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Navionics WebApp is also immensly helpful, I forgot about that one
It is helpful. I use the mobile app too. In my forgetfulness, I left my Navionics chip in my computer after updating my maps. Went fishing about 2 hours from the house and realized what I had done. I ended up using the app to put me in the areas I wanted to fish.
To me bathymetric mapping is a great tool to use as a start. Community edits can be a tremendous help if there is a lot of activity for a new body of water one is interested in going to. With mapping one can pull up and study the information on a computer, set routes, trails & waypoints to areas of interest then download to a card for ones chartplotter/FF prior to heading to the spot.
Once you're on site, certain visual cues hold true from location to location in freshwater and saltwater. Current, structure, shoreline topography and wildlife activity each predict likely locations to hookup. There's a consistency to fishing that successful anglers rely on no matter where they wet a line.
I always consult NOAA charts and Google Earth...and print out a color map from Google Earth of the site I plan to fish...and once on the water, my side imaging sonar helps paint the complete picture...I fish moving water...gotta be in some phase of the tide..and my favorite structure is points and bridges...big grass beds are good for redfish and speckled trout in Southern Maryland...grass shorelines and boat docks are white perch haunts...keep your eyes open for breaking fish and the diving gulls...often movement of bait pods show up as ripples on the water...be observant...when your favorite lure isn’t working, be aggressive, change baits, colors, size...as conditions change you need to change...retirieve speed, cadence-slow down, speed up...
"Lady Luck" 2016 Red Hibiscus Hobie Outback, Lowrance Hook2-7TS
2018 Seagrass Green Hobie Compass, Humminbird 798 ci HD SI
"Wet Dream" 2011 yellow Ocean Prowler 13
Charter member of Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club
Once you're on site, certain visual cues hold true from location to location in freshwater and saltwater. Current, structure, shoreline topography and wildlife activity each predict likely locations to hookup. There's a consistency to fishing that successful anglers rely on no matter where they wet a line.
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