5 Fishing Vacation Destinations that Non-Anglers will Love
byWe get asked countless times to recommend fishing vacation destinations for couples or families. What people are really asking for is a way to…
Live bait is the life blood of many fishing trips, and a number of those trips start before daylight.
That’s why most livewells now feature illumination so you can see how your liveys are faring.
A light also helps keep the bait from bumping into the walls of the well.
But what happens when the light malfunctions?
First thing, turn it off, because a corroded connection or loose terminal can lead to an overheated wire and a possible fire.
To illuminate the livewell in the meantime, carry a handful of Cyalume 6-inch chemical light sticks (about $0.40 per stick in bulk).
It floats and casts a soft glow into the water.
Blue is the preferred color for livewell lights, but any color you have on board will work in a pinch.
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In the past, I used two deck brushes when scrubbing the boat with soap and water after a day of fishing.
A brush with soft bristles covered 95 percent of the boat, but I had a stiff-bristle brush standing by for stubborn spots of dried blood and tracked-in dirt on the deck.
Today I use only one brush — the Combo Deck Brush from Shurhold (about $34).
A ring of long, soft bristles cleans most of the deck and the smooth fiberglass surfaces, while a core of short, tough fibers rests in the center.
I deploy these stiffer bristles simply by pressing down on the brush when I need the extra scrubbing power.
Combine this brush with a Shurhold 9-foot telescoping aluminum handle (about $38), and you can wash just about every spot on your boat with one tool.
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Boating safety dictates that you have a means of dewatering your vessel.
That usually means a motorized bilge pump.
However, if the bilge pump fails or drains the battery, you might need to manually dewater the boat.
You can turn to an ordinary bucket to bail water, but buckets don’t fit well into small lockers or crowded bilge compartments.
That’s where a manual pump comes in handy.
The West Marine 36-inch manual bilge pump (about $55) has a narrow tube that fits into any compartment.
It pumps 13 gallons per minute or 780 gallons per hour at a nominal pace.
The lightweight pump and 72-inch hose are easy to stow; you can also use it to pump rainwater from boat covers and compartments.
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If you’ve ever followed a trailer boat down the highway, you might notice its 8-foot-long VHF antenna flailing about with every bump in the road, even though the antenna is folded down for towing.
Clips are available to help secure these antennae, but my friend Steve Bowcott showed me a relatively simple solution.
He fashioned a ³/16-inch-diameter cord with a loop on the end.
He cinches the loop around the tip of the antenna, then belays the bitter end to a stern cleat.
A slight bend in the fiberglass antenna maintains enough tension to keep it from whipping about wildly under tow.
He removes the cord and tilts the antenna up when he’s ready to launch.
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