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Fish Froze Up After Being Pulled Through A Weedbed? 2025


fishing user avatarDaniel Lin reply : 

I was night fishing tonight and I hooked onto what I'm pretty sure is the queen of the pond at the community college I fish at regularly after work. I was throwing a Strike King Midnight Special (7/16oz, single colorado) and had to pull through a pretty thick weedbed to get her out of the water. There was definitely an awkward moment when I didn't have my drag adjusted adequately for moving from relatively open water to the weed-filled shallows and I had to pause for a second to max my drag out and wrench her out of there. The spot I was at though, was illuminated by a lamp, and she was visible in the weedbed as I fumbled with my drag. I noticed that her tail was cocked fully to the side and her entire head and mouth was engulfed by weeds. Looking into the water, it was such an unusual sight that I thought I might have just hallucinated a battle with the hardest fighting boot I've ever encountered. She remained like this when I hoisted her out of the water too.

 

Unfortunately, while holding her up by the line while I tried to get all the weeds out of her mouth and face enough to lip her with my gloved left hand and start working on getting the hook out, she unfroze after I got a ball of weeds about the size of a tennis ball out of her mouth and shook free of the hook and landed just out of reach in the extreme shallows. Two flips later she was back in swimmable water and there I was, likely my PB out of that body of water gone without a photo. (My actual PB has no photo either, apparently my phone camera won't start when battery is under 5% and now I make sure my phone's battery is adequately charged before going fishing)

 

Has anyone else encountered any other situation like this? If anything, I learned that if it's not going to be a routine lip and unhook procedure, I'm going to take a few steps back from the water and turn around too. I've lost three other fish in the past week as they kicked off my hook while I was getting ahold of them after pulling them out of the water. This goes in the book of habits I need to get into, just like how I realized I was missing a lot of time observing the water when I turned toward shore to rig up another lure.


fishing user avatarAmericanzero reply : 

I see that a lot, would be interesting to know exactly why they freeze like that.


fishing user avatarPaul Roberts reply : 

I think I can answer that one.

 

"Freezing" is an instinctive response used by many fishes when frightened. Bluegills and minnows often do this when approached by bass. Motion invites attack and by freezing prey fishes can sometimes avoid triggering an attack. "Frozen", or "immobile" prey fishes in tanks in fish behavior labs have been described as being so immobilized the researcher can reach right in and pick them up.

 

A hooked bass is a frightened one. One common fear response by bass is to bolt to the bottom, and bury into cover, before "freezing". This happens quite often when fishing in heavy cover, the bass bolting into heavy vegetation, then freezing. I've also had bass wedge themselves into rip-rap, and even had one stuff itself into a muskrat burrow! All I could see was the tail sticking out. Didn't see that one coming. :) If one wedges itself, sometimes you can wait them out. Eventually they come to and swim out.

 

This bolting for bottom and burying into cover is the main reason why bass are notoriously difficult to collect by netting, especially seines. The bass dive under the lead-line, and if there’s any cover, they’re in it and the net passes overhead.

 

The inability to dive toward something to hide in is one reason I believe that bass over featureless bottoms are so apt to jump when hooked.


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 

My aunt used to fish a lot in Florida.  I remember her telling me when a fish "holed up" she would pluck the line like a banjo and they would often come back out.  Now I don't know what type of fish she was talking about, or even if it was fresh or saltwater fish she was referring to.  All I know is that it doesn't work if a fish gets you wrapped in deep brush, lol.


fishing user avatarChris S reply : 
  On 10/15/2014 at 9:27 PM, Bassun said:

My aunt used to fish a lot in Florida.  I remember her telling me when a fish "holed up" she would pluck the line like a banjo and they would often come back out.  Now I don't know what type of fish she was talking about, or even if it was fresh or saltwater fish she was referring to.  All I know is that it doesn't work if a fish gets you wrapped in deep brush, lol.

