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Chicago fishing: Shoreline salmon/trout and a shift toward fall weather

Shoreline salmon and trout and the shift toward fall weather drive this sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report.

Mike Norris, who guides in the Big Green Lake area of Wisconsin, texted his weekly report, which is in the Green Lake report below, and the photo at the top of Mike Johnston with his PB smallmouth bass.

SHORELINE SALMON/TROUT

Ceviche served to the group at 63rd by Herman last week.

Provided by BoRabb Williams

CHICAGO: BoRabb Williams messaged the photo above last week from 63, and indicated fishing was slow (only one caught that morning) he suspected because of the warm water; but a guy named Herman made ceviche, a special treat I wish I had been there before.

Stacey Greene at Park Bait at Montrose Harbor texted:

Hi Dale

Salmon have been pretty constant. Of course there are some days that are slow but overall a good season so far. Hoping with cooler temps and a little rain lake temps will begin to come down and get fish more active.

WAUKEGAN: See Fish of the Week.

NORTHWEST INDIANA: Capt. Rich Sleziak at Slez’s Bait in Lake Station texted:

With the rain we got the salmon in nwi creeks are moving around better. Spinners, skein and spawn saks are baits to use.

SOUTHWEST MICHIGAN: Staff at Tackle Haven in Benton Harbor said it’s slow off the St. Joseph pier and in the St. Joseph River.

SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN: Arden Katz said that it has been slow, probably because of warm water. He has been alternating between boat at Milwaukee and shore at Kenosha and they are only 2-for-6. He lost a big one Sunday night. They’ve been using K.O. Wobblers and Rat-L-Traps.

CHICAGO PASSES

Park Bait and Bridgeport Bait and Tackle are now selling parking passes. Email fishing@chicagoparkdistrict.com with questions. Chicago Park District parking passes ($20 for two months) are for the anglers’ parking lots at DuSable and Burnham harbors.

NAVY PIER ANGLING

North side of Navy Pier is open for anglers. Discounted parking for anglers is $9 daily, beginning at 5 a.m.; must be out by 10 a.m. for the discount. Click here to prepay for the discounted tickets.

LAKEFRONT PARKING

My column from Nov. 30, 2022, on parking the length of the Chicago lakefront is posted at https://chicago.suntimes.com/2022/11/30/23485385/chicago-lakefront-parking-fishing

FROGGING

Illinois: From the Illinois Department of Natural Resources:

“Bullfrogs may be taken only by hook and line, gig, pitchfork, spear, bow and line, or bow and arrow and arrow, hand, or landing net.June 15 through October 15, both dates inclusiveDaily Harvest Limit is 8; possession limit is 16A sport fishing license is required to harvest reptiles and amphibians”

Indiana: From the Indiana DNR:

“Frog hunting season runs from June 15, 2024 – April 30, 2025, and hunters can harvest the American bullfrog and green frog. The bag limit is 25 frogs per day with a possession limit of 50 frogs, and any combination of bullfrogs or green frogs maybe be used to reach these bag and harvest limits.”

PIER PASSES

Pier passes go on sale and become effective Nov. 15. The $10 pier passes, which allow legal access to select piers at Jackson Park, Burnham, DuSable, Diversey, Belmont and Montrose harbors, may be bought at Park Bait at Montrose Harbor (cash only) and Northerly Island Visitor Center (credit-card only), 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday, but call (312) 745-2910 first to make sure someone is there.

AREA LAKES

Dave Kranz of Dave’s Bait, Tackle and Taxidermy in Crystal Lake and with his You-Tube channel, Dave Kranz Living the wild outdoors, texted:

Fall weather is finally here! The hours of daylight diminished everyday. Lake weeds are dying off. One key for me has always been finding the last good green weeds or grass in the lake. There you should find the bait and the fish feeding on them. Chatter Baits, Buzz Baits, Spinner Baits and Top Water Baits all are go to choices for me in the fall. It’s also a great time for panfish! Use wax worms, red worms or a 1 inch Gulp minnow.

