Wheel

Fishing Marks near Wheel

Last updated: 2 weeks ago

Sea fishing in Wheel, Devon puts you close to top marks like Newberry Beach, Combe Martin Beach and Widmouth Head. These spots regularly produce on moving tides. Use the list below to compare distance, access and recommended rigs, then time your session to the tide and wind.

23 Marks Found

Putsborough Sands

(6.6/10)

8.4 miles from Wheel

Long, exposed sandy beach at the southern end of Woolacombe Bay with clean sand, surf gutters and rocky fringes toward Baggy Point. Best fished on a flooding tide into dusk or after dark when the surf eases. Target small-eyed rays and dogfish at range over clean ground; bass work the...

Bass Whiting Flounder Dab Turbot

Morte Point

(6.7/10)

8.5 miles from Wheel

Morte Point is a rugged rocky headland near Mortehoe with steep slate ledges, deep gullies and a powerful tide race around the Morte Stone. It offers deep water within casting range and prolific rough-ground habitat for wrasse and pollack, with summer pelagics moving through the rips. It is exposed to...

Bass Pollack Pouting Three-bearded Rockling Lesser Spotted Dogfish

Lynmouth Beach

(6.5/10)

9.5 miles from Wheel

A steep shingle-and-boulder beach at the mouth of the East Lyn in Lynmouth village, giving quick access to deep, fast-moving Bristol Channel water. Ground is mixed and snaggy with kelp, rough patches and rock ledges toward the harbour and cliff sides, with some cleaner shingle areas toward the centre at...

Bass Pollack Pouting Whiting Three-bearded Rockling

Croyde Bay

(6.9/10)

9.5 miles from Wheel

A west-facing surf beach between Baggy Point and Downend with shifting sandbars and gutters. Best after a blow as the swell eases, on a flooding tide into dusk or dawn. Target close-in gutters for bass; long casts to the outer bar produce rays and winter whiting. Summer brings weever fish...

Bass Pollack Pouting Whiting Spotted Ray

Downend Point

(7/10)

9.9 miles from Wheel

Downend Point is the rocky headland at the southern end of Croyde Bay, facing the Atlantic. It’s a classic North Devon rock mark with broken ground, kelp-filled gullies and ledges dropping into mixed sand and rock. Expect good summer sport on wrasse and pollack, with mackerel and garfish passing close...

Bass Pollack Pouting Lesser Spotted Dogfish Bull Huss