Before MP3's, before CD's, before cassettes, before 8 tracks..........geez, I'm getting old.HOOKEDONFISHING wrote:Record player how long ago was that ?

Before MP3's, before CD's, before cassettes, before 8 tracks..........geez, I'm getting old.HOOKEDONFISHING wrote:Record player how long ago was that ?
Goodnatetreat wrote:Every year we have the same discussion. It's an age old ethical conundrum for salmon fishermen. Read the old thread, and then ask your questions. Otherwise this will turn into a flame topic and there are heated opinions on all sides. Just keep an eye on Jens postsOops, there I go, I did it.
It was a joke......personally I could care less about if one is the other. This topic has been played so many times it is really getting old.HOOKEDONFISHING wrote:Sorry Marc I couldn't resist .lol I don't think there the same thing. Flossing line drifts into mouth. Snagging someone is yanking line through the water until it hits fish.
I also have a sick sense of humorwdavis10 wrote:There are people who have fished for years in these rivers and then there are the new guys - new guys have questions that the "pro's" have answers to - thier for we ask and I did recieve thanks to all for the input and maybe I'll see ya out there. If ya run into a guy with a handlebar mustache and sick humor say hi - we are not all alike and in my search for answers I leave no turn unstoned!!!!
Sorry jens, this is where I'll have to disagree. Unless you have underwater vision, you can't say there is no doubt. There is always a chance your lure found it's way into a open mouthed fish. All these fishing methods that have the lure skimming along the bottom have the potential of snagging a fishes mouth. The fact that the rod gets ripped out of your hand could be nothing more than a response of the fish feeling the hook and pressure. You're assuming it's the fish attacking your gear. I won't disagree - it probably is - but I also believe that in most cases my drifted corky is also being attacked by the fish.jens wrote:But if you are in it for the sport of it and skill of it, then learn how to fish other methods. Nothing gets my blood pumping more so when my bobber gets slammed under by a hot Steelie or having my rod ripped almost out of my hand fishing spoons. There is no doubt you made a fish strike when fishing this way.wdavis10 wrote:There are people who have fished for years in these rivers and then there are the new guys - new guys have questions that the "pro's" have answers to - thier for we ask and I did recieve thanks to all for the input and maybe I'll see ya out there. If ya run into a guy with a handlebar mustache and sick humor say hi - we are not all alike and in my search for answers I leave no turn unstoned!!!!
Good luck out there.
I am waiting for your response as to my Hoodsport terminal fishing experience. Again - tons of fish everywhere. Three hours. No bites, no snags, no nothing. Then BAMM obvious (to me anyway) fish biting my drift gear and fish ons, then just like salmon do - light switch OFF. Same number of fish swimming around with open mouths, same gear, but suddenly, no bites, day is done.jens wrote:Drift fishing with corky/yarn is based on mainly feel am I right, can we agree on that? A person casts, feels the bottom with their weight.. tick tick tick tap tick tap and then pause.. Set the hook right? Do I have a fish? Or a snag? Rockfish, stickfish, gearonthebottomfish? Sometimes that snag pulls back? You feel a head shake maybe?
OK, but that is how a bite feels with a drift fishing gear. You can't say it's not a skilled caught fish just because the technique dictates that a bite is registered on the tip of a persons pole as something "not quite right".
I am going on experience. Of the fish I have caught with hardware or bait, there is absolutely no doubt of a bite. Why is there so much confusion with anglers when they are driftfishing?? Why do I always get asked from rookie river fisherman, "How do I know I have a bite?"
Again, see above. Just because the bite is registered in a different way doesn't mean it wasn't a skill caught fish. It is just - different. And again, I'll ask (which you haven't addressed). How can you tell me with ABSOLUTE CERTAINTY that your hardware didn't get flossed? It's being retrieved along the bottom. The fish has it's mouth open. The line travels along the mouth. The fish turns it's head slightly in the direction of where the rubbing is coming from. And "ta-da" the hardware hooksets in the mouth. You don't see it, so you don't know with ABSOLUTE CERTAINTY. I've had savage responses from my drift gear hook getting set - very savage. I've had my rod about ripped out of my hands. How is that different from a savage hardware bite?
