Solunar Calendar · Updated 2026-07-06
Best Fishing Times for St. Louis Bay Lake
14-day solunar fishing calendar for St. Louis Bay Lake, Douglas County, Wisconsin — sun and moon times calculated for lat 46.715, lon -92.181.
St. Louis Bay Lake pulls a D on the LakeGrade rubric — phosphorus loading and limited clarity hold it below the Wisconsin average. The three sub-grades — clarity, phosphorus, and chlorophyll-a — track close together, so no single parameter is dragging the average.
At a TSI of 69, St. Louis Bay Lake reads as eutrophic — nutrient-rich enough that summer algal growth and reduced clarity are expected, not unusual. The lake's maximum depth is not yet documented in state morphometric records — context for its physical structure remains limited. The lake's surface area is not consistently recorded across state datasets — physical context remains partial. St. Louis Bay Lake ranks 34 of 44 in Douglas County — at the lower end of the locally monitored distribution.
Full water-quality breakdown: St. Louis Bay Lake water-quality report.
Today at St. Louis Bay Lake
Sunrise 5:22 AM, sunset 9:04 PM. Moon is Last Quarter (58% illuminated). Day rating: ★★☆☆☆.
Major periods: 4:59 AM – 6:59 AM; 5:21 PM – 7:21 PM
Minor periods: 11:19 PM – 12:19 AM; 11:53 AM – 12:53 PM
14-Day Fishing Calendar
No 3.5+ star solunar days in the next 14 days at St. Louis Bay Lake — consider focusing on dawn and dusk windows.
| Date | Rating | Moon | Sunrise | Sunset | Major Periods | Minor Periods |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mon, Jul 6 | ★★☆☆☆ | Last Quarter 58% lit | 5:22 AM | 9:04 PM | 4:59 AM – 6:59 AM 5:21 PM – 7:21 PM | 11:19 PM – 12:19 AM 11:53 AM – 12:53 PM |
| Tue, Jul 7 | ★☆☆☆☆ | Last Quarter 47% lit | 5:23 AM | 9:04 PM | 5:44 AM – 7:44 AM | 11:35 PM – 12:35 AM 1:07 PM – 2:07 PM |
| Wed, Jul 8 | ☆☆☆☆☆ | Waning Crescent 37% lit | 5:23 AM | 9:03 PM | 6:07 PM – 8:07 PM 6:31 AM – 8:31 AM | 11:54 PM – 12:54 AM 2:25 PM – 3:25 PM |
| Thu, Jul 9 | ☆☆☆☆☆ | Waning Crescent 27% lit | 5:24 AM | 9:03 PM | 6:56 PM – 8:56 PM 7:23 AM – 9:23 AM | 12:16 AM – 1:16 AM 3:47 PM – 4:47 PM |
| Fri, Jul 10 | ☆☆☆☆☆ | Waning Crescent 18% lit | 5:25 AM | 9:02 PM | 7:50 PM – 9:50 PM 8:19 AM – 10:19 AM | 12:45 AM – 1:45 AM 5:09 PM – 6:09 PM |
| Sat, Jul 11 | ½☆☆☆☆ | Waning Crescent 11% lit | 5:26 AM | 9:02 PM | 8:50 PM – 10:50 PM 9:22 AM – 11:22 AM | 1:24 AM – 2:24 AM 6:28 PM – 7:28 PM |
| Sun, Jul 12 | ★☆☆☆☆ | Waning Crescent 5% lit | 5:27 AM | 9:01 PM | 9:54 PM – 11:54 PM 10:27 AM – 12:27 PM | 2:18 AM – 3:18 AM |
| Mon, Jul 13 | ★½☆☆☆ | Waning Crescent 1% lit | 5:28 AM | 9:00 PM | 11:01 PM – 1:01 AM 11:33 AM – 1:33 PM | 7:36 PM – 8:36 PM 3:27 AM – 4:27 AM |
| Tue, Jul 14 | ★★½☆☆ | New Moon 0% lit | 5:29 AM | 9:00 PM | 12:06 AM – 2:06 AM 12:37 PM – 2:37 PM | 8:29 PM – 9:29 PM 4:49 AM – 5:49 AM |
| Wed, Jul 15 | ★★☆☆☆ | New Moon 1% lit | 5:30 AM | 8:59 PM | 1:07 AM – 3:07 AM 1:35 PM – 3:35 PM | 9:08 PM – 10:08 PM 6:16 AM – 7:16 AM |
| Thu, Jul 16 | ★☆☆☆☆ | Waxing Crescent 4% lit | 5:31 AM | 8:58 PM | 2:03 AM – 4:03 AM 2:29 PM – 4:29 PM | 9:37 PM – 10:37 PM 7:40 AM – 8:40 AM |
