wahoo fishing – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com Sport Fishing is the leading saltwater fishing site for boat reviews, fishing gear, saltwater fishing tips, photos, videos, and so much more. Thu, 11 Apr 2024 14:39:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/uploads/2021/09/favicon-spf.png wahoo fishing – Sport Fishing Mag https://www.sportfishingmag.com 32 32 Kona Hawaii Offshore Fishing https://www.sportfishingmag.com/travel/kona-hawaii-offshore-fishing/ Thu, 11 Apr 2024 02:00:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=44263 Why the Big Island remains one of the world’s prime destinations for blue-water game fish.

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Kona’s consistent billfish success sparked a worldwide revolution in big-game fishing. Bryan Toney

Many years ago, Kona skipper George Parker made ­headlines around the world when he caught the first certified, world-record grander Pacific blue marlin. Since that 1,002-pound giant in November 1954, Hawaii’s lee eddies have churned up a stream of 1,000-pound blues that continues today. Kona waters usually average two or three granders per year, along with more Pacific blue marlin IGFA records than any other sport-fishing hot spot. That parade of records continues. In March 2013, Alex Nuttall boated a 958-pound blue marlin with Capt. Chip Van Mols on the Kona charter boat Monkey Biz II to claim the IGFA women’s 130-pound-class record.

Kona’s consistent billfish success sparked a worldwide revolution in big-game fishing because these big fish were caught on lures pioneered and developed in Hawaii waters. Meanwhile, big-game fishermen elsewhere had been saying you could catch billfish only with bait. Even those doubters caught the Kona wave and started catching marlin on Kona-style lures. Kona is also the perfect starting point for novices who have never caught a fish in their lives. It happens every day, 365 days a year. Newcomers are well served by a well-maintained fleet of top-of-the-line boats and expert captains.

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Calm waters off the Big Island attract abundant sport fish all year, including blue marlin, wahoo, mahimahi and yellowfin tuna. Most popular port city to leave from? Kailua-Kona. Brian Powers / hawaiianimages.com

Plus, Kona’s big fish hunt in deep, calm waters near shore. The 100-fathom line is a 10-minute run from Kona’s two main fishing fleets at Honokohau Harbor and Keauhou Bay. What’s more, the biggest fish of any week is usually a marlin in the 500- to 900-pound range caught by a complete newcomer on a four- or six-hour trip. On any day of the year, a visitor can find a suitable charter and hope to catch one or more of Hawaii’s mighty four: billfish, ahi (yellowfin tuna), mahimahi (dolphinfish) and ono (wahoo).

Billfish of Every Kind

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Kona’s impressive charter fleet and prolific waters allow visiting anglers the opportunity to land a record marlin on a half-day, four-hour trip. Kevin Hibbard

Blue marlin, black marlin, striped marlin, sailfish, shortbill spearfish and broadbill swordfish — Kona’s waters are home to every billfish found in the Pacific. But each has a different story, and you should know those stories when you make plans.

Big blues are the billfish that pay the bills in Kona. Blues of all sizes are here year-round, but they are usually most common during the summer tournament season, from June through early September. Mid-Pacific currents can supply a fresh run at any time, however. For example, sometimes April surprises offshore trollers with fish heavier than 500 pounds on every day of the lunar cycle. Catches like these show that the lunar cycle has little, if any, influence on billfishing in Kona (unlike the effect different phases might have in other fishing areas).

Kona granders have also been landed in January, March and July. March, which might otherwise be considered the offseason elsewhere, has turned up more of Kona’s historic granders than any other month, and that includes the 1,649-pound Kona all-time record in 1984. The 1,376‑pound IGFA record for 130-pound class was caught in May 1982. Indeed, granders have been caught in Kona waters every month of the year. Licensed commercial fishermen are allowed to sell blue marlin in Hawaii, but professional skippers prefer tag-and-release for clients who want to let vital fish go. In any given week, more of Kona’s blues are tagged than kept. Visitors should make their wishes known when setting up a charter.

Hawaii’s Striped Marlin

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Kona fishermen catch other billfish too, such as striped marlin (pictured), swordfish and shortbill spearfish. Kevin Hibbard

Striped marlin cruise through Kona water’s year-round, but the big run extends from December through March. The Hawaii state record, 212 pounds, turned up here at the end of March 2011. That’s big for a north Pacific stripe, which is noteworthy because South Pacific stripers max out at more than double the weight of their northern cousins. Striped marlin are most attracted to Kona when winter waters cool down into the mid-70s. During those “chilly” times, the luckiest trollers might get up to a dozen striped marlin bites, and hook about a third of them.

Those same striped marlin ­conditions also attract shortbill spearfish of world-record size. Kona’s frisky shortbills ­presently hold 16 IGFA marks for tackle as light as 4-pound-class, and even on fly gear. Record-seekers troll hookless teasers to draw a spearfish within range, and then present a lure, fly or bait on the most sporting gear available. For most visitors, however, the spearfish is a surprise catch when trolling for blues and stripes.

For black marlin, Kona is outside the normal migration range. The entire Kona fleet sees only a handful each year, and these are much smaller than the giants of the Great Barrier Reef far to the south. Old-timers will remind you that the state record weighed 1,205 pounds, but that once-in-a-generation fish was caught in 1980.

Broadbills are the secret sensations for fishermen who know when, where and how to catch them. Most of Kona’s rod-and-reel swordies are caught at night during ika-shibi (traditional hand line) trips that target tuna. With its giant staring eyes, the broadbill is readily attracted to lights at night and to the squid schools that gather in the glow. The state record 503-pounder took the bait in June 2006 at the start of what are usually the three best swordfish months. Only a few boats cater to the night-fishing trade.

Hawaii Tuna Fuel Jet Revolution

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Flashy metal jet lures are a top trolling choice for ono and ahi. This trio has an original shape, dating back to the 1960s. Jim Rizzuto

More than fifty years ago, Hawaii troller Henry Nishikawa ignited the jet revolution when he caught a world-record ahi on a metal-headed lure drilled through and through with holes. His 269-pound yellowfin didn’t last long in the record books after anglers in the eastern Pacific discovered a tribe of bigger tuna off Mexico. Yet the IGFA record book is still overwhelmingly Kona on the ladies’ side: Kona catches made by women hold the 16-, 20-, 30- and 50-pound-class marks.

Though Kona waters attract ­resident schools of yellowfin year‑round, ahi are most abundant in late spring and throughout summer. As schools migrate west to east through the islands, the big runs reach Kauai first by Mother’s Day in May and Kona by Father’s Day in June. When the action is wide open, lucky boats can catch as many as 10 a day, all in the 100- to 220-pound range, by trolling or live-baiting with aku (skipjack tuna) or opelu (mackerel scad). During the rest of the year, ahi specialists target them with green-stick gear, and continue to catch a few each trip.

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There’s no better live bait for big marlin than a bridled skipjack tuna, caught fresh from the fishing grounds. Kevin Hibbard

Hawaii’s state record ahi (a July catch) of 325 pounds is unusually large for central Pacific yellowfin tuna. Kona’s biggest ahi each year normally hits 250 pounds (258.5 in 2013). The state record bigeye (277 pounds in July 2013) and the biggest albacore (89.2 pounds in April 2011) both were caught on the Big Island’s windward (eastern) coast. The albacore weighed more than any on the IGFA record list but did not qualify for world-record status because it was caught on commercial-fishing gear. Kona ­fishermen regularly catch albies (tombo ahi) in the 60s and 70s on sport fishing tackle.

Mahimahi, Hawaii’s Gift to the World

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Mahimahi live up to their name (it means “very strong”), and the brightly colored, agile acrobats do their muscular tricks in Kona waters year-round. Kevin Hibbard

Almost 70 years ago, Hawaii Big Game Fishing Club official George Perry set the 130-pound-class IGFA world record for dolphinfish with a 72.5‑pounder. That record didn’t last long, but the name “mahimahi” is Hawaii’s gift to the world, because it replaces the confusing name “dolphin” on restaurant menus. Though Hawaii has no current IGFA mahimahi records, the state-record 82-pounder confirms the potential. That record fish was a September Kona catch, but mahimahi are available any time the current drags a “floater” within trolling distance.

Mahimahi live up to their name (it means “very strong”), and the brightly colored, agile acrobats do their muscular tricks in Kona waters year-round. Occasionally huge schools gather around flotsam and jetsam for a wide-open bite that can go on for days. Then, skippers gear down to match the catch with sporting 20- and 30-pound-class rods. Unless a Kona skipper finds a floater, mahi are incidental catches on marlin and tuna trips.

By the way, the mahimahi record aside, Perry went on to catch the largest blue marlin in each of the first two Hawaiian International Billfish Tournaments (HIBT). The HIBT became an annual Kona fishing feature in 1959 and soon inspired dozens of other Kona tournaments. During the most popular tournament months of June, July and August, events compete with each other every week

Ono Blitzes, Summer Phenomenon

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A Guide to Big Fish off the Big Island

Ono (wahoo) are mostly chance catches but can bite in bunches at certain times of the year. (Photo Credit: Adrian E. Gray) Adrian E. Gray

Ninety years ago, a mysterious fellow known only as “J.B. Stickney” caught a 124.75-pound wahoo in Hawaii waters to set the world record. That was five years before the IGFA was founded, a time when records were compiled by Van Campen Heilner of Field & Stream and Francesca R. La Monte of the American Museum of Natural history. Ono — what wahoo are called in Hawaii — average 30 to 40 pounds, which makes J.B.’s catch even more extraordinary.

Big ones do show up now and then — state-record-holders Tom Brandt and Sky Mullins surprised their 133.2‑pound ono off the windward coast of the Big Island in December 2000. The major ono run reaches the Big Island in May of each year and hangs around into early September. Some ono are caught year-round, with early morning being your best chance. Kona skippers typically troll the 40-fathom line at the start of each trip to pick up any ono that might be harassing the nearshore bait schools.

