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June 7, 2025 47 mins
In today's episode, the guys discuss how male organizational brain may not appear as organized, but we know that it's organized! They also discussed the joys of boating. 

Thanks, as always, to Captain Paul Tyre for joining the show. If you’re interested in going fishing with Paul, visit lakeseminolefishingguides.com or find them on Facebook @LakeSeminoleFishingGuides.  

Check out our archive of podcasts here: https://ihr.fm/36mzYjf.  

Follow the Talon Training Group and Range on Facebook @TalonRange.

Listen live to the Talon Outdoors Show from 10-11 a.m. ET on 100.7 WFLA!
WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe 

Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and like us on Facebook at @wflafm.  
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
And welcome to the town out door Chew. All right, Charlie,
so we are. So I'm Charlie. Yeah, thank you for
reminding me to introduce myself.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Bombini.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Yeah, I don't know who they like. I'm Fred.

Speaker 4 (00:26):
I get to sit and captain mister Charlie's chair today.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
So you're Cat Paul.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
So we're a little confused today. So Grant's not in
the studio. Congratulations to Grant and his lovely wife. They
have a new baby, and he is he's not multitasking,
so he's not in the studio today. I called him
on the phone a minute ago, didn't answer it first,
and I'm like, I don't know how to do this,
So I'm producing. So today is gonna we're We're not

(00:54):
doing video, we're not doing TikTok, miss, We're not doing
any next stuff. And I'll just.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Don't call me on Sunday to tell me. Radio sounded funny.
Sounded funny. Yeah, I'm expecting it to sound funny.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
Oh it's it's gonna be all jacked up. So y'all
bear with us. You know, this doesn't happen efficiently or proficiently,
or sometimes at all without Grant in the studio. That's
why he's the executive producers, the only producer. I guess
I would be the backup producer and I suck.

Speaker 3 (01:23):
So you know he was on he did Preston's show.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
Oh he did.

Speaker 3 (01:30):
He was like he did like the whole Houston thing.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
Yeah, does a good job.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Oh yeah he does.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
He's uh, he is a radio Preston, but none like us.
We are.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
It was a nice change of pace.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
We're rank amateur at pretty much everything in life.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
Well that's what they say about us on TikTok.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
At least let me rank talk. Man, it's been a
it's it's been a heck week. See that is I'm
I'm a little out today because I woke up with
X messages from emails from the website. The Townholster's website
was down and the dead emails wasn't working for half

(02:08):
the company and the payment stuff it expired. But I
tried to go in update it, but then the website
provider for the Holster site that wouldn't let you log
in because if you didn't pay, it don't let you
log in. You can't log in to pay unless you
as I had to call and get some backdoor way
to get into the website and then update the payment information,
and then the Googles thing doesn't work, and the I

(02:30):
just blah.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Blah blah blah conditions out.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
And I'm and we're in the studio and air conditioner
doesn't work.

Speaker 3 (02:36):
This is I was having So I was having communication
with JD with our eyes and it wasn't pretty.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
Yeah, well it's it's kind of where my feelings on
my head. It's not a mystery.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
I was like, I don't like looking at you.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Yeah, Jed is he has he semi as well get
a billboard on his foreheads. I ain't happy or I'm
not I don't like what you just said or what
And I read him like a book and my stupid self,
I'll just keep talking. Sometimes I can see him going
down there and I say, I ain't he ain't happy
with what I'm saying, but I don't know how to
shut my mouth, and so.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
Kind of like when you walk in on you your
friend fighting with his wife, I mean you just kind
of turn around, walk.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
Out the door, stay by.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
Yeah, that's that's kind of where I wanted to.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Well, there's no way you win that because if you
if you take his side she'll hate you forever. And
if you take her side, then you know he feels
lucky betrayed him. He's probably wrong anyway. So I mean,
you know, because there are women are always right. My
wife might listen to this show.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
So just to see how bad you screw up. That's
that that would cause my wife to listen if you
knew I was gonna screw up something.

Speaker 1 (03:42):
Oh yeah, let me.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
Tell you all what change the subject. So once or
twice a month, me and some buddies of mine that
I went to high school with and all that, we
gather up and cook at my buddy's house on his
car port back behind the house, you know, do man
things and fire up the grill or smoker.

Speaker 3 (03:59):
No so uh it looks like a scene out of
King of the Hill.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
Yeah, pretty much. You know, there may be adult adult
beverages being partaken of and that kind of stuff. I
we had fried fish last night, fried bass. So buddy mine,
one of one of my buddies of Johnny Callaway that
plays in his band is called the Stimulus Package. Uh.
He's a lead singer and guitar player. Remember Stimulus Package

(04:24):
from the during COVID and all that stuff. That's that's anyway. Uh,
they're really good. They played the comus that we like.
But anyway, he goes, I got to ask to help
a guy clean out his pond. He's got too many
fish in it. So they took like thirty bass out
of this pond, that little small bass.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
Fil as now was going, okay, I understand now eating
bass and to hit me.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
So I didn't want to, you know, I had to
clarify these were these were farm pund bass, and there's
too many of them in the pond. So he goes,
I'm a fried fishing. Yeah, I bet you ain't never
had them like this before. And I'm like, man, it's
kind of hard to have fried fish that you ain't
never had. They fried fish that I ain't never had.
It was like candy, I could have I could have
made a hog out of myself. And it's so simple.

(05:11):
So Tony chatcherise, saturise or whatever the Tony's creole season
and sprinkle that on them, marinated them for a couple
of hours and Heinz fifty seven sauce. So he takes
the bass, cut it up in little chunks. Heinz fifty seven.
After the Tonies let it marinate, and then they took
I don't know what it's called now, but it used
to be called aunt Jemima's pancake mix, you know, the

(05:34):
flower the pancake flour, and flowered them, pulled them straight
out of the Heines fifty seven and flowered them with
the pre done, the ready to go pancake mix, and
then fried them. Wow, oh my gosh, game changer. Unbelievably
good fried fish that just it don't sound good. I know, Fred,
It don't make one bit of sense. It's like, whoever

(05:55):
thought of this? Y'all? Just God bless you. That stuff
was so good, he said, they fry that for people
that don't like fish.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
I got the marinate part, and then.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
You take the dry, the dry pancake like.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
They're ready milk and eggs.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
Right, it's just like your so your marinates making the
pancake MIXTI to the fish.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
Correct and then they just drop and drop it in
the fryer.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
Oh I got to try that.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Oh it is it is fish crack. I mean it
was is.

