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singingdog

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Posts posted by singingdog

  1. I am suprised that more people do not use paddleboards up North. I guess it has to do with you do get wet but down here lots of people strap a milk crate on the nose and fish the shallows. I would join them but I have a 10ft pelican that works for me and launches from the back of the pickup easily with one person.

     

     

     

     

    Art

    If you have ever tried to get anywhere on an SUP in a stiff headwind, you would understand. They are great fishing platforms, IF there is no wind, and you don't need to carry much.

  2. Nothing beats a yak for solo fishing. A good SOT, compared to a canoe, is virtually immune to wind and far easier to handle on your own. Don't even think of taking a SOT on a portage-interrupted trip, unless the portages are short, flat, and level enough to use a cart. The achilles heel of SOTs are their weight and difficulty to carry. But, like you said, you can always rent a canoe for trips with portages.

     

    Yes, you can put a downrigger on a yak.

     

    Spend a bit of time over on yakfisher.net. The folks there are dedicated fishers of every conceivable species and have already asked and answered all the questions that you are asking.

  3. So glad I am not a CO. On this board, it's a lose/lose proposition to be one. If they do their job, people whine, if they don't do their job, people whine. If someone on the board sees suspicious behaviour, there aren't enough CO's around. If they actually check someone from the board, there are too many COs around, wasting time and gas to (gasp) check and see if the regs are being followed.

     

    So, you grabbed your cell and warned folks that they were coming. That implies that you were worried that folks had something to hide, which means that they were breaking the regs, which means that you were interfering with COs "protecting the resource". How often have I seen huge threads on this board, complaining that the COs weren't around to "protect the resource"?

     

    Sorry Chris, but your whole post (and many that follow it) sounds like one big whine.

  4. If you are fishing mostly inland, small water, take a look at the Wilderness Systems Commanders. They are a hybrid, like the Nucanoe, so you can stand and fish. The captains chair on the Commander makes is super-easy to go from sitting and paddling to standing and fishing. They are also specifically designed to take a trolling motor.

  5. Spend a bit of time over on yakfisher.net reading the old threads on yak selection....lots of great info there. There are lots of great fishing yaks on the market right now, and narrowing it down to "type" (sit-in, sit-on, hybrid) will help. A few questions that I think help that process:

    1. What "size" water are you going to fish most of the time? Lake O for salmon? Small back lakes? Rivers?

    2. How portable do you want your yak to be? Will you be car-topping/trailering right to the water, or do you want to be able to cart/carry/drag it into more remote water?

    3. Are you a gear junky (6 rods, downriggers, full-size FF, gps) or more of a minimalist?

    4. Do you want to be able to stand and fish?

     

    Each type of yak has it's strengths and weaknesses. Figuring out what you want it to do most of the time will go a long way to ending up with the right one.

  6. Decided to brave the rain yesterday and hike into a lake. It felt like early May; high humidity, warm temps, easy on the hands :). The only sign of the recent cold weather was the ice on the puddles while walking in. Water temps up this way have dipped below 40, so I was thinking the trout would be biting. It was a tough bite. 2 hours on the lake only turned up one fish.

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    PB170604.jpg

  7. lakers or splake?

     

    definitely nice country up there, looks like more fun to me rather than fishing shoulder to shoulder down here

     

    I'm guessing the ponds might get a skim of ice in the next couple days up there

     

    PM me if you're ever looking for company to hit some back lakes

    Splake. This is a great time of year for them, and they will be biting until it freezes over.

  8. Buy the yak that you will use 90% of the time, not one that you think you will use the other 10%. If you are going to fish primarily smaller water, then I would look at a smaller boat: 12' range.

     

    Weight: SOTs are heavier than either SIK (traditional yaks) or hybrids (look more like canoes: WS Commander, Native Ultimate). SOT's, on the other hand, are the safest of the 3 types of boats. They won't take on water, are easier to self rescue, and generally sit lower in the water so that wind affects them less. IF I were going to own just one fishing yak, it would definitely be a SOT.

     

    Keep an eye on Kijiji. Better yet, join yakfisher.net: lots of Ontario yakfishers there. There is a Jackson SOT on the classifieds board there that fits your needs.

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