My fishing is different than yours, me being in the Northeast and doing a mix of inshore, offshore and Canyon fishing. My boat is a twin diesel express, which may be bigger and have more storage space too.
I have all my terminal tackle (swivels, hooks, crimps, beads, etc), inshore hooks with leaders, offshore Tuna chunking hooks with leaders, small diamond jigs (1-4 oz), leader material, and all my tools in a Cabela's bag that holds 5-3700 boxes. I have all my inshore sinkers (1-10 oz) each size in plastic 16 oz jars in a tackle bag. I have a Sharking bag that has pre-made hooks, 4, 8 & 12 oz flat sinkers, skirts and floats. I have a bag for Canyon chunking that has hooks with leaders (for Tuna and Swordfish), glowsticks, swordfish weights (3-10 oz eggs on 200lb mono). I then have three mesh NANTUCKET BOUND Marine Utility Totes 22" W X 15"H X 12" D that hold all my trolling rigs (1 for Striped Bass & Bluefish (umbrella rigs, tubes and Bunker spoons) and two for offshore (Tuna, Mahi - the larger lures (Kona Jets, Daisy Chains, etc) are in single lure bags, things like Tuna Feathers, Ilanders etc are in 4 pocket bags and my Ballyhoo heads are in 8 pocket units). And lastly I have a 40" NANTUCKET BOUND Spreader Bar Tote for my two dozen 30" & 36" spreader bars (each in its own bag). Yes it is a lot of different bags (and they are each (except the totes) a different color and design so the crew can tell them apart, but it makes really easy to find items when you need them and I only take what is needed (although for most offshore trips everything but the Bass & Bluefish trolling gear ends up on the boat. |