ArticlesReader.com

 

ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Humor

Spider's Big Catch

Author : Gary E. Anderson
Spider's Big Catch
(From the book Spider’s Big Catch)
Gary E. Anderson
www.abciowa.com

When I was in college, Spider McGee, Charlie Fox, and I loved to fish off the log boom in the river near my house on summer afternoons. We'd sit and talk about life, drink hot chocolate, and occasionally catch a fish or two. But one day, Spider yelled, "Hey, I got something, and it feels big!"

Catching any fish—of any size—was always a surprise, but hooking something big was reason for genuine excitement. As Spider began to reel, his pole bent almost in half.

"This thing is a monster," he said, the drag on his reel screaming.

After twenty minutes or so, he'd gotten it close enough to the boom to get a glimpse of his catch. It was a snapping turtle.

"Ah, man, that's too bad," said Charlie. "I thought maybe you had Old Granddad there, for a second. Cut the line and let him go."

"Are you crazy?" said Spider. "That lure was given to my dad by his grandfather. It was hand-carved in Norway—and he doesn’t even know I borrowed it! I gotta get it back."

"Well, how're you gonna do that?" I asked—and was soon sorry I had.

"I'll just bring him up to the edge of the boom, and you guys reach out and grab it," Spider said calmly.

Now, I'm dumb, but I'm not stupid.

I said, "No, no, no—you bring him to the edge of the boom, and then I'll try to pry the lure loose with a stick."

"OK, that’ll work," said Spider.

As Spider struggled to bring the turtle close to the edge of the boom, Charlie handed me a long stick. I reached out, and the turtle's jaws instantly clamped down on the stick. I lifted him out of the water, and we headed toward the bank.

Once on shore, we set the angry turtle on the ground, but he refused to let go of the stick, the lure still dangling from the corner of his mouth. I reached out with my tennis shoe to nudge him in the back, and instantly learned several interesting things about snapping turtles. First, they're not as slow as you might think, second, they're very agile, and third, they're well-named.

In a heartbeat, the turtle's neck shot out, reached completely behind him, and bit through the end of my sneaker. Then, spitting out rubber and nylon, he turned and looked at us menacingly.

"OK, we need a new plan," said Spider.

"And a new pair of shoes," I added, looking down at my big toe, which was now plainly visible through the hole in my shoe.

"You hold his head down with the stick, and I'll reach out and grab the lure," Spider said.

It was an insane plan, but it was still a step in the right direction, I thought. At least, there wouldn't be any parts of my anatomy at risk this time. I took the stick and pinned the turtle's head to the ground while Spider got down on his belly and crept slowly toward the angry, struggling turtle.

It was then I learned even more lessons about snapping turtles. First, their front feet can be used a lot like a pair of hands, and second, snapping turtles are much stronger than you might think.

The turtle reached up and quickly pushed the stick away and quickly raised his head—now leaving him face-to-face with a very surprised Spider McGee.

The big guy screamed, which was probably the best thing to do at the time, since it caused the startled turtle to reach up with a front foot, pop the lure from its mouth, and then it whirl around and head back toward the river.

While all that was going on, the lure leapt through the air and finally came to rest—firmly lodged in Spider's left ear. He danced around in pain, but we finally managed to pin him down and cut the line from the lure. Then we packed up and loaded him into the car.

All the way home, Charlie and I would occasionally look back at poor Spider, sitting like a sad puppy in the back seat and wearing what looked like a giant hand-carved, bug-eyed earring. Then we’d look at each other—and laugh.

All that happened more than 30 years ago, and although Spider didn't know it at the time, he was a trendsetter. He was the first guy I ever knew to wear an earring, even if he'd had to get his ear pierced by a snapping turtle to do it.

I'm pretty sure they have easier ways of doing that nowadays.

