Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily

Lake St. Clair Smallmouth Bonanza: Finesse Baits Slay Pre-Spawn Bass


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Lake St. Clair is fishing hot as we close out May. Sunrise hit at 5:58 a.m., with sunset coming at 9:04 p.m.—so you’ve got a full, bright day to work the water. Winds were light out of the southwest early, picking up just a bit by midday, and surface temps are holding steady near 58 degrees. Lake St. Clair doesn’t have much tidal change to report, so you can focus more on weather windows and water clarity.

The star of the show right now is smallmouth bass, and the bite is strong. Local anglers—including folks from the Extreme Outdoorsmen channel—have been working shallow water near Anchor Bay and the east side of the lake, targeting those aggressive pre-spawn and bedding fish. The best action’s been coming on finesse presentations: the Great Lakes Finesse Sneaky Underspin swimbait and the Juvy Craw were both absolute killers for smallmouth this week, especially in clear water. Tubes and soft plastics, fished slow and near bottom, have also been landing some slabs. Largemouth bass have started to show up too, especially on the warmer flats, with jerkbaits and spinnerbaits drawing strikes.

While high winds earlier in May muddied up sections of Anchor Bay, things have cleared out and catch rates are way up again. The biggest smallmouth this week topped 5 pounds, with plenty of solid fish in the 2–4 pound class. A handful of walleye have been caught around the channels and rocky points, mostly on jig-and-minnow combos or trolling with crawler harnesses. Perch action is quieter, but a few are still being picked off in deeper weed edges.

For hot spots, you can’t go wrong with:
- Anchor Bay (especially west and mid-bay in 8–12 feet of water)
- The channels at the mouth of the St. Clair River—great for a mixed bag of bass and walleye
- St. Clair Shores and 9 Mile areas, where the smallmouth are schooling up tight

Keep your colors natural in clear water, but go bold with chartreuse or gold flash if you hit any cloudy patches. Early morning and dusk have produced the best topwater strikes, while midday is best for dragging finesse baits along rock and sand transitions.

Thanks for tuning in to Artificial Lure’s Lake St. Clair fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the latest bite window or bait tip. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - DailyBy Quiet. Please