Speaker 4 (06:26):
So are already good?

Speaker 3 (06:27):
It is good.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
Don't don't tell everybody that they won't be none left.
But yeah, I grew up eating bass and it's good good.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
But is it richer?

Speaker 2 (06:36):
I mean, I don't know how to describe it. Fred
It's it's it. He said, we cooked this for the
girls that don't like fish. Is exactly what he said
for the women folks in the in the family that
don't really like fish.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
I mean, is it like too sweet or no, it's not.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
Too sweet, but it is it gives you. It's when
you're cooking it, it almost smells like a maple. I'm like,
did y'all put maple syrup or something there? Because I
was getting a little bit of a smell. I eat.
I taste things really through smell pretty. I got a
really sensitive sense of smell, and it's, uh, if something
doesn't smell, it's something doesn't. If something doesn't smell good
to me, I ain't gonna eat it. I mean, it's

(07:10):
just not gonna taste good either. This almost had like
a maple leave maple syrup pancakes smell when they're frying it.

Speaker 4 (07:18):
It was like a fish in pancake.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
Oh yeah, you could, absolutely you could.

Speaker 4 (07:27):
You take redfish and put mustard on it then't.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
Yeah, I have to. I've tried a bunch of different
ways of I had never had it. Apparently this one
of there trying to I introduced Johnny and his family
to fried spare ribs, and they just think that's the
greatest thing ever, because we've been eating fried spare ribs
my whole life and just straight fried spear ribs.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
And Fred's over here contemplating to stop by Southern seafood.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
Yeah, the grouper would Grouper and bass are really similar,
texture and flavor and all that to me anyway, and
we normally do Hoover's cornmeal and salt.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
You hear that free plug?

Speaker 3 (08:01):
I heard that free plug. He's out in Montana right now,
but he's still listening.

Speaker 2 (08:04):
Yeah, but uh yeah, dude, it was just it was
a it was a different ball game. It tastes totally
different than any fried fish I've ever had, and I
grew up eating fried fish once or twice a week.
You know what, if you did it was shrimp, I
don't know, I get knocked out. Knock yourself, give it
a try. I mean, it's yeah, I'm gonna I can't
wait to go fishing again and get a bunch of
fil AT's and bring it home and cook the girls

(08:25):
and my wife and try.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
To get out a shot tonight. We got the grandkids.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
It's so easy. I mean, it's just you put that
You put your pancake mix in a in a zip
lock bag.

Speaker 4 (08:34):
Just like you would just row pancake mix.

Speaker 2 (08:36):
Yeah, just like you would Hoover's cornmeal. And I asked
him why, said, well, does it matter what kind of
pancake mixing? Because no, not really, he said, this is
whatever Aunt Jemima's called now, because I don't think it's
called pancake mix whatever. I mean, you know, General, General Mills.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
Or something themselves a pancake mix and the stuff on
or cert whatever it is that the Terrence something or
other he's on social media. Don't know. It's it's a
black fella who who sells non politically correct. Uh, you know,
the same stuff that Aunt Jemima sold. But he said,
I don't care. Yeah, well so he's out there. He's

(09:10):
probably a multi millionaire. Now.

Speaker 2 (09:14):
The real Aunt Jemima was a business woman that that
made a lot of money with her stuff.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
Her family actually wanted them to go.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
Yeah, they're mad about it.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
They were mad.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
And I think there I think.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
That was that was a rumor that that happening. They're
never going back.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Whatever, whatever it's called. I don't care. Be quick, I
don't care do the bes quick stuff it's but anyway,
it was, it was an excellent, excellent meal, and uh wow,
you know to give it a try.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
What are you doing?

Speaker 4 (09:43):
I'm doing grand signals thever never three.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
Well, I was doing. That's all I can do. I
can't remember that how anything. I don't know. I was, well, hey,
we'll be right back. I hope the first segment recorded.

(10:11):
I hope this has I see a bunch of spikes
over there. But that's so the minute we ended it,
I'm like, all right, y'all, hush, I'm trying to figure
out what to do when you immediately started talking again.
So if it's gone, it's on, y'all. And I don't
know Fred don't know, he's an attorney.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
Yeah, it's been a week. Yeah, I don't know. It's
a bag. I got back a frown and like the
craziest just came out of the woodwork.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
That's your normal clientele.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
This week it has been.

Speaker 1 (10:42):
I mean, you got some good clients, had some need
little help.

Speaker 3 (10:46):
I don't think these were gonna ever be my clients.
We just got some whacked out calls.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
It's weird. Yeah, we get we get the weeks like that,
where or just odd odd just encounters you talking about
you having a day. This morning, I had a day.
I'm hooked up and got my truck with the boat
behind it because Paul and I are going to the
river when we get done with the show. Make sure
it ain't lose straps in the boat. That one ain't

(11:15):
gonna blow off. I promise that boat's too heavy to
blow off. But anyway, Uh, they so dropped off my
youngest child and my dog with my mama this morning
because she had to take Alley somewhere at eleven o'clock.
And I left the dog there, and I didn't pull
in the driveway because it's a twenty foot long boat
on a trailer with a twenty seven foot long truck

(11:36):
and trying to back bed in a driveway off the
main road is you know, in tight quarters. And uh,
I get head on out and I hit Thomas Field
Road and I'm headed south coming out here and gonna
be early. And I get two miles down the road
and Ally called me, and Daddy, do you have a
key to Nana's house? Well, no, I ain't got a

(11:58):
key to Nana's house. What's happened. She's got an electronic
lock on the front door with the code and punch
the cote in and go in. Well, it's not working
and we're locked out because it automatically closed. When when
my mom walked outside to help get stuff in or whatever,
the door closed, the door behind her, the automatic lock
shut and the battery died.

