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May 8, 2025 69 mins

This week we're sharing an episode of Wired to Hunt where Ryan Callaghan joins Mark Kenyon to recap their Washington DC visit last week to meet with elected officials and advocate for our public lands and wildlife.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome to the Wired to Hunt podcast, your guide to
the whitetail Woods, presented by First Light, creating proven versatile
hunting apparel for the stand, saddle or blind. First Light
Go farther, stay Longer, and now your host, Mark Kenyon.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Welcome to the Wired to Hunt podcast. This week on
the show, I'm joined by Ryan Callahan to recap our
recent visit to Washington, d C. To advocate for our
public lands and wildlife. All Right, welcome back to the

(00:40):
Wired to Hunt podcast, brought to you by First Light,
and today we are recapping for you a recent trip
that I took just last week actually with mister Ryan
Callahan to visit Washington, d C. We were speaking there
with our elected officials about the importance of our public lands,

(01:03):
our wildlife, hunting and fishing opportunities, and everything in between.
And if you have been following the news and various
outlets that cover conservation and public lands and wildlife related issues,
then you're probably aware of some of the things going on.
If not, maybe you're a little bit out of the loop.
We've tried to cover some of this here on Wired

(01:25):
to Hunt. We actually just had cal on the podcast
maybe a month and a half two months ago to
talk about some things, But since then there have been
all sorts of new issues and updates when it comes
to what's happening with environmental protections, with public land related

(01:47):
regulations and protections. There have been a number of proposals
that raise some red flags when it comes to the
future of these things. Take, for example, proposals from the
current administration to possibly sell public lands for housing. There
have been other serious discussions within Congress about using the

(02:11):
sale of public lands to fund some of our budget
issues at the moment that are being debated within the
budget reconciliation process. And that's something that's particularly dangerous and
concerning because this whole reconciliation process. To forgive me for
getting some jargon here, but when a bill is passed

(02:33):
through reconciliation, it does not require the sixty votes that
most bills require. It can be passed with a simple majority,
so fifty one votes could get something passed. And oftentimes
in this reconciliation process, they lump a whole bunch of
issues into these budget focused bills, so stuff can get
passed as part of one of these budget considerations that

(02:56):
just kind of gets tacked on to the end that
could have far reaching implications. So in this case, a
serious sale of public lands, something that would have generational
impact for many of us, could possibly be slipped into
this thing and then have to get passed because it's
a party line kind of thing. So that's why this
stuff is really getting a lot of people's attention right now.

(03:19):
There's countless other specifics that we could get into that
we won't, but rest assured there's been more news and
proposals and action item type emails and action alerts sent
out over the last few months that I've seen in
years and years and years. And we've got to be

(03:39):
paying attention to these things, and we've got to let
our voices be heard and letting people know, whether they
are Democrats or Republicans or something in between, let them
know that we care about our public lands, we care
about wildlife, we care about conserving these things and protecting
these things for the future, for a sustainable, long term future.
And that is why me and Cal and a whole

(04:02):
lot of other folks visited Washington, d C. Last week
to make sure that those kinds of ideas, that those
causes and values are represented there in the halls of Congress.
So today's podcast is me and Cale recapping that trip.
We discussed what we did there, why we were there,

(04:22):
the issues we talked about, the people we spoke with,
some of these broader things going on. There was a
number of kind of conservation related events going on there.
We talked about that a little bit, but I think
most interesting to you guys will be kind of the
takeaways we had from these conversations. You know, what do
these meetings with a congressional representative look like. We visited

(04:45):
the offices of the House representatives, and we visited offices
of senators. We met with everything from senior staff members
to sometimes the senator or representative themselves. We talked to
a lot of people. We got a very interesting kind
of look behind the curtain when it comes to what's
happening right now related to the issues we care about.

(05:07):
So we wanted to report back to you on what
we learned on kind of what the vibe is there
right now, how concerned people are about these issues, or
are not concerned about these issues, and lots in between.
So we're going to talk about that. We're going to
talk about tactics a little bit about how you can
use some of the strategies and framing ideas that we

(05:28):
used to advocate for these things to these people how
you might be able to use that yourself when making
a phone call or having a meeting of your own.
And we talk about some of the things that all
of this has made us realize about the future. What
this entails we do in the coming months and years
to make sure that we've got wildlife and wild places

(05:51):
where we can hunt and fish and camp or climb
or bike or whatever does he like to do. We
want to make sure that can continue to happen. And
if we want that to be the case, it's going
to require not just me and Cale going to Washington, DC,
but all of us doing our part, having meetings, making
phone calls, sending emails, letting our elected officials know that

(06:11):
this stuff really matters. So that is our podcast here today,
and it's a special joint episode. So Cal and I
we're both hosting this one and we're both releasing it
on our individual podcast channel. So hopefully you know that
Ryan Callahan has his own podcast. It's called Cal's Weekend Review.
It's another show on the media or network just like mine.

(06:32):
And you definitely should go over there and tune into
that show and subscribe if you're not already. His show
every week is a recap of the most important public
land and wildlife and conservation related news and issues and updates.
So it's a great place to stay aware of everything
going on, so make sure you do that. And speaking

(06:54):
of you know, back in the day, when I first
started this podcast some like twelve thirteen years ago, I
frequently reminded people to subscribe to the podcast, to leave
a review, to share it with their friends and family.
But I have not done that for a long time,
and I've kind of gotten complacent on that because I
just sort of assumed that everyone knows that and does that.

