Anthony Pearson
Senior Member
As some of you will know, I've been toying with the idea of purchasing a Deeper Smart Fish-Finder. In fact, I've borrowed one off a mate and have been fascinated by the information it gives. However, I have a problem. On a recent visit to a river stretch I am unfamiliar with, I used my watercraft and picked a swim. Before fishing I cast out the Deeper and discovered a really impressive drop-off about 40 yds downstream. This looked too good an opportunity to miss so I shifted all my gear to the peg below it so I could upstream ledger the spot. Despite giving it a real go, I managed only one small bream.
Now, there could be many reasons for this such as better features nearby which I was unaware of. But it had me thinking: if a feature becomes well-known and heavily fished, does this pressure lead to a change in fish behaviour i.e. do they avoid this area? I've read about this happening when anglers fish directly into holding areas such as snags etc, but is this the case for those locations we identify as feeding areas? If you take this to its conclusion, will the increased use of technology to find the theoretical hotspots and the sharing of this information have a detrimental impact (from an angler's perspective) on the numbers of fish in such a swim? We are of course talking long-term here, but if the fish move from a heavily fished raft feature (because they don't feel safe) why could the same not happen in a regular feeding spot?
On a different note, when fishing a big, relatively featureless-looking river, if I only target the ones identified by a fishfinder, am I restricting my chances of success or improving them?
Now, there could be many reasons for this such as better features nearby which I was unaware of. But it had me thinking: if a feature becomes well-known and heavily fished, does this pressure lead to a change in fish behaviour i.e. do they avoid this area? I've read about this happening when anglers fish directly into holding areas such as snags etc, but is this the case for those locations we identify as feeding areas? If you take this to its conclusion, will the increased use of technology to find the theoretical hotspots and the sharing of this information have a detrimental impact (from an angler's perspective) on the numbers of fish in such a swim? We are of course talking long-term here, but if the fish move from a heavily fished raft feature (because they don't feel safe) why could the same not happen in a regular feeding spot?
On a different note, when fishing a big, relatively featureless-looking river, if I only target the ones identified by a fishfinder, am I restricting my chances of success or improving them?