Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
If you're gonna go full Canadian, you have to constantly apologize.
I'm so sorry about that, but right away I put
my hand right over the whole clients had no idea,
They had no idea what just happened. You could probably
get away with living in your friends driveway longer because
he can just tell the neighbors like, yeah, that's my
buddy's boat. Do I blur the naughty bits on the
(00:29):
back of the spoon? Do I let it ride? I
haven't really decided yet. Good mornings generate anglers. And welcome
to Bend, the fishing podcast that once tried to patch
a pair of waiters with big lead chew and trailer
bearing grease. I'm Joe Surmelli and I'm Haden Samack, and
I was more of a bubble tape man myself. Oh
that's good, that's good. There's something wrong with bubble tape.
(00:51):
How about razzles? Do you ever have a razzle? It's
candy than it's gum razzles? No, No, you never had
a razzle. You come out here, when you come back
at here and buying you some razzles? Um, anybody who's
had a razzle? You you were you were sure each
time it just wasn't going to become gum like you're
just about to swallow, and then suddenly it was gump.
Total mind freak. Anyway, it cares about razzles. What's shaking
(01:14):
this week? We've got kind of a boat theme going
on here. We've got a sort of near death experience
on a boat, and then we've got a boat that
cheats death. It comes back from the dead, but is reincarnated,
um and isn't really a boat anymore, which which beat Yeah, exactly,
which beats the more common alternative of talking about restoring
(01:36):
a boat for ten years while it just disintegrates in
the backyard. You just you just gotta let those go sometime,
you know, you just gotta give it up. Just let
it go. Man. Well, though, surprisingly the reincarnation of this
boat could be more appealing to the misses. We'll see,
we'll see how that goes. Anyway. So, uh, before we
(01:56):
move on here, man, what's shaken? What's shaken on the
west side? Anything good? How you do one? Uh? You know,
big game just kind of wrapped up here not too
long ago, so I'm kind of going through like that
reorganization process, and you know, my closet and all my
gear and getting all that ship squared away. So that means, um,
I'm cutting up an elk. Can no longer be your
excuse when I call and you can't take the call.
(02:19):
I got like four mule deer quarters in the freezer
right now I'm going to deal with at some later point. Um.
You know, a lot of the trout water out here
fish is great all uh all winter long. So I'm
really looking forward to some winter fishing. Uh. Let's see,
I'm really really really looking if it gets cold enough,
I'm really looking forward to some hard water. And you're
(02:40):
not going to believe this, but one of my best
buddies around here is our HR person, Christine. And see,
I thought you'd be more surprised that, like, I had
a buddy in HR. I thought that would be like,
that's a power move at any company. You want to
be friends with the HR people. Good for figuring. I
(03:03):
just figured with the ship that we say, you'd be
surprised if NHR person took a shine to me. Uh.
But anyhow, Christine's from Michigan and she's real into ice fishing.
So we've been scheming to hit it hard this year
if it ever gets cold enough. Yeah, well, I know
it's been it's been kind of abnormally warm out there,
right yeah. Well anyway, Uh, speaking of ice fishing, you
(03:23):
mentioned the other day that our friends at thirteen Fishing,
our friends and sponsors, they actually did get you that
care package we talked about, right, Uh, yeah man, they Uh.
One of our listeners wrote in the other day saying
that there's a lot of yeah man in these episodes,
So yeah, man, there is. I forget who it is,
(03:43):
but shout out to you guys. Anyhow, you said something
about getting me some gear a couple of weeks ago,
and sure enough, the other day a couple of mysterious
boxes appeared on my doorstep full of ice fishing gear,
and I could not be more excited to get out
there and use it. Yeah. The thirteen guys are great. Um,
what you get? What's your what's your favorite thing? What? What?
(04:04):
What was in the box? Tell me it was in
the box? That was your favorites in the box? In
the box? Phil drop that please? What's in the box?
What's in a box? Well, they sent me a couple
of like rod and real setups, and then I'm pretty
sure every single finesse, babe, they offer like literally literally
(04:26):
like every single one that they offer. I I just
love the look of that flash bang though. It's just
like fishy, So I like those. Uh. They also sent
some of those freefall omen combos, and who knows, man,
like I might even trick some folks into thinking I
know what I'm doing with all this gear. Anyhow. Yeah,
(04:47):
as if I wasn't already looking forward to hard water,
now I'm really looking forward to hard water. What have
you been up to? A little trout, little steel brown
trout had been pretty randy on a few of the
local rivers and just got back from the Niagara River,
one of my favorite places to fish, and and we
we we messed up the lake trout pretty good and
had a nice little i'd say a smattering of steel.
(05:08):
I could have used more steel, but they were just
being finicky because of the conditions. So I'm happy to
have just gotten a few um in the tough conditions.
But yeah, man, I know you're headed back east soon,
and I'm we've we've talked about it behind the scenes
and now publicly, like we should get out together and
float for those browns while you're home. Yeah, man, you know,
I'd love to do that. Yeah, I could. I could
(05:29):
totally see that happening. I'll bring the I'll bring the
streamers and rods and stuff, and you you just, you know,
bring whatever special items you need for fishing. They're gonna
be doing a lot of dube rolling when you're living
in a van down by the river. I am not high,
(05:49):
I know, I know, but I can't help. But it's
a thing now, it's just funny. Um. Anyhow, if we
get together to float, I will say, it will be
in the comfort of my trusty clack of craft, which
is of course a hard drift boat. I see what
you're doing. Yep. Now, if you, let's just say, hypothetically
you're on the fence about buying a raft or a
(06:10):
hard boat for all your floating needs, We've got a
smooth move for you this week with a colleague of
ours that just might sway you toward that fiberglass Why
all right, Joe, So, we got another one of my
friends from the Meat Eater office and here, uh he's
(06:33):
currently are what what do you social media manager? Communications coordinator?
What is it? The latter communications coordinator? We got the
communications coordinator in here with us. Uh. Corey Caulkins former
fly guide as well. Man, how are you? I'm good.
How are you guys doing today? I think this is
terrific because again, like I work with Corey too, but
(06:54):
mostly through email. So having you out there and we're
finding out that all these people have these great fishy
story reason we're guides and stuff, it's terrific. Oh yeah,
I mean like there's so much of the Mediator Office
really is made up of folks who just live this
ship in like a big way, you know what I mean?
