I also recommend keeping a 4ft loop of webbing in your PFD pocket. That way, if you flip you can take out the webbing, run it through a side handle of the kayak, then pull the loop through the middle of the loop to form a bite. Then throw the webbing over the top of the kayak, swim to the other side, grab the webbing, and pull it really hard to flip the kayak back over right side up. These kayaks are super stable, wide, and nearly impossible to flip back over by yourself. But if you use the webbing, it gives you a ton of leverage during a self rescue. One more thing: always have a serrated knife on you, because if you flip you might get tangled in fishing line, bungees, or leashes and need to cut yourself free. Oh and another thing, pack an extremely loud whistle in case you need to get the attention of a running boat.
I recommend taking 3 rods at least if bass fishing. One with a quick release swivel for crank baits, chatter bates etc. One with a jig on it and one with a texas/carolina worm rig. It SUCKS having to keep changing your terminal gear on a kayak. Just my experience which isn't vast. Somebody recommended that to me and has been a life saver.
Even in Texas inshore it's nice to have 3 rods. I use weighted hooks and paddletails on a ML, 1/4 - 1/2 oz jigs on a M, and I have a flexy glass blend MH for popping corks and weighted rigs. I hate changing tackle, and I really like to fish different methods.
I always take 3 rods with me when I fish, two closed one open reel, the closed ones each have a specific setup on it and the open reel for backup if one of the lines break. Now, I've always done shore/dock fishing up to this point, but do plan on getting a kayak this coming summer (the fishing where I've moved to basically is crap without being ON the water, haven't even bothered with it for the last two years and I've hated it).
Yes I 100% agree with not kayaking in deep water. Im a novice and got tempted one day after I bought my 1st kayak to kayak across the bay.(( Providence,RI))...the other side didn't look far and the water looked calm... Ok...fast forward...im in the middle of the bay and see a mattress comming straight for me ....the water was not as calm anymore ...and I just realized the rivers are emptying out into the bay because it had rained heavy..& so.I headed back. . Better safe than sorry. Thx for the video...will be watching it again & again!👊😆
Thanks for the video! Waders are really needed in colder weather, because otherwise you get cold because you will anyway wet yourself. And you don't drown with them because you will wear life jacket anyway! I agree totally with the amount of rods - I use normally 1-3 and most of the time I need 3 rods, because I use 2-3 for trolling, can't understand if some one need more that 3-4, makes no sense to me....
I do multi species fishing up here in the PNW i use 3 rods ultralight spinning for crappie, perch, trout, etc a medium spinning for finesse and a medium casting rod for all around fishing.
I have been kayaking for 4 years, I have learned every thing thanks to RUclips and my own experiences in the water. I wish I had this video many years ago when I was a newbie. Thanks for posting this video, so it can help new kayakers be safer in the water. Tight lines.
Waders can serve as rain pants and when you fish high mountain lakes in Colorado with rain also comes very cold temps, you just put on a rain jacket over the waders and your dry warm and golden
Great helpful videos Like all things It all depends Three of my smaller favorite lakes have quite large expenses of lily pads interspersed with openings so This is how I would "rod up" so to speek Personally as I ALWAYS fish live bait usually nightcrawlers I feel 3 to 4 rods are perfect *One spinning rod rigged with a slip bobber for crawlers *2nd spinning rod for lighter
I'm just going to add that even in shallow water things can go wrong when you are alone. Like you mentioned, some times the weather can change suddenly and get caught off guard. If you go in the water and the silt and sand is up to your waist. It can be very difficult to get back into a kayak. My pfd saved me because it prevented me from sinking in deeper. I could not for the life of me get enough vertical movement to get up on top of my kayak. The silt and sand kept sucking me back down. I had to keep moving just to avoid sinking into it. Finally got on the bow after an hour and moving towards thicker vegetation. There was no one for miles on the water. I was maybe out a mile from where I launched. I was dreading that hike with the kayak through that muck and I know there are snapping turtles and snakes in there. I took a breather on the bow and got my breath back. Then slowly and very patiently took my time to get back into my seat. Stayed out another 3 hours and enjoyed myself. I just wish, I re-applied my sunscreen. That silt and sand will easily wash that stuff off. My legs were lobster red. I won't go kayaking there anymore though. It was my first time kayaking there. Adventures should be made with friends. I would of been back in the boat a lot quicker if I could of had a hand. This is how we learn some of our lessons in life.
Great history.. Thank you.. One trick I learn .. If you fallow in a shallow water .. If you can bend you knees and dont try to touch the botton and stay a flote then you can swim and reach your bote ..maybe No always you can do that.. Keep that in mind.
Just bought my first fishing kayak or even kayak for that matter, a lifetime tamarack. Seems like a great kayak for the money. I almost bought a normal kayak for fishing not realizing they made the open style fishing ones. Im really happy with it. Great video! Its great for new guys like me.
@@randallkeiser The kayak in question is fantastic. Very stable. I just sold the same version for a bigger kayak with more options. I built outriggers for my tamarack until I got comfortable with it, then removed them.
I only bring two rods no matter where I'm fishing. A medium action when I'm fishing in wind or with heavy lures. And a ultra light for small lures, which works great for getting really finicky fish.
Perfect set up IMO... I use one medium with braid for the heavier bait... And a medium super fast with fluro for throwing plastics and other small baits.
Wear your PFD. There should be no reason to not be prepared for an accident. PfD's are made I'd different sizes and styles. Find one that's comfortable for you and use it. You never know when someone in a motor boat won't see you and run you down. You will not have time to put it on before you are struck. If you are struck by a motor boat you could lose consciousness and not be able to find your PFD and put it on. Be prepared please and enjoy your fishing! 😁🐟🎣🚣♀️🚣♂️🐡🦈🐠🐟🎣🐡🐟🦈🐠🐡🎣
Correct about waders but the only thing is if your in the water with waders and it fills up completely, you will not sink you will sink to the point of wear the waders sit on you think about it, the water in your waders does not weigh any more then the water your in. But this other info makes a great guide for me since I’m about to buy a kayak for the first time. Make a vid about weather and how it effects your decision making on where you fish l.
I like your idea of why not to do certain things in a kayak and found most of them very reasonable as you presented a point, not just an opinion. I've fished in the winter and wished that I had waders. I have regularly fished water 50-60' deep at Lake Braunig due to not having people to fish with. I also point my nose into the current of the San Marcos, drop anchor and cast up river to drift and hug the bottom coming back down. Recently, I flipped three times in three hours on the Guadalupe in New Braunfels going through rapids that I have been down before on other kayaks. Thankfully, I was wearing my life jacket; lost two rods, two tackle boxes and a thermos of coffee, but I did not lose my life. Good luck fishing and I look forward to watching more of your videos
Chris Hinkelmann thank you very much. Loving hearing some experiences from other kayakers, definitely helps see the other side of things that I don’t see. Thank you!
Waders should always be a 'No'... but being from the east coast of Canada, I like to get out as early as possible in the year, and the water can be wicked cold. A couple years ago I invested in dry pants. They seal at the top so if you end up in the drink, they don't fill up. They aren't cheap, but they keep you warm and dry, and alive!
Great vid.... Waders in Kayak is for people fishing where the weather is not like TX my friend. When its snowing and sleeting and under 30 degrees (like yesterday on Lake Ozark with 14 other Yak'rs) breathable waders are nice when you cannot afford a dry suit. Also the sinking with waders on in deep water is a myth, been proven- even RUclips vids on here showing it. They do not turn into 100 pound sinkers, I jumped in with mine each year before I do proof testing just to make sure. If I fish in the rule of 120 sure I would not need waders or drysuits... but, us in Colder states live by them some months. Keep up the vids brother !!
Sarge's Adventures see that I can understand! I see people down here in waders on a kayak in the middle of summer, with no PFD. That I don’t understand. Thanks for the insight.
@@TexasFishingForce , I agree. I think that before trying to be a "know it all" and giving general fishing tips, you should ask people why they have certain habits. You actually try to put them down as stupid. If one goes overboard with waders, one just needs to slip off the suspenders and you can actually just float out of them. I do agree with all your other tips. Thanks
SilverShadow2LWB I’m definitely not trying to put anyone down, in fact as I stated many times “I don’t know why” people do specific things. I try and learn from everyone and every experience on the water. I’m wrong often and have no problem admitting that. Thank you for watching and tight lines!
Water balloons float in water. There is usually a small amount of air in them and the latex rubber is less dense than water making them slightly buoyant in water. You wont sink to the bottom with waders, but i imagine that pulling yourself into your yak with waders partially full of water (which they wont fill much) would be hard. The wader myth comes from moving water. Rivers or streams are a bad place to fill your waders with water, that can drive you towards the bottom.
