Seward, August 28, 2011
Launched out of South Beach in Seward around 10am after a few technical delays with my new thule rack for the 2 dr civic si. Headed out with the intent of focusing on Halibut near Tonsina Creek. Caught a pink while trolling out there.
Caught a bunch of P-Cod and a decent sized skate. No halibut.
On the way back in I managed to land 3 of 5 silvers hooked. Maybe I should have focused on the silvers.
The highlight of the trip was a porpoise running between my rod tip and the kayak. It just cruised by me staring and keeping an eye on me the whole time. Pretty cool but FREAKED me out initially! I didn't know what it was but it was big and it was close!
Oh here's a quick video where I reveal one of my most guarded secrets. Never before documented training in the ways of Jedi/Ninja mind tricks to make the fish come to me. Worked once...almost twice in the video. Soon I can go without a net. Eventually I hope to be able to go out without a rod or line. lol.
Kayak is the vessel of choice though I will fish anytime, anywhere for anything! Logs of every time I go out and fish in the Great state of Alaska!
Monday, August 29, 2011
Sunday, August 21, 2011
Sunday August 21, 2011
On Saturday I had a board meeting which went very well and ended at 1:30 pm. So I run home get ready, pick up supplies and I am ready to go.
Too bad there was a head on collision with one fatality at mile 84 at 4:20pm. I think that's between Whittier and Girdwood. Well it must have just happened as people start turning around and I see emergency vehicles. ARGH! Well probably a lot less "ARGH" than the casualties and their family. Thoughts and prayers to the families involved.
People ask me what the most dangerous thing about kayaking is. I say "Driving."
So I take a nap and head out at about 1am. Wow..it's dark! Impressive enough I took a pic! lol. Maybe you have to live in Alaska to appreciate this...
Get there earlier than I thought so took another hour nap and hit the beach at 6am.
I saw pinks jumping which gave me hope. I also saw a bunch of small salmon jumping or chasing my herring. They were about 10 inches long. I caught two of them. If you scaled down, I bet you could limit out!
Slow Slow Slow! I keep going back trying to replicate that one weekend and it is not to be.
The derby runs till noon so I fish silvers. I get one by Tonsina Creek, miss one. A little while later in the same area I pick up a pink and miss another Silver I had on for a minute or so. Noon comes and go and so the derby is over.
Switched over to Halibut. Tried Herring first but kept pulling up one cod after the other. I did have one small halibut on briefly. You know immediately that it is not a cod. So arms got tired of dredging up cod so I lopped the pinks head and sent it down. A few solid whacks but nothing would take it completely.
On the way in, I hit one more silver. So 3 for 5 (one pink though) and 0 for 1 on Halibut.
Oh yeah! I forgot the highlight of the day!!!!! a 13.5 inch flounder that worth points toward the AOTY tournament! I had bigger ones but I was tossing them back. I kept this one for bait and then later realized I was throwing away points no matter how few!
On Saturday I had a board meeting which went very well and ended at 1:30 pm. So I run home get ready, pick up supplies and I am ready to go.
Too bad there was a head on collision with one fatality at mile 84 at 4:20pm. I think that's between Whittier and Girdwood. Well it must have just happened as people start turning around and I see emergency vehicles. ARGH! Well probably a lot less "ARGH" than the casualties and their family. Thoughts and prayers to the families involved.
People ask me what the most dangerous thing about kayaking is. I say "Driving."
So I take a nap and head out at about 1am. Wow..it's dark! Impressive enough I took a pic! lol. Maybe you have to live in Alaska to appreciate this...
Get there earlier than I thought so took another hour nap and hit the beach at 6am.
I saw pinks jumping which gave me hope. I also saw a bunch of small salmon jumping or chasing my herring. They were about 10 inches long. I caught two of them. If you scaled down, I bet you could limit out!
Slow Slow Slow! I keep going back trying to replicate that one weekend and it is not to be.
The derby runs till noon so I fish silvers. I get one by Tonsina Creek, miss one. A little while later in the same area I pick up a pink and miss another Silver I had on for a minute or so. Noon comes and go and so the derby is over.
