Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
We on there and welcome to that.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
You can't even say welcome to.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
The town Outdoors show.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
I'm Charlotte, I'm.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Captain Paul Tyrer, and I'm Grant.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Hey, hey, we're missing somebody sitting in Fred. See well,
I mean I ain't actually miss some jokes today. So
if you don't, you're gonna tell Joe.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
I won't try to do something to try to be
like Fred.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Okay, do we need to vet these jokes?
Speaker 4 (00:26):
Yeah, I don't learn not to say something kind of grass.
I've learned some things.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
You've got to be. You've got to be careful to
leically correct. But Trump say, well, well, hold on now,
I don't understand Paul, your your your your verbal faux
pause come from a level of innocence, of righteousness of
you know, you are a true Christian, a man of God,
(00:50):
and and and you will say things that you have
no intention of being, and but just out of pure
innocence say stuff. And and the us utter minded evil
people over here, we're like, yeah, that's what she said.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
I mean, so bless your bless your heart, my friend,
did it spit on you.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
Talking about that Lama speaking of creators? Like somebody people
keep asking me what else you's going to add to
your farm? And uh, Billy Bailey says, somebody, why don't
you get because I'm talking about incubating some eggs. I'm
looking for a big drink cooler to turn into a
big incubator and I couldn't find any anywhere, and I
put it on Facebook. Now I got a local uh
(01:39):
business trying to give me one. I got other people
trying to I got that coming out to I could
start of incubating zoo if I wanted to right now.
So I'm going to be looking around. But uh, I
mentioned he said what Billy says, maybe you should get ostriches,
And I'm like, I.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Mentioned a turkey on this I mentioned the word.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
I mentioned the word em you and my wife went on, no,
because there's this woman on TikTok and Facealo that's got
this EMue that keeps attacking her all the time. And
what you need And I know, well, there's a story.
There's a story about a man named Brady. No. So uh,
if you listen to a story about a turkey named Jacob,
(02:20):
everybody's heard the story. Because I get people constantly. You know,
what's going on with you? In that turkey. What's going
on with you that turkey? Well, that turkey is a butthole,
and he continues to be a butthole. But he got
a little bit of karma the other night. So a
couple of nights ago, I was over here at the
shop late, working on stuff on the computer, and I
tooled out here. I got and I remember a little
fuel efficient car like to drive, and I got home.
(02:41):
It was dark turned the corner. Well, Jacob likes to
roost on top of the chicken coop, which is a
bunch of dog kennel panels put together with a tarpover
some you know, some white trash stuff. And I built
it so I know that's what it is. And I
can say that, and uh, we're moving all that around
back in the ba. She can't see her from the
road here coming and so I come in there. Jacob's
(03:03):
on top of the coop and as I drive up,
he hops off, bows up in his most fearsome fashion,
and he's chasing the car now with some energy and
earnest that I haven't seen in him before. I mean,
he's serious about it. And I'm I speed up and
he's coming along. I heard him over there, and I round.
I look up in the yard and Rusty in Lily,
(03:24):
my bulldog, and my short haired pointer bird dog. There's
the key to this story is up there, just rolling
in the grass, tussling and fighting each other. And I
round the corner and I come in the back of
the carport. And as I pull in the car port
and the turkey never goes up there, I heard a
turkey gobble, and I thought I was imagining. I thought, well,
the brakes or the something or the pull pump or
(03:46):
something made a funny noise. And I got out and
I looked around and normally when I get out of car,
I get a face full of the bird dog. She
runs up, jumps in my face and I push her
off of me. Well, she didn't do that, And I'm like,
oh cool, this is good. I get to get out
of a car in piece and she didn't spill them
drink on of stuff, my soda and the uh. And
I walk up to the house. I look around, okay, whatever,
(04:07):
there's no turkey there. And I go in the house
and sit down and and a few minutes later I said, hey, uh,
the turkey chase me up the driveway and my wife says,
see the go put the turkey up. My son, thirteen
year old son goes outside to go put the turkey
back in the pen and uh. He comes back. He says,
I can't find him. And I'm like, I'm sitting there.
(04:28):
This is one of those times where I'm pretending not
to hear anything. Watching the TV. I'm like, on watch
that they're doing, watch this thing and uh, and my
wife goes, hold on, let me go with you. They
get the flashlights and put shoes on. Go outside. A
little time goes by, and all of a sudden, I
hear the side beside and I'll go down the road
(04:51):
and this ain't good. And I see lights out in
the yard. I'm like, I'm pretending I don't know nothing.
I know nothing. I know nothing.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
Huh and uh.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
She comes back in and throws the bird dog in
the house, gets your blankety blank blank in there. You're
in trouble. And I'm like and she comes around and
looks at me all white eyed, like she had done
something something, and I'm like, well, you just better sit down,
lay down. And she's watching that door like something's coming
through that door. And so she comes in and I said,
(05:26):
they finally come back in, all huffing and puffing and goes, well,
what A? I said, what what does she do? She
she tried to kill the turkey. And I went, WHOA,
what happened? I said, where was the turkey? Way down there,
pass the shed by the flat bed trailer, passed the
livestock trailer near the other chicken pen and no, no, no,
(05:47):
And I said, he said, all right, Well, I don't know.
He's his whole face and the turkey's changed colors in
her face went under stress. They turned white. His face
was white. And I don't know if he's got any
feathers left. And there's feathers from the barn all the
way down to the trailer there everywhere. I thought he
had killed a rooster. And uh, because with all the
(06:08):
feather's gone, he didn't look as big as he did.
And he's cooped up in a little pile in the grass,
huffing and puffing. And we picked him up and took
him down there and put him in a pen. I said,
what to do? He went in the coop and got
on the roost bar with the with the guns with
the girls. Well, she got his rear, his she got
(06:30):
his butt, literally and figuratively. And I said, okay, well
I hate that, you know.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
I hate that buttle got hurt.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
And so the next morning I got up and I
went down there, and he come up there and fanned
his tail out, all red faced and blue face, pretty face.
