I've got two cars, and use both as fishing vehicles. My first one is a Mazda
Protege, and like some of the other front wheel drive cars mentioned it
actually works ok most of the time. I even put my Buck's Bags Bronco on the
roof of it this summer and drove all the way to Craig Mt to fish the
Missouri with it. For the rough roads,bad weather and camping I use my other
rig. That's an '85 Chevy Suburban 4x4. It gets poor gas mileage, but other
than that is a great fishing machine. I can haul one fully inflated pontoon
boat inside, and another on a rack I built on the roof. I can and frequently
do sleep in it on fishing trips, and with plenty of dents and scratches on
it I don't worry about it getting beat up. It will hold enough gear for an
army, and seats six people for shuttling (nine if I had the third seat for
it). All and all it works out great for the trips off the main highways.
Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: Kent Lufkin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2001 1:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Fishing vehicles?


Over the years, we've discussed just about every kind of fishing gear
or strategy imaginable. But it struck me the other day that there's
still one indispensable piece of gear that every one of us uses: the
vehicle that gets us where we fish.

I assume that for most of us, our fishing vehicle is also our daily
driver that spends most of its time making trips to the store or
commuting. For some of us in a multi-car household, a second vehicle
may be much more appropriate for fishing. A very few of us may
actually have a rig dedicated just for fishing, refined over years of
use.

To get the ball rolling, here's my own 2� on the subject:

I've always owned a pickup. In fact I can only remember a couple
years when I didn't have one. My current ride is a 1998 Ford Ranger
XLT extra cab 4x4 with a 4.0 liter V-6 and an automatic. Wish I'd got
it with the small, half-sized doors to get behind the front seats.
However, a retractable cover keeps things out of sight back there.

The bed will hold a couple float tubes fully inflated or my 9 foot
pontoon boat (I haven't tried stacking two pontoon boats back there
yet.) There's plenty of room left over for gear bags, coolers, oars
or rod tubes. Plus, the bed doubles as a place to sit and wader up
without rocks that can tear up my neoprene wader feet.

But having a pickup does pose some limitations. Leaving stuff in the
back is an open invitation to theft if you leave it there even
briefly. And relatively light weight stuff needs to be tied down to
keep it from becoming airborne at highway speeds.

My truck's bed isn't long enough that I can stretch out in it to
sleep, and I'd need some sort of canopy to stay dry in the rain. The
space behind the seats doesn't hold very much gear (long rod tubes
are an especially tight fit) and it's a real pain to get to. Finally,
if I owned a boat and trailer, my rig is probably much too puny for
serious towing.

But for the most part, it works well for the kind of fishing I do.
The 4wd and high ground clearance are a real plus on marginal roads.

I'd sure like to hear how other subscribers have adapted their
vehicles for their own fishing style.

Kent Lufkin


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