PODCAST · society
Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point AI
Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today delivers the latest updates and insights for fishing enthusiasts. Tune in for expert tips, fish population trends, and weather conditions that impact fishing success. Stay informed with real-time reports ensuring the best catch experiences on Lake St. Clair, making every fishing trip productive and enjoyable.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock Also check out https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/time-in-city-news-info/id6692631879andhttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/what-to-do-in-city-guides/id6615091666This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lake St. Clair Early Summer: Smallmouth Beds, Muskie Heat, and Prime Evening Walleye
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer pattern setting up around the lake. Weather out of Detroit Metro this morning is mild, with temps starting in the low 60s and heading for the mid to upper 70s by afternoon, light west to southwest breeze around 5–10 mph, and only a slight chance of a passing shower later in the day according to the National Weather Service. Skies should run partly cloudy, just enough cover to keep fish comfortable through the late morning. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., with sunset close to 9:15 p.m., giving you a long window to work summer spots. Lake St. Clair is not a tidal system, so you’re working wind-driven current and boat traffic rather than true tide. A light southwest wind will push warmer surface water toward the Canadian side and the St. Clair River mouth, so expect a bit more current and slightly cooler, cleaner water on the main-lake breaks and channel edges. Smallmouth bass have been the big story. Local charter captains and tackle shops around Harrison Township and Anchor Bay report steady numbers of 2–4 pound bronzebacks with some 5s and the occasional 6 mixed in over the last week. Many of those fish are sliding off beds and holding on 8–14 feet of water, relating to rock, scattered weeds, and subtle depth changes. Best producers have been dropshot rigs with goby-style plastics in natural browns and greens, 3–4 inch tubes in green pumpkin, and Ned rigs in goby or perch patterns. Early and late, jerkbaits and small swimbaits are taking more aggressive fish on wind-blown shorelines. Muskie action is picking up fast with the stable weather and warming water. Local muskie guides out of the Detroit River and the South Channel are reporting good numbers of mid-30 to mid-40 inch fish, with a few 50s already hitting the nets. Trolling big crankbaits and jointed baits in walleye or perch colors at 3–4 mph along the South Channel, the Belle River Hump, and the dumping grounds has been productive. Casters are doing well with bucktails and 8–10 inch rubber baits over 10–18 feet. Walleye are still in play, though more scattered than spring. Anglers working the St. Clair River and the shipping channel edges have been boxing eaters pulling crawler harnesses and small crankbaits near bottom in 15–25 feet. Natural gold, purple, and firetiger patterns have been solid. Best bite has been low light: first light and last couple hours before dark. Perch catches are spotty but improving. Locals picking at them in the dumping grounds and deeper pockets of Anchor Bay are getting mixed sizes, with some nice keepers in 12–18 feet. Minnows on perch rigs or small pieces of nightcrawler right on the bottom are your best bet there. For bait, you can’t go wrong with emerald shiners and nightcrawlers from the local marinas. Artificial-wise, think natural: goby, perch, and shiner colors for smallmouth and walleye; big perch and walleye patterns for muskie. A couple of hot spots to circle on the map today: - The mile roads out of St. Clair Shores, especially 9 Mile to 12 Mile, in 8–14 feet for post-spawn smallmouth. - The Belle River Hump and surrounding deeper structure for muskie and mixed-bag opportunities along the channel edges. That’s the latest from Lake St. Clair. 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
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461
Lake St. Clair Early Summer: Smallmouth Limits and Long Evening Bites
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re in a classic early-summer pattern on the lake. Air temps are starting cool at daybreak and pushing into the mid‑70s by afternoon with light southwest winds and mostly clear skies. The barometer is steady to slightly rising, and that’s keeping fish active most of the day. Sunrise is right around 5:50 a.m. and sunset is about 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work. There’s no real tide on St. Clair, but the light wind is giving a gentle drift that’s perfect for covering breaks and weed edges. Smallmouth bass are still the headliner. Local charter captains out of Metro Beach and the St. Clair Shores marinas report easy limits this week, with lots of 2–4 pound fish and a few pushing 5–6. Most are coming off 8–14 feet of water on rock and scattered weed. Early, they’re chewing on moving baits; once the sun gets up, it’s more of a finesse bite. Best producers right now are natural‑colored tube jigs, green pumpkin and goby patterns on 1/4‑ounce heads, dragged slowly along the bottom. Ned rigs in green pumpkin, Canada craw, and perch colors are also putting up big numbers. When the wind puts a chop on the surface, jerkbaits and small shad‑style crankbaits in perch and silver/black have been hot. Live minnows and nightcrawlers on simple dropshot or slip sinker rigs are working well for less experienced anglers or kids, especially around deeper breaks. Walleye action has been solid but a bit more hit‑or‑miss than spring. Anglers drifting crawler harnesses with chartreuse and copper blades are picking up good eaters in the shipping channel and off the Belle River Hump. Low‑light periods are best, with a short flurry right at dawn and again towards dusk. Muskie reports are picking up as we slide farther into summer. Trollers running big crankbaits and bucktails along weed edges are moving fish on the south shore and toward the Thames River area. Focus on 10–18 feet, and don’t be afraid to cover water. Panfish are stacked in marinas and canals. Bluegill and perch are hitting small pieces of crawler or waxworms under a float, with the better fish holding just off the main lake where there’s a little shade and weed cover. A couple of hot spots to keep in mind: First, the mile roads off St. Clair Shores – 9 Mile through 12 Mile – have been very consistent for smallmouth on tubes and Ned rigs in 10–14 feet. Work those subtle rock patches and inside turns. Second, the area off the mouth of the Clinton River has given up mixed bags of smallmouth, walleye, and the odd muskie, especially when there’s a light chop and some stain to the water. Overall, it’s a great time to be on Lake St. Clair. Get out early, fish the low light hard with moving baits, then slow down and finesse them once the sun gets high. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for more reports and tips. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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460
Lake St. Clair Smallmouth Bite Heats Up: 20-40 Fish Days with Natural Plastics
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a light north to northeast breeze this morning, about 5–10 miles an hour, with air temps starting in the upper 50s and pushing into the low 70s by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy with a good mix of sun and high clouds, and only a slight chance of a passing shower later. Lake St. Clair is basically non‑tidal, so no real tide swing to worry about, but water levels are seasonally high and clarity is decent on the main lake with some stain near river mouths after recent winds. Sunrise came early and the first couple of hours after first light are prime. Expect the evening bite to fire back up in the last two hours before sunset when that sun gets low and the lake lays down. Smallmouth bass have been the star of the show. Recent reports from local charters and bait shops around Fair Haven and St. Clair Shores say boats are putting 20–40 smallies in the net on good days, with plenty of 2–3 pound fish and a few pushing the 5‑pound mark. Most of those fish are coming off 8–14 feet of water on rock and scattered weed edges. Best producers have been natural‑looking soft plastics: green pumpkin or goby‑pattern tubes, Ned rigs in darker browns and greens, and dropshot rigs with small minnow or goby imitations. If the wind gives you a little chop, switch to moving baits: 3/8‑ounce spinnerbaits in white