Switched over to Halibut. Tried Herring first but kept pulling up one cod after the other. I did have one small halibut on briefly. You know immediately that it is not a cod. So arms got tired of dredging up cod so I lopped the pinks head and sent it down. A few solid whacks but nothing would take it completely.
On the way in, I hit one more silver. So 3 for 5 (one pink though) and 0 for 1 on Halibut.
Oh yeah! I forgot the highlight of the day!!!!! a 13.5 inch flounder that worth points toward the AOTY tournament! I had bigger ones but I was tossing them back. I kept this one for bait and then later realized I was throwing away points no matter how few!
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Seward Silver Salmon Derby -Round 2
August 17, 2011
Launched 8am Wednesday Morning.
Slow slow slow. Nothing for the first few hours. I started picking up fish after I passes Tonsina Creek which is a littel different. Had the most take downs near Caines Head. Nothing at all near Miller's Landing.
Ended up with 3 salmon on 8 hookups. I need to improve on that. 2 silvers and a pink. I did manage a nice 23 inch yelloweye rockfish...sort of. reeling up something decent from 300ft, my line goes slack part way up. Darn! Check the rig, bottom hook is broken off on a two hook mooching rig. Dogfish?
5 minutes later, I notice a buoy floating towards me. That's odd...wait it's orange, not really super red. What? A yelloweye? I pick it out of the water and there is my 4/0 gamakatsu hook in the corner of the mouth? Completely unexpected for inside the bay. I am glad it didn't go to waste.
Ran into a Hobie Oasis camped out at Caines Head. First one I have seen other than mine.
Also ran into Dudemandude whose buddy promptly lands a ten pound-ish halibut on a salmon head from a yak. Nice! So obviously I had to try it. that's why the silver has no head. One good smack at the head but didn't hook it.

Slow slow slow. Nothing for the first few hours. I started picking up fish after I passes Tonsina Creek which is a littel different. Had the most take downs near Caines Head. Nothing at all near Miller's Landing.
Ended up with 3 salmon on 8 hookups. I need to improve on that. 2 silvers and a pink. I did manage a nice 23 inch yelloweye rockfish...sort of. reeling up something decent from 300ft, my line goes slack part way up. Darn! Check the rig, bottom hook is broken off on a two hook mooching rig. Dogfish?
5 minutes later, I notice a buoy floating towards me. That's odd...wait it's orange, not really super red. What? A yelloweye? I pick it out of the water and there is my 4/0 gamakatsu hook in the corner of the mouth? Completely unexpected for inside the bay. I am glad it didn't go to waste.
Ran into a Hobie Oasis camped out at Caines Head. First one I have seen other than mine.
Also ran into Dudemandude whose buddy promptly lands a ten pound-ish halibut on a salmon head from a yak. Nice! So obviously I had to try it. that's why the silver has no head. One good smack at the head but didn't hook it.
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Seward Silver Salmon Derby - Round 1
August 13 & 14, 2011
Saturday I get off to a late start. Don't get in the water till 11am. 8 hours later...nadda...for salmon. Got bored so dropped deep and got a DOUBLE! Too bad it was P-Cod. Argh.
August 13 & 14, 2011
Saturday I get off to a late start. Don't get in the water till 11am. 8 hours later...nadda...for salmon. Got bored so dropped deep and got a DOUBLE! Too bad it was P-Cod. Argh.
So I stay at a great Bed and Breakfast, Alaskan Odyssey http://www.alaskanodyssey.com/ Check it out if you are staying in Seward.
I sleep in again! Ack! But at least I am on the water by 7am.
Nothing for the first hour and then my rod doubles over! Oh yeah!...Dang lost it...wait...what the heck?
WHaaaa? THAT caused my rod to double over? Hmmm..... something fishy going on here...
Finally after paddling out to Tonsina Creek, I see a few boats hooking up. It took me over an hour but finally I get hit. Nothing. ARGH!
