This is Artificial Lure with your on-the-water update for Sunday, September 14, 2025, covering Cleveland and the western Lake Erie basin. Glorious, almost summer-like weather gripped the area today. Skies were wall-to-wall blue from sunrise at 7:04 am to sunset at 7:33 pm, and even with a lake breeze, it was nearly 80 degrees at the shore. Water temps are a fish-friendly 70 off the Cleveland piers, setting up a perfect bite window that stretched through the early morning and then again just before sundown, as these late summer days can get the fish sluggish in the afternoon heat.
Conditions were made for casting: east winds mostly under 10 knots had waves at a manageable foot or less, so everything from kayaks in the harbor to big center consoles out deep could get out safely.
Fish activity has been strong across species, but the big news remains the late summer walleye action. According to recent podcast updates and local chatter, limits of eater-sized eyes are coming in from deeper structure off the Cleveland breakwall and around the West and East Shoals. Trolling stickbaits in 40-50 feet of water, especially Bandits and deep-diving Husky Jerks in firetiger or chrome, have been hot—run them 80 to 100 feet back for best results. At sunrise, a few anglers limited out on casting weight-forward spinners tipped with nightcrawlers off the Rocky River marina—always a top shore spot this time of year.
Smallmouth bass have been active on the main-lake reefs and drop-offs from Edgewater Park east to Euclid. Reports from guides and local regulars highlight success on blade baits and jigging raps worked just off rocky points; natural shad or silver patterns are the ticket. Use a light fluorocarbon leader for stealth. The artificial-only crowd has also found a steady bite drop-shotting goby imitations over gravel bars—a perfect match-the-hatch setup right now.
Yellow perch are making a showing near the Cuyahoga dumping grounds, but it's a pick—prospects are best if you bring emerald shiners and stay mobile to find the schools. The rocky shorelines around East 72nd and Wildwood have coughed up some slab crappies and early steelhead, especially in low light with downsized marabou jigs under a float.
If you want hotspots, here are your top picks today:
- The Cleveland Harbor breakwall: casting for walleye and bonus smallmouth, dawn or dusk.
- Rocky River mouth: active walleye on spinners and plenty of channel cats if you soak a nightcrawler.
- Euclid Creek mouth: smallmouth and the odd early steelhead, especially tight to shore on spinners and live shiners.
No tidal swings to factor in, but as always, pay attention to wind direction and late-day boat traffic which can push bait and fish around.
Best lines are low-visibility fluorocarbon leaders in 6-10 lb for bass and steelhead, and don’t sleep on slick 8-12 lb braid for trolling. Gamma Edge fluorocarbon has been well loved for its abrasion resistance and invisibility, and guides have been pairing it with braid for mixed-bag jigging, especially for quick drops and reduced line fouling—see more on that at Gamma Lines.
In summary—perfect weather, stable water, and hungry fish: September at its best. Get out there early or late, pick your structure spots, and don’t be afraid to switch baits when the bite slows.
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