Most of us aren't fishing small remote systems where the fish aren't being bombarded by cannonballs and long leaders. But I will believe a fish will take a corky/yarn there but not in the terminal fisheries we all fish in. One river comes to mind: Tilton River. There is no way in hell a fish is biting in that river, no way. A newb friend fished it over the weekend. He said he hooked into over 50 fish. 50 fish!! He was able to take home 2 fish that were in the mouth. Look at his percentage: 2/50. Come on..
I've not fished the Tilton so I can't respond to your example, but, your friend already answered your question. He snagged 48 fish and fair hooked two. Did the fish take the corkie or did it "floss" into his mouth. That's between God and the fish, unless you have an underwater camera, you and I can't say one way or the other.
"It's in the mouth" - I said it because considering there are so many chum in such a small area you would expect lot's of snags to occur. I was amazed we didn't snag fish, I would have expected some snagged fish. Nate and I both downsized our hooks to size 1-4 to avoid snagging. For the record, I had zero snags, and Nate had one. That was out of several dozen caught. I will note, that there were a lot of sideways fish brought in by others. Which I'm guessing is due to large hooks and slashing techniques, which you and I will agree is a sure recipe for snagging in terminal fisheries.jens wrote:I watched the video. What struck me is you guys saying, "It's in the mouth.." Um, why wouldn't it be? Why say that?
Where you guys drift fishing? or casting and retrieving? Did you witness guys on the shore snagging?
I know of a guy who fishes Mud Bay. You want to know what he calls his technique for catching Chum?? Slossing...![]()
Really, jig fishing takes no skills?![]()
Help me understand. You said, "Oh, one more thing. I would argue it takes a lot more skill to successfully drift fish than it does using a jig and bobber. I mean really - get the depth right, keep the line from dragging, and wait for the fish to floss the jig. Sorry. "Mike Carey wrote:"It's in the mouth" - I said it because considering there are so many chum in such a small area you would expect lot's of snags to occur. I was amazed we didn't snag fish, I would have expected some snagged fish. Nate and I both downsized our hooks to size 1-4 to avoid snagging. For the record, I had zero snags, and Nate had one. That was out of several dozen caught. I will note, that there were a lot of sideways fish brought in by others. Which I'm guessing is due to large hooks and slashing techniques, which you and I will agree is a sure recipe for snagging in terminal fisheries.jens wrote:I watched the video. What struck me is you guys saying, "It's in the mouth.." Um, why wouldn't it be? Why say that?
Where you guys drift fishing? or casting and retrieving? Did you witness guys on the shore snagging?
I know of a guy who fishes Mud Bay. You want to know what he calls his technique for catching Chum?? Slossing...![]()
Really, jig fishing takes no skills?![]()
I was either drift fishing or using jig/float. Using a light slinky and allowing the tidal current to drift the gear along. Nate was just drifting either corkies or dick nights, and some spinners earlier when the fish weren't biting.
snagger and flosserjens wrote:Goodnatetreat wrote:Every year we have the same discussion. It's an age old ethical conundrum for salmon fishermen. Read the old thread, and then ask your questions. Otherwise this will turn into a flame topic and there are heated opinions on all sides. Just keep an eye on Jens postsOops, there I go, I did it.
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. I love that I am in the minority in this discussion. I know I haven't been river fishing that long, but from every fish I have hooked using corky/yarn I know the fish didn't voluntarily take my offering. So according to the definition of snagging, flossing is snagging. Sigh I am a snagger.
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With that said, until flossing is made illegal, then I do it. My friends do it. We at least admit flossing takes zero skills to get a fish hooked in the mouth. I like to use a long leader so most of my fish are lined in the mouth. Gil plate forward right?![]()
Of all the gear that is used, what method foul hooks more fish? You never hear, "It's in da mouth!!" EVER from guys fishing bait and hardware. Think about it.
jens,jens wrote:Help me understand. You said, "Oh, one more thing. I would argue it takes a lot more skill to successfully drift fish than it does using a jig and bobber. I mean really - get the depth right, keep the line from dragging, and wait for the fish to floss the jig. Sorry. "
And the Chum you caught you were using what again? And you guys couldn't get them to bite spinners/spoons and jigs?? Interesting..![]()
But it is so easy to catch fish on jigs.. get the right depth.. Bobber downs are super easy.