Home » Barbs and Backlashes » Something to Listen To. . .

Something to Listen To. . .

I know what you have all been doing the past few weeks.  While you are “working at home” you are watching a lot more TV, listening to a lot more radio.  By now you have seen all the same stupid movies a couple, three times.  Sports TV is worthless, but still better than sports talk radio is right now.  Sure, you can listen to music, but that gets old too.

The best solution would be the sounds of nature; there is something comforting about that.

But, in the meantime, I have an alternative for you. . . . How about listening to some fish stories?

FishStoriesKickstarterPhoto

I have mentioned Fish Stories website before, but if you have not checked it out by now, it is time you do.  I know some extra stories were being added recently, some positive, uplifting, perhaps funny stories to lighten our moods.  Check it out!

The best thing is, you can record and add your own!

You know that the stories, the oral history is a huge part of fishing!  This is a fantastic way to preserve that important part of our sport, and a way you can participate in preserving your own stories.  You need to do it, and now is the perfect time!

VVAM0003

About daryl bauer

Daryl is a lifelong resident of Nebraska (except for a couple of years spent going to graduate school in South Dakota). He has been employed as a fisheries biologist for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission for 25 years, and his current tour of duty is as the fisheries outreach program manager. Daryl loves to share his educational knowledge and is an avid multi-species angler. He holds more than 120 Nebraska Master Angler Awards for 14 different species and holds more than 30 In-Fisherman Master Angler Awards for eight different species. He loves to talk fishing and answer questions about fishing in Nebraska, be sure to check out his blog at outdoornebraska.org.

Check Also

That Other Edible, Tasty Spring Mushroom: The Dryad’s Saddle

Topside photo of a dryad’s saddle, a.k.a. pheasant’s back or hawks wing, in Nebraska. Photo …