| Fri, Jul 17 | ½☆☆☆☆ | Waxing Crescent 9% lit | 5:32 AM | 8:57 PM | 2:54 AM – 4:54 AM 3:18 PM – 5:18 PM | 10:00 PM – 11:00 PM 9:01 AM – 10:01 AM |
| Sat, Jul 18 | ★½☆☆☆ | Waxing Crescent 16% lit | 5:33 AM | 8:56 PM | 3:41 AM – 5:41 AM 4:04 PM – 6:04 PM | 10:19 PM – 11:19 PM 10:18 AM – 11:18 AM |
| Sun, Jul 19 | ★★½☆☆ | Waxing Crescent 25% lit | 5:34 AM | 8:55 PM | 4:26 AM – 6:26 AM 4:48 PM – 6:48 PM | 10:36 PM – 11:36 PM 11:31 AM – 12:31 PM |
Server-rendered 14-day calendar starting 2026-07-06. Live in your browser shortly.
How to Read This Calendar
Major periods (≈2 hours) are centered on lunar transit (when the moon is highest in the sky) and lunar opposition (when the moon is directly underfoot). These are typically the strongest feeding windows.
Minor periods (≈1 hour) are centered on moonrise and moonset. They're secondary windows that often produce well — especially when they coincide with sunrise or sunset.
Day rating combines moon phase (peak near new and full moons, when lunar gravity is strongest) with the overlap of major periods and the dawn/dusk twilight. A 4–5 star day stacks all three.
At St. Louis Bay Lake (lat 46.71°N), the longest day of the year is around June 21 with 15h 51m of daylight. The shortest is around December 21 with 8h 33m. Plan summer trips around the early-morning bite (as early as 5:00 AM) and the long evening window before sunset.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best time to fish St. Louis Bay Lake today?
Today's solunar calendar for St. Louis Bay Lake (lat 46.71, lon -92.18) shows sunrise at 5:22 AM and sunset at 9:04 PM. The strongest fishing windows are around major solunar periods at 4:59 AM–6:59 AM and 5:21 PM–7:21 PM, plus the 30-90 minutes around dawn and dusk.
What does the moon phase mean for fishing St. Louis Bay Lake?
Solunar theory holds that fish activity peaks during major periods (when the moon is overhead or directly underfoot) and minor periods (moonrise and moonset). Fish feeding tends to intensify during the days surrounding the new moon and full moon, when lunar gravity is strongest. Today's moon at St. Louis Bay Lake is Last Quarter (58% illuminated).
When are the longest and shortest days at St. Louis Bay Lake?
At St. Louis Bay Lake's latitude (46.71°N), the longest day of the year is around June 21 with about 15h 51m of daylight. The shortest day is around December 21 with about 8h 33m of daylight. Sunrise and sunset shift by roughly 6 hours between solstices.
Are major or minor solunar periods more important?
Major periods (about 2 hours, centered on lunar transit and lunar opposition) are generally considered the strongest feeding windows. Minor periods (about 1 hour, centered on moonrise and moonset) are secondary but still productive — especially when they overlap with sunrise or sunset.
More for St. Louis Bay Lake
Solunar calculations based on lat/lon and Meeus astronomical formulas. Times shown in Central Time. Solunar theory is a heuristic — fish activity also depends on weather, water temperature, barometric pressure, and recent forage conditions. Always check local regulations and conditions before fishing.