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Fall Bite Breakdown on Lake St. Clair - 2025 October Update

Fall Bite Breakdown on Lake St. Clair - 2025 October Update



Artificial Lure here, bringing you your Lake St. Clair fishing report for Wednesday, October 15, 2025. We’re up before first light on the lake and here’s what local anglers need to know today.

The weather’s cool at sunrise, with temps hanging around the upper 40s to low 50s. Expect light northwest winds in the morning, picking up a bit by the afternoon, with scattered clouds and stable barometric pressure most of the day. Sunrise hit at 7:39 AM, and sunset is at 6:52 PM—plenty of time to get on a good bite, especially around those low-light periods.

The moon is headed toward its waning crescent, and fishreminder.com reports major bite times at 5:27–7:27 AM and 5:47–7:47 PM, with minor bites in the early afternoon and late night. With today’s visibility around 62% and no tidal swing on these inland waters, focus your activity around those major windows. Saint Clair Shores reports similar timings, with a slight edge toward the dawn and dusk bites.

Fish activity has been steady with the cooling water temps. Perch reports light up the boards—a group yesterday boxed 32 solid perch in 16–16.5 feet off the Puce, and they sorted through about 60 fish total before 11:15 AM, working through slow bites by moving after the packs[11]. The action is best in mid-depths off the Canadian side, but US waters around Anchor Bay, the Mile Roads, and north toward Harley Ensign have kept up on perch if you can find the right schools. Bring minnows if you’re after numbers, but don’t forget a jumbo worm for the bigger slabs.

Muskie anglers are seeing some heart-pounding late-season activity. Reports from St. Clair Shores say musky are still responding to big profiles, with 6 fish landed out of 8 bites on a recent full moon night outing[9]. Large rubber baits, jointed crankbaits, and oversize inline spinners are bringing in those fall giants. Trolling along weed edges and the deeper breaklines at the South Channel and Belle River Hump can produce big follows.

Bass fishing—both largemouth and smallmouth—remains consistent for October, especially targeting rocky points and current edges. Anglers on Fishbrain reported solid catches in Lake St. Clair, with both smallmouth bass and the occasional chunky largemouth taking downsized jerkbaits, green pumpkin tubes, and Ned rigs[2]. Drop-shotting a minnow imitation or a 3" swimbait will also put you in the running, especially along the mile roads and near the Metro Beach flats.

Walleye—while the major push is spring, the night bite is quietly picking up with cooling temps. Use crankbaits like Deep Husky Jerks or Flicker Minnows slow-trolled after sunset near the Detroit River mouth, as local anglers have started quietly boxing a few eaters[7].

Your best spots today? Try the mouth of Anchor Bay by Harley Ensign Boat Launch for mixed bags of perch and smallies, or swing over to Jefferson Beach Marina and L’Anse Creuse Bay for sheltered bites in a northwest wind. Further south, the mile roads and Grassy Island edges have produced a steady pick of bass and perch. If you’re after musky, mid-lake humps near the Belle River and the weedlines off St. Clair Light are hot, especially trolling around dusk.

Top baits: minnows or perch rigs tipped with worms for perch, white or chartreuse spinnerbaits or tubes for bass, and big rubber bulldawgs, Medussas, or jointed crankbaits for musky. Don’t be afraid to switch colors if the bite slows—match the hatch to local shad and perch for best results.

That’ll wrap it for your Lake St. Clair fishing update. Thanks for tuning in to the morning report, folks—tight lines, be safe on the water, and let’s see those fall giants! Don’t forget to subscribe for the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Published on 2 months ago






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