Where were you guiding? Mostly? Man? Started out up in
northwest Montana in the Bob Marshall Wilderness for half my
(07:18):
career and then the last seven eight years down here
in Bozeman. So you guided in the northwest corner. So
is that like the Kootney Drainage. I've only ever been
up there once, not that far northwest? Uh, the Flathead drainages? Okay,
got you all right? It sounds good. Okay, So that's um.
I feel like that's kind of the part of Montana
that not as many people go to. I'm sure you've
(07:39):
seen much more, many more crowds on the water when
you switched to guiding out of Bozeman than that part
of the state, right, Yeah, true, it's uh, it's still
a little bit of a secret. There's some secret streams
and corners up there, but there's not many secrets left anymore. Well,
I didn't. I didn't just spoil anything because Kutney is
pretty damn big river that's very hard to fish on foot,
if I'm not mistaken. So that was not a burden, correct,
(08:01):
not at all. So Quarry is with us this uh
this morning to uh to give us one of his
smoothest moves man. And this one, actually, Joe, it does
not come from a mega sport or it were a client.
It comes from from our man, Corey himself. Yeah, this
(08:24):
was a very smooth move on a terrible act on
my part, very part of the state of which part
of Montana is this smooth move coming from the northwest
or the Bowsman area, the northwest on one of the
famed flathead drainages. So so lay it honest, man, because
I know Hayden knows this story, but I don't. I
have no idea what's coming. So I am very excited.
(08:47):
So there's this one stretch of river that we float
the attapt to pack your raft down this really steep hill.
It's a quarter mile. Takes about four trips. You roll
your raft up, put it on a hack frame, pack
it down the hill, go back up, which is the
worst part, just going back up the hill. Take your
frame down, which is extremely awkward, corners of the frame,
(09:09):
raft frame bouncing all the way down. Go back up
one more time for your gear. When you're at the bottom,
pump up your boat. It's a long process to get
a boat in the water on this stretch. It's really
it takes a couple hours. You want to try and
be there before your clients, and then somebody drives your
clients there. If you have the energy, you walk back
up the hill, walk your clients down because it's kind
of a treacherous trail getting down. So we're I don't know,
(09:32):
eleven am a third of the way through our trip,
catching plenty of cutthroat, and I think a client got
tangled up something. I had to drop anchor. So I
dropped the anchor in a not very good spot. Water
was a little fast, and hopefully other people can learn
from this one. I'm sure it's happened too many folks,
But I dropped the anchor in between some slab rocks.
(09:55):
Finish on tie and this not we're ready to go,
go to pull the anchor up. It's stuck, very wedge jammed. Yeah. Yeah,
I've been here and it sucks. Yes. Asked the client
in the back to do what he can in the
back to pull on that thing. He can't get it.
He's about to snap the collapsible chair in a half
trying to yank on this anchor rope. I'm back there
(10:16):
with him, trying to like hold him up and pull
the anchor rope at the same time. I actually asked
the kid in the front to row as hard as
he can upstream and while I pull on the anchor rope.
It was a debacle, right, I'm sure we were stuck
there for fifteen minutes trying to get this thing unstuck.
It came to the conclusion that anchor is staying right there,
and I better cut the rope. I don't want to
(10:36):
just leave the rope, which maybe would have been smart,
because the rope would have left to, you know, place
to come look later. The candy cane blue and white
long anchor rope. So I decided to cut the rope.
So I break out my pocket knife and brilliantly cut
down on the rope and I sliced right through that rope.
(10:58):
It's very sharp knife and punctured the raft, brand new raft.
This was the second voyage for this raft, RS Otter.
Oh no, so I sliced down instantly, but right away
put I put my hand out over the hole. Clients
had no idea, they had no idea of what just happened.
(11:23):
So my hands on this hole, my hands shaking because
of so much air is trying to come out, and
I wrote us down about another quarter mile with one
hand on the oars, the other hand on this little
slit three slit and the brand new otter, and I
just go, guys, I think it's lunchtime. So we go
down to this spot pull over. At this point, the
(11:46):
whole back end of the boat's drooping pretty bad. Like
the guy in the back. They still not said anything
like do they still not know what's going on? Even
though they were back they were fishing still. I mean,
I'm rowing out one hand, so it's just like this
total oblivious nous. Yeah, they're fishing a clue. I just
really like crab strokes man. Yeah, it was it was
awkward rowing. Luckily it was an easy spot. In fact,
(12:06):
I'm pretty sure they caught a couple of fish between
the knife incident. And yeah, it's pretty silly fishing back there.
So we pull over do lunch, and luckily I had
a patch kid with me and had never actually had
to put this to work, but I knew exactly how
to patch that boat. Got are all patched up, pumped
it back up, they had lunch, We continued on our day.
(12:28):
They had no idea that had ever happened. That is
like a smooth move in more way than one. It's
the smoothest kind of move, because that's what a good
guy does, like the best guide. It's like it's like
an airline pilot, Like you could be like crashing, but
like the good guy, like you will still be eating
your complimentary you know, pretzels and not have any clue,
(12:50):
like like unless you're like death is eminent, like the
good ones know how to just keep that under wraps man,
And there's so many great captain stories like that. We're
same deal, Like some catastrophic ship or potentially catastrophic shit
is happening right now, but as long as the clients
don't know, like you are doing your job so as
the smoothest kind of smooth move. The recovery was smoother
(13:11):
than the incident. It has everything a good smooth move has.
Man it has like you know, a colossal cup, which
is like funny, and then it right like you said,
it has that perfect It's like airline captain quality poise. Well.
I also think we can all identify Corey with with
with slicing the boats. It's one of those things that
(13:32):
in your head here like I would never do that,
like that will never happen to me, Like I would
always have like no, not to have the sharp objects
going down into the raid because I ran a raft
for years before I got a hard boat, right, And
I was like, so I didn't trust other people with
hooks and things, right, but I trusted myself and I
was like, I know how to make sure I don't
(13:55):
pop this. So it's just one of those things that's
like you never think that's going to happen until it does.
Like and I'm sure that was a split second of
cutting and you were just like, cannot believe I just
right now. I was so frustrated that I couldn't get
the anchor up I mean, I've gotten a wedged many times.
It is probably my fifth year guiding, and we could
not get that thing up. It was driving me crazy,
(14:16):
as you know, the pyramid anchor, and it was so
rounded over it wasn't sharp anymore, and I could not
get it up. So I was like, oh screw this,
took out my knife and slashed. Isn't that when most
mistakes are made, when you're just in like a complete
fit of rage, you know what I mean? Like cool
heads prevail, although like I would have been just as
(14:37):
piste off about that, um and I've I've I've cut
off a few anchors before for the same reason. So
if anybody out there gets their anchor stuck, make sure
you cut up on your rope and not down. Man.
