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Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Fishing Forum :: Fish finder recommendations
 
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bombinbrian
04/21/2025 05:42AM
 
Just for the BW we have iBobbers. Bluetooth to your phone. I have found them accurate. They are very lightweight also
 
CoachWalleye74
04/23/2025 09:53AM
 
Trying to figure something out, thought this board used to have a DM feature.
 
wxce1260
05/20/2025 09:11PM
 
Just purchased a Deeper Pro Plus 2. Read a ton of reviews on it so I'm going to give it a shot. Just got it out of the box tonight, headed to knife Lake next week. We'll see how it works. I've never used a fish finder in the bwca before, I'll find out if I was missing something after all these years.
 
bfurlow
05/21/2025 03:24PM
 
I use the Hawkeye Fishtrax.


It's a good fish finder and shoots through the hull, no problem. It will give you depth and fish, and if you put the transducer in the water, it will provide surface temps too. I have never run out of battery up there on trips that were a week plus. An extra set of batteries is good for backup. Can't beat the price either!
 
SmallieSmasher17
05/20/2025 10:47AM
 
Buy a rapala countdown, it sinks a foot a second. Also much cheaper then a fish finder.
 
ProneonthePortage2021
04/22/2025 03:22AM
 
bombinbrian: "Just for the BW we have iBobbers. Bluetooth to your phone. I have found them accurate. They are very lightweight also"


I try to save my phone battery for pictures but it’s a neat concept. With my luck though that little bobber would likely float away :)
 
ProneonthePortage2021
04/22/2025 03:26AM
 
shouldertripper: "If I didn’t have one and was starting from scratch a looking solely for BWCA use I would probably go for the HawkEye fishtrax. Have heard it does the simple things well, affordable, lightweight, and powered by AAA batteries. This post got me curious and looked and as of right now it’s on a limited time deal on Amazon for $81"


This is similar to what I had but nicer. Digging all the features in a little hand held. Great find!
 
bombinbrian
04/22/2025 09:03AM
 
ProneonthePortage2021: "bombinbrian: "Just for the BW we have iBobbers. Bluetooth to your phone. I have found them accurate. They are very lightweight also"
I try to save my phone battery for pictures but it’s a neat concept. With my luck though that little bobber would likely float away :)"

I take a battery backup with me, actually a couple. I also tie a line onto the iBobber.
 
shouldertripper
04/22/2025 11:18AM
 
YaMarVa: "Garmin Striker 4
Nocqua battery pack
Ram Mounts (size b)



All this fits in a small waterproof seal-line bag, weights about 3-5lbs. The battery has never died on a trip, generally fishing 4-6 full days.



"

I have always used my striker 4 with a generic AA battery case and use lithium which works well and has always lasted our whole trip. Do enough trips and it does add up quickly, so I’ve looked into a rechargeable battery pack. Which AH size nocqua do you use?
 
YaMarVa
04/22/2025 09:20AM
 
Garmin Striker 4
Nocqua battery pack
Ram Mounts (size b)


All this fits in a small waterproof seal-line bag, weights about 3-5lbs. The battery has never died on a trip, generally fishing 4-6 full days.



 
CoachWalleye74
04/22/2025 09:50AM
 
I have a Garmin Striker 4 that I'd sell you very reasonably
 
rpike
05/27/2025 02:27PM
 
Thanks. We're usually trolling different areas, so I keep mine on nearly constantly while fishing.
 
rpike
05/27/2025 02:10PM
 
bfurlow: "I use the Hawkeye Fishtrax.



It's a good fish finder and shoots through the hull, no problem. It will give you depth and fish, and if you put the transducer in the water, it will provide surface temps too. I have never run out of battery up there on trips that were a week plus. An extra set of batteries is good for backup. Can't beat the price either!"



I've used the Fishtrax for years. I had to get a new one after the transducer on my old one failed. How do you never run out of batteries? I run mine in gray scale to save power, and I get about 8-10 hours of use out of a set of Li AAAs.
 
bfurlow
05/27/2025 02:22PM
 
rpike: "bfurlow: "I use the Hawkeye Fishtrax.




It's a good fish finder and shoots through the hull, no problem. It will give you depth and fish, and if you put the transducer in the water, it will provide surface temps too. I have never run out of battery up there on trips that were a week plus. An extra set of batteries is good for backup. Can't beat the price either!"




I've used the Fishtrax for years. I had to get a new one after the transducer on my old one failed. How do you never run out of batteries? I run mine in gray scale to save power, and I get about 8-10 hours of use out of a set of Li AAAs. "



I pop in a set of fresh Lithium batteries at the start of a trip. I use it mainly for water temp and to mark depth. Once I hit some fish and figure out an area, I turn it off. When we move to a new area, I take another check.
All of my measurements are based on starting with the map, finding a contour and guessing once I do to maintain depth. If not hits, I turn it on again to check depth.


I'm a low maintenance nerd - I will bring an extra set of batteries just in case.
 
ProneonthePortage2021
04/20/2025 09:57PM
 
Hi all! I’m looking for fish finder recommendations please after mine took a drink last year. I realize there are fish everywhere ?? but find it helpful for depth and all. Thank you
 
ProneonthePortage2021
04/23/2025 05:11AM
 
CoachWalleye74: "I have a Garmin Striker 4 that I'd sell you very reasonably"


Go on. How do I get a hold of you?
 
shouldertripper
04/21/2025 08:04AM
 
If I didn’t have one and was starting from scratch a looking solely for BWCA use I would probably go for the HawkEye fishtrax. Have heard it does the simple things well, affordable, lightweight, and powered by AAA batteries. This post got me curious and looked and as of right now it’s on a limited time deal on Amazon for $81
 
YaMarVa
04/22/2025 12:40PM
 
I use the Nocqua 20Ah