Finally I get in the groove and quickly land 3. My first one I thought was a monster. Then I weighed it and it was only 12 pounds. Needs to be 50% bigger to even have a shot. One's a runt that I let go after closely examining the fish for tags.
I get hit another 3 or 4 times and no hook ups. I hate shortening the second hook. But I don't want to leave snag marks even if the first hook is in the mouth. I'm going to make them longer. I got to land them before I have to worry about snag marks. 90% will be ok.
2 more towards the end of the day closer to Miller's Landing. Kept one, let the other go.
So the tally after two days, 20 hours of on water time....5 fish landed. Biggest a respectable 12 pounds and 30+ inches for an upgarde for my AOTY points! Got something out of it at least!
Because it was a derby, I really didn't mess around with the video.
I'll be back next week!
Monday, August 08, 2011
Seward. Aug 7, 2011
Started fishing about 8am. Launched the yak from South Beach. Had a silver in the first 15 minutes. Then I manage a pink on my ultra light and I am thinking this is great!
Because I was partly test fishing for a possible entry into next weeks derby, I did leave fish to go find fish. I caught one other silver all the way out to Derby Cove and back. I was use either a plug cut and whole herring.
I decide to try to go catch something in the deep water and the first fish up is a halibut! Of course I forgot my net...ARGH. 15 pounds maybe. No big deal. Once again I am thinking this is great! But after about a dozen BIG pacific cod from 250 to 300 feet down, i give up.
One last pass with the trolling gear and I hook one!
The silvers I caught today all had scales set. Meaning they didn't shed them when they hit the boat. Odd....
The highlight of the trip was watching a sea otter eat a big octopus right next to me.
Here's the video of the sea otter.
My Pink on an ultralight plus my lost halibut on video:
Started fishing about 8am. Launched the yak from South Beach. Had a silver in the first 15 minutes. Then I manage a pink on my ultra light and I am thinking this is great!
Because I was partly test fishing for a possible entry into next weeks derby, I did leave fish to go find fish. I caught one other silver all the way out to Derby Cove and back. I was use either a plug cut and whole herring.
I decide to try to go catch something in the deep water and the first fish up is a halibut! Of course I forgot my net...ARGH. 15 pounds maybe. No big deal. Once again I am thinking this is great! But after about a dozen BIG pacific cod from 250 to 300 feet down, i give up.
One last pass with the trolling gear and I hook one!
The silvers I caught today all had scales set. Meaning they didn't shed them when they hit the boat. Odd....
The highlight of the trip was watching a sea otter eat a big octopus right next to me.
Here's the video of the sea otter.
My Pink on an ultralight plus my lost halibut on video:
Monday, August 01, 2011
Took the family out looking for pinks so the kids could catch a few. Reports were they were in up North so off we go.
We get to Sheep and the water is high. We throw mainly size 5 vibrax. Saku used a hometied jig with a float.
The bad news is we didn't catch a single pink!!! What????
But we did manage 3 silvers and two chums. Saku hooks and lands two silvers all by herself!!
Aki catches her first fish this year. A nice silver all by herself.
The first couple of fish I hand off to my kids I hooked on my 4'6" ultralight 1-4lbs test Gloomis spinning rod. Okay, I have 20 pound spectra and 12 pound leader...Not bad...for kids...lol!
Ryu catches a nice chum.
So all is good. Kids did great. They earn another trip!
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
We get to Sheep and the water is high. We throw mainly size 5 vibrax. Saku used a hometied jig with a float.
The bad news is we didn't catch a single pink!!! What????
But we did manage 3 silvers and two chums. Saku hooks and lands two silvers all by herself!!
Aki catches her first fish this year. A nice silver all by herself.
The first couple of fish I hand off to my kids I hooked on my 4'6" ultralight 1-4lbs test Gloomis spinning rod. Okay, I have 20 pound spectra and 12 pound leader...Not bad...for kids...lol!
Ryu catches a nice chum.
So all is good. Kids did great. They earn another trip!
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
Location:Sheep Creek
Sunday, July 31, 2011
July 30, 2011
Seward, AK Cohos from a Yak.