The rest of him on the other hand, uh, he
looked like he had a highway twenty grill. His his
(07:02):
his his tail feather. Look at that right there. He's
got one tail feather on one side and four on
the other. And and what you can't see in that
picture is his whole rear end. It's just skin. It
looks like somebody plucked his whole butt on and and
and he's walking around, strutting around, bowing up, gobbling at
(07:25):
me and chirping at me and daring me. And I'm
looking at him like, man.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
I don't think i'd be showing that off.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
Like I said, man, you know whatever, being all.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
Boat with two black eyes and a skin chin, So
I would.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
So I can just see in my mind's eye that
girl got the he bowed. I'm sure he bowed up
and swattered her and did all this with his wings
like he does. But she finally got that butt started
plucking him, and she just started plucking him. And if
I don't know what made her stop, I guess she
maybe she just got tired, or he maybe he popped
her in the head a couple of times because he's
(08:02):
mean turkey.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
Yeah, take heard about down there when you go and
I sit there and watch it.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
So we got a new dog. We got some We
had ordered some new collars for the dogs because we
had this Halo four system GPS tracking system for the dogs.
And man, I loved the customer service and I love
their their their app, but their product is kind of
not some we had. We bought two dog collars and
in six months we had to get twelve almost twelve
(08:27):
or more returns to their customers. Whereas and I like
the customers so much and make it real easy, but
after sending twelve back, I basically they're sitting on the
counter at the house and I ordered the UH spot
on collars which are twice the money, and they started
with those last night. The app is just as good
and so now the dogs can't get past the driveway,
(08:52):
no barns, no chicken pins, no goat pins, and now
the goats can run well, the goats they'll chase the goats.
The goats can run across the invisible line now back
to their pen, and the dogs will have to stop.
And you're talking about stopping. They stopped work. You put
Rusty's collar on. He's like, yeah, I needed to go
outside and pee, but I don't need to go anymore.
You put the collar. Leave the collar off. When I'll
(09:12):
go outside, you put it on me, I'll uh, he'll
go out there. The problem is he started pooping right outside,
right off the porch. He used to go way out
in the car. He goes way out to cal pasture. Uh.
And now he's like, you're gonna make me go. It's
it's a anyway tails from the homestead. Turkey Karma. I
(09:36):
Saiday's show name right there, Turkey Karma. Yeah. Too long
to make it to TikTok. But maybe they'll they'll come
back and listen to the whole show. We'll be right back.
(10:00):
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Are on the web at recon dash restoration dot com
and we're back. I'm sorry that was such a long story,
but it was. It was funny to me. I had it.
It was so funny. We had to call JD a god,
tell you the story before we get on the shows,
(11:02):
and he laughed. He didn't laugh on the show because
he'd already heard the story, but well, he laughed in
his other brain, like I was at his jokes before
the show. Now you can't tell them on there.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
Yeah, well, you know, it's all all good. It's all good.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Well they weren't too bad, Paul laughed. I mean, there
wasn't no cussing in it. There wasn't. No course, he's
asking for forgiveness for laughing.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
There was no cussing in either one of them jokes.
It's just a little bit off color stuff.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
It is is like a room talk, I think. Ain't
that what they called it? Anyway? So, yeah, you you
had asked about how my dogs got along with all
the farm animals. Well, what's complicated is is that Lily
gets along with everything. She will chase the little pigmy
goats around the yard and sometimes she'll get a little
rough with them. She have to be careful because she
(11:51):
wants me any harm. She wants to play with the
little goats like she does rusty and dogs play different
and goats the why they want to run aroun and
chase with her. Once she puts her mouth and starts
chewing on her neck and all, they're kind of like
the whole You know, dogs are predators and their prey
and so they have a little hole you know, Oh
my god, I don't know this is are we playing
(12:12):
still or are you serious? I mean, you know, and
so they'll kind of freak out a little bit. But
so but Lily can't be around a bird because she's
a bird dog and she does what bird dogs. That's
the reason I've had to replace all my chickens. And
we had a duck. We don't have that anymore. We
like not to have a turkey. She's doing what bird
dogs do. She one of the turkeys got out the
(12:34):
other day and this is a month old, you know,
turkey chick and it was the one I posted on Facebook,
I got this little turkey is I'm making a friend
with this one I got, you know, posted I'm gonna
make this with my friend. It got out of the
pen and she brought it to me. She's running around
the backyard with it in her mouth, and I said,
what do you do? When she ran up and dropped
it at my feet and looked at me like she
had done something right, and I'm like, how do you
(12:57):
I can't scold her because that's what she's supposed to do,
is to go get a bird and bring it back
to daddy. It just wasn't that.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
I have a jack or two Jack Russell's and next
door neighbor had chickens.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
That don't go together, and boy, I had, I had,
you had to apologize several times.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
And I finally I finally beat skiter one time. He
and we don't he'll run from him, see now, But
the other one will just hold them down and just
play with them, not trying to kill them.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
But we finally broke them up.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
Usually if a dog ever catches the chicken one time,
it's just you can't break them. You can't stop them.
The electric call it helps, yeah.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Well, boundaries. The problem is I can't free range my
chickens truly. They're in those electric fence netting fences that
I move around. But I can't let them out truly
because they will wander up in the yard and she'll
get them. But I've got her with that spot on callar,
that fence where she can't go down there, and she won't.
(13:56):
She will stop. I mean even when we're like right,
she'll she'll come in the boundary every once in want
try to come to me. She'll run to me and
sit down next to me, and that caller is getting
there and she's like, and I'll tell he get back
to the house, and she'll run up to the other
side of the line and wait now Rusty, on the
other hand, he's fine with the chickens. He didn't care
about the chickens. He didn't care about the goats. Now
he tried to get the goats initially, but I popped
in with the collar one time when he was messing
(14:16):
with the goat. He won't mess with the goats anymore.
