Coke Can Teaser fro Sailfish and Wahoo
Posted: Thursday, July 05, 2007
by Adrian Watt
Bite-Me @ Matava Resort
Though I catch wahoo and sailfish all year round, May through to September is our hot bite season with numerous packs of wahoo and sailfish gathering all along the Great Astrolabe Barrier Reef. When fishing for sailfish we usually use bait and switch tactics so often run teasers.
I also sometimes run teasers when fishing baits or lure/bait combinations for wahoo. Pacific sailfish are magnificent creatures and probably my all time favourite species to fish for. They feed determinedly and will chase a lure right up to the back of the boat, close enough that you could reach out and grab their bill (Not that I recommend this !).
Coke Can Teaser for Sailfish
I mostly use bait & switch tactics for sails so we start out by trolling one or more teasers. When a pack of sails is raised, the teasers come out and the baits are fed back to the fish.
Teasers come in all shapes and sizes but we have found that the most effective teaser for sailfish is a daisy chain of three or four pink squid with a coke can rigged at the head of the chain. Yes, a coke can.
Rig it so the bottom of the can runs first through the water.
- Punch a small hole in the top and the bottom of an empty coke can.
- Remove the snap swivel on the front of the daisy chain.
- Crimp a stopper to the front end of the mono daisy chain line and slide the can down to the stopper.
- Re-attach the snap swivel to the front of the daisy chain and you are good to go.
Cheap and very effective.
Coke Can Teaser for Wahoo
This teaser is exactly the same principal as above but we do away with the daisy chain and just troll two cans rigged close together in the prop wash.
- Punch a hole in the top and bottom of each can.
- Take a two foot length of multi strand wire and crimp a stopper on one end.
- Slide on the first can.
- Crimp a second stopper about 6 inches ahead of the first can and slide on the second can. Crimp a snap swivel to the front and your teaser is good to go.
I have experimented with several different types of can but the red coke can seems to be best, though I do know a charter boat skipper out of Sydney that swears by a blue and gold Fosters beer can when fishing for blue marlin……
This Article has been viewed 1,018 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
No comments yet.We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.