Most of the time I carry 4-5 rods an they are all rigged up for dif things. 1 for popping cork, 1 for bottom fishing with jig head, 1 for big fish bottom rig, 1 for topwater, and 1 for jerkbaits an stuff. Way more efficient than having 2 rods and constantly rigging for dif stuff. Just my opinion and what works best for me.
Had the exact experience with a 9” hardhead cat...got me in the end of my middle finger. The pain all the way up my arm to the center of my chest was unbelievable. It could not have hurt worse if my finger had been chopped off. I didn’t got to the e.r....just stupidly stuck it out. About a month later, a 1/4” spine tip worked it’s way out of my finger which had never really healed.
I wear breathable waders while the weather is cool and water is cold here in south west Louisiana. Also when you bring fish into the kayak you don’t hav to get fish all over you just on the waders. When you get back to truck just take them off and you are clean for the ride home. I can’t afford a dry suit so they are the next best thing. I been kayak fishing for 6 years now and consider the waders a great asset during the cool and colder months.
I wear waders to go and feed my pet rock and to find out about the weather . If it is wet, it might have rained last night or just lots of dew. If it's hot, then it is sunny. And if it has cold white stuff on it, then it snowed.
Water weighs the same wether inside your waders or out. Waders keep you warm and dry, the only issue is that if you get them full of water - you can't climb back up onto the kayak as easy because the weight of the water - its like wearing lead boots.
I bring a lot of lures and soft plastics and 6-7 rods just because of the many different ways to fish. Plus you can have 6 or 7 different presentations tied on and you can be more efficient in fishing.
MustangFishing why not just tie on a snap swivel on 2 rods? That way you can change lures and setups even quicker and you aren’t limited to 6-7? That way you can throw 30 different lures in one day if you wanted and it only takes a few seconds to switch them.
I bring 2 rods, sometimes 3. One spinning reel, one baitcaster. Sometimes I bring my strongest rod if I'm going after big fish like flatheads or gar. What I use the most though is my baitcaster.
Number 4: Since you mentioned it, I will share with you something I know to be true. I have a friend who loves to fly fish for trout. The common mode of transportation is to go up the river, find some trout, they then land the kayaks, get out and wade - fly fish the river. I will go a step further and tell you how he learned this was with a licensed fishing guide in that state. I was introduced to tube fishing as a kid, one of the things I learned from my teacher, (My Dad) was to make sure you always have the top of the waders tight and even use a belt to keep it tight, so if you did flip or fall out or whatever, the waders dont fill up with water and take you down. Now back to the guide and my buddy, and two of my other friends went with Said buddy and guide, the guide had loaner waders, fly rods, kayaks etc, two of the guys waders had holes in them so the legs where filling up with water. Yes they had life jackets on as far as I know, I just seen trouble written all over this scenario. Have a blessed weekend, dale
Great advice. Only problem I have is the waders thing. I wear waders when I kayak because often times I'm using the kayak to get to more remote areas that I will then wade fish for steelhead/trout with a spey rod which cannot be used from a yak. That said, the whole myth about waders sinking is just that. A myth. Once the water enters the waders that water is neutrally buoyant; ie. The water that fills the waders is neither heavier, or lighter than the water around it and therefore your waders will never, repeat, never cause you to sink. They remain the same weight filled, or empty when submerged in water. Do a test. Half fill a water bottle and throw it in the bath tub. You'll notice the bottle floats at exactly the same point the bottle is filled with water. This happens because the water inside the bottle is equally as buoyant as the water around it, leaving the portion containing air above the water. It's simple physics.
@The END Is Near Beware i'm sorry for your loss, but the science is what the science is. Water is neutrally bouyant in water. They did not drown from their waders filling. They likey died from shock in cold water. Waders will never cause you to drown. Secondly, it's clear you have never worn waders. There is not enough air trapped in the waders to "flip" you. That's just more nonsense
Not trying to contradict you and no disrespect intended. I have about 17 years of kayaking experience and I started to make a long response to the "no waders in a kayak". I changed my mind about that. There are a lot of reasons to wear waders in the kayak especially in the winter time. There are a lot of videos out there that go over the "waders of death". I suggest people check them out.
Bought my first kayak in 1994; and old Ocean Kayak that didn't even come with the storage compartment tops cut out. The waders of death was a busted myth back then, but somehow still has traction as you've noted. I've had waders filled when slipping putting out duck decoys in the winter (SUCKED) but water in a waders is the same weight as water out of the waders and equalizes.
I thought it was mostly for rivers? People slip on a rock trying to cross deep water, the waders start filling, catch the current and they get carried downstream and drown.
Mate you talk so much sense, it is a pleasure to listen to you, I have watched so many ksyakers from the US, their Kayaks are fitted out like warships, ridiculous.
I'm from the U.S.and I definitely believe you. I haven't been in a kayak yet but I've been out on lakes in boat's, canoe and a jet ski. You can tell from watching some people at the boat ramps and other launching areas if they're gonna be a danger to themselves or others.. They can be an accident just waiting to happen..
Thing about waders: if they fill up with water you won’t sink. However, it will make it impossible to get back in the kayak. Side note: I fell in 40F water with waders and they filled up. I thought I was a goner, but the waders acted like a wet suit and I did not die. However, when I got to the bank I had to lie on my back to drain the water out of the waders.
Great video. One more to add. Overboard on leashing equipment. Too many things leashed to a kayak if it turns over creates a hazardous underwater spiderweb to get tangled on. Your vid covers some good points. Thanks.
I generally carry three rods in my kayak. One is a dedicated frog setup, that rod it useless with anything other than topwater frogs. Then I have one rod rigged with a shallow running lure such as a jointed minnow and then one with a deeper running lure. This allows me to instantly switch from fishing the shoreline, fishing weeds, and fishing deep holes. I mainly float fish rivers and creeks so there is no time to tie on lures while you are moving with the current.
I carry 4 rods. 1 spinning for light baits. 3 different casting rods. 1 heavy for slop and 2 medium heavy. One is usually a punching rig or something like that for picking apart trees. Another one with a search bait like a crankbai, spinner bait, or topwater. That way I don't have to constantly trying things on constantly while I am trying to find fish. Once I find them, yeah maybe I will only use one. But it's hard to have one rod that is gonna be optimal for any situation. I thought people were crazy too until I started experimenting with different rods. You can't fish a frog in thick slop with a medium action spinning rod. You might get lucky sure but forget about trying to pull a 5 or 6 pound large out a thick mat with it. Most of the big females aren't anywhere but under that stuff in the summer. I also like to have reels with both floro and braid. The cause baits to behave differently.
Don't forget to wear your PFD at all times is a good one. If something happens to you and you can't put it on, you're in trouble. I only use 2 rods as well. 1 baitcaster and 1 spinner for finesse stuff.
This is so important. It's extremely difficult to put on a PFD and do it up in the water, especially if it's over your head. And that's assuming it doesn't get carried away by waves, wind or current.
I was fishing all my life long. Since this year on Kajak. And well you are right. There are things you simply don’t think of and it’s very helpful to hear other more advanced peoples stories and warnings. Thanks saved me an arm 😂✌🏼
Some y’all never fished in wintertime and it shows. If you wear waders properly you can wear them in a kayak. Wading belt cinched tight will keep a lot of water out of your waders. Everett Johnston of Texas saltwater magazine has an article showing with a belt, wading jacket and PFD had every little water inside them.
I take three rods. One rigged with topwater. One rigged with a popping cork. And the other rigged with light line and a Mirrodine so I can cast it a mile. I do this because I hate tying on lures when on my kayak. I fish inshore on Florida east coast. Hope this helps.
I do something similar but I never use a popping cork (not something I grew up with back in the 70's), so where you have the p-cork rig I have a snap swivel where I can change out for Texas or Carolina rig. No snap swivel on my topwater rig, I just use a heavy mono leader and use a loop knot for optimum lure action. But I don't usually switch out lures too much, it's either a Bomber or a Rapala that work best for me.
I only use two rods one baitcaster and one spinning setup. It’s some of the pros making local fishermen think they need all that rods especially on a kayak. In a boat I will bring 4 rods but that’s it each for a different approach. I pack very light now at the end of the day you’re wore out. I agreed exactly with what you said if it’s not safe to bring it in then just cut the line. Your own personal safety first and being able to do it again another day. Tight lines!!
Hey, lots of Kayakers in Texas... Thanks for the tips... Mine just arrived, waiting for Kayak Cart so I can get her on the water. I was a grown man, crying, walking in circles, called my wife and told her to come home from work...when I got a gaftopsailfin spine into my thumb joint. How ever many hours later it stopped dead as fast as it started... Agony one minute, nothing the next... weird.
