Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Welcome to this country Life. I'm your host, Brent Reeves.
From coon hunting to trot lining and just general country living.
I want you to stay a while as I share
my experiences and life lessons. This country Life is presented
by Case Knives on Meat Eaters Podcast Network, bringing you
the best outdoor podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
The airwaves haved off.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
All right, friends, grab a chair or drop that tailgate.
I've got some stories to share. Keeping your cool above
and below the water. Good night, nurse, We've got some
stuff to talk about this week. I thought my adrenaline
(00:48):
field living on the edge of safety adventures were over
when I hung up my badge and spurs from chasing
criminals around. But alas they were not. I'm going to
tell you all all about it. There's no leading story.
This is the long one, kids, So grab a cup
of Joe and get ready for this one. I still
(01:14):
remember the opening sentences of the liability waiver that my
brother Tim and I had our family attorney draw up
for our guide business. Welcome to Southern Waterfowler's Guide Service.
Waterfowl hunting is an inherently dangerous activity, and from there
it went on to describe that associating your person with firearms, dogs,
(01:37):
water boats, ATVs, inclement weather, and others either known or
unknown to you. Was a risk you took voluntarily and
assumed all the responsibility should any calamity befall you whilst
participating in any activities during your stay. It took a
(01:58):
whole page of legal life alad you couldn't really understand
without deciphering it with a Rosetta stone to say, you're
on your own, pal, don't do anything stupid now. The
reason we had to hire a lawyer to create that
document for clients to sign was because of lawyers in
the first place. It's like the circle of life. They
(02:19):
created and profited from this whole assumed liability thing, to
the point where you can't swing a dead cat around
your head without hitting someone looking to sue you for something,
including hitting them with a dead cat. It's in our
DNA to take risk. Folks have been taking risks since
like forever. For instance, had the Spaniards not risk the
(02:42):
Royal farm on Columbus's exploration of the West, we'd all
be working on the second Thursday of each October instead
of sitting in a tree bow hunting like Queen Isabella intended.
For all of us to do. I'm no stranger to
takeing risks. Anyone who's listened to this weekly struggle be
well versed by now on my continued attempts to unintentionally
(03:04):
martyr myself doing the things that I love most, which
is spending time outside. I've never been what I would
call reckless, but there have been occasions when I have
used poor judgment. I was ten or eleven when I
unintentionally discovered that it was possible to pop a wheelie
on a tractor. I was bush hogging a field behind
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the house. For those that aren't familiar with that term,
bush hogging allowed me to hold forth a simple explanation.
Bush hog is a brand name for a roadary couter
that's pulled behind a tractor to cut high grass, weeds
and tree sap with bushes, all kinds such as that.
And it was powered by the tractor's PTO, by a
(03:49):
drive chef that you connected to the gearbox that ran
the blades. The faster you set the throttle, the faster
the blades turn. It was a big, overgrown lawnmower, and
it was inherently dangerous activity to begin with, and trusting
it to a child even more so, or one would think,
(04:10):
but it was not really. I was well versed on
how to run both pieces of machinery before ever being
turned loose on. I lived on a farm, and it
was part of my very existence, along with the regular
chores of mowing the yard and other activity that kids
of the time found themselves bound too, and what I
(04:30):
liked to refer to as my error of indentured servitude.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
No work, no victuals.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
It was a simple arrangement that required no knowledge of
Latin to understand. I didn't really mind it unless it
was taking the time I'd allotted for hunting and fishing
or running around with my friends. Otherwise, I actually enjoyed it,
especially when I found out I could do tricks on it.
It was a massive Ferston two forty five diesel tractor
(04:59):
manuft action from nineteen seventy six to nineteen eighty three,
and you could buy one in its final year of
production for seventeen thy one hundred and fifty dollars.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
We'd had that one.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
For a few years by then, but it was in
great shape and well taken care of.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
I just sat down in the seat and started it.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Up, set the throttle to the RPMs I'd been instructed
to do, and placed the tractor in the appropriate gear
and range I was allowed to use for traveling from
the barn to wherever I'd be running the tractor on
the farm. I had a different set of instructions for
actually engaging the bush hoog and mowing. It was higher
RPMs but lower gears. I left the barn across the
(05:43):
pond level and slowed down to a crawl to cross
the spillway on the west side of the pond. Reaching
the other side, I increased the throttle above where I
was supposed to, but I was in a hurry to
get to bowing, and with the bush hog raised a
few feet above the ground behind the tractor, it looked
like a diesel pired red Wah with its stinger poking out.