Speaker 4 (12:18):
Oh no, I was wondering about that. So what y'all do?

Speaker 2 (12:22):
I had to turn around, and I'm like, well, I'm
gonna leave my eighty something here, old mama and my
YOUNGU standing on the porch with a dog. So I
was trying to turn that rig around on Thomasville Road
in morning traffic with the you got the South the
South Georgia Express going south, and then you got all
the whatever coming north. I about got run over in

(12:42):
the road again. We get back to the house, back
the back the trailer, and back the boat into the
driveway because I sure didn't want to pull in and
have to back out into the road and get run
over and uh dug around on my truck. Because I
was thinking myself, I know I got a key to
this this house, you know. And I dug around and
dug around and dug around. And I used to keep
a bunch of keys in a bag in my center console.

(13:05):
And I get to find the bag and there ain't
no keys in it. So I started digging. I finally
dug around and I found a water of keys. And
I looked at it and one of them was a big,
funny looking key, and I was like, that's the right brand.
Let me see, and walked up there and turned that thing.
That door came open, and I was like, hallelujah. And
mama's let said, well, yeah, that thing's been telling me
the batteries getting low for a while. She said, do

(13:28):
you know how to change the batteries. I'm like, yeah,
give me a little, Phillips said, screwdriver. Phillips said, screwdriver.
Four double A battery. Weren't no double A batteries in
the house that worked?

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Oh man, good morning.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
So yeah, I came to work with my tail feathers
a little bit sin in the morning.

Speaker 1 (13:46):
Yeah. Yeah, we have one of those sink. My wife
had to have the sink kitchen faucet that you touch
all right, well, it takes battery. A battery pack on
her there. It takes to four eight double a's and
a little battery pack with a nine volt connector on it.
She can put a nine volt battery on it.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
And that's the one the dog's collar sets off.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Yeah, that's the one that you'll walk by. If the dog,
if the if the up the garming GPS, the hunting
collar is on the dog, the water will come on
just by itself.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
But house one day and the dog walked by, that
thing came on and I was like, yeah, I thought
that I thought the hainting had done coming.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
My mama has the same kind of fawcet up at
her house, and when I walk up there to wash
my hands at Mama's house, I reach up and touch
the thing and it don't work. And I do it
every single time, and I'm like you what, oh crap,
I got to turn it back on. And then every
now and at the house, somebody will reach over there
and turn kind of you know, when a dog collar
was setting off. We got the new spot on GPS stuff,

(14:45):
and it doesn't do it, but it'll turn the foscet
off and I'll go up there and it's like how
many times do I touch it? Before I realize it
ain't coming on, and I got But now what will
really mess you up is every six months or so
the batteries ago did and then it's the facet doesn't work,
and you got to get out and crawl up underneath
the sink and I'm kind of large, and get amongst
all the cleaning materials and all the stuff and reach

(15:07):
back there and grab that battery pack and then go
dig up. And if you're always one battery short, I
got seven, kneed eight and it's digging around and one
doesn't match, and it kills.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
I go to Costco and get you a battery. Daddy battery.
It's a big, huge plastic case that's got every battery
compartment sizing in there, and you fill that thing up
and set it up on there, and then just when
it gets halfway empty, I mean, I got forty seven
types of every battery at the house because of different

(15:39):
ones or whatever I got. It's really it's this really
nice organization organized case that holds the batteries in the
right place and you can see through the lid and
you look at it and go, yep, I'm getting half,
I'm half. I gotta I can put a whole package
of bulletpacking.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
JD's work bench in there, and he's talking about something organized.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
Yeah, that's because about four other people have access to
my work bench in there, and I go clean it up,
and then they go use something and leave everything. And
then you know, I know, I know who the primary
culprit is of that, because I anyway, and it's my
work bench. If I want to leave my tools out, wife,

(16:19):
I know where I came out.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
Yeah, you know. I tried to explain this to my wife.
I mean, if I put something down, don't move it.
Don't move it because it's there. It may not look organized,
but it's organized. I know where it is, and she can't.
I know you didn't clean up after you and puts
it away. I can't find it.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
I cant right now. I've been looking for two days
for my my my e PRB, my personal locator beacon
satellite beacon that I carry with me hunting and fishing
and on the boat. And even though I go with
somebody else, I got my EPURB in my bag.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
It couldn't find its locator beacon.

Speaker 2 (16:51):
Yeah, and I guarantee you, I know when the last
time I had it, and I came home with it
in a bag with my my fishing clothes, but my
dirty clothes because I changed before I get in the truck.
If I've been off shore and I'm stinky, nasty or
whatever else, I go somewhere and put clothes on before
I drive my truck back, because I don't want my
truck smelling like that for the next two weeks. And
I guarantee you it got home and it got put away.

(17:12):
Oh yeah, it got it got put up somewhere, but
nobody has any memory of said operations.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
I don't even want to put in my clothes with.
I mean the Wednesday morning, I you know, I had
been with color can of cork, you know, early, and
so before I went to bed, you know, I heard
my pants and everything, I'm good to go. I get
up next morning and I got put on my blue pants.
I'm going to color cord. They fell off of me

(17:39):
because she puts somebody else's pay. These were sized thirty
four pants. I wear size thirty nine or twenty nine.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
And who else I don't know who I've got.

Speaker 3 (17:51):
I don't know. It could be the milkman. I mean, well,
that's kind of a somebody.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
That conversation you might want to have that.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
Could the neighbors pants for all I know, but they
weren't mine. And I looked like a clown with those things.
And I had to go to court and wrinkled.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
Wrinkled, wrinkled extra large pants pants and that's pants picking
up that to wear fresh self wearing.

