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August 25, 2006
Article
The
Fisherman’s Marker
By Paul Strege
“Marker buoys - who needs them?!”
That is what I once thought and have
heard throughout my fishing
lifetime. Until I stumbled upon an
innovative version of the
traditional gaudy fluorescent orange
and yellow “jugs” a few years ago, I
avoided using them all-together.
Fishing markers are largely
unpopular with many anglers today
for two reasons: often they attract
more anglers to a specific location,
and they occupy a relatively large
amount of valuable space in a tackle
box or storage compartment.
Jeff Lamphere from Minnetonka,
Minnesota invented a solution. He
calls it the Fisherman’s Marker. Not
only are these markers dramatically
smaller in size than traditional
buoys, they also come in
non-attractive colors. The smaller
size and flat design occupies less
space and allows for ease in
stowage. Non-attractive colors
meanwhile provide camouflage from
other anglers: white for sunny days,
and black for low-light conditions.
Jeff
started development on the
Fisherman’s Marker while fishing at
his cabin on Green Lake in Spicer,
Minnesota. One of his favorite
fishing spots on the lake was a
small, shallow rock bar located one
mile offshore. Water depths of 40 to
50 feet surrounded the bar, making
it a prime spot for fishing. “Once
we located the rocks, we would mark
it with a buoy. If you ran your
motor over the rock pile more than
once, you would scare the fish and
push them into deeper water –
generally not getting them to bite,”
recalls Jeff. “After we marked the
rock pile, we would float quietly
over it and catch fish on every
drift, mostly nice walleyes and
smallmouth bass.”
With Jeff’s success came undesirable
attention, however. “It seemed like
within minutes of throwing a marker
buoy, our spot would become Grand
Central Station. As soon as other
fishermen saw our float they would
motor up to it to check the depth
and many times start fishing
extremely close to the buoy marker
we had thrown out - ultimately
spooking the fish and our bite would
be over.”
It
was after this repeated occurrence
that Jeff decided to look for a
small discrete marker that people
would not notice – one that would
not attract other fishermen in the
area. After a fruitless search, he
decided to fabricate one of his own
out of a small block of wood,
painted white. That small block
served Jeff well the rest of that
summer and fall, eliminating
artificially-crowded spots. Thus
began the initial development of the
Fisherman’s Marker.
The
Fisherman’s Marker today has
certainly evolved from the first
prototype, yet it remains a secret
tool among weekend anglers and
tournament fishermen alike. Jeff
receives new testimonials and
creative on-the-water applications
every month. Anglers can pinpoint
the exact locations of underwater
structure, breaklines, and even
bedding bass. Smaller, more compact
markers offer the angler the
additional ability to efficiently
mark structure with the placement of
multiple buoys as opposed to fewer
deployments of larger, traditional
ones.
Structure
While Global Positioning Systems
(GPS) continue to evolve, the marker
buoy serves an important role that
cannot be replaced by modern
technology. An angler often has to
traverse, or crisscross a single
weedline multiple times in order to
locate a defined edge. As a result,
the tracking display becomes an
indistinguishable conglomeration of
trails. Global Positioning Systems
are limited in this capacity.
Deployed markers, on the other hand,
offer a concise, visual delineation
of the underwater structure.
Team Kellogg’s Pro Dave Lefebre of
Erie, Pennsylvania uses the
Fisherman’s Marker in this capacity.
“When fishing a weedline, I like to
place markers along the edge that I
am targeting. I will have several
markers out at a time - six or more
for a single stretch. The neat thing
about the Fisherman’s Marker is that
their compact size allows me to
easily carry a dozen in the boat at
a time.”
Dave
will also customize his marker by
cutting the pre-spooled line to a
specific length. This ensures that his
marker will not completely unroll in
large waves. “I organize my markers in
sets, generally in 5-foot increments,
with the depth clearly marked on top.
Even before heading to the lake, if I
know that the weedline is generally
8-feet deep, I will pack my 10-footers.”
Sight Fishing
Sight
fishing for bedding bass is not a
technique that anglers commonly
associate with marker buoys. Bass are
easily spooked during certain phases of
the spawn. If an angler has to target
bedding bass at a distance, or at a
greater depth, placing a marker buoy can
establish a floating landmark in low
visibility conditions. Light refraction
also is a common challenge for sight
fishermen, especially in deep water. The
actual position of a bass has to be
interpolated with every cast to
compensate for the refracted image. With
a definitive point of reference, anglers
can be assured of proper lure position
and focused on provoking the bass into a
strike.
Boat
Position
Another
useful application of the Fisherman’s
Marker does not include marking
structure at all; it is position
triangulation. An angler can drop a buoy
off the bow, and have an immediate
reference point for use in conjunction
with two aligned features onshore. With
a marker buoy aside the boat, a second
set of features is not needed for
triangulating a spot. Similarly, when an
angler locates an active school of fish
offshore, simply dropping a marker over
the edge is both practical and quick.
There is no need to throw a marker into
the active school, and the precious time
saved stumbling back to the console GPS
unit can be spent landing additional
fish.
While
fishing tools come and go, there are an
innovative few that deserve a permanent
place in any angler’s tackle box. The
patented Fisherman’s Marker is one tool
no angler should be without. For more
information on the Fisherman’s Marker,
visit Jeff’s website at
www.fishermansmarker.com, or call:
612-965-2259.
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