CAUTION, and for once the window is the back half of the day, not dawn. The buoy is reading NW 15.6 kt with 1-3 ft waves at 5:30 AM. NW is the worst direction for a PWC on the shallow north reefs, and that combo sits right at your stay-home line. The break: NWS has it subsiding to 1 ft or less and clocking around to W then SW through the day, so the lake lays down while you wait. Let the morning NW blow out and launch late-morning or afternoon when it's W and flat. Water has jumped to 69.4°F, so this is now a summer pattern: walleye are off the reef tops and scattered, which makes trolling the headline play. Cover water with Reef Runners / Husky Jerks 30-50 ft back at 1.3-1.8 mph on the 19-28 ft reef edges and the Mouse Island / Marblehead current seams. Smallmouth are dialed in at this temp too. Tomorrow is worse (SW 15-20 kt, showers, evening storms), so today's afternoon is the best near-term shot.
> TOP SPOTS TODAY · coords + how to fish them · ranked by today's odds
RANK 01 · CLOSEST + SAFEST IN NW
Mouse Island REEF
HIGH CONFIDENCE
N 41° 36.402'
W 82° 49.962'
~1.2 nm NNE of launch · 9-22 FOW
Closest reef and the one you can fish in a NW blow — work the south/lee edge. At 69°F the reef-top bite is fading, so troll the perimeter first: Husky Jerk 40 ft back at 1.5 mph along the 14-22 ft edges to find scattered pods, then drop a 3/8 oz hair jig (purple/chartreuse + minnow) back through them if you stack fish on the finder.
RANK 02 · WARM-WATER TROLL
Marblehead Current Seam
MED CONFIDENCE
N 41° 32.400'
W 82° 42.300'
~3-4 nm E · 18-28 FOW
The warm-water pattern lakeeriefish named. Walleye stack on the high-current break off Marblehead at 69°F. Troll a Reef Runner / Husky Jerk in the bottom third at 1.5 mph along the current seam, with and against the flow. Bonus: running E keeps you sheltered from the morning NW wind, so this is the spot if you go before the wind fully lays.
RANK 03 · AFTERNOON (WIND LAYS)
Niagara / Round Complex
HIGH CONFIDENCE
N 41° 39.840'
W 82° 58.390'
~6 nm WNW · lighted buoy 5
Afternoon spot, not a morning run. Don't head WNW into the NW wind early. Once it clocks W and flattens, troll Reef Runners / Husky Jerks 30-50 ft back at 1.3-1.8 mph along the 18-22 ft edges, or jig the rocky outskirts 12-16 FOW if you mark fish. Round Reef sits right next door (N 41° 37.040', W 82° 58.150') for a one-two punch.
⬇ DOWNLOAD ALL 7 WAYPOINTS (.GPX)
Full list (launch + 6 fishing spots) in section 03 below.
Water Temp
69.4°F
Buoy 45005, 5:30 AM ET · summer pattern
Wind
NW 15.6 kt
NW AM → W/SW, subsiding
Waves
1-3 ft
subsiding to ≤1 ft PM
Air Hi/Lo
78 / 60
Sunny → clouds, 0% precip
01Jet-Ski Call — CAUTION (afternoon window) NWS LEZ143 issued ~4 AM ET 6/15 · live data on refresh
Not a dawn day. The buoy is at 15.6 kt out of the NW with 1-3 ft waves right now, and NW piles chop onto the shallow north-shore reefs faster than any other direction. That's at the top of your stay-home envelope. But the forecast is on your side: the marine zone calls "northwest winds 5 to 15 knots becoming west, waves 1 to 3 feet subsiding to 1 foot or less." Translation: rough early, laying down to flat by afternoon as the wind drops and clocks to W. No Special Weather Statements for Ottawa County, no fog, no storms today. So flip your usual plan: let the lake settle, watch the buoy, and launch once it's under ~10 kt and off the NW. With a W wind and 1-ft water the whole reef complex opens up.
