teejay wrote:I wait until I’m ready to fish before pinching down the barb.
I’ve found that the barbed hooks stay attached better in the foam compartments of my fly boxes.
This also allows me determine which flies in my box have previously been used.
Like teejay, I also pinch the barbs down on the river and have had very minimal breakage of hooks when doing it this way--actually none if I'm careful to only smash flat with no twisting or turning of the hemostats during the smashing. I smash barbs on all flies when fishing a "barbless regs" water--naturally as that's the law. I also smash the hooks sized 16 and larger almost all the time on all waters regardless of the regulations, but seldom smash on 18 and smaller if barbless isn't required. I feel it does make a difference in fish landed (and I think the fact that fish often come off in the net when fishing barbless is "proof" that barbed holds better).
As for why more flies aren't sold barbless, cost is the first factor as it's only recently that barbless hooks at a more reasonable price became available, and second, I still don't think a lot of flyfishers want exclusively barbless flies. I feel many, like myself, prefer to make up their own mind how they want to fish their flies. If it's barbless, you can make it barbless, but if it's not barbless and you want the barb, you can't "rebarb" a barbless hook.
That being said, even the small barbed hooks are tough to pull out of a finger. I had a size 20 midge embedded this week and it was a tough squeeze and * to get it out. Obviously a barbless hook would've been far easier to remove.
If you always keep a tight line to your quarry, a barbless hook works just fine, but when fish jump or run at you, keeping said tight line is problematic. On those tiny midge patterns I want the extra holding power, and removal isn't difficult, but still more difficult to remove than an unbarbed hook would be to remove.
"Should you cast your fly into a branch overhead or into a bush behind you, or miss a fish striking, or lose him,or slip into a hole up to your armpits-keep your temper; above all things don't swear, for he that swears will catch no fish."