He'll look at you like he has lost his best
friend when the goats are like messing with him, and
he's just looking at me like you've got to be
kidding me. And but he will now hang out with
the goats, and they'll the billy goat and rust they'll
play together, and they're neck and they're right neck, they're
about the same size. And but the pigs, he will
(14:40):
try to kill the pig. You know, I got one
pig without a ear now and all the pigs have scars,
you know where he's you know, they got out and
he taught them a lesson. And so we've had to
rearrange everything to keep all that from happening again. And
I'm nursing wheel Arol back to help because they tied
up with each other. My thirteen year old out there,
you know, but just different they react differently with different animals.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
So does the new blue stuff work as good as
the old blue stuff?
Speaker 1 (15:06):
I will tell you what. I'm glad you sent me
that link because you saved that pig's life. Because Willie
Earl got out purpose and Willie Earl got out on
his own, I'd put him out in the pasture and
he came through the electric fence, through the barber fence,
got out in the yard and Rusty got him. And
CJ went down there and called me, Rusty's killing Willie Earl.
(15:29):
And I said, grab him by the collar and snatch
him off. Of course, you know, snatching a bulldog trying
to kill a critter off ain't always good idea, but
you know, chicks dick scars. You see, he'll be all right.
And so he grabbed him by the neck, pulled him off.
He goes all right. I got him. I said take
him up to the house, and he did.
Speaker 3 (15:44):
So.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
You know, Rusty's an awesome dog. I mean he mine
as well. He just doesn't like pigs and deer. He said, deer.
He'll go point to the deer head on the wall
and look at it like it's gonna move. You say, bird,
He'll look at the Pheasant on the top of the
counter at the how He's like, okay, that's a bird,
that's the so yeah, he the blue stuff, the blue stuff.
(16:08):
So he got he got wheel eerol down. I get
there and whillei Eerol's bleeding from several places. He's got
a chunk of hide missing out between his shoulder blades,
and I got stuff sprayed on there. No, there's no puss,
there's no infection, there's no I just kept putting it
back on there and putting it. Well, Fred's not here,
and you gross you out. I can be more descriptive.
(16:28):
I mean, he just it. I mean it looks terrible
because the skin's gone, but it's just it's dressed. You know,
he'll leave the liver. He won't. He's a pig, but
now he's he's turned into more of a pet pig.
And I've been needing to fix him, but I just
don't have it in my heart. While he's sitting out
there all scarred up and cut up, and he's finally
quit it again. He quit limping another day because I
thought rusted he broke his leg, but he, you know,
(16:50):
he he you know it.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
Just Paul is an antiseptic. To answer your question, it
is a it's a farm horse antiseptic that Charlie and
I both had used on on us at various times
in our childhood. Working around there, get cut on a
piece of barbed wire or whatever, the granddaddy would hold
you down and daub some of it on you too. Uh.
It's just an anti anti bacterial antiseptic spray or comes
(17:15):
in a can with a dabber on it where you
just brush it on there. It works good. I don't
remember the name of it.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
But I've seen Daddy. We would have sows, would have pigs,
and a sow would step on a pig and just
rip it open, you know, with a sharp hoof and
just rip the pig sidewiy. And Daddy was a corman
in Vietnam and he worked in uh Navy hospitals and
all that. And you know, he'd done a bunch of stuff,
and he had his old suture kit and all his
stuff from from the military, and he came hey, hold
(17:43):
his pig, and got his little pig just screaming like
a screaming like a pig and like a stoke hall
and and he's over there sewing this thing up and
he'd take that blue lotion and he'd daub that stuff
on there, and you know, sometimes they live, sometimes they wouldn't,
but it was a pig. And so now I got
that stuff. So the other day I looked at will
(18:03):
her and I'm like, I need to sew that up,
but I don't have anything sew it up with. I
now have a from Amazon. I have a full on
suitrare kit with everything from from from like fishing line
and needles all the way to the small stuff. And
you know they have these where you can practice and
tim ty, I won't be fine, I sew them up.
(18:24):
I'll make it stay. But so yeah, the next time
that happens, I've got everything I need. I got the
spray on. I mean, I need to get my manimiotics
or something. But that's not something you can just go
to the track supply and get. So I'm sure somebody
out there is going, oh, well you can get it. Yeah,
I know there's ways.
Speaker 3 (18:40):
But there's that orange stuff you used too that you
know what I'm trying.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
It looks.
Speaker 4 (18:46):
I had I had an only time I've been hooked
by a hook had a kid I had with a frog,
and I went over to my Richard Carter's dock and
he said, come on, hearing get he got a he
got some rope and he's going to jerk it out.
And he poured that stuff all over my head and
you would a jerk and it didn't come out.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
He said, you better go on the doctor, boy, Daddy.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
I stuck my trigger finger in a wheel on a
combine day. I graduated high school in nineteen eighty four.
And I see, I criocket, Yeah, the joint is yeah.
That was there. Was trying to see if the belt
was tight or not. Well, how you tell fan belts
tight or not? You push on it with your finger
and see how much play has got in it. Well,
the combine was running, but the belt was sitting still,
and the pulley was sitting still. And I reached that. Well,
(19:27):
the pulley was moving, but the belts sitting still, and
I reached down there. In a minute, I pushed on it.
It caught and it pulled my finger right through that V,
that V belt and that V and I looked down
and all I could see was cartilage and bones and fingernail,
and uh, of course I just stuck in my pocket
because I'm like, Uh, I ain't something that didn't happen.
I just I'm gonna pretend it didn't happen. Maybe it didn't.
(19:50):
I'm gonna, I'm just making I'll close my eyes and
go away. Daddy comes down off combine, says, what's matter? Son?
I said, it's working now. Daddy in the higher the
normal voice, what's up? What's wrong? Son? I said nothing?
And he looked in my faded blue jeans with the
holes and the legs and everything that was in style
(20:10):
back then, at least it from me and my old
bloody spot in my pocket. My right pocket was just
getting bigger and bigger. And he goes, let me see
your finger on, let me see your blankety blank finger, son,
And I pull it out and hold it out there.
