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Wilmington, NC Fishing Report: Trout, Flounder, Reds Biting Strong on Tide Changes
Published 8 months ago
Description
Good morning, fishing friends—this is Artificial Lure coming to you with the August 27th Wilmington, NC fishing report.
Sunrise hit the water at 6:41 AM and we’ll have plenty of daylight, with sunset at 7:43 PM. Tides are running true to late summer form today: look for low tide at 4:39 AM, high tide peaking at 11:05 AM, back down to low at 5:10 PM, and one more high at 11:16 PM. That’s a pretty vigorous swing—tidal coefficients are in the upper 80s and 90s this week, meaning big current moves and lots of water exchanging in both creeks and ocean passes, perfect for stirring up the bite according to Tide-Forecast.com and Tides4Fishing.
Weather this morning is calm and comfortable. NWS Wilmington calls for north winds at 10 knots, dropping back a bit as the day goes by, with seas at 2 feet—favorable for boaters. You might see a stray cloud or two, but no big systems rolling in and only a slight chance of a surprise shower this afternoon. Not much surf to speak of if you’re casting the beach.
Here’s what’s been hot this week. Inshore, speckled trout are showing nicely early, especially around Wrightsville’s creeks and dock edges—MirrOlure 52MRs and Z-Man DieZel MinnowZ in smoky gray or chartreuse have been putting fish in the boat. Flounder action is still strong around the Carolina Beach Inlet with anglers getting steady keeper bites on live mud minnows and Gulp! 4-inch Swimming Mullets in white or pink. The red drum, both in the slot and upper-range, are pushing up into the flooded spartina on higher tides—cut menhaden or finger mullet is your best ticket, but a popping cork with a DOA shrimp can’t be beat for sight-fishing the seams.
Nearshore, king mackerel are starting to push back in as the water temps hover in the low 80s, and there’s been good action trolling the Yaupon Reef and the 3-Mile Boxcars—try slow trolling with dead cigar minnows or Clarkspoons behind a planer rig. Spanish mackerel schools have been up top chasing glass minnows just off Masonboro; a silver Got-Cha plug or small Drone spoon cast into the fray means constant hookups when they’re busting.
Offshore, the bottom bite is consistent over the ledges past 10 miles on cut squid and cigar minnows—gag grouper, beeliners, and the odd cobia coming topside this week.
A couple of hotspots to put on your list: Snows Cut on a falling tide for flounder and reds, and the south tip of Masonboro Island for everything from trout to blues on a moving tide. Don’t sleep on Bradley Creek and Whiskey Creek at first light for trout and the occasional tarpon roll as well.
For bait, live mud minnows and finger mullet are easy to find and are out-fishing everything else for flounder and red drum. Artificials: white Gulp! and pearl or chartreuse soft plastics have been the trend on both trout and flounder.
Overall, fish activity is excellent, with big tide shifts pushing bait up into the marshgrass and across the sandbars. Best feeding windows are those tide changes, especially dawn and dusk.
That’s your rundown for this Wednesday—thanks for tuning in to the report. Don’t forget to subscribe, and we’ll see you back on the water.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Sunrise hit the water at 6:41 AM and we’ll have plenty of daylight, with sunset at 7:43 PM. Tides are running true to late summer form today: look for low tide at 4:39 AM, high tide peaking at 11:05 AM, back down to low at 5:10 PM, and one more high at 11:16 PM. That’s a pretty vigorous swing—tidal coefficients are in the upper 80s and 90s this week, meaning big current moves and lots of water exchanging in both creeks and ocean passes, perfect for stirring up the bite according to Tide-Forecast.com and Tides4Fishing.
Weather this morning is calm and comfortable. NWS Wilmington calls for north winds at 10 knots, dropping back a bit as the day goes by, with seas at 2 feet—favorable for boaters. You might see a stray cloud or two, but no big systems rolling in and only a slight chance of a surprise shower this afternoon. Not much surf to speak of if you’re casting the beach.
Here’s what’s been hot this week. Inshore, speckled trout are showing nicely early, especially around Wrightsville’s creeks and dock edges—MirrOlure 52MRs and Z-Man DieZel MinnowZ in smoky gray or chartreuse have been putting fish in the boat. Flounder action is still strong around the Carolina Beach Inlet with anglers getting steady keeper bites on live mud minnows and Gulp! 4-inch Swimming Mullets in white or pink. The red drum, both in the slot and upper-range, are pushing up into the flooded spartina on higher tides—cut menhaden or finger mullet is your best ticket, but a popping cork with a DOA shrimp can’t be beat for sight-fishing the seams.
Nearshore, king mackerel are starting to push back in as the water temps hover in the low 80s, and there’s been good action trolling the Yaupon Reef and the 3-Mile Boxcars—try slow trolling with dead cigar minnows or Clarkspoons behind a planer rig. Spanish mackerel schools have been up top chasing glass minnows just off Masonboro; a silver Got-Cha plug or small Drone spoon cast into the fray means constant hookups when they’re busting.
Offshore, the bottom bite is consistent over the ledges past 10 miles on cut squid and cigar minnows—gag grouper, beeliners, and the odd cobia coming topside this week.
A couple of hotspots to put on your list: Snows Cut on a falling tide for flounder and reds, and the south tip of Masonboro Island for everything from trout to blues on a moving tide. Don’t sleep on Bradley Creek and Whiskey Creek at first light for trout and the occasional tarpon roll as well.
For bait, live mud minnows and finger mullet are easy to find and are out-fishing everything else for flounder and red drum. Artificials: white Gulp! and pearl or chartreuse soft plastics have been the trend on both trout and flounder.
Overall, fish activity is excellent, with big tide shifts pushing bait up into the marshgrass and across the sandbars. Best feeding windows are those tide changes, especially dawn and dusk.
That’s your rundown for this Wednesday—thanks for tuning in to the report. Don’t forget to subscribe, and we’ll see you back on the water.
This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This episode includes AI-generated content.