or white/chartreuse, and small shad‑style crankbaits ticking the tops of the rocks. When the sun gets high and the bite slows, drag a tube painfully slow or hover a dropshot just off bottom. Walleye action has been steady but more of a grinder’s game. Anglers drifting the shipping channel edges and the mouth of the Detroit River are seeing 5–10 keeper ’eyes per trip when they stay on the marks. Best bets are jigging with 1/2‑ounce jigs tipped with emerald shiners or soft plastic minnows in chartreuse or firetiger. In slightly dirtier water, bottom bouncers with crawler harnesses in purple or gold blades are putting fish in the box. Muskie trollers are starting to cash in along the south shore and up near the Belle River Hump. Fish are still a little scattered, but a few boats have reported 2–4 fish days with mid‑40‑inch class muskies and the odd 50‑inch bruiser. Big crankbaits and jointed plugs in perch, walleye, and firetiger colors are the go‑to, pulled 3–4 mph with wide trolling spreads. Don’t overlook oversized rubber baits if you’re casting breaks and weedlines. Panfish are a solid backup plan. Bluegills and pumpkinseeds are hanging on inside weeds and around marinas, with perch nosing around the same areas in 6–10 feet. Small ice jigs tipped with wax worms, pieces of crawler, or tiny plastics under a float will keep the rods bending for kids and casual anglers. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: Anchor Bay, especially the mid‑bay humps and weed edges off Fair Haven, is lights‑out for smallmouth when the wind is right. The Mile Roads out of St. Clair Shores continue to pump out mixed bags of smallmouth and walleye, especially along the breaks in 10–14 feet with scattered rock. Overall, think natural colors in clearer water, bright chartreuse and firetiger when you find stain, and lean on tubes, Ned rigs, and dropshots for numbers, with spinnerbaits and cranks when the wind kicks up. 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
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459
Early Summer Smallmouth & Walleye Bite Heating Up on Lake St. Clair
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re rolling into a classic early-summer pattern on Lake St. Clair. Water temps are running in the upper 60s to low 70s across most of the lake, with a light chop this morning and a chance of a bit more breeze building by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, with a mild southwest wind and comfortable air temps. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., with sunset close to 9:15 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those prime low-light bites. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have real ocean tides, but you do get minor seiche-related water level swings and wind-driven pushes. With a southwest wind, expect a touch more water piled up on the Canadian side and slightly lower on the U.S. side, which can nudge fish tighter to breaks and weed edges. Smallmouth bass are the headliners right now. Early in the day, fish are sitting on 8–12 feet breaks, especially where clean rock meets emerging weed clumps. Focus on the Mile Roads, the Belle River Hump, and the dumping grounds. Natural goby-colored tubes, 3.3–3.8 inch swimbaits in perch and emerald shiner patterns, and dropshot minnows in green pumpkin and watermelon are top producers. Work them just off bottom and don’t be afraid to drift rather than anchor. Walleye action has been decent in the St. Clair River and the south end of the lake. Target 15–25 feet with bottom bouncers and harnesses in chartreuse, purple, and copper, or jig plastics in current breaks. Evenings and after dark along the shipping channel edges are giving up a few bonus eyes to crankbaits trolled 10–15 feet down. Musky are starting to wake up. Cast big bucktails and 8–10 inch crankbaits along weedlines in 8–14 feet, especially around the South Channel, the North Channel mouth, and the edge of the flats. A few nice fish have come trolling big cranks at 4–5 mph over 12–18 feet, running just above the tops of the weeds. Panfish and perch are scattered but catchable. Look for inside weed edges and small sandy pockets in 6–10 feet. Slip bobbers with live minnows, redworms, or small plastics will put fish in the bucket. If you find clean sand with scattered grass, stay put and let the school come to you. Best overall lures and bait right now: - Goby and perch pattern tubes and swimbaits for smallmouth. - Dropshot rigs with natural shiner- and goby-colored baits. - Crawler harnesses and jig-and-minnow combos for walleye. - Bucktails and large crankbaits for musky. - Live minnows and worms under floats for perch and bluegill. A couple of local hot spots to circle on the map: - The Mile Roads area on the U.S. side, especially 9 Mile to 12 Mile, drifting 8–14 feet for smallmouth. - The Belle River Hump and surrounding structure for mixed smallmouth and the occasional walleye. That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown from Artificial Lure. 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
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458
Lake St. Clair Early Summer Smallmouth: Tubes and Dropshots in the Sweet Spot
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer setup on the big pond. A light southwest breeze this morning, building to a modest chop by afternoon. Temps are comfortable, starting cool and climbing into the 70s. Skies are partly cloudy with a mix of sun and haze, and only a slight chance of a passing shower later. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., with sunset near 9:15 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those prime low‑light bites. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have true tides, but you may notice minor seiche‑type water level shifts when that southwest wind kicks up. You’ll see a little extra push on the American side when it’s really blowing, especially along the St. Clair Shores and Grosse Pointe shorelines and down toward the Detroit River mouth. Fish activity has been strong. The smallmouth bite is still the headline: solid numbers of 2–4 pounders with enough 5‑plus fish to keep things interesting. Anglers have been putting good limits together on the Mile Roads, the 400 Club area, and up around the St. Clair River delta. Walleyes are showing in decent numbers along the shipping channel edges and down toward the Detroit River mouth, with a mix of eater‑sized fish and a few bigger ones. Perch are scattered, but folks picking at them near the hump areas and in some of the slightly deeper bowls off the main lake are finding small packs. Best lures for smallmouth right now are classic St. Clair staples: - Tube jigs in goby, green pumpkin, and smoke purple on 3/8 to 1/2 oz heads. - Dropshot rigs with shad or minnow‑style baits in natural colors. - Ned rigs in green pumpkin or Canada craw fished slowly along the rocks and grass edges. When the wind slicks off and the sun gets high, finesse wins: lighter line, smaller plastics, and a patient drag along bottom. When the breeze is up, you can get more aggressive with spinnerbaits and shallow‑running cranks over the weed tops, especially around 8–12 feet. For live bait, minnows and leeches are hard to beat for both smallmouth and walleye. Crawlers on harnesses trolled 1.0–1.3 mph along the channels and breaks will produce a steady pick of walleyes and the occasional jumbo perch. If you’re anchor‑fishing or spot‑locking, a slip‑sinker rig with a lively minnow near the bottom works well around rock piles and current seams. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: - The Mile Roads: 9 Mile down to 11 Mile in 8–14 feet. Drift tubes and dropshots over scattered rock and patches of grass. This stretch has been kicking out numbers of smallies. - The South Channel / delta area: edges of current and sand‑to‑rock transitions. Great mix of smallmouth and walleye opportunities; work the breaks and subtle points with dropshots, tubes, and crawler harnesses. Overall, expect the best action early and late in the day, with a midday lull unless you’ve got some wind to ruffle things up. Electronics are key right now: find the bait, find the rock and grass transitions, and you’ll find the fish. 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
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457
Lake St. Clair Fishing Report: Muskies, Smallmouth, and Perfect Evening Light
