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#11
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Itīs not, itīs a knot.
http://www.marinews.com/fishing/Knot...k_hooksnel.htm A snelled hook, is a hook attached to a piece of line using this knot. Shoot. I used this as my source: http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=snells Am I still top posting? |
#12
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![]() "Mike Connor" wrote in message ... Nope, do a search on "Longline hooks", or "Circle Longline Hooks". Apart from which, I used them for a while. For some fly-fishing. Practically all the fish I caught ( predominantly cod) ,were hooked in the throat, and impossible to release unharmed. The main reason for commercial fishermen using the circle hooks was that the fish was less likely to bleed, and consequently did not die on the line. A dead fish which may have been dead for a while, is not worth as much as live fish which can be freshly killed. Which going back to your statement which formed the basis for my question- "Circle hooks were specifically devised for longline fishing, in order to guarantee a mortality rate of 100%. They actually come close" Seems to me if they were designed to keep fish alive on long lines (which my posted links agreed with) that would not guarantee a mortality rate of 100%? I think the post you responded to initially was regarding use of live bait on circle hooks and not flies. Based on limited reading and understanding, they don't sound appropriate for artificial lures of any type, especially flies which agains supports your thesis. Or perhaps we have two people speaking the same language not understanding each other? Like that's never happened around here, ya know? |
#13
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just al wrote:
... Am I still top posting? No, and thanks for asking. There may be hope for you after all. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#14
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Nope. :-)
just al wrote: Am I still top posting? -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#15
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![]() "just al" wrote in message ... Lemme guess.....you really don't have a ****ing clue what the adjective "snelled" means, do you? I think snelled means to have a pre-tied thinner line tied to a hook before tying it to the line. I see that others have already addressed the problem of definition. That leaves us with just one more burning question to be answered. What do you suppose are the odds that an UNsnelled hook "...with worm, corn, or bread..." will kill a fish? Wolfgang enquiring minds and all that. |
#16
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![]() "Wayne Knight" schrieb im Newsbeitrag .com... SNIP Or perhaps we have two people speaking the same language not understanding each other? Like that's never happened around here, ya know? Indeed possible! ![]() It is quite immaterial whether one uses bait, or flies. The principles are exactly the same. Whatever, the use of circle hooks on unmanned longlines increases fish mortality considerably, because a much larger number of fish are hooked and held alive, to be eventually killed. This is a commercial operation, they want to catch as many fish as possible. The hooks work only too well. In the two seasons I tried them regularly for cod fishing, once I got the technique down, I did not miss a single fish which took the stationary lure. As I also wrote, most of these fish were hooked deep in the gullet. To be perfectly fair, this was also probably also a result of the type of lure I was using, which invariably results in such "engulfing" takes,even among trout and other fish. The lure in question is known as a "booby", and is unusual in that it is fished as a stationary lure. These hooks reign supreme for any type of stationary bait fishing. The fish do not have a chance. If they take the stationary bait and move off, they are hooked. Fortunately, circle hooks below about a size 12 cease to work any more, as the hook gape is then too small to allow a hook-up. Otherwise, dead drifting nymph fishermen using these hooks would clean up. No need for an indicator, no need for any skill at all really. Just cast the fly out and let it drift. Practically every fish which takes will be hooked. One merely has to wait until one feels a fish moving off. My basic point was, that these hooks resulted in much greater efficiency, and thus a greater fish mortality rate. As the considerably increased numbers of hooked fish were of course killed. The ease of hook removal, when the hooks do their job properly and hook lips, jaws, or scissors, is a commercial advantage, as it saves time and effort, which translates directly to money. The people using these things could not care less whether the fish is damaged or killed really, they merely want to catch a large number and unhook and kill them quickly. This is in my opinion the antithesis of sportfishing, most especially flyfishing. That these hooks could play a role in reducing the mortality of fish caught by bait fishermen is definitely true, but also extremely unlikely, as the majority of the bait fishermen are there because they want to catch and kill the fish. It is also theoretically true that flyfishermen who wish to practice catch and release would also damage far fewer fish, but not in the way that many people seem to think. They would do less damage, assuming they continued to use the present methods, because they would then catch very few fish. If they changed their methods, as has also been suggested, to suit the peculiarities of circle hooks, then they will merely be baitfishing with flies. It occurs to me that this is rather a vicious circle! ![]() TL MC |
#17
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Wolfgang
What do you suppose are the odds that an UNsnelled hook "...with worm, corn, or bread..." will kill a fish? I suppose you already know the answer. You know, I can help you with your bullying issues. I have training with helping aggressive at-risk students succeed and feel positive. There's no hugging involved... |
#18
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![]() "just al" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP Shoot. I used this as my source: http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=snells Am I still top posting? I did not need a source. The word was in common usage where I lived as a boy. The main reason for snelling hooks, is the direct pull, and strength which results. This only works with the correct knot. In the meantime many people think that a snelled hook is a hook tied to a piece of line. This is incorrect, it is a hook tied to a piece of line using a snell knot, which ensures a direct pull on the hook, and when properly tied, retains close to 100% of the line breaking strain. This is the knot favoured by most English competition anglers, especially for very fine nylon monofilament, and almost universally in combination with spade end hooks. The website is also incorrect in saying that the snell knot may only be tied by passing both ends of the line through the eye. Spade end hooks do not have eyes. It also has nothing at all to do with the attachment being "quick and simple", as stated on the website at the URL I posted, it is in fact nothing of the kind. Snelling hooks properly is actually quite difficult. This is also the main reason why it is not done on the river bank for instance, but at home in comfort. The snelled hooks are usually attached by a loop to the main line, which also allows for quick changes to different sized or shaped hooks to suit various baits, fish and conditions. It is often the case that the snelled line is weaker than the main line, but this is not essentially so. The site was merely the first one I found which showed the snell knot. Are you asking me if you are still top posting? I have no idea. But not in this instance at any rate. TL MC |
#19
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 23:39:30 GMT, "just al"
wrote: You know, I can help you with your bullying issues. I have training with helping aggressive at-risk students succeed and feel positive. There's no hugging involved... Hilarious. g -- Charlie... |
#20
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just al wrote:
You know, I can help you with your bullying issues. I have training with helping aggressive at-risk students succeed and feel positive. There's no hugging involved... It's just an Internet thing with Wolfgang. In person, he's a perfect sweetheart. :-) -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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