Fishing charters San Jose del Cabo

cabo fishing glossary

Complete Reference for Cabo Anglers

Cabo Fishing
Glossary

130+ terms every angler needs to know before booking, boarding, or fishing in Los Cabos waters. Species names in English and Spanish, techniques, tackle, local spots, conservation, weather, and the unique Cabo vocabulary.

Total Terms
130+
Cross-referenced
Categories
8
Color-coded sections
Languages
2
English & Spanish
Last Updated
May 2026
Current standards
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T W Y

A practical reference covering every term you'll hear on a Cabo charter: from the technical language of IGFA tournaments to the Spanish words your captain uses on the radio. Bookmark this page. Use the category chips above to jump to a section, or the alphabet to find any specific term.

Category 1 of 8

Species & Fish

AmberjackMedregalSpecies

Powerful reef-dwelling jack of the Seriola genus. Aggressive predators caught around structure, drop-offs, and seamounts. Pacific amberjack run 20-80 lb in Cabo waters with occasional larger specimens.

BallyhooBalajúSpecies

Small surface-schooling baitfish used as one of the most common rigged trolling baits for billfish, dorado, and tuna. Also a fish in their own right.

Bigeye TunaAtún Ojo GrandeSpecies

Thunnus obesus. Deeper-water tuna species less commonly caught in Cabo than yellowfin but present in offshore waters. Distinguished by large eye and stocky body.

Black MarlinMarlin NegroSpecies

Istiompax indica. The largest and rarest of the regularly-caught Cabo billfish. Trophy specimens exceed 1,000 lb. Counts toward Marlin Grand Slam achievement.

Black SkipjackBarrilete NegroSpecies

Euthynnus lineatus. Small tuna species common in Cabo waters. Prized as live bait for blue marlin. Distinguished from skipjack by dark side markings.

Blue MarlinMarlin AzulSpecies

Makaira nigricans. Largest billfish in Cabo waters during summer (May-October). Pacific blues regularly exceed 500 lb with trophy specimens over 800 lb. Cornerstone species for summer billfish fishing.

BonitoBonitoSpecies

Sarda chiliensis. Small tuna species. Prized as live bait for blue marlin and excellent table fare. Common in Cabo offshore waters year-round.

CabrillaCabrillaSpecies

Local Spanish term for various grouper species (Serranidae family) caught around reef structure and rocky bottoms in Cabo waters. Excellent eating fish.

Cubera SnapperPargo CuberaSpecies

Lutjanus cyanopterus. Large reef-dwelling snapper. Trophy specimens exceed 50 lb. Caught around rocky structure and drop-offs along the East Cape.

DoradoDorado / Mahi-MahiSpecies

Coryphaena hippurus. Brilliantly colored offshore species peaking May-November. Found around floating debris, sargassum lines, and current breaks. Bulls (males) and cows distinguished by head shape.

GrouperMero / CabrillaSpecies

Various species of the Serranidae family caught around rocky structure. Goliath grouper, gulf grouper, and leopard grouper all occur in Cabo waters.

Jack CrevalleToro / Jurel ToroSpecies

Caranx hippos. Hard-fighting inshore jack. Aggressive surface feeder. Catch-and-release species; poor table fare. Caught on poppers and topwater lures.

NeedlefishAgujónSpecies

Long, slender fish with needle-like beak. Surface dwellers caught around lighted dock structures at night. Not commonly targeted recreationally.

Pacific SailfishPez VelaSpecies

Istiophorus platypterus. Acrobatic billfish renowned for spectacular surface displays. Smaller than marlin (60-150 lb in Cabo) but extraordinarily fast. Peak season May-October.

PompanoPámpanoSpecies

Trachinotus species. Inshore jack-family fish. Excellent table fare. Caught on light tackle along beaches and inshore reefs.

Rainbow RunnerSalmón / MariposaSpecies

Elagatis bipinnulata. Offshore jack with distinctive blue and yellow longitudinal stripes. Caught while trolling for tuna and billfish. Excellent eating.

