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Late Fall Fishing Frenzy on the Cape Fear Coast
Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Wilmington fishing report.
We’ve got a classic late‑fall pattern setting up along the Cape Fear coast. Light west wind around 5 knots this morning and calm seas inside the inlets, with the National Weather Service in Wilmington calling for high pressure building in behind a front, so it’ll stay cool, dry, and pretty comfortable on the water today. Sunrise is right around 7:05 a.m. and sunset near 5:05 p.m., giving you a tight prime window at first and last light.
Tides are moving good. NOAA’s Wilmington station shows an early morning low just before 8 a.m. with a strong incoming through late morning, then falling again toward dark. Over on Wilmington Beach and Wrightsville, Tides4Fishing lines up with a negative low pre‑dawn and a solid high late morning in that 6‑foot range, which is perfect for pushing bait up on the flats and along dock lines.
Fish activity has picked up with that cooler water. Inshore, local Wrightsville and Carolina Beach guides have been reporting consistent slot **redfish** and plenty of under‑slot rats around the marsh creeks, with a few upper‑slot fish holding tight to oysters and deeper bends. Speckled **trout** action has been steady in the ICW and creeks off the Cape Fear, with most boats putting a dozen or more trout in the boat on a half‑day when they stay mobile. A few **flounder** are still showing as by‑catch around deeper docks and inlet ledges, but that bite is thinning.
Nearshore, the artificial reefs and live bottoms out of Masonboro Inlet have given up good numbers of **black sea bass**, small **grunts**, and some keeper **sheepshead** for folks dropping shrimp and fiddlers on light bottom rigs. Scattered **false albacore** and **Spanish mackerel** are still popping on the outside when the bait balls get pushed up, especially on glassy afternoons.
Best lures right now:
- For trout, 3–4 inch soft plastics in opening night or natural mullet on 1/8 to 1/4 ounce jigheads, plus MirrOlure 17MRs in darker, tannin‑stained creeks.
- For reds, gold spoons slow‑rolled along grass edges, and paddle‑tails in new penny or root beer bumped over oysters. A noisy topwater like a Spook Jr. at first light around creek mouths is still drawing some violent strikes.
- For nearshore, small metals and epoxy jigs in the 20–40 gram range, ripped through bait schools, will handle Spanish and albies.
Best bait:
- Live **mud minnows** and finger **mullet** for redfish on Carolina rigs or jigheads around oysters and docks.
- Live **shrimp** under a popping cork for trout along current seams and grass lines.
- Fiddler crabs and fresh shrimp on light bottom rigs for sheepshead and black sea bass over nearshore structure.
A couple of hot spots to circle on the map:
- **Masonboro Inlet and the adjacent ICW docks**: work the falling tide for reds tight to structure, then slide to the jetty edges and rip soft plastics or MirrOlures for trout.
- **Snow’s Cut and the creeks behind Carolina Beach**: fish the deeper bends and rock walls on the first of the incoming for mixed trout and reds, with a shot at a stray flounder on soft plastics hopped near bottom.
That’s your on‑the‑water rundown from Wilmington. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.
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 a classic late‑fall pattern setting up along the Cape Fear coast. Light west wind around 5 knots this morning and calm seas inside the inlets, with the National Weather Service in Wilmington calling for high pressure building in behind a front, so it’ll stay cool, dry, and pretty comfortable on the water today. Sunrise is right around 7:05 a.m. and sunset near 5:05 p.m., giving you a tight prime window at first and last light.
Tides are moving good. NOAA’s Wilmington station shows an early morning low just before 8 a.m. with a strong incoming through late morning, then falling again toward dark. Over on Wilmington Beach and Wrightsville, Tides4Fishing lines up with a negative low pre‑dawn and a solid high late morning in that 6‑foot range, which is perfect for pushing bait up on the flats and along dock lines.
Fish activity has picked up with that cooler water. Inshore, local Wrightsville and Carolina Beach guides have been reporting consistent slot **redfish** and plenty of under‑slot rats around the marsh creeks, with a few upper‑slot fish holding tight to oysters and deeper bends. Speckled **trout** action has been steady in the ICW and creeks off the Cape Fear, with most boats putting a dozen or more trout in the boat on a half‑day when they stay mobile. A few **flounder** are still showing as by‑catch around deeper docks and inlet ledges, but that bite is thinning.
Nearshore, the artificial reefs and live bottoms out of Masonboro Inlet have given up good numbers of **black sea bass**, small **grunts**, and some keeper **sheepshead** for folks dropping shrimp and fiddlers on light bottom rigs. Scattered **false albacore** and **Spanish mackerel** are still popping on the outside when the bait balls get pushed up, especially on glassy afternoons.
Best lures right now:
- For trout, 3–4 inch soft plastics in opening night or natural mullet on 1/8 to 1/4 ounce jigheads, plus MirrOlure 17MRs in darker, tannin‑stained creeks.
- For reds, gold spoons slow‑rolled along grass edges, and paddle‑tails in new penny or root beer bumped over oysters. A noisy topwater like a Spook Jr. at first light around creek mouths is still drawing some violent strikes.
- For nearshore, small metals and epoxy jigs in the 20–40 gram range, ripped through bait schools, will handle Spanish and albies.
Best bait:
- Live **mud minnows** and finger **mullet** for redfish on Carolina rigs or jigheads around oysters and docks.
- Live **shrimp** under a popping cork for trout along current seams and grass lines.
- Fiddler crabs and fresh shrimp on light bottom rigs for sheepshead and black sea bass over nearshore structure.
A couple of hot spots to circle on the map:
- **Masonboro Inlet and the adjacent ICW docks**: work the falling tide for reds tight to structure, then slide to the jetty edges and rip soft plastics or MirrOlures for trout.
- **Snow’s Cut and the creeks behind Carolina Beach**: fish the deeper bends and rock walls on the first of the incoming for mixed trout and reds, with a shot at a stray flounder on soft plastics hopped near bottom.
That’s your on‑the‑water rundown from Wilmington. Thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report.
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.