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May 07, 2010

10 Deadly Dolphin Rigs

Keep these proven mahi fishing tricks handy in your offshore arsenal.

I love to fish for anything that swims in salt water, yet I'm an offshore man at heart. And while I've spent decades chasing marlin, sailfish, tuna, swordfish, wahoo and dolphin, everyone has their favorite game fish, including me. If someone forced me to narrow my favorite to just one species, I'd tightly squint my eyes, take a deep breath and say, "dolphin!" I doubt I would be alone in this decision.

There's just something about dolphin that inspires thousands of offshore anglers to buy all sorts of rods and reels, fishing lines, hooks, lures, baits and gaffs in anticipation of the upcoming season. And for very good reasons: Here is a fish that is abundant, comes in all sizes, puts up a great and oftentimes acrobatic fight, commonly blitzes in schools or pairs (larger fish) and is downright delicious to eat. Dolphin are so popular that it is frightening to imagine what our industry would look like if they ceased to exist.

I've taken a deep interest in these fish and have perfected my tactics over the years. When I set forth to target them, the following 10 rigs rank among my most potent dolphin catchers:


1. Large and Horse Ballyhoo

I prefer to headhunt for larger fish when trolling for dolphin and would rather take one 30-plus-pound dolphin than a dozen 3- to 5-pounders any day. Therefore, my spread consists mostly of large and horse ballyhoo, each rigged to several feet of 110-pound-test fluorocarbon leader and a single 9/0 long-shank hook.

The reason I use this rig is that big baits eliminate the smaller fish. You know the drill: School dolphin blitz a spread of smaller lures and baits, and all the lines go down. After the fish are boated, the boat moves along and the lines go back out only to hook up with some more schoolies; you ultimately spend most of your time dealing with small fish. School dolphin are intimidated by large baits. Outside of possibly pecking, they'll leave the bigger baits alone. And this unmolested soak time dramatically increases the odds of attracting larger dolphin, which have no problem consuming big baits.

Comments (4) Post A Comment

Thanks for the lure tips. Like you I've spent my life fishing Mahi Mahi. I lived on Guam over 40 years and was a charter captain for 30yrs. Every year was a different run. Some years we caught fish using anything. We couldn't sell them because everyone had them. Some years we'd try every action lure or freshly baited hooks or whatever and couldn't get much of a bite going. Some believed in 3 yr. 7 yr or even 10 year cycle. What have you learned over the years of catching Mahi?

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Good day. I've also been doing that for years. I was also in the same position. there were layers of dolphin and they weren't hitting anything. I thru everthing at them. Pilchards spoons cut bait even sprayed the water with the wash down hose. I couldn't believe how many dolphin their was. My friend thru a old bass plug and landed 1. I then put a shrimp on a hook pitched it out there and the dolphin came out of the water after it. We landed so many. I never informed any1 about my little trick until reading your article.

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What lure is the one mentioned under small trollibg lures?

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Hello :-)

My first encounter with Dolpines was at Kay Biscane in the seventies.
Mr. Cook from the local Church of Christ took me first bass fishing into the Everglades and then a friend of him took me with his boat dolphine fishing.
We started early in the morning and after I caught a triggerfish, that ran like crazy, wie drifted along the sargassum weedbeds looking out for dolfines.
We caught a few small ones. I was fascinated by the golden glittering rainbow colores of this "Liberaces of the Sea".

Next fishig trip after years of savings was to the Bahamas and Key West.
I think it was at Nassau were we trolled for Dolphines. Vorgive me, it is now more than 40 years ago.
I caught some big eye tuna and some gorgeous bull dolpines. It was great.

I wanted so badly to live in such a fishing paradies.
I even bought me a nor-fin fly reel and a fenwick flyrod 10 weight.

Instead of my favorite destination in Florida we moved to Texas.

Breckenridge and lake Hubbard-Creek-Lake. Fishing was tough for me there, and later in Abilene Texas at Lake Fort-Phantom.
I took me two year to learn the local tricks and fishing locations.
Instaed of Dolpings I was happy to catch a bunch of sandbass and crappies.

I got a Bachelor at Hardin Simmons and a Masters at University of North Texas, all that did not enable me to go back to Florida where my enthusiasm started. I met Stu Apte, Lefty Krey and most of the fishing hall of famers in the Forth Worth Fly fishing Club. Thousand times thanks to the club!

I still love the dolphines and dream about them like Santiago in "The Old Man and the Sea" was dreaming about the Lions in Afrika.

Tight Lines Friends. Catch one dolpine for me and unhook him in the water.
He ist much too pretty to dye in a fishbox.

Bob

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