Watch item — morning NW wind
NW at 15+ kt with up to 3 ft is the dangerous combo for a low-freeboard PWC on these shallow north reefs. Do NOT run WNW toward Niagara/Round into that. If you launch before it lays, stay tucked on the south/lee side of Catawba and Mouse Island, or run E toward Marblehead (sheltered from NW). Best move: wait for the W shift.
Best launch + plan
Catawba Point ramp, late-morning or afternoon once the buoy drops under ~10 kt and off the NW. Run E to the Marblehead current seam (sheltered) or work the lee edge of Mouse Island Reef, then push WNW to Niagara/Round only after it flattens. Short hops, bail-out harbors at Catawba, Put-in-Bay, Port Clinton. Tomorrow is worse (SW 15-20 kt, showers, evening storms), so today's PM is the window.
Lightning
Off the water immediately. No exceptions. (None in today's forecast, but the rule stands.)
02What's Biting lakeeriefish.com · pulled 6:05 AM ET 6/15
- Walleye — full summer scatter, trolling is the program. At 69°F the fish are off the tight reef tops and spread out, which is exactly when trolling earns its keep. lakeeriefish puts them in the high-current zones near Mouse Island, Middle Bass, and Marblehead plus the rocky reef edges and adjacent sand flats in 19-28 FOW (target the bottom 5-6 ft) with Reef Runners, Husky Jerks, P10s, and Bandits at 1-1.8 mph (lean to the upper end now; with the current or against it flips day to day, so try both). Jigging still produces on the rocky outskirts of Toussaint, Round, and Niagara in 10-16 FOW, but it's no longer the every-fish bite it was at 55°F. The LEWT Lorain Pro-Am (6/6-6/7) was won on forward-facing sonar casting jigs tipped with plastics (39.90 lb), confirming the scatter pattern.
- Smallmouth bass: Prime. 69°F is peak smallmouth water. Rocky points and reef edges around the Bass Islands. Tubes, drop-shot, jerkbaits. Strong primary target if the walleye are scattered and you want a bend in the rod.
- Perch: Starting to fire as water crosses 70. Not the headline yet, but worth a perch rig in 25-35 FOW if you mark schools.
- White bass: Spring run can blitz any day in low-70s water. A small spoon or jigging spoon at a surface boil fills a cooler fast.
02bRecent Angler Reports (Facebook) loading...
02cWater Clarity (NASA MODIS satellite) NASA Worldview · 250 m/pixel · today's pass
Two satellites pass over Lake Erie daily. Use these to spot sediment plumes (muddy west end from Maumee River runoff), algae blooms (green/turquoise patches), and clearer water (deep blue). Walleye prefer stained but not muddy water — pick areas where the plume is fading into clearer blue.
TERRA · ~10:30 AM EDT pass · click for interactive
AQUA · ~1:30 PM EDT pass · click for interactive
Reading the imagery
White: clouds. Light tan / brown: heavy sediment (skip). Turquoise / green: algae or stained (often productive walleye). Deep blue: clear (smallmouth water). Plume edges where muddy meets clear = the walleye sweet spot.
If clouded over, step back a day in the Worldview interactive viewer.
03Where to Go (full list) static for the day
⬇ DOWNLOAD .GPX FOR GARMIN
ON THE WATER » PHONE → FISH FINDER (3 TAPS)
One-time setup: Install Garmin ActiveCaptain on phone, enable Wi-Fi on ECHOMAP (
Settings » Communications » ActiveCaptain), pair.
On the water: open
reel.quest/today → tap DOWNLOAD GPX → iOS share sheet → ActiveCaptain → waypoints sync wirelessly.
CONFIDENCE LEGEND
[HIGH] verified from authoritative source.
[MED] center-of-feature only; fish on edges.
[LOW] guess from satellite or vague intel. Always: waypoint is starting point. Fish hold on drop-offs and current breaks, 50-200 yards off the named coord.
