Treble Hook

TREBLE HOOK
Triples the odds of your catching a fish.
Quadruples the odds of your getting the hook caught in your thumb.

“THUMB”
A temporary hook holder.

With the above in mind, Please read on…

HOOK REMOVAL

It’s time to start cleaning your lures and sharpening those hooks. This year might prove to be a great one. There’s a lot of fish in Black Lake just waiting to be caught and sometimes scalps, fingers, hands, arms, legs, thighs, knees and an occasional rear end.

The most common accident during fishing season involves hooks. The second most common hazard facing anglers is getting too much sun. Both are easily avoided. Sunscreen and a hat will handle the sun and a first aid kit with a little knowledge of how to use it will take care of the hook problems.

The most important tool any angler should always have with him/her for removing a hook is a sharp pair of wire cutting pliers.

Here are a few methods for removing hooks.

When a hook’s point and barb are protruding out the skin, it’s easier to cut off the barb and back the hook out of the wound. This is when those sharp wire cutters come in handy.

The best method that seems to be recognized by most experienced hook remover professionals and even by some doctors is called the snatch method. No matter where the hook ends up this method works.

This method is quick, simple and relatively painless, as long as you get it on the first try. The secret to a first time success is yanking the loop of line, which is wrapped around the embedded hook, rather hard so the hook comes out on the first try. The reason you should get it out on the first try is obvious, the patient might not stick around for a second try.

The snatch method of hook removal is simple and effective, It’s the best method to remove a hook that’s deeply imbedded in the skin and when the barb is buried.

To perform the snatch method when the barb is imbedded, all that’s needed is a short length of fishing line, at least 10 pound test, approximately 2 feet long.

  1. Remove hook from lure.
  2. Double the fishing line and loop it around the hook, as close to the skin’s surface as possible.
  3. Hold onto both ends of the doubled line, wrapping them around your hand for a firm grip and holding the line parallel to the skin’s surface in line with the hook.
  4. With your other hand, press the eye of the hook down onto the surface of the skin and back toward the hook’s bend, as if trying to back the hook out of the wound.
  5. While pressing on the hook eye, yank the line sharply, parallel to the skin and in line with the hook, to snap the hook back out of the wound.
  6. Apply antibiotic ointment, bandage wound and check to make sure tetanus shots are current.

First Aid Kit

A basic onboard first aid kit for anglers should contain sunscreen, small bottle of hydrogen peroxide, alcohol wipes. bandages, gauze, tape, hydrocortisone cream for poison ivy and other itchy rashes, antibiotic ointment (Bacitracin or Neosporin) and aspirin. Another essential should be a brand new pair of needle-nosed and wire cutting pliers, sealed in a seal-lock plastic baggy. All Anglers, especially those using worms, should always have their tetanus shot up to date. The tetanus germs are usually spread in soil.

OK, With that said..
Lets go fishing and get that big one that got away last year!

NYS Department of Conservation
Region 6 Headquarters
317 Washington St., Watertown, NY 13601
315-785-2262

Black Lake, NY

Black Lake is one of the most widely known fishing and vacation spots in New York State. The lake is located in upstate New York, approximately 2 hours north of Syracuse. Black Lake is a natural, glacier lake formed by the same glacier that carved out the Great Lakes.

Finding Black Lake

Traveling north on New York Interstate 81 exit at LaFargeville {Exit 49, Milemarker 169}. Turn right on NY State Route 411 and follow to NY State Route 37 {Red Caution Light}. Turn left on Route 37 and follow 18 miles to the Amber Caution Light in the Village of Hammond. Turn right on Lake Street (County Route 6) and follow a few miles to the shoreline of Black Lake.