I have a similar 6' YakAttack pole, and eventually upgraded to the 8' pole. The biggest mystery to me is why any kayak fisherman would willingly put a 20+ pound power pole on his yak with the availability of these fiber glass poles. Expensive and heavy! In southern Louisiana mud, it takes a couple of feet to hold a kayak in place if windy. That's why I went to the 8' model. I can anchor in 6' of water along the edge of a dropoff or along a bayou bank!
@@coolbreeze4u2nvcheck with your manufacturer, if your scupper holes are rated for a kayak carrier that goes through the scuppers I’d bet it can handle an anchor pin. Just don’t do it that way in waves or heavy current
I have a similar 6' YakAttack pole, and eventually upgraded to the 8' pole. The biggest mystery to me is why any kayak fisherman would willingly put a 20+ pound power pole on his yak with the availability of these fiber glass poles. Expensive and heavy! In southern Louisiana mud, it takes a couple of feet to hold a kayak in place if windy. That's why I went to the 8' model. I can anchor in 6' of water along the edge of a dropoff or along a bayou bank!
Will half to try that stick. That thing is awesome. Beats dropping a weight.
Got one on the way
dont use your scupper holes, your kayak can crack very easily that way.
Hi, is that really a known fact? Am getting one and first thought was the scupper hole😅
@@coolbreeze4u2nvcheck with your manufacturer, if your scupper holes are rated for a kayak carrier that goes through the scuppers I’d bet it can handle an anchor pin. Just don’t do it that way in waves or heavy current