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How to Catch Dorado in Costa Rica

how to catch dorado

How to Catch Dorado (Dolphinfish)

The Dorado has more pseudonyms than an outlaw from the old west going by different names depending on what region you’re fishing. In Florida they’re dolphin, in Hawaii Mahi Mahi and in Costa Rica they are called Dorado. No matter what you call them one thing is for sure, they’re fun to catch and amazing to eat. They are among the fastest growing fish in the ocean and can spawn every two to three days at the early age of four to five months old. A female releases an average of 50,000 eggs each time they spawn. dordado can grow to an estimated 0.5 to 1.0 inch in length per week while gaining two to three pounds per month. Just watching their neon greens, golds and aqua blues explode from the oceans surface is an unforgettable experience and an adrenaline rush you won’t forget. In Hawaiian the name Mahi roughly translates to “strong” – and once you’ve had a good size bull on the business end of your fishing line we think you’ll agree with the title. The following article is by famous Pro Angler and no stranger to Costa Rica fishing George Poveromo.

Baiting techniques that make the most of school dorado

Large dolphin being pulled on board
The biggest dorado often are found alone or in pairs when they’re traveling or migrating in open water. Scott Salyers

Catching school dorado can be a fast and furious undertaking; lines cross, schoolies come flipping into the boat, free hands scramble to cut chum and bait, and anglers hooked to a decent fish bark orders for a gaff or landing net. Everyone gets caught up in the moment.

Usually eager players, schoolies are sometimes reluctant to hang around, particularly if they’ve been recently hammered. However, regardless of whether they’re in gorging or traveling mode, there are strategies to keep them around longer. Below are some of my time-proven tricks to keep school dorado interested.

Systematic Approach

Dorado blitzes are frustrating for the unprepared. If only a couple of outfits are rigged for the task, time spent rerigging from a break-off or swallowed hook is often long enough for the school to move on. School doradodor can evaporate that quickly.

Several rods should be rigged and reserved strictly for school fish. Aboard my boat, there is a minimum of eight outfits, mostly 8- and 12-pound-class spinners. In addition, a pair of 20-pound spinners stand ready for larger, solitary fish. Should a leader need to be replaced, that outfit is racked, and a fresh one is pressed into action without delay. Also, such an inventory lends the option of “loading up” the rods. More on this trick in a bit.

Fire the Leads

School dorado are fooled easily at the onset. However, they’ll surely smarten after repeatedly seeing the same bait. My decadeslong approach is to first use artificials, followed by cut natural bait, and then live bait. But there’s a bit of a twist to this as well

With artificials, start off using the same style and color on all the rods. Pitch an arrow- or lima-bean-style bucktail in white or yellow. Bucktails cast and sink well, reaching fish at varying distances and depths. What’s more, their sizes parallel those of the forage thriving under weed lines and flotsam. Yellow is a hot dorado color because it mimics the coloration of pufferfish, a common dorado delicacy.

Timing is key. Once a school begins losing interest in yellow jigs, switch to white. This swap coaxes them back into feeding. Ditto when switching from a straight-tracking bucktail (arrowhead) to one that wobbles (compressed head). Bucktails aren’t without disadvantages. They often lose their dressing after catching several fish.

Poveromo Peanut lure
When dorado are hitting artificials, the Poveromo Peanut, a diminutive variation on the classic tube lure, does the job. With single-strand-wire rigging, it remains nearly indestructible fish after fish.Steve Sanford

Years ago, to counter the mentioned deficiency, I fabricated makeshift artificials, using 2- to 4-inch sections of surgical tubing in yellow, chartreuse, orange and blood red, a bullet weight (freshwater worm sinker) forced into one end of the tube, single-strand wire, a long shank, 4/0 or 5/0 hook (with the shank hidden inside the tube), and a small barrel swivel affixed at opposite ends of the wire. I jokingly dubbed the creation the “Poveromo Peanut.” The lures can be skipped on the surface, slowly worked beneath it, or allowed to sink. The best part is dorado can’t destroy them. They’ll repeatedly catch fish with only scuff marks to show for it.

Meat Them

Once a school wises to artificials, switch to chunks of ballyhoo, squid or Spanish sardines. Simply cast or free-line a bait until it’s picked up, which should be instantaneous. To reignite the bite, broadcast a few freebies. However, don’t overdo it and fill the fish. Simply pitch two or three chunks with each loaded bait presentation.

Dolphin chasing bait
Dorado find squid, whole or cut, nearly irresistible.Kevin Dodge

I prefer around 15 feet of 30-pound leader for bailing fish. When it’s time to rerig after a blitz, leaders can be cut back as needed, without having to tie on a new one (typical of short leaders). If you don’t have backup outfits, keep a box of hooks handy for quick cut-and-ties after each fish. The longer you stay on a school of fish, the shorter the leader will get. But it will remain long enough until the bailing is done.

Live-Bait Liberation

When the remaining schoolies shy away from cut bait, pitch out the liveys. The live bait will re-energize the school. We reserve our live baits mostly for running-and-gunning and pitching to larger dorado. However, we’ll certainly use some for reluctant schoolies, and any larger fish in the mix that won’t fall for our other tricks.

A classic dorado tactic is to take along a few dozen live shrimp. Similar to the routine outlined above, pitch out a live shrimp when doradoDDo tire of everything else. Live shrimp will fool the most leery of them.

Based on the shrimp size, rig an 8-pound spinner with a 2/0 to 3/0 J-style hook and 20- to 25-pound leader for casting distance, a stealthy rig that won’t overburden the live shrimp. In addition, tipping a bucktail with a live shrimp provides scent and offers a good way to deliver a shrimp deep.

The Dorado Whisperer

To bring a dorado school back around, or to draw one out from underneath a weed line, a topwater plug is magical. My go-to plug is a Williamson Popper Pro 130 fished on a 20-pound-class spinner with a 50-pound fluorocarbon leader. It chugs and splashes, is relatively small and streamlined, so it casts well, and comes with two extra-strong single hooks.

Gaffing a large dolphin
Oversized dorado require skill to safely bring aboard.Gary Caputi

We’ve rallied back schools of dorado as well as uncovered new ones many times with this plug. It goes out during our stops alongside weed lines and patches, helping us determine if they’re worthy of greater fishing effort. If a larger dorado doesn’t clobber the plug, an entire school will chase it back to the boat, at which point the school fish outfits come into play. My favorite plug colors are mahi (dorado eat their young), blue silver (flying fish, a natural forage) and gold black (bar jacks and banded rudderfish).

The Rotation

The old trick of keeping one dorado in the water to hold a school’s interest doesn’t quite cut it anymore. Nowadays it takes several hooked ones by the boat. The three or four hooked fish will be digging deep and occasionally leaping about. The ensuing commotion and illusion of a feeding blitz will keep the school near the boat and their aggressiveness stoked. This is where all those backup rods come in handy. It’s a way to guarantee several dorado dinners in short order.

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