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We don’t have real tides on St. Clair, but wind does push water. Overnight southwest breeze stacked a little water on the Michigan side, so expect a light chop early, building to a steady mid‑day ripple. Air temps are starting cool in the low 60s, climbing into the mid to upper 70s by afternoon with partly cloudy skies and a slight chance of a pop‑up shower inland. Humidity’s up, but we’ve got decent visibility and manageable winds around 8–14 mph out of the southwest. Sunrise hit right around 5:55 a.m., with sunset about 9:15 p.m. That gives you long low‑light windows, and that’s when the bite has been best. The early morning topwater window is short but hot, and then things pick back up again from about 7 p.m. until dark. Muskie action has been solid. Trollers running 3.5–4.5 mph are moving fish in 10–16 feet of water. Recent catches have included good numbers of mid‑30s to low‑40‑inch fish, with a few pushing upper 40s. Big rubber like Bulldawgs and Medussas in perch and walleye patterns, plus smaller bucktails with nickel or copper blades, have been productive. Natural colors are working in clear water; when it muddies up, firetiger and chartreuse get the nod. Smallmouth bass fishing has been excellent on the edges. Anglers are putting 20–40 fish days together, with plenty of 2–3 pounders and some 4‑plus mixed in. Tubes in green pumpkin, drop‑shot minnows in goby shades, and 3–4 inch swimbaits have been the consistent producers. A subtle jerkbait works well when the wind lays down. Live shiners and crawlers are still putting numbers in the boat if you’re fishing with kids or just want steady action. Walleye catches continue in the shipping channel and along deeper breaks, with eaters in the 15–20 inch range. Bottom bouncers with spinner harnesses and crawlers, or slow‑rolled plastics on jigs, are getting it done. Low light and a touch of stain in the water really help that bite. Panfish are hanging around weed edges and marinas. Bluegill and perch are hitting red worms, waxies, and small plastics under a float. Great option if you’re staying close to shore. A few local hot spots to consider: - **Mile Roads area (9–11 Mile)** on the U.S. side: classic smallmouth structure. Work the rock and weed transitions in 8–14 feet with tubes, dropshots, and small swimbaits. - **The St. Clair Shipping Channel edges**: good for mixed bags of walleye, smallmouth, and the occasional muskie. Drift jigs and harnesses along the breaks, watching current and boat traffic. Honorable mention to the **Belle River Hump** on the Canadian side if you’re legal to fish there; it’s been holding muskies and big smallies on those mid‑lake contours. Today, focus on the early and late light, fish a touch deeper as the sun gets high, and don’t be afraid to downsize if the lake slicks off. Keep an eye on that southwest wind; if it builds, slide to the leeward side for cleaner drifts and better boat control. 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
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Early Summer Smallmouth Heat: Natural Colors and Dawn Bite on Lake St. Clair
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’ve got a classic early-summer setup on the lake. Overnight temps dropped into the upper 50s, climbing into the mid to upper 70s this afternoon with light southwest winds around 5–10 mph and a mix of sun and scattered clouds. Humidity’s manageable, and water temps are sitting in the upper 60s to low 70s across most of the lake. Being a Great Lake-connected system, you won’t see real “tides,” but you can expect minor seiche-related level bumps with the wind shifts. Sunrise came just after 5:50 a.m. with sunset around 9:10 p.m., giving a long feeding window. The best fish activity has been in that first two-hour window after sunrise and again from about 6:30 p.m. to dusk, especially on the edges of weedbeds and along current seams. Smallmouth bass action has been strong. Local anglers have been reporting solid numbers of 2–4 pound smallies with a few 5-pound class fish mixed in, especially on the U.S. side weed flats and rock patches. Hard baits are doing work: - Best lures right now are **natural-colored tube jigs** (green pumpkin, goby patterns), **dropshot rigs** with minnow-style plastics, and **ned rigs** in darker, subtle tones. - When the wind picks up and you get a little chop, **spinnerbaits** and **shallow-running crankbaits** in perch and shad colors are triggering reaction bites. Walleye fishing has been decent rather than on fire, but those putting in time are picking up eaters in the 15–20 inch range. The most consistent approach has been trolling **crawler harnesses** behind bottom bouncers off the shipping channel edges and deeper breaks, with gold or copper blades producing. Nightcrawlers remain the best bait for eyes, especially when run just off bottom at a slow, steady pace. Muskie reports are starting to heat up as more boats get out. A few fish in the low to mid 40-inch range have been boated recently by trollers running big **jointed crankbaits** and **large bucktails** along outside weedlines. Early in the season, more natural baitfish colors—walleye, perch, whitefish patterns—are getting more follows and strikes than the wild neons. Perch are scattered but around. Anglers soaking **live minnows** on drop-shot or simple spreader rigs over sand and grass mix are putting together modest buckets of 8–10 inch fish. You’ll want to move frequently until you land on an active school. Couple of local hot spots to put on your list today: - **Mile Roads Area (9, 10, 11 Mile)** on the U.S. side: nice mix of weedbeds and scattered rock in 8–14 feet, excellent for smallmouth and the odd muskie. Drag tubes, work a dropshot, or slow-roll a spinnerbait along the weeds. - **Belle River Hump and Thames River Mouth (Ontario side)**: good for smallmouth and walleye when there’s a bit of current. Jigging with tubes or minnows on a jighead around the structure can be very productive. Overall, think low and slow in the bright mid-day sun, then pick up the pace as shadows lengthen. Light line, natural colors, and staying mobile are going to be the keys to a heavy livewell or a full memory card today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Lake St. Clair update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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Lake St. Clair: Smallmouth, Walleye, and Panfish Heat Up with Warming Trends
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a warming trend around the lake this morning: overnight lows in the upper 50s to low 60s, climbing into the low 70s by afternoon with a light west to southwest breeze 5–10 mph. Skies are partly cloudy, and pressure is steady to slightly rising, a good setup for daytime bites. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m. with sunset near 9:12 p.m., giving you a long window to work that morning and evening feed. Lake St. Clair isn’t truly tidal, but we do get seiche-related water level bumps. With the light wind today, expect only minor fluctuations, so current will be driven more by wind direction than any real “tide.” A west or southwest wind will push a bit more water toward the Detroit River side and set up some nice drifts along the U.S. shoreline. Recent chatter from local anglers and shop boards around St. Clair Shores and Anchor Bay has been all about **smallmouth bass**, **walleye**, and a solid mix of **panfish**. Smallmouth action has been strong in 8–14 feet over rock and broken weed edges; plenty of fish in the 2–4 pound range with a few bigger bronzebacks mixed in. Walleyes have been coming from deeper breaks and channel edges, especially on crawler harnesses run just off bottom. Perch and bluegills are showing in the canals and inside weeds, great for filling a bucket if you stay mobile. For smallmouth, the hot producers have been: - **Lures:** natural-pattern tube jigs (green pumpkin, goby), 3–4 inch swimbaits, and jerkbaits in perch and shad colors. A dropshot with a minnow-style plastic has been money on the deeper rock. - **Best bait:** live shiners or gobies where legal, nose-hooked on a dropshot or lightly weighted rig. For walleye: - Bottom bouncers with **nightcrawler harnesses** in chartreuse, purple, or copper blades. - Crankbaits in firetiger or clown patterns trolled along the shipping channel edges and the mouths of the rivers. For panfish: - Small slip floats with wax worms or redworms around docks and canal mouths. - Tiny jigs tipped with plastics in white or chartreuse fished just over emerging weeds. A couple of local hot spots to put on your list: 1. **Mile Roads / 9–12 Mile area** off St. Clair Shores: classic early-season smallmouth water. Work 8–12 feet of water over rock and patchy grass with tubes and swimbaits. Drift with the wind and watch your electronics for bait pods. 2. **Anchor Bay**: especially the mid-depth weed edges. Great multi-species area right now. Drag a tube for bass, run a crawler harness for walleye, or drop a small jig and worm for panfish and you can stay on action most of the day. Midday, expect the bite to slow when the sun gets high, so finesse presentations—lighter line, smaller baits, and slower retrieves—will pay off. The evening window, from about 7 p.m. to sunset, should see another push of active smallmouth and roaming walleyes sliding up to feed. That’s your Lake St. Clair update from Artificial Lure. 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