RoosterfishPez Gallo / PapagalloSpecies

Nematistius pectoralis. Inshore predator with distinctive seven-spined dorsal "comb." Catch-and-release species. Peak May-October along East Cape and surf zones. Trophy specimens exceed 80 lb.

Shortbill SpearfishMarlín Trompa CortaSpecies

Tetrapturus angustirostris. Smallest and rarest of Pacific billfish in Cabo waters. Counts toward Super Grand Slam and Fantasy Slam. Usually caught incidentally rather than targeted.

SierraSierraSpecies

Scomberomorus sierra. Pacific Sierra mackerel. Small, fast inshore predator. Excellent table fare. Caught on small lures, spoons, and live bait inshore.

Skipjack TunaBarrileteSpecies

Katsuwonus pelamis. Schooling tuna species. Used as live bait for blue marlin. Also targeted for sushi and sashimi. Pelagic species caught while trolling offshore.

SnapperPargoSpecies

Multiple Lutjanidae species caught around reef structure and rocky bottoms. Yellowtail snapper, mullet snapper, and pacific dog snapper all common in Cabo waters.

Striped MarlinMarlin RayadoSpecies

Kajikia audax. Most abundant billfish in Pacific Mexico. Peak season November-April. Distinguished by vertical body stripes. Built Cabo's sportfishing reputation. Typical size 80-300 lb.

TriggerfishCochitoSpecies

Reef-dwelling fish with distinctive trigger-like dorsal spine. Multiple species in Cabo waters. Caught around structure on natural baits.

WahooPetoSpecies

Acanthocybium solandri. Speed demon of the offshore world (60+ mph strikes). Peak season November-March in Cabo. Caught on high-speed trolling lures and live bait. Excellent table fare.

Yellowfin TunaAtún Aleta Amarilla / AhiSpecies

Thunnus albacares. Premier Cabo gamefish. Trophy "cow tuna" exceeding 200 lb caught at Gordo Banks. Distinguished by long yellow finlets along body. Year-round species with summer peaks.

YellowtailJurel de CastillaSpecies

Seriola lalandi. Pacific yellowtail caught around rocky structure and offshore banks. Strong fighter, excellent eating. Peak winter months in Cabo waters.

Two Languages, One Vocabulary

"Speaking your captain's language unlocks the local knowledge that turns a good charter into a great one. Learn the Spanish terms; they matter."

Category 2 of 8

Fishing Techniques

Bait and SwitchTechnique

Tactic where teasers without hooks raise billfish to the boat, then a hooked bait is dropped back to the excited fish. Increases hookup ratio dramatically.

Bottom FishingPesca de FondoTechnique

Targeting structure-dwelling species (grouper, snapper, amberjack) by dropping baits to specific depths over reefs and rocky bottoms.

Bridge HookingTechnique

Method of rigging live bait with hook pinned through the upper nasal cavity (bridge of nose). Keeps bait swimming naturally and increases hook-up rate.

ChummingChumear / Tirar CarnadaTechnique

Tossing small pieces of bait into the water to attract fish to the boat. Common for tuna and yellowtail.

ChunkingTechnique

Drifting chunks of cut bait while anchored or drifting over structure. Effective for yellowfin tuna and yellowtail at Gordo Banks.

Daisy ChainTechnique

Multiple teasers strung together in a line, designed to mimic a school of baitfish. Used to raise billfish to the boat's spread.

Drift FishingPesca a la DerivaTechnique

Allowing the boat to drift with current and wind while presenting baits. Used for tuna at offshore banks and for billfish over structure.

Drop BackTechnique

Allowing free-spool line to pay out when a billfish strikes, letting the fish swallow the bait before setting the hook. Critical for circle hook billfish technique.

Flat LineTechnique

Bait or lure trolled directly from the rod tip without outrigger, running closest to the boat's wake. Often the "money" position in a trolling spread.

