This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Erie–Detroit fishing report.
We’re in full winter mode now. The Detroit River and western Lake Erie are running cold, with nearshore surface temps sitting in the mid‑30s, as reported by the National Weather Service Cleveland marine page. Winds have been cranking west–northwest 15–25 knots on the open lake with higher gusts and 3–6 footers outside the islands; a small‑craft advisory has been in effect, so big‑water runs are for seasoned crews only.
Sunrise around the Detroit–Monroe stretch is right about 7:50 a.m., with sunset near 5:00 p.m. That tight daylight window means your prime bite windows are short: first light to mid‑morning, then a dusk flurry if the wind doesn’t blow you off.
There’s no real tide on Erie, but wind‑driven seiche has been pushing levels up and down a bit on the Detroit shoreline. Strong west and northwest winds drop levels on the western basin and can speed up the Detroit River current, which makes vertical jigging a little tougher but can stack fish tight to breaks and current seams.
Walleye are still the headliner. Charter and local reports from the western basin and the river mouth say limits of eater‑size ‘eyes with a few bigger fish mixed in when boats can safely get out. Most are coming on blade baits and hair jigs in 18–28 feet: gold, purple, and firetiger have been the colors folks keep talking about. A lot of fish are tight to bottom, so slow, short hops are out‑producing big rips.
Perch action has slowed but isn’t dead. Anglers picking at them near the shipping channel edges and off Luna Pier are getting smaller buckets—maybe a dozen to twenty good fish per trip—on emerald shiners fished right on bottom. Panfish in the marinas and cuts around Wyandotte and Trenton are starting to show as docks ice up: bluegill and crappie on small tungsten jigs tipped with waxies.
Best baits and lures right now:
- For walleye: ½–¾ oz blade baits, Rapala Jigging Raps, and hair jigs in natural shiner, gold, and purple; tip with a minnow head if they’re finicky.
- For perch: live emerald shiners on crappie rigs or small spoons tipped with minnow pieces.
- For river mixed bag: smaller jigheads with plastic minnows or paddletails in white and smoke.
Couple of local hot spots to consider if conditions allow:
- The Trench and Maumee Bay edges out of Brest Bay and Luna Pier: classic late‑season walleye drift‑and‑jig territory when the wind isn’t howling.
- The Detroit River shipping channel bends near Fighting Island and down toward Grassy Island: focus on 25–35 feet, vertical jigging right in the current seams.
With water this cold and wind this stiff, safety is the first priority: full winter gear, PFDs on, and let someone know your float plan. Ice is just starting to tease around protected marinas; it’s not walkable yet, so treat all early ice as unsafe.
That’s the bite for now from your buddy Artificial Lure. 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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Published on 5 days, 5 hours ago
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