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Wilmington, NC Fishing Report: Mild Conditions, Hot Inshore Bite, Offshore Kings Highlight Coastal Action
Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Artificial Lure here, bringing you the latest Wilmington, NC fishing report for Wednesday, October 15, 2025. If you’re up early, you’ll catch the sun rising at 7:17AM, with sunset this evening at 6:37PM. Today gives us about 11 hours and 20 minutes of daylight, perfect for squeezing in some solid casts.
Let’s talk tides: We’ve got high tide swinging in at 5:11 AM and again at 5:50 PM, with a low tide smack in the middle at 11:39 AM (tide heights peaking a bit over 4.5 ft). Tidal coefficients sit on the low side today, meaning softer currents and modest tidal swings—great for light tackle work and bottom fishing, but drift presentations are gonna run slow. According to Tides4Fishing, today’s tidal amplitude isn’t wild, so expect less movement of baitfish on flats and in the marsh[4].
Weather’s shaping up mild—light northeast breeze and temps riding in the mid 60s early before warming towards low 70s. Overcast is expected to filter through by afternoon, which should help keep the bite firing past those twilight hours. This is prime time for species like flounder, redfish, and speckled trout, which have shown up heavy in recent catches. FishingBooker, reporting from Carolina Beach this week, says flounder action especially is hot, with solid fish over 18 inches landed in the last few days[10].
Wrightsville Beach Marina and Cape Fear Marina are producing well this week. Inshore, reds and trout are chasing live shrimp and mud minnows, but artificial lures are absolutely turning heads. Anglersportsman and Captain Experiences stress soft plastics on weedless jig heads—the tried-and-true Z-Man Opening Night or MirrOlure MR17 twitchbait. For flounder, work the bottom with white Gulp swimming mullets or cut bait if you like less mess. Out around dock pilings, mullet strips and finger mullet have accounted for several limit catches just this weekend, while trout are showing a preference for Vudu Shrimp in more stained water[3][6].
Those working off the beach and points—Ready Bay, Vines Bay, and Long Bay—should focus near irregular sandbanks close to the surf’s edge. Birds have been diving on glass minnows and mullet outflows, drawing Spanish mackerel and bluefish within casting range. Gotcha plugs and silver spoons were hot at sunrise along Wrightsville and Kure Beach, as per local tackle chatter.
Reports from Cape Fear River mouth say black drum, speckled trout, and the occasional striper are lingering on incoming tides up near Sawmill Point Marina, especially where the fresh meets the salt. Best bait here: Carolina-rigged shrimp for black drum, but DOA paddle tails in natural hues for trout, especially with that light stain in the water from rain earlier this week.
For those after the bigger game offshore, recent charters have boated some hefty king mackerel and the odd sailfish on slow-trolled blue runners and cigar minnows. These trips—averaging excellent reviews for local captains—haven’t reported big tuna since Monday, but blacktips, flounder, and snapper are plentiful just outside the jetties. Light wire, live bait, and patient trolling are the ticket for kings if the wind stays gentle[3].
Hot spots? It’s hard to beat Masonboro Boat Yard early in the day, especially if you want to cover water for reds and flounder, or Wrightsville Beach Marina around dusk for specks and blues. Both spots offer shelter, structure, and proven catches this week[1].
To wind down—if you’re heading out, bring the soft plastics, live shrimp, Gotcha plugs, and a handful of finger mullet. Focus on the rising tide for best action, and if you want trout limits, don’t overlook those deeper marsh cuts at the bottom of the tide. Thanks for tuning in with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for your next local update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
Let’s talk tides: We’ve got high tide swinging in at 5:11 AM and again at 5:50 PM, with a low tide smack in the middle at 11:39 AM (tide heights peaking a bit over 4.5 ft). Tidal coefficients sit on the low side today, meaning softer currents and modest tidal swings—great for light tackle work and bottom fishing, but drift presentations are gonna run slow. According to Tides4Fishing, today’s tidal amplitude isn’t wild, so expect less movement of baitfish on flats and in the marsh[4].
Weather’s shaping up mild—light northeast breeze and temps riding in the mid 60s early before warming towards low 70s. Overcast is expected to filter through by afternoon, which should help keep the bite firing past those twilight hours. This is prime time for species like flounder, redfish, and speckled trout, which have shown up heavy in recent catches. FishingBooker, reporting from Carolina Beach this week, says flounder action especially is hot, with solid fish over 18 inches landed in the last few days[10].
Wrightsville Beach Marina and Cape Fear Marina are producing well this week. Inshore, reds and trout are chasing live shrimp and mud minnows, but artificial lures are absolutely turning heads. Anglersportsman and Captain Experiences stress soft plastics on weedless jig heads—the tried-and-true Z-Man Opening Night or MirrOlure MR17 twitchbait. For flounder, work the bottom with white Gulp swimming mullets or cut bait if you like less mess. Out around dock pilings, mullet strips and finger mullet have accounted for several limit catches just this weekend, while trout are showing a preference for Vudu Shrimp in more stained water[3][6].
Those working off the beach and points—Ready Bay, Vines Bay, and Long Bay—should focus near irregular sandbanks close to the surf’s edge. Birds have been diving on glass minnows and mullet outflows, drawing Spanish mackerel and bluefish within casting range. Gotcha plugs and silver spoons were hot at sunrise along Wrightsville and Kure Beach, as per local tackle chatter.
Reports from Cape Fear River mouth say black drum, speckled trout, and the occasional striper are lingering on incoming tides up near Sawmill Point Marina, especially where the fresh meets the salt. Best bait here: Carolina-rigged shrimp for black drum, but DOA paddle tails in natural hues for trout, especially with that light stain in the water from rain earlier this week.
For those after the bigger game offshore, recent charters have boated some hefty king mackerel and the odd sailfish on slow-trolled blue runners and cigar minnows. These trips—averaging excellent reviews for local captains—haven’t reported big tuna since Monday, but blacktips, flounder, and snapper are plentiful just outside the jetties. Light wire, live bait, and patient trolling are the ticket for kings if the wind stays gentle[3].
Hot spots? It’s hard to beat Masonboro Boat Yard early in the day, especially if you want to cover water for reds and flounder, or Wrightsville Beach Marina around dusk for specks and blues. Both spots offer shelter, structure, and proven catches this week[1].
To wind down—if you’re heading out, bring the soft plastics, live shrimp, Gotcha plugs, and a handful of finger mullet. Focus on the rising tide for best action, and if you want trout limits, don’t overlook those deeper marsh cuts at the bottom of the tide. Thanks for tuning in with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for your next local update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Great deals on fishing gear
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