Richard Isaacs
Senior Member & Supporter
Let’s be honest though on the other side of the coin barbed hooks have come on leaps and bounds in recent times to the point that the barb is much easier to remove than it used to be...... but the fact remains that barb however small it is, it has a job to do and that job is to latch on to the inside of the lip and prevent a hook from coming out the same way it went in. You cannot remove a barbed hook without causing some degree of tearing unless it’s either gone right through and you get the chance to cut it off. Or you expand the hole big enough to get it to clear without making contact. (Not advised btw) It’s impossible... you have to do some degree of tearing in most cases and I’m just not that comfortable with the idea.
How does a fish remove a barbed hook? Sometimes they can but it’s not much fun for them. Usually it be in the case of a tethered fish where it might have enough energy or strength to physically rip it out. Or wait around for months for it to completely rust away. It will shift a barbless though with a few shakes of its head and be feeding the next day. Going back to commercial carp fisheries (it’s not my area of expertise) I only ever fish them with the kids but I cannot deny I’ve seen lots of mouth damage to those poor carp but none of which I can honestly say I put down to the use of barbless hooks. The biggest fish in our lake I could comfortably land on an Avon rod with 8-10lb mono, yet the trend down there seems to be 3 hefty carp rods set on bite alarms spooled up with kite string. Unless they know something I don’t??? They are landing 7 and 8lb fish on this gear literally winding them in. What happened to a little waggler Set up in the margins on a good fun rod.
How does a fish remove a barbed hook? Sometimes they can but it’s not much fun for them. Usually it be in the case of a tethered fish where it might have enough energy or strength to physically rip it out. Or wait around for months for it to completely rust away. It will shift a barbless though with a few shakes of its head and be feeding the next day. Going back to commercial carp fisheries (it’s not my area of expertise) I only ever fish them with the kids but I cannot deny I’ve seen lots of mouth damage to those poor carp but none of which I can honestly say I put down to the use of barbless hooks. The biggest fish in our lake I could comfortably land on an Avon rod with 8-10lb mono, yet the trend down there seems to be 3 hefty carp rods set on bite alarms spooled up with kite string. Unless they know something I don’t??? They are landing 7 and 8lb fish on this gear literally winding them in. What happened to a little waggler Set up in the margins on a good fun rod.