I call it Noodlin they call call it Grabblin..

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Loggy

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Brought this thread over from Old Board put up by jcchartboy. A good one from our Old that I missed over there. :lol:

Post by Jeff:

Oh Man......

Click on the link below, then click on "view video clip" in the middle of the page.....JEFF

http://www.catfishgrabblers.com/
 
Thanks Loggy,

I saw that and thought it would brighten someones day... :lol:
 
Those people have no fear in those parts....not even the deer are scared.. :lol:
 
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Noodlers Anonymous isn't a 12-step group for pasta fanatics. But its secretive members are fanatical - about fish.

Noodlers fish by reaching barehanded into murky water, logs and submerged holes in river banks, hoping what they grab is a big old catfish, not a snake or a snapping turtle.

"I haven't lost any fingers, but I've lost a lot of hide. You get bit everywhere," declares Howard Ramsey of Paris, Mo., president of Noodlers Anonymous and a handfisherman for 46 of his 58 years. His father initiated him, as did his daddy before him. Ramsey taught his son, Mark, to noodle, and proudly passes along a snapshot of them holding up freshly noodled catfish the size of outboard motors.

"It's a real fight with these fish," Ramsey says, "but it's sporting because you are under water and in his territory. I've had quite a few close calls."

The anonymous part of his group's name is because Missouri has for decades decreed handfishing a misdemeanor punishable by court-imposed fines. Ramsey was socked with a $600 fine about 20 years ago, and says he now noodles outside Missouri. Forms of handfishing, variously called hogging and grappling, are legal in 11 states, including Oklahoma, Arkansas and Illinois.

Now a University of Missouri-Columbia professor has surveyed noodlers about their clandestine hand-to-fin competition against catfish weighing upward of 50 pounds and packing flat heads as big as hubcaps. Most are men, average age about 40, who started noodling in early adolescence and are usually joined by friends.

"This is their form of recreation, and according to noodlers, it's wholesome family fun, social bonding and being with nature. They also are really brave or really crazy, because there are dangers," said Mark Morgan, the professor exploring sociological aspects of noodling.

This year, the Missouri House and Senate overwhelmingly approved bills backed by Noodlers Anonymous to legalize handfishing during June and July, but the legislation died in procedural traffic jams.

The Missouri Department of Conservation, which regulates fishing and hunting, is skeptical about legalizing handfishing but has its biologists studying the practice.

Deputy Director John Smith said the most favored catch of noodlers, the flathead catfish, doesn't reach sexual maturity for four or five years, and yanking them from spawning areas could deplete the fish population and disturb nests. And many Missouri waterways have been smoothed into manmade channels, reducing flathead habitat, he said.

"We do think this makes Missouri's situation somewhat unique, but we are listening and have an ongoing dialogue with the handfishermen," Smith said Friday.

He said the agency also noted the broad legislative backing for noodling, "because the assumption is the lawmakers are representing what their constituents want."

The department is conducting its own survey of attitudes about noodling, with questionnaires being mailed to about 12,000 holders of Missouri fishing licenses.

Morgan said his survey of admitted handfishers, vetted by a university academic committee, offered new nuggets of information. Ramsey helped by forwarding the questionnaire to 184 noodlers, and about half replied directly to Morgan.

Respondents reported noodling an average of a dozen times each summer, most often with bare hands, the law notwithstanding. Acknowledging that fishing and exaggeration are inseparable traditions of the great outdoors, Morgan said with a chuckle that about 40 percent of fish targeted by noodlers reportedly got away.

"You'd consider it a niche sport," the professor said.

For noodling activist Ramsey, those niches have included deep cavities in river banks, 15 feet under water.

"There's nothing like being deep in one of those holes, with someone you trust holding your ankles, ready to pull you out when you kick 'cause you've got the big one," Ramsey said.

"You just hope it IS the big one."
 
nice write up. I've seen guys do this twice looks fun but dangerous. not sure i'd stick my arm in a log hoping a big cat would latch on.
 
IT WOULD BE INTERESTING TO FIND OUT IF THERE HAVE EVER BEEN ANY NOODLIN' FATALITIES...

TERRELL
 
Dangers of Noodling....

Although no deaths have been recorded in the recent history of noodling, this could have more to do with the fact that very little about noodling has been seriously documented until recently. Despite that, almost every instance of noodling involves minor wounds, due to the 'arm as bait' process of noodling. Although superficial cuts are received with every catfish caught, this can be avoided to an extent by wearing gloves and other protective clothing (although most noodlers take no such precautions.) A slight danger of drowning exists, as most holes are far enough down in the water that diving is required to reach into them. At the bottom of a lake with a 50 pound catfish latched onto your arm is not a position you want to find yourself in without help. Spotters can alleviate this danger, but it is still present. It is possible that statistics on noodling deaths are not available or accurate due to the depths at which many catfish live. A severely wounded noodler ten to twenty feet underwater might not have the physical capacity to return safely to the surface of the water, resulting in the official cause of death as death by drowning.

By far the most prevalent danger posed to noodlers are other marine life found in catfish holes. By far more dangerous than catfish are beavers and snapping turtles, who will take over abandoned catfish holes as homes of their own. These animals are always on the mind of experienced noodlers, and although they can level much more serious and lasting harm than the catfish themselves, most noodlers are not too worried about them. Okie Noodling provided anecdotal evidence that beavers have gnawed off the hands and arms of former noodlers, but no disabled noodlers were presented as proof.
 
I agree bout the dangers of snappers for sure Jeff. When I was a kid me Dad & trapped those big ole snappin turtles using bloody throw away beef we got from local butchers baitin up turtle hooks. We set lines out late evening.

The turtles would range in the 25-40 lb class and mean as hell after swallowing a turtle hook and waitin till early morn to greet us. :lol: A 22 LR in the head would slowem down so they would cooperate in baggen them up in a burlap feed sack.

Very long story made short.....I was the burlap bag carrier for my Dad. Well, i was a toten a big ole snapper one morn and he grabbed my ass thru the bag! Dad warned me not to get the bag against me but of course i knew more than him. I have a faint scar today to show ole Dad was right as always. It was one horrifying exprience to say the least. His head was cut-off before his jaws would open even then a pair of pliers was needed. They aint nothin to screw with for sure. :lol:

Its a humorous story as I reminisce back but even to this day, I now and then have nightmares of the experience.
 

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