
13 December 2025
Lake St. Clair Fishing Report: Braving the Winter Chill for Smallies, Walleye, and Perch
Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today
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This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report.
We’re locked into winter mode now, but the lake’s still open and very much alive. No safe ice yet on the main lake, and the canals are sketchy at best, so plan on the boat or walking the banks instead of dragging an ice shanty.
According to the National Weather Service for the Detroit–St. Clair shoreline, we’re looking at mid‑30s to low‑40s air temps today, light west to northwest winds around 5–10, and a mix of clouds and filtered sun. That’s classic December “just warm enough to chew” weather. USNO tables have sunrise around 7:50 a.m. and sunset near 5 p.m., so your prime windows are late morning through mid‑afternoon as the shallows pick up a degree or two.
No real tide on St. Clair, just a slow seiche and a bit of push from the St. Clair River. Water’s cold and clear, so think slow and subtle. Recent reports from local bait shops in Harrison Township and St. Clair Shores have smallmouth, walleye, and perch still coming in, but you’ve got to grind for them. One shop in The Shores said guys dragging minnows off the docks this week picked a “nice mess of perch and a couple bonus walleyes” in 12–15 feet just outside the marinas.
Smallmouth are bunched up on deeper breaks and rock. Best bets have been:
- Blade baits in gold or perch pattern, hopped off bottom.
- 3.5" tubes in green pumpkin or goby, dragged painfully slow.
- Finesse swimbaits on 1/4‑oz heads along the breaks.
Walleye guys running the river mouths and deeper channels are doing well pulling:
- Jig and minnow or jig and plastic, vertical in 18–25 feet.
- Smaller crankbaits or deep Husky Jerks trolled 1–1.5 mph right off bottom.
Perch have been sliding into the usual winter haunts. The most consistent ticket:
- Emerald shiners or fatheads on single hook or small spoons.
- Keep it just off bottom and be ready for light bites.
If you’re a bait person, the best live options right now are emerald shiners, fathead minnows, and waxies for panfish. For artificials, don’t overthink it: natural goby, perch, and shad colors are king in this clear water. Fluorocarbon leaders, light line, and slow presentations are making the difference.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
- The mile roads off St. Clair Shores, especially 9 and 10 Mile out to about 14–18 feet for mixed smallies and perch.
- The mouth of the Clinton River and the dumping grounds edges, targeting 18–22 feet for walleye and the odd big smallmouth.
Dress warm, keep the PFD on, and remember that cold water doesn’t forgive mistakes. But if you move slow, watch your graph, and stay on those breaks, there are still plenty of fish to be had on St. Clair right now.
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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
We’re locked into winter mode now, but the lake’s still open and very much alive. No safe ice yet on the main lake, and the canals are sketchy at best, so plan on the boat or walking the banks instead of dragging an ice shanty.
According to the National Weather Service for the Detroit–St. Clair shoreline, we’re looking at mid‑30s to low‑40s air temps today, light west to northwest winds around 5–10, and a mix of clouds and filtered sun. That’s classic December “just warm enough to chew” weather. USNO tables have sunrise around 7:50 a.m. and sunset near 5 p.m., so your prime windows are late morning through mid‑afternoon as the shallows pick up a degree or two.
No real tide on St. Clair, just a slow seiche and a bit of push from the St. Clair River. Water’s cold and clear, so think slow and subtle. Recent reports from local bait shops in Harrison Township and St. Clair Shores have smallmouth, walleye, and perch still coming in, but you’ve got to grind for them. One shop in The Shores said guys dragging minnows off the docks this week picked a “nice mess of perch and a couple bonus walleyes” in 12–15 feet just outside the marinas.
Smallmouth are bunched up on deeper breaks and rock. Best bets have been:
- Blade baits in gold or perch pattern, hopped off bottom.
- 3.5" tubes in green pumpkin or goby, dragged painfully slow.
- Finesse swimbaits on 1/4‑oz heads along the breaks.
Walleye guys running the river mouths and deeper channels are doing well pulling:
- Jig and minnow or jig and plastic, vertical in 18–25 feet.
- Smaller crankbaits or deep Husky Jerks trolled 1–1.5 mph right off bottom.
Perch have been sliding into the usual winter haunts. The most consistent ticket:
- Emerald shiners or fatheads on single hook or small spoons.
- Keep it just off bottom and be ready for light bites.
If you’re a bait person, the best live options right now are emerald shiners, fathead minnows, and waxies for panfish. For artificials, don’t overthink it: natural goby, perch, and shad colors are king in this clear water. Fluorocarbon leaders, light line, and slow presentations are making the difference.
Couple of local hot spots to circle:
- The mile roads off St. Clair Shores, especially 9 and 10 Mile out to about 14–18 feet for mixed smallies and perch.
- The mouth of the Clinton River and the dumping grounds edges, targeting 18–22 feet for walleye and the odd big smallmouth.
Dress warm, keep the PFD on, and remember that cold water doesn’t forgive mistakes. But if you move slow, watch your graph, and stay on those breaks, there are still plenty of fish to be had on St. Clair right now.
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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI