Thanks Rich for your rely.
Obviously, there are lots of us fishermen that think that we know what we are doing (how to handle and release fish), but I think we may be missing the point, or the bigger picture here!
Releasing and handling fish is not the question here, or how long we may be keeping a fish out of the water. I believe that I can safely say that I have caught a lot, and killed a lot, of fish and I don't believe that too many other board members would question that statement. But we are not talking about handling and releasing fish here; we are talking about using an extremely large size of hook for c&r of wild fish.
I will put my personal experience on the line here on this issue. I know for a fact, that you care dearly about wild fish. But we apparently see things a little bit different on this issue. You are definitely right about the double hook issue. But in my professional opinion (and fishing was definitely my profession), you are wrong about using such large hook sizes for a hook and release fishery on wild steelhead.
Even if the bigger hooks may make it easer and faster for "the fishermen" to remove his hook, it is extremely hard for me to except or believe that a "bigger hook" is better for the survival of a wild steelhead. Since much of the mortality of a hooked fish occurs "AFTER" the fish has been released and has gone down stream; no one can see what has really happen, so who are we trying to kid?
As you know, I am not an anti "wild fish" advocate, nor do I preach that we only practice c&r; but I do understand how fish react to hooks, especially large hooks that are in the 3/0 size. Big hooks make big holes; big holes allow more bleeding, and more infection to enter the wound; which intern would also lead to higher mortality rates… one would reason!
About dragging fish up onto the bank; what makes a fishermen think that picking a fish up for picture taking is any worse then dragging a fish up onto the bank? Fish almost always have contact with rocks and river slime on there journey up river, but contact with people, or pictures is certainly not a natural occurrence in a fishes cycle!
I do not often challenge what c&r advocates may say about handling fish, or the size of the hook they use to catch wild fish, but on this one, I am very concerned!
Again Rich, I know that you care about wild fish, but I am very concerned about the hook size and holding wild fish out of the water for pictures. My clients have attempted to "hold" fish for pictures hundreds of times, which resulted in many times, the fish twisting out of their hands and slamming onto the rocks below! Not a very good thing for any fish that one wants to release unharmed!
I also assume that you were using a 3/0 barbless hook…right?
Cowlitzfisherman
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Cowlitzfisherman
Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????