I have fished with bait quite a bit at times, mainly in the winter and I have never hurt a fish using a dead bait. The whole key to fishing dead bait is don't let the fish run with the bait for 10 minutes like some guys do. If you wait that long to set the hook you will have a gut hooked fish every time. When I fish bait I set the hook after the bobber stays down about 5 seconds. Yes I miss a lot of fish, but I have never gut hooked one, and all but a few eaters that I kept for other people have been released unharmed. I'd rather miss all the fish then gut hook a big pike, so it's a trade off I''m willing to take. I use a small treble hook as a stinger and it helps with hookups some and I land about 1 out of every 5 fish that bite.Mike Carey wrote:HOw would one use a two pole endorsment for pike? Trolling? Cause the only other option I can think would be bobber fishing with bait. Wouldn't that cause a higher mortality rate (yes, I know WDFW wouldn't have a problem with that)?
Not a problem for the eaters but if you bait catch a 15 pounder and hook it deep it's deep fryer time.
Where I can use the 2 poles, I fish one rod with a bait and cast the other with a lure. I don't ever dead bait after about mid April and switch to one rod as I find I can get just as many fish on lures and by then I want to move around more. Dead bait pretty much keeps you stuck in one spot.
So if you use a little common sense there is no reason that dead bait fishing will be any more harmful to the fish then fishing a swimbait or other lures. You just can't let them run with the bait forever like I see some of the bank fisherman do. Most of them will let the bobber go down let it pop back up and let it do down 2 or 3 times before they ever try to set the hook. When fishing swimbaits Pike tend to take them deep at times as well, but in my years of pike fishing I have only had one fish that I felt was to badly injured to release and it was off a Swimbait in late spring.