(06:06):
While releasing the clutch, my left foot slipped off the
pedal and I popped the wheelie on that tractor and
rode it for about ten yards before I slammed it
back down. The wheel on the back of the bush
all acting like a wheelie bar and keeping the front
wheels from getting more than a couple of feet above Arkansas.
It scared the living soup out of me and was
(06:27):
exhilaratingly fun all at the same time. I needed to
do that again, and I did on multiple occasions when
the coast was clear of parents and snitches. Popping the
wheelie was my gateway maneuver that led me to power
breaking individual back wheels, allowing me to whip into a
power slide in the mud and change directions on the
(06:49):
dime on that tractor, never thinking how easy it would
have been to flip the tractor over on top of me,
which was a real and probable occurrence that thankfully never
manifested itself in my routine of tractor tricks, witnessed only
by me and our cow dog Luke. Now that was
(07:09):
the extent of my tractor tricks, and thinking back on
it now, I realized how blessed I am to still
be here today. I'm also reminded of the time my
friend Wayne Parnell rode his motorcycle all the way from
where he lived in the country on the other side
of town out to our farm. We were about fourteen
years old. He'd been exactly two months to the day
(07:31):
older than me, and it was the summertime, and I
was the only one at home. When Wayne came rolling
up on his new wheels man that slick, He said,
you want to ride it?
Speaker 2 (07:41):
Heck, yeah, I do.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
This would be the first time I had ever rode
a motorcycle in my life.
Speaker 2 (07:48):
You know how to ride one, don't you? Yep? Sure do?
What's the gears? One down?
Speaker 1 (07:53):
And three of them said got it and I'm gone.
And with that I eased out the clutch while rotating
the throttling way. I went down the driveway, out on
the County Road and around the curve that only a
few short years ago I had mud drifted the family
farm truck ending that escapade from Walker Creek.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Chasing the school bus. You when they remember.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Once I was out of Wayne's line of sight, I
down shifted into first gear, showered down on the throttle,
and released the clutch with the intention of popping a
wheelie and riding it for a piece down the road.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
That was my intention. It was my maiden voyage on
a motorcycle. I needed it to be marrorable. Now what
happened was before Cat cauldlicks behind.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
I was laying on my back holding a Honda motorcycle
in the air like I had been placed there in
the middle of that gravel road like a paperweight to
keep the rocks from blowing away in the wind.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
As gently as I could.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
I uprided Wayne's motorcycle, inspected it for any signs of abuse,
and there was none. I wrote it back to where
he sat waiting for me on the front porch. I
have known him for fifty years. I have guarded that
secret for the last forty four. I feel better now
that I've confessed sorry, Wayne. Outside of playing cops and
(09:23):
robbers with real police cars and chasing real bad guys,
some of which were pretty dynamic, I've kept the danger
needle pretty much on zero when it pertains to purposely
putting myself at risk just for the sake of thrill
and adventure. Let's not to say it didn't happen, because
it did, just not on purpose. Some of the occasions
(09:46):
I've alluded to on this very program. Another that happened
a few days ago. I'm about to I and a
few of my fellow compatriots, gathered in Arkansas are at
the head of a recent Arctic coal front that was
running to be bringing in frigid temperature, snow and clouds
of ducks two thirds of which would turn out to
(10:08):
be true. But as I sometimes say, that's a story
at the end of the day. Anyway, after months and months
of planning with my colleagues at first light and meet
Eater on a duck hunting film we've been working on,
the time came for the rubber to meet.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
The road, or better yet, with the waiters to meet
the water.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
I'd gain permission to hunt a few places that are
a little off the beaten path that some friends have
access to, and it was one of those places our
adventure would begin well before daylight and well below freezing.