(07:14):
But you know, this is a great reminder as I'm
plugging Kale to also plug this one. If you're not already,
please subscribe to this podcast. You can get every single
new episode popped right up into your podcast app, so
you don't miss one. If that's something you're interested in doing.
Price to subscribe or follow, please leave a review if

(07:35):
you haven't yet. We've been doing this podcast for free
for more than a decade and if that has in
any way benefited your life, which which I really hope
it has. That's been the goal all these all these years.
If that's the case, I would love to hear about that.
I'd love to see your feedback there in the reviews
and share with a friend, share it with a friend,
excuse me, share with a family member. Anything along those

(07:58):
lines would would be rific. So thanks to that in advance.
Thanks for tuning into this one. Thank you for joining
me and Cal and trying to fight the good fight
to make sure we have these incredible opportunities and places
and critters that make our way of life possible. So
that's what today is all about. That's what our visit
last week was about. And I hope you enjoyed this one.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
Hey, what's happening in Meat Eater universe. This is Ryan
cal Callahan, Cal's We Can Review Cal the wilde Podcast Channel.
I'm joined Todave for another special interview series with the
one and only Mark Kenyon of Wired to Hunt Fame.
This guy's been on the front page of Field and Stream.

(08:50):
He's a cover boy, as they say in the biz.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
That's a deep cut. That's an old, old reference there.
It's been quite a while, so you're digging out the archives.
My friend, Well you got.

Speaker 3 (09:03):
I mean, you're I guess in the zeitgeist. I guess
is what they'd say. He's a well cataloged human. He's
been putting out content informing folks, I would say, primarily
on the white Tail front for a lot of years.
He's also an author working on book number two. I'm
not sure if that's public knowledge yet, but it is

(09:24):
now and today we're going to talk about being advocates,
following through with our duties as citizens and voters in
these United States taxpayers to inform our duly elected, let
them know what they're doing right, what they're doing wrong,

(09:45):
and what they could do better from are very specific
points of view.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
Yeah, I got to jump into kil and just say that,
if you've got free time once a week, I would
for you to introduce me on every one of my
podcast episodes too, like that. I could really use a
hype man. You do a hell of a job, So
thanks for that.

Speaker 4 (10:08):
Well, let's hear your let's hear your Wired to Hunt intro.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
Let's go the Wired to Hunt intro. I would, uh,
you know, I'd open it up with the typical welcome
to Wired to Hunt this week on the show and
then what I would say is something along the lines
of the fact that you and I crashed Washington, d C.
Last week and had a lot of really interesting conversations

(10:33):
about a lot of interesting things with people all throughout
the nonprofit conservation ranks, the government, and points in between
that that were a, I thought really interesting and important.
But B and here's my hype man moment for you,
kal H. We're just really eye opening for me with

(10:56):
what you bring to the table as far as a
leader in this space. So I really appreciated how you
were able to communicate with some of our elected officials
and the representatives and advocate for the stuff we care about,
which is, you know what we're going to talk about
here today. But long story short, I liked seeing how

(11:17):
the sausage is made, I think, is what I'm getting to.
I liked the fact that we're able to kind of
see both inside the gears of our government a little bit.
And then I also got to see into the world
of Ryan cale Callahan, the fearless leader of Cal's We
Can Review, and saw how you not just talk the talk,
but walk it. So yeah, man, I'm glad we can

(11:40):
catch back up here today to talk about everything that
happened to talk about you know what? I have always
watched from Afar and wondered, you know, what's really happening there?
Does a visit there matter? Does it actually make a difference?
What's that? You know? What could that lead to? I've
had a lot of questions over the years, and so

(12:01):
finally getting to be a part of that myself was
very eye opening. I guess I've said a couple of times,
but eye opening. So how do you want to do this?
Where should we start?

Speaker 4 (12:10):
Cail, Let's say, what what were we there to do? What?
What did we hope to accomplish?

Speaker 2 (12:18):
Yeah? What about you got there a day before me? Right,
so I'll let you, uh, I'll let you lead with
what you thought you were going to accomplish and what
you wanted to do.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
I had a very, as it turns out, fortunate travel
schedule where I and I really haven't even got around
to talking about this elsewhere, but I got to join
West Virginia Backhuntry Hunters and Anglers, the West Virginia Chapter,
as well as several members of the West Virginia Department

(12:49):
of Natural Resources on a about a fifty to fifty
split private land, public land turkey hunt, and we floated
the New River Gorge just gorgeous and awesome and super fun,
and camped out on the river and hunted public land

(13:11):
birds and public land off of the New River, and
we got skunked on the birds. I had some fun
encounters in there, busting through some West Virginia rainforest and
then essentially in a not efficient route, went directly to

(13:31):
d C. I had a firearm which I had needed
to return back to my home, but anyway, so I
landed in DC, went directly to Senator she He, which
Tim she is our freshman senator here in Montana. He

(13:55):
won the tightest race that we had this past election
series with an incumbent Democrat, John Tester.

Speaker 4 (14:04):
Who has been.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
Really really solid on public lands, public access, and wildlife
habitat issues during during his run as a senator here
in Montana. And Senator Tim Shee is a freshman, he's
brand new. So we had him on the Mediator podcast
a couple of weeks ago. I think he did a

(14:31):
good job. We talked about fire management, land management, and
you know, kind of got to know him and his
perspective a bit, which is always valuable, especially when you
want to do what we're going to talk about, which
is get your prerogatives across, right, And I met with

(14:57):
one of his staffers with folks need to understand, like
you don't always get to meet with the elected official,
you get to meet with their staff quite often, and
that you need to treat as valuable time because I

(15:17):
know lots and lots of stories of it's it's.

Speaker 4 (15:21):
Like a mini government.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
Okay, So like your senator is your your head of state,
and their staff is there to cover certain spheres of
interest and then inform the head of state as to

(15:45):
the whole situation, the feedback that they're getting, and probably
more than likely offer an opinion as to what they
think they should do.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Yeah, the gate keeper, the prioritizer, right.

