EPISODE · Aug 28, 2025 · 3 MIN
Walleye, Bass, Trout & Perch: Your Detroit River Fishing Report for August 28, 2025
from Lake Erie, Detroit Fishing Report · host Inception Point AI
This is Artificial Lure coming to you fresh from Lake Erie, Detroit, and here’s your bite-by-bite fishing report for Thursday, August 28, 2025. The day kicked off with a **mostly clear sunrise at 6:51 AM** and a warm glow painting the Detroit River before closing out with sunset at **8:16 PM**. Mother Nature’s been gracious to us: weather stayed calm, daytime highs in the mid-70s, and east winds turned southerly at a gentle 5 to 10 knots. Water conditions? Just about perfect—waves 2 feet or less, and water temperature at Belle Isle hanging right around **75 degrees**, which is optimal for late summer multispecies action, according to the National Weather Service. Anglers targeting the mouth of the Detroit River and adjacent Lake Erie flats did well on **walleye**, especially early, dragging **crawler harnesses** or bottom-bouncing with gold and chartreuse blades. The Michigan DNR reports consistent walleye action north of the river mouth, but bass—both smallmouth and largemouth—have been modest in number, with activity trailing off compared to July’s peak. If you’re after bass, best chances are at first light, and finesse presentations seem to be outperforming power techniques right now. Out on the deeper ledges and reefs, the mixed-bag bite continues. Up North Voice notes anglers are pulling in **lake trout, brown trout, coho salmon, and the odd Chinook**, with fair numbers landed on spoons and crankbaits, especially if you stay mobile and cover water. The hottest pattern right now is running downsized flutter spoons in silver/blue and orange. From recent tournament chatter and local Facebook groups, most of the bass weighed in nearby lakes recently tapped out between 10 and 19 pounds per 5-fish limit—a respectable haul for late summer. Chatterbaits and jigging soft plastics stood out for those chasing largemouth, and Rapala DT crankbaits worked for main-lake bass. Jerkbaits landed a few heavy smallmouth near weed lines. Steve Martin pulled in a 5.56-pound largemouth on a soft plastic minnow and jig combo, which is solid advice for anyone fishing similar Detroit-area structure this week. Yellow perch reports are building as the water cools. The latest trawl survey by local fisheries biologists showed robust populations, with concentrations off Grosse Ile and the mouth of the Huron River. Best results are still coming from **emerald shiners** and small chartreuse tube jigs bounced right along the bottom. If you’re scouting for prime real estate, put your time into: - **The mouth of the Detroit River**: The channel edges are holding walleye early and late. - **Sandy Creek to Point Mouillee**: Great for perch and whatever’s trailing the schools, especially on small jigs or live bait. - **The south shore reefs near Brest Bay**: If you’ve got a boat, troll crankbaits for migrating trout and the occasional summer steelhead. With World Lake Day just behind us, remember that our Great Lakes’ health depends on anglers stewarding clean practices a This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
What this episode covers
This is Artificial Lure coming to you fresh from Lake Erie, Detroit, and here’s your bite-by-bite fishing report for Thursday, August 28, 2025. The day kicked off with a **mostly clear sunrise at 6:51 AM** and a warm glow painting the Detroit River before closing out with sunset at **8:16 PM**. Mother Nature’s been gracious to us: weather stayed calm, daytime highs in the mid-70s, and east winds turned southerly at a gentle 5 to 10 knots. Water conditions? Just about perfect—waves 2 feet or less, and water temperature at Belle Isle hanging right around **75 degrees**, which is optimal for late summer multispecies action, according to the National Weather Service. Anglers targeting the mouth of the Detroit River and adjacent Lake Erie flats did well on **walleye**, especially early, dragging **crawler harnesses** or bottom-bouncing with gold and chartreuse blades. The Michigan DNR reports consistent walleye action north of the river mouth, but bass—both smallmouth and largemouth—have been modest in number, with activity trailing off compared to July’s peak. If you’re after bass, best chances are at first light, and finesse presentations seem to be outperforming power techniques right now. Out on the deeper ledges and reefs, the mixed-bag bite continues. Up North Voice notes anglers are pulling in **lake trout, brown trout, coho salmon, and the odd Chinook**, with fair numbers landed on spoons and crankbaits, especially if you stay mobile and cover water. The hottest pattern right now is running downsized flutter spoons in silver/blue and orange. From recent tournament chatter and local Facebook groups, most of the bass weighed in nearby lakes recently tapped out between 10 and 19 pounds per 5-fish limit—a respectable haul for late summer. Chatterbaits and jigging soft plastics stood out for those chasing largemouth, and Rapala DT crankbaits worked for main-lake bass. Jerkbaits landed a few heavy smallmouth near weed lines. Steve Martin pulled in a 5.56-pound largemouth on a soft plastic minnow and jig combo, which is solid advice for anyone fishing similar Detroit-area structure this week. Yellow perch reports are building as the water cools. The latest trawl survey by local fisheries biologists showed robust populations, with concentrations off Grosse Ile and the mouth of the Huron River. Best results are still coming from **emerald shiners** and small chartreuse tube jigs bounced right along the bottom. If you’re scouting for prime real estate, put your time into: - **The mouth of the Detroit River**: The channel edges are holding walleye early and late. - **Sandy Creek to Point Mouillee**: Great for perch and whatever’s trailing the schools, especially on small jigs or live bait. - **The south shore reefs near Brest Bay**: If you’ve got a boat, troll crankbaits for migrating trout and the occasional summer steelhead. With World Lake Day just behind us, remember that our Great Lakes’ health depends on anglers stewarding clean practices a This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Walleye, Bass, Trout & Perch: Your Detroit River Fishing Report for August 28, 2025
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