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Lake Erie & Detroit River Fishing: Early Winter Bite, Wind & Waves

Lake Erie & Detroit River Fishing: Early Winter Bite, Wind & Waves



Artificial Lure here with your Lake Erie and Detroit River fishing report, coming to you like we’re talking over coffee at the marina.

We’re locked into a classic early-winter pattern: cold, high pressure sitting over the lake with a front queued up for later in the weekend. The National Weather Service Cleveland marine forecast is calling for south to southwest winds around 10–15 knots on the western and central basins, building a bit this afternoon with waves 1–3 feet nearshore and 2–4 feet offshore. Surface temps are running cold: about 38 degrees off Toledo and low 40s as you slide east.

We don’t have real tides here, just seiche and wind-driven water, so pay more attention to wind direction than any “tide chart.” A steady southwest this morning will push a little extra flow down the Detroit River and stack fish on current breaks and inside turns.

Sunrise is right around 7:50 a.m. with sunset just after 5 p.m., so that low-light window is short but important. First hour after sunrise and last hour before dark have been the best bite.

Fish activity: it’s a grind but worth it. Local Erie charters out of Bolles Harbor and Luna Pier this week reported solid walleye limits when the wind let them get out, mostly deep—25 to 35 feet—on the Ohio side. Detroit River jig guys have been picking at decent numbers of eater walleyes with a few 8–10 pound fish mixed in, plus the odd perch and the occasional late catfish.

Best presentations right now are slow and tight to bottom. On Lake Erie, run deep-diving crankbaits or husky-style stickbaits 1.2–1.6 mph off boards: patterns like purple clown, firetiger, and anything with chrome and blue have been key in the cold, clear water. If you’re jigging the river, go with 3/8 to 5/8 ounce hair jigs or wyandotte worms in chartreuse, black, or purple, tipped with a minnow. Keep it subtle—short hops, maintain bottom contact, let that current do the work.

For live bait, emerald shiners are still king when you can find them. Fathead minnows on a simple dropshot or river rig will put perch and bonus walleyes in the bucket if the crank bite slows. On calm days nearshore, a spread of minnows on perch rigs around rock piles and shipping channel edges can still produce a nice mixed bag.

Hot spots to focus on:

• Down on the lake, target the dumping grounds and edges off Luna Pier and the Michigan–Ohio line. That 24–32 foot band has been holding roaming schools of walleye sliding with the bait.

• In the Detroit River, hit the Trenton Channel—current seams off Horse Island and around the steel wall—plus the Belle Isle side of the upper river, working jig drifts from shallow to deep until you mark fish.

Water is cold enough that safety has to be part of your plan: dress for immersion, not just the air temp, and keep an eye on those building southwest waves as the day wears on.

That’s the bite for today in and around Lake Erie and the Detroit River. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.

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 weeks ago






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