|
A new setup
has people talking on the wahoo grounds.
 |
COOL HEAD: If
wahoo are on the prowl, pick up the pace and set
an "icer" spread.
Photo: George Poveromo |
Wahoo fishermen are a
notoriously tight-lipped bunch, but recently there was a
leak in the ranks. Word got out about a high-speed rig
that was fooling big wahoo from South Florida to the
Bahamas. I heard about it from Captain Harry Vernon III of
Capt. Harry's Fishing Tackle Supply in Miami. The rig is
an in-line, dual-hook, high-speed setup that I call the
"icer" because it puts fish in the box when
others don't.
The icer leads off with
an in-line trolling sinker, so it tracks exceptionally
well at the high speeds that incite wahoo strikes. The rig
also keeps fish from shaking free because the hook
arrangement and trolling speed combine to hook fish
solidly nearly every single time. The best part about the
icer is that you can make one yourself in just a few easy
steps (see "Ice Sculpting").
Make
Your Own
To rig the icer, I use a Bost No. 38 Rum Cay Pro
rockethead with a double skirt, but any trolling lure with
a similar tapered, streamlined head will do just fine. For
hot colors, Vernon says lures with abalone inserts in
greenish or blackish tints are the ticket when wahoo are
feeding on houndfish, as they often are along reefs in the
Bahamas. Blue-and-white or pink-and-blue seem to do well
when flying fish are prevalent. If the forage isn't
apparent, Vernon advises putting out a mixed-color spread
to see which lure color gets bit more often than the rest.
The dual-hook arrangement
is sold as a single unit with a pair of Mustad 10/0, No.
7732 hooks rigged in line. All parts of the rig are
available at Capt. Harry's [(800) 327-4088; www.captharry.com].
The trailer is crimped to the eye of the lead hook with
980-pound-test cable, and it is all held in place with
hard, heavy-duty heat-shrink tube that stands up to
strikes from toothy fish.
A one-ounce egg sinker is
placed on the leader between the lead hook and the lure
head—this is a critical part of the rig. This lead adds
a bit of heft, but also keeps the crimp sleeve at the
forward end of the hooks from jamming inside the head of
the trolling lure, which happens sometimes at high speeds,
making the lure spin. The plastic spacer beads often used
for this job in other setups sometimes break under the
strain.
One important
modification is trimming the lure skirt. Ideally, the
point of the rear hook should ride 1/4 to 1/2 inch behind
the trailing edge of the skirt. Aside from freeing the
hook point to stick a wahoo, the short skirt also keeps
the point of the trailing hook from catching in the skirt,
which would likely affect the way the lure tracks or
looks—even preventing a fish from getting hooked. Why
trim this skirt and not one on a marlin lure?
Because the speed at
which the icer is trolled causes more turbulence,
resulting in more of these snags.
The rest of the rig
components include a few 3/64 zinc sleeves and six feet or
so of 480-pound-test 49-strand cable. I make up a 30- to
50-foot shock leader of 300-pound-test monofilament,
crimping a loop on the leading end and swivel at the rear.
This runs between the trolling sinker and the lure setup.
I also bring Capt. Harry's wahoo cigar trolling leads in
16- and 32-ounce sizes. These trolling sinkers are cast
with a length of 480-pound-test cable running through the
center of the lead weight and are less prone to wobbling
than trolling sinkers equipped with an eye at each end.
Rigged
to Run
The icer is designed for high-speed trolling, so don't be
afraid to goose the throttle when it's in the water. Many
pros drag the icer at 15 knots or more. It's an ideal
setup for trolling to and from the fishing grounds. I find
it especially useful on the way back from the Bahamas,
when rough seas often prevent a fast run home.
To use the in-line wahoo
icer, attach the crimped loop at the leading end of the
32-ounce sinker setup to the swivel on the main line of a
bent-butt outfit spooled with 80- to 100-pound mono—or a
wire-line outfit. Position the lure anywhere from the prop
wash to 300 feet back. The icer tracks two to four feet
below the surface, depending on speed.
For another option, place
the icer in the shotgun: 400 to 600 feet back. Pair it
with the 16-ounce trolling sinker and watch the wahoo nail
it.
The next time you're
headed offshore, put out a small spread of in-line wahoo
icers. You may have a successful day on the water before
you even hit the fishing grounds.
Ice
Sculpting
Pre-made components make the Icer simple to rig.

Step 1: Start with a 32- or 48-ounce
Capt. Harry's Wahoo Cigar trolling lead, which is cutom-made
with 480-pound-test cable cast through the center of the
lead.

Step 2: Slide an egg sinker and a crimp
sleeve onto six feet of 480-pound-test 49-strand cable.
Pass the end of the cable through a pre-rigged, two-hook
rig and crimp the cable with the sleeve. This two-hook rig
consists of two 10/0 hooks connected by crimped 980-pound
cable covered with heat-shrink tube.

Step 3: Slide a Bost No. 38 Rum Cay Pro
rockethead lure onto the other end of the cable leader,
and bring it down to the egg sinker.

Step 4: Crimp the leading edge of the
480-pound leader.

Step 5: Make up a 30- to 50-foot-long
shock leader of 300-pound mono with a loop crimped in the
leading end and a loop with a 200-pound ball-bearing
swivel with a coast-lock snap in the trailing end. Clip
this swivel to the leading end of the terminal leader.
Attach the leading loop of the 300-pound leader to the
trailing-end swivel of the trolling lead.

Step 6:
(left) Make certain the lure is seated firmly on the egg
sinker, then trim the skirt of the lure so the point of
the trailing hook sits 1/4 to 1/2 inch behind the trailing
edge of the skirt.
Step 7: (right) The short skirt prevents
the hook from fouling when the Wahoo Icer is trolled at
high speed.
|