Good morning from Lake St. Clair—Artificial Lure here with your October 17th, 2025 fishing report. We’re waking up to a crisp fall morning along the lake. The temperature’s dropped overnight, water temps are sitting near 61 degrees. Today’s weather brings mostly clear skies, a cool start around 44°F climbing toward the mid-50s, with a gentle west-northwest breeze at 8-12 mph. Sunrise hit at 7:46 a.m., and sunset’s drawing down at 6:53 p.m. There’s no true tide, but you’ll notice daytime wind-chop and a slight surface drift by midday.
Lake St. Clair’s cooling water has fired up the bite the past few days. According to the Michigan DNR’s October 15th bulletin, anglers working the **weed beds from shore and trolling have found steady action on** bass, walleye, and pike. If you’re hunting yellow perch, fish are starting to show up along the Macomb County shoreline, though they’re not schooled up thick just yet. Reports from local crews and recent YouTube catches tell the same story: perch and smallies are biting, especially toward the **Dumping Grounds area** on the south end and up near the mile roads yacht clubs.
Recent outings have seen good numbers of **largemouths and smallmouths** coming boat-side. Bass are hitting on tubes, paddle-tails, Ned rigs, and drop shot rigs especially in green pumpkin, watermelon, or natural shad colors. Try a slow drag along the deeper edges of the weedlines, 7–12 feet down. Pike and the occasional muskie have come off jointed swimbaits and bucktails trolled along those same points.
For perch, the most effective rigs this week have been the tried-and-true **perch pounders**—multi-hook rigs tipped with natural shiners. Many locals are adding a #6 snelled hook at the bottom with a fathead minnow, hugging bottom in 15-20 feet. White River Tackle and similar natural color rigs are producing, but don’t be afraid to trim the weeds off—it’s worth the trouble for bigger fish that are holding just off bottom. The bite is a bit deeper right now; fish haven’t schooled up shallow en masse, but morning and late afternoon windows have been best.
If you’re after walleye, catches are picking up slowly but surely. The best success has come trolling crankbaits in perch or firetiger colors, around 12–18 feet along edges where clean sand meets coontail, especially toward the Anchor Bay area. If you’re set up near the mouth of the Clinton River, toss blade baits or jigging raps for a chance at both eyes and bonus pike.
Hot spots to try today:
- **Dumping Grounds (south end)**: Deeper perch and smallies; focus on structure and fish tight to bottom.
- **Mile Roads Yacht Clubs (9 Mile, 10 Mile)**: Good for both perch and bass as the water chills; early birds are getting them shallow at daybreak.
- **Weed edges off Metro Beach**: Consistent for pike and bass, especially trolling bucktails or jerkbaits.
Top baits and lures:
- Perch rigs tipped with shiners or fathead minnows.
- Tubes (green pumpkin, watermelon), Ned rigs, and paddle-tail swimbaits for bass.
- Bucktails, jointed swimbaits for pike and muskie.
- Crankbaits in perch, chartreuse, or firetiger for the elusive walleye.
Remember, mornings are producing better than afternoons as fish get more active with falling temps. Shore anglers are also nabbing a few good ones—work the windblown stretches for your best shot.
Thanks for tuning in to your Lake St. Clair fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for the latest conditions and hot bites. 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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