Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Frozen Flatlines: Lake St. Clair Mid-Winter Fishing Update
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 real tide on St. Clair, just that slow **seiche** push, so treat wind as your tide. A light west to northwest breeze has the lake laid down pretty friendly this morning, with some skim ice back in the marinas but the main lake and channels staying open, according to the National Weather Service Detroit office. Air temps are parked in the upper 20s to low 30s, seasonable for January, with a slim chance of flurries and mostly cloudy skies.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. and sunset just after 5 p.m., so you’ve got tight low‑light windows: dawn for the walleye and perch crew, then a little late‑morning bump when the sun nudges that deeper water a degree or two.
No true tide chart to worry about here, but watch for that wind‑driven water shift: a steady south wind will stack water on the Canadian side and pull it off the U.S. shorelines; north wind does the opposite. That can change current in the Mile Roads and the river mouths just enough to flip the bite on.
Recent chatter from local bait shops around Harrison Township and Anchor Bay, plus reports echoed on Michigan Sportsman forums, has the lake fishing like classic mid‑winter St. Clair:
- **Walleye**: Good eater numbers with some 20–24 inchers mixed in around the St. Clair River and outflow areas. Most fish are coming at first light or after dark on 1/4 oz jig and minnow, small silver blade baits, or jigging‑rap style lures crawled tight to bottom.
- **Yellow perch**: Solid 8–11 inch fish in the canals and along the edges of old weed flats in 12–18 feet. Enough action to fill a bucket if you stay mobile. Simple emerald shiner on a perch rig, tiny glow spoons, or teardrop jigs tipped with minnows or wax worms are doing work.
- **Smallmouth**: Fewer bites but big shoulders when you find them. Think 3–5 pounders hanging on rock and break transitions in 15–25 feet. Blade baits in silver or gold, goby‑pattern tubes, and small swimbaits on 1/4–3/8 oz heads fished painfully slow are the ticket.
- **Bonus fish**: Odd pike cruising the canals and the rare lazy muskie following baits but not fully committing in this cold water. Michigan DNR’s recent stocking updates say predator numbers system‑wide remain strong, so the future looks good.
On the **bait** front, emerald shiners are still king for both walleye and perch when shops have them. Fatheads or rosy reds back you up when shiners are scarce, and waxies on tiny teardrops will tempt picky canal perch.
For **lures**, keep it subtle:
- Walleye: glow‑head jigs with soft‑plastic minnows, small silver blades, and jigging raps fished low and slow.
- Smallmouth: 3–3.5 inch green pumpkin or goby tubes, finesse swimbaits in natural shad or perch, and blade baits yo‑yo’d along rock.
- Perch: micro glow spoons, teardrops with minnows, or a plain hook and split shot with an emerald shiner just off bottom.
A couple of local **hot spots** to circle on the map:
- **Mile Roads / 9–12 Mile off St. Clair Shores**: Working 14–18 feet, you’ll find a mix of perch, smallmouth, and the odd walleye. Focus on subtle depth changes and any leftover rock or weed clumps. Tubes and blades for bass, jig and minnow or small spoons for walleye and perch.
- **South Anchor Bay near the Clinton River mouth**: Perch and a few walleye along old weed edges and current seams. Drift minnows on perch rigs or a light drop‑shot until you mark a school, then sit tight.
Inside the **Harrison Township canals** and along the **Grosse Pointe** shoreline, shore anglers are still picking off perch with minnows under floats and tiny jigs. Downsize and be patient; the bites are light but steady in the warmer afternoon window.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so y
We don’t get a real tide on St. Clair, just that slow **seiche** push, so treat wind as your tide. A light west to northwest breeze has the lake laid down pretty friendly this morning, with some skim ice back in the marinas but the main lake and channels staying open, according to the National Weather Service Detroit office. Air temps are parked in the upper 20s to low 30s, seasonable for January, with a slim chance of flurries and mostly cloudy skies.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. and sunset just after 5 p.m., so you’ve got tight low‑light windows: dawn for the walleye and perch crew, then a little late‑morning bump when the sun nudges that deeper water a degree or two.
No true tide chart to worry about here, but watch for that wind‑driven water shift: a steady south wind will stack water on the Canadian side and pull it off the U.S. shorelines; north wind does the opposite. That can change current in the Mile Roads and the river mouths just enough to flip the bite on.
Recent chatter from local bait shops around Harrison Township and Anchor Bay, plus reports echoed on Michigan Sportsman forums, has the lake fishing like classic mid‑winter St. Clair:
- **Walleye**: Good eater numbers with some 20–24 inchers mixed in around the St. Clair River and outflow areas. Most fish are coming at first light or after dark on 1/4 oz jig and minnow, small silver blade baits, or jigging‑rap style lures crawled tight to bottom.
- **Yellow perch**: Solid 8–11 inch fish in the canals and along the edges of old weed flats in 12–18 feet. Enough action to fill a bucket if you stay mobile. Simple emerald shiner on a perch rig, tiny glow spoons, or teardrop jigs tipped with minnows or wax worms are doing work.
- **Smallmouth**: Fewer bites but big shoulders when you find them. Think 3–5 pounders hanging on rock and break transitions in 15–25 feet. Blade baits in silver or gold, goby‑pattern tubes, and small swimbaits on 1/4–3/8 oz heads fished painfully slow are the ticket.
- **Bonus fish**: Odd pike cruising the canals and the rare lazy muskie following baits but not fully committing in this cold water. Michigan DNR’s recent stocking updates say predator numbers system‑wide remain strong, so the future looks good.
On the **bait** front, emerald shiners are still king for both walleye and perch when shops have them. Fatheads or rosy reds back you up when shiners are scarce, and waxies on tiny teardrops will tempt picky canal perch.
For **lures**, keep it subtle:
- Walleye: glow‑head jigs with soft‑plastic minnows, small silver blades, and jigging raps fished low and slow.
- Smallmouth: 3–3.5 inch green pumpkin or goby tubes, finesse swimbaits in natural shad or perch, and blade baits yo‑yo’d along rock.
- Perch: micro glow spoons, teardrops with minnows, or a plain hook and split shot with an emerald shiner just off bottom.
A couple of local **hot spots** to circle on the map:
- **Mile Roads / 9–12 Mile off St. Clair Shores**: Working 14–18 feet, you’ll find a mix of perch, smallmouth, and the odd walleye. Focus on subtle depth changes and any leftover rock or weed clumps. Tubes and blades for bass, jig and minnow or small spoons for walleye and perch.
- **South Anchor Bay near the Clinton River mouth**: Perch and a few walleye along old weed edges and current seams. Drift minnows on perch rigs or a light drop‑shot until you mark a school, then sit tight.
Inside the **Harrison Township canals** and along the **Grosse Pointe** shoreline, shore anglers are still picking off perch with minnows under floats and tiny jigs. Downsize and be patient; the bites are light but steady in the warmer afternoon window.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so y