Put a wild card in
the trolling spread and be ready to deal.

LIGHTEN UP: Different teasers have the same goal:
to get fish like this blue marlin ready to eat
Photo: Richard Gibson/Hiseasphotography.com
A summer saturday
found us on a weedline 12 miles off South Florida.
Some dolphin were around, but boats were
everywhere, and the fish were staying deep. How
could we make our spread stand out? We deployed a
StripTeaser dredge from each transom corner. The
fish-decal strips undulated five feet down,
looking like balled-up bait.
Within a half-hour,
we had two dolphin in the dredges. I free-spooled
a ballyhoo back and hooked a 15-pounder. Our
fellow trollers continued to pull their
cookie-cutter spreads, all without a strike.
The various types
of teasers-dredges, fenders, pin teasers and
spreader bars-bring new looks to a spread. They
provide three advantages: One, they create
distress vibrations that attract gamefish. Two,
they add the exciting contrast of large and small
fish mixed together. And three, they bring in fish
for a closer look or maybe even a strike.
1. Dredge Up a
Bite
Anglers who want to grab the attention of
lockjawed gamefish should use a dredge, a
subsurface teaser that pulls many baits or
artificials behind weighted crossbars.
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Fender
Teaser
Photo: George Poveromo |
Emulating bait
schools, they produce vibrations that billfish
can't resist. Dredges perform best between four
and eight knots.
Position a dredge
as far back and deep as you can and still see it.
Put a flat-line trolling bait at the surface five
to ten feet behind the dredge, and keep a pitch
bait ready, too. If a billfish shows,
"swim" the pitch bait back to it, or
reel the flat-line bait ahead of the fish, then
free-spool it back like an injured bait floating
away from the dredge-an easy meal for a predator.
Don't pigeonhole
dredges as a trolling aid for billfish-as I said,
I use them for dolphin, too. And recently I've put
them out when drifting livies for sailfish and
kings: The sight of a bait ball under the boat
never hurts.
2. Fun with
Fenders
It's hard to beat a fender teaser for blue marlin.
These big teasers are made from air-filled boat
bumpers rigged with a pound of lead. They swim
erratically from five to 15 feet down. Fish come
in focused on the fender but often switch to the
surface baits in short order.
"The fender
tracks best when it's about three-quarters full of
air," says Frank Johnson, a big-game
authority and owner of Mold Craft Lures, which
sells fender teasers.
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Pin teaser
Photo: George Poveromo |
"Too much air
prevents it from going under." Johnson trolls
between five and ten knots and puts surface
trolling lures in front and behind a deep-running
fender.
"It shouldn't
spook a fish that's beating on it," he says.
"Just hope the marlin doesn't eat the fender
and break the line, which can happen."
3. Bowl a Strike
If one big teaser draws attention, then a few will
crank up the action. When he's fishing for blue
marlin, Albert Castro and his team on Sharky's
Revenge swear by a daisy chain of six pin teasers.
Run from 20 to 40 feet back, the pins look like
bonito. When a blue shows up, the mate yanks the
teaser away, and the angler drops back a hook
bait.
"Since we have
to pull the teaser away from the fish, we tie
knots in the nylon handline section every two
feet," says Castro. "They provide a
solid grip." The rope has a No. 1 stainless
snap, which then attaches to 25 feet of 300-pound
mono with three-way swivels every four feet. Each
pin has a dropper tipped with a swivel that snaps
to the main line.
4. Quite a
Spread
Captain Damon Sacco believes in spreader bars so
much that some days he uses them exclusively. When
he searches for tuna off Cape Cod, he deploys five
spreader bars in a "crooked X" pattern
from 25 to 70 feet back.
"Don't run
them far back or they'll dig in the water, which
scrubs off action," Sacco says. He sets his
speed by tuna type: bluefin get four knots; bigeye
or yellowfin, six or more. He rigs bars with pink
squid and a contrasting, trailing hook bait.
Designed to look
like competing predators or prey worth chasing,
various teasers can incite even spooky fish to
feed when used creatively.
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TAKE A BITE:
Tease down deep with a Spanish.
Photo: George Poveromo |
The Natural
This teaser has some teeth.
When offshore
trolling for dolphin is tough, I sometimes send a
Spanish mackerel 80 to 100 feet deep on a heavy
outfit with a 32-ounce trolling weight or off a
downrigger. The pulsating action draws in gamefish.
Or go one better: Rig that Spanish with a wire
leader, two hooks and a 12-ounce egg sinker under
its chin-in case it gets eaten. It's not
technically a teaser, but we've landed many a nice
wahoo and dolphin off that bait. - G.P.
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