Tips
and Techniques > Rigging
with wire > Basic Pin rig


This is the traditional
rig to use when trolling Ballyhoo. It's more common nowadays
to use a mono leader with a separate wire pin, and the mono
will certainly draw more strikes, but many old hands still use
wire, especially in waters where Wahoo or Kingfish are a possibility.
Take a hook of a size
suited to the bait. Note that the best hook for this rig is
a needle eye type. If a round eye hook is used, special care
must be taken to ensure that there is no gap in the eye through
which the wire can pull out. Squeeze the eye closed with pliers
if there is any gap at all.
Pass the wire through
the hook eye and form the Haywire twist as before. However,
do not do not break off the tag end after making the Barrel
wraps.
Wrap the wire so that
the tag end stands up away from the main wire, pointing in the
opposite direction to the
hook bend. Trim the tag end off to around 1/4" 1/2", this will depend on the
size of your bait.
To rig the Ballyhoo, first
break off the bill attached to the lower jaw by snapping it
off downwards. Then run your thumb along the belly towards the
anal vent, emptying the stomach cavity. Finally flex the bait
a few times to loosen it up a little. Some crews remove the
eyes from the bait to stop them bulging out with the water pressure
when trolling.
Insert the hook point
under the gill cover and through into the body cavity. Bring
the hook point out through the belly, leaving the pin under
the bait's head. Push the pin up, to exit through the top of
the head level with the eyes. Some anglers like to bend the
pin back to avoid the sharp spike spooking a wary fish. I'm
not convinced by this, but I guess it can't hurt.
Ensure that the bait hangs
straight. If it doesn't, take a sharp knife and carefully cut
a slit where the hook exits the belly until it moves freely.
This is very important, if the pull is not on the head of the
bait it will spin when trolled.
You have several choices
for securing the bait to the pin. The favourite among charter
crews is to hook a very small rubber band over the pin, take
it around the bait's head, and hook the other end of the rubber
band over the pin.
The second is to wrap
the Ballyhoo to the pin with fine copper wire.
Before attaching the bait to the hook, take 8" 9" of rigging wire and wrap
one end tightly around the Haywire twist to secure it.
Rig the bait as previously described, then wrap the copper wire
up and around the pin then through the eye socket and out of
the other side.
Pull the wire up tight and take another wrap around and behind
the pin. Finally finish wrapping the wire down the broken off
bill and you're done.
The third method, which
many purists sneer at, is to use a product called a bait spring.
It's simply a tightly wound cone shaped spring. The wide end
faces towards the Ballyhoo and it is simply wound onto the pin.
It really is that straightforward and it works great.
I generally like to add
an octopus skirt or a small lure head such as an Ilander to
help protect the bait whilst trolling and to make it easier
to spot the baits from the cockpit.
Like many things in fishing
there is no one right answer. Try them all and see which method
works best for you.

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