- Catawba Point Association ramp (launch). [LOW] Your home ramp. Drop a pin at actual ramp and tell me — I'll re-deploy.
> N 41° 35.280', W 82° 50.400'
📍 Open in Maps
- Mouse Island REEF. [HIGH — Natural Atlas] Actual fishing structure, NOT the island. ~1.2 nm NNE of launch. Limestone shoal, 0.33 sq mi, least depth 9 ft. At 69°F troll the perimeter to find pods, jig back through. Closest/safest in a NW blow (fish the lee edge).
> N 41° 36.402', W 82° 49.962'
📍 Open in Maps
- Niagara Reef (buoy 5). [HIGH — Coe Vanna Charters] ~6 nm WNW of launch. Lighted buoy marks reef. Afternoon spot once NW wind lays and clocks W. Troll 18-22 ft edges or jig the rocky outskirts.
> N 41° 39.840', W 82° 58.390'
📍 Open in Maps
- Round Reef. [HIGH — Coe Vanna Charters] ~5 nm WNW, right next to Niagara. Named in lakeeriefish this week for jigging 10-16 FOW. Pair with Niagara for a one-two punch.
> N 41° 37.040', W 82° 58.150'
📍 Open in Maps
- Toussaint Reef. [HIGH — Coe Vanna Charters] ~9 nm W. Named in lakeeriefish this week. Jig the rocky outskirts.
> N 41° 36.660', W 83° 01.240'
📍 Open in Maps
- Crib Reef (buoy 7). [HIGH — Coe Vanna Charters] ~10 nm NE. Less crowded than Niagara, similar reef pattern.
> N 41° 38.820', W 82° 39.990'
📍 Open in Maps
- Marblehead current zone. [LOW] ~3-4 nm E. High-current walleye zone named in lakeeriefish. Troll Husky Jerk / Reef Runner 18-22 FOW @ 1.5 mph where current breaks the point.
> N 41° 32.400', W 82° 42.300'
📍 Open in Maps
04What to Throw verified product links
At 69°F the fish are scattered into a summer pattern, so trolling is the headline: cover water until you find a pod, then work it. The hair jig is still the best single bait once you locate fish on a reef edge, and a worm harness shines on lazy mid-day walleye. Lead with the troll, jig the pods you find.
> TROLLING PROGRAM (PWC)
Now that you're trolling, here's the realistic setup off the Fish Pro. The whole game is putting baits at the right depth and speed and covering water until you find a pod, then circling back through it.
THE NUMBERS
01
Speed: 1.3-1.8 mph on the GPS (lean to the upper end now that water's near 70°). Watch SOG, not the throttle — wind and current push a PWC around.
02
Lead + depth: Reef Runner 800 / Husky Jerk #12 run ~6-12 ft down on 30-50 ft of line. Reef edges are 18-28 FOW, so you want baits in the bottom third. More line back = deeper. Bandits dive a touch deeper for the same lead.
03
Where: the 19-28 ft reef edges and the Mouse Island / Marblehead current seams. Troll along the contour, not across it. Try with the current and against it — lakeeriefish says which one works flips day to day.
THREE WAYS TO RIG IT (easiest first)
A
Flatline / short-line (start here): rods straight off the back, 2 lines, crankbaits 30-50 ft back. Simplest thing to run solo from a PWC. No extra gear.
B
In-line planer boards (Off Shore OR12): clip a board on each side to pull lines 15-30 ft out from the hull so you can run 3-4 without tangling and cover a wider swath. The board pulls sideways and pops/lays flat on a strike. A bit more to manage solo — add one board per side first, then build up.
C
Worm harness + bottom bouncer or Jet Diver: when fish are deeper/scattered, pull a crawler harness (gold or chartreuse blade) behind a 1-2 oz bottom bouncer or a Jet Diver to reach 18-25 ft at 1.0-1.3 mph. Slower than cranks; deadly on lazy mid-day fish.
