Artificial Lure here with your October 19th Lake Erie and Detroit fishing report. First light today hit the water at 7:51 AM, and we’ll have lines in until sunset wraps things up at 6:47 PM. Anglers, grab your jackets—fall has truly settled in, and there’s a potent weather system rolling through. According to the National Weather Service, we’ve got strong south-to-west winds on deck, topping out at 30 knots, with gusts to 40 possible later today. Expect waves from 3 to 6 feet by afternoon, occasionally touching 8, so nearshore fishing is the safer bet for most small craft. Water temps have edged down to around 66 degrees off Toledo and Cleveland, with 64 near Erie. Gale warnings are posted, and if you’re out, keep a sharp eye and a weather radio handy.
Heading out early, the conditions are brisk with a shot at showers, but that cloud cover is actually helping the bite. Walleyes are still feeding, getting ready for their winter slowdown, and smallmouth action has been excellent along Detroit River edges and rocky nearshore spots. Trollers pulled in respectable limits before daybreak using deep-diving crankbaits in perch and natural shad patterns—those Smithwicks and Bandits were top performers overnight.
Jigging took center stage this week in the channels and just off the breakwalls. Hair jigs in purple and black, coupled with live emerald shiners, triggered both walleye and surprise bonus perch. The Detroit River’s lower tracts—especially Sugar Island and Belle Isle flats—remain hot spots for mixed bags. Reports from regulars say several boats landed double-digit smallmouths here yesterday, most running 2 to 4 pounds, with a couple pushing the five mark. Ned rigs and green pumpkin tubes pulled along the drop-offs have been dynamite.
On the Lake Erie side, perch have schooled up nicely in 16 to 22 feet around the Grosse Ile and Wyandotte areas. Try spreading your search until you mark fish, then anchor up and drop a perch rig with shiners. The bite can be light, but patient jigging pays off. Some slabs over 12 inches were iced yesterday, and buckets of eater-sized perch made their way back to the basin.
If you’re chasing predator action, don’t overlook the mouth of the Detroit River where muskies are making their late-season moves. Big rubber baits like Bulldogs in firetiger have tempted follows and a few solid hookups at Windmill Point and Fighting Island. Muskies are in pre-winter mode—be ready for epic strikes.
Best bets:
- Sugar Island drop-offs for smallmouth—toss a Ned rig or a white fluke.
- The south channel edges by Grosse Ile for perch—classic perch rigs with emerald shiners.
- The Ford Yacht Club wall for night walleye using deep-diving cranks.
- Windmill Point and the mouth for trophy muskie hunters.
For bait shops, emerald shiners have been flying off the tanks—grab them early as supplies run low fast on weekends. Plastics in natural shades get the nod, but don’t be afraid to try something bold when skies are grey.
The week’s biggest local haul was a five-man limit of walleyes out of Trenton, sticks in chartreuse doing most of the work. Newcomers to the shoreline scene pulled in twelve- and thirteen-inch perch in short order at Wyandotte’s city dock.
Remember, winds are up and the water's cooling. Put safety first, fish with a buddy, and keep those life jackets zipped. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for tomorrow’s dawn breakdown and hot bait picks. 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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