Fall Frenzy on NC's Coast - Topwaters, Soft Plastics, and More for Reds, Trout, and Bluewater Beasts
03 October 2025

Fall Frenzy on NC's Coast - Topwaters, Soft Plastics, and More for Reds, Trout, and Bluewater Beasts

Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report - Daily

About
Fishing folks, it’s Artificial Lure with your Atlantic North Carolina fishing report for Friday, October 3, 2025! The morning’s already packed with energy—let’s dig into how these waters are firing up as fall turns the calendar.

Starting out with the **weather and tides**: The National Weather Service out of Wilmington says we’ve got strong northeast winds at 20 to 25 knots with gusts up to 30 today and seas running 5 to 7 feet—so conditions are challenging, especially for smaller craft. Small Craft Advisory remains in effect through Saturday, so plan accordingly if heading offshore. Nearshore and pier anglers, make sure to keep safety in mind. According to the Ocean City Beach fishing pier tide chart, the first high tide is at 4:17 a.m., followed by low tide at 10:08 a.m., then a second high tide at 5:01 p.m. Sunrise comes at 6:44 a.m. and sunset stretches out till 7:33 p.m., giving you solid bookends for your trip.

On the fish front, the patterns are all about **early fall**. According to Bass Forecast, here in North Carolina, fish activity is fair to good, with the bite turning on especially when clouds linger. Anglers this week have reported strong action on topwater baits around grass beds and docks at dawn; as that sun gets higher and the mugginess sets in, flipping soft plastics or punching jigs into deeper structure pays off. A few folks have been landing slot-sized red drum and speckled trout from the surf and soundside—shrimp and mud minnows on Carolina rigs are still the go-tos.

Offshore, the wind has made conditions sporty, but the boats getting out earlier in the week saw solid catches of false albacore, Spanish mackerel, and the occasional king—Clarkspoons and flashy metals have been key when you find that feeding blitz. Reports out of Bogue Inlet and around Cape Lookout have folks standing shoulder to shoulder on the best days, with blues and Spanish tearing into glass minnows on breaking water. Inshore, sheepshead are still holding thick on the pilings, and a juicy fiddler crab or barnacle-scraped shrimp continues to produce.

Now for the **best lures and bait**: With these winds churning up bait close to shore, top picks are walk-the-dog-style topwaters like the Heddon Spook, popping corks rigged with shrimp, and 1/4-ounce jigheads dressed with paddletail soft plastics in chartreuse or electric chicken. For pier and surf guys, try a Got-Cha plug or metal spoon for Spanish and blues, or bait up with fresh cut mullet for the red drum. If you’re working the bridges and deeper creeks, the drop-shot technique with a small finesse worm will pick up bass and the occasional flounder.

**Hot spots** today:
- **Avalon Pier in Kill Devil Hills** for blues, Spanish, and bottom species—early high tides are setting the bite up right.
- **Fort Macon Jetty** near Atlantic Beach, always hot after a good northeast blow, is prime for specks and slot reds.
- The **Haystacks** at Morehead City: drifting live shrimp or jigging soft plastics on moving tides here puts you in the trout and drum game.

With the full moon on deck for next Monday, big tides and feeding flurries are just around the corner, so now’s the time to scout points and creekmouths for those fall fattening schools. If you’re out on the water, remember, conditions can change fast—keep your head on a swivel and always check the latest marine updates before launching.

Thanks for tuning in to today’s fishing update. Don’t forget to subscribe for more local intelligence and real-time bite windows. 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