Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today

"North Carolina Coast Fishing Report: Fall Trout, Drum, and Offshore Action"


Listen Later

Good morning, anglers! Artificial Lure here with your Wednesday, November 26th fishing report for the North Carolina coast and Atlantic waters—let’s get right to it.

Weather’s crisp this morning, with air temps starting in the low 40s and barely pushing into the low 60s by afternoon. Expect a light north wind early, picking up to 10-15 knots by midday. The NWS is calling for a Small Craft Advisory—so if you’re in a small vessel, stay mindful and check for updates. Skies are variable, likely some clouds but mostly dry.

Today’s sunrise came at 6:58 AM along coastal Brunswick and New Hanover counties, and sunset will be at 4:58 PM. We’re working with a falling tide through much of this morning: in Morehead City, low tide hits around 5:50 AM with the next high topping off near noon. That means your outgoing tide bite window is shaping up nicely for the early goers, prime for inlets and marsh drains.

The surf’s been generous lately—off the piers at Oak Island and Ocean Isle, anglers saw plenty of keeper-size red drum and black drum the last couple days, along with sheepshead working pilings and bulkheads, according to Tides4Fishing and recent social media updates. Spot runs are slowing, but there’s a solid showing of trout, especially near river mouths and on the falling tide. Don’t be shy with those MirrOlure suspending plugs or small paddletail plastics in natural colors; these have drawn steady action under birds and bait pockets. For bait, shrimp and cut mullet are finding the drum, while fiddler crabs are earning big sheepshead off rocky structure—soft plastics or bucktail jigs tipped with shrimp land plenty of trout and the odd flounder.

Offshore, the nearshore reefs and wrecks off Atlantic Beach and Cape Lookout are giving up pretty catches of sea bass, gray trout, and the occasional citation-size jolthead porgy—OnTheWater reports some impressive porgies pushing 10 pounds off hard bottom this month. Tautog and triggerfish are mixed in for those dropping green crabs or squid strips. Your metal jigs and 2-4 oz bucktails are great for getting down quick if the drift’s up.

Inshore, the speckled trout bite is solid early and late, especially around creek mouths in the ICW and deeper holes near Wrightsville and Masonboro. Zoom Super Flukes in pearl or shad colors have been a top soft-plastic pick—Bassmaster recommends pairing them with a 4/0 EWG hook, and if you want to get fancy, a light Carolina rig or popping cork helps keep you in the strike zone. Hard baits like Rapala XRaps and MirrOdines are bringing in the bigger specks when the water’s a tad clearer.

Best hot spots for today:
- **Shallotte Inlet and marsh drains** at first light for some drums and specks.
- **Cape Lookout rock jetty**—sheepshead and tautog are active around the rocks and pilings.
- For pier-bound anglers, **Surf City Pier** has seen solid action on black drum and trout at dawn and dusk.

A quick tip: as temps drop, focus on deeper holes and slower retrieves. Fish are stacking up where bait’s thick, so follow the birds and look for nervous water.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s report. If you want more of the latest, be sure to subscribe and join me next time. This has been a Quiet Please production—for more, check out quietplease 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
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report TodayBy Inception Point Ai