Hey folks, this is Artificial Lure with your up-to-the-minute June 1st fishing report from the Atlantic coast of North Carolina. Summer’s knocking, water’s warming, and the action’s heating up from the northern beaches down to Sunset and Holden.
Kicking off with the tide news: Over in Atlantic Beach today, high tide rolled through just after midnight and will be back at 12:39pm, with lows at 6:41am and 6:34pm. Sunrise was a crisp 5:54am, and sunset’s stretching all the way out to 8:15pm. Calm winds this morning and a gentle southerly breeze by midday should make for inviting conditions both inshore and nearshore, with temps climbing into the low 80s and scattered clouds providing some welcome cover. According to Tide-Forecast.com, these tides are spot-on for those looking to fish the moving water around structure and inlets.
The early summer run is firing on all cylinders for pelagics and bottom dwellers alike. Fisherman’s Post reports that the Atlantic bonito bite has been “on fire,” especially early mornings on nearshore wrecks, reefs, and around the inlets. Spanish mackerel are thick from Wrightsville Beach to Emerald Isle, busting bait on top and keeping rods bent. Big Nic Spanish Candy lures and casting spoons in the ½ to 1.5 oz range are the hot ticket, fished fast and erratic on high-speed spinning gear. Bluefish are mixing in, sometimes thick, so up your leader strength a touch to avoid bite-offs. According to Captain Jot Owens out of Wrightsville, the small king mackerel have shown up, so check your size limits.
On the reefs and rock piles, Captain Experiences notes steady catches of black sea bass and hefty sheepshead. Bring fiddler crabs or shrimp for those stubborn sheepshead, or drop down a squid-tipped jig for sea bass. Red drum and black drum remain active inshore, taking cut bait tight to docks and marsh edges, especially on the falling tide.
A critical reminder for all: the spotted seatrout harvest is closed until July 1, due to a state-mandated cold stun recovery extension after this past winter’s harsh snaps, according to the NC Division of Marine Fisheries. Please handle any incidental catches with care and release promptly.
A couple hotspot recommendations for you:
- Bogue Inlet Pier is holding Spanish and blues on the morning tide.
- The AR-315 artificial reef off Wrightsville is loaded with bonito and sea bass right now.
- Harkers Island flats are prime for sight-casting drum on topwater at first light.
Best baits this week:
- Metal spoons and glass minnow imitations for mackerel and bonito
- Fiddler crabs or shrimp for sheepshead and drum
- Cut mullet or menhaden for reds and black drum inshore
Thanks for tuning in to your North Carolina coastal report! Be sure to subscribe for the latest hot spots, tackle tips, and tide updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.