The Great Lakes are into one of their best stretches of the year. Lake Erie’s walleye fishing is peaking in the western basin, the Lake Michigan salmon program is producing, the smallmouth are on the spawn, and the perch are schooling. Late May offers something for every Great Lakes angler willing to watch the weather.
Lake Erie walleye peak
The western basin walleye bite is at its peak. Post-spawn fish are spread across the reef complex and the open-water schools, and trolling is the most efficient way to find and catch them. Pull worm harnesses (crawler harnesses) and crankbaits behind planer boards, varying your depth and speed until you connect, then duplicate what worked across the spread. The fish suspend and roam this time of year, so covering water and dialing in the program is the key. Once you are on a school, the action can be fast and the limits come quickly. Casting weight-forward spinners over the reefs is a fun alternative when the fish are shallow.
Salmon and smallmouth
On Lake Michigan, the chinook and coho salmon bite is on for the boats trolling spoons and flashers behind downriggers and dipsy divers in the cooler water near shore early in the season. Smallmouth bass are on the spawn around the rocky structure, points, and reefs across the lakes — they will crush tubes, jerkbaits, and dropshots, but be mindful of bedding fish and handle them carefully, and know the regulations, as some areas have spawning-season rules.
Perch and the bottom
Yellow perch are schooling on the bottom and provide steady action and great eating — a perch rig with minnows or worms over the right structure fills a cooler. The perch bite is a reliable fallback when the wind keeps you off the bigger water.
- Walleye: western-basin trolling, harnesses and cranks on boards
- Salmon: Lake Michigan troll, spoons and flashers near shore
- Smallmouth: spawning rocks and points (handle with care)
- Yellow perch: bottom schools on minnow rigs
Where to focus this week
The western basin reef complex — the Bass Islands and the reefs out toward Camp Perry and Niagara — is the walleye focus, with both the reefs and the open-water schools holding fish. The Lake Michigan ports are producing salmon on the early near-shore troll, and the rocky points and reefs across the lakes hold the spawning smallmouth.
A crawler harness behind a 1- to 2-ounce inline weight or a bottom bouncer, trolled on planer boards, is the western-basin walleye standard — stagger your depths until you connect. For smallmouth, a tube or a dropshot worked on the rocky structure is hard to beat, but handle bedding fish carefully and release them quickly.
Conditions
The big lakes can turn rough in a hurry, so watch the marine forecast closely and pick your days — safety comes first out there. The walleye trolling rewards covering water and dialing in depth and speed, and the smallmouth and perch bites are best in the cooler hours. Know the current regulations for the specific lake and state you are fishing.
Looking ahead to June
The western-basin walleye fishing stays excellent into June as the fish settle into their summer patterns, and the Lake Michigan salmon push offshore as the near-shore water warms. The smallmouth move off the beds and onto their summer structure. As always on the big lakes, the weather window dictates the day, so plan accordingly.
Regulations reminder: seasons and slot limits change through the year. Confirm the current rules with your state agency before you keep a fish.
On the water this week? Send your photos and details through our reader report form — the best submissions run in next week’s report.
