Saltwater Sportsman

Sailin’ Ships

Floating structure yields hot sailfish action

- GEORGE POVEROMO

THE MORNING’S FIRST SAILFISH SKIRTED ALL THE 20-POUND RODS, AND PROCEEDED TO DEVOUR A LIVE HERRING FLAT-LINED ON THE 12-POUND OUTFIT IN OUR SPREAD. ENGEL COOLERS’ PAUL KABALIN ANSWERED THE CHALLENGE.

However, just prior to his hooking the sail, Reef Kabalin, Paul’s son, started battling a large hammerhead. With Reef ’s shark trucking due south, and Paul’s sail now running full-steam to the east, we had a decision to make.

A billfish reigns supreme over most fish, at least on my boat. So Reef broke off the shark, enabling us to pursue his dad’s fish, which had already emptied half the spool on the reel.

The lengthy fight had us worrying about the 30-pound fluoro leader surviving the abuse. It did. Harry Vernon III billed the sailfish and removed the hook, and we idled forward until the sail was strong enough to swim free.

Back to the Ship

We reposition­ed for another identical drift between a freighter and cruise ship, both anchored off Miami’s Government Cut for over a week. Ironically, conditions weren’t ideal, with a very light current and cloudy greenish water. Yet, by playing off these ships, we ended the day after going 3 for 5 on sailfish, and boating two mid-20-pound blackfin tuna and a mutton snapper. There were also several skirmishes with sharks and barracuda.

I’d fished along these same ships two days prior, with Carl Grassi and Rob “the Swede” Greene, and the second day with Grassi and Debbie Hanson. We raised sails each day, and boated

RELEASE TIME: Post-fight, this sailfish gets retained for a quick photo, right.

OPPORTUNIS­T: Sails around anchored ships are ready biters, opposite.

blackfins up to 26 pounds. Despite the tight confines this location presents, Grassi caught a sailfish that charged under the bow of the anchored cruise ship and went out the other side, before turning back to come alongside our boat. As if on cue, it even went airborne several feet in front of a pair of ship workers on a scaffold. How the sail avoided the anchor chain remains a mystery.

Can’t Beat Those Buffets

These ships function as floating restaurant­s, offering forage for migrating fish, sailfish included. If food is abundant, pelagics may hang around for a day or more. These thriving ecosystems exist over relatively small zones, making them easy to fish. However, not all ships produce; certain conditions make them come alive.

Much like floating weed patches and debris, offshore eddies and temperatur­e breaks, it’s all about the bait. The longer a ship remains at anchor, the more bait it attracts and holds.

The sheer mass of a ship, along with the deployed anchor and chain, attracts forage fish. Think of these massive ships as floating artificial reefs. The heaviest bait concentrat­ions gather at night, under the stadiumlik­e lighting. Goggleeyes often congregate under anchored ships for multiple days. With this kind of buffet readily available, gamefish eagerly take advantage, even under marginal water conditions.

Sailfishin­g off South Florida focuses on rips, color changes, and zones where a solid northbound current flows, or over craggy bottom and structure. Knowledgea­ble sailfish anglers also incorporat­e ships as part of their routine, noting the depth and length of stay of those at anchor. They’ll often produce when open-water conditions are poor.

All Aboard

Capt. Dean Panos, with Double D Charters in Miami, seeks out ships anchored in 80- to 90-foot depths, rather than those in 40 to 50 feet.

“The deeper the water a freighter anchors in, the better it will be,” Panos says. “They rarely anchor beyond 90 feet. When they anchor shallower, it doesn’t bode well for the sailfishin­g. Without a doubt, if a ship is on the hook for one week or more, it bears investigat­ing.

“I recall a large, red freighter—some six or seven years ago—that was anchored in 90 feet of water for a month, some 2 miles north of the sea buoy. Just about every time we’d go around that freighter, we’d catch a sail. We started catching sailfish around it one week after it anchored.”

Panos reasons that the highly migratory sailfish rarely hang around these ships for long. Yet there always seems to be a few. “These sails are on the move,” he says. “The masses keep migrating, but a few detour and feed around the ships.”

Slick Ship Tricks

The typical live-bait strategies apply here: drifting with kites or bump-trolling.

When drifting, understand how wind and current will influence a pass around a ship. A prime drift shouldn’t be interrupte­d by reposition­ing the boat to avoid the ship. It’s simple geometry. Determine the straightes­t line to drift past the ship without coming dangerousl­y close to it.

Panos says to be aware of how a hooked sailfish may run relative to the ship.

“Typically, sailfish run south and then east,” Panos says. “Big sails seem to always go west.”

Depending upon the boat’s position in relation to a ship, some fancy maneuverin­g may be required when a sail is

hooked. Be wary of the anchor line too. Keep close to a hooked fish, and follow it around a ship to maintain clearance, if you’re in a position to do so. And always watch the fishing kites in relation to any ship.

Over three days of fishing, this tactic initially factored in a drift between the two ships. In 200 feet with a southeast wind, out went three kite baits, along with a pair of free-lined liveys and two deep baits on the upwind side. Goggleeyes graced the kite, with a mix of goggle-eyes, herring and pilchards on the flat lines.

The deep baits were staggered at 50 and 80 feet down. Leaders were 40-pound fluorocarb­on, but a couple were swapped out for light wire in anticipati­on of kingfish.

The drift took us between the two ships, into 70 feet of water. We also made drifts along both sides of each ship.

If one drift produced, we’d repeat the pass following the chart plotter’s track line. In between, a number of sails, blackfins, kingfish, bonito, ’cuda and sharks bent the rods. Ironically, when the sharks and barracuda became a menace, the sails and tunas weren’t far behind.

It’s that old adage of life breeding life. And that’s the beauty of fishing around anchored ships off Miami and other busy South Florida inlets.

Our goal around these ships is sailfish, but we welcome the variety of pelagics attracted to them as well.

This winter and spring, show these long-anchored, lonely ships some love. More than likely, they’ll love you back in grand fashion.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? FISH MAGNETS: Anchored ships aggregate forage, and the predators that feed on it, like this sailfish.
FISH MAGNETS: Anchored ships aggregate forage, and the predators that feed on it, like this sailfish.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? GUESSING GAME: Ships yield a variety of predators, from billfish to blackfin tuna, and bonito to barracuda.
GUESSING GAME: Ships yield a variety of predators, from billfish to blackfin tuna, and bonito to barracuda.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States