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This website was created to house internal and external drafts containing reports associated with the art of angling and our Kayak Fishing Adventures. Based in and around cities and locations throughout Australia, these tales of experience, knowledge and info are for all to enjoy and all content, text and images contained herein are deemed strictly copyright ( (C) 2006 - 2012, all rights reserved ).

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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

NSW - FangACT Burrinjuck Weekend 6/12/08



Introduction :

Burrinjuck Dam is around 57 km south-west of the township of Yass. Constructed in 1928, It was one of the first major dams built for irrigation in NSW (Supplying water for the local Riverina and in turn the Murrumbidgee Irrigation Scheme).The Lake itself has an immense surface area of 5500 ha, teamed with 645 km of shoreline it can hold just over double the water density of Sydney Harbour. An angling Mecca with a multitude of species available including Murray Cod, Golden Perch and a smattering of Redfin, Carp and perhaps remnant populations of Silver Perch, Trout, Atlantic Salmon, Eel-Tailed Catfish and Macquarie Perch.

FangACT (A Fishnet Anglers Group from Canberra) hold a friendly interclub competition here, celebrating the opening of Murray Cod season for the year. While it is held on a strictly mateship basis, pride is on the line with the chance of gaining your name permanently on the FangACT perpetual Cod opening trophy. At first I was confused as to the reason they hold their annual event here but winding my way down along the old rail line into Burrinjuck Waters State Park I immediately could see why. Burrinjuck Waters is a spectacular situate offering visitors a megalithic haven with pristine flora and fauna, it also offers immediate access to boat launching facilities.

Arriving Friday night after a long week of work I was greeted by Marty and Evan along with the ritual crew Heathy, Lynnie and Breezeabout. Spent a few hours chatting and meeting others including the infamous Nimrod (Your Fishnet reputation preceeds you, in a good way ) and setting up the car into my own private bungalow. Members stated the wind had been a factor for poor prefish results but it was beginning to abate for the evening. Deciding on a good nights rest I opted for the very, very early rise instead of the classic midnight fumble (Which can be deadly on a Kayak). My mobile alarm was set for 4am and anticipation was soaring, the waterway looked immense but prior to dark I managed to scope out a polite, safe pre-dawn run.


Saturday 6/12/08 :

Rising slightly later than planned I was surprised to be the only member awake, I took this as an omen and snuck out of my campsite towards death or glory. The predicted winds made famous by the lakes open plan basin were non existent so I quickly pushed off. The sheer size of the main basin under the gloomy, early sunrise was slightly concerning but as always it was related to first time nerves. Paddling under kayak equipped lights helped calm the senses and made changing lures safely a dream, but what depth to run at, what brand to use and what colour/pattern to opt for?

Being an avid tackle buff I had been stocking my native lure supplies up for a few solid years, the choices always seemed confusing. For some reason today clarity was on my side, a Perch pattern and a Wagga Frog AC Invader duo were deployed without much ado. Following the shoreline expanse of Carrols Creek towards the Murrumbidgee arm brought a couple of small Redfin undone, maybe my expectations were too high but this run lacked serious meaning. Sure there were little sheltered inlets with cliff like sections but the bottom structure was featureless and ultimately weedless. I looked behind me to assess my GPS breadcrumb, the first boats of the day had launched, no doubt following the waters edge on the way to the ‘Bidgee mouth.

Tree lines appeared in the distance as the light grew stronger, paddling through saw some tense moments as I ducked and weaved my Hobie Quest through with little incident (Unfortunately). It was at this stage I hung up my spin outfits and switched to Bassman Spinnerbaits (Insert cash for comment here), throwing all weights and all sizes with all different types of blade configurations. Small Redfin schooled close by with the occasional tap, shake and bake but nothing of significance. With recent native success on SB’s I felt confident but no reward saw a return to the old, troll fold. Custom Crafted make a wonderful lure called a Hammerhead (In ambush purple/red stripe colour), it’s seen better days and in desperate need of a treble upgrade but got the nod anyway.

Leaving the Wagga Frog to fend for itself I pushed over towards Cave Island, entering deeper water with every paddle stroke. When I hit 28m I felt a little uneasy, realising I was still all alone (Not for long mind you) but that soon faded once protruding timber emerged from bank side breakaways. I feel much safer hugging banks, much like a kid longing for his teddy; I guess it’s just a psychological thing (Mummy?). Rounding the rocky end of ‘Jucks island home I encountered the mother off all drop offs that saw me whack my sounder in dismay, “Don’t break now, stupid thing!” I muttered. Having a further glance at the pixelated screen revealed columns, thermoclines, bait schools and a whole lot of DEPTH! (Features included a 6m to 31m high-rise drop).