Speaker 4 (16:02):
Yeah, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
And you know, I've talked to folks who have been
staffers for a lot of different elected officials and they
all have stories of this is why you need to
take a staff position seriously. And one person in particular,

(16:23):
they're working for an elected official in Colorado who had
no hunting and fishing experience, but they're well aware that
there are many hunters and anglers in the state of Colorado,
and despite having zero hunting and fishing experience. That elected

(16:45):
official had staffers who had hunting and fishing experience in spades.
That's part of what he was rounding out in his cabinet,
if you will. And they were able to pass a
series of really good wildlife bills through that office, and

(17:05):
largely on behalf of around on the shoulders of the
staffers in that office. It looks good for the elected official.
They're not tied to it in the way that that
folks who hunt and fish all the time are. But
they were good enough, smart enough to understand that they
needed those people in their office. And so if you

(17:26):
go in and you talk above their heads and you
don't try to get to know them and treat them
with respect, you can imagine like the type of report
that's going to go back to the elected official right
at the head of state, it's not not going to
be a good one. And these are people that are
in their orbit there, they are intimately familiar with each other. So,

(17:54):
and I guess while we're on this topic, I will
also throw out this something I was reminded of on
this trip. DC is a very expensive place to live.
As such, there's people who just stay in DC. So
your staff are for your home state or state representative

(18:21):
that you want to speak with you, it's you shouldn't
assume that they are from the state that they're representing,
which is an odd things go. So I like to say, hey,
this is what I want to talk to you about today.
How familiar with this topic are you, and again trying

(18:46):
to approach things in a non confrontational, friendly way of like,
we're here to exchange some knowledge, hopefully for the collective benefit.
So if you tell me you don't know, I'm not
going to be like, Okay, dumb ass, find me somebody else.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (19:05):
Right.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
One thing I did find in my experience too, and
talking with some other folks, was that the educational side
of things is just as important as trying to influence
because in a lot of these cases, they simply, you know,
especially with staffers, don't know about some of these specific
issues that we're talking about, or maybe don't understand the

(19:26):
full story. So yeah, just starting with that building a
foundation is if that's all you did in these types
of visits, that would probably still be worthwhile, just to
make sure we're all looking at the same set of facts,
at looking at the same deck of cards.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
You know, absolutely absolutely, and you know, I mean we're
all subject to headlines, and there's a lot of headlines
I would say the majority out there that aren't getting
the real story across. And it's like you said, probably
worthwhile to make a phone call, shoot an email over

(20:02):
and just provide some some real facts and wildlife management
is not a casual thing to read up on unless
you're actually interested in them. Yeah, so so, yeah, I
met with the Josh guy in Chihi's staff. We had
a good conversation about a number of things. And this

(20:26):
is kind of like to our goals of what we
were trying to do encourage elected officials to stand strong
on public lands, meaning we don't want to see public
lands sold off. If we have to sell public lands
at Darnshire, better go through the system that's in place

(20:48):
so the American people understand exactly what they stand to lose,
so they can make a better decision.

Speaker 4 (20:57):
During the public comment period as to.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
If they think the juice is worth the squeeze, which
is something we heard a lot last week. And uh,
by standing strong, we mean co sponsor Ryan Zinke's Public
Lands in Public Hands Act. If you can't co sponsor.

(21:24):
You should sign up and join the caucus public caucus. Yeah, yeah,
make a statement and in return, we are more than
happy to support you back. Let people know that you
did a really good thing, and then you know, there's

(21:47):
lots of data that we can provide as to why
this matters, uh, financially and just in the American interest level.
Something I did consistently across the board with everybody I
spoke with was talk about the Grasslands Act, and as

(22:13):
you and I discussed a little bit, one way that
I did that was through talking about the Lesser Prairie
Chicken Landowner Alliance, which is, you know, I'll just say,
like a bunch of conservative ranchers who are trying to
save ranching, and by saving ranching, they're going to save
our most recently added used to be huntable species, the

(22:38):
lesser prairie chicken, something that happened on our watch as hunters.
It's sickening to me, but the lesser prairie chicken used
to be a huntable species. Now it is not, and
ninety percent of that population lives on private land. If
they want to save ranching and do a good thing
in turn for this endangered speed which I think a

(23:02):
lot of Republicans perked up their ears on because the
ESA is is quote unquote under attack right now, they
can support the North American Grasslands Conservation Act, and in
so doing they'll provide a funding mechanism directed specifically at

(23:28):
ranchers who are trying to improve native grassland habitat which
the lesser prairie chicken needs. So that was a big ass.
And then another one that I think is a softball
and something that a staffer could take immediate action on

(23:49):
was and this is something that came up through chapter
feedback at the BHA level, our chapters at Backcountry Hunter's names,
they work a lot with state agencies, volunteering for different
habitat projects and certainly lobbying for good bills when their

(24:11):
states are in session, lobbying hard for good state management
species and habitat.

Speaker 4 (24:20):
Well.

Speaker 3 (24:20):
The feedback that we're getting from our state agencies is
that because of staffing shortages created by DOJE actions or
through DOJE actions, either the early termination fork in the
Road email which allowed for early retirement, early termination with

(24:43):
some benefits to federal employees, or elimination of positions the
office that approves and cuts the checks out of the
Wildlife Fund, which is funded through Pittman, Robertson and Dingle
Johnson dollars, excise tax dollars and then matched three to

(25:07):
one with our license and tag fees at the state level.
And these are are on the ground state projects that
this administration is supposed to prioritize. They are not getting
those funds.

Speaker 4 (25:28):
That the rank and file.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
State citizen wants and the state agency wants to make happen.
They're not getting that cash to make these projects happen
because there's nobody in that federal office to approve the project.
Slash cut the check for the project that's already been approved.
And that's a major issue, and that's how we're already

(25:56):
seeing some impacts of some of these layoffs. So that's
a really good one because it's some phone calls, some
pressure that needs to be put on, said, hey, we
need people back in this office.