To ward off the ono’s sharp teeth, skippers rig their special ono lures with single-strand stainless leaders. Ono slash at heavy-headed subsurface lures like weighted jets and lead-head feathers. On a typical trip specifically for ono, a successful boat might catch three or four fish. In years when ono blitz the summer currents, boats are known to hook as many as 40 on a single trip.

Other fishing areas might see the diversity of big-game fish that Kona has, but few have them in the sizes regularly seen here. In Kona, your next strike could come on any day of the year, in any phase of the moon, at any turn of the tide, on routinely comfortable seas, and be one of the Pacific’s biggest and most exciting game fish.

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Shore Fishing off the Big Island

The Big Island’s jagged reefs make ­shoreline fishing difficult, and its rugged lava-rock sea cliffs add considerable danger. Big Islanders have developed special “slide-bait” techniques and equipment for overcoming the hazards and obstacles, but the method is more equipment-dependent than most visitors can handle. If you know how to cast for surf fish, however, you can easily adapt your skills and use them to catch Hawaii’s many ­multicolored snapper, wrasses, goatfish, jacks, barracuda and assorted other surprises. Bring your favorite surf spinning reel with you, and be prepared to buy a matching 8- or 9-foot rod at a local tackle shop. Rig with a ringed torpedo sinker, 30-inch length of leader and a tarpon-style hook. Tip the hook with a strip of ika (squid) or a slice from a mackerel scad. Cast out the weight as far as you can, and reel it back fast enough to keep it swimming just under the surface. Locals call this “whipping.” A quick surface retrieve can draw strikes from omilu (bluefin trevally), lae (leather-skin jack), kaku (barracuda), aha aha (needlefish) and awa awa (ladyfish). Some of these will bite through your nylon leader, but don’t switch to wire. In Hawaii’s ultraclear waters, a metal leader will scare away wary shore fish. If the surface retrieve gets no attention, let your bait drop down to a lower water level. Keep it above the reef or it will snag immediately. A bait that moves 3 or 4 feet above the reef catches moano (manybar goatfish), kumu (white saddle goatfish), taape (blue-lined snapper), roi (peacock grouper), toau (blacktail snapper) and other reef dwellers. To focus exclusively on bigger game, whip with poppers and metal spoons. Local favorites include PILI poppers and Mark White ceramic plugs. Jim Rizzuto

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Explained: How to Catch Wahoo Casting Lures https://www.sportfishingmag.com/howto/cast-lures-to-catch-wahoo/ Mon, 21 Aug 2023 12:26:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=53006 Maximize your wahoo fishing efforts by implementing West Coast-style casting tactics.

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wahoo caught on long range boat Southern California
Wahoo of this class are available to California anglers on long-range fishing trips. Plus, the speedsters often school in high numbers, so it pays to be prepared with your casting tackle. Mike Murciano

In warm-water locations worldwide, wahoo is predominantly targeted on the troll. While this is one of the most-productive methods to locate and target these gamefish, you tend to miss out on their hard fighting ability and extravagant runs using this method.

Southern California Wahoo Fishing

In Southern California, the long-range charter fleet has been targeting them quite differently for years. They cast to them with “wahoo bombs” and jigs. The methods and range of lures maximize the opportunity of encountering wahoo, often leading to multiple hookups on the boat. In some areas, wahoo really stack up in high numbers. With trolling, you might just get a strike or two when passing through a productive area. Casting to wahoo can be incredibly effective.

The long-range fleet comprises nearly two dozen boats that call San Diego Bay home. Each vessel has been thoughtfully designed as a multi-day fishing machine for anglers. When describing these operations, think of it as hotel meets tasty restaurant meets spacious fishing platform. Trips on these boats can range from just three days to 28 days. The longest trips use the extended period to explore far and reach remote bountiful banks for less-pressured bluefin tuna, yellowfin tuna, wahoo, dorado, yellowtail and more.

Southern California and its long-range boats have a significant history with wahoo (or “skins,” as they are called among the fleet). On these trips — which explore the local banks off SoCal all the way south to Cabo — wahoo is one of the primary fishing targets. While catching wahoo is not a new endeavor, how this fleet targets this delicious gamefish warrants explanation.

Trolling Helps Locate Wahoo

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Wahoo can school together in surprisingly large numbers. Trolling doesn’t always maximize hookup numbers, so that’s why savvy anglers cast speedy lures such as irons, jigs, plus and wahoo bombs. prochym / stock.adobe.com

For better or worse, trolling is the most common method to target wahoo worldwide. It’s tough to argue that there is a better method to locating wahoo than trolling. In most cases, this leads to one or two fish being landed per bite. Here’s the important part: Anglers onboard should be ready to cast lures once a wahoo is hooked on the troll. Being ready to cast quickly leads to several more or, at times, a wide-open bite on these toothy critters.

Wahoo are seldomly alone, and usually, they are in schools ranging from just a few fish to dozens of fish. The schooling behavior presents an opportunity to maximize fish-catching after a troll hook-up. On these head boats, trolling Braud Marauders, Yo-Zuri Bonitas, Nomad MadMacs or diving lures are used to locate a school.

When to Cast Lures for Wahoo

Once a hook-up occurs, the deckhand at the bait tank entices the rest of the fish to stick around by tossing out some baits. Once the baitfish start flying, so do the lures. At this point, anglers will begin casting their wahoo bombs or other assortment of wahoo lures during what’s called “the slide.” The slide is when the boat is still in motion but slowing, eventually sliding to a stop. The overabundance of lures, bait, and hooked fish often turns wahoo aggressive, resulting in a feeding frenzy.

This style of fishing, at times, can be best described as controlled chaos. There is nothing like hooking a wahoo on a jig (often called an “iron”) or wahoo bomb. The sudden stopping of your jig at the hook-up, your line racing across the water’s surface faster than you’ve ever seen it. It’s truly an unforgettable experience. At times, these wahoo-feeding frenzies get so aggressive that they’ll strike just about anything you cast in front of them.

The Best Lures to Cast for Wahoo

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At left, an iron for wahoo. Right, so-called “wahoo bombs” are often homemade lures or store-bought, consisting of a heavy, bullet-shaped head with flashy skirt and blade. Mike Murciano

Ideally, when casting to wahoo, you want you’re lure to have specific characteristics:

  • Castability: Your lure needs to be heavy enough to give you the ability to make a significant cast as the boat is sliding. Most wahoo bombs and jigs are in the 2- to 4-ounce range.
  • Speed: Wahoo are speed demons, and you need to be able to have a lure that matches their speed. You should be able to retrieve this lure at a very fast retrieve. A tight wiggle is all you need out of your lure.
  • Hooks: Rig with the sharpest hooks available. Think your hook is sharp? Sharpen it even more. These fish have tough boney mouths, making penetrating their jaw difficult.
  • Sink: You need a lure that will sink down after casting out. The urge is to cast then retrieve immediately, but I can tell you’ll double the number of strikes by letting your lure sink 30 to 50 feet down before retrieving.
  • Color: While the verdict is out, and every angler will give you a different opinion, it’s common to have blacks and dark colors against fluorescent colors. Blacks and pinks are great for wahoo.
  • Tip: When selecting lures to cast at wahoo, don’t limit yourself to wahoo bombs and jigs. Take the descriptors above; if it applies to your lures, try it.  Stick baits have also been a successful option in recent years.

What Tackle to Use for Wahoo

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Examples of different rods and reels to use for casting lures to wahoo. All setups should have plenty of backbone and enough drag power to stop sizzling wahoo runs. Mike Murciano and Sam Hudson

As you guessed, conventional tackle is the go-to option on the Pacific Coast. Today, we can access fantastic gear from various manufacturers with this fishing style in mind. Ideally, it would help to have a rod with substantial stopping power and a reasonably soft tip to allow load up when casting and hooking up.

A 7-foot, 6-inch to 8-foot rod with a “Heavy” or “Extra Heavy” rating usually does the trick. As for your reel, there are so many options available today. The three primary descriptors would be: (1) the ability to cast far, (2) stopping power (meaning high drag capability), and (3) high speed retrieve (meaning the ability to crank your lure fast!). Many anglers tuned into this fishery rely on reels with taller spools to increase their retrieval rate and add an oversize handle.

The addition of oversized saltwater baitcasting-style reels has also been a great bonus to this fishery. The reels are fished using 50- to 60-pound braid, connected to a monofilament or fluorocarbon leader.

Should Anglers Use Wire for Wahoo?

To use wire or not to use wire? That is a common question. Wahoo can sometimes be finicky. Presenting your lure without wire can significantly increase the number of hook-ups. At the same time, be ready to lose several jigs to those razor-sharp teeth. Single-strand wire is preferred if you intend to use wire, as it’s much stealthier than multi-strand wire. The recommendation is a simple haywire twist connection on single-strand, 60- to 90-pound wire.

Tips for Casting to Wahoo

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Wahoo teeth are incredibly sharp. There’s no question about it — wear deck boots to protect your feet. One fair question to ask, “To use or not to use wire leader?” Mike Murciano
  • Biting near the boat. When pulling your lure out of the water, have it come to a complete stop, then lift. More than once, I have seen lures get bit as an angler pulls a jig out of the water during their last retrieve, surprising the angler and resulting in a rod and reel overboard.
  • Wear close-toed shoes. Please wear boots or shoes when fishing for wahoo. Nothing is scarier than a wahoo flopping on deck with bare feet in proximity.
  • Watch out for flying objects. Keep your eyes peeled for flying wahoo. Another crazy scenario I’ve seen several times on a wahoo bite. Wahoo will often fly out of the water in pursuit of their prey just inches from the boat.
  • Try casting for wahoo anywhere you fish. While the method of casting to wahoo on a troll stop is a West Coast method, make sure to experiment with this in your wahoo fishery as it’s sure to put some on the deck. There’s no reason jigs and wahoo bombs wouldn’t work in other wahoo hotspots such as Bermuda, Bahamas or even far offshore Louisiana.

