Originally Posted by
wicklundrh
Ryan,
It would be hard to pinpoint the exact issue without knowing a little bit of information first. Were you bank fishing? Boat fishing? Casting and retrieving or vertical jig fishing? Casting a float? What bait were you using? Live bait? Soft plastics?
The reason for the questions can help determine what might be done wrong (if anything at all). Take for instance one particular lake that I fish. I cast 1/16th oz jigs tipped with a twister tail. I catch a ton of crappies on this lake with this setup but also lose a fair number of fish as well. Mostly, the fish that I lose are small blue gills. They usually only get the twister tail in their mouths. You fight them for a few seconds and they are gone. Primarily because the hook never reaches their mouths. Eventually, they will tear the twister tail right off the bait.
If you were casting a float, I would say that your rod is too short. Many times, a longer rod would be needed in order to take up any slack in the line and quickly set the hook when a strike is indicated.
If you were casting a retrieving a jig/fly combination (hair jig) it could possibly be the retrieve being too fast. I like to use a lift reel, sink repeat technique. I do this with soft plastics as well. As for vertical presentation, I don't attribute it to a hook set as much as I do a firm upward motion of the rod.
I will say this, there are days that I miss way more than I catch. Other days, they pound it and you don't have to worry much about the hook set. Today just might not have been your day. Heck, you might have done better than others. We call a lot of this as "short biting" fish. They don't tend to bite the whole jig combination but rather the tail of it. Oftentimes they will spit it out long before you knew they were there. The sunfish family are filter feeders. Hookups can be hard when they light bite.
I hope this helps. I would say that your issue today had more to do with the fish and less to do with what you were doing at the time.