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recommendations for single portable fish house


scully

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If you don't mind not having a floor, the Eskimo QuickFish 3 is awesome - stays very warm with even a little heater, and weighs only about 25 lbs, plus it gives you more room than the one-man shelters.

I was very skeptical about these last year when my buddy said he bought one. Well on a windy day this shack went up in minutes (For the first time too). Kept us very warm, and because of the size and weight, i'm looking into buying one. This will work for one person to three.

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I bought the Clam Pro TC for on the back of my snowmobile. The reason I went with the pro is the sled base was as small as the trapper, kenai and scout but when set up was bigger. The Kodiak is bigger then the Pro but has a much bigger pack size too. I wanted the smallest pack size so it wouldn't hang over the side of the snowmobile too much. The thermal cap is nice for not dripping on you and the seat is great. I do like the size also, because it's 45" wide compared to the 35" of the other clams I can still fish 2 holes side by side.full-26462-4280-revwithrack.jpg

full-26462-4281-11270016581.jpg

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  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • Sounds pretty sweet, alright. I will check them out, thanks.
    • If you really want to treat your wife (and yourself) with a remote operated trolling motor, the Minn Kota Ulterra is about easy as it gets.  Auto stow and deploy is pretty awesome.  You just have to turn the motor on when you go out and that the last time you have to touch it.   24V 80lb.  60 inch shaft is probably the right length for your boat.  They ain’t cheap - about $3k - but neither one of you would have to leave your seat to use it all day.
    • Wanderer, thanks for your reply. I do intend for it to be 24 volt, with a thrust of 70-80. Spot lock is a must (my wife is looking forward to not being the anchor person any more).  With my old boat we did quite a lot of pulling shad raps and hot n tots, using the trolling motor. Unlikely that we will fish in whitecaps, did plenty of that when I was younger. I also need a wireless remote, not going back to a foot pedal. We do a fair amount of bobber fishing. I don't think I will bother with a depth finder on the trolling motor. I am leaning toward moving my Garmin depth finder from my old boat to the new one, just because I am so used to it and it works well for me. I am 70 years old and kinda set in my ways...
    • Dang, new content and now answers.   First, congrats on the new boat!   My recommendation is to get the most thrust you can in 24V, assuming a boat that size isn’t running 36V.  80 might be tops?  I’m partial to MinnKota.     How do you plan to use the trolling motor is an important question too.     All weather or just nice weather?   Casting a lot or bait dragging?   Bobber or panfish fishing?   Spot lock?  Networked with depth finders?  What brand of depth finders?
    • We have bought a new boat, which we will be picking up this spring. It is an Alumacraft Competitor 165 sport with a 90 horse Yamaha motor. I will be buying and installing a trolling motor,  wondering if I can get some recommendations on what pound thrust I will want for this boat?  Also, I will be selling my old boat, is there a good way to determine the value on an older boat ( mid-80's with a 75 horse 2-stroke  Mariner motor)  I will appreciate any help with these questions.
    • Sketti...  not out of a jar either!
    • Lol yeah I watched that
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