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YodaMage

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About YodaMage

  • Birthday 01/31/1972

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Grand Island, NY
  • Home Port
    Wilson
  • Boat Name
    Line Change

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  1. YodaMage

    Sold / Closed SOLD - Grady 254

    Sold today, to a nice guy from Vermont. Boat was surveyed and came out great. Hope it catches him some big ones and and both he and the boat have a long and happy life together.
  2. YodaMage

    Sold / Closed SOLD - Grady 254

    I'll get back up and get some more pics this week. Sorry, I was out of town and just got back. Definitely a dog house, though there is a ton of room in the corners as the boat is wide. PD, I'm going to get a deck boat or open bow most likely for now. The kid wants to tube and ski, the wife wants to lounge and bake. I'll just grab a charter when the bug gets me.
  3. YodaMage

    Sold / Closed SOLD - Grady 254

    http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2033.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2032.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2036.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2038.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2037.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2039.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2040.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2041.jpg http://i343.photobucket.com/albums/o460/yodamage/DSCF2042.jpg
  4. YodaMage

    Sold / Closed SOLD - Grady 254

    I am selling my Grady Sailfish 254. It is an awesome fishing machine but I do not have time to use it (kid is now playing travel hockey an travel lacrosse so my weekends are blown up).I purchased this boat a few years ago from an old guy who had barely used it. In fact, 12 years of warehouse storage preceded my buying it. Boat came from Lake Erie and has had a freshwater life. Included in sale: -1993 Grady 254 with UNDER 400 HOURS on it -Mercury 7.4 I/O -Eagle Trailer -2014 Mercury Bigfoot 9.9 kicker with less than 10 running hours -Humminbird 958c with Great Lakes maps (2013) -Fishhawk X4 (2013) -Trollmaster throttle (2014) -Goetz hydraulic kicker steering (2014) -Uniden radio (2013) -Stereo and speakers (2013) -Slip paid out til October Boat has had all maintenance done on it including replacing impellers, bilge pumps, carburetor, distributor, thermostat, filters in last two years. The boat needs nothing and is ready to fish today. Asking $24,900 including all above. This is a serious big water boat that handles 4-6 like a champ while also providing the comfort or a small galley and and enclosed head. Boat is in the water in Wilson currently. Pics to follow as I figure out how to post them below. Chris ("Line Change") 716-570-0491 [email protected] So after a few weeks, a few lookers and some questions here is some additional info to questions that seem recurring: -I am going to go into something in the 19-22' open bow, deck boat or cuddy category for a few years and tool around the river towing the kid on a tube while the wife bakes. Its what they want right now. -The Grady is a 9'6" beam, nice for fishing. Legally towing it requires a permit. Annual or monthly is not a big deal. That said, I've never gotten one and yes I have pulled it. -Boat and trailer are ~8000 dry, ~10,000 fully gassed up and loaded. No you can't tow it with a Tacoma. -There are a pair of Digitrolls I had professionally rebuilt that stay with the boat. Also a planner mast currently not on it. I'll probably leave a couple of copper rigs on board as well. -No you're family can't meet me at the boat and go for a ride. It isn't leaving the slip again unless you have money in hand. -No I won't take a lowball offer "cash". Of course it will be cash, not accepting pesos, twinkies, peppermints...would accept bouillon though, lol (this is my fault, as is above for putting it on Craigslist...) New price, $22,900. Boat will either sell by September 30 or I'll haul it home and mothball it (Full shrink, pump it dry, grease and fog everything, strip off electronics, etc..) behind the house for a few years.
  5. I'd spend my days fishing bass and musky from my aluminum bass rig I'd buy...and have a ton of cash left over to buy salmon fillets
