Aug 24 2009

Fishing with technology

Published by at 12:09 pm under Technology

Ninety percent of the fish are in ten percent of the water.  Any fisherman worth his salt knows that to be true.  So how do we eliminate that ninety percent of unproductive water?  You might think this is going to be an article about fishing.  In reality, it is an article about how computer technology has enhanced every aspect of our lives…even our hobbies.  Years ago, eliminating that unproductive water was done by chance or by having an intimate knowledge of a body of water after years of fishing it.  Many fishermen simply used a long rope with a weight, then tied a knot every foot, dropped it to the bottom and counted the knots as they fed the rope over the side of the boat.

Then, technology stepped in with the invention of sonar in 1906.  Originally intended to detect icebergs, it was eventually adopted for military use…looking for mines and submarines.  In the 1980’s flash locators, using “active” sonar, began to appear as options on new sport fishing boats.  By the early 1990’s “flash” locators, showing just a series of bars to indicate the bottom and possible fish echoes produced by the returning sound waves of the active sonar of the locator, were replaced by a CRT screen which actually started to show what the sonar was “pinging” off of…so fishermen could get a better “look” at what was in the water.  Early units showed an image that was grainy and not very detailed.  If a fish was hiding inside some downed timber, good luck seeing it, but it was a start….and the technology race in fish locators was on.

How far has it come?  Well, the locator on my boat, a Lowrance LCX-17M features not only sophisticated sonar, but an incredible Global Positioning System (GPS).  With my unit, which is now five years old, I not only get a detailed look at the bottom, including structure and any fish that might be hiding there, but it also gives me the water temperature, depth, and will even show me if the bottom is rocks, sand, weeds or a combination of those.  The screen is a 7 inch wide VGA monitor with a resolution of 640 x 480.  With the built-in GPS I get a reading of my speed and my location on the planet.  Not only that, but I have an MMC (its also SD compatible) memory chip in my locator that will superimpose a map of the lake I’m on, including depths, structure, obstructions, navigational markers, boat launches, bait shops and just about anything else in the area.  And at any time, I am able to split the screen between the sonar image and the GPS.  The mapping feature shows me known “hot spots” on the lake or river, but I can also mark a location I might find on my own.  The unit will store up to 1,000 of these “waypoints” for decades.  All I have to do is call up the waypoint from a menu, hit a button and the unit will guide me to within 2 feet of the target.  This is easily more computing power than our Apollo astronauts took to the moon!!  I can even set a feature that will alert me if I’ve drifted as little as 3 feet while I’m anchored.  Oh yeah…and it will do it in 10 different languages.  I even have the ability to create my own custom maps of any body of water, put it on a memory card and import it to my desktop where I can do some really fancy map creation.  Haven’t quite figured that one out yet…lol.  The GPS unit uses over a dozen satellites circling the earth to give me the details on my position and it does it with a transmitter about the size of a smokeless tobacco tin mounted on the rear gunwale of my boat.

Just in case you think the rush to newer technology has slowed down, the new units are now full color HD with screens as large as 10.5 inches and resolutions of 800 x 600.  The images are unbelievable!  They also come with satellite radio and weather channels built in…greatly enhancing safety on the water.  The newest units by Humminbird now feature something called side imaging sonar.  Traditional sonar sends it’s sound waves straight at the bottom.  Now it will also send waves to the sides producing a nearly three dimensional image of what is underneath your boat.  Truly amazing technology, but at a price.  The best units now run close to $3,000.  Unfortunately, that is way out of my price range.

At this point you might say it’s an unfair advantage…why do you need all that just to go fishing?  Well, I don’t “just go fishing”.  I really enjoy every aspect of being outdoors doing something I love.  This technology allows me to find that ten percent of productive water much quicker.  Since I fish with artificial baits 95 percent of the time, I still have to pick the right lure, the right color based on cloud cover, water clarity and my guess about what “mood” the fish are in, then present the lure so it looks like something they might want to eat.  While I’m a pretty fair fisherman, trust me, the fish are winning.  That’s why, no matter how much technology we have, they still call it “fishing” and not “catching”.

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One Response to “Fishing with technology”

  1. PC ProSchools – TechTalk » GPSon 29 Sep 2009 at 10:11 am

    [...] I see it in cars, on cell phones and as Jim Cranston has related to us all, it has even invaded the fishing arena. (Like those invasive species the DNR always warns us about cleaning from the hulls of our [...]

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