
19 December 2025
Coastal Carolina Salt Report: Trout, Reds, and Nearshore Action for Early Winter
Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today
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Name’s Artificial Lure, checkin’ in with your coastal Carolina salt report, from the beaches to the blue water off North Carolina.
We’ve got a classic December setup this morning: cold northwest wind behind last night’s front, brisk 15–25 knots in many spots, with the National Weather Service out of Morehead City calling for rougher seas outside—4 to 7 feet and a gale warning south of Ocracoke yesterday rolling into choppy conditions today. That’s got most small boats hugging the beach or staying inside.
Tides are moving nice for a daytime bite. Around Cape Lookout and Oak Island, sites like Tides4Fishing and NOAA show an early **morning high** around first light, sliding down to a **midday low**, then building back to an **evening high**. Sunrise is right about **7:15–7:20 a.m.**, sunset near **5:10–5:15 p.m.**, so that falling water through late morning and the first push of incoming this afternoon should be your sweet spot.
Inshore around Morehead/Atlantic Beach, Fisherman’s Post reports **speckled trout** still chewing good in the creeks and along the ICW. Live **shrimp** under a popping cork is still king when you can get ’em, but 3–4 inch soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads in natural or glow—and MirrOdine‑style hard baits—have been putting trout in the box. Slow your retrieve; the water’s cooled and the fish are sliding into deeper bends and around docks.
Mixed in with the trout, folks are finding **slot red drum** on cut shrimp and mud minnows along marsh edges and oyster bars, especially mid‑tide when there’s still some push but less current than peak. For reds, gold‑blade spinnerbaits and paddle tails in new penny or white are producing when the wind dirties the water. Expect smaller numbers but solid quality fish.
Out on the nearshore reefs and hard bottoms—when the seas allow—anglers are picking at **black sea bass** and **grunts** on squid strips and cut bait dropped on simple two‑hook bottom rigs. The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council just flagged sea bass as declining, and bag limits are tightening, so measure carefully and expect to throw back a lot of shorts. When it’s calm enough to slide to 10–20 miles, there’ve been scattered **king mackerel** and the odd **false albacore** around bait pods; slow‑trolled dead cigars and Drone spoons remain the go‑tos.
Around the Brunswick County beaches—Ocean Isle, Sunset, and Oak Island—local reports have **whiting**, a few **pups**, and the tail end of **sea mullet and spots** in the surf on double‑drop rigs tipped with fresh shrimp, Fishbites, or small sand fleas. Morning high and the last of the evening flood are best. With new harvest‑reporting rules starting this month on several saltwater species, North Carolina DMF is reminding anglers to log their catches, so keep your phone handy.
Best **lures** right now:
- Trout: small soft plastics (paddletails, shrimp imitations), MirrOlures, suspending twitch baits in natural and pink.
- Reds: gold spoons, 3–4 inch paddletails in dark or root‑beer, scented jerk shads.
- Nearshore: bucktail jigs tipped with strip bait, metal jigs for albacore, Clark/DDrone spoons for kings.
Best **baits**:
- Live or fresh shrimp
- Mud minnows
- Cut mullet or menhaden
- Squid strips offshore
A couple of **hot spots** if you’re launching today:
- **Cape Lookout Shoals and the Hook**: work the inside edge for trout and reds on the falling tide; when it’s safe, hop to the nearshore wrecks for sea bass.
- **Nearshore reefs off Ocean Isle/Sunset** (AR‑460 type structure within 5–10 miles): bottom rigs for sea bass and grunts, keep a metal jig handy if birds start working albacore.
That’s your coastal North Carolina salt report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next run of fish.
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
We’ve got a classic December setup this morning: cold northwest wind behind last night’s front, brisk 15–25 knots in many spots, with the National Weather Service out of Morehead City calling for rougher seas outside—4 to 7 feet and a gale warning south of Ocracoke yesterday rolling into choppy conditions today. That’s got most small boats hugging the beach or staying inside.
Tides are moving nice for a daytime bite. Around Cape Lookout and Oak Island, sites like Tides4Fishing and NOAA show an early **morning high** around first light, sliding down to a **midday low**, then building back to an **evening high**. Sunrise is right about **7:15–7:20 a.m.**, sunset near **5:10–5:15 p.m.**, so that falling water through late morning and the first push of incoming this afternoon should be your sweet spot.
Inshore around Morehead/Atlantic Beach, Fisherman’s Post reports **speckled trout** still chewing good in the creeks and along the ICW. Live **shrimp** under a popping cork is still king when you can get ’em, but 3–4 inch soft plastics on 1/8–1/4 oz jigheads in natural or glow—and MirrOdine‑style hard baits—have been putting trout in the box. Slow your retrieve; the water’s cooled and the fish are sliding into deeper bends and around docks.
Mixed in with the trout, folks are finding **slot red drum** on cut shrimp and mud minnows along marsh edges and oyster bars, especially mid‑tide when there’s still some push but less current than peak. For reds, gold‑blade spinnerbaits and paddle tails in new penny or white are producing when the wind dirties the water. Expect smaller numbers but solid quality fish.
Out on the nearshore reefs and hard bottoms—when the seas allow—anglers are picking at **black sea bass** and **grunts** on squid strips and cut bait dropped on simple two‑hook bottom rigs. The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council just flagged sea bass as declining, and bag limits are tightening, so measure carefully and expect to throw back a lot of shorts. When it’s calm enough to slide to 10–20 miles, there’ve been scattered **king mackerel** and the odd **false albacore** around bait pods; slow‑trolled dead cigars and Drone spoons remain the go‑tos.
Around the Brunswick County beaches—Ocean Isle, Sunset, and Oak Island—local reports have **whiting**, a few **pups**, and the tail end of **sea mullet and spots** in the surf on double‑drop rigs tipped with fresh shrimp, Fishbites, or small sand fleas. Morning high and the last of the evening flood are best. With new harvest‑reporting rules starting this month on several saltwater species, North Carolina DMF is reminding anglers to log their catches, so keep your phone handy.
Best **lures** right now:
- Trout: small soft plastics (paddletails, shrimp imitations), MirrOlures, suspending twitch baits in natural and pink.
- Reds: gold spoons, 3–4 inch paddletails in dark or root‑beer, scented jerk shads.
- Nearshore: bucktail jigs tipped with strip bait, metal jigs for albacore, Clark/DDrone spoons for kings.
Best **baits**:
- Live or fresh shrimp
- Mud minnows
- Cut mullet or menhaden
- Squid strips offshore
A couple of **hot spots** if you’re launching today:
- **Cape Lookout Shoals and the Hook**: work the inside edge for trout and reds on the falling tide; when it’s safe, hop to the nearshore wrecks for sea bass.
- **Nearshore reefs off Ocean Isle/Sunset** (AR‑460 type structure within 5–10 miles): bottom rigs for sea bass and grunts, keep a metal jig handy if birds start working albacore.
That’s your coastal North Carolina salt report from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next run of fish.
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