
30 August 2025
Late Summer Smallies and Walleye Surge on Lake St. Clair
Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily
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Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure delivering your August 30th, 2025, fishing report for Lake St. Clair and the surrounding Michigan waters.
It’s a cool start this Saturday—the overnight low dipped comfortably into the upper 50s, but by midmorning, the temp is pushing the low 70s. According to the TH Marine weather watch during yesterday’s Bassmaster Elite Series, we’re looking at light winds and partial cloud cover, perfect conditions for firing up that late-summer bite. Sunrise came at 6:51 AM, and the sun will set tonight at 8:10 PM. Lake St. Clair isn’t a tidal water, but water clarity is solid, and levels are typical for late August.
Fish activity is up, especially with this cooling trend nudging our resident smallmouth bass and walleye toward those early fall patterns. The Bassmaster Elite event yesterday saw Gerald Swindle and other top pros boating bags over 14 pounds by early session, with plenty of chunky smallmouth showing up between 3 and 5 pounds. Over on the St. Clair River, according to recent Major League Fishing and Bassmaster coverage, hot teams are stacking up 20 to 25 smallmouth, tipping the scales at 50 pounds total for the competition round. Expect a mix of aggressive pods and some lockjaw fish, as many have seen heavy pressure from forward-facing sonar.
Best lures right now are drop-shot rigs paired with soft plastics—the green pumpkin goby has been hot, especially the Rapala Crush City BLT threaded onto a VMC hook. Ned rigs in goby or perch pattern and tubes dragged along current seams and rocky breaks are also doing damage. If you’re targeting largemouth in marinas or weedy bays, spinnerbaits and chatterbaits in white/chartreuse are producing, especially around scattered cabbage.
Walleye are showing up in fair numbers during the low light hours. Pulling crankbaits just off the edges of deeper flats, especially in the 12–16 foot range, remains reliable. Nightcrawlers on harnesses are picking off bonus fish for those drifting or slow trolling. Early mornings and late evenings are your best windows thanks to reduced boat traffic.
Mixed bags have included the odd muskie lurking the weed edges—big rubber baits or large bucktails are your best tools if you’re grinding for a trophy. Perch schools are tight, but when you locate them, live minnows or finesse plastics on light jigs are working north of Metropark and out towards Anchor Bay.
Hot spots today:
- Mile Roads: Smallmouth are holding on the gravel bars in 10–15 foot depths, especially between 10 and 12 Mile.
- St. Clair River Mouth: Deep current breaks just outside the Black River are stacked with active smallies and some roaming walleye.
- Anchor Bay: Early birds are boating mixed bags of perch and bass along isolated weed clumps.
- Harley Ensign launch area: Reliable for bass, especially around isolated structure and current seams.
As always, check your regulations, especially if targeting sturgeon—Michigan DNR has reminders out, and season dates are firm.
That wraps up your Lake St. Clair report for August 30th from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
It’s a cool start this Saturday—the overnight low dipped comfortably into the upper 50s, but by midmorning, the temp is pushing the low 70s. According to the TH Marine weather watch during yesterday’s Bassmaster Elite Series, we’re looking at light winds and partial cloud cover, perfect conditions for firing up that late-summer bite. Sunrise came at 6:51 AM, and the sun will set tonight at 8:10 PM. Lake St. Clair isn’t a tidal water, but water clarity is solid, and levels are typical for late August.
Fish activity is up, especially with this cooling trend nudging our resident smallmouth bass and walleye toward those early fall patterns. The Bassmaster Elite event yesterday saw Gerald Swindle and other top pros boating bags over 14 pounds by early session, with plenty of chunky smallmouth showing up between 3 and 5 pounds. Over on the St. Clair River, according to recent Major League Fishing and Bassmaster coverage, hot teams are stacking up 20 to 25 smallmouth, tipping the scales at 50 pounds total for the competition round. Expect a mix of aggressive pods and some lockjaw fish, as many have seen heavy pressure from forward-facing sonar.
Best lures right now are drop-shot rigs paired with soft plastics—the green pumpkin goby has been hot, especially the Rapala Crush City BLT threaded onto a VMC hook. Ned rigs in goby or perch pattern and tubes dragged along current seams and rocky breaks are also doing damage. If you’re targeting largemouth in marinas or weedy bays, spinnerbaits and chatterbaits in white/chartreuse are producing, especially around scattered cabbage.
Walleye are showing up in fair numbers during the low light hours. Pulling crankbaits just off the edges of deeper flats, especially in the 12–16 foot range, remains reliable. Nightcrawlers on harnesses are picking off bonus fish for those drifting or slow trolling. Early mornings and late evenings are your best windows thanks to reduced boat traffic.
Mixed bags have included the odd muskie lurking the weed edges—big rubber baits or large bucktails are your best tools if you’re grinding for a trophy. Perch schools are tight, but when you locate them, live minnows or finesse plastics on light jigs are working north of Metropark and out towards Anchor Bay.
Hot spots today:
- Mile Roads: Smallmouth are holding on the gravel bars in 10–15 foot depths, especially between 10 and 12 Mile.
- St. Clair River Mouth: Deep current breaks just outside the Black River are stacked with active smallies and some roaming walleye.
- Anchor Bay: Early birds are boating mixed bags of perch and bass along isolated weed clumps.
- Harley Ensign launch area: Reliable for bass, especially around isolated structure and current seams.
As always, check your regulations, especially if targeting sturgeon—Michigan DNR has reminders out, and season dates are firm.
That wraps up your Lake St. Clair report for August 30th from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe so you never miss a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn