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Fishing Vest weight discussion



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 19th, 2008, 04:29 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
daytripper
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Posts: 1,083
Default Fishing Vest weight discussion

On Tue, 19 Feb 2008 07:37:59 -0800 (PST), rb608
wrote:

The subject of vest weight has come up before and again just recently,
and I thought I'd offer up my Boy Scout "Be Prepared" fishing vest for
discussion. On the few occasions I hit the rivers, I'm planning to
make a day of it. I'm usually an inconvenient distance from my car,
and anything I want for 8 hours, I need to take with me.

I'm all for a light vest, and I really don't take too much extra
fishing gear. Then again, what do a few leaders or spools of tippet
weigh anyway. No, fishing supplies add virtually nothing to my vest,
yet the last time I was up on the Salmon River, I think my vest must
have weighed ten pounds. Why? It's the other stuff.

It's no fun getting hungry when the catching is good, so I stuff a few
granola bars in the back pocket. Getting dehydrated is worse, so a
couple bottles of water go in there too. Now the vest is a load.
Stuff a stuffable rain jacket back there too, and now it's bulky *and*
heavy. Then there's the flask of single malt (optional, I suppose,
for some), a few good cigars, and a small supply of TP, and a small
camera. In the end, my vest ends up more a backpack than a fishing
aid.

I don't really have a question, except, does everyone else take all
this **** when they go out for a day? Or, do you plan to be closer to
your vehicle and leave more stuff behind?

Joe F.


As I similarly tend to prepare for a day on the river with the goal of not
needing to return to the vehicle what brung me - except to leave...aside from
the single malt, the second bottle of water, the camera, and the cigars, I
suspect the contents of my vest are very similar to yours :-)...and after I
add an extra reel and a few spools to those two back pockets, probably end up
with a similar weight problem :-(

My shorty vest of the last 15 years has something like 50 pockets. I'm not
sure I've yet found them all, but none of the ones I've found are ever empty
on the stream - the classic "problem growing to the bounds of its domain"
syndrome ;-)

Typical vest inventory for salmonid: four of the large black Wheatley boxes
(dries, streamers, mayfly/stonefly nymphs & wets, and caddis/dragon/damsel
"nymphs"), 2 of the small silver Wheatleys for microminutiae drys and wets, a
wool-lined streamer wallet, 6 spools of Orvis SuperStrong (2x through 8x), 5
spools of Mirage (2x to 6x), a few extra leaders, hemostat & nippers on
separate zingers, bottle of fly-shake, bottle of flotant, small collection of
lead-free split-shot, couple of line cleaner pads, a few drift indicators, a
stream thermometer, small gooseneck flashlight, a slip-on bug seine bag,
breathable shorty hooded rain jacket tucked in the big back pocket with a
ziplock baggie of TP, a back-up flyreel w/mounted spool, a spare spool for the
back-up reel, and a spare spool for the primary reel, pair of glasses in their
case, a TU pin and a few plastic license holders festooning the front, and
often a landing net french-clipped to the back...

I think I've covered everything. Woof.

I don't know how much that vest ends up weighing at the start of a day but I
can say by the end of that day it weighs a *lot* more.
And it feels so good taking it off!
And it has always been thus....

/daytripper (it's a love/hate thing ;-)
  #2  
Old February 28th, 2008, 01:40 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
Big Dale
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Posts: 19
Default Fishing Vest weight discussion

On Feb 19, 9:37*am, rb608 wrote:
. *In the end, my vest ends up more a backpack than a fishing
aid.

I don't really have a question, except, does everyone else take all
this **** when they go out for a day? *Or, do you plan to be closer to
your vehicle and leave more stuff behind?

Joe F.


The only way I cut the weight is to carry only one loaded spare clip
for the Glock.

Big Dale

  #3  
Old February 28th, 2008, 03:10 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
riverman
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Posts: 1,032
Default Fishing Vest weight discussion

On Feb 19, 11:37*pm, rb608 wrote:
The subject of vest weight has come up before and again just recently,
and I thought I'd offer up my Boy Scout "Be Prepared" fishing vest for
discussion. *On the few occasions I hit the rivers, I'm planning to
make a day of it. *I'm usually an inconvenient distance from my car,
and anything I want for 8 hours, I need to take with me.

I'm all for a light vest, and I really don't take too much extra
fishing gear. *Then again, what do a few leaders or spools of tippet
weigh anyway. *No, fishing supplies add virtually nothing to my vest,
yet the last time I was up on the Salmon River, I think my vest must
have weighed ten pounds. *Why? *It's the other stuff.

It's no fun getting hungry when the catching is good, so I stuff a few
granola bars in the back pocket. *Getting dehydrated is worse, so a
couple bottles of water go in there too. *Now the vest is a load.
Stuff a stuffable rain jacket back there too, and now it's bulky *and*
heavy. *Then there's the flask of single malt (optional, I suppose,
for some), a few good cigars, and a small supply of TP, and a small
camera. *In the end, my vest ends up more a backpack than a fishing
aid.

I don't really have a question, except, does everyone else take all
this **** when they go out for a day? *Or, do you plan to be closer to
your vehicle and leave more stuff behind?

Joe F.


Am I the only person who actually uses a *backpack*? I stuff my vest,
reels, water bottles, cigars, a book, GPS, TP, etc into it and wear it
to the river. If I'm fishing a pool and will be returning to the same
spot I hang the pack on a tree and don the vest. If I'm wading up a
river, I put the vest on and put the pack on over it. That way, I
still have all my fishing goodies handy, and can still drop the pack
if I stop for a spell at one spot.

I worry about a heavy vest. Having swum plenty of rapids during my
whitewater days, there's no way I want all that weight and claptrap
rattling around me if I take a fall while crossing at a rapid or slip
into a deep pool.

--riverman
  #4  
Old February 28th, 2008, 06:32 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
Frank Reid[_2_]
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Posts: 740
Default Fishing Vest weight discussion

I worry about a heavy vest. Having swum plenty of rapids during my
whitewater days, there's no way I want all that weight and claptrap
rattling around me if I take a fall while crossing at a rapid or slip
into a deep pool.


SoSpenders and a curved, serrated pocket knife. Works every.... uh,
well, I'll get back to you on that.
Frank Reid
  #5  
Old February 28th, 2008, 08:30 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.fly
[email protected]
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Posts: 195
Default Fishing Vest weight discussion

On Feb 19, 8:37 am, rb608 wrote:

[heavy loaded vest stuff]

Yeah, I'm a heavy-vest wearer, but I'm trying to cure myself. Maybe we
need a HVWA group ;-)

Danl, the generous and kind gentleman that he is, at one SJ clave
brought us all the filter water bottles that he uses. I for one use it
on my rare fishing ventures (and sometimes hiking), and am very happy
to have been on the receiving end of that gift.

I've seen Willi head out for the day with waders, a jacket, and a fly
rod, and still catch all the fish. Ok, I think I saw him slip a 1x2"
box of flies in his pocket, and one tippet spool.

Jon.
 




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