The lures drop back was such that I felt the Wagga Frog brush the 6m undergrowth before exploring depths unknown, as for the Hammerhead well he was operating on his own terms and conditions. Diving way beyond its intended marching path I didn’t take much notice of either lure until I was well and truly out of sight of the State Park. Boats disappeared from view; the sun appeared and highlighted another depth change, this time an increase from 31m to 34m with even deeper deviations. My previously safe bank side edge loomed steeply above me and the water began confusing itself, I felt out of my depth for a split second (Excuse the pun) and completely alone. Just when I was about to call out for my Mum and look for Teddy, all hell broke loose!

During the next off paddle (Paddle dip on the right) the left hand side of the yak jolted violently, Nitlon screamed from the reel and the rod loaded up something fierce. Its these initial bursts of power that make kayak fishing rewarding but extremely difficult at the same time, I could not for the life of me wrench the miracle combo out of the Scotty triple mount. I have developed a strategy when dealing with big fish from a yak and really only applies to this particular rod setup (Mainly due to this being the most successful one). It involves lots of self help techniques, total mindset procedures and a hell of a lot of patience. “Big fish, big fish, big fish” I coached myself, feeling the raw pulling power surge deeper into the crystal clear, emerald brine.

Almost on cue the wind began howling creating a drift line directly towards the daunting rocky face. Patience in my gear and confidence in my knots helped reassure my fate but oh how I began regretting not upgrading those old rusty hooks. Big tail beats spun drag settings into overdrive but funnily enough stopped as quickly as it started, this is when I saw the first glimpse of the white fin tips. It came to the surface quite quickly (Probably due to its swim bladder ), pausing for a moment on its side. Performing one last dash beneath the kayak the fish was beat but with my compromising position closing I had to make some very important decisions very, very quickly. The Quest began kissing the ledge placing my Nitro Undertaker a little to close for comfort. A quick reposition, a deck check, a glance for the lip grips/pliers plus a gentle hand nudge away from the rocks saw the environet come into play.

While the fish remained relatively calm once onboard, my nerves were overloaded with mesmerizing adrenaline. After 20 seconds of correct handling and stubborn hook removal my catch and release prize lay upon my wet lap, a beautiful, fat Murray Cod. Trying to get some time for a quick photo shoot proved difficult, my waterproof pants were deemed too slippery to attempt anything more than some simple happy snaps. Surveying my surroundings one final time (In an attempt to embrace FangACT Cod opening success) I placed a ruler across the fishes length and tallied up 66cm hastily. With a slightly raised head, engorged stomach and tail slope it was possibly not accurate enough. I am a man of modesty (Maintaining some brag ability) but if anything this icon was estimated one to two cm larger than submitted comp length.

Swapping the tightly bound lip grip lanyard from one wrist to another allowed a classic release away from stoned harm. Supporting its enormous guts and girth was an incredible feeling, having my wrist twisted off upon release was not. Immediately it indicated it was ready to go and soaked me from head to toe with two massive beats of its tail, subtly waving good bye and giving me the finger in one sift sweep south. I found shallower water and celebrated with a well earned rest (Plenty of fist pumping action), opting once finished to retrace my island path backwards and head back to the campground. Certain pertaining conditions saw this fish not make it onto a brag mat (Not what I personally recommend doing with Cod caught from a kayak), unfortunately the main requirement for entering fish in the FangACT Cod opening competition.

The winds eased enough for a brisk paddle back, maybe they didn’t. Could have been the smile emanating from my phizog parting the lake, paddling definitely felt that little bit easier. Arriving on Friday night after State Waters office hours I was due to check in my car and campsite by 9am sharp this morning, leaving enough time to gloat humbly at the ramp to a FangACT member who was previously tinkering with his plated vessel. It was great finding a welcoming Evan, knowing full well he would appreciate any capture from a kayak (Being a yak angler himself). After wishing him well, he ventured out solo into the now buffeting conditions. Glancing at the time on the GPS I packed up rapidly, gradually working my way up and through the park to the State Waters office (Noticing another more serious fishing competition gathering).

