A good casting lesson is the one supporting the fishing day to be a great one!
I agree that too.
It comes back to the point Craig was making, which is about discovering and then matching up what a caster already “knows” with what their angling ambitions are.
What is meant by what they “know” in the context of these papers is the motor control patterns that they habitually employ. That is, something they’ve already learned to do. This is not information they know about casting like the 5, or 6, Es, it’s about the underlying patterns of movement.
Error amplification, and old way new way, take the habituated pattern that a caster already “knows” and uses it as a base for expanding to a wider range of controlled motion.
For the most part, a wider range of controlled motion is exactly what is needed to improve someone’s chances of getting a fish.
Mel Krieger used error amplification.