Jack
of all trades, Master of none. I am sure we have all heard this phrase at some
point or another, but what does it mean for fishing? Well, it doesn’t directly
apply to fishing unless you are KVD and are a master of all. Talking with Mark
Zona at the 2013 Schaumburg Fishing Expo, he told me that to be successful
fishing at any competitive level you have to be good at almost everything but
have one or two go to techniques that you mastered in your bag of tricks. Use
that logic to look at any pro on the tournament circuits, 99% of them have one
or two trademark technique that they are known for being a master of. So from
that logic, it should be changed to “Jack of all trades, Master of One” for
fishing purposes.
Any
given tournament, you could be fishing any one of the many techniques that are
out there. Your boater will have a pre-set technique/pattern for the tournament
and if what they are throwing is all that is working … you better already be good at it or
be super quick to learn it to be successful. Over the years, I have learned
from reading magazines, articles, YouTube videos, seminars, and talking with
other fishermen about the wide variety of techniques and tricks I need to be
successful. From that information, I have gained confidence in many lures
however I have two lures that will ALWAYS have a spot in my box.
As said in the last post about having a proving ground. Find that place you can go practice and learn those new techniques there. Why? As
you are learning a new technique, you probably aren’t going to get it correct
right away. Learning at a productive spot will tell you quickly what you are
doing correct or wrong because you will either be catching or not catching fish.
It is instant feedback on correct presentation and helps to build confidence in
the technique, which is tip number two.
Building
confidence in a technique can be a double edged sword. You want to be confident
in what you are using. For example, if you are in a situation where you need to
throw a spinnerbait and all you have to rely on is what you have read and you
think to yourself “I have never caught anything on a spinnerbait”, your
confidence is already shaken and you won’t be in a mindset to be successful. If
you had taken the information and applied it on that small pond to catch a few
fish, it would show you that it works and your confidence in picking up that
bait will be much higher when you need it.
DON’T
LET YOUR CONFIDENCE BLIND YOU when learning new lures and techniques. In my early stages of learning techniques, I found myself wanting
to learn a new technique but using another that I already had confidence in as
a crutch. I would bring the confidence lure along “just in case they weren’t
biting” and found myself using that bait more than the one I wanted to learn
because I didn't have to prove that caught fish. So when learning a new technique, as Zona told me... commit
to learning it and don’t bring a crutch; learn how to make that one lure
do a variety of things to fit the given conditions.
That
point of making a lure work in a variety of conditions will help you more than
you can imagine. It will also give you opportunities to do something different
than your boater which may pay off for you. An example would be the Jack Links
Major League Fishing, when all the pros were flippin/pitching jigs around docks
but Ike was flippin/pitching a chatterbait, and the extra action on the lift
and fall paid off for him.
Hopefully
that helps you prepare for tournament fishing, and figure out how to make those
final preparations before you jump in. Build your confidence and learn how to make all your lures work smarter for you.
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