Speaker 3 (18:14):
I was self conscious. I mean, I just I just
felt awkward. I mean I was standing there and all
these people are call. Yeah, there was the one call
of freaks coming in in the.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Court, bitch your chester drawers on to pulled up to
your chest chest in your drawers.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
I had this adjustable and I had to like, you know, yanked.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
And like you was wearing your daddy suit.

Speaker 5 (18:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (18:36):
I just felt like such a jackass.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
Like me, like, uh we kind of around here. We
got on this weight loss kick. I just put I'm
wearing pants that I had more than two years and
I'm like, I had.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
To buy a new one and I dropped from a
forty size forty pants down to thirty six.

Speaker 1 (18:53):
Is well, I only went.

Speaker 3 (18:55):
I think I got a few parody House.

Speaker 2 (18:57):
Had some thirty four that I might squeez you sure
it ain't his? Could be it's our secret.

Speaker 3 (19:07):
Yeah, that's my that's my week. Crazy people pants.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
That don't fit somebody else's pants.

Speaker 3 (19:13):
Somebody else's pants.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Well, I had a rough week and I had to
come in here and cap it off with you jokers. So,
I mean, you know, that's just this is so much
stress relief for me right now. The only thing that's
less stress for me is going home and sitting down
in the chicken pin or playing with the goat taggravator.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
You sit in the chicken pin.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
I go sit on a five gallon bucket. You have
to turn it over on its side. When they're in there,
they'll crap all over it. Yeah, So I go in
there and I picked the bucket up straight. I sit
down and sling some food down there. My favorite it
was a hen. Now it's a rooster. I'll show you
a video because you don't do Facebook, but uh, I
got this this hen I've been had on my little shoulder.
I remember y'allre kidding me about my shoulder chicken and

(19:52):
all that stuff. Well, the other day I went in
there and he she or he now hopped up on
my lap and looked a up and did some weird croak,
which was like a weird kind of garbled, almost a crow.
And I'd heard some hens without a rooster around would
do that, but the rooster's in there. And then I
went out there day for yesterday and and jumped up,

(20:16):
jumped up on me, and I'm playing with the thing
and I set it up on my shoulder, and all
of a sudden it goes to crowing. And I was
talking to it, and I'd say, all right, tell him
telling you a boy, and it would crow, and I,
you know, I talked for a minute and it would
just sit there and look at me and peck around.
And then I'd go, all right, tell them again, tell
them it's telling you a boy, and it would crow
again on my little wings come out, and it was
like it was all it could do. And I went, well,

(20:37):
I'll be dog gone. So I started me a new
Facebook page for Dry Creek Farms so I can take
on my farm stuff and just put in one location
and I put the video of him on there. And
uh so, anyway, trying to get people to follow that now,
just for the farm and the dog and the chickens
and the turkey content and the hay into this and

(20:57):
that been selling some anyway, it's uh.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
Lot, you thought it was a hen, but you was wrong.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
I was wrong. Turns out five of those hens that
I bought are I bought five Shetland hens. Two of
them are hens, three of them.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
Are roosters, Shetland hen be it's a Shetland.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
Shetland hen is the breed, and so it's a Shetland
Hen rooster. If that makes any sense.

Speaker 2 (21:24):
That sounds like sound Francisco.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
Need to be well, you can't really look at them
tell the difference until apparently they get this age. And
then now the other ones, he's the only one crow
and all the ones that are clearly roosters, they're all like, no,
we're gonna So he's he's he was hitting up there
talking about I'm on daddy's shoulder, I'm daddy, I'm Daddy's friend,
and I'm telling y'all I'm in yards now, and then
that'll aggravating turkeys out there trying to get in there

(21:48):
with us.

Speaker 3 (21:49):
Things still wrong.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
Yeah, what's left of him? Yeah, he's got have to
tell the others gone and they but I would showed
a video on the break of my rooster.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
He got to work on that.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
It's his first day I mean, it's every every breed
as a different kind of crow. And apparently the Scottish
Shetland hens roosters don't don't uh exactly well, you know what,
I don't want to realize. Now, I've got two other
breeds and roosters out there, and so I have h

(22:29):
I've reached out on and was trying to find some
drink coolers to build I want to build. I've got
some old Georgia Quail Farm GQF egg incubators that I've
been incubating quail eggs, and I've had several hatches, now
hundreds of quail at the time that I'm hatching off
the eggs that I've got in a hatch time, you know,

(22:49):
egg collecting cage pen whatever, and trying to raise and
get the eggs and hatch my own quail and put
them in a flight pen. So if I've been doing
pretty good, but I wanted i've been I wanted a bigger,
more commercial operation. So I was looking around for some
drink coolers and a fella here in town called me up.

(23:12):
So I got two and I said I just needed
broke one. I went by and picked up two and
both of them got them home. Both of them worked,
and so I can't bring myself to build an incubator
and drink coolers that work. So I went all the
way to Carabelle and picked up an old double door
restaurant freezer, stainless steel, doesn't have glass doors, can't see

(23:32):
through it. But I'm gonna install the porthole like in
the boats. I can put a light in there and
see the eggs, make sure they're turning. And this huge cabinet,
this fred you can put five of you in it,
and I'm gonna put egg turners and the heater and all.
They got all that stuff coming in. And my son,
my thirteen year old son, is fixing to get into
the chicken hatching, turkey hatching, quail hatching business, and I'm

(23:54):
gonna teach him a little bit about That's why I
started that new farm page, is to you know, kind
of include him in the process. Because the light's going
out there missing with the animals. So I'm fixing to
teach him a little bit about agricultural enterprise.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
If you really want an incubator, all you gotta do
is just sticking eggs in the studio and turn the
air conditioner off.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Just because the air conditions doesn't work. You see, this
is what it feels like to be on the stand
with you cross examining. I've been there, I've been there.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
I pulled it off, but starting to get the little
sweat pellets on top of my head.