  6. As of today...it is theoretically in working order. I say theoretical because I have not seen or heard most of it work...because it is still not in the water...but it made its way to the lift. The lift of course is broken so it sits stranded worse than if it were on the trailer. I also noticed upon inspection that the marina shrink wrap guy snapped off my antenna. I have yet to get a great look at it to see what else might be broken, as it is trapped in a lift which I may have mentioned. Bad joke. I am 90% on looking to trade it at year end on something like a 26 Sundancer or Larson 265 that I'll move to the Inner Harbor or Upper Niagara and have the option the pull out as needed and drag it home or to a dealer of my choice. I think I'm giving up on Lake O and fishing unfortunately. MyTurn hit it dead on, it isn't the money, it is the frustration.
  7. So I find myself for the third year in a row not in the water in May. Why not in the water? Same old story...and to me the biggest problem with boating around Lake O, especially on the west end. You see, down here we have very limited ports and as such docking prices are fairly high. Additionally, our marinas seem to have a few things in common which is they are owned by crooks and staffed by the incompetent. Should you not have a towable boat, you are at the mercy of a handful of 'boatyards' which are complete shams taking months to do little and most of that wrong. That is where I am again this year...months behind with a boat still in pieces and parts they were going to order in March still not even ordered and calls unanswered. So a lesson to many..DO NOT CROSS INTO AN UNTOWABLE RIG unless you: 1. have the time to do all your own work on it..which is to some degree a paradox as you probably work a decent amount to pay for said rig 2. have no desire to actual be on the water 3. are willing to dock it hours away from home So my options now are three fold...either keep paying thousands for a boat in a parking lot (which I spent 5K on this spring to 'upgrade it' ... upgrade as in sit in a parking lot it seems eating 2K in dockage fees that it isn't using..). Second, take the financial hit to dump it and go back small which my family does not enjoy bouncing around in or lastly just selling the gear and going to a cruiser somewhere in Lake E or the Upper River. I'm leaning toward the last right now, giving up fishing and passing the hobby onto my kid and instead going tubing. Sad, but what other options are there...
  8. I feel like I just walked into the 'wrong bar' and can't unsee what I saw...
  9. Mine is right in front of kicker and it reads fine.
  10. Numbers like that tell part of nothing.. "Over one million people annually participate in recreational fishing in Ontario. More than 30 per cent of those people fish the Great Lakes and its tributaries. Great Lakes recreational anglers spend over $600 million dollars yearly on items such as equipment, transportation, food and lodging." OK, so evaluating just that statement. How many would participate regardless of species available. An unknown. Great Lakes anglers spend $600 million yearly on equipment (how much would still be spent..how much is spent JUST for great lakes fishing, how much is spent locally vs. ordered online in this day and age having no effect locally). Transportation means what exactly and who is the beneficiary? Gas stations? Gas stations definitely contribute nothing to the local economy... Food and lodging is at least real, but how is it determined what is driven directly by great lakes fishing only? I don't have a horse in this race and realize many of the posters on here do. The charter guys who make a buck off the lake predominantly. That said, I'd love to see a real study of this issue with most of the special interests and politics removed. At the end of the day, that which makes the lake healthiest long term, sustainable long term and does so with the smallest impact on the tax payers as a whole should be the direction taken. If that is returning native species that will allow much of the stocking to someday be shut down, then so be it. If that is exterminating or reducing alewives so be it as well. I'm fine letting the biologists make that call, not the politicians as long as that is who is making it. Just my .02
  11. The trend in all the great lakes has been to restore them to a natural state as best as possible. Lakers, Atlantics, Walleye. It makes sense economically and it makes sense ecologically. http://cida.usgs.gov/glri/projects/habitat_and_wildlife/fish_culture_facility.html some of these links are interesting as I believe Lake Michigan leads the way on policy applied to other lakes http://www.miseagrant.umich.edu/explore/fisheries/the-future-of-salmon-and-trout-stocking-in-lake-michigan/ The bonus is the Walleye and Lakers seem to eat goby like it is their job.
  12. Elk have been determined to have a conservative leaning...as a result, Cuomo has told them that there is no place for them in New York.
  13. The other advantage is not having a huge hole in your hull and numerous points of failure which result in sinking.
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