← Mackerel

fish.logged

How-to · combo guide

How to catch Mackerel
on the Running ledger

Scomber scombrus

Sea Sea

Why this combo

When you're targeting Mackerel across UK shore marks, estuaries and inshore boat ground, the Running ledger is the top pick in our rig suggestions for the species. A free-running lead on the mainline above a stop bead and swivel. The line slides through the lead on a take so the fish feels no resistance, classic for shy biters like bass and smoothhound in estuaries and inshore marks. This guide stitches the rig fundamentals together with what you specifically need to know about Mackerel — how to identify a confirmed fish, how to tie the rig properly, and how to actually fish it on the day.

Make sure it's actually a Mackerel

Iridescent, finlet tail, wavy back stripes.

For the full identification guide — key features, confusion species and where they live — read the full Mackerel ID guide.

Tie the Running ledger

Step-by-step instructions are in the full tie guide. Take a few minutes at home to practise tying it before your next session — knots come undone at exactly the wrong moment.

Fish it on the day

For the longer breakdown — when it shines, casting + retrieval, and what tends to go wrong — see the how-to-fish guide for the Running ledger.

Log every fish

Catch one? Drop it in your fish.logged log — photo, GPS, weight, the rig you used. Auto-attaches the conditions (tide, wind, moon for sea fishing; weather + moon for freshwater) so you can spot patterns over the season. The pattern data is what turns a rig + species combo from a one-off win into a repeatable one.

Other rigs for Mackerel

Pulley rig

mackerel on the pulley rig →

Two-hook flapper

mackerel on the two-hook flapper →

Long flowing trace

mackerel on the long flowing trace →

Track your catches

Log every Mackerel you land.

Start logging free →