Sometimes this is the case but not always.
Veins help regulate your body temperature. When the body temperature is too warm, the veins will pop out. Veins will also be more prominent in those who have less body fat, and in the elderly because their skin is thin.
The veins are neither strong nor thick of the blood vessels. On the contrary the veins are thin and thin walled. The arteries are strong and thick. They have to bear the pressure of the blood that comes from the heart.
Reticulate venation is where lateral veins radiate away from a central vein towards the leaf margin. The areas between the lateral veins shows strong secondary veins
Depending on how far they stick out, nothing, you're working out and the blood is flowing.
Picket
I think every player needs stick skills. Usually the left side field players need strong stick skills because they use reverse stick more. *This is not fact! But in my six years playing, this is my opinion*
If they are big and kind of stick out a little, they might be varicose veins. Lower extremity veins normally have valves in them to help pump blood from the legs back to the heart. In varicose veins, these valves have stopped working. Varicose veins can be potentially dangerous and can lead to blood clots. I'm pretty sure surgery is the only fix.
I don't really know, but I really think you should go to a doctor.
"Big Stick" (NovaNet)
avoiding un necssary uses
Big stick
It really depends upon weather u are a defensmen offensmen goalie middie and wheather u want the stick to b stylish or strong...the stick does not pick you, you pick the stick