I saw an amazing short video last night of some lads I know who recently went with an official boat. They said the Bluefin Tuna were in their thousands the video backed this up. For as far as you could see all around them big tuna were crashing into Mackerel. They were within 3 miles of the shore. On their second day the Bluefin were so close to shore you could have cast to them. The first day they had 6 to the boat with 2 lost, they take some landing even on stand up 80lb class. They also said there were large numbers of Shark boats unofficially catching bluefin . Sadly the Asian super trawlers were waiting on the Tuna just outside our 12 mile controlled area. That to me makes our catch ,tag and release fishery a bit of a mockery. Maybe limits could be set and a rod caught fishery could be set up like they do on the east coast of the USA.
We’re certainly seeing big numbers of tuna out there every day Mark and, as you say, sometimes very close inshore.
Our ‘busiest’ day so far has seen 10 hits with 7 fish to the boat which is fantastic as all the anglers on board ( we run a maximum of 4) had a chance to fight one of these fish.
We’re using 30lb class IGFA stand - up equipment ( this bears no resemblance at all to UK classifications) and all the fish have been brought to the boat before 30 minutes( well within the time constraints imposed on us)
The scheme is already on track to tag double the amount of tuna than last year- very exciting stuff indeed.
I must admit, I’ve not personally experienced these so called ‘Asian super trawlers’ yet, nor many ‘shark boats’ having a bash in our area ( Around Plymouth) but , last week I did see a fellah in a 17ft Warrior being towed around by ‘something’.
I think he might even still be out there
At the moment, we’ve been told that it is unlikely that the tagging scheme will run next year but, a licenced C&R fishery is being negotiated with the Government ( do we actually have a Government
)by representatives from the Angling Trust so we’ll have to wait to see what happens .
Just an amusing observation- the boats gauge their ‘success’ rate using a thing call ‘catch per unit effort’ (CPUE)
Overall it’s about 1.9 tuna per boat, per day.
In my world you’ve got far more chance of catching a tuna than a barbel!!!!