Artificial Lure here with your Lake Erie-Detroit fishing report for October 24, 2025. We’ve got a classic late-October set up—**crisp air**, big swells, and plenty of fish stories out on the water.
The sunrise hit Detroit this morning at 7:53 a.m. and with sunset riding in at 6:42 p.m., we’ve got roughly eleven hours for anglers to make their mark. Today’s weather pulled in with a solid northwest wind at 15 to 25 knots, leftover from last night’s bluster. Waves are kicked up—running in the 4 to 7-foot range. NOAA and the National Weather Service have kept that Small Craft Advisory in effect until at least 4 p.m., so boaters in smaller rigs should play it cautious, especially along the shoals and west end points near Monroe and the River Mouth. The air’s a brisk mid-40s climbing into the low-50s by midday, and it’s the kind of cold snap that gets those smallmouth and walleye on the prowl.
No tides to report—this is the Great Lakes after all—but water levels are on the seasonal drop.
Fishing activity’s been strong despite the weather tantrums. According to the Tackle Shack report, bass have been coming in fat and feisty lately. Just last Saturday, the Tackle Shack Brawl, shortened by a foul wind forecast, still saw impressive stringers. Brock and Martin bagged 25.29 pounds, mostly smallmouth, with a 6.60-pound kicker. They put up over 22 pounds in the first hour on **spinnerbaits** and **Chatterbaits** in 2 to 5 feet of wind-churned water on the edges of the Detroit River.
Word from the top teams is that throwing **finesse swimbaits**—like the 2.8" Keitech on a BAFA F8 jighead—and the new Rapala Crush City Mayor has been the ticket to big numbers, with close to 50 bass caught in one practice day. When the bite gets fussy, a tube or crankbait drug through current seams in 8 to 12 feet, and an A-rig slow-rolled near the bottom, is pulling chunky fish, too. The biggest of the week? Mason Alverado’s monstrous 7.45-pound smallmouth, wrestled from the Detroit River near Trenton, all muscle and grit.
Walleyes are heading back into the river and down the western basin, stacking up along the Maumee channel and near the mouth of the Detroit River north of Grosse Ile. Golden hour—dusk—has been especially productive on deep-diving crankbaits and blade baits in gold and firetiger patterns. Locals are tipping their blade baits with a chunk of nightcrawler for bonus stripes. Tossing a jigging Rap or working a drop-shot with a minnow on the flats has also convinced a few bonus yellow perch into the livewell.
As for hot spots, don’t skip the classic pea-gravel humps just off Wyandotte and the channel edges east of Bar Point. If you need cover from the wind, the dump grounds south of the Ambassador Bridge in U.S. waters have held packs of big smallmouth, most sitting tight to rock fingers in 7 to 12 feet. Quick note: there’s chatter of some decent pike lurking the weed edges off Belle Isle.
Bait-wise, smallmouth have been smashing **white or chartreuse paddle tails** and downsized tubes with green pumpkin flake. If you’re targeting walleye at dusk, a 1/4 oz. jig head with a lively minnow can outshine plastics, especially if you’re vertical jigging in a cross-current.
With cool, clear air and dropping temps, the lake’s clearing fast. Stay stealthy, use lighter leader, and don’t be afraid to downsize your offering. If you hit a lull, bounce around—fish are roaming and stacking up ahead of winter drawdown.
Thanks for tuning in to your Lake Erie-Detroit fishing fix. Remember, subscribe for more local know-how, and keep those lines tight. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 1 week, 2 days ago
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