Do I Need a Fishing Guide?

Hiring a fishing guide is a great way to put smiles on the faces of anglers visiting new waters.

Some of my best days on the water happened thanks to the helpful advice of a fishing guide. Unfortunately, a lot of anglers shy away from booking a fishing guide. Call it foolish pride or simply being penny-wise, but many anglers have a hard time admitting that someone else might know a little more about a fishery than they do.

Fishing New Waters

The Fishing 411 TV crew visits a host of fisheries across Ontario’s Algoma Country every year in our quest to film high-quality television episodes. If I’ve never fished a body of water before, I’m inclined to spend at least a day with a local guide to get a better feel for the fishery.

A good guide can not only help put you on fish faster but he or she can also narrow down the lure and presentation choices so time on the water is spent more efficiently and productively. A guide can also help you avoid navigation hazards that can tear up a boat faster than you can say “Oh crap!”

Information Is Priceless

The thing about hiring a guide most anglers rebel at is that it adds substantial cost to a fishing trip. I mitigate this cost by hiring a guide early in the trip and then spending the rest of the trip fishing on my own. The things I’m hoping to learn from a good guide aren’t just spots to try, but rather presentations that seem to produce in a multitude of spots. A solid fishing pattern, like pitching jigs to rocky shorelines or trolling crankbaits in the saddles between islands, amounts to invaluable information that can be applied in a wealth of places.

These are the tidbits of valuable information a guide can share that an angler visiting a fishery cold turkey may never discover on his own. When I hire a guide, I also strive to jump in the boat with an open mindset. Different fishermen do things differently, and I enjoy learning new or different ways of doing things. If a fisherman gets too rigid in his or her skill set, it becomes difficult to get the most from the services of a fishing guide.

I also measure the success of a guide differently than most anglers. When I hire a guide filling a cooler with fish is not my primary goal. Instead, I’m more interested in learning the finer points of fishing. Every time I fish with a guide, or any avid angler for that matter, I find myself picking up tips that make me a better fisherman.

The things I learn from others are what help me turn a poor day of fishing into a good day. Even if the skills learned only catch me the occasional fish, I view that as a step in the right direction. I look at fishing as a non-stop form of education. Anglers who take the time to absorb the finer points of fishing from others are better equipped to use that information again and again.

Fellowship Counts

It’s also important to understand that fishing can be a singular activity, but for most of us, fishing is a form of fellowship. Many of the guides I’ve hired over the years have become lifelong friends. A lot of bonding takes place in a fishing boat, and that’s a good thing.

Tipping Your Guide

I’ve never met a guide who didn’t appreciate a couple of extra bucks for doing a good job. Guides depend on tips to help make a living at a job that frankly doesn’t pay all that much. Guides don’t do what they do to get rich, they are guiding because they love to fish and share what they know with other anglers.

When your guide does a good job, don’t be afraid to offer them a few bucks as a tip. How much you tip is a personal decision. I often give a cash tip and sweeten the deal by offering the guide a piece of my personal fishing gear.

Guides who live in remote areas often have a hard time finding the gear they need to be successful on the water. Sharing a few lures or other pieces of gear goes a long way toward saying thank you, and developing relationships that can bear fruit for years to come.

Summing It Up

For those anglers out there planning a fishing trip to Ontario’s Algoma Country this year, the question of hiring a guide is something that is almost certain to come up. My advice is if you’re even a little intimidated by a body of water, hiring a guide for a day or two is money well spent.

Fishing is full of all kinds of investments including rods, reels, line, lures, boats, electric motors, sonar units and about a thousand other items. All this stuff costs money, and most of it is worthless without some local and friendly fishing savvy to help put the investment to good use.

About Mark Romanack

Mark Romanack is an outdoor writer, book author, fishing educator and the Host of the Fishing 411 television series broadcast on the World Fishing Network. For more information on fishing visit the Fishing 411 Facebook page or go to the Fishing 411 YouTube Channel to access a wealth of free educational fishing videos.