Boating New Zealand Boat Reviews
Reviews
Boating New Zealand News
News
Boating New Zealand Sports
Sport
Boating New Zealand Lifestyle
Lifestyle
BOAT-REVIEWS-MOBILE
Boat Reviews
BOAT-NEWS-MOBILE
News
BOAT-SPORTS-MOBILE
Sports
BOAT-LIFESTYLE-MOBILE
Lifestyle
Home2021September 2021Slip into a slider!

Slip into a slider!

Published
Bookmark post
Bookmarked
Bookmark post
Bookmarked

They may look more like Christmas Tree decorations than fishing lures, but kabura or slider jigs do the business on snapper – and a whole range of other species.

Think about it: no more buying smelly, expensive bait and berley before each fishing trip, and no more bulky chilly bins to store it all. Instead, picture a small tackle box containing a handful of lures and diminutive, lightweight, fun-to-use tackle generally providing far more fish at the end of the session!

Yes, if you can fish a ledger or flasher rig with a heavy weight attached – a Black Magic type Snapper Snatcher, for example – you can catch fish on a tai rubber slow-jig-type lure, better known locally as a kabura or slider.

Mind you, I wouldn’t blame anyone seeing a kabura for the first time having doubts about its potential. With a globular, free-sliding head atop a clump of spindly, multicoloured tendrils, a kabura looks so unlikely! But boy, do they work well!


It is not necessary to find work-ups to catch fish on kabura-style lures, but they can definitely reduce the waiting time between hook-ups.

- Advertisement -

HOW DO SLIDERS WORK?

While the bulbous head tends to dominate the lure’s appearance, especially in the heavier weights, it’s actually the long, slim tentacles that play the biggest role in the slider’s effectiveness. The tentacles’ undulating magic often proves impossible for fish to resist and their nemesis is nestled among the tendrils – an assist rig armed with two small but very strong hooks.

The lure’s other key secret is the way it behaves in the water. When falling towards the bottom, water drag initially causes the tentacles to separate from the weighted head, which descends faster. The tentacles are prevented from sliding too far up the line by the trace-to-mainline joining knot.

This behaviour sees the weighted head hitting the seafloor first, leaving the long tendrils still waving and fluttering seductively well up off the bottom, where they look vulnerable to any predator. The short time period between the heavy head touching down and the two components of the lure coming back together is when bites tend to occur – anglers who click their reels into gear when they feel the slider’s head reach the bottom often find themselves holding a bucking rod with a reel unloading line!

SUITABLE TACKLE

The rod: Any light rod rated for 4-8kg line with a whippy, forgiving action is a good candidate (lightweight soft-bait rods will do the job), but, shorter specialised slow-jig rods make the most of the technique’s potential and provide the best success.

That is because specialised slow-jig rods exert more precise control – longer rods tend to move sliders too far, too fast – and their ultra-light tip section is designed to slow the lure’s movements to create a more seductive action. The same light tip helps to absorb any sudden head shakes and bursts of power from hooked fish, so the small hooks are less likely to rip or bend out.

The reel: Reels can be overhead (i.e. a baitcasters or small freespool reels) or spinning models holding around 250-300m of 10kg braid. It’s unlikely you’ll ever break or lose that much line to a snapper, but wear and tear tends to shorten the mainline over time and it’s comforting to have a bit of insurance when you hook a decent kingfish.

While many keen slow-jiggers opt for compact, open-topped free-spool reels which allow very precise line/lure control, I prefer spinning reels. Their generally faster retrieve speed means less time wasted winding up between drops and more time spent fishing effectively during the course of a session, especially in water over 40m deep.

Mainline: This should be braid, around 20-30lb breaking strain, typically labelled as 15-20lb (7-10kg) – braid is notorious for over-testing. Braid is thin so it cuts through the water which means lures remain near the bottom for longer. Braid’s lack of stretch transmits any fish contacts – nibbles, bumps and bangs – to the angler more effectively.

Trace material: The deeper the water and the stronger the current and/or wind, the heavier the kabura and the stronger the fluorocarbon trace should be. The leader needs to resist any chafing when the line is under tension with the heavy slider flicking around as a snapper shakes its head – see the lure to trace weight table. Around two metres of trace does the job nicely.

The lure: When fishing sliders ‘as light as possible’ is not recommended! Instead, choose a lure weight that gets down and stays there.

If undecided, always choose the heavier option, especially since a lure bumping along the bottom creating vibrations and kicking up silt and sand, will draw hungry fish in for a closer look. Hopefully that interest will result in a bite!