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Lake St. Clair Early Summer: Post-Spawn Smallmouth, Walleye Channels, and the Mile Roads Hot Bite
Artificial Lure here with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’ve got a classic early‑summer pattern setting up. A light southwest breeze, generally 5–10 miles an hour, with daytime highs pushing into the upper 70s to low 80s and a mix of sun and passing clouds. Humidity is up a bit, so expect that hazy look over the lake by midday. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., sunset near 9:10 p.m., giving you a long window to work the low‑light bites. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have true ocean tides, but you will see slight seiche‑type water level changes and current shifts with the wind. With today’s light southwest wind, expect a gentle push toward the Detroit River and a little stain on the American shoreline, especially where that wind stacks up surface water. Fish activity has been solid. Smallmouth bass are in classic post‑spawn mode, sliding off the beds and setting up on the first breaks, rock patches, and edges of the weed flats. Anglers have been boating good numbers of 2–4 pounders with the occasional 5‑plus mixed in. Walleye catches remain steady in the channels and deeper cuts, while perch and panfish are showing up on the inside weeds and around marinas. Best producers for smallmouth have been: - Medium‑running crankbaits in perch and goby patterns - Tubes and ned rigs in green pumpkin or goby colors - Spinnerbaits and chatterbaits when the wind chops things up Live bait folks are doing well with: - Emerald shiners on slip bobbers for perch and mixed panfish - Nightcrawlers on bottom rigs or harnesses for walleye in the channels - Leeches and minnows on simple jig heads for mixed bag action A couple of hot spots to put on your list: - The Mile Roads: From about 9 Mile to 12 Mile, look for 8–14 feet with scattered rock and weed clumps. Drift or slow‑troll those breaks with tubes, ned rigs, or crankbaits. Smallmouth have been stacked here, especially in the morning and late afternoon. - The St. Clair River mouth and into the South Channel: Work the edges where river current meets lake water. Pull crawler harnesses or heavier jigs for walleye, and keep an eye out for bonus smallmouth sitting on the current seams and rock piles. Midday, when the sun gets high and the lake lays down, downsize and slow down: finesse plastics, dropshots, and light jigs close to the bottom. Early and late, take advantage of the low‑light window with more aggressive reaction baits — cranks, spinnerbaits, and topwater in the calm pockets. Water clarity will dictate color. If you’ve got that classic St. Clair green and 3–5 feet of visibility, natural goby, perch, and shiner tones are key. If the wind muddies things up, don’t be shy about chartreuse, white, or firetiger to help those fish find your bait. Boat traffic ramps up quickly on weekends, so if you want the best bite — and a little peace — be on the water at gray light or plan to fish the evening bite into dusk. That’s the rundown from Lake St. Clair. 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
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453
Lake St. Clair Early Summer: Smallmouth Patterns, Mile Road Hotspots, and Prime Bite Windows
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sliding into a classic early‑summer pattern on St. Clair. Water temps are sitting in the upper 60s to low 70s in most of the main lake, with slightly cooler water on the Canadian side and in areas with good current. Winds the last day or so have been light to moderate out of the west–southwest, so the U.S. shoreline has a light chop while the east side lays down a bit more. Lake St. Clair is basically non‑tidal, so you’re dealing with wind‑driven water levels, not true ocean tides. A west or southwest blow will stack a little water on the Detroit River end and drop it slightly toward the St. Clair River end. Plan your drifts with the wind first, then fine‑tune with trolling motor. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m. with sunset roughly 9:10 p.m., giving you a big low‑light window. The best bite windows today should be first light through about 9 a.m., and then again from 7 p.m. until dark, especially if the wind lays down. Smallmouth have been the main show. Local anglers are reporting 30–50 fish days when they stay on the move, with plenty of 2–4 pounders and a few pushing 5+. Recent chatter from the mile roads and the Belle River Hump has been strong: fish are grouped on scattered rock and inside turns in 8–14 feet. A mix of post‑spawn and summer schools means you’ll see flurries of action, then dead water; don’t be afraid to hop spots often. Top smallmouth producers: - **Tubes**: green pumpkin, goby, and watermelon with copper or purple flake on 1/4–3/8 oz heads. - **Dropshots**: natural goby and shad‑style baits, nose‑hooked on light wire hooks with 1/4–3/8 oz dropshot weights. - **Swimbaits**: 3.3–3.8" paddle tails in alewife, perch, or sexy shad on 1/4 oz heads. - **Reaction baits** when there’s chop: chartreuse/white spinnerbaits and jerkbaits in clown or perch patterns. Live bait guys doing well drifting **leeches** and **nightcrawlers** on simple lindy rigs or bottom bouncers along breaks and edges of grass. If the bite gets tough, a small shiner on a dropshot can turn lookers into biters. Walleye action has been steady but not on fire. Most of the better catches have come from guys trolling the shipping channel edges and outflows toward the Detroit River, pulling small crankbaits and harnesses in 14–20 feet. Expect a half‑dozen to a dozen eater‑sized fish in a decent pass, with the occasional bigger eye mixed in. Gold, purple, and firetiger blades and cranks are good starting points. Muskie season is picking up. Anglers are moving fish over classic structure like the South Channel and the dumping grounds, with a few mid‑40s to low‑50s fish reported this week. Bigger bucktails in black/nickel or black/chartreuse and mid‑size rubber baits in walleye or perch colors are solid choices. Focus on edges of weeds and subtle breaks in 10–16 feet, especially when there’s a little stain and a steady breeze. A couple of hot spots to circle: - **Mile Road stretch (9–12 Mile)** on the U.S. side: great for smallmouth, with mixed rock and grass in 7–12 feet. Drift tubes and dropshots; if the wind’s right you can cover a ton of water and just re‑run the productive lines. - **Belle River Hump** on the Canadian side: classic smallmouth structure, plus a shot at incidental walleye. Fish the crown and edges with tubes, dropshots, and swimbaits; watch your electronics for bait and rock patches. If the main lake gets too bumpy by mid‑day, duck into the channels and marinas for panfish and the odd bonus bass. Small jigs tipped with waxworms or tiny plastics under a float will keep rods bent. That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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452
Lake St. Clair Early Summer: Smallmouth Heat, Long Days, and Finesse Wins
