Plan Your Fishing Success

If you're looking to fish a specific species or want to fish by lake—Ontario's new Fish ON-Line resource makes planning your next fishing adventure easy.

Planning your next Ontario fishing trip has never been easier thanks to an amazing free application, created by the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (OMNRF), called Fish ON-Line. And it is jam-packed with absolutely everything you need to know for your next fishing trip. So, what do you say, let’s take a run through it.

When you enter the site, you will see a map of Ontario and a column down the left-hand side with a number of headings. The first one is pretty obvious and allows you to buy your fishing license. The Create Stocking List, on the other hand, is super useful if you are planning to fish for stocked species like brook trout, brown trout, chinook salmon, or splake and want you can create a list of lakes. 

Pyzer-Plan-Your-Fishing-Trip-1

You can do it by OMNRF District, Fisheries Management Zone, or even within the radius of a specific address. So, if you’re staying at a hotel, motel, fishing resort, or your friend’s house, you can enter the address and a search radius of say, 25, 50, or 100 kilometres/miles and you will see every one of the 400,000 lakes in the province that matches your criteria. How cool is that?
 
But, trust me, we’re only getting started. Your stocking list will also show you how many fish have been planted each year over the past several years so you can gauge their relative size and number. Here is a partial list of the stocked brook trout lakes in Sault Ste. Marie District, for example.

Pyzer-Plan-Your-Fishing-Trip-2

Now, let’s close up the Create Stocking List folder and look immediately below it, where you will see a magnifying glass beside the heading Search By. This is the part of the tool that I find most useful because it lets you search by Waterbody Name, Fish Species, Stocked Waterbody, and even GPS Coordinates. And it lets you define your search area once again, by the distance from an address, Fisheries Management Zone, or MNRF District.  

So, let’s say that we’re heading to Parry Sound District and we’d like to fish for walleye. Here is what Fish-ON Line presents us with. Do you see all the red fish symbols on the map, as well as the list down the left-hand column? These are the lakes within Parry Sound District that have walleye in them. And if you click on either the map symbol or the lake name in the column it will take you to a new map of the lake with all of the fisheries information displayed. It is quite amazing.

Pyzer-Plan-Your-Fishing-Trip-3

Better still, if you click back to the map page, you can define, under Information, the specific parameters that you wish to highlight. Including fish sanctuaries, access points (boat launches), and even a contour map of the lake if it exists, so you can see the layout and identify potential fishing spots. You can even view the background as imagery or a topographic map.

Pyzer-Plan-Your-Fishing-Trip-4

That is what I’ve done here, so you can see what the tool tells you about Whitestone Lake — a pretty little walleye lake in Parry Sound District that I fished many years ago. In addition to learning about its basic size and depth, notice the active headings highlighted in blue at the bottom of the left-hand column. If you click on any one of them you will learn everything you need to know about the highlighted topic, including safe fish consumption advisories and species-specific zone regulation differences.  

But I’ve saved my favourite part of Fish-ON Line for last. Do you see the heading Broad-Scale Fisheries Management Bulletin? When you click on it you are presented with the results of the OMNRF’s survey data that tells you about the composition of the fish population in Whitestone Lake — everything from pumpkin seeds to brown bullheads — including the maximum, minimum, and average size of the walleye and smallmouth bass that were captured in the OMNRF’s nets. So you can pick and choose lakes to fish based on the population of a particular species, its trophy potential, or both. Fish-ON Line is a mighty impressive tool that will help you plan your next successful Ontario fishing trip.

Pyzer-Plan-Your-Fishing-Trip-5
Pyzer-Plan-Your-Fishing-Trip-6

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

Top 5 Wet flies for Brook Trout

Fly Fishers describe their favourite brookie flies.

Fishing Big Rideau Lake

This is a Bucket List Fishing Trip

Walleye Sunsets

Walleye Fishing on Lake Nipissing.

Top 5 Tips To Fish Smallmouth Bass in Ontario

Ontario has some of the top smallmouth bass opportunities. in the world.

Catching Bucket List Walleyes at Dogtooth Lake Resort

The Ontario Experience visits Dogtooth Lake in Sunset Country

Go Shallow For More Walleye

Walleye anglers think the fish are always in at least ten-foot or deeper. They're wrong!

Top 5 Flies for Brook Trout

Favourite fly patterns from The New Fly Fisher

The Tigers of Sunset Country

The most picturesque of all freshwater fish.

Summer Smallmouth

Bass Techniques to Help You Catch a Trophy

Do-It-Yourself Fly-In Fishing

Fly into one of nine outpost camps on nine lakes with Lauzon Aviation

Timber Edge Camps

Drive-to Walleye Fishing in Ontario's Sunset Country

Beaverland Bass on Marten River

In search of smallmouth bass at a traditional Northern Ontario fishing camp.

The Best Brook Trout Fishing

Discover world class fishing in Northern Ontario—home of the world record brook trout!

The Lake of Many Bays

Fly-in Fishing at Pine Portage Lodge

Discover the 3 Best Bass Fishing Lakes in Ontario

Check out these lakes for hard-fighting smallmouth bass on your next fishing trip to Northern Ontario.

Perfect Shore Lunch

Try This Award-Winning Recipe

Structure or Cover?

Learn the Difference to Catch More Fish

Batchawana Bay Smallmouth Bass

Fish'n Canada fishes the Lake Superior for bass.

Pike and Walleye: Ontario’s One-Two Punch

Walleye and the northern pike reside in the same bodies of water. When one's not biting, the other might!

Predicting Lake Thickness

When Will Ontario Lakes Freeze Over This Winter?