Releasing Your Fish

Sharing the resource with other anglers.

When fly fisher Lee Wulff first popularized it, catch-and-release fishing was a revolutionary way to conserve fish stocks amid a growing American population and dwindling habitat. Today, in many places, it is still a sound way to share the resource with other anglers.

Keep in mind however, that in many places, a wild fish population (trout, striped bass, panfish) can withstand some harvest. There’s nothing wrong with eating a few fish during a season in places where a wild fish population can sustain some harvest, or in put-and-take stocked trout fisheries.

The best way to release a fish is to do so without touching it. Release the fish by sliding your hand down the leader, grab the fly with hemostats or a Ketchum Release tool, and twist the fly out. The fish swims away untouched. A barbless hook makes this release technique both easy and effective.

The Right Way

If you are going to release a fish, it’s important to do it properly. Releasing a fish that dies due to improper handling is a waste (in some waters over 20 percent mortality), and if you catch-and-release many fish this way during the course of a day, you can kill more fish than a poacher who keeps more than his legal limit.

Here are some things you should keep in mind when you release a fish by handling it:

Most fish are covered in a protective slime. If you must handle the fish, keep this protective coating intact, don’t touch the fish with dry hands, don’t throw it in the grass or snow on the bank, and don’t net it unless you have to.

All fish have delicate gills, and their internal organs are not protected by a sturdy ribcage like ours. Never squeeze a fish while attempting to hold it or you will injure the fish. Also, the fish will probably pop out of your hands like a bar of soap. The harder you squeeze, the more likely this is to occur. Instead, gently cradle the trout or other fish with your hands, allowing it to rest/lean on your fingers and hands to distribute its weight.

Always hold the fish in the water as much as possible, this way the water helps support the fish naturally and all the weight is not on your hands.

Never “lip” a trout and hang the fish’s body weight by its jaw. You are likely to injure a trout’s jaw so badly it may later die of starvation. Many bass anglers do this to largemouth and smallmouth bass, but if you plan on doing your best to release the fish unharmed, there’s no need to do this to any species.

If you catch a trophy or even just a memorable fish, you’ll probably want a photograph. As above, cradle the fish with your hands and lift it momentarily from the water. You can also compose excellent photos with the fish in the water, especially if the water is clear.

Make sure your fishing companion is ready with the camera turned on and lens cap off before you lift the fish from the water. (Photo tip remove your sunglasses before you have your picture taken so people can see who is holding the fish.)

If you are fishing alone, don’t put the trout up on the bank to photograph it. This makes for a poor picture, and when the trout flops on the snow, rocks, sticks, or sand, it can injure itself. If you are alone, cradle the fish half in/half out of the water with one hand, and shoot a few close-up pictures with your digital camera with the other hand.

With big trout and light tippet, a net is probably better for the fish (as compared to leaving the fly stuck in the fish’s mouth) but use a net with a soft rubber mesh basket. Net bags made from cotton or nylon (worse) are abrasive, which is fine if you are netting a fish to keep, but not if you plan on releasing it.

Small fish rarely need to be revived because they are not played to the point of exhaustion. When you catch a large fish on a light tippet, you must often bring the fish to the point of exhaustion before you can handle it. In these cases, you should carefully revive the fish before you release it. If you release it too soon, it may tumble to the bottom and die.

With wet hands, turn the fish on its side or hold it upside down so it doesn’t struggle as much. Hold it facing into moderate-speed clean current so the water naturally rushes through the fish’s mouth and over its gills. There’s no need to “pump” the fish back and forth unnaturally.

In a stillwater situation, cradle the fish in clean water and allow it to pump water through its gills naturally.

If you handle the fish, don’t stick your fingers into the gills. This is the equivalent of having someone sticking their fingers in your bronchial tubes.

In the summer, when the water is warm, properly reviving the fish becomes critical. When you revive a trout, don’t do it in warm backwaters or sloughs off the main river. Revive it near riffles where the water is as cool and oxygenated as possible.

If the water temperature is near or above 70 degrees, catch-and-release fishing becomes unethical and impractical, as the mortality rate will be high.

As the fish regains its strength, its gills will work faster and you will feel the fish struggle to get away. When the fish feels strong, allow it to slip behind a rock or along the bank where it has some shelter from the current. Do not release a weakened trout or other fish into fast whitewater.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Comments

Login to post a comment. Not registered? Register now!