What reel for towing a float?

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Spray25

Contributor
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Location
McCall, Idaho
I'm wanting to purchase a surface float/marker and am thinking that using a reel to tow it. Is this the best choice? If so, which one? I know NOTHING about reels.

Also any recomendations on which float to use?

Thanks in advance.
 
Are you beach diving? If not, why on earth would you want to tow a turd?

If so, what's your max depth likely to be? Chances are that a reel is not your best bet.

Personally I hate towing anything. I feel it's a safety hazard when the boats run over it.....

Tom
 
Yes I am shore diving. Being a newbie I really don't know what my depths will eventually be. I want a float for safety and because it is required by law here if in a body of water that boats can also be in.
 
Originally posted by Spray25
I want a float for safety and because it is required by law here if in a body of water that boats can also be in.
The first statement is easy to refute but the second is impossible because mindless and bureaucracy are synonyms.

Anyway... to bad that you have to tow a float... try not to get tangled in the line... and watch out for the boats and jetskiis that will use your float for target practice.

Oh, reel?

Hmmm.... well whatever it is it should be cheap so you can abandon it without feeling bad... and never attach the line to yourself or any piece of your equipment.

We carry a marker bag that can be sent up on a line when we are ascending (I hate to use it when boats are present because it attracts attention) and we use a jump spool for the line.

Is it possible to only shoot a bag when you are ready to come up or do your have to drag it around while you dive??
 
I haven't read the actual law, but my scuba instructor said it is required in any body of water that boats are also allowed in. 100 feet away is the law here in Idaho, but from what others have said it sounds like centimeters not feet!! LOL
 
The law is one thing... practicality is often another. I'm thinking of two specific sites here with high interest from the authorities and a likely ticket if the law has a chance to "getcha."
Site one - beach dive, max depth 20' - wreck in the sand about 300 yds off the beach. On this one I drag the float along for the whole dive. There are boats about that draw 12 - 15 feet.
Site two - beach dive, max depth 80' - bridge rubble stretching across a lake. On this one I haul the flag out to 25' depth and tie it off - pick it up on the way back. Technically we're in violation of the law, and if for some reason we had to do an emergency ascent out in the middle of the lake without our flag we could be fined - but we figure it's safer to leave the flag in the shallows.
As for a reel - for a flag I use one of those yellow plastic line holders rather than a reel.
Rick
 
OK, since you are shore diving and the law says drag it, here's my suggestions:

First, don't use a reel, use the little cheapie plastic line holder like Rick suggested. Second, DO NOT clip or otherwise attach it to yourself, carry it in your hand. You don't want to take a ride when some gomer in a ski boat runs it over. Trust me on this.

For the same reasons, use an inflatable float rather than a solid one. If a boat hits it, less chance of it getting attached to the boat. If a boat without a prop (like a jet ski) hits it, it will probably survive to float again.

Tom
 
In Mass we also are required to have one. I use the cheap plastic one that you wrap the line around. I have heard some horror stories about boats using flags and floats as target practice, but thank heavens have never personally encountered it. I do have a small weight attached to the plastic to keep it hanging instead of floating. This is usefull for when you drop it to grab a lobster or adjust gear. Like the others said, don't tie it off to yourself. Good luck
Dkerr
 
Another option is to find a state legislator who is also a diver and try to get the law changed to something more reasonable?
 
My aunt does not dive in NE anymore because of some incidences that happened to her diving here. One night she was almost drowned by the harbor master who was running his boat back and forth over their dive flag because he thought they were stealiing lobsters from the traps. They were down to shairing air before the harbor master left them alone. This was seen by a friend who was waiting on their boat. It all happened years back, but she is still afraid to dive anywhere around here.
 

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