Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily

"Lake St. Clair Smallies Bite Hard, Finesse Techniques Reign Supreme"


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Artificial Lure here with your Lake St. Clair fishing report for Saturday, August 9th, 2025. First light cracked at 6:18am this morning and sunset’s coming quick at 8:48pm, giving you a solid window for those early and late bites when conditions are prime. The weather’s mild and steady: mid-70s, partly cloudy with a gentle breeze out of the west, just enough chop to give the bass some cover but not enough to blow you off your spot. No real tide to speak of on the lake—just good Michigan flow—so water movement is going to depend on the wind and the occasional boat traffic.

The smallmouth bite’s getting headlines again thanks to the ongoing Bassmaster Elite Series. The pros are reporting you gotta “have all smallmouth over four pounds to compete” these last couple of days, and forty-four anglers boated 20-pound-plus bags on Day 1—that’s piles of 4- and 5-pounders for the taking. Trey McKinney led with 24-11, anchored by a 5-10 brute, while bags over 22 pounds barely made the top ten. The bite has been a little tougher than past years, with the fish showing some real smarts—presentation and cadence are everything. According to the anglers, “How you present the bait to them is the difference between them eating it and bumping it” (from Bassmaster Elite Series coverage and interview with McKinney).

Recent social posts back this up: Logan Parks landed the “biggest bag of smallmouth I’ve ever weighed” at a whopping 25-9, so the big ones are stacked up and chewing if you get the rhythm right.

For baits, finesse and natural is king. The Strike King Bait Selector for this time of year backs up what the pros are doing—go with *dropshot rigs*, *Ned rigs* with goby or shad imitations, and small *swimbaits* in natural colors like green pumpkin, smoke, and silver for the pressures these brown bass are feeling. If you find them schooling up and want to trigger a big bite, throw a jerkbait or a topwater walker in the dim hours. Lawless Lures Recoil Bait got a shout-out for its erratic action, and the bite has been best when anglers snap the rod tip and let it dance.

Don’t forget the unsung heroes: the bowfin and perch have also been active in the shallows and the weedy edges, so if you’re looking for variety, pitch a live minnow or worm into those zones as well. For perch, stick with small jigs tipped with soft plastics or waxworms.

Hotspots you can’t miss right now:
- The Mile Roads in the US waters near St. Clair Shores have been holding solid pods of smallies around scattered rocks and deep grass.
- Anchor Bay’s southern edge near the shipping channel drops is a big-fish magnet, especially as the sun edges higher and fish slide off the flats.

No matter your target, pay attention to cadence—make it look natural, pause when you think you should move, and don’t be afraid to try a few different retrieves to dial them in. The water clarity’s good, so go light on the line and keep your fluorocarbon leaders long.

That’s your rundown from Lake St. Clair this August morning. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for all the latest reports, tackle tips, and location breakdowns. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - DailyBy Quiet. Please