So I make an executive decision to head to Seward on Saturday. Launch from the South Beach near Miller's Landing.
I get three strikes and land one silver before I get to Tonsina Creek. I should of followed the first rule of fishing which is: Never leave fish to find fish. But the silvers aren't supposed to be this close in and EVERYONE knows the fishing is better away from port. WRONGO. I spend the next three hours landing one more silver. Caught a few cod and rock fish and I begin to paddle back. About where I hit the first fish I consistently hit fish. Next 2 hours I hook maybe 30 fish and land 10 silvers!
About half came while power mooching. Could not have done that with my mini-x.
Stopped by Liquid Adventures and said hi to Chris. Great guy.
Not a very good video but hopefully you get the idea. I need to clean my LENS!!!! I didn't think about it with the nice day but forgot about all the water the fish throw into the air! Oh well. Next time if I get in to fishing anywhere near this good, I want to try the underwater camera. Dang! I need to get my act together!
Seward, AK Cohos from a Yak.
So I make an executive decision to head to Seward on Saturday. Launch from the South Beach near Miller's Landing.
I get three strikes and land one silver before I get to Tonsina Creek. I should of followed the first rule of fishing which is: Never leave fish to find fish. But the silvers aren't supposed to be this close in and EVERYONE knows the fishing is better away from port. WRONGO. I spend the next three hours landing one more silver. Caught a few cod and rock fish and I begin to paddle back. About where I hit the first fish I consistently hit fish. Next 2 hours I hook maybe 30 fish and land 10 silvers!
About half came while power mooching. Could not have done that with my mini-x.
Stopped by Liquid Adventures and said hi to Chris. Great guy.
Not a very good video but hopefully you get the idea. I need to clean my LENS!!!! I didn't think about it with the nice day but forgot about all the water the fish throw into the air! Oh well. Next time if I get in to fishing anywhere near this good, I want to try the underwater camera. Dang! I need to get my act together!
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Initial Review of the Hobie Outback Kayak.
So now I have had the opportunity to take the Hobie Outback out three times. Once each out of Whittier, Seward, and the Kenai River.
All I can say is "WOW!" 9.5 out of 10!
Keep in mind my the Kayak I upgraded from was a Malibu mini-X. The Mini-X was/is a GREAT kayak. I love the lightweight, tough, stable kayak. But it just did not have the range to effectively and more importantly fish the waters where I wanted to fish safely. No longer am I limited to a one mile of launch fearing currents and wind.
Before this sounds too much like a commercial and not a review, we'll start with the negatives.
CONS
1) The first is the price. Mine was $2,300 to ship it up here to Alaska with the ST Turbo fin and Sailing Rudder upgrade. My mini-x I bought on Craigslist for $400. I got it through Alaska Raft and Kayak who in turn orders it from Hobie Cat Northwest out of Seattle. But Mark at Alaska Raft and Kayak said he'd take care of me and any warranty issues so I opted to go through them. Basically it's what you'd pay for a Hobie in Seattle plus $300 bucks for shipping.
2) The weight. At 60 pounds, its 22 pounds heavier than my mini-x. I can already tell that over the course of the year, I WILL get lazy and will take one or two fewer trips because of the extra weight hassle. It's a LOT harder to load onto the car when i go out by myself
3) A LOT more stuff that can break or get in the way. The mirage drive in my eyes effectively cuts the front area in half for things like strapping on a 75 pound halibut. The mirage drive and the rudder are two more things to worry about whether it be while landing or fighting a fish. In my third trip out, I bent the mast of my turbo fins. Fortunately one of the pros is it was easily fixed. Also you better hope your rudder doesn't break. That mirage drive was impossible without it...almost took hitting a sweeper to realize that rudder must be in water before it works...kinda like tires need to be on the ground. But the yak will NOT go straight without some kind of rudder like a paddle. Duh....
4) Not as many places to mount things...I think. The mirage drive takes away the nice center space, I don't have racks on my car so I don't want anything like a ram ball extending past the flat plane. I guess maybe I should just buy racks.