Free SpoolTechnique

Reel condition where line pays out without resistance. Used during drop back on billfish strikes to let fish swallow bait.

JiggingJiggearTechnique

Vertical fishing technique using weighted lures (jigs) worked up and down through the water column. Effective for tuna, amberjack, and bottom species.

Live Bait FishingCarnada VivaTechnique

Using live baitfish (skipjack, bonito, ballyhoo) presented either drifted, slow-trolled, or kite-fished. Premier technique for trophy blue marlin.

Pitch BaitTechnique

Bait kept ready and "pitched" to a billfish raised by teasers. Requires quick mate work to deliver the bait into the strike zone before the fish loses interest.

Popper CastingTechnique

Casting surface lures (poppers) at visible fish or feeding activity. Highly effective for roosterfish, jack crevalle, and busting tuna schools.

Slow Pitch JiggingTechnique

Technique using specialized rods and jigs with deliberate slow lifts and falls. Effective for grouper, snapper, and amberjack at deep structure.

Strip StrikeTechnique

Setting the hook on a billfish by pulling line backward with the rod tip low and pointed at the fish, rather than lifting the rod. Standard with circle hooks.

TeaserSeñueloTechnique

Hook-less lure or bait spread used to attract billfish to the boat. Once a fish appears in the spread, anglers present a hooked bait. See bait and switch.

TrollingCurricánTechnique

Dragging baits or lures behind a moving boat. Standard technique for billfish, dorado, wahoo, and tuna. Typical Cabo trolling speeds: 5-9 knots.

Category 3 of 8

Tackle & Gear

Ballyhoo RigGear

Standard rigged natural bait for trolling. Ballyhoo (small baitfish) hooked through gill plate and bridled, often combined with a skirted lure.

BraidTrenzadaGear

Braided spectra/dyneema line. Thinner diameter than mono for equivalent strength. Used for jigging, bottom fishing, and as backing on offshore reels.

Bridle RigGear

Rigging method where hook is tied externally to live bait using a small loop, not pierced through flesh. Standard for live skipjack and bonito on marlin.

Circle HookAnzuelo CircularGear

Hook designed to slide to the corner of fish's jaw and rotate into position, dramatically reducing deep-hook injuries. Mandatory for billfish tournaments and recommended for all billfish. Required by NMFS for Atlantic billfish.

DragFrenoGear

Reel mechanism applying resistance to a running fish. Strike drag (initial setting), full drag (locked down), free-spool (zero). Critical to fight management.

Fighting ChairSilla de CombateGear

Specialized chair on larger boats for fighting big fish. Rotating base, footrests, and rod gimbal. Used for heavy tackle classes (80-130 lb).

FluorocarbonFluorocarbonoGear

Nearly invisible underwater leader material. Used in clear water situations for spooky fish. More expensive than monofilament.

GaffGancho / BicheroGear

Long pole with large hook used to land fish boatside. Lethal to fish; only used on fish being kept, never on release species.

Gimbal BeltGear

Belt with cup that holds rod butt against angler's waist during stand-up fights. Distributes load and protects body during long fights.

J-HookGear

Traditional fish hook with straight or slightly bent shank ending in a sharp point. Effective but causes more deep-hook injuries than circle hooks on billfish.

LeaderLíderGear

Heavy line between main line and hook/lure. Resists abrasion from teeth and rough surfaces. Marlin leaders typically 200-400 lb test; sailfish 80-130 lb.

LureSeñuelo / CurricánGear

Artificial fish-imitating tackle. Trolling lures (skirted), jigs, poppers, swimming plugs all qualify. Cabo billfish lures typically 9-14 inches.

Mono LeaderGear

Monofilament leader. Most common leader material for billfish. Slight stretch and clear appearance. Standard for marlin and sailfish in Cabo.

