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Posted

Hey gang

 

So I usually get 10+ musky a year by accident while fishing for walleye and believe it or not some of the biggest musky I've ever seen have fallen to a walleye crank

 

Anyways... hand bombing musky up to and over 50" is a challenge to say the least...

 

My dad has a boga grip that is nice and compact and can easily be stored in the boat at all times... however the boga grips are stupid expensive

 

Anyone ever use the rapala or Berkeley knock offs?

More importantly on bigger fish?

 

Let me know what you think of these cheaper alternatives

 

And to be clear I do target musky and I do handle them properly... this is for the accidental fish I can't plan for

 

Thanks

Posted

Cant say ive used one on skis but i do use them on chinnies up over 30 lbs, i mostly use them to hold them over the boat to revive them but it does help a bit with control.

I think mine are the berkely ones, they have held up so far.

Posted

The cheaper ones I bought broke. Can't remember brand.

I love my boga I don't lift fish with it but I use it to control its head when in net and unhooking. It was worth the money IMO but I got hooked REALLY bad once so I bought it tighte after that.

Posted

Yeah I don't want to lift the fish by the gripper

 

Just get a lock on it so I can control the fish and get a better grip on her and not have her break me off with a lure stuck in her face

 

Had to hand bomb a 55" the other day and a 56" earlier this year.... not an easy task

Posted

I'm trying to get to bed because we are heading to Lake St. Clare early for Musky. The first time ever going for them specifically on my own. I hope I need a grabber tomorrow. Nice problem to have Mike. If I see a 50" fish I'm going over board to grab it like Tarzan.

Posted

I use the ones from Canadian tire on big lake o salmon to revive fish dragging behind the boat for a few min . once the water warms up. No issues yet only had them for one season.

Posted

 

funny, I stumbled across this picture just today, hahaha

 

boga_zps2cfaez4l.jpg

 

 

you don't have a spot to stow a cradle even while you're walleye fishing? especially since you're fluking into quite a few big skis?

Posted

funny, I stumbled across this picture just today, hahaha

 

boga_zps2cfaez4l.jpg

 

 

you don't have a spot to stow a cradle even while you're walleye fishing? especially since you're fluking into quite a few big skis?

 

That's a funny looking "ski" :whistling:

Posted

I have the Berkeley gripper with the attached tape measure. It worked great the first year, second year the tape measure rusted through and broke off.

 

The gripper still works great though. Just don't bother with the attached tape.....

Posted

I had one of those made by Matsu (?), it broke very quickly. The pins that hold it all together jamb and it actually did that when I had it on a muskie and I was alone. That was quite the ordeal, but I was able to get it off and the muskie revived fine.

Stick with the best on the market and you will only have to buy it once. The long handled one is the best even though a little costly.

I should have taken this advice. LOL

Posted (edited)

Here's the Berkeley gripper holding up to a 42" muskie I caught on Balsam this spring.

 

IMG_6190.JPG

 

That fish went crazy too, my hand would have been mulch if I have been "bare handing" it.

Edited by Dutch01
Posted

X2 on the Berkeley gripper. Worked fine for me too. Also I sometimes use it to hold the fish's head up

( while it's in the basket ) while I unhook it. I've seen other people get hooks in their hands and it isn't pretty.

Posted (edited)

Other than Boga grip,

Evolution Gorilla Grippers are probably the 2nd best in my opinion for handling large fish like musky or king salmon. They have a built in scale and swivel like Boga.

They are sold @ BPS for around $60 Cdn,

Make sure you snug the lanyard around your wrist or have the Grippers on a leash before handling a fish. ?

Edited by stonefish
Posted

If your gonna use a gripper to control a big fish close to the boat Mike, try and get one that swivels rather than a solid one. If the solid one is locked onto her jaw and she starts to thrash...which she will... there's every chance you could snap her jaw bone whereas the swivel should just spin without hurting her.

 

Same as holding a fish up with a solid gripper, all sorts of bad things can happen to her when she tries to break loose.

Posted

funny, I stumbled across this picture just today, hahaha

 

boga_zps2cfaez4l.jpg

 

 

you don't have a spot to stow a cradle even while you're walleye fishing? especially since you're fluking into quite a few big skis?

I do but cradles are terrible when alone in the boat

Posted

Why I love my folding 'ski net, no matter what I'm fishing for it's always in the boat and only takes 10 seconds to get it out and ready to scoop.

With a 16' aluminum I dint have a lot of room for something that big in my boat when I'm not planning to use it

 

When I'm targeting the big girls I don't mind a net taking up spece

Posted

After getting some input and doing research it looks like Baker brand stainless steel grip n weigh is next in line after a Boga grips

 

And they swivel

 

18"

 

Regular price is about $70 USD

 

Tackle direct has the 60lb model on sale right now for $25

 

At that price I have nothing to lose so I ordered one

Posted

The rapala swivels, but it rarely gets a chance. I have the gripper tied off to the yak with 1m of strong cord. When a ski decides to spin, I let go. No leverage on the fish's jaws, and it is easy to pull back in with the cord.

Posted

Yep, that's it Mark. Takes up virtually ZERO space in the boat. Sits along the gunnel with my normal telescopic "pickerel" net beside it. ALWAYS in the boat, no matter the species at hand. Also comes in handy when you tag a 40+ inch Lake Trout downrigging as well.

 

 

 

 

TS116Y.jpg
Posted

I don't have first hand in-the-boat experience with it. It was very straight forward when I tried it.

 

Jim Saric used it on his show.

 

A capable guy like yourself would have no problem.

 

Easier and safer than hand-bombing a fish for sure. Better for the fish too. A live-well pen for the fish until it is good to release(especially with Walleye gear).

 

Cheers,

Mark

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