The menhaden oil is used to create a scent trail. To dispense it, get an empty plastic soda bottle and tie a few feet of cord around the bottle neck. Pour the oil into it, put the cap back on tight and poke a few small holes in the bottle with a hook point so it drips out slowly, and put it in the water secured to the spring line cleat.
Brant’s trolling pattern consists of one long bait back about 150 feet, one medium about 75 feet, and one run from the release clip off a downrigger ball set at between one-third to one-half distance to the bottom.
“These three bait positions consistently catch the majority of the kingfish in competition or when I have charter clients on my boats out of Ocean Isle Fishing Center here in Ocean Isle Beach, N.C.,” he told us. “They work everywhere we fish for king from here to Texas. You can add additional lines to the pattern if you’d like.”
Trolling speed is S-L-O-W. You want to be moving just fast enough to maintain steerage. With a single-engine boat, run at idle. With a multi-engine boat, use just one engine and adjust the RPM to maintain the right speed. If there is a breeze, you can even drift fish with the engines off, just reposition the baits off the upwind side of the boat instead of off the transom.
“That’s all it takes to catch kingfish, if you’re fishing the right places,” Brant said.
But how do you find the “right places?” It isn’t as hard as you might think, and often the answers come by simply as asking the question. Start off at a local tackle shop near the water. Buy a chart or some rigs and bait, and ask the person behind the counter where other customers have been catching kingfish.
You’re now a customer and he wants you to come back so there is a certain obligation to share some information. If you are not familiar with the areas mentioned, have them pointed out on the chart.
“Another good place to pick up information is on the local charter dock after a day’s fishing. See who is offloading kings, but show some courtesy,” said Brant. “Instead of blurting out, ‘Hey, where did you catch those?’ try asking ‘What depth did you find them in today?’ If you learn nothing more than that important piece of information, you are ahead of the game, but you’ll probably find that once you break the ice more precise information on locations is forthcoming.”
Kings can be found from just off the beach to well offshore. The primary factor is finding forage, schools of baitfish that tend to school near the surface like menhaden, cigar minnows and threadfin shad, but structure plays a key role, too. Kings prefer low-lying, natural hard-bottom areas and if the charter boat guy caught them in, say, 50 feet, you go to your chart and look for structure areas in that water depth. Kings like clean water, but water color is less important. If they were being caught very shallow, just off the beach, but an east wind or storm stirs up a lot of sand or sediment in the water, they will move off looking for cleaner water and bait. Y
Got questions?
You can ask Brant and the guys at the Ocean Isle Fishing Center by checking out their website
www.OIFC.com or email: CaptBrant@OIFC.com. |