MonofilamentMonofilamentoGear

Single-strand nylon fishing line. Standard main line for trolling reels. Stretches slightly, absorbing shock loads from billfish strikes.

OutriggerTangónGear

Long poles extending outward from boat's sides to spread trolling baits. Allows running 4-7 baits without tangles. Standard on sportfishing boats.

Pin RigGear

Live bait rigging method using a small pin inserted through the bait's flesh to anchor the hook. Alternative to bridle rig.

ReelCarreteGear

Mechanism for line storage and retrieval. Cabo trolling reels typically Penn International, Shimano Tiagra, Avet, or Accurate brands. Sized by line class.

RodCañaGear

Fishing rod. Cabo trolling rods rated by line class (30-130 lb). Stand-up rods shorter and stiffer than chair rods.

SkirtGear

Soft plastic or vinyl skirt covering the hook of a trolling lure. Provides visual attraction and protects the hook point. Many color combinations.

Snap SwivelDestorcedor con ClipGear

Swivel with quick-release snap. Allows fast lure changes without retying. Used for changing trolling lures on the fly.

SwivelDestorcedorGear

Small barrel-shaped fitting connecting main line to leader. Allows line to twist without spinning bait/lure. Ball-bearing swivels for highest quality.

Tagging StickGear

Long pole tipped with a tag applicator. Used to apply scientific tags to released billfish for research purposes through The Billfish Foundation.

30 lb ClassGear

Tackle rated for 30 lb test line. Standard for sailfish, smaller marlin, and dorado. Light enough for sporting fight, heavy enough for serious fish.

50 lb ClassGear

Tackle rated for 50 lb test line. Standard for striped marlin, smaller blue marlin, and yellowfin tuna up to ~150 lb. Versatile workhorse class.

80 lb ClassGear

Tackle rated for 80 lb test line. Standard for blue marlin over 200 lb and cow tuna at Gordo Banks. Heavy but manageable for stand-up fights.

Wire LeaderLíder de AceroGear

Stainless steel or coated wire leader. Required for wahoo (razor-sharp teeth cut mono). Used for high-speed wahoo trolling.

The Right Spot at the Right Time

"Cabo's 13 productive fishing zones each produce different species in different seasons. Knowing the names is the first step to fishing them effectively."

Category 4 of 8

Cabo Local Spots & Geography

95 Spot (95 Fathom)Local Spot

Pacific side fishing zone approximately 18 miles southwest of Cabo San Lucas. Named for its 95-fathom (570 ft) depth. Productive for striped marlin during winter.

Boca de SaladoLocal Spot

East Cape coastal point north of Las Frailes. Inshore zone productive for roosterfish, jack crevalle, and dorado during summer months.

Cabo FalsoLocal Spot

Pacific side point southwest of Cabo San Lucas marina. Productive nearshore zone for striped marlin, dorado, and yellowfin in winter and spring.

Cabo PulmoLocal Spot

UNESCO-protected marine reserve north of Los Cabos. Fishing prohibited inside park boundaries; surrounding waters productive for roosterfish and inshore species.

Cabo San Lucas MarinaLocal Spot

Original Cabo marina, dredged 1974-1975. Working heart of Cabo San Lucas tourism. Charter departure point for many operators. Located at the foot of Land's End.

East CapeCabo del EsteLocal Spot

Coastal region north of San José del Cabo extending to La Ribera and beyond. Premier roosterfish destination. Includes Las Frailes, Punta Pescadero, Vinorama spots.

Finger BankLocal Spot

Deep Pacific seamount approximately 50 miles southwest of Cabo. Trophy yellowfin tuna and blue marlin destination. Requires long-range capable boats.

Golden Gate BankLocal Spot

Pacific seamount approximately 35 miles southwest of Cabo San Lucas. Legendary striped marlin destination during winter months. Big trophy yellowfin tuna in summer.

Iman BankLocal Spot

Underwater seamount approximately 12 miles east of San José del Cabo. Highly productive for striped marlin, blue marlin, and sailfish. Standard run from Puerto Los Cabos.