Ken “Husker” O’Malley holds a largemouth bass from local waters.

Provided

Ken “Husker” O’Malley of Husker Outdoors emailed the photos above and this:

Hey Dale,

Here’s a recap from this weeks fishing.

Area Lakes-The bite started out slower than it has been the past few days. It may have been the overcast conditions. Once that cleared out the bite started going. The bass were just swiping at the buzzbait. In fact I missed the same fish twice. I threw back a senko and missed it again! Now you have my attention. Bass seemed tighter to cover so a jerk shad rigged on a Vector Hooks 4/0 EWG with FINS Braids spin 5 braid got the call. It was game on. Throwing that bait into weed pockets was the winning presentation. More hot dry days to come. The summer patterns will be back.

. . .

TTYL

Ken “Husker” O’Malley

Husker Outdoors
Waterwerks fishing team

Pete Lamar holds a bluegill from the western suburbs.

Provided

Pete Lamar emailed the photo above and this on Monday:

Hi Dale,

I finally got out to fish still water, yesterday afternoon after most of the rain had fallen. Conditions were much better with all the additional water. Bluegills were very active. Nothing big, but they were numerous and nicely colored. Only a few bass, but one was of respectable size and unfortunately, camera-shy. Water-and air-temps had dropped and there was enough of a breeze to keep the biting insects away. Looking forward to more of this in the coming weeks.

Rob Abouchar finding fall success on Island Lake.

Provided

Rob Abouchar messaged the photo above and this:

Hi Dale

. . .

On island lake I fished largemouth around the slowly dying algae and got a few to hit my standby wacky rigged senko. Lake management crews are trying to harvest and remove the pesky stuff. I still think it doesn’t hurt the fish and only mildly irritates anglers.

I’m needing to get back up to Merrill Wisconsin for the fall blitz.

On the music front a gig is set for November 30th in Wauconda at main street outfitters. Gozortenplat is set for 2 shows in December at Reggies in Chicago and Shank hall in Milwaukee. This time with zappa band member Ray White originally from Illinois…yes he’s the one singing Illinois enema bandit.

Tight lines and good health!!

Rob

BRAIDWOOD LAKE

Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset.

Final day of fishing is Oct. 15.

CHAIN O’LAKES AREA

Art Frisell at Triangle Sports and Marine in Antioch said for walleye are best on Fox Lake (some white bass, too, in 8 feet there); catfish are fair, crawlers, roaches, stink bait; bluegill are fair, try in 8 feet firth with ice jigs and waxies; crappie are fair in main lake areas.

NOTE: Check updates on water conditions at foxwaterway.com or (847) 587-8540.

NOTE 2: Stratton Lock and Dam is open 8 a.m. to midnight through Sept. 30

CHICAGO RIVER

Vince Oppedisano holds a smallmouth bass from the Chicago River.

Provided

Vince Oppedisano emailed the photo above:

Hey Dale,

. . .

Regarding the Chicago River, I fished the riverwalk almost every day last week. I found a few more crappie and a school of good sized rock bass. Also caught a handful of nice sized smallmouth, mostly in the evening hours just before dark. A few fish have hit artificial lures after sunset. The key for me has been to keep moving and never stay in one spot too long. Better exercise that way too…

COOLING LAKES

Braidwood, Heidecke and LaSalle are open daily 6 a.m.-sunset.

Final day of fishing at Heidecke is Oct. 8; at Braidwood and LaSalle, Oct. 15.

DELAVAN LAKE, WISCONSIN

Capt. Dave Duwe emailed:

Delavan Lake Fishing Report 9/23/24 through 9/30/24

Fall has officially arrived on both the calendar and the temps. After about 10 days of high temps and high pressure, we’ve seen a significant drop and for the past few days high temps have struggled to get into the lower 70’s.

