Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily

Midweek Mayhem: Lake St. Clair's Bass Bonanza and More on the Docket


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Artificial Lure here with your boots-on-the-dock report for Lake St. Clair, Michigan, Wednesday, August 13th, 2025.

We’re rolling out on a classic mid-August morning. **Sunrise hit at 6:30 AM, sunset will be at 8:34 PM.** The weather is a Michigan mix: expect temps climbing from the upper 60s toward 80 by afternoon, with light northwest winds about 6 to 12 mph, skies partly cloudy, air thick with summer. No tidal swings to worry about on the Great Lakes, but water levels are riding a touch higher after recent rains, so expect slight stain in shallows and fair clarity mid-lake.

Fish activity is ramping up by dawn, tapering in mid-day heat, then coming alive again after 6 PM. Recent chatter from local guides and the postings from the past week showcase **Lake St. Clair bass fishing at its peak**. Just yesterday, Brock Mosley pulled “a ton of fish” on shad-shaped worms (Yamamoto’s got the hot hand), mostly smallmouth bass averaging 2 to 4 pounds, with a couple bruisers nudging 5-plus near the Mile Roads and off Metro Beach. The Detroit River mouth and Anchor Bay have also kicked up solid numbers, especially around weed lines and scattered rocks.

**Largemouth bass are schooling up in the cattails and boat channels—try shallower water along Grosse Pointe and the canals out of St. Clair Shores.** Blade baits and black/blue jigs flipped tight to cover have been putting fish in the boat. The best biters are coming off isolated structure: sunken tires, old pilings, and riprap points.

Don’t discount **walleye and perch** action—yesterday, a couple boats brought in twelve nice 'eyes working crawler harnesses slow around Strawberry Island. Perch have been spotty but rewarding; the 16-to-20-foot humps off the Clinton River mouth are holding fish on shiners. Reports from Strike King say their new Tumbleweed spinnerbait has triggered bites on overcast mornings; green pumpkin, goby and smoke colors are consistently productive on plastics.

**Top lures right now:**
- Drop shot rigs with shad or goby imitations
- Tube jigs, especially in chartreuse or smoke pepper
- Spinnerbaits (white or chartreuse blades)
- Ned rigs (black, green pumpkin)
- Suspended jerkbaits in metallic baitfish patterns
- Dice baits and finesse worms on light line for pressured areas

Live bait (shiners, crawlers) is drawing bonus bites for perch and walleye, but soft plastics dominate the bass game. With Michigan DNR stocking activity up—nearly 19 million fish so far this year—expect to see healthy numbers of all species.

A couple hotspots to circle on your map:
- **Metro Beach weed beds**—big smallmouth early, largemouth at sunset
- **Mile Roads channel edges**—steady bass and a shot at quality walleye
- **Anchor Bay northwest corner**—perch and panfish stacking up when the wind lays down

For shore anglers, try the pier at Harley Ensign or the boat launch near Selfridge AFB. Both spots have been producing mixed bags on worms and soft plastics, especially from late afternoon into dusk.

The Bassmaster Elite Series stop starts tomorrow, so expect some extra competition and a little added fish pressure. But there’s more than enough water for everyone.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s boots-on-the-dock Lake St. Clair report. Subscribe for all the daily scoop, insider techniques, and local tips you can use right here on your next trip.

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