Inner Gordo BanksLocal Spot

Shallower of the two Gordo Banks (~600 ft). Located approximately 8 miles east of San José del Cabo. Premier yellowfin tuna destination. Productive year-round.

Land's EndEl ArcoLocal Spot

Iconic rock arch formation at the tip of Baja California where the Pacific Ocean meets the Sea of Cortez. Defining geographic landmark of Cabo San Lucas.

Las FrailesLocal Spot

Dramatic East Cape headland between Vinorama and Cabo Pulmo. Inshore zone productive for roosterfish during summer.

Outer Gordo BanksLocal Spot

Deeper of the two Gordo Banks (~1,200 ft). Approximately 12 miles east of San José del Cabo. Premier zone for blue marlin and trophy striped marlin.

Pacific SideLocal Spot

Waters west of Land's End (Pacific Ocean). Generally cooler water than Sea of Cortez. Striped marlin and yellowfin tuna concentrate here in winter months.

Puerto Los Cabos MarinaLocal Spot

Modern marina in San José del Cabo, opened October 2007. 200 slips, accommodates 250-ft mega-yachts. Daliken's home port. Shorter run to Gordo Banks than from Cabo San Lucas.

Punta GordaLocal Spot

Coastal point and shallow nearshore area east of San José del Cabo. Inshore zone for sierra, jack crevalle, and rooster on light tackle.

Punta PescaderoLocal Spot

East Cape point north of San José del Cabo. Calm waters; productive nearshore zone for billfish during summer migrations.

San Jaime BankLocal Spot

Pacific seamount approximately 28 miles southwest of Cabo. Striped marlin and trophy yellowfin destination. Slightly closer than Golden Gate Bank.

Sea of CortezMar de Cortés / Golfo de CaliforniaLocal Spot

The Gulf of California separating Baja peninsula from mainland Mexico. UNESCO World Heritage marine ecosystem. Cousteau called it "the world's aquarium." Conservation guide here.

VinoramaLocal Spot

East Cape coastal stretch north of Punta Pescadero. Inshore zone for roosterfish along sand beaches; offshore for billfish.

Category 5 of 8

Spanish & Local Slang

AnzueloHookSpanish

Generic Spanish word for fish hook. Captain may specify "anzuelo circular" for circle hook or "anzuelo J" for J-hook.

BahíaBaySpanish

Bay. Bahía de Santa Cruz was the original Spanish name for Cabo San Lucas given by Hernán Cortés in 1535.

CañaRodSpanish

Fishing rod. "Caña de pescar" is the full term but "caña" alone is universally understood on Cabo boats.

CapitánCaptainSpanish

Boat captain. Universally understood. Daliken's lead captain is Capitán Pancho.

CarnadaBaitSpanish

Bait. "Carnada viva" = live bait. "Carnada muerta" = dead/cut bait. Critical word for any bait conversation with crew.

DoradoMahi-MahiSpanish

Spanish name for mahi-mahi. Literally means "golden one" referring to the brilliant colors. Used worldwide as the species name.

LíneaLineSpanish

Fishing line. "Línea principal" = main line. "Líder" = leader. Universal vocabulary on Cabo boats.

MarineroMate / DeckhandSpanish

Crewman who handles baits, rigging, and fish releases. The marinero is the second most important person on the boat after the captain.

MarlinaMarlinSpanish

Local Spanish slang for marlin (the proper term is "marlín" or "pez aguja"). "Marlina azul" = blue marlin.

PangaTraditional Mexican boatSpanish

Traditional Mexican fiberglass open-deck fishing boat. Light, fast, fuel-efficient, and ideal for Sea of Cortez conditions. Standard charter vessel type.

PapagalloRoosterfishSpanish

Spanish slang for roosterfish (proper name "pez gallo"). Refers to the rooster comb-like dorsal fin.

