Fort Pierce Offshore: Oct. 2017

JD from Kansas with a nice 15-pound kingfish and a 21-inch peanut mahi. This was his first time offshore fishing and he had a good day also catching another peanut mahi and a triggerfish. All these fish came bottom fishing and 80 feet out of Fort Pierce Inlet on cut bait and small live blue runners. Photo credit: Capt. Danny Markowski.

October has arrived and with it will be the start of slightly cooling water temperatures. The waters to our north will cool down faster than the Treasure Coast and this will start our fall mahi mahi run. This is when the mahi start heading south through our area. The fall run is not as large and does not last as long as the spring mahi run, but there will be more mahi in our area looking for a meal than through the summer time when the surface temperatures were in the middle to upper 80s and cold water was in the lower depths.

The mahi this time of year don’t usually average the size of spring time but you can still catch a nice one in the 20-to-25-pound range. Trolling is the best-known method for targeting mahi during the fall run. Multitudes of live bait will be in the area to catch, including the mullet run. You can net the mullet and use them as live bait to catch mahi. Normal tackle set-up used for trolling is 20-to-30 pounds but when live bait trolling use a 50-pound leader as it will be less noticeable at a slower speed.  When trolling with live bait, keep your baits spread out at different distances behind your boat and always keep one in your prop-wash.

A faster trolling method to cover more ground when targeting mahi is to use rigged ballyhoo and colorful trolling lures. Ballyhoo and lures can be trolled at higher speeds when looking for a mahi hookup, allowing you to canvas a greater area.  When trolling these baits, 30-pound tackle will still be sufficient but I would suggest using 60-to-80-pound leader to compensate for the higher speeds (since it is moving faster it won’t be seen as easily as slower live bait trolling speed).  Whichever trolling bait preference you have, always use mono main line instead of braid because you will want the stretch for the trolling strike.

Everyone focuses on weed lines, rips and floating debris when looking for mahi but keep a live bait in the water when a bottom or wreck fishing, a nice mahi can always be caught in open water too.

The water conditions will start getting rougher when the cool fronts start moving in, so get out on the water and enjoy some time catching!

FORECAST BY: Capt. Danny Markowski
LottaBull Fishing Charters
Phone: (772) 370-8329
Email: lottabull4@bellsouth.net
www.lottabullfishingcharters.com