Late Summer Bite on Lake St. Clair - Lures, Live Bait & Hatches for Bass, Perch & More
03 September 2025

Late Summer Bite on Lake St. Clair - Lures, Live Bait & Hatches for Bass, Perch & More

Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily

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Artificial Lure here with your Lake St. Clair fishing report for Wednesday, September 3rd, 2025. Folks, it’s shaping up for a classic late-summer bite out on our favorite Michigan waters.

First, let’s set the scene. This morning sunrise was right around 6:56 AM, with sunset expected tonight near 7:59 PM. Weather on the lake is mild and pleasant, with air temps at 65°F and water just a shade warmer at about 68°F, according to the National Data Buoy Center from Buoy 45147 sitting just off Anchor Bay. Winds are light out of the northwest around 4 knots, and the pressure’s steady at 30.22 inches. Waves are flat, so you can expect glassy water and easy boat handling all day long.

No tides influence the lake, but look for some current where the St. Clair River feeds at the north and Detroit River at the south—classic spots where the bite gets triggered, especially with lake levels steady through the week.

Fish activity this week has been strong after a run of cooler nights perked up water oxygen. BassMaster reported that bass fishing on St. Clair is a little tougher than previous years, but the overall numbers are still solid, especially for smallmouth. Tournament results from RFD-TV’s Major League Fishing coverage last week showed both teams stacking up heavy 26 fish days, with the top bag stacking over 62 pounds of smallmouth, largemouth, and a few bonus perch. Most recreations are seeing 15-30 bass per boat on half-day trips, with best catches in the 2–4 pound range. Perch anglers have been picking up decent limits—expect the best bite in the mid-morning window.

In terms of lures, bass continue to smash soft-plastic jerkbaits along mid-depth humps and weed lines—Lake St. Clair’s classic Mile Roads stretch is especially hot, as shared by local angler Kim Stricker. A natural shad or perch pattern is the way to go, as those bait schools are thick right now. Tube jigs (green pumpkin with some copper flash) and drop-shot rigs have been putting up numbers, especially off Metro Beach and the Harley Ensign launch. Early morning anglers are doing well on topwater—try walk-the-dog baits around shallow rocky shoals; crankbaits (chartreuse or red) are cleaning up once the sun’s on the water.

Live bait remains a staple: Emerald shiners, nightcrawlers, and leeches are the best bets for multi-species limits. Crappie and perch are stacking up in 7–10 ft near the weed edges, and minnows fished vertically will keep the rods bending. Don’t overlook vertical presentations with new sonar—several anglers on BBC Boards are catching bonus walleye and drum by marking fish and dropping straight down, especially late in the day.

For hotspots, here are two must-fish zones today:
- **Mile Roads Area (9 Mile & 12 Mile)**: plenty of bass and perch in mixed rock and weed washes, hard bottom transitions, and fish responding to jerkbait and drop shot. The underwater structure is a magnet now.
- **Harley Ensign Launch / Metro Beach Flats**: good for trolling crankbaits and casting tubes for roving smallmouth. This area has produced steady action days—even as tournament crowds thin.

Don't be surprised by the last of the fish flies swarming around docks and shorelines. These mayfly hatches mean bonus feeding windows, especially near lighted areas overnight. You’ll see bass and panfish popping surface bugs in the evenings.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s Lake St. Clair fishing report. Remember to subscribe for daily updates, tips, and local know-how. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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