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Late Summer Fishing in Wilmington, NC - Reds, Flounder, and More

Late Summer Fishing in Wilmington, NC - Reds, Flounder, and More

Published 8 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure reporting from Wilmington, North Carolina with your August 28th fishing rundown.

Today we had a classic late-summer coastal pattern—hot and humid, mostly clear skies with some haze and a light southeast breeze rolling in off the water around midday, holding highs near 86°F. Sunrise came at 6:42AM and sunset will hit at 7:42PM, giving us solid daylight for those before and after work sessions. The moon’s waxing and had a mid-morning rise, which can boost midday fish activity, especially on clear nights.

Tides are running strong with high coefficients—big tide swings mean pronounced current and plenty of movement in the marshes and creeks. Wilmington Beach hit low tide at 5:12AM, climbed to a high at 11:46AM around 4.6 feet, dropped again to 0.9 feet by 5:57PM, and then creeps toward another overnight high at almost midnight. That midday outgoing is prime for flushing bait out of the grass, stirring up feeding windows for flounder, reds, and trout.

Reports from Wrightsville Beach and inshore marshes say water temps have climbed—a little muggy, but still fishing well if you chase moving water for cool pockets. One detail: avoid stagnant, hot water as badly as you do cold. Seek those deeper bends or shaded docks for best fish comfort.

The inshore bite this week has leaned to the usual late-summer suspects. Plenty of flounder, with some keepers hitting artificial lures—Gulp Jerkshad in new penny, chart pepper neon, and fire tiger have all grabbed bites, especially on a solid jighead in the 3/8oz size. Red drum are cruising the river flats and creek mouths, taking Bonga Shad swimmers and scented grubs, with dirty water drawing more strikes on darker colors. If you’re after speckled trout, stick with suspended jerkbaits and soft plastics in lighter colors during the early hours, then switch to the golds and darks as the sun climbs and the water gets stained. Sheepshead have been solid around the area bridges and pilings—best shot is a fiddler crab or sand flea on a Carolina rig.

For live bait, heavy flows have pushed plenty of mullet and mud minnows into the creeks, and a live shrimp under a popping cork is easy money this week for reds and trout. Folks are also hauling in bluefish on topwater plugs off the ICW edges, with Whopper Ploppers and chuggers drawing surface bites early and late.

Recent catches from the river stretch up to Castle Street Bridge have included slot reds, a few citation flounder nudging past 22 inches, and specks in the 14–18 inch range. Off Masonboro Inlet, surf guys have been picking up pompano and Spanish mackerel with gotcha plugs and sand fleas as bait.

Hot spots to check:
- Wrightsville Beach Jetty: Early morning for flounder and drum, especially on outgoing tide; fish tight to rocks with Gulp or live mud minnows.
- Masonboro Island flats: Sight-fishing reds on brighter days; gold spoons and paddle tails in deeper cuts.
- Cape Fear River, just south of downtown: Dock edges and creek mouths produce sheepshead, drum, and some black drum on fiddler crabs and shrimp.

A quick tip for this steamy season—don’t be afraid to upsize your jighead for faster current, and lean on scents to get that extra edge when the water dirties up after rain.

Thanks for tuning in, y’all—and don’t forget to subscribe for reliable local fishing advice and weekly reports. This has been a Quiet Please production; for more, check out quietplease.ai.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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