South‑West Pelagic Push: Bass & Bluefin
107,243 tonnes of pelagics reshaping south‑west ports

Early landings data moved into conversations on the quays as mackerel and sandeel shoals pushed value into ports and onto charter skippers’ books. Cornwall, the Isles of Scilly and Portland report rising charter demand as sea bass anglers shift dawn trips to exploit narrow tidal windows and offshore boats chase pelagics and bluefin sightings.
What is biting today
Sea bass are turning up in two clear dawn windows around the ebb tides; hard-charging fish on light spinning gear ahead of first light, taken on soft plastics and live sandeel. Offshore, mackerel and horse mackerel are schooling close to the surface and feather jigs work well for eager pelagics. Boat crews note more skippers booking half-day runs to intercept bluefin on the edges of those shoals.
The national picture helps explain the spike: pelagic tonnage is driving volume at UK ports while high-value demersal and shellfish underpin market returns. That mix has nudged charter prices and availability along the south‑west coast, with Newlyn, St Mary’s and Portland slips fuller on calm mornings.
Water temperatures are nudging up and visibility varies after recent swell; tides remain the ticket—work the first light ebb or the turning tide at Portland Bill. Dawn brings seabirds, slicks and the smell of diesel; when the birds line up and the rod tips ping, the next run could be bass or a shadow of bluefin cutting through the slick.
Recommended: heavy-duty spinning rod