π₯ The salt spray hits your face as the boat cuts through crystal-clear water, and you can already smell the sunscreen mixing with the anticipation of a ripper day out on the Great Barrier Reef. You’re chasing coral trout and maybe a cheeky Spanish mackerel, but here’s the thing – what you carry your gear in can make or break the experience!
π Quick Comparison Overview
Right, so I’ve been testing both options on multiple reef fishing trips out from Cairns and Port Douglas over the past year. Here’s the gist:
π **Traditional Backpack**
π° Price: $50-150
πͺ Durability: Varies heaps
π Water Resistance: Usually crap
π Comfort: Winner for hiking
π§ **Waterproof Dry Bag**
π° Price: $30-120
πͺ Durability: Bloody tough
π Water Resistance: 100% waterproof
π Comfort: decent but not made for long treks
For reef fishing specifically, one of these clearly comes out on top…
π °οΈ Traditional Backpack – The Old Mate
I tested my trusty 40L hiking pack on three separate charter trips. Look, it holds heaps of gear and sits comfortable on your shoulders during the walk from the carpark to the marina.
**What worked:**
β’ Heaps of pockets for tackle organisation
β’ Padded straps for comfort
β’ Easy access to everything
β’ Looks normal walking through town
**What didn’t:**
β’ Got absolutely soaked on the first trip – even with a “water resistant” cover
β’ Sand gets into EVERYTHING
β’ My phone copped a bit of moisture damage
β’ Started smelling like old bait after trip two
Honestly, if you’re doing shore-based fishing or need to hike to a spot, backpacks are still legit. But on a boat? She’s a struggle.
π ±οΈ Waterproof Dry Bag – The Game Changer
Picked up a 30L Sea to Summit dry bag and bloody hell, what a difference! This thing’s been on five reef trips now and it’s an absolute weapon.
**What worked:**
β’ 100% waterproof – survived a rogue wave and torrential arvo storm
β’ Sand just rinses right off
β’ Floats if it goes overboard (saved my mate’s gear!)
β’ Lightweight and packs down small
β’ No more funky bait smells soaking in
**What didn’t:**
β’ Only one main compartment – organisation is trickier
β’ Straps aren’t as comfy for long walks
β’ Looks a bit daggy for cafe stops afterwards
β’ Need to buy separate small pouches for tackle
For boat fishing though? This is the clear winner, mate.
βοΈ Head-to-Head Breakdown
**Water Protection:** Dry bag wins hands down (10/10 vs 3/10)
**Comfort & Carry:** Backpack takes this one (8/10 vs 6/10)
**Durability:** Dry bag edges it (9/10 vs 7/10)
**Organisation:** Backpack wins for tackle (8/10 vs 5/10)
**Value for Money:** Dry bag – cheaper and lasts longer (9/10 vs 7/10)
**Sand Resistance:** Dry bag absolutely smashes it (10/10 vs 4/10)
**Versatility:** Backpack wins for multi-use (8/10 vs 6/10)
For reef fishing specifically: Dry bag wins 5-2!
π The Winner Is…
**WATERPROOF DRY BAG** π
For Great Barrier Reef fishing charters, day trips, and boat-based adventures, the dry bag is the clear champion. Your gear stays dry, sand-free, and if anything goes overboard, it’ll float!
βββββ **Dry Bag: 4.5/5**
βββ **Backpack: 3/5**
**Pro move:** Get a 30L dry bag PLUS a small waterproof pouch for your phone and keys. Chuck some small ziplock bags inside for tackle organisation. Total cost around $60 and you’re sorted!
**When to still use a backpack:** If you’re hiking to a remote fishing spot, doing camping-fishing combos, or need serious organisation for multiple species targeting.
Either way, don’t be the bloke with soggy gear and a waterlogged phone like I was!
π‘ Tips & Warnings
β
Pack a separate small dry pouch for phone, keys, and wallet – even inside a dry bag!
β
Rinse your dry bag with fresh water after every saltwater trip to extend its life
β Don’t overstuff your dry bag – you need to roll the top down at least 3 times for proper sealing
β οΈ Test your dry bag in a sink before trusting it with expensive gear – not all cheap ones are actually waterproof!
π Which one would you pick for your next reef adventure – trusty backpack or waterproof dry bag? π
#greatbarrierreef #reeffishing #fishinggear #drybag #australiafishing #outdoorgear #fishingtips #cairnsfishing #queensland
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