Release Them Right

Innovation and adaptations are the hallmark of recreational fishing - I'm sure brilliant fishers will find ways to effectively rig our gear to match the best practice recommendations and/or regulations if it comes to that.
 
I am quietly gob-smacked that people in this day and age would even think of having to use a treble hook with any lure or bait, either for salt chuck or fresh water fishing. It also blows my mind that DFO didn’t come down on the use of trebles decades ago. You can’t use them for steelhead in fresh water——why should they still be in use in the salt chuck????

I have used anchovies for 4 straight seasons now. My experience—- Zero reason to rig them with trebles. They fish just fine with either a single hook or tandem singles like a plug-cut herring, either with or without the Rhys Davis helmet

A 3/0 tandem rig on an anchovy results in a nice clean gaff-release on any size fish, No fuss, lickety-split.
Sorry, didn't mean to strike a nerve!
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Zero reason to rig them with trebles. They fish just fine with either a single hook or tandem singles like a plug-cut herring, either with or without the Rhys Davis helmet
You fish the way YOU want to fish ,I fish the way I want to fish . I tell you right now you let DFO into your tackle box you WILL open up a huge can of worms, TRUST me you dont want it. Just do what you you do for now as it may not last long take it for what it is till its no longer.
Also Salt and fresh water is 2 totally diferent fisheries you cant even compare the two.
 
I fish treble hooks with a single trailer for anchovies and occasionally use trebles for bottom fish.
Salmon for me is mostly a harvest fishery.
Trout is a totally different story. Size 18 barbless mostly all spring so far.
Flyfishing heaven right now up here.
 
Had one of the authors (lives across street from me) do a presentation to our sfac in the spring. One thing she said is release mortality was less than what they thought it would be...aka more fish survived than they thought would. That's good news.
 
The attached Exec Summary is quick reading. There were a number of research findings, including some what I would consider to be high mortality rates associated to specific fishing gear and fish handling practices. Also a correlation to the size of fish being released - smaller fish did not fair as well as larger fish. I wasn't privy to the presentation at your local SFAC, but am quite familiar with the research work.

I think this research points very clearly to our community needing to adopt best practices to manage our post release mortality. It is highly likely DFO will take this seriously, and if we stick our heads in the sand because we like certain ways of fishing and handling fish that are to be released that will not end well for our future opportunities. Others (not DFO) will make sure of that. We can't wishful think our way out of this one IMO.

 
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The attached Exec Summary is quick reading. There were a number of research findings, including some what I would consider to be high mortality rates associated to specific fishing gear and fish handling practices. Also a correlation to the size of fish being released - smaller fish did not fair as well as larger fish. I wasn't privy to the presentation at your local SFAC, but am quite familiar with the research work.

I think this research points very clearly to our community needing to adopt best practices to manage our post release mortality. It is highly likely DFO will take this seriously, and if we stick our heads in the sand because we like certain ways of fishing and handling fish that are to be released that will not end well for our future opportunities. Others (not DFO) will make sure of that. We can't wishful think our way out of this one IMO.

I am afraid they are going to study this to death, and when i mean death I mean the death of the sports fishery. All we can do as anglers is to put the fish first when releasing and try to use these best practices methods as much as possible. The method of releasing in the water having the best outcome is nothing new. I going to date myself but i remember Alec Merriman writing about this in the Victoria newspaper many years ago. He suggested making your own releasing gaff by using a 2 to 3 foot wooden stick with a large salmon hook attached to the end and cutting the point off and the barb. the hook is smaller than a regular gaff and can go into the fishes mouth to release the hook if deeper in the mouth vs a regular gaff.
 
I agree Duffy. Most anglers with any experience already know what the best practices are and this has been talked about for years. At the end of the day you have to be ok with what you are doing ....... others will be doing differently.
 
I am afraid they are going to study this to death, and when i mean death I mean the death of the sports fishery. All we can do as anglers is to put the fish first when releasing and try to use these best practices methods as much as possible. The method of releasing in the water having the best outcome is nothing new. I going to date myself but i remember Alec Merriman writing about this in the Victoria newspaper many years ago. He suggested making your own releasing gaff by using a 2 to 3 foot wooden stick with a large salmon hook attached to the end and cutting the point off and the barb. the hook is smaller than a regular gaff and can go into the fishes mouth to release the hook if deeper in the mouth vs a regular gaff.
That the kind of release gaff I use, simple and effective with single hooks.
 
I've been trying to net less trout since reading about fins and tails.
I've always used one of these but now I'm trying it with bigger fish if I don't want a throat sample.
Fits in the gape of a size 20 chironomid.IMG_20240229_135457168.jpg
 
If anyone reads that document, I think most of us would not be surprised to see the results. And @Hardy Guy that's an important point - "Most anglers with any experience" - but there are roughly 250k licenses sold every year, and its pretty obvious that there are not 250k experienced anglers.

I think this work is important for the weekend warrior angler, or someone who may be new to the game, and not as invested as many on this site. Many of us here live and breathe this stuff, and so much of what they've "learned" with these studies is confirming things that the angling community has already learned through thousands of anglers and many, many decades of experience for many on the coast and on this site. The info from these studies are for the many anglers who don't share this collective knowledge that many of us have, because they aren't as invested.

You know who else doesn't have the collective knowledge of anglers? DFO. So, these studies are important to inform fishery managers that gear and methods can be modified within fisheries to improve release outcomes. Otherwise, we end up with the continued trend of over-regulation to account for the "precautionary" approach. There are more ways to reduce fishery mortality than turning on and off fisheries. Without empirical data, DFO won't have the option to listen.

DFO has already been in the tackle box to manage the fishery. Barbed hooks are not allowed to be used. Why, pretty simple. Changing practices around things like treble hooks is no different. There is a mortality effect. Plain and simple. Given the option, which would you rather have in your face. Pretty easy answer to me.

Smaller percentage points matter in fishery decisions now. If we can shave a couple % mortality off estimates that could mean the difference between fisheries opening and closing... I'd rather fish with a smaller single hook than not be fishing.
 
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