Classic AquaSport
General Aquasport Forums => Aquasport Discussion => Topic started by: 126andy on February 19, 2013, 12:10:09 AM
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I was just wondering what would be classified a skiff. I have a 1997 Aquasport striper 165. Would that be considered a skiff? I seen lots of people calling boats skiffs but I don't really know what makes them a skiff. I guessing that it is a semi flat bottom boat with no draft to speak of. I a boat has a gas tank below the deck instead of an external can does that make it not a skiff?
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Skiff would have supper low gunnels and a very shallow draft 6-8" and usually in the 14-18 ft range, and be set up for push polling, Andy your boat is very close, I would consider it a skiff more then anything else and that's not a bad thing.
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I thought a "skiff was more of a small boat like 10 to 12 ft like a jon boat with a small kicker,Andys' would be called a "flats boat" by todays' definition....or not,maybe a skiff is in the eye of the captain. :scratch:
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Well then you have Micro Skiffs or Technical Polling Skiffs also :?
Biggest of all is the word Skiff adds $ to the price tag which is why the widespread use of the word.
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I think skiff is one of those names that is used to describe many different types of boats depending on use, region, etc etc. Ever hear of a captains skiff? Skiff is even used to describe a certain types of small sail boats and so on. I think generally the traditional term describes a small flat bottomed boat with shallow draft powered by oars. In our recreational fishing world I think marketing has applied the name to a bunch of small boats but I would say a boat with shallow draft and a flat bottom could be called a skiff.
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A skiff is, by definition, a shallow, flat-bottomed open boat with sharp bow and square stern. A flatback could be considered a skiff, but the semi-v and deep-v Aquasports are not really skiffs. Neither are most Carolina Skiffs, cuz they ain't got no sharp bow! But that's OK, cuz they are not made in Carolina either! I guess today you can call a boat about anything and somebody will buy it.
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Remember CJ, if you catch a bass fishing from a jon boat, said jon boat can now be called a bass boat! And will fetch a premium price!
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Remember CJ, if you catch a bass fishing from a jon boat, said jon boat can now be called a bass boat! And will fetch a premium price!
just like said jon boat fishes the flats, it magically becomes a flats boat
http://tampa.craigslist.org/hil/boa/3620530017.html (http://tampa.craigslist.org/hil/boa/3620530017.html)
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Remember CJ, if you catch a bass fishing from a jon boat, said jon boat can now be called a bass boat! And will fetch a premium price!
just like said jon boat fishes the flats, it magically becomes a flats boat
http://tampa.craigslist.org/hil/boa/3620530017.html (http://tampa.craigslist.org/hil/boa/3620530017.html)
That guy covered all his bases, he called it a flats boat in the title and a Bass boat in the ad.
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I've seen some ads in the past for 80's model tri hull boats and they were called flats skiffs :scratch:
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The definition I found for "Skiff" on boats.com reads, simply:
"A small, simple, shallow-draft boat."
So what's simple? Well, the rough unfinished interior (no inner liner) of a boat like a Carolina Skiff with few hatches and little to no bells and whistles is about as simple as it gets. I think the Striper is of a better fit and finish with an inner liner, with a better layout than a conventional skiff. To add to this, I believe a Jon Boat is basically the name for an Aluminum Skiff.
"Flats boat" definition from the same source:
"Type of small, inshore saltwater fishing boat with moderate deadrise and draft, usually equipped with a raised platform aft used by a guide pushing a long pole to silently maneuver the boat through shallow tidal water. "
Seems like any boat that could be referred to as a Flats Boat would at least have to have a stock poling platform to get away with the designation.
A "Bay Boat" is what I would classify the Striper as, minus the rolled edge-
"Low-profile, inshore fishing boat intended for use in protected coastal waters, and frequently made with rolled-edge construction."