I love Corey. That guy's genuinely one of the best
(14:57):
outdoors and I know, dare I say the best. I
respect for you guys are saying that you're breaking my heart.
You said it. I don't know Corey as well as
you do, and he might be the best, like except
for that one time, just at one time, he wasn't
quite the best. Everybody slips up now and then sometimes
with a large knife anyway, h a guy like Corey
(15:21):
is like bound to have some smooth moves man. And
as far as like our smooth moves go, I think,
like that's pretty high up he's done. It was pretty
smooth in the sense of like, you know, uh, cause
and effect. Like it was like a very clear, clear
cut part in the pun. Very good. Yeah, I like fun.
That dude has done a bunch of really cool ship
as a guy. Uh, you know, just knowing him as
(15:43):
a buddy, you know, he's done a ton of back
country stuff, a lot of boats stuff, um, including I'm
pretty sure a bunch of trips on the Madison, which
gives us the perfect segue into a very special edition
of fish News. Fish News that escalated quickly, very quick
(16:04):
bit of housekeeping I have to share. Uh, we got
a bunch of notes about our Canadian themed show last week,
all very nice, very nice. Um, but I got I
got a message from one listener and he says, Um,
you didn't apologize enough, Like if you're gonna go full Canadian,
you have to constantly apologize. Here, I'm so sorry about that. Yeah,
(16:29):
so they up here, you hold he said, you hold
the door for somebody, and you apologize for doing it.
Um so I got I gotta kick out of that anyway. Um,
here's what's going on a little bit different spin on
news this week, Hayden, tell the good people exactly what's
going on here. So the fishing world, uh, you know,
(16:50):
was kind of in the national headlines for a little
bit last week because of some recent events on the
Madison River. Um, as many you know, the Madison there
was a damn malfunction and in short, I mean we'll
get into it more in like the interview, but the
water levels dropped precipitously very quickly, and there was genuine
(17:11):
concern that this was going to result in some sort
of ecological like disaster for the Madison. Unluckily, it was
remedied fairly quickly, and the general consensus is this isn't
gonna be something with a lasting felt impact. That said,
we felt as if it was like really important to
(17:32):
bring as much light as we could to the issue,
not so much because it ended up being a really
horrible and serious thing, but more because there was so
much conversation surrounding it and we wanted to kind of
give people the bigger picture of what went on. Yeah. Yeah,
So I was actually I was away when this happened.
I just got back from three days on the Niagara River. Um,
(17:52):
and you know how it is like when you're out
in the cold all day with your boys and you
get in and just want to go like eat you know,
wings and drink beers. So like, I saw something going
on here. I caught a few of the headlines. I
saw it in kind of bits and pieces. But then
when I finally sat down and read the piece on
the Meat Eater website by our colleague Sam Longdren, I
was like, oh shit, right now, I know. Um, a
(18:14):
bunch of the Meat Eater team like jumped right into
action on on this and and went to ground zero,
right Yeah, a bunch of our colleagues were immediately. I
was getting text left and right. Uh you know, Oh
we're going out. We're going out. Do you want to come?
You know? And I think that really speaks to it's
like a microcosm example of the response that was felt,
(18:36):
you know, from all sorts of you know, different areas.
I heard of people coming from as far as South Dakota,
you know, to go help. Yeah, well, I mean you
have to consider we're talking about one of the most
famous trout waters in the entire country, if not the world. Um,
and that this also hits so close to home for
you and everyone else out in Bozeman. Um. You know,
you had said I'd like to fire up a special
report on this, and I was all for that. So
(18:58):
who is joining us to tell everybody? So today we
have Andrew Welch. He is the leader in hydro power
license compliance for Northwestern Energy. And we also have John Way,
who is the owner of the Tackle Shop in Ennis,
which is the oldest fly shop in Montana. So yeah,
(19:22):
I think we're gonna have a a really good conversation
and it's gonna bring to light a lot of like,
you know, problems that existed before, how we're dealing with
this particular problem and what we're gonna do to avoid
problems of a similar ilk in the future. Absolutely, So
we're gonna We're gonna talk to John and Andy and Phil.
(19:44):
I'm not really sure who you're gonna judge with this one, Um,
but this wouldn't be bene if we didn't hear from Phil.
So when this is all over, Phil surprised us. Alright,
So today on the show, Joe and I are doing
a special edition of Fish News covering some recent events
on the Madison River that made national headlines. For those
(20:04):
of you who don't know, Last Tuesday, a malfunction at
the Hebgen damn uh caused the water to drop to
dangerously low levels on the Madison River. After the malfunction
was discovered, volunteers flocked to the Upper Madison and worked
to relocate fish stuck inside channels, while cruise from Northwest
Energy worked by all accounts, NonStop to restore flows. After
(20:26):
forty eight hours, the dam was fixed and the flows
river restored. With us today to talk about it, we
have two guests, John Way, owner of Montana's old owner
of Montana's oldest fly shop, the Tackle Shop in Ennis,
and Andy Welch, leader of hydro power Licensed compliance for
Northwest Energy. How is it going, guys? How are you
(20:48):
happy to be here? I appreciate you guys taking the
time to be here so much. This is this is terrific. Yeah,
for real, Um, It's something that a lot of folks
are deeply concerned about, and it's kind of like a
nuanced issue to unpack. And so it happened like two
experts like yourselves. He's going to be I think hugely
valuable to clarifying a lot of like the situation. It
(21:12):
also makes it feel like we have a grown up podcast.
We're not just grabbing ridiculous news stories, all right, So look,
let's sort of get like right down to it. Uh, Andy,
I want to start with you, man, Can you walk
us through exactly like what went wrong? Sure? Yeah, thanks
for having me this morning. I appreciate it, you bet so. Yeah,
(21:32):
the the malfunction that the damn was was caused by
a coupler that broke essentially, and so the shaft that
controls the outflow gate at Hebgen became in two pieces.
