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#1 |
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Stop staring at my Avatar.
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Mass
Posts: 366
Credits: 1,831.9
Boat: Carolina Classic 28
Home Port: Falmouth
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Hand care
I've been fighting fisherman's hands 3-4 years now with cracks and cuts not healing all summer and eventually smoothing out by Nov when our northern season is over. About 2 winters ago; the cuts never healed and my fingers started cracking in the cold and dry air. Its been downhill since; cracks would heal and peel and I have not been able to get smooth skin back in over 18 months.
Dermatologist says hand eczema,stop fishing; my physician says moisturizer and a cortisone cream. I can maintain them on a day's trip by being really careful; not rigging bait or cutting fish without gloves and being especially careful to continually rinse salt off with fresh water and then re moisturize with hand cream. 36 hr trip; lots of salt; I was bait boy #1 and they are back in hell again. By the end of the trip they were so cracked I needed help to close a 300# snap swivel. Today they are cracked and swollen; tomorrow the cracks will start peeling. Going to the dermatologist and getting the "stop fishing/stayy away from salt and salt water" is a non starter. I can't be alone here; I'm sure some of you southerner's fight the same thing year round, especially in the cold winter conditions. I am curious how others deal with the inevitable salt water hand cracks and keep your hand cuts and cracks from degrading over a long season. |
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#2 |
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I think Admin is going to let me have this space
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: 5 min from MHC, NC
Posts: 2,055
Credits: 4,623.2
Occupation: Bluewater Realty
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keep several pair of gloves on hand perhaps..
if i get cuts this time of year, and air starts to get dry/cold, my hands crack like you said, mainly on my knuckles, and its a royal bitch to get them not to crack..... specially when working and its cold, i started wearing thin mechanics gloves when outside working/installing, and they help alot. my dermatologist told me that sun has a major roll to play. as does alot of the kayaking i do, constantly wet/salty hands, and im not going to stop kayaking/fishing/working anytime soon, so the "stay away from the water" thing isnt going to work. especially my line of work, where im working alot with pool chemical installers etc, i always get some kind of chem on my hand, wether it be a testing kit, or a chem from an automatic feeder just installed, hands get crap on them... Jesse
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#3 |
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#1 Croaker Hunter
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 103
Credits: 1,537.4
Boat: 25' Trophy
Home Port: OCMD
Best Catch: 72lb BFT
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Worth a try
I have a friend that is a mechanic and he uses this stuff called invisible glove so his hands are not stained black. Some sort of hand cream that you put on before working with your hands. He said he has to re-apply every couple hours.
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#4 |
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Gunnel hugger
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Hampstead NC
Posts: 14
Credits: 1,233.6
Boat: 2008 Mako 212
Occupation: Charter Captain/Sales
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Try looking at a farm supply store for some "bag balm". Used on cow udders.
Worked on a long range boat out of Cali in the early 90's, it was a savior to us deckhands. |
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#5 |
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I think Admin is going to let me have this space
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: High Point, NC
Posts: 3,593
Credits: 3,073.9
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Pee on them. I'm not being rude or joking. Somewhere along the line I heard it works.
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#6 |
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Sit down Shut up And fish
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Central, NH
Posts: 559
Credits: 1,540.4
Boat: Someone Else's
Home Port: Portsmouth, N.H.
Best Catch: Still Looking...
Occupation: Doesn't pay enough!!
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Ditto on the bag balm. Put it on at night and cover your hands with cotton gloves while you sleep...my old man use to get it bad in the winter when he was delivering mail for the post office. He did this for a while and it worked.
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Any fool with fast hands can grab a tiger by the balls, but it takes a hero to keep squeezing. www.myspace.com/nhmtmn1 |
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#7 |
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Master of all things wet
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: The Plywood State
Posts: 11,449
Credits: 12,176.0
Boat: Several
Home Port: Palm Beach
Best Catch: Mrs Deep
Occupation: Killin Stuff
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My hands basically are scars over bone... I used to get that crackin stuff and it went away on its own. I cant be sure but I notice myself clenching and moving my hands frequently during the course of most everything I do. Perhaps this keeps them supple.
I dabble a bit with a guitar and of course type on the keyboard ... a lot. Again constant movement seems to help. I too have heard about pee but am not ready to go whizzin on my money makers just yet... I have to remind myself to wear gloves... I get in trouble comming off the wheel to help my mate and either leader or bill a fish bare handed. This sets me up for trouble again. Handling small fish with spines is another one that sets up issues. Make a conscious effort to avoid nicks and cuts as often as you can. Get the salt off too. I keep a bucket of fresh water wuth a little bleach at hand on long trips. More to slow down infections than to avoid cracking but it helps too.
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C Gull 20' Aquasprt: Florida Deep C 27'Albemarle: Florida/ Bahamas Mirage 23' Contender: New Jersey Mirage 31' Contender: Florida Mirage 43' Viking: New Jersey, Bahamas http://www.sportfishermen.com/deepc/ |
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#8 | |
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I think Admin is going to let me have this space
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Wrightsville Beach, NC
Posts: 3,381
Credits: 8,933.1
Boat: 2 many
Home Port: Bridge Tender Marina & Motts Channel Seafood
Best Catch: My family
Occupation: Charter Capt.
Blog Entries: 8
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Quote:
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Gottafly Guide Service Capt. Lee Parsons 910-540-2464 Booking for Speckle Trout or False Albacore out of Harkers Island Now offering MirrOlure Schools We could learn a lot from crayons: some are sharp, some are pretty, some are dull, some have weird names, and all are different colors....but they all exist very nicely in the same box.
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#9 |
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Weaky wacker
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Randallstown
Posts: 26
Credits: 5,157.3
Boat: 19' Sea Pro Ctr Console "Get Wet"
Best Catch: Randy 1st, then my goliath grouper
Occupation: selling Thumbdingers, LPN @ Job Corps
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This might sound funny, but get yourself a paraffin spa. You can get them at Bed,Bath and Beyond (or places like that). It keeps paraffin in a warm liquid state. You put a good thick layer of hand cream on and dip your hands several times into the paraffin. The paraffin holds the heat for a good while and basically forces the ceam into your skin. Randy has the problem of cracking skin on his hands in the winter and when we do this, no problems. You can also do elbows and feet the same way.
Getting one for home may make you more comfortable than going to the spa or nail salon to get the treatment.
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Prevent Thumb burn....... Fish with protection. Buy a THUMBDINGER !!!! www.thumbdinger.com |
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#10 |
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Crab mustard is good
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Matawan NJ
Posts: 648
Credits: 2,157.0
Boat: 34 Pursuit Express
Home Port: Keyport
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Bag Balm works great but I found this stuff and It works better.
In case you can't read the addresses here they are. 16 Alden Ave, Greenland, NH 03840 It lists on the can " for re-orders, email doduckinn@aol.com Hope this helps, cracking hands and line cuts hurt like hell.
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A jerk on one end of the line waiting for a jerk on the other end |
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