jitterbug127
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2023
- Messages
- 601
I think it will be an easy way to get a measurement for what i need. Ill buy oars that are the length I like.
Today's trolling motors could easily bring you home. I can get over 8 hrs run time from my setup. Even at only 3 mph it would cover 25 miles, plenty to get me back even if slow...not sure your gonna go much faster with oars.Two of my boats have "trolling motors" because we TROLL., i.e., run long lines out the back with fishing plugs looking for the big ones. One is a 3.5 and the other a 5.0. They can also be classified as "kickers" and both will bring us home in an emergency.
Another one in my fleet has an electric "trolling motor". It is used to move around the weed beds where the fish are. "Electric trolling motor" is a misnomer, IMHO. But certainly it is NOT a kicker than can bring me home.
If safety is a concern, oars or electrics have the same utility. They will get you to shore where you can use your VHF to call for a tow. The only advantage to one over the other is that the battery will run out of juice long before I run out of oar power.....LOL.
Thanks for the link again! I looked at the link again, and I’m getting recommendations of around 10 1/2 almost 11 feet each per oar.This isn't rocket science. I posted a formula way back in the beginning. All you need to know is the beam and freeboard. If you google it there are a dozen other formulas that come up.
I have put oars on 3 different boats in the last 35 years and als I had to do was calculate the length and go order them.
One thing that I don't think has been touched upon was that whatever size you buy it has to fit inside the boat when not in use. Also, back in the olden days (I learned from my Dad) rowboats had "oar chocks" so they wouldn't fall in the water when you weren't rowing. Nobody uses them any more (doubtful anybody even KNOWS what it is today). When I restored my woodie that was certainly an addition I had to make.
View attachment 393530
Maybe so, maybe not. Personally, I use my oars all the time. There are some back-stream fishing holes where I go where oars are my only option. Even a trolley would fill up with weeds pretty quick.Here is my take. The oars are a secondary backup to the main motor
You will used them once or twice regardless if they are 9-1/2 feet or 11 feet