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<title>net</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/tags/net</link>
<description>New posts about net</description>
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<title>How to Fish for Catfish</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/Fishing/How-to-Fish-for-Catfish.185101</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>This is what your fresh water catfish should look like.</p>
<p><img src="http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/sportales/2008/07/27/238419_0.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>First off, pick an evening on one of your days off. Now I don't know if you buy your worms or not. But I don't buy them. And the reason why is because they are to easily taken off the hook, and chum is the same way. Personally, I get out the old shovel and find some damp soil and dig up fresh worms. Now there not as big as the one's you buy at the store frig, but the catfish go crazy over them. And all you need to do to keep them alive, is put them in some kind of shade.</p>
<p>Now that you have dug up your fresh worms. Get your poles and tackle together, and maybe a chair or two. Get the cooler out and buy or get something out of the frig to eat and drink later. Stop by the store and pick up some ice or food products that you might want to bring along with you. Like a snack or something. Also if you don't want to go by yourself, bring a friend or family member.</p>
<p>If you don't know where to go. Or what catfish are safe to eat. Then here's a hint. Don't go fishing in saltwater. Go down to the creek, or some place with fresh water. And that is the catfish that you want to eat.</p>
<p>So you're at the place you picked out, great. Get your gear and seats out. Find a tree and brake off a branch about 3 feet long and an inch thick with a forked end. Push the stick's end without the forked end on it in the ground about a foot. Get your worms out and fix up your fishing line on your pole with just a weight and hook. Now feed the worm on the hook, making sure the hook is completely covered up. Cause if any part of the hook is seen by you, then the catfish will see it to. That means that you're not going to get a bite.</p>
<p>Cast out your line as far as you can cast it. Let the weight and hook sink to the bottom of the creek. When your line goes slack. Set your pole down onto the forked stick to prop it up. Real the line up a little so it looks as if it is tight. Then set and wait. When your pole starts to jerk, pick it up easy like without jerking it. Wait a minute or two. Because the catfish like to nibble and jerk the line a few times, as if they were playing with it. Now as soon as you feel a huge tug on your pole, then rear back the pole to set the hook in its mouth. Then start reeling it in. To tell when your getting good at fishing for catfish is when you just about know when that huge tug is coming. Timing your jerk back at the exact time of the huge jerk. And If it doesn't want to reel in that easy. Then play the catfish out. That means reel and rear back on the pole , then leaning it forward without reeling. Do this until the catfish stops fighting you as much, or until you get the catfish on the bank.</p>
<p>Congrats! You are now enjoying catching catfish!</p>
<p>&amp;nbsp;</p>
<p>&amp;nbsp;</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FFishing%2FHow-to-Fish-for-Catfish.185101"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FFishing%2FHow-to-Fish-for-Catfish.185101" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Sun, 27 Jul 2008 14:04:08 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>Wrestling News and Notes From the Net</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/Wrestling/Wrestling-News-and-Notes-From-the-Net.125214</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>According to <a href="http://prowrestling.net/" target="_blank">Prowrestling.net</a>, the return of Rey Mysterio has been pushed back due to some post op complications from his arm surgery. He was slated for return 6/1 at One Night Stand PPV because it was in his home town San Diego.</p>
 
<p>Kurt Angle was pulled from the main event at sacrifice after sustaining yet another neck injury while wrestling in the far east. I think that it may be time for mister Angle to hang up his singlet and think about his long term health for a change.</p>
 
<p>It is being reported on <a href="http://rajah.com/" target="_blank">Rajah.com</a> the HHH is in the running for the next big Marvel Movie, Thor. Given his limited acting credits, that's going to be a tough sell to the die hard Marvel comics fan.</p>
 
<p>Finally, the reports of the &amp;ldquo;Coach&amp;rdquo; taking a job with ESPN are apparently not true. J.R, posted a new blog which said that Coachman had not signed with ESPN and as of this posting was still working WWE.</p>
 
