To be effective on the water means you need to be
efficient in the boat (or on the shore for that matter). In a tournament,
every minute counts. Spending time hunting through your things, looking for
“that lure” can cost you time…and money!
Having the right things in the right place is the best
way to organize your tackle. With the myriad of tackle-storage options on
the market today, each angler can develop a system to suit his/her needs.
Plano has recently come out with several new storage box styles – some even
molded in several different colors – to compliment their 3700 series.
Being a tackle junkie (there, I said it!), I have
dozens of lure storage boxes at the ready. But there is a method to my
madness. For instance, in one of my boxes, I have shallow diving crankbaits
– all colors, with and without rattles, etc. – but only shallow
divers. If I am going to a body of water where I know a promising pattern
involves shallow divers, it goes into my Ranger. Once it reaches my boat,
that box or bag undergoes a decision process – if it is something I know
I will throw often, it goes in my front storage compartment – otherwise it
is relegated to the hatch behind me on the starboard side. That way I can
minimize my weight in the bow – and improve boat performance.
However, for as many storage boxes in my possession, I
have just as many Tackle Logic bags (the ones with several individual
ziplock-closure bags inside of the wrap, suspended on metal rings). I
discovered this system years ago in Florida and I still find them just as
handy today for transporting plastics. As with my boxes, I have my bags
segregated by color and/or size – so if I need some 4” green pumpkin worms,
I grab the appropriate bag and put it in the boat. Just purchase the
stick-on tabs, and place them on the bottom of a new pack of plastics, then
put them in the appropriate bag.
Tackle bags can also be handy for storing spinnerbaits
as well, with their staggered sized bags which makes it easier to leaf
through them when looking for “that lure.” Again, I like to segregate them
(by weight and blade type). The bags are also handy for carrying extra
spinnerbait parts like blades, snap-on clevises and stick-on eyes – which
can scatter ALL over your boat when your trying to replace a Colorado blade
in three-foot rollers!
So this off-season (at least “up north”), take a look
at your current tackle storage system and see what you can do to make it
more efficient. You will find a lot of options in tackle storage systems to
get you out of the box… and into the fish!