5) Plastic seems MUCH softer than my mini-x. I've got a few nice gouges and dings already. Maybe I am just sensitive from looking at my first brand new kayak.
6) I still haven't gotten my seat adjusted to where it is anywhere near as comfortable as my mini-x seat. But I think I still need to tinker with this some more.
Okay that probably covers the cons, most of the functionality issues are very minor.
Pros:
1) THIS KAYAK IS A FISHING MACHINE!!!!!!!
Maybe that's all I need to say? Okay, let's try this again.
1b) Mirage Drive: If you are thinking about seriously fishing any flowing waters whether it be ocean current or river, the Mirage Drive is an unfair advantage. To be able to propel and drive the boat with rod in hand is an advantage that just cannot be made up by the standard paddlers. When I was trolling with paddles, I would say that maybe one in five drops, my gear was tangled because I would either have to cast/drift while deploying and then begin to move. If I judged the current or wind wrong, the result was I was pulling tangled gear. Never happens with the mirage drive because I am moving while deploying which is not only much faster but doesn't tangle.
How can you stay over a small pinnacle or other structure with current if you hands were busy paddling. You might get one brief drift while the mirage drive can hold me consistently over that structure. The mirage drive alone strapped to a cardboard box would be almost as good as a standard paddle kayak in many situations. It is really that good in terms of fishing effectiveness in my opinion.
2) Stability. The Outback is designed such that it feels like you are sitting inside the kayak versus sitting on top of it like it did on my mini-x. Although I haven't tried it, it almost seems like it would be impossible under normal conditions to tip the outback as long as you were seated and you did not lean your body over the edge. Much more initial stability. No fears swinging my legs to dangle over the side even the the sides seem much higher. I always hesitated on my mini-x. I bought the outback over the revolution for the stability. I definitely got it. But it is so dang stable, I am almost thinking I should have gone with the revolution...nah, I'll probably just get an adventure in a year or two. lol.
3) Cruising speed. Not necessarily top end speed but the ease of maintaining a cruising speed. A very slow cadence. Often I'd get tired fairly quick and I'd think to myself that if every peddle cycle was like a paddle stroke, my arms would look like a comic book character imitating a windmill. So I slow down and it cruises just fine. 100% more effort only seems to yield 33% more speed anyways. I haven't gone out with anyone so i will be interested in seeing if I can at least keep up. Well all I know is it will keep up with anything a LOT better than my mini-x.
4) Control- With the sailing rudder and turbo fin upgrade, holding or slowly backing down in a nice straight line on the Kenai River was easily accomplished. Even in the fastest sections I had no problem maintaining what I thought was a fish catching speed down river. The one thing I should have tried was to reverse the drive so I could face downstream as I backtrolled. But being the first time out on a river ever in any kayak, I opted for familiarity. But I could see swapping it every drift which is probably only once every 15 to 30 minutes. I wonder how the rudder will work if it at the front of the kayak?
5) Fish control - I can't say I have first hand experience but it HAS to be the case. Imagine sitting in Beaver Hole and the fish tears downstream? With the mirage drive I can peddle upstream and still fight the fish. I MIGHT be able to coax the fish back upstream. Turning the corner at Beaver Hole means taking out 10 miles downstream at the bsuiest dock in Alaska during the last two weeks of July. I guess with a paddle yak, you could stick it in a rod holder, paddle like crazy and hope to god the fish is still on but I can't imagine having to do that with a fish of a life time. Even if the fish doesn't tear downstream, if you are fighting the fish, you have no choice but to drift downstream with a paddle yak. How you would deal with a monster Kenai king which tend to run upstream. How are you going to control that with a paddle yak? I guess tighten the drag and go for a RIDE! Nothing wrong with that...but being able to chase down the fish while fighting it on the rod and reel seems like a MUCH more effective method of landing that fish.
I am sure that as I use it more, I will have more to report. I give it a 9.5 out of 10. Not perfect due to the price and weight mainly. The other issue that concerns me a little bit but seems to ne okay is the reliability of the mirage drive. I guess only time will tell for that, though other erviews seem to indicate they are very durable drives.
