Navonics

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Sea Chaser
Posts: 14
Joined: April 15th, 2018, 3:42 pm

Navonics

Post by Sea Chaser »

Curious to know if anyone has purchased the navonics gps card and the thoughts about it. I have put a few nearshore gps numbers in my machine and had limited success grouper fishing. Usually fishing with multiple boats on the spots. We fish out of the st Marks area roughly 4-6 times per year.

Does the card offer gps spots that are not available to the normal search engines on the web?

I don’t mind spending the money but just don’t to waste money for something that is already available for free.

Thanks in advance.
Salty Gator
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Re: Navonics

Post by Salty Gator »

A navionics card won’t have anything like your looking for. There will be public wrecks and reefs, channel markers and boueys. It’s really more of an advantage for inshore over your factory map.
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Sea Chaser
Posts: 14
Joined: April 15th, 2018, 3:42 pm

Re: Navonics

Post by Sea Chaser »

Salty Gator wrote:A navionics card won’t have anything like your looking for. There will be public wrecks and reefs, channel markers and boueys. It’s really more of an advantage for inshore over your factory map.

Thanks salty gator
rickc
Posts: 26
Joined: May 2nd, 2018, 12:24 pm

Re: Navonics

Post by rickc »

take a 160 degree heading from the bird rack at st marks and run till you are in 35' of water. start trolling stretch 30's east and west along that depth contour watching your bottom machine for rock piles. when you get a hit mark the spot. when you see a good rock pile stop and drop some live pinfish down on it.

if you continue along that same heading out to 45' there are some really good rock piles there too.

stone crab traps are a dead givaway of good rock piles

won't take long to have a whole notebook of good numbers

now i am a gadget guy but a humminbird sidefinder with a platinum navionics card was invaluable to me. need a big screen on that sidefinder.
Sea Chaser
Posts: 14
Joined: April 15th, 2018, 3:42 pm

Re: Navonics

Post by Sea Chaser »

rickc wrote:take a 160 degree heading from the bird rack at st marks and run till you are in 35' of water. start trolling stretch 30's east and west along that depth contour watching your bottom machine for rock piles. when you get a hit mark the spot. when you see a good rock pile stop and drop some live pinfish down on it.

if you continue along that same heading out to 45' there are some really good rock piles there too.

stone crab traps are a dead givaway of good rock piles

won't take long to have a whole notebook of good numbers

now i am a gadget guy but a humminbird sidefinder with a platinum navionics card was invaluable to me. need a big screen on that sidefinder.

Thanks, I may give it a go on my next trip.
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geofish
Posts: 343
Joined: July 23rd, 2016, 8:18 pm

Re: Navonics

Post by geofish »

This is incredibly helpful. My charts are showing almost 20 miles from the bird rack at St Marks to a 35 foot depth on a bearing of 160. Does that sound right? That's into federal waters, isn't it? Or am I mis-reading my charts?
george
rickc
Posts: 26
Joined: May 2nd, 2018, 12:24 pm

Re: Navonics

Post by rickc »

geofish wrote:This is incredibly helpful. My charts are showing almost 20 miles from the bird rack at St Marks to a 35 foot depth on a bearing of 160. Does that sound right? That's into federal waters, isn't it? Or am I mis-reading my charts?
george
oh yeah federal waters.

now there are places out of st marks within 9 miles. winter is the best time for them. follow the crab traps and watch your bottom machine. dog bollard is one if you can get by the Jewfish. nothing like you can get in the deeper water.
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