Largemouth bass are biting again with the weather change. The fish are on the inside turns off the main lake points. They can be caught on lindy rigged nightcrawlers or drop shotting 4 inch finesse worms or white chatter baits. As the water continues to cool, the bait will switch from nightcrawlers to shiners and fat head minnows. Look for the fish by Assembly Park Point, Willow Point and by the gray condos.

The walleye pike fishing is also continuing to improve. The fish I’ve been seeing are coming out of the 22-24 ft depth range. They can be caught on jigging Rapalas in chrome and blue or pearl color. I prefer the size 7. The best bite has been in the pre-dawn or dusk period of the day. The best location has been by the concrete point or by Browns Channel.

Bluegill fishing has been spotty. Most of the action has been with suspended fish in the main lake basin, about 10-15 ft down in 40 ft of water. The best presentation has been ice jigs with wax worms or leaf worms fished on a split shot rig.

Northern pike action remains consistent in the medium weeds in 13-15 ft of water. Use spinner baits or chatter baits for the best success. The best location has been by Lake Lawn Lodge or the bay by Browns Channel.

Good luck and I hope to see you on the water, for guide parties, please call Dave Duwe at 262-728-8063

DOWNSTATE

HENNEPIN-HOPPER: Closed.

POWERTON: Both bank and boat fishing are open. Hours are 6 a.m.-8 p.m. through Sept. 30. Boating ends Oct. 20; Bank fishing ends Oct. 25. Dec. 23 lake reopens for bank fishing.

EMIQUON PRESERVE: Open daily, sunrise to sunset. Access permits and liability waivers are available Tuesday to Saturday at Dickson Mounts Museum, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Details at https://www.nature.org/content/dam/tnc/nature/en/documents/2024EmiquonLakeAccessRules.pdf.

SPRING LAKE: Open. Boating ends Oct. 18. Bank fishing allowed after 1 p.m., Oct. 26-Dec. 24.

FOX RIVER

Len Cajic holds a smallmouth bass from the Fox River.

Provided

Vince Oppedisano emailed the photo above and this report from Len Cajic:

Hey Dale,

Here’s a Fox River report from Len Cajic:

“The Fox River the last week has been the lowest it’s ever been this year. The water level came up a little with the recent rain on Sunday. The water clarity is stained / dirty. Fishing from shore continues to be tough along with on the weekends from a lot of fishing pressure from anglers. The smallmouth are active and feeding for fall. Now is the time to catch a personal best. The bigger smallmouth can be caught near structure, slack water, anywhere there is oxygenated water, and the deeper holes. Small & shallow running crankbaits, subsurface lures, along with finesse baits in bright colors and craw patterns work best.”

Pete Lamar holds a gar from the Fox River.

Provided

Pete Lamar emailed on the photo above and this on Monday:

Hi Dale,

. . .

This Fox report is already obsolete: I fished late last week and it was much more Summer-like and water levels were low. It was a study in contrasts: water temps had dropped, but only a little, so wading was comfortable; trees were changing colors, but air temp was 90 when I started. It was a chance to fish some new water since wading was so easy. I was able to get all the way across to an area that is inaccessible from its near bank. It looked prime, but I didn’t do much, other than see a lot of carp in the slack water and suckers in the faster flows. On the way out, after sunset, I did land the gar in the attached image. I think it’s a long-nosed gar, based on comparison with a photo in an atlas. 36 hours later, somewhere between three quarters of an inch and an inch+ of rain fell along much of the Fox watershed. Levels have likely come up and that’s no bad thing, not after the past few weeks.

GENEVA LAKE, WISCONSIN

Capt. Dave Duwe emailed:

Lake Geneva Report 9/23/24 – 9/30/24

Largemouth bass fishing has been improving. The fish are off the weed lines in the deep water approximately 23-25 ft of water. The fish can be caught on lindy rigged nightcrawlers or drop shotting 4 inch finesse worms. Green Pumpkin and watermelon seed have been the best colors. Look for the fish by Covenant Harbor, Maytag Point and the weed line by Gage Marine.

