I don't know if you are serious or just being a troll. Just because you out fish people next to doesnt mean the fish are biting. There are techniques to every fishery. Most people who bottom bounce do not have a clue how to do it effectively. Personally Bare hook or wool really doesn't matter as long as you are hitting the lane. I feel wool gives you an advantage because it can get caught up in the fishs teeth. This is a snagging fishery no doubt about it. That's why you have to use wool or something on hook or else it is illegal to bottom bounce because its considered snagging. You wanna bottom bounce go ahead but don't dilude yourself to think you are enticing a fish to bite.
:sigh: The fish are biting. As I posted in another thread, with the setup we have, we have had numerous sockeye take it when it is just sitting at the back of the boat, not trying to fish. You can't tell me that a spin-n-glo spinning a foot below the water five feet behind the boat is flossing anything.
We have a spin-n-glo along with some yarn and other stuff but we are still bottom bouncing with it.
And I have been fishing for all kinds of salmon for almost 40 years. If you can't tell whether the fish is taking it or getting snagged, then you don't know what you are doing. The fish, sockeye and chinook alike almost rip the pole out of my hands. They are hooked usually through the nose. Almost never in the corner of the mouth. Always inside the mouth. A good portion of the fish would be hooked well enough by hitting that setting the hook wouldn't even be required.
And hitting the lane is important no matter which way you fish. If the fish are right on the bottom and you are near the top, you won't catch anything. If you are on the bottom and they are near the top, you won't catch anything. If it is deep enough, if they are in the middle and you are on the bottom, you won't catch anything. You have to be able to put it relatively in front of them, close enough that they care.
And nobody has given any explanation for why the color of the yarn matters if I am flossing. If we are just flossing, then the color would make absolutely no difference. The fact that we get tons of bites with a certain color, and virtually none with a different color, and everything else is the same, including fish still being caught by others in the boat using the right color, you can't tell me that is just flossing or snagging anything. We have done these experiments. Switch one fisherman that has been catching fish to a different color for a bit, leave everyone else the same. The other color stops catching fish completely.
Explain how that indicates flossing and snagging. If you can explain that, then I will consider your positions.