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Pete Collin

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Posts posted by Pete Collin

  1. Hello All,

    Since I took up boat fishing, I always sought to do more with less.  I had a small boat, cheap equipment, and gear I had made or modified.  I did OK with it.  Part of the fun was finding creative ways to get to the fish.

    It's natural to eventually want to add to what you've got.  As my small boat began to show its age, I wanted something bigger, safer, and better fitted for modern fishing.  I searched for a while before getting my 17 foot Lund last fall.  It came with electric downrigggers, two GPS sonar graphs, CB radio, Yamaha kicker, and best of all, a spot-lock bow mount motor.  

    In the past, I experimented with anchoring in deep water.  When you vertically jig for lake trout, you'll often drift over a big group of fish that you'd love to park on top of.  With drift bags out, moving with the wind, all you can do is hope they bite in the time it takes to pass overhead.  Staying in place is an attractive notion.  I've tried using the foot pedal of my bow mount to stay in position, but it was too much like rubbing my stomach and patting my head.  And on Lake Onatrio, there are no landmarks to navigate yourself into a swimming pool sized waypoint.  Aside from tossing out a bouy to go by, the only other option seemed to be splicing together a 300 foot section of anchor rope so you could really work over a good area.  I tried that only once.  Ever hand-haul 300 foot of anchor rope, heaving for the length of a football field against mud, zebra mussels, water resistance, and gravity?  A capstan would be a practical assist for that grueling task, but the cost of one is roughly the same as buying a spot lock motor.  And an electric motor that can use GPS to robotically hold you in a tight position, with the click of a button, is awesome!

    I wanted to get an early start yesterday because it was sure to be busy at the launch.  The guys in front of me helped me launch, and explained that they couldn't get their engine started, so had to pull out as soon as I got underway.  I thought, "poor guys", as I thanked them and waved goodbye while putting toward the creek mouth.  Early morning, flat waves, tons of recent, encouraging fishing reports.  What a time to be dead in the water.  This is when I noticed my fuel gauge pegged at empty.

    "How could this be?" I thought.  I could swear I had about a half tank after my last trip.  The new boat uses way less gas than my old 2-cycle.  Flipping switches on my panel, I figured that either I was in fact out of gas and was damned lucky to have made it all the way in on my last trip out, or the gauge was broken, or the tank had somehow sprung a leak.  If the gauge was broken, I either had enough gas for the day, or didn't but there was no way to tell.  I tried rigging a dipstick to put down the gas port with what I had on hand, but it didn't work.  Even with all the other boats out there, I still didn't want to get myself stranded, and have stories about this idiot who wasn't smart enough to buy gas to show up on this forum.  The only way to save the day was to trailer up, fill the tank with enough gas for the day, and head back out again.  I lost about an hour of fishing time.  And it turns out my gauge is broken, the tank top-off didn't budge the needle.  On my second launch, I met another group of guys that had to come back in because of mechanical problems.

    Isn't boating fun?

    Well I learned exactly what a help my space-age equipment can do for jigging lakers.  If you park your boat right above any blip you see, teasing them with a fluke in their face until they make up their mind is just the presentation the situation calls for.  I also came to appreciate how strong the lake currents can get on a seemingly flat day.  When stationary, my jig wanted to belly out behind me fairly quickly unless I used a rather heavy one.  One could imagine lakers on the bottom finning themselves in place, holding themselves steady in a choice lie the way a stream trout would.  Spot Lock let me stay right with them, tease them, change lures, try every trick on each fish until they bit.  It was a revelation.  You spend so much more time with a line in the water, rather than pulling in the drift bags and motoring back upwind.  I was having a lot of fun, was ready to set up a camera to make a video, until the batteries of the Minn Kota ran out.  I guess they don't hold their charge when sitting idle for 3 months!  Oops!  Still, I was really happy and look forward to a fish-catching summer!

    Stats:  Landed 6, missed 2.  Doesn't sound earth-shattering, but I lost prime fishing time and they were still biting when I left.  3 were bigger than 30 inches.

     

    LKR2023.jpg

    • Like 6
  2. 7 minutes ago, rolmops said:

    Nice project. Where did you find the chestnut wood?

    You can still find a few chestnut trees sprouted up from old root systems. They usually grow until they are a few inches in diameter then die from blight. Sometimes they get bigger before they succumb. I am a professional Forester, and have the opportunity to find these. If the landowner lets me take these dying trees, I saw them up into lumber. There really is no market for them, not enough supply to create a demand. 

    • Like 1
  3. Hello All,

    I'm working on a woodshop project for my boat. It will be a wooden tackle box made from rare chestnut lumber. It will look like those old machinists' toolboxes when it's done, with a front door that swings down and a lidded top compartment. I have used an ugly old metal tackle box for the last 15 years, this will be a step up. 