Speaker 4 (26:11):
You're hurting your voters.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
Yeah, And.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
It's cash that doesn't need to be appropriated. It's a
separate fund. It's our money, our sportsman angler dollars and
our recreational shooting dollars and our hunting dollars that are
going to hunt to fund our you know, more habitat
and more access work. So those are three consistent ones

(26:39):
across the board.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
So I guess to kind of recap with every one
of these meetings, it seemed like there was there was
like a three or four part framework. It was, you know,
we came in number one, established you know, who we are,
and then what we wanted to speak about, which was
generally public lands and wildlife related issues. And then we
spent some time more establishing Okay, you know this is

(27:13):
who we represent. We represent mediator or first light or
backcountry hunters and anglers, and you know, these are the things,
These are the kinds of things that we care about.
This is the kind of scale we have, This is
the the community that we represent and reach. So that
I think that was just setting the stage for hey,
we represent a lot of interest, and we also we

(27:35):
are worth listening to. I suppose would be a little
bit of what some of that framing would be at
the beginning. And then it was okay, now, given all that,
here is why public lands and wildlife and these things
we just mentioned, this is why they matter to our community.
This is why they matter to your constituents. People that
live in your state or your district, so we tried to,

(27:55):
you know, share a little bit that would help connect
those dots. And then finally what you just described there
was the ask, so here's a specific way that we
would like you to take action on this issue for us.
And then finally, I guess, so this is more like
a five part piece. We typically always ended with a
little bit of that relationship building back and forth, which was, hey,

(28:18):
how can we help you If you are willing to
support these things, what can we do to make that
easier for you? Or how can we support that? Or
what can we further educate you on or what materials
do you need or whatever it might be to help
make this stuff happen. Because I can't remember if it
was you who said this or somebody else, but you know,
oftentimes these meetings are just a step one. This is

(28:42):
that foot in the door which hopefully leads to maybe
an email back and forth or another visit down the
road or whatever it is that leads to you know,
you getting one step closer to actually seeing the kind
of action that you want to see happen. And so
it was it was that basic recipe for every one
of these meetings right, Kill, and I had let me

(29:04):
see what my numbers are here. I had eight of these,
and I think you had something pretty similar. So so
I'll run through the list of the offices I met with,
and then I want to hear what yours were. I
met with Senator Risch's office from Idaho, Senator Heinrich from
New Mexico, Senator Danes from Montana, Representative Zinki from Montana,

(29:24):
Representative More from Alabama. Rep. Latta from Ohio, Salazar from Florida,
and Malyotakis from New York. Who all was on your list?
You mentioned Shehi already? Who else or what other offices
did you hit? Kil?

Speaker 4 (29:43):
Let's see, I guess in order. Well, I had that evening.

Speaker 3 (29:49):
I went to the Ducks Unlimited Bank what they're in DC,
and fat with you know, the new in our CS team,
so freshly appointed National Resource Conservation Service team, which I

(30:10):
thought was was great to get to know some of
those folks, a lot of hunters and some ag backgrounds there.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
There.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
There are a couple of folks that I spoke with.
They're definitely coming from different backgrounds in a lot of ways,
but the similar parts were great.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
In the fact that.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
They have some bag background, there's some bird dog owners
in there, there's some hunters in there. And you know,
the National Resource Conservation Service is the largest conservation org.

Speaker 4 (30:50):
Would be.

Speaker 3 (30:52):
Agency, would be the largest conservation agency in the world,
and they got hit pretty hard during the DOGE process.
So I'm optimistic that these folks are going to be
able to understand the benefits that they can provide to

(31:15):
our egg producers, and we need as sportsmen and women,
we need to understand that making sure our egg producers
stay producing also keeps, quite selfishly, all that open space open,
as in not developed. And they're going to do some

(31:38):
habitat and some drought tolerance and fire tolerance work, and
work on native species and work against noxious weeds and
all those things that nrcs can do good good habitat work,
providing perpetual ease months and keeping producing land producing while

(31:59):
all also producing good habitat benefits.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
So that was great.

Speaker 3 (32:03):
I spoke with a bunch of folks in the Department
of Agriculture on the topic of are we going to
get a new farm bill and how can we help
make that happen? Farm bill For everybody listening, it's not
just for farmers like, there is a ton of conservation

(32:26):
work that's balled up in the Farm Bill. Everybody thinks
about CRP, but you also need to think about there's
a private land hunting, private land public access program in there, and.

Speaker 4 (32:46):
More habitat work, more water development work.

Speaker 2 (32:49):
The EQUICK program is huge for getting cost share out
there for habitat projects and technical expertise. Yeah, it's the
biggest source of conservation dollars on a basis across the government.

Speaker 3 (33:03):
Huge, and it's getting long in the tooth. We're on
our second extension and it needs to get updated and
put into some more modern terms here, so super interested
in that. Everybody listening should be interested in that, and

(33:23):
you know, we'll do our follow ups and see what
we can provide more information wise. Brings us to a
next point. It's great to walk into somebody's office and say, hey,
love your position on this, thank you so much for
making it happen, which we did with Senator Danes and
Danes's office, he has stepped in and been a big

(33:47):
proponent of getting cash authorized for the VPA hip program,
which is something that's buried within the Farm Bill. But
that's a good access program and dollars for these private producers.
So thank you to Senator Danes on that one. And

(34:08):
I met with Crapo's office, which would be Idaho, and
same deal, talked about public Lands, just kind of laid
some things out there, made them aware of.

Speaker 4 (34:23):
Who we are.

Speaker 3 (34:26):
It's probably a little unclear, but I was kind of
wearing two hats. I was there as the North American
board chair for back Country Hunters and Anglers, So I
would talk about our network of chapters, our diverse membership,
how we're broken down politically, which I just said is diverse.

(34:46):
So we have a lot of Independents, a lot of Republicans,
a lot of Democrats, and it were hard to pin down,
which is great. So we lean quite a bit independent,
and we're right across all fifty states, and you know,
our membership's just a little over north of thirty thousand,

(35:06):
but it's growing like crazy right now, with you know,
public Lands being so squarely in the headlines. It's kind
of waking folks up again. So if you're not a
member of BHA, please become a member of BHA. And
I'll tell you why over and over again. But it's
so you can have somebody in the room advocating for

(35:27):
things like this, and then on the other side of
my head, my bald head, I was representing meat Eater
as the director of conservation and the fact that we
have a office of business in four states. We have
Phelps in Washington, Dave Smith Decoys in Oregon, First Light

(35:49):
in Idaho, Meat Eater, and FHF based right here in
bos Angeles, and we depend on public lands, public wall,
public wildlife, and access to those things in order to
sustain our business. And even going all the way back
to like early days first Light sales, it wasn't just

(36:14):
people in Idaho buying our gear, as people from all
across the US, and their dream, if not reality, is
to buy this stuff and wear it when they're when
they're hunting or fishing or exploring our public lands and
public waters in pursuit of public wildlife. And then I

(36:37):
would throw some some business stats at them, how big
our reach is, our podcast network, how many people we
talk to, how many how much feedback we get get
back from the outdoor population here in the United States,
And you know, drive home the fact that even though

(36:58):
some recent headlines have said, had oh Western states love
public land or just Montana loves public land. That's not
what our data says. Yeah, this is a national issue
and we need you to stand firm on this because
if you don't, you're going to be on the wrong side.

