If that bull was true, then how do all those salmon make it back to their streams of origin with all those dirty old smelly BEARS standing right in the middle of their streams? How does a fish known what a human even smells like? What about all the urine and crap that is dumped into the rivers from people and animals? That sure doesn't seem to stop the hundred of thousands of salmon and steelhead from going up the Columbia each year does it? It may be true that salmon and steelhead have very unique sense of smelling, but how could they know what "humans or dogs" even smell like? The last time I checked, I had never found any human or dog remains in their guts, have you? They don't eat them do they, so how do they know what they are?
What about all those hatchery fish that have humans around them all the time, especially when lots of them had been hand feed by humans for 1 or 2 years? If smell really meant that much to them, you would think that all you would have to do to catch them hatchery fish would be to just rub your hand scent onto your bait, and they would think that they were back home again getting another free lunch! It is true, if you let your dogs jump into the water that you are fishing in, that you will likely scare some of the fish out, and that also goes for peoples actions too!
Smell plays a part in fishing, but I think we over rate what that part really is. You say that fish can detect this at 1 part per 80 million. That may very well be true, but think about this, what in god's creation would a steelhead or salmon think he is eating when he grabs a bait covered with 80 million pars of anis oil? I was out fishing in a hog line at the mouth of the Cowlitz a few years ago, and the old guy anchored up next to me was just hammering the upriver bights. The only thing different that he was using and doing different then I, was that he was dipping his spinner in blue dawn dishwater soap detergent, right from the bottle. I could even see bubbles on top of the water when he let his spinner go out each time. Fish do have a great sence of smell, but I don't thing that they have the ability most of the time to know what the smell really means! That's my 2 cent worth!
If it was me, I would take my dogs fishing and chuckle at every one else!
Cowlitzfisherman
Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????

[ 08-05-2001: Message edited by: cowlitzfisherman ]