Pakula Micro Uzi
A trolling skirt from Pakula Skirts (heads).
How to fish it
Trolled offshore at 7.5–9 knots in a five-to-seven-rod spread. Position depends on size: smaller heads (under 9 inches) run on the long corner or shotgun positions, larger heads on the long rigger or short rigger. The bubble trail is the trigger — if the lure pops out of the water cleanly without smoking it's either too small for the wash or rigged too high; let it settle into a consistent bubble chain before committing to that position.
Set deployment off the EAC convergence fronts, the western edges of warm-core eddies, and any sharp colour changes. Pelagic targets like Marlin, Yellowfin Tuna, Mahi-Mahi push bait against these temperature walls, and your spread converts the trolling work into strikes by being where the food chain compresses. Look for sub-1°C SST changes inside 5km — those are the front lanes.
Speed by species: 6.5–7.5kn for marlin and slow-pulling tuna; 8–9kn for mahi-mahi and wahoo; bumping to 10kn briefly when wahoo are sniffing but won't commit. If you mark bait but no strikes, drop a knot before changing colours — speed shifts are usually more productive.
Rigging matters more than colour selection: a single Mustad Southern & Tuna 11/0 or twin 9/0 setup, 200–600lb mono leader sized to species, and a pre-rigged ballyhoo or strip bait under the skirt. Run a teaser short (10–15m) to bring fish up before they hit the lures.
Rigging
- Leader
- 200–600 lb mono, sized to species (200lb mahi/wahoo, 400lb for marlin)
- Braid / mainline
- 50–80 lb mono on overhead reels; PE10+ for stand-up gear
- Hooks
- Single 11/0 Mustad S&T or twin 9/0 chain rigged inside the skirt
- Bait
- Pre-rigged ballyhoo, garfish, or strip bait under the skirt
- Troll speed
- 6.5–9 knots — start at 7.5kn and adjust to bubble trail
- Spread position
- Long corner / shotgun for small heads; long rigger for large heads
Reading BiteCast for this lure
When this lure is in your spread, BiteCast's data layers tell you when + where to deploy it. The most relevant layers for offshore trolling:
- SST (sea-surface temperature) →
Filter for the target species' preferred SST band, then troll the eddy + front edges within that band. Sub-1°C changes inside 5km are the lanes.
- Altimetry + Eddies →
Warm-core eddy edges + convergence fronts are prime offshore lanes. Run this lure on the western edge of warm-core eddies where bait piles against the temperature wall.
- Thermocline (MLD + Th-Depth + Th-Wall) →
Skirts run on the surface — they don't dive. Th-Depth + Th-Wall tell you where predators are staged below: sharp wall + shallow MLD = compressed bait pinned in the upper column with predators ambushing upward into your spread. When Th-Depth gets deep, complement the skirts with a diving lure or downrigger-rigged bait to actually reach the staging zone.
- Subsurface temperature →
Confirm what fish are seeing at trolling depth; pair with SST to identify front structure that extends below the surface.
- Chlorophyll →
The green/blue boundary is the food-chain front — fish concentrate on the edge, not the dense bloom interior.
Best months in AU
Trolling skirts work the AU pelagic season — late spring through autumn for marlin and mahi, with wahoo extending into early winter on the EAC mainstream.
General guidance for southern + central AU; tropical north runs warm-water species year-round.
Where it shines in Australia
- Sydney Offshore (Browns / Banks)— EAC convergence + warm-core eddies push tuna and marlin within range Nov–May
- South-East Queensland (Gold Coast canyons)— Black + blue marlin, mahi-mahi, and yellowfin on the EAC mainstream Nov–April
- Far North QLD shelf— Year-round wahoo, mackerel, and dogtooth tuna over the GBR shelf and outer reef
Target AU species
About Pakula Skirts (heads)
Iconic AU game-fishing skirt range — Peter Pakula's complete head catalogue. Sizes 15/25/35/40/55 available for most. Heads made in-house, skirts from Sevenstrand US.
Origin: Made in Australia
FAQ
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