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http://www.castandcatch.com/safety.htm
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...&dopt=Abstract Several species are found around the British Isles, most commonly the greater and lesser Weaver. They are very poisonous, and the sting is extremely painful. TL MC |
#2
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"Mike Connor" wrote in
: http://www.castandcatch.com/safety.htm http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...rieve&db=PubMe d&list_uids=11379401&dopt=Abstract Several species are found around the British Isles, most commonly the greater and lesser Weaver. They are very poisonous, and the sting is extremely painful. I saw Gurnard on your list. Supposed to be very good eating? Eel? Common or Conger? I once saw a Conger Eel around the seaweed at low off the County Antrim coast. Kind of a blueish color, IIRC. I was fishing for Mackerel and try to tease it with strips of bait. No luck. |
#3
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![]() "GaryM" schrieb im Newsbeitrag 74.103... SNIP I saw Gurnard on your list. Supposed to be very good eating? Eel? Common or Conger? I once saw a Conger Eel around the seaweed at low off the County Antrim coast. Kind of a blueish color, IIRC. I was fishing for Mackerel and try to tease it with strips of bait. No luck. Gurnard are very good to eat. Not many about nowadays though. The eels on fly were common eels, caught while trout fishing mainly, and once while carp fishing. It is unusual to catch eels on fly, I assume they took the flies because there was fish slime on them. I have caught conger from a boat, using mackerel as bait. I have never heard of one being caught on a fly, although perhaps they have been taken on feathers? Any "normal" fly gear would be useless, even for a small conger. A large one puts up a hell of a fight. http://web.ukonline.co.uk/aquarium/pages/conger.html A fish of about 40 lb bit the tip of my right seaboot once, and it was well nigh impossible to get it off. I was lucky that my toes were not at the tip of the boot. TL MC |
#4
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In article ,
"Mike Connor" wrote: http://www.castandcatch.com/safety.htm http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...bMed&list_uids =11379401&dopt=Abstract Several species are found around the British Isles, most commonly the greater and lesser Weaver. They are very poisonous, and the sting is extremely painful. TL MC Mike, Are they sharp enough spined that they can go through gym shoes or wading socks? Had a neighbor in FL who stepped on a stingray while scalloping once and was stung through the side of the canvas shoe he was wearing. Very nasty and took several weeks to recover full use of the foot Allen |
#5
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![]() "Allen Epps" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP Mike, Are they sharp enough spined that they can go through gym shoes or wading socks? Had a neighbor in FL who stepped on a stingray while scalloping once and was stung through the side of the canvas shoe he was wearing. Very nasty and took several weeks to recover full use of the foot Allen Normally, sneakers, sandals, or similar, will prevent stings, as the spines on the fish, although sharp, are not normally strong enough to penetrate relatively solid shoe soles, they will however penetrate the sides of canvas shoes etc. They will also penetrate neoprene, and some other things. A long time ago now, I used to do quite a bit of scuba diving, and one or two colleagues were stung through their booties, or light "flip-flops". It is inadvisable to use very light shoes. The effects of such stings can be fairly dire, although people react in different ways, and the effects vary considerably. Quite a few people are stung in Britain every year, most get away with severe pain for a while, and relatively few after effects. In some places various shop proprietors, first aid people etc, are aware of the problem, and always have a bucket or bowl handy. Placing the stung part in very hot water apparently neutralises the venom to a considerable extent. http://www.bbc.co.uk/devon/news/0620...ver_fish.shtml http://www.bbc.co.uk/guernsey/conten..._feature.shtml Should a person be allergic to the venom, then this can have serious consequences, up to and including heart failure, respiratory failure, or anaphylactic shock. http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/e...cle/000844.htm TL MC |
#6
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"Mike Connor" wrote in message
... aid people etc, are aware of the problem, and always have a bucket or bowl handy. Placing the stung part in very hot water apparently neutralises the venom to a considerable extent. Ice it down good and as soon as possible liberally apply meat tenderizer on the sting area. Never go sal****er fishing on the southern US coast without good ole meat tendizer. |
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In article ,
