Coastal Currents: Bluefish Blitz, Cobia Cruising, and Tuna Tango on the Carolina Coast Podcast Por  arte de portada

Coastal Currents: Bluefish Blitz, Cobia Cruising, and Tuna Tango on the Carolina Coast

Coastal Currents: Bluefish Blitz, Cobia Cruising, and Tuna Tango on the Carolina Coast

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Good morning, anglers—Artificial Lure here with your June 14th North Carolina Atlantic coast fishing report.

First off, the sun crested the horizon at 6:38 this morning and will dip down tonight at 7:34. We’re looking at classic early summer conditions—warm days, rising water temps, light breezes, and a scattered chance of showers. Tidewise, we’ve got an incoming high late morning and dropping into low by suppertime, which ought to get the bait moving and fire up the bite along beaches and inlets. According to Sea Level, Core Sound tide charts, high tide is late morning, low tide early evening, perfect for working both surf and inshore structure.

Let’s start close to shore. The surf action along the Outer Banks and Crystal Coast has been hot for bluefish—over-slot choppers up to 30 inches. Most folks are lobbing 3/4 oz. Stingsilvers or metal jigs into bird-busting schools and burning them back to trigger strikes. Cut bait—especially mullet—has been a sure bet as well, while Spanish mackerel are thick just outside the breakers and inlets. Trolling Clarkspoons behind planers at 7 mph keeps those Spanish coming and helps dodge the aggressive blues. For the bait-and-wait crowd, sea mullet are biting hard on artificial bait strips and cut shrimp, especially during the top and bottom of the tide swings.

Red drum are pushing in and out of the surf and sounds, with the best results coming on cut bait and live finger mullet under a popping cork. Inshore, speckled trout are holding steady—live shrimp or soft plastics in the early morning, with topwater lures like the MirrOlure Top Pup getting explosive strikes right at daylight. Little Bridge and Bonner Bridge are both producing good numbers of specks, small bluefish, and pinfish, while the sheepshead bite is heating up around bridge pilings; fiddler crabs and sand fleas are the ticket.

Nearshore, the cobia run is still happening, with anglers sight-casting bucktails to cruising fish and occasionally running into big schools of red drum. Offshore, the first mahi (dolphin) of the season are showing well from Hatteras down to Carteret County, and the yellowfin tuna bite remains ballistic around the northern Outer Banks, especially for those willing to chase birds and bait balls early.

As for hotspots—put your time in around Avalon Pier and Nags Head Pier for mixed-bag action, or target the deeper holes around Wrightsville Beach and the marsh edges at first light for redfish and trout. The southern piers are also seeing good king mackerel bites, and don’t sleep on the inlets when the tides are moving.

Best lures and baits today:
- 3/4 oz. metal jigs or Stingsilvers for blues and Spanish
- Clarkspoons (trolled) for Spanish
- Bucktails for cobia
- Topwater plugs and popping corks with live shrimp for speckled trout and reds
- Fiddler crabs or sand fleas for sheepshead
- Cut bait (mullet, menhaden) for drum

That’s your boots-on-the-ground update for today, June 14th. Thanks for tuning in—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a cast!
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