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Lake Superior Duluth Fishing Report Today
by Inception Point Ai
Stay updated with the latest fishing conditions on Lake Superior with the "Duluth Fishing Report Today." Get expert tips, weather updates, and daily catch reports. Perfect for anglers looking to maximize their fishing adventure in Duluth, Minnesota! Tune in to stay ahead on the best fishing spots and techniques.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis show includes AI-generated content.
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Early Summer Superior: Lake Trout, Coho, and Long Light Windows on the North Shore
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Duluth–Lake Superior fishing report. We’re sitting under a cool, early‑summer pattern on the big lake. Overnight temps slid into the low 50s, climbing into the 60s by afternoon with a light northwest breeze. Skies are partly cloudy, and the barometer is steady to slightly rising—usually a good sign for consistent bites. Shoreline water temps are running in the upper 40s to low 50s, still chilly but just right for salmonids cruising the breaks. Superior doesn’t have true tides, but you will see seiche swings and wind‑driven water level changes, especially with that northwest wind. Expect a little push of water and a bit more chop on exposed points this afternoon; that can flip the switch on feeding trout and salmon along the breaks. Sunrise is right around the mid‑4 a.m. hour, with sunset close to 9 p.m., so you’ve got long windows. Best action has been classic low‑light: first light until about 8 a.m., then again from 7 p.m. to dark. Midday has been slower unless there’s wind and cloud cover. Reports from local anglers around the Duluth entry and up the North Shore have been solid. Nearshore trollers and casters have been picking up a mixed bag: lake trout in the 2–6 lb range, coho salmon, a few browns, plus bonus pinks and steelhead. Inside the harbor and along the St. Louis River side, folks are still getting walleyes, smallmouth, and the odd pike. Trollers running 20–80 feet down off the North Shore have been doing well on small spoons—silvers, greens, and blues—behind dipsy divers and downriggers. Stickbaits in natural smelt and rainbow‑trout patterns are taking fish early and late. Around the harbor and shorelines, casting heavy spoons and 3–4 inch swimbaits in white, smelt, or goby colors has been productive when fish push bait shallow. If you’re soaking bait from shore, pack salted or frozen smelt, spawn sacks, and crawlers. Smelt on bottom rigs after dark is still a sleeper for lakers cruising the breaks. Inside the river and harbor, a jig and minnow or jig and crawler will put walleyes and smallmouth in the net. A couple of local hot spots to try: • Canal Park and the shipping canal walls: When boat traffic is light, casting spoons and crankbaits along the current seams can turn up coho, steelhead, and the occasional brown or laker, especially at first light. • The 21‑foot hole and shipping channel edges in the Duluth–Superior Harbor: Troll crankbaits or run live‑bait rigs for walleyes and the odd big pike; smallmouth stack on the rock and riprap edges—tube jigs and ned rigs do work here. If you’re running out deeper off McQuade or Burlington Bay, watch your graph for suspended schools. Run small flashy spoons a few feet above the marks. Don’t be afraid to speed up to 2.4–2.7 mph on the troll; Superior fish like a chase. That’s the word from the big lake. 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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Lake Superior Early Summer: Trolling Spoons and River Jigs Around Duluth
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake Superior Duluth fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool, stable early‑summer pattern around the Head of the Lakes. Air temps today ride the mid‑50s near dawn, pushing into the mid‑60s by afternoon, with light northwest breeze on the lake and a bit more puff out of the harbor. Clouds are in and out, with a few light showers possible later, but no serious storms in the mix. Sunrise hits right around 5:15 a.m., sunset near 9 p.m., so you’ve got a long window to work prime light. Superior doesn’t have true tides, but we do see seiche‑driven level changes. Nothing dramatic on tap today, but pay attention if the wind swings; a stiff east or northeast can bump water levels and push bait around the Duluth Entry and up along Park Point. Water temps in the western arm are still cool, generally mid‑40s to low‑50s, warming a bit in the harbor and St. Louis River. That’s kept the nearshore bite decent. Anglers out recently have been doing well on **lake trout** and a few **coho** trolling along the North Shore breaks, with the better action inside of 80 feet. Mixed reports of **walleyes** and a few **pike** in the St. Louis River, plus **smallmouth bass** waking up on rock and rubble shorelines. Recent catches around Duluth include steady numbers of smaller lakers with occasional bigger fish sliding into the teens. A few scattered coho and steelhead are still being picked off by the more dedicated trollers, especially early and late in the day. In the river, folks are putting a handful of eater‑sized walleyes in the box on dragging rigs and jigs, while bass anglers are reporting decent numbers but lots of short strikes in that cool water. Best bite windows: dawn through mid‑morning and again from about 7 p.m. to dark. Midday is tougher unless you’re working deeper structure or running long, stealthy trolling passes. On **lures and bait**: - For lake trout and coho on the big lake, run **silver/blue and orange‑bellied spoons**, plus smaller **flasher‑fly combos** in green or chartreuse. A white or glow dodger with a green fly has been a quiet producer. - Inside 60 feet, long‑line or lead‑core spoons and shallow divers will get it done. Out deeper, downriggers and dipsy divers are still the tools. - In the St. Louis River, **jig and minnow**, **jig and half‑crawler**, or a **live‑bait rig with leeches** are putting walleyes in the net. Bright chartreuse, gold, or parrot‑style jig heads have been solid in the stained water. - For smallmouth, work **3–4 inch paddle‑tails**, **tubes**, and **Ned rigs** in natural goby or green pumpkin colors along riprap, bridge pilings, and rock points. A simple slip‑bobber and leech will still out‑fish plastic on tougher days. Couple of **hot spots** to put on your list: - **Duluth Entry and shipping channel edges**: troll spoons just outside the traffic lanes at first light, then slide deeper as the sun climbs. Watch your electronics for bait pods stacking on breaks. - **St. Louis River – around Barker’s Island and up toward the Oliver Bridge**: drift jigs or pull slow‑death rigs along channel edges and current seams for walleyes, then slide shallower and pitch plastics for smallmouth once the sun warms things up. Water’s still cold enough to be dangerous, so wear the life jacket and keep an eye on that Superior wind shift. She turns on you fast. Thanks for tuning in to this report from Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next bite 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 Superior Early Summer: Trout, Salmon, and Walleye in the Duluth Harbor
This is **Artificial Lure** with your Lake Superior Duluth fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool Northland morning along the big lake. The National Weather Service in Duluth is calling for light winds out of the west around 5–10 knots, small chop on the open lake, and cool temps hugging the 50s near the water, creeping into the 60s inland as the day goes on. Skies are partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of a light sprinkle later, but nothing that should push folks off the water. Sunrise over the lake is right around 5:15 a.m., with sunset close to 9 p.m., giving you a long, fishable day with that classic soft evening light on the harbor. Lake Superior isn’t a tidal water, but the NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab notes small seiche and water-level fluctuations driven by wind; nothing today that should affect boat access or nearshore structure—just keep an eye on wind shifts that can stack bait along windward shorelines. Water temps from recent Minnesota DNR and USGS nearshore readings have been in the upper 40s to low 50s right outside the shipping canal, warming into the mid‑50s in the inner harbor and the St. Louis River. That’s kept fish active but still a bit scattered, with cooler nearshore pockets holding trout and salmon, and warmer stained water pushing walleye and smallmouth into a solid early-summer pattern. Recent reports from local charter captains out of the Duluth-Superior harbor have been good: mixed bags of **lake trout** and **coho salmon**, with a few **chinook** and bonus **steelhead** coming on long-lines and downriggers. Most boats are reporting 5–15 fish per trip when conditions line up, with lakers making up the bulk. Productive depths have been 60–140 feet off the Park Point sandbar and out toward the Wisconsin side, running baits just off bottom for trout and higher in the column for coho. Best lures on the big water have been: - Silver/green and silver/blue **spoons** in smaller sizes for coho and steelhead. - Larger white or glow **flutter spoons** and simple white **tube flies** behind flashers for lakers. - For chinook, run bright **orange or UV spoons** and meat rigs deeper during mid‑day. Inside the harbor and up the St. Louis River, local bait shops are reporting steady **walleye**, with mixed **smallmouth bass** and a few **northern pike**. Typical evening walleye numbers are 3–10 fish per boat, with some keepers in the 15–19 inch range and the occasional bigger fish. Best bets are slip bobbers and jig‑and‑minnow combos along channel edges, current seams, and the first breaks off rip‑rap. Best baits and presentations right now: - **Live fathead minnows** or half a **nightcrawler** on a 1/8 oz jig, slowly dragged or popped along bottom. - **Slip bobbers** with leeches set 1–3 feet off bottom around rock piles and bridge pilings. - For smallmouth, throw **green pumpkin tubes**, **Ned rigs**, and small **white swimbaits** along rocky shorelines and pilings. If you’re shore fishing, cast spoons, spinners, or small crankbaits from the Minnesota and Wisconsin Points shipping canal piers at first light and last light; coho, steelhead, and bonus lakers will cruise through, especially when there’s a little chop and cloud cover. A couple of hot spots to circle for today: - **Minnesota Point / Park Point outside the canal**: Troll spoons and flasher‑flies in 60–120 feet, focusing on subtle temperature breaks and bait marks on your graph. Great area for mixed trout and salmon when the wind cooperates. - **St. Louis River channel edges from the Bong Bridge up toward Spirit Lake**: Anchor or drift jigs and slip bobbers along 10–18 feet of water. Walleyes are relating to current breaks, and smallmouth are tight to rock and wood. For an easy win with the kids or anybody new to the lake, slip bobbers and leeches near structure in the inner harbor will usually put something in the net, even during mid‑day. That’s your Duluth–Superior fishing 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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Early Summer Lake Superior: Glow Spoons and Seiche Swings Keep the Bite Hot
