
12 October 2025
Fall Dawn on the NC Coast: Flounder, Bull Reds, and Offshore Action
Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily
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This is Artificial Lure with your Atlantic North Carolina fishing report for Sunday, October 12th, 2025. Let’s get you ready for a brisk fall dawn on the salt with the latest from the coast.
First off, expect classic autumn weather: cool in the low 60s at sunrise, climbing into the 70s by afternoon. Winds are howling offshore today—NOAA and the National Weather Service both have a Gale Warning in effect, with gusty north-northeast winds over 25 knots, and seas stacking up to 7 feet at times. Boaters, keep a lookout and maybe think twice before running outside the inlets today. Sunrise hit at 7:15 a.m. with sunset set for 6:42 p.m.
On the tidal front, Oak Island and nearby surf spots saw the first low tide at 5:51 a.m. at around 0.2 ft, rolling to high around 12:27 p.m. with nearly six feet on the board. The evening sets up another low near 6:55 p.m.—so you’ll want to plan your pier and surf efforts around the moving water, when bites heat up fast according to Tides4Fishing.
Now to what’s been caught—and there’s plenty to talk about. The shortened October flounder season is all but wrapped, but what a finish: Atlantic Beach and the lower Crystal Coast saw multiple doormat flounder over 10 pounds this week. A 13.04-pounder hit the scales fresh off a live minnow, while several other local legends broke double digits using either mullet strips or Gulp! grub tails.
Beyond flounder, giant red drum action has been fire, especially for those targeting the inlets and deeper sound channels. These bull reds are rolling through ahead of their offshore move—so if you want a trophy, now’s the time to focus on cut bait or big, noisy popping cork setups. Also, king mackerel are around in force—some over 40 pounds landed off nearshore wrecks and piers, and that’s drawing live bait trollers and tournament teams from all over. Don’t miss the Atlantic Beach King Mackerel Saltwater Slam ongoing through the 25th, with winners weighed right downtown.
Inshore, sheepshead, puppy drum, chopper bluefish and especially speckled trout have ramped up as water temps drop. Anglers wading and drifting the marsh points around Morehead and Bogue Sound are reporting strong limits of specks every moving tide, especially on MirrOlures, Z-Man soft plastics, and popping corks tipped with shrimp. In the Nags Head and Hatteras surf, mullet runs are strong, leading to solid catches of pompano, slot drum, and big Spanish mackerel in the wash. Offshore, those lucky enough to sneak out earlier this week before the blow found dolphin, citation sheepshead, and even a few late blue marlin.
Top baits this morning: fresh finger mullet, menhaden, and mud minnows for live lining; Gulp! grubs or a 3" twister tail on jighead for any species cruising structure; and, for the kings, nothing beats a big live bluefish slow-trolled on a stinger rig. Surfcasters are still loading up on fish-bites or sand flea chunks for pompano and blues.
Hot spots to check this weekend: Atlantic Beach Bridge access and Chasin’ Tails Bait and Tackle for the latest flounder—these local shops have weighed some of the best fish lately. On the Outer Banks, Jennette’s Pier and Oregon Inlet both saw blitzes of drum, blues and mackerel on yesterday’s evening tide.
Thanks for tuning in to your local tide and tackle line. Hit subscribe to catch each daily report in your feed. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease 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
First off, expect classic autumn weather: cool in the low 60s at sunrise, climbing into the 70s by afternoon. Winds are howling offshore today—NOAA and the National Weather Service both have a Gale Warning in effect, with gusty north-northeast winds over 25 knots, and seas stacking up to 7 feet at times. Boaters, keep a lookout and maybe think twice before running outside the inlets today. Sunrise hit at 7:15 a.m. with sunset set for 6:42 p.m.
On the tidal front, Oak Island and nearby surf spots saw the first low tide at 5:51 a.m. at around 0.2 ft, rolling to high around 12:27 p.m. with nearly six feet on the board. The evening sets up another low near 6:55 p.m.—so you’ll want to plan your pier and surf efforts around the moving water, when bites heat up fast according to Tides4Fishing.
Now to what’s been caught—and there’s plenty to talk about. The shortened October flounder season is all but wrapped, but what a finish: Atlantic Beach and the lower Crystal Coast saw multiple doormat flounder over 10 pounds this week. A 13.04-pounder hit the scales fresh off a live minnow, while several other local legends broke double digits using either mullet strips or Gulp! grub tails.
Beyond flounder, giant red drum action has been fire, especially for those targeting the inlets and deeper sound channels. These bull reds are rolling through ahead of their offshore move—so if you want a trophy, now’s the time to focus on cut bait or big, noisy popping cork setups. Also, king mackerel are around in force—some over 40 pounds landed off nearshore wrecks and piers, and that’s drawing live bait trollers and tournament teams from all over. Don’t miss the Atlantic Beach King Mackerel Saltwater Slam ongoing through the 25th, with winners weighed right downtown.
Inshore, sheepshead, puppy drum, chopper bluefish and especially speckled trout have ramped up as water temps drop. Anglers wading and drifting the marsh points around Morehead and Bogue Sound are reporting strong limits of specks every moving tide, especially on MirrOlures, Z-Man soft plastics, and popping corks tipped with shrimp. In the Nags Head and Hatteras surf, mullet runs are strong, leading to solid catches of pompano, slot drum, and big Spanish mackerel in the wash. Offshore, those lucky enough to sneak out earlier this week before the blow found dolphin, citation sheepshead, and even a few late blue marlin.
Top baits this morning: fresh finger mullet, menhaden, and mud minnows for live lining; Gulp! grubs or a 3" twister tail on jighead for any species cruising structure; and, for the kings, nothing beats a big live bluefish slow-trolled on a stinger rig. Surfcasters are still loading up on fish-bites or sand flea chunks for pompano and blues.
Hot spots to check this weekend: Atlantic Beach Bridge access and Chasin’ Tails Bait and Tackle for the latest flounder—these local shops have weighed some of the best fish lately. On the Outer Banks, Jennette’s Pier and Oregon Inlet both saw blitzes of drum, blues and mackerel on yesterday’s evening tide.
Thanks for tuning in to your local tide and tackle line. Hit subscribe to catch each daily report in your feed. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease 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