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Huge 111-Pound Wahoo Caught in Bahamas https://www.sportfishingmag.com/news/huge-111-pound-wahoo-caught-in-bahamas/ Tue, 27 Dec 2022 15:04:40 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=51650 An American charter boat captain and crew boated a massive speedster off San Salvador.

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Giant wahoo caught in the Bahamas
A BEAST of a wahoo! Courtesy Tyler Levesque

Charter Capt. Tyler Levesque from Madeira Beach, Fla. was fishing with a crew of anglers on his 31-foot Bertram boat the “Lady A” Dec. 5 off San Salvador in the Bahamas. It’s the famed spot where in Oct. 1492 Christopher Columbus discovered the New World.

The anglers were targeting wahoo and headed out that morning in calm seas and beautiful weather.

“We fished all morning with no bites, which is crazy because the fishing had been on fire for wahoo with 5 to 8 strikes per day,” said Levesque via email to Sportfishing. “We went back to land for lunch, and headed out that afternoon during a falling tide, which is when the fish were most active.”

At 4:45 p.m. that day, and nearing to the prime full moon phase, a big fish smashed a “cow bell” lure set up on a far back long line in 430 feet of water.

The wahoo’s first run was incredible, reports Levesque, as angler Drew Johnson grabbed the heavy-duty custom rod with Shimano “Beast Master” reel.

“That first run was awesome as it pulled close to 1,000 feet of line from the reel,” said Levesque, who runs South Atlantic Outfitters in Florida. “Drew was on that fish for 40 minutes before we could get it near the boat.”

But getting the fish into Levesque’s Bertram wasn’t easy.

“The wahoo surfaced and we could see it was a big fish,” said Levesque. “The last 30-feet of leader the fish was hand lined to the boat. Right beside us the wahoo did a last ditch head shake and threw the hook. Just For a millisecond the fish was free, but we hit it fast with a gaff behind the gills, then my mate Tyler Barrett hit it with a second gaff.”

Capt. Levesque saw the chaos trying to boat the wahoo. So he left the Bertram tower, rushed to the stern of the boat, and grabbed the tail of the still-flopping fish.

The group of men pulled the ‘hoo into the boat stern, then into the fish box, as they realized how huge the wahoo was.

“The size of the fish really began to sink in, and cheers rang out with hugs and excitement all around our crew,” said Levesque.

Read Next: Record 101-Pound Wahoo Caught Off Florida’s Panhandle

Back at the marina that afternoon the wahoo officially weighed 111-pounds, 2-ounces, a giant by any measure. But in San Salvador such fish are regularly seen. Currently there are four IGFA world line class records from San Salvador, including two fish weighing over 150 pounds.

The IGFA All-Tackle record for wahoo is a beast of fish, weighing 184-pounds, caught off Cabo San Lucas, Mexico in July 2005.

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“It Took Off and Just Kept Going!” Record 101-Pound Wahoo Caught Off Florida’s Panhandle https://www.sportfishingmag.com/news/record-101-pound-wahoo-caught-off-floridas-panhandle/ Thu, 13 Oct 2022 20:12:39 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=51256 The giant speedster set a tournament record in the 74th Destin Fishing Rodeo.

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Record Florida wahoo
Wahoo don’t come much bigger than this! Courtesy Destin Fishing Rodeo

Big wahoo are a big deal, and the 101-pounder caught by angler Derrick Dover while fishing with his dad Tony and brother Andrew Oct. 1 on the “Muscle Memories” boat is a record breaker.

They were entered in the popular Destin Fishing Rodeo, headquartered in the town of Destin in Florida’s Panhandle.

The anglers had first targeted grouper that morning. But slow bottom fishing made them start trolling, and it didn’t take long for them to hook and boat a 30-pound wahoo.

Derrick Dover told the Destin Log they were fishing 30 miles southwest of Destin. And after the first wahoo, they hooked another one that struck a Jag-A-Hoo Blue Water Candy lure.

“We were in the same area,” he told the Destin Log. “It took off and just kept going. I thought, ‘Oh this is a big one’.”

The wahoo screamed off a sizzling run lasting almost a minute before Derrick could turn the fish and start fighting it back toward their boat.

“Then I thought it got off because it started coming toward us, so I’m cranking and cranking,” he said.

But the fish wasn’t lost, it just rocketed toward their boat. Then it turned and zipped off on another scorching run.

Dover fought the fish through several runs, still not knowing how big the fish was, nor for sure that it even was a wahoo.

“He was down deep under the motor,” he said.

Then the anglers spotted the fish below the boat, and knew it was something special.

“He was huge, and nerves started to set in,” said Derrick who didn’t want to lose the prized wahoo. “After dad stuck the gaff in him, he was done.”

Back at the Rodeo weigh-in at Destin the fish officially scaled 101-pounds, breaking the previous Rodeo record of 98.2-pounds, set in 2010 by angler Omar Breiz.

The Florida record wahoo weighed 139.56-pounds, caught off Marathon in the Florida Keys in May, 1960 by angler George Von Hoffman.

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An 87-Pound Wahoo Caught by A Flounder Fisherman https://www.sportfishingmag.com/news/87-pound-wahoo-caught-by-flounder-fisherman/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 21:00:00 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=51026 The bullet-quick fish with razor-edged dentures showed suddenly on a Northeast Florida reef.

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Large wahoo northeast Florida
A giant wahoo at the scales. Courtesy Fred Miles

It was a perfect late-summer day for running offshore and probing deep reefs for bottom-hugging flounder. So, St. Augustine anglers Jon Herring, 58, and Fred Miles, 57, took advantage of it and ran out of the Ancient City. They settled their 21-foot Contender boat over a reef 17 miles offshore in 73 feet of water where a “live bottom” reef is noted for holding flat fish.

They were rigged right for it, with a cooler full of whole mullet baits from which strips could be cut and sent deep for flounder.

That’s when a giant wahoo suddenly showed just 15 feet from their boat.

“I yelled ‘Whoa, look at that the size of that one’,” says Herring, as the ‘lit up’ fish eased passed them, it’s radiant blue flanks clearly showing in the clear water. “I didn’t even want to try and catch the fish because we didn’t have wire leader to prevent leader cut offs. But Fred said, ‘give me a bait,’ and he rigged it on a jig head to his heaviest fishing outfit – which was still light – and flipped it to the circling wahoo.”

The big wahoo ate the 9-inch mullet immediately, and instantly severed the 80-pound test fluorocarbon leader attached to the bait, said Herring. But the fish didn’t leave. It just circled the boat, above the reef, looking for another meal.

Miles rigged another mullet, tossed it to the wahoo, with the same result. Time after time he rigged a bait, flipped it to the still-circling wahoo, and each time the fish wolfed down the bait, cutting the line like a hot knife through butter. But it continued circling their boat.

“We had one bait left, about a 12-inch live whiting we’d caught earlier on a strip bait and tossed into the live well,” explained Herring. “Fred hooked it through the nose with a 7/0-circle hook, and pitched it to the wahoo as it swam by us just 15 feet away.”

The wahoo took the bait, and the circle hook did its job by barbing the fish on the side of the mouth – its metal shank preventing the wahoo’s razor-sharp teeth from cutting the line again.

The medium-action flounder rod bent tight, and 40-pound test braided line ripped off his Daiwa “Saltist” 30-class level-wind reel, as the wahoo kicked into high gear and raced away.

Herring quickly pulled up the Contender’s Spot Lock bow-mount electric motor, cranked the big engine and gave chase to the racing wahoo.

“The fish nearly dumped all the line on the reel, and it took awhile to gain on the fish and get it close again,” says Herring, who manned the boat controls. “The wahoo stayed close to the surface until we got near it, then it went down about 30 feet, made another run, and we pretty much got control after that.”

The veteran anglers worked the boat, rod, and hooked fish just right, and about 20 minutes later the wahoo was at the surface, beat, and ready to be brought aboard. But they had no large gaff, only a small homemade gaff designed for handling small fish like flounder. It was made from an old golf club handle with about an 8/0 hook (having no barb) fitted in one end for small fish gaffing duty.

“That little gaff is all we had, so I used it and hit the wahoo near the tail, on the other end of those razor teeth,” said Herring. “Then I muscled it into the boat, Fred dropped his rod, grabbed the fish, too, and we put it onto the deck.

“Then we started jumping up and down like a couple of kids, laughing and yelling, back slapping and smiling.”

They loaded the fish into their cooler, but a couple feet of the tail wouldn’t fit. So they rearranged ice on it as best they could, then ran back to shore to weigh it and get it properly cooled before it spoiled in the Florida August sun.

Back at Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor in St. Augustine the fish weighed 86.7-pounds – a giant of a wahoo, even for St. Augustine, which annually gives up massive wahoo every winter, some weighing over 100 pounds.

But catching wahoo off the Ancient City in summer is a rarity, especially fish of such size. But Herring says a “temperature inversion” occurs every late summer off Northeast Florida, where cool water pushes in and that may have been why such a massive wahoo was so close to shore during the heat of August in Florida.

Asked about catching such a huge wahoo on such light flounder tackle, Miles was matter of fact.

“Braided line was the great equalizer,” he said about catching the wahoo. “And a lot of luck.”

The post An 87-Pound Wahoo Caught by A Flounder Fisherman appeared first on Sport Fishing Mag.