Of course, he goes to mashing it and turning it.
He goes, well, it looks like everything's still intact. But
we got to let's let's get in the truck. Let's
(20:31):
go to town. And we went to my my papa's
house at the time, and uh, he opens the dreaded
medicine cabinet in the bathroom, the old metal medicine cabinet.
He opens that thing up and now I know there
ain't nothing in there but some band aids of some
some galls bandage and some caure on my cure chrome
(20:51):
with thighlate stuff with a little glass bottle with a
little bulb on the end of the glass stick. And
he opens that thing up, says, whole steal on him,
and he puts that on there, and I thought I
had stuck my finger in the lava, and you know,
and then he starts mashing around putting it on and
he wraps it up with that galls and some tape
and it was, you know, twice as big as my finger.
(21:11):
And that's why I went to my high school graduation.
I got a picture of me holding that finger up
and you know, you go up and get your diploma
and they shake your hand. Well, yeah, that didn't go
over real well because you got to shake the superintendent's hand,
the principal's hand. I'm like, and you know, you don't
want to do the whole sack thing, and they say, yeah,
(21:32):
you come off the other side. And I mean it
was insult to injury that day. Man. It's just so
farms are dangerous. Just what I'm trying to say. I'll
keep that in mind. It's hard. I want to get
my son doing stuff on the farm, but every time
I go, okay, well.
Speaker 2 (21:47):
I don't want to make him do that.
Speaker 3 (21:49):
Guineas.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
I ain't an't getting no guineas. We can't get anything
that makes that kind of racket. My wife didn't want roosters,
but I'm I'm now. I've got roosters coming along, and
we're gonna start breeding different breeds of chickens, and I'm
building a big incubator and we're gonna steyd on them.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
I'd like to see, uh, lily try to catch a
guinea because them things can buggy.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
I'd like to have an evening.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
The guineas are from Africa. They live in They live
in the wild in Africa. You know, if something lives
in Africa, with all the stuff over there there is
to eat. Things that live on the ground in Africa,
you gotta If you're gonna be a bird and survive
on the ground in Africa, you better be fast. Yeah,
I mean, it'd be interesting to watch. I love those guineas,
(22:33):
they just raise too much.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
They're pretty to me, they're pretty, but I just don't
I don't want to kind of noise because in the
dog's park every time to make money.
Speaker 3 (22:39):
You're right, We'll be right now.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
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(23:43):
I thought about every I'll talk about it on a break.
We do have remember the some stuff going out, But
that's all folks. Yeah, my brain and my mouth ain't
working right anyhow.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
Y'all had a shoot coming up.
Speaker 1 (23:59):
There up where? Oh yeah, yeah, at the end of
the summer blast us coming. I think registration's probably closed
on that unless you know drew where. They're doing some
changes up there. I think they're bringing a crane in
and moving a contex box around the back of the range.
There's going to be some rearranging stuff we have now
up there, you know, so much going on anyhow, don't
(24:21):
forget in Dothan that we do have. We can bring
your gunsmith and stuff down Tyle Hasse and get done.
We are doing some of our fifteen builds up there.
We do have a fully stocked store now with you know,
fully stocked. We don't carry tons of guns, but we
do have uh you know, full We're a full line
clock stocking dealer up there. We do have some some
(24:44):
of the the M eighteen SIGs and things like that
for the military guys that like it. Just so much
going on, but.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
Got a bunch of SIGs coming in hopefully soon.
Speaker 1 (24:55):
Yeah. Yeah, they're just ordered about and.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Got a Legion X five Legion coming in and three
twenty twos.
Speaker 1 (25:05):
And then we can get you anything on our kids there.
Got order straight from the distributor and have it there
in a few days. And through the trail we do
transfers the cans we get back to well, let's do
that on the next segment so that our tyler hassee
audience to hear it. But when we come back on
the next segment, we are don't talk about.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
A lot of interesting stuff going on in the world. Yeah,
that's gonna see how it goes. Game changer, but y'all
come see. I mean anyway, getting into the summer months.
I went up to a livestock sale in Dothan the
other day with the Sheriff of Jackson County. We rode up,
had lunch. I hadn't been there before, and I had
been to livestock auction since I was a kid. Went
in and was watching there was a just uh anyway,
(25:44):
it was a sale. They had a bunch of cowcaf
pairs and steers and heifers, and I was watching all
that and I just bought some cows. I'm just getting
into it. We're rolling.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
We're actually running a tetter and a mower right now
on my place in Marianna. People, you know we're doing something.
We have on the local farmer gonna have a bunch
of hay for sale fifty nine and fertilized clean. Yeah,
behave grass is clean. And so you know if you
you reach out to the oath and Range that you
know they'll give you my number and just say I'm
(26:15):
gonna talk to Charlie about some hay I can delivered.
And so yeah, it's it's the guy cutting my hay.
So that's the best hay that I've seen a year
into after you planted it, and it's perfectly clean, and
we're cutting it at just the right time, and and
a fertile we put just put a bunch of fertilizer
on it, and it's it's I've never been able to
(26:36):
grow anything out successfully before. So maybe all those years
I was farming roa crop and I was trying to
kill grass, and you know, now I'm trying to grow it,
and all of a sudden I go, well, I was
growing wrong stuff all along. So but anyway I went
to that shut I learned more at that one auction,
sitting there on the top row than I've learned in
a long long time about cattle pricing and cattle and
(26:59):
and listening to the auctioneer and listening to you know,
because we go to those du banquets and stuff, and
that's a different kind of auction, and that's that's trying
to get drunks to buy raffle tickets and and and
pieces of artwork with somebody in grave something. There's a
different ball game than going to a real auction where
you're going, all right, what is I got my ear
I'm listening. I got it, man. That was again. I'm
(27:21):
sitting here the whole time. The whole time, I'm sitting
there going I'd have bought that. If i'd have just
got me a number, I'd have bought that. I got.
