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Wilmington Winter Wonders: Reds, Trout, and More on the Cape Fear

Wilmington Winter Wonders: Reds, Trout, and More on the Cape Fear

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
This is Artificial Lure with your Wilmington, North Carolina fishing report.

We woke up to a cool, clear Carolina morning, light north breeze and crisp air along the Cape Fear. According to the National Weather Service in Wilmington, we’re looking at seasonable high pressure today with northerly winds around 10 to 15 knots nearshore, easing later, and seas 2 to 3 feet – very manageable for the small-boat crowd. US Harbors for Wilmington Beach has temps starting in the low 40s with a sunny warm‑up into the 50s and 60s, so bring a jacket at daybreak and shed layers as the sun gets up.

Tides inside around Wilmington, based on Tide-Forecast for the river gauge, run with a pre‑dawn low just after 4 a.m. and the morning high stacking up around 10:15 a.m., then falling again mid‑afternoon. That gives you a nice incoming push through breakfast and a solid outgoing for the lunch bite. Tides4Fishing notes good solunar activity right through the late morning, and sunrise/sunset from SolunarForecast put first light a little after 7 a.m. and sunset just after 5 p.m., so you’ve got a tight winter window – make those moving‑water periods count.

Inshore, the Cape Fear and ICW have been giving up **red drum**, **speckled trout**, and a mix of **black drum** and **sheepshead**. Local chatter from tackle shops around Carolina Beach and Wrightsville says most folks are picking off half‑dozen to a dozen slot reds on a good tide, plus a handful of trout if you stay patient. The trout aren’t stacked like fall, but there are still 16–20 inch fish hanging on deeper bends and creek mouths.

Best baits right now:
- For reds and black drum: fresh **shrimp** on a Carolina rig, or small **blue crab** chunks around docks and rock edges.
- For trout: 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads with **soft plastics** in natural or smoky green, or a MirrOlure‑style suspending plug worked slow.
- Sheepshead: small fiddler crabs or barnacle‑picked pilings with a light jig.

Water’s cooled down enough that a slower presentation is key. Think hop‑and‑drag, not burn‑and‑rip.

On the beaches around Wilmington Beach and Kure, Tides4Fishing and local pier reports point to a scattered surf bite: a few **puffers**, **whiting**, and the odd **slot red** on shrimp and Fishbites, especially around the top and first of the falling tide.

A couple of local hot spots to circle on your map:
- **Masonboro Inlet and the ICW edges north and south of it** – work the deeper drop‑offs and creek mouths on the last of the incoming and first of the fall with soft plastics and live shrimp under a cork for trout and reds.
- **Cape Fear River around Snow’s Cut and Carolina Beach Inlet** – the rock walls and channel edges have been holding reds and black drum; fish cut bait or shrimp tight to structure on that moving tide.

Nearshore, guys running a little off the beach have still been finding a few **gray trout** and **sea bass** on the hard bottom, using 1–2 oz jigheads tipped with cut squid. Nothing crazy, but enough action to make the ride worth it when the wind lays down.

That’s your Wilmington‑area fishing rundown from Artificial Lure. 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.

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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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