One by one the club anglers returned to camp, beaten and bruised by the foreboding wind. Tales of singular Golden Perch and tiny Redfin whiffled throughout our heavily tackle laden community. Many of us slept throughout the daylight heat, hoping to awake mid afternoon to a mirror finished conclusion to an otherwise slow day fishing. Strong wind gusts died to some extent, warranting another expedition towards the Murrumbidgee arm. Spying the white caps surrounding the Cave Island a few 100m away, I concentrated on loving the now local banks once again (Only this time I made it into the ‘Bidgee arm). Whilst trying to maintain a drag free drift a assemblage of redneck piss swillers threatened nearby, many chants of “Dump him!” carried the distance separating our to dissimilar craft. Given the conditions and the urgency of such a thing happening I retreated, parting ways with a peaceful bird gesture (No shadow puppet animation here).

I suffer from a no retreat, no surrender mentality, but conditions weren’t improving. Slogging my way back to camp I pondered what makes fellow anglers act improperly towards kayak fisherman. Were we viewed as a threat? Hardly… Were we considered inadequate? Possibly… My mind continued racing, the only sure fire way of making a couple of painstaking kilometres feel like brief moments in time. With more reports of lacking captures we rounded off the night with a good old FangACT raffle (Courtesy of Marty and generous sponsors/individuals). Heathy, Lynnie and Steve wandered in after, with a successful tale or two. In their words of wisdom, insane kamikaze trolling runs were required to secure a fish, against the wind and tight to structure. Murray Cod, Golden Perch and Redfin reports were distributed for the listening, finally some positive angling effort, indicating persevering in the wind could pay off.

Bunking down for the night, the Subaru was getting a confined feel to it. Maybe I was facing impervious facts that roll out mattresses (No matter the diameter/thickness) should not be expected to provide maximum comfort, even when used in a stackable, tandem formula. The Foresters windows were rolled down, Aeroguard applied and the phones alarm was once again set solid to 4am (Give or take a snooze button or two). Even after seven hours of trolling against an unrelenting stiff breeze, I still had trouble sustaining a civilized sleep pattern (Leaving my sneakers outside next time might help!). The wind was still around when I woke on Sunday morning, I hit the snooze button too many times and turned the alarm attribute off accidently (That’s what I kept telling myself anyway).


Sunday 7/12/08 :

Rising without crack of dawn rota felt great, as my weather-beaten body obviously needed a rest. Spoke to a few of the boys to make sure I was not the only fool heading out and nicked off ahead of them with dreams of making the now infamous freshwater atoll. Once almost underway, heaven breathed heavily as the blustery weather sprang into life once more. Making headway this time proved impossible; despite the fact the flurries were showing a somewhat gentile nature. Carrols Creek was in the middle of a European surface invasion, never in my life have I seen so many tailing Carp before. Trying to find shelter was as fruitless as an orchard after a hail storm, my arms were broken and my bulk was trodden, surely somewhere out there was another fish for me?

I cut my energetic losses and called it a trip, frugally obtaining a paddling pace Sally Robbins (Lay down Sally) would have been proud of. The others had either not ventured out or had returned to camp previously, all except the brethren three. Whilst reshuffling gear in the car and undertaking maintenance on my site, Heathy, Lynnie and Steve bided farewell and commenced exiting the Park (Only to be passed at the local State Waters tuck shop). It was after two minutes of trying to hail Marty or any other member on the UHF that I noticed the caravan and tents were gone, I was treating myself like a clueless, late bridesmaid. A tonne or more dead Carp dumped into a ute tray (By the real fishing competitors) saluted me on my way out, no doubt scheduled for a long and dirty appointment with a deep hole somewhere…


Conclusion :

Sometimes all it takes is a short, country drive to realise you are as close to kayak fishing heaven as one could/can get. In every reachable direction, north, south, east or west, a journey of less than two hours can get you fishing immaculate, well-known destinations with plenty of folk lore attached. If it was not for the famous three P’s, Politicians, Politics and pornography, I am sure Canberra would have been branded another ‘The gateway to…’ town. Needless to say past capital planning included various stages of urban waterways, no doubt to cool the heatwave from emitted from Parliament House representatives (Thank god for visionaries, Walter Burley Griffin).

NSW - Shallow Crossing 22/11/08



Finally caught my first wild Bass, read on folks...

