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Thread: Fall Owens River trout

  1. #21

    Default

    Glad to see some outrage about the way “trouty” handles fish he plans on releasing unharmed. And did he snag the fish literally or was he speaking figurative?

    Trouty you might want to read this,
    10 Tips for a Successful Release

    Following are 10 tips for insuring that your catch makes it back into the water for another angler to pursue. While these guidelines are written from the perspective of the trout and salmon fisherman, virtually all of these guidelines apply to other species as well. Click on the links for more useful information.
    http://www.hatchmag.com/articles/tro...pressure/77147

    Use Crimped or Barbless Hooks
    This is the obvious one, so let's get it out of the way first. Use hooks with no barb whatsoever, or use your pliers or hemostats to press down the barb on your hook before fishing it. Barbless hooks are almost always removable with ease. Barbed hooks can often cause serious damage to your catch and probably aren't increasing your landing rate as much as you think. Get a ‘Ketchum Release Tool’; it will make releasing a fish a snap without touching the fish at all. I think it is the best streamside gadget ever made. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xptYPB7KCos

    You're No Surgeon
    Well, at least we're assuming you're not. Even if you are a surgeon, don't try to perform surgery streamside on an un-sedated subject. If your fish takes a hook deep and it can't easily be removed, just cut the leader/tippet as close as you safely can and leave the hook in. The fish will eventually shed the hook on its own, the hook will corrode, or new tissue will surround the hook and the fish will go on about its business of being a fish. The alternative, attempting to dig out a deep hook, almost invariably results in a mortally wounded fish. In fact, one study by the PFBC (Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission) showed that 66 percent of deeply hooked fish that were released with the hook still in place survived. Their counterparts that had the hook dug out? They survived only 11 percent of the time.

    Horse It In
    Ditch the 8x tippet and fight your fish in with authority. Apply pressure properly from the side and don't over play the fish. Playing a fish for 10 minutes (that's intended as a gross exaggeration, it can take much less time than that to excessively exhaust a trout, for example) on tippet that's too light for the fight is likely to exhaust a fish past a point from which it can recover. Chances are you don't need that ultrafine tippet anyway.

    Use a Rubber Net
    Landing nets provide one of the few reliable ways to release a fish without handling the fish at all and also allow you to land a fish more quickly. Try to use a net whenever possible and use a good quality catch and release net like the rubber mesh variety that are increasingly common and increasingly affordable these days. Stay away from nylon nets. Buy a net from Greg @ http://www.sierra-nets.com/CMS-Sierra/

    Get Wet
    When it comes time to handle the fish, always get your hands wet. Dry hands are much more likely to remove a fish's layer of slime which protects the fish from fungus, bacteria and parasites.

    Take Care of the Head and Eyes
    Like you, the fish at the end of your line relies on its head and eyes to get by. Unlike you, however, a fish doesn't have a head designed to take the occasional whack or two. A fish's head is fragile and needs to be protected. In fact, head injuries are the leading cause of fish mortality after release. Also never ever put your fingers or other things in the gills of the fish. That is like somebody shoving something into your lungs, it just can’t be a good thing for the fish or you.

    Avoid the Shore
    Never land your catch by dragging it onto the rocks, beach or even grass along the shoreline. These places are no place for a fish. Putting a fish on the shore virtually guarantees you're committing all kinds of no-nos: disturbing the fish's protective slime, keeping the fish out of the water too long, encouraging head and eye injuries and more. Keep your catch in the water where it belongs if you're hoping to release it unharmed.

    5 Second Rule
    This isn't the same 5 second rule that applies to dropping french fries or funnel cake at the ballpark. This version, much more well-rooted in science than the aforementioned version, requires that you strictly limit the time your fish spends out of water. This doesn't mean you've lost all hope of getting that grip-and-grin shot, it just means you need to do it properly. Prepare for your photo with your fish safely under the surface. When you lift the fish out of the water, do it for 5 second intervals or less. Feel free to keep on trying (within reason) until you get the shot, but return your fish to the water for a rest between attempts.

