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Brad Reid

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About Brad Reid

  • Birthday 07/21/1952

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Galveston, Texas
  • My PB
    Between 10-11 lbs
  • Favorite Bass
    Largemouth
  • Favorite Lake or River
    Lake Athens and Wheeler Branc

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  • About Me
    I am a retired Certified Financial Planner and pension consultant.

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Brad Reid's Achievements

Short Fish

Short Fish (4/9)

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  1. Well, a knot of any sort has to be snug as it is required for what makes them work best: surface or skin friction. But, if one really yanks hard on a tag end, what you are in essence doing is flattening and stretching the line from that end, especially so with monos and stretchy lines, and making it harder for the wraps above it to bite down. It'll fail more often. What you really want is similar to a tight ring stuck on a finger where as you attempt to pull it off, your skin bunches up in front of the ring in the direction you are pulling. It blocks the ring from coming off. So, you soap up your ring finger, friction is eliminated, and the skin doesn't get dragged up into a hump. But, for a knot, we want to be "dug in." You want the wraps to press down as much as possible into the tag end material in a relaxed state. Stretching line taut makes it rather denser, harder to dig into for a good hold. You want the wraps tight, yes, as in that taut state they'll dig in better, but you want the tag end line down, the receiving end, rather relaxed (comparatively) for the best contact. I first saw this demonstrated by an elite angler and lure maker, Bo James, warning viewers to not over-pull on the tag end of a double uni knot he ties as best as any I have ever seen. Man, he ties a great knot! Brad
  2. The rod I never leave home without taking along when I fish from my kayak? A St. Croix PS56MF spinning rod. At 5'6", it is just so handy from a kayak for all sorts of finesse applications. I usually take along another rod or two, rarely need to reach for them. My essential theory is that we rarely need to make casts of any length from a kayak so I just sidle up or glide to a position stealthily and work the area. It's our great advantage over bass boats. Of the two techniques, I pitch and a short rod with enough line out to sort of grab the bait can be slung with great accuracy. And, a short rod has a shorter lifting point, better leverage, so when you get a big bass on the hook the rod handles them very well. But, I get it, the drive and the attraction to lengthy rods. I just feel like anyone who'd ever try a 5'6" rod for kayak fishing will likely add it to their arsenal. Whether it becomes their "go to" or not, I'm less sure. Brad
  3. The best I've used in homemade. Buy the cheapest little can of Sardines in oil you can find. They'll be the stinkiest and most broken up ones (If you want to eat fabulous Sardines, get King Oscars!!!). Anyway, advert aside, just open them up (outside to keep your spouse from divorcing you!!!) and drop then in to a plastic container. I use empty coffee containers. Add just a bit of cheap veggie oil, any will do, and take a fork and sort of mash this up. I set this in my kayak so I can dip a plastic into it, move my rod tip out of the vessel and shake it a bit, then make my cast. You can actually see the oil coming off the plastic for many casts. Seems natural to me that fish will be attracted to what is essentially a salty bait fish. Brad
  4. See if you can find some statistical sources, say using state/lake records and calculate a ratio using stats from states where 10 pounders are more common. So, if Lake Fork in Texas has 10 twelve pounders caught each year, and your lake has about that many six pounders caught, your 10 pounder should weigh 5 pounds to be about the equivalent. Oh! Take a look a Carl's videos. He fishes cold water up on the east coast, I think in the NJ area. He has morphed over to using larger swim baits and has had considerable luck catching much larger bass over the past several years. Nice guy, I always learn something from him. Brad Here: Targeting big bass in colder climates
  5. Water flow would be a mechanical reason for something to stay afloat a bit longer. With a rain event, another reason is simply that as things dissolve in water (washed into rivers), water becomes denser. So, objects take longer to drift downward. A best example we are all familiar with? Salt water, with its dissolved salts, is much more buoyant than fresh water. Brad
