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OhioFisherman

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Everything posted by OhioFisherman

  1. Just a little heavier action, look at the casting weights, cork is OK, no preference to me though. Never bought a rod without seeing and holding it myself, a feel for it being able to do the job?
  2. If I was only going to carry one casting rod it would probably be something like this, https://www.tacklewarehouse.com/Daiwa_Aird_X_Casting_Rods/descpage-DAX.html?from=tbassin Daiwa Aird X Casting Rod 7'3" Med Hvy
  3. They used that stuff on the tractors and trailers at a few of my jobs, it works, and you can just picture the beating it takes in commercial applications. If you can find a copper bolt, nut, and washers that might be the way to go for a good connection?
  4. Our local paper is saying 80% of nursing home residents are accepting the vaccine, but only 60% of nursing home employees are.
  5. Nice work Brian! I remember using size 12 and 16 hooks to catch minnows, they seemed awful small for anything else.
  6. If you also noted the location? Columbia. We aren't the only ones searching for answers?
  7. https://apnews.com/article/fact-checking-afs:Content:9768999400 https://www.fda.gov/animal-veterinary/product-safety-information/faq-covid-19-and-ivermectin-intended-animals https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04602507 https://www.medpagetoday.com/special-reports/exclusives/88310
  8. https://apnews.com/article/fact-checking-9765563716 Sorting thru the info being dumped on us can be difficult?
  9. To the best of my knowledge? no the old jitterbugs did not.
  10. http://www.pikeminnow.org/background/save-a-salmon-and-make-money-doing-it Some serious cash for minnows!
  11. After my second marriage my wife and I went to Newport News Virginia to visit her girlfriend and her husband that lived there. Some water supply reservoirs there and the area tackle shops had 10+ plus bass hanging on their walls that had been caught in them, all I could connect with were eels like the one on page one. They cut most of the Golden Shiners I was using for bait in half, like they had been cut with a knife. When I finally hooked one and saw what it was I didn't want it the the boat with me!
  12. LOL, I wouldn't even want to hold a fish that big! It might make fishing seem like more work!
  13. https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/21/europe/new-variant-coronavirus-intl-hnk/index.html https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/20/health/walter-reed-covid-19-variant/index.html Hmmm?
  14. Our buddy and house guest got rushed to the hospital early in the year, and still no signs that he will fully recover. A chimney fire on mother's day. My dog that never goes near the road got hit by a car. My legs are having a tough year, they seem to be bearing the weight of the MS symptoms for the year.
  15. Evidently the European ones and the American Eels are both thought to spawn in the Sargasso Sea, European countries such as Belgium have also had severe declines in their population. When I was a kid we caught like 5-6 small ones, like 6-7 in ch while netting chubs for bait in a tributary of Lake Erie, roughly 15 - 20 miles upstream from the lake, never saw another one again here.
  16. https://www.webstaurantstore.com/12-qt-aluminum-colander-with-base-and-handles/407C12QTA.html It comes with mounting brackets for chin straps!
  17. https://www.fda.gov/animal-veterinary/product-safety-information/faq-covid-19-and-ivermectin-intended-animals LOL, I have MS, years ago I took my dog to our local vet for his shots, the dude asked me about my walking issues the cause, and then if I had tried bee stings? Really dude? if that even sounds like a good idea? you try them!
  18. Most people don't have a problem with bee stings or eating peanut butter, it's probably not much of a reach to see some have an allergic reaction to just about anything? My sister in law has severe issues with with cats and her allergies, but no problems at all with dogs.
  19. https://www.cpsc.gov/Recalls/2020/yeti-recalls-rambler-travel-mugs-with-stronghold-lid-due-to-injury-and-burn-hazards
  20. Ray, another thank you, I googled bottom bouncing rigs and nothing was really close, but it showed after your clue.
  21. A bottom bouncer would be my guess, not an early version but a home made one Lots of ways to make them I have used copper grounding wire in the past, it doesn't snag on rocks an easily as a lot of sinker styles.