Speaker 1 (24:27):
Well, we're not on camera today, so you just feel
free to nobody's gonna.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
Gonna be no cameras. Like I forgot my hat.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
Yeah, I'm actually wearing a hat, which I rarely do. Yeah,
like I said, the plans for afterwards, all.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
These names I've been caught on social media on account
of Yeah, it's got me really depressed.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Yeah, I'm sure.

Speaker 2 (24:49):
Tell I get that that video you sent from the
Bahamas or wherever you was last week show you look
real depressed.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
That one hanging on a tree.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Not that one the dance the dancing Fred. Yeah, the
dancing Fred video.

Speaker 3 (25:01):
I was channeling my lit off.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
He was dancing on the palm tree like it was
a stripper pole, and I'm like, that's got to be
uncomfortable to get splinters.

Speaker 3 (25:13):
I was shimming up that thing and this girl was like, oh,
I bet that hurts. I'm like, it ain't nothing hurt
right now, pain free. Yeah, that was a good time.
That was That was a good time. I had a
real good time.

Speaker 2 (25:26):
I could tell it was. I bet the next morning
wasn't all that fun.

Speaker 3 (25:32):
Well, you know, so they have gambling down there. Yeah,
and I got on the craps table, and uh, I
had a good brun. I came back with more than
I took down, So I.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
All right, So there are several things there you go unpack.
Fred getting drunk might misunderstand that it's a craps table
and not a table to crape. And and then he
came back with more than he went down, and you
got to be c Yeah, you don't want to bring
nothing back that you didn't take down there with you
now now that.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Penicilla won't care you, No, no, no.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
They just want to clarify for the doath in the
market that listens to this bottom of the hour segment
and the Bible belt up there that listen. We're all
wholesome Christians in here, and Fred is a little you know,
he's he's he's the one that you know, we we pray,
we're we're trying to bring him on board with the stuff.

Speaker 3 (26:24):
Even Jesus hung out with the sinners. I mean, yeah,
somebody got to somebody got to put up with you
to balance all out.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
I ain't washing your feet, so you gotta.

Speaker 3 (26:37):
You don't have a tooth brush with you anyway?

Speaker 1 (26:42):
All right?

Speaker 2 (26:42):
Well, oh man, I can only imagine you down there
in that environment with with no responsibility to behave.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
I saw that he sent us, and I'm in a
hay field, moving hay and I'm going I'd rather be
here than there right now, we'll be right back and
we're back. So yeah, we got off on a Gillian's
Island down So I was telling Paul, I met a
young man I want to get on the show coming up.

(27:11):
I'm getting who it is and all just yet. But
the fishing guide does a little bit on seminole, does
a little bit off the off shore, some four hour tours.
We got to laughing about talk. I want to end
up being Skipper and Marianna and them out there. You know,
I don't know. I got to figure out how I
want to get said. I want to talk about how
far do you go on a four hour fishing trip,
because I know you get out out of side of

(27:33):
land which had been which puts it out.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
Of you fish for it the coast. I mean, I've
I've gone on eight hour fishing trips out of Panama
City and never get out of side of the beach
and catching king mackerel like going out of style. When
it's too rough to go bottom fish or whatever. You
can control them down the beach two or three miles
off shore and catch king mackerel.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
Like, how far are we going? You tried to kill me.

Speaker 3 (27:53):
I can make it from from the east pass in
off of you know, between Saint George and uh dog Out.
I can make it from there to oh Tower in
less than forty minutes.

Speaker 1 (28:04):
I can make it just over the horizon before I
start puking me too.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
I think that the day you and I went out,
we probably went twenty miles.

Speaker 4 (28:11):
Okay, you can see land no more.

Speaker 5 (28:13):
So.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
I was sick the whole time, and he tried to
knock me out on the way back because he took
the wave. He took a tack towards the wave just
at the right where every time we'd hit one it
snapped my neck over and finally I hit that dead
get him aluminum pole and tea top.

Speaker 3 (28:25):
I mean, if you go twenty miles, you're going to
be sixty seventy feet of water.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Yeah, I got I used to have a I still
got the mine to have a pile of numbers and
sixty foot of water out of Saint Mark's. Yeah, there's
a lot of light bottom out there.

Speaker 3 (28:39):
I'll be talking to you when we're done.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
Well, i'll hand you the I'll hand you the garment
unit that all them numbers are on, and if you
can figure out how to get them off there you
have them.

Speaker 3 (28:50):
I think I can do that because I've got it.
Does it does it have one of those little slights
that you put.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
A chip, No, it's got a it's got a plug.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
Okay, you gotta plug it in your computer. Yeah, there's
a way to do that.

Speaker 1 (29:02):
There's always a way.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
Well, if you want it, you'll you'll find it. Yeah,
that's the way.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
I just this is the way I quit.

Speaker 1 (29:14):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (29:15):
It got to where, you know, when when my wife
and I first bought our offshore boat, we were both
cops and working shift work and days off in the
middle of the week, and we just go whenever we
had a day off, we go and back then with
the liberal the liberal limits, we go out there and
fill up a cooler of the two of us full
of full of grouper or snapper or whatever it was backen.
That was good to eat. We go out there and

(29:36):
fill up a cooler, and it was worthwhile. And then
gas prices went the four dollars a gallon, and grouper
limits went the one. And it became like, I'm not
getting getting beat up, you know, because we didn't, Like
I said, I didn't know, I didn't always look at
the weather forecast or really care what it said. As
long as it was something less than six foot, you know,
we'd go and uh, get man, just get I think

(29:58):
that's the reason I got a bad back to this
day with some of the beatings I've taken on an
off shore boat.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
Yeah, you're not as much to talk about what your
wife did to you, now what.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
I'm talking about the waves. I'm talking about the waves man, it's.

Speaker 3 (30:12):
Uh, it's more than three feet island like guy.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
Yeah, it's just the older I get, the less I
want to get out there and get beat up and
tossed around.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
And I just need a bigger boat.