The lower half was attached to the gate and it
fell to a more closed position, reducing the flows to
(21:54):
the Madison, and the upper part was still attached to
our controls. We lost full control all of that outlet
gate and uh it closed to a more closed position
about a foot and uh and reduced flows down to
right around twofs in a matter of a few seconds. Yeah, yeah,
it was. It was pretty drastic and right now right
(22:15):
this story, um, a lot of it is based on
eyewitness accounts. So John, I want to ask you to
give listeners a feel for that. Can can you talk
about a little bit about what you saw in the
Madison since you were right there? Yeah, absolutely, and thanks
for having me today, guys. Um. Sure, my guys and
I were up there the day it happened, as well
as the second day when the big rescue effort UM
(22:37):
came underway. Most of the side channels were dried up
to pockets kind of in the holes in the side
channels and kind of along the edges. There was still
a main channel UM with that most of that two
cfs flowing down the main channel. UM, but the flow
to those pockets was there, There was no flow to
(22:58):
those pockets UM. In me of the pockets there were,
there were fish, sculpins UM all that kind of trapped
in those pockets because the water came down quick enough
that they couldn't escape back to the main channel. And
this was all pretty much UM between the lakes between
head Get and Quake Lake. Below Quake Lake, UM, conditions
came down I think more more gradually and so those
(23:21):
fish had time to move. So the real uh stress
area I believe was between head Getting Quake Lake. Sure. Well,
just quick follow up to that, like in terms of
stressing the fish, right, I would imagine that that sort
of one thing on the side of all this, on
the good side, was that this happened in the winter.
I imagine this would have been a much bigger issue
had it happened in the middle of the summer. Right, Oh, absolutely,
(23:45):
at least in our our respect. But the brown trout
had just finished spawning, so there were reds all, you know,
quite a few reds in that upper section. Um that
did get dried out, and so that that's one of
the big concerns moving forward. And Andy, I'm sure you
saw a similar thing kind of going down there. Yeah,
I totally agree with that. Um, you know it, it
(24:07):
could have been a lot worse than a lot of
different circumstances. You know, the heat of the summer would
have been pretty catastrophic for fish and aquatic life there.
But also if it would have been a lot colder
and we would have had all of these exposed areas
freezing up overnight, and that can also be much more
detrimental than the conditions we saw. And so it was
actually with the lack of a very short freezing and
(24:31):
uh cooler temperatures, things would have held their moisture for
a longer period of time. And and we I think
we were rather fortunate relative to that, right, I think
we can all agree that we did get lucky in
that sense. Uh. It seems like it seems like a
lot of the it seems like the biggest problem in
the eyes of a lot of folks was the river
(24:51):
falling while operators worked on the assumption that it was
an instrument glitch. Um to be like kind of just
blunt with it, I is, how come somebody just didn't
go out and check on it? Yeah, So you know,
it's that's a very complicated question relative to operating a
facility like this. Um, what it comes down to have
agin as a you know, it's a remote facility. We
(25:12):
don't have someone there, man, So we have a lot
of instrumentation in place to monitor what's going on, and uh,
you know, are the way things are set up. We
did not have indication right away that, um, there was
an actual problem within the damn facility itself. And so
we saw the U S G S gage. There's a
lot of history with U S G S gages going
(25:33):
up and down and and uh, and so one of
the first things we did was looked to see do
our controls show any change from what we saw yesterday essentially,
and then if no, can we verify this is a
real condition on the ground, call usgs UM you know,
have them check their instrumentation UM to see if if
(25:54):
the U S g S was real. From that point on,
we sent people as fast as we could get them
up there to get on site and get eyes on
the ground. We do have cameras at the facility, they're
more facility based, and so those were limited to our
value of actually looking at the river conditions down below.
And then we started receiving notifications from outside folks that
(26:16):
showed pictures and stuff like that that we were like, okay,
this is real, um, and we that's when we started
our response. So this brings up kind of like an
important point. Uh, there are there are a lot of
reports saying that people tried to get in touch with
Northwestern for you know, some folks estimated as many as
like twelve hours between when this was noticed and when
(26:40):
you know they actually got through. Could you speak to
that at all? Yeah, you know, it's that's a really
hard question to respond to in the way that who
knows where they were calling who they're trying to contact.
But you know, we we do stop by flas shops
um about quarterly with our my staff. We leave our
contact info. UM. We you have websites for the Madison
(27:01):
that you know has some contact info. So um. I truth,
we don't understand who they might have been trying to
get ahold of M. But I'd have to have more
information obviously to evaluate what really happened. Yeah, and see,
I also think that's a little unfair, right, But one
thing you said about the the gauges that that sort
of resonates with me just because not just you guys,
(27:23):
but everybody fisherman in general put so much stock and
like you're always looking at gauges on your phone and
wind gages and all these things, and like we we
we we take that to heart. But in reality it
just goes to show that sometimes those things are wrong,
you know what I mean, Like you need to have
eyes on the ground, or or even in fishing scenario
where it says the river is doing this, it might
(27:43):
not be. So it just sort of it's like a
little like how reliant we are on on those kinds
of things, you know what I mean? I totally agree
you know, it's it's equipment. It can malfunction, it needs
to be adjusted to calibrate it. There there's all sorts
of things with us G S gauges. They do have
a good alarm system set up on those. It just
happens to be that the Madison River below Hepgin we
have a minimum flow of a hundred cfs that's allowed
(28:05):
by our license, and so we have alarm set. Like
for me personally, I have a USGS alarm set at
that level. We didn't quite drop that low, so that
alarm was never triggered. It was the rate of change
that was the catastrophic impact, but it wasn't necessarily the
full low level of discharge from the facility that would
(28:27):
cause us to be alarmed. Sure, and I think another
important thing to remember too. And John, I'm sure you
could you could speak to this, but um, you know,
there's there's so many damns like this all over the country,
so many a lot of fisheries have this here, and um,
you know, anglers come to rely on these tail waters.
They're great fishing. Um. But you also can't forget that
(28:50):
then it puts sort of humans between you and the wild.
Like if you have these things and a lot in
a lot of cases, these damns create such great, great
trout fishery ease. But um, you know there are people
operating those and it is it is mechanical and things
are going to happen from from time to time. Now,
no real quick, before we get there. John's trying to
(29:10):
get a word in edge. I'm sorry, guys, and I
agree with what you're saying, Joe. You know, the masison
is so great because of the damn. We're always kind
of really blessed with that clean cold water that flows
all year. And something you said, Andy, Um, the minimum
flow required is a hundred. Is there any plan going
(29:32):
forward to to bump up those alarms to maybe two
or three gfs so you guys have a better idea
or more insight UM on a quicker basis. Yeah, for sure.
