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Old August 18th, 2004, 10:47 PM
Charles Summers
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Default Catch-and-release: Handling larger bass safely

See the ***s'

"Richard Berke" wrote in message
om...
I have had the good fortune lately of catching some larger bass than I
had been used to. (Whether this is luck, or I'm getting better at
techniques, I don't know.) I haven't had a scale, but I'm guessing
these have been 15+ inches and maybe 3-3.5 pounds. I only
catch-and-release. I've only been fishing ponds/lakes from shore. I
need advice on several aspects.


*** I can tell you from experience that a 15" fish is usually closer to 2lbs
than 3.

1. As you are reeling in how do you decide how fast to reel in, and
whether to lift the fish out of the water with your rod?


***Depending on how hard the fish fights, and when it get close enough, I
can usually tell if I can lift it over with the rod. I'd rather lip or net
anything in the 15" category.

The
concentration of force on the skin/cartilage where the hook is caught
will increase substantially with a heavier fish. I want the fish to
be able to go swim away and grow even bigger. Some of the fun of
fishing is the fight, but I don't want to exhaust the fish and risk it
dying after I release it.


*** It's always good to release a fish as soon as possible. But after a hard
fight, try to hold it in the water making sure that water is flowing through
its' gills. Usually, the fish will try to swim away, throwing water all over
you!


2. How do you grab a fish safely? I know you want to avoid touching
it's protective slime coating on its skin. If it's hooked and you have
line tension, and it's almost out of the water, it still seems iffy
whether the fish will thrash as I try to use a thumb grab on his lower
lip.


*** A good net is coated and is suppose to help prevent losing the slime
coat. If the net isn't available... then lipping them is a good choice.

I have some concern about getting myself hurt on the hook still
in its mouth that way.


*** It a part of life... it's gonna happen, and it's just a matter of when.

Also, I've gotten some cuts from their raspy
lower teeth. The bigger heavier fish have sometimes been too much for
my grasp and as they wrench themselves free I get cut. So far it's
only been a stinging irritation with a little blood from my thumb. I
wish I could say I fished and caught enough to develop a callous. A
bandaid in advance of catching seems the simple solution. What do you
do?


*** Nothing. I consider it a part of the game. If the fish can live with a
hook being set in its' mouth... I can handle a little "Bass Thumb".


3. How heavy a bass is it safe (for the fish) to hold up by only its
lower jaw? When is it less injurious to the fish to use two hands:
one on the lip and one as a shelf under its belly?


*** The less contact with the slime coat, the better. NEVER try to hold a
fish horizontal by its' lower jaw alone. Vertical is best.


4. I've caught fish that bent my medium-rod past a gentle C and almost
to a U, so I've grabbed the line with my hands to pull the fish up the
rest of the last few feet and out of the water and let the rod
straighten out. How do you know when the bend is too much for the rod?


*** When it snaps. Unless there is a flaw in the rod, it should not break
while fighting a fish. It will break however... if you are trying to lift a
huge fish out of the water and into the boat. Once again... get the net for
that.

5. I can't always get way down to the water to release a fish slowly,
and within just seconds after the catch. If my choices are to toss
the fish the higher shore/dock from 3-5 feet into the water, or walk
2+ minutes or so to reach a lower shore area to get to the water,
which stresses the fish least? Out of water, struggling to breath all
the while is bad, but the impact of water at some point would be
worse. Right?


*** 3 to 5 feet will probably be ok. Just don't give them that spin that
I've seen people try to do. LOL Try for the head first approach.

6. When the fish thrashes off the hook, or snaps the line, and it's on
the ground struggling to get to the water, what do you do? Of course
banging its body on the ground is harmful. Of course grabbing the
fish with a towel further disturbs its slime coat. I've tried to grab
with my hands, and been cut on the top fins/spines much worse than by
the fish's teeth. What do you advise?


*** Pick up the fish, take out the hook, quick snapshot, and put it back in
the water. Also... use a heavier line if break offs are a problem.


Thanks,
Richard Berke
Columbia, MD