Good morning anglers, this is Artificial Lure with your Friday, August 15th, 2025 fishing report from in and around Wilmington, North Carolina.
We’re kicking off the day with a fresh sunrise at 6:33AM and sunset wrapping things up at 7:57PM—giving us plenty of daylight hours to get out there and wet a line. Today’s tides started with a low at 6:24AM, a high rolling in at 1:09PM, and another low at 7:26PM. That midday high is a prime window, with moving water keeping things lively. Tides this week are running strong, with healthy ranges that typically translate to higher bait activity and more aggressive predators, especially as that high approaches and the current picks up according to Tide-Forecast.com.
Weather’s pretty classic for August: muggy start, light southerly winds swinging through the afternoon, and just enough cloud cover to keep things from scorching. Water temps are sitting comfortably in the upper 70s—right where inshore species want it.
Now, onto fish activity. The bite’s been pretty hot this week, with guides and locals alike reporting solid catches of speckled trout, slot reds, the first flurries of flounder moving back inshore, plus snapper and a scattering of late summer snook. Tarpon are still hanging on the outer bars off the river mouth and around the inlets—especially during big tidal shifts midday. Inshore, anglers have been pulling in trout and reds with consistency, with a few bull reds hitting the docks in the evenings.
Best results lately? According to recent trip feedback, folks are tearing it up with artificial lures—think Z-Man soft plastics in natural and chartreuse patterns, paddletails rigged on a 1/8 oz jighead, and MirrOlure suspending twitchbaits near grass lines and creek mouths. If it’s topwater excitement you’re after, hit the early morning with a Spook Jr. for trout and reds blitzing shrimp and mullet near the surface. Live bait is always reliable, especially finger mullet and live shrimp pinned on a Carolina rig. For flounder, Gulp! swimming mullets and bucktail jigs tipped with strip bait are the go-to.
Lately, bottom bounce with cut bait is still putting black drum and sheepshead on the dock piles, while live menhaden slow-trolled along the beachfront is drawing in king mackerel and spanish. Out at the Masonboro jetties, reports of a mixed bag—including ladyfish, blues, and the occasional jack crevalle—help keep rods bent.
For hot spots, Carolina Beach Inlet is firing on all cylinders—just aim for the morning high or the evening fall for trout, flounder, and reds. Wrightsville Beach’s south end flats have been loaded with schooling reds on the rising tide, and the creeks off Hewletts and Bradley with specks and puppy drum on the edges. Don’t overlook Snow’s Cut during strong tidal movement—it’s putting out solid flounder numbers and the odd fat trout.
To sum it up: target the moving tidal windows, pack a few proven artificials, and bring some live bait if you want to hedge your bets. Plenty of action for anglers of all skill levels right now, whether you’re hitting the surf, the river, or backwater creeks.
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