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Late Fall Walleye & Perch Bite on Lake Erie and Detroit River

Late Fall Walleye & Perch Bite on Lake Erie and Detroit River



Artificial Lure here with your Lake Erie and Detroit River fishing report.

We’re sliding into early winter now, and the lake’s got an attitude. The National Weather Service out of Cleveland is calling for stiff west winds pushing up into gale territory on open Lake Erie, with waves from 6 up to 10-plus feet at times and low-water issues on the western basin shoals. That means smaller boats should tuck into the Detroit River or the marinas and tributaries instead of running open water.

Air temps are sitting in the 20s and low 30s, wind-chilled, with scattered snow showers. Cloud cover is heavy, so those classic low-light windows around sunrise and late afternoon are stretched out. Local almanac data has sunrise right around 8 a.m. and sunset just before 5 p.m., giving you a short but productive daylight bite.

Water temps on the western basin and into the river are now in the mid- to upper-30s. That has the shad bunching up and the walleyes and saugeye glued tight to breaks and current seams. According to recent reports from Lake Erie and Detroit River charter captains, jigging bite has been strong for eater-size and a fair number of big fish, with limits common when the weather has allowed folks to get out.

Most recent catches:
- Plenty of **walleyes** in the 16–22 inch class, with a solid mix of 24–28 inch fish.
- A few bonus **perch** in the marinas and slower pockets.
- Occasional **white bass** and **sheepshead** mixed in when you’re vertical jigging in the river.

Best presentations right now are classic cold-water staples:
- 3/8 to 5/8 oz hair jigs, often with a **stinger hook**.
- Vertical jigging spoons and blade baits in gold, silver, and firetiger.
- Tipped with emerald shiners when you can get them, or salted minnows.

For trolling those deeper Erie breaks when the lake lays down, locals are still pulling size 11–12 crankbaits 25–40 feet down, often on snap weights, in natural perch, clown, and purples.

Live bait: lake shiners and river shiners on a simple jig head are hard to beat. If minnows are scarce, plastics like fluke-style minnows or small paddletails in white, smelt, and green pumpkin are putting fish in the box when fished slow and tight to bottom.

Couple of hot spots to circle:
- The **Trenton Channel** stretch of the Detroit River, especially inside turns and eddies down from the steel mill – excellent vertical jig water on a west wind.
- The **mouth of the Detroit River out toward Stony Point and Brest Bay** when the waves back off – good for both jigging and short trolling passes along the deeper edges.
- For shore anglers, the **Wyandotte and Ecorse riverfronts** have been giving up fish on jigs and minnows when the current lines up.

Fish activity is classic cold-water: short, intense feeding windows. Expect the best action right after first light and again mid-afternoon as the light drops. Slow your cadence, keep contact with bottom, and don’t be afraid to downsize if the bite gets finicky.

That’s the rundown from Lake Erie and the Detroit River. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss tomorrow’s 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 5 hours ago






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