This is Artificial Lure with your Duluth-area Lake Superior fishing report. We’re riding a cool early-summer pattern on the big lake. Air temps around Duluth sit in the upper 40s at first light, pushing into the low 60s this afternoon under mostly clear to partly cloudy skies. Light northwest wind this morning, 5–10 knots, building a touch mid‑day, then laying down again toward evening. Waves on the open lake are running 1–2 feet, a little less tucked in by the breakwalls. Sunrise is right around 5:15 a.m., with sunset just after 9 p.m., so you’ve got a long, fishable window. The best bite windows lately have been the first two hours after sunrise and the last couple before dark, especially when that surface chop picks up just a bit. Lake Superior doesn’t have a true tide, but you’ll see minor seiche swings with the wind. When that northwest breeze stacks a little water up on the Wisconsin side and then relaxes, watch for a short burst of current around the canal and river mouths — that’s been enough to kick the bite into gear. Recent action has been solid for **lake trout**, **coho**, and a few bonus **king salmon** out deeper, with **walleyes** and **smallmouth** doing well in the St. Louis River and near‑harbor structure. Charter captains out of Duluth and Knife River have been reporting mixed bags of 3–8 lake trout a trip, with a couple of coho and an occasional king when they work 80–160 feet of water off the edges of the shipping lanes. Average lakers are running 3–6 pounds, but there’ve been some low‑teens fish in the mix. Best big‑lake program has been a classic spread: downriggers and dipsy divers pulling spoons and flashers. Glow green, orange, and hammered silver spoons in the 3–4 inch range have been hot. White or green flasher with a matching fly is still putting fish in the box. If you’re a caster instead of a troller, work heavier jigging spoons or 1–1½ ounce white tube jigs vertically over 80–120 feet on any marks you see. Inside the harbor and up the St. Louis River, walleye anglers are doing well on jig‑and‑minnow combos and slip bobbers with leeches. Chartreuse, gold, and firetiger have been the go‑to jig colors. Most folks are reporting enough eaters for a fish fry, with the occasional 20‑plus‑inch fish. Smallmouth have been hanging around rock piles and riprap; 3–4 inch paddle‑tails, Ned rigs, and small crankbaits in natural shiner or perch patterns are producing steady action. A few **hot spots** to circle: - The **Duluth entry to just outside the lift bridge**: early‑morning coho and the occasional king cruising bait pods just off the surface. Run small orange or red‑dot spoons high in the column. - The **21‑ to 27‑line off Two Harbors and Knife River**: good laker numbers working the breaks. Watch your sonar for bait and run your spread 5–15 feet above marks. - Inshore, the **St. Louis River channel edges and flats near Boy Scout Landing and Spirit Lake**: solid walleye and smallmouth action, especially toward sunset. Live bait: for the river, bring fathead minnows and leeches. For the lake, you’re mostly running artificial — just make sure your hooks are sharp and your leaders are fresh. Fluorocarbon in the 12–20 pound range has been the sweet spot for most trolling rigs. That’s the rundown from the North Shore. 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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Early Summer on Superior: Cold Water, Long Days, and Consistent Coho
This is Artificial Lure with your Duluth–Lake Superior fishing report. We’re sitting on a cool early-summer pattern around the Twin Ports. The lake is running cold, surface temps mostly in the low 40s offshore and upper 40s to low 50s in the harbor and near the river mouths. Winds lately have been light to moderate out of the east and northeast, putting a little chop on the main lake but keeping the inner harbor and St. Louis River pretty manageable. Sunrise is right around a quarter after five, with sunset just before nine in the evening, giving you a long prime-time window. Low light is still king on Superior: first three hours after sunrise and the last three before sunset are when most folks are quietly slipping nets under fish. Being a Great Lake, Superior doesn’t have an ocean-style tide, so level changes are minimal and driven more by wind than anything else. Focus more on wind direction and current seams than on any tide charts. Recent chatter at the ramps and bait shops around Duluth, Superior, and Knife River has been consistent: - Good numbers of **coho** and a mix of **lake trout** and smaller **kings** out over 80–140 feet, with fish riding 20–60 feet down. - Inside the harbor and lower St. Louis, anglers are picking at **walleyes**, **smallmouth**, and the odd **pike**. - Shore anglers on the piers and rock points are still nabbing a few straggler **coho** and **steelhead**, plus plenty of **smelt-sized baitfish** showing in the lights at night. Best offerings on the big lake have been: - For salmon and trout: small spoons in orange, UV green, and silver/blue, size 3–4, run off downriggers or long lines with 1–3 colors of leadcore. Thin trolling crankbaits in natural smelt patterns are also putting fish in the box. - Flashers with small flies in green/glow or blue/white are calling in deeper lakers when run slow and close to bottom on offshore humps. In the harbor and river: - **Walleyes** have favored jig-and-minnow or jig-and-plastic combos in 8–14 feet, especially on current breaks and along channel edges. Chartreuse, orange, and plain white are still the local staples. - **Smallmouth** are chewing on Ned rigs, tubes, and small squarebills around riprap, pilings, and rocky points. - **Pike** are falling for big spoons and flashy spinnerbaits in the weedy pockets and back bays whenever the sun warms things up. A few hot spots to circle on your map: - **Minnesota Point / Park Point and the ship canal area** – casting spoons, spinners, and crankbaits from the piers and nearby rock can connect you with coho, steelhead, and the occasional brown, especially at first and last light with a little chop. - **Wisconsin Point and Allouez Bay** – solid for walleyes and pike around channel edges and weedlines; troll stickbaits at dusk or drag jigs tipped with minnows or plastics along the breaks. - **Knife River to Two Harbors stretch** – small-boat trollers working 60–140 feet just off the breaks have been finding consistent coho and lakers pulling small spoons and flies behind flashers. Live bait standouts remain lake shiners, fatheads, and leeches for walleyes, with spawn bags and waxies still worth packing if you’re swinging a steelhead rod off the rocks. On artificials, think small and flashy for salmon, slow and subtle for walleyes and smallmouth. Boat traffic is picking up, so work those inside turns and subtle points others are driving past. Watch your speed—2.0 to 2.5 mph for salmon gear, slower for lakers—and let the fish tell you what they want. 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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Lake Superior Spring Bite: Walleye, Smallies, and Lakers Heating Up Near Duluth
