Question about "Double" Hooksetting
Posted: Fri Aug 24, 2007 11:41 pm
I have a question for the Prostaffers about the practice of double hooksetting.
I'm bringing this up for a few resons. I'll give a few examples of the situations technique applied and I would appreciate your opinions on the subject.
I have run into a few dicey situations, especially when fighting large LMB.... ones that may be in the trophy range. I've had a few get off after I though I had a really good hookset on them, only to come up empty...... man what a letdown that can be.
Ahh the thrills of bass fishing!! Just like a roller coaster sometimes only faster and better if you ask me.
So it was recommended to me by a buddy that I lay a second really good hookset on a fish just for insurance if it was a large one.
This spring I was fishing at Castaic in March and got into a fish that would have been my first really good one of the year. I laid one really good hookset on this fish which bit on the Fat Ika and thought I was OK. I sorta had forgotten about the double hookset advice from the year before.
I had this rig going with a 4/0 Gamakatsu EWG hook, 10 lb. Toray flourocarbon line, and a 7' medium hard action rod.
This fish was pulling really hard and started running back and forth on me side to side doing the zigzag action and I thought I had this one in the bank. All I had to do was tire it out and I'd be on the scoreboard with a six pounder or better for the start of my '07 season.
The fish passed in front of me one more time and I came up on it a little....... my lure came flying back at me, the fish was off, and when I examined the lure, it was basically rigged up still good to go out again.
Actually I had had no hook on this fish at all, the dang monster had just chomped down on the line and as pulling it around through the water.
I was so disappointed by that loss. Instantly brought to mind the double hookset advice.
Well a few casts after that I got what felt like a monster pressure bite on the Ika. I started to do my usual slow retrieve and it felt just like the lure was nailed to the bottom.
Dang....couldn't believe it, another fish on!! Swung away from the water hard and fast like Reggie Jackson goin afer a Nolan Ryan fastball.
Came up solid, wham... had a really good hook on this one. And was it ever pulling hard. Very, very strong pulls... and then I realized this would be my new PB if I could land this fish... I mean it was drilling for the deeper water like a freight train.
I have to admit at this point I became very nervous because of what hat just happened with the previous fish getting off!!
So I went ahead and laid a second really solid and hard hookset on this fish and then the fireworks really started to go off. I think I drove the hook into a nerve in this fishes jawbone cause it went totally ballistic after that.
Fought this fish for a long time. It was very strong and didn't want to go down. I was lucky this time and finally won the fight, earned my photo op with my new personal best.
After that I hadn't had any more big ones on this year until the other day I was fishing the Ika down at the Lagoon again I got hit very sharply again on the Ika. I estimate this fish to have been in the 8 lb. range.
I set the hook on this one really good. Though I had it on solid but the double hookset advice popped into my mind and I laid another really good one on this fish, came up really hard on it just for insurance.
Bad news, this time I came up empty. Fish was off almost immediately. When I got my rig back I could see the lure run all the way up the line and the hook pulled completely out of the Ika.
My conclusion is that with the second hard hookset I had ripped the hook out of the fishes mouth.
Now I'm undecided as to wether or not double hooksets are advisable and maybe even more risky in that you can lose a big one that way too!!
So after an admittedly long intro that is the juxt of the question.
In your opinion, as a regular practice, is it advisable to employ a double hookset on a large fish just for insurance or not?
Good fishing to you guys, later................... geobass
I'm bringing this up for a few resons. I'll give a few examples of the situations technique applied and I would appreciate your opinions on the subject.
I have run into a few dicey situations, especially when fighting large LMB.... ones that may be in the trophy range. I've had a few get off after I though I had a really good hookset on them, only to come up empty...... man what a letdown that can be.
Ahh the thrills of bass fishing!! Just like a roller coaster sometimes only faster and better if you ask me.
So it was recommended to me by a buddy that I lay a second really good hookset on a fish just for insurance if it was a large one.
This spring I was fishing at Castaic in March and got into a fish that would have been my first really good one of the year. I laid one really good hookset on this fish which bit on the Fat Ika and thought I was OK. I sorta had forgotten about the double hookset advice from the year before.
I had this rig going with a 4/0 Gamakatsu EWG hook, 10 lb. Toray flourocarbon line, and a 7' medium hard action rod.
This fish was pulling really hard and started running back and forth on me side to side doing the zigzag action and I thought I had this one in the bank. All I had to do was tire it out and I'd be on the scoreboard with a six pounder or better for the start of my '07 season.
The fish passed in front of me one more time and I came up on it a little....... my lure came flying back at me, the fish was off, and when I examined the lure, it was basically rigged up still good to go out again.
Actually I had had no hook on this fish at all, the dang monster had just chomped down on the line and as pulling it around through the water.
I was so disappointed by that loss. Instantly brought to mind the double hookset advice.
Well a few casts after that I got what felt like a monster pressure bite on the Ika. I started to do my usual slow retrieve and it felt just like the lure was nailed to the bottom.
Dang....couldn't believe it, another fish on!! Swung away from the water hard and fast like Reggie Jackson goin afer a Nolan Ryan fastball.
Came up solid, wham... had a really good hook on this one. And was it ever pulling hard. Very, very strong pulls... and then I realized this would be my new PB if I could land this fish... I mean it was drilling for the deeper water like a freight train.
I have to admit at this point I became very nervous because of what hat just happened with the previous fish getting off!!
So I went ahead and laid a second really solid and hard hookset on this fish and then the fireworks really started to go off. I think I drove the hook into a nerve in this fishes jawbone cause it went totally ballistic after that.
Fought this fish for a long time. It was very strong and didn't want to go down. I was lucky this time and finally won the fight, earned my photo op with my new personal best.
After that I hadn't had any more big ones on this year until the other day I was fishing the Ika down at the Lagoon again I got hit very sharply again on the Ika. I estimate this fish to have been in the 8 lb. range.
I set the hook on this one really good. Though I had it on solid but the double hookset advice popped into my mind and I laid another really good one on this fish, came up really hard on it just for insurance.
Bad news, this time I came up empty. Fish was off almost immediately. When I got my rig back I could see the lure run all the way up the line and the hook pulled completely out of the Ika.
My conclusion is that with the second hard hookset I had ripped the hook out of the fishes mouth.
Now I'm undecided as to wether or not double hooksets are advisable and maybe even more risky in that you can lose a big one that way too!!
So after an admittedly long intro that is the juxt of the question.
In your opinion, as a regular practice, is it advisable to employ a double hookset on a large fish just for insurance or not?
Good fishing to you guys, later................... geobass