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Trolling for pelagics with blue runners?

5.9K views 11 replies 5 participants last post by  FRAYEDKNOT  
#1 ·
Anyone ever used blue runner to troll for billfish,dolphin and tuna?!tuna!
 
#3 ·
yes, yes, and yes. Smaller (4-6") blue runners are death on yellowfin and obviously dolphin will eat anything it can get its mouth around. Large blue runners (the 2-4 lb variety) are killer live baits for marlin. Big secret, they are also great for wahoo too.
 
#6 ·
Bump troll. No faster than 2-3 knots, but usually slower. Live baiting for marlin should key on structure (i.e. rigs). Note of caution though, sharks and barracudas LOVE blue runners as well. Bridle the runner through the eye sockets with a big circle hook for marlin, and you can pull him around for hours and hours. Nose hook with a smaller circle (7/0-9/0) on the smaller runners for tuna and dolphin. Wahoo will require wire leaders obviously.
 
#8 ·
You can't cover much ground live baiting, so if you are working a large area or rip, I would troll dead bait/ and or plastic, unless you find an area on a weedline or a ball of bait that you can focus in on and bump troll the liveys around.
 
#11 ·
Lots of good advice ... I don't troll much with larger bait although some captains love it. My bigger baits all run crooked and they helicopter, which isn't a problem with rigged ballyhoo.

That said, drift fishing can be quite productive when trolling and jig&pop ain't. You chum a box of something like frozen herring. You bring the fish to YOU. Deep digging, hopeful sword fishing, float fishing at 12 to 30 feet, and kite fishing with blue runners is a blast. Even bump trolling with a 'chute and a hard current can whack the King Mackerel.

Cover some interesting structure, since drifting is more of a mental game to see if you can drift over some reefs, holes, structure, or oil trash manifolds. Nobody is perfect and that kind of fishing can be slow and hot. But often the big sows and bulls are caught that way.