Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today Podcast Por Inception Point Ai arte de portada

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today

De: Inception Point Ai
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Discover the latest insights with the "Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today" podcast. Stay informed with daily updates on fishing conditions, the best spots, exclusive tips, and local marine life around North Carolina's waters. Ideal for anglers of all levels, this podcast keeps you connected to the pulse of coastal fishing. Listen in and enhance your fishing adventures with expert knowledge and real-time recommendations.

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Episodios
  • Winter's Wakeup: Trout, Reds, and Nearshore Bites on North Carolina's Atlantic Coast
    Dec 5 2025
    North Carolina’s Atlantic side is waking up to a classic early‑winter pattern: cool water, stiff northerly breeze, and fish that want a slower, smaller presentation but are very much still chewing. Inshore creeks, surf troughs, and nearshore structure are all in play if you time your trip around the rising and high tides.

    ## Tides, sun, and weather

    Along the southeast coast from Oak Island up through Topsail and Masonboro, you’re looking at a strong morning flood pushing in just after daybreak, with a solid evening high as well. That gives you two quality windows: first light through mid‑morning, and then the last couple hours of daylight on the incoming. Sunrise is around 7 a.m. and sunset shortly after 5 p.m., so plan short, focused trips instead of trying to grind all day. Expect cool air, choppy seas outside the inlets, and a north to northeast wind that will make the ocean side bumpy but keep the creeks and ICW more comfortable.

    ## What’s biting and how

    Inshore, speckled trout are the main story, stacked in deeper bends of the ICW, creek mouths dumping into the waterway, and around bridge pilings and docks with good current. Red drum are mixed in on the mudflats and shell banks just off those same drops, especially where the sun has warmed the water a degree or two. Surf anglers are still seeing sea mullet, black drum, and the odd pompano or slot red in the deeper outer bar sloughs, with better action when that incoming tide starts to put some water on the beach. Nearshore reefs and wrecks a few miles out are holding gray trout, small black sea bass, and a grab‑bag of bottom fish for anyone willing to ride out the chop.

    ## Baits, lures, and tackle

    For trout and reds in the creeks, think subtle and slow:
    - 3–4 inch soft plastics on light jig heads in natural shrimp or mullet colors, twitched just off bottom.
    - Suspending hard jerkbaits worked with long pauses over deeper holes.

    Live shrimp, mud minnows, and small finger mullet under a cork will still out‑fish artificials when you can get them, especially around docks and rock walls. On the beach, fresh cut mullet, shrimp, and sand fleas on double‑drop rigs will handle sea mullet and drum. For the nearshore reefs, drop squid strips or cut bait on standard bottom rigs, and keep a heavy jig or bucktail handy if marks slide up off the structure.

    ## Hot spots to try

    Two areas stand out right now:
    - Masonboro and Wrightsville: Work the ICW side creeks, bridges, and jetties for specks and reds, then slide out the inlet on nicer seas to poke at the nearshore rocks.
    - Oak Island and Ocean Isle: Target the river side and ICW creeks for trout on the morning flood, then move to the surf at Oak Island or Ocean Isle Beach to soak cut bait in the outer sloughs for sea mullet and drum as the tide tops out.

    That’s the word from Artificial Lure—thanks for tuning in and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a bite report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    3 m
  • NC Coast Fishing Report: Tides, Winter Species, and Hot Spots for December
    Dec 4 2025
    Hey there, folks! Artificial Lure here with your Thursday morning fishing report for the North Carolina coast. Let's dive right in.

    **Tides and Conditions**

    We're looking at some decent tidal action today. Up at Cape Hatteras, we've got a low tide at 12:23 AM and a high tide coming in at 7:02 AM. Over at Atlantic Beach and Wilmington, similar patterns—highs early morning around 5 AM with lows mid-morning. These tidal windows are prime time for getting baitfish moving, so pay attention.

    The weather's been a bit rough out there. We've had some marine gale warnings and rough seas the past couple days, but conditions are settling down. Expect moderate winds and seas around 5 to 8 feet this morning, improving as we head into the afternoon. Sunrise today is around 7 AM, so you'll want to be launching early if you're serious.

    **What's Biting**

    December's our gateway into the ocean winter fishery. We're seeing the usual winter suspects—rays and dogfish are common catches right now, which is typical for this time of year. But here's the good news: don't be surprised if you hook into some quality speckled trout when a cold front rolls through. Cold water brings bigger specs closer to structure, and with any luck, we could see that happen soon.

    **Lures and Bait**

    Downsize your offerings this time of year. Small shad imitations are working well as bass and other predators focus on baitfish. Scented soft plastics like Berkley Gulp work great in both clear and stained water. If you're targeting flounder—which are still active through mid-December—mud minnows and small finger mullet on Carolina rigs are your bread and butter. Live bait generally produces better numbers, though artificials tend to attract the larger fish.

    **Hot Spots**

    Get yourself down to Cape Lookout or Cape Hatteras. These areas are holding fish with the tidal movements pushing baitfish through the structure. The deeper holes and drop-offs near the piers are worth a cast or two as well.

    Bundle up out there, folks. The water's cold, and December's no joke on the coast.

    Thanks for tuning in! Make sure you subscribe for more daily reports straight from the water. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please 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
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    2 m
  • North Carolina's Atlantic Coast Fishing Report - December 2025
    Dec 3 2025
    # Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report – December 3rd, 2025

    Hey folks, Artificial Lure here with your Wednesday morning fishing report for the Atlantic Ocean around North Carolina.

    We're looking at some excellent winter fishing conditions today. The N.C. Marine Fisheries recently released analysis showing modest improvements in Southern Flounder stocks with increased abundance and a wider age range of fish in our waters—that's good news for everyone heading out.

    **Tides and Conditions**

    Over at Cape Hatteras, we've got low tide at 10:51 AM this morning, so plan your trip accordingly. The water's dropping right now, which can push fish into tighter pockets. Atlantic Beach Bridge is showing similar patterns with a low tide around 11:52 AM. These dropping tides are actually prime time for hunting.

    **What's Biting**

    December in Eastern North Carolina is absolutely prime time. Red drum, black drum, and speckled trout are showing in good numbers right now. Striped bass are also very active this time of year. Recent tournament reports show anglers are consistently landing quality fish—Colby Ard and Justin Lane just weighed in five bass at 14.60 pounds on the Waccamaw River, so the bite is definitely on.

    **What to Throw**

    For cold water fishing, blade baits are absolute money right now—they're one of the most overlooked lures in winter. Jerkbaits work great too with that classic jerk-jerk-pause pattern. Don't overlook crankbaits either; Shad Raps are producing solid results. For the stripers and drum we're targeting, you'll want soft plastics and spinnerbaits in your arsenal.

    **Hot Spots**

    Head down to Morehead City Harbor on the Crystal Coast if you can. The docks are quiet compared to summer, and locals know the winter fishing there is some of the best around. Cape Hatteras is always a reliable choice for land-based saltwater action with plenty of structure holding fish.

    Thanks so much for tuning in, everybody. Make sure you subscribe for daily fishing reports right here.

    This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai

    Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    2 m
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