MistakeTrolling crankbaits too fast and high over a 20-ft reef edge so they never reach the fish. If you're not ticking bottom occasionally or marking your bait near the fish on the finder, let more line out or slow down.
Full how-to: Short-line trolling · In-line boards · Worm harness
05Beginner Notes
- Wait out the NW, fish the afternoon. This is the rare day where dawn is the worst part. Don't launch into 15+ kt NW and 3 ft chop on the north reefs. Watch the buoy, go once it's under ~10 kt and off the NW, and you get flat water plus the warming bite.
- At 70°F, trolling beats grinding one reef. The fish are spread out. Cover water at 1.3-1.8 mph, mark a pod on the finder, then circle back through it. Watch GPS speed, not the throttle, and keep two flatlines simple before you add in-line boards.
- One safety note: PWCs are sunrise-to-sunset only in Ohio, and the wind clocks SW and builds again tonight. Be off the water well before dark and don't chase the evening bite. DDM coords only; the .GPX loads all 7 waypoints to the ECHOMAP.
06Sources Pulled AM run, fetched ~6:05 AM ET 6/15
- NWS LEZ143 nearshore (6/15): NW 5-15 kt becoming W, waves 1-3 ft subsiding to 1 ft or less, sunny. Tonight SW 5-15 kt, 2 ft or less. Tuesday SW 10-15 increasing to 15-20 kt, chance of showers PM, t-storms Tue night. No advisories.
- NWS point forecast (Catawba/Marblehead): no hazard banner. High near 78, low ~60, NW 7-10 mph, increasing clouds, 0% precip.
- NWS active alerts API: zero active alerts for the point.
- Buoy 45005 / live.json: water 69.4°F, air 59.7°F, wind 15.6 kt NW (320°), obs 5:30 AM ET.
- lakeeriefish.com Western Basin: walleye scattered into high-current zones (Mouse Island/Middle Bass/Marblehead) + reef edges 19-28 FOW, trolling 1-1.8 mph (Reef Runners / Husky Jerks / P10s / Bandits); jigging Toussaint/Round/Niagara 10-16 FOW.
- community.walleye.com: active threads 6/13-6/14 (Saturday reports, "looking for the eyes 6-13"), but the index page does not expose body detail or Catawba-specific coords in window.
- Lake Erie Walleye Trail (.net): LEWT Lorain Pro-Am 6/6-6/7, won by Zart/Dudas with 39.90 lb on forward-facing sonar + casting jigs tipped with plastics. Western/central basin.
- FB groups PAUSED: account security checkpoint, pending Rob. No FB scrape this run.
This is a refresher, not a class. Reread it the night before a trip. You're running a low-freeboard PWC on the shallowest, rockiest, most weather-volatile basin of the Great Lakes, sharing water with 700-foot freighters and weekend pontoon traffic. Three things will keep you alive and legal: respect the reefs, know who has right of way, and follow Ohio's PWC rules. Everything below is built around those three.
ALake Erie Western Basin: PWC operating envelope
The Western Basin is the shallowest part of Lake Erie. Average depth around 24 feet, with reef shelves at 1 to 4 feet that aren't always buoyed. Wind builds chop fast because there's nothing for waves to do but stack. A Fish Pro Trophy sits low. You feel weather sooner than a 22-foot center console does.
Rule of thumb: GO/NO-GO
Green light: winds under 10 kt, waves 1 foot or less, no T-storms in the 6-hour forecast.
Yellow light: winds 10 to 15 kt, waves 1 to 2 feet. Doable if you stay west of the islands and inside known water. Plan a short loop.
Red light: winds 15+ kt sustained, waves 2+ feet, or any T-storm risk. Stay on the trailer. The Western Basin builds 3 to 5 foot square chop fast, and a PWC takes those waves like a brick. NOAA marine forecast for LEZ143 is the call, not the lakeshore forecast.
