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A Really Stupid Question (please don't beat me) 2024


fishing user avatarLord Castlereagh reply : 

I THINK I know the answer to this question. Even my VERY limited experience has taught me, but I am not 100% sure, so I will ask...

 

What is the purpose of the scoop or dip net?

 

Why net 'em at the very end as opposed to just reeling them in all the way?

 

Thanks, and excuse a new fisherman's ignorance, please.


fishing user avatarSam reply : 

Because they may not be hooked well enough to lift them into the boat.

 

Some tournaments, like the Bassmaster series, do not allow nets to be used to land the bass.

 

Club, region and federation tournaments usually allow the use of nets.

 

You can use any type of net you wish.

 

Not a stupid question. No such thing as a stupid question. But there are some stupid answers out there. :lol: 


fishing user avatarScott F reply : 

If you catch a bass on a crankbait with 2 or 3 treble hooks, reaching in to lip them could result in one of those hooks sticking in your hand. Nets help get them in the boat without hooking yourself. If you ever catch a pike, pickeral, or a walleye, lipping them isn't a good idea. A net will help. If you use light lines and expensive baits, a net will get bigger fish in the boat without risking breaking a line or losing the bait and the fish. Hoisting big bass with your rod can damage your rods. Nets are often a good idea.


fishing user avatarMassYak85 reply : 

With larger fish especially, lifting them with the rod is playing with fire (that's how you snap your rod if you aren't careful). Plus you risk ripping the hooks out and losing the fish. 


fishing user avatarLord Castlereagh reply : 

Thanks to all. It is as I thought. From the day I began fishing, I noticed that I lose just an amazing number of fish AT THE VERY LAST SECOND, just as I am lifting them from the water. It happens maybe 20 percent or more of the time. Today, I had my best day fishing EVER!!!! My previous best was four trout in about 2 hours.

 

Today, I brought in 13 fish!! Bass and crappie. But I lost NINE fish. EIGHT of them, AT THE VERY LAST SECOND!!!! I don't fully understand the science of it, but clearly a fish "weighs more" as it is leaving the water, causing problems.

 

I have ordered a dip net. I will NEVER lose another fish who is 3 inches from the bank again.

 

Thanks, guys.


fishing user avatarArmtx77 reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 8:16 AM, Scott F said:

If you catch a bass on a crankbait with 2 or 3 treble hooks, reaching in to lip them could result in one of those hooks sticking in your hand. Nets help get them in the boat without hooking yourself. If you ever catch a pike, pickeral, or a walleye, lipping them isn't a good idea. A net will help. If you use light lines and expensive baits, a net will get bigger fish in the boat without risking breaking a line a losing the bait and the fish. Hoisting big bass with your rod can damage your rods. Nets are often a good idea.

YEAH, this right here.

 

I fish slow/medium rivers and carry a net on the back of my vest. River fish are typically more engaged in a good fight, than their lake cousins care for.

 

I carry a net to end the fight earlier. I dont keep many fish, so I want to end the fight as soon as possible and get that fish back into the water ASAP. A net lets me get them BEFORE they get to "the boat and make another run".

A net in a bass boat, can get a guy, to catch some ribbing from his buddies IME. I feel the run when the at the boat, is what what makes a fish vunerable when released.


fishing user avatarWRB reply : 

First time you hook a good size bass using a treble hook lure you will know!

Dip net is used to net live baitfish out of a tank, a Scoop net net is used to scoop a quantity of live baitfish from 1 tank to another, a landing net is used to land a single live sport caught fish.

Tom


fishing user avatarRPreeb reply : 

Here's what you need to lip those toothy fish:

 

81IqGUbeE4L._SL1500_.jpg

 

Stainless steel chain mail.  However, at $80 for one glove, a net is much better deal.  :lol:


fishing user avatarGlaucus reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 10:47 AM, RPreeb said:

Here's what you need to lip those toothy fish:

 

81IqGUbeE4L._SL1500_.jpg

 

Stainless steel chain mail.  However, at $80 for one glove, a net is much better deal.  :lol:

Kinda want the glove for battle effects now


fishing user avatarScott F reply : 

The gloves are not good. The problem is if you aren't wearing it when you need it, it's not easy to put it on while you are holding a rod, and fighting a fish. 


fishing user avatarBankbeater reply : 

I fish from the bank a lot.  If you aren't in a position to reach down and pick the fish up then you have to get into position while reeling in the fish.  This is no problem if you are fishing from a sloped surface that gradually goes out into the lake.  If you are fishing off of rip rap then you could have some problems.


fishing user avatarTnRiver46 reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 9:09 AM, Lord Castlereagh said:

Thanks to all. It is as I thought. From the day I began fishing, I noticed that I lose just an amazing number of fish AT THE VERY LAST SECOND, just as I am lifting them from the water. It happens maybe 20 percent or more of the time. Today, I had my best day fishing EVER!!!! My previous best was four trout in about 2 hours.

 

Today, I brought in 13 fish!! Bass and crappie. But I lost NINE fish. EIGHT of them, AT THE VERY LAST SECOND!!!! I don't fully understand the science of it, but clearly a fish "weighs more" as it is leaving the water, causing problems.

 

I have ordered a dip net. I will NEVER lose another fish who is 3 inches from the bank again.

 

Thanks, guys.

Actually, I hate to break it to you. As long as you keep fishing, you will lose a fish 3 inches from the bank again, net or no net. But you'll have better odds with the net! And if a fish comes off close to the bank, at least you got the fun part out of it! 


fishing user avatarRHuff reply : 

No silly questions man. Trust me I have asked my share as we all have. These are REALLY good people on this board always willing to help out a fellow fisherman. 


fishing user avatarsully420 reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 10:47 AM, RPreeb said:

Here's what you need to lip those toothy fish:

 

81IqGUbeE4L._SL1500_.jpg

 

Stainless steel chain mail.  However, at $80 for one glove, a net is much better deal.  :lol:

I would rather not destroy all the teeth in a pikes mouth lipping them with a butchers glove.


fishing user avatarRPreeb reply : 

Come on guys, it was a joke.  Cut me some slack.


fishing user avatarAll about da bass reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 8:16 AM, Scott F said:

If you catch a bass on a crankbait with 2 or 3 treble hooks, reaching in to lip them could result in one of those hooks sticking in your hand. Nets help get them in the boat without hooking yourself. If you ever catch a pike, pickeral, or a walleye, lipping them isn't a good idea. A net will help. If you use light lines and expensive baits, a net will get bigger fish in the boat without risking breaking a line or losing the bait and the fish. Hoisting big bass with your rod can damage your rods. Nets are often a good idea.

Exxxxxcaclty..:D


fishing user avatarBassWhole! reply : 
  On 4/18/2018 at 2:26 AM, RPreeb said:

Come on guys, it was a joke.  Cut me some slack.

Humor is not as easy as it looks, you have to be incisive (see what I did there) while walking a fine line. Watch this....

  On 4/17/2018 at 7:57 AM, Sam said:

Not a stupid question. No such thing as a stupid question. 

Does anybody know where Scott Martin was on the day Stormy was threatened?


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 9:09 AM, Lord Castlereagh said:

I have ordered a dip net. I will NEVER lose another fish who is 3 inches from the bank again.

 

lol, unfortunately you will.  Netting fish is as much an art as it is science.  Just like all things fishing, it takes practice and a feel for when to make that jab for the fish...and doing it solo is sometimes harder than landing a fish without a net.

What's more, is when you have someone else landing for you, who has little experience netting fish.  I've seen some crazy attempts, and some crazy saves.  I've had fish knocked off by the netter, had fish spooked and broke off because of the net, and had fish come off and snagged mid air by the net.  So there is good and bad --- but, inevitably, if you have a partner netting there will be the opportunity to rib each other over netting failures which is always fun.  (Unless money is on the line... then it's a little more angst vs fun.)

On to a netting story:  I was bank catfishing one year with a couple buddies.  I brought my landing net to make things a little easier.  Didn't catch squat all night, but the next morning I got onto a nice carp.  He put up a fantastic fight and when it was time to land him, my buddy grabbed the net... and then proceeded to the bank.  All was fine and dandy... fish came in, then things went a little .... lets say wild.

He puts the net in the water, apparently for me to guide the fish into---which, only sparked another run.  Another run by both the fish and my buddy.  Fish turns an swims down the bank...he...well, he chases him.  So I have a 20ish pound carp running on relatively light line, buddy chasing him down the bank.  Other buddy squalling to get him, and I'm trying to fight the fish and am dying laughing.  I turn the fish, and he runs back up stream ---- buddy misses again, and continues chasing the fish.  He's literally running up and down the bank, at this point making feeble swipes at the fish... I am laughing my arse off and not fighting the fish, just trying to keep the line away from a flailing net and netter, and other buddy is now between me and the netter still squalling directions on netting the fish.  Finally after a few minutes of chase the carp finally gives in, and somehow ends up in the net.  Buddy comes out, soaked, complaining that it was harder to net than to just drag up on the bank.  And to beat it all... there was NO beer involved, lol.  That was some of the hardest laughing I've ever done fishing, and a site I will never forget.

But the story comes as a notice --- advise people how to net fish, don't just hand em a net and say go get em...
 


fishing user avatarsully420 reply : 
  On 4/18/2018 at 2:26 AM, RPreeb said:

Come on guys, it was a joke.  Cut me some slack.

Sorry i didn't mean to get on your case. My grandfather used to do that, he was a butcher, it drove me nuts.


fishing user avatarthinkingredneck reply : 

Anyone who teaches knows that there ARE stupid questions.  This was not one.


fishing user avatarChoporoz reply : 

@Lord Castlereagh, I know you already ordered a net, but consider also ordering a pair of Fish Grips.  As @Bassunsaid, netting can be harder than it looks.  I don't think I've netted any fish other than pike and walleye since I first got a pair.  Especially, if you fish alone - I find it much easier to apply the grips while the fish is at the surface than to net by myself.  I use the 'jr' size, but I had a gigantic snakehead shake free from the grip this weekend.  I may need to get a bigger Fish Grip.