PescaFishingSpanish

Fishing as an activity. "Pesca deportiva" = sportfishing. "Permiso de pesca" = fishing license.

Pez GalloRoosterfishSpanish

Spanish for roosterfish. Literally "rooster fish" referring to the distinctive seven-spined dorsal "comb." Premier inshore catch-and-release species.

Pez VelaSailfishSpanish

Spanish for sailfish. Literally "sail fish" referring to the enormous dorsal fin used for display and herding.

Super PangaEnhanced traditional boatSpanish

Modern, larger panga (typically 23-26 ft) with shade canopy, more comfortable seating, and larger engines. Daliken operates 23-ft and 26-ft super pangas.

YateYachtSpanish

Spanish for yacht. Distinguishes larger luxury vessels from working boats like pangas. Cabo hosts mega-yachts at both major marinas.

Category 6 of 8

Tournaments & Records

Bisbee's Black & BlueTournament

Premier Cabo marlin tournament held annually in October. Founded 1981 by Bob Bisbee Sr. 2006 record payout: $4,165,960. Often called "the Super Bowl of sportfishing."

CalcuttaTournament

Optional side-betting pool in tournaments. Teams pay into the pool; winners take a percentage. Significantly increases potential payouts.

Fantasy SlamTournament

IGFA-recognized achievement of catching 5 different billfish species in one day. Extraordinarily rare. Full slam guide here.

Grand SlamTournament

IGFA-recognized achievement of catching 3 different billfish species (blue marlin, striped marlin, sailfish, etc.) in a single calendar day.

IGFATournament

International Game Fish Association. Governing body for sportfishing records, slam achievements, and ethical fishing standards. Headquartered in Dania Beach, Florida.

Los Cabos Billfish TournamentTournament

Annual Cabo billfish tournament held earlier in the season than Bisbee's. Part of the "Triple Crown" of Cabo tournaments.

Royal SlamTournament

Lifetime achievement of catching all billfish species in a given ocean. Pacific Royal Slam requires 7 species. Multi-year pursuit.

Stars & StripesTournament

Conservation-focused Cabo billfish tournament. Smaller field than Bisbee's. Charitable foundation supports children's medical care in Baja.

Super Grand SlamTournament

IGFA achievement of catching 4 different billfish species in one day. Rare; requires nearly perfect conditions and luck. Approximately 1 per 50-100 dedicated attempts.

Category 7 of 8

Conservation & Regulations

Bag LimitConservation

Maximum number of a species an angler may retain per day. Mexican regulations set bag limits for keeper species; billfish are generally release-only or limited to 1 per angler per day.

Billfish Foundation, TheConservation

Conservation organization dedicated to billfish research, tagging programs, and policy advocacy. Major partner for the global billfish science community.

Catch and ReleaseCaptura y LiberaciónConservation

Practice of returning caught fish to the water alive. Standard for billfish (marlin, sailfish, roosterfish). Combined with circle hooks, dramatically improves post-release survival.

CONAPESCAConservation

Comisión Nacional de Acuacultura y Pesca. Mexican federal agency that issues sport fishing licenses and regulates fishing activities. License details here.

250m Exclusion ZoneConservation

Mexican regulation prohibiting sport fishing within 250 meters of swimmers, divers, and commercial fishing operations. Standard charter practice respects this distance.

IUCN StatusConservation

International Union for Conservation of Nature classification of species conservation status (Least Concern, Near Threatened, Vulnerable, Endangered). Several billfish species are on the IUCN watchlist.

MPAConservation

Marine Protected Area. Designated zones where fishing is restricted or prohibited. Cabo Pulmo National Park is the region's most famous MPA. Sea of Cortez has multiple MPAs.

NMFSConservation

National Marine Fisheries Service (U.S.). Researches and regulates U.S. fisheries. NMFS 2008 rule requires circle hooks for billfish in Atlantic billfish tournaments.