I got. I gotta, you know, I gotta figure that
side of it out. But you know, you don't know
what I'm gona try to go to Donaldsonville sall next,
and you know there's different ones. You's sitting there. Okay,
now I'm learning. It's an interesting experience for me.
Speaker 3 (27:43):
It might be selling stuff now well.
Speaker 1 (27:45):
Ventally, I got, I got cow cap hairs on the ground.
I got steers and heifer's coming along, and when it
comes time to sell them, I'll be doing that. I mean,
so far, I've sold pigs at the Graceville sheep and
pig and goat whatever sell what I call it. I
like that place. I'm a sheep. I don't know what.
(28:07):
It's just the Graceville sell that. You know. You can
buy chickens, and you can get guineas, and you can
get every now and then be a peacock or something
up there, and you can get rams. You get sheep
and goats, and.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
There's a pile of wild I guess, sort of wild
peacocks running around my neighborhood lately.
Speaker 3 (28:25):
Arthur, Yeah, I.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Want to I have a joke on the break. I
will be right back.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Are you looking for a place to buy quality shoes
but want to work with a local small business that
greets you like a friend and still knows what they're doing.
I'm J. D. Johnson. Both Charlie and I use the
Shoe Box for all of our work, boots, casual shoes,
and shirt.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
Jeff Wildon runs a great store that carries men's, women's
and children's shoes, and a number of major brands. They
know how to fit shoes properly and can even fit
you in orthotics to make great shoes fit even better.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
If you see us, we're probably wearing a car heart
shirt embordered by Jeff and shoes from there as well.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
They're located at twenty eight twenty South mon Road Street,
just north of the Fairgrounds. Tell them we said hello, Hey,
it's Charlie and Jedd from Tallan. Do you have residential
or commercial roofing needs? What about a bathroom or kitchen remodel?
How about commercial construction?
Speaker 2 (29:13):
If you do, call our good friend Travis Parkman at
Teespark Enterprises. They do roof replacements, roof repair, and new construction.
Speaker 1 (29:20):
Travis does commercial and residential work. Has come to my
rescue on more than one occasion, so I trust him
to get it right. Find him at tspark Construction dot
com or call him at eight five O seven six
six thirteen forty and we're back. So I want to
(29:43):
talk about JD brought up called me the other day.
I know when JD. When I call JD, it's generally
some mundane thing. I just gotta I gotta get out
of my head and talk about and share it with
him so I can move on to the next thing.
But when JD calls me, there's something as bad wrong
or something cool has happened, and he call says, did
(30:04):
you hear about the big beautiful bill? And I'm like, well,
you know, that could be the whole thing blew up
and Trump got impeached all the way to they passed it.
I don't know. And any you know, you said that
it had passed the House.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
Yeah, so, and I didn't know. I wasn't paying close
enough attention to it because it was listed or advertised
as a tax tax cut bill, you know, the big
the big deal for most people is going to be
the no tax on tips and the no tax on
overtime and no tax on some sob security stuff, you know,
up to a certain point and depending on your income
(30:40):
and all that stuff. And I don't make overtime, I
don't get tips, and I ain't on social Security, so
I wasn't paying a lot of attention to it. But
there is a there is a tax that affects us
or affects our world in a in a big way,
and that's the two hundred dollars tax on suppressors, short
barrel rifles, and machine guns, because that's the industry that
(31:00):
we're in.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
Otherwise known as a tax stamp.
Speaker 2 (31:02):
Tax stamp is a two hundred dollars per item fee
that you have to pay the federal government to be
in possession of those things. So there is a tax
stamp associated with every NFA item that you that you
want to own. You have to pay a two hundred
dollars tax stamp on top of the sales tax, on
top of the cost of the device and all this.
Speaker 1 (31:21):
Other When did they implement.
Speaker 2 (31:23):
That started in like nineteen twenty eight.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
And so in nineteen twenty eight two hundred.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Dollars, it was two hundred dollars. Then it's two hundred
dollars now. It was done in nineteen twenty eight to
be so grossly expensively prohibited that nobody would buy them.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
Yeah, I mean in today's dollars, I don't do the map.
Let's say that'd be thousands of dollars today.
Speaker 2 (31:44):
It would be that.
Speaker 1 (31:45):
Whatuld mean, nobody would buy them? Right, that was where
it came from.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
Yeah, and so at two hundred and like I tell
they're like, I don't want people. I'm not gonna do
that because I don't want to pay the two hundred
dollars tax stamp. And I'll go, well, if you take
your wife out to dinner on Friday night to a
nice restaurant, you're going to spend more than two hundred dollars.
And they kind of go, yeah, you're right, it ain't
that much anymore.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
If you buy drinks, you will spend that much.
Speaker 3 (32:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
So I was going to say, where y'all going like that?
Speaker 2 (32:10):
I said, you a nice dinner, and yeah, a bottle
of wine or some glasses of wine or if you
do the if you do the whole spill, it is
not a big deal to go to certainly not.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
A j ad money. You might do it, Charlie money.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
JD go to Waterburger, but uh, I don't take my
wife out. I cook for my wife most of the time.
But anyway, yeah, two hundred bucks is that doesn't go
a long way if you've been to the grocery store
lately to say a lot of money. So and and
now you know we've seen this this vast increase in
sales of suppressors because the other obstacle in the whole
(32:44):
deal was the waight time to get your stamp once
you've submitted all your paperwork. Well, the government has made
that really easy with an ephile. It still had the
two hundred dollars stamp the Big Beautiful Bill. There's a
lot of I think it at the time, there's still
a lot of misinformation going out. The Big Beautiful Bill
does away with the from the version I read, does
(33:05):
away with the two hundred dollars tax stamp. It does
not take from what I read, it does not. And
there's a lot of articles. I've read some articles that say, oh,
it's taking the taking suppressors off of the NFA list,
So which is which makes it special paperwork you have
to file to on it. I could be wrong, there
(33:27):
may be a change in it. But the version that
passed the House takes the two hundred dollars tax stamp
off of the suppressors, so there will if it goes through.