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lake Superior Spring Awakening: Lake Trout, Salmon, and Walleye Off Duluth
Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** comin' at ya with your Lake Superior fishin' report for Sunday, May 3rd, right here around Duluth. It's early mornin' at 3 AM Eastern, and we're lookin' at a crisp start with temps hoverin' around 38°F, light winds from the northwest at 5-10 mph pickin' up to 15 by afternoon. NOAA's callin' for partly cloudy skies, no rain in sight—perfect for gettin' out on the big lake. Sunrise hits at 5:45 AM, sunset at 8:30 PM, givin' ya a solid 14+ hours of daylight to chase 'em. Lake Superior's got no tides like the coasts, but water levels are steady at about 601.5 feet per the Army Corps data, with a slight southeast swell makin' for calm nearshore action. Fish are wakin' up strong this spring—recent reports from the Minnesota DNR and local charter logs show limits of **lake trout** hittin' 5-10 pounds off the Superior Harbor breakwall, plus **coho salmon** and **steelhead** pushin' into the rivers like the Knife and Lester. Anglers pulled in 20-30 walleyes per boat yesterday from the bays, and smallmouth bass are aggressive in 10-20 feet. Perch are schoolin' thick too, up to 12 inches. For lures, stick with **white tube jigs** or **spoons like the Little Cleo** in silver/glow for lakers—troll 'em slow at 1.5-2.0 mph in 40-80 feet. **Suspending jerkbaits** in perch patterns are killin' smallies, and for bait, fresh minnows or nightcrawlers on slip bobbers can't be beat for walleye. Fly guys, throw streamers for steelhead. Hot spots? Hit the **Duluth Harbor piers** for easy access and steady bites, or motor out to **Brighton Beach** for deeper trout runs—launch from the Brighton Marina. Stay safe out there, check your gear, and respect the limits. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lake Superior Smallies and Lake Trout Firing Up This Saturday Morning
Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** comin' at ya with your Lake Superior fishin' report for Saturday, May 2nd, straight from the Duluth docks. Water's sittin' at a crisp 42 degrees this mornin', with a light chop from the northeast breeze—NOAA's callin' for partly cloudy skies, highs around 52, and winds gustin' 10-15 mph. No tides up here on the big lake, but the moon's waxin' gibbous, pullin' fish shallow. Sunrise was at 5:52 AM, sunset 8:22 PM, givin' ya a solid 14+ hours of prime light. Fish are wakin' up after that cold snap—local reports from Minnesota DNR and angler forums say smallies are hammerin' in 10-20 feet off the breakwalls, with limits of 2-4 pounders on jerkbaits and tubes. Lake trout are deep, 60-80 feet on Superior's north shore, takin' spoons like the Moonshine or Williams Wabler. Coho and kings are showin' early near the Lester River mouth, with a few 8-12 pounders boated on alewives or cut herring. Walleyes bit fair last night post-spawn, 15-22 inchers on minnows under bobbers. Perch are stackin' up in the bays, fat 10-inchers on worms. **Best lures right now:** Rapala X-Rap for smallies, orange or firetiger; go with soft plastics like Gitzit tubes in green pumpkin. For lakers, Williams Whitefish spoons trolled slow. **Top baits:** Live minnows or nightcrawlers for walleyes and perch—can't beat 'em fresh from the bait shop. Hit these **hot spots:** Park Point breakwater for smallies at dawn, or Knife River for staging cohos—launch early, watch for rocks. Stay safe out there, check your regs, and wear that PFD. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lake Superior Spring Coho Bite Heats Up with Full Moon Action
Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your Lake Superior angling guru out of Duluth, comin' at ya with the fresh fishing report for May 1st, 2026. Water temps hoverin' around 42-45 degrees up here on the big lake, perfect for early season action—fish are active in that cold spring bite, pushin' shallow near river mouths and breakwalls. Sunrise hits at 5:48 AM, sunset 8:17 PM, givin' ya long daylight for trollin' or castin'. Weather's lookin' decent: mostly cloudy, highs in the low 50s, light winds from the northwest at 5-10 mph—dress warm, that Superior chill bites harder than a steelhead. No tides on this freshwater beast, but full moon tonight means night feeders like coho could go off, especially with bright nights crankin' predator activity. Recent catches? Michigan DNR's weekly report nails it: Grand Marais saw excellent coho salmon trollin' west and east of the breakwall, plus rainbow trout mixed in—boats averagin' six fish, some pushin' 20 inches. Au Train and Munising lit up with coho and steelhead near river mouths; Marquette breakwall gave browns, steelhead, and coho. Duluth side's mirrorin' that—anglers hittin' coho, brown trout, and lake trout nearshore trollin' spoons and stickbaits in the upper water column. Limits on perch and smallies poppin' too, with fair numbers overall. Best lures: spoons like glow or chartreuse for trollin' coho at 1.5-2.5 mph; stickbaits and body baits for browns and steelies. Crank it with shallow divers or spinners dead-drifted near rivers. Live bait? Spawn, worms, or small minnows like emerald shiners jigged bottom or drifted—DNR swears by 'em for cold water trout. Hot spots: Hit the Duluth breakwall and Park Point for shore casters targetin' coho; boaters, troll near the St. Louis River mouth or out to Minnesota Point—shallow waters holdin' the action. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more Superior secrets! 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.
