Thanks guys!
I do have a marine radio, but I think the chatter was limited today because of the tournament.
I think my speed was a little slow. I had a hard time keeping the speed steady, but I was only around 2.5 to 2.7. With the warmer water, I should have picked up my speed.
Thanks again and I will keep trying to improve.
Speed is a very important thing and changes with the primary setup you run as different baits have different speed tolorences. Most baits overlap at some point in there performance curves but knowing what you are targeting and the baits you are using does take some experience and the only way to get that is time on the water and experimentation. With that said boats also play a little factor in that as well as GPS vs Speed at the ball. Depending on currents you may have to speed up or slow down with your change of direction. Here are a few things you can keep in mind and I have used since I started chasing these salmon, 30+years. Whether fishing in the 14ft flat bottom, 17ft multi sport, or 36ft I use the following:
1. If you are not getting bites change your speed. Easiest way to figure out if you are going to fast or slow is to start turning the boat. Make a small turn to the port or stbd or most of the time I basically zig zag in an S pattern and see if I start picking up hits, If the hit come from the inside of the turn the baits are slower there so you are going to fast, if the hits come from the outside turn then you are going to slow as they are faster.
2. If you have Downriggers watch the angle on the cable for your depth. This is an experience thing and takes time but if you have a good setup and proper speed you should hear you riggers talk to you, more or less sing to you. If the cables are hanging straight down you are most likely going to slow, at 20-60 foot down you should see a nice angle(20-30-40 deg) to the cables and a nice harmonic resonence should be heard. The deeper you go the more the drag and the greater the angle. If I dont hear that singing I change speed.
3. Hold a rod tip under the water with the primary bait (spoon, plugs, D/F, SD/F) and see what kind of action you have. Spoons and plugs are more speed tolerant but you need to see them flashing imitating a dying fish. If they are spinning too fast, lazily moving back and forth too slow. D/F(Dodger/Fly) should be moving back and forth with the fly snapping in the oposite directions behind it. A good speed for a Dodger will produce a small uniform rythmic rod tip dip when on a rigger and dipsey, harder to see on a copper or lead long line. SD/F(Spin Doctor /fly) just like the name indicates it should spin.
Keep these things in mind for the fish you are targeting, water temps, and the possible currents between surface and bait. Hope this helps some on speed.