Bass Fishing May - Jun 2017 | Page 64

Scout Your Schools First choice, second choice, third choice, backup schools of bass – learn how to identify your best prospects and deal with them all when opportu- nities are presented. “When I really started tournament fishing, we could fish a tournament at Pickwick and run to 10 or 12 holes a day,” Lambert says. “If they weren’t bit- ing, you could come back and get them when they were. Nowadays, that’s not the case. If you leave a hole now, chances are that you aren’t going to get it back in a big tournament.” Lambert’s solution to this develop- ment is to spend practice days idling at a snail’s pace while his electronics scour the river bottom for ledges and schools. Here, he’s mostly deploying side-scan imaging to pinpoint as many fish as possible in as many areas as possible. According to Lambert, electronics are the most important part of it. “I’ll make a few casts during prac- tice, but only a few,” he says. “In three days, I might spend three hours with a rod in my hand.” Once Lambert finds a school, he marks it on his graph and keeps rolling. Come tournament time, he’ll run back to see if the fish are still there, or if they’ve moved up or down the ledge. Lambert is quick to note that many of the fish he locates in practice relo- cate when tournaments begin. When they do, he keeps moving from way- point to waypoint and checking up and down ledges until he finds them again. It’s not a perfect process, but doing the research ahead of time at least provides an angler with starting points for when the competition begins. 62 FLWFISHING.COM I MAY-JUNE 2017