Coastal Catches: Reds, Trout, and Offshore Excitement - Your Atlantic Beach Fishing Forecast for August 22, 2025 episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 22, 2025 · 4 MIN

Coastal Catches: Reds, Trout, and Offshore Excitement - Your Atlantic Beach Fishing Forecast for August 22, 2025

from Atlantic Ocean, North Carolina Fishing Report Today · host Inception Point AI

Artificial Lure here with your Carolina coast angler’s report for Friday, August 22, 2025, covering all the hot Atlantic action from the Outer Banks down to Emerald Isle. Let’s get started with today’s **tides around Atlantic Beach**: look for a low at 1:27 a.m. just past midnight, a solid high tide rolling in at 7:15 a.m., another low at 1:14 p.m., and a final high just before sunset at 8:25 p.m. The swings are making for dynamic inshore movement and prime windows for early and late fishing. **Sunrise** popped at 6:33 a.m. and you can keep lines wet until sunset around 7:44 p.m., maximizing those twilight bites. The weather’s warm, as inland highs touch the mid-80s to low 90s with humidity sticking around and only a breeze off the ocean—classic August stuff—so hit the water early and late to dodge the midday scorchers. National Weather Service warnings for those frequent afternoon pop-up storms mean keep a sharp eye on the sky and be ready to head for cover if thunderheads build. **Inshore fishing is on fire**. The creeks, sounds, and estuaries are loaded with **Red Drum—locals just call them reds—plus Speckled Trout and flounder**. Reds are cruising the flats early and late, and falling tides are flushing bait out of the marshes; mullet, shrimp, and finger minnows are thick this week and the predators know it. Live baits are catching the most, but Gulp! and Z-man soft plastics in natural or pink on jigheads have landed some bruisers before lunch, especially around oyster bars and drop-offs. Flounder catches are steady on mud minnows and white Gulp! swimming mullets, especially as the tide starts dropping. Spotted seatrout are hitting popping corks and shrimp imitations at first and last light. According to Carolina Sportsman’s latest report, most action is before 10 a.m. or in the last couple hours before dark, as the heat pushes fish deep by midday. Don’t overlook bottom fishing just outside the inlets—the nearshore reefs and wrecks are pumping out **keeper black sea bass, snapper, and grouper**. Cut squid and menhaden are the classic choices for these, but butterfly jigs are pulling up bigger fish for those willing to work ’em. Offshore, the **big pelagics** are still coming over the rails: King Mackerel are thick from 5 to 20 miles out, chasing live menhaden slow-trolled just outside the surf line. Farther out along weed lines and flotsam, mahi-mahi (dolphin) and wahoo are steady. Recent charters from Morehead City and Wrightsville Beach also reported a handful of sailfish and yellowfin tuna, especially when trolling ballyhoo and skirted lures deep in the blue water. **Hotspots** today? Try Bogue Inlet, especially the western jetty at dawn for bull reds and flounder, and the surf near Emerald Isle pier at sunrise and sunset for specks and bluefish. Offshore, the AR-315 reef is the local favorite right now for a mixed bag, and the nearshore wrecks off Shackleford Banks are cranking out keeper sea bass and triggers. If you’re after quantit This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Artificial Lure here with your Carolina coast angler’s report for Friday, August 22, 2025, covering all the hot Atlantic action from the Outer Banks down to Emerald Isle. Let’s get started with today’s **tides around Atlantic Beach**: look for a low at 1:27 a.m. just past midnight, a solid high tide rolling in at 7:15 a.m., another low at 1:14 p.m., and a final high just before sunset at 8:25 p.m. The swings are making for dynamic inshore movement and prime windows for early and late fishing. **Sunrise** popped at 6:33 a.m. and you can keep lines wet until sunset around 7:44 p.m., maximizing those twilight bites. The weather’s warm, as inland highs touch the mid-80s to low 90s with humidity sticking around and only a breeze off the ocean—classic August stuff—so hit the water early and late to dodge the midday scorchers. National Weather Service warnings for those frequent afternoon pop-up storms mean keep a sharp eye on the sky and be ready to head for cover if thunderheads build. **Inshore fishing is on fire**. The creeks, sounds, and estuaries are loaded with **Red Drum—locals just call them reds—plus Speckled Trout and flounder**. Reds are cruising the flats early and late, and falling tides are flushing bait out of the marshes; mullet, shrimp, and finger minnows are thick this week and the predators know it. Live baits are catching the most, but Gulp! and Z-man soft plastics in natural or pink on jigheads have landed some bruisers before lunch, especially around oyster bars and drop-offs. Flounder catches are steady on mud minnows and white Gulp! swimming mullets, especially as the tide starts dropping. Spotted seatrout are hitting popping corks and shrimp imitations at first and last light. According to Carolina Sportsman’s latest report, most action is before 10 a.m. or in the last couple hours before dark, as the heat pushes fish deep by midday. Don’t overlook bottom fishing just outside the inlets—the nearshore reefs and wrecks are pumping out **keeper black sea bass, snapper, and grouper**. Cut squid and menhaden are the classic choices for these, but butterfly jigs are pulling up bigger fish for those willing to work ’em. Offshore, the **big pelagics** are still coming over the rails: King Mackerel are thick from 5 to 20 miles out, chasing live menhaden slow-trolled just outside the surf line. Farther out along weed lines and flotsam, mahi-mahi (dolphin) and wahoo are steady. Recent charters from Morehead City and Wrightsville Beach also reported a handful of sailfish and yellowfin tuna, especially when trolling ballyhoo and skirted lures deep in the blue water. **Hotspots** today? Try Bogue Inlet, especially the western jetty at dawn for bull reds and flounder, and the surf near Emerald Isle pier at sunrise and sunset for specks and bluefish. Offshore, the AR-315 reef is the local favorite right now for a mixed bag, and the nearshore wrecks off Shackleford Banks are cranking out keeper sea bass and triggers. If you’re after quantit This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Coastal Catches: Reds, Trout, and Offshore Excitement - Your Atlantic Beach Fishing Forecast for August 22, 2025

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This episode was published on August 22, 2025.

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Artificial Lure here with your Carolina coast angler’s report for Friday, August 22, 2025, covering all the hot Atlantic action from the Outer Banks down to Emerald Isle. Let’s get started with today’s **tides around Atlantic Beach**: look for a...

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