It’s Artificial Lure reporting for the North Carolina Atlantic coast on this Wednesday, August 27, 2025. Sunrise hit at 6:39 AM, with sunset coming up at 7:34 PM—giving us a full, long day with mild early morning temps and a steady, classic late-summer heat coming up by noon. Winds are running light and variable, mostly between 5 and 10 knots from the north, and seas are sitting down around 2 to 3 feet, making conditions prime for both offshore and inshore efforts. According to the National Weather Service Wilmington marine forecast, we’re expecting benign weather to hold for a few days; just watch for a little unsettled weather creeping in Thursday into Friday, as a low passes to the south.
Tides at Atlantic Beach today are mellow but moving: look for a low at 7:08 AM, high around 1:59 PM, and another low after sunset at 8:43 PM. With the tide coefficients still running high for August—nudging 90 and up—expect plenty of current, especially around the inlets and major structure. That’ll move bait and fish into feeding lanes; plan to fish an hour or two on either side of high water for your best action.
On the bite: it’s been a strong mixed bag across the region. Reports from Carolina Sportsman and local catches around Oak Island and Surf City say surf casters and pier anglers are seeing good numbers of Spanish mackerel, bluefish, and a surprising push of big red drum prowling the sloughs on rising water. Flounder have been steady around jetties, with keeper-sized fish showing on both live finger mullet and Gulp! soft plastics. Spotted seatrout (specks) are still holding deep holes during the day but sliding onto grass flats and creek mouths at first light.
Offshore, boats running out from Hatteras and Morehead City are reporting scattered but quality mahi-mahi on weed lines about 10 to 20 miles out, and some solid king mackerel action in the 5-to-10-mile zone trolling dead cigar minnows or slow-trolling live menhaden. Occasional blackfin tuna have shown for the deep runners.
The hottest artificial action lately has come from soft plastics on jigheads, carolina-rigged flukes, and spoon lures. For pier and surf, a 2-ounce Hopkins or Kastmaster has been deadly on Spanish and blues when they're busting on the surface. Early risers drifting live mullet or mud minnows are getting serious thumps from flounder and slot drum. Night anglers—don’t discount specks: MirrOlure 52MRs in chartreuse or electric chicken colors are a go-to.
Live baits—finger mullet, menhaden, and shrimp—remain unbeatable for pretty much everything that swims these waters, especially if you’re targeting reds or flounder near structure. Cut mullet on fishfinder rigs will pick up big drum, especially around dusk.
For hot spots today, try:
- Oceanana Pier and adjacent surf zones at Atlantic Beach for Spanish mackerel and blues at the morning high.
- The rocks at Fort Macon or Bogue Inlet’s west jetty for flounder and drum on the falling evening tide.
- Cape Lookout’s shoals and channel edges for boats chasing drum and tarpon when the current’s rolling.
Word from Instagram anglers as of yesterday afternoon is that the red drum bite is steady and the slot trout are plentiful, so be ready to report your catch starting December—don’t forget.
Thanks for tuning in to the daily report. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss the tide or the bite window. This has been Artificial Lure, your North Carolina coast authority. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 4 days, 15 hours ago
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