Spring Pelagic Surge
£310 million and the spring shoals

£310 million landed in the first third of 2026 has a clear face: pelagic shoals running hard into Cornwall and the Solent. More than 193,700 tonnes came ashore as mackerel and herring stacked in bars off Newlyn, Brixham and the eastern Solent, while demersal species still lead on value at key landing ports.
Morning windows are the story. Anglers will find best action from first light through the early flood; two tight shoaling windows often break up by mid‑morning as wind and tide mix the water. Shore crews from Hurst Castle to the Lizard report surface boils, gulls working lines and quick-moving baitfish.
What to expect and gear notes
Boat anglers pick spinning tackle and fast lures to swipe through the edges; shore anglers work spod and double‑strip rigs off shingle beaches. Workable water levels favour small boats launching from Bembridge and Portsmouth when the tide is lifting. A simple fishfinder helps locate the thicker bars and a stout spinning rod copes with the fight and frantic school runs.
Seasonal run looks set to hold into early summer with intermittent pulses. Dawn on the Solent becomes a line of white backs and silver flashes as mackerel break the surface near the castle at first light.
Recommended: portable sonar fishfinder