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Midwinter Walleye, Perch and Smallmouth on Lake St. Clair with Artificial Lure
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 that slow seiche slosh, so think of **wind as your tide**. National Weather Service Detroit has us in typical mid‑winter mode: light west to northwest breeze, seasonable cold with air temps hanging near the freezing mark, mostly cloudy with a stray flurry here and there. That light west wind has the main lake and channels open, with skim ice tucked back in the marinas and canals.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. with sunset just after 5 p.m., so your best windows are **first light** and the last hour of daylight. Low light is prime for walleye pushes along current seams and for perch sliding up on the edges of old weed flats.
According to recent local shop talk around Harrison Township and Anchor Bay, plus chatter mirrored on the Lake St. Clair Michigan Fishing Report Today podcast on Spreaker, the lake’s fishing like classic mid‑winter St. Clair. Walleye numbers have been solid, with good eaters and a few 20–24 inchers coming from the St. Clair River and outflow zones on 1/4‑ounce jig and minnow, small silver blade baits, and jigging‑rap style lures dragged tight to bottom. Most of those bites are dawn or after‑dark deals.
Perch are running 8–11 inches in the canals and along the 12–18 foot weed edges. If you keep moving, you can still stack a bucket. Best bets are emerald shiners on a perch rig, tiny glow spoons, or teardrops tipped with minnows or wax worms. Shore guys in the Harrison Township canals and along the Grosse Pointe shoreline are quietly picking away with floats and micro jigs.
Smallmouth are fewer but big when you find them, classic 3–5 pound bronzebacks on rock‑to‑sand and rock‑to‑weed transitions in 15–25 feet. Local bass hammers and past Major League Fishing coverage from St. Clair both point to **blade baits**, goby‑pattern tubes, and small swimbaits crawled painfully slow as the deal. Think green pumpkin or goby colors, 1/4 to 3/8‑ounce heads, and don’t be afraid to just drag it.
Bonus pike are cruising canals, and you might see a lazy muskie follow in this cold water, though most muskie folks have hung it up for the season. Michigan DNR stocking notes say predator numbers are healthy, so the system’s in good shape.
On **bait**, emerald shiners are still king for walleye and perch when shops have them; fatheads or rosy reds are your backup, and waxies shine when the perch get finicky. For **lures**, keep it subtle and close to bottom:
- Walleye: glow‑head jig and minnow, small silver blades, jigging raps.
- Smallmouth: 3–3.5 inch goby tubes, finesse swimbaits, blade baits.
- Perch: micro glow spoons, teardrops with minnows, or a plain hook and shiner just off bottom.
Couple **hot spots** to circle:
- **9–12 Mile Roads off St. Clair Shores** in 14–18 feet: mixed perch, smallmouth, and the odd walleye on subtle breaks and leftover rock or weeds. Tubes and blades for bass, jig and minnow or small spoons for everything else.
- **South Anchor Bay near the Clinton River mouth**: perch and a few walleye along old weed edges and light current. Drift minnows on perch rigs or a light drop‑shot until you mark a school, then sit tight.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in and make sure you 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 that slow seiche slosh, so think of **wind as your tide**. National Weather Service Detroit has us in typical mid‑winter mode: light west to northwest breeze, seasonable cold with air temps hanging near the freezing mark, mostly cloudy with a stray flurry here and there. That light west wind has the main lake and channels open, with skim ice tucked back in the marinas and canals.
Sunrise is right around 8 a.m. with sunset just after 5 p.m., so your best windows are **first light** and the last hour of daylight. Low light is prime for walleye pushes along current seams and for perch sliding up on the edges of old weed flats.
According to recent local shop talk around Harrison Township and Anchor Bay, plus chatter mirrored on the Lake St. Clair Michigan Fishing Report Today podcast on Spreaker, the lake’s fishing like classic mid‑winter St. Clair. Walleye numbers have been solid, with good eaters and a few 20–24 inchers coming from the St. Clair River and outflow zones on 1/4‑ounce jig and minnow, small silver blade baits, and jigging‑rap style lures dragged tight to bottom. Most of those bites are dawn or after‑dark deals.
Perch are running 8–11 inches in the canals and along the 12–18 foot weed edges. If you keep moving, you can still stack a bucket. Best bets are emerald shiners on a perch rig, tiny glow spoons, or teardrops tipped with minnows or wax worms. Shore guys in the Harrison Township canals and along the Grosse Pointe shoreline are quietly picking away with floats and micro jigs.
Smallmouth are fewer but big when you find them, classic 3–5 pound bronzebacks on rock‑to‑sand and rock‑to‑weed transitions in 15–25 feet. Local bass hammers and past Major League Fishing coverage from St. Clair both point to **blade baits**, goby‑pattern tubes, and small swimbaits crawled painfully slow as the deal. Think green pumpkin or goby colors, 1/4 to 3/8‑ounce heads, and don’t be afraid to just drag it.
Bonus pike are cruising canals, and you might see a lazy muskie follow in this cold water, though most muskie folks have hung it up for the season. Michigan DNR stocking notes say predator numbers are healthy, so the system’s in good shape.
On **bait**, emerald shiners are still king for walleye and perch when shops have them; fatheads or rosy reds are your backup, and waxies shine when the perch get finicky. For **lures**, keep it subtle and close to bottom:
- Walleye: glow‑head jig and minnow, small silver blades, jigging raps.
- Smallmouth: 3–3.5 inch goby tubes, finesse swimbaits, blade baits.
- Perch: micro glow spoons, teardrops with minnows, or a plain hook and shiner just off bottom.
Couple **hot spots** to circle:
- **9–12 Mile Roads off St. Clair Shores** in 14–18 feet: mixed perch, smallmouth, and the odd walleye on subtle breaks and leftover rock or weeds. Tubes and blades for bass, jig and minnow or small spoons for everything else.
- **South Anchor Bay near the Clinton River mouth**: perch and a few walleye along old weed edges and light current. Drift minnows on perch rigs or a light drop‑shot until you mark a school, then sit tight.
That’s the word from Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in and make sure you 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