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Lake Superior Spring Bite: Walleye Limits and Salmon Action off Duluth
Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling up here on the big lake. It's early morning on April 30th, 2026, and we're talkin' Lake Superior around Duluth – that crisp North Shore bite is callin'! Weather's lookin' prime for a cast: highs in the low 50s, light northwest winds at 5-10 mph calm enough for the bays, partly cloudy skies per the National Weather Service forecast. Sunrise hits at 5:58 AM, sunset 8:22 PM, givin' ya a solid 14+ hours of light. No tides up here on Superior – it's all wind-driven levels, sittin' steady around 601.5 feet mean stage today from the NOAA gauge at Duluth. Fish activity's rampin' up with spring turnover; walleyes are post-spawn hungry in 10-20 feet, smallies staging on rocky points, and lake trout deep but active. Recent reports from Minnesota DNR show limits of walleyes (15-20 inchers) off Park Point and Superior Harbor, coho salmon in the 5-8 lb range hittin' off the breakwalls, plus a few 10-15 lb lakers jigged deep. Locals pulled 20+ walleyes yesterday alone near the Aerial Lift Bridge usin' minnows. Best lures right now? **Fire-Brite spoons** or **Williams Wabler spoons** in silver/glow for salmon and trout – troll 'em 1.5-2.5 mph at 40-60 feet. For walleyes, **Jiggin' Raps** in perch or firetiger, or **Reef Runner Ripsticks**. Live bait kings are fathead minnows on slip bobbers or crawlers on Lindy rigs. Deadly combo: nightcrawlers with a glow jig head after dark. Hot spots? Hit **Park Point beach** for shore-bound walleye action at dusk, or boat out to the **Duluth Entry breakwater** for coho slams. Stay safe out there – Superior don't play. Thanks for tunin' in, folks – subscribe for more North Shore secrets! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lake Superior Spring Bite Heating Up Around Duluth
Hey folks, this is **Artificial Lure** comin' at ya with your Lake Superior fishin' report for April 29, 2026, right here around Duluth. Water temps are hoverin' in the low 40s, pushin' that spring bite into gear as the big lake thaws unevenly. No tides on Superior—it's all about wind-driven levels today, with a light northwest breeze keepin' things calm at 5-10 mph. Weather's crisp: partly cloudy, highs near 48°F, lows in the upper 30s. Sunrise hit at 5:58 AM, sunset at 8:22 PM, givin' ya 14+ hours of light—prime for those long dusk casts. Fish activity's pickin' up with solunar peaks around major feedin' windows mid-mornin' and evenin', thanks to a waxin' gibbous moon. Recent reports from local anglers show steady action: limits of **coho salmon** (8-12 lbs) and **lake trout** (5-15 lbs) off the drops, plus **steelhead** runs in the rivers—20-30 fish days on eggs and spinners. **Walleye** are stagein' shallow near Duluth Harbor, with perch and smelt bitin' heavy too. Brown trout hittin' hard in the tributaries. Best **lures**: crankbaits like Rapala Shad Raps in perch or firetiger, spoons (Little Cleos or Moonshine), and jigs with soft plastics. For **bait**, go minnows, nightcrawlers, or spawn bags—egg patterns slaying steelhead per angler chatter. Hot spots: **Park Point piers** for walleye and cohos—troll the breaks. **Duluth Harbor entrance** and **Canal Park** for easy access to staging trout and salmon. Bundle up, watch for wind shifts, and respect the Superior—stay safe out there. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for more reports! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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Lake Superior Spring Awakening: Lakers, Cohos, and Steelhead Off Duluth
Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure, your go-to guy for all things angling up here on the big lake. It's early morning on April 28th, 2026, and we're talkin' Lake Superior around Duluth—waters still chilly from that long winter, hoverin' around 38-42°F, but the fish are wakin' up. Weather's lookin' cooperative today: mostly cloudy with temps climbin' from 35°F to a brisk 48°F, light northwest winds at 5-10 mph keepin' things calm on the bays. No tides up here on the big freshwater sea, but those north winds might push water levels down a foot or so near the Superior Harbor—prime for shallow structure. Sunrise hits at 5:58 AM, sunset at 8:22 PM, so milk those long daylight hours. Fish activity's pickin' up post-spawn. Locals report solid catches of **lake trout** (lakers up to 15 lbs), **coho salmon** averaging 5-8 lbs, and **steelhead** holdovers in the 6-10 lb range from recent outings off Duluth piers and nearshore reefs. Smaller **whitefish** and **smelt** runs are hot too, drawin' predators. Per Minnesota DNR creel surveys, last week's tallies showed 20+ lakers and a dozen cohos boated from charter trips out of the marina. Best lures right now? Go with **glow spoons** like Williams Whitefish or Moon Glow in 1/2-3/4 oz for vertical jiggin' over 40-80 ft depths—those UV flashes mimic smelt. For casting, **Rapala X-Rap** #10 in silver or perch patterns from the rocky points; they've been slaying steelies. Natural bait? **Suckers** or **nightcrawlers** on slip rigs for bottom feeders, or live **smelt** if you can net 'em. Hot spots: Hit **Brighton Beach** for shore casters—work the drop-offs at dawn. Or motor out to **the Cribs Reef** (stay legal on your electronics) for deep-water lakers; limits comin' easy with downriggers at 60 ft. Bundle up, watch for those sneak waves, and get after 'em before the tourons swarm. Thanks for tunin' in, folks—subscribe for weekly updates! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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316
Duluth Fishing Hotspots: Lake Superior's Seasonal Transition Fuels Trout, Salmon, and Walleye Action
