This year I have started to seriously target Jacks from my kayak. I have managed a fair bit of success so far with about 7 fish landed this summer so far ranging between a baby of around 25cm up to respectalble fish of around 48cm with most fish in the mid 40's. Of late I have been trolling lures whilst paddling along in front of the snags and experiencing a good hookup rate on the Jacks. Problem is that I have been having trouble converting these hookups into landed fish.
It all starts when you hear that exhilarating scream of the drag as a fish crunches your lure whilst already trying to head back to his snag. Previously in this situation I would reach back (trolling rods mounted behind me) and grab the rod to fight the fish with my paddle in my lap and concentrate on getting the fish into a managable position before stowing my paddle and grabbing a net, this was often a bit of a race with the fish dragging the yak towards it's snag. I was winning the race most of the time so this worked out fine for a while with the occasional bust up in the snags, which I thought was par for the course with this form of fishing. But more recently I have been losing more fish than I can land. I thought a change in tactics might help and upon hookup I would take half a dozen powerful strokes and alter course into the middle of the creek or canal that I was fishing to try and take the fish away from it's home base. But this has not seemed to help either as it just seems to give the fish a wider arc in the line to work with and I would just get run into the next snag along. I'm still using the same gear with an extemely tight drag setting, so I figure that I'm either hooking a better class of fish or hooking them closer to their snag.
If anybody has any tips that they think may help me stay attached, please pass them on. I am not bothered whether these are simply a theory or based on experience, I am open to all suggestions to help turn these missed chances into fish and also save me a few bucks in lost lures.
Generally I am trolling with my spin rod that I originally bought for inshore snapper fishing which consists of and Ian Miller raider rod 3-5kg with 2500 shimano twin power loaded with 10 pound fireline and a 20 pound fluorocarbon leader. I crank the drag well up beyond a normal breaking strain for this line whilst doing this form of sudden death fishing.
Any and all assistance greatly appreciated.
Kev