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Topic: Rods: one-piece or two?  (Read 1683 times)

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dwwestesq

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I have the normal fisherman's warehouse of tackle throughout my house to choose from in outfitting my kayak and, of course, it would be just awful to have to buy some new toys.  My expeditions are almost always multi-species, multi-activity (fishing, diving, touring, camping).

So I am trying to figure out how to carry all the stuff in my first kayak, a Hobie Adventure.  I am looking at dry bags to stow gear in the hull that is not  being actively used.  I want to keep things dry and safe when the boat is being used as a dive platform, and in the event I find myself checking out the  boats tertiary stability (aka clinging to the overturned hull).

So, it looks to me that one-piece fishing rods are out of the question.  In fact, getting even two-piece rods in and out of the hull while on the water may be a challenge.  Same challenge for long freedive fins and spearguns.  On river and lake tours you can almost  always pull over to shore to wrestle with gear if need be, but the ocean is a different deal.  How do you guys handle these challenges?

Crew (aka darn cat):  notes his solution is to stay home but the Captain is always pressing his luck.  Nonsense, luck has little to do with it!  It's opportunity meeting preparation, and this post is all about preparation.  (Crew: so that's luck you feel when opportunity meets Preparation H?) Captain reminds Crew that common decency and federal HIPPA laws prohibit disclosure of medical information.  Crew notes he never claimed to be common, and violates naval tradition while demonstrating why he doesn't need said preparation.  Captain notes further demerits.  Message ends.


ChuckE

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So, it looks to me that one-piece fishing rods are out of the question.  In fact, getting even two-piece rods in and out of the hull while on the water may be a challenge.  Same challenge for long freedive fins and spearguns.  On river and lake tours you can almost  always pull over to shore to wrestle with gear if need be, but the ocean is a different deal.  How do you guys handle these challenges?
I demo'd the Hobie Adventure this past weekend, and I had no problem stowing a one piece rod in the front.  It just takes practice to be able to  be comfortable getting it out of the hatch when you're on the water.

I also tried stowing in and accessing rods from the 8" round hatch in the middle of the cockpit and it was no problem as long as the rod and it's butt wasn't too long.

I heard that the front hatch was big enough to stow the entire pedal drive, so I tried it.... and it actually works.  You just need to set one pedal arm forward and one back before stowing.  This would be the ticket for tricky beach launches and landings.
Winner - 2023 ARW Halibut Derby "King of the Wall"
Winner - 2018 ARW Halibut Handline Derby
Winner - 2013 Doran Beach Crabfest
2nd Place - 2012 Alameda Rockwall Halibut Derby
Winner (Biggest Rock Crab) - 2010 Half Moon Bay Crabfest
Winner - 2009 Alameda Rockwall Halibut Derby
Winner - 2009 Paradise Halibut Hunt
Winner - 2007 NCKA Angler of the Year
Winner "Grand Slam" - 2007 Bendo @ Mendo III
2nd Place - 2007 Monterey Bay Kayak Fishing Derby
Winner - 2004 Santa Cruz Kayak Fishing Derby


jmairey

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stockton, bring less rods and if launching and landing a protected area, dont' stow, just leash.

J

ChuckE, I'd love to hear your review of adventure, maybe you posted already?

J
john m. airey


 

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