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Mid-Winter Mix: Perch, Walleye, and Smallies on Lake St. Clair
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report.
We don’t get a true tide on St. Clair, just a slight seiche, so think of it like a big shallow bowl. Wind is your “tide.” A light west to northwest breeze this morning has the lake fairly laid down, with some shore ice in the marinas but the main lake and primary channels still fishable. According to the National Weather Service Detroit office, temps are sitting in the 20s to low 30s with clouds and a stray flurry possible, but nothing that’ll chase a determined angler off the water.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. and sunset just after 5 p.m., so your feeding windows are tight. Low light around dawn and dusk is best for walleye and perch in the river mouths and outflows, while that late‑morning sun helps smallmouth wake up on the deeper rock.
Local bait shops around Harrison Township and reports on Michigan Sportsman say the bite is a classic mid‑winter mix. Perch are showing in 12–18 feet off the Mile Roads and in the canals, with decent numbers of 8–11 inch eaters and a few bigger slabs mixed in if you move around. Walleye catches are steady but not crazy: lots of 15–20 inch eaters with the odd 22–24 incher, mostly right at dawn, dusk, and after dark in the St. Clair River, the South Channel, and near the Clinton River mouth. Smallmouth are fewer but thick, 3–5 pounders glued to rock and breaks in 15–25 feet. You’ll also see the occasional pike in the canals and a lazy muskie following baits on the main lake, but the muskie show is mostly just lookers in this cold water.
Best lures right now are all about finesse. For perch, tiny glow spoons and teardrop jigs tipped with emerald shiners, fatheads, or wigglers are doing work, along with a simple shiner on a plain hook and split shot just off bottom. For walleye, stick to 1/4‑ounce jigs with glow heads and live minnows, small silver blade baits, and Jigging‑Rap‑style baits snapped and paused close to bottom. For smallmouth, think winter staples: 3–3.5 inch tube jigs in green pumpkin or goby, blade baits in silver or gold, and hair jigs crawled painfully slow along rocky breaks and current seams. If you’re tucked into a clear canal, a small suspending jerkbait can still surprise you.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
First, the 9–12 Mile Roads stretch off St. Clair Shores. Work that 14–18 foot band, keying on subtle breaks and scattered rock. It’s been giving up perch plus a mix of smallmouth and the odd walleye on tubes, blades, and minnows.
Second, South Anchor Bay near the Clinton River mouth. Old weed edges and light current seams are holding perch and some walleye. Drift minnows on simple perch rigs or light drop‑shots until you mark a school, then anchor or Spot‑Lock and pick them off. Inside the canals around Harrison Township and along the Grosse Pointe shoreline, shore guys are still putting a few perch in the bucket on minnows under small floats and tiny jigs.
Big picture, the Michigan DNR’s recent stocking updates say walleye and muskie numbers in the connecting waters remain strong, so the future on St. Clair looks solid.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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 get a true tide on St. Clair, just a slight seiche, so think of it like a big shallow bowl. Wind is your “tide.” A light west to northwest breeze this morning has the lake fairly laid down, with some shore ice in the marinas but the main lake and primary channels still fishable. According to the National Weather Service Detroit office, temps are sitting in the 20s to low 30s with clouds and a stray flurry possible, but nothing that’ll chase a determined angler off the water.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. and sunset just after 5 p.m., so your feeding windows are tight. Low light around dawn and dusk is best for walleye and perch in the river mouths and outflows, while that late‑morning sun helps smallmouth wake up on the deeper rock.
Local bait shops around Harrison Township and reports on Michigan Sportsman say the bite is a classic mid‑winter mix. Perch are showing in 12–18 feet off the Mile Roads and in the canals, with decent numbers of 8–11 inch eaters and a few bigger slabs mixed in if you move around. Walleye catches are steady but not crazy: lots of 15–20 inch eaters with the odd 22–24 incher, mostly right at dawn, dusk, and after dark in the St. Clair River, the South Channel, and near the Clinton River mouth. Smallmouth are fewer but thick, 3–5 pounders glued to rock and breaks in 15–25 feet. You’ll also see the occasional pike in the canals and a lazy muskie following baits on the main lake, but the muskie show is mostly just lookers in this cold water.
Best lures right now are all about finesse. For perch, tiny glow spoons and teardrop jigs tipped with emerald shiners, fatheads, or wigglers are doing work, along with a simple shiner on a plain hook and split shot just off bottom. For walleye, stick to 1/4‑ounce jigs with glow heads and live minnows, small silver blade baits, and Jigging‑Rap‑style baits snapped and paused close to bottom. For smallmouth, think winter staples: 3–3.5 inch tube jigs in green pumpkin or goby, blade baits in silver or gold, and hair jigs crawled painfully slow along rocky breaks and current seams. If you’re tucked into a clear canal, a small suspending jerkbait can still surprise you.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
First, the 9–12 Mile Roads stretch off St. Clair Shores. Work that 14–18 foot band, keying on subtle breaks and scattered rock. It’s been giving up perch plus a mix of smallmouth and the odd walleye on tubes, blades, and minnows.
Second, South Anchor Bay near the Clinton River mouth. Old weed edges and light current seams are holding perch and some walleye. Drift minnows on simple perch rigs or light drop‑shots until you mark a school, then anchor or Spot‑Lock and pick them off. Inside the canals around Harrison Township and along the Grosse Pointe shoreline, shore guys are still putting a few perch in the bucket on minnows under small floats and tiny jigs.
Big picture, the Michigan DNR’s recent stocking updates say walleye and muskie numbers in the connecting waters remain strong, so the future on St. Clair looks solid.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a 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