Hi, thanks for the info much appreciated, I got new fishing Kayak single seat about 4m, and I am located at the north of Somalia, Berbera port red sea gulf, I was doing many years fishing, but never in Kayak, I seen many tips including your tips, but not a lot on if you loose or drop the paddle, how to secure the paddle, are there different ways, last thing is to not have way back and not have a paddle, the ocean is different to lakes, the Kayak type is close to (Freedom Single Fishing Kayak), If you could touch base, on where to put baits, my one has 2 spaces front large, and rear screwing 6inch hole, and rear open space I assume for cooling box etc. This may amaze you ,I am the only or the first fisher person on a kayak in whole Somalia, Africa, so your advice dont go alone on a kayak fishing, is out of window, On the shore there are very small fishes, I feel jealous when I see people fish at the beaches in Australia and catch big or reasonable size fish, In the south Indian ocean we do have good catch from the beaches, but not so good in the gulf Aden shores, To catch little bigger need to paddle atleast 100m, and 100, is not head height, very tricky, what to do. One last question, do I need anchor, or fishing drifting is OK. Thanks in advance Al
I’ve been watching several of your videos, thanks for your help. In all the kayak videos I’ve been watching I haven’t seen anyone actual store the fish they catch. What do you do with them? Sounds funny maybe but with al, the gear and DIY mods I’ve seen, no one ever covered this
String them, pull it in when moving. Ice bags are awesome for off shore, don't wanna atract the wrong thing. Lakes I always use string. Get back to the truck I have an ice chest waiting for them. Catch and release when my freezer is full.
This is some pretty good advice. About not bringing toothy, spiky fish into the yak: It reminds me of literally my first trip out on a real river. When I bought my kayak last year, I started out on a small public pond not too far from home. Well, that got boring quickly, in part because that little body of water was so over-fished, nothing really bit. I'd seen three or four other people out there, and none of them were catching -- but they sure as sh*t were bragging about that big one they'd caught not long before! But I digress. There's a canoe drop on a river not too much farther, so I decided to try it out. I was tossing a chatter bait, without any luck. Ahead was a tree sticking out of the water, and I decided to see what might be near that and hungry. Nothing bit, but as I was reeling, I noticed a shadow behind the lure. As it got closer, I realized it was a long-nose gar. This fish was almost half as long as my boat! So here I was, slowing down the retrieve, speeding up the retrieve, debating if I should try to catch this monstrosity before I was completely acquainted with my 10-fot kayak. I decided not to, as it would also have been my first ever gar. But I'd bet it would have been a tale to tell when I got home!
What if I have no friends to fish with :) I hear you though, I have visions of flipping my kayak and getting tangled in the anchor rope. Recently bought a HH350 VHF radio because I fish alone in bays and lakes.
Hey Mike,I just wanted to say thanks for the tips on what not to do while fishing in a kayak. I'm new to kayak fishing and out here in California I've heard of guys hooked into a sturgeon that took them on one hell of a sleigh ride and almost flipped him into the bay plus I totally agree 100% with you about not wearing waders in a kayak, I used to scuba dive all over California and the best thing i could suggest is investing in a drysuit not only for keeping you dry but it's gonna keep you floating if you do happen to fall into the water and protect you from possible hypothermia. Anyway I just wanted to say thanks again and thank you for your service to our country, I'm an Army veteran, keep up the great work and God bless y'all.
I wear hip waders in tye winter to get in and out of my kayak. I live in Utah and the water gets real cold right before ice up and right after ice off, so hip waders make it possible to keep my feet dry and warm in the winter. When it is warn, Teva sandals!
I wear neoprene waders in the winter. Yak fishing, wading rivers, duck hunting etc... No need for them in the summer, unless I'm in the mountains wading 50* creeks.. then I wear gore-tex. Here are a few things about waders. 1. Always wear a wader belt with your waders. If you do fall in it keeps water out. 2. Neoprene waders float. It's the same as a wetsuit. I'd rather have on a pair of waders than some bulky winter gear. 3. Neoprene waders are warm. Think... launching, and portage when creek fishing. I do it a lot and I'm dry and warm in the winter. 4. Buy quality stocking foot waders, a belt and quality boots. 5. Wear your PFD. So if you do fall in you'll float no matter what your wearing.
I am now getting ready to end my membership with my boat club (this is the last year) and am considering getting a Hobie PA12 360. My former neighbor has been Kayak fishing for years and is providing a lot of guidance. SO, like you, I am looking at a lot of youtube, reading reviews, and trying to get a good understanding of Kayak fishing from the RUclips universe. My question for you is that this video is a year old, You have had the Kayak for 14 months or so. How do you like it? Is it everything you hoped? I really like the idea of getting out faster and into smaller waterways.
I always carry 5 to 6 rods on a kayak. Each rod serves a different purpose. I dont want to waste time swapping gear I made need in a different spot. A frog in one spot may not work but fifty yards away frogs may do it. I always have a frog, spinner, mid crank, jig, and a soft plastic.
I keep my big tackle box at home. I bought a small clear Plano tackle box and just bring the tackle and lures I need that day and 3 bottles of water and sunscreen. I live in ROUND ROCK
I use 3 rods but that's because I prefer certain rods for certain lures! I have my power rod my finesse rod and in between rod I like to also spend more time fishing then tying lures on! So I'll set up each rod with preferred baits and begin. As I'm sure you know the fish change day to day as to what they will hit so I like options and less tying time so as I agree to many rods is unnecessary! I feel 3 is perfect well tight lines good notes on what not to do!! 🎣
Hey Mike: Last week I fell in (I've been kayak bassin' for 10 years and never fallen in before). The REASON I fell in can be added to your "things not to do in a kayak". I had my vertical rod holders too closely spaced and the tips got tangled. My struggle to untangle them led me to lean too far over.
They are all great tips mate I 100% agree on all of them especially not to wear waders on a yak you’d seriously have to have rocks in your head to do that but people still do I think it’s one of the most dangerous things possible
In my home waters, there is no water not over my head. If I flip, my stuff is just going to have to sink. Our biggest danger then, except maybe in the summertime, becomes hypothermia. Have a plan to get to shore with or without your stuff at all times, to get dry and get warm. It may be that a floating dry bag full of survival items including a whistle and a cell phone is the most important piece of equipment. As far as waders, I am with you. I won’t even wade fish in waders. Certainly not wearing anything I can’t get out of quickly… especially in deep or swift water.
Well I was fishing my pond in my kayak. And we have this 150+ pound alligator snapping turtle in there we named Godzilla. This dang turtle keeps biting and stealing all my bass lures,ect. I accidentally hooked into Godzilla's shell and he towed me in my kayak all over my pond. Finally got him landed and called a game Warden to come take it. The game Warden promised me they will find Godzilla a new home where he will be happy. Fyi I'm in east Texas
On my way to the store to return my Waders, 9 fishing rods and 4 pair of pliers. I'm also going to cancel my Solo Fishing trip out at the Mariana Trench! Thanks for the tips
I fish alone in deep waters. You are right, it is dangerous. I take precautions but it is not enough. Recently I incorporated a VHF radio with DSC capability.
Yes you do wear waders in a kayak. If you fish in the winter they keep you warm if you go through rough stuff on a river and get wet you are cold until the end of the day. Depending on your waders you do not sink when they get full of water.
For stand-up Kayaks I learned not to stand when fishing big fish like Muskie and carp. Sometimes you gotta put a lot of effort in pulling the fish in that if it spits the hook or the line snaps you might get sent overboard from losing balance. Definitely no matter what wear a PFD. God forbid you do tip over you wanna have a flotation device at all times.
Geeze, if you feel the need to fish big fish from a kayak in the ocean (sharks) put outriggers/pontoons on it! Every kayak/canoe in the pacific use one of the many varieties of outriggers for a reason - they work and have for many hundreds (thousands) of years. I won an Autopilot 136 this past weekend (might see it by spring due to delays) and will be coming from the canoe that I custom built pontoons for. I do things in that no sane person would ever do in a canoe and have been totally safe. I built it to be a fishing platform, not a tight rope exercise. The 136 is the same width as my canoe, so will have to see if I can move around like I do in the canoe. I'm not out there for a fashion show, I'm out there to have fun and to keep doing it in the future. So adding something that can be dropped down when you need extra stability, well, that just a cool feature! ;) Great vids by the way! Learning what's going to be different fishing from a kayak
I agree with you on no waders. Some people disagree. I would like to comment on the difference between warm water and protected water fishing and open water - cold water fishing. There is a much smaller margin of error in cold water. You can get away with the mistake of wearing waders in Gulf waters. In my 50 -60 degree waters waders are deadly.
