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>>Tips 'n Tales >>Pain in the Neck |
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By Rudy Nielsen |
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When fishing, always make sure you
wear a hat and a vest. I’ve seen
more people with barbed hooks stuck
in them, mostly in their head, from
getting too close to an inattentive
fly-fisherman or casting fisherman.
It’s not always their fault. I
remember one time when it happened
to me. |
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My father and his best friend Ron
decided to go fishing on the Crooked
River in central British Columbia.
We loaded all of our gear into the
car, put the boat on the trailer,
and headed out to the Crooked River.
Our plan was to launch the boat near
the start of the river, drift and
motor down over the rapids, and then
hitch a ride to our car and drive
back to pick up the boat. We
launched the boat, and began to head
down the river. |
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While the Crooked River is slow moving in most
parts, there were some areas with swifter water
and rapids. If you were piloting the boat, you
needed to know what you were doing, and you
needed to concentrate completely on the boat and
the river. On that day, I was running the motor,
and using the paddle to keep the boat straight.
We then came to the section with the rapids.
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Father and Ron had taken some beer with
them. In the tradition of some fishermen,
they had caught a lot a lot of fish and
drank a lot of beer. They weren’t paying
attention to anything but their fishing. Ron
kept casting his line in front of the boat,
using a three barbed hook, looking to land
the big one. As he was dong this, he caught
his lure and line into a tree branch on the
shoreline. He pulled and pulled, trying to
free the hook, and the nylon line kept
getting tighter and tighter as he reeled his
line in. All of a sudden, the hook jerked
free, and shot, like a bullet, right for me.
I never even saw it coming. It caught me
right in my neck beside the jugular vein.
I was so busy trying to run the boat and the
motor in the rapids and keep the boat
straight, that I didn’t notice that the hook
was caught in my neck. |
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There were some swift rapids
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Never stand too close to a
fisherman casting |
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I knew that something had hit me, and I
felt a shot of pain, but I didn’t have
time to check what had happened. I had
my hands full with the boat. Meanwhile,
Ron thought his hook was now caught in
something behind us. He was reeling in
his line as fast as he could, and then
it became taut. He then violently pulled
on the line, trying to yank the hook
free. I felt a ripping pain in my neck,
and then I finally realized what had
happened. I had a barbed hook stuck in
my neck as we were shooting down the
rapids at breakneck speed! I held the
motor of the boat in one hand, and Ron’s
fishing line in the other. I screamed at
him, “You got me, you got ME!” I didn’t
know if he could hear me above the
rapids and the noise of the motor,
because he kept tugging at his line. It
was a good thing that I always carry my
knife, because I whipped it out
and cut that line. Ron stumbled and fell
back against the side of the boat. |
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We were in the middle of some pretty fast
rapids which I had to get us through,
otherwise, we could be swamped. It took us
about half an hour until we got to some
quieter water, and I was able to stop the
boat and beach her on the shore.
I said to my father, “I think we got a
problem. I got a hook stuck in me.” And my
father looked at it and agreed with me. |
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Fishing can be great when done safely |
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But we were a long ways from the nearest
hospital. While we were shooting the rapids, the
strong current of the river took us pretty far
down stream from where we started. We were about
half-way through our journey. It would be too
difficult to go back upstream, so we had to
continue onwards. While the road was not far
from the river, we would have to cut through
thick underbrush to get to the roadside. We
would have to take another car at the end of the
river to get us back to our starting point |
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Father said, “That hook is really close to your
jugular vein or your esophagus. I’m not sure
which. I’m really worried that if we move it
around too much, it’ll hook into something
vital, and you’ll start to bleed. And we’re too
far away from the hospital. We have to get this
hook out of you now.” |
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We continued fishing and caught
our limit of fish |
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Father had brought a bottle of whiskey
on the trip. He told me to take four
glasses of whiskey straight. I shot them
back, and we poured a fifth glass on the
wound. Then Father took out his knife
and a pair of pliers. He held the skin
of my neck taut, and pushed the hook
through the other side of the skin,
being careful not to hit anything
vital. He took the pliers and cut the
most of the barbs off the hook, because
the barb couldn’t come all the way
through. Because he didn’t get the
entire barb out, he had to use his knife
to make the wound just a little bit
bigger. He poured some more whiskey on
the wound, took his knife and made a
little cut in my neck to get the rest of
it out. Then my father put a little more
whiskey on the wound, and bandaged it up
with some electrician tape which we had
in the boat. Then we continued on our
fishing trip, caught our limit of fish,
and hitched a ride back to our car.
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We never did make it to the hospital on that
trip. |
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