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Los Cabos, Mexico: Spring Fishing Bonanza https://www.sportfishingmag.com/travel/los-cabos-mexico-spring-fishing-bonanza/ Tue, 01 Feb 2022 17:26:20 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=50243 The Los Cabos region of Mexico offers a superb variety of saltwater fishing opportunities in spring.

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Striped marlin chasing bait
Striped marlin often join together to feed on schools of bait in the offshore waters off of Mexico’s Los Cabos region in spring. Gary Graham

The Los Cabos region at the tip of Mexico’s Baja California peninsula is a sport fishing shrine that draws worshipful anglers from all over the world. The famed tourist destination includes Cabo San Lucas with its sprawling marina and easy access to the merger of the Pacific Ocean and Sea of Cortez, as well as the East Cape region a few miles north on the sparkling southeastern shores of Baja.

These waters harbor an incredible wealth of marine life, including gamefish ranging from billfish, mahi and wahoo in the blue offshore waters to roosterfish and grouper inshore. Here are some of the angling opportunities you’ll find around Los Cabos in spring.

Striped marlin jumping
Acrobatic striped marlin can reach weights in excess of 200 pounds, but most are under 150 pounds. They represent one of the greatest attractions among anglers visiting the Los Cabos region. Gary Graham

Striped Marlin Mania

Few other fish attract anglers to the Cabo region like striped marlin. While this species feeds year around in these waters, the best time to fish for striped marlin runs from February through the end of June. While the stripers might show up anywhere, one of the best areas to find the acrobatic billfish in spring is the Golden Gate Bank, 15 miles north of Cabo San Lucas on the Pacific side, where upwellings create rich waters that attract sardines and Pacific mackerel. You might find a school of these marlin attacking a dense pack of bait on the surface, and well-placed live bait such as a mackerel or caballito (Mexican scad) will often draw immediate attention.

School of birds
When discovered offshore, groups of feeding frigates, gannets, gulls, pelicans and terns represent a sure sign that striped marlin and other pelagic predators are driving schools of baitfish to the surface. Gary Graham

Bird Brain

To be clear, the surface feeding activity by striped marlin described above does occur during every outing. On many trips, crews spend time trolling and, at the same, searching the horizon for the telltale clouds of birds hovering over schools of sardines and other baitfish driven to the surface by ravenous striped marlin and other pelagic gamefish. When a boat crew finds these birds, they race to the spot, and once within casting distance, the anglers fling live baits into the melee, often producing multiple hookups followed by releases—an extraordinary opportunity for anglers to achieve personal-best billfish catch-and-release totals.

Releasing a roosterfish
Roosterfish represent one of the most prized inshore fish anglers might catch in spring along the beaches of the Los Cabos region. Gary Graham

Other Targets

Striped marlin might grab most of the offshore attention, but there are many other spring angling opportunities in this region, including dorado, yellowfin tuna and wahoo, often found in the same offshore waters.

Close to the sandy beaches of the Sea of Cortez on the East Cape, anglers also can target roosterfish in spring. This fish’s unique comblike dorsal fin slices the water as the rooster attacks schools of baitfish. Roosters often behave like the striped marlin, feeding on the surface.

When roosters don’t show themselves at the surface, one of the most effective techniques for finding them is slow trolling live baits such as mullet or sardines along beaches. Other inshore gamefish such as Pacific jack crevalle and sierra mackerel join in on the near-shore feeding frenzies. Both of these species eagerly bite anything moving, including trolled cedar plugs, tuna feathers and Rapala diving plugs in a variety of colors.

Other species to consider in spring include California yellowtail, cabrilla (leopard groupers) and pargo (Spanish for various species of snapper) These delicious fish can be found along rocky areas of the coastline, and will readily strike a live bait fished near the bottom.

Marina Cabo San Lucas
The expansive Marina Cabo San Lucas serves as headquarters for a number of sportfishing charter-boat operations serving visiting anglers. Gary Graham

Cabo Launch Points

Los Cabos Airport in San Jose del Cabo serves both Cabo San Lucas and the East Cape, and it is less than three hours by air from most major Southern California airports. A transfer to Cabo San Lucas takes less than hour, while the drive to the East Cape takes about one hour.

Cabo San Lucas features a huge, bustling marina; the IGY Marina company is the largest resident operator with 380 slips, many of them filled with sportfishing boats to meet the needs of anglers wanting to charter. Hotels ranging from economical to luxury 5-star properties surround the marina, and make it convenient to walk to your charter boat for an early morning departure.

On the other hand, the East Cape has no marinas. Instead, each beachside resort has its own fleet of sportfishing boats that anchor in the typically calm waters in front of the resorts. Some properties build small piers where passengers can board and de-board, while others use pangas to ferry guests to and from the larger boats.

Fish release
Marlin anglers who visit the Los Cabos region in spring often experience phenomenal fishing for striped marlin, dorado (mahi), yellowfin tuna and wahoo. Gary Graham

Charter Options

Back in Cabo San Lucas, for more than four decades, the Ehrenberg family has run the Pisces Sport Fishing charter operation in Marina at Los Cabos. Their boats are equipped with high-end rods and reels spooled with fresh line, available in various sizes from 30- to 80-pound-test trolling outfits. They also provide bait-fishing outfits with either 30- or 50-pound-test line, plus lures, leader, terminal tackle and more.

“Pisces Sport Fishing has gotten off to a record-breaking pace in 2022,” says Rebecca Ehrenberg, Pisces vice president of conservation, “In January, our fleet released 2,361 marlin, with excellent catches of 315 tuna and 181 dorado (mahi), combined with 282 wahoo and other inshore species. Our bookings through June are rapidly filling up. Our spring season should be remarkable.”

Read Next: Cabo San Lucas Fishing

Sierra mackerel
Sierra mackerel offer excellent light tackle for anglers visiting the Los Cabo region in spring. Gary Graham

Few destinations can match the Los Cabos region for the remarkable array of spring fishing opportunities to catch saltwater gamefish.

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Wahoo Full-Moon Madness https://www.sportfishingmag.com/wahoo-full-moon-madness/ Tue, 23 Jul 2019 20:36:15 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=47143 Summertime tricks for catching this speedy game fish.

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Wahoo chasing bait
Winter’s not the only time to target Florida’s favorite speedster. Kevin Dodge

The South Florida seas had grown into nasty 4- to 5-footers; the sky darkened. If it hadn’t been the August full-moon period, Capt. Chris Fay would not have ventured offshore. But he and his buddy were confident that it was prime time to catch a wahoo. “It was rough…nasty,” recalls Fay, a Deerfield Beach, Florida, charter captain (poseidontoo.net). “We had been fishing in 300 feet, but we saw a storm coming in, so we went into shallow water, 97 feet.”

Fay continues: “Right before the sun went down, the moon was coming up. As soon as that moon popped, the one fish that we were looking for decided to feed. We were doing a turn, and I looked over at the short planer rod, and that thing just started dumping. The fish made a 350-yard run, and we knew exactly what it was: a big, fat, giant wahoo.”

The fish, which ate a split-tail mullet, came within 15 feet of the boat after that initial run, then took off on another run. The wahoo eventually came close enough for Fay and his friend to sink two or three gaffs into the fish. Then they struggled to lift the wahoo into their boat.

They headed straight for the dock after that, where the wahoo bottomed out a 75-pound scale. “We just said we’re going to call it 80 pounds,” Fay says. “When you go specifically looking for that one bite on that day, there’s no better feeling, especially when you put in the time and effort.”

Holding wahoo up on board boat
Summer’s full-moon periods can be the best time to catch wahoo off the southeast Florida coast. Kim Bain

Moon Magic
Anglers catch wahoo year-round throughout southeast Florida, from Jupiter to Miami, yet relatively few know of the hot summertime bite. Savvy anglers and captains like Fay say that the absolute best time to catch the most and biggest wahoo—40 pounds and up—occurs around the full moons in July, August and September.

In the northern Gulf—a well-known action spot for big ’hoos—the prime bite happens in February or March, with no known summer-full-moon bite. In North Carolina, however, a summer fishery ignites a day or two before the full moons of July and August. The fish come in fairly close to shore, says tournament captain Mark Henderson, who caught a 75-pound wahoo in 42 feet of water on a live bluefish two summers ago.

“My favorite moon is in August,” says Fay, who prefers the days leading up to the moon and the day after. “There’s so much more water flooding out of the inlet, and the fish are waiting for the food (baitfish) to come out. I like to fish 2 miles north and 2 miles south of the inlets.”

Capt. Skip Dana, who charters selectively on his center-console Pop-A-Top out of Pompano Beach, Florida, says that in 2018, the wahoo bite was best around the full moon in September. He prefers to fish “three to four days before a full moon and then a few days after. The day of the full moon is usually slower, with the best bite at midday.”

Even kayak anglers take ­advantage of the summer-full-moon wahoo bite. “I’ve caught them all the way out from a week before the full moon to a week or a week and a half after,” says Joe Hector (extremekayakfishing​.com), who puts on kayak-fishing ­tournaments out of Pompano Beach. His tournament two years ago around the full moon in August produced eight wahoo, including a 71.9-pounder and two others over 50 pounds.

“To me, August is the prime time to get those monster wahoo,” Hector says.

Joe Hector / extremekayakfishing.com
Joe Hector kayak-fishes for ’hoos out of Pompano Beach, Florida. Wahoo caught in a kayak

Timing the Tides
Capt. Stan Hunt, who used to charter out of Pompano Beach before retiring and moving up the coast to Palm City, caught one of the region’s most ­celebrated summertime wahoo several years ago. Fishing in a local tournament, his first fish of the day was a 74.2-pound ‘hoo that he caught trolling in 95 feet of water off Hillsboro Inlet. The biggest fish of the event, that wahoo helped Hunt and his crew to a victory—and a record $99,025 payday.