(37:19):
So that was Crapo's office, and then I met with
Senator Kramer's office. Can't remember what day that was at
this point over there in North Dakota, And you know,
I had a great conversation over there. Lots of overlap.

(37:42):
Senator Kramer's done a lot of good things for national
parks and we need to see that kind of same
passion on just the regular old public land side of things.
And had had a good, good conversation over there, but
need to follow up.

Speaker 4 (38:03):
And then.

Speaker 3 (38:07):
Had the TRCP dinner that night. And so the Teddy
Roosevelt Conservation Partnership of which Steve is well, Steven Ronelle
is a board member, and he likes to host that
thing mc it.

Speaker 2 (38:20):
Does he like to or does he get roped into it?

Speaker 3 (38:24):
I think he likes to do it because you know,
when you're on a board, as you know, everybody kind
of has their strengths and you want to play to
those strengths when you volunteer. And so This is like
one of the ways that Steve gets to publicly volunteer

(38:45):
for the conservation organization that he sits on the board with.

Speaker 2 (38:50):
It's a good point. He does a good job. He
did a good job. You and I got to kick
back and enjoy our dinner while while poor Steve was
up there working the room.

Speaker 4 (39:01):
Yep, yeah exactly.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
But that room is so they always give one of
the Capital Conservation awards to a Democrat, a Republican, and then.

Speaker 4 (39:21):
Uh someone in in.

Speaker 3 (39:23):
In the field that's probably not an elected representative. And
so it's a really good diverse room. There's lots of
different organizations present. There's lots of lobbying groups present. There's
lots of newly confirmed for for this year anyway, positions

(39:48):
of leaders leadership. The Chief of the Forest Service was there.

Speaker 4 (39:52):
I did not get.

Speaker 3 (39:53):
A chance to talk with mister Schultz there. I really
would have liked that. Lots of kind of movers and shakers.
So when you're in that room, your you know, your
job is is really to have those conversations, introduce yourself,

(40:14):
speak to people, say hey, you know, thanks for joining
the civil service. Being the chief of the Forest Service.
These are the things that really matter to us. I'd
love to sit down and talk with you more about
it later, try to get a meeting that way, at
least make the introduction. And it's also a great information

(40:38):
gossip circle, especially if folks get a little couple of
cocktails in.

Speaker 2 (40:42):
Them and start getting the real scoop.

Speaker 3 (40:45):
Yeah, you can hear like, well, what are you hearing
and what's happening on this topic and the topic reconciliation
and it it does matter, And.

Speaker 2 (40:58):
You hear about this networking bus word right, And that's
one of those things they say in business or whatever.
You got a network, You got a network. But man,
it's it's so true that oftentimes relationships and who you
know or if you know this person, that stuff matters
even in this world too, just with you know, having
someone you can call who might know the guy who

(41:19):
understands what's actually happening, or might know the woman who
can get you up, you know, some face time with
such and such persons. So yeah, an event like that
awards dinner is about as good as you can get.
And I'm sure the du dinner the night before was similar.
Just being around people who are involved with the decision
making that impacts our public LANs and wildlife and all

(41:41):
those people in that room have you know, really really
important touch points to those things. So, just like you,
it was all about talking to as many people as
you can, building those connections because you never know when
there might be when there might be cause to give
that person a call or also, you know, making sure
that people know that you're available, right. That was a

(42:02):
big thing for me too. I was talking to folks
in different organizations and you'd figure out, oh, we care
about some similar things, or there might be something that
I could do to help them out that I would
like to help with that I never knew about. So
lots of stuff kind of comes out of those random
meetings at an event like that, And I think that
for anyone listening, there's going to be like local versions

(42:26):
of that, whether it's like a BHA pint night or
a Ducks Unlimited banquet or a volunteer event with a
state game agency, like any one of those events is
worth being at because of that community you might be
able to build, because of those connections you might need,
you might be able to foster that who knows, might

(42:46):
help you someday down the road, whether it be you
know as an advocate for these places or who knows what?

Speaker 3 (42:53):
Oh, and I mean if we're thinking, we're talking really
about something that's huge, right, We're talking about the National
Day and the idea that our federally managed lands could
be sold in order to somehow satiate the national debt somehow.

(43:13):
It's going to take a broad, diverse coalition of people
to get on the same page and kind of have
the same language and make the same statement, No, this
is not.

Speaker 4 (43:27):
Going to do it. What else you got?

Speaker 3 (43:29):
Yeah, don't you think having these lands working on our
behalf is going to pay more dividends in the long
run than selling them right now and never getting them back.

Speaker 4 (43:41):
Things like that.

Speaker 3 (43:42):
So yeah, you know, talking with those folks that aren't
in the hook and bullet community and letting them know that, yeah,
you're available. We're absolutely on the same page, like very
very valuable.

Speaker 4 (44:00):
And you know, just like you and I do. Folks
listening do when.

Speaker 3 (44:07):
You know, like I see somebody in a three piece
suit and fancy shoes with you know, those no sock
thing that's going around, you know, I'm like, oh, this
person's not necessarily one of my folks. How are we
going to handle this? I see somebody coming in a
plaid shirt, jeans and flip flops. It's an easy approach,

(44:33):
it's an easy conversation. You know, folks in DC are
the exact exact same, So when they know your name,
when when anybody knows somebody's name, they're eighty percent more
likely to open that email instead of blow right past it.

