Good morning, anglers—Artificial Lure here with your Saturday, August 30, 2025, North Carolina Atlantic Ocean fishing report. We’ve got classic late-summer conditions, mixing sunshine, strong tides, and a hot inshore and offshore bite that’s not to be missed.
Let’s kick it off with today’s sunrise at 6:33 am, sunset wrapping up at 7:45 pm. Tides are ripping, with a high around 9:08 am and again at 9:33 pm, and lows at 3:40 am and 3:36 pm. The tidal coefficient sits high at 91—big water movement means active fish, especially around these changes. Expect pronounced currents and plenty of stirred-up bait along the banks and inlets, which get the predators on the hunt according to Tides4Fishing and Tide Forecast.
Weatherwise, things are stable after last week’s brush with stronger winds. This morning welcomes you with a light breeze, temps in the low 80s, and barometric pressure holding steady—classic southeast Carolina sunshine. Look for clear skies and gentle swells, but always keep an eye on the horizon for pop-up storms, especially north of Cape Lookout. If you’re fishing the Pamlico or Core Sounds, there’s minimal wind chop, perfect for running the skiff or kayak.
The red drum bite is absolutely on fire right now, especially in Pamlico Sound and on the shoals from Cape Lookout north to Hatteras. Locals and charter captains, like those featured in Carolina Sportsman, report that bull reds—some stretching 50 inches—are hammering soft plastics fished under popping corks. Early and late in the day is prime: look for schools of menhaden or mullet getting balled up by feeding reds. Cast a Blabber Mouth cork with a four- to six-inch paddle tail, or live finger mullet if you can find them.
If you’re chasing speckled trout, focus on the creeks and marsh points from Topsail up through the southern Outer Banks. The Betts Halo Shad in green tiger or chartreuse is the top artificial, and if you can get your hands on some, suspending live shrimp under a popping cork is the local secret according to Yeah Right Charters out of Southport. Don’t be surprised to hook bonus flounder and slot drum in these same waters.
Offshore, a few boats are starting to see more Spanish mackerel and kingfish as the water nears the low 80s. Pull small silver spoons at dawn on the tide rips off Bogue Banks, or target nearshore wrecks for a mix of triggerfish and the odd cobia. Bottom fishing is reliable this time of year for sea bass around the deeper reefs—squid or cut menhaden are the ticket.
Hot spots this week:
- The “Penny Shoals” near the mouth of the Neuse River—big drum at first light, especially on an outgoing tide.
- Atlantic Beach surf: prime whiting and spot fishing, plus a chance at Spanish if you cast metal spoons right at sunrise.
- Cape Lookout Rock Jetty: flounder close to structure, slot reds nearby, and trout pushing up with the morning tide.
Best baits: live finger mullet, menhaden, and shrimp. For artificials, stick to soft plastic paddle tails in white and chartreuse, MirrOlures for trout, and gold spoons for cruising reds.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Atlantic Coast report. Make sure you subscribe so you never miss a tide or a bite. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 1 day, 15 hours ago
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