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Lake St. Clair Fishing Report: Walleyes, Perch, and Monster Muskies on the Prowl this Crisp October Morning
Published 5 months ago
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Artificial Lure here coming at you from the shores of Lake St. Clair, Michigan on this brisk Saturday morning, October 18, 2025. As the sun crests just after 7:42 a.m. and we anticipate sunset around 6:43 p.m., anglers are waking up to near-ideal autumn conditions. Water temps have held around 60 degrees, while the air started off at a cool 57, with a gentle west-southwest breeze barely touching 2 knots according to NOAA—dialed in for smooth boating and shoreline casting. Waves are minimal, less than half a foot, so even kayak and small craft fishers are getting in on the action.
Though there’s no tidal swing on Lake St. Clair, fish activity pulses with moon phase and light. We’re in waning crescent, and today’s strongest bite windows fall just after sunrise, from 7:58 to 9:58 a.m., and again at dusk, 8:34 to 10:34 p.m. Fishingreminder and local veterans swear that low-light or twilight hours are clutch and that points adjacent to beaches or irregular bottom features often hold schooling fish.
The bite this week has been classic mid-October—fast and mixed, but with clear standouts. Walleyes are moving shallow and feeding aggressively at first light and dusk. Reports from the daily Spreaker broadcast indicate anglers are pulling multiple keeper walleyes from Jefferson Beach Marina and the mouth of the Clinton River, mostly on bright chartreuse jigs tipped with minnows and #11 Rapalas in silver-blue patterns. A few boats limited out early yesterday with some heavy eaters pushing the 4–6 pound range.
Yellow perch action has picked up, especially in L’Anse Creuse Bay and Campau Bay. Michigan DNR’s weekly releases confirm robust numbers, with some catches of 20–30 fish per boat—most keepers, though weed beds nearer to Milk River have produced a higher proportion of jumbos, most on live emerald shiners or bits of nightcrawler under slip bobbers.
Monster muskies are on the prowl. According to William Corbin’s Lake St. Clair Daily Fishing Report, both trolling and casting have yielded excitement north of Fords Cove and out from Belvidere Bay. Large bulldawg-style soft plastics in firetiger and black perch are the top producers, especially when slow-rolled over deep weed edges. Just yesterday, reports came in of two muskies over 46 inches, released after photo ops.
Bass anglers are still hunting largemouth and the occasional smallie. The best results have come from fishing rocky points near Jefferson Beach and the Clinton River mouth, mostly with dark green tube jigs and lipless crankbaits. Locals on Michigan Sportsman Forum noted that shallow coves are producing surprising topwater hits right after sunrise. Campau Bay saw a solid dozen eaters taken early this week on spinnerbaits and Texas-rigged soft plastics.
For bait, live minnows and shiners have outfished anything else for perch and walleye. Muskies are keyed on big flashy artificials, while bass are chasing noisy baits in the warming mid-morning.
Today’s recommended hot spots:
- Jefferson Beach Marina: Excellent for walleyes at dawn, good perch action mid-morning.
- Clinton River mouth: Solid mixed bag, especially bass and the odd pike.
- Campau Bay: Perch and muskie, with some big catches reported the last three days.
Don’t forget to double-check Michigan DNR regs, especially if you’re near the Clinton River—seasonal closures and slot limits change this time of year.
That wraps up today’s Lake St. Clair fishing report—thanks for tuning in! If you found this helpful, make sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Though there’s no tidal swing on Lake St. Clair, fish activity pulses with moon phase and light. We’re in waning crescent, and today’s strongest bite windows fall just after sunrise, from 7:58 to 9:58 a.m., and again at dusk, 8:34 to 10:34 p.m. Fishingreminder and local veterans swear that low-light or twilight hours are clutch and that points adjacent to beaches or irregular bottom features often hold schooling fish.
The bite this week has been classic mid-October—fast and mixed, but with clear standouts. Walleyes are moving shallow and feeding aggressively at first light and dusk. Reports from the daily Spreaker broadcast indicate anglers are pulling multiple keeper walleyes from Jefferson Beach Marina and the mouth of the Clinton River, mostly on bright chartreuse jigs tipped with minnows and #11 Rapalas in silver-blue patterns. A few boats limited out early yesterday with some heavy eaters pushing the 4–6 pound range.
Yellow perch action has picked up, especially in L’Anse Creuse Bay and Campau Bay. Michigan DNR’s weekly releases confirm robust numbers, with some catches of 20–30 fish per boat—most keepers, though weed beds nearer to Milk River have produced a higher proportion of jumbos, most on live emerald shiners or bits of nightcrawler under slip bobbers.
Monster muskies are on the prowl. According to William Corbin’s Lake St. Clair Daily Fishing Report, both trolling and casting have yielded excitement north of Fords Cove and out from Belvidere Bay. Large bulldawg-style soft plastics in firetiger and black perch are the top producers, especially when slow-rolled over deep weed edges. Just yesterday, reports came in of two muskies over 46 inches, released after photo ops.
Bass anglers are still hunting largemouth and the occasional smallie. The best results have come from fishing rocky points near Jefferson Beach and the Clinton River mouth, mostly with dark green tube jigs and lipless crankbaits. Locals on Michigan Sportsman Forum noted that shallow coves are producing surprising topwater hits right after sunrise. Campau Bay saw a solid dozen eaters taken early this week on spinnerbaits and Texas-rigged soft plastics.
For bait, live minnows and shiners have outfished anything else for perch and walleye. Muskies are keyed on big flashy artificials, while bass are chasing noisy baits in the warming mid-morning.
Today’s recommended hot spots:
- Jefferson Beach Marina: Excellent for walleyes at dawn, good perch action mid-morning.
- Clinton River mouth: Solid mixed bag, especially bass and the odd pike.
- Campau Bay: Perch and muskie, with some big catches reported the last three days.
Don’t forget to double-check Michigan DNR regs, especially if you’re near the Clinton River—seasonal closures and slot limits change this time of year.
That wraps up today’s Lake St. Clair fishing report—thanks for tuning in! If you found this helpful, make sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI