Soundings

Your First Billfish

Nothing comes easy in offshore fishing. The run is long, the waves are big and finding a fish in a million miles of ocean is hard. But there is a bluewater fishery with surprisingly easy entry. Two rods, a box of tackle and a thousand yards of line are all you need to deep-drop for swordfish.

Up until a few years ago, most anglers targeted swordfish at night by drifting with rigged baits and bright lights. The tactic was marginally successful and not easy. Then, anglers in the Florida Keys developed tactics to catch huge swordfish during the day. They dropped rigged baits more than 1,000 feet to swords feeding near the bottom. Since then, the technique has spread around

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Soundings

Soundings3 min read
A Tribute to Tradition
LOA: 43’o” Beam: 14’10” Draft: 2’9” Displ.: 32,000 lbs Power: (2) 550-hp Cummins QSB6.7 diesels Back in the day, when a much younger Jim Turner was learning the ways of business at his family’s jam-packed Ritz Bakery in Manasquan on the Jersey Shore,
Soundings7 min read
Driving A Classic
Chris-Craft, one of America’s oldest and best-known boat builders, celebrates its 150th anniversary this year. Stephen F. Heese has served as the company’s president for more than 23 years. We asked Heese to share his insights on the company’s trajec
Soundings4 min read
Tidewater 3100 Carolina Bay
LOA: 31’1” Beam: 10’2” Draft: 1’7” Weight: 7,200 lbs. Fuel: 220 gals. Water: 19 gals. Power: (2) 400-hp Mercury or 350-hp Yamaha outboards Tidewater Boats says that its 3100 Carolina Bay is the world’s largest bay boat. Having stepped aboard at Febru

Related Books & Audiobooks