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Winter Wilmington Fishing Report: Tides, Targets, and Top Tactics
Published 3 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Wilmington-area fishing report.
We’re sitting on a **mid-range winter tide** pattern. Tide-Forecast’s Wilmington tables show a predawn low followed by a late-morning rising tide and an early-afternoon high, with another drop toward dark. That means your best inshore windows are **first light on the incoming** and again midafternoon as that water tops out in the creeks and bays.
According to Tide-Forecast for Wilmington Beach and Wrightsville Beach, **sunrise is right around 7:20–7:25 a.m. and sunset near 5:15–5:25 p.m.** this time of January, so plan to be set up and ready when that first gray light hits the marsh.
The National Weather Service office in Wilmington is calling for a **cool, stable winter pattern on the coast** today: light to moderate northwest to north winds early, easing and swinging more northeasterly with seas in the 2–3 foot range just offshore. According to the NWS marine forecast, no big blow or front crashing through during the day, so conditions should be **very fishable**, especially in the lee of the land.
Water’s cold, but the fish are still chewing if you slow down. Local chatter and recent winter reports up and down the Cape Fear say:
- **Red drum** holding deep in creeks and around docks, often in small winter schools.
- **Speckled trout** still coming from the ICW and inlet mouths on the warmer tide stages.
- **Black drum and sheepshead** picking around bridge pilings, rock, and oysters.
- Nearshore, on the right weather window, boats have been finding **sea bass and a few gray trout** on the close reefs.
Most recent catches folks are talking about are **slot reds and a handful of over-slot releases**, plus **nice eater trout in the 14–18 inch range**, with a mix of small black drum from the bridges and river docks.
Best offerings right now:
- **Artificial lures:**
- 3-inch **soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads** in natural colors (opening night, pearl, new penny) worked slow along the bottom for reds and trout.
- **Suspending twitchbaits and MirrOlure-style plugs** fished with long pauses around docks and creek mouths for specks.
- Light **bucktail jigs** tipped with a little Gulp! for deeper river fish.
- **Natural bait:**
- **Live mud minnows** are king in winter, pinned on a jighead or Carolina rig.
- **Fresh shrimp pieces** on a small circle hook for black drum and sheepshead around structure.
- Cut mullet or menhaden where you’re targeting laid-up reds.
Fish your baits **slower than you think you should** and stay tight to structure: dock pilings, jetty rocks, and shell edges are the ticket.
Couple of hot spots to circle on your map:
- **Wrightsville Beach / Masonboro Inlet:** Work the ICW docks behind Wrightsville, the edges of Banks Channel, and the rock jetties on the rising tide for specks and reds.
- **Carolina Beach / Snow’s Cut and the upper Cape Fear:** Deep bends and rip lines in Snow’s Cut, plus docks and rock along the river, are holding winter reds, trout, and black drum when the tide’s moving.
If you can slide a little farther south, **Fort Fisher and the rocks at the ferry landing** fish well on a warmer afternoon high tide for reds and trout, especially with a light north wind laying it down.
That’s the word from the water today. 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’re sitting on a **mid-range winter tide** pattern. Tide-Forecast’s Wilmington tables show a predawn low followed by a late-morning rising tide and an early-afternoon high, with another drop toward dark. That means your best inshore windows are **first light on the incoming** and again midafternoon as that water tops out in the creeks and bays.
According to Tide-Forecast for Wilmington Beach and Wrightsville Beach, **sunrise is right around 7:20–7:25 a.m. and sunset near 5:15–5:25 p.m.** this time of January, so plan to be set up and ready when that first gray light hits the marsh.
The National Weather Service office in Wilmington is calling for a **cool, stable winter pattern on the coast** today: light to moderate northwest to north winds early, easing and swinging more northeasterly with seas in the 2–3 foot range just offshore. According to the NWS marine forecast, no big blow or front crashing through during the day, so conditions should be **very fishable**, especially in the lee of the land.
Water’s cold, but the fish are still chewing if you slow down. Local chatter and recent winter reports up and down the Cape Fear say:
- **Red drum** holding deep in creeks and around docks, often in small winter schools.
- **Speckled trout** still coming from the ICW and inlet mouths on the warmer tide stages.
- **Black drum and sheepshead** picking around bridge pilings, rock, and oysters.
- Nearshore, on the right weather window, boats have been finding **sea bass and a few gray trout** on the close reefs.
Most recent catches folks are talking about are **slot reds and a handful of over-slot releases**, plus **nice eater trout in the 14–18 inch range**, with a mix of small black drum from the bridges and river docks.
Best offerings right now:
- **Artificial lures:**
- 3-inch **soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads** in natural colors (opening night, pearl, new penny) worked slow along the bottom for reds and trout.
- **Suspending twitchbaits and MirrOlure-style plugs** fished with long pauses around docks and creek mouths for specks.
- Light **bucktail jigs** tipped with a little Gulp! for deeper river fish.
- **Natural bait:**
- **Live mud minnows** are king in winter, pinned on a jighead or Carolina rig.
- **Fresh shrimp pieces** on a small circle hook for black drum and sheepshead around structure.
- Cut mullet or menhaden where you’re targeting laid-up reds.
Fish your baits **slower than you think you should** and stay tight to structure: dock pilings, jetty rocks, and shell edges are the ticket.
Couple of hot spots to circle on your map:
- **Wrightsville Beach / Masonboro Inlet:** Work the ICW docks behind Wrightsville, the edges of Banks Channel, and the rock jetties on the rising tide for specks and reds.
- **Carolina Beach / Snow’s Cut and the upper Cape Fear:** Deep bends and rip lines in Snow’s Cut, plus docks and rock along the river, are holding winter reds, trout, and black drum when the tide’s moving.
If you can slide a little farther south, **Fort Fisher and the rocks at the ferry landing** fish well on a warmer afternoon high tide for reds and trout, especially with a light north wind laying it down.
That’s the word from the water today. 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.