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singingdog

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Posts posted by singingdog

  1. One of my favorite open-water smallie techniques for roamers is a take-off on the saltwater popper technique: a popper with a senko underneath. It's a great way to get them to come up, even when they are over 100 FOW. InFisherman did a great video on the technique, but I can't find it. I use a fairly large, brightly coloured popper with the rear treble taken off. Tie on a 3-6' leader with a circle hook and put your favourite stick worm on. It will get hits when nothing else is working.

  2. On lakes like Redstone, the big smallies are roamers: keying on schools of moving baitfish more than on specific structure. You may find them suspended over 100 FOW one moment, up in the shallows the next. Watch the birds, use your electronics.

  3. Where - what kind of water - will he be using it? Going out for salmon on Lake O is a very different thing than fishing small lakes for bass.

     

    I fish most of the time out of a Wilderness Systems Commander: a "hybrid" fishing yak, almost like a plastic canoe. The upside is that I can stand and fish, which has all kinds of advantages over sitting (flyfishing, pitching, chucking heavy musky lures). The downside is that it is not a good open-water boat. For that, I use a SOT (sit on top). SOTs are great in heavier water because they are self-bailing. They are also very comfortable, since you can alter your position on the boat, and have lots of room for rigging. Some of the new SOTs are good for standing as well. Downside to SOTs are the weight.

     

    The best of both worlds is the Wilderness Systems ATAK: it offers the ability to stand, with the speed and seaworthiness of a SOT.

     

    Traditional yaks (SIKs) can be used for fishing, but are not near as popular. The upside is extreme seaworthiness (if you know what you are doing) and lighter weight. Downside is the limited seating position and difficulty in rigging for fishing.

     

    I always recommend paddling before buying, to get a sense of how different boats feel/paddle.

  4. 10x50s offer very few advantages compared to the disadvantages. The 2 main issues with 10 power binos are the much smaller field of view, and the very shallow depth of field at close range. Unless you need very good detail at a considerable distance, 10 powers just don't offer much of an advantage over 8s.

  5. my brother was catching walleye off our dock in 6 FOW all weekend mid day...something was happening for sure,

     

    Must be awesome to reel in a ski off a yak so cool. Great picture.

     

    Yep, musky in a yak is a blast. In some ways, it is easier than from a bigger boat. You can fish lighter gear because the yak is so much lighter and doesn't stress equipment near as much as a larger boat. The ski in the pic hauled me around for about 10 minutes before getting tired enough to land. Landing/unhooking can sometimes be easier because you are so close to the water.

  6. Seems I was wrong about going small. 3 of us landed 9 Musky over a day and a half of fishing, with several others lost right at boatside. Most were in the 25-30" range, with one just over 40". We weren't throwing huge lures, but much bigger than last year: #7 Mepps Marabou was my best for the weekend. Spent a fair bit of time throwing smaller inlines, topwaters, and cranks with no takers.

    P6060735.jpg

     

    The walleye were very shallow in one lake we fished: 4-6 FOW, and hitting in fairly bright sunlight....strange pattern.

  7. It's not even at the safe navigation levels yet on the graphs at parks canada !!!!!! I'm really suprised those guys can find their own way to work in the morning !!!! It's how clueless they are !!!!! We are atill waiting for the non- existant snow pack to come down from Haliburton !!!! That's one excuse they told me !!!! Hahaha ...... THERE IS NO SNOW OR WATER IN HALIBURTON EITHER !!!!!!! There is NO water Comming from anywhere .......

    Wow, I guess that using a whole bunch of exclamation points passes for informed debate :rolleyes: I know some of "those guys": some of the nicest folks you could hope to know, and they take their work very seriously. Easy to sit and slag them from behind your computer screen, with virtually no understanding of the conditions that led to what is happening right now. They have "no win" jobs: if they hold water back, the folks downstream moan about the lack of water. If they let water through, the cottagers on the upper lakes moan about their lake being low. If the rivers are running high in the spring, everyone in Minden starts panicking, remembering the big flood. No matter what they do, someone wants to call an inquiry.

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