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Late Fall Transition on Erie and Detroit River - Targeting Walleye and Perch in Cold Shallow Waters

Late Fall Transition on Erie and Detroit River - Targeting Walleye and Perch in Cold Shallow Waters



Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Erie–Detroit fishing report.

We’re sliding into that early–ice, late–fall transition on western Erie and the Detroit River. According to the National Weather Service marine forecast out of Cleveland, winds are running northeast to southeast about 10–15 knots with nearshore waves 1–3 feet and surface temps hovering mid‑30s off Toledo and around 40 off Cleveland. That cold water has the fish stiff but stacked tight.

No real tide to speak of here on Erie, just seiche and wind‑driven levels, so your “tide” today is the wind shift and barometer. As the breeze lays down and swings southeast later, expect a short feeding window when that chop eases and clarity improves.

Sunrise on this stretch is right around 7:50 a.m., with sunset near 5:00 p.m., so you’ve got classic banker’s hours. The best bite is still low light: first hour after sunup and the last 90 minutes before dark. Midday is scratchy unless the sky clouds up and the wind breaks just right.

Recent action out of Detroit, Wyandotte, and down toward Luna Pier has been all about walleye, with a decent mix of eater‑sized fish and the odd 8‑ to 10‑pounder mixed in. Local charter chatter has most boats boxing 15–30 ‘eyes on better days when the wind cooperates, with bonus yellow perch and the occasional lake trout farther out over deeper rock. Closer to the river, guys jigging the shipping channel edges are still plucking a few smallmouth and the odd white bass, but it’s mostly a walleye show now.

Best producers:

- **Lures:**
Thin‑profile blade baits in 1/2–3/4 oz (silver, gold, and perch patterns), jigging raps in natural shad, and 3/8–1/2 oz jigs tipped with big plastics. A lot of locals are running dark plastics—black, motor oil, or purple with a contrasting tail—when the water dirties up from that north wind.
- **Bait:**
Emerald shiners are still king when you can find them; run them on a simple lake‑rig or tightline them over deeper marks. For river jigging, a lively minnow on a chartreuse or glow head is tough to beat. On calm days some guys are still pulling deep Husky Jerks and Reef Runners 15–25 feet down off planer boards, ticking suspended schools.

Fish activity’s moderate but very pattern‑oriented. Think slow, deliberate presentations: short hops with the blade baits, subtle lifts with jigging raps, long pauses on your cranks. You’re not trying to trigger hunger so much as piss off a cold, lazy fish.

Couple of hot spots to circle:

- **Detroit River – Trenton Channel and down toward Grosse Ile:** Vertical jig the edges of the channel, especially current breaks behind points, bends, and shipwrecks. Boat control is everything; match your jig weight to just barely stay vertical.
- **Western Basin – Brest Bay to Luna Pier and out toward the first pack off Bolles Harbor:** Focus on 18–26 feet where you’re marking bait clouds. If the water’s stained, tighten your spread, slow down, and run louder, wider‑wobble cranks or big, thumping blades.

Ice coverage is still sketchy; according to recent coverage discussions on regional outlets like AOL’s Great Lakes pieces, Erie hasn’t been locking up consistently in early winter the last few years, so treat any shoreline ice as unsafe and stick to the boat or pier game for now.

To sum it up in local terms: bundle up, slow down, fish tight to the marks, and let that big water do the sorting. The big girls are there; they’re just making you work for it.

Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. 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, 5 days ago






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