winds coming in at about 5 to 10 knots and waves one foot or less, making it downright pleasant for smaller crafts and shore anglers. Water temps are holding steady — 70°F off Toledo and 68°F off Cleveland, perfect for active fall fish. Small craft advisories have been lifted, so it’s full go for everyone, but do keep an eye out for a chance of showers late tonight and into Saturday as a cold front rolls through. Saturday will see southwest winds picking up to 15 knots, so adjust your plans if you’re heading out for an all-day session.

On the fishing front, Lake Erie is still living up to its reputation as the Walleye Capital of the World. Local bait shops and recent catches report strong walleye numbers, with anglers landing good-size fish in the 2-4lb range, most stacking limits using trolling tactics or casting from the piers. Yellow perch are feeding aggressively, especially in the warmer pockets near the river mouths and channel edges. If you’re after rainbow trout, target deeper structure, as they’re cruising the thermocline now.

Best bet for walleye is to troll with crankbaits like Flicker Shads or Rapalas in natural shad or perch patterns — work those drop-offs between 18-26 foot depths. Harness rigs tipped with fresh nightcrawlers are still turning heads for perch and walleye. Jigging minnows or plastics has also produced near shore with the water cooling. For yellow perch, drop-shot rigs with emerald shiners never go out of style, especially when you anchor just offshore near rocky bottoms.

Bite windows are best around the low light periods — sunrise to mid-morning and again at dusk. Fish are feeding up for winter, and that means more aggressive hits. If you’re shore fishing, cast jigs or swimbaits around marinas and river mouths, especially in the Detroit River, which continues to produce steady catches for both locals and visitors.

As for hotspots, give these proven locations a try:
- The mouth of the Detroit River, especially at the Belle Isle Bridge and surrounding flats. It’s consistently producing walleye and jumbo perch.
- The stretch from the Ambassador Bridge downstream to Fighting Island, known for big catches and less pressure.
- Point Mouillee State Game Area — excellent for perch and occasional bonus smallmouth bass.
- Lake Erie metropark launches for easy access and reliable results.

Fall fishing means changing tactics, so pack a variety of lures: start with crankbaits and crawler harnesses for walleye, light jigs and live bait rigs for perch, and don’t overlook a metallic spoon for bonus trout.

With the lake conditions settling and fish hitting hard as they feed up for the cold months, today promises excellent odds for a full stringer, a few pictures, and even more stories.

That wraps it up for today’s Lake Erie fishing report. Thanks for tuning in — be sure to subscribe to stay up-to-date with the 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, 1 week ago






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