Where Hunt chooses to fish depends on what the tide is doing because that determines where the bait will be. On the last of an incoming tide, baitfish are pushed close to an inlet, so Hunt fishes shallow. When the tide is out, he fishes around wrecks and other baitfish attractors in 200 to 400 feet of water.

Fay says his favorite tide time to fish for wahoo falls on what he calls the switch of the tides: the first hour of the outgoing and the first hour of the incoming.

“I usually catch wahoo on an outgoing tide,” Hector says. “I fish around the deep wrecks and inlets because that’s when the bait is coming out.”

Fay also likes to fish around wrecks, particularly in depths ranging from 140 to 240 feet. He also studies his depth recorder to locate schools of fish on which wahoo feed. “Get your electronics dialed in to where you can mark the bonitos,” he says. “Where there’s bullet bonitos (tuna) and little blackfin tuna, there’s going to be wahoo. If there are tunas in 400 or 500 feet, guess where the wahoo are?”

Wahoo chasing a teaser
Lures, bonito strips, rigged mullet, and live baits fished at the surface and below from planers and downriggers can all tempt these roving summertime wahoo—in Florida and North Carolina. Pat Ford

Trolling Tactics
Fay usually fishes a split-tail mullet from a planer 100 feet behind the boat. If he wants the bait deeper, he lets out more line. He also fishes big swimming mullet on two shorter planer lines, each about 20 feet behind the boat.

“There are two kinds of wahoo,” he says. “The shy wahoo that’s going to swim up to the bait three or four times before eating it on the long planer, and the big wahoo that’s not afraid to hit the short planer. They’re not swimming up to look at it; they’re swimming up to crush it. Seventy to 80 percent of my bites come on the short planer. They’re nasty, they’re mean, and they come right up in the prop wash.”

His spread also includes two big lures on the short outrigger lines. He likes to fish lures made locally at RJ Boyle Studio, as well as Ilanders with ballyhoo. On the long rigger lines, he trolls two midsize baits such as a Sea Witch with a fresh bonito strip on a long-shank 10/0 or 12/0 hook.

Fay says, on low-light days, he uses bright colors such as pink-and-blue and chartreuse-and-purple. On bright days and in clear water, he likes blue-and-white, all white and pink-and-white. “In August, my spread is almost all pink. Why? Because shrimp and squid are around on that moon.”

Hunt trolls bonito strips behind Sea Witches or ballyhoo with a skirt; he ties both rigs himself. Both the lures and skirts feature lots of Mylar for added flash, and his favorite skirt color is blue-and-white. He rigs the baits with a single hook, and pulls two of them on planers from the cockpit and one on a weighted line from the bridge at 8 to 9 knots.

Wahoo caught using a teaser
Wahoo bite big-time on full moons during summer. Will Drost

Live-Baiting Choices
Dana prefers to use live bait for summertime full-moon wahoo, especially in August and September. “You get more bites live-bait fishing than any other time of year. I’d rather catch one on live bait than 10 trolling a lure on a planer.

“Usually first thing in the morning, if there’s a little bit of a breeze, I’ll put out the normal spread and try to get surface bites,” says Dana, who’ll fly two fishing kites, each with three lines, a couple of flat lines, and a couple of deep baits. “They’ll sky on the kite baits, just like kingfish.”

Once the sun comes up, he starts slow-trolling in 200 to 400 feet of water. He rigs goggle-eyes, blue runners, speedos and little bullet tuna, and bumps the motors in and out of gear to keep the lines tight. “I’ll put one flat line 200 yards back, and one 50 or 60 yards back. I’ll put a downrigger bait on each side of the boat and stagger them. I’ll start at 75 and 125 feet down, and if I get a bite on the deeper one, I’ll go to 125 and 200 feet.”

When he gets a bite, his crew cranks up the downriggers to get the cables out of the way. Dana also pays attention to the depth where he catches the first wahoo because subsequent bites likely will be in the same depth. And don’t be surprised if you catch other species with downriggers, fishing deeper.

“There are 30- to 40-pound kingfish out there, and sailfish,” he explains. “I don’t know how many times the line takes off, zipping across the surface, and then a sailfish comes up jumping, and I thought I had a wahoo on.”

Hector buys live bait before he launches his Hobie pedal-drive kayak off the beach. He typically buys only five goggle-eyes and three pilchards, and keeps them in a 5-gallon bucket with a battery-powered aerator. Once he catches a wahoo—his personal best is a 65-pounder—he heads back to shore.

“When I’m targeting wahoo, my trips are short and sweet,” he says. “I’ll put out my first gog on the way out in 80 feet, then set up a drift. Or if the current isn’t strong, I’ll slow-troll [by pedaling the kayak]. I free-line a pilchard around 60 yards behind me on top, with a gog below. With goggle-eyes, sometimes to get them down I use a 2- or 3-ounce egg weight and try to keep it at middepth. If you put out two gogs together, you’re going to end up with a tangled mess.

“Believe it or not, I’ve caught more wahoo on big pilchards than on gogs. Some of my best catches have been on a 6-inch pilchard as opposed to a 3- or 4-inch one.”

Hector uses a Garmin Striker depth finder to locate wrecks in 180 to 250 feet, and keeps zigzagging in and out of those depths unless he sees a sizable school of bonito or a solid color change, where the water abruptly changes from greenish to dark blue.

If he catches a blackfin tuna, Hector uses it to entice a wahoo bite. “I’ll cut open the tuna, take my gog or pilchard and stick it in the belly of the tuna, count to three, then put out the bait,” he says. “I believe it’s all about scent. Blackfin tuna and bonito have a distinct scent, and they’re very oily. I believe that’s why wahoo eat them. I once caught three wahoo in three days doing that.”

Wahoo caught in the Gulf of Mexico
The Gulf of Mexico offers an impressive wahoo bite, but so far, the only targeted season seems to be winter. The ’hoos there get mighty big, though. Adrian E. Gray

Waging War
Fay fishes his dead baits and skirted strips from a straight-butt rod with a Shimano Tiagra 30-wide reel spooled with 80-pound braided line. He uses a No. 6 or No. 8 planer and trolls at 6 to 7 knots. On calm days, Fay switches to a No. 4 planer and troll at 8 knots.

He connects the other end of the planer to 60 feet of 50- or 60-pound monofilament, attached with a double uni-knot to 10 to 15 feet of 60- to 80-pound fluorocarbon leader. Fay adds 18 to 24 inches of No. 7 wire leader to the fluorocarbon with a Spro swivel.

Dana fishes live baits on Penn Fathom high-speed reels spooled with 20-pound Momoi Orange Crush monofilament line on 7-foot medium-action 20-pound rods. He uses a 15-foot Momoi 30-pound fluorocarbon leader that he ties to the main line with a blood knot. To prevent cutoffs, he adds a 3-foot piece of 30-pound Knot 2 Kinky nickel-titanium leader wire attached to the fluorocarbon with an 80-pound Spro swivel. He ties the terminal end of the leader to a 6/0 VMC J hook, and adds a second J hook as a stinger.

“We always have a stinger on,” Dana says. “The length depends on the size of bait: 3 to 6 inches of No. 6 wire tied to a 4/0 VMC that we hook in the skin just enough so it holds.”

From his kayak, Hector fishes a Shimano 6500 spinning reel spooled with at least 300 yards of 30-pound monofilament on a medium-heavy rod. “In South Florida, you never know what you’re going to get—maybe a yellowfin tuna or a marlin, so you don’t want to miss the opportunities if you get them.”

His leader consists of 50-pound fluorocarbon or monofilament with a 6- or 7-inch piece of 30- or 40-pound wire. He fishes his baits on a 3/0 or 4/0 J hook with a 2/0 treble stinger hook. “Every single wahoo I’ve ever caught, when I gaffed it and brought it in the kayak, was caught in the throat, eye or side by the stinger. The lead hook was swinging freely.”

Read Next: Wahoo: Speeding Up Fast Tactics

Hector ties all of his connections and keeps plenty of spare leaders in a small plastic bag. “I don’t do any swivels,” he says. “When I’m offshore in the kayak, I don’t want to be tying knots the whole time. If my wire gets kinked, I can tie on another leader [with an Albright knot].”

For anglers who have always wanted to catch a big wahoo, timing is everything, and there’s no need to brave wild winter weather to land that trophy fish—at least in South Florida. Check your calendar for the summertime full moons, put out your live bait or trolling lures, and get ready for that sizzling run.

The Kayak Endgame
Kayak angler Joe Hector always keeps a 2-foot gaff with him. He brings the wahoo alongside his Hobie, puts the gaff under the fish, and pulls up rather than reaching out and over the wahoo.

“A lot of anglers have lost some epic fish in our ­tournaments that way,” he says. “In a kayak, you’re literally in the water with the fish. Just gently put that gaff in the water, and pull up and hold on tight.”

Hector keeps a fish bag aboard; after he gaffs the wahoo, he puts it into the bag headfirst. “You don’t want him coming out of the bag headfirst,” he says. “The good thing about wahoo, most of the time—especially with big ones—is that by the time you get them up to the kayak, they’re close to death.”

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Wahoo: Speeding Up Fast Tactics https://www.sportfishingmag.com/wahoo-speeding-up-fast-tactics/ Fri, 31 May 2019 22:04:05 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=46902 Better lures and improved tackle have allowed captains to troll even faster for wahoo.

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High-speed trolling for wahoo
High-speed trolling for wahoo has evolved. Adrian E. Gray

Offshore trollers can be separated into three categories: those who slow-troll, those who troll fast, and those who troll for wahoo. Comparatively speaking, that’s like driving your vehicle through a lunchtime Chick-fil-A parking lot, driving on an interstate, and driving in the Daytona 500.

