An Umbrella on the boat helps some
[QUOTE=jkelley1487;556077]Move on-- you guys are right. I won't do that again. I was pulling out around 1pm Saturday and there were about 4-5 ppl fishing the ramp. It was a family out there but it was a circus at the ramp. I noticed that the bass on my graphs started suspending up as the day went on... The bites definitely slowed down after about 11am or so, but so did the boat traffic. That's a good idea to go out later in the day if you can keep cool. What I noticed was the canoes really came out in full force later in the day.[/QUOTE]
But even if you have some shade and a little breeze the people in canoes tend to get in the way and make it hard to troll the break line along the East Side of the Pit. The break line is not a straight line as the sharp drop off swings in and out along the coast line. The 10 ft break line from 10 to 15 ft is where I target my crankbaits.
Now there are other areas of the Pit on the Northern End that are less crowded and more easily trolled.
Right now the only reason I'd go out in the middle of the day would be to take pictures. It's way too hot for me to fish even with an umbrella.
I wish I had one of those canopy that can be put on the small boats. Those would help me get more shade and be able to see the depth finder's screen in the day time. My older Screen is hard to see in direct sunlight even if it's shaded some.
Fish tend to suspend over the deeper drop offs. The area where it drops down from 20 to about 40 or 50 deep. Those underwater ledges are well down below the fish which suspend right above the thermocline at around 26 to 27 ft deep this time of the year.