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October 15 Fishing Report: Walleye, Perch and Bass Action Heats Up on Lake Erie and Detroit River

October 15 Fishing Report: Walleye, Perch and Bass Action Heats Up on Lake Erie and Detroit River



This is Artificial Lure with your October 15 fishing report for Lake Erie and the Detroit River. Daybreak arrived at 7:36 AM, and we’re looking at the sun setting at 6:52 PM—all the daylight you need for a solid mid-fall outing.

The weather’s fresh off a cold front, and according to the National Weather Service, we've got north winds tapering off throughout the day—starting 15 to 20 knots, dropping down to 5 to 15, and the waves should calm from 2–4 feet to 1–3 by late afternoon. The water’s moving enough to trigger those predatory instincts but settling nicely for a comfortable drift.

Tides aren't really a factor here, but that weather shift sure is. Clouds early with a slight sprinkle possible, but you'll see breaks of sun by midday. Overnight lows kept temps in the 40s and today should climb to mid-50s by noon—a pattern perfect for all your cool-water species.

Let’s talk fish. Walleye activity is peaking and recent Masters Walleye Circuit action across the region shows anglers hauling in excellent numbers—not just in tourney territory but scattered along the western basin and in the Detroit River too, especially at night and during low-light periods. Michigan Sportsman Forum reports handlining remains deadly on the North and Middle Channels. Three-night stretches saw steady bites, with hand-liners bringing in several quality eater-sized ‘eyes—most taken during the quiet of night with little boat traffic and under a nearly full moon.

Yellow perch are also beginning their late season schooling. Classic spots from Brest Bay all the way up to the St. Clair cutoff are pacing out some competitive buckets, though it’ll take some patience and moving around to stay on an active bite. Reports mention decent numbers, though not quite the glory days—still, several folks finding keepers mixed with some throwbacks, and the action gets better by the hour mid-morning through early afternoon.

Bass fans—both smallmouth and largemouth—shouldn’t be discouraged. Bassmaster coverage of recent events shows smallies stacking up around river mouths and rocky points, hitting hair jigs, soft plastics, and even jerkbaits as the water cools. Locals are pitching Ned rigs, tube jigs, and swimbaits in 10–20 feet from Gibraltar to the Trenton Channel.

For walleye, stick with deep-diving crankbaits as evening falls, or classic Rapalas run behind a three-way rig with a heavy weight. In daylight, hair jigs tipped with emerald shiners are money—either vertical jigged or drifted in current seams. After dusk, nothing beats a shallow-running stickbait pulled slow through the channel edges.

If you’re hunting perch, bring those emerald shiners or fathead minnows, and present them on a simple drop-shot with light line. Move often until you land on a pod—the bite comes fast when you’re on them.

Bass anglers, go with green pumpkin or goby-patterned plastics; Ned rigs and tubes are producing. Suspended jerkbaits in natural shad colors shine if you find clear water near drop offs and weedlines.

Two hot spots for today:
- **Wyandotte to Fighting Island:** Target the deeper holes along the channel edges for walleye after sunset and early mornings.
- **Colchester Reef to Edison Boat Launch:** Moves schools of perch in about 16–20 feet and scattered smallmouth chasing bait.

No shortage of fish this week—just get your presentation right and move with the wind.

Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Erie, Detroit River fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe for more daily updates and hot tips. 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 ago






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