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nomis

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Posts posted by nomis

  1. 46 minutes ago, mudflat said:

    Use some kind of tether to keep the mast in place

     

    The seat base is strong enough but without a tether my mast will work it's way upward over time and can pop out of the base.

    I was fortunate to have noticed my mast was wiggling upward before it came all the way out, would have been a real mess.

     

    Thats a good tip. I hadn't thought about that.

     

    A mess would be an understatement. I'm sure there would be plenty of lost or damaged gear. Not to mention the poor guy in the back of the boat who might take the post to the back of his head.

  2. On 3/13/2021 at 6:46 AM, Blue Heron said:

    I spent a lot of hours trolling spring trout/salmon from a rebel 1625  with the mast mounted in the front seat base and triple rod holders mounted towards the back. As long as your boards are tuned well and run out to the sides of your boat you will have no issues.

     

    (If you want to build your own mast a chain link fence corner post (from Home Depot) works nicely)

    Thats the plan. The measurements match, but its almost too good to be true. Does the post just slide into place with no other adjustments?

     

    Also, is the seat base strong enough to handle the stress? I'm wondering if it makes sense to do some kind of guy wire back to the bow.

  3. I bought a set of inline boards a couple seasons ago. I love them and they changed my fishing for the better. But can anyone who swears by them honestly say that its fun to fight a fish with a board attached?

     

    Thats why I'm trying this. I'm a DIYer, so my biggest investment will be time.

     

    I've been reading this site for a long time, and it seems its about 50/50 between inline and big board guys. So its really just one respected opinion vs another. There's absolutely a time and a place for inlines and I'll still use them. Just doing a little experimenting.

  4. I guess the general consensus is that my original plan isn't going to work.

     

    I had always planned on using the seat mount, but figured that farther forward might perform better. It never really occurred to me that handling the tow lines and setting up would be harder.

     

    As for the rod storage being in the way, most of those slots are full, even if we have 6 lines in the water. I like to have immediate replacements ready for breakoffs, tangles, or just a quick program switch. So shifting stuff around on turns isn't really practical. I think ifishy's suggestion of just breaking them down is my best choice. Its really just a few seconds added to the process to put it together.

     

    Thanks for your ideas, guys! Keep 'em coming if you have any more.

  5. We're considering installing a planer mast onto our boat. Its a Lund Rebel 1625. I'm just not sure about whether its going to be possible with our setup. I marked up this floor plan I found online to show my issue. On the port side of the bow, I made a vertical storage rig for extra rods.

     

    The plan would be to mount the mast on the front of the bow, where the stock trolling motor would have been mounted. So here is my main question:

    Would the rod storage interfere with the tow line? Its been several years since the last time I was on a boat with big boards and I can't really picture how much blow back to expect. I'm guessing I could get away with it on a straight run, but how about if I need to turn towards the starboard side?

     

    Aside from installing a tower and storing the rods overhead, I haven't really come up with a better way to store any number of fully rigged rods.

     

    Any other idea for a different mast installation? Or maybe a rod storage solution that i haven't come up with yet?

    1912131263_LundLayout.thumb.JPG.8ac3e0747cff07d7308b5832050a2987.JPG

     

  6. I give streamers a chance every now and then for a number of species. Never seems to work for me.

     

    Flutter spoons are always somewhere in my game plan. I don't have a lot of Suttons, but a whole box full of Hinckleys. They're made locally, so they're a lot easier to find than Suttons.

  7. Thanks for the tips, guys. Lots of good ideas here. The main forage here is smelt. Not sure if that might change anything. We also have ciscos, but they seem to be a little much for the salmon. The lakers love them though. In fact, we target them while jigging, just so we can put them on our tipups.

     

    A lot of the lakes north of here and some of the smaller ones to the south are freezing and fishable. The perch grounds in the bays on George were almost ready to go before this thaw, but it takes a lot to get the main lake to freeze. We need a few nights of sub zero and windless nights to make it happen. We have plenty of years where it doesn't come together right and the ice just doesn't happen. Even in a perfect world, theres still a month until the main lake freezes.

