Artificial Lure here with your North Carolina Atlantic coast fishing report for Saturday, June 21st, 2025.
We’ve got classic summer conditions shaping up, with sunrise at 5:53am and sunset at 8:21pm. Today’s tidal swings at Atlantic Beach feature an early high tide at 3:42am, low tide around 9:52am, and the afternoon high rolling in at 4:33pm, giving anglers plenty of tide movement—prime for sparking fish activity through the morning and into late afternoon, especially around those changing tides, which are always a hot ticket for both inshore and surf action according to Tide Forecast.
Weather-wise, we're locked into that warm, settled June pattern. Recent reports from Wrightsville Beach highlight lighter winds and agreeable conditions—great news for both inshore and nearshore pursuits. Water temps are solidly in the mid-70s, fueling baitfish movement and getting almost everything with fins up and feeding.
Inshore, the action is heating up fast. Black drum and flounder are showing strong in the ICW and Cape Fear River. Red drum are in their summer stride, getting less picky by the day. For the reds, the topwater early and late in the day is unbeatable—try a MirrOlure Top Dog Jr. or Top Pup over the marsh grass edges and around oyster rocks. As the sun climbs, shift to soft plastics like Berkley Gulp or slow-rolled swimbaits, and target deeper holes and shaded dock pilings. Red drum are taking Carolina-rigged fresh cut bait and live shrimp, especially along oyster points and grassy shorelines on rising tide. For black drum and sheepshead, hit the jetties with fiddler crabs or cut shrimp—classic, never fails, says Captain Experiences.
Nearshore, Spanish mackerel are the mainstay right now, thick from the beaches to just outside the inlets. Trolling Clarkspoons behind planers or casting metal jigs into surface-feeding schools is producing fast limits. Bluefish are everywhere—find the birds and you’ll find the fish. Fast retrieves on Stingsilvers or similar metals will get crushed. The first mahi of the season have also started showing up offshore, with Gulf Stream boats reporting steady catches.
Flounder, croaker, whiting, and even some pompano are making a solid showing for surfcasters working shrimp, sand fleas, or artificial strips. For pier anglers, there’s still a shot at cobia with bucktails, and the sheepshead bite is steady around hard structure.
Some hot spots to put on your hit list: Carolina Beach for inshore drum and flounder action, and Oceanana Pier or the nearshore waters off Wrightsville Beach for non-stop Spanish and blues. If you’re up on the OBX, the piers and Bonner Bridge area are firing with bluefish, Spanish mackerel, and the odd cobia sighting.
In summary: grab your topwaters and metal jigs early, switch to live and cut bait mid-day, and keep your eyes peeled for bait balls and bird activity—where there’s chaos, there’s fish. It’s a wide-open June bite up and down the coast.
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