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Late-Fall Walleye, Perch, and Steelhead on the Detroit River and Lake Erie

Late-Fall Walleye, Perch, and Steelhead on the Detroit River and Lake Erie



Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in from the Detroit side of Lake Erie and the lower Detroit River with your on-the-water rundown.

We’re locked in late-season mode now. Air temps are hovering in the low 30s around Detroit, with light southwest winds this morning building through the day, and a colder north push expected with snow chances as the next front rolls through, according to the National Weather Service marine forecast out of Cleveland. That has Erie running 1–3 feet early, building to 3–5 feet or better once that north wind stiffens, so smaller rigs should hug the river and nearshore cuts.

Sunrise is right around 7:50 a.m. with sunset pushing 5 p.m. here, so the feeding windows are tight. The best bite has been classic winter slots: first light until about 10 a.m., and again from 3 p.m. to dark, especially when that wind lays just a bit and the clouds hang in.

Lake Erie doesn’t have true ocean tides, but it’s acting “tide-like” the last few days with seiche swings after each blow. Kingsville Times recently highlighted a big seiche event on the western basin, reminding us how hard wind can shove water back and forth. When levels drop out on the Erie shoreline and push into the Detroit River, current picks up and the fish stack tight to breaks and deep holes.

Fish activity: this is walleye season, plain and simple. Charter chatter and ramp talk out of the western basin has been steady limits of eater-sized ’eyes with a few big hens mixed in, and the Toledo Blade noted that Erie stayed relatively clean this summer with only a mild algal bloom, which helps the late-fall clarity and keeps the fish comfortable in that 18–28 foot band. Perch catches have tapered, but a few pods are still giving up buckets when you land right on them. In the river, shore guys are also tangling with the odd steelhead and bonus smallmouth hanging on rock edges.

Best lures right now:

- For walleye on Erie: slow-trolled crankbaits like Flicker Minnows and Deep Husky Jerks in natural shiners, purples, and chartreuse. Run them just off bottom, 1.0–1.4 mph, long leads.
- In the Detroit River: 5/8 to 1-ounce jig heads with 4-inch plastic minnows in white, emerald shiner, or black ice. Snap-jig just off bottom in that heavy current.
- At night along seawalls and marinas: suspending jerkbaits in clown, blue chrome, or ghost shad, slow twitches with long pauses.

Best bait:

- Emerald shiners are king. Tight-line them on river rigs or perch spreaders when you can find good marks.
- For perch, a simple crappie rig with lake shiners or fatheads, dropped to bottom and inched up a foot, is putting fish in the bucket.
- Egg-sack or spawn bags under a float will tempt roaming steelhead in some of the river seams.

Couple of hot spots to circle on your map:

- Mouth of the Detroit River out toward the dumping grounds and the Michigan side reefs. When the wind lets you, work the edges in 20–26 feet; that’s where a lot of those limit catches have come from the last week.
- Downriver near Wyandotte and Trenton Channel, jigging the deep cuts and current breaks. When that north wind gets nasty on Erie, this stretch still fishes and concentrates walleye in tight packs.

Fish smart today: respect that building chop and cold water, keep an eye on the wind shifts the forecasters are calling for, and don’t be shy about sliding from Erie proper back into the river if it stands up.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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 1 week, 6 days ago






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