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Crisp Fall Fishing on Lake St. Clair - Muskies, Bass, and Walleye Bites Heating Up

Crisp Fall Fishing on Lake St. Clair - Muskies, Bass, and Walleye Bites Heating Up



This is Artificial Lure clocking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report for November 7th, 2025. It’s a crisp, classic Michigan autumn morning on the big bowl, and locals are already heading down to the docks with coffee in hand and rods rigged up. First light was at 7:15 a.m. today, and sunset will come early at 5:19 p.m. Weatherwise, we’re seeing low 40s out the gate, with patchy clouds and a brisk north wind carrying the promise of a November cold snap by Sunday, maybe even a touch of lake effect snow on the way—so bundle up!

Lake St. Clair doesn’t have tidal swings like the ocean, but wind-driven currents can move the bite, especially with today’s north wind stacking up the southern shorelines and marinas. Water levels are holding steady, a little higher than average for fall, keeping the shallow weeds productive in the bays and along the flats.

Muskie have been the talk this week. Charter captains running out of the Metropark and Harley Ensign have reported solid action, particularly mid-morning to lunchtime. Most boats are trolling over the shallower breaks, 8 to 14 feet of water, with custom-painted jointed crankbaits and large rubber baits in perch and black-nickel—those colors are hot right now thanks to matching the natural forage that’s still abundant. Don’t be surprised to see a 40-incher crash your bait right alongside the nearshore weedlines.

Bass fishing is still hanging on. According to pro Kevin VanDam’s breakdown and recent guide reports, the entire lake is a giant feeding bowl right now. The northern rocks near the St. Clair Light remain a favorite; anglers are hauling in chunky smallmouth, and occasionally largemouth, on tube baits in green pumpkin, Ned rigs, and drop-shot setups. On calmer afternoons, jerkbaits and spinnerbaits along Goose Bay and around Strawberry Island have produced beautiful fish. Local standouts say to slow your retrieve—these bass want an easy meal as the water cools.

Walleye are making a strong showing in the mouths of the St. Clair and Detroit Rivers, especially on the American side where the wind puts a mild chop on the water. Jigging white fluke-style plastics or vertical jigging chrome blade baits near the shipping channel edges has been effective, especially through mid-morning.

Perch continue to school up at the usual haunts: the weedbeds off Metro Beach, the mouth of Anchor Bay, and residential canals in Harrison Township. Locals are loading up on nice eaters with emerald shiners or small jigging spoons. Bonus bites include slab crappie and the occasional jumbo bluegill.

Recent DNR surveys and angler reports confirm plenty of life in the system, with deepwater sculpin, gobies, shiners, and smelt all still showing strong numbers in trawl counts—this keeps those gamefish fat and active.

If you’re looking for hotspots today:

- **Metropark & Metro Beach weedlines:** Prime for muskies and perch.
- **St. Clair Light north flats:** Consistently productive for big smallmouth.
- **Goose Bay and Strawberry Island:** Steady multi-species action on bass and the odd pike.

Bait shops are recommending you stick with natural presentations on clear days—shiners and soft plastics in baitfish patterns—or go loud with chartreuse and fire tiger crankbaits when clouds and wind kick in.

A special note for the waterfowlers sharing the lake: According to Michigan DNR, bird migration is cranking up, so watch for ducks and more boats than usual in the marshes near Anchor Bay—be courteous and share the water.

Thanks for tuning in to the Lake St. Clair report—this is Artificial Lure. Subscribe so you never miss the bite, and remember: This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.

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Published on 1 month, 1 week ago






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