High-speed trolling for wahoo is faster than ever, in part because of new lures, improved tackle, and faster, more-maneuverable boats. Anglers also have realized that they really can’t troll too fast for wahoo, which rank among the fastest fish in the ocean.

“I usually troll for wahoo at 14 to 17 knots,” says Capt. Cory Burlew (goddesscharters.com) of Deerfield Beach, Florida, who has fished for wahoo for 30 years. “When I first started, we did 8, 9, 10 knots. Thirteen knots was the big number in the late 1990s.”

“We troll from 12 knots up to 16 knots,” says Mark Henderson (fishlf.com), captain of the Liquid Fire Fishing Team out of Cape Carteret, North Carolina, who adds that wahoo can’t help but chase something whizzing by them. “They’re predatory. You get in their strike zone, it’s an instinctive reaction.”

X-Rap Magnum XR40
In California, Rapala pro staffer Steve Carson uses that brand’s X-Rap Magnum XR40 rigged to 2 feet of 175-pound cable leader. Steve Carson

Go-Fast Lures
Henderson, who competes in king mackerel and multispecies tournaments with his sons Joshua and Crockett, said at press time that the wahoo bite off North Carolina had been strong since fall. He commonly heard reports of fish from 50 to 60 pounds, as well as several over 100 pounds.

Henderson’s new boat, a SeaVee 390Z with four Mercury Verado 400 outboards, makes it child’s play for him to run 60 to 65 miles to fish for wahoo in 30 to 50 fathoms. He dials in the fish using his SiriusXM sea-surface ­temperature data to find breaks, where blackfin tuna, vermilion snapper and flying fish typically congregate—all prey species for wahoo.

“High-speed trolling covers so much ground, it’s becoming more and more popular,” Henderson says. “Yo-Zuri Bonita plugs are pretty popular. The Blue Water Candy Jag-A-Hoo is very popular here. It’s got a blade, so it creates a lot of flash. It’s a little heavier and a little bigger, so it stays a little more in the water. Purple-and-black, black-and-blue or red-and-black—those colors tend to entice strikes.”

Burlew, whose biggest wahoo weighed 110.4 pounds, does most of his high-speed wahoo trolling in the Bahamas and says he has always had luck with those same dark colors for big fish because the baits resemble bonito. He uses his own custom slant-head lures, which he plans to eventually bring to market.

“Most people use straight-running lures. I like slant heads because they run better and deliver more action,” he explains.

Burlew adds that many wahoo-­tournament anglers fish Black Bart Lures, such as the 12-inch San Sal Candy or Hawaiian Eyes. His lures are slightly smaller to better match what wahoo eat.

That’s also part of his tournament strategy. In the early days of high-speed wahoo trolling, when Burlew fished on Concrete Machine with Capt. Ron Schatman, the most wahoo won. Now, the biggest wahoo wins.

“The ones we use are the right size that the fish are feeding on,” says Burlew of his lures, which are 8 to 10 inches long. “Sometimes the smaller ones seem to catch more fish and bigger fish because wahoo feed on flying fish and small tuna. I feel like the big fish are lazy. They’d rather eat a small bait. It’s like walking by a buffet; are you going to pick up a french fry or a baked potato?”

Wahoo caught on speedy trolling tackle
Speedy wahoo require streamlined lures and stout tackle. Many captains say you simply can’t troll too fast for wahoo. Mark Henderson

High-Speed Tackle
Burlew and Henderson both usually troll five lines: one far behind the boat, one on each outrigger, and one at each corner. The latter four are staggered at different distances because sometimes wahoo prefer lures close to the boat, and sometimes they bite only the distant ones. Starting off with different colors helps the skippers determine what the fish want that day.

“I put out either three brights and two darks or three darks and two brights,” says Burlew, who fishes variations of the same color once he determines which is preferred. “The majority of the time, once you home in on a color, that’s when you get your multiples. Sometimes the fish like bright colors early in the morning. In dark-purple water, dark colors work best. Sometimes I use blue, black and white lures to imitate giant ocean ­flyers with white backs.”

A member of the Accurate pro staff, Henderson uses ATD TwinDrag 50-wide reels spooled with 50-pound Yo-Zuri Hybrid copolymer line. He’ll top it with 50 feet of 100- or 120-pound Yo-Zuri fluorocarbon, and tie that to a small, stainless-steel ball-bearing snap swivel. Ten to 12 feet of wire goes from the swivel to the lure. “If we have to change lures, we’ll cut down the wire until it gets to 4 or 5 feet. We try to keep baits in the water.”

He pairs the reels with custom 6-foot, 50-pound-class rods with AFTCO guides and bent butts. His anglers fight wahoo either from a swiveling rod holder or an AFTCO stand-up belt.

One of the key innovations since the old days of high-speed trolling is braided line. Burlew says he used to troll either 100-pound wire line or 80-pound monofilament line for wahoo. Although he prefers the stretch, shock absorption, and forgiveness of mono, he says it’s hard to overlook the advantages of braid, which is what he primarily fishes today.

“We can fish the drags a little tighter, and the braid cuts through the water better, so we can fish a little bit lighter lead,” says Burlew, who uses 80- or 130-pound Shimano Tiagra reels because of their strong drags and line capacity. “With monofilament, the farther out it gets, the tighter the drag becomes or the line breaks. With braid, you have the same amount of drag with half a spool. If too much line goes out, it’s easier to gain it back.”

Wahoo caught on lure
Captains usually start the fishing day deploying some light and some dark lures to find out what the wahoo might want. Once they catch a fish, they switch to the appropriate hue. Chris Woodward / Sport Fishing

Cable Benefits
Another recent adaptation for Burlew is using cable instead of wire to ­connect a trolling weight to the main line and to the lure. “What that does is it enables you to go shorter [on the shock cord],” he says. “If a fish hits the lead, it won’t cut you off. I use heavier cable—900-pound—from the snap swivel to the lead, and thinner cable—400 to 480—for the shock cord.

“All of my shock cords are the same length: 35 to 40 feet. When I used wire, my shock cords were 100 feet. Make sure your snap snivels are good. I like 300- to 400-pound snap swivels so strong that it takes Superman to open them up. Wahoo hit so hard sometimes, they’ll almost spring it open.”

Read Next: Louisiana’s Wahoo Wonderland

That’s the nature of this prime gamefish; it can’t help but shift into high gear to chase down a lure that zips past. Moral: The faster you troll, the better the wahoo bite.

West Coast Wahoo
To target wahoo out of Southern California, many anglers book trips on multipassenger long-range boats to fish Mexico’s Baja Peninsula. “Most anglers head south on a seven- or eight-day trip or longer to reach the wahoo areas,” says Steve Carson, a Penn and Rapala pro staffer from Carlsbad, California. “In some warmer years, the wahoo have been a little closer. From 2014 through 2016, Oceanside (California) was ground zero for wahoo.”

Carson says the boats run about 450 miles to a series of volcanic islets, known as Alijos Rocks, and to an area known as the Ridge. Wahoo typically can be found there from July through December, but he adds that the best months to catch the fish are probably September and October.

When fishermen trolling lures hook wahoo from a long-range boat, other anglers cast lures or live bait to the school. Carson says most of these bigger boats troll for wahoo at 9 to 11 knots, “although certainly plenty of fish are caught at 7½ knots.”

About 40 years ago, anglers fished chrome-plated lead-head jigs with feathers that weighed 10 to 16 ounces, he says. In the late 1980s, what Carson calls the pregnant guppy-style plug became popular.

The trolling lures of choice today include the Braid Marauder and the Yo-Zuri Bonita. Carson trolls a black-and-purple Rapala X-Rap Magnum XR40. He rigs the lure with 2 feet of 175-pound cable leader, and fishes it on 80-pound monofilament line spooled to a Penn International 30 or 50. The big reels become necessary if you hook a large tuna or marlin.

Carson upgrades the VMC 4X Perma Steel hooks to 6X to handle wahoo that can range from 30 to 100 pounds. “Anything over 60 pounds is considered big. A fish of 70 pounds will usually win you the jackpot.”

Other popular deep-diving plugs include the Nomad DTX Minnow and Bomber CD 30—the bigger the better. “We get so few opportunities to be in the wahoo area, we don’t want a tuna to bite,” Carson says. “Ten- to 15-pound tuna are just like flies. They’ll drive you insane. Trolling those big plugs is a way to concentrate on the wahoo.”

Favorite colors include orange with a black back or dark purple with a black back, although Carson says, “it’s really more the wiggle than the color. Every boat has one lure that swims the way the fish like it.”

Captains troll lures in the prop wash of the long-range boats, which seem to attract wahoo rather than repel them. “You get to see a bite quite often. That’s really thrilling.”

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Florida Keys Fishing Trip Planner: December https://www.sportfishingmag.com/florida-keys-fishing-trip-planner-december/ Wed, 30 Nov 2016 06:16:19 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=47945 It's cold almost everywhere else, but the Keys are hot in December.

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Winter Wahoo
Keys Wahoo
Target wahoo in the early mornings off Key West outer reefs. The top days occur before and after the full moon of December, says Capt. R.T. Trosset. Adrian E. Gray

Fishing the edge of the Bar off Key West, on the outside reef, Capt. R.T. Trosset targets wahoo with live speedos, bullet bonito or blue runners. Anywhere there is an irregularity in the reef, such as a high or low spot, it’s liable to attract wahoo. The best fishing conditions are during an east current or when the Gulf Stream edge moves in close to the reef, he says.

“The top fishing times are five days before the full moon and five days after in December and January,” says Trosset. “Also, mid-June to July can be hot, especially under flotsam in 200 to 2,000 feet.”

Once you hook one, keep fishing hard: Wahoo often school together, and you catch more. “I like fishing with live baits for the spectacular, skyrocketing bites,” he says. “I’ve caught more than 20 in a day, averaging 25 to 60 pounds.”