Grouper, they back up into the structure and use their gills to hold them in place. I have waited 15 minutes trying to get one to come out. Pluck the line or in my case slack the line and hope that circle hook is still in place. 


fishing user avatargulfcaptain reply : 

Bass do it, I've seen yellowtail offshore that have buried themselves in a kelp paddy lay there.  They can't see you and feel like they are hidden and waiting for the danger to pass.  Pull them all the way to the boat or be it bass fishing  from shore with a face full of weeds and pick them up without a kick or headshake....of course when they figure out they aren't safe anymore, that extra energy they saved explodes and as your's did, managed to free themselves without letting you get a picture.


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 
  On 10/15/2014 at 9:41 PM, Chris S said:

Grouper, they back up into the structure and use their gills to hold them in place. I have waited 15 minutes trying to get one to come out. Pluck the line or in my case slack the line and hope that circle hook is still in place. 

 

Thanks!  I wasn't sure what it was she did that to but remembered her telling me many, many years ago.


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 

Seems like a simple landing net would resolve the issue.


fishing user avatarDaniel Lin reply : 
  On 10/15/2014 at 10:21 PM, J Francho said:

Seems like a simple landing net would resolve the issue.

From shore though? Recently I've been taking one, or at most two rods (BC and spinning) and a waistpack with a single 3600 and two pouches of soft plastics. A landing net would have to go on my back, fly-fisherman style, and would be of debatable use if I'm not halfway in the water, a la fly-fisherman.


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 

Yes, from shore.  Debatable?  It's debatable whether you caught a PB or not - no pics.  See what I did there. ;)

 

Just get a cheap net with a 30" or so handle, and toss it on the ground where you are.


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 
  On 10/15/2014 at 10:49 PM, J Francho said:

Yes, from shore.  Debatable?  It's debatable whether you caught a PB or not - no pics.  See what I did there. ;)

 

Just get a cheap net with a 30" or so handle, and toss it on the ground where you are.

 

I have to agree that I pretty much always have a net available even when bank fishing now (full size).  Landing big fish on light line at a bank is asking for trouble elsewise.  Same thing with wading, I keep one on my back but it's just a shorty.


fishing user avatarChris S reply : 

No one mentioned this but I keep a set of Boca Grips with a scale on it with me bank fishing, at the very least if I get those Bocas in the fishes mouth I can hang on better than twisting my thumb off. I catch Walleye from time to time and those Bocas sure are handy :) 


fishing user avatarlectricbassman reply : 

Had a crappie do this to me once. I threw it back in and it sunk to the bottom. I thought it was dead and was thinking i should have kept it for a meal. Few seconds later it darted off


fishing user avatarClackerBuzz reply : 

always lip the bass BEFORE you remove the weed blindfold. and make sure you have a firm grip b/c they go ape ship if they didn't get to initially fight. I don't know the science behind why they go paralyzed but i use it to my advantage. from a boat i don't mind picking up my finesse rod and using it around weeds b/c i know even 6lb test is strong enough to get a weed blind fold around their eye's. after that it's lights out and I just troll over and scoop them up.


fishing user avatarDarren. reply : 
  On 10/15/2014 at 10:49 PM, J Francho said:

 

Just get a cheap net with a 30" or so handle, and toss it on the ground where you are.

 

Agreed. If 30" isn't enough, they make 'em longer (obviously) 

and if you still have trouble and want a telescopic net, you can 

opt for the kind carp fishermen use, up to 20+ feet:

 

http://www.allfishingbuy.com/Landing-Nets.htm


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 

This is the net I use.  It is a little pricey, but it's outlived other nets I've had costing nearly as much.

 

http://www.leveragelandingnet.com/


fishing user avatarDarren. reply : 
  On 10/16/2014 at 1:26 AM, J Francho said:

This is the net I use.  It is a little pricey, but it's outlived other nets I've had costing nearly as much.

 

http://www.leveragelandingnet.com/

 

These are on my radar. Local kayak store has begun to 

carry them. Love the leverage of using your forearm.


fishing user avatarDaniel Lin reply : 

Holy crap that's pricey for a net. Off to the fabrication shop I go...


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 
  On 10/16/2014 at 2:48 AM, DarrenM said:

These are on my radar. Local kayak store has begun to 

carry them. Love the leverage of using your forearm.

