4370 · 43°N / 70°W
A private fishing instrument for the Gulf of Maine. One spot. One window. One confidence score. Before your feet hit the floor, the call is already made.
What changes
01
Before: five tabs, three guesses, one shrug.
After: one glance, one call, engine on.
02
Before: a notebook in the glovebox.
After: a season that remembers itself.
03
Before: reading the water through a squint.
After: the water, already read.
04
Before: one bar of coverage between him and a good day.
After: offshore is just the next tab.
The map
Most fishing apps show you density. We show you density and three other things.
Density is where boats are right now. Useful, but it’s the question you can answer with a pair of binoculars. The other three questions — where are they working that they normally wouldn’t, which spots have held for weeks, where has my buddy been all season — those are the ones that change the call.
The same map answers all four. One toggle. The data underneath is the same fleet substrate, the same daily snapshot, the same hex grid. What changes is the question you’re asking. The map doesn’t shout. It tells you what’s true.
How the call gets made
Every variable a captain normally juggles in his head — charts, tide, temperature, what the water is doing, what you did last September — pulled in and weighed against each other while you sleep. The app does the reading. What comes out is a single line on the Bet card: one spot you can point the bow at, one window to be there, one number that tells you how hard to trust it.
Not a dashboard. Not a feed. A synthesis. The kind of answer you’d write on the back of a chart after twenty years of mornings, compressed into the hour before sunrise and handed to you before the coffee’s cold.
Nothing is invented. Every number has a receipt you can pull up inside the app. Your trip log stays with your squad — no rankings, no sharing, no outside eyes on your water.
Every trip you log sharpens the next one. By October the app knows what was working in May, which is more than most notebooks do.
Example call
Jeffreys Ledge SW · 72% · 5:45 – 8:15 AM · 58m
Who it’s for
Runs his own boat. Knows his water. Has Navionics memorized. Has opinions about tide. Is not looking for a tutorial. He’s looking for an edge that respects what he already knows.