#101043 - 12/12/00 10:00 PM
6 foot leader
|
Parr
Registered: 10/02/00
Posts: 57
Loc: Tacoma, WA
|
I was fishing the Blue Creek hole the other day and was wondering what if any is the benefit of using the extremely long leaders a bunch of the guys use. A lot of guys were using leaders that were at least 6-7 feet long with tiny corkies and usually no yarn. They were catching fish and I was curious what they accomplish that my 3 foot leader does not? They must feel more confidence this way in order to endure the agony of tight quarter casting of such a long leader.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101045 - 12/12/00 10:35 PM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Anonymous
Unregistered
|
Suonds like snagin to me.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101047 - 12/13/00 12:00 AM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Fry
Registered: 08/30/00
Posts: 28
Loc: lacey
|
long lining, flossing, sockeye fishing is snaging them in the mouth. it is a method use to catch fish buy people who are not smart enough to figure out what the fish want. snaging steelhead thats what the sport is all about.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101050 - 12/13/00 12:50 AM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 12/13/99
Posts: 140
Loc: Silverdale, Washington, U.S.
|
Snagging-a method in which the fish does not willingly except the offering. I don't think these fish ar biting the line on purpose. I have seen places where fish just don't chose to bite and I have accepted it and left them alone. It's to bad some have to catch fish using illeagal methods. I thought that you could be fined if your leader was longer than twenty-four inches.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101053 - 12/13/00 01:00 AM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Returning Adult
Registered: 12/12/00
Posts: 447
Loc: tacoma, Washington, US
|
This flossing theory has a few major flaws. You would think that the long leader gives you a better chance of flossing the fish but think again. For one, in order to do this you line must be at the same level as the fish. Secondly, what are the chances that your long leader will enter the fish's mouth. Finally, I like to ask you, have you ever hook a fish at the end of the drift? I tell you that I have and many of my catches are at the end of the drift. So how in the heck the fish is being flossed if it is right behind your leader? Think about this and I'll tell you my theory of the extra long leader. I do use extra long leader and it works any where and for any level of river dept.
_________________________
Know fish or no fish.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101054 - 12/13/00 01:26 AM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Parr
Registered: 10/02/00
Posts: 57
Loc: Tacoma, WA
|
I have posted a very honest question with no intention of stirring things up. I buy the flossing theory. But I constantly have inner-self debates over the optimum leader length. So, I was interested in any advantages of the long leader other than flossing. I also fished the inside of bend straight accross from blue creek the day before (you know where the jet boat parade begins) and saw a couple of guys catch some nice steelhead essentially bank fishing using the same long leader approach. The main reason I ask is that I see some very competent fishermen using the long leader.
As far as flossing goes this fall I went to fish a shallow salt water area for chum and all the fly fishing guys did really well (9 foot leaders stripped accross the school of fish). I essentially was using drift gear (small corkie, yarn, 18" leader, small lead). I was using all the right colors but didn't do very well. The next day I used a leader in the same length as the fly guys with just green and chartreuse yarn and I did as good as anyone. I only fished a hour or so but landed 4 fish. Two of the fish the hook was on the outside of the mouth and 2 of the fish the hook was inside the mouth. I still think I flossed all of them but it is my belief that sometimes a flossed fish will look legal. (all fish were caught and safely released)
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101055 - 12/13/00 08:06 PM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 12/13/99
Posts: 140
Loc: Silverdale, Washington, U.S.
|
This is a very sensative issue. I used to fish with a noodle rod and I have read many books on different techniques. Up in lake michagian they use leaders as long as ten feet for salmon and steelhead. They say that these long leaders are necessary if you weren't going to spook the fish. Maybe they were flossing the fish, maybe they weren't. I talked to a hatchery worker on the Kalama and he told me how to "leagaly snag fish" It was kind of like plunking only that instead the leader was five or six feet long with a corky tied in back of the hook. If you hook a fish outside of it's mouth chances are you snagged it.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101056 - 12/14/00 12:13 AM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Dazed and Confused
Registered: 03/05/99
Posts: 6367
Loc: Forks, WA & Soldotna, AK
|
BK ... Kenai / Kasilof sockeye fishing vs. ling steelies is like comparing apples and oranges.
