[cool][url "http://members.tripod.com/float-tubers/"]http://members.tripod.com/float-tubers/[/url] This is a link to a handicapped float tubers club, referred to me by Dave (I think).
Flotation fishing is a passive form of exercise therapy for many people with physical challenges. Not only that, with proper gear and instruction, it makes it possible for them to fish productively in many situations in which they would be incapable of trudging the banks or some other physically demanding form of fishing.
In the early 80's, I was visiting a friend's tackle shop. He introduced me to an older gentleman as "the man who can answer your questions about float tubes." My friend left us, to go wait on other customers and I "held forth", as I am prone to do. At the older gent's request, I helped him assemble a complete float tube system...including fins and waders...from the shelves of my friend's shop.
We took his gear to the front, to be checked out, and my friend
d when he mentally tallied the sale. Then the old gent
d himself, and proposed that he would gladly buy all this stuff...but only if I took him on a demo fishing excursion, to help him learn to use it. My friend pleaded with his eyes, and I agreed.
We met early the next Saturday morning and drove up to Willard Bay Reservoir, near Ogden Utah. I helped set up the tube and tackle, and coached my new student into his waders and fins. He literally took to it like a "duck to water". While I was getting my own craft launched the old dude was kicking around and learning to maneuver his new toy.
When I could catch up to him, I got him rigged for dragging bait for channel cats. They had been biting well, I figured it would be a sure thing, and he was not a troutaholic purist type. To cut to the chase, he had a ball, catching a limit of nice channels in about two hours.
We broke down the gear and stowed it in my rig for the trip home. While I was filleting out his fish for him he admitted that he had a very serious reason for wanting to get a thorough tubing tutorial. It turns out that he was a prominent heart surgeon...and a heart patient himself. He wanted to put himself to the test, as well as the float tube, to see if it was something that heart patients could do in moderation.
His verdict? As he stated, "It is a fantastic passive exercise...as long as one does not have to exert unduly, in the wind, etc." His next action was to contact all of the fishing heart patients in his club and take them back to my friend's tackletorium to get outfitted. I didn't collect any commission, but I did get some "feel goods" out of it.
Over the years I have helped design and build various rods and harnesses to allow challenged anglers to fish, even with physical limitations. As long as they have good legs, and can work the fins, float tubing is a "hands free" system that helps give challenged fishing fans a better way to fish.
Good post, Lonehunter. I like the way you think.
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