by Jimbo Roberts » February 19th, 2013, 1:38 pm
I mash down the barbs on virtually everything. About the only ones I don't bother mashing down are the 22's and smaller.
I had to remove a bunch of hooks from various friends over the years. I also had a friend bury 4 of the 6 points on two treble hooks from a rattle trap in the back of my upper arm while Bass fishing at Lake Guerro around 1980. We were fishing out of our Bass boat and casting opposite directions. He reared back to launch one way out there, and was apparently standing too close for his long rod. He caught my arm at the end of the back cast before beginning the forward cast only to bury the hooks deep in the muscle. This was one of those times when the hooks could not be rotated through to mash the barbs. They had to be yanked out with a pair of needle nose pilars. The consolation was his reel backlashed so bad all the line had to be cut off. I still have 4 little round scars on the back of my right arm.
I've used a heavy mono loop trick to remove several hooks from anglers. It works surprising well.
I might also mention that in addition to wrap-around sunglasses, always use a full brimmed hat. That will help deflect most things coming back towards your ears. And when you find something coming straight back at your eyes/head, DO NOT TURN YOUR HEAD 90 DEGREES ! Youe best strategy is to look straight at it and possibly dropping straight down to avoid the hit. Turning your head 90 degrees is an instinctive act but when wearing sunglasses that just exposes the gap between your head and the sunglasses and I have seen flys/lures make it inside that gap. I removed a fly from a friend's upper eyelid because he turned his head.
Jimbo