Lake Superior is coming alive this June 21st as our early summer pattern sets in around Duluth. We’re enjoying long daylight stretches, with sunrise a touch before 5:15 AM and sunset rolling in just past 9:05 PM. Although Lake Superior, being a freshwater inland sea, doesn’t have true ocean tides, anglers here still keep a keen eye on wind direction and barometric changes, as they can move baitfish and stir up the bite. Today’s weather is seasonal—highs in the low 70s, light winds, and a slight chance of scattered showers later in the day, a classic North Shore Saturday. Surface water temps are holding steady around 55°F near Duluth, which keeps both lake trout and coho salmon active and on the hunt. According to the most recent Minnesota DNR report, anglers trolling between 10 and 40 feet down are boating solid numbers of 16-21 inch lake trout and 15-19 inch coho salmon. The hot setup this week is brightly colored spoons—orange, pink, and purple have been especially deadly—or flasher fly rigs that flutter and glint through the water. Further up the shore, near Two Harbors, the water’s a bit cooler and the action’s slower, making the Duluth area the prime stretch for consistent limits. The St. Louis River is also producing, with walleyes moving downstream toward Duluth. Trolling green and purple stickbaits or working a jig along current seams and shoreline structure is putting plenty of keepers in the boat. With a chance of rain and wind later, the St. Louis River estuary is a smart alternative to the big lake for a more sheltered bite. Fish Lake and Grand Lake just outside Duluth are offering up pike and largemouth bass for those looking to mix it up—Fish Lake in particular is full of hungry northern pike. Brown trout and the occasional steelhead are still being picked up by folks trolling nearshore—especially around the mouths of tributaries where colder water mixes in. Spoons and stickbaits in silver/blue or gold/orange are working best when fished at dawn or twilight. If you’re eyeing shoreline action, Canal Park is a local favorite for casting spoons and catching both trout and salmon right from the rocks. If you’re after a couple of hotspots, don’t miss: - The waters off Park Point: especially in the morning as bait is pushed up by light winds. - The river mouth at the St. Louis Estuary: prime walleye territory right now. - Canal Park rocks: for an easy-access trout and salmon session at daybreak. Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Superior Duluth fishing update! Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a report, and good luck out there. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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315
Duluth Fishing Hotspots: Lake Superior's Seasonal Transition Fuels Trout, Salmon, and Walleye Action
Lake Superior is coming alive this June 21st as our early summer pattern sets in around Duluth. We’re enjoying long daylight stretches, with sunrise a touch before 5:15 AM and sunset rolling in just past 9:05 PM. Although Lake Superior, being a freshwater inland sea, doesn’t have true ocean tides, anglers here still keep a keen eye on wind direction and barometric changes, as they can move baitfish and stir up the bite. Today’s weather is seasonal—highs in the low 70s, light winds, and a slight chance of scattered showers later in the day, a classic North Shore Saturday. Surface water temps are holding steady around 55°F near Duluth, which keeps both lake trout and coho salmon active and on the hunt. According to the most recent Minnesota DNR report, anglers trolling between 10 and 40 feet down are boating solid numbers of 16-21 inch lake trout and 15-19 inch coho salmon. The hot setup this week is brightly colored spoons—orange, pink, and purple have been especially deadly—or flasher fly rigs that flutter and glint through the water. Further up the shore, near Two Harbors, the water’s a bit cooler and the action’s slower, making the Duluth area the prime stretch for consistent limits. The St. Louis River is also producing, with walleyes moving downstream toward Duluth. Trolling green and purple stickbaits or working a jig along current seams and shoreline structure is putting plenty of keepers in the boat. With a chance of rain and wind later, the St. Louis River estuary is a smart alternative to the big lake for a more sheltered bite. Fish Lake and Grand Lake just outside Duluth are offering up pike and largemouth bass for those looking to mix it up—Fish Lake in particular is full of hungry northern pike. Brown trout and the occasional steelhead are still being picked up by folks trolling nearshore—especially around the mouths of tributaries where colder water mixes in. Spoons and stickbaits in silver/blue or gold/orange are working best when fished at dawn or twilight. If you’re eyeing shoreline action, Canal Park is a local favorite for casting spoons and catching both trout and salmon right from the rocks. If you’re after a couple of hotspots, don’t miss: - The waters off Park Point: especially in the morning as bait is pushed up by light winds. - The river mouth at the St. Louis Estuary: prime walleye territory right now. - Canal Park rocks: for an easy-access trout and salmon session at daybreak. Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Superior Duluth fishing update! Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a report, and good luck out there. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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314
Duluth Fishing Hotspots: Lake Superior's Seasonal Transition Fuels Trout, Salmon, and Walleye Action