 

Yeah.  I use it in my boat, too, and now I don't need a "net boy" to screw everything up. :P


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 
  On 10/16/2014 at 3:06 AM, Daniel Lin said:

Holy crap that's pricey for a net. Off to the fabrication shop I go...

 

I was just thinking of a couple cheap ways to gain the benefits of the leverage net myself.  I see two super easy ways to modify my net. 

 

A: Add a "pistol" grip on top and an arm guide on the back using the same net.  It wouldn't be as fancy, nor have the exact same torque, but would make one handed operation much easier.  

B:  Get a "forearm crutch" and affix the net to the end of that // affix the grip and forearm guide to the existing net.  Either way could be an interesting mod.

 

I'm interested to see what you fob up in the shop.


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 

Your letter B is how the leverage net was born.  The folding aspect came after. Kaykers have been doing that for years.


fishing user avatarDaniel Lin reply : 
  On 10/16/2014 at 4:32 AM, Bassun said:

I was just thinking of a couple cheap ways to gain the benefits of the leverage net myself.  I see two super easy ways to modify my net. 

 

A: Add a "pistol" grip on top and an arm guide on the back using the same net.  It wouldn't be as fancy, nor have the exact same torque, but would make one handed operation much easier.  

B:  Get a "forearm crutch" and affix the net to the end of that // affix the grip and forearm guide to the existing net.  Either way could be an interesting mod.

 

I'm interested to see what you fob up in the shop.

I was mostly kidding..... the shop I had in mind is back home.... 12 hours away. I have some basic car tools here in Mississippi but that's it, unfortunately.


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 

Ah, well heck.  i thought we were gonna see some inventiveness, lol.


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 
  On 10/16/2014 at 4:34 AM, J Francho said:

Your letter B is how the leverage net was born.  The folding aspect came after. Kaykers have been doing that for years.

 

Being serious, does the the leverage net really make it "that" easy?  I can see how it could, but then again, I'm expecting it to vs experiencing how it does.


fishing user avatarPaul Roberts reply : 

OK... I guess the question doesn't seem to be "why do they freeze?"... it's "What do I do when they have a face full of weeds?"

 

The answer is an easy one. As ClackerBuzz suggested, lip em first, then clear the weeds. Hanging a PB, with a mouthful of weeds, from the line is a disaster waiting to happen. Broken line, overstressed knot, lost fish, cut hands. Lip em first.

 

As to the net, save your money. I've fished from shore quite a bit and never carried a net for bass. Bass come with a handy handle. The only time I've used a net is from a boat, a pier, where it's difficult to reach the fish, or when fly-fishing for trout in streams when it can be difficult to get a hold of slippery trout in turbulent currents.


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 

I can't agree on the net thing.  I personally love using a net, especially with anything more than one hook.  It's not always just about the fish, but about protecting yourself.  A nice fish on a bait with multiple trebles hanging around its mouth is just asking for trouble when you go to lip it, especially if its a smallmouth or green when you land it.  Sure if you have a jig, you're less likely to get stuck, but if you have a jerk bait with three sets of trebles flopping around...yeah, I'll take that net please, lol.  No point in adding extra risk to yourself if you have a good net right there. 

 

I find it even more important on steep banks and especially if you are fishing light line which I usually am if I'm on a bank.  You may look funny with a net down by the bank, but the first time you don't have to worry about landing that big fish, it's all worth it.  Now, if you are fishing for dinks that you can lift with the line, then maybe go ahead and skip the net.

 

But, that's just my opinion.


fishing user avatarJ Francho reply : 

I think a net would really help a guy that is already using a glove to handle the fish. 


fishing user avatarHattrick7 reply : 

Man this happened to me tonight. Hooked into a nice one and realized drag was too loose. Kept taking line so I go to tighten drag down some more and then it's just dead weight. Nothing moving on the other end. This lake normally doesn't have a lot of weeds but as I continue to pull there's a good mass of it.

We'll my knot breaks and there's this hunk of weeds just sitting about 15' away from me. No movement in the water. I tied on a lipless to drag the weeds in and this one time I felt the bass hit it and swim off.

Interesting behavior.




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