jack mackerel

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pollocks!
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jack mackerel

#1 Post by pollocks! »

Last summer me and the bro were fishing back from the metalman in Tramore when he caught a 'strange' mackerel. We later identified it as a member of the jack family and commonly called a jack mackerel. Has anybody else caught any and how common are they in Irish waters. It was about 10-12 oz. Tasted good too!!!!
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kieran
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jack mackerel

#2 Post by kieran »

from http://www.fishbase.org under "jack mackerel"

Northwest Pacific: southern Japan, Korean Peninsula to the East China Sea. Pacific Ocean off the coast of southeast Asia.


reckon what you might have caught could be a scad or horse mackerel, also beloved of the japanese. Smaller, silvery, big eye, small finlets at the tail, very bony, tastes just like mackerel (slightly milder)...

Just a thought...
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The cod father

#3 Post by The cod father »

I have only ever caught 1 of these and I didn,t even know what it was. I brought it home and I asked another well known sea angler what it was and he said it was a scad. Rare looking boyo.
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scad

#4 Post by kieran »

They are a deep water species, common as muck on the west coast in summer on high tides in darkness, often running with mackerel but they do come inshore occasionally and are taken off the shore... crap for bait.
Kieran Hanrahan

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2015 targets - a triggerfish, a specimen bass, a three bearded rockling to complete the set and something big and toothy from certain north Mayo deep water marks
yellowfin

#5 Post by yellowfin »

You regularly pick up scad in summer round the salmon cages in glenarm and red bay - usually only the odd one - have never ran into a shoal.
jalfrezi

#6 Post by jalfrezi »

i don't understand - if they taste like mackerel why do they make crap bait?!
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#7 Post by pete »

Scad make a very useful bait, being scaly fellas they tend to stay on the hook really well too. Congers, pike..usual suspects.
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#8 Post by markj »

I had them at teelin pier last october, some northern guy was there aswell and he told me they were good for nothing!! I can imagine that they would be a good bait for conger.....
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#9 Post by fish4fun »

My mate had one off Fenit Pier last September when we were over there.
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#10 Post by fenitbob »

yep fairly regular in fenit you always remember you first Scad - and the way the spines towards the tail cut through you skin. takes ages to heal. thats how you know its a scad not a mackeral :)
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#11 Post by corbyeire »

exactly fenit! - plenty in blackhead in august

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