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"Wilmington Fishing Report: Reds, Trout, and Bluefish on the Bite"
Published 6 months, 1 week ago
Description
It’s your local angler Artificial Lure with the latest fishing scoop for Wilmington, North Carolina, and nearby salt and brackish waters, reporting for Monday, October 20th, 2025.
We’re starting with the day’s **conditions**: Sunrise set up at 7:21 AM and the sun will tag out at 6:31 PM, giving us over 11 hours of good daylight. Tide-wise, we’ve got a low tide early at 1:08 AM, high at 7:34 AM, low again at 1:44 PM, and the next high at 7:50 PM. The highs this morning and around sunset are pumping, with over 5 feet of tide swing — a great sign for active currents and stirred-up bait, especially with a tidal coefficient at 85. Get ready for visible movement in the creeks and along the inlets, which tends to drive those predators right to where you want them.
Weather on the water blows in stiff today. There’s a Small Craft Advisory in effect into late morning, so coastal and nearshore waters may be choppier than usual. Plan extra caution if you’re heading out before midday, especially around Masonboro Inlet or the Cape Fear River mouth. But by this afternoon, expect more settled winds and seasonably warm fall air — a sweet spot for both the fish and the folks tossing a lure or two.
**Fish activity is buzzing**. According to CaptainExperiences, the inshore bite this weekend was firing, with reports of *“reds and specs, exactly what we were targeting… a nice catch at every location.”* Most anglers are seeing their best luck in that two-hour window around the peaks of high tide and in the final hours before sunset, when those game fish are pushing bait up against the shell banks and grass lines.
The **species list** for the past 24 hours is classic October: solid red drum action, good numbers of speckled trout, some flounder, and a push of fat fall bluefish. Spots and black drum have been mixed in, especially at Carolina Beach State Park and along the Spoil Islands just south of Wilmington. Cape Fear River proper is yielding its usual stripers, especially on cloudier mornings.
For the best results, here’s what’s working right now:
- **Lures:** MirrOlure MR17s in natural or chartreuse, Z-Man soft plastics on 1/8- or 1/4-ounce jigheads, and popping cork rigs with Gulp! shrimp have been deadly on trout and reds.
- **Bait:** Live finger mullet, mud minnows, and fresh cut menhaden. For surf anglers, bloodworms and shrimp are pulling in the black drum and spots.
- **Tactics:** Work the moving water at creek mouths and along drop-offs at high outgoing tide. If you’re wading the marshes or banks, those first and last sunlight hours are key.
A couple of **hot spots** you shouldn’t miss:
- **Wrightsville Beach Jetty:** Producing slot reds and specks, especially right after the morning high.
- **Eagles Island Backwaters:** Close to downtown, has been on fire for flatties (flounder) and a few bruiser reds chasing mullet schools.
- **Carolina Beach State Park’s Snow’s Cut:** Still going strong for trout and the occasional slot drum.
For boats, running the flats behind Masonboro Island or working the river edges from Dram Tree Park down to Fort Fisher offers plenty of variety without needing to punch out far into the sound.
That’s the scoop from Artificial Lure for your Monday. If you’re just getting started with artificial lures, today’s strong, moving tides mean the bite should keep up most of the day, especially as that cooler October air pushes the mullet run into full swing. Thanks for tuning in — don’t forget to subscribe for your daily updates.
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 with the day’s **conditions**: Sunrise set up at 7:21 AM and the sun will tag out at 6:31 PM, giving us over 11 hours of good daylight. Tide-wise, we’ve got a low tide early at 1:08 AM, high at 7:34 AM, low again at 1:44 PM, and the next high at 7:50 PM. The highs this morning and around sunset are pumping, with over 5 feet of tide swing — a great sign for active currents and stirred-up bait, especially with a tidal coefficient at 85. Get ready for visible movement in the creeks and along the inlets, which tends to drive those predators right to where you want them.
Weather on the water blows in stiff today. There’s a Small Craft Advisory in effect into late morning, so coastal and nearshore waters may be choppier than usual. Plan extra caution if you’re heading out before midday, especially around Masonboro Inlet or the Cape Fear River mouth. But by this afternoon, expect more settled winds and seasonably warm fall air — a sweet spot for both the fish and the folks tossing a lure or two.
**Fish activity is buzzing**. According to CaptainExperiences, the inshore bite this weekend was firing, with reports of *“reds and specs, exactly what we were targeting… a nice catch at every location.”* Most anglers are seeing their best luck in that two-hour window around the peaks of high tide and in the final hours before sunset, when those game fish are pushing bait up against the shell banks and grass lines.
The **species list** for the past 24 hours is classic October: solid red drum action, good numbers of speckled trout, some flounder, and a push of fat fall bluefish. Spots and black drum have been mixed in, especially at Carolina Beach State Park and along the Spoil Islands just south of Wilmington. Cape Fear River proper is yielding its usual stripers, especially on cloudier mornings.
For the best results, here’s what’s working right now:
- **Lures:** MirrOlure MR17s in natural or chartreuse, Z-Man soft plastics on 1/8- or 1/4-ounce jigheads, and popping cork rigs with Gulp! shrimp have been deadly on trout and reds.
- **Bait:** Live finger mullet, mud minnows, and fresh cut menhaden. For surf anglers, bloodworms and shrimp are pulling in the black drum and spots.
- **Tactics:** Work the moving water at creek mouths and along drop-offs at high outgoing tide. If you’re wading the marshes or banks, those first and last sunlight hours are key.
A couple of **hot spots** you shouldn’t miss:
- **Wrightsville Beach Jetty:** Producing slot reds and specks, especially right after the morning high.
- **Eagles Island Backwaters:** Close to downtown, has been on fire for flatties (flounder) and a few bruiser reds chasing mullet schools.
- **Carolina Beach State Park’s Snow’s Cut:** Still going strong for trout and the occasional slot drum.
For boats, running the flats behind Masonboro Island or working the river edges from Dram Tree Park down to Fort Fisher offers plenty of variety without needing to punch out far into the sound.
That’s the scoop from Artificial Lure for your Monday. If you’re just getting started with artificial lures, today’s strong, moving tides mean the bite should keep up most of the day, especially as that cooler October air pushes the mullet run into full swing. Thanks for tuning in — don’t forget to subscribe for your daily updates.
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.