I remember when this gizmo came out, I thought, how dorky. I mean, I fish these highland reservoirs in Tennessee and Kentucky. Your never more than 4 good casts to the bank, what do you think, your gonna get lost? Not likely. Maybe its you can't find your fishin hole. Not likely either seeing as how I know the lakes I fish pretty well. Where then is the advantage of this costly gadget.
That's when I got schooled. We were in Florida on Okechobee, and the whole country was fogged in. We had been fishing in the Monkey Box all week, but there wan't a prayer of finding it in the fog. We had almost settled into fishing the Northwest Wall when one of our group mentioned he had the gadget on his rig. In behind him we fell and rode out to where we had been catching fish. Now I passed off on this incident. After all, we only get on that big water once a year, and generally when we go, that group is there, and 2 of them had GPS, so why buy one.
Fast forward to last fall. Dale Hollow, last night tournament of the year. Blast off was at 7:30 dark at 8 except that it was pouring the rain just before blast off, and the sky was cloudy. We did get to our first hole. After it failed, I turned around to tell my partner we were moving, except I couldn't see him. The fog had rolled in big time. We started easing down the lake, but spent hours trying to figure out where we were. Had no idea what we were fishing, where we were, even how close to the bank we were. After our 3rd idle around an island, one of our buddies somewhat oriented us. I heard the VHF crack, picked up and he used his GPS to tell me where I was.
The new units are a far cry from the first generation models. Maps that scroll with you and indicate contour on the lake. Now were talking usable box. I haven't purchased my own yet, but plan to in the next 2 months. Are any of you using GPS with your bass fishing?
Skipper