So now I have had the opportunity to take the Hobie Outback out three times. Once each out of Whittier, Seward, and the Kenai River.
All I can say is "WOW!" 9.5 out of 10!
Keep in mind my the Kayak I upgraded from was a Malibu mini-X. The Mini-X was/is a GREAT kayak. I love the lightweight, tough, stable kayak. But it just did not have the range to effectively and more importantly fish the waters where I wanted to fish safely. No longer am I limited to a one mile of launch fearing currents and wind.
Before this sounds too much like a commercial and not a review, we'll start with the negatives.
CONS
1) The first is the price. Mine was $2,300 to ship it up here to Alaska with the ST Turbo fin and Sailing Rudder upgrade. My mini-x I bought on Craigslist for $400. I got it through Alaska Raft and Kayak who in turn orders it from Hobie Cat Northwest out of Seattle. But Mark at Alaska Raft and Kayak said he'd take care of me and any warranty issues so I opted to go through them. Basically it's what you'd pay for a Hobie in Seattle plus $300 bucks for shipping.
2) The weight. At 60 pounds, its 22 pounds heavier than my mini-x. I can already tell that over the course of the year, I WILL get lazy and will take one or two fewer trips because of the extra weight hassle. It's a LOT harder to load onto the car when i go out by myself
3) A LOT more stuff that can break or get in the way. The mirage drive in my eyes effectively cuts the front area in half for things like strapping on a 75 pound halibut. The mirage drive and the rudder are two more things to worry about whether it be while landing or fighting a fish. In my third trip out, I bent the mast of my turbo fins. Fortunately one of the pros is it was easily fixed. Also you better hope your rudder doesn't break. That mirage drive was impossible without it...almost took hitting a sweeper to realize that rudder must be in water before it works...kinda like tires need to be on the ground. But the yak will NOT go straight without some kind of rudder like a paddle. Duh....
4) Not as many places to mount things...I think. The mirage drive takes away the nice center space, I don't have racks on my car so I don't want anything like a ram ball extending past the flat plane. I guess maybe I should just buy racks.
5) Plastic seems MUCH softer than my mini-x. I've got a few nice gouges and dings already. Maybe I am just sensitive from looking at my first brand new kayak.
6) I still haven't gotten my seat adjusted to where it is anywhere near as comfortable as my mini-x seat. But I think I still need to tinker with this some more.
Okay that probably covers the cons, most of the functionality issues are very minor.
Pros:
1) THIS KAYAK IS A FISHING MACHINE!!!!!!!
Maybe that's all I need to say? Okay, let's try this again.
1b) Mirage Drive: If you are thinking about seriously fishing any flowing waters whether it be ocean current or river, the Mirage Drive is an unfair advantage. To be able to propel and drive the boat with rod in hand is an advantage that just cannot be made up by the standard paddlers. When I was trolling with paddles, I would say that maybe one in five drops, my gear was tangled because I would either have to cast/drift while deploying and then begin to move. If I judged the current or wind wrong, the result was I was pulling tangled gear. Never happens with the mirage drive because I am moving while deploying which is not only much faster but doesn't tangle.
How can you stay over a small pinnacle or other structure with current if you hands were busy paddling. You might get one brief drift while the mirage drive can hold me consistently over that structure. The mirage drive alone strapped to a cardboard box would be almost as good as a standard paddle kayak in many situations. It is really that good in terms of fishing effectiveness in my opinion.
2) Stability. The Outback is designed such that it feels like you are sitting inside the kayak versus sitting on top of it like it did on my mini-x. Although I haven't tried it, it almost seems like it would be impossible under normal conditions to tip the outback as long as you were seated and you did not lean your body over the edge. Much more initial stability. No fears swinging my legs to dangle over the side even the the sides seem much higher. I always hesitated on my mini-x. I bought the outback over the revolution for the stability. I definitely got it. But it is so dang stable, I am almost thinking I should have gone with the revolution...nah, I'll probably just get an adventure in a year or two. lol.