Bluegill fishing remains excellent in the 18-20 ft depth range. The best location has been by Elgin Club or the Lake Geneva Yacht Club. You want to fish leaf worms, 6 inches to 1 foot off bottom. The schools are very large and are visible on your graphs and fish finders. I like to use a vertical presentation using my Minn Kota trolling motor to keep me directly over the schools of active fish.

Rock bass fishing has been a little slow. I’m catching a few here and there but without any great numbers. I haven’t isolated the reason yet other than to say I haven’t been specifically looking for them either. The few I have caught have come off of nightcrawlers fished right off bottom.

Walleye fishing remains excellent at night. The fish remain in their same general areas by Trinkes Bay, Williams Bay and Abbey Springs. Trolling remains the best presentation. Medium diving stick baits in chrome/blue or chrome/black are the best choices.

Smallmouth bass fishing is starting to improve with the cooler water temps. They are just off the main lake points in 20-25 ft of water. Look for the fish by Conference Point, South Shore Club or Black Point. I’ve been using lindy rigged nightcrawlers or fat head minnows.

Good luck and I hope to see you on the water. For guide parties, please call Dave Duwe at 262-728-8063

GREEN LAKE AREA, WISCONSIN

Guide Mike Norris texted at the very top and emailed this:

Fishing Report – 9/23/2024

By Mike Norris

Big Green Lake: I’m catching large and smallmouth bass up to 4 lbs. along drop-offs adjacent to sand flats using a drop shot rig in 14 – 20 feet of water. The bass bite was steady all week. Bluegill fishing slowed down much of last week, but as a cold front approached last Saturday, the bluegill fishing fired up big time and my clients and I caught gills up to ten and a half inches. Last Friday, Major League Fishing held its General Tires Team Series Heritage Cup Championship on Big Green. Team Redcon1, consisting of Ott DeFoe and Andy Montgomery, caught 29 basses weighing 55 lbs 8 ozs to win the Heritage Cup Championship. Under a bright sunny sky, the duo flipped jigs and Senkos under piers to win the $40,000 first-place prize. This will be the last whole week of fishing for lake trout. The season for trout closes at the end of September 30th and doesn’t reopen until January.

Fox Lake: Fishing for bluegills and crappie was excellent last week. A redworm on a 1/16th oz. jig suspended beneath a float worked well. Try along the north side of Chief Kuno Island. Bass fishing along the cane edge in the Government Marsh area was also good. Chatterbaits accounted for most of the bites.

Little Green Lake: Muskie’s and northern pike fishing is steady. Try speed trolling with oversized crankbaits outside the weed edge where perch and bluegill are present.

GREEN/STURGEON BAYS, WISCONSIN

Click here for the Wisconsin DNR weekly report.

HEIDECKE LAKE

The Leyden bass fishing club enjoying a day on Heidecke Lake.

Provided by Rob Abouchar

Rob Abouchar messaged the photo above and this:

Hi Dale

On Saturday we had the Leyden fishing team out on Heidecke lake. The continued hot weather had the water at 73 degrees. Smallmouth bass were hitting but tough to catch. Anglers had hits on plastic worms tossed shallow around rocks but the woms were getting bit in half. I hooked into a couple nice smallmouth and landed one on a Rapala og Rocco crankbait in black and silver. Bass were jumping around the boat and banging into the sides of the boat. This I had never seen before. One bass literally was on the gunnel and slipped back into the lake. This was occurring on the west side of the center like between marker 20 and 17.

. . .

Tight lines and good health!!

Rob

Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset.

Final day of fishing is Oct. 8.

KANKAKEE RIVER

Bob Johnson with a smallmouth bass from the Kankakee River.

