Angler Tips

One practical tip every day on the home screen. The whole library lives here.

Finding Fish

Fish transitions, not just obvious structure

Edges where rock changes to sand, weeds meet open water, or deep water meets a flat often hold more fish than the center of either area.

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Finding Fish

Find the food before the fish

Predators usually position near baitfish, insects, shrimp, crabs, or other forage. Empty water rarely becomes productive just because the structure looks good.

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Finding Fish

Current breaks are feeding stations

Fish often sit behind rocks, pilings, points, bridge supports, and channel edges where they can avoid the strongest current while waiting for food.

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Finding Fish

Pay attention to the down-current side

Food usually gets pushed past structure, so predators commonly position where the current delivers prey directly to them.

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Finding Fish

Depth changes matter more than distance

Moving your bait five feet deeper can be more important than casting fifty feet farther.

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Finding Fish

Use birds as moving fish finders

Diving birds, hovering terns, and birds sitting over one area can reveal baitfish activity, but approach quietly and avoid driving through the school.

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Finding Fish

Look for nervous water

Ripples, flickering bait, unusual surface texture, mud clouds, and sudden disturbances can reveal feeding fish before you see a strike.

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Finding Fish

Mud lines create ambush cover

Predators often patrol the cleaner edge of dirty water where they can see prey without being easily seen.

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Finding Fish

Shade is structure

Docks, boats, trees, bridges, and steep banks create temperature relief and visual cover, especially during bright conditions.

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Finding Fish

Do not ignore tiny depth differences

A depression only one or two feet deeper than the surrounding area can hold fish when conditions are difficult.

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Finding Fish

Leave fish to find fish

When one area stops producing, use the pattern you learned to locate similar structure instead of waiting indefinitely.

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