00:00We're like, what? What? I'm up watching for the front trying to GoPro from these different angles
00:05and I'm just seeing them take off like 30 yards out. And I'm like, I think the sea line has
00:11it
00:11and the line is just getting dragged out. The thing is so strong. So we turn the boat around.
00:17Rust goes to the front of the boat. I go to the front of the boat. The captain goes to
00:22the front
00:22of the boat. He gets the rod. Someone grabs a slingshot because these things have little
00:27like pellets and you can get the fish to, you can scare basically the sea line away from the fish.
00:32It's like, what was that? Like, it's like getting scratched for them. They're so tough, but they're
00:37probably really surprised by it more than anything. And we were able to chase it down. It dove down
00:41again, 30 yards. And finally, the sea line let go. After 20 minutes of chasing this thing down,
00:49I gaffed it. I gaffed the fish up. I was like, yes, bring it up.
00:52Was the fish still kicking? Perfect. Yeah, because it's such a tough fish that the animal
00:59didn't have enough time to take care of it and to eat it. It has to like really throw its
01:04head
01:04around to get a piece off because the fish is so tough. So it was just going to a safe
01:08place to do
01:08that. It was just going to an area where it could enjoy its catch and we didn't allow it to
01:13do that.
01:14And the captain said he's never seen anyone get a fish back like that from a sea line.
01:17So we were stoked. That's awesome. Was it a big tuna? It was huge.
01:23Big old thing. Big old thing. You can't see it, Tegan, but it was big.
01:29So we
01:31we served that up. It's all the
01:35So I'm going to work on the rhomboids specifically in this area here.
01:38I stay very superficial to the skin. I work in a straight line
01:42going across. So you can see what she's talking about. The ones closer to the spine in this area
01:50where we talked about some of those paraspinals being a little heightened and restricted. You
01:54can see some of this redness starting to occur around the needles in an area that's hypotonic
01:58or muscle that's constricted. That histamine response is a good thing. I'm in the right
02:02area. I'm targeting tissue that's when it elicits that response. I'm in the right tissue tissue
02:09that's in spasms or tissue that's irritated.
02:12Went and she had a trigger point here at the infraspinatus muscle. So there's part of the
02:18rotator cuff. This is the spine of the scapula. This is infraspinatus. Here are the rhomboids
02:22that I'm working on. Paraspinal muscles here. This is the upper trap. This is T1 and T2 levels
02:28of the upper spine where she has some tension. So I'm going to finish off those levels and
02:33I'm going to let Tegan rest here for 10 to 15 minutes.
02:44The sea lion was okay, just if you're wondering. Sea lions are kind of pests out there, but he
02:51was, uh, he was just, he was probably angry that we took back our lunch.
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