![]() And if you switch out your tackle mid-trip, you can make a note of it and quickly select your new rig from your virtual tackle box. You can add waypoints to mark important locations like honey holes or particularly defensive osprey. If you don’t feel so inclined you can enter that data when you return to land from memory (which I often find results in logging much bigger catches). If you feel so inclined, you can manually add a fish pic to your entry along with the weight, length, and species. ![]() Then, when you finally do catch a fish, you just press the log button and the app will automatically mark the location, time, and tackle. After that, the app will log where you go, changes in weather conditions, and tidal fluctuations. Before your first cast, you punch in the body of water you’re fishing on, the gear you are using, and the type of fishing you plan on doing. By itself, ANGLR is easily the best all-rounder. Of all the apps I looked at, ANGLR Logbook is most likely going to be the one still be on my phone when I inevitably drop it off the side of a boat within the next few months. The ANGLR app was the author’s top pick, after much logging in varied apps. To figure out which one was best, I downloaded the 30 most popular ones and tested them on the water. Luckily there are tons of logging apps to choose from almost too many. ![]() As a millennial, I’m always looking for any opportunity to get out into the great outdoors and dink around on my phone. ![]() Pen and paper are going the way of the Rolodex, polio, Xerox machines, and good music. Logging is still a great way to figure out trends and patterns, but it’s the 21st Century. Back in ye olden days, after a day of Chesapeake Bay fishing people would log their catches in notebooks. ![]()
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