Fishing Kayak-what do you guys use.

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Viewing 17 posts - 1 through 17 (of 17 total)
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  • #6155

    I am getting ready to purchase a kayak for my son and Ito fish from. Since making the move from Indiana to south Fla I figured it was a necessity.

    #54116
    Michael Exl
    Member

    NuCanoe Frontier 12 or Jackson Big Tuna

    #54117
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    PJ.

    Do a search on the board.

    #54118

    Tim–

    I was siting in the passenger seat of my Yukon Denali on my way back to Florida when I posted this from my iPhone–

    I didn’t dare take my eyes off the road long enough to do a full blown search–;)

    #54119
    david frank
    Member

    As Kayaks are used for many outdoor activities, as it is used for diving,
    fishing, wilderness exploration and for many purposes during rain and

    #54120
    Avatar photoBob Riggins
    Member

    How old is your son?

    #54121
    Clay Smith
    Member

    What makes the tandem yak’s such poor performers?

    Am I allowed to call them yak’s if I don’t know why tandem’s suck?

    #54122
    Avatar photoBob Riggins
    Member

    Kayaks are too small for two people to comfortably fish from;

    #54123
    Clay Smith
    Member

    Bob,

    So what I just read there is for the two of us buy a canoe

    #54124
    Avatar photoPeter E.
    Member

    If there are two of you then I would suggest the Native Ultimate 14.5. The tandem model is easy to fish out of for two people and when there is just you fishing it converts into a solo.

    I would agree though, i would ask how big your son is and what sort of fishing you are planning on doing.

    #54125
    Clay Smith
    Member

    He is 4 so gotta be 2 of us in the boat at least for a couple more years.

    #54126
    Avatar photoPeter E.
    Member

    I have owned the Ultimate 14.5 and have used it tandem and solo. I loved it. The only hold was the boat in wave action. I feel that had I had a spray skirt I would have been golden though.

    #54127
    Zach Matthews
    The Itinerant Angler

    The consensus for striper fishing my area seems to be the Wilderness Systems Tarpon 12 or 14.

    #54128
    Clay Smith
    Member

    Now I have to add canoes to the consideration.

    Geeze Zach now I may never pull the trigger on a watercraft

    #54129
    R Black
    Member

    I bought a used Hobie Pro Angler.

    #54130
    Clay Smith
    Member

    Does anyone have exerience in the Old Towne Saranac?

    #54131
    Abe Mathews
    Member

    I demoed a few last year, including the Wilderness Commander, Native 14.5, Tarpon 140, Ride 135, and Jackson Cuda.  For me, with intended uses of bass fishing on local reservoirs, striper fishing below TVA dams, and saltwater fishing for trout and reds in the Pensacola area and bones in the Keys, I decided that the Cuda was the “goldilocks” boat.  Every boat is a compromise.  The Tarpon was faster but not stable enough for me to fish standing up.  The Ride was very stable, but felt like it topped out slower regardless of how hard I pushed.  I wasn’t comfortable at all in the Wildy Commander (ergos), and I didn’t want to take a hybrid canoe across the bays in Pensacola.

    The Cuda wasn’t the fastest, or the most stable, or the lightest.  But it has an exceptionally comfortable seat, and a ton of features that are well thought out for a fisherman.  While the boat is setup primarily for gear fishermen, fly rods fit in the two outside rod racks.  There is some rigging that can be fly line wrap magnets, so you have to be aware and potentially make a couple mods.  Here’s my Cuda getting ready to chase some bass:

    If you notice the seat is in the “high” position, which makes for a much better casting platform, at the expense of distance paddling comfort.  You can adjust this position on the water.  Also notice behind the paddle on the right side, that’s a vertical Plano 3700.  The Cuda has molded in slots to fit both 3600 and 3700 series boxes, so I’ve transfered my bass and saltwater flies to boxes that size (using Neal Osborn’s box construction guide).  I’m very pleased with this choice.  And it’s effective.

    I’m currently getting it ready for the first saltwater trip – chasing reds and trout in Pensacola next week.  The first place I paddled a Cuda was Pensacola, and it was an effective platform there as well.  Can’t wait.

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