Episode Details

Back to Episodes
Frozen Walleye Wintertime on Lake Erie - Slow Down and Stay Warm

Frozen Walleye Wintertime on Lake Erie - Slow Down and Stay Warm

Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake Erie–Detroit fishing report.

We’re locked in mid‑winter mode. The National Weather Service Cleveland marine forecast has west winds 10–20 knots on western and central Erie, with 3–6 footers on the main lake and 1–3 nearshore, and water temps right around 33 degrees off Toledo. That’s bone‑cold, so think slow, deep, and deliberate. Sunrise is right around 8 AM with sunset about 5:20 PM, so your prime windows are that first hour of light and the last 90 minutes before dark.

No real “tide” here, but wind‑driven seiche on Erie is the deal: hard west winds will suck some water out of the western shorelines and push it east, dropping levels a bit around the Detroit River mouth and Monroe; a swing of a foot isn’t unusual and it does reposition fish along breaks and current seams.

Ice is still sketchy. Great Lakes Commission news is talking about “pancake ice” and frazil on the big lakes, which tells you we’re in that dangerous in‑between stage – open pockets, skim ice, and drifting sheets. Treat everything as unsafe ice unless you’re on a well‑checked local bay with spud bar and buddies.

Fishing pressure’s light but the reports that are trickling in from the western basin and the Detroit River have been solid for **walleye** with a side of **yellow perch** and the odd **smallmouth**. Charter captains and local weekenders are still picking quick limits of eater‑size ’eyes when the wind lays down, mostly in 18–28 feet off Luna Pier, Brest Bay, and out from Bolles Harbor, plus deeper wintering holes on the Detroit River.

Best producers:

- For walleye trolling: deep‑diving crankbaits like Bandits and Husky Jerks run 1.0–1.4 mph just ticking near bottom. Purples, chromes, and natural shad patterns are leading the pack in this clear, cold water.
- Vertical on the river: 3/4–1 ounce jig heads tipped with emerald shiners or soft‑plastic minnows in chartreuse, purple, and fire‑tiger. Keep your line straight up and down and make tiny lifts – they’re nipping, not smashing.
- Perch: when you can get on them, a simple spreader or drop‑shot rig with lake shiners just off bottom in 22–30 feet around Stony Point and the deeper edges off Sterling State Park has been putting keepers in the bucket.

Smallmouth are mostly a bonus this time of year, but guys dragging tubes or blade baits along rock edges in 20–30 feet near the mouth of the Detroit River and around old shipping channels are still running into a few solid brown fish. Think heavy blades in gold or nickel, yo‑yoed painfully slow.

Couple of local hot spots if the weather cooperates:

- **Detroit River – Trenton Channel down to Grosse Ile:** Classic winter jigging stretch. Work current seams, inside turns, and the edges of shipping lanes.
- **Western Basin – Brest Bay / Luna Pier line:** When the waves settle, this band of 18–28 feet continues to kick out numbers of walleye, especially on slow‑rolled cranks.

Last thing: dress like you’re planning to fall in, even if you don’t. Float suit, PFD, dry clothes in a dry bag, and let somebody know your float plan. These 33‑degree waters give you minutes, not hours.

That’ll do it for today from Lake Erie and the Detroit stretch. 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
Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us