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Wilmington Fishing Report: Reds, Flounder & Trout Crushing Baits on Big Tides
Published 8 months ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Wilmington, North Carolina fishing report for Friday, August 29, 2025, bright and early at 7:29 a.m. Locals rolling out before sun-up found the tide bottoming out this morning—a low at 5:48 a.m. and a solid high coming at 12:31 p.m., bringing a push of 4.5 feet. Sunset’s at 7:40 p.m. and the sun popped over the horizon at 6:43 a.m., so you’ve got a hearty day of light for working banks and piers. The tidal coefficient is running high at 91, which means strong current, active bait, and hungry fish—perfect for August action along the Cape Fear and Carolina beaches, according to tides4fishing.
Weather’s been cooperative: gentle northeast winds shifting east by midday, only 5-10 knots, and seas building to just 2 feet. That means the surf shoals and inshore creeks are prime for casting and kayaks; you won’t be getting bounced around too much, reports the National Weather Service marine forecast.
Now, let’s talk fish. In the past few days, Carolina Beach and Wrightsville Beach have both had some solid catches. Slot reds are crushing live mullet and cut bait in the early flood tide—if you’ve got live shrimp, that’ll work magic around docks and marsh points. Flounder numbers are up; folks working Carolina rigs with finger mullet or bouncing soft plastics are scoring keepers on nearshore reefs and creek mouths. Speckled trout are getting more active, swiping at MirrOlures and Z-Man Slim SwimZ during the moving water, especially in the deeper bends of Bradley Creek and along the ICW edges.
A few guides running morning trips out from Masonboro have put their clients onto blues and Spanish mackerel right off the surf line using glass minnow jigs and Clark spoons. If you’re trolling, silver spoons and small planers are your best bet mid-morning as the sun rises higher—Spanish are schooling tight and hitting fast. For bottom fishing, the jetties have seen black drum and sheepshead taking fiddler crabs and fresh shrimp.
Here’s what’s hot on lure selection:
- Soft plastic paddletails (electric chicken, new penny) for flounder and trout in all the creeks.
- Topwater plugs (Super Spook Jr. or Skitter Walk) at dawn in the marsh for flashy red drum strikes.
- Gulp! shrimp on 1/4 ounce jigheads for both slot drum and flounder.
Live bait is still king—mullet, shrimp, cut menhaden—but don’t overlook a well-worked artificial if the water’s a bit murky or you’re chasing trout with light tackle.
A couple of local hot spots to put on your list:
- Wrightsville Beach north end jetty: best for drum and sheepshead, especially at the turn of the tide.
- Carolina Beach State Park boat ramp area: deeper pockets stacked with flounder and a few stray trout.
Don’t sleep on the docks and deeper creek holes around Snow’s Cut, either—reds and occasional flatfish hiding out as the tide swings in.
Just remember, the usual late-summer advice—change up presentation if the bite’s slow, look for active bait, and work the edges of current and structure. There’s plenty of fish moving with these big tides.
Thanks for tuning in to your Wilmington fishing update. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss a single bite update, tackle tip, or hot spot recommendation.
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.
Weather’s been cooperative: gentle northeast winds shifting east by midday, only 5-10 knots, and seas building to just 2 feet. That means the surf shoals and inshore creeks are prime for casting and kayaks; you won’t be getting bounced around too much, reports the National Weather Service marine forecast.
Now, let’s talk fish. In the past few days, Carolina Beach and Wrightsville Beach have both had some solid catches. Slot reds are crushing live mullet and cut bait in the early flood tide—if you’ve got live shrimp, that’ll work magic around docks and marsh points. Flounder numbers are up; folks working Carolina rigs with finger mullet or bouncing soft plastics are scoring keepers on nearshore reefs and creek mouths. Speckled trout are getting more active, swiping at MirrOlures and Z-Man Slim SwimZ during the moving water, especially in the deeper bends of Bradley Creek and along the ICW edges.
A few guides running morning trips out from Masonboro have put their clients onto blues and Spanish mackerel right off the surf line using glass minnow jigs and Clark spoons. If you’re trolling, silver spoons and small planers are your best bet mid-morning as the sun rises higher—Spanish are schooling tight and hitting fast. For bottom fishing, the jetties have seen black drum and sheepshead taking fiddler crabs and fresh shrimp.
Here’s what’s hot on lure selection:
- Soft plastic paddletails (electric chicken, new penny) for flounder and trout in all the creeks.
- Topwater plugs (Super Spook Jr. or Skitter Walk) at dawn in the marsh for flashy red drum strikes.
- Gulp! shrimp on 1/4 ounce jigheads for both slot drum and flounder.
Live bait is still king—mullet, shrimp, cut menhaden—but don’t overlook a well-worked artificial if the water’s a bit murky or you’re chasing trout with light tackle.
A couple of local hot spots to put on your list:
- Wrightsville Beach north end jetty: best for drum and sheepshead, especially at the turn of the tide.
- Carolina Beach State Park boat ramp area: deeper pockets stacked with flounder and a few stray trout.
Don’t sleep on the docks and deeper creek holes around Snow’s Cut, either—reds and occasional flatfish hiding out as the tide swings in.
Just remember, the usual late-summer advice—change up presentation if the bite’s slow, look for active bait, and work the edges of current and structure. There’s plenty of fish moving with these big tides.
Thanks for tuning in to your Wilmington fishing update. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss a single bite update, tackle tip, or hot spot recommendation.
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.