
21 November 2025
Crisp November Bite on Lake St. Clair: Walleye, Bass, and Perch Primer
Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today
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Artificial Lure here with your Lake St. Clair fishing report, bright and early on November 21, 2025.
It’s a genuine November crisp out there, with air temps just about 46°F at dawn, and the water’s holding at 53°F, ideal for hungry late fall walleye and some surprisingly feisty bass. A steady east wind is rolling over the lake at about 15 knots, so dress warm and expect a light chop with two-foot swells, making for those classic St. Clair roller conditions. If you’re planning a full day, sunrise arrived at 7:24 AM and sunset will be at 5:05 PM, leaving plenty of daylight, but be ready for that quick afternoon chill. According to the NOAA buoy on the lake, barometric pressure has been slowly falling, hinting at a changing weather front—often a precursor to a hot bite window.
We’re under a first quarter moon, and FishingReminder marks the major feeding times today as 6:43 to 8:43 a.m. and 6:57 to 8:57 p.m., with a minor uptick just after 2 in the afternoon. Local solunar tables suggest the fish should be active around those low-light bites, so aim to be on your spot or drifting well before then.
This week, anglers have reported the fall run for **walleye** remains steady, best targeted with slow-trolled crankbaits or crawler harnesses just off Metro Beach and up near the channel mouths. Joe Bauer Fishing on YouTube showed winter trolling is seeing solid hookups along the dropoffs, with deep-diving Bandits and Flicker Minnows in blues and chromes getting bit. Try 15-20 feet of water along the south shore—Boat ramp at Harley Ensign is ice-free and busy at first light.
**Smallmouth bass** are still on the chew, especially around the Belle River Hump and Anchor Bay. A few late-season bronzebacks were caught this week by folks dropping blade baits like the Silver Buddy and working finesse dropshots with shad-pattern baits. According to the most recent Major League Fishing event, top pros hammered smallies right on the flats with Yamamoto Shad Shape Worms and white blade baits, especially when fish are pushed by wind into 10-18 feet of water.
**Largemouth bass** action lingers in the canals and marina mouths. Swim jigs in bluegill patterns, slow-rolled chatterbaits, and black buzzbaits pulled over last of the weed lines are taking fish. Ott DeFoe recommends frog baits in the skinny residential cuts if there’s any leftover surface scum—you’ll find a few kickers hiding there, even this late.
**Yellow perch** are showing up heavy along the Mile Roads, especially near the 9 Mile launch and up in Fairhaven. Anglers with minnows are catching nice keepers using basic perch rigs in 12-15 feet—don’t skip on emerald shiners if you can get 'em at the bait shop.
**Hot Spots:**
- Metro Beach Dropoff: Reliable for walleye and mixed bag jig bites at dawn.
- Belle River Hump: For smallmouth—watch for bait flicking and drift with blades or dropshot.
- Fairhaven Launch Area: For perch, anchor up and dabble with live minnows.
- Harley Ensign Ramp Channels: Trolling for late fall walleye.
**Best Baits & Lures:**
- For walleye: Deep-diving crankbaits (Bandit, Flicker Minnow), and crawler harnesses.
- For bass: Dropshots (shad-color, goby), vibrating jigs, and topwater frogs near cover.
- For perch: Live emerald shiners, redworms, classic perch pounders.
Bait shops like Lakeside Fishing and Hook One in Marine City are well-stocked, but go early—live bait sells fast on chilly days.
That wraps your boots-on-the-bank update for Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and insider 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
It’s a genuine November crisp out there, with air temps just about 46°F at dawn, and the water’s holding at 53°F, ideal for hungry late fall walleye and some surprisingly feisty bass. A steady east wind is rolling over the lake at about 15 knots, so dress warm and expect a light chop with two-foot swells, making for those classic St. Clair roller conditions. If you’re planning a full day, sunrise arrived at 7:24 AM and sunset will be at 5:05 PM, leaving plenty of daylight, but be ready for that quick afternoon chill. According to the NOAA buoy on the lake, barometric pressure has been slowly falling, hinting at a changing weather front—often a precursor to a hot bite window.
We’re under a first quarter moon, and FishingReminder marks the major feeding times today as 6:43 to 8:43 a.m. and 6:57 to 8:57 p.m., with a minor uptick just after 2 in the afternoon. Local solunar tables suggest the fish should be active around those low-light bites, so aim to be on your spot or drifting well before then.
This week, anglers have reported the fall run for **walleye** remains steady, best targeted with slow-trolled crankbaits or crawler harnesses just off Metro Beach and up near the channel mouths. Joe Bauer Fishing on YouTube showed winter trolling is seeing solid hookups along the dropoffs, with deep-diving Bandits and Flicker Minnows in blues and chromes getting bit. Try 15-20 feet of water along the south shore—Boat ramp at Harley Ensign is ice-free and busy at first light.
**Smallmouth bass** are still on the chew, especially around the Belle River Hump and Anchor Bay. A few late-season bronzebacks were caught this week by folks dropping blade baits like the Silver Buddy and working finesse dropshots with shad-pattern baits. According to the most recent Major League Fishing event, top pros hammered smallies right on the flats with Yamamoto Shad Shape Worms and white blade baits, especially when fish are pushed by wind into 10-18 feet of water.
**Largemouth bass** action lingers in the canals and marina mouths. Swim jigs in bluegill patterns, slow-rolled chatterbaits, and black buzzbaits pulled over last of the weed lines are taking fish. Ott DeFoe recommends frog baits in the skinny residential cuts if there’s any leftover surface scum—you’ll find a few kickers hiding there, even this late.
**Yellow perch** are showing up heavy along the Mile Roads, especially near the 9 Mile launch and up in Fairhaven. Anglers with minnows are catching nice keepers using basic perch rigs in 12-15 feet—don’t skip on emerald shiners if you can get 'em at the bait shop.
**Hot Spots:**
- Metro Beach Dropoff: Reliable for walleye and mixed bag jig bites at dawn.
- Belle River Hump: For smallmouth—watch for bait flicking and drift with blades or dropshot.
- Fairhaven Launch Area: For perch, anchor up and dabble with live minnows.
- Harley Ensign Ramp Channels: Trolling for late fall walleye.
**Best Baits & Lures:**
- For walleye: Deep-diving crankbaits (Bandit, Flicker Minnow), and crawler harnesses.
- For bass: Dropshots (shad-color, goby), vibrating jigs, and topwater frogs near cover.
- For perch: Live emerald shiners, redworms, classic perch pounders.
Bait shops like Lakeside Fishing and Hook One in Marine City are well-stocked, but go early—live bait sells fast on chilly days.
That wraps your boots-on-the-bank update for Lake St. Clair. Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates and insider 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI