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Matthew Martin February 25th 06 05:42 PM

Crabbing from a Kayak
 
Has any one here tired crabbing form a touring kayak with any success.
What type of equipment was used?

Steve Cramer February 25th 06 11:35 PM

Crabbing from a Kayak
 
Matthew Martin wrote:

Has any one here tired crabbing form a touring kayak with any success.
What type of equipment was used?


I haven't tried it, but I would think dropping a star trap on a hand
line would work if you could keep the boat from drifting. How to deal
with the buggers when you bring them up might get interesting.

--
Steve Cramer
Athens, GA

Bob P February 26th 06 12:42 PM

Crabbing from a Kayak
 
John Fereira wrote:
Matthew Martin wrote in news:fG0Mf.30503$Ug4.14829
@dukeread12:


Has any one here tired crabbing form a touring kayak with any success.
What type of equipment was used?



You might consider some form of "protection" if you catch any and think
about storing them in the cockpit.



A Google "rafting" search returned 28M hits. Amazon has books as cheap
as $4. Unless you've got very specific questions, I suggest that you
start there.

[email protected] February 28th 06 11:20 PM

Crabbing from a Kayak
 
Yes.

I posted about this a few years ago.

Last time I crabbed, it was in recreational kayaks, but touring kayaks
have more rigging and are better for waves, so they should do even
better. I was in Tillamook Bay on the Oregon Coast.

Here, people are looking for Dungeness or maybe red rock crab.

There are several traps for crabs: rings, pots, and cages. Rings aren't
really appropriate; you won't be able to guarantee pulling them up fast
enough. Crab pots captivate the crabs but are a bit heavy and bulky.
Crab cages are available in collapsable 18x24 shapes, which fit with
bungee cord on deck rigging. You can drop them down and come back to
check them in an hour.

I thought the process of pulling traps up would tend to flip me, but it
didn't, although I tipped when I tried a crab pot which was too big. I
would go to the nearby beach to actually sort them out since I didn't
want to do this in an open cockpit.

There are also angling hooks used to catch crab on a fishing line, and
nets for catching crabs in shallow water. Either of these would work
fine with a kayak.

If you are not in a protected bay, this all gets harder, but you could
raft kayaks together for more stability.

Nathan


Richard Adams March 4th 06 06:16 PM

Crabbing from a Kayak
 
Crabbing from a SOT kayak works fine, I use a collapsible round trap, and as
noted below, never had trouble with retrieval. I crab in protected waters,
mostly.

I am thinking about trying the small traps used on a fishing line. They're a
mesh pyramid about 5 inches high. Bait is placed inside and the crab tangles
its legs gettting at the bait. I would like to lay out a series on my
longline.


wrote in message
oups.com...
Yes.

I posted about this a few years ago.

Last time I crabbed, it was in recreational kayaks, but touring kayaks
have more rigging and are better for waves, so they should do even
better. I was in Tillamook Bay on the Oregon Coast.

Here, people are looking for Dungeness or maybe red rock crab.

There are several traps for crabs: rings, pots, and cages. Rings aren't
really appropriate; you won't be able to guarantee pulling them up fast
enough. Crab pots captivate the crabs but are a bit heavy and bulky.
Crab cages are available in collapsable 18x24 shapes, which fit with
bungee cord on deck rigging. You can drop them down and come back to
check them in an hour.

I thought the process of pulling traps up would tend to flip me, but it
didn't, although I tipped when I tried a crab pot which was too big. I
would go to the nearby beach to actually sort them out since I didn't
want to do this in an open cockpit.

There are also angling hooks used to catch crab on a fishing line, and
nets for catching crabs in shallow water. Either of these would work
fine with a kayak.

If you are not in a protected bay, this all gets harder, but you could
raft kayaks together for more stability.

Nathan




Matthew Martin March 4th 06 08:58 PM

Crabbing from a Kayak
 
Richard Adams wrote:
Crabbing from a SOT kayak works fine, I use a collapsible round trap, and as
noted below, never had trouble with retrieval. I crab in protected waters,
mostly.

I am thinking about trying the small traps used on a fishing line. They're a
mesh pyramid about 5 inches high. Bait is placed inside and the crab tangles
its legs gettting at the bait. I would like to lay out a series on my
longline.


wrote in message
oups.com...
Yes.

I posted about this a few years ago.

Last time I crabbed, it was in recreational kayaks, but touring kayaks
have more rigging and are better for waves, so they should do even
better. I was in Tillamook Bay on the Oregon Coast.

Here, people are looking for Dungeness or maybe red rock crab.

There are several traps for crabs: rings, pots, and cages. Rings aren't
really appropriate; you won't be able to guarantee pulling them up fast
enough. Crab pots captivate the crabs but are a bit heavy and bulky.
Crab cages are available in collapsable 18x24 shapes, which fit with
bungee cord on deck rigging. You can drop them down and come back to
check them in an hour.

I thought the process of pulling traps up would tend to flip me, but it
didn't, although I tipped when I tried a crab pot which was too big. I
would go to the nearby beach to actually sort them out since I didn't
want to do this in an open cockpit.

There are also angling hooks used to catch crab on a fishing line, and
nets for catching crabs in shallow water. Either of these would work
fine with a kayak.

If you are not in a protected bay, this all gets harder, but you could
raft kayaks together for more stability.

Nathan



I figured I could strap a milk crate or something to the back of the
kayak and put the crabs in there and use a small trap of some sort I
have had luck in the past from a small boat with just some bunker,
string, and a net. just gotta be slow.


Trevor Nottle March 17th 06 02:43 PM

Crabbing from a Kayak
 
I use a Perception Acadia to fish for blue swimmer crabs. I tow a small
fibre glass kayak to carry the drop nets and to have somewhere to keep the
crabs. Last time I went out I caught about 2 dozen. I have small floats
tied to the end of the dropnet line. I just paddle along and place the nets
about 30 metres apart and then after 15 to 20 minutes I go and pull and
empty the nets. The only trouble I have is when a big sting ray steals the
bait and damages the steel frame of the dropnet. In between pulling the
nets I usually do a bit of fishing close by to make sure the rays don't
steal the nets.
Cheers
Trevor

"Matthew Martin" wrote in message
news:fG0Mf.30503$Ug4.14829@dukeread12...
Has any one here tired crabbing form a touring kayak with any success.
What type of equipment was used?





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