Left Canberra after securing new AT ( All Terrain tyres ) on my Forester at around 1:00pm, bound for Craigs popper extreme secret hideout. He looked bushed after a big morning at Durras but was eager to guide me to some of my first wild river Bass. Weather was still iffy but we arrived around 4:30pm to a mostly calm, super secret location ( Shallow Crossing, Clyde River ). Pushed upstream for little surface activity but a few missed explosions. Some few pools deep Craig secured a new PB of 43cm Australian Bass which I know he felt good happy about... He is kind of a one up PB man.

Got the bejesus scared out of me on a surface striking fish who missed the first cast, exploded but missed the second, flipped the third and hooked up on the fourth. Big mouth and small hooks dont mix and even though unsighted was a corker of a Bass. Moved deeper again to the further pools and on the way I caught a small model, around 20cm's of pure Bass delight. Craig got done over 2 or three times, losing Spinnerbaits galore all still with a wry smile on his face ( I guess losing a bunch of expensive lures is ok if its to a big Bass, big Flathead, big Salmon etc etc ).

After 3 hours of throwing surface lures for not much I took Craig's unoffered advice and switched to a little Kokoda Kingspin Spinnerbait and hooked up on the fourth cast, bit of a grand tussle and an inspection / verification / photo from Craig showed a new PB of 42cm prime healthy Bass was in my net ( Eclipsing my Bass PB by a mere 1cm ). Pretty sure Craig got done again when darkness set in so we retreated back to the cars for a crash, anticipating a hectic morning on the super bronze fishies... Dinner consisted of servo sambos, beef jerky and some spicy ass chips!

Rising Sunday morning at 5:00am was easy, fishing till 10:00am solidly in the pouring rain was not. Insect activity lacked and while I missed a few strikes early on the Sammy. the Bevy Fizzer rattled a few undersized Bass which promptly would self release upon retrieval. Moved down to the previous days mega pool to find the action tough, a decent Bass held the skirt of my Spinnerbait long enough for me to ready myself or the impending tail beat shower but he let go. Perhaps he prefered monstering Craigs offerings, some bloody Bass did as he was done over again and lost his last Spinnerbait. Plenty of bling bling fish in Shallow Crossing at the moment, guess its lucky they were all 1/8 oz. not 1/4. oz in weight.

I threw some thoughtfull and uninspiring sage advice Craig's way ( Perhaps its time to change leader Brands? ) as his tally loss of lures for the weekend was well over $100.00 and counting. We headed back Sunday fishless but happy with Saturday evenings effort, bashing our all terrain way back down towards the Old Princess Highway without a hint of a few unsaid Lyrebird incidents. Didnt get many photos of Sunday due to extreme rain and bad light, really need to get a new camera or risk using it without the waterproof housing.

Still takes good images but low light kills many otherwise great shots by adding noise, alternatives are not available for the low end DSLR and I keep spending my dosh on my car...

NSW - Brogo Dam + Others 8/11/08



Will keep this pretty blunt,

Had the desire to cram in as much fishing time as possible ( Due to Claire's sister having her Hens party this weekend ). The aim was to master a fish on fly and then journey down to Pambula to stay with the folks. Trying to savour the Trout rivers and streams on the way was slightly futile due to the weather but did manage an optimal day on Brogo Dam before returning home. If anything I did some great recon for future trips... The following powem sums it up quite nicely :

Ive been everywhere man, ive been everwhere...

Ive been to Brindibella (Fly), Numerella (Fly), Bredbo (Fly) and the Badja (Fly),..
Cooma (Fuel), Bombala (Fly), Nimmitabel (Fly) and Wilumla (Piss)...
Brogo (Yak), Candelo (?), Bega (Look) and Tathra (Sigh)...
Pambula (Bed), Merimbula (Fuel), Williamsdale (Yawn) and Canberra (Bed)...

IVE BEEN EVERYWHERE!

800km trek, 5 hrs sleep, 1 x missed Trout, 1 x 33cm EP and bugger all mobile coverage (Optus sux! )

NSW - Snowy Mountains Trout Fest 1/11/08, 2/11/08



Friday / Saturday 1/11/08 :

Arrived Friday evening ahead of Jason and Craig to a cabin brimming with members. Met and conversed with most people while devouring a couple of bowls of yummy curry, didn’t agree with me the next day though. Craig and Jason elected to camp at Kalkite overnight Friday for 1 x 2am Bow and 1 x 6am Bow. Launched my yak from Kalkite 5am Saturday morning to try and find the boys, tied on the J7 Rapala and jointed Rebel and caught 2 Bows ( Average 40cm ) in the first 1/2 hr and lost about the same amount as the sun came up.

