Artificial Lure here, checking in from Cleveland’s Lake Erie. The sun cracked the horizon at 7:33 this morning, and we’ll get darkness just after 6:39 PM, so your daylight window is tight. Anyone heading out: don’t let the fresh breeze fool you—it’s a wild one. National Weather Service is posting small craft advisories all today. Winds up to 30 knots, gusting to 40, swinging south to northwest by the evening, and waves climbing 5–9 feet with occasional bruisers topping 11. Not a good day for small boats, and even the charters are hugging the shoreline after a cold front slammed through last night. Water temp’s sitting around 66 off the Cleveland crib.
Fish don’t mind the weather, and the fall run’s still firing. Walleye have stayed hot off Cleveland the past week. Most are coming on Bandits and Flicker Minnows trolled slow at 2 to 2.5 mph—best colors, according to angler reports near Edgewater and Gordon Park, are purple, chrome, and fire tiger. Crawler harnesses are pulling limits near the bottom, especially around rocky breaks when the wind lets up. Drifting is touchy, but the bite’s real if you can hold a line between the swells, and good fish—mostly 3 to 5 pounds. Several boats reported double-digit catches yesterday before the wind started hammering them.
Perch are stacking deep, 35 to 40 feet, from Edgewater west to Euclid. Local regulars on the breakwalls are still landing 20–50 perch a trip, rigging double drop-shot setups tipped with emerald shiners right on the bottom. Most are hand-sized, but good pockets have pushed a few “jumbos.” Sit tight and let the tap load up—the bite is best first light before the waves muddle the shoreline.
Steelhead woke up last night after that rain—river mouths like Rocky and Chagrin have seen a real push of chrome. Shore guys in waders are casting ¼-ounce Little Cleos or drifting live shiners under floats along the breakwalls. Several anglers on the Rocky River mouth this morning saw hookups. If you’ve got pink spawn sacs, now’s the time—especially with higher water and that cold front moving in.
Smallmouth continue to stage around the rock piles and reefs off Gordon Park and west harbor structure. Most tournament boats last week pulled football jigs in green pumpkin and tubes off rock-to-weeds transitions, bringing in bass between 2 and 4 pounds. Locals are using Ned rigs in pearl or bluegill pattern, fishing real slow where the current breaks.
A couple current hot spots you should target—if the weather allows:
- Edgewater Park breakwall: Best for perch and steelhead when the lake's rolling.
- Rocky River mouth: Top producer for steelhead as they push into the river after heavy wind and rain.
- Gordon Park reef: Reliable for smallmouth and walleye when bait pins up against the rocks.
For tackle and bait today:
- Walleye: Trolling Bandits, Flicker Minnows, or Erie Dearies in dark or reflective finishes.
- Perch: Live emerald shiners fished on double drop-shot rigs, sitting deep.
- Steelhead: Little Cleo spoons, white hair jigs tipped with maggots, or shiners—spawn sacs for river mouths.
- Smallmouth: Football jigs, green pumpkin tubes, and Ned rigs on hard structure.
Today’s advice: Play it safe—watch the wind, don’t stray far, and get off the lake before the big rollers move in. Dress warm and keep those apps open for sudden weather changes.
That’s your Lake Erie fishing fix from Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in, don’t forget to subscribe for tomorrow’s update and daily reports. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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