"Wayne Knight" wrote: "Mike Connor" wrote in message ... aid people etc, are aware of the problem, and always have a bucket or bowl handy. Placing the stung part in very hot water apparently neutralises the venom to a considerable extent. Ice it down good and as soon as possible liberally apply meat tenderizer on the sting area. Never go sal****er fishing on the southern US coast without good ole meat tendizer. Wayne, Are you referring to Stingray or jellyfish stings? When I lived in Pensacola we had both and I read an interesting article in Scientific America that had studied the Jellyfish sting and they said enough meat tenderizer would help but that much actually has a chance of giving you a chemical burn. They found normal White Vinegar was better at neutralizing the agent in those little spiral needles. Anyone ever tried it? Allen |
#8
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![]() "Allen Epps" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP Wayne, Are you referring to Stingray or jellyfish stings? When I lived in Pensacola we had both and I read an interesting article in Scientific America that had studied the Jellyfish sting and they said enough meat tenderizer would help but that much actually has a chance of giving you a chemical burn. They found normal White Vinegar was better at neutralizing the agent in those little spiral needles. Anyone ever tried it? Allen http://www.discoveringhawaii.com/SF_...StingRays.html http://www.dnr.sc.gov/marine/pub/sea...e/jellyfi.html http://www.toxinology.com/generic_st..._boxjelly.html http://www.toxinology.com/generic_st...antivenom.html http://www.users.totalise.co.uk/~darrenbarton/id59.htm For various stinging rays, weaver fish etc hot water is the generally recommended treatment. For the venom of various other creatures, the above may be of interest. Icing stings will remove the burning sensation, simply by cooling, but it does not apparently neutralise the venom. In cases where fishermen were stung by rays and weavers, we always used hot water. This was easy to do, as on the crab boats a tub of boiling water ( for cooking crabs etc) was always available. Ice would have been hard to obtain in any case. TL MC |
#9
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![]() "Allen Epps" wrote in message ... Are you referring to Stingray or jellyfish stings? When I lived in Pensacola we had both and I read an interesting article in Scientific America that had studied the Jellyfish sting and they said enough meat tenderizer would help but that much actually has a chance of giving you a chemical burn. They found normal White Vinegar was better at neutralizing the agent in those little spiral needles. Anyone ever tried it? Alan: I was referring specifically to stingray encounters but I have seen it used on jelly fish stings too. Vinegar was also commonly used (bee sting anyone?). Both of which breakdown the protein. Ice slows it down. I'm not going to get into a link posting contest with the good brit but those were the common remedies on the gulf coast. Amd it was in Pensacola that I learned this. Guess I should have put two and two together, you being an (ex?) Navy pilot, naturally you would have been in Pensacola. I was there from 1970 - 1986, graduated hs, business school, got married there and daughter was born there. Mother in law still in the area and wife is PO'd that I just turned down a possible job there. When were you there? And coming to Greenwood for the holidays, that Vector is softly calling your name g. |
#10
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In article ,
"Wayne Knight" wrote: "Allen Epps" wrote in message ... snipped Guess I should have put two and two together, you being an (ex?) Navy pilot, naturally you would have been in Pensacola. I was there from 1970 - 1986, graduated hs, business school, got married there and daughter was born there. Mother in law still in the area and wife is PO'd that I just turned down a possible job there. When were you there? And coming to Greenwood for the holidays, that Vector is softly calling your name g. Well, I guess ex. My last flight in the fighting drumstick was last year with 2400 hours, 502 traps and 128 combat missions and I've finished all my Reserve commitment and as of the end of March I have 20 years. I got to Pensacola in Nov 86 and left in Dec of 88 to go to Whidbey Island Wa so looks like we just missed each other. I also found out last year I had a cousin down there who trains pointers, does field trials and has access to a bunch of wild quail places. Good thing really as I likely would have spent a whole lot more time hefting the 101 20 gauge instead of studying. My folks decided to do the reverse snowbird thing and bought a place in FL this fall and plan on doing the reverse and renting a place in Indy for the summer so I'll get back sometime. My brothers still there. That vector was sweet and Frank and I drew a whole bunch of stares standing out in front of the office casting it at 6:30 in the morning. Too soft for him, about right for me. Just finished doing eight racks of babybacks on the smoker and heading off to the farm in Kentucky for deer season. Allen |
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