Brisk Winds, Cold Water: Late Fall Tactics for Lake St. Clair Mega-Bags
18 November 2025

Brisk Winds, Cold Water: Late Fall Tactics for Lake St. Clair Mega-Bags

Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today

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Lake St. Clair is showing her late November stripes—if you’re reading this before heading out, layer up and keep an eye skyward, ‘cause we’re in for a classic, cold Michigan fall day. Weathering the chop is the name of the game; detroit-fishing-report and majorleaguefishing.com both note brisk northwest winds this morning, keeping afternoon water temps in the high 40s to low 50s. Skies are overcast and there’s a biting breeze, so dress for warmth and spray.

Sunrise hit at 7:23 a.m. today, and we’re looking at sunset around 5:11 p.m. That gives us a tight bite window, with peak fish activity running from late morning through early afternoon, based on recent catches and the current solunar tables. There’s no tidal swing here, but wind-driven current, especially on the Michigan side near Harsens Island and the mouth of the Thames, plays a huge part, so target sheltered cuts and channel edges where bait stacks up.

In terms of what’s being caught, it’s been a solid week for late fall fishing. The muskie are on the chew, especially with the water turning cold and clear—angler reports on YouTube have folks boating up to seven fish per outing, mostly casting big rubber baits and trolling oversized crankbaits off the dumpings and along the Ontario weed edges. Smallmouth action remains steady, too, with those post-front bronzebacks biting in 8-15 feet. Instagram reels from last week show Bassmaster Open contenders hauling bags over 22 pounds, so the quality is still out there. Don’t sleep on walleye either; the Detroit River mouth and deeper mid-lake holes have put out nice eaters for those snap-jigging blade baits and running live bait rigs.

For best results today, I’d go heavy on the hardware and live offerings:
- Lipless crankbaits in red or craw colors—Strike King Red Eye Shad is a top pick, burned right over shallow grass or ripped along stone ledges per advice from Kalamazoo legend Kevin VanDam.
- Suspending jerkbaits in shad patterns for those finicky smallmouth, especially if the water’s gin-clear.
- Big rubber swimbaits (Bulldawgs, Medussas), black or firetiger, for muskie.
- Three-quarter ounce jigging spoons and blades—Hopkins or Heddon Sonar—for walleye. Add a minnow to up your odds.
- Emerald shiners, if you can get ‘em, are money for perch and walleye, while tube jigs and Ned rigs in green pumpkin put bonus bass in the boat.

Hot spots? No secret, but you can’t miss around the Metro Beach weed beds—find the sharp drop from 6 to 12 feet, toss a jerkbait or drag a tube for smallies. Try Goose Bay to the South Channel for muskie, or hit the anchor breaks off 9 Mile for mixed bags. Up near Harsens Island, those current seams draw everything from slab perch to bonus pike.

Boat traffic’s light, but do mind the weather—it’s hunting season, deer camps are full, and that means less pressure on the water. According to the City of Algonac, Pickerel Capital of the World, the locals are still getting out before the ramps ice up, and the steadiest bites are coming to anglers who slow things way, way down.

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