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Midwinter Walleye and Perch Tactics for Lake Erie and Detroit River
Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure coming to you with your Lake Erie – Detroit fishing report.
We’re in classic mid‑winter mode, and according to the National Weather Service out of Cleveland, Lake Erie is mostly ice covered with south to southwest winds running 10 to 20 knots and air temps hovering in the 20s and low 30s. The open stretches are rolling 1 to 3 feet, but a lot of the western basin and the lower Detroit River edges are glazed up. Sunrise is around 8:00 a.m. with sunset near 5:15 p.m., so our prime light windows are short and sweet.
No real tides here on Erie, just wind‑driven seiches. With south and southwest winds, water’s pushed north, so expect slightly lower levels along the Michigan shore and the mouth of the Detroit River and a little more current on the Canadian side and in the main channel.
Recent chatter from Detroit‑area bait shops and local charter captains has been the same theme: the big fall walleye run slid out, but there are still numbers of eater‑sized fish hanging on the river edges and deeper wintering holes. Most guys running open‑water are picking off 5–10 walleyes in a short trip when they can tuck out of the wind, with the better fish in 18–28 feet. A few bonus perch are still coming from marinas and canals when you can find safe skim ice. Steelhead reports are light, but the tributary mouths on the Ohio side and the warm‑water discharges are quietly giving up a couple fish for the diehards drifting spawn.
Best producers right now are classic cold‑water presentations:
- For walleye on the Detroit River and any open lake edges, go with **vertical jigging**: 1/2–3/4 oz hair jigs in chartreuse, purple, and black, tipped with emerald shiners or a minnow head.
- Blade baits in gold or silver, and small jigging raps, have also been sticking some nicer fish when the bite is off.
- Shore and canal anglers are leaning on **live minnows on plain hooks** or small jigheads under a slip float for perch and the odd panfish.
If we lock into solid ice over the next week like the marine forecast suggests, expect a quick uptick in perch and panfish catches in the marinas and canals – waxies, spikes, and tiny tungsten jigs will take over then.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
- **Wyandotte / Grassy Island stretch of the Detroit River** – deeper winter holes along the channel edges have been the most consistent for walleye. Boat traffic is light, but when someone sticks fish this time of year, it’s usually here.
- **Mouth of the Detroit River around the Grosse Ile side and out toward Stony Island** – when you can find open water and manageable wind, that transition from river to lake has been giving up scattered schools of walleyes and a few jumbo perch.
Fish activity is classic winter – short windows. The best bite has been first light to mid‑morning and then a smaller flurry right before dark. Keep your presentations subtle, slow your jig strokes way down, and don’t be afraid to downsize. If you’re marking fish and they won’t go, switch from plastic to meat – one good shiner can make all the difference.
That’s the word from the river and the west end of Erie. Dress warm, check ice and weather twice, and let someone know your float plan before you chase those ‘eyes.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports.
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’re in classic mid‑winter mode, and according to the National Weather Service out of Cleveland, Lake Erie is mostly ice covered with south to southwest winds running 10 to 20 knots and air temps hovering in the 20s and low 30s. The open stretches are rolling 1 to 3 feet, but a lot of the western basin and the lower Detroit River edges are glazed up. Sunrise is around 8:00 a.m. with sunset near 5:15 p.m., so our prime light windows are short and sweet.
No real tides here on Erie, just wind‑driven seiches. With south and southwest winds, water’s pushed north, so expect slightly lower levels along the Michigan shore and the mouth of the Detroit River and a little more current on the Canadian side and in the main channel.
Recent chatter from Detroit‑area bait shops and local charter captains has been the same theme: the big fall walleye run slid out, but there are still numbers of eater‑sized fish hanging on the river edges and deeper wintering holes. Most guys running open‑water are picking off 5–10 walleyes in a short trip when they can tuck out of the wind, with the better fish in 18–28 feet. A few bonus perch are still coming from marinas and canals when you can find safe skim ice. Steelhead reports are light, but the tributary mouths on the Ohio side and the warm‑water discharges are quietly giving up a couple fish for the diehards drifting spawn.
Best producers right now are classic cold‑water presentations:
- For walleye on the Detroit River and any open lake edges, go with **vertical jigging**: 1/2–3/4 oz hair jigs in chartreuse, purple, and black, tipped with emerald shiners or a minnow head.
- Blade baits in gold or silver, and small jigging raps, have also been sticking some nicer fish when the bite is off.
- Shore and canal anglers are leaning on **live minnows on plain hooks** or small jigheads under a slip float for perch and the odd panfish.
If we lock into solid ice over the next week like the marine forecast suggests, expect a quick uptick in perch and panfish catches in the marinas and canals – waxies, spikes, and tiny tungsten jigs will take over then.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
- **Wyandotte / Grassy Island stretch of the Detroit River** – deeper winter holes along the channel edges have been the most consistent for walleye. Boat traffic is light, but when someone sticks fish this time of year, it’s usually here.
- **Mouth of the Detroit River around the Grosse Ile side and out toward Stony Island** – when you can find open water and manageable wind, that transition from river to lake has been giving up scattered schools of walleyes and a few jumbo perch.
Fish activity is classic winter – short windows. The best bite has been first light to mid‑morning and then a smaller flurry right before dark. Keep your presentations subtle, slow your jig strokes way down, and don’t be afraid to downsize. If you’re marking fish and they won’t go, switch from plastic to meat – one good shiner can make all the difference.
That’s the word from the river and the west end of Erie. Dress warm, check ice and weather twice, and let someone know your float plan before you chase those ‘eyes.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing reports.
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