Around flotsam, Trosset trolls deep-diving purple-and-black bombers, or he’ll jig metal or bucktails 200 to 300 feet below the object. For live-baiting, chunking or jigging, Trosset prefers to use Fin-Nor 6500 spinners with 30-pound braid. For conventional setups, he opts for a Fin-Nor Marquesa 30 on a Tidal rod with 50-pound braid.

Explosive Tuna

Keys blackfin tuna
Jigs, poppers or live baits entice marauding blackfin tuna at the surface. Doug Olander / sportfishingmag.com

For those who enjoy the promise of active fishing inherent in both jigging and popping, Key West in winter is hard to beat. Anglers well equipped can enjoy a variety of situations. Start trolling just a few miles from Key West where the bottom drops away from the shallow outer reef. You might soon find yourself in the midst of multiple schools of blackfin tuna, prowling the surface and tearing up baitfish.

Capt. Trosset runs just upwind of a frenzy and pops the power into neutral, so anglers can fire lures and jigs into the commotion. The whole area can remain alive with explosive blackfin pods for hours. Small lead-head jigs are hard to beat, perhaps mimicking the tiny jacks on which the tuna gorge. But they also climb all over small to medium topwater plugs, and the strike alone is worth the price of admission.

Madness on the Reef

surface action
Blackfins, little tunny and mackerel are just some of the species mixing it up underneath ballyhoo schools. Doug Olander / sportfishingmag.com

Starting at some point in December and on through winter, big fish “cruise the edge of the reef, from Cosgrove to the buoy, and come up to crash the hell out of the ballyhoo!” Trosset says. “We look for the frigate birds,” he says, then get anglers ready to cast. “You throw a topwater into that, and you’ll get hit 95 percent of the time. And it can be anything!”

Trosset lists blackfin tuna, sailfish, little tunny, kingfish, cero mackerel, big yellowtail snapper, bar jack, jack crevalle and occasionally mutton snapper as among the game fish mixing it up underneath bunches of frantic ballyhoo.

“Sometimes we even get good gaffer dolphin — 12- to 20-pounders — up there when they’re chasing ballyhoo.”

Little Ledges Hold Big Surprises

amberjack catch
Amberjacks put up such a strong fight that anglers often must recuperate after a drawn-out battle. And likely the fish too. Doug Olander / sportfishingmag.com

In addition to fishing small ledges, Trosset has the option to put anglers over any of quite a few wrecks. The upside is that these offer a larger target to hit when dropping metal deep than does a small ledge. They also hold good concentrations of fish (typically including the most and biggest AJs). The downside is that unlike the little ledges for which many numbers fill Trosset’s GPS, wrecks are hardly a secret and get more fishing pressure more consistently.

Trosset points out there’s always the chance of finding new small ledges or slightly elevated hard-bottom spots since many remain uncharted. He recommends keeping a jig rod or two armed and ready for a stop ’n’ drop when the sounder shows something interesting while trolling. He recommends jigs that are in the shape of Bomber Saltwater Grade’s Darters (versus very long, skinny jigs), noting that he seldom needs to go to jigs heavier than 4 ounces. And of course, he’ll tell you that lead-heads with plastics still get great results (though these might be needed in weights heavier than metal jigs, since the latter tend to sink more effortlessly into deep water).

Tournament Sailfishing Hits High Gear

sailfish release boatside
In tournament situations, fishing teams often fight and release sailfish so quickly that anglers never touch the fish. Instead, a deckhand purposely pops the leader once the fish is at boat side. Above, this sailfish was caught during a fun fishing trip, not during a tournament. Charlie Levine / sportfishingmag.com

Up to 25 boat teams of elite sport fishermen are to compete in the Florida Keys Gold Cup Sailfish Championship series held in the waters off Islamorada, abiding by rules that strongly emphasize conservation and sportsmanship. Fishing is scheduled Friday through Sunday, Dec. 2-4, with an awards ceremony Sunday.

If a minimum 14 boats register in the overall Gold Cup Series, $20,000 in prize money is to be awarded. Amounts increase as the number of registered boats increases.

Each of the three tournaments in the series operates independently with its own set of rules and entry fees. At least one angler must be entered and paid for all three series events by the kickoff of the Islamorada Sailfish Tournament, first in the renowned triple-crown sequence.

A primary fundraiser for the Islamorada Charter Boat Association, the Islamorada Sailfish Tournament is the only event in the series to offer a junior division for anglers age 16 and younger. The all-release boat event opens with pre-registration Thursday, Dec. 1. An unlimited number of anglers is allowed per vessel.

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Celebrities Who Fish https://www.sportfishingmag.com/celebrities-who-fish/ Thu, 11 Aug 2016 03:33:46 +0000 https://www.sportfishingmag.com/?p=45570 Insights into the lives of saltwater anglers who became celebrities.

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Fishing Famous
Ryan Tannehill and wife
Miami Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill anxiously watches as wife Lauren plays a kingfish in the Gulf Stream off Miami. Courtesy Miami Dolphins

Not many of us own a Super Bowl ring or belong to baseball’s Hall of Fame. It’s also unlikely that we’ve won a pro golf championship or starred in a TV series. Nonetheless, many saltwater anglers passionately follow their favorite sports teams and idolize stars of stage and screen. It’s also human nature to be curious about how celebs share our love of saltwater fishing. In that spirit, I contacted a number of well-known personalities recognized as genuinely serious about the sport.

Jimmy Johnson, Football Coach, Broadcaster

Jimmy Johnson wahoo
Jimmy Johnson hoists a wahoo that struck a trolled lure off Islamorada. Andy Newman / Florida Keys News Bureau

I recently met Johnson at his Big Chill restaurant in Key Largo. We talked about how he coached the Miami Hurricanes to a national college football title in 1987, and the Dallas Cowboys to back-to-back Super Bowl wins in the early 1990s.

“I’m proud of all those accomplishments,” said Johnson. “But these are the good old days.”

Indeed, Johnson’s tanned face — contrasting nicely with a superbly combed coif of gray hair — often lit up with an easy laugh or smile during our talk. He was loose, relaxed, and somehow younger-looking than when I’d last chatted with him years ago.

“I grew up in Port Arthur, Texas, and often fished with my dad in an old wooden boat,” he said. “After getting the head coaching job at the University of Miami, I started diving the reefs off the Keys and soon got into fishing.”

Fishing is the key that turns on Johnson’s positive energy. Unless it’s too windy or he’s out of town for a couple of days each week during football season, serving as a commentator on the Fox NFL Sunday pregame show, Johnson leaves the dock early in the morning to fish and usually returns well before noon. His oceanside home in Islamorada allows quick access to the Gulf Stream to troll for big-game fish in either his 39- or 43-foot twin-diesel boat — both appropriately named Three Rings to commemorate his triad of championships.

Jimmy Johnson Dolphin
Formerly coach of the Miami Dolphins, Johnson poses with a big bull caught aboard one of his two offshore boats. Rhonda Johnson

Johnson fishes alone 90 percent of the time. When he’s on the bridge, watching his lure spread, his mindset is a world apart from his years of big-time football pressures or the ­trappings of being a public figure.

“I like the fact that on the water, it becomes a level playing field, because fish don’t care who you are,” said Johnson.

He’s mastered the art of single-handedly performing the roles of skipper, angler and mate to land trophy-size wahoo, tuna and slammer dolphin. That talent has also earned him solo conquests of five blue marlin — an amazing demonstration of skill.

“Fishing is a great sport for family bonding,” he said. “It’s also a lot of fun when I take friends fishing, and such outings have included eight or nine NFL head coaches and many former college and pro players.”

Not surprisingly, the Big Chill is festooned with pictures of fish caught by Johnson with many of his well-known friends. They convey the message that Johnson is enjoying these good old days as a fisherman in the Florida Keys each time he heads offshore.

Wade Boggs, Major League Baseball

Wade Boggs permit
Wade Boggs and Capt. Matt Bellinger in the aftermath of a skirmish with a 25-pound permit. Fellow guide Capt. Steve Lamp shot the photo. Capt. Steve Lamp

Boggs grew up in Brunswick, Georgia, and lived along a river. As a youngster he’d catch crabs and use them to nab redfish, sharks and the like. “We moved to Tampa when I was 11, and

I fished the flats with my dad near MacDill Air Force Base,” Boggs said. “As I grew older, my fishing interests stretched to fishing the reefs and offshore.”

Two years ago he broke the all‑tackle record for bluefish and also tied the record for striped bass. But his biggest thrill nowadays centers on billfishing. “I’m trying to catch a Royal Billfish Slam,” he explained, which will entail releasing all nine billfish species.

Wade Boggs striped bass
Lots of teeth as Boggs (left) celebrates a 46-pound striper victory with Capt. Frank Crescitelli. Wade Boggs

Pitchers feared Wade Boggs. He won five batting titles starting in 1983, and racked up a batting average of .328 and 3,010 hits in 18 years. He helped the Yankees win the World Series in 1996 and entered MLB’s Hall of Fame in 2005.

Now retired, Boggs uses his fame to help charities. He often fishes the Redbone tournaments in the Keys, which benefit cystic fibrosis research. Boggs also hosts the Steve Yerrid Celebrity Tournament each October, which funds the Pediatric Cancer Center in Tampa.

Andy Mill, Olympic Athlete, Broadcaster

Andy Mill tarpon
Skiing star Andy Mill puts some muscle into lifting this big tarpon, caught on fly, for a quick pic before its release. Adrian E. Gray

“My roots in saltwater fishing are as deep as they are in Olympic skiing,” said Mill. “Growing up in Aspen, Colorado, it was a natural progression to be a skier, but at age 8 I also started fishing locally.”