Good stuff. I gave you a 👍🏼 on this video. I've been kayak fishing for 4 years now and am still guilty of bringing too much gear sometimes. Mostly that's too many lures.....and you're right.....they're hard to locate quickly if you have too much gear on board. I usually limit myself to 2 poles, but (depending on the season) I sometimes bring 4. Keep up the good work. 👍🏼 Kayak fishing is a very intimate experience with the fish, as your butt is quite literally right there at water level.
I wear waders when I’m dry fly fishing in a kayak and I want to stop and target a rising fish from the right angle with out making a commotion paddling my self into position
Good stuff, I won a kayak last night at an auction. We just moved to Texas last August, need to meet some fisherman!! I have a new Lund big water boat sitting in my garage, let’s go crappie fishing
There is one situation where i bring my waders with kayak. When i fish small rivers, i pull kayak behind me and wade most part. I use kayak just to paddle over deep places where i can't wade. And also kayak is good place to keep your gear on, in this situation.
I’ve had it for 6 years now, going on 7. Thing is a workhorse. Caught a ton of fish, travelled literally hundreds of miles. It has wear. But the bungees still have elasticity, and there’s no sign of the boat stopping. 5/5.
Fly fishing rivers and fishing the rapids. This is the only reason I wear waders. Of if I’m wading upstream with limited public access. I will be in and out of the kayak fishing and will use it to float back downstream to the truck. Most spin fishing and deal water fishing. You are correct and it makes no sense to wear them. It can be dangerous. Know the waters you are fishing and use your best judgement and experience level.
I’ll bring 4-5 rods… I keep each one rigged a different way.. my bait caster may have a frog lure, heavy spinning rod may have a jig, another a Texas rig, and a small pole for small trout… may even have my fly pole… having each pole rigged a different way allows me to take less tackle and spend less time tying knots
My. God. I’m still relatively new to fishing, just won a lengthy appeal with the VA for comp & pen for combat injuries, which is why I’m researching the perfect fishing kayak & things I need to know before getting on the water. But I had NO idea catfish can stab you like that, so thank you for sharing that story. Hopefully they don’t get too crazy but here in Colorado. I’m def going to be more cautious next time I take my catty set up out!
CJ Kremp well, I know most catfish can stab you but not all. The saltwater hardhead catfish are the real issue though. I generally don’t worry about any of the others. You should be fine with freshwater cats.
I keep 6 rods in my yak because I just don't get to fish very often. I have multiple rigs all tied on so I can change on the fly instead of stopping to re-tie. Doing it this way saves me an inordinate amount of dead time.
What I have learned so far from experience; Consider everything that might be in and around the water sure Alligators, gar and sharks come to mind first but something as simple as a sharp oyster shell can make you bleed like a siev very quickly, all because you tried to hand paddle to maneuver out of some mangroves (It happened to me). Even a small scratch can become infected without proper attention on top of that the ocean is home to many venomous species that could end your trip fast. Always handle fish like they have giant toxic spines because most of them do. Also have good line and pole awareness and don't get tangled by an over hanging branch that could lead to frustration, or a hornets nest. Another thing ALWAYS have bug spray the mosquitos will get you on open water. Its pretty safe to kayak fish if you take a good assessment of risk vs reward.
On theorie the extra rods should be to hit diffrent spots using diffrent lures. But again i bring 2 sometimes 3 One is rigged for weeds shallow waters A sinker and a trolling one 😉 Passed 3 rods you are showing off 😅
watched a couple of your vids last night, didn't realize they were a couple years old. watched about 10 more tonight, i'm catching up. good stuff bro. sub'd
Okay, that whole "Waders will make you sink" is a total fallacy. It's already been disproven by much more experienced people than I. PLUS, if you DO flip, the water pressure is gonna cause the waders to form to your body, first. Anytime you wear waders, you should have a good wading belt on, anyway, providing a decent cutoff point, where the water should be minimized, getting by. Not to mention, especially when fishing on river systems, it's pretty common to get out of the kayak and wade fish for a while, giving your legs and butt a break. Seriously, waders on a kayak, especially during colder months are NOT a big deal. In fact, that what most cold water kayakers used in the first place, before dry suits became so prevalent. In fact, many of us who can't afford dry suits costing several hundreds of dollars STILL wear waders.
Fun fact one of those hard head catfish was my first kayak catch and I made sure to not bring it in the kayak I had it damn good on a treble hook though.
dig the vid but i have an issue with # 3. If the weather and water are cold, and an angler does not own a dry suit or dry pants/top, waders are their safest bet for staying warm and dry on the water. obviously the paddler needs an adequate waterproof jacket NOT tucked into the waders so they dont fill up from rain or water from splashing.... and if the angler is wearing a properly fitter LifeJacket LIKE THEY SHOULD BE, they will not drown if they fall in the water and their waders fill up as water in water is neutrally buoyant(if that makes sense).
I caught a pretty big gafftopsail Catfish on the beach in Florida and got stung by its huge barb. Lost a lot of blood and was in a huge amount of pain.
Sometimes when river fly fishing I wear waders. Whether in a raft, drift boat, or kayak there are situations where current seams have to be fished from an angle you can't get to from a boat. I won't wear them when the water level is higher than normal from rain or snow melt, and I won't wear them the water is extremely cold. 99% of my fly fishing is done in water I can just stand up in if I take an unintentional swim. My question would be "why are you wearing waders in the middle of the lake?"
Great advise and content. Also, do you carry a gaff with you in the bays or do you just stick with nets? I'm in St. Augustine, FL and am a beginner yak fisher. I will be going out into the intracoastal (saltwater) that may yield some big boys. Thanks again for the video.
Dude your so right, people think they need to take everything except the kitchen sink. Looks like a pain in the ass and time consuming putting all that junk on your boat. I like simplicity and a light boat that I'm paddling lol it doesn't have a motor. Yeah what's up with these guys with 10 polesl lol! 2 is enough for me. Spot on brother! Liked your video
People always get on me cause I have a hobie outback that I ride out with suuper minimal gear. 1-2rods max, plyers, a backpack, and a net. No extra fancy stuff
OK, not sure about deep water, 10 feet? I got an out rigger for my HObie Pro 14. I used to take wife and 2 boys on it that jump dive on it. Never even thought of depth. I am not even sure if I can flip it even if I tried with the out rigger. But love your advice cause because we all need reminder.
I also recommend keeping a 4ft loop of webbing in your PFD pocket. That way, if you flip you can take out the webbing, run it through a side handle of the kayak, then pull the loop through the middle of the loop to form a bite. Then throw the webbing over the top of the kayak, swim to the other side, grab the webbing, and pull it really hard to flip the kayak back over right side up. These kayaks are super stable, wide, and nearly impossible to flip back over by yourself. But if you use the webbing, it gives you a ton of leverage during a self rescue. One more thing: always have a serrated knife on you, because if you flip you might get tangled in fishing line, bungees, or leashes and need to cut yourself free. Oh and another thing, pack an extremely loud whistle in case you need to get the attention of a running boat.
That is great info. Thank you for the tip
I recommend taking 3 rods at least if bass fishing. One with a quick release swivel for crank baits, chatter bates etc. One with a jig on it and one with a texas/carolina worm rig. It SUCKS having to keep changing your terminal gear on a kayak. Just my experience which isn't vast. Somebody recommended that to me and has been a life saver.
At that point why not have a home made H crate with 6 rod holders on the back.
Even in Texas inshore it's nice to have 3 rods. I use weighted hooks and paddletails on a ML, 1/4 - 1/2 oz jigs on a M, and I have a flexy glass blend MH for popping corks and weighted rigs. I hate changing tackle, and I really like to fish different methods.
I always take 3 rods with me when I fish, two closed one open reel, the closed ones each have a specific setup on it and the open reel for backup if one of the lines break. Now, I've always done shore/dock fishing up to this point, but do plan on getting a kayak this coming summer (the fishing where I've moved to basically is crap without being ON the water, haven't even bothered with it for the last two years and I've hated it).
Yes I 100% agree with not kayaking in deep water. Im a novice and got tempted one day after I bought my 1st kayak to kayak across the bay.(( Providence,RI))...the other side didn't look far and the water looked calm... Ok...fast forward...im in the middle of the bay and see a mattress comming straight for me ....the water was not as calm anymore ...and I just realized the rivers are emptying out into the bay because it had rained heavy..& so.I headed back. . Better safe than sorry. Thx for the video...will be watching it again & again!👊😆
Appreciate the tips because I am a rookie at kayak fishing..just purchased my first..thanks for the useful info bro..
- Unless you fishing for an Orca...well you are doing all of us a favor then.... ROFL Awesome.
