Okay, hoping to find a loving new owner for my fishing kayak. You don't see these around Montana but it would be perfect for someone who fishes a lot of the lakes and reservoirs here. I put this together when I lived in the Midwest fishing all the bass lakes and ponds down there.
This is a 13.5' Native Watercraft Titan (which they don't make anymore, only smaller ones) with pedal drive. Completely set up by me for fishing. Specs are as follows (with approximately what I paid):
- 13.5' Native Titan Kayak w/ pedal drive ($3000)
- Yakima Rack & Roll Trailer ($2800)
- Micro Power Poles (x2 $600)
- Running lights, switches, wiring ($150)
- Rod Holders ($100)
- Yak Power Battery Kit x2 (Box +3 Duracell 9ah batteries ea) ($600)
- Yak Attack Pole Light
- Groovy Landing Gear ($340)
- Groovy Rudder Upgrade ($90)
- Lowrance HDS-7 Live Display / Transducer ($1200)
All told, about $9K into this rig, so you're getting it for better than half price and it's completely ready to fish. Given a similar kayak alone goes for $3500 now, I feel like this is a screaming deal.
It's wired with the micro anchors on their own switch/supply, which makes a redundant system for the main system that has the finder and lights wired to it. If you blow a fuse or something craps out, just switch batteries or harnesses or whatever. Each battery box has 3x 9AH rechargeable batteries giving you about 27AH on each one. You can basically fish all weekend on one charge. If you use one battery then the other you could probably fish for a week.
Running lights include red/green on the bow, mini deck lights at midship, and mini deck lights at the stern. There is also a light in the rear flag pole. I didn't want some idiot on a wave runner running me down at dusk if I could help it.
I never really liked the power poles to be honest, but I'm basically throwing them in for free anyway. They integrate with the fish finder and there's a remote that can hang around your neck and you can set them up or down without going to the display. I forget how long the poles are, 10 or 12' I think.
Plenty of room in the back for your dog or whatever. This boat is incredibly STABLE. You can fish standing up all day. I'm 180lbs and I can stand on the bow and it handles it. The seat is super comfortable and you can really haul using the pedal drive.
The "landing gear" fold down so you can wheel it to where you need to go all by yourself. After you launch you simply pivot them back up onto the deck like you see in the pic. This works in places where there's no boat ramp and you might have to wheel it across the lawn or something to launch. The boat is heavy, but one guy can manage it.
There's a two-piece paddle that stores on the stern, or behind your seat if you have it assembled and want it easily accessible. The front hatch has plenty of storage. The storage bin pulls out and lets you access inside the boat where the batteries and wiring are.
There's rod racks on each side as well, tubes that protect the tip and follow the bow, holders for the handles. Comes with my box of spare electrical parts, wiring, original finder box, etc.