To give you some idea, fishing charter operators using sliders on a near-daily basis tend to start with 140g lures when fishing in 35-50m of water, but change up to 180g if the wind and/or current picks up.

Look for lures from reputable brands incorporating bright colours – fluoro orange and pink are well-proven and luminous paint is known to attract fish.


A chunky snapper on a brightly-coloured slider from deep water

GET THE BEST FROM YOUR KABURA

As soon as the lure touches the bottom, engage the reel and – if you are not already hooked up – slowly wind up a few turns of the handle, retrieving three to six metres of line.

Or you can try ‘mechanical jigging’: lifting and dropping the rod while simultaneously making one full rotation of the reel’s handle. This slow-motion lift-and-drop action keeps the lure in the strike zone for longer.

Whichever retrieve method you choose, resist striking when you feel a fish biting. Instead, wind the reel or lift the rod a bit faster – this will often make the fish bite harder and hook itself.

If you get no interest within the first several metres of the retrieve, drop the lure back to the seafloor, repeat and repeat again! When the line angle reaches around 35-40o, it’s time to wind in and start the whole process again.

NB: Lobbing lures up ahead of the boat gets them to the seafloor quicker and they stay there for longer before lifting off the bottom as the boat drifts over and past them.

Using specialist tackle like this whippy rod with its parabolic action allows an angler to make the most of a kabura’s fish-catching ability.

TIPS AND CONSIDERATIONS

• It is best to drift-fish when using kabura-type lures. If necessary, deploy a drogue to slow the drift speed enough to allow your offering to reach the bottom and stay there, trundling along at a fish-catching rate.

• Fishing rough ground results in lost tackle, so stick to reasonably clean areas. Look for promising fish marks on the fish-finder near the bottom in 20-100m of water (30-50m is usually best) and seek out work-up activity, as workups really attract fish and get them biting.

• The better fishing grounds hold food snapper like to eat – shellfish, crabs and sea worms – with the best areas also exhibiting significant depth changes or nearby structure that interrupts the tidal flow. Bathymetric charts can assist in locating suitable areas.

• When the water is less than 20m deep look for current and preferably water that’s a little murky, to help disguise your boat’s presence.

• Snapper can be all but ‘invisible’ on sonar when feeding hard against the seafloor, so give an area that’s been consistent in the past at least 10-15 minutes before abandoning it.

• If a steady stream of seabirds flies past going in the same direction, it’s usually worth following them, even if its for several kilometres. Persistence is the key here!

• Feeding activity can be signalled by wheeling, diving birds, fast-moving dolphins, and/or the presence of whales. A good pair of binoculars can alert you to these opportunities.

• Rafts of birds sitting on the water are always worth checking out, especially if they’re gannets. Often they are resting after recent feeding activity and the snapper/kings/john dory etc are still under the birds, deeper down out of sight.

• Congregations of boats are a giveaway: if you see two or more boats in close proximity ‘in the middle of nowhere’, it can be worth checking out to see if they’ve located a workup and/or feeding fish.

• If the fishing is particularly tough, pin a strip of squid tentacle to the assist-rig’s leading hook. The natural scent combines with the lure’s appearance, weight and movement to deadly effect. Keep baits small because snapper will swallow bigger baits, hooks and all, making unhooking difficult and release impossible.

So next time you’re planning a trip out fishing and want a refreshing and exciting change, grab a bunch of sliders, buy, beg or borrow a light, whippy outfit and prepare to turn your fishing world upside down! BNZ

SHARE:

Related Articles

Comments

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand. Subscribe to view comments and join the conversation. Choose your plan →

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand.

Boating New Zealand
Boating New Zealandhttps://www.boatingnz.co.nz
Boating NZ is New Zealand’s premier marine title devoted to putting its readers behind the wheel of the latest trailerboats, yachts and launches to hit the market. It inspires with practical content and cruising adventures, leads the fleet with its racing coverage and is on the pulse of the latest maritime news and innovation.

More from Boating New Zealand

Exciting day for SailGP boats ...

Out on the Waitemata Harbour and into the Hauraki Gulf, the SailGP boats ar...
Runup to AucklandSailGP

Peter Burling: Leading with pr...

As the New Zealand SailGP team gears up for a thrilling home race, Peter Bu...
Runup to AucklandSailGP

The Exotic Caulerpa threat to ...