(44:56):
This So you got to make these connections. You got
to reach out to folks that don't look like you,
act like you, dress like you, and say, yeah, this
is this is where we overlap. We'd love to work
with you on this. And my point also is you
may not divulge as much to somebody who visibly doesn't

(45:23):
look like they care about the same stuff you do.
So when you're in these gossip circles, you can be like, oh,
that's interesting. I met with them today too, and they
actually told me this. And if you and I are
on the same page on this public lands thing, I
have no problem sharing that with you. And I had

(45:47):
several versions of that conversation last week, and you know
I'm here to win on this public lands deal.

Speaker 4 (45:54):
So.

Speaker 2 (45:56):
Whatever it takes. Yeah, So cal out of all these
conversations and you had you know, all these various dinners
and press conferences and then the office visits, like we

(46:17):
were just discussing, you know, I had a few things
that stood out to me as far as like high
level takeaways or I guess lessons or vibes that I
kind of picked up. And I'm curious if you felt
anything similar. But one of the things that was a
this was a little bit more personal for me, less

(46:39):
so probably for you. But going and doing this, this
is my first set of hill visits like this. I
came out of it much more confident in my ability
to do more of that kind of thing. I think
before you go into this, there's a certain level of
intimidation or this idea like, oh gosh, this is going
to be like an interrogation. You're going to go in

(46:59):
there and they're going to be like arguing with you
or trying to make you feel stupid, or you know,
it could be confrontational in some kind of way. And
every one of these meetings was was so far from that.
All of these were much more low key than maybe
the average person thinks. This is literally showing up walking
into an office saying, hey, I'm here to see Kate

(47:21):
and sitting down for a nice chat, and they all
you know, were polite, interested, maybe ask a few follow
up questions. In every single one of these meetings, I
generally felt like I knew more or just as much as,
if not more than they did about these issues. I
came in, We came in as the subject matter experts.
And I think most anyone who's into this kind of

(47:44):
stuff and wanted to make a phone call like this
or go in person to a state capital or the
nation's capital or whatever it might be, they're probably going
to be in a similar boat because again, like we
talked about the beginning, we're meeting with staffers. We are
not meeting with the you know, secretary of the interior
or something in most cases who is entrenched in these things.

(48:04):
So you can go into this again feeling pretty confident
that you know what you're talking about. This is your issue,
this is your passion project. And so this was a
great reminder, and what I want to pass on to
people listening is that, you know, do not feel like
this is above you or beyond your capabilities. If you
care about this stuff enough to listen to a podcast
like this, you are probably armed and ready to go

(48:27):
and have a chat like this with someone in one
of these offices. So that's number one and number two,
And this is something that I'm I think that you
heard as well. But from the outside looking in, over
the last handful of months, I think a lot of
us have said like, oh wow, this feels crazy right now,
this moment feels unprecedented. There's been a lot of that

(48:49):
kind of terminology thrown around the news, and I felt
that way myself. What was interesting was that I was
hearing that from people in these offices too, So this
wasn't just like an outside Oh it seems crazy from
the outside. Everyone on the inside said the same thing,
both sides of they all too. This was I was
hearing this from Republicans and Democrats, things like everything's so

(49:12):
uncertain right now, this is wild, this is unprecedented. Anything
seems possible, nothing's off the table. Oh I thought this
kind of thing would never be possible, but now anything is.
I heard so many versions of that from many different
people that, again, I think, just shines a spotlet on
how important what we're talking about right now is. Because

(49:35):
if anything's possible, then these issues that we care about,
it's more important than ever to make sure that we're
on the right side of them. So anything else for
you stand out from all your conversations, or was there
a big like consistent through line across the border or
anything else for you.

Speaker 3 (49:53):
We definitely heard a lot of I mean, I'll definitely
back you up on that. There's a great quote of
and this is coming coming from a senior policy person
in a Republican office saying, Uh, guys, I'll be honest

(50:16):
with you. Trump has been really shaking the snow globe here.
Our job is not easy right now, and you may
have more information than than we do on some of
this stuff. So that is interesting. And I will tell

(50:36):
you and the listeners past administrations, including Trump's first term,
there was way more information and way more access purposely
coming out of the administration to get people on the

(50:57):
same page, get them informed early so they can be
prepared for to make next steps. That is largely not
going on. It's it's kind of stealed rooms at the
top top. And just from my experience, I did notice

(51:24):
a lot of people who are way more informed paid
to be way more informed than I am, taking real
notes of what I was saying. After recapping a meeting
because as we've already discussed, like different communicators get different

(51:48):
information and slightly different versions and different levels of access,
and that could be based off of that representative or
to offfer just being tired and later in the day,
or they're more energized and earlier in the day, or

(52:10):
you know them or their family member, or you have
some sort of a personal connection to a place or
resource or something that connects with them and they go,
all right, I got to tell you what's going on.
So it is an interesting time. I will say that.

(52:35):
I would say one of the other themes that we
heard was working in a bipartisan manner, trying to work
across the aisle. And we definitely saw this in Trump's

(52:57):
first administration, where things kind of deadlocked after midterms, and
you know, really the things that moved were the outdoor bills,
like positive things because those are largely nonpartisan issues and
folks want to get some stuff done and get some wins.

(53:19):
And there's a lot of that talk going on right
now too, which is like, yeah, we are working Zinky,
working with Gabe Vasquez, Congressman Vasquez out of New Mexico,
Danes making some positive statements on some some Democrat led things.

(53:40):
Heinrich may making some great statements. Heinrich, a Democrat of
New Mexico, making some some very positive statements about Danes
and and Zinki as well.

