Good morning folks, Artificial Lure here with your Wilmington, North Carolina fishing report for Friday, August 8th, 2025.
We’ve got about 14 hours and 20 minutes of daylight today, with sunrise at 6:19 am and sunset around 8:39 pm, plenty of time to wet a line before the heat truly sets in. The weather’s shaping up classic coastal Carolina style: morning temps already nudging into the 80s, climbing to the low 90s by afternoon, with light southerly winds and only a slim shot of a pop-up thunderstorm late in the day. Skies are mostly clear, with enough humidity to remind you it’s August in the Cape Fear.
If you’re watching the tides, the first low comes at about 2:14 am, with high tide swinging in late morning just before 8:30 am. The next low is due just before 2:45 pm, then another high rolling through close to 9 pm, according to the Wilmington tide chart. Expect a decent push of current both early and late—prime for staging fish along the creek mouths and drop-offs.
August fishing in Wilmington is on fire. According to BlackBird Guide Service and Carolina Sportsman, there’s no shortage of species bending rods right now—redfish, black drum, Spanish mackerel, and flounder are all making strong showings inshore and nearshore. Sight-fishing for redfish is heating up, especially on those just-flooded morning flats. Keep your eyes peeled for “back crawlers” nudging the shallows. They’re spooky, so a light presentation like a gold spoon, Z-Man paddletail, or even a well-placed shrimp fly can do serious work.
Black drum are a sure bet for numbers if the water gets a little dirty or winds kick up. Fresh shrimp—dead or alive—pinned on a Carolina rig is still the ticket for these steady biters. These fish are hanging along oyster beds, creek bends, and just about any structure with a bit of flow. Plenty of anglers report consistent catches, especially near the spoil islands back in Hewletts and Masonboros sounds.
Over in the surf and just off the beaches, Spanish mackerel have been blitzing on the falling tide. Folks are doing real well casting Clarkspoons, small Gotcha plugs, and trolling flashy rigs just outside the sandbars. King mackerel are on the move too, mostly near the nearshore ARs and live bottom, and recently the Pirate Plug rigged with a cigar minnow or ballyhoo has been the top-producing lure. Dolphin (mahi) are even being picked off by boats pushing a little deeper, especially when trolling fast with bright-colored skirts.
Smaller species like croaker and spot are around in fair numbers, especially at Sun Coast Pier and Carolina Beach State Park. Bloodworms and shrimp bits on double-drop rigs are picking up enough for a family fry-up. Don’t sleep on pompano in the suds either—banana jigs and sand fleas are your best bets if you’re hunting them in the morning wash.
Hot spots this week: The flats behind Wrightsville Beach early for redfish and drum, and outside Masonboro Inlet for Spanish and kings. The surf from Fort Fisher to Carolina Beach is holding whiting and the occasional pompano. If you’re landlocked, the Cape Fear River docks and bridges have seen a steady black drum bite—shrimp is your friend.
Quick tackle tip: Downsizing your leader to 20lb fluoro helps in the clear water, but bump it to 30-40lb if you’re chasing those bigger jacks or kings near the inlets.
That wraps it up for today. Thanks for tuning in to your Wilmington fishing report with Artificial Lure. Don’t forget to subscribe for daily updates, tips, and the freshest local intel. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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