EditB wrote:Are they like the planer boards you can use for trolling? http://www.downtimecharters.com/Ideas/Planer_boards/boards.htm With a couple of breakout clips, you could potentially hold several kahawai in the current for the kings... |
Zambizi wrote:My thoughts as well. But it would be such a ***** to setup/maintain/manage. |

Zambizi wrote:
My thoughts as well. But it would be such a ***** to setup/maintain/manage. Used to us the same concept when we were kids to hold our baits in place when fishing streams and rivers for bream using ice cream sticks. Was awesome for holding little bits of corn at the edge of an eddy. Some times we could get them close to 90 degrees into the current and then move them out & in by letting line out. |
Ahab wrote:I've also heard of a contraption called a galloping gertie that takes your line out off a surf beach. |
Zambizi wrote:Amanzimtoti :) |

Attach your tow line to the end of the dowel and you're ready to go. We would mostly run two lures each on a separate leader around 4m long. One leader off the tail end of the board and another 3-4m up the tow line. Lures were mostly hexagonal chrome slices but you could use anything really. Saltwater flies / octopus skirts / soft baits would work better than metal slices when the current is slow.
The top /plan view would look like this.
This is what I did 50 years ago. With today's tools and materials I'm sure there are better / simpler ways of attaching a wooden dowel or similar at right angles to a flat board.


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