The version I read goes through still going to be
in an NFA item. And I don't think that's necessarily
a bad thing. And I'll tell you why here in
a minute. But the two hundred dollars stamp, the two
(33:49):
hundred dollars extra cost on top of everything else, will
go away, which is a good thing. There's some other
versions and some other stuff out there. Everybody's like, oh,
the should shacked past. No it didn't. It's part of
this economic bill, of the budget bill that they're trying
to get through.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
Well, I think was it an NFA item based on
a law that was passed or an NFA item.
Speaker 2 (34:13):
An NFA item since nineteen twenty eight, because what the
NFA did in nineteen twenty eight was assigned this tax
to and the special registration stuff to machine guns, short barrels,
and suppressors. Okay, okay, And it's been revised over the years.
There's been changes to the NFA. The last one was
in nineteen eighty five, I think took effect in eighty six.
Speaker 1 (34:39):
So it's gonna be interested. Is it removing the tax
stamp across the board for all NFA items or is
it just suppressors?
Speaker 2 (34:46):
What I saw was suppressier.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
Okay, Well, it's a stepping right directly.
Speaker 2 (34:49):
It is a step in the right direction. Here's what
I'm afraid of. So if you if you completely take
them off of the NFA, and you say what is
you and I commonly believe, even I do believe this
a suppressor is not a firearm. It is an accessory
to the firearm. The problem with that is if it's
(35:09):
no longer treated with special as a firearm. Right now
is treated like a firearm when we sell one and
it gets transferred to the customer in the end of it,
once they've gotten their tax damp and done their paperwork,
it gets transferred on the forty four to seventy three
form government form, just like a firearm does, take off
all the restrictions on it, where it becoming over the
(35:31):
counter accessory where there's no tracking, there's no special forms,
there's no forty four to seventy three. When everybody's going, yeah,
that'd be great, No, it's not because the minute is
not a firearm anymore. It's not protected under the Second Amendment.
If it's just like just like barrels are not protected,
handguards are not protected, muscle devices, flashlights anything. If you
(35:54):
start treating it like an accessory, it's gonna be not
protected by under the Second Amendment as an arm anymore
or as a as a firearm. Right now, it's called
and treated like a firearm by the government. I'm afraid
that if they turn it into an accessory. They can
come out and pass a law and not only make
any further ones uh prohibited, they can make They could
(36:17):
technically if the wrong people get into.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
Office and I don't know, I don't know that can
make it contra federal government would do that, but individuals
stage might and they.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
Have no Second Amendment exactly. Yeah, the federal government absolutely could.
If the wrong people get into office and get control
of the government, they could do it. Yeah, it's we're
we're thinking. We're thinking about today, not ten years of.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
The flip side of that is is okay. So if
you treat it like a firearm, all right, If if
you bought a gun today and next week you decided
that you didn't want it anymore, you could sell it
to me directly an individual transfer. If you treat the
can like age firearm, what's to I mean? Then by
that you should be able to just turn around and
sell it to me since there's no tax.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
Right, which is why I kind of want them to
leave the thing like it is so that you if
we keep because what I'm really worried about, Charlie, what
I'm really really worried about, is if we treat it
nonchalantly tons of them will end up on the street
used in crimes, this, that, and the other. Then the
federal government or the government comes along and says, we
can't have these things on the street anymore. We've got
(37:24):
to put these restrictions back on them, plus.
Speaker 1 (37:26):
Plus, which is how Florida ended up with a bump
stock band, bump stock band when the federal government doesn't
have one anymore, because it was a reactionary thing with
the Republicans in the state of Florida, and they still
haven't fixed that issue. So I see, I see the point.
I'm happy. I think that it will open up a
whole new market for people and make it more affordable.
(37:48):
And here's the thing is, if we still had a
year to delay on these getting these cans, these tax stamps.
Speaker 2 (37:53):
Right, don't we have a dage they come back and
we've had as fast as a twelve hour return in
our store here the routine routine returns now or less
than seven days. So for a suppressor. And if they
keep the paperwork and the restrictions of having to send
in your photograph and your fingerprints in place, and they
(38:15):
keep it to where you can't transfer from one person
to the other without that said paperwork. So it's tied
to you. That suppressor that you own, that you did
a tax stamp on, it is tied to you. You
can't loan it to somebody, you can't sell it to somebody,
you can't give it to somebody without doing the proper paperwork. Now,
I know a lot of people go, well, it's my right. Well,
it's you're right to have a gun. It ain't your
right to have a muffler on your gun. If the
(38:35):
government sees fitting to do.
Speaker 1 (38:37):
It, they can take that away. So here's the thing,
is nobody at the federal level or gives two hoots
about what we think anyway. But my concern is what's
gonna happen. Now it goes to the Senate. The Senate's
already saying are going to rewrite everything. They're liable to
butchers and they're gonna and they're concerned about a lot
of tax breaks because they don't want to cut medicates,
(38:58):
bad medicare, whatever, whichever cut, and they don't want to
cut some of the things that the House was willing
to cut. Trump was able to push the House a
little bit because of some midterms coming up, and he
was threatened the primary some people if it didn't vote
for it. I mean, he put political pressure that he
can't necessarily do. With the Senate, we have a little
bit of a more margin for error in the Senate.
It's going to be interesting. I don't see them going
(39:20):
in and line iteming this out because they'd have to
specifically go after a gun issue, and I don't see
the Senate doing that more likely than I'll go after
something else. But we'll say we'll be right.
Speaker 5 (39:37):
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Speaker 1 (40:06):
Remember fdi c Hey, it's Charlie and JD from Talent
Tactical Outfitters. Are you in the market for a firearm?
Speaker 2 (40:11):
How about Holster's optics, cleaning gear or apparel.
Speaker 1 (40:14):
We offer all of that and more and provide expert
advice and a one of a kind try before you
buy program.
