How to Become a World-Class Fishing Guide

Misconceptions, behind-the-scenes intel, and key tips from a professional guide.

Most of us would trade jobs with Lisa Goodier in a heartbeat. She is a top-flight professional Ontario fishing guide with the Ottawa River Musky Factory and is on the water almost every day from the season opener in early June until the snow starts flying in mid-December. So, I chuckle when I ask her, in jest, if she is embarrassed to get paid for fishing every day because I know if she had a frying pan in her hand, she’d whack me over the head with it.

“That has to be the biggest misconception of them all,” she laughs, “that I get to fish all the time. I did over 100 charters last year and maybe made a cast on ten of those occasions. There were days when clients insisted that I fish, or I had youngsters in the boat and could set the hook and pass the rod over to them.”

angler fishing musky
Lisa Goodier says her job as a guide is to coach her guests to success. Photo credit: Lisa Goodier

Muskies are known as the fish of 10,000 casts and you typically only get one or two chances a day to hook one. So, my focus is always on making sure my clients are ready for that moment. I look at myself as a coach whose job it is to prepare my guests for the best chance of success. I watch carefully to make sure they are casting efficiently and effectively, working their lures properly and finishing up well at the side of the boat. Forty percent of the muskies we catch, hit at the very last moment, within ten feet of the boat, so I prepare my guests to be ready to set the hook, understand how the fish is going to fight and then bring it to the net headfirst. When all is said and done, my guests pay me to put them on fish. It is their chance of a lifetime. Watching me get the only shot — or catch a muskie — would be a terribly awkward end to the day. I want every guest to have the best possible experience chasing this elusive trophy.”

angler fishing musky angler with musky
Photo credits: Lisa Goodier

What also goes unnoticed most of the time is that professional fishing guides like Goodier are super-skilled boaters who know how to position their large boats using a powerful electric trolling motor, to take advantage of every nuance in the current, wind and waves. She knows far better than most, too, how to read her sonar and electronics, sharpen hooks so they penetrate with ease, change lures as the wind, weather and water conditions dictate and adjust fishing strategies as a result of feedback — or lack thereof — from the fish.

2 anglers fishing musky
Lisa Goodier says her job as a guide is to coach her guests to success. Photo credit: Lisa Goodier

And then there is everything that goes on behind the scenes, long before her guests show up on the dock and just as long after they depart. “I typically leave the house around 5:00 o’clock in the morning and don’t get back home until 11:00 o’clock at night. A typical day starts with me launching the boat for a five-hour morning charter. Then, after I drop off my clients, I put the boat back on the trailer, start answering phone calls and emails, work on social media, maintain my gear, arrange deposits, and do some bookkeeping. If I am lucky, I might get 30 minutes for a nap before I relaunch for the evening charter. I am my own marketing manager, social media content creator, accountant, and head of the human resources department.”

2 young anglers fishing musky
Photo credit: Lisa Goodier

Knowing how hard it is to be a professional fishing guide, I am feeling really brave now, so I tease Goodier about the big bucks guides like her make. “Our expenses are insane,” she says, “I have truck payments, boat instalments, commercial insurance, huge equipment costs and constant maintenance fees. I spent over $10,000 on fuel last year alone. Trust me, I didn’t take on this career to get rich. I do it because I am passionate about fishing. It’s incredibly rewarding to help folks catch their very first fish, their personal best muskie or get positive feedback about how much they learned fishing with me.”

So, I sense that despite the long hours and sometimes brutal weather conditions, that she has no regrets. “None whatsoever,” she smiles, “As tough a gig as it can be, the satisfaction I get from being involved in peoples’ fishing experiences is awesome. Spending time getting to know guests who become your friends is just so rewarding. It doesn’t hurt that I have the best view from the office.”

2 anglers fishing musky
A good guide does everything possible for her guests to catch fish and have the adventure of a lifetime. Photo credit: Lisa Goodier
About Gord Pyzer

Gord Pyzer is the fishing editor of Outdoor Canada magazine and field editor of In-Fisherman magazine. He is the co-host of the Real Fishing Radio Show and host of Fish Talk With The Doc.

Recommended Articles

5 Tips for your Fly-in DIY Adventure

Imagine fishing on a secluded pristine remote lake.

Weighting for Panfish

Ice fishing for Ontario Panfish

Shallow Water Walleye

Learn Tips and Techniques From The Extreme Angler

Big Boat Portaging

Fishing on Lady Evelyn Lake in Northeastern Ontario

Prime Time for Ontario Panfish

The best time to ice fish for crappies and panfish is when the predator activity is low

Family Friendly Fishing Getaways in Northern Ontario

Fish TV rediscovers 2 fishing lodges for bass and walleye.

Bivins’ Bounce Crappies

This technique is a must for crappie fishing

Bobber Down

You’ll double your hook-up ratio and find yourself constantly yelling, "Bobber down!"

The Ultimate Social Distancing Getaway

Lots of wilderness, space, and fresh air in Ontario.

Spring is in the Air

4 tips and recommendations to help prepare anglers for open water fishing season

Crawford’s Diamond in the Rough

A year-round resort for the true die-hard angler on Lake of the Woods

Making Memories

Killarney Mountain Lodge serves as a backdrop for a meaningful outing between friends

Three Surefire Solutions for Catching Canadian Muskies

Ontario, Canada is a dream destination for all musky anglers

Cranking Up The Heat in Northern Ontario

Tips for Using Crankbaits When Fishing Bass

The Spin on Early Season Walleye

Depending on where you are walleye fishing in Ontario, the conditions range from early spring to near summer-like.

Who Let the Dawgs Out

Fishing Muskie on the Ottawa River

The Northern Walleye Dream

A Dream Fishing Vacation on the English River Watershed

Big Hook Camps

Walleye and Pike Fishing in Beautiful Canadian Wilderness

3 Great Walleye Lakes

Lakes Home to Both Eaters and Trophies

Eagle Lake Island Lodge

Fish for Walleye, Northern Pike, Muskie, Smallmouth Bass, Lakers and Whitefish