
By Cal Kellogg
I’m approaching the end of my first year as a kayak angler and I’ve got to confess that the sport has lived up to all my expectations and more. My Hobie Pro Angler 14 from Kayak City has proven to be a deadly fishing platform whether I’m trolling for trout or casting for bass. The fact is, I’ve had just as much success fishing out of my kayak as I’ve had in years past while fishing out of a powerboat. But right now, I’m confronting a situation that I knew was coming…The cold months.
When you’re bank fishing or fishing out of a big powerboat, cold weather can be a factor, but not like when you’re kayaking. When you launch and retrieve a kayak, you’ve got to make contact with the water. Furthermore, since you’re fishing from a small craft, despite the fact that modern fishing kayaks are extremely stable and I’ve never even came close to falling in, you’ve also got to assume you’re going to end up in the water during an emergency and you’ve got to plan accordingly.
As summer gave way to fall, I started wearing warmer clothes, but even when I visited Lake Almanor and Davis Lake in October when the air temperature was in the 20’s early I still went into the water barefoot when launching my kayak. Once afloat and offshore I dried my feet, put on heavy socks and got busy fishing. That strategy doesn’t work now because the water temperatures have gotten a lot colder and it doesn’t warm up later in the morning like it did back in October. In short I can’t wade into the water barefoot anymore.
The obvious answer to my problem was a pair of waders, but I didn’t want chest waders. I didn’t want to get into a big hassle undressing my torso to pull down the waders the 318 times a morning I have to go to the bathroom…LOL.