If any store told you that you needed to spend 39 bucks per lure to catch a dolphin, then you need to shop somewhere else. I am all for the local stores, and they have a lot of invaluable stuff to serve us with such as info and advice, but if you’re telling us that anybody recommended that you have a spread full of 39 dollar lures at any point in your learning curve, then that’s just wrong.
You don’t need to spend more than 4 dollars per lure to catch dolphin when trolling. You may think that’s cheap, but it’s actually what is most effective, and it is what’s used by folks who have more disposable income to spend on all this than most of the rest of us…
Dolphin don’t take as much to catch as people want to think.
Have you ever seen your loco lures on a charter boat outfitted to go catch dolphin? Yet, they put 30-60 in the box on a given day that the fish are biting good???
Invest in good hooks.
Mustad 7766
Match the hook to the bait.
7/0 for small bally
8/0 for mediums
Match the chin weight to the bait
1/4oz for smalls
3/8oz for med
Put the right COLOR and length skirts on
you will have to experiment with dif colors in dif positions on whatever days to find what works best for how people’s particular spreads work on their individual boats
Most importantly,
run the baits right and keep constant watch over them
presentation matters
You are trying to mimick bait fish. If your trolling spread doesn’t look natural then you need to adjust
how you rigged the baits
speed
positions
weights
colors
… in that order
You can purchase moldcraft type plastic lures that do just as good for dolphin as something that cost 40 bucks.
If you truly want durable, you want a cedar plug or hard yozuri or braid style lure.
Luke 8:22-25