Speaker 4 (30:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (30:22):
You know, one of these days, if I'm making enough money,
I'll get me a freeman where I don't have to
worry about the waves anymore.

Speaker 3 (30:28):
Yeah, well you got to put one hundred grand down
to just to be on the waiting list.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
Yeah, and then pay another nine hundred grand when it
gets there. It's those big catamaran boats are just such
a game changer.

Speaker 3 (30:39):
If you know that guy's from here.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
Yeah, there's the World Cats, there's the Freeman's. There's a
bunch of these big new catmarans, a twin hole, non
planing hole catamaran boats. And when I went out of
we went out of Venice one time on a charter
tuna fishing and the guy had a forty two foot
I think it was a forty two foot Freeman and
we ran eighty miles and it was and it was rough.

(31:03):
It was six to eight and he's running forty two
miles an hour. And if you you could have sitting
at the back of the boat on a bean bag,
I could have drank a cup of coffee. Wow, they're unbelievable,
unbelievable in rough water.

Speaker 3 (31:16):
He started out as an airline pilot. He married one
of the Willis girls, Tallahasseebby and uh. He lives up
in Charleston now where those boats are manufactured and it
was kind of started out as a hobby for him,
and look what it's turned into.

Speaker 2 (31:30):
Yeah, it's it's it's a I would I would never
own another deep bee offshore boat, not as long as
something like that exists. Even if I didn't have to
get a frame and it didn't get a Freeman, I
got a WorldCat or some of the other ones that
are not quite as expensive. The uh, what's the other one.
The cop was at Caboo.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
Uh yeah, well the Freeman, I mean got that sea
keeper in it that has the gyroscope.

Speaker 2 (31:51):
Yeah, Charlie, you wouldn't even get seasick on. They've got
a they've got a device. Now it looks like a
it looks like a globe. It's this big round ball
that's got a bunch of stuff around it, and it
is a gyroscope that you mount to the boat that
when the boat starts pitching and rolling, this gyroscope counters
counters all of that and the boat doesn't move.

Speaker 3 (32:10):
Sit out there in fourth season and you're just like
on the oil platform.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Yeah, it's got a gyros gyroscope mounted in the boat,
down in the whole of the boat, and you turn
that thing on in all the rocking stops. It's you know, it.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
Found out that you find that on team you.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
Probably not Maybe I gotta feel I don't. I have
never priced one of those things. I got to feeling
they're probably kind of.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
In about twenty five grand for the lowest, the smallest, but.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
You're talking about a million million two for the boat, right,
Oh well, okay, maybe.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
These days on the forty two free men, you're going
to be a couple of million. Other way.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Wow, I see here's out of my price ranging.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
I don't go I want to, I want I don't.
I sold my John Boat to some guy that wanted
to buy it for his fifteen sixteen year old grandson,
and I'm like, sure, you you know what, I'm not
using it limit absolutely I got I got all my
money back out of it after having it for like
fourteen years. But you know it just that the boats
tend to hold your value if you maintain them. The
problem is it takes up shed space, and you know,

(33:13):
you got rats building this and there and everything else.
And I'm like, I want one again. But at the
same time, I know I'm not going to use it
that much. So what there's got to be there's got
to be somebody out there. There's a business model for
somebody rent boats.

Speaker 4 (33:30):
Rent a boat that doesn't work too well, like some of.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
You know, well, okay, so I rent no nice boat. Yeah,
I'll tell you that. They little boat.

Speaker 4 (33:38):
I guess you get away.

Speaker 2 (33:39):
They don't depend my city. You rent, you rent ponting boats,
take them out. There's there's boat there's there's several boat
operations where you can there's franchises that have boat rentals.
It's just, man, you talked about a bunch of liability
for you. You turn somebody lose that ain't never been
on a boat before, and you you know they don't
understand that that it ain't no breaks on it. And

(34:01):
then you got to have power to it to turn it.

Speaker 3 (34:03):
Not only that, if I'm going twenty thirty miles out.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
I really don't somebody else talking about that. I'm talking
about John all my fresh water inland, you know stuff
like that where and I agree, like some of those
probably not then Lake Talquin to put them on that
one that'd be that'd beat on the restriction list.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
Bulletproof boat.

Speaker 1 (34:24):
Yeah you're not, you're not doing that. You get well,
you get one of those with like the jet ski
motor in it, and then you run over stuff. Well,
if you hit something that's underwater, you probably wouldn't know
it because there's nothing sticking down from the bottom of
the boat.

Speaker 2 (34:37):
Us a hole. The lighted stumps will bust a hole
on the fiberglass boat.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
Yeah, if you get the jet ski motors and this
has happened to me with a jet ski whole like Commonia,
and you start running over a bunch of weeds.

Speaker 2 (34:49):
Suck it up in the start to do somebody else ship,
you need to stop all that thinking about that stuff.

Speaker 3 (34:59):
Yeah, we got to get out of the jet ski
and pull all that stuff out of the intake.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
Now we wait that you're out on the flats on
a jet drive out board and you suck up a
sting ray.

Speaker 3 (35:11):
That ain't pretty talking about. But when you're doing it
in Lake Ammonia, you know, you got all these alligators
over there going there's a midget.

Speaker 2 (35:22):
They Yeah, we've been a buddy mine were fishing on
the flats one time and he had a jet drive
out board for shallow water fishing, and we're going along
there and it literally, you know, it's got a big
square intake at the bottom of the foot of the
motor and it sucked up a sting ray and that smelled. No,
the sting ray didn't get to the impeller. It just
stopped everything. It's just like you go from wide open

(35:45):
to dead no power, no steering. No, we turned the
motor off and poked at him enough until he came
off and swam off.

Speaker 3 (35:54):
Would make me upset.

Speaker 2 (35:55):
Yeah, I got the thing that I was thinking about that, like,
you know, away to flounder fish, you just ride around
to the boat stoping. I got one run around at
night out there around the oyster bars and suck the flounders.
Vacuum up to flounders.