<p>I'll be surfing later on today so I might have more things to chat about later.</p>
 
<p>It is being reported on wrestling news world that Curt Angle and Booker T are actively trying to recruit Former WWE star Bobby Lashley. The buzz in the TNA locker room is that its getting close to bringing Lashley into the fold.</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FWrestling%2FWrestling-News-and-Notes-From-the-Net.125214"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FWrestling%2FWrestling-News-and-Notes-From-the-Net.125214" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Fri, 16 May 2008 21:03:36 PST</pubDate></item>
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<title>18 Homemade Fishing Ingredients for Big Fish Catches</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/Fishing/18-Homemade-Fishing-Ingredients-for-Big-Fish-Catches.113013</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>Big fish come to those who wait, but those who fully prepare catch the most! Here is a formula which includes a few things many fishermen overlook and it may well make the difference between big fish success and utter disaster! By a guy who hooked a previous world record carp.</p>
 <ol>
<li>Fish location is not for the lazy! It's a vital fishing "must do" especially for big fish and is the universal fishing rule number one; you will not catch any fish where there aren't any!</li>
<li>Always use a sharp hook of suitable size for your fish, and bait! A sharp hook has always caught more big fish than that old blunt beast of an old pattern hook you find in the bottom of the tackle box even if it was your favourite 5 years ago!</li>
<li>A bait that still tempts the fish you are hunting and has not already lost its "edge" through previous over-use which actually repels wary fish instead! Do your own thing; homemade baits are the closest thing to a sure-fire bet of a bait; readymade baits are often a lottery in actual effectiveness; the ones you choose may already have been "hammered" without your knowledge! When it comes to baits, flavors and rigs, adaptability and creativity is the name of the game. Being prepared to take risks and do new things always pays-off big-time in the end! The best baits are the ones that catch on the day after all!</li>
<li>Lady luck always helps no matter how much you prepare for your fishing! You might hook the one fish you desire within just 5 minutes of your first cast; or it might take you 10 years! </li>
<li>You will need other tackle to enable you to land the big fish you're after including an adequate rod, reel, line and hook link and a strong enough hook not to open-out when the real pressure during the fight reaches its peak, generally on the first run or at the landing net!</li>
<li>You will need equipment to deal with the fish once hooked. You will need a big enough landing net for a start. It's no good using a normal 42 inch carp landing net for a 6 or 7 foot long catfish, unless you are particularly skilled at "folding" such beasts into such a net in the dark, on your own at night, in the rain, on a slippery wet bank! (The secret is drilled rehearsal!)</li>
<li>If you are a responsible fishermen and care for the future of your sport, then you will realise that the fish are the future. Remember, smaller fish will be the personal best fish in the future. So if you care for your fish and intend replacing it back into the water it lives in (and not cooking it for tea,) then a protective mat big enough to completely remove any danger of damage from contact with the ground is an excellent and essential bit of kit. </li>
<li>Suitable unhooking forceps are necessary (as are sharp scissors!) Often unhooking a well hooked fish with your fingers is difficult without causing undue damage due to difficult angles with a barbed hook which potentially might cause damage. Practicing your forceps skills can make hook removal simple and clean so keep them easily accessible. I've seen far too many so-called anglers rushing and fumbling when unhooking fish virtually ripping the hook out of them. This is completely irresponsible and utterly unnecessary and can produce wounds which last for the life of the fish! Just calm the fish down by de-stressing it with plenty of water and wet hands, being efficient, confident and quick. It's like the old dentist joke: &amp;ldquo;You what - you want 200 dollars for just 2 minutes work to remove my tooth; that's a joke!&amp;rdquo;  The dentist responds by asking: &amp;ldquo;Would you rather I took an hour instead!?</li>
<li>Use of fish care kits with swabs and antiseptic solution are very responsible too in helping heal the hook wound and any scale damage or fresh scrapes, or previous wounds on the skin etc. It is very possible by doing this you will enable the fish to recover from capture much faster, even put on more weight quicker in the future owing to less stress and even potentially save a fish's life!</li>
<li>You need a venue containing the species and size of fish you are hunting; it's no good fishing for salmon in a river devoid of them for the past 30 years or for a 30 pound carp where the biggest is 19 pounds!</li>
<li>Have all your camera equipment ready for use! When you catch your personal best fish of a life-time, you want the photos to reliably come out right; there's nothing worse when they don't! (No problem; just catch the same fish twice!)</li>
