Personally, last year was off the HOOK, so many nice large fish.
This year, I have yet to crack maybe 4lbs (largest was right around there) and it's killing me.
I have also been around to my usual spots and water levels have been down since spring compared to last year, about 1-2' lower.
Combine that with the longish winter and crazy weather we had in the spring, that could explain the sporadic fishing I have experienced.
Now, I always thought that it was all about how much you fish and how you did it. I do a lot of bank fishing, and take the canoe out every other weekend when I have time, so when it gets warmer, the fish just move out deeper and it gets harder to catch quality fish during the summer heat. Having access to a decent boat would certainly help me catch more fish, and so would a fish finder, motor, multiple rod setups with different lures, etc., etc.
And you have to put in time. I would go on streaks where people would ask "Damn man, how do you catch fish all the time?" The answer was...I wasn't, I was just fishing WAY more than they were. There were days when I would get nothing for HOURS, everyone else would have already packed it in. But regardless if you catch fish or not, if you put in the time, it will eventually pay off.
I guess my ramblings boil down to....there are so many factors that affect you catching fish, that it's incredibly hard to correlate anything from that myriad of data to produce a solid reason "Why," we're not having a good year. The only thing that has worked for me is changing it up, keep on the move looking for fish, and try new baits/lures/approaches and you hopefully will locate active fish.
There are always exceptions/outliers like all data sets; for example, SamF, Stratos, Sinista, khaskins, shawneramoe just to name just a few over the years have seemed to consistently produced DAMN good quality fish (haha seriously, almost makes me want to just give up you guys
), but they put in the days to get it done, have done their homework oh the fish/lakes/weather, and I am guessing can quickly adapt to a variety of different conditions that they encounter.
The Zen of bassfishing....adapt and become the fish, become the outdoors, that way you get a relaxing time even if you don't find any bad larrys lurking the waters. Like everything else in life, there are ups and downs, you just have to manage them.
/mic drop