Speaker 3 (36:09):
Now I got two ideas from today's show. I got
to fried fish and then way to catch flounder.

Speaker 4 (36:14):
Yeah. I just had a guy call me from this
just built a beautiful home upoint like someone on his
I said, do you want to come up and learn
to like And I said do you have a boat,
And he goes, no, I'm just going to plan on
going with you, buddy.

Speaker 3 (36:24):
I was like, do that you got the money you
are to have a membership there.

Speaker 4 (36:29):
Yeah, I'm considering that. After Charlie just said that, I
got five or six that say. I had a man
telling me you could rink. He says, it's cheap for
me to come with you, that for me to.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
Go by, absolutely, And I had that conversation with a
young man the other day. For most folks, most folks,
instead of buying a boat doing all that, it's cheaper.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
To for off shore fish. And it's better to have
a friend with a boat.

Speaker 5 (36:50):
Than it's driving. I'm sort of going to show me
where to sign.

Speaker 1 (37:08):
Continuing on our our topic of the day, which is fishing,
fish cooking.

Speaker 2 (37:14):
That's what you do this time of year.

Speaker 4 (37:16):
That's right, it's not the best time. I mean you
they're starting to bite right now.

Speaker 1 (37:20):
Pretty good.

Speaker 4 (37:21):
But well, I love the winter timing and when it's cool.
By ten o'clock this morning, I was sweating so bad
to come in and take a shower.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
Name you sweating again, lake.

Speaker 3 (37:32):
Though it's been humidly. I mean this this rain that
I mean, it's like every five minute rains and then
the sun comes out and.

Speaker 1 (37:38):
I'm loving it. Growing fast, yeah, I bet it is.

Speaker 5 (37:41):
No.

Speaker 3 (37:42):
No, the garden's going crazy. Tomatoes in there, I got,
I got cucumbers look.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
Like walking crazy little reads growing around the shack.

Speaker 2 (37:50):
Yeah, I thing tomato. The bushes are five foot tall, man,
straight up.

Speaker 3 (37:55):
I mean the sunflowers went up and then broke got
too much worth, too much water. And uh yeah, I've
had oakre's coming up. Everything's coming, everything's growing this year.
You ready for some gumble Yeah, I got that. I
got some mustard greens in there and having to cut
the tops off of them so they keep growing. Yeah,
and uh, those are coming up nicely. The the cucumbers

(38:15):
are nice. Of carrots not yet ready, but you I
mean they all came. All the stuff came from seed.
Green beans have gone crazy. I did some grapes this year,
so the grapevines are gonna crawl around the fence.

Speaker 2 (38:28):
You do did you do grapes or did you do
scupping on these?

Speaker 3 (38:31):
These are like grapes, like like grape grapes. Yeah, grapes.
Where I can you know, get the naked women to
walk around in the barrel and make wine?

Speaker 2 (38:39):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (38:40):
Yeah, they were on that movie I saw.

Speaker 2 (38:44):
Of course they were. That's on the wrong section of
the movie Rental Place, well, Blockbuster.

Speaker 3 (38:52):
That's the only reason about the grapes. You got the
barrels and if you.

Speaker 1 (38:57):
If you're listening to show on Saturday. Billy, you missed
out because Billy Bailey's over in the next building over
teaching the foraging class's doing that right now. You're doing
it right now. Yeah, you can still go if you
want to, because we're recording the day before, but it's
going on right now while we're airing. If that makes
any sense.

Speaker 3 (39:14):
To you, I can go over there and learn how
to eat my yard.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
You would enjoy that class. So it's it's it's changed.

Speaker 2 (39:23):
The way I look at things, but not long as
they sell salad at public.

Speaker 3 (39:26):
So I'm good.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
I walk around the yard and old passion flowered, old
pretty purple flowers growing out there. I grabbed the tips
off of that that's growing and just eat that like
snacks now. And there's so many things that's changed for me,
the way I see things that grow and eat, and
it's it's better than a lot of things. But anyway, so.

Speaker 2 (39:50):
Paul said, he had how many seven? You had seventeen
blow ups on bread this morning?

Speaker 4 (39:55):
Yes, no, yesterday evening, oh, Wednesday evening, and we fit
on frogs, yes, sir, And we fished the morning had three,
and then the evening we had seventeen.

Speaker 3 (40:05):
So my son get a hold of you.

Speaker 4 (40:07):
Yes, yes, we're gonna be getting together. I'm on now
now that by starting to I'm gonna reach out to him.

Speaker 3 (40:12):
I don't know if you told you this. He called
the other day. He said, Uh, he said, you know
your oldest son is not as smart as you thought
he would. I said, well, I didn't think you were
smart again and uh, and he said, I've been talking
to who I thought was Paul and making all these
plans about doing all this stuff and talking about that
we're gonna do this, We're gonna it wasn't Paul, somebody else.

Speaker 4 (40:34):
Oh really, I talked to him all. I talked to
him one time.

Speaker 3 (40:36):
Yeah, well I think you cinarly figured out he was
talking to somebody else he'd gone to high school with.
And I'm like, you're gonna have to start that conversation
over again. So you may want to ask him to
screenshot whatever his text were to see it. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (40:51):
So now you're dealing with kids.

Speaker 2 (40:53):
But this time of year, when uh, when the frog fishing,
that's that's when you want to go right before dark
on Jackson whatever.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
And you're just putting them right over the lily pads.

Speaker 4 (41:04):
They were hitting off lily pads yesterday about five or
six feet they.

Speaker 3 (41:07):
So, okay, up on it. Good. Here's the lake right
here the okay to visualize the lake and open water
and lily pads at the edge of the lake. So lake,
lily pads. Where do I throw my frog to catch that?

(41:28):
To get that? Do I throw it outside? And open water? Dog?
Come in the little I'll tell you what.

Speaker 4 (41:32):
Remember, points, pockets and changes, Okay.

Speaker 2 (41:35):
J absolutely points anything different about that line, line of
weeds or the whole contour of the contour of.