Provided

Bob Johnson emailed the photo above and this:

Hi Dale – River temp at 70 this day most likely a few degrees less by this weekend with 70 air temps. River is low but smallmouth are beginning that fall feed. A few smaller sized bass on Ned rigs with fat bellies along with this 17” chunk also taking a Ned rig. Was able to get 1 Walleye on a swimbait 16” catch and release. Weather is getting right for fall frenzy coming soon

LAKE ERIE

Click here for the Ohio DNR Report.

LAKEFRONT

Andy Hansen holds a smallmouth bass, caught on the lakefront, with a chunk taken out of it.

Provided

Andy Hansen messaged the photo above and this:

Decent smallie in the harbor the other day. I think It had more fight than the team that plays in the building seen in the background! Also, what do you think the chunk in its side was from? Pike attack? Lamprey?

Hope all is well.

Andy

I lean toward northern pike. I also enjoyed the gratuitous shot at a certain football team.

Stacey Greene at Park Bait at Montrose Harbor texted:

Hi Dale

Salmon have been pretty constant. Of course there are some days that are slow but overall a good season so far. Hoping with cooler temps and a little rain lake temps will begin to come down and get fish more active.

North /East winds will have Sheephead active. They are hitting live crayfish which we still have in stock. There has also been some huge ones caught by guys casting spoons for kings. A few Smallmouth caught here and there. No other species to report this week.

Have a good one!

Capt. Bob Poteshman of Confusion Charters said out of Chicago, lake trout are very good, seem to be moving more toward the north (probably toward the reefs), best in 130-150; a few salmon. Out of North Point, good lakers in 180-200 and around the reefs; a few salmon, primarily before early light. Bite is on the bottom.

LaSALLE LAKE

Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset. As a perched lake, boating is closed when winds top or will top 14 mph. Check daily updates on boating at (815) 640-8099.

Final day of fishing is Oct. 15.

MADISON LAKES, WISCONSIN

Click here for the update from D&S Bait, Tackle & Fly Shop.

MAZONIA

Hours are 6 a.m. to sunset.

Final day of fishing (Monster remains open all year) is Oct. 15.

NOTE: Area around Eagle and Ponderosa lakes at Mazonia South is closed for construction and probably will be into winter.

NORTHERN WISCONSIN

Kurt Justice at Kurt’s Island Sport Shop in Minocqua emailed:

Looks as if fall is finally on its way. Following nearly two weeks of high temps in the 80’s, things look to cool off a bit, hopefully bringing some consistent fall patterns back in order.

Bluegill: Very Good – One nice consistent, despite full moon, high temps and not usually on the radar. Very nice above average (8 ½”-10 ½”) Gills still being found outside coontail edges of 14-18’ and in drowned wood of 10-14’. Beavertails (small crawlers) and worms suspended under floats, as well as, small plastic grubs working best.

Northern Pike: Good-Very Good – Despite looking not so good last week, Pike shot up the charts with some nice reports of anglers catching Pike of 24-31” working chubs in deeper, cooler slots on jigs with wire leaders. But the best report was of a large 41” Pike caught on a #5 Mepps.

Yellow Perch: Good-Fair – Medium fats and beavertails on 1/16-1/8 oz jigs or under slip-floats along 8-12’ cabbage beds and flooded timber. Nice Perch of 9-12”+.

Musky: Fair – Early and late, due to high skies. Top-water and bucktails over weed flats. Water temps in upper 60’s to low 70’s as of 9/21, same pattern should hold, even get better as water cools.

Crappies: Fair – Suspended fish on medium fatheads and swimming plastics. Coming weeks, as waters cool, should pick up bite and concentrate fish.

Largemouth Bass: Fair – Still some top-water reports, but bites tougher to come by. Wacky Worming, looking for slow bites best.

Smallmouth Bass: Fair-Good – Rock/Gravel off shore humps/bars. Drop-shotting and football jigs or tubes best. Anglers working jigs on Lindy rigs for Walleye reporting some Smallie play as well.