© 2004. Gary E. Anderson. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Gary Anderson is a freelance writer, editor, ghostwriter, and manuscript analyst, living on a small Iowa farm. He’s published more than 500 articles and four books. He’s also ghosted a dozen books, edited more than 30 full-length manuscripts, produced seven newsletters, and has done more than 800 manuscript reviews for various publishers around the nation. If you need writing or editing help, visit Gary’s website at www.abciowa.com.

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. If Real People Ran the Bank - I (a spoof for the heart)
  2. If, An Online Marketer's Internet Addiction Poem, Can You Relate to This?
  3. Pee Here Now
  4. How I Spent my Summer Vacation
  5. Dog Poo - And You Thought You Had Problems
  6. How To Get Attention, or: 'As You Read This, You Feel an Irresistible Urge to Go On Reading!'
  7. Psychiatric Psychiatrist - A Joke on Psychiatry
  8. Computers According to Carol
  9. Voodoo Munchies
  10. Local Author Joins History and Humor To Tell His Stories
  11. The Language of Appalachia
  12. Discover the Lighter Side of the Internet
  13. Military Wives
  14. Marines Don't Take Crap
  15. The Patience of Job
  16. Can't Get There From Here
  17. The Superior Mind -- Man vs. Mouse
  18. Rural Relocation – Considerations and Adjustments
  19. Chicken Rearing 101 – How Not to Raise Chickens
  20. 8 Reasons Why You Should Email Me One Dollar
  21. Timothy Ward's Great Coloring Book Rebirth
  22. Bat Ejection Techniques – Country Survival Course #27
  23. Halloween Howler
  24. Gone Fishing For Trivia
  25. Birds of a Feather
More related feeds
Big Dan; The Beginning | Hubba’s House
After Lee got Spider, he rode him almost as much as me, and between the two of us, the cows were ours. Lee always caught me if he was in a hurry and didn’t have time to “put up with Spider’s shit.” When Lee wasn’t using us, ...

Download Movies: Spider-Man 2
Download Spider-Man 2 movie online. The easiest way to Download Movies.

quesselchens chaos: Christmas catch-up
As I had ever so slightly over-reached myself in the amount and time for Christmas knitting (come on, no big surprise here, really), I decided that both would get one sock each and the second in the new year. ...

Obama gets the Marvel Treatment | O Hell Nawl - The Blog
Marvel Comics was so touched by the fact that President-Elect Barack Obama has stated on several occassions that he is a big Spider-Man fan, they.

Black widow spider goes from grapes to zoo | KOMO News - Seattle ...
"Grapes are perfect because a clump of grapes has enough hiding spaces inside and these guys don't make a big orb web, they make a very tangled web to catch their prey," she said. "They're not after the grapes - they're after the ...

Christmas Catch-Up « The Meekrat Entertainment Group
It’s all your own fault, Big-Time. Seriously. Also, Spider-Man just crammed three puns into one line of dialogue. Except he should have left out the “big” out of the second “big time”, since it just sounds like he’s repeating himself. ...

Pencil Line Sketch, CCG #95 and a big catch up
The theme of the night was to come dressed as villians, so Laura and Madeleine went as dark angels and Alex went as a spider. The party went from 5:30pm to 10:30pm and by all accounts it was a great night. Alex's parents have just ...

Big catch
mohan | മോഹന് posted a photo:. Big catch. a tiny spider (3 -5mm long)with a rare catch! Looks like its some kind of beetle that got caught up in the web. Taken with macro filter on 18-55mm kit lens @ 55mm f10.

SPIDER-MAN 4: Web slingers… amongst the carnage!
What is needed is a big enough threat and I think that that aspect is very much so what the last movie was lacking. The villains in the last movie were really not threatening enough in comparison to the destruction of the city which was ...

Big Hollywood » Blog Archive » The Workshops Of Identity
Films like It’s a Wonderful Life and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, even Star Wars and Spider-man, were films about common, decent people – Americans, obviously, for we all know that even Luke Skywalker was an Iowa farm boy – who find ...