
Kayak Fishing Using Your Feet?
By Lawrence Gunther E.
At age 12, I along with 15 other 1st Georgetown
Venturers took part in a canoe trip that started in
Toronto an ended at Summerset P.E.I. Our Venturer
Company was made up of avid paddlers, and this voyage
was our chosen method of travelling to the 1977 world
scout jamboree. Travelling by canoe obviously didn’t
represent the most efficient form of transportation, but
we chose it because we love canoeing. Kayak fishing too
is a personal choice based on one’s spirit of adventure.
Now
that my sight has gone completely, the sensation of
being so closely linked to the movement of water has
become that much more powerful. The feel of digging in a
paddle and knowing that concluding a voyage depends
totally on each and every stroke represents a tangible
relationship that can’t be any clearer. Canoe tripping
in Algonquin Park, shooting rapids on the lower
Madawaska River, or riding ocean swells along Cape
Breton’s rocky coastline are experiences I enjoy
reliving over and over.
Fishing from a kayak ranks as one of my favourite sports
as it combines two of my greatest pleasures. And while I
don’t claim to be the first, 35 years ago I did carry
with me a small hand-line throughout the 2,000 km 36-day
canoe trip to P.E.I.
The idea of putting down the paddle and using my legs to
power a kayak, for me, is a concept I initially
dismissed as a trend. At the same time, the obvious
advantages of having my hands free to feel the bite made
sense, but kayak fishing isn’t about making sense – it’s
about passion.
After speaking throughout the winter with Jason Kirby of
Jenda Paddle Sports, I agreed to give HobieCat’s Mirage
drive system a try. Already being the owner of a
sit-on-top fishing kayak, the Mirage system was of
interest for two reasons over and above the obvious
advantage to trolling. One, it has a hand operated
rudder system beneficial to maintaining a true track – a
feature of particular interest to me (LOL), and two, the
peddle propulsion system is virtually silent. Not to say
someone well trained with a paddle can’t stroke without
making sound -- it’s stowing paddles and retrieving
fishing rods that generates the clatter.
David Mingy, a seasoned kayak fisher, and I set out from
Ottawa for a day on the water and fishing. The lake we
chose is closed to boats with motors over 9.9hp, and
regarded as a consistent producer of quality Bass.
Normally, I’d have aboard my kayak talking compass and
GPS systems, but for this trial, I wanted to fully
experience what the HobieCat Revolution with its Mirage
drive had to offer. Instead, at the tip of one of Dave’s
rods, we attached a small bell commonly used for ice
fishing.
The
idea being that the rod tip would move enough to ring
the bell when Dave was underway so I could follow along.
The only drawback to a system such as this is that it
doesn’t tell me which way Dave’s kayak is pointing until
he travelled some distance and it was possible to
determine his course. Judging Dave’s speed and the
distance between the two kayak’s also involved my
maintaining concentration. All this to say, that bell
made Dave and his kayak a bit of a target.
Just to be stubborn, I paddled the HobieCat the first
half of the day and used the Mirage drive the second
half. The HobieCat Revolution 13 tracked well with the
rudder retracted, and paddled effortlessly. However,
even my experienced stroke and superb concentration
resulted in my forward progress resembling more of a
bird dog working hard to flush pray.
The lake itself was one typically found in this terrain,
having clear water and a shoreline made up primarily of
over-hanging deciduous trees and plenty of rock. The
bottom dropped off sharply, which meant the targeted
area holding fish was between five and 10 feet out from
shore.
The first Bass we spotted was floating dead. On closer
examination, we discovered a live Sunfish stuck in its
mouth. The Bass itself measured to be 19” in length, and
while we weren’t able to extract the Sunfish, from all
indications it was prospering from its predicament.
Ironic just how life can turn the tables on even the
surest thing.
Dave and I caught plenty of Bass in the 1-2 pound range
throughout the day, but no lunkers. Sunfish were
everywhere, and it wasn’t unusual to have a dozen or so
directly below the kayak at any one time.
Half way through the day had us about 4km from our
launch point. It was time to reverse direction and
switch over to the Mirage leg-powered system. The first
thing I noticed was just how quietly the Mirage system
functions. With periodic course corrections made through
the hand-operated rudder system, I could easily parallel
Dave’s kayak as we trolled 20 or so feet out from shore
following the lake’s contours. While the Mirage drive’s
lack of reverse occasionally required I un-ship my
paddle, I probably would have managed fine with just a
ping pong racket. (One need simply fully extend one of
the peddles to flatten the Mirage’s two fins flat
against the bottom of the HobieCat.)
By the end of our day, (six hours), I was definitely a
convert to HobieCat’s Mirage drive. The next day made me
even a bigger believer when I awoke with stiff arms from
paddling, but felt no ill effects in my legs. The ease
of use and virtual silent operation has made the Mirage
drive a definite main-stay in my kayak fishing arsenal.
.
Ontario Ice
Fishing
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