I actually already adjusted by water alert for the U
S g S. But yeah, there's there's there's certain essentially
(29:54):
stages associated with the different levels of cfs that we're
releasing from Ebgin that um have different impacts on the
river there and you know a hundred and see it
it's a hundred and fifty cfs is are low UM
and then six hundred cfs at Kirby, which is downstream
at Quake Lake. UM. So you know, there's there's definitely
gonna be a follow up on this to look at
(30:16):
not just alarms, but everything in the mix on you know,
what we can do to prevent the equipment failure, what
we can do to respond in a more quick and
controlled manner. There's also gonna be UM looks at just
impacts everything you can think of, and all of those
well being brought into context and say, okay, what do
(30:36):
we do next time that would alert us quicker be
able to have us respond quicker. UM. But for instance,
you know below Hebgin, somewhere around three cfs is where
that first side channel in the corner right there starts
to lose flow, and so we manage it the best
we possibly can to not go below that UM and
(31:00):
a six hundred cfs at Kirby onfs all the way
downstream it and it's UM really drive how much water
we're releasing from Hegan. So I think it's important to
note that like this story is not as much about
an environmental catastrophe as it is a close call. And
I think the reason that it was a close call,
(31:21):
was because delayed or not. Once the issue was recognized
by you know, volunteers and Northwestern, Um, the response was
you know, pretty swift and decisive. And you know, I
think like that like kind of ought to be you know, celebrated.
So John, I want to start with you, and then
I want to go back to you. Andy. Uh, John,
(31:44):
can you describe the volunteer response? And then Andy, Uh,
you know the same question to you. Can you talk
about Northwestern's response? Yeah? Absolutely, Um, the volunteer response was
pretty overwhelming, you know. UM, and I believe it was
kind of driven by social media. It really kind of
shows the power of social media. Uh, every fly shop,
(32:06):
every outfitter from west Ellstone all the way down to
Bozeman here, Uh put something out that this was this
was an issue. There was this rescue effort to try
to help save these fish that were trapped. UM, please
show up and help and and uh the response was
was unbelievable. Um that I think it was Wednesday. I
(32:26):
drove up the valley and every parking spot had three
or four cars in it, you know, with people out
with nets and buckets and and trying to save a
few fish and Um, it really shows the power of
of social media. And I believe you know, within six hours,
everybody you know in the fishing community coast to coast
(32:46):
knew what was going on and and knew what the
next step would be. It was pretty overwhelming. Yeah, yeah,
And what do I want to talk a little bit
about Northwestern? Yeah, I'll just follow up on that to
it's I was there Wednesday morning early and U met
a bunch of the volunteers all the Madison Foods parking
(33:06):
lot and kind of gave an update what was going on.
But the response was absolutely humbling. Um, just to see
everybody from all over there come into a place and
be respectful to the situation and also just trying to
be there to help, you know. And and that was
a pretty big deal, I would say, And it was
it was just a um, it was a kind of
(33:28):
an overwhelming experience to see that. And we had a
bunch of Northwestern staff there to to volunteer too. Is
you know, this is the lifeblood of our lives too,
you know, we we live in Montana for a reason.
And uh we uh we actually made a change of
plans and just said okay, let's let's support the supporters
here from a Northwestern perspective, So how about we just
go and start distributing refreshments and talk to people, and
(33:50):
and it was. It was a really great day all
on all considering the circumstances that brought it forward. So
and I have to say, Andy, I I give kudos
to Northwestern Energy. You know, you guys were were in
the parking lot at Madison Foods. I believe the president
of the company even came down to n S and
and I mean he didn't have to do that, you
guys didn't have to do that, and even being on
this podcast, you guys, I mean didn't have to but
(34:13):
it shows a level of commitment going forward and commitment
to the resource. So I appreciate that. It's it's you know,
we manage these things for you know, benefit of the resource,
but we see it as a privilege to generate electricity
from the water there too. So those are kind of
level of priorities and I think you'll find that from
the top down in the company. John, I gotta ask
(34:33):
kind of a kind of a little bit tougher controversial question,
right because I feel like this is a this is
I have to ask this, So what we've seen here
in the face of crisis is like this extreme coming together, volunteers, anglers,
everybody out there working for one calls. Right, But it's
also no secret that I mean, the Madison has just
gained this reputation of being so overcrowded. I mean, it's
(34:55):
been in the New York Times, right, I mean they've
run articles about the uptick in track fick on that
river and how insane it's gotten. So do you see
this as, at least on a local level, something that
come next summer or next spring when the season really
kicks back in hardcore? I mean, I think it's fair
to say that you have guides out there who make
(35:17):
their living their pitching in the help, right, That's that's
that's that's their livelihood. But then you have all these
you know, tourists and locals and all these people who,
in another breath, some guides could be like, man, these
are the people who are clogging up the river and
making this place crazy. So what does this do for
sort of long term pr on the river? Is this
now sort of like do we go back to the
(35:39):
in fighting with the crowds, or is this the moment
to be like, well, look, okay, they bug us. There's
a lot of people whatever it may be, but when
it came down to brass tacks, we're all out here
helping keep this going. Yeah, that's a good question, Joe,
and something I've thought about as well. You know, you
go Fourth of July weekend and her thirty boats putting
in Alliance Bridge, and the average tour or Montana resident
(36:01):
wants to go float with their family on July fourth,
and and here they are. I understand where that anst
comes from. Um, and I understand where the bad vibes
to guides are because that's what they see. They see
us out there, they see us in the parking lot,
they see us on the river, and that's all they see.
But I hope now they see this as well. Where
(36:23):
the outreach was from the guidan outfitter community. Yeah, to
you came, you know, was it was a big part
of it, and you know, everybody pulled together, but a
large part of that outreach and a large part of
of those volunteers were from the guiding outfitter community who
dropped everything and I mean and ran up there. So
(36:44):
I hope this is a great opportunity for the public
to gain a little more faith in the uh the
outfitting community. Andy, I would ask, like, what's what's the
lesson here for other fisheries and other places here? Like,
what's what's the takeaway? That's a tough one. You know,
the Madison is a unique place, UM, with conditions there.
(37:04):
It's amazingly beautiful, free flowing reached between the two dams.
That just gives it some character and and there's a
lot of things to balance there from you know, recreational
and outfitted use to you know, Northwestern making sure we're
managing things right. So UM, I think the best thing
to kind of get out there is just you know,
how are we communicating what's getting done out there from
(37:26):
all parties and and that way we can manage it
the best we can. Um. You know, with so many
vested interest in the health of the fishery there, it's
that it doesn't seem like you could do anything reasonable alone, obviously,
and that's been showed through the process the last few years.
There's there's got to be that equilibrium though that you
(37:47):
know that well the resource will support the use and
trying to figure out what that is and in this
ever change environment is is something that everybody has to
get together on So we're gonna wrap it up here
in just a second. But before we do, I I
kind of wanted to, Yeah, you put out a call
for listener questions, didn't you? I did? I did. Um.
