"Summer Sizzle on Lake St. Clair: Scorching Smallmouth, Perch, and Walleye Bite" Podcast Por  arte de portada

"Summer Sizzle on Lake St. Clair: Scorching Smallmouth, Perch, and Walleye Bite"

"Summer Sizzle on Lake St. Clair: Scorching Smallmouth, Perch, and Walleye Bite"

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Artificial Lure here with your July 7th Lake St. Clair fishing report, coming from the heart of Michigan’s premier multi-species summer waters. It’s been a scorcher the past few days, but the bite is matching the heat—local anglers are calling this the "Summer Sizzle," and for good reason.

Weather’s been classic July: high sun, mid-80s by afternoon, and southwesterly breezes—just enough chop for a good smallmouth bite. Water clarity remains excellent across most of the lake thanks to a stretch of calm nights. Sunrise was at 5:54 AM, with sunset hitting at 9:16 PM, so you have prime early and late light to work those productive transitions. No significant tidal effect for St. Clair, so the wind and weather patterns matter most.

According to the Daily Fishing Report from Spreaker, the bite is “strong and conditions are lining up for a full slate of productive fishing.” That lines up with what I’m seeing on the water—catch rates are up, and the usual dog days slump is nowhere in sight.

Bass are the headline—especially chunky smallmouth. The Major League Fishing Bass Pro Tour just wrapped its St. Clair stop, and every top angler was drop-shotting plastics like the Berkley PowerBait MaxScent Flatnose Minnow in watermelon red magic, the Lil’ General, and the Flat Worm in green pumpkin or goby. Pair those with ¼ to ½-ounce tungsten weights depending on wind, and target cabbage patches in 15-19 feet or perch-rich hard spots for the morning flurries.

Anglers in the Canadian waters—newly open for bass season—are reporting even bigger fish, particularly on bare feeding flats where yellow perch school up. If you can get over there, go early and stake your claim. Otherwise, Michigan waters remain stacked with opportunities.

Walleye and perch are making a strong showing. The perch are starting to group in 10-14 feet on sandy edges with scattered weed patches. A Michigan Sportsman Forum post from July 5th details a solid perch session, with anglers filling buckets using small live emerald shiners and perch rigs tipped with chartreuse or pink beads. Walleye are hanging deeper, but trolling harnesses or drifting crawler harnesses along the shipping channel edges and the mile roads is steadying limits for persistent anglers.

Northern pike have entered summer patterns, and reports from local spoonpluggers say they’re taking flashy spoons ripped over weed tops, especially early and late.

For baits, you can’t go wrong with classic drop-shot rigs or Ned rigs for smallmouth. For perch, live shiners or Gulp! minnows on perch rigs are producing. Walleye anglers: stick with purple or gold blades on crawler harnesses.

A couple of hot spots to circle:
- The mile roads near 9 and 10 Mile, right off St. Clair Shores—big smallies and mixed perch action.
- Anchor Bay’s weed edges for perch and pike.
- The shipping channel edges for walleye, especially as the sun gets higher.

Michigan Outdoors Report points out Paradise Jigs as a top local producer—tie one on if you get the chance.

That’s the word from Lake St. Clair today. Thanks for tuning in—remember to hit subscribe for your daily lake report and never miss a bite window. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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