#1
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Newbie Fishing Gear Tips, Tricks
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#2
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Re: Newbie Fishing Gear Tips, Tricks
It probably depends what type of fish you are going for, but there are some things I find useful. I have a NativeWatercraft Ultimate 16 Propel and a tandem Ocean Kayak Malibu. I fish with my son, mostly on small lakes. We often want to stay in one area and avoid drifting, so we have two things that work nice for that. First I have a short rope with a small spring clamp tied to it that works well to tie off to trees or other objects. We also use a small claw anchor and I have a rope with loops tied of at 6, 10, 20 and 30+ feet, we use a clip on the desired depth loop and drop it. I have a pulley system on the side of the kayak, this is a lifesaver and allows you to position the anchor to the front or back your yak to position you whatever way you want to face in windy condtions. I keep a sharp knife close in case we would get hung up and need to cut it loose. Inverting the anchor and using a ziptie to hold the rope to the "top" of the anchor has saved me many times in rocky snags. Hope that helps.
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#3
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Re: Newbie Fishing Gear Tips, Tricks
The anchor is a good Idea, that’s one of the things on my first trip out I realized I needed. After looking around at traditional “anchors” I decided I needed a less traditional approach. I have a sit in , emotion glide, and although it’s not really cramped feeling, there really isn’t an abundance of space on any kayak, so I made a custom modified anchor.
I bought a 75 foot length of weaved polypropylene rope (that’s about the max depth I’ll be in), not real high tensile strength, but then again, I’m not anchoring a yacht. Some “C” shaped hooks that I bent outward a bit with a vise to get into the form I wanted, and I used a 2½ foot length of ½ inch rebar with a hole drilled into the center for anchor. The hooks I used on the stern starboard side to keep the rope wound up, and the rebar is secured nicely in a bungee paddle lock. When I’m out on the lake, en route or trolling, I just rest the rebar against the rope and hooks, it stays quite secure, in transport I secure it in the paddle lock bungee cord ****(whatever it’s called) I wanted something semi-heavy but that didn’t take up excessive space, and the rebar fits the bill quite nicely, I also primed it grey to match the kayak, and to secure from rust. |
#4
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Re: Newbie Fishing Gear Tips, Tricks
The knife is a very good idea, and is something that I had been thinking about, I don’t want to get flipped over and wound up with rope or fishing lines; that would be a rather precarious situation. I went and got a Leatherman multi-tool, for removing hooks, cutting lines etc;, but that won’t help in an emergency. I’d like something I can fasten to my PFD with easy access, in case I flip over and get wound up and need to slice and dice in a hurry. I have a diving knife, but that’s a little overkill, need something much smaller, I’m thinking non-collapsible straight blade with a quick release sheath, less than 3 inch blade.
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#5
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Re: Newbie Fishing Gear Tips, Tricks
Surely going for and taking a knife while kayaking is considered good, but playing with knifes, didn't your mummy warned you never to play with knifes......
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#6
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Re: Newbie Fishing Gear Tips, Tricks
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#7
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Re: Newbie Fishing Gear Tips, Tricks
Seriously, how could y'all not mention a fish finder? Unless you got superman eyes on the water!
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