All spots

The Wash

Sea, from shore  United Kingdom · 04:35 - 21:28

The Wash on the coast in United Kingdom. Coastal and sea fishing with species ranked by weather, water temperature and season, see below.

Best day to fish

Tomorrow
0%
22°
Best day
Tue
0%
23°
Wed
0%
22°
Thu
0%
21°
Fri
0%
25°
Sat
0%
25°

The bite over the next days, scored at dusk. Based on the weather forecast, so it is guidance, not guarantees.

Conditions right now

Weather
Overcast
Water temp (est.)
18°C
Air temp
22°C
Wind
6 m/s
Pressure
1018 hPa ↑ rising
Clouds
92.0%

Water temperature is an estimate based on weather and season.

Feeding times today

Full moon 97% lit
Major period 22:51–00:51 Major period 10:51–12:51 Minor period 19:56–21:26 Minor period 02:17–03:47

Solunar times are a traditional guide based on the moon's position, separate from the live ranking above. Local time at the spot.

Next hours

19:00
22°
20:00
22°
21:00
21°
22:00
20°
23:00
19°
00:00
18°
01:00
18°
02:00
17°
03:00
17°
04:00
16°
05:00
16°
06:00
16°

Likely catch now (0 species)

About the fishing here

The Wash is a coastal fishing spot in United Kingdom. The fishing here is from the shore.

A national or regional fishing permit is generally required here. Check the local rules. Napp ranks the species above from the live weather, water temperature, season and time of day, so the order changes through the day.

Fishing permit

You need a fishing permit (fiskekort) to fish here. Buy it online:

About this water

The Wash is a shallow natural rectangular bay and multiple estuary on the east coast of England in the United Kingdom. It is an inlet of the North Sea and is the largest multiple estuary system in the UK, as well as being the largest natural bay in England, and is the outflow for the rivers Witham, Welland, Nene and the Great Ouse. It is also one of the most important conservation areas in Europe, with several nature reserves within this area.

Read more on Wikipedia →

Map

More waters nearby

Common questions

Do you need a fishing license at The Wash?

Usually yes. Most countries require a national or regional fishing permit. Check the local rules via the link on this page.