81qE4E0MQyL._SX355_.jpg


fishing user avatarFurther North reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 7:57 AM, Sam said:

Some tournaments, like the Bassmaster series, do not allow nets to be used to land the bass.

That's absurd, and irresponsible.

 

It is far easier on the fish than lipping it, or flopping it over the side of the boat with the rod and line...

 

 


fishing user avatarFurther North reply : 
  On 4/24/2018 at 1:04 AM, thinkingredneck said:

Anyone who teaches knows that there ARE stupid questions.  This was not one.

I'd challenge that.

 

I teach a lot. 

 

I look at questions on things I've discussed as places where I've not done a great job of conveying information, or capturing my audience's attention...

 

...and no. I'm not "a teacher" in the conventional sense...


fishing user avatarFurther North reply : 
  On 4/17/2018 at 12:15 PM, Scott F said:

The gloves are not good. The problem is if you aren't wearing it when you need it, it's not easy to put it on while you are holding a rod, and fighting a fish. 

...and they strip away the fish's slime layer...which can lead to all kinds of problems.


fishing user avatarthinkingredneck reply : 
  On 4/24/2018 at 8:37 AM, Further North said:

I'd challenge that.

 

I teach a lot. 

 

I look at questions on things I've discussed as paces where I've not done a great job of conveying information, or capturing my audience's attention...

 

...and no. I'm not "a teacher" in the conventional sense...

I have been teaching kids who are a product of the MS public school system.


fishing user avatarFurther North reply : 
5 hours ago, thinkingredneck said:

I have been teaching kids who are a product of the MS public school system.

It has more to do with the parents than the schools system, IMO.


fishing user avatarthinkingredneck reply : 
16 hours ago, Further North said:

It has more to do with the parents than the schools system, IMO.

Yes


fishing user avatarLCG reply : 

Not a stupid question at all. Everyone started with little to no knowledge. It took me a year of constant mistakes to learn what not to do. Then I learned to take away a new lesson every time I went out. Trust me it doesn't stop :)

 

A rubber landing net helps with landing the fish, keeping the fish safe if you plan to catch and release, and protects you while removing the hook(s). Also, lifting the fish out of the water using your rod is a great way to break a rod. Rods are not meant to dead lift a fish. 

 

I view a small collapsible rubber net as an essential tool, same as pliers, hooks, weights, line, etc. 


fishing user avatarFurther North reply : 

If you were to look in my boat, you'd find 4 nets:

  1. Two "trout" nets, short handles, 18" hoops.  One front, one back.  Those'll handle bass north of 6 lbs. in a pinch, but somewhere around 3 lbs., I try to transition to my...
  2. EGO Slider with an "Extra Large" rubber net.  24” bag depth. Hoop size: 23”L x 22”W. That'll handle big bass, pike and musky to up around 3 ft. and walleye to 30".
  3. Musky-size Frabil Power Stow.  This is for the big girls north of 3 ft. long.  It can, and has, handled musky to 50".

My preferred method of unhooking big fish is to lean over the side, grab the hook shank with a set of pliers and slide the de-barbed hook out without ever taking the fish out of the water.  Oddly, this is harder with small fish than with big ones, so most smaller bass wind up in those "trout" nets for quick de-hooking and release.


fishing user avatarClackerBuzz reply : 

a net isn't as important as analyzing what you did wrong and learning correct landing techniques. you're not always going to have a net with you so hand landing fish is a critical skill.

 

there are tons of youtube videos but I'll add 3 valuable tips:

 

1 always leave 4-5 ft of line out to prevent the fish from getting to much leverage and shaking ur lure.

 

2 'high sticking' ur rod means you can easily reach a bass with 4-5 ft of line out.  do not hold onto the cork handle. instead grab the rod blank just below the lowest guide.  you have the benefit of the rod fighting the fish while still being able to reach it.

 

3 don't bring bass/fish in too 'hot'.  if possible play them out a bit and allow them to burn off energy.  obviously you need to be aware of ur surroundings but in open water you can play a fish out on 4 lb line with no worries.  I've lost endless fish from bringing them in too fast vs I can barely name 5 that i lost due to playing out and breaking off on structure/cover.


fishing user avatarBassun reply : 
14 hours ago, ClackerBuzz said:

3 don't bring bass/fish in too 'hot'.  if possible play them out a bit and allow them to burn off energy.  obviously you need to be aware of ur surroundings but in open water you can play a fish out on 4 lb line with no worries.  I've lost endless fish from bringing them in too fast vs I can barely name 5 that i lost due to playing out and breaking off on structure/cover.

I tend to agree with this, with the caveat of deep water fishing, and very warm water fishing.  If its really hot, or they are really deep I try to not fiddle around with them much at all if I can get em in.  I'll bring em in greener than I would most other times, just to get them back out and down more quickly.

 

Also -- try to remember to wet your net before you scoop up a fish.  I know, it will get wet when you go to scoop it (usually) but a good habit is to dip first to help cool and moisten the net.  you know how hot black rubber gets in the hot sun... on the boat if we call for the net, first step is to dip it regardless of the conditions.  Set's the habit for when it does matter. 




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