We're kind of gonna boil those down into some more
(38:09):
assiscinct questions because basically everybody asked the same ship um
uh First, UM, what would you guys say to folks
that are in New York that are reading about this
and think the sky is falling? You know, John, what
would you say? Andy? What would you say? I think, Um,
(38:31):
we we we almost had a catastrophe. I don't think
we did. I think you know, the swift action of
the volunteers, Northwestern Energy and Fishwife and Parks all um
prevented a pretty big catastrophe from happening. Um. I worry
about the long term biological impact um on brown trout,
aquatic invertebrates, and that especially in that stretch between the lake.
(38:54):
But you gotta remember, this is a three to four
mile stretch that was really affected. The Madison is sixty
miles long here. There is a huge portion of of
that river that that is not affected. The Madison is
still a great place. It's still gonna have lots of fish. Um,
We're gonna learn a few things, I hope, and the
sky has not fallen yet, ye and yeah, I totally
(39:15):
agree um with that perspective. Um. Obviously, going forward, Northwestern
is going to do what we can to analyze exactly
what happened at this situation and and come up with
some corrective actions that we you know, fully intend to implement.
But then also, you know, talking about the long term fishery,
you know this this is a challenging one in the
way that we don't have good baseline data for fish
(39:38):
in this exact reach below he gain between having in
the quick and so we're gonna have to come up
with some, uh with some ideas with our partners on
you know, what can be done here to really evaluate
the impact, because undoubtedly there's going to be an impact, um,
you know, but what that is and in the the
impact in the overall fishery and the long term is
is a whole different question. And so I think that uh,
(40:00):
you know, to answer that is it's going to take
you know, some kind of specialized folks putting their heads
together to to figure that out. The positive thing is
we we do have a macro invertebrate sampling spot right
down in this reach, and so we'll be able to
track that and we have twenty years of data directly
in that area to be able to compare and see,
you know, whether or not there's an impact of the bugs.
If there is, how long it persists, those sorts of things,
(40:22):
so we can get an idea of how you know,
the resiliency of the the river there is is reacting.
And then the third piece I will say too is
you know, we we've long standing how to program in
the Madison to to provide mitigation enhancement measures for the
impacts caused by the dams. And it's a perfect framework
(40:43):
to to be able to look at some of this
stuff to develop some potential projects to help out and uh,
you know it's it's a very viable way to to
respond to this once we do understand exactly what the
impact maybe. And you know, it's we've spent a lot
of money over the is you know, about six and
a half million since two thousand investing on projects on
(41:05):
the Madison and so that will always continue and hopefully
we can you know, make some meaningful impact that will
help out this reach. So andy, um, moving forward, is
there is there a plan in place right now for
increased sampling, increased biological work to to figure out what
effects might have had? Um or is your more money
(41:25):
shut a shide for that anything like that? Is that
into works At this point, I would say the discussions
have started on how we need to kind of start
talking about this. Frankly, we're we're getting our breath right now. Um.
Northwestern did a full on, full court press on this.
In the forty eight hours that we had with limited
FLOWCA went out of Hedgin. I think I slept six hours. UM.
(41:48):
It was. It was a pretty wild situation. I'll tell you.
Tuesday night at ten o'clock, we had twenty five people
on a zoom call, um, you know, trying to figure out.
We had divers, we had engineers, we had our environmental staff.
It was. It was a full on effort to do
the best we could to get those situations remedied as
fast as possible. Now that we have that done, I
(42:10):
think we take a quick breath and be very diligent
and purposeful on how we go about trying to figure
out what the impact maybe and then respond with some
sort of action after that, and and I don't want
to promise anything right now on exactly how that will look, um,
but obviously there's there's some follow up that's needed in
Northwestern's committed to doing that, all right, guys, Well, you know,
(42:33):
thank you both so much for taking the time to
talk with us. So nice to get insight directly from
you guys on something that so many people are reading
about on social media and elsewhere. This has been great.
I think it's going to clear up a lot of
ship for folks, um, you know. I I think it's
going to be valuable. I think this might be a
very very valuable bit official news joke. I think so too,
(42:56):
perhaps one of our most valuable. Again, it was really
it was nice to change, get up and not just
talk to each other. Have some some people here with
some more interesting things to say than just you and
I do so and real quick, I gotta ask and
you are you a are you? And angler yourself? I
am man. I do a little mixed bag. I find
myself out on reservoirs a little bit right now with
a three year old. She's not quite proficient at wade
(43:19):
fishing yet, so but we're working on it. Quick tip
on that, don't buy the three year old waiters because
by the time she's four, they won't fit anymore. That's
I bought them and like she got to wear them
once and then by the next time, it's like, oh, ship,
these don't even fit you anymore. So tip of the week.
Thanks thanks for that. I always appreciate parenting tacks like that.
All right, well, thanks again for coming on, guys. Appreciate you, guys,
(43:42):
Thank you, thanks for having us. You know, there was
a chance for that to get sort of combative, and
it didn't. That was a very nice conversation. Both those
guys were super on point. I'm I'm really glad we
did that. Yeah, me too. Um, I'm really glad that
we kind of took the time to tuck into that
(44:04):
because a lot of folks were like pretty freaked out,
and I think it's important that we all kind of
come to the table and have a balance talk about
what happened, you know, why the sky didn't exactly fall,
but also not forget to really highlight what we just avoided. Yeah,
to be clear, like this really could have been it
(44:25):
could have been catastrophic, horrible. Uh as far as I'm concerned,
you know, we kind of burned or get out of
jail free card. If the weather had been different, if
they couldn't have gotten the damn fixed quickly, if it
had been a different damn, if a whole host of
things had happened, this could have been just terrible. Yeah,
(44:46):
And I think it's also you have to point out that,
as much as I like to take shots at social media,
right everybody has bad shits say about social media. Prime
example of how social media helped this situation very very quickly.
So for all the bad that we say comes from it,
here is a great example of some good. And that
(45:06):
was a really interesting report. So we're gonna hear from Phil, which,
since he's not judging, perhaps just pontificating, this is like
a wrapped present under the tree. It's a surprise, right um.
And speaking of stuff to put under the tree, Right
after Phil, we're gonna hit the sale bin because we've
got a one of a kind item just begging to
have a giant bow put on it in your driveway.
(45:32):
All right, Welcome to our inaugural episode of Ask a
three year Old about fishing? Hey, three year old, what
do you think it is cooler Wally I or Wally Wally.