Lost a big Brown near the yak before finding the lads ( Bugger ) on an unusual bank. Jason landed another fish while I had a quick chat so I departed while the trolling was good and caught another 42cm Bow on the now infamous J7 lure ( Best Trout trolling statistics from the yak so far ). Found our regular Kalkite bank and set up the rods with Powerbait ( 1 x Lemon Twist, 1 x Chunky Chart ). Jason paddled over eventually just in time to witness a feisty clone Bow jump on the chartreuse, I found myself 1 fish away from my bag limit before 9am ( Been trying to bag out all year ).

Craig was hooking and losing plenty of fish from his yak using the rainbow Squidgy fish plastics, he too eventually joined us on the bank. Craig and Jase caught up on the fish front with the following 4 Bows flowing onto their lines ( Some mid 40's and a thumper from Craig ). They switched to injected Scrub Worms ( Don’t ask, sure you know ) and waited and waited and waited... Craig pulled stumps and went for a troll, returning about 40 minutes later down wind a few bays. Jason went to investigate and scout for Yabby holes ( Unfortunate mistake ) for his nets, I stayed to watch my lines and concentrate on catching a Brown somehow.

We discussed what it would take to get a Brown about 10 minutes before this 'Unlucky' walk, as soon as he was completely out of sight and shouting range his bite alarm flew off and braid peeled furiously. Left hand wind confused me and I was screaming Jason’s name every 10 seconds ( Alas he did not hear or see me ). Decent Brown ( 1.584 gilled and gutted ) that went bezerk and took to the air, he was well hooked though. Had to walk in knee deep to land the fish and just as I exited the water poor Jason strolled over the hill within yelling range… He was pretty bummed, he never leaves his rods for long.

All action died after that, even though the fish kept rising around us till about 2pm. Weighed in ( Jason and I decided I should weigh in the Brown, so I bagged out for the first time this year ) and went back to the cabin for a rest before the boys once again headed for a camping session at Kalkite with hopes of big fish. I was pretty wrapped with our performance Saturday but we lacked the big Rainbows we were easily securing in the winter months. Rang Jason at about 10pm and whilst chatting Craig landed a 1.818 gilled and gutted Brown on, yep you guessed it, an injected Scrub Worm. Tried my Powerbait luck solo at Stinky Bay till 12am for nil result, went back to the cabin for 4hrs rest and another very, very early rise.


Sunday 2/11/08 :

Alarm went off at 4am, was unloading at Kalkite and packing the yak when I noticed a strange buzzing sound. I amp myself up by pumping Metallica but gave myself a flat battery. Moved on hgging the twon side bank and hooked up almost immediately. Had the net in the hand and lost my first fish on the Rebel jointed. Hooked and lost close to 6 fish in the next hour, most to tail walking, jump, spit ( My usual problem ) all on the J7.

Hooked a big fish ( looked Brown ) which took me around some visible snags. Got close to regaining all line when the 4lb braid gave way, lost my lucky Rebel Jointed and about 15m braid and leader. Headed for Craig and Jase losing 3 more on the way when I spied Craig loitering around some snags in the yak. Landed a trolling PB of 47cm Rainbow ( 960 gilled and gutted ) on the J7.

Craig mentioned he lost a fish of a life time trolling said snags, estimated over 80cm. Bank fishing went quiet and am unsure of the boys tally but now we all weighed in good fish with Craigs Brown being the team fish of the day. Wind picked up making it a hell of a paddle back to Kalkite, Marty drove to the ramp and gave me a jump start ( Thanks champ! ) and shadowed me from the weigh station to the cabins.

Forgot to add I tried leadcore line from the yak ( Thanks for that John ) and struggled but learned quite a bit. One of the best times I have had fishing Jindy and one worth repeating, look forward to fishing the Troutfest next year in 2009!

NSW - AKFF Lake Durras Event 11/10/08



A short summary would read something like this,

About 18 - 20 participants all catching good fish ( Sans me, go Claire! ) and enjoying good company. Saturday we owned the boat ramp most of the day ( Not a soul on the water ) and after a misty morning Durras commenced firing. Everyone did a great job figuring out the system with Patwah, Dustin, Craig and Jason notable standouts ( Sans me, go Claire ).

