All Feedback is Appreciated

george

Administrator
Staff member
Hello New York Anglers,

As I begin to develop this new AI automated website, I'd love any kind of feedback I can get from you guys and gals. As I build out the AI agents and assign them their personas, I am curious as to if you like their style of writing, what you'd like to see more of, what you'd like to see less of.

There's a link to the fishing reports on the top banner. For users interested in such reports, I'd really appreciate some feedback as I continue to design the future of the fishing website. These reports are truly groundbreaking and will only get better each and every day. I have been preparing for this for three years and we have our models working on proprietary data that I have quietly been gathering in the background.

When I say the reports are groundbreaking. They truly are. You can go in there and literally ask any question you want and you're going to get an answer. For example you can say, "Hey I'm thinking about going to Montauk. What's going on there?" Or you can ask any question. Where's the bait? Where's the bunker? Where's the fluke? Where's the bass? It doesn't matter. This is going to run through the entire report and come back and give you a personalized answer.

There are so many things that are about to happen and change here. I want to take them one at a time but the future is exciting. This is a lot of fun. And for the record I'm doing this entire site on my own. It's me and my crew of AI bots.

So as I head into beta, let me know if you want to be interested in testing things out and giving some feedback along the way.
 
Really impressive. I can use surrounding area reports, but any chance of adding an East Rockaway/Deb’s inlet section?
Let me look into that. It's probably covered, right? It's got to be covered. I'll have the agents chew on that tonight. Fairly soon, each reporter will have knowledge of every nook and cranny of every area they cover. And thanks so much for the really impressive. Means a lot.
 
Let me look into that. It's probably covered, right? It's got to be covered. I'll have the agents chew on that tonight. Fairly soon, each reporter will have knowledge of every nook and cranny of every area they cover. And thanks so much for the really impressive. Means a lot.
Did you ask it for that in particular? Might be able to handle it. When you land on the page, there's a box there. Just ask that same exact question the same way you're requesting it. I'm hoping you'll be surprised.
 
Did you ask it for that in particular? Might be able to handle it. When you land on the page, there's a box there. Just ask that same exact question the same way you're requesting it. I'm hoping you'll be surprised.
I asked “where can I find fluke near East Rockaway inlet?”. The responses were from the Rockaway section.
 
I must be doing something wrong.

I asked where I have the best chance of finding Striped Bass in Southern Nassau and it suggested the Seafood section of Stop & Shop.

JK. But I asked a similar question and I got DEBUG: Forbidden.
 
I asked “where can I find fluke near East Rockaway inlet?”. The responses were from the Rockaway section.

Is there another name it may be confusing it with? I'm not sure it can identify "East Rockaway" It doesn't show on the chart.
 
I must be doing something wrong.

I asked where I have the best chance of finding Striped Bass in Southern Nassau and it suggested the Seafood section of Stop & Shop.

JK. But I asked a similar question and I got DEBUG: Forbidden.
Yeah, that's a definite error there. I hope these bots didn't take off for Father's Day.
 
I must be doing something wrong.

I asked where I have the best chance of finding Striped Bass in Southern Nassau and it suggested the Seafood section of Stop & Shop.

JK. But I asked a similar question and I got DEBUG: Forbidden.
That's corrected, and this is the answer I got when I asked it the same thing.

**Jones Inlet / Hempstead Bay**Per the reports from Sal Moretti, the "money play" is working the **Jones Inlet mouth** at first light. Adult bunker schools have been holding inside the inlet on the morning slack. Livelining a bunker on a 7/0 circle hook in the inlet bowl or pitching 9-inch white soft plastics along the jetty rocks on the dropping tide are the high-percentage moves for slot and overslot fish. The

**Meadowbrook and Loop Parkway bridge pilings** are also holding bass, particularly on the evening outgoing tides when warmer bay water (which has hit 74°F) flushes through the system.

**Shinnecock & Moriches (Eastern South Shore)**If you are mobile, the night bite at **Shinnecock Inlet** is "absolutely on fire" according to Charlie "Night Owl" Ortiz. Bass from 24 to 36 inches are stacking on the jetties during the outgoing tide after midnight. Live peanut bunker on fishfinder rigs cast tight to the north jetty rocks in 15 to 20 feet of water has been the most productive method. In **Moriches Bay**, Pete Gallo reports consistent schoolie action (24 to 28 inches) at the inlet mouth on evening tides, especially where the 74-degree bay water meets the cooler ocean.

\**Tactic & Conditions Summary:***
**Water Temperature:**
he back bays are cooking at 74°F, creating a 6-to-7-degree premium over the 67-68°F ocean water. This gradient is the primary engine driving the bite.*

*Tide Window:** Focus on the **last two hours of the ebb (outgoing)
** through the first hour of the flood. This is when bait is most concentrated at the choke points.* **Lures/Bait:** Live peanut bunker or adult bunker are the top choice. For artificials, use large white paddle-tails or SP Minnows in bunker patterns.Per the reports from Denise Vasquez, if you head slightly west to

**Jamaica Bay**, the **Marine Parkway Bridge** is a top producer for slot fish on the outgoing tide using 3/4-ounce chartreuse bucktails or soft plastics worked tight to the bridge shadow line.
 

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