Whitefish hook sets...
I headed out to a lake today to try my hand at some lake whites. Was probably the most action I’ve seen in many many years. I had to have seen 40 whites and had a great deal of them showing significant interest in my wire worm. Lots of little bumps, pushing the hook in front of them etc.
Still, I had many of them taking the hook fairly aggressively. There were close to 10 times they’d come up, open their mouth, suck the lure in, is set the hook and end up with nothing. Not even hooked... One of the two I did land did this 4 times before I finally got a hook set. The third attempt actually changed the worm from sitting horizontal to hanging vertical. He came back immediately and hit it again even with the hook hanging vertically. That time I hooked him. So, question time. What is going on??? Lots of bites but I couldn’t get a hookup to save my life. It seemed like it was setting the hook too early maybe, but it was DEFINITELY in their mouth when I set the hook... I have two thoughts. Either I’m setting it too early or too hard. Thoughts? |
Have you tested the sharpness of the hooks? I know mine seem to get dull even just rattling around in the tackle box
|
Quote:
Thanks. |
To test the sharpness, poke your thumbnail with the point of the hook and try to drag it a little bit. A sharp hook will be "sticky" and a dull hook will slide across your thumbnail or scratch it a bit but won't stick.
|
Yep, sharp is the way to be. Especially for whites. You can also wait to set the hook until you feel that slight pull, hole the line in between your fingers and you'll know when. If they spit it out before you can do that then it was likely not meant to be.
|
I find with Whites you don't want to quickly "set" the hook like you might with a Walleye or Pike but rather just pull up swiftly until you feel the weight of fish. Whitefish have soft mouths and to hard of a hook set will tear the hook right out of their mouths. A Whitefish will also reject a hook very quickly as soon as the feel the hook so timing is absolutely the key.
As the others have pointed out, sharp hooks for sure. Another point I find that is overlooked is if you are running mono, you will want to "stretch" the line out to remove all of the line memory. Any slack in the line and its a done deal. I prefer mono over braid while fishing for White's as it acts like a shock absorber. That and a soft ice fishing rod and a reel with a good drag. Get into a 3lbs plus white and the battle will be on. |
1 Attachment(s)
Your OP doesn't say but are the wire worms facing up? I noticed a big difference in hook sets when I started pointing mine up. Sounds like you got them interested enough to commit so it could just be one of those frustrating days. +1 for sharpness. if that doesn't work I'd size up/down.
|
Quote:
At this point I’m leaning towards sharpness. I’ve been fishing for whites this way for 25 years and I don’t remember ever having this issue before... |
Quote:
By closed I mean that the sharp part is pointing to much toward the shaft of the hook. Bend the sharp part (open) away from the shaft so that it is not parallel with the shaft. Some guys will also put a bit of a twist in as well so the point doe not line up with the shaft. Pretty sure speckle55 (a white fishing god) covered this as well, a year or two ago. I have found this helps quite a bit. |
how heavy is the line? With or without maggots? What size hook?
|
Are you using store bought wireworms? I find the store bought ones lose sharpness quickly and sometimes are not very sharp to start with. I make my own wireworms and only use chemically sharpened hooks and don't have issues with not getting hooksets.
|
Quote:
|
First, bend the hook slightly open.
Second, sharpen the hook deadly sharp. (whitefish mouths are rubbery) Third, tie a TIGHT knot, then bend the knot towards the wire worm so the hook rides horizontal, hook pointing up. Fourth, as a finesse step, do an overhand loop, wrap it around the front of the wire worm body so it loops back, draw it tight. Now the hook is actually having its balance point set behind the double wrap on the wire worm body that forms the "head". This keeps the hook very level, even after you miss a fish on the take. Finally, PM me the lake, as I might have the killer hook you need if it is the lake I am thinking it is. It might really surprise you!!! Drewski |
Has anyone tried this over here? Does it work?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=fNsWxeHQ100 |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Thanks Vic |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:40 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.