If a stranger walked up to
J. Gary Early Jr. and suggested that he “go fly a kite,”
he would probably take it as a compliment - not an insult.
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| Photo by MIKE
MARSH |
| An artificial Yummee
Fly’n Fish is an extremely productive lure when fished
offshore below a kite. The 6/0 and 9/0 hooks are cabled
together and tied to a leader of 130-pound test
monofilament. |
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That’s because Early, a yacht broker from Mount
Pleasant, has flown many a kite in his pursuit of bluewater gamefish off
the South Carolina coast.
When he climbs aboard Patriot, a charterboat he owns, and heads to the
Winyah Scarp, Georgetown Hole or Edisto Banks in search of yellowfin
tuna, wahoo, dolphin or billfish, flying a kite is just part of the
deal.
“In June, water temperatures are getting too hot for yellowfin tuna,”
Early said. “But we catch them along with everything else. We catch
yellowfin later than most boats because we fish with a kite.
“We used to think the yellowfin left as soon as the water got too hot.
But I saw another boat fishing with a kite, and he was catching them. I
bought a kite, brought in onboard and told everyone we were going to
learn to fish with it.”
Along with Charles Kerley, who captains Patriot on a daily basis, and
mates David Lee and Kate Creech, Early learned the basics of kite
fishing and figured out quickly how and why the rigs will help fishermen
catch big bluewater fish when traditional trolling spreads are less than
productive.
“It’s a lot of trouble to fish a kite,” Kersey said. “But it’s a great
way to catch yellowfin tuna, as well as blackfin tuna and dolphin.”
Early said that kites add to a captain’s bag of tricks when tuna fishing
gets more difficult, after the great April-May run about 70 miles off
port at Toler’s Cove Marina. Yellowfins and blackfins tend to get a
little spooky when the water warms up, and a kite that can get his baits
away from the hull of his 55-foot boat gives him a much better chance of
hooking up.
“You’ve got to have confidence there are some yellowfin in the area
before you start kite-fishing,” Early said. “You might get one to hook
up on a conventional bait, or you might have caught them in the same
place recently. But when the water gets around 80 degrees, they shy away
from the boat and the leaders, and that’s what makes kite fishing so
effective. The baits are away from the boat so it doesn’t run over the
fish, and the leaders are suspended out of the water.”
Patriot uses a standard fishing kite — sometimes two kites — when
fishing for tuna. The kites are about 36 inches square and are flown
from short, stiff rods set in the tower rod holders. The favored lure
for tuna fishing with a kite is a Yummee Fly’n Fish, which is rigged
with a pair of hooks — 6/0 and 9/0 — cabled together and threaded
through the lure’s body. They are tied to 12 feet of leader — at least
130-pound test — then to a pair of crimping sleeves sandwiched around a
2- to 4-ounce egg sinker. A 200-pound barrel swivel connects the rig to
the 50- to 80-pound monofilament that runs back to the fighting rods.
The bait is attached to 200-pound braided kite line by a release clip.
“We use standup rods with Shimano 50Ws for kite fishing,” said Early,
who uses electric reels on the reels that control his kites. “You don’t
need heavy gear, just lots of line capacity.”
Kite fishing is extremely specialized. The boat can only go one
direction, essentially downwind. While it’s possible to reel everything
back in and head back in the opposite direction, that burns a lot of
fishing time. Sometimes, Patriot trolls several baits on an outrigger on
the opposite side of the boat from a kite, along with some other lines
from the deck rod holders. But usually, everybody has their hands full
when the kite baits are doing their thing.
“With a conventional spread for tuna fishing, you get a hit, circle back
and keep working the school,” Early said. “But with kites, you keep
going, trying to stay over the structure where the fish are holding. The
action is so exciting, You can’t always mess around with the
conventional lines.”
The kite is usually set up about 100 yards from the boat. Two kites can
fish up to six baits. To spread the kites, a small split shot is crimped
to the outsides of the top corner of each kite. Baits are dropped so
they form a straight line from each kite so they are easy to spot.
“It can get tricky,” Early said. “Kites tangle. The wind is too high or
not strong enough. The kites made today fly in most conditions where
it’s reasonable to be out here, and light wind is best for using kites.”
While many kite fishermen use live baits or ballyhoo rigs, Patriot uses
the life-like Yummee flying fish lures made by Carolina Lures. They can
be rigged in a number of ways and everyone rigs them a bit differently.
Even Lee uses a couple of different rigging techniques.
“The trick is rigging the Yummee Fly’n Fish so it skips across the water
like a real flying fish,” Lee said. “It has to do that without fouling
or digging too deep or the leader (will) pop free of the release clip
because of the line drag.”
A kite is just more of a technical bother than an outrigger, but it gets
the lines farther than any outrigger is capable of doing.
“Yellowfin will chase the bait, sometimes missing it three or four times
until they hook up,” said Early, whose girlfriend, Cynthia Graf, caught
the South Carolina state-record blackfin tuna aboard Patriot. “Watching
them chase the bait is one of the most exciting things about kite
fishing. The flying-fish lure looks so real when you fish it from a
kite, the fish just can’t stand it. It incites the feeding instinct so
it’s irresistible. You can see the fish coming from hundreds of yards
away, keying in on the commotion.”
A tuna hooked up, and Creech, who has been fishing offshore since she
was 10 years old, took the rod and took over the fighting chair. A big
blackfin came over the side. Other yellowfin tuna followed. Before the
day was over, everyone aboard Patriot was exhausted from the early dock
time, the long ride out and the ride back in. But mostly, the crew’s
arms were tired from reeling in a boxful of big game fish.
While other areas of the country, especially Florida, have good luck
with sailfish using kites, Early said he has yet to perfect kite fishing
for sailfish aboard Patriot, which has been named Charter Boat of the
Year the past two years by the Charleston Regional Fishing Tournament
“Sailfish strike the baits and knock them loose from the release clips,
and (that) should create an automatic drop-back for sailfish,” Early
said. “But we hook them up more easily on conventional rigs, saving our
kites for finicky yellowfin.”
Fishing the edge of the continental shelf means a long, predawn run to
the fishing grounds to take advantage of the early-morning bite that is
standard. It gives the crew plenty of time to check tackle and rigs.
“We find fish along the 100-fathom curve,” Early said. “They places we
fish are: Winyah Scarp, Georgetown Hole, Big Dump, Little Dump, 226
Hole, 380 Hole, Southwest Banks and Edisto Banks. Anywhere there’s a
change that creates an eddy, there are going to be fish. You pick your
spot, watching for baitfish on the surface or on the depthfinder. You
watch for birds and weed lines or try to spot color changes or current
rips that indicate a temperature break.”
When it comes to traditional trolling spreads — and Early likes to fish
several rods on the side of the boat opposite the kite — he and Kersey
will rig rods with standard ballyhoo and rubber-squid daisy chain.
Without the kites to worry about, the Patriot would easily fish nine
lines at a time.
“The more lines in the water, the better the chances of catching fish,”
Lee said. “The number of lines depends more on the strength of the bite
than anything else. When the bite’s hot, you run over a school of fish,
and half the reels go off.”
Early hooked up with a 35-pound bull dolphin that Lee gaffed after a
short fight. It was a gorgeous fish, lit up in neon greens, blues and
yellows.
“Dolphin make your day when the fishing’s slow,” said Early. “You’re
going to catch big dolphin nearly 100 percent of the time.”
Several billfish struck ballyhoos, but none hooked up.
“That’s the way it goes sometimes,” Kersey said. “Sometimes the billfish
are finicky, or you aren’t quick enough on the drop-back to get them to
hook up. When the billfish strikes a ballyhoo with his bill, he expects
to see the injured bait drop down before he eats it. If you can’t drop
the bait back quick enough, he loses interest.”
But a big wahoo needed no drop-back. He struck with power and speed.
Creech sat took the rod from Lee and got into the fighting chair as the
fish made several long runs. Unlike the dolphin, the wahoo never jumped,
and when it came alongside, it was exhausted. It was easier to gaff than
the wriggling dolphin, just heavier to lift. Bostic commented on its
weight as he gaffed it and hoisted it into the fish box.
“Any wahoo is a nice fish, but that’s a really big one,” he said after
giving Creech a high-five, then replacing the line in the spread with
another rod that was already igged. Lee had put one rod in a transom
holder, placing the ballyhoo bait in a ballyhoo holster, which was a rod
holder placed along the outside wall of the cabin. It kept the bait out
of the way, ready for use so the rod on which a fish had been caught
could be re-rigged with no downtime.
“Every minute is valuable out here when you’re charter fishing,” Lee
said. “Figure the cost of the fuel, the boat, and the charter and
efficiency is critical to success. It’s little things like the having
extra rods ready that mean more fish in the boat at the end of the day.
It’s the difference between being the best boat or just average.”
“It would have been be nice to have caught some billfish today,” Early
said. “But we really wanted to fish the kite for tuna. Every day out
there in the bluewater is different. Next time, maybe all we will catch
will be billfish. You just never know what you're going to catch when
you go. It’s part of the fun of fishing the break.”
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