Reef awareness
Niagara, Crib, Round, Gull Island Shoal, Locust Point, and the reef complex around the Bass Islands all have spots under 2 feet. Most are unmarked. A jet drive sucking sand and gravel will eat your wear ring and pump in one pass. Rule: stay in 4+ feet of water unless you have eyes on the bottom and a charted track. Use the Garmin chartplotter's depth shading. If you see color change in the water (lighter green or brown), throttle down and look before you commit.
Wind-driven water level
A steady 15+ kt SW wind can drop Western Basin water levels 1 to 2 feet in an hour (it sloshes east toward Buffalo). A reef that was 3 feet deep at launch can be 12 inches deep by lunch. If wind is steady SW, recheck depth on familiar spots before running shallow lines.
PRE-LAUNCH CHECKLIST (Catawba ramp)
01
Check NOAA marine forecast LEZ143 (Western Basin) the morning of, not the night before. Note wind direction, gust spread, wave height, T-storm timing.
02
File a float plan. Text Jen: launch ramp, intended area, expected return time. "Mouse Island to Niagara Reef, back by 2 PM."
03
Drain plug in. Check it every single time. PWCs don't have a hull drain plug like a boat, but the LinQ livewell cooler and any aftermarket mods might. Verify.
04
Gear check: PFD on, kill-switch lanyard clipped to PFD (not the handlebar), whistle, phone in dry bag, paddle, anchor with at least 50 ft of line, throwable Type IV cushion stowed, fire extinguisher in date.
05
Fuel: 1/3 out, 1/3 back, 1/3 reserve. The Fish Pro Trophy's range drops hard in chop.
06
Garmin on, depth alarm set to 4 ft. Confirm GPS lock before you leave the no-wake zone.
IF CONDITIONS DETERIORATE MID-TRIP
01
Decide early. The moment whitecaps appear or the forecast worsens, turn for the nearest safe harbor. Don't try to finish the last drift. Catawba, Put-in-Bay, Kelleys Island, and Port Clinton are all options. Pick the one with the shortest beam-sea exposure.
02
Quarter the waves, don't take them broadside. A PWC rolled by a beam sea will dump you. 30 to 45 degrees off the wave face is the sweet spot.
03
Slow down. Trying to outrun chop in a PWC ends with you launching off a wave and landing flat. Power down to where the hull stays in contact with water.
04
If you go in the water: kill-switch cuts the engine, ski circles back idling (Sea-Doo iBR + lanyard design). Approach from the rear, board from the reboarding step. Practice this once in calm water before you need it.
MistakeAnchoring bow-first in chop. The Fish Pro's bow eye is low, waves climb the hull, and you swamp the front storage. Anchor off a stern cleat with enough scope (7:1 in chop) so the ski rides up and over swells, not into them.
MistakeStanding rods in the gunwale holders while running over 15 mph. Tips whip, lines tangle into the intake grate, and a $200 rod becomes a $40 broken blank. Lay rods flat under bungees for transit, holders for trolling and drifting only.
MistakeForgetting the LinQ livewell pump strainer. It clogs with weeds and zebra mussel shells fast in Erie. Check and clear it before every trip or your walleye are dead by noon.
Fish Pro Trophy quirks
The Garmin 7″ with in-hull transducer reads great at trolling speed but gets noisy above 25 mph. Use Slow Mode (up to 8 mph) for sonar work. The 13.5 gal LinQ cooler/livewell quick-disconnects, take it off when you don't need it. Anchoring system (bow and stern cleats with the included rope retractors) is purpose-built, use it instead of clipping to a fishing rod holder. iDF (intelligent debris-free) pump on Trophy 170 helps with Erie's weed mats but doesn't make you invincible. Stay out of obvious weed lines at speed.
BUSCG navigation rules: right of way
The Navigation Rules (COLREGS and US Inland Rules) treat every encounter as one boat being the stand-on vessel (holds course and speed) and the other being the give-way vessel (alters course or speed to avoid). PWCs are power-driven vessels under the rules, so the same rules apply to you as to any motorboat. But you also have practical obligations because you're small, fast, and harder to see.