Lake Superior is coming alive this June 21st as our early summer pattern sets in around Duluth. We’re enjoying long daylight stretches, with sunrise a touch before 5:15 AM and sunset rolling in just past 9:05 PM. Although Lake Superior, being a freshwater inland sea, doesn’t have true ocean tides, anglers here still keep a keen eye on wind direction and barometric changes, as they can move baitfish and stir up the bite. Today’s weather is seasonal—highs in the low 70s, light winds, and a slight chance of scattered showers later in the day, a classic North Shore Saturday. Surface water temps are holding steady around 55°F near Duluth, which keeps both lake trout and coho salmon active and on the hunt. According to the most recent Minnesota DNR report, anglers trolling between 10 and 40 feet down are boating solid numbers of 16-21 inch lake trout and 15-19 inch coho salmon. The hot setup this week is brightly colored spoons—orange, pink, and purple have been especially deadly—or flasher fly rigs that flutter and glint through the water. Further up the shore, near Two Harbors, the water’s a bit cooler and the action’s slower, making the Duluth area the prime stretch for consistent limits. The St. Louis River is also producing, with walleyes moving downstream toward Duluth. Trolling green and purple stickbaits or working a jig along current seams and shoreline structure is putting plenty of keepers in the boat. With a chance of rain and wind later, the St. Louis River estuary is a smart alternative to the big lake for a more sheltered bite. Fish Lake and Grand Lake just outside Duluth are offering up pike and largemouth bass for those looking to mix it up—Fish Lake in particular is full of hungry northern pike. Brown trout and the occasional steelhead are still being picked up by folks trolling nearshore—especially around the mouths of tributaries where colder water mixes in. Spoons and stickbaits in silver/blue or gold/orange are working best when fished at dawn or twilight. If you’re eyeing shoreline action, Canal Park is a local favorite for casting spoons and catching both trout and salmon right from the rocks. If you’re after a couple of hotspots, don’t miss: - The waters off Park Point: especially in the morning as bait is pushed up by light winds. - The river mouth at the St. Louis Estuary: prime walleye territory right now. - Canal Park rocks: for an easy-access trout and salmon session at daybreak. Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Superior Duluth fishing update! Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a report, and good luck out there. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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313
Duluth Fishing Hotspots: Lake Superior's Seasonal Transition Fuels Trout, Salmon, and Walleye Action
Lake Superior is coming alive this June 21st as our early summer pattern sets in around Duluth. We’re enjoying long daylight stretches, with sunrise a touch before 5:15 AM and sunset rolling in just past 9:05 PM. Although Lake Superior, being a freshwater inland sea, doesn’t have true ocean tides, anglers here still keep a keen eye on wind direction and barometric changes, as they can move baitfish and stir up the bite. Today’s weather is seasonal—highs in the low 70s, light winds, and a slight chance of scattered showers later in the day, a classic North Shore Saturday. Surface water temps are holding steady around 55°F near Duluth, which keeps both lake trout and coho salmon active and on the hunt. According to the most recent Minnesota DNR report, anglers trolling between 10 and 40 feet down are boating solid numbers of 16-21 inch lake trout and 15-19 inch coho salmon. The hot setup this week is brightly colored spoons—orange, pink, and purple have been especially deadly—or flasher fly rigs that flutter and glint through the water. Further up the shore, near Two Harbors, the water’s a bit cooler and the action’s slower, making the Duluth area the prime stretch for consistent limits. The St. Louis River is also producing, with walleyes moving downstream toward Duluth. Trolling green and purple stickbaits or working a jig along current seams and shoreline structure is putting plenty of keepers in the boat. With a chance of rain and wind later, the St. Louis River estuary is a smart alternative to the big lake for a more sheltered bite. Fish Lake and Grand Lake just outside Duluth are offering up pike and largemouth bass for those looking to mix it up—Fish Lake in particular is full of hungry northern pike. Brown trout and the occasional steelhead are still being picked up by folks trolling nearshore—especially around the mouths of tributaries where colder water mixes in. Spoons and stickbaits in silver/blue or gold/orange are working best when fished at dawn or twilight. If you’re eyeing shoreline action, Canal Park is a local favorite for casting spoons and catching both trout and salmon right from the rocks. If you’re after a couple of hotspots, don’t miss: - The waters off Park Point: especially in the morning as bait is pushed up by light winds. - The river mouth at the St. Louis Estuary: prime walleye territory right now. - Canal Park rocks: for an easy-access trout and salmon session at daybreak. Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Superior Duluth fishing update! Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a report, and good luck out there. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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312
Duluth Fishing Hotspots: Lake Superior's Seasonal Transition Fuels Trout, Salmon, and Walleye Action
