Lake St. Clair, Michigan Fishing Report - Daily

Smallmouth Bonanza on Lake St. Clair: Anglers Adapt to Fussy Fish in Bassmaster Elite Event


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This is Artificial Lure with your Lake St. Clair fishing report for August 10, 2025.

We’re waking up to calm conditions out here on St. Clair, with morning temps in the high 60s climbing into the mid 70s by midday. Light winds from the southwest—just a gentle 4 to 8 mph this morning—keeping the ride smooth across the lake. Skies are mainly clear, but expect a little haze to linger till noon. Sunrise hit at 6:22 AM, and sunset rolls in at 8:39 tonight, giving us plenty of daylight to stay on the bite all day.

Lake St. Clair is famous for its world-class **smallmouth bass** fishery, and this week’s Yokohama Tire Bassmaster Elite event is proving once again why this lake’s a legend. Illinois pro Trey McKinney is leading the charge with a three-day haul of 72 pounds, 4 ounces, showing that big bags are getting caught even as the fish turn a bit finicky, according to Bassmaster Day 3 reports. Most of the bigger bites have come early, with anglers also picking off a few tanks mid-morning and getting crucial upgrades late in the day.

The smallmouth have been schooling tight in key areas, but the word among the pros is that these fish are getting “educated” fast. The lake’s extra-clear water—visibility running seven to eight feet in spots—means smallies are scrutinizing every presentation. Local anglers and Elite pros both say the fish can see those lures coming a mile away, so stealth and finesse are paying off.

The most consistent baits have been **small swimbaits slow-rolled in shallower water**, Ned rigs, and insect imitations like mayfly patterns. Several anglers are reporting that bug hatches, though fading, are still attracting surface-feeding smallmouth. In these conditions, working a Ned rig or a subtle swimbait on light line can fool those fussy biters. Treble-hooked stickbaits and jerkbaits have also accounted for some key fish, especially when the water’s flat calm.

If you’re looking for action, head to the deeper breaks out off the Mile Roads or up near Anchor Bay—those spots keep putting up numbers, and there’s always a shot at a five-pounder. Anchor Bay in particular continues to fish well, with shallower flats delivering bigger bites for folks willing to slow down and target roaming fish. Another good area is the St. Clair Light, especially around the shipping channel edges, where current pulls plenty of bait and draws in the bruisers.

Other species biting include good numbers of **walleye** on crawler harnesses and blade baits east of the channels, and some **perch** schools showing up near the weedlines along the eastern shore and around Harsens Island.

Live bait is landing fish—nightcrawlers and emerald shiners are reliable—but most of the tournament-grade smallmouth are coming on artificials. Downsizing your baits, using natural colors, and mixing in something that mimics the leftover mayflies or baitfish are the real difference-makers.

No specific tidal swings on St. Clair to report, but look for flurries of activity when the wind bumps up or boat traffic pushes bait around midday.

That’s your snapshot for today. Stay safe out there, mind those afternoon boat wakes, and remember: the next cast could be the big one.

Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe and keep those rods bent. 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