A Beginner’s Guide to Safely Unhooking & Handling Fish

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Your guide to getting your fish back into the water safe and sound.

Even though fish fight hard on the end of your line, and the larger specimens can do some damage to your tackle, fish are a fragile species, that as responsible anglers we must take precautions and steps to get them returned to the water ready for a bigger, better fight for the next anglers baitthey hook on to!

Part of minimizing this impact is leaving as many fish as possible unharmed after they are caught. This is why it is of utmost importance on our part to learn how to unhook a fish. Being able to unhook and return fish unharmed is a key skill for any angler. To help spread good practice, Angling Direct has put together this brilliant set of tips to help everyone get it right, with every fish they catch.

Quick Do’s & Don’ts for Handling and Unhooking Fish

Always handle fish with wet hands and always wet your unhooking mat before placing a fish on it.

Get your fish back in the water as quickly as possible.

Try to use barbless or micro-barbed hooks.

Go fishing with an experienced angler or ask for help if you get in trouble.

If you’re using a keepnet make sure it is extended fully and the water in front of you is deep enough.

Don’t chuck fish back in from a height or handle them high off the ground; if you drop them you can damage them

Don’t pull hooks out, push the hook back the way it went in

Don’t put a fish on a dry surface or, even worse, gravel or tarmac

Consider Barbless Hooks for Angling

With a barbless fishing hook, you can avoid any harsh hooks, keeping yourself and the fish safe when removing the hooks. There is some debate about barbed vs barbless hooks, but many anglers find fishing with barbless hooks far easier to remove and they tend to do less damage to the fish.

If you do use barbed hooks for angling, avoid hooks with large, crude barbs or you can squash these down a little with pliers from your tool kit. You can also consider swapping treble hooks for singles when lurefishing, especially when targeting smaller species such as trout or perch, where hook removal can be tricky.

While many observers worry that the process of playing in a fish is cruel and risky, most of the harm that comes to fish as a result of angling happens on the bank, when a lively or panicked fish injures itself by thrashing on the ground. This kind of injury can easily be prevented with the use of appropriate fish care equipment such as an unhooking mat.

Unhooking Mat: These offer a protective, padded, gentle surface between fish and bank. Pack your unhooking mat or cradleas most species from pike to our beloved carp need a safe surface to be handled.

For an idea of the different types of unhooking mats, watch the following video.

Along with a safe space and surface to unhook your fish, you will need…

Forceps: A quality pair of forceps is handy for crushing barbs, as well as unhooking fish.

Fishing Pliers: Providing a more accurate grip, a pair of long needle pliers not only help remove any deep-set hooks but are also a must when dealing with sharp teeth and treble hooks. Many predator anglers rate fishing pliers over forceps as they’re stronger and often offer a better grip.

Disgorger: Used to remove deep hooks in smaller fish.

Bucket: Used to hold some lake or river water from where the fish was caught. This can then gently splash over a fish on an unhooking mat to keep them hydrated and cool.

Fish Care Treatment: Imagine having a cut and leaving it exposed to lake water; there’s a huge chance of infection, which can not only damage a fish in appearance but can result in illness and some cases death.

Various fish care kits are available, all with liquid treatments for mouths and damage on the fish’s body.

With all the fish care gear ready, let’s look at how to safely remove a hook from a fish’s mouth.

2. Wet Your Hands

Keeping your skin that contacts the fish wet protects the fish’s delicate scales and keeps the fish more hydrated. It is also worth keeping a bucket of water from the venue (lake or river) nearby so you can keep the fish calm and cool when on the unhooking mat or cradle.

3. Examine Where the Fish Has Been Hooked

You need to have a look at where the fish has been hooked to determine your next course of action. If the fish is hooked in the top or bottom lip then you can usually remove it with your fingers; by using barbless hooks this becomes a lot easier.

To remove the hook from a lip-hooked fish with your fingers hold the fish with your left hand (if you’re right-handed) then grasp the shank of the hook and pull it firmly in the opposite direction from which it enters. Give it a wiggle if it won’t come straight out.

For bigger hooks and trebles a pair of forceps may help you remove the hook more easily.

4. Using A Disgorger to Remove a Fish Hook

If the hook has taken hold deeper in the fish’s mouth then you’ll need a disgorger for small fish,

To use a disgorger you need to keep tension on your mainline. First, fit the slot of the disgorger onto the line then twist in once to keep the disgorger in place, then slide it down the line into the fish’s mouth until it comes into connection with the bend of the hook. Apply downwards pressure to free the hook, now you can remove the hook from the fish’s mouth, being careful not to hook it again as you pull out. Buy a variety of different-sized disgorgers to suit the size of hook you are using.

When unhooking from the mouth of a large, specimen fish, disgorgers are not the tool for this job. Get those forceps out.

