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text and photo
by Gord Pyzer |
Freeze Frame
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This winter, use a portable sonar unit to help
pinpoint the perfect hardwater presentation |
I’m
long enough in the tooth to remember when angler Carl Lowrance
designed the first high-frequency sonar unit for recreational
angling. When it debuted at the Toronto Sportsmen’s Show
in 1960, the Fish-Lo-K-Tor looked like something straight out
of a science fiction novel. But it was transistors—not
computer chips—that allowed Lowrance to construct the
compact, portable unit.
Today, many younger anglers have probably never even heard of
transistors, yet almost every fishing boat has at least one,
and often two or more, sonar displays. The evolution and transformation
of the technology has been nothing short of astounding. So,
why do so few ice anglers use sonar units? It’s one of
angling’s little mysteries.
Actually, it’s an absurdity when you consider that sonar
units provide more and better information on the ice than on
the open water. I mean, how often can you follow the path of
your lure in the water column, and watch fish rise up to inspect
it, when your boat is rocking in six-foot-high waves? Heck,
how many times do you even do that when you’re drifting
in calm water?
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| Screen
test: Use sonar to fine-tune your tactics |
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| FILL THE
SCREEN |
| Improve
your ice-fishing results by using the zoom function
on your sonar. Most units let you zoom in two to
four times, allowing for much greater detail. If
you’re fishing in 30 feet of water and consistently
seeing fish swimming a foot or two off the bottom,
for example, why tie up the screen displaying the
entire water column? Instead, zoom in on the specific
area of activity, and the essential details become
bigger and brighter. |
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Wind, waves and boat movement limit the potential of your sonar
unit during the open-water period. Not so when you’re
ice fishing. Just drill a hole, plunk down your transducer,
and you can tell immediately if there are fish beneath you.
Even when you don’t see something on the screen, it still
pays to drop down a lure and jig it a few times to see if you
can catch the fancy of a fish from somewhere off-screen. If
you can’t, you know for certain there are no fish around
and that it’s time to move on.
If you do see fish on the screen, however, you can monitor their
attitude and quickly determine how to adjust your tactics accordingly.
This is where a sonar unit plays such a vital role in your ice-fishing
strategy.
As noted in the Ice-fishing guide in our Winter 2007 issue,
there are two aspects to almost every winter jigging approach.
The first is the attracting phase, when you lift your jig, spoon
or live bait, pause for a second or two, and let it flutter
back down. The second is the triggering phase, when you allow
the bait to pause. How aggressively you work your lure and how
long you let it rest are questions you can readily answer by
monitoring the fish’s reaction on your sonar screen.
Many times during the winter, for example, you can watch as
numerous fish approach your lure while you jig it. But if you
don’t allow it to pause, often for exceptionally long
periods, you won’t feel a bump. Other times, you’ll
see the fish literally putting their noses against the bait;
if you don’t wiggle or twitch it ever so gently, they
won’t commit.
Schooling fish such as walleye, perch, whitefish and crappies
are particularly easy to see and monitor because they tend to
suspend in the water column to varying degrees. Convincing enough
of them to join you for shorelunch, however, can be another
matter entirely.
Sometimes, you have to jig your lure a foot or two above the
fish, watch as they gather below, then let it flutter through
the mob before one of them rushes over and grabs it. Or you
may have to attract a horde of fish before ever so gently and
steadily pulling the lure away until one of the fish snaps and
chases after it. Regardless of your final presentation, your
choice is made all the easier by watching the fish on your sonar
screen.
Now, if only you could do this during the summer, too.
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