Podcast Episode Details

Back to Podcast Episodes
Sunday Surf Scouting: Reds, Trout, and Offshore Action Along the NC Coast

Sunday Surf Scouting: Reds, Trout, and Offshore Action Along the NC Coast



Good morning, anglers—Artificial Lure here with your Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina fishing report for Sunday, August 24th, 2025.

Sunrise hit at 6:34am and we'll have lines in the water until sunset at 7:43pm. Tidal movement is shaping up nicely, with a low tide early at 2:47am, a solid high at 8:44am, then another low at 2:50 this afternoon and a big high again around 9:05pm. This means you’ll want to hit the outgoing and incoming swings, especially early and late when the water’s moving and the fish are biting hardest—classic Carolina rhythm, right out of Atlantic Beach and the Bogue Banks. That’s according to today’s forecast from tide-forecast.com.

Weather-wise, expect mild winds, mostly from the north early on shifting northwest by afternoon, staying in that 5 to 10 knot range. Seas are easy at 2 to 3 feet, but keep your eye out: a few afternoon showers or pop-up storms could roll off the coast, especially as the heat builds with that late August sun. Take it from the National Weather Service: cover up, hydrate, and have a plan to get off the surf quick if you see thunderheads building.

Now, the moment you’ve been waiting for—what’s biting and where. Inshore, red drum have been schooling up on the flood tides, especially on the shallow flats around Shackleford Banks and up in the estuarine creeks near Emerald Isle. Early risers have been rewarded with hard-fighting reds at first light, with quite a few slot fish reported in the box. Alongside ‘em, the speckled trout have rebounded, with the warm water keeping them in deeper drop-offs and under the docks during the heat of the day. According to Carolina Sportsman, soft plastics and live finger mullet are putting fish on the stringer, especially root beer or new penny Z-Man paddletails, and the classic gold spoon is always a safe bet for redfish. Wilmington NC Fishing Report says don’t forget topwaters at dawn—lots of blowups lately, especially around weed beds and oyster bars.

Flounder are back—some doormat-sized fish pulled out near pilings and rock jetties, best on live mud minnows or white curly-tail grubs bounced on the bottom. If you want numbers, drift the deeper edges or cast into moving current on the outgoing tide.

Offshore action is hot. King mackerel are crushing trolled drone spoons and flashy Clarkspoons in close, especially around bait pods and nearshore structure. Farther out, boats running to the Gulf Stream report good catches of mahi-mahi and wahoo, particularly around weed lines and floating debris. A few sailfish and blackfin tuna have also come in from charters running out of Morehead City and Wrightsville Beach. Bottom fishers are picking up snapper, grouper, and black sea bass over artificial reefs—the best ticket there is squid strips or cut bait on the drop.

A couple of hot spots to circle for today: try the western tip of Shackleford Banks for inshore red drum and speckled trout, or head out to the AR-315 reef—good mixed bag of bottom dwellers and plenty of bait to attract the pelagics. For beach and pier action, don’t skip the Oceanana Pier, which has produced solid catches of Spanish mackerel and flounder recently, particularly around the morning high tide.

In summary: early and late bites will be best, with redfish, trout, and flounder close, kings and dolphin farther. Best bets are soft plastics and live bait inshore; spoons and squid offshore. Watch for showers, stay safe, and check in with your local tackle pros if you want the latest whispers from the docks.

Thanks for tuning in to this local’s fishing report. Remember to subscribe if you want the real story from the Carolina coast. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn


Published on 1 week ago






If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Donate