Speaker 1 (41:44):
Points, pockets and changes. That's interesting to me, Paul.

Speaker 4 (41:47):
If you have a line of pads, or if you're
looking out into a pad fill, well, if there's a
hole in the pads, you know, they're not all perfectly round.
They could be they could be open gap spot. So
there's gonna be points on that. There's gonna be it'll
be a pocket, and it'll be a change of what's
around it. And if you're doing a line a pad line,

(42:10):
it's gonna have points, pockets.

Speaker 2 (42:11):
And changes in lake. It's like a lake Ammonia that
is highly lily pad covered. Right, you'll find their gator
holes there where alligators have gone out there and wallered
on the bottom, wallered out of hole and opened up,
and to pull the root, pull the lily pads up
by the root, and it may be something is big

(42:31):
enough to put two or three boats in. It might
be something half the size of your boat. You're gonna
have a little open spot there. So the predators bass
or predators that hide under cover and they don't want
to move around any more than they have to to
get something to eat, so they'll just sit there and
suspend under that shade and wait on something to come
above them that they can come up and strike.

Speaker 1 (42:54):
Right.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
So there's they're lazy. They're sitting there, and you find
those open spots where you can get your bait in there,
your frog or you're taught whatever tap water bait or
worm or whatever, and just you just have to kind
of look at that and imagine, Okay, there's probably that's
as my granddaddy would call it, old Oscar's got to
be in there. That looks like a good spot, you know,
and it's you You throw to that spot, and you

(43:15):
may have to pull it across there two or three times.
But if you you know what that spot's supposed to
look like or what there's there should be a fish
there because you've got the point jutting out where the
water's more shallow and the you know, the pads are
growing well there, it'll make a point or you'll have
a cut in spot. It looks like you just went
in there and that's a that's a cut or a

(43:35):
notch in the in the line. It's not perfectly symmetrical.
So you'll have this this pocket okay, And that's where,
for whatever reason, fish tend to congregate it. And and
once again back in the lake, this's got lily pads
with boat runs where people run boats constantly, you're not
gonna have anything growing in that space, and they're all
over the place. On lily pad lakes. You'll have a

(43:56):
boat run sometimes late in the evening. You've got this
open water, this long straight straight away of open water,
and you got lily pads on both sides, and you
can just fish those boat runs. They used to inlect Jackson.
I've heard of the guy's doing a technique where they
take this big long, twelve or fourteen foot long pole
right and they would tie a lure just a few

(44:18):
feet off the end of that pole, and they would
just shake it in the open spots, you know, and
not cast to it. They just yep, that's exactly what
they call it. And they'd take a jitterbug or some
kind of a a long pole with a short piece
of really heavy basically rope like piers corn or something heavy,

(44:41):
and yeah, they jig it over in the hole and
they would wiggle that thing around in there and make
a bunch of commotion on top of the bas and
see that and that's something to eat, and they just
lift it up out of the pads. Technologies come a
long way. Now we've got little bitty tiny line. Now
that's fifty pounds tests it's barely visible. They didn't have
that back then. They had to come up with a
different way to fish that thick, heavy cover. And that's

(45:03):
the way they did it. And they would paddle. You'd
have some guy skull in the boat and some guy
up on the front with this big, long pole and
he pushed me over in that hole right there, and
he'd shake it there. And they used to catch absolute
monsters at a lake Jackson. Lake Jackson was a world
renowned big fish lake, and it's because of that cover
that makes it hard to fish. Lake Seminole over the

(45:25):
years has become much harder to fish than it was
when I was a kid because of hydrilla. It took
fisherman years to figure out how to fish hydrilla on
Lake Seminole because you can't get a bait through it.
But now that they figured out how to fish it,
it's the fish are still there. It's a very productive lake.
It's just not an easy lake to fish if you
don't know where you're going or how to do it,

(45:46):
you know, for that's why you hire somebody like.

Speaker 4 (45:51):
Is sand rock, logs, logs, mud, you know what I mean?
And you got a grass lake. It's hydrilla that's coming
up from the bottom and it's constantly changing. Yep, it changes.

Speaker 1 (46:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (46:07):
Lake Talquin is a very lake Talquin. It's local. Doust
here is a very unique for Florida. No other lake
like it in Florida. It's an impoundment, there's deep water.
You've got a forest that was there that they cut down,
so you've got all these trees and left over logs
and stumps that are out there in thirty foot of water.
And that's unique there in Florida. There's really no other
place like that because Seminole, where they dammed it up,

(46:29):
the rivers were already there. There were no trees growing
in it. There's a few places in Seminole over the
years as the trees have died and fallen out and
they washed away and through floods and.

Speaker 3 (46:38):
So going down about what sick No, No, what times?
What time are you getting your blow ups?

Speaker 4 (46:48):
We got them yesterday from about seven fifteen to about
ten minutes for dark, so started about seven.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
Yeah, you and I both remember Seminole when there was
a ton of standing timber.

Speaker 4 (46:58):
Hurricane Michael helping a lot to Yeah, I finished it.

Speaker 2 (47:00):
All that used to be up Spring Creek.

Speaker 4 (47:02):
It looked like a forest, and over the years it
broke off at the water line because underneath the water
is not getting any auctions, so the stumps have broke.

Speaker 2 (47:08):
Off right at the waterline, which is why it's dangerous.
And that's why Chalcon can be very dangerous lake too,
because you still have some essentially fourteen or year and
fifteen foot of water out there, and you've got a
tree stump that broke off at the water line that's
just under the edd of the water, and you can still.
You can tear a boat up and oh it's getting there.

Speaker 4 (47:25):
An old plane in Talcon too, remember there was a
could be.

Speaker 2 (47:29):
Yeah, I don't know there is. I don't know. I
know there's some boats out there. I found them. I
have found some boats and cars and whatever else out there. Anyway,
we'll see you all next week, I guess.

Speaker 3 (47:40):
Yeah, I enjoyed it, guys,
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