Listen "North Carolina's Atlantic Coast Delivers for Anglers as Fall Bite Heats Up"
Episode Synopsis
Artificial Lure here with your Friday morning fishing report for the Atlantic coast of North Carolina. Sunrise dropped in at 6:44 a.m. today, with sunset tonight at 7:24 p.m.—good daylight for putting in some casts. The weather’s opening the fall season right: mild temps, a light northerly breeze, and breaking clouds, making the ocean flat enough for small boats and shoal work.Atlantic Beach tides show a low at 12:47 p.m. and a high at 7:10 p.m. If you’re heading out early, catch the moving water between these swings for best bite. Holden Beach has its highs at 10:31 a.m. and again at 10:01 p.m., with solid flood tide action all morning—timing couldn’t be better for surf spots and nearshore runs.Big news: North Carolina’s commercial flounder season officially opened yesterday. We’re seeing more pound nets and giggers out, and folks at the docks are hauling in nice legal-sized flounder. Most are coming in right off the sandbars, with handfuls of keepers mixed with underslots. This is a great signal for weekend rec anglers: try slow-rolling bucktail jigs tipped with Gulp or live finger mullet on the edges of deeper holes near the beach. According to The Coastland Times, boats working over the sand have been especially productive since the opener.Red drum numbers remain steady with the cooling nights. Several local boats have reported drum blitzes around Bogue Inlet and the marsh edge near Swansboro, with fish mostly in the mid-slot range. Highly recommend Carolina rigs baited with fresh cut menhaden, or if you’re chunking lures, gold spoons and popping corks with shrimp imitations are delivering the most hits.Speckled trout catches are up as well, especially around the jetties and deeper stretches of the ICW. Fluke-style soft plastics worked low and slow, or MirrOlure suspending twitch baits, have produced multiple five-fish limits in the past few evenings—one Oak Island report mentions that switching to smaller white fluke lures as the sun drops worked when nothing else drew strikes.Off the beaches, Spanish mackerel and blues are still pushing inside the bars, feeding early into outgoing tide. Trolling Clark spoons and slinging weighted Got-Cha plugs have led to double-digit Spanish catches, with some blues mixed in for good measure. Try bouncing silver spoons through bait balls around high tide at Fort Macon—one of my suggested hot spots—where birds are working and fish stay active.Offshore, king mackerel are picking up around the 10-mile boxcars and AR 315. Fresh cigar minnows slow-trolled as bait are the go-to. A few boats working chicken rigs have also found sea bass and some scattered triggerfish.For bass anglers working brackish waters, Bass Fishing Daily highlights the effectiveness of finesse worms or early topwater, but as we move into September and October, switching to fluke lures or paddle-tail swimbaits in shad colors works best. The Bass Fishing Cheat Sheet recommends downsizing your offering and fishing near shaded structure for more bites as temp drops.If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots:- Fort Macon rock jetty for specks and mackerel- Bogue Inlet for drum and flounder at tide change- Holden Beach peer for all-around salt actionIn summary, falling tides, cooling waters, and that first September cold snap have North Carolina’s Atlantic bite firing across the board. Flounder, drum, trout, and mackerel are all hitting hard from pier to inlet to offshore wreck. Best baits today: finger mullet, cut menhaden, and Gulp on bucktail. For lures, try gold spoons, MirrOlures, and white flukes with quick twitches.That’s all for today! Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for your next local report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1PnThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
More episodes of the podcast Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily
Atlantic Beach Fishing Forecast: Tides, Bites, and Hot Spots for a Successful Day on the Water
18/10/2025
Tides, Lures, and Grouper: The Secrets to Successful Fishing in North Carolina's Atlantic Waters
17/10/2025