We rolled up to the meeting place an hour and
a half before daylight and met another one of my
friends who would lead us, and by us, I mean
(10:49):
all seven of us, a number that included two video
camera men, a photographer, a producer, a black lab named Moss,
and two others along with yours, truly toting shotguns, camera gear,
a dog stand, backpack, shotguns, and three sons of the South,
would occupy a fifteen year old syber side that has
(11:10):
been a fixture at the Cash by You Hunt Club.
The number of ducks and coons and hounds and people
it has carted back and forth along the white and
cash rivers would be far too many for me to
even hazard a guests, but you get the idea. It's
been well used and like our old tractor, it's always
(11:30):
been well taken care of. It wasn't treated as a
circus prop like I did that tractor on occasion, or
a borred motorcycle from a childhood friend. It was a
conveyance to and from the hunting and fishing locations, a
tool in the Geordia to be used, cleaned and put away.
That's how piece of machinery lasts for fifteen years and
(11:52):
in an environment of wearing hardship. And it is with
this contraption that we would all narrowly avoid trap tragedy.
On the onset of this production, we gathered in a
huddle delegating who would ride where, before taking a two
sides beside convoy down the levee and a cross wooden
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bridge into what I like to call the mother Church,
a duck hunting knee deep.
Speaker 2 (12:18):
Flooded green timber.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
It is the one true place to enjoy deconn mallard
ducks and see in the beauty of how they seemingly
sometimes just crash down in through the holes in the canopy,
their wings stir in the air like a big ceiling fan,
and ended in a splash of water that sometimes reaches
where you stand. The image I just struggled vainly to describe.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
Is what we were going to attempt to.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
Capture on film, and even then fails to show all
the wonderment of decin ducks. You feel it as much
as you see it, you smell it as much as
you hear it. To fully appreciate it, you have to
be there with friends in which to share it, And
with friends I was both colleagues and hunting buddies. We
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followed our counterparts down the levee, they and the lead
side by side, and us bringing up the rear. The
bridge that crossed the ditch leading into the footed timber
was fashioned with new six or six treated timbers and
tuber forms. It was solidly constructed, and the lead vehicle
and our element crossed without a hitch, and we followed
suit Brad Clark, the pride of her Nando Mississippi. Our
(13:28):
driver lined up perfectly and eased our way across the
bridge that allowed for a little less than a foot
of clearance. On each side of the six foot wooden
expanse that separated dry clothes from wet ones. The next
instant was quick and in slow motion, all at once.
Now no one can say for sure what happened, but
(13:49):
after the rear tires touched the bridge and we were
one hundred percent committed to the crossing, the rear end
slowly slid left. I sat in the cab, staring straight
at the head of the flooded woods in front of us,
as did Brad and Trevor Nevin, my young friend, who
in his senior year of high school joined us on
this film to play a pivotal role in the message
(14:12):
that we were trying to capture. We all felt the
sudden shift as the left rear tire crept toward the
left edge, either due to the ice that had formed
on the bridge or possibly a board that had become loose,
we don't know. We still don't know, but the cause
was immateial. What did matter was that we were all
doing the math in our heads, and the rate of
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leftward motion was going to surpass the rate of forward
momentum that we needed to reach the other side. Now,
Brad did the only thing he could have done, and
that was to send the foot feed to the floor
and hope the front tires could pull us back from
the brink of extinction.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
It was not to be.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
Now before the armchair quarterback start writing in and telling
me how this and that should have been done differently.
Speaker 2 (14:59):
Save it there.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
And no one, and I mean no one knows how
they'll react to anything.