Thanks for the video! Waders are really needed in colder weather, because otherwise you get cold because you will anyway wet yourself. And you don't drown with them because you will wear life jacket anyway! I agree totally with the amount of rods - I use normally 1-3 and most of the time I need 3 rods, because I use 2-3 for trolling, can't understand if some one need more that 3-4, makes no sense to me....
I do multi species fishing up here in the PNW i use 3 rods ultralight spinning for crappie, perch, trout, etc a medium spinning for finesse and a medium casting rod for all around fishing.
I have been kayaking for 4 years, I have learned every thing thanks to RUclips and my own experiences in the water. I wish I had this video many years ago when I was a newbie. Thanks for posting this video, so it can help new kayakers be safer in the water. Tight lines.
Red Lady Fish thank you, I’m glad you enjoyed it. Tight lines and thank you for watching!
Waders can serve as rain pants and when you fish high mountain lakes in Colorado with rain also comes very cold temps, you just put on a rain jacket over the waders and your dry warm and golden
Great helpful videos
Like all things
It all depends
Three of my smaller favorite lakes have quite large expenses of lily pads interspersed with openings so This is how I would "rod up" so to speek
Personally as I ALWAYS fish live bait usually nightcrawlers I feel 3 to 4 rods are perfect
*One spinning rod rigged with a slip bobber for crawlers
*2nd spinning rod for lighter
I'm just going to add that even in shallow water things can go wrong when you are alone. Like you mentioned, some times the weather can change suddenly and get caught off guard. If you go in the water and the silt and sand is up to your waist. It can be very difficult to get back into a kayak. My pfd saved me because it prevented me from sinking in deeper. I could not for the life of me get enough vertical movement to get up on top of my kayak. The silt and sand kept sucking me back down. I had to keep moving just to avoid sinking into it. Finally got on the bow after an hour and moving towards thicker vegetation. There was no one for miles on the water. I was maybe out a mile from where I launched. I was dreading that hike with the kayak through that muck and I know there are snapping turtles and snakes in there.
I took a breather on the bow and got my breath back. Then slowly and very patiently took my time to get back into my seat. Stayed out another 3 hours and enjoyed myself. I just wish, I re-applied my sunscreen. That silt and sand will easily wash that stuff off. My legs were lobster red. I won't go kayaking there anymore though. It was my first time kayaking there. Adventures should be made with friends. I would of been back in the boat a lot quicker if I could of had a hand. This is how we learn some of our lessons in life.
I know exactly what you are talking about. Ive gotten into some sand and silt that felt like quicksand. Crazy!
Great history.. Thank you..
One trick I learn .. If you fallow in a shallow water .. If you can bend you knees and dont try to touch the botton and stay a flote then you can swim and reach your bote ..maybe No always you can do that.. Keep that in mind.
Just bought my first fishing kayak or even kayak for that matter, a lifetime tamarack. Seems like a great kayak for the money. I almost bought a normal kayak for fishing not realizing they made the open style fishing ones. Im really happy with it. Great video! Its great for new guys like me.
Chris Watson thank you!
How do you like it? Thinking about getting one myself
@@randallkeiser The kayak in question is fantastic. Very stable. I just sold the same version for a bigger kayak with more options. I built outriggers for my tamarack until I got comfortable with it, then removed them.
I only bring two rods no matter where I'm fishing. A medium action when I'm fishing in wind or with heavy lures. And a ultra light for small lures, which works great for getting really finicky fish.
Perfect set up IMO... I use one medium with braid for the heavier bait... And a medium super fast with fluro for throwing plastics and other small baits.
Great video. Remember everyone always wear your P.F.D if you're kayaking or Wade fishing. Personal flotation device
JLD Fishing agreed.
Wear your PFD. There should be no reason to not be prepared for an accident. PfD's are made I'd different sizes and styles. Find one that's comfortable for you and use it. You never know when someone in a motor boat won't see you and run you down. You will not have time to put it on before you are struck. If you are struck by a motor boat you could lose consciousness and not be able to find your PFD and put it on. Be prepared please and enjoy your fishing! 😁🐟🎣🚣♀️🚣♂️🐡🦈🐠🐟🎣🐡🐟🦈🐠🐡🎣
Correct about waders but the only thing is if your in the water with waders and it fills up completely, you will not sink you will sink to the point of wear the waders sit on you think about it, the water in your waders does not weigh any more then the water your in. But this other info makes a great guide for me since I’m about to buy a kayak for the first time. Make a vid about weather and how it effects your decision making on where you fish l.
I like your idea of why not to do certain things in a kayak and found most of them very reasonable as you presented a point, not just an opinion. I've fished in the winter and wished that I had waders. I have regularly fished water 50-60' deep at Lake Braunig due to not having people to fish with. I also point my nose into the current of the San Marcos, drop anchor and cast up river to drift and hug the bottom coming back down. Recently, I flipped three times in three hours on the Guadalupe in New Braunfels going through rapids that I have been down before on other kayaks. Thankfully, I was wearing my life jacket; lost two rods, two tackle boxes and a thermos of coffee, but I did not lose my life. Good luck fishing and I look forward to watching more of your videos
Chris Hinkelmann thank you very much. Loving hearing some experiences from other kayakers, definitely helps see the other side of things that I don’t see. Thank you!
Waders should always be a 'No'... but being from the east coast of Canada, I like to get out as early as possible in the year, and the water can be wicked cold. A couple years ago I invested in dry pants. They seal at the top so if you end up in the drink, they don't fill up. They aren't cheap, but they keep you warm and dry, and alive!
Great vid....
Waders in Kayak is for people fishing where the weather is not like TX my friend.
When its snowing and sleeting and under 30 degrees (like yesterday on Lake Ozark with 14 other Yak'rs) breathable waders are nice when you cannot afford a dry suit.
Also the sinking with waders on in deep water is a myth, been proven- even RUclips vids on here showing it. They do not turn into 100 pound sinkers, I jumped in with mine each year before I do proof testing just to make sure.
If I fish in the rule of 120 sure I would not need waders or drysuits... but, us in Colder states live by them some months.
Keep up the vids brother !!
Sarge's Adventures see that I can understand! I see people down here in waders on a kayak in the middle of summer, with no PFD. That I don’t understand. Thanks for the insight.
@@TexasFishingForce haha... yea, maybe they be trying to look cool like the kids wearing beanies pulled down to their jaw in 90 degrees haha.
Sarge's Adventures haha, that’s the way it seems.
@@TexasFishingForce , I agree. I think that before trying to be a "know it all" and giving general fishing tips, you should ask people why they have certain habits. You actually try to put them down as stupid. If one goes overboard with waders, one just needs to slip off the suspenders and you can actually just float out of them. I do agree with all your other tips. Thanks
SilverShadow2LWB I’m definitely not trying to put anyone down, in fact as I stated many times “I don’t know why” people do specific things. I try and learn from everyone and every experience on the water. I’m wrong often and have no problem admitting that. Thank you for watching and tight lines!
Water balloons float in water. There is usually a small amount of air in them and the latex rubber is less dense than water making them slightly buoyant in water. You wont sink to the bottom with waders, but i imagine that pulling yourself into your yak with waders partially full of water (which they wont fill much) would be hard. The wader myth comes from moving water. Rivers or streams are a bad place to fill your waders with water, that can drive you towards the bottom.
Most of the time I carry 4-5 rods an they are all rigged up for dif things. 1 for popping cork, 1 for bottom fishing with jig head, 1 for big fish bottom rig, 1 for topwater, and 1 for jerkbaits an stuff. Way more efficient than having 2 rods and constantly rigging for dif stuff. Just my opinion and what works best for me.
Billy yup. That’s what I do.
I take the same amount of rods but learning to bring less tackle.
Had the exact experience with a 9” hardhead cat...got me in the end of my middle finger. The pain all the way up my arm to the center of my chest was unbelievable. It could not have hurt worse if my finger had been chopped off. I didn’t got to the e.r....just stupidly stuck it out. About a month later, a 1/4” spine tip worked it’s way out of my finger which had never really healed.
I feel ya. It was bad when I got hit. I still get nervous grabbing hard heads sometimes.
I wear breathable waders while the weather is cool and water is cold here in south west Louisiana. Also when you bring fish into the kayak you don’t hav to get fish all over you just on the waders. When you get back to truck just take them off and you are clean for the ride home. I can’t afford a dry suit so they are the next best thing. I been kayak fishing for 6 years now and consider the waders a great asset during the cool and colder months.
Derek Bushnell that makes sense, I can see that as long as you are also wearing a PFD.
I wear waders everywhere. In my truck, in my garage, on my couch, in the shower. You just never know when you might need waders on.
Someone is full of shit around you then lol
I first wore waders to the strip club. Haven’t taken them off since.
