As
part of the Sea Angling Classic Roadshow, they're travelling the country
exhibiting prizes and promoting the ethos of a sustainable, environmentally
conscious and forward-thinking event.
Catch & Release Best Practice
In the March edition of Saltwater
Boat Angling, David Mitchell wrote about the new scientific report concerning
the post-release mortality (PRM) of bass. You can read the full report
online.
The report concluded that an
impressive ninety-five percent of bass released by recreational sea anglers are
likely to survive. This report is good news and is probably the reason why, in
the short term, we have been allowed to continue to catch bass on a
catch-and-release basis. You may recall that there was a move to ban us
completely from targeting bass. The report may even pave the way to a
reintroduction of a bag limit in the near future.
Poole
skipper, Steve Porter, gives us some tips on how best to treat fish you are
planning to return to the water.
Handling
your catch
It can be great to get a photo of that special catch, but to do so can
sometimes seal the fate of the fish. The most common mistake anglers make is to
lay a fish on the deck. The deck can be very hot, especially in the summer. Try
walking on it barefooted. It is often too hot even for us. If a fish must be placed
on the deck, then ensure it is cooled first with running water and then
continue to hose the catch, and the deck, while the fish is being handled. On
Trueblue most fish are retained in the net, which rests on the gunnel, so fish
rarely come into contact with any part of the boat. Many fish are simply
T-bared off at the side of the boat, so they never even leave the water. Good
practices unless you want a photo, or to record the weight of your catch.
Weighing
your catch
How often do you see anglers hooking a fish in the gills or a ray in the
mouth with the hook of the weighing scales? The problem is, these parts of a
fish were never designed to take the weight of its body. Weighing a fish,
particularly a large one, in this way, will cause serious damage to it. A good
practice is to have a net bag for larger fish, or even a plastic carrier bag
for smaller fish, which supports the weight of the fish as it is being weighed.
Unhooking
your catch
This has to be the single biggest
area where anglers can improve the chances of survival for a released fish.
Most anglers can deal with fish that are lip hooked. Careful handling and
a quick release with minimum contact will almost always ensure they survive.
But, what about those deep-hooked fish? Some anglers, however well-meaning, dig
and poke deep into a fish’s mouth, some even resorting to a so-called twizzle
stick to remove the fish. The fish plops into the sea, shows a bit of movement
as it fades from sight and an angler’s conscience is clear, ‘It’ll be alright,’
I hear many of them say.
The thing is, it probably won’t be all right. Twizzle sticks, although a
very effective and quick way of removing a hook, do it by ripping the hook from
the fish, almost always severing a gill-raker in the process. No fish is going
to survive this. Digging deep into a fish’s mouth with fingers or forceps,
trying to get leverage by bending the head of the fish to one side, is also not
going to aid survival.
Unhooking
plaice and flatfish
Unhooking a deep-hooked fish can be surprisingly easy using the right
technique and, if done carefully, will give any fish the best chances of
survival. The following photos show the technique we have learned on Trueblue.
In this case, it shows the removal of a hook deep inside a plaice, but the
technique works for most other species too.
- Holding the fish firmly but gently insert a pair of forceps into the
gill, but on top of the gill rakers
- Gently push the forceps right through and out of the mouth. At this
point, you are not looking for the hook.
- Once the forceps are through, take hold of the line.
- Gently pull the line back through the fish and out of the gill cover.
The hook will usually turn easily. If it doesn’t turn easily, then do not force
it. It simply means that the hook is on the other side of the mouth, or in the
case of flatfish, in the underside. Pull the line back out of the mouth and
repeat the process of pulling it back through from the underside or other side.
In this picture, you can see the shank of the turned hook.
- A gentle push in the direction of the hook shank usually allows the hook
to pass freely out of the fish’s mouth.
- With the bend of the hook now out of the mouth, gently pull it clear.
- The end result is a healthy-looking plaice ready for release and not a
drop of blood. For any fish, big or small, always consider going in through the
gill to remove a hook. A fish has three holes in its head. In the case of a
deep-hooked fish, the mouth is often the furthest of these from the hook. Why
then make things hard for you and the fish by limiting your unhooking attempts
to the mouth.
The above is just a taste of what we
can do to help ensure a high survival rate of fish. Other measures include hook
choice. Circle hooks that nearly always ensure fish are lip hooked are many
anglers’ first choice. They are, of course, harder to deal with on those rare
deep-hooking scenarios.
We don’t know what the future holds
for us anglers, but we know it is likely to be more restrictive. That’s not a
bad thing if it is managed correctly, but when the time comes, we anglers just
need to be given a fair share of the spoils. I believe that demonstrating good
practices now will serve us well for whatever the future might bring.
The Sea Angling
Classic Roadshow will be in Scotland on 24th/25th March
Glasgow Angling Centre 24/03/2022 15:00 – 20:00
Edinburgh Angling Centre 25/03/2022 14:00 – 17:00
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