THE THREE ENCOUNTERS
01
Head-on: both vessels alter course to starboard (right) and pass port-to-port. One short blast signals "I'm altering to starboard." If both boats do this, you pass each other on the left side, like cars on a US road.
02
Crossing: the boat on your starboard (right) side is the stand-on vessel. You are give-way. Slow, turn behind them, or both. Think "if you see red on the right, give way." The other boat's red port light is on your starboard side, meaning you're crossing in front of them.
03
Overtaking: the overtaking vessel is always give-way, regardless of vessel type. If you're passing a slower fishing boat, you go around them. Pass on whichever side is safer and signal: one short blast to pass on their starboard, two short blasts to pass on their port.
PWC practical reality
Officially, a PWC has no special legal subordination — you're a power-driven vessel like everyone else. Practically, yield to everything. Sailboats, anglers on anchor, kayaks, pontoons, bass boats. They don't expect you, they can't maneuver as fast as you, and the courtroom doesn't care that you were technically the stand-on vessel if you T-boned a sailboat. PWC operators draw extra scrutiny. Eat the right of way, keep moving.
SOUND SIGNALS (USCG Inland Rules)
01
One short blast (1 sec): "I intend to leave you on my port side" (I'm turning to starboard / passing you on your starboard).
02
Two short blasts: "I intend to leave you on my starboard side" (I'm turning to port / passing you on your port).
03
Three short blasts: "I am operating astern propulsion" (backing up).
04
Five or more short blasts: DANGER or "I don't understand your intentions." If someone blows five at you, stop and figure out what's wrong. If you can't tell what another boat is doing, you blow five.
05
One prolonged blast (4 to 6 sec): sounded when leaving a dock, coming around a blind bend, or in restricted visibility. Required equipment on a PWC: a whistle or horn audible at half a mile. The pea whistle on your PFD counts in a pinch but a real horn is better.
Red right returning
When returning from sea (heading into port, upstream, or into Sandusky Bay / Port Clinton harbor from the open lake), keep red buoys on your right (starboard) and green on your left. Buoy shapes: red = nuns (pointed/conical top), green = cans (flat top). Lighted buoys: red flashes red, green flashes green. On Lake Erie, "returning" means heading toward shore or harbor from the open lake. If you're running west out of Catawba toward the open Western Basin, you're "heading to sea," so flip it: red on your left.
Commercial traffic
Lake Erie still moves freighters, mostly 600 to 1000 feet long, drawing 28+ feet. They run the shipping channels north of the islands and into Toledo, Sandusky, Cleveland, and Lorain. Stay out of their way. Always. They cannot stop, they cannot turn quickly, and they can't see you in the last quarter-mile in front of the bow. Cross shipping lanes at 90 degrees, behind the freighter, never in front. Their wake is a 4-foot rolling swell, hit it bow-on at slow speed and ride it out. A freighter's draft is deeper than most of the Western Basin, so they stay in well-marked channels. Know where the channels are (Pelee Passage, South Passage between Kelleys and Marblehead) and don't loiter in them.
Fishing vs underway
A boat actively fishing with gear that restricts maneuverability (commercial trawl, longline) is a "vessel engaged in fishing" with priority over power-driven vessels. Recreational anglers do NOT get this status. A guy trolling with downriggers is still a power-driven vessel under the rules. But common courtesy and common sense say: don't blast through someone's drift, don't cross close behind a trolling boat (you'll cut lines), and give anchored anglers a wide berth at no-wake speed.
MistakeAssuming a sailboat will keep clear because you're faster. Under sail alone, a sailboat is stand-on against any power-driven vessel (including you), and they often can't change course quickly. You give way. Period.
COhio PWC regulations (Ohio DNR Division of Parks & Watercraft)
Operator age
16 and older: can operate a PWC alone with a valid boater education certificate (if born on/after Jan 1, 1982).
12 to 15: can operate a PWC only with a Boater Education Certificate AND an adult (18+) physically on board.
