2 Cool Fishing Forum banner

The Spike end of a Stringer

2 reading
29K views 28 replies 22 participants last post by  Fishsurfer  
#1 ·
Hi Guy's

I never done wade fishing before and have a question about what to do with the spike end of the stringer. Should you just wrap it around your belt.

So you load fish stringer using the spike end through the fish gills and the fish end up on the float end of the stringer that leaves you holding the spike end, then what? Would like to know

searacer:texasflag
 
#2 ·
Never ever tie the stringer to you. Ever. The spike is meant as a quick release if a shark or gator grabs the fish on your stringer.

Most wade belts have a small hole the spike sticks down into. If a shark grabs it may pull you off your feet but it will pull free. I have donated 3 stringers in my life to the shark gods. Give it to em.....dont pull it away as you will just pull the shark closer to you.

NOT THROUGH THE GILLS!! That will kill your fish as fast as possible and put a bunch of blood in the water. you want to keep your catch as fresh as possible by keeping it alive till you can get back to the boat/ice.

Stick the spike through the corner of their mouth bottom and top jaw.
 
#5 ·
Maybe this is common knowledge, but I just figured it out... Being relatively new to wade fishing, i never used a stringer much until recently. I was just taking the point and running it through the fishes lower jaw and out his mouth. I use a coated cable stringer and while wading in the surf my trout kept swimming "up" the stringer and running into my legs, which made me pretty uncomfortable. Now I go in through the mouth and out the lower jaw, which keeps them swimming towards the float and 15-20 foot away from me. That was a "eureka!" moment for me and I felt pretty dumb for not knowing that.
 
#8 ·
I tie a quick release knot in a 15' stringer on a loop off my chest pack. One tug and it goes. The length I like the fish at is arm extended and to the tip of the rod where I can swat at the sharks to keep them off my stringer. Where I fish the sharks will just eat your fish if the stringer is too far away. Whenever you see a shark eyeballing your stringer you need to take a swat at it and run him off. If you do happen to see a shark as big as you, take a swat at him and get the heck out of the water. They will usually nudge or bump something before they bite it and if it's your leg, oh well. Another thing to consider is; I believe in conservation and catch and release if your not gonna eat it and I won't mount a fish on my wall but I have seen the shark population grow (from my own personal experience) in the last 10 years more so than the 30 years before it. I am not sure why, so if you want to kill a few sharks it certainly isn't going to hurt my feelings. I know this will upset some of you amateur conservationist.
 
#9 ·
Make it so you it can release with a slight pull , I have seen a guy pulled backwards with a 10' stringer and a 8' bull shark had it , shark luckily had a fish in his mouth note the rope of the stringer , Bob shat his pants and still has never wade fished since . Be safe , small black tips don't bother me but bull sharks do !
 
#10 ·
Guy's you are worrying about wade fishing with all these Shark stories ! I not planning on Surf fishing so only inland waters around SLP area.
Might be something a person could invent a floating net that is not visible to what's inside made of thick mesh materials and thus want draw sharks attention to fish by sight.

searacer
 
#12 ·
Guy's you are worrying about wade fishing with all these Shark stories ! I not planning on Surf fishing so only inland waters around SLP area.
Might be something a person could invent a floating net that is not visible to what's inside made of thick mesh materials and thus want draw sharks attention to fish by sight.

searacer
http://www.academy.com/shop/pdp/tournament-choice-deluxe-float-well?repChildCatid=13988

This will help, but the only thing "shark proof" is an ice chest in a tube like what you use floating the river.
 
#18 ·
I strung a red wrong one time. Sucker kept swimming to me! Bleeding too! I was nervous to say the least. Wouldn't have been so bad but it kept swimming up from behind and hitting my leg. Freaked me out the first time. I kept tossing it out in front of me and the current would pull him by me...next thing I know, tap tap tap. Ugh.
 
#21 ·
scene from jaws

Made the mistake of tying my stringer to my belt. Had a shark hit three reds in one swipe and yank me a few feet. It then broke the stringer and started dragging the float across the flat, periodically going under and popping back up and circling me.. It was just like the barrel scene from jaws. Fun games!

needless to say, have a quick release.
 
#26 ·
Image


I made this in an hour or so. I tie it to my belt with a 10' leash and tie my stringer to it. Keeps the fish away from me and provides a place to park my R&R and a bait box. Need to add a holder for a water bottle. I don't wade without it.

Edit: I've looked for one of those holders for the stringer spike, would cable tie it to the PVC rig. Can't find one tho.

Sent from my iPhone 6 Plus purchased selling eggs.
 
#28 ·
My favorite stringer is the Stinky Pants stringer,

http://www.stinkypantsfishing.com/Stringer.htm

It is 12' long, the cord doesn't tangle, the float slips off easily when desired and thus the fish do as well.
I always wear a wading belt. I slip a loop of the stringer up under my belt, then take the hanging spike and insert it into the loop. Then I pull the loop slightly tighter to "lock" it in place. A quick pull of the spike back from the loop and the stringer is free.

I have seen a fabric "channel" for a spike to slip into as well. But my Simms belt does not have one.