<li>If you fish at night take at least 2 torches and always have plenty of spare batteries. Its "sod"s law' that the one night or session when the fish feed like mad is the one you find your torch packs up. (Bulbs blow too!) Head torches are very popular and cheap these days and I also use "glow-in the dark" pencil torches to find my torches (and glasses) at night. I hang one on the bite alarms to indicate the position of the rods on dark nights. The dim light of a pencil torch is enough for landing big fish in the dark without spooking them off at the last minute at the net and losing them because you have a thousand candle-power lantern on the bank or have a 100 light-emitting diode torch on your head! (On some carp lakes in the UK, constant use of such torches make the banks at night look like a scene from close encounters of the third kind or club laser show rather than a natural lake-side environment; expect to see a "ufo" any minute!)</li>
<li>If you fish in the heat you need water and loads more of it than you think! You "feel" hydrated long after your body has become dehydrated. Most people in an out of doors setting are amazed how dehydrated they get but this is because they do not realise just how much more active we have to be outside.  Everything takes effort, exertion and energy to get things done and just breathing a lot more loses you much more water and not just in hot conditions. Remember you will usually dehydrate yourself looking around and locating fish, getting yourself and your fishing gear to your swim and having set-up your tents, rods and baiting-up with ground bait if desired. From personal experience; you're not much good as a fisherman with a heat stroke and a dehydration headache; playing a big fish with a bad headache is most un-cool! </li>
<li>Please be aware that fish when first caught come from water that is generally cooler than the air at the height of summer and they will need constantly cooling down with generous amounts of water. Fish skin and delicate vulnerable tissues as in the gills in such conditions can dry out very quickly and be damaged. So be efficient in unhooking fish and very quick with pictures, and keep fish wet! (Wetting your hands before touching your fish really reduces the heat sensitivity shock on them and covering their eyes with a wet sling or sack is very sensible and can help a fish "settle" on your unhooking mat and de-stress it which is very important! I usually take at least 2 big bottles of water just for one night, so you might imagine how much I take for a 3 or 4 days and night session.</li>
<li>A bit more about fish recovery and handling. If it is very hot, keep the fish out of the sun and in the water until the last second while everything on the bank is prepared so the fish is out of the water the minimum time possible. When handling, touch the fish as little as you can to avoid stressing it and utilise your wet unhooking mat to carry it back to the water. It may take some minutes if not hours to get a big hard-fighting fish to recover from a spirited fight. During this time make sure you choose a conveniently shaded cooler margin for the fish's and your own comfort; and be persistent! You may have to artificially work the gills of the fish and wave fresh oxygenated water into its mouth for its energy and metabolism in order for it to recover, which might take an hour or more in very hot conditions!</li>
<li>Polarising sunglasses are one of your key bits of kit because they can make you look cool when standing on the bank like an idiot, even though you might have caught no fish, be sweating gallons and look like the morning after your stag night and your gear might have been almost totally destroyed in a freak storm that the previous night! "Shades" are also good for looking for signs of fish such as cleaned feeding spots and impersonating celebrities. In combination with a hat, they even shade your eyes from harmful rays direct from the sun and reflected back off the water, which can easily avoid you a nice headache after a day watching the water, or a tiny little float!</li>
<li>If you fish in the winter you will always need more warm dry windproof and waterproof clothing than you think! When your rain or snow-proof stuff gets wet and it's raining or snowing, if you have no way to dry out; you'll slowly freeze! A windproof fishing shelter or "bivvy" with a door with zips that really work all the way down to the ground, can literally be a life-saver just as much as a life-jacket when using a boat! Comfortable anglers catch more big fish because they can focus on catching fish instead of just staying warm! (In any country, when you spend the night outside in a strong northerly wind with a minus degrees Celsius wind chill factor, clothes are not just about comfort, but avoiding hypothermia, so beware!</li>
<li>It takes practice to do anything in life consistently successfully. "Beginners luck" is one not so "weird" phenomenon. It is easily explained; often a new fisherman on a water with different baits and rigs, fishing unusual or less popular spots (because he is not familiar with the "popular" ones,) will hit the biggest fish first. (No big surprise there; so be prepared!)</li>
</ol> 
<p><img src="http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/sportales/2008/04/23/149085_0.jpg" alt="" /></p>
 
