Month: December 2025
FLAMBEAU’S NEXTGEN 4/0 MEDIUM TACKLE BOX

Reviewed by: CAPT. MIKE SCHOONVELD
The day my son was born, I used it as an excuse to buy a new fishing rod. I could imagine in five or six years, I’d have it well broken-in and he’d be standing on the back deck reeling in a coho or two with it. That “dream” did come true.
When my first grandchild was born, I bought her a child’s model, Zebco spincaster. Fishing off a boat dock, Anna reeled in her first bluegill with it when she was just 2 ½ years old. She now has a little brother, but I hadn’t yet bought anything “fishy’ for him when I spotted a NextGen 4/0 Medium Tackle Box made by Flambeau Outdoors. Bingo!
Andrew is way too little to fill the box with hooks, bobbers and other fishing gear, but I knew he’d be attracted to the bright blue color of the box, the bright yellow handle and closure knob and have fun opening and closing the top and swinging out the drawers to fill them with other bright plastic toys. I was right about that.
In a couple years we’ll add a few panfish hooks, some red and white bobbers and other panfish tools then head down to the dock. In the meantime, I’ll work on teaching him words like “tackle, reel, bobber and “here fishy, fishy.” That’s one of the jobs grampas are supposed to do.
Toddlers are going to play with some sort of toys, they might as well be fishing oriented toys. One of the jobs Flambeau Outdoors has taken on is to supply products designed to capture the attention of the next generation of anglers. Check out their NexGen Tackle Boxes, Wild Bite Adventure Kits and the Big Mouth Tackle Box Kits at: http://www.flambeauoutdoors.com. All Flambeau products are available at this website, as well as at hundreds of online sources, retailers and big-box stores. (Flambeau makes products for “big” kids and grampas, too.)
INSHORE ESSENTIALS TOOL KIT BY TOADFISH

Reviews by: CAPT. MIKE SCHOONVELD
What fisherman doesn’t like getting a fishing related gift for Christmas or other occasion? I do, but my wife and daughter know better than to just wander into a tackle shop or click around the interweb and buy something that they think I would like, need or enjoy. (I probably already have it or don’t need it.) So, I make not-so-subtle “hints” about the “Tackle and Toys” that would brighten my Christmas, birthday or anniversary to help them out. One of the hints I made for my birthday a few months ago, paid off both for me and for my wife – the Inshore Essentials Tool Kit from Toadfish.
The kit includes a “boca grip” style fish gripper, a pair of braid scissors and a pair of long-nose pliers (along with a retractable cord and a lanyard.) “Whoopie do,” you might think, but one feature stands out from the “gifter’s” point of view- they come packed in a stylish case, virtually useless on the boat, but handsome to behold – that scores points for both my wife and daughter. Inside the case, the tools look terrific, as well; sort of like the sausage sticks and foil wrapped cheese in a gift box from Hickory Farms look better than similar items at a food store. The contrasting blackened steel or aluminum frames set off with contrasting stainless steel rivets and hinge-pins give them a “cultured” appearance and the signature, “Toadfish-teal” grips on the pliers and scissor makes them look even better.
More important to me is: “Do they work?” I don’t give a whit if the pliers, cutters or other tools on my boat look good. If they work good, I love ‘em. If they “look good” I just love ‘em more. These tools were designed to work, then appointed to make them handsome. The pliers fit my hand, open and close with zero slop, have a spring-loaded action, important when using them with wet or “fish-slimed” hands. The jaws taper to grip onto perch-sized hooks and are strong enough to dislodge a 2/0 treble from still quivering king salmon. Add a bottle opener and carbide line cutter and it’s a winner.
Most fish grippers are long, heavy tools. The one in the Toadfish kit is petite, in comparison, lightweight and with folding handles allowing them to be stowed in your pocket or in a hand-tool rack if you prefer. Don’t let the small size fool you. The largest size fish I’ve lifted with them so far was a still-struggling 20-pound laker. I love them for walleyes, however, since I can hold the fish easily but the diminutive size doesn’t get in the way of unhooking the trebles even if they have been sucked in way back in the fish’s mouth.
The line cutter clips both mono and braid perfectly. ‘Nuff said, other than the built in carabiner makes it handy for storage whether on a belt loop or other location.
Here’s the exact URL to post on the gift list you present to the person who wants to see your eye’s light up on that special day: https://toadfish.com/products/inshore-essentials-tool-kit. Now available at Amazon as well.
FLAGSHIP TROLLING RODS BY FISHUSA

Reviewed by: CAPT. MIKE SCHOONVELD
Many big box sporting goods retailers produce any number of products with their own label on them. They don’t manufacture the gear – Bass Pro, Dicks Sporting Goods, Sheels and other major retailers including FishUSA don’t own factories. Instead, they contract with companies that do have manufacturing facilities, perhaps Shimano, Daiwa or others to build rods, reels, lures, and dozens of other products for them and then adorn them with the FishUSA or other company’s label.
Don’t expect these private labels to be identical with the name brand models, but that doesn’t mean they are inferior. In many cases they are made to exacting specifications and (at least to most anglers) they perform similarly to the brands from well-known manufacturers. In general, however, they don’t carry the price demanded by the well-known equipment makers. That’s important to value-minded anglers, whether they are newcomers and can’t afford to invest in multiple set-ups all at once or for seasoned charter captains who are often putting their gear in the hands of rank amateurs prone to abusing tackle just due to unfamiliarity with handling any sort of gear.
I was pleasantly surprised by the Flagship Trolling Rod I got from FishUSA in late summer in every aspect. It looks good and performs great. The 802M model I tested has a pleasing metallic steel-blue finish – not so flashy that it looks out of place among the other rods in my array; but even if it was some gaudy color, I’d still like it for how it feels in my hands and how it performs both when I’m trolling or when it’s being bent by a Great Lakes fish.
In hand, its graphite composite blank is noticeably lighter than many of the “well-seasoned” major brands I use daily and the triangular shaped foregrip gives it a firm feel, comfortable in my hands and I’m sure it will be easier to grip for novice customers to handle. The 802M is eight feet long, two-piece construction for easy storage and is rated for 10-to-20-pound line. It will fit well with the rods I use when trolling for cohos on Lake Michigan or walleyes on Lake Erie using planer boards. It would work well with a downrigger for these species, but if I planned to use it when targeting kings, steelhead or lakers, I’d select one of the medium-heavy Flagship versions offered by FishUSA with a bit more backbone.
If you are looking for a mid-priced rod with top-level looks, quality and performance, look no further than the Flagship trolling rods from FishUSA. See them all at http://www.fishusa.com.
THAW RECHARGEABLE HANDWARMERS

