Good morning, anglers—this is Artificial Lure checking in with your November 6th Lake Erie and Cleveland fishing report.
Sunrise hit at 6:56 this morning, with sunset rolling in at 5:13 this evening. Get your casts in during that mid-morning to late afternoon sweet spot, but be aware: we’ve got a stiff breeze on the water today. According to the National Weather Service out of Cleveland, strong west winds of 20 to even 30 mph are expected, with gusts up to 50. There’s a Gale Warning east of Vermilion and Small Craft Advisories elsewhere, so if you’re heading out check your gear and expect big rollers—waves could push from 5 up to 9 feet this afternoon and tonight. Water temps off Cleveland are 57 degrees, turning brisk but still lively enough for late fall action.
Lake Erie doesn’t have a measurable tide, but wind-driven water movement is real today, so look for current breaks, points, and creek mouths as active ambush spots for fish.
Now to the bite: Recent catches in the Cleveland basin have been dominated by **walleye**, **yellow perch**, and late-season runs of **steelhead**, with a handful of **smallmouth bass** still showing up, especially close to rocky structure and deeper breaks. The nearshore and inshore rocks, Cleveland Harbor wall, and up the Cuyahoga River channel have produced solid fish for those brave enough to handle rough water.
For **walleye**, trolling and casting are both effective right now. The top baits remain crankbaits like Bandits and Smithwicks in chrome, purple, and chartreuse; don’t overlook deep-diving stickbaits as those fish push down with the cooling water. Blade baits and jigging spoons are also producing, especially when fish are pinned tight to bottom. Switching to hair jigs tipped with minnows works if fish get fussy.
Perch are stacking in 30-45 feet, especially off E. 72nd Street and the Cleveland Crib. Emerald shiners on crappie rigs or plain drop-shot rigs are the ticket. If you’re not finding a bite within fifteen minutes, don’t be afraid to move—these schools are on the roam.
Steelhead are showing up at river and harbor mouths, like Edgewater Park and the Rocky River. Try Little Cleos, spawn bags under floats, or minnow imitations, especially when the wind pushes warmer surface water and bait into the tributary mouths.
Smallmouth are holding along rocky points and reefs in 15-25 feet. Drop-shot rigs with a Strike King Dream Shot, Gulp Minnows, or tubes in goby colors have been the go-to. Calm, sunny days help smallies bite, but if the waves calm just a touch and the sun peeks out, it can turn on quick.
Two hot spots worth your time today:
- **Cleveland Harbor Wall and E. 72nd Street Access**: Protected from some wind, with structure for late-season walleye, perch, and steelhead.
- **Lorain Breakwall and Black River Mouth**: Good for mixed bag action and offers some lee if the wind’s howling.
With falling barometer and heavy winds, fish are active but hugging cover—precision and patience are key. Safety first: check the conditions before you launch and always wear your PFD.
Big thanks for tuning in to your local Lake Erie fishing report from Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next bite—this has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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