Monday 2 June 2008

Mackerel and DIY

The mackerel are here in force, which is great news because they are a fantastic bait, taste great in all sorts of guises, and with light spinning tackle can be very sporting. We have been catching them around the Forts, at the harbour entrances and also over the fishing marks too. When you are using strings of feathers I am sure you will have found that after only an hour or so, the feathers or tinsel can be stripped leaving a perfectly good set of line and hooks. Recognise this?


Although they are cheap there is no need to throw them away. You can buy mini squids from some tackle shops which make ideal replacements - just slide then over the hooks and fix in place with superglue.
The downside is that the squids probably cost the same as a new set of feathers! Here is a much cheaper alternative. Rummage through your gift-wrap box and find a length of tinsel cord - the sort that is made up of braided tinsel around a core of string. Silver, gold and colours all work.

Pull the string out, cut off a 5cm length and thread it onto the hook like a worm. Tease out the tail with a needle, fix the head in place with superglue and your feathers are ready for action again.



If you want a lot more sport with mackerel than feathering, try spinning with a light rod, fixed spool reel and a small heavy lure like one of these:



If mackerel are near the surface, the seabirds will give the game away by wheeling and diving. When this happens, take your boat upwind or uptide, kill the engine and drift down onto the feeding zone. Make some long casts into the shoal, let the lure sink a few feet then strip it back fairly fast. Takes will be aggressive - you could hook a mackerel, scad, garfish or bass and any of them will give you a good run for your money on light tackle. My favourite spots for this type of fishing are between the Blocks and Langstone Harbour entrance, and even up to the East Winner if the wind is not too strong. Enjoy!

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