I wear waders to go and feed my pet rock and to find out about the weather . If it is wet, it might have rained last night or just lots of dew. If it's hot, then it is sunny. And if it has cold white stuff on it, then it snowed.
They stick to your legs no way they will drown u maybe even make u float
Lmao
Water weighs the same wether inside your waders or out. Waders keep you warm and dry, the only issue is that if you get them full of water - you can't climb back up onto the kayak as easy because the weight of the water - its like wearing lead boots.
I bring a lot of lures and soft plastics and 6-7 rods just because of the many different ways to fish. Plus you can have 6 or 7 different presentations tied on and you can be more efficient in fishing.
MustangFishing why not just tie on a snap swivel on 2 rods? That way you can change lures and setups even quicker and you aren’t limited to 6-7? That way you can throw 30 different lures in one day if you wanted and it only takes a few seconds to switch them.
@@TexasFishingForce snaps can sometime mess up the action of some baits. Plus I can tie lures about as fast as most people can work a snap
MustangFishing fair enough, gotta do what works for you.
I bring 2 rods, sometimes 3. One spinning reel, one baitcaster. Sometimes I bring my strongest rod if I'm going after big fish like flatheads or gar. What I use the most though is my baitcaster.
Number 4: Since you mentioned it, I will share with you something I know to be true. I have a friend who loves to fly fish for trout. The common mode of transportation is to go up the river, find some trout, they then land the kayaks, get out and wade - fly fish the river. I will go a step further and tell you how he learned this was with a licensed fishing guide in that state.
I was introduced to tube fishing as a kid, one of the things I learned from my teacher, (My Dad) was to make sure you always have the top of the waders tight and even use a belt to keep it tight, so if you did flip or fall out or whatever, the waders dont fill up with water and take you down.
Now back to the guide and my buddy, and two of my other friends went with Said buddy and guide, the guide had loaner waders, fly rods, kayaks etc, two of the guys waders had holes in them so the legs where filling up with water. Yes they had life jackets on as far as I know, I just seen trouble written all over this scenario.
Have a blessed weekend,
dale
I just purchased my first kayak last week and will be using it this weekend for the first time.
Great advice. Only problem I have is the waders thing. I wear waders when I kayak because often times I'm using the kayak to get to more remote areas that I will then wade fish for steelhead/trout with a spey rod which cannot be used from a yak.
That said, the whole myth about waders sinking is just that. A myth. Once the water enters the waders that water is neutrally buoyant; ie. The water that fills the waders is neither heavier, or lighter than the water around it and therefore your waders will never, repeat, never cause you to sink. They remain the same weight filled, or empty when submerged in water. Do a test. Half fill a water bottle and throw it in the bath tub. You'll notice the bottle floats at exactly the same point the bottle is filled with water. This happens because the water inside the bottle is equally as buoyant as the water around it, leaving the portion containing air above the water. It's simple physics.
@The END Is Near Beware i'm sorry for your loss, but the science is what the science is. Water is neutrally bouyant in water. They did not drown from their waders filling. They likey died from shock in cold water. Waders will never cause you to drown. Secondly, it's clear you have never worn waders. There is not enough air trapped in the waders to "flip" you. That's just more nonsense
Great video and info. I take one rod for topwater, one for soft plastic, one for popping cork, one for hard plastic/jerkbait,
Not trying to contradict you and no disrespect intended. I have about 17 years of kayaking experience and I started to make a long response to the "no waders in a kayak". I changed my mind about that. There are a lot of reasons to wear waders in the kayak especially in the winter time. There are a lot of videos out there that go over the "waders of death". I suggest people check them out.
Bought my first kayak in 1994; and old Ocean Kayak that didn't even come with the storage compartment tops cut out. The waders of death was a busted myth back then, but somehow still has traction as you've noted. I've had waders filled when slipping putting out duck decoys in the winter (SUCKED) but water in a waders is the same weight as water out of the waders and equalizes.
I thought it was mostly for rivers? People slip on a rock trying to cross deep water, the waders start filling, catch the current and they get carried downstream and drown.
@@mswen1983 ah in that case the waders act as a sail or parachute
Mate you talk so much sense, it is a pleasure to listen to you, I have watched so many ksyakers from the US, their Kayaks are fitted out like warships, ridiculous.
I'm from the U.S.and I definitely believe you. I haven't been in a kayak yet but I've been out on lakes in boat's, canoe and a jet ski. You can tell from watching some people at the boat ramps and other launching areas if they're gonna be a danger to themselves or others.. They can be an accident just waiting to happen..
Thing about waders: if they fill up with water you won’t sink. However, it will make it impossible to get back in the kayak. Side note: I fell in 40F water with waders and they filled up. I thought I was a goner, but the waders acted like a wet suit and I did not die. However, when I got to the bank I had to lie on my back to drain the water out of the waders.
Great video. One more to add. Overboard on leashing equipment. Too many things leashed to a kayak if it turns over creates a hazardous underwater spiderweb to get tangled on. Your vid covers some good points. Thanks.
I generally carry three rods in my kayak. One is a dedicated frog setup, that rod it useless with anything other than topwater frogs. Then I have one rod rigged with a shallow running lure such as a jointed minnow and then one with a deeper running lure. This allows me to instantly switch from fishing the shoreline, fishing weeds, and fishing deep holes. I mainly float fish rivers and creeks so there is no time to tie on lures while you are moving with the current.
I carry 4 rods. 1 spinning for light baits. 3 different casting rods. 1 heavy for slop and 2 medium heavy. One is usually a punching rig or something like that for picking apart trees. Another one with a search bait like a crankbai, spinner bait, or topwater. That way I don't have to constantly trying things on constantly while I am trying to find fish. Once I find them, yeah maybe I will only use one. But it's hard to have one rod that is gonna be optimal for any situation. I thought people were crazy too until I started experimenting with different rods. You can't fish a frog in thick slop with a medium action spinning rod. You might get lucky sure but forget about trying to pull a 5 or 6 pound large out a thick mat with it. Most of the big females aren't anywhere but under that stuff in the summer. I also like to have reels with both floro and braid. The cause baits to behave differently.
Don't forget to wear your PFD at all times is a good one. If something happens to you and you can't put it on, you're in trouble.
I only use 2 rods as well. 1 baitcaster and 1 spinner for finesse stuff.
Frank Concemi absolutely!
This is so important. It's extremely difficult to put on a PFD and do it up in the water, especially if it's over your head. And that's assuming it doesn't get carried away by waves, wind or current.
I was fishing all my life long. Since this year on Kajak. And well you are right. There are things you simply don’t think of and it’s very helpful to hear other more advanced peoples stories and warnings. Thanks saved me an arm 😂✌🏼
Thank you so much!
Some y’all never fished in wintertime and it shows. If you wear waders properly you can wear them in a kayak. Wading belt cinched tight will keep a lot of water out of your waders. Everett Johnston of Texas saltwater magazine has an article showing with a belt, wading jacket and PFD had every little water inside them.
I take three rods. One rigged with topwater. One rigged with a popping cork. And the other rigged with light line and a Mirrodine so I can cast it a mile. I do this because I hate tying on lures when on my kayak. I fish inshore on Florida east coast. Hope this helps.
I do something similar but I never use a popping cork (not something I grew up with back in the 70's), so where you have the p-cork rig I have a snap swivel where I can change out for Texas or Carolina rig. No snap swivel on my topwater rig, I just use a heavy mono leader and use a loop knot for optimum lure action. But I don't usually switch out lures too much, it's either a Bomber or a Rapala that work best for me.
I only use two rods one baitcaster and one spinning setup. It’s some of the pros making local fishermen think they need all that rods especially on a kayak. In a boat I will bring 4 rods but that’s it each for a different approach. I pack very light now at the end of the day you’re wore out. I agreed exactly with what you said if it’s not safe to bring it in then just cut the line. Your own personal safety first and being able to do it again another day. Tight lines!!
freestyle yaaj thanks man, I do the same. On my boat I bring 5 rods, but each rod has a different purpose. Thanks for watching!
Hey, lots of Kayakers in Texas... Thanks for the tips... Mine just arrived, waiting for Kayak Cart so I can get her on the water. I was a grown man, crying, walking in circles, called my wife and told her to come home from work...when I got a gaftopsailfin spine into my thumb joint. How ever many hours later it stopped dead as fast as it started... Agony one minute, nothing the next... weird.
Hi, thanks for the info much appreciated,
I got new fishing Kayak single seat about 4m, and I am located at the north of Somalia, Berbera port red sea gulf, I was doing many years fishing, but never in Kayak, I seen many tips including your tips, but not a lot on if you loose or drop the paddle, how to secure the paddle, are there different ways, last thing is to not have way back and not have a paddle, the ocean is different to lakes, the Kayak type is close to (Freedom Single Fishing Kayak),
If you could touch base, on where to put baits, my one has 2 spaces front large, and rear screwing 6inch hole, and rear open space I assume for cooling box etc.