  6. Several "great" things about Old Town hitting the fishing kayak market so hard just a few years ago with its Predator series, then others. Old town seemed to get so many things right from the very beginning including making good looking, muscular boats, good colors, angler friendly yaks. And, good pricing. So, Hobie and others also stepped it up a notch, Hobie with the 360 series and way up there in price; but, also they brought out pedal kayaks in the mid-teens pricing. Hobie attacked the high-end AND the price-conscience/sensitive markets in short order with new models exploiting both ends. This caused a cascading down in prices of Natives and many other makes and models . . . to stay competitive. And, paddlers? Wow! Same thing is happening where it is now going to be danged tough selling pure paddlers for what one can spend on an entry level pedaler. Several makes are going to have to fall in line on price very fast, I suspect, else lose market share. Eddyline paddlers come to mind and so does Bonafide. Gonna be tough selling pure paddlers, regardless of their quality, for prices one can buy low end pedalers. Well, on Old Town, one last thought: I really like the way these new TM powered kayaks work. The TMs are so functionally integrated. Man, are they going to put pressure on the after-market units with their sky high after-market prices and often extensive rigging work. Yep! As long as the government stays out of kayak development and pricing, we'll get more and more bang for the buck year after year. An example of deflation when it is a good thing!!! Brad
  7. You might take a look here, see if it would fit your needs. Brad Liberator
  8. I really like the GrandeBass Airtail Stickbaits. These have an air chamber in the tail of the plastic so the tails float up. Oh! Since these are heavily ribbed, they have increased surface area and when I throw them out weightless on a light finesse hook, they often sort of get held up by surface water tension but eventually sink. I normally fish them with a weight up the line by about a foot or so, poor man's Carolina Rig. Brad
  9. Right, J Francho, good knots tied correctly . . . always best. And, the more knots in a "system," the more chances of a failure so all the more care required. And, the more line out, the more likely to experience an imperfection in it. Let's see. Instantaneous response vs static weight. Your point, again, is correct. Imagine two men, same weight, with nooses around their necks being hanged, same rope size tied using the same knots around their necks. They drop the floor out from underneath them, one man though has a 20 ft rope tied on and drops that far, the other man a 5 ft rope so he drops less far. F = MA. Different forces acting on the ropes owing to the length of the fall, the longer rope under more force. Same for setting a hook to the extent different lengths of line out, or stiffness of the rods and more act on how much actual force the line is exposed to. Brad
  10. My mention of a scupper-less Native and not being self-draining is important. So, I wanted to mention that many two-skinned, heavy, polyethylene scuppered kayaks actually don't drain or drain well. Why? If the vessel is pressed down into the water to the point where the outside water line is > than the floor of the kayak, water will actually come into the kayak, no possible way for it to drain the other way. Why? First, most kayak capacity figures are literally just made up. In other cases, they are calibrated differently. Eddyline, for example, publishes its kayak's capacities and they are defined as being including the weight of the vessel. So, if it says 350 lbs. and the vessel weighs 50 lbs., it means there is only 300 actual loading pounds left (person and gear). Second, people are just so much heavier these days and then add a lot of gear. For BTB, it is critical to get this right else you will get swamped. Water is very likely going to come over the gunwales, the bow and the stern. I suppose my general warning is if not having scuppers is a concern, and it should be, just know that a lot of kayaks have scuppers . . . and they don't work under certain conditions. Brad