Tag and ReleaseConservation

Practice of applying a scientific tag to a billfish before release. Tagged fish contribute migration and growth data to The Billfish Foundation and other research programs.

UNESCO Sea of CortezConservation

The Sea of Cortez was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2005 as the "Islands and Protected Areas of the Gulf of California" recognizing extraordinary marine biodiversity.

Category 8 of 8

Weather, Sea & Conditions

ChopWeather

Short, choppy wind waves on the water surface. Created by local wind. Distinguished from swell (longer-period waves from distant weather).

Cross SeaWeather

Sea condition where waves are coming from two or more different directions. Uncomfortable for boats. Can develop when wind direction shifts.

CurrentCorrienteWeather

Ocean water movement. Cabo currents flow generally north-south. Current lines often concentrate baitfish and predators, creating productive fishing edges.

Following SeaWeather

Sea condition where waves are moving in the same direction as the boat. Generally comfortable for transit but requires attention to broaching risk in steep waves.

KnotWeather

Unit of speed equal to 1 nautical mile per hour (approximately 1.15 mph). Used for boat speeds, wind speeds, and current speeds. Standard nautical measurement.

Lee SideWeather

Side of land or boat sheltered from the wind. Opposite of windward. Lee shorelines often provide calmer fishing conditions during windy days.

Moon PhaseFase LunarWeather

Position of moon in lunar cycle (new, waxing, full, waning). Influences tides and fish activity. Many anglers consider new moon and full moon to be peak fishing periods.

Neap TideWeather

Smaller tide range occurring during quarter moon phases. Reduced tidal currents. Often considered less productive than spring tides for tide-dependent species.

Sea StateWeather

Description of ocean surface roughness on a 0-9 scale. Sea State 0 is calm, Sea State 3 is moderate, Sea State 5+ is rough. Cabo charters typically operate up to Sea State 4.

SlickWeather

Smooth patch on the water surface, often caused by oil from feeding fish or current convergence. Visual indicator of fish activity. Captains target slicks while running.

Spring TideWeather

Larger tide range occurring during new moon and full moon phases. Stronger tidal currents move bait and trigger predator activity. Often considered peak fishing periods.

SwellWeather

Long-period waves traveling across the ocean surface, generated by distant storms. Smoother and more predictable than chop. Pacific side of Cabo typically has larger swell than Sea of Cortez side.

Temperature BreakWeather

Boundary between water masses of different temperatures. Concentrates baitfish and predators. Modern charter boats use sea surface temperature (SST) data to locate breaks.

ThermoclineWeather

Layer in the water column where temperature changes rapidly with depth. Affects fish distribution. Many tuna species concentrate at or near the thermocline.

TideMareaWeather

Periodic rise and fall of ocean levels caused by gravitational forces of moon and sun. Cabo experiences mixed semi-diurnal tides (two highs and two lows daily of unequal heights).

WindwardWeather

Side of land or boat facing into the wind. Opposite of lee side. Windward conditions can be rough during windy days; captains may run leeward of islands or points for protection.

Found the term you needed?

Book a Daliken charter and put the vocabulary to use. Your captain and mate will use these terms throughout the day; knowing them deepens the experience.

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Authority Sources Referenced
  • International Game Fish Association (IGFA) - official angling vocabulary and slam definitions
  • The Billfish Foundation - conservation terminology and tagging program documentation
  • NMFS (National Marine Fisheries Service) - circle hook regulations and species names
  • CONAPESCA - Mexican federal sport fishing regulations and license terminology
  • NOAA - sea state scale, wave terminology, and oceanographic vocabulary
  • FishBase - scientific names and species classifications
  • Bisbee's Black & Blue Tournament documentation
  • Daliken Sportfishing operational vocabulary - regional Cabo Spanish terminology

Speak the Language. Catch the Fish.

Knowing these 130+ terms transforms your Cabo charter from a passive experience into an active conversation with your captain and the fishery. Book Daliken and put the vocabulary to work.

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