Lake Superior is coming alive this June 21st as our early summer pattern sets in around Duluth. We’re enjoying long daylight stretches, with sunrise a touch before 5:15 AM and sunset rolling in just past 9:05 PM. Although Lake Superior, being a freshwater inland sea, doesn’t have true ocean tides, anglers here still keep a keen eye on wind direction and barometric changes, as they can move baitfish and stir up the bite. Today’s weather is seasonal—highs in the low 70s, light winds, and a slight chance of scattered showers later in the day, a classic North Shore Saturday. Surface water temps are holding steady around 55°F near Duluth, which keeps both lake trout and coho salmon active and on the hunt. According to the most recent Minnesota DNR report, anglers trolling between 10 and 40 feet down are boating solid numbers of 16-21 inch lake trout and 15-19 inch coho salmon. The hot setup this week is brightly colored spoons—orange, pink, and purple have been especially deadly—or flasher fly rigs that flutter and glint through the water. Further up the shore, near Two Harbors, the water’s a bit cooler and the action’s slower, making the Duluth area the prime stretch for consistent limits. The St. Louis River is also producing, with walleyes moving downstream toward Duluth. Trolling green and purple stickbaits or working a jig along current seams and shoreline structure is putting plenty of keepers in the boat. With a chance of rain and wind later, the St. Louis River estuary is a smart alternative to the big lake for a more sheltered bite. Fish Lake and Grand Lake just outside Duluth are offering up pike and largemouth bass for those looking to mix it up—Fish Lake in particular is full of hungry northern pike. Brown trout and the occasional steelhead are still being picked up by folks trolling nearshore—especially around the mouths of tributaries where colder water mixes in. Spoons and stickbaits in silver/blue or gold/orange are working best when fished at dawn or twilight. If you’re eyeing shoreline action, Canal Park is a local favorite for casting spoons and catching both trout and salmon right from the rocks. If you’re after a couple of hotspots, don’t miss: - The waters off Park Point: especially in the morning as bait is pushed up by light winds. - The river mouth at the St. Louis Estuary: prime walleye territory right now. - Canal Park rocks: for an easy-access trout and salmon session at daybreak. Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Superior Duluth fishing update! Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a report, and good luck out there. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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311
Duluth Fishing Hotspots: Lake Superior's Seasonal Transition Fuels Trout, Salmon, and Walleye Action
Lake Superior is coming alive this June 21st as our early summer pattern sets in around Duluth. We’re enjoying long daylight stretches, with sunrise a touch before 5:15 AM and sunset rolling in just past 9:05 PM. Although Lake Superior, being a freshwater inland sea, doesn’t have true ocean tides, anglers here still keep a keen eye on wind direction and barometric changes, as they can move baitfish and stir up the bite. Today’s weather is seasonal—highs in the low 70s, light winds, and a slight chance of scattered showers later in the day, a classic North Shore Saturday. Surface water temps are holding steady around 55°F near Duluth, which keeps both lake trout and coho salmon active and on the hunt. According to the most recent Minnesota DNR report, anglers trolling between 10 and 40 feet down are boating solid numbers of 16-21 inch lake trout and 15-19 inch coho salmon. The hot setup this week is brightly colored spoons—orange, pink, and purple have been especially deadly—or flasher fly rigs that flutter and glint through the water. Further up the shore, near Two Harbors, the water’s a bit cooler and the action’s slower, making the Duluth area the prime stretch for consistent limits. The St. Louis River is also producing, with walleyes moving downstream toward Duluth. Trolling green and purple stickbaits or working a jig along current seams and shoreline structure is putting plenty of keepers in the boat. With a chance of rain and wind later, the St. Louis River estuary is a smart alternative to the big lake for a more sheltered bite. Fish Lake and Grand Lake just outside Duluth are offering up pike and largemouth bass for those looking to mix it up—Fish Lake in particular is full of hungry northern pike. Brown trout and the occasional steelhead are still being picked up by folks trolling nearshore—especially around the mouths of tributaries where colder water mixes in. Spoons and stickbaits in silver/blue or gold/orange are working best when fished at dawn or twilight. If you’re eyeing shoreline action, Canal Park is a local favorite for casting spoons and catching both trout and salmon right from the rocks. If you’re after a couple of hotspots, don’t miss: - The waters off Park Point: especially in the morning as bait is pushed up by light winds. - The river mouth at the St. Louis Estuary: prime walleye territory right now. - Canal Park rocks: for an easy-access trout and salmon session at daybreak. Thanks for tuning in to this Lake Superior Duluth fishing update! Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a report, and good luck out there. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Stay updated with the latest fishing conditions on Lake Superior with the "Duluth Fishing Report Today." Get expert tips, weather updates, and daily catch reports. Perfect for anglers looking to maximize their fishing adventure in Duluth, Minnesota! Tune in to stay ahead on the best fishing spots and techniques.For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease....Get all your gear befoe you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXkThis show includes AI-generated content.
HOSTED BY
Inception Point Ai
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