     

    And I had no idea about rainbow stocking. I guess its been a few years since I've looked at the stocking lists. I've heard about extremely rare cases where people have caught rainbows while trolling for salmon, but I guess I just assumed they were getting washed in from the stocked streams. Looking at the lists, most of them seem to be pretty small and probably become food pretty quick.

     

    We're still waiting on the forecast to figure out when we're hitting the lake, but I'm looking forward to it.

  8. Next weekend, I'll be be going for my first winter salmon trip. I've come up with a pretty decent summer program, but that might not won't work right now. We won't be in the Finger Lakes, but we'll be in Lake George, instead. I figure there are enough similarities that any tips I can get here might at least get me pointed in the right direction.

     

    First, the basics. My instincts are telling me to use stickbaits and smaller spoons in the top 10 feet of the water column. Probably slow, maybe less that 2.0 mph. Does that sound right? What about colors? The water will be clear and the skies will be over cast.

     

    The bigger question is what type of water am I looking for? I could stay relatively shallow with structure and stream deltas. Or I could fish over deep water, out in the open or I could be in 150' fow within 100' of shore in some areas.What kind of habitat would they hang out in this time of the year?

     

    Any suggestions would be helpful. The salmon fishery in Lake George has just started to come back a few years ago, and its hard to get anyone around here to spill any information. Thanks.

     

     

  9. 4 hours ago, seeyawader said:

    Is the water level predicted to go up another 11 inches? If so where is that info? Hope to get my dock in this weekend.

    I'm just going by what she said, not something that I know for fact. But it definitely didn't seem like a number that she was just guessing at.

     

    I believe they do it to control the flow of the river for the hydroelectric dams and/or for the shipping lanes.

  10. On Saturday afternoon, a park manager was at the launch and asked a few people what could be done to make things easier for when the water level comes up another 11 inches. We told her that they'll need a some kind of ramp to step from the launch ramp onto the floating dock. The whole conversation gave me the impression that they're planning on keeping the launch open and want to be ready for it.

  11. We got into town Friday afternoon for browns. Got onto the water immediately because we weren't sure what the weather was going to let us do for the rest of the weekend. We put one 8.5 lb brown in the boat right off the bat. And then it was a rookie troller's turn and he couldn't get the rod out of the rod holder, so we went 0 for 3 the rest of the afternoon.

     

    We got a hot tip from the neighbors who were hitting them pretty good all week and headed out early Saturday morning. We headed East out of the chute with a lot of optimism. after going a slow 2 for 2 after about two hours of trolling, we noticed another boat spending a lot of time fighting a fish a little farther out. We moved out to 30 feet and started pulling spoons at 15-25 feet down. Within 5 minutes, a 13 lb king hit a Stinger alwife four colors down. Obviously, we were happy with the move. But before I could get everything set again, the rigger set at 25 feet popped on a DW wonderbread. Turned out to be a 16.5 lb king. After one more decent brown, on the same wonderbread, things started slowing down. We kept going until around 11 and decided to pull our gear in and go in for lunch. We had been towing a 16" steelie for who knows how long. Could have been hours. I was happy to see him take off right away.

     

    The weather held off for the afternoon, so we went back out. We figured that since the big game fish were hitting, that we would try out deep. Couldn't even mark a fish the rest of the day as we moved in closer to shore.  We fished through a couple little showers, but the swells were starting to grow. The big rain and wind started as soon as we got the morning catch processed.

     

    And then Sunday was obviously a three coffee pot kind of morning.

     

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  12. $100 for a refurbished Galaxy tablet, $10 for the app, and $15 for three mounts from Amazon so I can swap it between multiple boats. I'm a budget fisherman. Theres really no way to beat it.

     

    Its also handy to have the tablet on the dash for everything from music to the countless amount of fishing and boating apps.

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