Speaker 2 (53:54):
So you know something that yeah, speaking of that, something
that I just was remind kind of which I hadn't
heard as much about in recent months, but it was
nice to hear. When you and I sat down with
Senator Heinrich and you guys were recording that podcast. One
thing he mentioned that I was really excited about was
that he is definitely feeling bullish about the prospects of

(54:18):
getting recovering America's Wildlife Act, you know, reintroduced and pushed
forward again in this Congress, and that there was energy
from both sides of the aisle again supposedly, and that's
something that again would be a really important funding source
for state wildlife agencies and their wildlife management plans. So

(54:38):
you mentioned the Endangered Species Act earlier and how that's
something that gets a lot of people really fired up.
That's kind of like an emergency room for wildlife. Well,
REIWA would be, you know, as Senator Heinrich said, is
more like the primary care So like that's where we
can deal with wildlife issues before they're at serious risk
of death or in this case, you know, extinction species wide.

(55:00):
So that's a bipartisan one right there. That would be
a huge win if we could somehow get that to
move forward at this time, given all the other things
and cuts being met other places, I think that securing
some kind of funding like this for wildlife would be
really important. And then the one other thing I'll add
on that front was that on my first day there,

(55:23):
you had I think your press conference and stuff like
that during the TRCP Joint Corporate Council and Policy meeting,
and that was something that I did attend. And during
that we basically had a bunch of representatives from conservation
organizations and from the hunting and fishing industry, so representatives
from companies, and then we were all meeting together with

(55:46):
a number of different speakers talking about issues impacting hunting
and fishing and conservation and all the stuff going on
with the current administration and politics and ramifications for hunting
and fishing and public lands, YadA YadA. One big stand
up point there too was just what you said, which
was the importance of trying to have a non partisan

(56:07):
angle on this because you know, there certainly are things
coming out right now that most of us would say
is not good for hunting or fishing or wildlife for
public lands. Right. But if all you ever do is
scream bloody murder about those things and villainize the administration
for all that, you would never have an opportunity to

(56:28):
work with them on anything good too, or to establish
communications or to help, you know, inform these people about
different ways to think about things. And so a key
theme of the TIERCP meeting was how do we address
these issues in a way that's good for hunting and
fishing and wildlife and public lands, but at the same
time gives us an opportunity still to have influence with

(56:49):
whoever is that the is at the levers these days,
no matter if it's a democratic administration or Republican administration.
We want our issues to be at the table. We
want our voices to be heard. So, you know, I
think that's an important thing. Whether you are an individual
or a conservation organization or a larger group like the TRCP,

(57:11):
or a business that's thinking about how to engage in
this stuff, I at least certainly think that you can
be more effective for the things you care about. If
you simply say, hey, I'm going to work with whoever.
I don't care who's doing things. Let's just make sure
we are being heard, and then we have some ability
to have some kind of influence to move you know,

(57:31):
maybe it's five yards down the football field right now.
That's certainly much better than going twenty yards backwards. And
you have no chance to do that at all if
you are not even in the rooms and not even
having your phone calls answered or your emails read or
whatever it is. So that really stood out to me.
And you know, coming out of this, you know, handful

(57:53):
of days there, I guess it gives me maybe a
little bit more hope that those kinds of things are
possible because there was, you know, some degree of talking
about it. So I don't know, I certainly hope that
there's more momentum there to be had.

Speaker 3 (58:08):
Yeah, I'd hope as well. And you know, it's just
a consistency game, right. You can't let people think that
you're going to ease up or this is no longer
an issue, because there's always issues popping up and there's
so many things that will fill that space if you

(58:31):
aren't being consistent on these asks or educational moments or
whatever you want to call them.

Speaker 1 (58:41):
You know, So.

Speaker 2 (58:43):
That was the single biggest thing, and started jumping on
you again, kill But the biggest eye opener, like the
biggest takeaway from my entire visit was this. It was
walking through the hallways of the Senate office buildings and
the House office buildings, and especially saw on the House
side there were just hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of

(59:05):
people all walking around these same hallways as you and
I were flooding all of these offices with their own
issues and with their own pet causes and with their
own concerns. I mean, there were thousands of other people,
and I'm sure this is happening every single day, day
after day after day, talking to these elected officials about Hey,
pay attention to this, Hey, listen to me on this.

(59:26):
Hey be careful about this. Hey watch out for this.
Hey please advocate for this. Hey a b CD e
FG right. They're getting it from Sony different angles on
so many different issues that you know, any one single
phone call, any one single meeting, it's going to get
lost in the noise. It has to be, you know,

(59:47):
to move the needle on this kind of stuff. I
this like just I knew it intellectually, but it became
like real in a tangible way after seeing this. It's
like you have to be doing this over and over
and over again, and with so many different people doing
it from so many different angles, all kind of beating
the drum for the same cause, and only in that

(01:00:08):
kind of way. Like if you if you imagine like
a snowball, like what you and I did the other
day was we got a little snowball kind of rolling
down a hill, and then someone later in the day
was hopefully going to take that same snowball and keep
rolling it down the hill, so it got a little
bit bigger, and the next day, the hope is that
there was somebody else there from another similar organization who's
rolling that snowball a little bit more, and it gets
bigger and bigger, and over days and weeks and months

(01:00:31):
and years, you finally break through the noise and people
can't ignore you anymore, or you stand out above all
of these other things. It just seems like this is
this is even more I don't want to say daunting,
because daunting sounds disheartening, but this requires all of us,

(01:00:54):
This really requires all of us. And it's not something
we're going to solve with one thing. It's it's just
one straw on the camel's back and you just got
to keep on stacking them. And that was my big takeaway.
I realized like, oh wow, this can't be a one
time thing. I'm going to have to come again, and
I have to come again. And actually, when I was
in the airport flying home, I called my representative because

(01:01:15):
I'd wanted to stop in his office and we didn't
get to. So I left a voicemail and said, Hey,
I was just walking by your office earlier today wasn't
able to stop, and but hey, want to remind you
about AB and C and and something you said to
me earlier this year cal on this issue was that
we should be making plans to check in with our
elected officials on a weekly basis. And I remember thinking, like, WHOA,

(01:01:38):
I'm not doing it that much. I thought I was
annoying with how many times I was emailing or leaving voicemails.
But now I realized that you weren't kidding. We really
do need to ramp it up. Whatever level you're at,
it's you got to go up another level. If we
want to stand out in this moment. I saw a
whole lot of folks walking around with last week killer.

