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Daytime Swordfishing

Techniques for Mid-Atlantic Swordfish
Swordfish help up boatside
With its menacing bill firmly secured, a swordfish is held up for a quick photo prior to its release. Jason Stemple

Daytime swordfishing is jokingly called catfishing because when broadbills strike down deep, they make the rod tip bounce just like the whiskered freshwater scavengers do when nibbling on a bait. I’ve experienced that firsthand now that daytime swordfishing consistently pays off in mid-Atlantic waters.

I got my first taste off the Outer Banks in North Carolina with Capt. Fin Gaddy on Qualifier. It was late November, and we were blessed with a couple of calm days. I arrived at the boat before dawn to meet Gaddy, and found local charter skipper Capt. Jeff Ross and South Florida swordfish whisperer Capt. Brent Feder readying the gear and trading stories.

As the sun broke, Gaddy ran to a series of deep lumps on the edge of the continental shelf, then took the engines out of gear and gave the order to drop the bait. Feder obliged, tossing overboard a rigged strip bait with a 5-pound weight. The rig descended for several minutes. Feder stopped the spool every few hundred feet to allow the line to come tight before releasing the clutch and continuing to deploy line. Once the sinker settled on the bottom 1,800 feet below, he brought the rig up 50 feet.

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Easy Turns Beastly

It took longer for the bait to hit bottom than for us to get our first bite. Watching the rod tip bob rhythmically while the boat rocked back and forth, I didn’t notice the first take. “There he is!” Feder said, quickly retrieving 50 feet of line. “What? Where?” I was confused.

Feder stopped cranking, and the rod tip returned to a slow, steady bounce. This time I watched more closely. When the rhythm was interrupted by a slight but obvious tap, the whole crew shouted, “There he is!” Feder returned to the reel just as the rod tip bent into a deeper arch, and he proceeded to retrieve line until the drag began to slip.

For the next 1,000 feet, the fish came to the boat with only an occasional pause to pull some drag. But once the weight was within reach and Feder removed it from the rig, the comparison with catfishing ended. The swordfish—considerably bigger than the fight to that point had led me to believe—was suddenly invigorated, as though it’d been saving its energy for a brutal fight boatside. Feder deftly worked the reel while the hooked leviathan pulled every trick to regain its ­freedom: diving, charging, jumping, thrashing, and swimming in circles.

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But luck was on our side and, after a half-hour with our hearts in our throats, Capt. Ross stuck the 472-pounder with a harpoon and Gaddy came off the bridge to finish the job with a gaff. Then Feder slipped the tail rope on the huge broadbill, we pulled it aboard through the fish door, and the entire crew erupted in loud celebration.

Swordfish being brought aboard a boat
It takes teamwork to haul a large swordfish aboard. Ric Burnley

The Back Story

My first success with daytime swords makes the fishing sound like an easy endeavor, but the catch was the culmination of many years of effort. Twenty years ago, few anglers targeted broadbills off mid-Atlantic shores. My swordfishing experience was limited to a handful of overnight trips drifting through Norfolk Canyon. When daytime swordfishing came to my home waters, I tried a few times with buddies but never managed to seal the deal.

Start of an Obsession

Gaddy admitted his road to success was long and bumpy. “I fell in love at first sight when I saw another crew land a 700-pound swordfish,” he recalls. That experience kicked off an obsession that sent Gaddy, an Oregon Inlet-based skipper, to target broadbills in some of the world’s hotspots.

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The learning curve eventually led him to target swords back in his home waters. “We didn’t have much luck until we started fishing in late fall,” he remembers. But once he was in the right place doing the right thing at the right time, it all came together.

My story starts with Capt. Justin Wilson, partner at Ocean’s East Bait and Tackle in Virginia Beach. A dozen years ago, stories of Wilson’s daytime swordfishing adventures tempted some friends and me to give it a try. To verify the rumors, I caught up with Wilson during the offseason. “I owe it all to Vic Gaspeny,” he admitted. When the legendary Islamorada guide fished with Wilson in Virginia Beach, he brought his South Florida tactics. “We ended up pulling off a big fish on our first drop,” Wilson recalls.

