Good morning y’all, this is Artificial Lure with your August 10th North Carolina Atlantic fishing report, serving up what’s biting in the salt along the Outer Banks down to Oak Island and everywhere in between.
We’re waking up to textbook dog days weather—expect air temps in the mid-80s, humidity you can wear, and a water temperature holding steady in the low 80s. Dr. Bogus at Bogue Inlet Pier notes it’s hovering at 82 degrees this morning, which keeps the action lively for summer species. There's a few Sunday squalls on the radar, but overall, the sea breeze and scattered showers look to cool things just enough to keep it comfortable for an all-day session. The marine forecast from the National Weather Service Newport/Morehead says winds out of the northeast at 5 to 10 knots, with seas laying down to 2 to 4 feet. That’s a green light for most boats to run outside the inlets or work the surf and nearshore reefs.
Today's tidal swing is worth planning your outing around. According to Tide-Forecast.com, we’re looking at a low tide at 2:47 AM, high tide peaking at 8:38 this morning, dropping to another low around 2:40 this afternoon, with a rolling high again just after sundown. Sunrise cracked at 6:23 AM and sunset’s due at 7:59 PM. Plenty of daylight for a dawn til dusk adventure.
Recent catches have been classic mid-August: king mackerel are still showing—Don Sheffield decked a 36-pounder off Bogue Inlet Pier, and Ben Linton’s 18-pound, 9-ounce king turned heads as well. Spanish mackerel action has been steady in the two-to-four pound class, and bluefish are coming over the rails with some sheepshead and croakers in the mix. Folks working the inshore reefs like AR 315 and AR 320 off Morehead City are bringing up flounder, gray trout, and what may be the last meaningful push of Atlantic bonito for the season, as reported by the Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Daily podcast.
If you’re looking to fill the cooler, the best baits right now are tried and true: for kings and Spanish, get your hands on fresh live menhaden or slow troll cigar minnows. Gotcha plugs in chartreuse and pink, or silver spoons work wonders for Spanish and bluefish from pier or surf, especially if you catch the high outgoing tide. For sheepshead and croaker around the pilings, fiddler crabs or fresh shrimp on a small Carolina rig are your bread and butter. Flounder are crushing white or chartreuse soft plastics tipped with cut bait at the reefs.
Hot spots this week? The old standbys are still the ticket for summer: Bogue Inlet Pier is delivering a mixed bag right now, especially just after daybreak. If you’re launching a boat, set a waypoint for those nearshore AR reefs off Morehead; they’re holding flounder and trout in good numbers, with the occasional surprise—keep a heavier rod ready for those late-summer kings. For surfcasters, the stretch near Fort Macon and out toward Emerald Isle is seeing Spanish blitzes on the glassy mornings.
To recap: Target kings and Spanish with live baits and spoons at first light, flounder and trout on soft plastics at the reefs, sheepshead and croaker under the piers, and keep an eye on those brief weather fronts to trigger a bite. Summer’s heat means fish stay active early and late, so plan accordingly.
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