An epiphany of sorts drew Mill inexorably into the art of fly-fishing. “I was walking by a park in Aspen one day as someone cast a fly rod,” Mill recalled. “As the fly line made a graceful arc, I felt a captivating energy. I started fly-fishing with my father and tying flies.”

After watching a tarpon battle about 30 years ago while fishing in Belize, Mill became hooked on the species. He’s gone on to become one of the world’s best tarpon anglers, with 14 tournament victories.

Mill took a break from ­tournament action, but last year he decided to fish a Keys tarpon event. “Even though some of the competitors wrote me off as a has-been, I ended up winning it,” he said.

Throughout the 1970s, Mill was a dominant force on the U.S. Olympic Ski Team, and he won the downhill event at the 1976 U.S. Alpine Championships. Since retiring from ski racing in 1981, Mill has served as a TV commentator on skiing, and he produces Ski with Andy Mill for TV stations in ski-resort regions.

But nothing gets in the way of his fishing. During the winter, when he lives in Florida, Mill trailers his boat to “wherever the fish are,” and during spring he focuses on his favorite quarry: tarpon.

Cory Wells, Rock Star

Cory Wells striped bass
Three Dog Night co-founder Cory Wells bagged this striped bass off Montauk, New York. Cory Wells

One of the founders of Three Dog Night, the late Wells was a freshwater angler until he met William Conrad, better known in the 1960s as the lead star of the Cannon TV series.

“Being a big fan [of Three Dog Night], Bill got in touch and offered to show me how to catch saltwater fish,” said Wells.

On a trip together to Kona, Hawaii, Wells and Conrad chartered a boat, and Wells battled a huge blue marlin late in the afternoon.

“The fight lasted hours,” Wells recalled. “Sweating like a hog, I took my shirt off. By the time we’d released the marlin and run back to the dock, my skin had turned the color of a tomato, and I was in excruciating pain.”

Just one problem: Stores in Kona had closed by that time. “Just as I was ready to throw a brick through a drugstore window to get some ointment, a Hawaiian woman offered to help,” said Wells. “She plucked a plant in her garden and rubbed its juice all over my back and shoulders. The aloe in the plant worked, and the pain gradually eased. I told her that she had a lifetime free pass to any of our concerts.”

Over the years, while touring coastal cities with Three Dog Night, Wells tried to find time for saltwater fishing. This past summer, however, he complained to me about back spasms that were affecting his diaphragm.

“You sing through your diaphragm, not your throat like most people think,” he said.

Sadly, his health worsened, and Wells died this past October. The world lost a treasured rock star who enjoyed his days on the water as much as his nights onstage.

Antonio Cromartie, NFL Cornerback

Antonio Cromartie
Antonio Cromartie has been a premier cornerback in the NFL for many years, most recently with the New York Jets. Zuma Press Inc. / Alamy Stock Photo

Antonio Cromartie is one of pro football’s best active cornerbacks. Currently a free agent, he’s played for years with several NFL teams and most recently for the New York Jets.

I felt rather intimidated at the thought of speaking with someone less than half my age who last season earned $8 million, but I needn’t have worried. Our conversation couldn’t have been nicer, and Cromartie’s comments reflected a respectful, humble young man.

At 6 feet 2 inches, Cromartie is tall for a cornerback, and of course he’s lightning-fast — no turtle can cover an NFL receiver. Those attributes explain his selection in the first round of the 2006 NFL draft by the San Diego Chargers and his ongoing value as an asset to NFL defenses.

Cromartie’s grandfather used to take him and his brother crabbing, which in turn led to fishing. His biggest thrill as a fisherman was the time he duked it out with a blue marlin for an hour and a half before releasing it.

Cromartie said that his favorite fishing grounds are off Clearwater, Florida. “I know several spots where hookups on reds, trout and snook are constant in the right conditions,” he said. “But like a game plan in football, honey holes like that must remain confidential.”

Bill Engvall, Comedian

Bill Engvall and boat
Bill Engvall prefers to charter a boat, sit patiently in the fighting chair, and hope the rod bends and line burns off the reel. Bill Engvall

Sometimes people are reserved at the beginning of an interview and warm up as the discussion moves along. Not Bill Engvall. Right off the bat, he talked to me as personably as if we’d been friends for years.

His popularity exploded with The Bill Engvall Show, which ran on TBS from 2007 to 2009 and co-starred Jennifer Lawrence. It escalated even further with his participation in the Blue Collar Comedy Tour with Larry the Cable Guy, Jeff Foxworthy and Ron White.

His baptism into fishing occurred at age 4, in Galveston, Texas, while fishing with his granddad. “He saw a dead perch floating by, and when I wasn’t looking, he tied it to my hook and tugged the rod tip.

“I became overwhelmed with excitement and reeled in the fish,” said Engvall. “I kept it with me all day and night until it began to smell so bad, the family got rid of it.” He now likes to charter a boat, sit patiently in the fighting chair, and hope the rod bends and line burns off the reel. Engvall also enjoys stalking bonefish with a fly rod in the Bahamas and especially the Florida Keys.

“I often hire a guide, but on occasion it’s nice to be alone, because it gives me time to ­decompress from performing,” said Engvall.

His most memorable day on the water involved taking his wife and kids to Panama and chartering a boat for four days. “What made that trip special is the joke my family played on me,” he said. “I smoke a cigar at times while fishing, so my wife, daughter and son put a cigar in their mouths and pretended that they were me, puffing away while battling their fish.”

Ernest Hemingway, Novelist, Writer

Ernest Hemingway in Key West
Ernest Hemingway (right) with “Sloppy Joe” Russell (holding the drink) in Key West in the mid-1930s after a successful outing. IGFA / Fashion Licensing

Tom Colicchio, Celebrity Chef

Tom Colicchio
Cooking competitions are popular on TV, and master chef Tom Colicchio (above) has been a co-host of Top Chef for 10 years. Bill Bettencourt

Candid, hard-hitting, ­opinionated but fair — all characteristics that render Tom Colicchio one of the most popular cooking-show ­personalities on TV. He has co-hosted and been a judge on Top Chef since its inception in 2006 on the Bravo TV network.

Colicchio, the recipient of five James Beard Foundation awards and author of three cookbooks, has co-founded several successful restaurants. Though busy, he still manages to fish by going out early.

“I live on the north part of Long Island and keep my boat nearby,” he said. “I shove off at first light in the morning, striper-fish a few hours, and get back in time to work a full day.

“It’s not easy targeting species off the Northeast coast, but I’m really hoping to nail a white marlin on fly soon. There’s a promising wreck site I want to try in 180 feet of water.”

When possible, Colicchio takes serious time off to fish the Bahamas and Florida Keys with Capt. Simon Becker, based in Key West. That’s led to a deep affection for flats fishing, ­especially for permit on fly.

His favorite place to fish in the world? “When I’m not on the water, I think about fly-fishing around the Marquesas Keys off Key West,” he said.

Ted Williams, Major League Baseball

Ted Williams fishing
The legendary Ted Williams was just as skilled with a rod as he was with a baseball bat. IGFA / Ted Williams Family Enterprises

Greg Norman, Pro Golfer, Entrepreneur

Greg Norman
Greg Norman with the Claret Jug trophy after winning the 1986 British Open at Turnberry Golf Resort, Scotland. Great White Shark Enterprises

Greg Norman grew up fishing the Great Barrier Reef off Australia with his father, so it’s no wonder that he gained a lifelong interest in fishing.

The owner of 41- and 64-foot sport-fishing boats, he’s often seen prowling the waters off Jupiter, Florida, where he lives part of the year. Then again, you might run into Norman even at some of the world’s most remote archipelagos and reefs.

“I still love fly-fishing for black marlin on the Great Barrier Reef,” he said. “But then I also enjoy bonefishing in the Abacos, so it really depends on what’s available. There’s not a game fish I don’t like.”

Greg Norman
One of many bonefish victories ­during one of Norman’s frequent trips to the Bahamas. Great White Shark Enterprises

Norman became a golfing legend from the late 1980s through the 1990s, when he held title as the world’s best player for 331 weeks. Nicknamed the Great White Shark for his white-blond hair and Aussie swagger, he won two British Open titles and 85 international pro events.

During filming years ago for a show called Great White vs. Great White, out of Port Lincoln, Australia, Norman in fact became engaged in a battle with a great white shark. Hooked on 50-pound-test stand-up gear, the estimated 2,000-pound monster fought Norman for four hours and 45 minutes.

“We had it to the boat several times, but the wireman just couldn’t get the right wrap on it,” recalled Norman. “Oh well. It was a great tussle.”

Since he retired from golf, Norman’s Great White Shark Enterprises has been involved in numerous pursuits, including apparel, golf course design, wineries and golf academies. He has also served as a TV co-host and ­commentator at PGA Tour golf tournaments.

“I have less time to fish now than when I was playing pro golf,” Norman lamented. “But at the end of the day, the thing I cherish most now is fishing with my family.”

Thousands of sports figures and entertainers have fished briny waters over the years, and of course only a handful could be chronicled here. I did try to contact many other celebrities for this article, especially a number of notable female saltwater fishers, but couldn’t get past the defensive lines of talent agencies, PR managers and agents blocking access to the unwashed masses and pesky writers like me.

That said, fishing celebrities help elevate our sport to the public, and that does some good for many charitable tournaments. While the mucky-mucks might own bigger houses and drive fancier cars than we do, when it comes to fishing, we’re all merely actors on the same stage, hoping to land a Facebook-worthy fish.

About the Author: A veteran outdoors journalist based in Florida, Doug Kelly has served as a representative for the International Game Fish Association for more than 20 years. He authored the award-winning Florida’s Fishing Legends and Pioneers, and his new book, Alaska’s Greatest Outdoor Legends, has just been released.

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