I could have tagged this onto the circle hook thread, but decided to start afresh.
Some like to fish doubles and trebles rather than single hooks. I'd just like to know why, and what the experience is here of holding fish on different hooks?
I fish single, barbless or debarbed fly hooks (bass, trout, grayling, pike, coarse fish and soon hopefully a few sewin!), and have done for a long time. It hasn't had a negative effect on netted fish. I do notice more fish find a way free on a extra longshank hook with a small front length, from bend to point. Some klinkhammer hooks are particularly poor. I guess there is more leverage on the hook hold the longer the shank.
In theory a single hook point (well struck) should have more holding power than two or three, where the pressure is spread between the different points?
I've been tying up some simple tube flies, with a 4 yr old daughters help (she keeps insisting on adding pink...). I aim to fish them with a single hook.
In Canada and BC the rule is single barbless hooks for salmon and steelhead, and that doesn't stop people catching some very, very big fish, and lots of them.
What are your thoughts? Is it just habit, or tradition - following the old patterns, or is there more to it? Sock it to me!
Some like to fish doubles and trebles rather than single hooks. I'd just like to know why, and what the experience is here of holding fish on different hooks?
I fish single, barbless or debarbed fly hooks (bass, trout, grayling, pike, coarse fish and soon hopefully a few sewin!), and have done for a long time. It hasn't had a negative effect on netted fish. I do notice more fish find a way free on a extra longshank hook with a small front length, from bend to point. Some klinkhammer hooks are particularly poor. I guess there is more leverage on the hook hold the longer the shank.
In theory a single hook point (well struck) should have more holding power than two or three, where the pressure is spread between the different points?
I've been tying up some simple tube flies, with a 4 yr old daughters help (she keeps insisting on adding pink...). I aim to fish them with a single hook.
In Canada and BC the rule is single barbless hooks for salmon and steelhead, and that doesn't stop people catching some very, very big fish, and lots of them.
What are your thoughts? Is it just habit, or tradition - following the old patterns, or is there more to it? Sock it to me!
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