    Revive it Properly
    Face your fish upstream (or whichever direction faces into the current), not down, and let it breathe normally. If you've been taught by someone in the past to drag your catch back and forth in the water in order to help it revive, stop. This sort of action actually impedes the fish's ability to move water through the mouth and across the gills to obtain oxygen. Also take care not to revive your fish in sediment-filled water. If you've disturbed the stream bed, move into clean, clear water with a moderate flow and revive the fish there. Be patient and let the fish tell you when it is ready to swim away. Returned vigor and stability of the fish will be the first signs that it is nearing the time for release.

    Watch the Thermometer
    Trout and salmonids are in increased danger of stress and exhaustion as water temperatures increase and oxygen levels decrease. Pay attention to stream temperatures as air temperatures increase and the season moves on. Know your target species and how hot is too hot for the fish you're pursuing. As temperatures approach the limits of what is safe, take extra care in all aspects of safe catch and release. Best to not even fish if the chances of the fish’s survival are slim, or if you must fish, do it early in the morning before the water temps go beyond the fish’s upper limits of survival.

    Practice these C&R techniques and you should be able to come back and enjoy fishing your favorite streams and lakes for years to come!
    Last edited by fly addict; 10-30-2014 at 01:29 PM.

  2. #22
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Norwalk
    Posts
    180

    Default

    We were up last weekend also and my son said the river was closed for fishing from the monument to benton. Maybe that's why no one was there? I was down at five bridges on the river and there were plenty of people fishing.

  3. #23

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Fishingdachronarch201E7 View Post
    Awesome pics and WTG!

    My buddies are going thanksgiving weekend, might have to tag along after this report.

    Thanks
    I thought the river was closed to fishing Nov 16th?

  4. #24
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Upland
    Posts
    187

    Default

    For those that don't know the section of the Upper Owens closes from Benton Crossing to the Monument on Oct, 1 every year.... The section above Benton Crossing is open all year with gear restrictions. Hot Creek and the East Walker are also open year around so people can fish a few areas at thanksgiving as long as they obey the Regs....

    I fished the Upper Owens 10 days ago and there was virtually no one else on the river...

  5. #25

    Default

    I was there yesterday fishing in the afternoon. Didn't see any larger fish, didn't catch anything. Three other guys fishing the section from the monument to crowley. Didn't see anyone else hook up on anything. Fish were hiding from us. Some small ones around that were pretty finicky.

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    chasing tail
    Posts
    673

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by fly addict View Post
    Glad to see some outrage about the way “trouty” handles fish he plans on releasing unharmed. And did he snag the fish literally or was he speaking figurative?

    Trouty you might want to read this,
    10 Tips for a Successful Release

    Following are 10 tips for insuring that your catch makes it back into the water for another angler to pursue. While these guidelines are written from the perspective of the trout and salmon fisherman, virtually all of these guidelines apply to other species as well. Click on the links for more useful information.
    http://www.hatchmag.com/articles/tro...pressure/77147

    Use Crimped or Barbless Hooks
    This is the obvious one, so let's get it out of the way first. Use hooks with no barb whatsoever, or use your pliers or hemostats to press down the barb on your hook before fishing it. Barbless hooks are almost always removable with ease. Barbed hooks can often cause serious damage to your catch and probably aren't increasing your landing rate as much as you think. Get a ‘Ketchum Release Tool’; it will make releasing a fish a snap without touching the fish at all. I think it is the best streamside gadget ever made. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xptYPB7KCos

    You're No Surgeon
    Well, at least we're assuming you're not. Even if you are a surgeon, don't try to perform surgery streamside on an un-sedated subject. If your fish takes a hook deep and it can't easily be removed, just cut the leader/tippet as close as you safely can and leave the hook in. The fish will eventually shed the hook on its own, the hook will corrode, or new tissue will surround the hook and the fish will go on about its business of being a fish. The alternative, attempting to dig out a deep hook, almost invariably results in a mortally wounded fish. In fact, one study by the PFBC (Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission) showed that 66 percent of deeply hooked fish that were released with the hook still in place survived. Their counterparts that had the hook dug out? They survived only 11 percent of the time.

