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Wilmington Fishing Report: Winter Tides Fuel Speckled Trout, Reds, and Stripers
Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Wilmington fishing report.
We’re sliding into a classic early‑winter pattern along the lower Cape Fear. Cooler water and big tide swings have the fish chewing when the water moves, and sleeping when it doesn’t.
Tides first. For Wilmington Beach and down through Carolina and Kure, today’s running a strong morning low around first light with a solid flood pushing in mid‑morning, then falling again late afternoon. Surfline’s Fort Fisher tide calendar shows roughly a -0.5 foot low just before 2 a.m. and a 5‑plus foot high late morning, with another good drop toward evening. That big range means stronger current in the inlets and creek mouths, which is exactly what we want.
Sunrise around the beaches is right about 7:05 a.m., with sunset near 5:05 p.m., according to FishingReminder’s Carolina Beach solunar tables. The best fish movement is lining up with that mid‑morning incoming and the last of the afternoon fall.
Weather‑wise, the NWS Wilmington marine forecast has us cool, damp, and breezy behind recent rain, with northerly to northeast wind and chop outside the inlet. Nearshore boats will feel it, but inshore creeks and the river are plenty fishable if you tuck out of the wind.
Inshore bite’s been solid. A recent Atlantic‑side report on Spreaker notes “winter tides delivering specks, reds and stripers on incoming mornings and afternoons” around Wilmington. That’s exactly what locals are seeing from Wrightsville south through Snow’s Cut and down the river:
- **Speckled trout** on deeper bends and creek mouths, 4–8 feet.
- **Red drum** laid up on shell and mud edges on the last of the falling, then sliding onto the flats with the flood.
- A few **stripers** in the upper Cape Fear around downtown structure and bridges.
Best baits and lures:
- For trout: 3–4 inch paddletails in opening night, electric chicken, or pearl on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, plus MR‑17 style suspending plugs worked slow.
- For reds: Gulp shrimp or mullet in new penny or natural, on a jighead or Carolina rig, and cut mullet or fresh shrimp if you want to soak bait.
- For stripers in the river: small swimbaits, soft jerkbaits, and shallow‑running plugs around pilings and riprap; think slower, closer to the bottom.
Live shrimp, if you can get them from a local shop like Tex’s bait and tackle in Wilmington, are still money under a popping cork for specks and mixed drum in the creeks.
Surf and nearshore: that stiff north wind has the surf stirred up, but when the water cleans between blows, folks are picking at **pups, black drum, and whiting** on shrimp, sand fleas, and Fishbites, with a bonus speck or two near the inlets. Nearshore reefs off Wrightsville and Carolina Beach are holding **gray trout, seabass, and a few flounder** on metal jigs and soft plastics fished tight to structure.
A couple of local hot spots if you’re heading out:
- **Snow’s Cut and the Carolina Beach Inlet edges**: work the drop‑offs and eddies on the incoming for specks and reds.
- **Masonboro Inlet and the creeks behind it**: great mix of trout and reds on plastics and live shrimp, especially around the mid‑morning push.
Fish slow, keep your presentations near the bottom, and let that tide do the work.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe.
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 sliding into a classic early‑winter pattern along the lower Cape Fear. Cooler water and big tide swings have the fish chewing when the water moves, and sleeping when it doesn’t.
Tides first. For Wilmington Beach and down through Carolina and Kure, today’s running a strong morning low around first light with a solid flood pushing in mid‑morning, then falling again late afternoon. Surfline’s Fort Fisher tide calendar shows roughly a -0.5 foot low just before 2 a.m. and a 5‑plus foot high late morning, with another good drop toward evening. That big range means stronger current in the inlets and creek mouths, which is exactly what we want.
Sunrise around the beaches is right about 7:05 a.m., with sunset near 5:05 p.m., according to FishingReminder’s Carolina Beach solunar tables. The best fish movement is lining up with that mid‑morning incoming and the last of the afternoon fall.
Weather‑wise, the NWS Wilmington marine forecast has us cool, damp, and breezy behind recent rain, with northerly to northeast wind and chop outside the inlet. Nearshore boats will feel it, but inshore creeks and the river are plenty fishable if you tuck out of the wind.
Inshore bite’s been solid. A recent Atlantic‑side report on Spreaker notes “winter tides delivering specks, reds and stripers on incoming mornings and afternoons” around Wilmington. That’s exactly what locals are seeing from Wrightsville south through Snow’s Cut and down the river:
- **Speckled trout** on deeper bends and creek mouths, 4–8 feet.
- **Red drum** laid up on shell and mud edges on the last of the falling, then sliding onto the flats with the flood.
- A few **stripers** in the upper Cape Fear around downtown structure and bridges.
Best baits and lures:
- For trout: 3–4 inch paddletails in opening night, electric chicken, or pearl on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads, plus MR‑17 style suspending plugs worked slow.
- For reds: Gulp shrimp or mullet in new penny or natural, on a jighead or Carolina rig, and cut mullet or fresh shrimp if you want to soak bait.
- For stripers in the river: small swimbaits, soft jerkbaits, and shallow‑running plugs around pilings and riprap; think slower, closer to the bottom.
Live shrimp, if you can get them from a local shop like Tex’s bait and tackle in Wilmington, are still money under a popping cork for specks and mixed drum in the creeks.
Surf and nearshore: that stiff north wind has the surf stirred up, but when the water cleans between blows, folks are picking at **pups, black drum, and whiting** on shrimp, sand fleas, and Fishbites, with a bonus speck or two near the inlets. Nearshore reefs off Wrightsville and Carolina Beach are holding **gray trout, seabass, and a few flounder** on metal jigs and soft plastics fished tight to structure.
A couple of local hot spots if you’re heading out:
- **Snow’s Cut and the Carolina Beach Inlet edges**: work the drop‑offs and eddies on the incoming for specks and reds.
- **Masonboro Inlet and the creeks behind it**: great mix of trout and reds on plastics and live shrimp, especially around the mid‑morning push.
Fish slow, keep your presentations near the bottom, and let that tide do the work.
Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe.
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.