Early Winter Walleye Bonanza on Lake Erie and the Detroit River
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## Weather and Conditions
We’re sitting in classic early-winter pattern: cold, brisk, and breezy, with air temps hovering near freezing and wind-driven chop out on the main lake. Expect a stiff west to northwest breeze on Erie proper, with smaller craft more comfortable tucking into the Detroit River and nearshore cuts. Skies lean mostly cloudy with scattered snow showers possible, so dress in layers and plan for wet decks and cold hands.
Sunrise comes late and sunset early, giving you a tight mid-day window with the warmest temps and most consistent bite. The low winter sun and stained water in the river keep fish comfortable in shallower zones longer than you’d see in summer.
## Fish Activity and Recent Catches
Walleye remain the main story, with strong numbers sliding through the Detroit River and staging along the Michigan side of western Erie. Anglers vertical-jigging the river report solid limits when they stay on current seams and slow their presentations, with plenty of eaters in the 16–22 inch class and regular shots at bigger fish. Out on the lake, deeper breaks and shipping channels are holding schools that move with the current and wind, so electronics and a willingness to hop spots are key.
Perch action is spottier but still worth a shot when you mark tight clusters close to bottom, especially mid-day when they rise a bit and start feeding. Bonus catches right now include the occasional steelhead roaming near river mouths and plenty of feisty lake-run smallmouth that’ll smack a jig meant for walleye.
## Best Lures, Baits, and Tactics
For walleye in the Detroit River, stick with 1/2–3/4 ounce jigs in chartreuse, fire tiger, and natural baitfish tones, tipped with emerald shiners or soft plastic minnows. Blade baits in gold, silver, and green work well when fish are aggressive; hop them just off bottom with tight lifts and controlled drops. On Erie, deep-diving crankbaits and harnesses run near bottom behind boards still take fish when trolled slow, but many locals are switching to jigging spoons and heavy jigs directly under the boat for better control in the wind.
Perch anglers do best with crappie rigs or simple drop-shot style setups baited with minnows or waxworms, keeping offerings just inches off bottom. Downsizing hooks and leaders helps in the clearer stretches, and a light, steady lift-drop cadence usually outfishes dead-sticking.
## Local Hot Spots
Two areas stand out today:
- Downriver stretch from Belle Isle south toward Grosse Ile, targeting current breaks, channel edges, and inside turns where walleye stack up behind structure. Focus on vertical jigging directly beneath the boat and slide with the current at a controlled drift speed.
- Western Lake Erie near the dumping grounds and main shipping channel edges out of the Michigan side launches, where deeper basins transition to subtle humps and breaks. Use your sonar to stay on bait and hooks tight to bottom and be ready to move a mile or two if marks dry up.
That’s the rundown from the dock. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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