Under 12: cannot operate a PWC, period. Can ride as passenger.
Boater education (NASBLA)
Ohio Revised Code 1547: anyone born on or after January 1, 1982 operating a powercraft greater than 10 HP must complete a NASBLA-approved boater education course or pass the Ohio Division of Watercraft proficiency exam. The Fish Pro Trophy is 170 HP, so this applies. The card never expires. You must produce it within 72 hours of being stopped by law enforcement. Take BoatUS Foundation's free Ohio course online if you haven't already.
Hours of operation
PWCs in Ohio may only be operated between sunrise and sunset. No dawn patrol, no dusk runs. Doesn't matter if your lights work. The law is the law. This eliminates the magic-hour walleye bite from a PWC. Plan accordingly.
PFD and kill switch
Every person on board a PWC must wear a USCG-approved Type I, II, III, or V PFD at all times while underway. Not stowed. Worn. The operator must also have the engine cut-off lanyard attached to person, PFD, or clothing (federal rule, applies on Ohio waters too). Clipping it to the handlebar defeats the purpose and is a violation.
Distance and speed rules
Operate at idle / no-wake speed within 300 feet of: shore, docks, swim areas, anchored or moored vessels, marinas, launch ramps. No wake jumping closer than 200 feet to another vessel. No weaving through congested traffic. No operating in a manner that endangers life or property. Ohio doesn't have a single "X feet from shore" speed line statewide, but the 300 ft no-wake bubble around fixed structures is the operative rule.
Registration and decals
Every PWC in Ohio must be titled and registered through the Ohio Division of Parks & Watercraft. Registration is valid 3 years. Registration number (OH-XXXX-XX) must be displayed on both sides of the bow in 3″ block contrasting letters with a hyphen or space between groups. Current validation decal goes within 6 inches of the registration number. Keep the registration certificate on board (laminate it, dry bag it).
Required equipment checklist
USCG-approved PFD per person (worn). Engine cut-off lanyard attached to operator. Sound-producing device (whistle or horn, audible 1/2 mile). USCG-approved Type B-I fire extinguisher (current, unexpired). Visual distress signals are not required on inland Lake Erie waters during daytime, but a handheld VHF (Channel 16) is strongly recommended for the Western Basin. Registration certificate. Boater education card.
MistakeSkipping the kill-switch lanyard because "I'll only be on it 10 minutes." If you eject and the ski doesn't shut down, it goes full throttle in a circle and people die. ODNR cites for this. Clip it to your PFD strap every ride.
MistakeCarrying an expired fire extinguisher. The Type B-I has a service life and a pressure gauge. ODNR and USCG Aux check this on safety stops. A $20 replacement avoids a citation and an awkward conversation.
DTrip-day mental checklist
Read this in the truck before backing down the ramp.
01
Forecast still green? NOAA LEZ143 in the last hour, not last night. Wind direction, gusts, T-storm timing, wave height.
02
Float plan sent? Where, when back, who to call if I don't check in.
03
PFD on, lanyard clipped to me, whistle on the PFD.
04
Phone in dry bag, VHF on Channel 16 if I'm carrying one.
05
Garmin showing depth, depth alarm at 4 ft, charted course set.
06
Reef avoidance plan: which reefs am I fishing on top of vs running around? Know the difference before I leave the ramp.
07
Out-of-fuel/weather bail-out: nearest harbor from the spot I'm fishing. (Catawba, Put-in-Bay, Kelleys, Port Clinton.)
Sources
Ohio Revised Code Ch. 1547. Ohio DNR Division of Parks & Watercraft Boat Operator's Guide. USCG Navigation Rules (33 CFR / COLREGS). BoatUS Foundation Ohio Course. NOAA Marine Forecast Zone LEZ143 (Western Basin nearshore). NOAA Coast Pilot 6, Ch. 6 (Lake Erie). Sea-Doo Fish Pro Trophy owner's manual / BRP spec sheet.