    PXL_20230629_235646259.jpg

    • Like 1
  4. 3 minutes ago, greenhornet73 said:

    Thanks guys, this is all really helpful and I am taking note of every bit of info.  My last question is what range of speed should I be looking for or is this more water temp related or changing with fish attitude by the day?

    In the spring, guys generally troll their streamers fast. 2.5 mph or better. 

  5. I tie and fish with the traditional New England tandem-hooked streamers.  When tied properly they don't twist.  When trolled up high, sometimes you may out a split shot a yard above the fly to make sure it doesn't skip across the surface.  You can also troll them deep behind a flasher or spin doctor.

    I have some favorites, but you can catch fish on nearly anything on the right day.  You just have to figure out if they want bright or dark, colorful or pale.

  6. I used to have wicked, debilitating hayfever seasonally.  But it went away as I got older.  Nice to know some things improve.  But Gator, I hear you about the alcohol.  One time I went to dinner and bought a beer "flight", sampling a small amount of several kinds of beer.  I was hardly drunk, but was sick all the next day.  From then on I cut myself off after 2 drinks.  Not a big deal, but nobody warned me that about getting older!

  7. 23 minutes ago, fish whistle said:

    Right on Pete,

    The offer stands if needed:yes:

    I got friends in Fort Kent and Madawaska and love fishing Long lake.

    Nothing like chasing Landlocks and moose up in "The County"

     

    Small world.  My family owned a camp on Long Lake from the mid-70's up to just a few years ago.  Want to know something funny?  I never caught a trout or salmon out of LL.  We didn't have a boat, and on the north end where our beach was, you could wade out 100 yards and still only be waist deep.  So we caught minnows, perch, and the occasional whitefish.  When you're a kid that is just as fun.

  8. Just now, fish whistle said:

    Hey Pete,

    Seems like you got your boat figured out and your plate is a part of it.

    I have a lightly used Happy Troller that I would be happy to send you if you like.

    Not sure what shipping would cost from Maine but it's yours if you want it.

    Send me a PM if you like......Dan

    Dan, thank you so much for the offer.  Rolmpos offered to give me one too...and he lives much closer!  But I am originally from Fort Kent.  Nice to hear from a fellow Maine-iac.

  9. Les,

    My boat does have a kicker.  But I find that with a tailwind I can't get it slow enough that the fish sometimes want it to be.  In the past I used a "blow-troll" method where the wind was perfect to give me the right speed.  The trolling plate kept the boat at the right attitude, bow-downwind.  One thing that occurs to me is my electric motor has two batteries.  On windy days I could troll downwind with that.  I've done it before in the old boat.  It's nice, really quiet and no exhaust fumes.  i got 2 hours per battery per charge back then.  The new boat seems to do better.  I jigged all day off the spot lock feature and it only took the charge halfway down.

  10. Hello All,

    I have a Happy Troller plate for the main prop.  I want to put it on my new boat, but it formed a crack because of the many times I accidentally gave it full throttle while the plate was down.  Is it possible to just buy some brazing rods and fix it that way?  Or do you really have to know what you're doing?

  11. 52 minutes ago, Gator said:

    That's crazy for NY. Thanks for sharing!

     

    You reminded me that we were supposed to fish together this summer...I was away on a trip when we last communicated, and we never touched base afterward. My apologies! Let's make sure to do it next year. 

    Gator,

    I didn't forget you. But I had the busiest year ever!  By this fall I decided to replace my old boat. So I'm equipped for next year whether it's your boat or mine. Looking forward to it. 

  12. 2 minutes ago, Smat64 said:

     Nice video as always. 
     

    any dead ash in there? Wonder what would have happened if it had a-lot of dead ash. 

    Most of the dead trees were aspen (popple).  There were not many ash in this woods.  It was oak, soft maple, black birch, some pine and hemlock, a little of this and a little of that.

  13. Brian,

    In this case it was me that didn't know what he was doing.  The bilge works fine.  It's just very quiet!  When I'm on the lake I can't hear it.  In the stillness of my garage I could hear it turn on.  My last boat's pump made a trumpeting sound when it ran dry.  That's what I was expecting.

    • Like 1
  14. Hello All,

    I bought a 17 foot Lund that's in pretty nice shape, came with a lot of goodies.  I have taken it out a few times and like it a lot.  One question - the bilge pump doesn't turn on when I flip the switch.  That could be a safety issue should I be in a situation where I'm taking on water.  But I thought that the pump may have a float switch.  Is this a standard thing in some boats?

    Lund2.JPG

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