BARBS: A LIMITING FACTOR IN HOOK
PENETRATION
By Joe H. Hughes
Editors
note: Ive known Joe for nearly 15 years. Hes a
full-time pro in factory end of the tackle business for Pradco.
He knows what hes talking about. As a personal note,
Ive mashed barbs for years for stripers, bass, trout and
exotics and know barbless hooks simply mean more hookups. Smaller
hooks penetrate easier too! It's simply a case of physics! Fly
flingers figured this out years back. It works in saltwater too!
In April of 1984, I had an
opportunity to fish with the late, Peter Barrett, then a
contributing editor for Field & Stream Magazine. The
quest was for walleye on beautiful Lake Ouachita, near Hot
Springs, Arkansas. The lessons of this trip, with one of the most
knowledgeable outdoor writers of our time, were many. One lesson
was immense.
Chris Lubbat with a nice catch
taken on a Mystic Shad-R
PHOTO CHIP PORTER
During the first hour of
fishing Mr. Barrett asked if he could smash down the barbs on the
Cordell Spot he was using. It was my lure and prior to modifying
the hooks, Peter thought he should ask.
"Why would you want to do
that, I asked?
"Let me ask you this first,
"Joe, said Peter. Why do you think the barbs are on these
hooks anyway? What are they there for?
Well, Id been around the
block a few times in my fishing career and the answer was
obvious. "To keep the fish from throwing the lure," I
answered.
"Wrong," smiled Peter.
"The barbs were originally put on hooks to keep live bait
from wiggling off. Imagine trying
to keep a worm or minnow on a hook without a barb."
"Smash um down, was all
I could say. All the time trying to figure out what important
piece of information had just been handed down.
Learning Takes
Time
It was about a year later that I
finally gathered enough courage to smash down the barbs on my
lure. Just a test, you understand. Four largemouth in the two to
three pound category had consumed a long-cast Spot, surfaced and
flung it back. This herd of bass was roaming on a shallow flat
and after smashing down the barbs, I caught and released 12, all
hooked securely.
As each bass was caught, a serious
eyeball investigation of the hook-up occurred.
In every case, each point that
made contact was driven home past the barb and the bass was
landed using the bend of the hook.
Spreading the Word
Since that first personal
experience with semi-barbless trebles, Ive made it a habit
to relate this barb story at seminars across the country. The
Cordell Spot is my best example. You cast it for long distance
and if a strike occurs when theres a lot of line out, it
simply hard to get a good hook set. Theres line stretch
and, under windy conditions, theres always a bow in your
line that you have to fight and wind through.
There werent many
enlightened faces in the crowds that initially heard this
smash-um-down story. There were even some looks that
suggested that this was the silliest tip that had ever been
heard. Never-the-less, when returning to the same areas the next
year, there was always one or two anglers that would get me off
to the side and tell me their personal smash-um-down-
story. Sort of kept me going.
Now, for you remaining skeptics,
heres another thought. Striper guides almost always have a
story about that big striper that straightened out their hook.
Granted, stripers can be pretty powerful. However, one might
suggest that the hook-bending fish simply never got that big hook
past the barb. Its pretty easy to straighten out a strong hook if
you grab it by the point with a pair of pliers. But, you grab
that same hook by the bend, where the pressure would be once the
barb is passed, and you are simply going to get whipped trying to
bend that hook. Editors note: You can simply try this
yourself.
No Barb - No
Bucks:
Theres no doubt that in the
world of bass fishing, it is really hard to make and promote a
barbless hook. That little sliver of metal that juts out just
gives us all a little extra confidence. One just cant argue
successfully against it.
However, we can all understand the
reasoning behind very small, yet effective barbs. You get almost
maximum penetration of your hook whether it be a single or
treble.
You fight the fish in the bend of
the hook and if you keep pressure and the fish doesnt do
something magically creative, youll land him. This
philosophy works.
To illustrate this point, check out the
barbs on the Heddon Rotating Excalibur Treble Hooksª (left)These
hooks are on all of the Pro Autograph Series, Excalibur Series
and most of the Mystic Series lures. The barbs are small. And,
yet, this hook continues to grow in popularity because it is so
effective. The small barbs are a part of what makes these hooks
so good. A very important part.
And, the next time you loose a
jumping bass, check the size of the barbs on the hooks you are
using. Notice, in particular, the diameter of the metal that had
to penetrate the tough part of that bass mouth. You might
fight it, like I did. But, in the end you may realize that Peter
Barrett was right when he suggested that for barbs, a whole lot
less is better.
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