This may amaze you ,I am the only or the first fisher person on a kayak in whole Somalia, Africa, so your advice dont go alone on a kayak fishing, is out of window,
On the shore there are very small fishes, I feel jealous when I see people fish at the beaches in Australia and catch big or reasonable size fish, In the south Indian ocean we do have good catch from the beaches, but not so good in the gulf Aden shores,
To catch little bigger need to paddle atleast 100m, and 100, is not head height, very tricky, what to do.
One last question, do I need anchor, or fishing drifting is OK.
Thanks in advance Al
I’ve been watching several of your videos, thanks for your help. In all the kayak videos I’ve been watching I haven’t seen anyone actual store the fish they catch. What do you do with them? Sounds funny maybe but with al, the gear and DIY mods I’ve seen, no one ever covered this
Catch & release. If anything is kept for shore it's gaffed and laid across the deck while hauling it in.
String them, pull it in when moving. Ice bags are awesome for off shore, don't wanna atract the wrong thing. Lakes I always use string. Get back to the truck I have an ice chest waiting for them. Catch and release when my freezer is full.
Waders.. cold weather fishing. I just use frog togs to keep water off. Its lightweight .
Helpful tips from a Texas guy who understands All Rifles Matter. Thanks, man!
Yes sir! Thanks for watching!
This is some pretty good advice.
About not bringing toothy, spiky fish into the yak: It reminds me of literally my first trip out on a real river. When I bought my kayak last year, I started out on a small public pond not too far from home. Well, that got boring quickly, in part because that little body of water was so over-fished, nothing really bit. I'd seen three or four other people out there, and none of them were catching -- but they sure as sh*t were bragging about that big one they'd caught not long before!
But I digress. There's a canoe drop on a river not too much farther, so I decided to try it out. I was tossing a chatter bait, without any luck. Ahead was a tree sticking out of the water, and I decided to see what might be near that and hungry. Nothing bit, but as I was reeling, I noticed a shadow behind the lure. As it got closer, I realized it was a long-nose gar. This fish was almost half as long as my boat! So here I was, slowing down the retrieve, speeding up the retrieve, debating if I should try to catch this monstrosity before I was completely acquainted with my 10-fot kayak. I decided not to, as it would also have been my first ever gar.
But I'd bet it would have been a tale to tell when I got home!
Great vid, you’re humble, just be humble out on the water ppl, have respect for the known and unknown, every day you get to come home is a good day.
I appreciate that
What if I have no friends to fish with :)
I hear you though, I have visions of flipping my kayak and getting tangled in the anchor rope. Recently bought a HH350 VHF radio because I fish alone in bays and lakes.
Hey Mike,I just wanted to say thanks for the tips on what not to do while fishing in a kayak. I'm new to kayak fishing and out here in California I've heard of guys hooked into a sturgeon that took them on one hell of a sleigh ride and almost flipped him into the bay plus I totally agree 100% with you about not wearing waders in a kayak, I used to scuba dive all over California and the best thing i could suggest is investing in a drysuit not only for keeping you dry but it's gonna keep you floating if you do happen to fall into the water and protect you from possible hypothermia. Anyway I just wanted to say thanks again and thank you for your service to our country, I'm an Army veteran, keep up the great work and God bless y'all.
Mike Hart thank you, I’m glad the tips were helpful and thank you for your service as well.
I wear hip waders in tye winter to get in and out of my kayak. I live in Utah and the water gets real cold right before ice up and right after ice off, so hip waders make it possible to keep my feet dry and warm in the winter. When it is warn, Teva sandals!
I wear neoprene waders in the winter. Yak fishing, wading rivers, duck hunting etc... No need for them in the summer, unless I'm in the mountains wading 50* creeks.. then I wear gore-tex. Here are a few things about waders.
1. Always wear a wader belt with your waders. If you do fall in it keeps water out.
2. Neoprene waders float. It's the same as a wetsuit. I'd rather have on a pair of waders than some bulky winter gear.
3. Neoprene waders are warm. Think... launching, and portage when creek fishing. I do it a lot and I'm dry and warm in the winter.
4. Buy quality stocking foot waders, a belt and quality boots.
5. Wear your PFD. So if you do fall in you'll float no matter what your wearing.
I am now getting ready to end my membership with my boat club (this is the last year) and am considering getting a Hobie PA12 360. My former neighbor has been Kayak fishing for years and is providing a lot of guidance. SO, like you, I am looking at a lot of youtube, reading reviews, and trying to get a good understanding of Kayak fishing from the RUclips universe. My question for you is that this video is a year old, You have had the Kayak for 14 months or so. How do you like it? Is it everything you hoped? I really like the idea of getting out faster and into smaller waterways.
CliffArt I love mine. I told myself I would buy another boat this year and never did because I’m having so much fun on the kayak. You’ll love it.
I just started my fishin journey with a kayak and man I'm so glad to have found your video thanks bro!!!👍🏼👍🏼
Watch river certified, another great channel from a kayak fishermen, he does alot of bank fishing and kayak camping/fishing vids too.
I always carry 5 to 6 rods on a kayak. Each rod serves a different purpose. I dont want to waste time swapping gear I made need in a different spot. A frog in one spot may not work but fifty yards away frogs may do it. I always have a frog, spinner, mid crank, jig, and a soft plastic.
I'm just starting in Kayak fishing. These vids are very helpful, thanks!
I just purchased my first kayak. Thank you for all your advice. Great insightful video.
Glad I could help!
I keep my big tackle box at home. I bought a small clear Plano tackle box and just bring the tackle and lures I need that day and 3 bottles of water and sunscreen. I live in ROUND ROCK
I use 3 rods but that's because I prefer certain rods for certain lures! I have my power rod my finesse rod and in between rod I like to also spend more time fishing then tying lures on! So I'll set up each rod with preferred baits and begin. As I'm sure you know the fish change day to day as to what they will hit so I like options and less tying time so as I agree to many rods is unnecessary! I feel 3 is perfect well tight lines good notes on what not to do!! 🎣
James Leary thank you, I appreciate you watching and all of the insight. Tight lines!
Great advice, Thank You. I'm making the swap from whitewater and surf kayaking to fishing 🎣 from a kayak so it's definitely a different world!
Hey Mike: Last week I fell in (I've been kayak bassin' for 10 years and never fallen in before). The REASON I fell in can be added to your "things not to do in a kayak". I had my vertical rod holders too closely spaced and the tips got tangled. My struggle to untangle them led me to lean too far over.
Larry Moffatt well glad you are ok man.
They are all great tips mate I 100% agree on all of them especially not to wear waders on a yak you’d seriously have to have rocks in your head to do that but people still do I think it’s one of the most dangerous things possible
In my home waters, there is no water not over my head. If I flip, my stuff is just going to have to sink. Our biggest danger then, except maybe in the summertime, becomes hypothermia. Have a plan to get to shore with or without your stuff at all times, to get dry and get warm. It may be that a floating dry bag full of survival items including a whistle and a cell phone is the most important piece of equipment.
As far as waders, I am with you. I won’t even wade fish in waders. Certainly not wearing anything I can’t get out of quickly… especially in deep or swift water.
Well I was fishing my pond in my kayak. And we have this 150+ pound alligator snapping turtle in there we named Godzilla.
This dang turtle keeps biting and stealing all my bass lures,ect. I accidentally hooked into Godzilla's shell and he towed me in my kayak all over my pond.
Finally got him landed and called a game Warden to come take it. The game Warden promised me they will find Godzilla a new home where he will be happy.
Fyi I'm in east Texas
On my way to the store to return my Waders, 9 fishing rods and 4 pair of pliers.
I'm also going to cancel my Solo Fishing trip out at the Mariana Trench!
Thanks for the tips
Have fun!
I fish alone in deep waters. You are right, it is dangerous. I take precautions but it is not enough. Recently I incorporated a VHF radio with DSC capability.
elh siete very smart! That VHF is a lifesaver!
Yes you do wear waders in a kayak. If you fish in the winter they keep you warm if you go through rough stuff on a river and get wet you are cold until the end of the day. Depending on your waders you do not sink when they get full of water.
For stand-up Kayaks I learned not to stand when fishing big fish like Muskie and carp. Sometimes you gotta put a lot of effort in pulling the fish in that if it spits the hook or the line snaps you might get sent overboard from losing balance. Definitely no matter what wear a PFD. God forbid you do tip over you wanna have a flotation device at all times.
