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The saying goes “time heals all wounds”, but what happens when a wound does not heal? Wounds go through many stages while healing and complications at any step can prolong the process.
Read moreIn my 50 years of penning this column, I’ve incurred the wrath of my readership on only three occasions. The most recent related to my suggesting that herbicides might be relate to our pheasant decline. I won’t apologize for that as I just don’t know. My second falling-out related to my suggesting that SD Game, Fish, & Parks might be right in their effort to ban rifles for turkey hunting. I was deservedly bombarded by senior hunters. My third miscue occurred many years ago when I opined that a woman had no place in the guiding business. I took a well-deserved beating on that one.
Read morePerhaps this has happened to you: Your recent cough kept you up for another night, so you went to the doctor. The nurse took your vitals, the doctor asked you some questions, listened to your lungs, maybe looked at your ears and your throat, and recommended rest, fluids, over the counter treatments, and time. It all seemed fine until you got home and realized the doctor did not “do anything” for you.
Read moreFor well over 200 years, a stretch along the Connecticut River has been the heart of our nation’s firearms industry. This area was appropriately known as “Gun Valley.” In alphabetical order, it included Colt in Hartford, CT, Marlin in North Haven, CT, Remington in Ilion, NY, Ruger in Southport, CT, Savage in Westfield, MA, Smith & Wesson and Springfield Armory in Springfield, MA, and Winchester in New Haven, CT. Today the old “Gun Valley” might be called “Death Valley” as far as firearms are concerned.
Read moreRight now ranchers are beginning to get into calving time - a demanding time of year. Other than the sometimes all night monitoring of the cow herd, it isn’t unusual to lose a cow or calf during calving. There’s nothing easy about fooling a cow into thinking an orphan calf is hers, and sometimes the rancher will skin the dead calf and lay its hide over the orphan calf so the cow will “scent” the calf and think it’s hers.
Read moreExperts estimate that well over 80 percent of people will experience back pain at some point in their lives. Perhaps ten percent of adults experience it at any given moment. Back pain is extremely common, and people with back pain can be extremely miserable. It may hurt to move, sit, stand, lay, even breathe. No wonder back pain accounts for so many visits to the doctor!
Read moreI want folks of all age groups to enjoy my column, and I have no desire to become a “poster child” for the elderly. Still, on occasion, I have alluded to my age and the infirmities that go along with it – like needing a stepstool to climb on a horse, etc. Today, because of a recent experience, I’m going to deviate from avoiding an elderly point of view and talk about age limitations. We are an aging population.
Read moreWhen you watch a medical drama on television the main characters are generally doctors, nurses, and patients. We rarely learn about the many extras in the background. In an actual hospital, patients are cared for by their doctors and nurses, along with a large supporting cast and crew. Many of these people on stage and behind the scenes rarely get their name in lights. I would like to introduce them now.
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