Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Wilmington Fishing Report: Late Summer Bounty - Reds, Flounder, Spanish Mackerel and More
Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
You’re out early with Artificial Lure, spinning up a Wilmington fishing report for Sunday, September 14, 2025. It's a fine late-summer morning, and here's what you need to know if you’re wetting a line in and around the Port City today.
**Tide and Weather:**
High tide hit at 3:23 a.m. at around 4.4 ft. Low tide will settle in at 9:45 a.m. near 0.3 ft, then expect the next high at 4:09 p.m., peaking up past 5 ft before the second low at 10:55 p.m. The sunrise was at 6:54 a.m. and sunset will be just after 7:19 p.m. These are big tides: tidal coefficient is up at 71—currents are strong and feeding windows are well defined. The morning’s cooler and partly cloudy, with light NE wind that’ll make inshore spots comfortable, but keep an eye out for breezier gusts by afternoon (tides4fishing.com and tide-forecast.com).
**Fish Activity & Recent Catches:**
Recent trips—according to Captain Experiences—are reporting red drum fired up inshore. Anglers are boating solid reds up to slot and above, especially on early falling tides. There have also been plenty of flounder caught in the creeks and around docks, plus scattered trout now showing up as water begins to cool. Spanish mackerel and a few blues are showing off Wrightsville Beach and on outgoing tides at the jetties. There’s been chatter about a late-season bull red run heating up the Cape Fear River and the barrier island surf. Folks working live bait under popping corks have found solid action, but artificial lures—Z-Man soft plastics in new penny or opening night, and gulp shrimp in chartreuse—are out-performing the rest for numbers.
**Best Bait & Tactics:**
If you’re a live bait purist, you won’t go wrong with mud minnows or finger mullet, especially fished along grass edges on a Carolina rig. For those slinging hardware, topwater plugs at dawn have drawn explosive hits—walk-the-dog styles like the Heddon Super Spook, or a MirrOlure She Dog in bone. As the sun rises, switch to paddle tail soft plastics jigged slow along oyster bars or creek mouths. If targeting Spanish, cast silver Got-Cha plugs or small Clarkspoons, especially on an outgoing tide in the inlets.
**Hot Spots:**
Two classics for you:
– **Masonboro Inlet:** Always reliable, especially on those strong tides for trout, reds, and Spanish. Work the jetty rocks and tip your jigs with gulp for bonus strikes.
– **Snows Cut:** On a morning like today, you can find the intersection of clean water and bait schools here, with flounder, red drum, and the occasional striper mixed in. Bounce jigs on the dropoffs and work live bait near the channel edges.
**Insider’s Note:**
With the tidal swings so pronounced this weekend, plan your start and finish around the slack tides for easier boat handling and best casting conditions. Locals are prioritizing the first couple hours of falling tide this week for redfish and trout, and the beach anglers are chasing blues and Spanish with metals right at first light and sundown.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Wilmington fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily on-the-water intel, and tight lines until next time. 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.
**Tide and Weather:**
High tide hit at 3:23 a.m. at around 4.4 ft. Low tide will settle in at 9:45 a.m. near 0.3 ft, then expect the next high at 4:09 p.m., peaking up past 5 ft before the second low at 10:55 p.m. The sunrise was at 6:54 a.m. and sunset will be just after 7:19 p.m. These are big tides: tidal coefficient is up at 71—currents are strong and feeding windows are well defined. The morning’s cooler and partly cloudy, with light NE wind that’ll make inshore spots comfortable, but keep an eye out for breezier gusts by afternoon (tides4fishing.com and tide-forecast.com).
**Fish Activity & Recent Catches:**
Recent trips—according to Captain Experiences—are reporting red drum fired up inshore. Anglers are boating solid reds up to slot and above, especially on early falling tides. There have also been plenty of flounder caught in the creeks and around docks, plus scattered trout now showing up as water begins to cool. Spanish mackerel and a few blues are showing off Wrightsville Beach and on outgoing tides at the jetties. There’s been chatter about a late-season bull red run heating up the Cape Fear River and the barrier island surf. Folks working live bait under popping corks have found solid action, but artificial lures—Z-Man soft plastics in new penny or opening night, and gulp shrimp in chartreuse—are out-performing the rest for numbers.
**Best Bait & Tactics:**
If you’re a live bait purist, you won’t go wrong with mud minnows or finger mullet, especially fished along grass edges on a Carolina rig. For those slinging hardware, topwater plugs at dawn have drawn explosive hits—walk-the-dog styles like the Heddon Super Spook, or a MirrOlure She Dog in bone. As the sun rises, switch to paddle tail soft plastics jigged slow along oyster bars or creek mouths. If targeting Spanish, cast silver Got-Cha plugs or small Clarkspoons, especially on an outgoing tide in the inlets.
**Hot Spots:**
Two classics for you:
– **Masonboro Inlet:** Always reliable, especially on those strong tides for trout, reds, and Spanish. Work the jetty rocks and tip your jigs with gulp for bonus strikes.
– **Snows Cut:** On a morning like today, you can find the intersection of clean water and bait schools here, with flounder, red drum, and the occasional striper mixed in. Bounce jigs on the dropoffs and work live bait near the channel edges.
**Insider’s Note:**
With the tidal swings so pronounced this weekend, plan your start and finish around the slack tides for easier boat handling and best casting conditions. Locals are prioritizing the first couple hours of falling tide this week for redfish and trout, and the beach anglers are chasing blues and Spanish with metals right at first light and sundown.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Wilmington fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily on-the-water intel, and tight lines until next time. 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.