While I don't personally fish the Kenai n(which gets about 700,00+ reds), the Kasilof receives around 250,000 sockeye annually ... and of 250,000 fish that come up the river, we get maybe one or two reds to 'bite' out of about 400+ rod days when the reds are running. Simply put ... they don't bite.
Steelhead and other salmon species (or even sockeye in some watersheds such as the 'Duc) do bite ... and in my eyes that's the big difference.
Personally, I don't have any problem lining fish that you know are not going to bite no matter what you do ... I do however, have a problem with lining fish that just may not be biting well that day (such as stacked steelies at Blue Creek). Encountering slow bites is part of fishing ... and for me, it's not just about having a couple of fish on the bank, it's about getting the fish to bite. I don't think the situations are even close to the same and can't be compared, period.
_________________________
Seen ... on a drive to Stam's house: "You CANNOT fix stupid!"
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101059 - 12/14/00 10:38 AM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 09/28/00
Posts: 238
Loc: Kapowsin, Wa
|
I think the reg say that if a fish is hooked in the gill plate or eye and is legal to keep, then you are encouraged to do so. I have hooked quite a few silvers from the outside in on a 15" to 24" leader. I think (and this is only a theory) that sometimes the fish bites the corky only and misses the hook. When I feel the hit on the corky, I naturally set the hook, which may or may not be in the mouth and if the planets are aligned and the moon is in the seventh house and the hook is lined up right it's fish on. I have no problem keeping a fish hooked in the mouth from the outside in. I believe that's why the regs have that stipulation in the rules.
_________________________
The vet said I should get my dog fixed. I didn't realize he was broken.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101060 - 12/14/00 12:07 PM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
The Chosen One
Registered: 02/09/00
Posts: 13942
Loc: Tuleville
|
Here's the difference:
In AK, snagging is legal for the reds on the Kenai.
In WA, all forms of snagging are illegal. <PERIOD>
You are *NOT* allowed to keep any snagged fish in WA, regardless of where you snagged it.
It's all there in the WDFW Fishing Regulations. I think a lot of people need to sit down and actually read the regulations.
Parker
[This message has been edited by parker (edited 12-14-2000).]
_________________________
Tule King Paker
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101061 - 12/14/00 02:09 PM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Juvenile at Sea
Registered: 03/28/00
Posts: 222
Loc: Renton,WA
|
As I read this thread for the second time I'm laughing just as hard as the first time. I'm normally fishing in the forks area or south, but I also beat the water at blue creek at least once a year, in fifteen + years I've foul hooked only a couple fish and one was in the side clear back by the dorsal. I think that most of you that are saying that the fish here are snagged, probably don't fish there. For myself I can say MY FISH ARE HOOKED IN THE MOUTH!!. You can't tell me that I'm "flossing" these fish when I'm at the bottom of my drift shooting 4 to 5 feet of line down the slot, maybe these fish are yawning as I shoot them line and that's how I hook them in the mouth, get real !!. I know guys that fish there that are very good fisherman, and they hook their fish IN THE MOUTH, my family that fish there with me hook their fish IN THE MOUTH. For myself I'm not crazy about fishing the Cowlitz, but it's a sure bet to get a couple of hatchery slabs in the smoker for the Holidays. So be careful on who you call a snagger.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#101062 - 12/14/00 04:58 PM
Re: 6 foot leader
|
Juvenille at Sea
Registered: 12/13/99
Posts: 140
Loc: Silverdale, Washington, U.S.
|
BillyBob, the reason why you are allowed to keep fish hooked in the tounge gill plate or eye is because these are fatal injuries to fish. If it's hooked in the eye it can'e see predators very well. If it's hooked in the toungue or gill plate it will bleed to death. I can't begin to count how many silvers I've cought in area nine that were hooked in the tounge and would bleed to death.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
1 registered (steely slammer),
1203
Guests and
8
Spiders online. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
11499 Members
17 Forums
72942 Topics
825256 Posts
Max Online: 3937 @ 07/19/24 03:28 AM
|
|
|