    Horse It In
    Ditch the 8x tippet and fight your fish in with authority. Apply pressure properly from the side and don't over play the fish. Playing a fish for 10 minutes (that's intended as a gross exaggeration, it can take much less time than that to excessively exhaust a trout, for example) on tippet that's too light for the fight is likely to exhaust a fish past a point from which it can recover. Chances are you don't need that ultrafine tippet anyway.

    Use a Rubber Net
    Landing nets provide one of the few reliable ways to release a fish without handling the fish at all and also allow you to land a fish more quickly. Try to use a net whenever possible and use a good quality catch and release net like the rubber mesh variety that are increasingly common and increasingly affordable these days. Stay away from nylon nets. Buy a net from Greg @ http://www.sierra-nets.com/CMS-Sierra/

    Get Wet
    When it comes time to handle the fish, always get your hands wet. Dry hands are much more likely to remove a fish's layer of slime which protects the fish from fungus, bacteria and parasites.

    Take Care of the Head and Eyes
    Like you, the fish at the end of your line relies on its head and eyes to get by. Unlike you, however, a fish doesn't have a head designed to take the occasional whack or two. A fish's head is fragile and needs to be protected. In fact, head injuries are the leading cause of fish mortality after release. Also never ever put your fingers or other things in the gills of the fish. That is like somebody shoving something into your lungs, it just can’t be a good thing for the fish or you.

    Avoid the Shore
    Never land your catch by dragging it onto the rocks, beach or even grass along the shoreline. These places are no place for a fish. Putting a fish on the shore virtually guarantees you're committing all kinds of no-nos: disturbing the fish's protective slime, keeping the fish out of the water too long, encouraging head and eye injuries and more. Keep your catch in the water where it belongs if you're hoping to release it unharmed.

    5 Second Rule
    This isn't the same 5 second rule that applies to dropping french fries or funnel cake at the ballpark. This version, much more well-rooted in science than the aforementioned version, requires that you strictly limit the time your fish spends out of water. This doesn't mean you've lost all hope of getting that grip-and-grin shot, it just means you need to do it properly. Prepare for your photo with your fish safely under the surface. When you lift the fish out of the water, do it for 5 second intervals or less. Feel free to keep on trying (within reason) until you get the shot, but return your fish to the water for a rest between attempts.

    Revive it Properly
    Face your fish upstream (or whichever direction faces into the current), not down, and let it breathe normally. If you've been taught by someone in the past to drag your catch back and forth in the water in order to help it revive, stop. This sort of action actually impedes the fish's ability to move water through the mouth and across the gills to obtain oxygen. Also take care not to revive your fish in sediment-filled water. If you've disturbed the stream bed, move into clean, clear water with a moderate flow and revive the fish there. Be patient and let the fish tell you when it is ready to swim away. Returned vigor and stability of the fish will be the first signs that it is nearing the time for release.

    Watch the Thermometer
    Trout and salmonids are in increased danger of stress and exhaustion as water temperatures increase and oxygen levels decrease. Pay attention to stream temperatures as air temperatures increase and the season moves on. Know your target species and how hot is too hot for the fish you're pursuing. As temperatures approach the limits of what is safe, take extra care in all aspects of safe catch and release. Best to not even fish if the chances of the fish’s survival are slim, or if you must fish, do it early in the morning before the water temps go beyond the fish’s upper limits of survival.

    Practice these C&R techniques and you should be able to come back and enjoy fishing your favorite streams and lakes for years to come!

    Good read for even those in the know...

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