<p>So there you have it; it's easy, there's nothing to catching big fish! When "opportunity meets preparation," big things will happen!</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FFishing%2F18-Homemade-Fishing-Ingredients-for-Big-Fish-Catches.113013"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FFishing%2F18-Homemade-Fishing-Ingredients-for-Big-Fish-Catches.113013" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Wed, 23 Apr 2008 01:35:06 PST</pubDate></item>
<item>
<title>Dressed for the Net</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/Tennis/Dressed-for-the-Net.37110</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>I remember when I was a teenager, someone invited me to go play tennis with them. Oh, sorry I said, I was busy on Thursday. I was going to the beach. The truth was, I didn't have a tennis outfit. I didn't have the necessary, little short white skirt, never mind the shoes and tennis racquet. Guys, in those days, were expected to wear  the white shorts, and the tennis sweater. Truth be told, I never played  tennis in my life. Oh, I wanted to play tennis. All the cutsie cheer leader types, they played tennis, but not me. 


</P>


<P>
 I was tall, gawky,  and oh, so unfashionable.  Thats why I started to notice with more frequency, that tennis outfits,  as well as the sterotype of the tennis player,  has certainly changed.  My very large, unshaven, unkempt neighbor was in the elevator last week with his tennis raquet. 
</P>


<P>

 Still didn't shave, still got the belly, had on thong sandals, cut off blue jeans and holey T-shirt  and was headed out to play tennis.  If he could stop smoking long enough.  I must admit though,  it was a fine looking racquet.  I don't consider myself an observant person,  even though I try to be,  but what planet have I been on,  that I missed all this?  When did we trade in the little short white skirt , or shorts, for  cut off jeans and T-shirt, circa 1977?

</P>


<P>

  So, out of curiosity, and research for this article, I decided to take a walk  past the tennis courts in the park. Well, it wasn't as clean and pristine as I remembered. I was glad my neighbor wasn't there. I Didn't want him to think, I was stalking him, but thats another article,  isn't it? So there they were, two, very old,  did I say very, very, old ladies, bless their hearts, trying to play tennis. Having trouble, even getting the ball over the net. It was amusing to say the least. I  pretended I was reading, so as not to just stare. Mental note to self: I'm laughing with them, not at them. 

</P>


<P>

Once when two attempts at a serve failed,  the one in the little flowered dress,  just bent over,  grabbed the ball and threw it over the net, over the protests of the other lady in a green jogging suit. Oh, they're so cute. I just have to go speak to them.  Turns out they are Wilma, and Velma. Sisters!  I couldn't get an exact age,  but Velma said Wilma was old enough to know better,  than to throw the ball over the net.  

</P>


<P>
So with that, an argument ensued, and I discreetly slipped away. I felt good on the way home. Yeh, no more mandatory outfits, wear your cut off jeans, and holy T-shirt. Wear your little flowered dress, or green jogging suit. You don't even have to shave. Just get out there and have fun. Tennis has finally come home.</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FTennis%2FDressed-for-the-Net.37110"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FTennis%2FDressed-for-the-Net.37110" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Mon, 30 Jul 2007 02:13:39 PST</pubDate></item>
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