A massive feed of 17 pizzas / 7 Garlic Breads was the table of fare for dinner Saturday, thanks to AKFF and Davey G for his edible donation ( Also thanks to Jason the 'Pizza Donkey' ). Sunday's yaks at dawn revealed a warmer morning with a strong Bream population with the occasional upgraded comp entry ( Mainly Caught2's 39.5cm Whiting, Pescado's 38cm Whiting and Scleburne's 53cm Cuda ).

Farewell gathering was fun with prizes and back slapping to boot, many thanks to AKFF, Davey G, Arpie, Craig450, Coffee Guru and Yak Fisher for the more than generous support. Many species turned on a show with some more prevelant than others, some crazy fish activity was recorded over the weekend signaling a promising future to the summer months ( Must be a few BIG fish chowing down right now ).

Great to see such a good turn out for a South Coast event, props to Justcruisin and Arpie for making the 6hr trek down )... Unlike previous events in this region the weather was almost immaculate!

For more information on the weekend, please click on the link below :

http://www.akff.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=20394

NSW - Durras Lake prefish 4/10/08



My close friends Jason and Craig fished Durras Lake for a few windblown hours before I got a chance to arrive ( Taking photographs of South Coast images consumed my time ). By the time I hit the water a nice storm that was brewing beyond Tuross turned up, making for a very hard prefish event before our AKFF gathering.

Fish were few and far between but managed to get some Flathead between us ( One a piece for Squidder and myself, 42cm + 48cm. Saw some surface activity on the way back to the ramp that got me fairly excited but I had to return home early, something big is getting round at the moment. One young guy who I briefly spoke to said he caught a 75cm Flatty on a prawn from the boat ramp on friday night, lets just pray to god it does not rain again ( Dont like the rain, wind I guess could have been a lot worse ).

Was also told that Eco Point resort has a resturaunt and bar that is available to the public ( Some more information, drinks prolong fishing events). See you guys and girls from AKFF next Friday, dont forget to keep an eye on the forum for updates...

ACT - Lake Burley Griffin 30/8/08



Top day all around and congratulations again to the lucky few who secured early Goldens!

You could just tell they would be around early, warmish weather and sunny patches proved their undoing. Even fellow AKFF member Ado's famed Min Min struck gold ( Upstaged by a $2 Force 10 Big W lure though ). AKFF member Patwah commented on the poor colours on his fish while Ado mentioned the great condition and lovely golden hue his had.

I started late due to some help with my Fly rod from Kim ( Thanks again, really appreciate it ) and mooched around for bugger all... Couple of fish in Redfin land. No photos from me as I was saving the battery power for the million photos of my late, last days of the season 1m + Murray Cod ( Which failed to come out and play ).

Found out my fishfinder was broken / filled with water from the Maloney's missadventure so felt a little lost ( Why a small screen with crap pixels makes me feel comfy I will never know ). The green but clear colour that LBG presented us was indeed pleasant, LBG is quite full of water at the moment!


Thanks for the company guys, bodes well for a good year on the natives!

NSW - Maloneys Beach 9/8/08


My first real scare from my kayak,

Was having a hard time trying to catch fish so decided to troll the Snapper Snatcher all the way from launch to Yellow Rock only to find as soon as I arrived 20kmph + winds decended upon us. I was a fair way from the departure point so decided to head back asap, needless to say I struggled.

My little Quest was dwarfed with wind waves the opposite direction to the swell and was promptly swamped all the way back ( I knew Craig wasnt to far if help was needed ).The harder I paddled the deeper the nose would dig, the lighter I paddled the further backwards I would drift. I observed Craig pedaling his Revo and noticed that it sat a LOT higher in the water and his fluid pedaling seemed to negate the seaway safe enough.

However the similar shape of the quest seemed a LOT different, it dug its nose in deep and allowed water to fill my yak almost to the water line ( At first I had scuppers plugged, unplugged the situation slightly improved ).The problem was I could not rid the water as fast as it was coming in, I stopped a few times and bailed as much as I could before pressing on but would lose ground fast. Rounding the final headland I went hell for leather, my initial 20 minute troll ended in 45 minutes of pain, stress and anger.

I dont blame my little yak, in fact even though it filled completely with water 3 times it didnt sink and kept itself above the waterline ( Along with getting me to land and warm clothes ).

Next time somebody asks if a Quest is a dry ride please inform them of the above...