  11. J Francho, I liked the other post about one advantage of a longer leader is if its knot is reeled in and wound a few times, it is out of play. Good point. No, though, to there being any advantage to a shorter piece of leader out versus a longer length of it out. Line length is not an issue, that is, a longer line can support as much hanging weight or force as a shorter one. If you have a 10 feet piece of line and can successfully hang a 25 lbs. barbell plate from it, you can do the same with a 100 feet length of the same. Same force/area. And, the same holds true for one knot still under tensile force versus two. Having a leader knot reeled up on a spool and out of play does't change the pressures on the knot down at the terminal end holding a lure. Well, to this, let me add . . . ALMOST. J Francho and others well know that the more line of any sort you have out, the more chances you have for it to have an imperfection or flaw in it. So, "science" assumes perfect, un-flawed line. The reality is often different. And, same for knots. While not having one knot exposed doesn't take any pressure off another, if you have two knots under the same pressure, you have two weak points instead of one. A knot is always the weakest point in a line . . . again, unless the line has a weak spot in it. What? Lab results versus real time "on the water" results I think. Brad
  12. From the kayak crowd here in Texas, we occasionally post dreams of returning to the basics we used years earlier, simplifying things, a minimalist approach. Of course, this is for non-competitive fishing. I rarely go out with more than two rods, rarely use the second one. Two 3600 Plano boxes is more than enough for me, if that. Say! I know a handful of anglers here that have all but stopped fishing for numbers, target big bass using large swimbaits. They don't catch many but when they do, it is photo time!!! Others sort of figure out they are finesse presentation guys only and do away with power fishing gear. Others have just found they really like 3 or 4 presentations, to heck with the rest of them. I'm a bit this way, spending the majority of my time year-round with a Keitech 4" shad-like bait and I like to drop shot on lakes set up for it. If you do trim down, consider contacting a local HS with a fishing team, even a college. Brad
  13. There's a similar thread working here and you might look at some of the thoughts posted over there. I posted that I have recently bought a 2020 Native Ultimate FX 12 Pro from incoming inventory to a dealer here in Texas. My cost with a discount is $854. It should arrive this coming week. 12'1", 30.5" beam, 60 lbs. w/o its seat, 65 with, seat has a high/low adjustment, under-seat tackle storage, seat can be trimmed forward and back, lots of gear track, rod stagers, front bow hatch standard, feet pads standard, hard handles front and rear. One important point or distinction is this kayak doesn't have scuppers (it has no bilge area) so it can't self-drain, more like a canoe in this respect. It is intended for rivers, lakes and smooth bay fishing. Because you stand with your feet a bit lower than the water line, it is supposedly a pretty stable kayak. Brad
  14. michaelb, No, no scuppers and you are correct that it is really a, more or less, canoe with "fishing" kayak features. Native also has a Ultimate FX Propel 13 which is a bit longer, same general construction . . . but has the Native pedal drive. It is also not recommended as an offshore vessel since it can't shed water. So, the Ultimate FX 12 Pro one has you seated or standing a few inches lower below the water line since there is no bilge area comprising two skins of plastic with space between the hull's bottom and the cockpit floor. This is an advantage for stability as your center of mass is a few inches lower. The disadvantage is any water sloshing in from the outside, waves or rain or prop wash from a boat, stays inside the vessel. I'll likely use it only in rivers, lakes and Galveston Bay staying pretty close to the perimeter in the last two circumstances. I'll carry a sponge. And, really, almost all fishing kayaks are "hybrids" and not very pure. Some are part stand up paddleboard, some part canoe, some part jonboat, now a few in catamaran orientations. Back to the Native Ultimate FX Pro 12, it has: a high and low seat adjustment, and removable, too; lots of gear tracks; rod stagers; much lighter weight than most other 12 footer kayaks; standard anchor trolley, underseat storage, front bow hatch cover, etc. Lots of vessel for $854 brand new. I'll use it as my minimalist choice and for specific circumstances. Brad
  15. J Francho, for sure. And, since this is meant to be a "throw it back in the bed of my truck and tie it down" and get on the water in minimalist form, I think the rudder might be overkill. Most reviews on this kayak that I have read said it tracks well without the added rudder owing to what you mentioned: the double tunnel hull form. I am like a lot of kayakers where I love paddling and pedaling depending on the situation/location. I'll report back once I get this kayak, get it "wet" and see how she performs. Brad
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