I've been fishing a lonnnnnng time and have done well different times of year either solo or with others, but one thing that smacks me upside the head is the fact that luck has as much to do with finding fish as catching them for some anglers such as myself. On the other hand, knowing a body of water and fishing higher potential (active) fish locations always puts the odds in the favor of a minority of skilled anglers. But it's like, which came first - the chicken or the egg? In other words, is knowing the seasonal locations of fish attracting structure in lake X far more important than the search lures or other equipment you use?
Key spots change depending on how much pressure is applied, but generally fish will feed more often in a small percentage of a lake's area. In my club, we have a few individuals that can usually do well on large or small waters they've fished many times where many of us struggle to find fish because we don't know the lake. You could hand us the best lure for the day and still we couldn't find fish on our own that would bite it.
So, it seems to me that when many go gaga over this or that piece of equipment, that maybe their wishing that their equipment (rods, reels, lures) will some how increase their odds of finding and catching fish versus first using sonar to pick apart a lake's bottom composition and depth changes or maybe even fishing with others that have a lock on that information.
No doubt presentation, lure characteristics, line diameter, retrieve speed, etc. contribute once active fish are found, but in the scheme of things isn't that only 1 percent or less of your success?
Last anecdote to illustrate what I'm touching on. Last fall, I fished with a very talented individual who knew a large reservoir like the back of his hand. The problem was finding fish that would cooperate in areas he had done well on in previous trips. We went bite-less for hours of rowing and a thousand casts only to change locations (in desparation) to areas I suggested might hold fish. My partner then used lures to then catch fish (some nice ones I might add) while I held the boat into the wind (only row boats allowed). I have no doubt that on a different day his locations would have produced and with a variety of lures used correctly, but on that day, one-per-spot fish locations trumped general fish location and therefore the lure, presentation and equipment used mattered as much or more than just general locaton.
In other words, I'd rather be in a boat with someone who knows the water versus one who owns the best equipment and doesn't.
F