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Falling For Lake St. Clair: Muskies, Bass, Walleye, and More

Falling For Lake St. Clair: Muskies, Bass, Walleye, and More



This is Artificial Lure, bringing you your Lake St. Clair fishing report for Saturday, November 8th, 2025—straight from the heart of Michigan’s November bite. Another cool, brisk fall morning on the lake, and the air’s got that fresh snap locals look for. Sunrise hit at 7:16 a.m., with sunset lined up around 5:16 p.m., giving you a solid window to chase a fall trophy before dusk settles over the water.

Now, Lake St. Clair doesn’t get tides like the ocean, but with today’s steady north wind, current and surface chop are piling into the southern shoreline and marinas—keep an eye out for that steeper weed growth in the bays and flats since those spots are holding the strongest fish. Water levels are a bit higher than your typical November, so shallow patterns are still hanging on in a big way.

The buzz along the launches and bait shops is all about muskie—right now, charter captains out of Metropark and Harley Ensign are reporting steady mid-morning action. Most bites are coming trolling the breaks in 8 to 14 feet, with custom-painted jointed crankbaits or big rubber baits in perch and black-nickel color schemes matching up with what the fish are feeding on. It’s not uncommon to see a 40-inch plus muskie following a bait right to the boat, especially around the weed edges and sandy drop-offs.

Bass anglers, your window isn’t closed yet. Pro insights and fresh guide reports agree—the north shore rocks by St. Clair Light are still loaded with hungry smallmouth chewing tubes in green pumpkin, Ned rigs, and drop-shot rigs. If the wind lays down later, jerkbaits and spinnerbaits in Goose Bay and Strawberry Island areas are working, but make sure to slow that retrieve as the water continues to cool down. One local even reported nearly 70 largemouths in just a day and a half’s run from the Michigan to Ohio side—so toss those finesse baits along the weedlines and breakwalls while the bite’s still on.

Walleye are coming alive at the mouth of the Detroit River and in the St. Clair River channels. Best action lately has been on white fluke-style plastics fished jighead-style, as well as chrome blade baits near channel edges. The chop from today’s wind should extend that prime bite a bit longer into the morning.

Perch fishers are also having a banner week, with most action at the weedbeds off Metro Beach, the mouth of Anchor Bay, and the Harrison Township canals. Emerald shiners and small jigging spoons are the ticket to a slab perch fry, and you’re likely to tangle with a crappie or bluegill mixed in for good measure.

Recent net surveys out of the DNR and fishy chatter at the dock show baitfish numbers are still high—lots of shiners, smelt, gobies, and deepwater sculpin—so the whole food chain is lit up. That’s keeping every predator fat and full of fight.

If you’re looking to zero in on the best water today:

- Metropark and Metro Beach weedlines: where muskie, perch, and bonus pike are putting on the feedbag.

- St. Clair Light north flats: your best bet for big, aggressive smallmouth.

- Goose Bay and Strawberry Island: steady bass and multi-species action.

On clear days like today, keep it natural—shiners and plastics in baitfish colors are best. When the wind or clouds move in, up the ante with chartreuse or fire tiger. And don’t forget, the DNR says waterfowl migration is ramping up, so respect your fellow hunters out in the marshes, especially around Anchor Bay.

That wraps up the scene from Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in—be sure to subscribe so you never miss the hot bites or the local scoop. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI


Published on 1 month, 1 week ago






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