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Big Bronzebacks and Muskie Madness on Lake St. Clair

Big Bronzebacks and Muskie Madness on Lake St. Clair



Artificial Lure here with your Lake St. Clair fishing report for Wednesday, October 29th, 2025. Let's talk fall fishing, local style.

Sunrise hit at 7:55 a.m. with sunset expected at 6:35 p.m.—plenty of daylight for a full session on the water. We woke up to chilly temps in the mid-40s, light drizzle moving off, and a ten-miler from the northwest. The lake’s riding a steady chop, surface temps hovering around 52°F. No tides to speak of here, but wind has pushed some good color onto the Canadian shore and stirred up new weedlines mid-lake. If you’re launching today, bring foul weather gear and a thermos of hot coffee—those brisk gusts can cut right through you.

The smallmouth bite is still lighting up across the flats and channel edges. According to yesterday's Tackle Shack tournament report, some absolute tanks came out—including a 7.45-pound smallmouth, the biggest ever caught in a tournament here. Anglers reported limits over 25 pounds, with most bags stacked with 4- to 5-pounders. You won’t need to chase deep; prime strikes are coming in 2 to 10 feet of water. Key lures: finesse swimbaits like the 2.8" Keitech on a BAFA F8 jighead, Crush City Mayor in shad or goby pattern, plus Chatterbaits and spinnerbaits for triggering that reaction bite. A few teams got bonus fish on A-rigs and by dragging tubes, especially in wind-sheltered pockets close to the launch.

If you’re in it for “the tug of your season,” Outdoor News highlights that muskie anglers should watch for the water temp dropping toward 48°F. The muskies are staging, and every cold front spikes their activity. Huge trolling plugs and rubber baits are the ticket, especially around the dumping grounds and the mouth of the Thames River. Don’t sleep on classic bucktails for early AM runs—some chunky follows reported this past weekend.

Multi-species fans—perch are schooling up along the Metropark weed edges, and walleye are active at the mouth of the Detroit River, especially during low light. Tip: cast crankbaits or vertical jig with live minnows for better odds. According to the most recent Detroit River report, there’s been a solid catch rate on weekend evenings with a few limits posted.

Best local hotspots today? Try the mile roads—9 Mile and 400 Club have been reliable for numbers and size, with bait balls thick on electronics. If you’re after that once-in-a-lifetime bronzeback, the Belle River Hump is holding giants—drop shot or drag a tube right on the break and hang on. For muskies, the Dumping Grounds and the stretch from Sturgeon Hole out to the south channel are drawing lures and legends alike.

A quick reminder from the local tackle shop: stock up on lighter line and sensitive rods—those big bass are keying on forage and can spit your lure in a heartbeat. Also, the zebra mussel invasion’s keeping the water crystal clear, so finesse tactics and natural presentations are money lately.

Get bundled, get on the water, and keep your net handy—the fish are biting, the big ones are moving, and fall action won’t last forever.

Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Lake St. Clair Fishing Report. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite. 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 1 month, 3 weeks ago






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