Northeast Lower Peninsula
Alpena: Some anglers were seeing success with mixed bags of walleye, lake trout and a few salmon. Trolling spoons and spin-and-glows in various depths was popular with anglers when targeting salmon and trout. While trolling body baits was the popular method for targeting walleye in the bay.
Cheboygan: Chinook salmon were present below the dam. Green crank baits or spawn sacs were providing anglers the best results when fishing for salmon at the Cheboygan Dam. The average size salmon caught was between 25 to 35 inches and between 15 to 20 pounds.
Ocqueoc River: Fishing along the Ocqueoc River and near the river mouth was slow. Anglers caught a few smallmouth bass and pike during the evening hours while using natural bait near the river mouth.
Thunder Bay River: Angling has dramatically picked up as Chinook salmon moved into the river. Anglers were also catching panfish, bass, pike, catfish and the very occasional walleye. Common methods used by anglers included casting stick baits, body baits, and spinners or drifting leeches and night crawlers. While targeting catfish, drop shot rigs were the most common method. While targeting salmon, anglers were casting body baits and spoons as well as floating eggs.
Oscoda: Anglers were catching lake trout, steelhead and walleye. Pier anglers were catching mostly bass and some Chinook salmon. Trolling spoons of various colors around 80 to 100 feet of water was the popular method when targeting salmon and trout. Common methods for pier anglers who were targeting bass, walleye, and catfish were floating leeches and nightcrawlers, casting stick or body baits, and using drop shot rigs for catfish. Pier anglers targeting salmon were casting spoons and body baits.
Au Sable River: Anglers were seeing success with bass, pike, panfish and a few catfish and salmon. Various methods were seeing success, but most commonly was the use of casting or trolling body baits and spoons. Catfish and panfish were caught with the use of drop shot rigs with night crawlers around dusk.
Rogers City: Anglers were having success with fishing for Chinook salmon. The best depths were in 50 to 90 feet of water. The salmon have been in deeper water so far this season. Anglers were fishing near the bottom with spoons, attractors with flies, squids or cut bait. Anglers should run lures throughout the water column for best results. The adult salmon were turning dark. As the water cools this should improve the mixed bag fishery where anglers can catch steelhead, coho, lake trout, Atlantic salmon and young Chinook. Good colors have been greens, blues, black and white oranges, and glow stuff early and late. Lake trout have been near the bottom when the water was warm but as the water cools, they will also be suspended.
Houghton Lake: Bluegill and crappie were caught in the weed beds. Leeches, wax worms and minnows performed best.
Tawas: Boat anglers were catching a few smallmouth bass inside the bay near shore as well as out near the point while casting spinners, body baits and jigs. Walleye fishing was slow. Shore and dock anglers were catching a few Chinook salmon in the Tawas River at Gateway Park while casting spoons and body baits. Pier anglers in the harbor were catching a few small perch with minnows.
Au Gres: There were some nice catches of perch out in the shipping channel in 40 to 50 feet of water off minnows. Anglers were sorting through lots of smaller ones and fishing for 4 to 6 hours. Dock anglers on the Au Gres River were catching a lot of smaller bluegills and sunfish off worms and a few small perch were also kept off minnows. Perch anglers were having some spotty success out at the weather buoy in 47 feet of water. Anglers were sorting a lot of small perch to keep a few. There were a few boats trolling for walleye out of Au Gres with no success.
Sumac Island: Anglers were catching good numbers of largemouth bass and pike while casting various artificial baits. Best catches were coming from weed beds in about three feet of water.
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