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Deep-Sea Swordfish Stalking: Prepare for the Fight of Your Life

 If billfish were boxers, swordfish would be the Tyson of the bunch. Blue marlin might have them beat for pounds and inches, but they can’t touch the swordfish for raw power and the grueling, punishing fight they put up. Simply put, the swordfish is a beast, and it takes an angling beast to catch one. Swordfish are hard to find, hard to hook, and even harder to fight. Stalking them calls for a lot of preparation; it requires a focus on everything from choosing performance fishing shirts to learning how to find the ocean’s deep scattering layer (DSL). Prepare to take your fishing game up a notch.

Performance Fishing Shirts


Get the Gear

There’s no way to include all of the specific gear necessary for taking swordfish here. There is a common denominator for what you’ll need; it has to be heavy and high-quality. Swordfish are not forgiving, and stories about swordfish snapping rods and breaking reels of mediocre quality are familiar. Invest in trusted brands, braided line, and sharp hooks. Precision high-tech electronic gear is considered a virtual necessity for anything like semi-consistent success.

Dress the Part

The best place to find swordfish in the continental United States, bar none, is South Florida. The weather in South Florida can alternate between unrelenting tropical heat and humidity to torrential cloudbursts. Prepare for the weather, rain or shine, night or day, by picking up professional-grade performance fishing apparel. Choose high-performance polyester apparel that’s fabricated to be moisture-wicking and quick-drying. The right high-performance fishing clothes will be lightweight and breathable enough to keep you cool while providing full-coverage and UPF 50+ protection. The high-performance fishing mask is, understandably, quickly becoming a Florida fishing favorite.

Take a Deeper Look

When you’re looking for swordfish, you’re going to be looking deep. Whether it’s night or day, that can mean hundreds of feet down or thousands, respectively. In either case, you’re looking for the DSL. The DSL is a layer of the ocean, often between 1000-1500 feet down during daylight hours, where plankton, baitfish, and squid are plentiful. Where you find squid, you’ll find swordfish.

Pick Your Time

Before the emergence of that precision, high-tech, electronic gear, swordfish were most often found during night excursions. That’s because the swordfish would chase the squid and baitfish up from a few thousand feet to about 300 feet at night. Daytime swordfish angling is now common and productive, with bait rigged anywhere from 800 to 5000 feet down. Some, however, still swear by nighttime swordfishing.

Wherever and however you fish for them, be aware that once you have a swordfish on, you are in for a fight that you will never forget. Be ready.

About Gillz®

Kent Hickman has loved fishing for as long as he can remember. As a Florida native, there certainly wasn’t any shortage of world-class fishing to be had growing up, and he made the most of it. As an adult, that love of angling brought Kent to the professional tournament circuit. It was there that he encountered a problem: professional anglers often faced unforgiving conditions, and he couldn’t find any reputable fishing apparel that could stand up to the challenge. Whether they’re pros or not, hard-core anglers need gear they can rely on to stay cool, dry, and comfortable. That means gear that protects them from both the elements and the heat and UV rays of the unrelenting Florida sun. Kent took it upon himself to meet the challenge, and in 2009 he founded Gillz® to ensure that devoted anglers had access to high-performance, high-tech, professional-grade, and, of course, stylish fishing apparel. Gillz® fishing clothes include fishing masks, shirts for fishing, hats, shades, accessories, and more.

Prepare yourself and your friends to fish longer and harder without sacrificing cool comfort by choosing Gillz® professional-grade fishing apparel at https://gillz-gear.com/


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