There you have a folks, Wally the robot who picks
(45:53):
up trash in a post apocalyptic earth, cooler and better
than Wally. Back to you, why did you put the
hand to pay? You don't know what I'm getting? Man?
What you didn't have to be so hurtful with me?
So angry? Al right, throw up hands west side flash
gang symbol whatever that is, uh, because that's where we're
(46:13):
going for this installment of sail ban. And today's item
keeps up with a sail bin trend, albeit a very
subtle one that most people I don't think would pick
up one. And what is that? So I'm fairly certain
that every single West Coast silban we've done has been
(46:35):
for some sort of shelter and or alternative to like
a traditional family home. I'm pretty sure. Oh you know, uh,
the population is exploding in California. Um. We're also looking
in like mostly like fishing classified. And I think that
(46:57):
the people who peruse fishing class sufides are like they're
typically a certain level of broke, yeah, or trying to
live off the grid or of a taxes something like that. Yeah. No,
that's true anyway. So this is coming from the Pacific
Northwest specifically UM and and we've had from the same region.
(47:17):
We once had a listing for an ice shanny that
literally is that what they call like a meth trailer
out there. I don't know people from the Pacific Northwest
let us know, um, but it literally it fell off
a cliff. Like the photo in the post was a
dude standing at the top of the cliff shooting down
(47:38):
on this busted up thing, and the post was just
like free if you're willing to climb down there and
get it. So that was one. And then there was
very early on in Bent history, there was a camper
that was turned into a boat and there was one
photo of it on like a beautiful Sunday afternoon floating
with all these these these young people partying on it.
(47:59):
But then the rest of the follow up shots were
just the interior and you could tell it had been
sitting in a yard forever and it's just like completely
covered in mildew and black mold. That's how they were
trying to entice you. You know, man, that black moles
ship is uh. It brings up a memory or two.
Man h In my like really, yeah, in my apartment
or what. No. No. When I was a musician, I
(48:22):
was working at this one recording studio and I could
have my own like private writing room. I just had
to fix it up. And there was a bunch of
black mold in that which, just in case you guys
are paranoid like me, black mold is actually not like
a neurotoxin. It is something that can triggered like asthma
and respiratory ship but it's like long term, it won't
(48:43):
hurt you. So all you grunge kids, you know, listening
from your party house, uh in the basement, don't worry
too much, man, but you know, do do clean it up? Yeah?
I mean I think it's one of those it's it's
it's one of it's one of those things like radon
in homes. I think people probably worry a little too
much about you know what I'm saying. This could be
(49:05):
horrible advice which we put what we should and this
is also why we're not the home improvement podcast, So
please keep that in the consideration. I don't listen to
this and be like Seahune, I don't have to get
rid of any of that black mold in the kid's room.
Joe and Hayden said, it's fine. Um, anyway, we're getting
way off here. This entry comes from Bent listener Mark
(49:26):
Jeraldlammy in Portland, Oregon, and he found it on Facebook
Marketplace and it is the exact opposite of a camper
turned into a boat. Exact opposite. Uh. Yeah, it's a
it's a boat turned into a camper. And before we
even like dive into it, it's legitimately nicer than a
(49:47):
couple apartments of lived in Dude, I got I gotta
I gotta say, unlike the jan kee ass camper boat,
someone puts some extreme love and money into the boat camper. Uh.
A matter of fact, it's so nice that the title
of the listings suggests this could also be a tiny house.
I think. I guess tiny houses are still a thing.
(50:08):
You could just live here, you just live in it.
To let you know, Joe, As long as pinterest is
a thing, tiny houses will continue to be. I'm curious, man,
tell me sell me on this tiny house. Yeah, so
this interest. So this thing started its life as a
twenty one ft sea swirl. And while it doesn't say
(50:29):
what year, I'm gonna guess by the looks and style
it's late eighties, maybe early nineties. And here's what the
description says. This old c squirrel speedboat, which is inaccurate.
It's more like an express style boat has been has
been converted into a camper slash, tiny home trailer, brand
new living space. It's one long vinyl floors, all new
(50:51):
appliances and that he's not kidding. It has like stainless
steel fridge in it, like they're nicer than the applying
Is it in my kitchen right now? Um? In floor
storage hot cold water, both electric and propane heat, propane stove,
dual tanks, air conditioning. It's got an air like a
window unit air conditioner, UH standard house outlet for power,
(51:14):
but also is set up to easily add a battery
bank and solar panels to be more off the grid.
Plenty of infloor storage for batteries, water tanks, et cetera
standard garden hose attachment for both waterline and drain designed
to easily remove the closet space if you want to
add a bathroom. You can actually see where like whoever
(51:35):
built this, you know, chopped the front deck because I'm
I'm looking, I'm looking at the thing as you're describing
to be full disclosure for our listeners, and and most
of the console off, and then they've raised it to
create more headroom inside, like like imagine like creating a
gap between the hull and the deck. And then they yeah,
it's yeah, it's a lot of work. It's almost as
(51:58):
if they made the wall is like taller and the
boat's original windshield is now like a picture window. You know. Yeah,
it's pretty brilliant. It's pretty brilliant. And if you can
picture the notch that would be cut out of a
boat transome to accommodate the outboard, the door is just
built into that notch, so like that's like now the
space for the full size walk up to the door.
(52:20):
It's it's it's cool. Yeah. What I actually think is
most brilliant is that if you were just driving through
a neighborhood and saw this back into a driveway at
a quick glance, it just looks like a boat totally.
You could probably get away with living in your friends
driveway longer because he can just tell the neighbors that, yeah,
that's my buddy's boat. It's also extremely economical, which is
(52:43):
not something that you can often say about boats. Yeah, no,
very much, no money pits exactly. Yeah. Here, here's what
the post like continues on to say, insurance on the
trailer is four dollars per year, four dollars. Yes, it
still needs to paint and finishing touches, but it's ready
(53:03):
for like whatever customizations you want to throw at it.
So he's asking for I'm sorry, that good of a deal,
but you're gonna see it's it's still worth it fifteen dollars,
which honestly, I'd hesitate to say is a bad deal,
particular when you're talking about housing. But the very best
part is that the disclaimer at the very end, in
(53:26):
parentheses reads, this is no longer a boat. It will
not float. There is no motor, no mechanisms. It's a camper,
not a boat. No trades, no takes backs. It's camper.
Not about I. I kind of love this, I truly do.
