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Know1,I've been doing more and more catfishing and my question is on the type of hooks to use.
I'm usually fishing in places where I'm catching small channel cats. I'll get bites constantly, but I hook up about 5% of the time.
I use circle hooks and I know you're not supposed to set the hook, but with a fish that small, they'll nibble on the bait forever so I'll eventually do a slow, even pressure hookset with the usual result being nothing.
Right now, I do not know what size hook I'm using, but I'm wondering if I need to go to a smaller circle hook.
Is that nibble just bluegills?
I catfish alot in the summer. When I start missing fish I just think they are gills.
BB1
Some of it might be bluegill, but I fish bluegill a lot too and these are more than just nibbles. These are the type where the float is popping sharply under the water or pulled completely under the water before I try to hook up.
The float I'm using is quite a bit bigger than something I would use with a bluegill.
Might be Skipjack or white bass. For grins, tie a second much smaller hook with teh same bait under the big hook soo it hands down say 4-5 inches form the big bait and hook. Next time the boobber starts doing this, you might just be able to catch and see who the culprit is.Some of it might be bluegill, but I fish bluegill a lot too and these are more than just nibbles. These are the type where the float is popping sharply under the water or pulled completely under the water before I try to hook up.
The float I'm using is quite a bit bigger than something I would use with a bluegill.
That's a good idea. I've not fished for catfish anywhere that had skipjack or white bass yet, so I do not think it's them.Might be Skipjack or white bass. For grins, tie a second much smaller hook with teh same bait under the big hook soo it hands down say 4-5 inches form the big bait and hook. Next time the boobber starts doing this, you might just be able to catch and see who the culprit is.
I think I'm going to buy some smaller hooks and just see.
Catfish will pull the float under slowly and it will just stay under. When a cat takes your bait he eats it. They usually don't fiddle fart around.Some of it might be bluegill, but I fish bluegill a lot too and these are more than just nibbles. These are the type where the float is popping sharply under the water or pulled completely under the water before I try to hook up.
The float I'm using is quite a bit bigger than something I would use with a bluegill.
What kind of bait are you using? Bluegill will pull worms and livers off your hook. A piece of cutbait they leave alone but you may run into gar with cutbait.