5. How to Remove a Deep Set Hook in a Large Fish

Unfortunately, unhooking fish when they have swallowed the hook is not easy to do. Even for the most experienced anglers, removing a deep set hook without causing irreversible damage is near-impossible so they decide to either:

Humanely kill the fish (with permission) and add it to take home

or

Clip the line and leave the deep-set hook in the fish instead of killing it.

However, if anglers do feel experienced enough to remove a deep-set hook without causing harm to the fish, read the following steps.

I. Try to clip the lineas close to the hook as possible, removing any large knots that may be present near the hook.

II. Remove all bait from the fish’s mouth or throat using your hands or a small set of pliersso you’ll have a better view of the hook.

III. Instead of trying to access through the mouth of the fish, positioning a long set of needle nose fishing pliers through the fish’s gills or you can use your hands if the size of the fish is big enough.

IV. Get a firm grip on the bend of the hook, rotate it over to the side so you have a good angle to start feeding the hook through.

V. Start slowly feeding the back hook through until the loop of the hook and remaining lines are completely threaded through.

VI. Now the hook should be released so you can remove the hook through the side gills or through the mouth depending on which part is easier.

7. How to Unhook a Fish with Sharp Teeth

Unhooking sharp teeth and fingers are not a good combination out on the bank, especially if you don’t like the sight of blood. Whenever you’re pike fishing you need to take the right unhooking equipment with you. At the very least, pack a pair of forcepsthat you can use to remove hooks rather than putting your fingers in harm’s way. Ideally, though, you would want long and short forceps and pliers to help with difficult hookings.

Watch the following video to see how to unhook a pike with incredibly sharp teeth!

Tips for Handling Fish

1. How to Hold a Fish

Be sure when lifting a fish for photos, assessment or moving from net to mat, etc that you kneel. The lower to the ground, the less of a drop when handling the fish. You never want to drop the fish but always be cautious.

When taking photos always hold the fish over a wet unhooking mat or even better get those waderson and stand in the water with the fish.

For the actual hold, use wet hands, never use a towel or fabric that can wipe off the fish’s protective slime. Be sure to cradle the fish into your chest, not squeezing it tightly with your hands.

2. What to Consider When Transferring a Fish

Whether it is from water to unhooking mat or vice versa, you need to use a wet sling to do so. You could risk ripping a fish’s mouth when you lift your net, causing them damage, as there’s pressure on the hook hold.

Transferring your fish from the net into a sling when it’s still in the water, before lifting onto the bank, ensures you are not potentially catching the line when you roll down the landing net mesh.

When the fish is being transported, ensure they are low to the ground in the sling, and that you aren’t travelling over large distances to your mat.

3. How to Return a Fish

When it comes to releasing a fish, always take your fish back to the water in a sling to ensure that it can’t be dropped from the distance of your unhooking mat to the water. If the fish starts flapping in transit, having it in a weigh sling is always a safety precaution.

For some fish, the experience of being caught and landed, coupled with time spent out of the water, can be much more stressful than it is for others. These fish will need to be safely held in the water before being finally released, to give them a chance to get sufficient oxygen through their gills, and recover from what, for them, was quite an ordeal, even if the angler in question was as considerate as possible with them.

In these instances, a cradle, which allows you to support the fish in the water until it’s strong enough to swim off safely, comes in very useful and avoids the distressing experience of watching the fish you’ve landed die just moments after release – something no angler ever wants to go through.

Ensure that the fish is properly recovered before you let it go. If returning by hand, hold the fish up and let it recover, whilst your hands guide it upright. It will power off when it regains its energy. Never just pop it in the edge and head back to casting.

If a fish is taking time, stay with it. You can try filling and dropping water from a bucket in front of it (oxygen bath type effect) or slowly moving the fish forwards and back. When it is recovered it will kick away and off back to its watery home.

FAQ’s on Unhooking Fish

Is It Okay To Leave The Hook On The Fish?

If anglers can reach the hook with fingers, forceps, or a disgorger, they are always encouraged to remove all hooks from a caught fish before returning them to the water.

A lot of anglers with good intentions are now choosing to leave a deep-set hook in a fish, believing that the hook will eventually rust out and remove itself. Unfortunately, this is not entirely true as many modern hooks are extremely rust proof meaning they will not rust out enough to get removed by themselves from the fish.

What Causes A Deep Set Hook?

A hook that gets caught in a fish’s gut or throat occurs usually when the initial bite is missed and the fish swallows the hook along with your bait. It can also happen when casting a long distance with a slackline and on very windy conditions, making takes harder to feel.

We hope this guide has helped answer some of the pressing questions when it comes to learning how to handle and unhook a fish. If you ever need more guidance be sure to pop into your local Angling Direct store where the staff can equip you with all the fish care essential and give further tips on handling fish.

You are viewing this post: A Beginner’s Guide to Safely Unhooking & Handling Fish. Information curated and compiled by Kayaknv.com along with other related topics.

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