
Getting hooked
Get Hooked is a six-part documentary series following four queer millennial women on fishing excursions across Ontario.
Home | Dating apps discoveries
In our ever-accelerating world of technology, it may come as no surprise that apps such as Tinder or SnapChat could be yet more tools to help you find fish. Tinder is a dating game app. That’s right. The original concept of Tinder was to be a game. More than a decade ago, two young men working at a tech company, Sean Rad and Justin Mateen, changed the face of modern dating. Swipe right for yes, hoping to match, (the other person also has to swipe right), and swipe left for no. This playful and addictive feature gave Tinder both its popularity and the unfortunate reputation of being a hookup app. Just not the kind of hookups anglers are familiar with. As time went on, however, something great happened, defying the odds of objectification and the window-shopping mentality of the app. People actually started dating others that they met there. This shift from hookup culture to a widely accepted dating app only encouraged more people to join, prompting the company to start adding features such as Tinder Gold and user verification. Finding fish So how can it help you find fish? I’ll give you a hint, it’s not the plethora of men holding fish in their photos. I have no complaints about that, however. This not-so-secret edge is Tinder’s location feature. It can let you know when you’re nearly a kilometre from someone. Distance is measured as the crow flies, not by road navigation. Reluctantly, I tried the app myself — and not to poach fishing spots. Soon after downloading, I had to remove a photo I was quite proud of with a beautiful brook trout. My DMs were flooded with messages like “Where’d you catch that trout?” “That’s a beautiful trout, where was that?” “What did you catch that trout on, was it caught at...?” My go-to response? “Lake Nunya.” Nunya business. In remote areas such as mine, there are literally more lakes than people. So even within a few kilometres, I felt confident that it would be hard to pinpoint let’s say, my spot on a lake, let alone a specific location. But if you are somewhere like southern Ontario, where the tributaries and water sources are fewer and further between, if your distance reads “three kilometres away,” this sleuthing could be possible. I’m not saying I’ve tried, but I have made a joke about it to a match
Get Hooked is a six-part documentary series following four queer millennial women on fishing excursions across Ontario.
Read MoreThree Ontario lodges share their favorite shore lunch fish recipes, all cooked over the fire with their own signature flavors and style.
Read MoreGet Hooked is a six-part documentary series following four queer millennial women on fishing excursions across Ontario.
Three Ontario lodges share their favorite shore lunch fish recipes, all cooked over the fire with their own signature flavors and style.
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PO Box 2800 / 4601 Guthrie Dr.
Peterborough, Ontario Canada K9J 8L5
Phone: 705-748-OFAH (6324)
Fax: 705-748-9577
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