Spybaiting for Fall Smallmouth in Northern Michigan: A Traverse City Tactic
As the colors start to turn across the hills of Leelanau and Benzie County, fall fishing in Northern Michigan enters one of its finest windows—especially if you’re targeting smallmouth bass. The Traverse City area is home to some of the clearest, most fertile smallmouth waters in the country, and one technique that shines here in the fall is spybaiting.
Not as flashy as jerkbaits or as aggressive as a swimbait, spybaiting is a finesse method that consistently produces quality smallmouth when the water cools and the fish get finicky. If you fish places like Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Leelanau, Torch Lake, or Crystal Lake, this one’s for you.
What Is Spybaiting, and Why Should You Care?
Spybaiting involves fishing a small, slow-sinking hard bait fitted with tiny front and rear props. The most popular version is the Duo Realis Spinbait 80 or 90, but there are others on the market now.
These baits don’t thump, rattle, or dart—they glide through the water with subtle shimmy and propeller flash, mimicking small, dying baitfish. In the gin-clear lakes of Northern Michigan, where bass can get boat-shy and selective in the fall, this finesse technique can be exactly what you need to trigger bites.
Why Spybaits Work in the Traverse City Area in Fall
Fall in Northern Michigan means dropping water temps, shrinking daylight, and baitfish schools on the move. Smallmouth are feeding hard before winter but often suspend in open water and become more cautious. That’s where the stealth and realism of a spybait become deadly.
Here’s why it’s a perfect fit:
- Ultra-Clear Water Advantage: Grand Traverse Bay, Torch Lake, and Crystal Lake are famously clear—visibility can be 20–30 feet. Spybaits shine where sight-feeding bass live.
- Match the Hatch: Fall baitfish like young perch, smelt, and shiners are small and tight in schools. Spybaits mimic them with near perfection.
- Suspended Bass: Fall smallmouth often hang 10–20 feet down over deeper water—exactly where a spybait can do its work.
- Subtle but Deadly: Loud presentations can actually spook fish in clear water. Spybaits are about finesse, not flash.
Where to Fish Spybaits in the TC Area
Here are some top-tier Northern Michigan fall smallmouth waters where spybaiting works incredibly well:
- East and West Grand Traverse Bay: Look for smallmouth suspending off breaklines near Old Mission or Elk Rapids. 15–35 feet of water is the zone.
- Torch Lake: Known for its ultra-clear depths, Torch is perfect for long casts and deep spybaiting. Target drop-offs near Clam River or the south end flats.
- Lake Leelanau (North and South): Focus on mid-lake humps and points, especially near Narrows and the western shorelines.
- Crystal Lake: Work the deep flats and secondary points—bass will follow baitfish into these areas as temps cool.
Use your electronics to find bait balls and suspending arcs—that’s your sign to start counting down and retrieving.
Gear & Setup for Spybaiting in Northern Michigan
This is a light-line technique, so finesse gear is key:
- Rod: 6’6”–7’ Medium-Light spinning rod with a soft, parabolic tip.
- Reel: 2500–3000 size spinning reel with smooth drag.
- Line: 6 lb fluorocarbon or braid to a 6 lb fluoro leader.
- Lure: Duo Realis Spinbait 80 or 90 in natural colors like Ghost Minnow, Ayu, Smelt, or Perch.
Pro Tip: On sunny days, go translucent. On cloudy days, try a more opaque baitfish pattern.
How to Fish It
Spybaiting is all about patience and consistency.
- Make a long cast – as far as you can.
- Count it down – these baits sink about 1 foot per second. If bass are 15 feet down, count to 15 before starting your retrieve.
- Slow and steady retrieve – do NOT twitch or jerk. Let the subtle wobble and props do the work.
- Stay alert – bites are often just a “tick” or slight pressure. Set the hook with a sweeping motion, not a hard jerk.
When It Shines vs. When to Switch
Best Conditions for Spybaiting:
- Clear water (visibility 8+ feet)
- Water temps 48–60°F
- Post-frontal days or calm, sunny conditions
- When smallmouth are suspended or following bait
When to switch:
- Stained or muddy water: Use a jerkbait or swimbait.
- Shallow, aggressive fish: Try a spinnerbait or crankbait.
- Heavy wind: It may be hard to control the fall rate and line.
Final Word: A Northern Michigan Secret Weapon
Fall smallmouth fishing in the Traverse City area is something special. The water is clear, the fish are fat, and the crowds have mostly gone home. Spybaiting isn’t a flashy technique, but it’s surgically effective—especially in places like Torch Lake or the East Bay where the fish can see everything.
So next time you launch out of Elk Rapids or drop in at the Lake Leelanau Narrows, give the spybait a try. Fish it slow, stay focused, and prepare to be surprised by how well it works.
Because in Northern Michigan, when the leaves fall and the water clears—stealth beats power every time.
Tight lines, and see you on the Bay!