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool, early‑summer pattern around the lake. Air temps today run mid‑60s at first light, climbing into the mid‑70s by afternoon under partly cloudy skies with a light southwest breeze around 5–10 mph. Local marine forecasts call for 1 foot or less chop on the main lake most of the day, so it’s plenty fishable in a small boat. Humidity’s moderate and barometer is steady to slightly falling, which usually helps the bite. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m. and sunset near 9:10 p.m., giving a long feeding window. The best action has been in that first two‑hour window after sunup and then again after 7 p.m. as the light drops. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have true ocean tides, just seiche and wind‑driven level changes, so you’ll mainly be timing your trips around wind and boat traffic instead of a tide chart. Bass and muskie are the headliners right now. Local charter captains and bait shops around the Harrison Township and St. Clair Shores area report strong smallmouth numbers on the U.S. side this week, with plenty of 2–4 pound fish and a few over 5 mixed in. Canadian side reefs are also producing but remember to follow border regs and licensing if you cross over. Best smallmouth bite has been on mid‑depth flats in 8–14 feet with scattered rock and weeds. Green pumpkin or goby‑pattern tube jigs, 3–4 inch swimbaits, and dropshot rigs with shad‑style or goby‑style plastics are doing most of the damage. Slow‑dragging a tube or subtly shaking a dropshot right on bottom has outfished faster presentations during the brighter parts of the day. When the wind puts a little chop on the lake, switch to spinnerbaits and chatterbaits in white or perch patterns and cover water. Muskie anglers trolling the south and middle channels are seeing more follows and a few solid hookups. Big crankbaits and jointed plugs in perch, walleye, and fire‑tiger colors are the go‑tos. If you’re casting, large rubber baits and bucktails over 10–15 feet of water along edges of major weedbeds have produced some mid‑40‑inch fish. Long pauses and speed changes are triggering strikes. Walleye action is decent, especially early and late, with eaters coming on crawler harnesses and smaller crankbaits run just off bottom in 12–18 feet. Live nightcrawlers on harnesses in gold, chartreuse, and purple blades are tough to beat when the bite gets finicky. For live bait overall, emerald shiners, nightcrawlers, and leeches are your best bets. Shore anglers soaking live bait near marinas and along seawalls are picking up a mix of smallmouth, rock bass, and the occasional perch. A couple of hot spots to circle on the map: – The Mile Roads, especially the 9‑ to 12‑Mile area off St. Clair Shores, have been steady for smallmouth on tubes, dropshots, and swimbaits over rock piles and scattered grass. – The Belle River Hump area on the Canadian side continues to kick out quality smallmouth and the odd walleye for those working finesse baits slowly along the structure. Water clarity is generally good but can cloud up quickly after wind or heavy boat traffic, so keep a few louder, flashier baits handy for stained conditions. That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown from Artificial Lure. 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
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451
Lake St. Clair: Smallmouth Season Heats Up with Ned Rigs and Tube Jigs
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have true ocean tides, but wind and pressure are pushing a light seiche today, so expect a subtle rise and fall of a few inches, with a touch more water moving on the south and east ends. That slight fluctuation, plus the weather, has the fish sliding on and off breaks. Weather across the lake is mild early with light winds and a gentle chop, building to a breezy, fishable afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy with good visibility and stable barometric pressure. Air temps are running cool at first light, then warming into a comfortable daytime pattern—great for staying on the water. Sunrise came early over the Canadian shore and sunset will give you a solid evening bite window, with low light lasting long enough to work shorelines and weed edges thoroughly. Smallmouth bass have been the headliners. Local charter captains and marina talk say 3–4 pound bronzebacks are common, with enough 5s in the mix to keep things interesting. Numbers have been strong on the U.S. side reefs, the Mile Roads, and around the Belle River Hump. Anglers drifting breaks in 10–16 feet have been boating good counts, especially when they stay on contour and adjust speed to match wind. Best artificial setups right now: - Ned rigs in natural goby colors, light heads - Tube jigs in green pumpkin, dark melon, and brown with copper flake - Dropshot rigs with subtle minnow or goby-style plastics in shad, smoke, and green pumpkin If you’re chasing walleye, the bite’s been scattered but steady for those trolling crawler harnesses and small crankbaits along the shipping channel edges and deeper flats. A few decent eaters are coming on bottom bouncers with nightcrawlers and smaller, natural-color blades. Musky reports are picking up as more guys start running big plugs and bucktails; nothing outrageous in numbers, but a few mid-40s fish have been quietly boated by folks working classic trolling passes. Best bait on the live side for bass remains emerald shiners and nightcrawlers, especially when fished on a simple slip sinker or split-shot rig around rocky transitions. Perch are spotty but when you find them, they’re chewing on minnows over broken shell and rock. Couple of hot spots to consider: - The Mile Roads area off the U.S. shoreline, especially 9 and 10 Mile, where the rocky patches and subtle depth changes are stacking smallmouth. - The Belle River Hump and surrounding structure, which have been producing both numbers and quality bass, with a bonus walleye or two for those dragging baits near bottom. Focus on low-light periods—early morning and the last couple hours before dark—for the heaviest activity. Midday, slow down, go finesse, and stay tight to structure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a Lake St. Clair update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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450
Lake St. Clair Early Summer: Smallmouth Heat Up, Muskies Bite, Long Days Ahead
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a light early-summer pattern now. Air temps are running in the upper 60s at first light, pushing into the 70s by afternoon with mild southwest breeze, 5 to 10 knots, and mostly clear skies. The barometer is steady to slightly falling, which usually helps the bite. NOAA’s Detroit/Pontiac office notes only a low chance of a passing shower later, but nothing that should blow you off the lake. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., with sunset close to 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long window. The best feeding periods have been the first two hours after sunrise and the last couple before dark, especially when the wind’s got a little chop on the surface. Lake St. Clair isn’t a true tidal system, but the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and NOAA gauge data show modest seiche and flow changes driven by wind; pay attention to any slight rise or fall at the St. Clair Shores and Belle River gauges. A bit of moving water on the breaks has been triggering bites. Smallmouth bass are the headliners right now. Local anglers and shop chatter around the Selfridge and Harrison Township area report solid numbers of 3–4 pound bronzebacks with the occasional 5-plus coming boatside. Most fish are post-spawn and sliding off beds to adjacent flats and rock transitions in 6–12 feet. Best producers have been green pumpkin or goby-colored tube jigs, 3–4 inches, dragged slowly, and dropshot rigs with shad-style or goby-style plastics in natural hues. When the wind kicks up, switch to spinnerbaits and 1/2-ounce chartreuse/white chatterbaits over scattered weed clumps. Walleye action has been decent, not lights-out, but consistent. Anglers running bottom bouncers and crawler harnesses along the shipping channel edges and out toward the mouth of the Thames River are picking up eaters in the 15–20 inch range, with the odd bigger fish mixed in. Gold and copper blades with a touch of chartreuse have been the ticket. After dark, a few guys trolling shallow crankbaits along the Metro Beach shoreline are scratching out bonus fish. Muskie reports are picking up as the season gets rolling. Charter captains out of the St. Clair Shores and Anchor Bay marinas have been boating low double-digit fish per trip on good days, with several pushing the mid-40-inch class. Big rubber baits in perch and walleye patterns, as well as classic bucktails with black/nickel blades, are good bets. Focus on 10–14 feet around weed edges and breaks; if you see bait flicking on the surface, work that area hard. Perch are more scattered, but you can still put together a mess for the pan by targeting deeper weeds with minnows on drop-shot or simple crappie rigs. Look for 10–15 feet with clean weeds and use light line. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental map: • The mile roads off St. Clair Shores, especially 9 Mile to 12 Mile, have been producing strong smallmouth numbers on tubes and dropshots when there’s a little wind-driven drift. • The mouth of the Thames River on the Canadian side has offered a mixed bag of smallmouth, walleye, and the occasional muskie where the river water pushes into the main lake, especially around current breaks and isolated weed clumps. Live bait choices: emerald shiners and nightcrawlers remain top producers for walleye and perch. For bass, if they’re finicky, a live shiner on a light hook and split shot can seal the deal, but artificials are carrying the day right now. That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown from Artificial Lure. 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