New Zealand’s pristine waters face a growing threat: the spread of exotic c...
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs)

The 11th RORC Transatlantic Ra...

On Sunday, 12 January 2025, the 11th edition of the RORC Transatlantic Race...
RORC Transatlantic

Vendée round the globe LIVE! 1...

Catch up with all the action from the past 24 hours in this 30-minute daily...
Vendee Globe - Round The World Yacht RaceVendée round the globe LIVE!

Charlie Dalin on the brink of ...

After leading the Vendée Globe since December 30th, Charlie Dalin...
Race Day ReportsVendee Globe - Round The World Yacht Race
-- ADVERTISEMENT --

Follow Us

Weekly Newsletter

Stay up to date with the latest developments shaping New Zealand's Boating world.

Social Media

Follow us on social media to stay in the loop with the latest trends and news shaping New Zealand's boating scene!

-- THINGS WE LOVE --

GET
STARLINK
HERE

-- DIRECTORY LISTING --

NZ Events Worth Adding to Your Calendar

Have an event you'd like to list on Boating New Zealand. Contact us with the details.

Catch all the action of the Vendée Globe Race, starting 10 Nov, 2024 in Barcelona, Spain. Follow along with excitement at Boating New Zealand.

FISHING

White Pointer Boats 30th Anniversary Fishing Comp, 5 - 8 Feb 2025 in Waihau Bay

Makaira Trailer Boat Competition, 25 & 26 Jan 2025 in Whangaroa

Stabicraft Fish N Chicks Tournament, 6 - 8 Feb 2025 in Tauranga. Dress up theme is “Ladies of their Time”. Raising funds to help find a cure for Breast Cancer.

Surtees Annual Fishing Competition, 28 Feb - 1 Mar 2025 in Whakatane

Hook Me Up Fishing Competition - Matakana vs Hillside, 7 Mar 2025 in Whakatane

The Kubota Billfish Classic, 12 - 15 Mar 2025 in Mercury Bay, Whitianga

ITM Fishing Competition, 13 - 16 Mar 2025 in Whangaroa

NZ Lure Masters (Catch, Measure and Release competition), 3 & 4 Oct 2025, New Zealand wide

Stabicraft Te Anau Manapouri Fishing Classic, 25 - 27 Oct 2025 TBC in Te Anau Manapouri

REGATTAS

Rolex Sydney to Hobart, 26 Dec 2024 starts in Sydney, Australia

New Zealand Sail Grand Prix, 18 & 19 Jan 2025 in Auckland

Bay of Islands Sailing Week, 21 - 24 Jan 2025 at Bay of Islands

NZ Millenium Cup, 1 - 4 Feb 2025 at Waitemata Harbour

Toyota Youth International Match Racing Cup, 26 Feb - 4 Mar 2025 in Auckland

PIC Harbour Classic, 28 Feb - 1 Mar 2025 in Auckland

Sydney to Auckland Ocean Race 2025, starting 11 Oct 2025 TBC from Sydney Harbour

PIC Insurance Brokers Coastal Classic, 24 Oct 2025 TBC from Auckland to Russell

NZ Match Racing Championships, 2025 dates tbc in Auckland

HYDRO THUNDER

Lucas Oil Hydro Thunder Race - Mangakino, 18 & 19 Jan 2025 at Mangakino

Lucas Oil Hydro Thunder Race - Karapiro, 7 - 9 Feb 2025 at Karapiro

Lucas Oil Hydro Thunder Race - Lake Rotoiti, 8 - 9 Mar 2025 at Nelson Lakes

Lucas Oil Hydro Thunder Race - Lake Twizel, 29 - 30 Mar 2025 at Twizel

JET BOAT RACING

2024/25 NZ Jetsprint Championship R2, 1 Dec 2024 at Featherston

2024/25 NZ Jetsprint Championship R3, 27 Dec 2024 at Wanganui

UIM World Jetsprint Championships, 25 Jan -2 Feb 2025 at Wanaka (25 & 26 Jan) and Wanganui (1 & 2 Feb)

2024/25 NZ Jetsprint Championship R4, 23 Feb 2025 at Wanganui

2025 NZ Marathon Coast-to-Coast, 16 to 25 Mar 2025 starting at Greymouth ad finishing at Christchurch

2024 Golden Homes NZ Jet Boat Marathon, 2025 dates TBC on Southland Rivers (Oreti, Waiau and Mataura)

National Jet Boat Rally 2024, 2025 date TBC at Oliver Road, Bendigo (near Cromwell)