3) Cruising speed. Not necessarily top end speed but the ease of maintaining a cruising speed. A very slow cadence. Often I'd get tired fairly quick and I'd think to myself that if every peddle cycle was like a paddle stroke, my arms would look like a comic book character imitating a windmill. So I slow down and it cruises just fine. 100% more effort only seems to yield 33% more speed anyways. I haven't gone out with anyone so i will be interested in seeing if I can at least keep up. Well all I know is it will keep up with anything a LOT better than my mini-x.
4) Control- With the sailing rudder and turbo fin upgrade, holding or slowly backing down in a nice straight line on the Kenai River was easily accomplished. Even in the fastest sections I had no problem maintaining what I thought was a fish catching speed down river. The one thing I should have tried was to reverse the drive so I could face downstream as I backtrolled. But being the first time out on a river ever in any kayak, I opted for familiarity. But I could see swapping it every drift which is probably only once every 15 to 30 minutes. I wonder how the rudder will work if it at the front of the kayak?
5) Fish control - I can't say I have first hand experience but it HAS to be the case. Imagine sitting in Beaver Hole and the fish tears downstream? With the mirage drive I can peddle upstream and still fight the fish. I MIGHT be able to coax the fish back upstream. Turning the corner at Beaver Hole means taking out 10 miles downstream at the bsuiest dock in Alaska during the last two weeks of July. I guess with a paddle yak, you could stick it in a rod holder, paddle like crazy and hope to god the fish is still on but I can't imagine having to do that with a fish of a life time. Even if the fish doesn't tear downstream, if you are fighting the fish, you have no choice but to drift downstream with a paddle yak. How you would deal with a monster Kenai king which tend to run upstream. How are you going to control that with a paddle yak? I guess tighten the drag and go for a RIDE! Nothing wrong with that...but being able to chase down the fish while fighting it on the rod and reel seems like a MUCH more effective method of landing that fish.
I am sure that as I use it more, I will have more to report. I give it a 9.5 out of 10. Not perfect due to the price and weight mainly. The other issue that concerns me a little bit but seems to ne okay is the reliability of the mirage drive. I guess only time will tell for that, though other erviews seem to indicate they are very durable drives.
Non Motorized Monday on the Kenai River - July 25, 2011
Mark Colett and Jammer, and I launch out of Stewart's Landing at around 9am. On the way down, we stop by a bank and fish some reds. I get lucky and limit out at the first stop. I am using my new hobie Outback peddle drive so I try some backtrolling. My first attempt was with a K-16 Kwikfish and a diver.
The mirage drive worked great. In the fastest section I could hold if I worked hard, but at a very sustainable cadence, I could back up at a nice slow pace. It was interesting that no matter how slow the water was, it seemed like a lot of effort to move upstream. You could do it, but it was work. But on the flip side, no matter how fast the current was, it seemed fairly easy to maintain a good back drifting speed.
On a small high tide at Beaver hole, I had no problems moving back up the hole. In fact I had enough control of the kayak that the last hour I used 10 oz of lead and bottom bounced a K-16 kwikfish. I should have used a lot lighter weight but the heavier weight wasn't a problem and it kept the lure near the yak and working.
I did manage to hook a fish at the top of crossover hole. Got the rod out of the holder, took one run, and it was off, DANG! As soon as it came off a rosey 30 pounder surfaced to mock me. ARGH. Well it can be done. Keep in mind this Monday was the first no bait restricted day, so I was probably lucky to get the hit. I didn't see a single net or a single rod out of the water though I heard several folks say they caught fish. the boat wake is no problem at all. A good anchor system is in order for the non motorized day. I think with a few more runs, i would have the confidence to run it during a normal motorized day as long as it was late in the evening after most of the crowd had thinned out.
Saturday, July 23, 2011
First Real Fish from my Outback!
Ok, so last week I jigged up a few herring and undersize rockfish. That doesn't count. So I launch out of Seward near Miller's landing and make it almost to Caines Head. I manage to pick up my first coho of the year and the christening real fish for my new outback! WOOHOO!