Speaker 2 (15:05):
Until they're in that situation.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
Giving it all again, same situation, same surroundings. I would
expect him to do the same thing, but next time
I wouldn't ride.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
I'd let him cross byself. Just kidding, not really.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Now back to the bridge, I reached and grabbed the
right front handle of the roller bar, whose cloaqual name
has never been more fitting or descriptive than it was
at that particular moment. My left arm was on the
back seat and around Trevor's shoulders, and as we reached
the point of no return, I grabbed as much.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
Of his coat that I could squeeze into my left hand,
and I pulled him as close to me as I
could manage.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
The side of the side, dipped toward the left rear,
and in one fluid motion, whipped the front toward and
into the ditch. Freezing cold water rushed into the cabin,
passed my waist, and I pulled with all my might
on Trevor's coat to keep him off of Brad, who
I assumed was now completely underwater and pinned there by
(16:09):
me and Trevor. My right leg was contorted and hung
behind me, preventing me from sliding out of the side
be side because I couldn't get out, I couldn't get
Trevor out, and for all I knew Brad was still underwater.
The time stood absolutely still. I didn't feel the cold water,
I didn't hear anything. I could see that Trevor was
fine and of the three of us was in the
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best position to come out unscathed, which he did. He
was sandwiched between me and Brad. Trevor didn't even get wet.
We were all wearing our waiters and Trevor had his
coat buttoned up to his neck. Inside his clothes, we
found out it was dry as a bomb. Brad was
my focus. I struggled as hard as I could to
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free my right leg from whatever was holding behind me,
doing a reverse set up to keep my head above
the water, the whole time calling Brad's name. He didn't answer,
and for all I knew, he was still underwater. This
had gone from good to bad in the blink of
an eye, and I knew it could turn tragic just
as fast if I didn't get Brad above the water.
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My colleague and friend, Max Bart jumped in the water
and was helping hold me above the surface while Trevor
climbed out. Someone freed my leg and I was hauling
Brad the whole time trying to find out where he was.
And I crawled out and as fast as I could,
I turned around only to see Brad standing up looking
at me. He did go under water, but he popped
(17:39):
up pretty quick, and he didn't answer me when I
was calling his name, because he thought I was trying
to get him to free my leg that after he
looked at it, thought was broken because of how it
was positioned. He's the one who freed my legs so
I could save him. Turned out he didn't need saving,
As is off in the case, communication was the problem.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
For the answer, we got a tractor in a back home.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
We pulled the side by side out of the water
and loaded it back on the trailer. Daylight hadn't reached
the horizon and we were headed back to the camp.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
That was enough adventure for the first day.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
We finished up with three more days of shooting and
God on film what I think will be something really special.
I hope it is. You can judge it for yourself
when it comes out later this year. I know it
will always be special to me because of the shared
experience of the hunt in the camp life. We shared
that experience with old friends and new ones. We can
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each tell our own version of that story to others
who weren't there, but they'll never know exactly how it was.
Drendling filled moments with acquaintances and friends make them family
and brothers, but above all will always have the defining
moment that, when faced with adversity, we put each other
before ourselves. I've had a few of those moments over
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my law enforcement career, mostly with the same few people,
and up until a week ago, the folks that fit
that criteria of acting beyond self or just about fill
up a church pew and that's all. But now there's
even less space on that pew. There's risking anything getting
(19:25):
out of bed, crossing the street.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
The best thing we can do is to be ever
vigilant and always have a plan.
Speaker 1 (19:33):
I didn't have a plan in place for riding by
side off a bridge, but remaining calm, assessing the immediate
threats to our health and safety, and acting accordingly was
what everyone did when that.
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Situation presented itself.
Speaker 1 (19:48):
Now that ain't always been the case, even with so
called veteran trained professionals. I've seen it firsthand. But one
of the shining examples of that day, who did you that?
Was an eighteen year old high school senior from cab At, Arkansas.
The world will benefit from him and others like him.
(20:09):
I know they're out there, and I'm proud to call
this one my friend. Thank y'all so much for listening.
I can't wait for you to see this project when
it gets released later on. Thanks for tuning into the
Bear Grease channel and listening to me and Clay. If
(20:30):
you're so inclined and have a minute, please share our
podcast with others.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
That you think might enjoy it and leave a review.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
If you have a chance. It really helps to spread
the word about what we're doing here.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
Until next week, this is Brent Reeves signing off. Y'all,
be careful