Artificial Lure here with your Lake St. Clair fishing report for Saturday, August 16, 2025. Hope your rods are rigged and ready, because this mid-August bite is keeping local anglers busy. Let’s break down the morning’s particulars—weather, conditions, hot baits, species caught, and a couple of can’t-miss spots.
Weather on the lake is prime for fishing today. According to local NOAA buoy data, we’re waking up to mild temps starting off near 68°F, climbing into the low 80s by late afternoon. Winds are light and variable from the southwest at 5-7 mph; the lake’s surface is flat with just a gentle ripple, making for easy boat handling. Humidity is moderate and skies are mostly clear, promising a comfortable stretch right through sundown. Sunrise today was 6:35 AM and you’ll get another long evening bite with sunset at 8:34 PM.
Lake St. Clair doesn’t have tides like coastal saltwater, but wind-driven “wind tides” can impact shallow flats and the fishing. Today’s steady southwesterlies should push just a bit of warm water into popular bays and weed beds—a pattern that encourages bait movement and triggers feeding from big predators.
Now, onto the fish: The summer bonanza continues, with smallmouth bass dominating every dock talk. Just yesterday, the FXR Pro at the Yokohama Tire Bassmaster Elite saw record-setting five-fish bags, with 4- to 6-pound smallies weighing down livewells all over the Metro Flats and Mile Roads stretches, according to The Bass Cast. Reports from Live 2 Fish and Instagram posts confirm that it’s been a numbers game—easy to catch 20–40 smallies in a morning if you stay mobile and focus on edges of weedlines in 8–16 feet.
The drop shot remains king. Berkley Flat Worms in green pumpkin and goby colors were the ticket for big fish this week, with pros also turning to Dropkick Shads, Micro Juvy Craws, and similar finesse plastics for finicky bass. MPOutdoors on YouTube swears by the Flat Worm, and a glance at any boat deck shows those baits in every cupholder. Can’t get much more “Lake St. Clair” than that.
Don’t sleep on other staples: tubes and Ned rigs are picking up the rest, especially when bass school tight on structure. If you want bonus action, tie on a classic Dardevle spoon or a #5 spinner for pike and the occasional muskie along weed edges—venerable Dardevle lures, made right here in Michigan, are slamming big esox, especially early or late in the day.
Perch anglers are also quietly hauling in limits off the St. Clair Light and around Strawberry Island, especially with emerald shiners or redworms under slip bobbers. The fish are averaging 8–10 inches but some 12-inch plates have shown up this week.
As for hot spots:
- Metro Beach Drop-Off: This area has been fishing lights-out all week for big smallmouth, especially along the scattered grass in 12–14 feet.
- Anchor Bay Points: Work the ends of the points with tubes and drop shots; baitfish are tight and bass are right behind.
A quick tip—run your finesse plastics slow and keep an eye on electronics for wolf packs. The smallies are up and hunting, so once you get one, don’t waste time—drop again and grab a few more.
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