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Updated: April 30, 2010, 11:59 PM ET
Early start to Mexican dorado season
El Nino currents have already kick-started some oddly out-of-season action
By Joel Shangle
ESPNOutdoors.com
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Joel ShangleWarming Pacific waters and El Nino currents will kick-start the dorado fishery out of Baja Sur and mainland Mexico ports.
MAZATLAN, Mexico — The dorado is a freaky-looking creature, with its flat, anvil-shaped head and iridescent yellow/green skin color. It's also one of the West Coast's coolest gamefish because it's as aggressive as a badger with a toothache, and is one of the best-eating fish in the Pacific Ocean.
As the waters of the eastern Pacific warm and winter's El Norte winds die down in the Sea or Cortez this month, the colder-water species (yellowtail, pargo, snapper, amberjack, etc.) begin to transition out of the inshore fishery, and warmer-water species like dorado and billfish will arrive in the offshore fisheries out of Baja Sur locations like East Cape, La Paz, Loreto and Cabo, and out of mainland Mexico ports like Mazatlan and Puerto Vallarta.
El Nino currents have already kick-started some oddly out-of-season action out of many Mexican ports — black and blue marlin out of Cabo, for example — so an early beginning to the normal June/July dorado bite should be right around the corner.
"Some of the warmer-water species (have) stuck around to some degree and, incredibly, we're already getting species and conditions we normally wouldn't experience until June or July," said Johnathon Roldan at Tailhunter International (www.tailhunter-international.com) in La Paz. "For example, we were already seeing significant numbers of dorado, albeit on the smaller side, with some larger bulls mixed in (in late April). (Last week) if you looked anywhere in La Paz Bay and north towards Espiritu Santo Island, you'd see low flying and dipping birds ... a sure indication that there were dorado working the spots."
Similar story over on the mainland, where surface-water temperatures rising from the low 70s to the high 70s and low 80s will bring dorado into the offshore fishery by the thousand in early May.
"This is the best time for the offshore species, when the water is starting to get the warmest, and the next three to four weeks, the dorado fishing is going to be phenomenal," said Chappy Chapman of Inside Outside Charters in Mazatlan. "Just run out to the trash line and you'll find them. That location changes every day, but if you run up to a buoy or something else floating, you can tell right away if dorado are under it. And if they're there, they'll bite."
Dorado are notoriously drawn to surface structure (or, rather, the baitfish that collect underneath it), so anything floating offshore is an automatic mahi-magnet.
Chapman's Mazatlan routine includes running between several dozen palm-covered buoys placed a mile apart, between 6 to 18 miles offshore. This buoy line serves as a bait collector for shade-seeking dorado and triple tail, and the best approach is to quietly motor up onto a buoy and cast Rapala X-Raps, Sub-Walkers and Skitter Walks, 5-inch Zara Spooks or Pencil Poppers.
"If they're under that buoy, they'll come out and hammer it," Chapman says.
Trolled dead ballyhoo, skipjack strips and live mullet or mackerel is also effective, and can also bring in sailfish and marlin. When he's trolling, Chapman will run bait on the outside lines and Williamson 13-inch Diamond Coyotes on the inside lines for both dorado and billfish.
Editor's note: Based in North Puget Sound and operating from Alaska to Baja, Joel Shangle has been a news junkie on the West Coast saltwater scene since the 1990s, first as editor of California Fishing & Hunting News' and now as editor of California Sportsman, which hits newsstands in October. He's the host of Northwest Wild Country, a popular fishing and hunting radio show airing throughout western Washington, and has the deepest source list this side of the Library of Congress. In other words: if you're catching fish on the West Coast, just try to get away from him.