I set the hook the same on mine and the fish simply came off, spit it out, whatever when I got to the point I could bring them up to net them. As soon as the head went up in any way they spit it out and swam away.
Hook ups were more for my boys. They didn't have to set the hook really hard and being they are only 7 and 8 they have not quite yet got to the point where they really set a hook on a ultra light 5'6"-6' pole.
Either way, my boys had never lost a fish once I was able to get it turned and headed into the net head up. I had lost very, very few until the sickle jig hooks.
And they were rainbow trout ranging in size from 8 to 18 inches. No lip hooks counted in the lost fish. All the ones I counted I saw spit the hook. We lost a total of 13 fish on the sickle hooks yesterday.
I will have to try turning out the point a little on them and see if it helps.
Landed vs. hooked and fought fish with fly hooks, 10/11. Sickle hooks, 7/25. More hook ups though, fly hooks, maybe 50% bite to hook up. Sickles, 75% hook up or so. I will have to do a lot more fishing with them before I can really compare though. Hook size for one thing was a huge difference. #4 sickle, #10 fly hook. A we fished the sickle hook jig for about 2 more hours.
They were all hooked in the roof of the mouth the best I could tell.
Oh well, maybe trout are not the best fish to catch on sickle hooks. They do have different mouth structures and maybe that makes all the difference.
Last edited by fish_4_all; 05-11-2009 at 12:55 PM.
I love taking my kids fishing, now if I could just manage to fish at the same time.