This is Artificial Lure with your September 3rd fishing report, coming to you live from the shores of Lake Erie, right here in Cleveland. The lake’s giving up classic late-summer conditions today: water temps are steady around 72 degrees off downtown Cleveland, according to the NOAA buoys. Winds have been out of the south and southwest, starting light but picking up through the afternoon—expect them steady at 5 to 15 knots, which’ll push up a light chop but keep it fishable for most small craft. Waves are running at 2 feet or less today, but make sure to check conditions tonight—Southwest winds will be ramping up as we get into the evening with waves building to as much as 3 to 5 feet, so watch for a bumpy ride if you’re staying out late.
As for the skies, it’s been nothing but sun through mid-day but clouds have been building to the west—National Weather Service Cleveland says there’s a chance of showers and even a rumble of thunder tonight and into Thursday morning. Highs touched the low 80s in the city this afternoon but we’ll be down into the upper 60s by sunrise tomorrow. Plan accordingly. Speaking of which, sunrise was right at 6:54 AM this morning, and sunset’s coming up at 7:55 PM, so you’ve still got some solid prime-time evening fishing ahead.
The fishing’s been consistent with this weather trend—walleye are the main headliner on the nearshore reefs off Cleveland, out by the Bratenahl and Euclid piers, and especially in that 32-38 foot depth range. Several charter crews reported scoring limits by mid-morning—best numbers on crawler harnesses in chartreuse and purple, but folks running deep-diving crankbaits off planer boards have also been filling coolers. Silver and blue Flicker Minnows and Bandits were hot, especially trolled 40-60 feet back in the top 15 feet of the water column.
Yellow perch have been a bit spotty but improving. Most action’s out of East 72nd, heading east between the Cleveland water intake crib and the mouth of the Chagrin River. Perch are holding close to the bottom, 33-42 FOW, and really keying on emerald shiners—if you can get ‘em live, that’s the ticket. Otherwise, salted shiners on tandem rigs or drop-shot setups will do the trick, tipped with a sliver of worm. Catches have been mixed but plenty of buckets had a dozen or more jumbos by noon.
Smallmouth bass are in transition with the start of September—local YouTubers and guides are finding them stacked on rock piles and breakwalls. Target 10-15 feet of water with tube jigs in green pumpkin or goby patterns, or try Ned rigs when the bite gets tough. Some good bronze were tagged at the rocky shoreline just west of Edgewater Park and off the Mentor lagoons.
Quick rundown on best baits for Lake Erie right now: for walleye, bring worm harnesses in purple/chartreuse, Bandits and Flicker Minnows in silver, blue, and clown patterns. For perch, emerald shiners (live or salted) remain unbeatable. Bass anglers—bring tube baits, Ned rigs, and a couple topwaters for low-light periods.
For hotspots close to Cleveland:
- East 72nd Street Harbor for perch and walleyes.
- Bratenahl reef edges, especially for big evening eyes.
- Rocky shoreline west of Edgewater for bronzebacks.
Remember, a blow is coming through tonight—double-check your weather windows, and always watch the marine forecast if you’re planning a late trip or heading offshore.
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