Speaker 2 (40:20):
We can even help you build your own talent tac
ops AR fifteen from our huge selection of parts in
our Armors class.
Speaker 1 (40:26):
You can build a nine millimeter for personal defense or
a larger caliber hunting rifle with optics. It's all up
to you, your color, your style. Come see us a
Midway right off Ien or call us at five nine
seven seventy five point fifty. It's a driving.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
I'm sort hudning.
Speaker 1 (40:44):
And we're back. Before we move on to our fishing segment,
I want to talk about a foraging class. We've talked
about foraging the the classes at Billy Bailey with old
Way's Environmental Education as his social media stuff. But Billy
Bailey is coming to Talling in Midway on June to seventh,
(41:05):
Saturday at ten am Eastern, that's nine am for you
people on slow time with me, and he's doing a
class on He will show a bunch of edible plants,
medicinal plants. He'll talk about all that in the classroom
and then you're going to do a foraging walk around
our building and there's probably twenty plus. I did a
(41:25):
walk the other day and just looked and there is
a ton of edible and medicinal plants growing around the
building out otherwise on his weeds in the building, in
the woods behind us, everything from wild blueberries to smile
acts to just on and on and on and on,
and Billy's going to go over all of that stuff.
This is an awesome presentation. He is offering the thing
(41:51):
you need to reach out to him and his phone
number and he does this either through social media on
Facebook Billy Bailey or on His number is eight five
O Tuesdazero nine fifteen thirty five. That's eight five O
two O nine fifteen thirty five. I have a hard
time say it's really close to my phone number, but uh,
(42:12):
that's Saturday, Saturday, June seventh. He does have a cat
costs for the twenty twenty five thirty bucks something like
that per person. I mean, I don't think he charges
for kids. Don't quote me on that, but which somebody will.
But Billy's real reasonable. Those classes do fill up, and
he does individual walks at people's homes and ranches and
(42:32):
homesteads and stuff like that. I mean, I've gotten into
this world and it aggravates Friday j D. Because all
I talk about is eating weeds and stuff you can't
you can't meet me somewhere.
Speaker 2 (42:41):
Ain't gonna eat it with you.
Speaker 1 (42:42):
I'm down looking. We're building a new building now there.
We go to a new pro shop. We're gonna move
down to the range here. And I was meeting with
Chad Hail from hell Contracting and show going over where
some dirts going in and stuff, and I'm like, hey,
you know, you can eat that plant right there, And
he got stuck there For the next fifth teen minutes.
I'm walking around showing him all the edible plants and
(43:02):
having him test playing. You can tell extra, you can
tell he's I handed him a plan. I said, try that.
He looked at me like I was nuts, and he
felt it was a peer pressured man to try. You know,
that's not bad, I said. See, I said, Now that
willow tree over there, you chew on a leaf, and
that's that. That's like eating aspiring, you know, the will
it leaves. It tastes like that, But it tastes like aspiring, So.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
It's that's not what I was going to say. It
tastes like but you're close.
Speaker 1 (43:27):
It starts. It starts with the first few letters of aspiring.
Speaker 2 (43:31):
Yeah, most of that stuff does.
Speaker 1 (43:35):
Get into wild lettuce and cooking that down and steeping
that down to something the consistency of of of toy sauce,
and and that should be illegal because that stuff apparently
will make it like put us. They call it opening
lett Yeah.
Speaker 2 (43:52):
Yeah, mustard.
Speaker 1 (43:54):
I go out the old wild mustard. It's in everybody's
pasture out there with a little yellow fos on. That's
the if you cook that stuff up.
Speaker 2 (44:01):
You like regular mustard greens, you like wild mustard greens.
Speaker 1 (44:04):
Why let us the same thing. The passion flower, they'll
really pretty purple flowers. It's not passion fruit. It's passion
flower vine that grows around here and it's everywhere, and
they'll have a fruit that's actually pretty sweet when it's right.
But when that vine's growing in the end, that's really
green and soft. I walk around just snatched the ends
(44:24):
off that and eat it like salad. Green. Just walk around,
just eat it at random, and it's good. I like it.
Speaker 2 (44:30):
Bird poop and all.
Speaker 1 (44:32):
Now you know it's well. You try to steer clear
of the crunching parts.
Speaker 2 (44:36):
To change this soft real quick. My my daughter graduates
from high school today. The show airs. I'm so proud
of her. She graduate graduating with a four point three
five GPA.
Speaker 3 (44:49):
Gosh, that's better.
Speaker 1 (44:50):
Yea perfect, that's that's excellent.
Speaker 2 (44:52):
They give them extra points, Paul for taking the ap classes.
Speaker 1 (44:55):
That's some attuff.
Speaker 2 (44:57):
So yeah, she's got She's got about at least. I
think the first two semesters of college will already done
in high school because of the level of classes taken
in school. So couldn't be more proud of her National
Honors Society, all kind of all kind of accolades, and
gonna be going to school up in Alabama at Troy
University Universe. Yeah, so couldn't be more proud of her.
Speaker 1 (45:18):
One mess in our listening audience radius she will be
able to listen to? Of course she probably she will not.
Speaker 2 (45:24):
She will not listen to the show. She thinks, Daddy,
is you know some some old redneck And she's probably right,
but she is right. I am proud of her. One
of her graduation presents, we were like, what do you
want for graduation? And she she didn't ask for much,
but she wanted her a new pair of cowboy boots,
so we went and got her new pair.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
Of cable boats, a new car.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
She already got one of them, so well, not new
but new to her. But yeah, we she went got
a new new pair of cowboy boots and she walked
around the house in them for about three days.
Speaker 1 (45:53):
Uh, you got carpet, Yeah, okay, as long as you
don't have hardwood floors.
Speaker 2 (45:57):
You're trying to break in boots in. You're coming through
the through the tile in the kitchen and there are
some hard wood and flies here clumbing and what are
you wearing these boots around for its? I'm trying to
get them broke in. I'm like, all right, so yeah, read.
