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Wilmington, NC Fishing Report: Brisk Winds, Strong Trout & Reds, Offshore Topwater Action
Published 6 months ago
Description
Artificial Lure here with your Friday, October 31st Wilmington, NC fishing report.
We’ve got classic crisp fall conditions in the Cape Fear region this morning: sunrise at 7:30am, sunset coming early at 6:19pm. Daytime highs peak in the upper 60s, dropping to the high 40s overnight, and the odds of rain are slim. West winds will be humming pretty good at 15 to 25 knots until about 2pm, and the National Weather Service says seas are pushing 4 to 6 feet offshore—so use caution if you’re heading out past the inlet[weather.gov]. Closer inland, winds are brisk but manageable for most craft.
Tidewise, we’re working with moderate morning action: high at 5:04am around 4.36 feet, then low slack at 11:36am near 0.72 feet. The next high rolls in at 5:34pm with 4.82 feet. Tidal coefficients remain low, which means gentler current and less stirring—excellent for pinpointing those schooling reds and specks, but don’t expect a crazy flush of bait like after a new moon[tide-forecast.com].
Solunar tables mark the major feeding window right around dawn and dusk, so set out before breakfast or rig up for that late afternoon push when the sun’s just about to kiss the horizon[solunarforecast.com].
In the past week, local tackle shops and regulars are reporting solid numbers of **speckled trout** around Wrightsville Beach and the ICW cuts. Trout are hitting hard-bodied twitch baits and 3" soft plastics on 1/8 oz jigheads, especially in the deeper creek mouths and drop-offs. **Red drum** are still schooled up on grass edges and oyster bars, smashing gold spoons and live shrimp under popping corks. Flounder catches, while fewer, are respectable out towards Masonboro and Banks Channel on mud minnows and Gulp swimming mullet. Over on the surf, a fresh run of **bluefish** and scattered Spanish mackerel are showing, with Clark spoons and Gotcha plugs doing the trick.
The report from Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report says that fall topwater bites are firing—walk-the-dog style lures like Heddon Super Spooks and Rapala Skitter Walks have been deadly early and late, especially for cruisers on shallow flats. Soft plastics (Z-Man paddletails and Matrix Shad) are working for everything from reds to trout when tossed up-current and worked slow off the bottom.
Hot spots for today:
- **Snow’s Cut:** Cooler water and moving tide concentrate trout and drum, especially near the bridge pilings and eddy slicks.
- **Wrightsville Beach Jetties:** Trout and blues are feeding actively here; try the outgoing tide for best action with artificials and fresh cut bait.
- **Masonboro Island Backwaters:** Best bet for sight-fishing reds and chance at larger flounder, especially if you’re quietly poling or kayaking near marsh drains.
Bait tip: Live shrimp is king for specks and reds inshore right now, but a fresh finger mullet can turn over a big flounder. If you’re heading offshore for king mackerel or bigger blues, load up on menhaden.
Numbers are strong this week: groups report 20+ trout days for patient casters, along with several slot-sized reds each trip, and even a few doormat flounder landed out at the deeper holes.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Wilmington report! Be sure to subscribe for daily updates and local fishing insights.
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’ve got classic crisp fall conditions in the Cape Fear region this morning: sunrise at 7:30am, sunset coming early at 6:19pm. Daytime highs peak in the upper 60s, dropping to the high 40s overnight, and the odds of rain are slim. West winds will be humming pretty good at 15 to 25 knots until about 2pm, and the National Weather Service says seas are pushing 4 to 6 feet offshore—so use caution if you’re heading out past the inlet[weather.gov]. Closer inland, winds are brisk but manageable for most craft.
Tidewise, we’re working with moderate morning action: high at 5:04am around 4.36 feet, then low slack at 11:36am near 0.72 feet. The next high rolls in at 5:34pm with 4.82 feet. Tidal coefficients remain low, which means gentler current and less stirring—excellent for pinpointing those schooling reds and specks, but don’t expect a crazy flush of bait like after a new moon[tide-forecast.com].
Solunar tables mark the major feeding window right around dawn and dusk, so set out before breakfast or rig up for that late afternoon push when the sun’s just about to kiss the horizon[solunarforecast.com].
In the past week, local tackle shops and regulars are reporting solid numbers of **speckled trout** around Wrightsville Beach and the ICW cuts. Trout are hitting hard-bodied twitch baits and 3" soft plastics on 1/8 oz jigheads, especially in the deeper creek mouths and drop-offs. **Red drum** are still schooled up on grass edges and oyster bars, smashing gold spoons and live shrimp under popping corks. Flounder catches, while fewer, are respectable out towards Masonboro and Banks Channel on mud minnows and Gulp swimming mullet. Over on the surf, a fresh run of **bluefish** and scattered Spanish mackerel are showing, with Clark spoons and Gotcha plugs doing the trick.
The report from Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report says that fall topwater bites are firing—walk-the-dog style lures like Heddon Super Spooks and Rapala Skitter Walks have been deadly early and late, especially for cruisers on shallow flats. Soft plastics (Z-Man paddletails and Matrix Shad) are working for everything from reds to trout when tossed up-current and worked slow off the bottom.
Hot spots for today:
- **Snow’s Cut:** Cooler water and moving tide concentrate trout and drum, especially near the bridge pilings and eddy slicks.
- **Wrightsville Beach Jetties:** Trout and blues are feeding actively here; try the outgoing tide for best action with artificials and fresh cut bait.
- **Masonboro Island Backwaters:** Best bet for sight-fishing reds and chance at larger flounder, especially if you’re quietly poling or kayaking near marsh drains.
Bait tip: Live shrimp is king for specks and reds inshore right now, but a fresh finger mullet can turn over a big flounder. If you’re heading offshore for king mackerel or bigger blues, load up on menhaden.
Numbers are strong this week: groups report 20+ trout days for patient casters, along with several slot-sized reds each trip, and even a few doormat flounder landed out at the deeper holes.
Thanks for tuning in to today’s Wilmington report! Be sure to subscribe for daily updates and local fishing insights.
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.