Late Fall Fishing on Lake St. Clair - Chasing Smallmouth, Walleye, and Jumbo Perch
14 December 2025

Late Fall Fishing on Lake St. Clair - Chasing Smallmouth, Walleye, and Jumbo 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 in that early-winter grind now: water temps sliding through the upper 30s, thin skim ice flirting with the marinas at daybreak, but the main lake and the channels are still open and very fishable if you pick your windows. The National Weather Service has us under a cold, mostly cloudy pattern with a light northwest breeze this morning building to 10–15 later, highs just below freezing. Sunrise is right around 7:50 a.m., sunset about 4:55 p.m., so your prime light is short—make it count.

No real tide here, just seiche and wind-driven pushes, so watch that northwest wind: it’s stacking a little water and stain into the Mile Roads and the mouth of the Clinton. That off-colored edge has been the difference between just casting and actually catching.

According to local charter reports out of St. Clair Shores and Harrison Township this past week, the **smallmouth** bite has mostly slid off the shallow rock and onto the first break in 18–28 feet, especially where you’ve got rock and scattered weed. The numbers are down from fall, but the ones you hook now are solid 4–5 pounders, with a few sixes showing up. Best producers:
- **Blade baits** in gold or silver, hopped just off bottom.
- **3.5–4" tubes** in green pumpkin, dark melon with flake.
- Small **hair jigs** in natural brown or black on calmer days.

Walleye guys running the Detroit River edges and the South Channel are still putting fish in the box. Outdoor News has been reminding folks that some of the biggest eyes of the year come right now in December, often in the dark, and Lake St. Clair is no exception. Slow vertical presentations are key:
- 1/2–3/4 oz **jig and minnow** or emerald shiner.
- Subtle **paddle-tail plastics** in chartreuse and natural shad.
Evenings and first light have kicked out mixed bags of eaters and the odd 9–10 pounder.

Perch reports have tapered, but if you can find green weeds in 12–16 feet off the 9–Mile and 10–Mile areas, there are still pods of nice 9–12 inchers. Bring a bucket of minnows and stay mobile. A simple **crappie rig with lake shiners** has outfished everything fancy.

Hot spots to circle on your map today:
- **Mile Roads (9 to 12 Mile)**: inside turns and small rock spines in 18–22 feet for late smallies and bonus walleye.
- **Mouth of the South Channel / off Harsens Island**: deeper current seams for walleye and the occasional jumbo perch when the traffic is light.

If you’re determined to swing on one last big bronzeback before true ice-up, fish slow and tight to bottom. Long pauses, subtle lifts. A lot of bites right now are just “weight.”

Bait and lure cheat sheet:
- Best artificials: blade baits, 3.5" tubes, goby-style plastics, hair jigs.
- Best live bait: emerald shiners, lake shiners, and fatheads on light fluorocarbon.

Ice is starting to tease the canals and marinas, but it is absolutely **not** safe yet. Treat everything as open water, wear a float suit if you’ve got one, and run your kill switch.

That’s your Lake St. Clair rundown for today from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report.

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