
12 December 2025
Lake St. Clair Fishing Report: Slow and Steady Wins the Winter Walleye
Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report Today
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Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Lake St. Clair fishing report.
We don’t get real tides here, but the water’s moving steady with the St. Clair River, and that flow’s got the fish pinned to current breaks, points, and the edges of the main channels. FishingReminder’s solunar tables for the St. Clair Shores area are calling for the stronger bite windows early and late, so plan around low light and those moon-driven peaks.
Weather-wise, the morning is cool and crisp with light winds, building a bit by midday out of the west–northwest. Skies are mixed clouds and sun, classic December pattern. Dress for damp cold; that breeze on open water will cut right through you. Sunrise is roughly a little after 8 a.m., with sunset just before 5 p.m., giving you a short but very workable window. Calmest conditions should be from first light through mid-morning.
Surface temps around the St. Clair system are in the low 40s this time of year, based on recent readings from NOAA’s Algonac station on the river. That’s winter mode for these fish, so expect tighter schools and more vertical bites. According to local guides and marina chatter out of Harrison Township and Anchor Bay shops, the last week has seen decent numbers of eater walleye, good jumbo perch packs when you find them, and a handful of stubborn smallmouth still chewing deep. Muskie chatter has slowed way down, but a couple late-season fish have come off the river edges for guys grinding big rubber.
Best baits right now are all about slowing down. For walleye, think bright jig heads tipped with minnows or plastics dragged slowly along the breaks; a firetiger or chartreuse paddle-tail on a 3/8-ounce jig has been putting fish in the boat. Perch anglers are doing well with live minnows and spikes on simple drop-shot or perch spreaders, tight to the bottom in 20–30 feet. Smallmouth are coming on blade baits, finesse swimbaits, and dark tube jigs, hopped slowly over rock patches and subtle humps.
Artificial-lure wise, I’d have three tied on: a ½-ounce silver or gold blade bait, a natural goby-colored tube, and a small suspending jerkbait in a perch pattern for any mid-depth structure or warm pockets near the river mouths. Let everything soak, long pauses, barely moving the rod.
Hot spots to focus on:
- **Mouth of the Clinton River and the 400-style humps off Harrison Township.** That area’s been giving up mixed bags of walleye and perch for anyone patient enough to graph and sit on marks.
- **The South Channel and around Harsens Island current seams.** Work the edges of the shipping lanes and any inside turns where the flow softens; that’s where winter walleye and the last few muskie are camping.
Fish activity won’t be all-day crazy; think short flurries when the wind, light, and solunar periods line up. If they go quiet, slide a little deeper, lighten your jig, and keep your bait right on the bottom. The guys who stayed put on good marks have been boxing more fish than the ones running all over the lake.
That’s the word 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
We don’t get real tides here, but the water’s moving steady with the St. Clair River, and that flow’s got the fish pinned to current breaks, points, and the edges of the main channels. FishingReminder’s solunar tables for the St. Clair Shores area are calling for the stronger bite windows early and late, so plan around low light and those moon-driven peaks.
Weather-wise, the morning is cool and crisp with light winds, building a bit by midday out of the west–northwest. Skies are mixed clouds and sun, classic December pattern. Dress for damp cold; that breeze on open water will cut right through you. Sunrise is roughly a little after 8 a.m., with sunset just before 5 p.m., giving you a short but very workable window. Calmest conditions should be from first light through mid-morning.
Surface temps around the St. Clair system are in the low 40s this time of year, based on recent readings from NOAA’s Algonac station on the river. That’s winter mode for these fish, so expect tighter schools and more vertical bites. According to local guides and marina chatter out of Harrison Township and Anchor Bay shops, the last week has seen decent numbers of eater walleye, good jumbo perch packs when you find them, and a handful of stubborn smallmouth still chewing deep. Muskie chatter has slowed way down, but a couple late-season fish have come off the river edges for guys grinding big rubber.
Best baits right now are all about slowing down. For walleye, think bright jig heads tipped with minnows or plastics dragged slowly along the breaks; a firetiger or chartreuse paddle-tail on a 3/8-ounce jig has been putting fish in the boat. Perch anglers are doing well with live minnows and spikes on simple drop-shot or perch spreaders, tight to the bottom in 20–30 feet. Smallmouth are coming on blade baits, finesse swimbaits, and dark tube jigs, hopped slowly over rock patches and subtle humps.
Artificial-lure wise, I’d have three tied on: a ½-ounce silver or gold blade bait, a natural goby-colored tube, and a small suspending jerkbait in a perch pattern for any mid-depth structure or warm pockets near the river mouths. Let everything soak, long pauses, barely moving the rod.
Hot spots to focus on:
- **Mouth of the Clinton River and the 400-style humps off Harrison Township.** That area’s been giving up mixed bags of walleye and perch for anyone patient enough to graph and sit on marks.
- **The South Channel and around Harsens Island current seams.** Work the edges of the shipping lanes and any inside turns where the flow softens; that’s where winter walleye and the last few muskie are camping.
Fish activity won’t be all-day crazy; think short flurries when the wind, light, and solunar periods line up. If they go quiet, slide a little deeper, lighten your jig, and keep your bait right on the bottom. The guys who stayed put on good marks have been boxing more fish than the ones running all over the lake.
That’s the word 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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI