I was out on the Vedder with my wife last Friday last week and had a great time. It was very humbling because she outfished me with five pinks to my three
(..and, yes, I know people are catching many more than that in a single day).
Anyway, she is a very observant person and noted how one guy next to us was doing so much better so I went and asked him his secret and he told me to use a very small omount of red wool no larger than a pea...well and good (we were using jigs). My wife then pointed out that we must be doing it all wrong because I had been encouraging her to maintain a natural drift with the float more or less vertical and the hook about a foot or two off the bottom..just like I had read in Rodneys articles and done with modest success before. The guy next to us was using a different approch: a) was fishing with longer leader and b) holding back on the float so that it was pointing at a steep angle towards him. Everyone I observe, including very experienced fishermen, seem to fish this way and I appear to be one of the few who tries to maintain a natural drift with the float remaining vertical for most of the drift. Two questions:
a) Am I doing something completely wrong here? There was no doubt the other guy was hooking into a lot more than us but I am pretty sure they were body shots most of the time. [when I tried to explain this to my wife she figured it was just sour grapes because we were catching less
. She is a lady of little faith in my fishing abilities
]
b) I am also ashamed to admit that I accidentally snagged 3 and legitimately hooked the other three. To a large degree I avoided snagging by fishing the faster water and staying away from areas where they were obviously just milling about in large schools as sitting ducks for any hooks that might be dragged through. Even so, it was hard to avoid and a pain in the butt when I did because it is virtually impossible to haul them in against the current when the body of the fish is horizontal to it.
c) My wife only foul hooked one out of the five she landed - I think because I had her using a jig with an upward pointing hook.
Any thoughts on a) how I can improve my technique and, more importantly, how I can minimise foul hooking when using a normal hook. [..I have heard suggestions that I can bend the point more towards the shank but I am not sure how good the hook sets are with legitimate bites with that approach].
My setup: float, lead so that 1 to 2cm remains above water, swivel, 2 feet leader, hook. (Sometimes I put a little split shot about 6cm above the hook just to make sure it goes down rather than wrapping around the main line)