Morning Briefing: bluefin & albacore off Cornwall
Three dawn strikes off Plymouth Sound as bluefin and albacore move in

Charter skippers out of Plymouth and Newlyn reported early runs today as bait schools lit up the English Channel near the Eddystone and waters off Land's End. Trolling lines and light wire tactics are working on fish that chase small tuna and sandeels into tight surface boils.
Reports from Isle of Scilly trips show albacore taking lures east of St Agnes at first light. Skippers note cleaner water and falling plankton slicks concentrating bait; that concentrates predators fast. Spreaders, feathers and fast trolled plugs are the call.
Water levels and seasonal pulse
Sea conditions are described as moderate with a steady tide through the morning; visibility has been enough for anglers to spot bait schools and set drift patterns around shoals. July forecasts point to a continued pelagic window as bluefin push north from the Bay of Biscay into Cornwall and Devon grounds.
On deck, crews run a mix of live-bait drifts and downrigged spread to cover fish at different depths. The market context underlines pelagic strength—UK vessels landed 193,700 tonnes of seafood in the first four months of the year, with pelagic catches topping 107,243 tonnes—so today’s activity mirrors a wider pulse in UK waters.
By noon the channel often calms; for now morning light, bait schools and the ping of a fishfinder mark where the next charter will head—and where the line disappears into a boiling sea.
Recommended: portable fishfinder unit