Walleye: Fair-Poor – Spotty reports. Getting some catches using black chubs and redtails. These fish seem to be most affected by unseasonably warm temps, full moon and sunny skies. Like Crappie and Musky, best is yet to come.

Looking forward to seeing surface temps drop, that will get fish in the mood and snapping! Most lakes very quiet, lots of room for anglers.

Kurt Justice

Kurt’s Island Sports Shop
– Like us on FaceBook

NORTHWEST INDIANA

Capt. Rich Sleziak at Slez’s Bait in Lake Station texted:

With the rain we got the salmon in nwi creeks are moving around better. Spinners, skein and spawn saks are baits to use.

Crappie action on lake George in Hobart fishing the bridges and gazebos using minnows.

Pine lake in Laporte giving up crappie at night for boat fisherman using crappie light and minnows in 20 to 24ft of water fishing 10 to 15ft down.

ROOT RIVER, WISCONSIN

Click here for the Wisconsin DNR’s report, usually on Tuesday or Wednesday.

SHABBONA LAKE

Staff at Boondocks reported catfish good on chicken liver or shrimp on the bottom; walleye on leeches in the stumps, hybrid stripers on chicken liver by the dam; largemouth and smallmouth bass by the campground near the no-motor zone; lots of bluegill off the points; water was 73 degrees Tuesday morning.

Site hours are 6 a.m.-10 p.m. through Oct. 31.

New restaurant hours: Monday-Thursday 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m, Friday and Saturday 11 a.m.-8 p.m. and Sunday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Boondocks bait shop remains 6 a.m.- 7 p.m.

SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN LAKEFRONT

Click here for the southern Lake Michigan reports from the Wisconsin DNR.

SOUTHWEST MICHIGAN

Staff at Tackle Haven in Benton Harbor said silver fish are in 170-180; not much off the St. Joseph pier; one report of perch off The Chalets south of St. Joseph.

WISCONSIN DELLS

Staff at River’s Edge (https://www.riversedgeresort.com/) had no legals registered through Tuesday morning, though one was caught and released last week, plenty of smaller ones being caught.

Season ends Monday, Sept. 30.

The Wisconsin DNR had this info:

MADISON, Wis. – The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) reminds anglers that the 2024 hook and line season for lake sturgeon will take place on certain waters from Sept. 7 through Sept. 30.

All anglers looking to harvest a lake sturgeon must have their general 2024 fishing license and a valid hook and line lake sturgeon tag. Licenses and tags may be purchased online through Go Wild or from one of our license vendors. All license requirements and regulations apply.

Anglers are reminded that only one sturgeon with a minimum length measurement of 60 inches may be harvested during the season. Anglers who have harvested a lake sturgeon must validate their tag immediately upon harvesting and before moving it.

All harvested sturgeon must be registered at a designated registration station. Please note that most registration stations are not open 24/7, so if anglers plan on harvesting a 60-plus inch lake sturgeon outside registration station hours, they must be prepared to keep their fish on ice.

A hook and line sturgeon tag is not required if an angler plans to release the sturgeon they catch in the open season. The DNR urges anglers to practice responsible catch-and-release when releasing any fish they do not wish to keep. Please note that it is illegal to fish by snagging, foul hooking and attempting to hook fish other than in the mouth.

Some sturgeon may have a tag near their dorsal fin with information about the movement and growth of lake sturgeon. If a tagged sturgeon is caught, please submit the following information to the county’s fisheries biologist to help the DNR in future management practices:

Where the fish was caught (county, waterbody and location)The date of the catchTag number, color and material composition of the tag (i.e., metal or plastic)Overall fish length

Please leave the tag attached to the fish if you release it.

WOLF RIVER, WISCONSIN

Guide Bill Stoeger in Fremont texted:

White bass action is still slow, but should improve by the weekend with nights in the 40’s. Crappie and bluegill remain strong.

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