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Wilmington's Crisp Fall Bite: Reds, Trout, and Offshore Action

Wilmington's Crisp Fall Bite: Reds, Trout, and Offshore Action

Published 6 months, 1 week ago
Description
It’s Artificial Lure here with your Tuesday morning fishing report for Wilmington, North Carolina, October twenty-first, twenty twenty-five. The air’s crisp, the mullet are running, and the bite’s heating up as fall takes hold. Let’s get into what you need to know before you head out on the water.

First, today’s **tide action** is going to shape your approach. According to Tide-Forecast, you’re looking at a low tide about 4:15 a.m., then a strong high tide rolling in at 10:11 a.m., another low at 4:48 p.m., and your evening high at 10:24 p.m. That means the best window for inshore fishing is pushing up on that mid-morning high, and again near sunset if you want to chase that incoming movement.

**Weather-wise**, it’s classic Carolina fall—start off a bit chilly, then warm to a comfortable 73 degrees, sunny skies and barely a whisper of breeze out of the north. The sunrise was at 7:22 a.m. and sunset’s at 6:29 p.m. today, so you’ve got quality daylight to work with.

Now, let’s talk **fish and local action**. Folks out around Wrightsville Beach and in the Cape Fear River have been reporting slot-sized red drum and bigger flounder being picked up around docks and creek mouths. The speckled trout bite is coming on strong, especially as water temps fall into the mid-sixties. Anglers tossing MirrOlure suspending twitch baits, Z-Man soft plastics on eighth-ounce jigheads, and classic live shrimp under popping corks are filling the box. There’s also been a solid run of bigger bluefish busting bait outside the inlets and just off the surf.

In the surf itself, whiting and Virginia mullet are active on sand fleas and cut shrimp, and you’ve got a fair shot at late-season pompano with the clear water. If you’re after bigger game, a few tarpon and overslot red drum have been hooked at Carolina Beach Inlet on live mullet and menhaden.

For the saltwater crowd, **best lures** right now are electric chicken and opening night colored soft plastics for trout, silver or pink MirrOlures for clear water, and darker patterns when there’s a muddy push. If you’re live baiting, finger mullet and menhaden are your prime tickets—either free-lined near oyster bars or on Carolina rigs around structure.

Some **hot spots** producing lately:
- Bradley Creek docks for trout and reds, especially with that rising tide in the morning.
- Masonboro Inlet area, especially along the north jetty for flounder and specks on the drop.
- Bank fishing? Try the public access at Snow’s Cut for steady action on trout and the chance at a surprise drum.

Folks at the tackle shops say the inshore scene is about as classic as October gets, with multiple reports of anglers limiting out on trout and picking up a mixed bag. Offshore, small boats trolling Clarkspoons and Drone Spoons have still been finding spanish mackerel before the action heads south.

Before I let you go, always check the latest regulations—NC’s always tweaking those slot limits and bag counts.

Thanks for tuning in—tight lines to all my Wilmington anglers, and don’t forget to subscribe for the latest updates and reports. 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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