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449
Early June St. Clair: Postspawn Smallmouth on the Break with Artificial Lure
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑June pattern. Water temps are generally in the low to mid‑60s on the main lake, a little warmer in the canals and marinas. Light south to southwest breeze is giving the lake a manageable chop with decent water clarity on the Michigan side, a bit more stain where the wind stacks up. Air temps are comfortable, starting cool in the morning and warming into the 70s by afternoon under partly sunny skies. No real tidal swing here on St. Clair, just a slow seiche effect, so focus more on wind direction and current in the channels than “tide.” Sunrise is right around the five‑thirty mark, with sunset close to nine‑o’clock in the evening, giving you a long low‑light window at both ends of the day. Those first two hours after sunup and last two before dark are absolutely prime. Bass are the main story. Postspawn smallmouth are sliding out from the spawning flats, setting up on the first breaks, rock patches, and scattered weeds in 8–14 feet. Lately, anglers have been putting good numbers in the boat, with plenty of 2–4 pound fish and a few pushing 5 and better mixed in. Perch and walleye are showing in the channels and along the shipping lanes, with “eater”‑size eyes coming on slow‑trolled harnesses and smaller crankbaits. Panfish action in the canals is steady for bluegill and sunfish on simple presentations. Best lures right now for smallmouth: - For covering water, throw **1/4–3/8 oz tube jigs** in green pumpkin, goby, or smoke with purple flake, dragged or snapped along bottom. - **Ned rigs** and small **drop‑shot minnows** or goby‑style plastics are money once you mark fish on the graph. - On overcast or breezy days, a **spybait**, **small jerkbait**, or **swimbait** on a light jig head will pull the more aggressive ones. If you prefer bait, **live minnows**, **leeches**, and **nightcrawlers** on a simple Lindy rig or slip sinker rig will take both smallmouth and walleye, especially along the edges of the channels and on the humps. Couple of hot spots to circle on your map: - **Mile Roads (9–12 Mile area)** on the Michigan side: look for patches of rock and scattered weeds in 8–12 feet. Dragging tubes and working a drop‑shot around subtle breaks is putting up solid smallmouth numbers. - **St. Clair River and the South Channel / North Channel mouths**: current seams and breaks in 15–25 feet are giving up a mix of walleye and smallmouth. Vertical jigging a jig‑and‑minnow or drifting crawlers is a steady producer. In the canals along the U.S. shore, especially around Harrison Township, slip floats with worms or small plastics are taking panfish and the odd bonus largemouth around docks and seawalls. If the wind stiffens and the main lake gets bouncy, tuck into the lee side of points or slide into the canals and marinas. Downsizing baits and slowing your presentation almost always boosts the bite when the pressure’s high or the sun gets bright overhead. That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown from Artificial Lure. 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
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448
Lake St. Clair Early June: Smallmouth Heat Up, Muskies Stirring, Best Bite at Dawn and Dusk
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a classic early‑June pattern around the lake. Overnight temps dipped into the mid‑50s, climbing into the low 70s this afternoon with light west to southwest winds around 5–10 mph and only a slight chop. Skies are partly cloudy, barometer steady to slightly falling, giving us decent feeding windows around the pressure changes. Sunrise hit just after 5:50 a.m., with sunset a bit after 9 p.m. The best bites have been right at first light and again in the last two hours before dark. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have true ocean tides, but wind‑driven seiche has water levels bobbing a few inches; any stretch with a bit of wind pushing into shore is fishing better than slack, glassy water. Smallmouth are the headliners right now. Local charter captains and tackle shops on the U.S. and Canadian sides are reporting boat‑loads of 2–4 pound bronzebacks, with some 5‑plus mixed in. Most are coming from 8–14 feet, relating to rock, scattered weed clumps, and the edges of shipping channels. The Detroit River mouth, the Mile Roads, and the Belle River Hump area have all seen solid action. Top smallmouth producers: natural‑pattern **tube jigs** in goby and green pumpkin, 3–4 inch **swimbaits** on 1/4‑ounce heads, and **Ned rigs** with green pumpkin or brown plastics dragged slowly on bottom. When the sun gets high and the bite slows, downsizing to a dropshot with a nose‑hooked minnow‑style plastic in shad or emerald shiner colors has been turning lookers into biters. Live **emerald shiners** and **nightcrawlers** on a simple bottom rig are still putting fish in the boat for those who like bait. Musky anglers are just starting to heat up their season. Recent reports around the South Channel and the St. Clair River delta have a handful of fish in the low‑ to mid‑40‑inch range, mostly from trollers pulling big **bucktails**, **jointed crankbaits**, and classic St. Clair **jointed swim baits** in perch, walleye, and fire‑tiger patterns. Water clarity has been decent, so brighter colors on cloudy days and more natural on sunny stretches are the rule of thumb. Walleye are still trickling in from the Detroit River and scattering across the lake. Anglers working deeper edges of the channels and the open basin have been boxing modest numbers, mostly eaters in the 15–20 inch range. Best bets are **crawler harnesses** with purple, chartreuse, or copper blades pulled behind bottom bouncers, and small crankbaits trolled just off bottom at 1.5–2 mph. Evening and after‑dark passes are producing the sharper flurries. Panfish and perch are quietly filling coolers in the canals and marinas along the U.S. shore and in the calmer pockets on the Canadian side. Bluegill and pumpkinseed are taking small pieces of worm or waxworm under a float around docks and shallow weeds, with perch biting on minnows near the deeper edges. These are great options if you’ve got kids in the boat or just want steady action. A couple of hot spots to circle on your mental map: • The **9‑ to 12‑foot flats off the Mile Roads** on the U.S. side – great for drifting tubes and swimbaits for smallmouth, with a chance at bonus walleye. • The **St. Clair River delta and South Channel edges** – prime for musky trollers and also kicking out mixed‑bag walleye and smallies along the breaks. Play the wind, look for clean water with a light chop, and keep your presentation just off bottom where the baitfish are cruising. 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
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447
Lake St. Clair Early June: Smallmouth Season Heats Up with Steady Conditions
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting under a classic early‑June pattern: cool morning, mild afternoon, light to moderate southwest breeze, and mostly clear skies with a shot at a pop‑up shower later. Air temps are running in the upper 50s at first light, pushing into the low 70s by mid‑day. Barometer’s fairly steady, which usually means a decent but not crazy bite. Sunrise is right around a quarter to six, with sunset a bit after nine, so you’ve got a long window. The best activity today is bracketed around low‑light: first three hours after sunup and that last two‑hour glide into dark. Mid‑day bite will slide deeper and tighter to structure. No true tide on St. Clair, but we do have seiche and wind‑driven current. With the southwest wind, expect a little extra push on the Canadian side and along the Detroit River mouth. Any subtle current edge around points, drains, or channel intersections is worth working slowly. Smallmouth bass are the headliners right now. Local reports from the mile roads and the South Channel say solid numbers of 2–4 pound bronzebacks coming in, with a few 5s and the odd 6 mixed in. Most fish are on post‑spawn transitions: think 8–14 feet, sliding toward flats with scattered rock, isolated grass, or patches of zebra mussels. For smallies, go with: - **Lures:** green pumpkin or goby‑pattern tubes, 3.3–3.8" swimbaits in natural shad or perch, and ned rigs in brown, green pumpkin, or Canada