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Wilmington NC Fishing Report for October 18, 2025 - Tides, Weather, Hot Spots & Tackle Tips
Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
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This is Artificial Lure with your Wilmington, North Carolina fishing report for Saturday, October 18, 2025!
We’re starting off with a **high tidal coefficient of 78** today, peaking at 81 around noon and wrapping up at 83, so expect big tidal swings and strong currents—perfect for moving bait and upping those odds of hungry, active fish, especially near inlets and marsh cuts. According to Tides4Fishing, **high tide hit at 6:15 AM**, with a **low tide coming at 12:17 PM**, and the next high will roll in at **6:34 PM**. That gives you plenty of movement all day, with the best current pushing through mid-morning and right at dusk.
Weatherwise, we’re looking at a crisp fall morning. Sunrise dropped in at **7:19 AM** and sunset settles at **6:33 PM**, giving us about 11 hours of fishing light. Expect upper-50s at dawn, warming to the high 60s. Light winds out of the north-northwest will knock down the humidity and should keep the water glassy through the morning—ideal for both topwater and sight fishing.
Fish are **on the chew** with this much tidal push. Reports from local guides and recent trips say the **speckled trout** bite has fired up—especially near the mouth of the Cape Fear River, Snows Cut, and the Wrightsville Beach jetty. Most anglers are catching **good numbers of legal trout**, a few pushing the 20-inch mark, mixed with smaller “schoolies.” **Red drum** are still thick in the marshes, tailing on the flood tides and working the oyster bars near Bradley Creek and Masonboro. One trip this week saw double-digit reds in a two-hour window, most falling in the 18-24 inch slot, with a few brutes pushing upper slots.
**Black drum** and **sheepshead** are feeding, especially around structure like docks, bridges, and rock walls near Snow’s Cut and the Carolina Beach State Park marina. Flounder are holding on drop-offs and creek mouths, though most releases right now are undersized as we approach the tail end of their season.
Best bets for lures: **MirrOlure MR17s, Z-Man MinnowZ on 1/4 oz jigheads**, and if you like it old-school, a classic white bucktail. For those targeting bull reds or flounder, nothing beats a live finger mullet or mud minnow on a Carolina rig. For sheepshead, fiddler crabs or fresh shrimp on a knocker rig are putting the most fish in the cooler.
If artificial is your game, topwaters like **Super Spooks** and popping corks with Gulp! swimming mullet are getting crushed early and late in the day. Switch to soft plastic paddle tails—chartreuse and pearl are hot colors—especially when the sun’s up and water is clear.
For hotspots, check the **northern Wrightsville Beach jetty** before noon for specks, reds, and the occasional bluefish. **Snows Cut** is always productive on a moving tide, especially for reds and flounder. If you want a mix and room to move, the **Cape Fear River mouth** and the drop-offs near **Eagles Island** are loaded with action and a shot at a late-season tarpon or big drum if you soak a big bait.
Thanks for tuning in to your Wilmington fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe, 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.
We’re starting off with a **high tidal coefficient of 78** today, peaking at 81 around noon and wrapping up at 83, so expect big tidal swings and strong currents—perfect for moving bait and upping those odds of hungry, active fish, especially near inlets and marsh cuts. According to Tides4Fishing, **high tide hit at 6:15 AM**, with a **low tide coming at 12:17 PM**, and the next high will roll in at **6:34 PM**. That gives you plenty of movement all day, with the best current pushing through mid-morning and right at dusk.
Weatherwise, we’re looking at a crisp fall morning. Sunrise dropped in at **7:19 AM** and sunset settles at **6:33 PM**, giving us about 11 hours of fishing light. Expect upper-50s at dawn, warming to the high 60s. Light winds out of the north-northwest will knock down the humidity and should keep the water glassy through the morning—ideal for both topwater and sight fishing.
Fish are **on the chew** with this much tidal push. Reports from local guides and recent trips say the **speckled trout** bite has fired up—especially near the mouth of the Cape Fear River, Snows Cut, and the Wrightsville Beach jetty. Most anglers are catching **good numbers of legal trout**, a few pushing the 20-inch mark, mixed with smaller “schoolies.” **Red drum** are still thick in the marshes, tailing on the flood tides and working the oyster bars near Bradley Creek and Masonboro. One trip this week saw double-digit reds in a two-hour window, most falling in the 18-24 inch slot, with a few brutes pushing upper slots.
**Black drum** and **sheepshead** are feeding, especially around structure like docks, bridges, and rock walls near Snow’s Cut and the Carolina Beach State Park marina. Flounder are holding on drop-offs and creek mouths, though most releases right now are undersized as we approach the tail end of their season.
Best bets for lures: **MirrOlure MR17s, Z-Man MinnowZ on 1/4 oz jigheads**, and if you like it old-school, a classic white bucktail. For those targeting bull reds or flounder, nothing beats a live finger mullet or mud minnow on a Carolina rig. For sheepshead, fiddler crabs or fresh shrimp on a knocker rig are putting the most fish in the cooler.
If artificial is your game, topwaters like **Super Spooks** and popping corks with Gulp! swimming mullet are getting crushed early and late in the day. Switch to soft plastic paddle tails—chartreuse and pearl are hot colors—especially when the sun’s up and water is clear.
For hotspots, check the **northern Wrightsville Beach jetty** before noon for specks, reds, and the occasional bluefish. **Snows Cut** is always productive on a moving tide, especially for reds and flounder. If you want a mix and room to move, the **Cape Fear River mouth** and the drop-offs near **Eagles Island** are loaded with action and a shot at a late-season tarpon or big drum if you soak a big bait.
Thanks for tuning in to your Wilmington fishing report. Don’t forget to subscribe, 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.