Those sleepless caffeine abusers at Moldy Chum found an Alaskan writer who pretty much opens fire on fishing with pegged beads (pegged 2″ above a bare hook).

Apparently, I slept through the development of this particular technique, and didn’t particularly see the big deal until I got to this part:

Just lob that dangling bare hook and bead out there, or better yet drop it straight down over the gunwales of a drift boat and let the guide row you around over the top of the fish, and soon trout will be flopping in the landing net. Because, unlike flies, when a trout bites a pegged bead and spits it out, you don’t even have to be paying attention at all (shoot, sometimes I like to take a nap while fishing this way).

The line below the pegged bead will floss that tricky little bare hook right into the side of that smarty-pants trout’s face — even if he did spit out the bead long before you saw the strike.

Given that the Underground’s largely clueless about pegged beads, does somebody want to enlighten me? Are pegged beads really designed to “floss” fish, wholly removing the need for a timely hook set?

(UPDATE: Another article in the same paper takes the opposite viewpoint; bead fishers just want to have fun. It’s up to you kids)

See you at school, Tom Chandler.

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