Reviewed by: CAPT. MIKE SCHOONVELD
I’ve nearly passed out two different times when my hands got so cold my brain shunted all my blood to my inner organs. I suppose this was to keep them working while I froze to death. One time was when I was duck hunting, once I was ice fishing and both times I was equipped with a hand-warmer that was supposed to keep that from happening.
One of these handwarmers produced heat by burning cigarette lighter fluid – it ran out of fuel. The other warmer had charcoal “stick” inside that was ignited, placed in a flameproof metal box the size of a cell phone. The fire went out.
I didn’t die, and I never relied on handwarmers again to keep my hands warm. Both of these events occurred decades ago, so when I heard of a company called THAW that was producing rechargeable electric hand warmers, I thought, “Perhaps it’s time I revisit handwarmers, now that hi-tech technology has replaced stone age methods to provide a bit of finger-warmth on cold days of fishing.”
What can I say? Charge it up, stick it in your pocket and turn it on when you get to the boat on a frosty morning, have your ice-holes drilled or whenever it’s needed. (If the low heat setting works for you, turn it on and forget it most of the day – it will last 7 hours (they say) and produce 113 degrees (Fahrenheit) of heat. I seldom turn it to the medium or high setting (high is 140 degrees), but I do turn it on and off since there’s no fuel or fuel sticks to ignite. The cell phone sized handwarmer goes from cold to warm in less than a minute. That’s the 5K version. The 10K version produces the same heat but lasts nearly twice as long or provides surplus power to use its other features.
The handwarmer is a multi-tasker since it has a small, but bright, LED flashlight and a port to plug in a power cord to recharge a cell phone or other electronic device needing a boost. I’ve tried the light – it’s bright, similar to the one on my cell phone. I’ve never had to jump-start my phone, but I assume it would work.
Check out the handwarmers and other THAW products at http://www.thaw.acgbrands.com. Purchase them there, at retailers or at Amazon and other online sellers.
DIAL BACK MEMORY ENHANCERS

Reviewed by: CAPT. MIKE SCHOONVELD
You are out fishing with your regular crew, one of which just finished unhooking a walleye that hit one of the planer board lines, or you are trolling on Lake Ontario and your fishing partner just unhooked a king salmon that fell for a lure pulled deep with a Dipsey Diver – or perhaps it’s you and a friend on Lake Superior and the fish being unhooked is a laker that fell for a downrigged lure. Regardless of the place or the fish, soon the familiar question will be heard: How deep was the line set? How far out did you have this Dipsey? How far back was this Flicker Shad?
Ah…. I think I had it out…. How far is the diver on the other side…? More likely, “I can’t remember.”
How far? How deep? How much line? All are important questions; and the wrong answer can be the difference in whether that lure or that line is a one-hit-wonder or the hero for the day.
I’m sure there are “set-up savants” that can remember every lure and every deployment. I was once on a boat where the captain kept an Excel spreadsheet on an iPad showing every lure, every depth, every fish, probably the wind speed and color of each angler’s underwear. That’s not me and it wasn’t a couple of Michigan fishing buddies who were always asking these questions whether they were out for Saginaw Bay walleyes or trolling for Lake Huron salmon.
But instead of just asking this question over and again, they used their non-fishing talents to invent and produce the Dial Back Precision Trolling Device, or what I call the Dial Back Memory Enhancer. There are two styles, depending on how your boat is set up or how you fish. Both have a small, plastic body with three numbered dials which rotate from zero to nine. Have a Dipsey Diver set at 93 feet, set the dials on the memory enhancer to show 093.
The original style is best for boats that always have the same rod in the same rod holder. The device attaches to the rod holder. If you always put the starboard downrigger in a specific rod holder, that’s where to put the Dial Back. Set the lure 88 feet deep, set the rod in the holder, set the dials on the Dial Back to 0-8-8.
The Dial Back “mini” is for guys who rotate their rods, a common tactic for those who use Big Board Planers with the fishing lines attached to releases that slide down a tether cord. After a fish is caught on the rod and reel in rod holder #1, the rod in the #2 holder gets moved to the #1 position, the #3 moves to #2, etc. The lure that caught the fish gets positioned to rod holder for the lure trolled closest to the boat.
Dial Back Minis attach to the rod or reel in any position that works for you. Attach it to the reel, to the rod, to the first line guide – where doesn’t matter, the process is the same. Catch a fish. Rotate the other rods, check the Dial Back on the set-up that just caught the fish and put the lure exactly as far as it was previously.
These are products EVERY trolling boat should have and every troller can afford! The Mini’s are available in black, the originals in a variety of colors so you can color-code your rod holders. “Fish on yellow!” Check them out and purchase them at www.dialbackprecisiontrolling.com.
