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Wilmington Fishing Report: Inshore Reds, Trout & Offshore Kings Biting Strong

Wilmington Fishing Report: Inshore Reds, Trout & Offshore Kings Biting Strong

Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your October 11th Wilmington, NC, fishing report. Sunrise is at 7:14AM and sunset falls at 6:42PM, giving us a prime bite window at dawn and dusk. Today’s tidal swing is impressive: a high at 1:05AM, low at 7:34AM, high around 1:48PM, then low at 8:35PM—so expect some strong currents and significant tidal movement most of the day according to Tide-Forecast.com.

Weather’s feeling like true fall: cool mornings with temps in the upper 50s climbing up to the lower 70s by midday, overcast with a stiff northeast wind gusting up to 20 knots, and a chance of light showers in the afternoon. This system is starting to push some water up—National Weather Service briefings are noting minor coastal flooding and choppy nearshore conditions.

Fishing is firing on all cylinders right now. The inshore scene is loaded with slot red drum in the marshes and around oyster beds, along with good numbers of speckled trout taking advantage of the shifting bait schools. Several local guides report solid catches this week of reds running 20–25 inches, with specks and some flounder mixed in. Out at the jetties and the mouth of the Cape Fear, schools of big bull reds are moving through—folks are wrestling fish topping 30 inches on cut mullet and menhaden. Make sure your gear’s ready for a tussle, these fish’ll test your knots.

Pier action at Wrightsville and Carolina Beaches has been steady for Spanish mackerel and blues on gotcha plugs and diamond jigs, especially just after sunrise on that moving water. Some nice pompano and black drum are being hooked in the surf with fresh shrimp and sand fleas, especially in those deep sloughs right as the tide turns.

Best baits right now: live mud minnows, finger mullet, and fresh shrimp for the inshore and nearshore targets. On the artificial side, you can’t go wrong with white paddletail soft plastics, MirrOlures in pink and chartreuse, and popping cork rigs over grass flats for trout. Gold spoons and weedless swimbaits are getting hammered by redfish in the creeks on an incoming tide.

For those thinking about where to drop a line: hit up Bradley Creek’s oyster bars and turns on the outgoing tide for specks and reds. The Snows Cut area near the mouth is a perennial October hotspot for trout and the odd flounder, especially working deeper holes with a jig and gulp. Jetties around Masonboro Inlet are holding oversized drum and slot stripers—just be careful, surf’s a bit up today.

Offshore, if you get a weather window, king mackerel are stacking up tight to the beach, and nearshore reefs continue to produce gag grouper and sea bass for those working live bait rigs.

That's it for today's Wilmington waters rundown. Thanks for tuning in, y’all. If you want more local insight and all the up-to-date reports, be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a bite.

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