My My only hesitation would be that you're still pulling
it on what looks like a kind of okay shape
(53:49):
roller trailer, and um, I mean trailers break eventually. Trailers
have their own issues, so um, you know, if it
no longer floats, the only way to swap trail trailers.
If anything happened, I guess would be to find a
boatyard with a lift to lift it off there. You
can't just like dump it off in the in the
lake for a sec to swap out trailers. Um And
(54:09):
I don't know. I feel like true campers are built
on beefier frames than your your average boat roller trailer.
But this is a minor concern, right whatever. Bottom line,
If I was like twenty two again and trying to
start some crazy YouTube channel, like imagine touring in this,
the comedic value of parking this at the lake like
having a boat you can live in on a trailer,
(54:30):
a big boat, but just like being confined to the
parking lot while you sure fish. The comedic value alone
is worth it. I think it's fantastic. It's it's pretty funny.
It would be a good stick. Did you ever see
a show back in the day called gun It with
Benny Spies? Oh? Man, I I know Benny Spies because
he did some work at Outdoor Life, but I don't
(54:50):
remember that show specifically. No. So he used to go
around in this camper, and I believe like every time
you'd open the door, a bunch of beer cans would
fall out. This seems very Spies esque to me. Yes, yes,
I think the comedic value alone would in fact be
worth the fifteen grand. It's a great stick for the
(55:11):
right person. Mark, thanks for sending this along. Maybe go
grab it man, right, I'd I'd say nothing else. That's
definitely one of a kind. There are some Bent stickers
and such now headed to Mark, and if you'd like
some of those, keep an eye on your favorite online
classifies for him, and send any weird ship like this
that you find to Bent at the meat eater dot com.
(55:33):
So Mark is getting some some Bent stickers for sending
in a sale band, and so is listener Andrew Jacobs,
because he is responsible for this week's end of the
line segment. All right, this is the one where completely
out of nowhere, we're going to go from a shady
camper boat to shady strip quote. That is correct, That
is correct? Right? So you know, spoons, spoons are pretty
(55:55):
great all around, lors Um, but but I feel like
there there's so many modern new fangle lures on the
market that the spoon has kind of taking a back seat,
although it shouldn't, especially with ice season ramping up. You're
gonna get out and do some ice fishing, you should
use some spoons. So I'm gonna close by covering a
spoon that everyone has heard of, but you might not
(56:15):
know anything about its risk a history. Well, that's not
loud enough. The Little Cleo is probably one of the
most popular well known spoons ever made. It's so popular
that it even has its own Wikipedia page. Of course,
(56:37):
it also has one of the shortest, most factless write
ups on all the Wikipedia, which is odd to me
because the Cleo has a fascinating story, one that I
just recently got tipped off to by listener Andrew Jacobs.
Prior to Andrew reaching out, I had no idea this
simple loure, enjoyed by anglers of all ages and from
(56:58):
all walks of life, was sort borne out of a
chance encounter in a nudy bar. The reason I was
unaware this is simple. I just never really fished a
ton of Cleo's. I mean I never really fished a
ton of spoons at all, really, especially in freshwater and salt.
I huck a cash master crippled herring or crocodile spoon
all day, but in sweetwater for no particular reason, I
(57:21):
threw Thomas buoyant spoons for trout and Daredevil's if I
happen to be chasing larger freshwater spoon eaters. This explains
why I never knew that for forty three years, every
Little Cleo spoon had a dancing, topless woman stamped on
the back. Andrew sent a photo of a vintage Cleo
featuring said half naked lady, and I wanted to know more.
(57:44):
These days, the Little Cleo is produced by Acme Tackle,
but when they first hit the scene in nineteen fifty three,
they were made by Seneca Tackle Company, which was based
in New York City. The company was started by a
fella named Charlie Clark, who had already made some money
as a saw writer and music publisher. As the story goes,
Charlie had visited a hoochie Coochie club way back in
(58:07):
the nineteen thirties and was smitten by one particular exotic
dancer that went by the name you guessed it, Little Cleo.
Years later, when the spoon was developed, Clark decided to
name the lord the Little Cleo because, according to a
story I found in the Oklahoman, he believed the wiggling
and dancing of the Lord would bewitch the fish, much
(58:29):
like Little Cleo's dance had charmed him. The stamped image
of the real topless Little Cleo had a good run.
It survived into the ACME Tackle era, which brought Seneca
Tackle in. She danced into trout, bass and pike mouths
through the Reagan years, kept charming Walleyes and Stripers while
George Bush Senior held office and just about made it
(58:51):
through Bill Clinton's first term. According to my research, in
a female employee at a major chain retailers all topless
Little Cleo and got offended. While I couldn't figure out
exactly which retailer that was, it had to be one
of the giants like Walmart or maybe Bass Pro, because
(59:11):
in the interest of not losing that retailer's business, ACME
took Little Cleo off the Little Cleo citing that she
was quote a victim of the politically correct nineties. Andrew,
thanks so much for sending the shot of your vintage
Cleo and helping me educate myself and our listeners about
this classic lore. I want to post your photo on Instagram.
(59:35):
But now, twenty five years after she made waves, I
find myself wondering do I blur the naughty bits on
the back of the spoon? Do I let it ride?
I haven't really decided yet, but the bottom line is
that naked lady or not, the little Cleo is likely
to keep seductively wiggling its way into fish jaws for
decades to come. So that's it for this week listen.
(01:00:03):
Instead of a recap, we just want to take a
minute to bring you guys up to speed on something
that's kind of long overdue. Right, So, for a while now,
many of you have been asking for a dedicated listener
Q and a segment where we answer your questions on
the show. That's right. So, starting with the first episode
of Joe and I are going to build in a
(01:00:25):
weekly segment dedicated just to answering your questions. And we're
bringing this up now so we can let some questions
build in the archives and get this sucker like rolling
in the new year. Yes, true story. You guys already
send us some really great questions, right. We get them
on on Instagram. They come through Bent at the Mediator
dot com in the email inbox, and we always try
(01:00:45):
and answer as many as we can. But here's a chance, um,
for some of those answers to help fellow degenerates and
be heard by the masses instead of just a quick
type of the answer back to you. And of course
if we use your question on the show, you'll get
so to that end fire away. But in the meantime,
we've got eyes on those Degenerate Angler Invent Podcast hashtags
(01:01:09):
and we're always excited to see the sale bin links,
bar nominations, awkward photos and the news clips that you
guys send our way. Yeah, and we'd also be excited
to see you patch your raft with only the items
available in the pitssport excuse for a Sporting good section
at your local target