Geeze, if you feel the need to fish big fish from a kayak in the ocean (sharks) put outriggers/pontoons on it! Every kayak/canoe in the pacific use one of the many varieties of outriggers for a reason - they work and have for many hundreds (thousands) of years. I won an Autopilot 136 this past weekend (might see it by spring due to delays) and will be coming from the canoe that I custom built pontoons for. I do things in that no sane person would ever do in a canoe and have been totally safe. I built it to be a fishing platform, not a tight rope exercise. The 136 is the same width as my canoe, so will have to see if I can move around like I do in the canoe. I'm not out there for a fashion show, I'm out there to have fun and to keep doing it in the future. So adding something that can be dropped down when you need extra stability, well, that just a cool feature! ;)
Great vids by the way! Learning what's going to be different fishing from a kayak
I agree with you on no waders. Some people disagree. I would like to comment on the difference between warm water and protected water fishing and open water - cold water fishing. There is a much smaller margin of error in cold water. You can get away with the mistake of wearing waders in Gulf waters. In my 50 -60 degree waters waders are deadly.
Good stuff.
I gave you a 👍🏼 on this video.
I've been kayak fishing for 4 years now and am still guilty of bringing too much gear sometimes. Mostly that's too many lures.....and you're right.....they're hard to locate quickly if you have too much gear on board.
I usually limit myself to 2 poles, but (depending on the season) I sometimes bring 4.
Keep up the good work. 👍🏼
Kayak fishing is a very intimate experience with the fish, as your butt is quite literally right there at water level.
I am new to kayak fishing.. love your videos. Keep up the good work. Stay safe
Thank you!
Awesome !!! New to the hobby, and I've been listening to some great videos, thanks for posting
Awesome! Thank you!
I wear waders when I’m dry fly fishing in a kayak and I want to stop and target a rising fish from the right angle with out making a commotion paddling my self into position
Good stuff, I won a kayak last night at an auction. We just moved to Texas last August, need to meet some fisherman!! I have a new Lund big water boat sitting in my garage, let’s go crappie fishing
Red River 6 that would be awesome! Congrats on the new yak, where about are you located?
Texas Fishing Force located in New Braunfels
There is one situation where i bring my waders with kayak.
When i fish small rivers, i pull kayak behind me and wade most part.
I use kayak just to paddle over deep places where i can't wade.
And also kayak is good place to keep your gear on, in this situation.
I agree with that. Actually, since making this video I have found a few scenarios where kayaks would be needed. Thanks for the input!
I’ve had it for 6 years now, going on 7. Thing is a workhorse. Caught a ton of fish, travelled literally hundreds of miles. It has wear. But the bungees still have elasticity, and there’s no sign of the boat stopping. 5/5.
Some great tips...tons of people getting into kayak fishing now, so its always good to share our experiences so others newer to the sport can learn
1Cast 1Fish absolutely! That’s exactly why I made this video. Thank you!
Always wear a PFD fishing vest. They make em for kayaker. They are comfortable & very functional for kayak fishing.
Larry McGinnis absolutely agree!
Fly fishing rivers and fishing the rapids. This is the only reason I wear waders. Of if I’m wading upstream with limited public access. I will be in and out of the kayak fishing and will use it to float back downstream to the truck. Most spin fishing and deal water fishing. You are correct and it makes no sense to wear them. It can be dangerous. Know the waters you are fishing and use your best judgement and experience level.
I’ll bring 4-5 rods… I keep each one rigged a different way.. my bait caster may have a frog lure, heavy spinning rod may have a jig, another a Texas rig, and a small pole for small trout… may even have my fly pole… having each pole rigged a different way allows me to take less tackle and spend less time tying knots
My. God. I’m still relatively new to fishing, just won a lengthy appeal with the VA for comp & pen for combat injuries, which is why I’m researching the perfect fishing kayak & things I need to know before getting on the water. But I had NO idea catfish can stab you like that, so thank you for sharing that story. Hopefully they don’t get too crazy but here in Colorado. I’m def going to be more cautious next time I take my catty set up out!
CJ Kremp well, I know most catfish can stab you but not all. The saltwater hardhead catfish are the real issue though. I generally don’t worry about any of the others. You should be fine with freshwater cats.
I keep 6 rods in my yak because I just don't get to fish very often. I have multiple rigs all tied on so I can change on the fly instead of stopping to re-tie. Doing it this way saves me an inordinate amount of dead time.
“If you lose a hand that’s a good picture too” love it lolll
Yeah that was awesome!
What I have learned so far from experience; Consider everything that might be in and around the water sure Alligators, gar and sharks come to mind first but something as simple as a sharp oyster shell can make you bleed like a siev very quickly, all because you tried to hand paddle to maneuver out of some mangroves (It happened to me). Even a small scratch can become infected without proper attention on top of that the ocean is home to many venomous species that could end your trip fast. Always handle fish like they have giant toxic spines because most of them do. Also have good line and pole awareness and don't get tangled by an over hanging branch that could lead to frustration, or a hornets nest. Another thing ALWAYS have bug spray the mosquitos will get you on open water. Its pretty safe to kayak fish if you take a good assessment of risk vs reward.
Nice Video. The wader thing is a myth. A wader filled with water is not heavier than the water surounding it.
On theorie the extra rods should be to hit diffrent spots using diffrent lures.
But again i bring 2 sometimes 3
One is rigged for weeds shallow waters
A sinker and a trolling one 😉
Passed 3 rods you are showing off 😅
watched a couple of your vids last night, didn't realize they were a couple years old. watched about 10 more tonight, i'm catching up. good stuff bro. sub'd
Glad you like them! Thank you!
Okay, that whole "Waders will make you sink" is a total fallacy. It's already been disproven by much more experienced people than I. PLUS, if you DO flip, the water pressure is gonna cause the waders to form to your body, first. Anytime you wear waders, you should have a good wading belt on, anyway, providing a decent cutoff point, where the water should be minimized, getting by. Not to mention, especially when fishing on river systems, it's pretty common to get out of the kayak and wade fish for a while, giving your legs and butt a break.
Seriously, waders on a kayak, especially during colder months are NOT a big deal. In fact, that what most cold water kayakers used in the first place, before dry suits became so prevalent. In fact, many of us who can't afford dry suits costing several hundreds of dollars STILL wear waders.
Fun fact one of those hard head catfish was my first kayak catch and I made sure to not bring it in the kayak I had it damn good on a treble hook though.
dig the vid but i have an issue with # 3.
If the weather and water are cold, and an angler does not own a dry suit or dry pants/top, waders are their safest bet for staying warm and dry on the water. obviously the paddler needs an adequate waterproof jacket NOT tucked into the waders so they dont fill up from rain or water from splashing.... and if the angler is wearing a properly fitter LifeJacket LIKE THEY SHOULD BE, they will not drown if they fall in the water and their waders fill up as water in water is neutrally buoyant(if that makes sense).
.. you just wont be able to reenter your kayak in water over your head with waders full of water due to you now weighing 500lbs
I caught a pretty big gafftopsail Catfish on the beach in Florida and got stung by its huge barb. Lost a lot of blood and was in a huge amount of pain.
Thank you for a very informative video. However, 'irregardless' is not a word. Use' regardless instead.
Sometimes when river fly fishing I wear waders. Whether in a raft, drift boat, or kayak there are situations where current seams have to be fished from an angle you can't get to from a boat. I won't wear them when the water level is higher than normal from rain or snow melt, and I won't wear them the water is extremely cold. 99% of my fly fishing is done in water I can just stand up in if I take an unintentional swim. My question would be "why are you wearing waders in the middle of the lake?"
Great advise and content. Also, do you carry a gaff with you in the bays or do you just stick with nets? I'm in St. Augustine, FL and am a beginner yak fisher. I will be going out into the intracoastal (saltwater) that may yield some big boys. Thanks again for the video.
Dude your so right, people think they need to take everything except the kitchen sink. Looks like a pain in the ass and time consuming putting all that junk on your boat. I like simplicity and a light boat that I'm paddling lol it doesn't have a motor. Yeah what's up with these guys with 10 polesl lol! 2 is enough for me. Spot on brother! Liked your video
People always get on me cause I have a hobie outback that I ride out with suuper minimal gear. 1-2rods max, plyers, a backpack, and a net. No extra fancy stuff
awesome tee shirt ... i need one right now!!
Nine line apparel. Thank you very much!
I love that shirt bro! Great vid too.
Appreciate it!
Yep pain is terrible like a sting ray...another dope vid!
It can be pretty rough! Thank you!
OK, not sure about deep water, 10 feet? I got an out rigger for my HObie Pro 14. I used to take wife and 2 boys on it that jump dive on it. Never even thought of depth. I am not even sure if I can flip it even if I tried with the out rigger. But love your advice cause because we all need reminder.
Keith Koch thank you!