Trying to convince me however was a different story since I have a few years under my belt and when I thought yakfishing, I thought less fish. Stubborn as he is, he bought a yak, caught a muskie and then, I bought a yak, spent last fall getting used to the new craft and we were both kinda gung-ho to get going...
...Which is why we headed out the second we could. First trip was in mid-march for walleyes..
Mtl dinks

Ottawa dinks. I had heard we had crossed Slop that day, maybe get a chance to shake hands next time

With everything closed, we figure we would go smell a skunk on the Niagara

Well, not really a skunk

Having these hit our yaks and spin us around had the border patrols scratching their heads

Pike opens early in some places and we slammed them pretty good, although no size but still had runs of every cast action

Some trout..
31 Mile lake


Specs


Hit the walleyes pretty good on the Petawawa river


Bottom fishing in Mtl was weird this year, due to the low waters we experienced. A deeper hole had fish stacked up like cord-wood.



Some bass with Dan doing most of the damage




Token pikes


Muskies


Buck's first from a yak



Filming for Mordus De la Peche



But Dan caught the three nicest fish of the season, for his first year of doing serious fishing, he set the bar pretty high for himself.

Almost a 6.

His tiger.

Just real quick, yakfishing is fun if you wanna explore lakes unaccessible by boat, want peace and quiet, pinch pennies or get your heart pumping. While it is not for everyone, we have noticed a pile of poeple trying it out this year and have answered a ton of pm's asking details as they are getting rigged up for next year.
That said, we had a pile of fun in the yaks.
Manny