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Lake St. Clair Fishing Report - Wind, Walleye, Perch, and Smallmouth Bass Bite
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report.
We don’t worry about tides here – St. Clair’s a Great Lakes flow-through, so wind is your “tide.” A light west to northwest breeze this morning and stable barometer have the lake laying down decent, with a skim of shelf ice back in some marinas but main lake and primary channels open. Air temps are running cold but not brutal for January, and a weak warmup this afternoon should nudge fish just a little more active in the mid‑day window.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. and sunset just after 5 p.m., so your prime light changes are tight. Low light has been best for walleye and perch in the river mouths, while the late-morning sun is helping the deeper smallmouth shake off that mid‑winter slump.
According to the National Weather Service Detroit office, we’re looking at seasonable temps, light winds, and only a slight chance of snow showers today, which means good boat control if you’re out in an open rig and manageable conditions if you’re hopping between shore spots and marinas.
Recent chatter from local anglers on the Michigan Sportsman forums and area bait shops around Harrison Township and Anchor Bay is that the bite has been a classic mid‑winter mix:
- **Walleye**: Smaller eater fish with a few nicer 20–24 inchers in the St. Clair River and outflow areas, most coming after dark or right at dawn on jig and minnow or small blade baits worked tight to bottom.
- **Perch**: Decent numbers of 8–11 inchers in the canals and along the edges of old weed flats; nothing epic, but good enough to fill a pail if you stay mobile.
- **Smallmouth bass**: Fewer bites but quality fish when you find them – think deep breaks and rock transitions in 15–25 feet.
- **Muskie**: Traditional season is wrapped up, but word around the Michigan DNR’s recent stocking update is that overall predator numbers lake‑wide remain strong, so the future’s bright.
Best producers right now:
- **Lures**
- For smallmouth:
- 3–3.5 inch green pumpkin or goby‑pattern tube jigs on 1/4–3/8 oz heads.
- Finesse swimbaits on ball heads in natural shad or perch.
- Blade baits in silver or gold, yo‑yo’d along rock edges.
- For walleye:
- 1/4 oz jig with a glow head and soft plastic minnow.
- Small silver blade baits and jigging raps fished slow and close to bottom.
- **Bait**
- Emerald shiners are still king for walleye and perch when you can get them.
- Fatheads or rosy reds as backup.
- Wax worms on small teardrops for picky perch in the canals.
A couple of local hot spots to put on your list:
1. **Mile Roads / 9–12 Mile area** off St. Clair Shores: Classic structure with subtle breaks and scattered rock. This stretch has been giving up a mix of smallmouth and the occasional bonus walleye on tubes and blades when the wind lines up.
2. **South Anchor Bay** near the Clinton River mouth: Perch and the odd walleye around old weed edges and current seams. Drift minnows on drop‑shot rigs or simple perch rigs until you mark a school, then sit on them.
Back in the canals around Harrison Township and along the Grosse Pointe shoreline, shore anglers are still picking a few perch on minnows under floats and small jigs; just downsize and be patient.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair today. 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.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
We don’t worry about tides here – St. Clair’s a Great Lakes flow-through, so wind is your “tide.” A light west to northwest breeze this morning and stable barometer have the lake laying down decent, with a skim of shelf ice back in some marinas but main lake and primary channels open. Air temps are running cold but not brutal for January, and a weak warmup this afternoon should nudge fish just a little more active in the mid‑day window.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. and sunset just after 5 p.m., so your prime light changes are tight. Low light has been best for walleye and perch in the river mouths, while the late-morning sun is helping the deeper smallmouth shake off that mid‑winter slump.
According to the National Weather Service Detroit office, we’re looking at seasonable temps, light winds, and only a slight chance of snow showers today, which means good boat control if you’re out in an open rig and manageable conditions if you’re hopping between shore spots and marinas.
Recent chatter from local anglers on the Michigan Sportsman forums and area bait shops around Harrison Township and Anchor Bay is that the bite has been a classic mid‑winter mix:
- **Walleye**: Smaller eater fish with a few nicer 20–24 inchers in the St. Clair River and outflow areas, most coming after dark or right at dawn on jig and minnow or small blade baits worked tight to bottom.
- **Perch**: Decent numbers of 8–11 inchers in the canals and along the edges of old weed flats; nothing epic, but good enough to fill a pail if you stay mobile.
- **Smallmouth bass**: Fewer bites but quality fish when you find them – think deep breaks and rock transitions in 15–25 feet.
- **Muskie**: Traditional season is wrapped up, but word around the Michigan DNR’s recent stocking update is that overall predator numbers lake‑wide remain strong, so the future’s bright.
Best producers right now:
- **Lures**
- For smallmouth:
- 3–3.5 inch green pumpkin or goby‑pattern tube jigs on 1/4–3/8 oz heads.
- Finesse swimbaits on ball heads in natural shad or perch.
- Blade baits in silver or gold, yo‑yo’d along rock edges.
- For walleye:
- 1/4 oz jig with a glow head and soft plastic minnow.
- Small silver blade baits and jigging raps fished slow and close to bottom.
- **Bait**
- Emerald shiners are still king for walleye and perch when you can get them.
- Fatheads or rosy reds as backup.
- Wax worms on small teardrops for picky perch in the canals.
A couple of local hot spots to put on your list:
1. **Mile Roads / 9–12 Mile area** off St. Clair Shores: Classic structure with subtle breaks and scattered rock. This stretch has been giving up a mix of smallmouth and the occasional bonus walleye on tubes and blades when the wind lines up.
2. **South Anchor Bay** near the Clinton River mouth: Perch and the odd walleye around old weed edges and current seams. Drift minnows on drop‑shot rigs or simple perch rigs until you mark a school, then sit on them.
Back in the canals around Harrison Township and along the Grosse Pointe shoreline, shore anglers are still picking a few perch on minnows under floats and small jigs; just downsize and be patient.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair today. 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.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI