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Late-Season Lake St. Clair Fishing Report: Smallies, Walleye, and Perch Bite Strong as Winter Approaches
Published 2 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report.
We’re sitting in that early‑winter pattern where the lake is mostly open, with some skim ice hiding in the canals and marinas. The National Weather Service is calling for seasonably cold air, light winds this morning building a bit this afternoon, and a mix of clouds and weak sun. Air temps are hovering around freezing, wind generally west to southwest, so boaters get some decent windows, but it’s still a dry‑gloves kind of day.
Sunrise is right around 8 AM with sunset just before 5 PM, so your prime light windows are that first hour after sunrise and the last hour before dark. With our very small seiche‑style water level changes and no true tide on St. Clair, you’re really fishing wind‑driven current: today’s breeze should push a little more movement along the Mile Roads and the shipping channel edges.
According to recent Lake St. Clair and Detroit River reports from local guides and the Lake Erie/Detroit daily updates, the **hot bite** has been:
- **Smallmouth** on the main lake breaks and in Anchor Bay, especially 15–22 feet, relating to sand grass and scattered rock.
- **Walleye** sliding along the dumping grounds, the South Channel, and down into the Detroit River.
- **Perch** in the marinas, canal mouths, and inside Anchor Bay when you can find cleaner water and a bit of depth.
Catch rates this past week have been solid for winter: mixed bags of 3–5 pound smallies with the occasional 6, eater‑sized walleye in that 15–20 inch class, and perch running 8–11 inches when you stay on the school. A few bonus pike are showing up on larger minnows and jerkbaits in the shallower weeds.
On tactics, the pattern still looks a lot like the late‑season tournament bite Major League Fishing highlighted on St. Clair:
- **Minnow‑style plastics** on a jighead or dropshot (Berkley MaxScent Jerk Shad, Flatnose Minnow, Flat Worm, Party Minnow, and similar shad baits) are top producers for smallmouth.
- A **3/16–3/8 oz dropshot** with a subtle minnow or goby imitation, fished right above the sand grass, is putting big numbers in the boat.
- **Finesse jigs** in green pumpkin with a TRD‑style trailer are great when fish pin tight to the bottom.
For live bait, lake regulars are doing well with:
- Lake shiners or fatheads on a simple jig or dropshot for smallmouth and perch.
- Emerald shiners and smaller walleye minnows, either on a three‑way rig or vertical jig, for ‘eyes in the channels and river.
Color‑wise, think **natural:** goby, green pumpkin, perch, and emerald shiner patterns. When the water muddies, a little chartreuse or copper flake helps.
A couple local hot spots to key on today:
- **Anchor Bay:** Focus on 15–20 feet, edges of the sand grass, especially off Fair Haven and out toward the deeper middle sections. Idle with sonar, find bait, then camp and grind with minnows and dropshots.
- **The Mile Roads area on the U.S. side:** Work from about 9 Mile to 12 Mile, targeting subtle breaks, rock patches, and the transitions from sand to grass in 17–22 feet. This stretch continues to kick out quality smallmouth when the wind lets you fish it.
If you’re staying closer to shore, the **Clinton River Cutoff** and nearby canals are still holding perch and the odd walleye; fish live minnows on light fluorocarbon and tiny spoons or teardrops if you find any safe skim‑ice pockets.
Boat traffic is light, but remember commercial ships are still moving the river, so keep an eye out near the channels and give them room.
That’s your Lake St. Clair report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
We’re sitting in that early‑winter pattern where the lake is mostly open, with some skim ice hiding in the canals and marinas. The National Weather Service is calling for seasonably cold air, light winds this morning building a bit this afternoon, and a mix of clouds and weak sun. Air temps are hovering around freezing, wind generally west to southwest, so boaters get some decent windows, but it’s still a dry‑gloves kind of day.
Sunrise is right around 8 AM with sunset just before 5 PM, so your prime light windows are that first hour after sunrise and the last hour before dark. With our very small seiche‑style water level changes and no true tide on St. Clair, you’re really fishing wind‑driven current: today’s breeze should push a little more movement along the Mile Roads and the shipping channel edges.
According to recent Lake St. Clair and Detroit River reports from local guides and the Lake Erie/Detroit daily updates, the **hot bite** has been:
- **Smallmouth** on the main lake breaks and in Anchor Bay, especially 15–22 feet, relating to sand grass and scattered rock.
- **Walleye** sliding along the dumping grounds, the South Channel, and down into the Detroit River.
- **Perch** in the marinas, canal mouths, and inside Anchor Bay when you can find cleaner water and a bit of depth.
Catch rates this past week have been solid for winter: mixed bags of 3–5 pound smallies with the occasional 6, eater‑sized walleye in that 15–20 inch class, and perch running 8–11 inches when you stay on the school. A few bonus pike are showing up on larger minnows and jerkbaits in the shallower weeds.
On tactics, the pattern still looks a lot like the late‑season tournament bite Major League Fishing highlighted on St. Clair:
- **Minnow‑style plastics** on a jighead or dropshot (Berkley MaxScent Jerk Shad, Flatnose Minnow, Flat Worm, Party Minnow, and similar shad baits) are top producers for smallmouth.
- A **3/16–3/8 oz dropshot** with a subtle minnow or goby imitation, fished right above the sand grass, is putting big numbers in the boat.
- **Finesse jigs** in green pumpkin with a TRD‑style trailer are great when fish pin tight to the bottom.
For live bait, lake regulars are doing well with:
- Lake shiners or fatheads on a simple jig or dropshot for smallmouth and perch.
- Emerald shiners and smaller walleye minnows, either on a three‑way rig or vertical jig, for ‘eyes in the channels and river.
Color‑wise, think **natural:** goby, green pumpkin, perch, and emerald shiner patterns. When the water muddies, a little chartreuse or copper flake helps.
A couple local hot spots to key on today:
- **Anchor Bay:** Focus on 15–20 feet, edges of the sand grass, especially off Fair Haven and out toward the deeper middle sections. Idle with sonar, find bait, then camp and grind with minnows and dropshots.
- **The Mile Roads area on the U.S. side:** Work from about 9 Mile to 12 Mile, targeting subtle breaks, rock patches, and the transitions from sand to grass in 17–22 feet. This stretch continues to kick out quality smallmouth when the wind lets you fish it.
If you’re staying closer to shore, the **Clinton River Cutoff** and nearby canals are still holding perch and the odd walleye; fish live minnows on light fluorocarbon and tiny spoons or teardrops if you find any safe skim‑ice pockets.
Boat traffic is light, but remember commercial ships are still moving the river, so keep an eye out near the channels and give them room.
That’s your Lake St. Clair report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
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