Gear
• Barbless hooks are required for all salmon and sea-run trout
fishing. Barbless treble hooks are acceptable in most areas,
however barbless single hooks are a requirement in many
tidal areas of coastal rivers as well as areas requiring special
management measures. These areas are described in the
accompanying tables.
• If you are pinching a barbed hook, the barb must be crimped flat.
Partially crimped barbs are not in compliance to this regulation.
• It is illegal to catch and retain or attempt to catch salmon by wilfully
foul hooking.
Salmon that are foul hooked accidentally in the ocean
may be retained.
A salmon intentionally or accidentally foul hooked in
any lake or stream including the tidal portions of coastal streams, must
be released immediately to the water from which it was caught with the
least amount of harm.
• There is no limit to the number of fishing rods a licensed angler may
use in tidal waters, other than the tidal waters of the Fraser River where
the limit is one line per angler.
• It is illegal to angle with a fishing line to which more than one hook,
artificial lure or artificial fly is attached except:
– in the tidal portion of the Fraser River where you can use two hooks,
artificial lures or artificial flies, attached to a bar rig.
– in tidal waters you may use any number of hooks attached to a fishing
line if the hooks are used in combination to hold a single piece of bait
and not arranged in such a fashion to catch more than one fish. This
does not apply in those areas restricted to the use of only one single
barbless hook.
Thank you for the link. here is everything written on Page 14 of the TIDAL regulations book.
I highlighted the part you thought was a spoof Bobo