Speaker 1 (46:10):
To go outside, honey.
Speaker 2 (46:13):
Anyway, you've been catching a fish.
Speaker 3 (46:14):
Yeah, I had.
Speaker 4 (46:15):
I just sent Charlie a picture of a shell cracker
trip we had this week.
Speaker 3 (46:19):
I'm it was man, we caught we killed them.
Speaker 4 (46:22):
It was awesome, all of them fished by eleven o'clock
on that picture.
Speaker 2 (46:25):
But it ain't nothing wrong with that.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
But that was good.
Speaker 4 (46:27):
Had I had had four people, had two boats and
we got on one one side and one on the
other and it had a great time. But the man
named Bass are starting to move up shallow to they've
been keeping the lake low up there. Jd on Seminal.
Speaker 2 (46:40):
I noticed every time a few times I've been over
the river recently. It's still pretty going, pretty good, so
they got to be getting it from somewhere because we
hadn't had the rain.
Speaker 3 (46:49):
So that's right.
Speaker 4 (46:50):
And the lakes, the Flint River arms still a little dingy,
spring creeks clear. The grass has been growing out there,
but on the Flint side of the lake it's and
the Hoochs it's been dingh grass has really started growing yet.
Speaker 3 (47:03):
On the main lake. Last year we had a bunch
of a bunch of water, a bunch of current, bunch
of high water, and that flushed alat of that grap
pulled it right up by the roots. And this needs
a clearputt bit so to start growing back again.
Speaker 2 (47:15):
I got you. I did want to mention we Uh yeah,
we lost. We lost a really really good friend and
a good guy and a service that we provided in
the building here that we rent, Jim Jim Hanshaw the
Rodden Reel repair. Uh Jim Jim passed away Saturday. He
was Yep. He built some custom rods for us and
(47:36):
kept some reals fixed for us. And Jim was just
a just an awesome guy and we thought the world
of him. I caught myself twice this week. Gonna walk
over there and just say hey to Jim, because I'm
out once a day, I go over and just say
say hey to him and talk to him. And uh,
but my, you know what, he went out the way
I would love to go out, and he was fishing
(47:57):
and uh caught a fish and the parents he went
and sat down on the back of the boat and
went to heaven. Wow.
Speaker 3 (48:04):
So good guy.
Speaker 2 (48:05):
Hated that for him, or hated that for his family
and for for our audience that has been up here
and knows Jim, you know, as a loss to us
for sure.
Speaker 1 (48:14):
And Uh, I always walk out the back door over
there and he'd be sitting over there in the corner
in the chair between working on stuff, and we talked
for a few minutes, and I'd see him coming and going.
Speaker 2 (48:24):
But man, if you if you've got to choose a
way to go as a as a fisherman, that's uh,
you know, that's that's the way to that's the way
to go. But gonna gonna miss him, I tell you,
he's h we we're the family is working on for
folks that have equipment up here that was getting repaired
or whatever.
Speaker 3 (48:41):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (48:41):
His I think his sister and brother in law came
up and they're gonna try to start getting somebody here
to get stuff returned or give us the authority to
do it, the authorization to do it. We're gonna work
with him and try to get folks uh stuff back
to him that that either been repaired or hadn't been
repaired or whatever. But it's gonna take a minute. We
got to go through stuff and where you know, technically
(49:02):
he was a he was a tenant, he rented spaces.
Doesn't work for so I don't We don't have any
legal authority to go in there and mess with anything
as of yet. But we're we're working on things. So
just be patient with us over the next week or
so and well we'll do what we can to try
to start getting stuff back. But just keep his family
in mind, to say, a good guy. Yeah, good guy
(49:23):
for sure. Me and you got invited to to go
down and fish a tournament in September down in Appalatch. Yeah,
there's a bass tournament that going out of the ten
foot hole down in Appleatch where they have the sea hoole. Yeah,
that's the boat landing down there where they do the
big seafood festival on Appole hatch Coal. It's right on
the right on the coast is the canal there. But
(49:43):
it's a bass fishing tournament and it's up in the river,
and it's September the thirteenth. If they get they told me,
if they get a hundred boats in this tournament they're trying,
it's a it's a charity tournament for the shrine down
there in Mason's Lodges is doing it. And uh, if
they get a hundred boats, there's gonna be ten thousand
dollars in pay.
Speaker 3 (50:05):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
Mister Langston's yep, Randall Langston. I've got his phone number.
I got Lorn Whaley who's helping to set it up.
But uh, they if you and I can swing it
or I'm gonna do my very best to go down there.
I hadn't fished a bass tournament in a lot of years, but.
Speaker 3 (50:22):
Just down there in a lot of years, that'd be fun.
Speaker 2 (50:24):
I'm willing to go down there and do it. Very
different fishing down there. You can go fishing down there,
bass fishing, end up catching trout and red fish depending
on things. So it's an interesting place, a beautiful part
of the river down there. Yeah, and I know if
if mister Lanson's alved it is good. Yeah. They do
a lot for the community down there, and that's what
this money is going to. It's gonna be kept local.
(50:44):
So if we if y'all are bass fishermen and you
you know, fishing Lake Wimbaco or lower lower part of
the Atlas Cola, you know, I get wild and crazy.
I might run all the way up to the dawn.
Speaker 3 (50:54):
I'm with you. I'm goll go ready, but.
Speaker 2 (50:57):
Uh, I'm looking forward to it.
Speaker 1 (50:59):
Man.
Speaker 2 (50:59):
I hope we get to hope we get this worked out.
But uh, it's the for the Carabell Lodge, Carrabelle Mason's Lodge,
so curfew. It's called the Curfew Lodge. I don't know
why unless they got to be home at a certain time.
Speaker 4 (51:11):
They do.
Speaker 1 (51:12):
They do scholarships and then they had helped widows, norphands
and things like that.
Speaker 2 (51:17):
Anyway, all right, we'll catch y'all next week.
Speaker 1 (51:19):
Let's see y'all