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"Late Summer Slam: Redfish, Trout, and Offshore Bounty on the Carolina Coast"

"Late Summer Slam: Redfish, Trout, and Offshore Bounty on the Carolina Coast"



Good morning anglers, Artificial Lure here, bringing you your Friday, August 29, 2025 fishing report for the North Carolina Atlantic coast. Sunrise came at 6:37am with sunset expected at 7:36pm, giving us plenty of daylight to hit the water. Today’s tidal action around Atlantic Beach features a low tide at 5:39am, peaking to a solid high tide at 12:11pm, and returning low at 6:39pm—meaning currents will be moving and bait will be active throughout much of the day, especially near those tide changes, with a tidal coefficient hovering around 91 early, boosting bottom movement and fish feeding windows according to Tides4Fishing.

Weather-wise, the forecast calls for warm midsummer conditions, clouds moving in by afternoon and a typical southern humidity. Keep an eye out for those pop-up storms later—this is classic August Carolina: keep a rain jacket handy and check marine radar if venturing offshore.

Now, onto the fish. According to Carolina Sportsman, the late summer surf and sound are alive and kicking with hungry red drum cruising morning and evening flats, while speckled trout patrol inlets and shaded marsh cuts. Most days you’ll see folks boat great numbers of slot reds and specks around the mouth of the Newport River, Core Sound, and the marshes behind Emerald Isle. Flounder bite is also hot in the backwaters and near the piers—reports from YouTube show solid catches coming from Mud Minnows and finger mullet fished on Carolina rigs, and folks dropping bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp are limiting out.

Offshore, the temperature is still in the mid-80s and the pelagic action is absolutely wide open. Charter boats running out of Morehead City and Wrightsville Beach this week brought in king mackerel, with plenty of two-to-three footers blitzing menhaden schools just off the beach, and near the Gulf Stream, anglers are raising mahi-mahi and wahoo. Weed lines at 30-to-50 mile marks held tight this week, so if you’ve got a boat and time watch those charts and chase the color changes. High-speed trolling with blue/white Islanders and ballyhoo is banging wahoo, while flashy spoons and deep-divers keep the kings biting. Bottom fishing has been consistent along AR-315 and the nearby wrecks—good hauls of snapper, grouper, and black sea bass reported by local tackle shops.

Bait advice for inshore: live shrimp, cut mullet, and soft plastics like paddle tails in natural shad or chartreuse. For reds and flounder, scented baits or strips of squid will do work. Offshore, dust off your ballyhoo rigs, cigar minnows for kings, and try trolling pink/chartreuse skirts around fads for mahi. Don’t forget to bring circle hooks for bottom fish—regulations require them.

Some local hotspots not to miss:
- The rocks at Fort Macon State Park for trout and flounder at dawn.
- The marsh creeks behind Bogue Banks for redfish at high tide.
- AR-315 and the 14-Mile Bottom for bottom hounds and those chasing snapper and grouper offshore.

Lastly, a quick reminder: local tackle shops are your best bet for up-to-the-minute info on bait and catch reports. Folks at Chasin’ Tails and EJW Outdoors in Atlantic Beach reported that the bite heats up fast on the falling tide, especially at first light.

Thanks for tuning in—remember to wear your sunscreen, hydrate, and share your catch photos with your community. Don’t forget to subscribe for more local reports and tips! This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Published on 2 days, 15 hours ago






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