  22. David, Buffalo area? No I am not going there, LOL.
  23. I have what doctors have called a virulent form of MS, my immune system is attacking the Myelin sheath around my Central Nerve System. That said? I figure if I get COVID I am a dead duck, but there isn't much info on what a COVID vaccine might also do to an immune system. Doctors, nurses want more data before championing vaccines By CHRISTOPHER ROWLAND The Washington Post Doctors and nurses, coping with the daily risk of coronavirus exposure, are expected to get top priority to receive vaccines that could become available as soon as next month. But it’s an open question how many will seize their place at the front of the line. Large health systems, medical societies and the federal government are launching an effort to persuade frontline health care providers to take novel vaccines that were developed, and are likely to be granted emergency approval, in record time. In Boston, major teaching hospitals are rolling out educational videos aimed at assuring medical staff the process of developing coronavirus vaccines will result in safe and effective shots. At New York’s Mount Sinai Health System, a leading infectious disease doctor said he likely will distribute photos of himself getting a shot in a bid to build confidence in front-line staff. Hospitals in urban areas are taking additional measures to make sure ethnic and racial minority members, who form a large percentage of their front line nursing and support staffs, receive rapid information about the safety and effectiveness of the new vaccines. Winning buy-in from doctors and nurses is crucial to gaining broader public support for the vaccines, based on the high degree of trust placed in them by patients. The hesitancy of some health care workers is attracting attention as the first two vaccines, from Pfizer and Moderna, near deployment. Pfizer and its partner, BioNTech, filed their Food and Drug Administration application for emergency use on Friday. Polling last month showed that 58% of U.S. adults were willing to get vaccinated against the coronavirus. A Pew Research Center poll in September found 51% of Americans said they would definitely or probably get a coronavirus vaccine. Medical experts said attitudes among doctors, nurses and the public could shift quickly as new data are revealed. But government, academic, and health-care officials say that significant numbers of providers want more data about the vaccine before it is deployed. Some of the information is expected to be released next month by the FDA. A report released Thursday by University of California Los Angeles researchers said that 66% of Los Angeles health care workers who responded to an online questionnaire (not a randomized sample) said they would delay taking a vaccine. The American Nurses Association, a national union, said one-third of its members do not intend to take CONTINUED FROM HEALTH ON PAGE A1 Jeffrey A. Hirschfield, a pediatrician in St. Petersburg, Fla., has shared his reservations about a coronavirus vaccine on Twitter. “It typically takes five to 10 years to successfully develop and vet vaccine candidates, especially those relying on new technologies,” he said. the vaccine and another third are undecided. New Jersey said last week that its data showed that 66% of the state’s doctors planned to receive the vaccine. Among professionals contacted by the state, “some did not want to be in the first round, so they could wait and see if there are potential side effects,” New Jersey Health Commissioner Judith M. for The Washington Post by Octavio Jones Persichilli said at a Nov. 9 news briefing. “Of those who said they would not take the vaccine, many said they would be more than willing to get the vaccine at a later date when more data is available.” The hesitancy among doctors and nurses is not the same as the anti-vaccine movement, which medical experts consider a fringe trend fueled by misinformation and conspiracy theories on social media. Health professionals tend to be advocates of vaccines, including seasonal flu shots, shingles vaccines, and childhood inoculations for measles, mumps and rubella. But in the case of coronavirus shots, health care leaders say President Donald Trump’s frequent promises about vaccines have raised doubts about the objectivity of agency reviews, as have the speed of the manufacturers’ clinical trials, and unfamiliarity with the novel techniques used by the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines to trigger natural antibodies. “We are vaccines’ greatest champiphoto see DATA on N3
  24. They could have fined him a million, but would he have been able to pay? " Ben Woo and staff later dumped 188 of those dead bass into the garbage " No fine for the staff members?
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