Tyme I know your wife, I expect her to shoot you at anytime! Lol
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Tyme I know your wife, I expect her to shoot you at anytime! Lol
By informing the fishing commuity they can make up their own minds as to what to eat or not. At least they now know what's going on in the water.
I think that Peter had a good post about ORSANCO. They test the water and fish for pollution and the State's issue fish consumption advisories.
But you are right that we can't worry too much about this. We are all going to die someday. Might as well try to enjoy our time on this earth and be happy. :D
[QUOTE=The Beagler;512225]How about name one interstate that's totally safe to drive everyday for the rest of your life? Life is too short worrying about eating fish from the river. Sorry, but I'm not a "doom & gloom" person. We're all going to die from something. Hopefully, I won't die from a contaminated fish in the river...I can just picture the Big Guy upstairs doing that to me after typing this post! Lol![/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Moveon;512255]By informing the fishing commuity they can make up their own minds as to what to eat or not. At least they now know what's going on in the water.
I think that Peter had a good post about ORSANCO. They test the water and fish for pollution and the State's issue fish consumption advisories.
But you are right that we can't worry too much about this. We are all going to die someday. Might as well try to enjoy our time on this earth and be happy. :D[/QUOTE]
Well said! :)
You guys think all this information is 'scary', consider this;
“Fluoride was declared a “strategic and critical” material by the government after WWII,” (Bryson, p. 148). After the war Truman created a task force to “study the United States’ mineral reserves.” The task force became known as the Paley Commission after its chair, William S. Paley. About fluoride the Paley commission found, “Without this little known mineral such industrial giants as aluminum, steel, and chemicals would be severely affected. Little or no aluminum could be produced; steel production would be reduced substantially; the output and quality of important chemical products…would be significantly cut down,” (p. 148)
[URL="http://water.epa.gov/drink/contaminants/basicinformation/fluoride.cfm"]Basic Information about Fluoride in Drinking Water | Basic Information about Regulated Drinking Water Contaminants | US EPA[/URL]
[URL="http://periodic.lanl.gov/9.shtml"]Periodic Table of Elements: Los Alamos National Laboratory[/URL] (Los Alamos National Labratory; Fluorine, the primary element in the fluoride)
[URL]http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/features/fluoride-childrens-health-grandjean-choi/[/URL] (latest findings)
How and why public water fluoridation programs are and have been carried out in the United States a model we are exporting to a great deal of industrializing countries, is revealing about the extant of the collaboration between medical authorities both inside and outside of government, private firms with a vested interest in fluoride production, and national security officials (completely impartial non-human actors, with no private interests or motivations of their own, interested only in national security of course) involved in an ongoing program promoting public water fluoridation policies and lobbying for the implementation and expansion of public water fluoridation programs. All of these actors have different motivations for promoting public water fluoridation and lobbying for the implementation and expansion of fluoridation programs but all engaged actors agree that the risks to human health posed by the chemical are insignificant if the optimal level of fluoride, which is measured in parts per million is added to the public water supply. Conversely there is also a recognition that exposure to above optimal levels of fluoride is extremely dangerous to human health. According to the Centers for Disease Control currently in the U.S. the EPA has set the optimal level between 0.7 ppm (parts per million) and 1.2 ppm. The Maximum Containment Level, the level at which the EPA recognizes fluoride poses a threat to human health is set at 4 ppm.[URL="http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/features/fluoride-childrens-health-grandjean-choi/"]
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I will give you money for your favorite charity .You could give me ohio river fish from your freezer.I'll donate them. I'm not glowing in the dark yet.I eat the small catfish.
[QUOTE="tree11;544245"]I will give you money for your favorite charity .You could give me ohio river fish from your freezer.I'll donate them. I'm not glowing in the dark yet.I eat the small catfish.[/QUOTE]
I eat them at times. Plenty of people eat ky lake fish and that water flows right into the big O. I'm sure somewhere along the line the TN river picks up pollutants. I don't eat a ton of fish anyway, but when I do its crappie and sauger from the mcalpine and cannelton pools
I grew up on them. How many people on here have ever been to a comercial chicken house. They are disgusting. I used to service the propane systems on them they are baaaad. Plus most of you on here probably eat at McDonald's once a week too. I'm guessing most of us probably eat things a lot worse for us than a few Ohio river crappie from time to time.
I was always a heck no, that river is a toilet. Then the guy pointed out how gross macdonalds is and I have eaten that in the past
So I'm changing my vote from heck no to- as little as possible.
Sauger out of the Ohio in winter may be the best fish I have personally ever put in my mouth. The Crappie would probably be just as good. The mercury content in Cumberland is about as bad as the Ohio river but people eat fish out of there every day, whats the difference.
Moderation is the key and all will be good. River is cleaner now than it has been in a century or more....
[QUOTE=mhall;544414]Sauger out of the Ohio in winter may be the best fish I have personally ever put in my mouth. The Crappie would probably be just as good. The mercury content in Cumberland is about as bad as the Ohio river but people eat fish out of there every day, whats the difference.
Moderation is the key and all will be good. River is cleaner now than it has been in a century or more....[/QUOTE]
I go to Canada every year.........the lakes I visit up there have the exact same warnings.......
SCREW THAT...you're gonna die from something anyways. Hell, I even drink the water directly from the lake, and my balls have not melted off yet........