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Old 10-25-2009, 05:45 AM   #5
Back Beach
Respect your elvers
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: franklin ma
Posts: 3,368
Quote:
Originally Posted by numbskull View Post
Some things I've learned this year.

Swimming in them is very inefficient. You basically are using one arm. If you struggle you tire very fast. They float, so trust the suit and go slow. Don't fool with current. Try the thing out with all your gear by day at a local beach.

The footwear you choose causes issues. Standard wading boots (which I need to walk to where I fish) lock your ankles and make it very hard to kick. These lighter athletic type korker shoes with studded felt soles, or dive boots with hard soles and korkers are probably better choices if distance walking through rock isn't a concern.

If you are swimming far or in current, short boogie board fins look like the way to go. Some NY guys put studs (nuts and bolts) in theirs.

Getting knocked off your rock and hitting your head is probably the biggest danger in using them (if you get swept away you could drop your gear, take off your boots, and swim pretty easily).

Landing/handling fish when using plugs is harder the deeper and rougher you go. A 15lb bluefish with a face full of trebles is a disaster. Carry a lipper or small gaff......or use eels like everyone else.

If you side stroke, prop your rod on your hip and hold it straight up, you can keep your reel above water much of the time.

They get cold in wind on either end of the season. You can use underarmor or other ski underwear and a dry top to help, although the dry top gets full of water and weighs you down when climbing up on rocks. A second neoprene top is likely better.

They are an advantage, but also a disadvantage. In late fall the thought of fishing while cold and wet is enough to make you shut off the alarm and go back to sleep.. This year I made my mind up to quit using it come Oct, stay warm and dry, and fish more conservatively with waders. Been working for me.
THE POTATO!!! YOU FORGOT TO MENTION THE POTATO!!!


Seriously, all good advice in the above posts. In addition, many of the largest surf fish taken this year were via wetsuit. Don't underestimate the importance of getting out a few extra feet.

It's not the bait
At the end of your line
It's the fishing hole
Where all the fish is blind
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