craw. Jerkbaits still have a place early and late when the wind puts a good chop on the surface. - **Live bait:** shiners or small chubs on a slip sinker or dropshot if they’re picky, especially in clearer water. Walleye are still moving through, especially along the shipping channel breaks and out toward the Detroit River mouth. Anglers dragging bottom bouncers with crawler harnesses in 14–22 feet are picking up eaters in that 15–20 inch class, with a few bigger. Don’t overlook vertical jigging a 1/2‑oz jig and minnow or plastic when the current sets up right. Muskie chatter is heating up as the season settles in. You’re not going to see big numbers every trip, but a handful of boats have moved fish in the upper 30s to upper 40s trolling the edges of weed flats and shoals. Big crankbaits in perch or walleye patterns, and classic bucktails in black‑nickel or black‑chartreuse, are doing work. If you’re casting, focus on inside turns in the weeds and any rock/weed mix. Panfish – bluegill and perch – are still an easy bet for numbers. Look for them on weed edges in 6–10 feet, especially around marinas and canals. Small pieces of nightcrawler, waxies, or minnows under a float keep rods bending and kids happy. A couple of hot spots to put on your list: - The **9–12 Mile area** on the U.S. side: classic smallmouth water with mixed rock and weed beds. Work tubes and swimbaits along the edges, paying attention to any inside turn or hump. - The **South Channel and the St. Clair River mouth interface**: great for walleye and smallmouth when the current’s right. Vertical presentations and bottom bouncers shine here. Water clarity is decent but can cloud up fast with boat traffic and wind. When it muddies, upsize your profile, add some chartreuse or orange, and lean on vibration – spinnerbaits and chatterbaits can turn the day around. Boat traffic will ramp up as the day wears on, so if you’re in a smaller rig, hit it early and be off the main lanes by mid‑afternoon. Always keep an eye on the sky and the wind; St. Clair can go from friendly to ugly in a hurry when the breeze picks up. 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
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446
Lake St. Clair Early Summer: Smallmouth on the Flats, Walleye on the Edges
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a light early‑summer pattern now. A weak north to northeast breeze and stable high pressure are keeping the lake pretty calm, with a light chop in open water. Air temps are running cool at daybreak, building into a comfortable, fishable afternoon with only a slight chance of a pop‑up shower. Sunrise is right around 5:55 a.m., with sunset near 9:10 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work those prime low‑light hours. Lake St. Clair doesn’t really have tides, but water levels are slowly influenced by wind and the St. Clair River flow. With the lighter wind this morning, you can expect more normal levels and decent clarity on the Michigan side, with a little extra stain where the wind has been pushing in against the shoreline. Bass fishing has been strong. Local chatter at the ramps in St. Clair Shores and Harrison Township has smallmouth running 3–4 pounds pretty consistently, with some 5‑plus brutes mixed in on the deeper edges. Largemouth are scattered in the canals and marinas, chewing best early and late. Walleye trollers out toward the St. Clair River mouth and the shipping channel edges report steady eaters, mostly 15–20 inches, with a few bigger fish sliding in later in the evening. Perch are spotty but showing in small pods on mid‑lake gravel and around weed transitions. For lures, it’s tough to beat a natural‑patterned tube or a goby‑style soft plastic on a light jig head for smallmouth. Green pumpkin, smoke purple, and perch colors are the ticket. A white or alewife‑colored swimbait or jerkbait will pick off aggressive smallies roaming the breaks. Largemouth guys are doing well with weightless stickbaits pitched tight to docks and weed edges, and a black or green pumpkin jig with a compact trailer. For walleye, stick with crawler harnesses in chartreuse, purple, or firetiger behind bottom bouncers, or smaller crankbaits in clown and perch patterns trolled just off bottom. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots, focus first on the Mile Roads—especially the 9‑, 10‑, and 11‑Mile areas. Work those 8–14 foot flats and subtle breaks with tubes, drop‑shots, and swimbaits. Second, don’t overlook the area off the Metropark and the mouth of the Clinton River: slightly stained water, good weed growth starting, and plenty of bait drawing both smallmouth and walleye along the breaks. Fish activity has been best at first light and again in the last two hours before dark. Midday can still produce if you slow down, downsize, and target deeper breaks and isolated rock or weed clumps. That’s the rundown from Lake St. Clair. 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
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445
Spring Smallmouth Fire at Lake St. Clair: Tubes and Ned Rigs Working Now
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool, spring pattern right now. A light west–northwest breeze is riding in behind the last front, with morning temps in the low 50s and climbing into the upper 60s by afternoon. Skies are partly cloudy, with just enough sun to warm the shallows but not so much that it flattens the bite. Winds are moderate, so expect a light chop on the main lake and some stain along the shorelines. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m. with sunset near 9 p.m., giving a long window to work those low‑light bites. There’s no true tide on St. Clair, but you will see slight seiche-related water level shifts and a steady push from the St. Clair River. That subtle movement, paired with wind-driven current, is enough to position fish on points, channel edges, and the upwind side of reefs. Smallmouth are the headliner right now. Water temps are in that pre‑ to mid‑spawn range in the high 50s to low 60s in the shallows. Buck males are showing up on gravel and sand patches, with some bigger females staging just off the breaks in 8–12 feet. Local charter captains out of Fair Haven and the Mile Roads reported solid numbers of bronzebacks this week, with plenty of 2–4 pound fish and the occasional 5‑plus in the mix, especially on the Canadian side when anglers can access it legally. Best smallmouth tools today: – Tube jigs in green pumpkin, goby, and brown with copper flake, 3–3.5 inches on 1/4 oz heads. – Ned rigs with green pumpkin or Canada craw TRDs in 6–10 feet around rock and scattered weed. – Spinnerbaits and compact swimbaits (3.3–3.8 inch paddletails in natural shad or perch) slow-rolled along breaks during the windy periods. – Jerkbaits in clown, perch, or subtle shad colors for that overcast morning bite over 6–8 feet. Natural bait anglers are picking up smallmouth and bonus perch on minnows and nightcrawlers fished on slip bobbers or simple Lindy-style rigs just off bottom. Keep leaders short in the wind so your bait isn’t spinning. Muskie season is just about to kick off, and a few accidental fish have already shown up for walleye trollers pulling crankbaits in the shipping channel. Walleyes themselves are scattered but catchable. The best reports are coming from deeper edges in the South Channel and down toward the Detroit River outflow. Anglers trolling size 7–9 crankbaits in firetiger, purple, and chrome blue, 1.2–1.6 mph, are boating eater-sized fish with an occasional bigger one. A few jig fishermen drifting with 1/2 oz jigs tipped with emerald shiners or crawlers are also doing well when boat traffic is light. Perch action is spotty but improving. Small pods of decent fish are holding off the weed edges in 10–14 feet. Tiny emerald shiners or lake shiners on perch rigs will outfish plastics most days, but 1–1.5 inch Gulp minnows in natural colors will get bit when live bait’s scarce. A couple of hot spots to circle on your map: 1) The 9–12 foot band off the 9 Mile and 10 Mile Roads: classic early-season smallmouth water. Work tubes and Ned rigs parallel to the break, paying attention to any scattered rock or isolated weeds. 2) The Belle River Hump and surrounding structure on the Canadian side: when the wind pushes in from the west, it stacks bait and smallies here. Jerkbaits and swimbaits shine, especially if there’s decent chop and cloud cover. Overall, fish activity is best early and late, with a softer midday bite unless the wind kicks up enough to move water and break up the light. Downsizing presentations and slowing your cadence in the middle of the day will keep you on fish. That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown from Artificial Lure. 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