The experience prompted Wilson to embark on a ­decade of developing techniques and game plans. Taking what he learned from top daytime deep-droppers around the world, he fine-tuned an effective system for mid-Atlantic swordfish.

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Swordfish jumping out of the water
In a dramatic display of power, a swordfish makes its last stand. Luke Williams

Brass Tacks

Wilson starts swordfishing in July and wraps up in January. “You can catch them all year, but the best action is November to January,” he points out.

Fifty miles off the mid-­Atlantic Coast, the continental shelf drops thousands of feet, and this precipice is pocked with canyons and seamounts. “You can pick almost any drop or hill to look for swords,” Wilson says, and he looks for bait or fish marks on his bottom machine. His best bites come in 1,000 to 1,600 feet of water.

Dropping a rig a quarter-­mile takes teamwork. Wilson keeps the boat ahead of the rig while the mate controls the payout, stopping every few minutes to let the line come tight. When the rig is a few hundred feet from the bottom, he slows the descent. “We’ve caught fish hundreds of feet off the bottom; many times, one follows the bait,” Wilson explains.

His swordfish rig starts out with a 10/0 hook. “It took us years to find the right hook,” he admits. The traditional rig starts with a strip of belly meat or a whole squid. The past couple of years, Wilson’s team has experimented with the Hogy Swordfish Eel, an 18-inch soft plastic that withstands peckers and missed bites without damage. “Tournament anglers like it because they can fish a J hook under tournament rules,” Wilson adds.

Seal the Deal

Connecting with a swordfish over 1,000 feet down takes a combination of luck and skill. Wilson compares it to hooking a triple-digit-weight seatrout. “For such a large fish, it has a soft mouth,” he says. It requires the man on the reel to bring in line, then wait for a response. When the line comes tight and the rod doubles over, it’s time to crank like hell.

Read Next: Using the Power Assist

Another of Wilson’s tricks is setting the drag to 24 pounds for the initial fight. “If the hook is going to pull, I’d rather it happens in the first few minutes,” he says.

Endgame Protocol

It’s common knowledge that swordfish save their strength until they are a few hundred feet from the boat, so the endgame is critical.

“We hit one fish with the dart, and it ran straight for the boat and wrapped the main line into the wheel,” Wilson says. His crew watched 300 feet of cord and a poly ball leave the boat, so they attached another 300 yards of cord and another buoy. “The fish took it all,” he remembers. They ­eventually worked all the cord in to claim their prize, but the ­story left an impression.

Daytime Swordfish Rig
Daytime Swordfish Rig
Start by sewing a dolphin or wahoo strip to a 10/0 Mustad 7691 DT Southern hook [1], and crimp it to 12 feet of 300-pound mono bit leader 2. A 550-pound swivel, [3], connects the bite leader to 100 feet of 150-pound mono 4. Join this leader to the 80-pound hollow-core-braid main line [5] with a wind-on connection 6. Thread 15, 1-pound egg sinkers on a length of 700-pound mono [7], and attach a longline clip to each end. Snap both to heavy-floss loops wrapped on the leader a few feet below the main line connection 8. The string of sinkers acts as a keel and prevents the rig from spinning during the descent.
Steve Sanford

Two-Line Spread

Capt. Tim Hagerich on Good Times out of Hatteras Harbor brought swordfish tactics he learned in South Florida to the canyons and ledges off North Carolina, and elects to fish two lines. He drops his first rig to the bottom, cranks up 50 feet, and uses a longline clip to attach a large foam buoy to the main line. He lets the buoy carry the first bait 100 to 150 feet from the boat, then drops the second rig and fishes it straight from the rod tip. “We troll at up to 6 knots,” he adds, periodically kicking the boat out of gear, letting the bait sink to the bottom before returning to trolling speed.

SWS Planner: Mid-Atlantic Daytime Swordfish

What: Swordfish in mid-Atlantic canyons and ledges When: Year-round, best in late fall Where: Hatteras, North Carolina, to Ocean City, Maryland Who:

When it comes to swordfishing in mid-Atlantic waters, these two pros are tops: Capt. Fin Gaddy 252-423-1779 qualifiercharters.com

Capt. Tim Hagerich 252-216-9273 goodtimessportfishing.com

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