Here's the next one.
Here's the next one.
I have a stakeout pole, but with the tides, the water can literally change by a couple feet during a normal hunt. That's what has me a little nervous. If the tide gets sucked out and the river drops two feet, I could lose my boat!
What I'll more than likely do is but multiple dog stakes and screw them into the ground on my permanent setups.
I'm working on my b-roll. The dslr makes a big difference there. I don't have one, but I'm trying my best with the camcorder.Solid video my friend. Good b-roll! That gator was definitely a shooter!
I'm working on my b-roll. The dslr makes a big difference there. I don't have one, but I'm trying my best with the camcorder.
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@swampsnyper - priceless advice. Every time I tie off my kayak on a changing tide (it can change several feet) I worry about my boat getting sucked away. Or it could be left on top of a mud flat. You can't walk through them because you sink to your knee and there's no chance of pushing a 160lb kayak off the flat.
Thanks for the topo comments as well. I've struggled to find good terrain to key in on in the deep swamps. The edges are easy, but when everything looks the same, it's much more difficult.
I'm going to pay more attention to the micro terrain in my swamps.
Thanks for the help! I really appreciate it!
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This is a really good solution. Thx.In regards to you staking the yak question. Buy some earth anchors like this and you can preset them ahead of time. No way for the yak to pull it.
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