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Wilmington Fishing Update: Strong Tides, Reds, Trout & Mackerel - September 19th

Wilmington Fishing Update: Strong Tides, Reds, Trout & Mackerel - September 19th

Published 7 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
It’s Artificial Lure here with your September 19th fishing report for Wilmington, North Carolina and surrounding waters.

The day kicked off with a **mild early fall start**—sunrise rolled in at 6:57 AM, and sunset’s due at 7:12 PM. We’ve got a **strong tidal swing** out there today. Low tide hit at 2:38 AM at about 0.4 feet. Your first high tide crested at 8:16 AM, up over 4.8 feet, and you’ll want to keep an eye out for the afternoon low around 2:47 PM, only a quarter foot, before the evening incoming flood tops out at 8:49 PM with a healthy 5.1 feet. That’s a big exchange, and it’s driving strong currents and bait movement all morning and evening according to Tide-Forecast.com and tides4fishing.com.

Wilmington’s been waking up to **late-summer warmth**, with lows in the upper 60s and highs expected near the low 80s, moderate humidity, and a light southwest breeze making for comfortable conditions. Skies look mostly clear with patchy clouds, and water temps are holding steady in the upper 70s.

**Fish activity reports** have been pointing towards solid inshore action. Folks are catching plenty of **slot reds**—that’s red drum—around the creeks and marshes, especially up toward the high tide. Flounder have been filtering into the backwater pockets, and the speckled trout bite is starting to pick up, especially on the early outgoing tide. According to local guides and bait shops, Wrightsville Beach piers and the mouth of the Cape Fear are both giving up Spanish mackerel, bluefish, and some scattered pompano right in the deeper holes.

For numbers, anglers this past week have been stringing together half-dozen flounder catches on short trips—with keepers mixed in—and double-digit trout mornings aren’t out of the question for folks drifting MirrOlures or live shrimp. Red drum are being seen and caught in small schooling pods, especially in the flats near Masonboro and up around Carolina Beach Inlet.

If you’re wondering what’s working best right now, **live bait is king**—finger mullet and mud minnows under popping corks are lights-out for reds and flounder. Soft plastics in natural colors—think Z-Man or Gulp! swimming mullets—on 1/8 to 1/4 oz jigheads are putting plenty of trout in the boat. For the mackerel and blues, cast metal spoons or flashy Got-Cha plugs from pier or surf. Topwater lures like the Rapala Skitter Walk have been turning heads in the first daylight hour, especially when tossed over oyster beds and flooded grass banks.

**Best hot spots today:** Target the main jetty at Masonboro Inlet on the rising tide for mixed bag action and consistent drum; or slide up into Hewletts Creek and the Sunny Point area for trout and flounder on the dropping tide. For surf fishing, try the stretch from Johnnie Mercers Pier down to Crystal Pier—those cuts and troughs are holding pompano and whiting.

Summing it up—today’s conditions are primed for some quality action. Work those **high-current windows and bait transitions** around the tides, and you’ll be in the meat. Grab your favorite popping cork or a handful of 4-inch soft plastics, and get ready for bent rods.

Thanks for tuning in with Artificial Lure! Don’t forget to subscribe for more local fishing updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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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