Retrieval kayak

judders87

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 24, 2022
Messages
201
Location
Indiana
I’m looking into getting a kayak to retrieve waterfowl that might die in areas a little deep for waders as I don’t have a dog. Lightweight and compact is probably the highest priority as I wanna be able to top it on my truck. Any recommendations?
 
A Phoenix Poke Boat Micro would be the best option but they are no longer made. They are 17 lbs.

Any cheap big box plastic boat is fine. They will be in the 35-60 lbs.
 
We tried the fishing lure with multiple treble hooks method and while it might be fine for a pond, it's tough to get reliable results in moving water. Ducks dropped at the edge of shotgun range will be hard to reach in any event.

We have some cheap, no-name kayak we use to retrieve ducks in the salt marsh. Works well enough, but I would rather have a 10' flat bottom boat with an electric motor. Safer over cold water and a big difference retrieving cripples.

I'm not a kayak expert, but most of those stripped down, basic models are intended to be handled by individuals and are very lightweight. I'd be more concerned with getting something that will blend in. We painted our kayak and paddle blotchy brown/tan and the ducks don't seem to notice it laying behind the shore blind.
 
What about a packraft? Several of the spots we hunt are close to a mile or more walk and leaning heavily in buying one for next season. Even with a dog getting decoys out can be an issue at times. A wheel base with a cheap rotomolded kayak works too.
 
I’d second the “any plastic kayak will do” but check weight capacity. Some of the ones for kids look big enough until they don’t.
 
What about a packraft? Several of the spots we hunt are close to a mile or more walk and leaning heavily in buying one for next season. Even with a dog getting decoys out can be an issue at times. A wheel base with a cheap rotomolded kayak works too.
Packraft might be the key... too bad they're not inexpensive.
 
I’d second the “any plastic kayak will do” but check weight capacity. Some of the ones for kids look big enough until they don’t.
I used to winter kayak (well, in March, water still cold) for smallmouth.

I’ll just say that water has no mercy and being out alone in winter is risky. Wear your pfd. Don’t wear things that hinder self-recovery. Don’t die for a duck.
 
I have a tractor supply 10’ sit on top kayak that I duck hunt in. Paid $299 for it brand new a year or two ago including the paddle. I wear waders in it. But its easy to haul around, weighs 52lb, not “light” but its compact so its easy to deal with. Toss it in the bed of the truck, drag it, or use a kayak cart to roll it if you have to hike a ways. Im 6’2” 200lb, its not roomy but it fits me, a backpack, my gun, and a dozen smaller decoys in it without working too hard. I started just clipping a jet sled behind it like a trailer and that makes it roomy. Any comparable kayak should work fine.
If I was going to do it over and spend anything more Id look at a old town discovery 119 canoe, or a native ultimate fx12.
 
Back
Top