Caught it on 5.0 coyote spoon right off Tonsina Creek. I had one other one on but lost it at the same place but when I was headed back in. I thought I might hook a chum but I am pretty sure the fish I lost was a coho by the way it fought. This outback sure is worth its money when it comes to trolling and letting out flashers and such without tangling.
I spent about half the day jigging with not much to show for it. I did manage a small greenling I was going to send down for bait and then realized I should at least measure it and get points.
The wind and rain pick up and it gets cold so I decide to call it a day. the outback definitely gives me WAY more range!!! Too cool. After spending the first half of the summer getting my upper body in shape, now I need to get my legs in shape. After I stopped for a bit, i started to cramp up and a tinge of panic as I was thinking I didn't want to paddle all the way back. Nothing some fluids and a snickers bar couldn't take care of though!
Ok, so last week I jigged up a few herring and undersize rockfish. That doesn't count. So I launch out of Seward near Miller's landing and make it almost to Caines Head. I manage to pick up my first coho of the year and the christening real fish for my new outback! WOOHOO!
Caught it on 5.0 coyote spoon right off Tonsina Creek. I had one other one on but lost it at the same place but when I was headed back in. I thought I might hook a chum but I am pretty sure the fish I lost was a coho by the way it fought. This outback sure is worth its money when it comes to trolling and letting out flashers and such without tangling.
I spent about half the day jigging with not much to show for it. I did manage a small greenling I was going to send down for bait and then realized I should at least measure it and get points.
The wind and rain pick up and it gets cold so I decide to call it a day. the outback definitely gives me WAY more range!!! Too cool. After spending the first half of the summer getting my upper body in shape, now I need to get my legs in shape. After I stopped for a bit, i started to cramp up and a tinge of panic as I was thinking I didn't want to paddle all the way back. Nothing some fluids and a snickers bar couldn't take care of though!
Monday, July 18, 2011
So this weekend the insanity began on the Kenai River. To make it more stressful, I had my (ex) father in law in town from Japan. So no kayaking, but I did get a good look and secure a potential private launch/retrieval area on the river.
First I am on a King Charter with Hi Lo charters. Fished with Guide Albert Kutzkey who allso fishes Norther California when not in Alaska. He just did a super job. We go four for four on Kings. A 40, 30, 30, 20 in a half days fishing. Just awesome!
First I am on a King Charter with Hi Lo charters. Fished with Guide Albert Kutzkey who allso fishes Norther California when not in Alaska. He just did a super job. We go four for four on Kings. A 40, 30, 30, 20 in a half days fishing. Just awesome!
So now its time to go get my reds. Martin and Sean had HAMMERED them the day before while I was King fishing. Boated over 200 reds they did! We start off slow but in 55 minutes we net 50 or so sockeyes to round out our tags! Here's a 10X sped up video!!!
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Congratulations Aaron and Adrienne! The A-team decides to renew their vows on their tenth anniversary on board a boat in front of Blackstone Glacier near Whittier, AK.
Well I got invited and of course I HAD to go. Besides, they are going to renew vows where I know there are fish? Heck ya!
So Saturday morning, Martin and Sean drop me off as they go check their shrimp pots at 10am. The wedding isn't till 2pm so I have 4 hours to fish! The fishing wasn't hot but I did manage 6 or 7 rockfish with one of them a super nice 24 inch yelloweye for the area.

Well I got invited and of course I HAD to go. Besides, they are going to renew vows where I know there are fish? Heck ya!
So Saturday morning, Martin and Sean drop me off as they go check their shrimp pots at 10am. The wedding isn't till 2pm so I have 4 hours to fish! The fishing wasn't hot but I did manage 6 or 7 rockfish with one of them a super nice 24 inch yelloweye for the area.
Saw at least a dozen whales. One group got so close that I could smell their "breath",,,ughh...nasty.
Martin comes and picks me up and off to the wedding! With the number of people on the boat, I launched my kayak and watched the ceremonies from my yak!
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