Circle Hooks |
Circle Hook Design Pierces Fish Through Jaw,
|
I have had a very high hookup ratio and was able to return more
striped bass
to the water
in better shape when using the circle hook.
Circle hooks are one of the best hooks for putting a rod in a rodholder.
The kids and ladies almost never miss with circle hooks giving them
the excitement of
hooking the fish themselves.
(IMHO) I think we need to get the circle hook mandated in Arkansas
Striper Waters
for anyone using live bait.
When the fish grabs the baited hook and starts to swim away.
The line tightens slowly
and usually pulls the hook out of the throat and to the corner of the mouth, where the
point rotates and pierces the jaw hinge or cheek.
Once the fish is hooked, it cannot
escape.
Advantages of the circle hook design include:
Circle hooks rewards you for not being quick on the trigger. Don't raise the rod in a
quick hard motion, You need to more or less reel and lift at the same time. If you do the
typical hook set, youll pull the hook right out of the fishs mouth.
Remember with circle hooks you "Crank don,t Yank".
Circle hooks are easy to
use, but it is important to use the appropriate size.
The hook you use is largely determined by bait size.
The first thing that fishermen and women "balk" at, when first seeing a circle hook is the fact that the gap of the hook (distance between the point and the shank) is relatively small. The point of the hook comes directly in towards the shank the distance of the radius (1/2 the diameter) of the circle. Pointing the "business end" of the hook away from the fish goes against everything we were taught as young fishermen. For those of us who hunt the Striped Bass it is a re-education. "That's the hard part."
Some interesting facts are that this design was primarily used in long-line fishing,
and before that, by our ancestors. They were used for a good reason.
Simply
stated, the fish hook themselves and 95% of the time, in the lip. This meant that they
were usually still alive when the lines were checked.
Circle hook effectiveness is based on Math and Physics, specifically, Newton's second law of motion and centripetal (center-seeking force). Just as when you drive around a curve in your car and lean towards the door. As velocity accelerates on the circle, the centripetal force (the car door) is towards the center.
They result in the fish almost always being hooked by their own momentum & being landed in good condition.
We should all keep in mind that the large Stripers are older mature breeding stock. Releasing most of them in good shape is the right thing to do.
Some Run and Gun Bass casting fishermen look down their nose at bait soaking Striper fishermen to begin with? Using a hook that eliminates more of the "fisherman factor", will, I'm sure only add to the prejudice. But so be it! (IMHO)
Those of us who pursue the Stripers know the truth
about our breed of sportsmen & women.
Scanning the water on the breaking morning light and the sinking sun
We know that she will sometimes reveal her secrets and give up her giants.
Many of whom, we will returned back to her.
By a lone fisherman.
With no one there to see them do it
For someone else to
Catch a Memory of a Life time
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