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"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
... On Sun, 08 Apr 2007 21:09:46 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: Got me to thinking about how come such utterly ridiculous crap never happened to me. The only real answer I can up with is: dumb luck. I've had a lot of hook accidents including picking a monster with more treble hooks on it that you could imagine out of the back of my head with a mirror. (That client never went with me again, I'll tell you what.) I've got to believe that the double thumb hook up is a tall tale - as in urban legend or something. I second Doug's scalpel trick, but mostly when I seriously hook myself, as I do at least two/three times a year, I just cut one end or the other off and pull it through. That's where a handy little can of numbing spray can help a lot. :) On a related note, for anyone lurking in this fascinating discussion: If you ever go to an emergency room and the attending nurse or physician hesitates when pondering which tool to use to remove the hook, leave immediately. Once, I had an embedded hook in the heel of my hand. My whole family was away, and I couldn't figure out a good way to stabilize the hook while cutting it. The physician's assistant wandered off and came back with tin snips, which would've torqued the hook in every imaginable direction, making the whole process nastier. I left. I mentioned this episode to a dermatologist of my acquaintance. He gave me a prescription for some cream intended for people who need to inject themselves, but can't handle the pain. Takes about 20 minutes to numb the area. "From the same neighborhood as lydocaine", as he explained it. |
#2
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On Apr 9, 9:04 am, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in messagenews:q7dk131thfcd5usjj8tlgg2rfp0rrr76gg@4ax .com... On Sun, 08 Apr 2007 21:09:46 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: Got me to thinking about how come such utterly ridiculous crap never happened to me. The only real answer I can up with is: dumb luck. I've had a lot of hook accidents including picking a monster with more treble hooks on it that you could imagine out of the back of my head with a mirror. (That client never went with me again, I'll tell you what.) I've got to believe that the double thumb hook up is a tall tale - as in urban legend or something. I second Doug's scalpel trick, but mostly when I seriously hook myself, as I do at least two/three times a year, I just cut one end or the other off and pull it through. That's where a handy little can of numbing spray can help a lot. :) On a related note, for anyone lurking in this fascinating discussion: If you ever go to an emergency room and the attending nurse or physician hesitates when pondering which tool to use to remove the hook, leave immediately. Once, I had an embedded hook in the heel of my hand. My whole family was away, and I couldn't figure out a good way to stabilize the hook while cutting it. The physician's assistant wandered off and came back with tin snips, which would've torqued the hook in every imaginable direction, making the whole process nastier. I left. I mentioned this episode to a dermatologist of my acquaintance. He gave me a prescription for some cream intended for people who need to inject themselves, but can't handle the pain. Takes about 20 minutes to numb the area. "From the same neighborhood as lydocaine", as he explained it.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - That's probably Emla creme. |
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