WATERSPORTS

Yamaha Rollo's Marine Bridge 2 Bridge, 2025 dates tbc Staged on the Waikato River between Cambridge & Taupiri, based in Hamilton, New Zealand

NON-MOTORISED SPORT

Waka Ama - 2025 National Sprint Championships, 12 - 18 Jan 2025 at Lake Karapiro, Cambridge

Waka Ama - 2025 Secondary School Nationals, 24 - 28 Mar 2025 at Lake Tikitapu, Rotorua

ANTIQUE, CLASSIC & RETRO BOATS

25th NZ Antique & Classic Boat Show , 1 & 2 Mar 2025 at Lake Rotoiti, Nelson Lakes

SHOWS

Moana Auckland - New Zealand's Ocean Festival, 27 Jan to 9 Mar 2025 in Auckland

Auckland Boat Show, 6 - 9 Mar 2025 to be held at the Viaduct Events Centre and Jellicoe Harbour, Auckland

The Hutchwilco New Zealand Boat Show, 15-18 May 2025 to be held at the Viaduct Events Centre and Jellicoe Harbour, Auckland

NZ Boat, Fish and Dive Show, 30 & 31 Aug 2025 to be held at Mystery Creek Events Centre, Waipa

-- DIRECTORY LISTING --

International Boat Shows

COMING EVENTS

Boot Düsseldorf 18 - 26 Jan 2025 to be held in Düsseldorf, Germany

New York Boat Show, 22 - 26 Jan 2025 to be held at the Javits Center, New York

Bahamas Charter Yacht Show, 29 Jan - 2 Feb 2025 to be held at Nassau, Bahamas

Houston Boat Show, 29 Jan - 2 Feb 2025 to be held at the NRG Center, Houston, Texas

Dubai International Boat Show, 19 - 23 Feb 2025 to be held at the Dubai Harbour

Miami International Boat Show, 12 - 16 Feb 2025 to be held in Miami

Palm Beach International Boat Show, 19 - 23 Mar 2025 to be held along Flagler Drive in downtown West Palm Beach

International Multihull Show, 23 - 27 Apr 2025 to be held in Terre-plein Ouest du port La Grande-Motte (34), France

Palma International Boat Show, 30 Apr - 3 May 2025 to be held at the Superyacht Village, Palma, Spain

Barcaly's Jersey Boat Show, 3 - 5 May 2025 to be held in the Channel Islands

South Coast & Green Tech Boat Show, 9 - 11 May 2025 to be held in Ocean Village Marina, Southampton, Hampshire

The British Motor Yacht Show, 15 - 18 May 2025 to be held at the Swanwick Marina, Southampton, Hampshire

The Hutchwilco New Zealand Boat Show, 15 - 18 May 2025 at Auckland Showgrounds, Auckland

Sanctuary Cove International Boat show, 22 - 25 May 2025 to be held in Sanctuary Cove, Queensland

Sydney International Boat show, 31 July - 3 Aug 2025 to be held at ICC Sydney & Cockle Bay, Darling Harbour

Hiswa Te Water, 3 - 7 Nov 2025 to be held in Bataviahaven Lelystad, The Netherlands

Southampton International Boat Show, 19 - 28 Sep 2025 to be held in Southampton, UK

International BoatBuilders’ Exhibition & Conference (IBEX), 7 - 9 Oct 2025 to be held in Tampa, Florida

Annapolis Sail Boat Show, 9 - 13 Oct 2025 to be held at City Dock, Annapolis, Maryland

Newport International Boat Show, 20 - 23 Nov 2025 to be held in Newport, Rhode Island

Cannes Yachting Festival, 9 - 14 Sep 2025 at Cannes – Vieux Port & Port Canto

Genoa Boat Show, 18 - 23 Sep 2025 to be held in Genoa, Italy

Melbourne International Boat Show, Oct 2025, TBC to be held at New Quay Promenade Harbour Esplanade Seven Marinas

Biograd Boat Show, Oct 2025, TBC to be held in the City of Biograd, Croatia

Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show 29 Oct – 2 Nov 2025 to be held at several locations in Fort Lauderdale

METSTRADE 18 - 20 Nov 2025 to be held at the Rai, Amsterdam

Antigua Charter Yacht Show 4 - 9 Dec 2025 to be held at the Nelson's Dockyard UNESCO World Heritage Site, Antigua

Monaco Yacht Show, 24 - 27 Sep 2025 on Monacco