13 On The Road: Blount County man catches fish with his hands, reeling in viral fame and timeless stories
Each week, 米兰体育 13 hits the road to uncover stories that define Alabama鈥攍etting a dart thrown at a map decide where we go. This time, the dart landed in Blount County, where we found a man catching more than just fish.
Meet Robert Earl Woodard鈥攁 retired P.E. teacher, lifelong fisherman, and accidental viral sensation鈥攚ho鈥檚 reeling in attention without ever casting a line.
Woodard doesn鈥檛 use a fishing pole. No hooks. No bait. No net.
Instead, he fishes with his hands.
鈥淢ost people won鈥檛 try it,鈥� Woodard said with a laugh. 鈥淎s far as I know, nobody else has caught one like this.鈥�
Born in 1951, just across the road from the pond he now fishes, Woodard grew up between dirt fields, the classroom, and the water. He spent nearly four decades teaching physical education to Alabama children鈥攖housands of them.
鈥淚 might hold the record for the most students ever taught in the state,鈥� he said. 鈥淎t one point, I had about 500 students a day.鈥�
After retiring, the pond became his classroom鈥攁nd the bass became his pupils.
鈥淭hese fish are like our pets,鈥� Woodard said. 鈥淲e relate to them. We know some of them by name.鈥�
He once hand-caught a fish big enough to break a state record, but let it go to preserve its life.
鈥淢y wife said, 鈥業t鈥檚 just another big fish. Let her live.鈥� So I did,鈥� he said. 鈥淭hat was worth more to me than any state record.鈥�
Woodard never sought recognition. He wasn鈥檛 even online鈥攗ntil his son posted a video of him catching a bass by hand. It went viral.
鈥淒ad, your video鈥檚 been shared 180,000 times,鈥� his son told him.
Woodard鈥檚 response? 鈥淲hat does that even mean?鈥�
Despite the attention, not much has changed. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 look at myself as famous,鈥� he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 just an average guy, blessed by the good Lord.鈥�
Woodard鈥檚 storytelling extends beyond the pond. One day, he sat down at his computer and began typing鈥攐ne finger at a time. He ended up writing 37 stories for his children.
鈥淚 wanted it in my own words. Mistakes and all,鈥� he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how it was back then.鈥�
Those stories 鈥攁 tribute to his family, faith, and the land that shaped him.
鈥淚 hope younger folks get a feel for how it used to be. And for the older folks鈥攊t鈥檚 a chance to remember,鈥� he said.
A fisherman. A teacher. A keeper of time.
Robert Earl Woodard doesn鈥檛 just catch fish.
He catches stories鈥�
And releases them for the next generation.