I like the way you think, lunkerboss, and fish. When it comes to depth, I sometimes use Fish & Wildlife depth maps, but I don't take them fishing, though, because they get wet and worthless in my always wet canoe. However, one can determine depth with different lures, but in the end, depth doesn't matter to me as much as simply where the active bass are that moment.
A boat is where we disagree. Yes, bank fishing is pure, but you're leashed to the land. In my little canoe, I can roam and I do roam. I paddle a couple strokes, position the canoe for my casting, and cast three to five times. Then I move, always looking for active bass and changing my lures. Even if one lure is consistently catching fish, I still switch because I'm curious about bass. I don't need much of a boat. My only requirement is that it's light enough for an old woman to lift.
I also agree about a 25-pound sack. The best piece of fishing advice was given to me by an accomplished fly fisher who said, when I landed a tiny bass, "They're all good."
She's right. We need to be grateful for them all, big and small.
^I really like this.^ I can read a reed line and see the gap and wriggle my canoe through it. That's a skill set that a pro might never develop and certainly not in their big, shiny boats.
I'm so quiet in my canoe that there were a couple times this past summer when I worked deep into the lily pads and made a mistake and bumped the boat and I saw four or five swirls less than four feet from my canoe. They didn't know I was there until I blundered or if they did, I was stealthy enough that they felt secure.
I'm almost always the only one on a lake, but if someone else arrives and they're half a mile away, I sure hear them again and again and I'm hearing them through the air, which doesn't conduct sound nearly as well as water. If I'm hearing the other fisher with my old ears, the bass sure are hearing them too.