(01:02:02):
We got to make sure that somehow our folders are
a little bit more attention worthy, is what I'm trying
to say.

Speaker 3 (01:02:08):
Yeah, and man, trying to get across it's not a
trope cliche.

Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
Thing.

Speaker 3 (01:02:20):
It's like everybody does have a voice, and people are
checking those boxes. Right. So when we go into an
office and we talk about managing for fire, they're like, oh, okay, yeah,
you guys know your stuff, and that's that's great. A

(01:02:45):
couple of hunting guys don't really understand what you do.

Speaker 4 (01:02:50):
Podcast people cool.

Speaker 3 (01:02:54):
They need to hear that from a couple of dudes
who are like, yeah, hey, we're plumbers in you know,
the Gallatin Valley making money hand over fist right now
with the crazy housing boom. What we do with our cash.
The only reason that we suffer through being on call

(01:03:15):
and working crazy hours and going from job to job
to job is because we want to hunt. And good
fire management provides excellent hunting opportunity.

Speaker 4 (01:03:27):
This is super important.

Speaker 3 (01:03:29):
And you know, like the law and care people and
every single order of society, right, like, hey, I'm a
childcare specialist. This is what I do. I work in
the hospital. All everybody has a voice. And by making
these phone calls and emails and visits, pretty soon like

(01:03:55):
that spreadsheet of interests is going to be filled out.

Speaker 4 (01:04:00):
I'm gonna be like Jesus.

Speaker 3 (01:04:02):
People are spending a lot of their own time, own
money to get here or make a phone caller or
write an email, and they're coming from all walks of life,
and they're all basically saying the same thing. I should
probably think really carefully before we sell off public land
or we don't sign on to this bill.

Speaker 2 (01:04:23):
Yeah, I'll give one encouraging anecdote on that front. When
you and I were going to visit with a Senator
Risch's office there from Idaho, you had to bounce for
the Zincy podcast, and so I took that meeting on
my own. And something that stood out is I kind
of gave the I kind of ran through our bit
talking about the importance of public lands and you know,

(01:04:46):
the value that they provide to hunters and anglers and
our community and our business audience and all these different things.
And I made some kind of line or kind of
common at the end, just something on the lines of you,
I hope you've heard something like that from many other people.
And she stopped and she's like, oh, trust me, we
have heard this from a lot of people lately. So

(01:05:09):
she looked over like there was an intern with her
and like they kind of looked at eyes. So I
feel like we are not alone in this right now,
like there has been a lot of that. And you know,
a good example, this is what there were several different
groups of conservation organizations. They are around the same time
that we were, so like the outdoor industry like not
hooking Bullet, but more of like your ARII crowd, the

(01:05:32):
Outdoor Industry Association and the Outdoor Recreation Roundtable, a bunch
of these groups that bring together those industries. I know
that they were there in town recently around the same time,
probably talking about some of these same things. So you know,
when we work across the board in that kind of way,
it's it's good. It's gonna do just like what you said,
spread our message from many different angles to the point

(01:05:54):
it's it's undeniable. You can't ignore it anymore.

Speaker 3 (01:05:57):
When that happens, that's right, that's right. So we got
to just keep on keep on trucking, all right, have
a b h A meeting that I'm four minutes late for.

Speaker 2 (01:06:16):
On that note, then you better, you better get out
of here. It's not as bad as the time I
forgot to pick up my kid during our last podcast.

Speaker 3 (01:06:23):
So oh, I know, I know, But yeah, Mark, We're
gonna do more of this. We're gonna, i think, hopefully
get across to more people that just because we're a
for profit business doesn't mean that we can't be in
the business of advocating for our customers and ourselves and

(01:06:45):
public lands, waters and wildlife access to them. And you
know that brings a certain something to the table. And
and when we do our jobs as volunteers for n
d A or b h A, that brings us certain
something to the table. And then our personal experiences bring
a certain something to the table.

Speaker 4 (01:07:05):
And I have no doubt.

Speaker 3 (01:07:08):
Even if we made zero impact last week, that what
we're doing advocating for these things matters. And even if
it made zero impact, we did get her foot in
the door. We got on a first name basis with
some folks. We got to follow up and our next

(01:07:31):
trip or next round of emails or phone calls is
going to carry a little more weight.

Speaker 2 (01:07:38):
Absolutely, we're gonna keep on pushing that snowball down the hill.
And I'm glad you're you're there right there alongside me
doing a kill.

Speaker 3 (01:07:44):
Thank you, No, buddy, man, you're you're leading the charge.

Speaker 2 (01:07:47):
Man.

Speaker 4 (01:07:47):
I love love the communication. You're you're you're crushing it.

Speaker 3 (01:07:52):
So if folks have anything to ask old Mark Kenyon,
ask him yourself, go over listen to his podcast. If
you really need to, you can write me.

Speaker 4 (01:08:02):
At ask c Al that's Askkal at the meeater dot com.

Speaker 3 (01:08:05):
Let me know what's going on in your neck of
the woods. And uh, you know, I like hearing that.

Speaker 4 (01:08:11):
I'll get back here.

Speaker 2 (01:08:12):
And if you're listening to this on Wired to Hunt,
make sure you go over to Cal's Week in Review,
subscribe to his podcast, set him an email, do all
those things you just said, and get your weekly dose
of conservation news and whatnot for mister Ryan Cale here.

Speaker 4 (01:08:28):
Thanks a bunch. We'll talk to you next week.

Speaker 2 (01:08:35):
All right, And that's a wrap for our episode. Thank
you for tuning in to this special joint meeting of
the minds with me and Cal discussing our DC trip.
Hopefully that was eye opening for you and insightful and
like we said there at the end, please subscribe to
Cale's podcast. Tune into him every week, Subscribe to this
podcast if you haven't yet, and uh until next week.

(01:08:59):
Thank you for being here, and stay wired to Hunt.
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Cal Callaghan

Cal Callaghan

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