Northeast Lower Peninsula
Rogers City: Limits of lake trout but anglers are having to work for them. Once located they have been doing quite well. The best depths have been anywhere from 65 to 120 feet of water for best results. Anglers are running lines throughout the water column for best results. Run a couple of lines deep for lake trout then scatter the remaining lines higher in the water column. Those higher lines have been taking an occasional coho, chinook and steelhead. Atlantic salmon have been taken running lines in the top 20 feet. Lakers are hitting best on dodgers and spin glos or cowbells with spin glos. Oranges with green or brightly colored spoons have been good for steelhead. The smaller walleye size or reg size spoons have been the best. Other good colors have been greens, blues, blue and silver, green and blue, purple chartreuse and glows early and late. Good places to fish are west towards 40 Mile Point or south towards Swan Bay and Adams Point.
Rockport: Good places to fish have been straight out of the harbor on the back side of Middle Island near the lighthouse and buoys. Anglers are also fishing the Nordameer Wreck. A few anglers are also fishing north towards Stoneport.
Alpena: Angling in the bay has been picking up. Lake trout are still being caught by mostly trolling spoons at slower than normal speeds in 30 to 50 feet of water but has slowed down in comparison to past weeks. Walleye harvest has increased in the bay but still is slow. Common methods used are crawler harness and bottom bouncers.
Thunder Bay River: Bass are still in the river. Common methods used by anglers to catch bass include casting stick baits, body baits and spinners. Anglers are still catching pike, freshwater drum, and the occasional walleye using body baits, jig heads with twister tails and crawler harnesses.
Cheboygan River: Shore anglers have been commonly catching drum and rock bass near the draw bridge on the river. Occasionally, boat and shore anglers have caught walleye and channel cat throughout the river, with the best results while trolling. Shore anglers have been having the best luck catching walleye while casting crawlers and stick bait.
Oscoda: Angling has picked up slightly. Anglers have been catching lake trout, rainbow trout and a few Atlantic salmon as well as walleye while trolling spoons and crawler harnesses between water depths of 80 to 140 feet. Off the pier anglers have been catching mostly bass and sheepshead with the occasional walleye using drop shot rigs.
Au Sable River: The bass are starting to move farther upstream and being caught most commonly by casting stick and body baits. Catfish have been caught with drop shot rigs with cut bait or worms. Anglers have been occasionally catching walleye and drum most commonly by trolling crawler harnesses and bottom bouncers. However, anglers have had some success casting jig heads with twister tails and using drop shot rigs.
Tawas: Boat anglers caught some walleye, lake trout, steelhead and brown trout in 30 to 80 feet off spoons and crawlers. Some boat anglers were catching and releasing good numbers of smallmouth bass in 10 to 20 feet off tubes, swim baits and body baits. Pier anglers caught small perch, rock bass and smallmouth bass off minnows, swim baits and crawlers.
Tawas River: At Gateway Park, some smallmouth bass were caught off swim baits, crawlers and spinners. Some catfish were caught off crawlers.
Au Gres: Boat anglers caught walleye (some limits were taken.) in 30 to 60 feet off crawlers and crank baits anywhere from north of the Charity islands to south into the bay. Pier anglers caught catfish, bull heads and drum off crawlers.
Pine River: Some largemouth bass, pike were caught off body baits, spinners and jigs. Some rock bass and bluegills were caught off waxworms and crawlers. Boat anglers targeting walleye caught some in 15 to 30+ feet off crawlers and crank baits. Bass anglers caught largemouth bass in near the weed beds off spinners, swim baits and body baits.
Spectacle and Reynolds Reef: Lake trout fishing has slowed down a bit forcing boat anglers to go further offshore to locate them. The anglers that have been catching lake trout have had the best results at depths of 30 to 60 feet.
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