Circle Hooks Reconsidered

J

John Bailey

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I’m well aware that circle hooks have been discussed in the past on the Fishing Magic forums and I don’t want to plough old ground. However, the fact remains that pike care is as live an issue as it ever was and that with the pike season now in full swing, you and I both know that pike will suffer from deep hooking and bad dental work. The pike deaths that this winter will witness are something we should be doing something about as responsible anglers. Surely? Probably the main cause of pike damage is the problem of inexperienced anglers trying to remove multiple treble hooks from a pike’s tooth-filled mouth. The possibilities of fatal results are immense. The issue has long been discussed and I was first really aware of it in the 1980s when Vic Bellars and Martyn Page pioneered their VB double hooks, which undoubtedly saved fish lives.

Experienced pike anglers have long discussed the pros and cons of circle hooks – and I have contacted several of my very successful friends before writing this. But my point is not really anything to do with pro pikers but rather concerns the far larger number of raw pike anglers that have a few sessions most winters. It is this level of angling activity that probably causes the real harm to pike populations and it is here that circle hooks might make a difference if they had more exposure. Most winters, predator pal Robbie Northman and myself have a few visits to the tidal Wensum in Norwich city limits and the fish damage we see is shocking. On occasion, I have watched Robbie remove up to EIGHT abandoned wire traces from a single pike. I’d say it is rare to catch a pike without at least one trace rusting in its mouth somewhere. This is the reality and this is something that wider use of circles might well alleviate.

We all know there is nothing magic about circle hook use. You put the hook into a bait in the head, back or tail root and present it in the normal way with the usual efficient run indication methods. When a run occurs, you do not strike in the usual way but keep winding down till the line gets tighter and tighter and you simply lift the rod tip and draw the hook into the fish. The concept is that the circle hook point will find its own lodging point, generally in the scissors or the edge of the jaw where it can be easily removed – even by a novice if he has decent tools.

Unhooking-so-simple.jpg

Unhooking is so simple

I know that if you are experienced you will be listing the drawbacks to circle hooks by now, most commonly that the point can bounce around in a pike’s mouth, ripping and tearing as it does so. BUT I am writing this at this stage very largely on the back of the experiences of my regular piking partner Simon Ratcliffe, who has been using circles almost exclusively for the past two winters.

  • Simon-with-yet-another-circle-success.jpg

    Simon with yet another circle success
  • Simon-and-Robbie-with-a-cracker.jpg

    Simon and Robbie with a cracker

I have to say that ALL of Simon’s many fish have been landed with the circle visible somewhere on the rim of the jaw and so easily taken out as a result. I add that Simon has 100% not lost any more fish in the fight than the rest of using more conventional trebles. I would also say that without doubt, during the period, he has actually landed significantly more big pike especially than any of the rest of us. I think there are good reasons for this – which I will return to in Part 2 of this piece.

For the record, Simon has tried Trokar Magnum circles, Eagle Claws, Owners, Mustad Demons and is now happy with Fox Rage patterns, generally in 1/0 or 2/0s. He uses soft, braided wire traces 18 inches long at least. He hits runs as fast as would with convention trebles and generally uses 4 to 6 inch baits, hooked in the head.

Preferred-hooks-and-traces.jpg

Preferred hooks and tracers

So, my point is this. If more inexperienced pikers used circles, we probably would see less damage as a result of unhooking. If more experienced pike anglers used them, we just might see more good fish landed as result…see my follow-up soon. And feel free to disagree in the meantime because many of us feel this is an important piking concern and that anything that saves the lives of pike is worth investigating.

Thank you for listening!


The post Circle Hooks Reconsidered first appeared on FishingMagic Magazine.

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john step

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That Cannelle Supratress is what I have used a lot over the last few years for deadbaiting. Very good stuff. I tie a loop each end of a length and hooks can be changed if blunted without the fluff of crimps etc.
Not my idea as I saw it on Youtube under a heading of "circle hooks".

Beware though of a similar product called wondertress from the same company. There was a recall notice from a local tackle shop as it was defective insomuch that the wire filaments had been omitted during manufacture and is not fit for purpose.
 

Philip

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Ok as it’s a bit quiet I’ll chip in with this…

I do not think circle hooks are effective hookers. The way they generally hook i.e in the scissors / extremity of the mouth I don’t think is an indication of how effective they are but rather an indication of how inefficient they are at hooking anything.

I know there are plenty of people who would disagree with that statement & sing their praises but to my mind an efficient hook would catch fish all over the place - top, back, sides of the mouth, the first place it came into contact with in fact.

So taking that into account, basically saying that circle hooks would lead to less badly hooked Pike , whilst probably true, to me is a bit like saying using no hook would lead to zero badly hooked Pike.

So how far do we really want to take this ?

For that reason I think the best solution to avoid deep hooking is to use whatever you think will hook the fish best and & learn to strike early.
 

steve2

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I think the biggest problem with single hook pike rigs is that anglers leave striking longer because they only have one hook and want to make sure the pike as the bait.
I will stick with my usual rig setup.
The other problem is whenever the fish welfare issue raises its head where do you stop.
 

Philip

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Something else I just noticed is that the first photo in the article appears to have a livebait on a circle hook .... in peice about fish welfare ???!!?? ?

Maybe it was intentional to stir debate ? ....which lets face it is a good thing so keep em coming :)
 
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