More and more women are wanting to learn how to read sonar sounders properly..and just like reversing a boat trailer, their preferred first stop for instruction is not from a partner who thinks he knows what it’s all about.
Whether it’s Annette Swaine, ex-police officer now running a boat hire business; Melissa Kenny who runs a cleaning business and drives trucks on a mining site; Minjaia Welham who’s a teacher’s aide, or scores of others from a myriad of backgrounds and occupations, they have one thing in common.
That’s the desire to know how to tune and interpret what’s on their boat’s sounder screen accurately, and then to set about identifying and catching the fish it’s showing.
Irrespective of whether it’s 2D traditional imaging, side imaging or down scanning, they’re turning in increasing numbers to Australia’s foremost fishing coach, Ryan Moody to learn how it’s done. And they’re doing it on-line.
The COVID-19 lockdown has provided the perfect opportunity for many women to take on the structured, on-line courses including learning from Ryan’s ‘real-time’ recordings of on-screen imaging and understanding what it is actually showing.
They’re learning critically important concepts like when a grain of rice is actually a barramundi; why smaller images on the sounder don’t always mean smaller fish; how a diagonal line is not actually something to ignore but rather, very often a fish rising in the water column; the different profile a fish has when it’s looking directly at the boat’s side scan transducer than when it is sitting parallel to it and scores of other key factors.
Collectively, it galvanises into the deadliest fishing asset you can have on a boat knowledge.
Minjaia from Mossman, Queensland said she used to sit in the family boat looking over, Nick, her partner’s shoulder.
“I just became obsessed with looking at the sounder constantly,” she said.
As a result. Minjaia undertook one of Ryan’s courses to learn about Wonky Holes areas where underwater springs flow up through the sea floor and stir up bait for serious reef fish.
“Some of the points Ryan makes in the course about Wonky Holes you just go, wow, okay that’s what happening there,” Minjaia said.
“When the kids were very little, I was always at home and I thought ‘no I’m going to go out fishing too’. It was more so to prove a point than to actually catch fish.”
“But I got my first 96 cm nannygai and I was hooked from there on. And that’s my favourite kind of fishing – nannygai from Wonky Holes.”
Fortunately for her, some Wonky Holes are located just 30 minutes’ boat drive from where Minjaia lives.
As well as trophy-sized nannygai, Minjaia also has extensive lists of red emperor, red bass, fingermark, marlin, mahi mahi, giant trevally and coral trout to her impressive piscatorial tally.
Melissa from near Townsville, has undertaken a number of Ryan’s courses starting with Barra Basics.
She has her own boat, the 5.5 metre fibreglass centre console, Miss Adventures Too.
“I’ve always loved fishing. I think it’s more the peacefulness and I love the ocean,” Melissa said.
“Many, many years ago, when I was a teenager, I was kind of homeless for a bit.”
“I always went to school, but I would save bits of dinner and I had my $2 handline and I’d go down the creek fishing. That was my way of dealing with a lot of what was going on in my life back then.”
“I loved that whole challenge of going out and trying to target a species and catch that species. It’s my comfort zone and there’s no stress in the world,” Melissa said.
“I did Ryan’s Barra Basics course first I’ve since been through the course countless times. Each time you go back through it, you pick up something you didn’t see or hear the first time there’s so much information in it, it’s hard to take it all in at one time.”
“My favourite part was learning to watch the water and its lines – you learn a lot about how to read what you’re looking at,” she said.
“With my first boat, I didn’t want my son to grow up in front of computer games – so we would just go out and bumble along.”
“We would catch catfish, and all the other crap fish. But once I started doing the courses, I started catching some decent fish.”
“I struggled to pay for the courses as a single mum, but it was so worth the money to learn and then go out and catch decent fish.”
“I’ve done all the other ones as well Wonky Holes and Fingermark, Threadfin and Sounder Skills.”
“I don’t do too badly when I go out now,” she laughed.
But Melissa wasn’t relying on a fishing and sounders course when she ‘caught’ a monster queenfish one day.
“It took my bait than swam straight at the boat, launched itself over the motor, slapped me in the face on the way past, then started thrashing around in the boat with hook, sinker and teeth flying,” Melissa said,
“I had to jump on it and wrangle it bare-handed, while my fishing buddy, Tracey stood at the front of the boat squealing like a stuck pig “¦ it was hilarious.”
For Annette, after 20 years in the police force and who now is a ticketed skipper and simultaneously running fishing charters, as well as the Cassowary Coast Boab Boats franchise, Great Barrier Fishing and Island Tours, Port of Call Fishing and Boating Supplies and a pontoon at Cardwell, learning on-line was a great and very convenient attraction.
A North Queenslander who spent a substantial part of her life growing up on a fishing boat in the Torres Strait islands, fishing “has always been in my blood”.
Four hire boats from a 4.2 metre tinnie to a six-metre centre cab and two charter boats are in her fleet.
“I watched a lot of Ryan’s YouTube videos which were really helpful. I loved looking at how he sets up mackerel rigs,” Annette said.
“He explains things really well and I really like his leader knots.”
“I am doing the sounder skills because we didn’t have the gear growing up, that you have now. I was a bit old school on the equipment, but I have learnt quite a bit from Ryan,” she said.
“He knows his stuff you can understand what he’s talking about. He’s good at explaining things.”
For Annette, nannygai are her favourite species at the moment, but she also loves tracking down coral trout and going game fishing.
“We go in the billfish tournaments up here every year,” Annette said.
“We got champion boat for under 7.5 metres last year with Innisfail Gamefish Club; the year before, I was runner-up in the female class and in the 2015 Cairns Bluewater comp, I got champion female.”
“Yes, I do like chasing the marlin, the reef fishing and mackerel.”
And what about her husband David?
“Oh yes, he helps a bit,” she quipped.
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