Releasing fish properly...
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Releasing fish properly...
Discovering fast, in particular with the small coalies that have the place infested at the moment, that a brief spell in a bucket of clean sea water really helps them when it comes to putting them back alive. Unhook them quickly and drop em in for a couple of minutes. You would be surprised how much stronger they swim away when you drop them back after a brief recovery period.
Fluff chucking is the new black..... Rampant Wreckfish is a fly angler in denial 

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release
Ye must try that,, every time i seem to put back a small whiting they just float back up to the surface, which i hate to see!
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Re: release
Any coalfish i catch seem to be quit hardy and go back easy enuff however whiting and codling for me is a different story if keeping them in a bucket helps i will give it a go in future.
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wet hands, unhooked with care, plus if you have a bucket of water for the smaller fish to revive them in its handy, if you have to drop fish in from piers etc it is best done by lowering them down in with a net or something instead of throwing or dropping them, as the impact with the water can kill them, if returning fish on the beach best to wade in and hold them until the kick off under their own steam.
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Re: release
James Barry wrote:Ye must try that,, every time i seem to put back a small whiting they just float back up to the surface, which i hate to see!
whiting are extremely hard to return alive- best avoid fishing for them if possible.
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small whiting tend not to go back well because u usually dont know u have one on and other fish will attack it while its hooked i have brought in whiting who,s whole belly has been eaten and on one occasion had one half way up the harbour wall in bray with another one with its head buried in its stomach .even using braid small ones can fail to register a bite supose the only way around it it to up hook size to avoid catching them if possible :?
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Sure I read an article about returning wrasse - though can't remember the technique - must go and find it, I have a feeling it was something that seemed a bit counter-intuitive so maybe Paul is right. I find it's the cuckoos that don't go back very well, don't know how many I've seen the gulls guzzle. Be nice if there was a way to get them back down there.
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It is amazing what birds are able to take in 1 go. Just wondering though.... is there a swim bladder issue with some fish e.g. pollack, whiting. Have heard that the swim bladder can rupture if the fish is retrieved quickly from deepish water due to a sudden change in pressure. Not sure if this true but makes sense to me.
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mb3 told that last year and ive never looked back. works really well for whiting and pouting. its nice to see your fish swim away.
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