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Late Winter Walleye Wake-Up: Detroit River and Lake Erie Early Season Tactics
Published 2 weeks, 6 days ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Erie–Detroit fishing rundown.
We’re sliding into that late-winter, early-spring mix: cold water, but the fish and the anglers are both starting to wake up. Around the mouth of the Detroit River and down toward Brest Bay and Luna Pier, the early walleye push has quietly begun, with a few boats already reporting decent marks on their graphs and scattered fish in the box. Local chatter from Detroit River regulars says the jig bite is just starting to show on the edges of the shipping channel and inside current breaks when the wind lines up.
There’s essentially no real tide here, just seiche and wind-driven water shifts, so focus more on wind direction and pressure than anything “tidal.” A light west or southwest wind that doesn’t mud up the U.S. shore too bad is your friend; hard northeast blows are still shutting the bite down and stacking debris.
Weather-wise, we’re in jacket-and-gloves territory at daybreak, with air temps crawling up toward the low 40s by afternoon when the sun bothers to punch through. That cold, clear water means a narrow feeding window: expect the better activity late morning once the shallows warm a degree or two, then again if you get a gray, low-ceiling afternoon.
Sunrise is right around the 7 o’clock hour Eastern, with sunset roughly 6:20 in the evening, so you’ve got a solid 11-plus hours to work with. First light to about 9:30 a.m. is prime for vertical jigging, especially if the wind keeps your drift under control.
Recent catches have leaned heavily walleye in the river and nearshore Erie, with the usual bonus fish: the odd yellow perch and a few out-of-season smallmouths being released from deeper rock. Most boats are reporting 2–8 keeper walleye on shorter half-day runs when they stay on clean water and slow down their presentation.
Best producers right now on the Detroit River side are:
- 3/8 to 1/2 ounce hair jigs in chartreuse, fire tiger, and black, tipped with a minnow.
- Short plastic paddletails in natural shad or green pumpkin on a river jig, snapped just off bottom.
- Emerald shiners and river shiners on a plain jig head if you want to keep it old-school.
Out on Erie’s nearshore reefs and breaks:
- Slow-trolled crankbaits like deep-diving shad profiles in purple, chrome, and clown.
- Floating/diving stickbaits pulled just off the bottom at 1–1.3 mph after the sun gets a little height.
Live bait: Emerald shiners are still the go-to for vertical jigging and perch. Fatheads will work in a pinch, but if you can find good Erie shiners at the bait shops along Jefferson or down toward Monroe, grab them.
Couple of hot spots to key on:
- The Trenton Channel stretch, especially the inside turns near the steel mills where current softens and bait stacks. Work those 18–28 foot edges with hair jigs and keep that line straight up and down.
- Brest Bay to the Banana Dike on Erie, targeting 16–24 feet. Watch your graph for pods of fish sliding up off the bottom mid-morning; swap between cranks and blade baits until they tell you what they want.
Water’s still cold, so don’t expect a lights-out, all-day chew, but if you dress for it, slow your presentation, and stay in that clean, slightly stained water, you’re in the game for a good box of ‘eyes.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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’re sliding into that late-winter, early-spring mix: cold water, but the fish and the anglers are both starting to wake up. Around the mouth of the Detroit River and down toward Brest Bay and Luna Pier, the early walleye push has quietly begun, with a few boats already reporting decent marks on their graphs and scattered fish in the box. Local chatter from Detroit River regulars says the jig bite is just starting to show on the edges of the shipping channel and inside current breaks when the wind lines up.
There’s essentially no real tide here, just seiche and wind-driven water shifts, so focus more on wind direction and pressure than anything “tidal.” A light west or southwest wind that doesn’t mud up the U.S. shore too bad is your friend; hard northeast blows are still shutting the bite down and stacking debris.
Weather-wise, we’re in jacket-and-gloves territory at daybreak, with air temps crawling up toward the low 40s by afternoon when the sun bothers to punch through. That cold, clear water means a narrow feeding window: expect the better activity late morning once the shallows warm a degree or two, then again if you get a gray, low-ceiling afternoon.
Sunrise is right around the 7 o’clock hour Eastern, with sunset roughly 6:20 in the evening, so you’ve got a solid 11-plus hours to work with. First light to about 9:30 a.m. is prime for vertical jigging, especially if the wind keeps your drift under control.
Recent catches have leaned heavily walleye in the river and nearshore Erie, with the usual bonus fish: the odd yellow perch and a few out-of-season smallmouths being released from deeper rock. Most boats are reporting 2–8 keeper walleye on shorter half-day runs when they stay on clean water and slow down their presentation.
Best producers right now on the Detroit River side are:
- 3/8 to 1/2 ounce hair jigs in chartreuse, fire tiger, and black, tipped with a minnow.
- Short plastic paddletails in natural shad or green pumpkin on a river jig, snapped just off bottom.
- Emerald shiners and river shiners on a plain jig head if you want to keep it old-school.
Out on Erie’s nearshore reefs and breaks:
- Slow-trolled crankbaits like deep-diving shad profiles in purple, chrome, and clown.
- Floating/diving stickbaits pulled just off the bottom at 1–1.3 mph after the sun gets a little height.
Live bait: Emerald shiners are still the go-to for vertical jigging and perch. Fatheads will work in a pinch, but if you can find good Erie shiners at the bait shops along Jefferson or down toward Monroe, grab them.
Couple of hot spots to key on:
- The Trenton Channel stretch, especially the inside turns near the steel mills where current softens and bait stacks. Work those 18–28 foot edges with hair jigs and keep that line straight up and down.
- Brest Bay to the Banana Dike on Erie, targeting 16–24 feet. Watch your graph for pods of fish sliding up off the bottom mid-morning; swap between cranks and blade baits until they tell you what they want.
Water’s still cold, so don’t expect a lights-out, all-day chew, but if you dress for it, slow your presentation, and stay in that clean, slightly stained water, you’re in the game for a good box of ‘eyes.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next 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