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444
Lake St. Clair: Smallmouth Fire, Stable Weather, Prime Low-Light Bite
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool, stable pattern this morning. The National Weather Service is calling for light west to northwest winds around 5–10 knots, waves generally a foot or less, with air temps climbing from the low 50s into the upper 60s by afternoon. Skies are partly to mostly cloudy with a slight chance of a passing shower later, but no big blows on tap. Lake St. Clair is a non‑tidal system, so no true tide swings, but wind will still stack water on the east or west shore depending on direction. According to timeanddate’s Detroit listing, sunrise hits right around 6 a.m. with sunset just after 8:45 p.m., giving us a long window. The best feeding bites have been classic low‑light: that first two‑hour window after sunrise and the last two before dark, with a smaller flurry around midday when the wind kicks up some chop. Local shops around Harrison Township and St. Clair Shores report the smallmouth bite has really turned on the last week. Anglers working the mile roads—especially 9‑ and 12‑Mile—are boating solid numbers of 2–4 pound bronzebacks, with a few 5‑plus fish each day. Most folks are seeing 15–30 smallies on a decent outing if they stick to the rock and gravel edges in 8–15 feet. Best producers have been natural‑colored tubes (green pumpkin, goby, watermelon with copper flake) on 1/4–3/8 oz heads, dragged or lightly hopped. Ned rigs in green pumpkin or canada craw on 1/6 oz heads are also putting in work when the bite is finicky. Jerkbaits—silver/black and perch patterns—are catching active fish over shallower flats on the Canadian side, especially when there’s a little wind ripple. A few locals are quietly doing damage slow‑rolling 3–4" swimbaits in goby hues along the deeper breaklines. Walleye reports from the shipping channel and the mouth of the Detroit River have been steady, not crazy. Guys running bottom bouncers with crawler harnesses in chartreuse, purple, or firetiger blades are picking up a half‑dozen to a dozen “eaters” in a morning, mostly 15–20 inches. Trollers pulling smaller crankbaits, like shad‑style lures in natural chrome or clown, are finding scattered fish along the U.S. side breaks when the light gets low. Perch action is spotty but improving. Anglers soaking minnows on spreaders around the 8–12 foot weeds off Metro Beach and near the Belle River Hump are getting mixed bags—some dinks, but enough 9–11 inch keepers to make it worth a sit if you land on a school. Use small emerald shiners or fatheads, just off bottom, on light line. For those chasing muskie early, a few skis have already been contacted in the cleaner water east side. Big rubber and smaller crankbaits are the ticket, but you’ll work for them this early. Concentrate on emerging weed beds and current seams along the channel edges. Two hot spots to circle today: • The 9‑Mile to 12‑Mile stretch on the U.S. side for smallmouth—focus on rock and scattered weed edges in 8–14 feet with tubes and Ned rigs. • The South Channel and lower shipping channel transitions for walleye—bottom bouncers with crawlers in 18–30 feet, especially when wind puts a chop on the surface. Water clarity has been running fairly clean except after stronger winds, so lean toward natural colors unless the lake muddies up; then don’t be shy with chartreuse and brighter blades or plastics. That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown from Artificial Lure. 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
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443
Late Spring Lake St. Clair: Smallmouth Strong, Muskies Starting to Move
This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report. We’re sliding into that late‑spring sweet spot now. Overnight temps dipped into the low 50s, climbing into the upper 60s to near 70 this afternoon with a light west to southwest breeze 5–10 knots. Skies are partly cloudy, with a small chance of a passing shower but nothing that should keep you off the lake. The barometer’s steady to slightly falling, which usually perks the bite up rather than shutting it down. Sunrise is right around 6:05 a.m., sunset near 9:00 p.m., giving you a long window. The best activity today should be early—first light through about 9:30 a.m.—and again in the last two hours before dark, especially if the wind lays down and the clouds thicken a bit. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have true tides, but you’ll notice minor seiche-related level changes and wind-driven current. A light southwest wind tends to stack a little water on the Canadian side and set up a subtle drift that smallmouth and walleye will use. Water temps are pushing into the low 60s on the main lake, a touch warmer in the canals and marinas. Smallmouth are in prime pre‑ to post‑spawn mode, and the action has been strong the last few days. Local anglers out of Harley Ensign and Metro Beach have been reporting solid numbers of bronzebacks in the 2–4 pound class, with a few 5s and the occasional 6 showing up. Ten to twenty fish mornings aren’t unusual when you stay on that 8–14 foot contour and keep moving. Tube jigs in green pumpkin, goby, and dark melon with a bit of copper flake are still the go‑to, especially dragged or lightly hopped over gravel and rock transitions. Ned rigs in natural shad or green pumpkin, and dropshots with goby‑style baits or 4" minnow profiles are putting in work when the bite gets finicky. A little chartreuse on the tail isn’t a bad idea with today’s mixed sun and cloud. When the breeze kicks up and puts a chop on the water, jerkbaits in perch and clown patterns or smaller squarebills in craw colors can trigger reaction bites. For live bait, lake shiners and medium emerald shiners are tough to beat for smallmouth right now. Nose‑hook them on a dropshot or run them on a light split‑shot rig over rocky flats. Musky season is open and a few early‑season fish have come boatside, mostly from trollers working deeper edges off the South Channel and the dumping grounds. Most reports are of follows and a handful of low‑ to mid‑40‑inch fish, but that will ramp up as we move further into warm weather. Large rubber baits, classic bucktails with nickel blades and black or firetiger skirts, and 6–8" cranks are your staples. Keep your figure‑8s tight; a lot of these early fish are lazy but will eat at boatside. Walleye action has been spotty but improving along the American side near the mouth of the Detroit River and out toward the Belle River Hump. Anglers drifting with bottom bouncers and crawler harnesses in purple, chartreuse, and copper blades are picking up a few eaters in 12–18 feet. Slow your presentation a bit with today’s moderate wind—1.0 to 1.2 mph is a nice sweet spot. At night, a few locals are still long‑lining smaller cranks in 8–12 feet and finding scattered fish. Perch are starting to show in better numbers around the Mile Roads—9, 10, and 11 Mile—though it’s still a lot of sorting. Minnows on perch rigs, with the hooks just off bottom, will take the better fish. Look for subtle changes in bottom hardness; when you find that light “tap” instead of a mushy thud on your sinker, you’re over better ground. A couple of hot spots to keep on your radar today: First, the area off the 9‑ to 11‑Mile Roads on the U.S. side in 8–14 feet: gravel and scattered rock with roaming smallies and perch. Drift tubes, Ned rigs, and dropshots here, and watch your graph for pods of bait. Second, the Belle River Hump and surrounding structure on the Canadian side: great spot for mixed bags of smallmouth, walleye, and the occasional musky. Work the breaks with crankbaits and bottom bouncers, then circle back with finesse plastics once you locate fish. If you’re heading out, remember the water’s still cooler than the air—wear the life Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today delivers the latest updates and insights for fishing enthusiasts. Tune in for expert tips, fish population trends, and weather conditions that impact fishing success. Stay informed with real-time reports ensuring the best catch experiences on Lake St. Clair, making every fishing trip productive and enjoyable.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock Also check out https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/time-in-city-news-info/id6692631879andhttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/what-to-do-in-city-guides/id6615091666This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Inception Point AI
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