As the weather turns decidedly cooler there are some dreich days until the Spring so rather than hang up our rods it's maybe time to leave the lures or flies behind and hunker down with deadbaits and a brolly chasing Pike.
If you’re taking up Pike fishing this winter, perhaps moving over from Trout, Salmon or Carp to keep fishing through the cold there’s some stuff you can’t go without. Unhooking: Pike are fierce in the water but they need careful handling on the bank, if you’re new to fishing for them try to go along with someone who knows how to unhook them properly. There’s plenty of good instructional videos to watch, check out the PAC Pike Anglers Club or PAAS Pike Anglers Alliance for Scotland groups for guidelines and information on Pike angling across the UK. There's nothing like having a calm head beside you though, fishing with an experienced angler there when you're dealing with these toothy critters particularly if one gets deep hooked is invaluable and you'll soon pick it up.
No matter what method you’re using to catch Pike you always need tools to land and unhook your catch. Hopefully you'll be landing a specimen so gear up expecting the best and make sure you've at least got these in your kit.
- Large Net, soft knotless or rubber mesh
- Unhooking mat
- Long-nosed pliers
- Pike-sized forceps
- Side-cutters
Rods & Reels On most lochs you’ll use a 12ft 3 to 3.5lb rod, enough backbone to deal with casting leads and baits, capable of dealing with hard runs and lunges at close quarters. You can specialise later but the standard Deadbaiting setup will cover you pretty much everywhere. Fixed Spool reels with a Freespool mechanism are perfect, anything from 6500 sized up to give you enough capacity to fill with your mainline. Many anglers fish braid these days, the finer diameters mean you can beef up the breaking strain beyond 50/60lb.
Bite Indication You don’t want to let a Pike swallow the bait, strike as soon as they pick the bait up and often they’ll be hooked in the scissor making them easier to unhook and release. A balanced bite alarm and drop-back indicator with your rod set up on a pair of banksticks will let you know as soon as possible. Don't wait for a second run, you might miss the odd fish but you'll avoid deep hooking your catch making unhooking a lot easier for you and your catch.
Traces You need a quality wire trace that’s long enough to keep your mainline away from sharp teeth, there’s loads available but the most common are twin treble & semi barbed allowing you to put the barbed end in the bait but leaving the other barbless points free. Crush the points on barbed hooks, you won't lose fish but it will make unhooking much easier.
0 Comments
Enregistrer un commentaire