Artificial Lure here with your Lake Champlain fishing report.
We’ve slid into full early‑winter mode on the big lake. According to the National Weather Service out of Burlington, we’re sitting in the mid‑20s to low 30s this morning with a light northwest breeze, only a slight warmup this afternoon, and wind staying manageable but cutting on open water. Skies are mostly cloudy with a few passing flurries, classic Champlain December. Local almanac numbers put sunrise right around 7:10 a.m. and sunset near 4:14 p.m., so your prime light windows are short and sweet.
No true tides here on Champlain, but water levels are on the low winter drawdown; the USGS gauge at Burlington has the lake slowly slipping day by day, which helps push fish to the deeper edges of main structure.
According to recent guide chatter and the latest Lake Champlain fishing podcasts on Apple Podcasts and Spreaker, the pattern hasn’t changed much the past couple days:
- **Smallmouth** are bunched up on deep rock and remaining bait, 25–45 feet, with some pods a bit shallower on sun‑soaked humps. Folks out of Burlington, Converse Bay, and Malletts Bay have been reporting a dozen to a couple dozen smallmouth per trip when they stay on a school, mostly 2–3 pounds with a few 4‑pound class fish mixed in.
- **Lake trout** are sliding a touch shallower, roaming 40–70 feet over basins off Thompson’s Point, Split Rock, and out toward Valcour. Numbers are fair, not fire‑hot, but steady for folks grinding with electronics.
- **Panfish and perch** are stacking in winter basins in the Inland Sea and Missisquoi, with buckets of 8–10 inch perch coming on small tungsten jigs tipped with plastics or spikes.
Best producers right now are all about slow, subtle, minnowy:
- For smallmouth, think finesse:
- Drop‑shot with 3–4 inch shad‑style baits or slim minnow worms in natural colors.
- 1/4 to 3/8‑ounce football jigs with small craw or goby trailers, craw or green pumpkin.
- On calmer days, a small hair jig or blade bait yo‑yo’d off the bottom can be deadly.
- For lake trout, vertical jigging heavy spoons and white tube jigs over marks is still the deal. Add a bit of cut bait or smelt where it’s legal for extra scent.
- If you’re after perch and crappie, tiny tungsten jigs and spoons dressed with maggots or a sliver of nightcrawler are putting fish in the bucket.
Natural baitwise, local shops around Burlington are saying live shiners and small smelt are moving fastest. A medium shiner on a simple split‑shot rig or slip float around steep breaks will still fool both smallmouth and the odd bonus pike.
A couple hot spots to circle:
- **Champlain Bridge / Crown Point narrows**: That squeeze of current is stacking bait and smallmouth on the rock and rubble, with bonus crappie and perch around the bridge pilings. Work the 20–40 foot band with drops and jigs, and don’t leave fish to find fish if you get a couple quick bites.
- **Inland Sea / North Hero–South Hero passes**: Deep rock and the last of the weeds near the openings are holding mixed bags—wintering smallmouth, a few northern pike, and scattered lakers. Slow roll a swimbait or drag a football jig along the edges, then slide a little deeper and vertical jig once you mark a school.
Overall activity is classic early winter: fewer bites than fall, but better quality. If you move slow, stay vertical, and trust your electronics, Champlain is still very much open for business.
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