All Episodes

June 28, 2025 47 mins
Thanks, as always, to Captain Paul Tyre for joining the show. If you’re interested in going fishing with Paul, visit his Facebook page.   

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.  
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
And welcome to the town. That door show you, Charlie.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
What well you fussed at us for talking. I'm JD
by the way, just Fred, and there's Catapaul time. So
you fussed at us about talking. So we're all sitting
here like little good school boys and our hands crossed
and nobody making any noise. And then you just have
a complete brain fart over there, and it's dead silence
for forty five seconds, and me and Fred both about

(00:30):
to bust over.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
Do you have any idea what I'm doing over here? No?
Do you know? Do you know what it takes they
do this?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
There was zero complaints involved in that. I was just
stating the fact I'm not complaining about well.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
I said, okay, are you all ready to go all
over to telling stories and stuff? And I said, I'm
over here trying to do Grant's job and figure out
the video recording and the audio recording and the this
and the that and the multi anyway, so trying to
figure out which one of these buttons when I'm talking
that I can show which nobody wants see my face anyway,
We'll we'll look at y'all and then and so, and

(01:04):
I'm all right, I get everything started, and then Fred's
over and I'm like, I have to go back and
have to delete everything and restart everything.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
Good conversation.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
I don't even know if it's working right now.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
I mean, we're talking about sixty hippies.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
It's making them squiggly lines on the screen.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
We got the squiggless I got, I got stoppers.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
Just I don't worry about all that. Either is gonna
recorder it or not.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
See now I can see me on the video, and
now I can see y'all on the video trying to
do Grant's job.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
Yeah, we miss Grant. We miss Grant.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
Grant. We need to to come back. You need to
come back and come back.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
Hoping everything's going well.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
Yeah, he's Gainesville.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
He may giving up on us because normally he just hey,
I can't make it just nothing.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
He may be otherwise occupied.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
He's got he's got things going on.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
We're trying to get that baby home.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Yeah, and so we're anyhow so so my phone won't start.
I'm sitting there looking at a dead phone and I'm
coming in. I'm coming in, uh this morning, And I said,
you know what, I need to let my wife do.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
What all just just check it. I'm just trying to help.
I'm just trying to help.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
I forgot the signal.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
So well, I'm gonna give you a finger when it's
time to stop talking. And so I'm coming in this morning,
and and I said, well, let me call my wife
from this other work phone. I got to start, and
of course I'm on the interstate. And then uh, I
turned on the work phone and it's got to do
it updates, and apparently my phone updated last night. It
won't come on at all. And so I called the share.

(02:42):
I call her at the Shaff's office in Jackson. Hey. Uh,
so she doesn't answer. She's right that she didn't recognize that.
She didn't answer it. So I'm gonna call it again.
And then she answers the way I thought she would
answer hello, And I went, ma'am, I like to talk
to you about your extended car warranty. And she goes, oh, Charlie, no,
I'm in a meeting right now. And I'm like, yeah,

(03:04):
well this is a number you need to reach me
at today. So okay, And then like thirty seconds later,
I get a text from her. Are we getting new phones?
And so no, she keeps bringing up this Hey, you're
eligible for an upgrade. You're gonna get a new phone.
You're eligible for an upgrade. You're gonna get a new phone.
Might be now, I'm like, well, I'm I'm thinking so

(03:25):
I think she's she may have done this to my
phone so that she gets a new phone.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
And I tell you that the difference. But well, my
wife's phone looks like a bag of busted bricks. I mean,
it's just is. The front's cracked, the back's cracked. We've
got I've got basically the Warter Galaxy twenty three, no
Galaxy twenty three Ultra or whatever. And her screen is cracked,

(03:52):
the case on the back is cracked, and everything mine's fine.
I don't need another one, and I've been trying to
get her to get into it. She beces this one
still works. I'm like, come on, looks like in case
of busted biscuits, you know, get you a new phone.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
Baby. Count a couple of times and she'll need Well,
she probably carries a work phone too.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
She has an Apple phone for work, and then she
has our the Samsung. So she speaks both. Yeah, she
speaks both languages. I don't I don't do Apple because
I don't do Apple.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
Why don't you do?

Speaker 1 (04:24):
I can't.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
I don't know. It's just that they're they're confusing to me.
I have a heck, I have an Apple uh I
pad thing? Uh no, it don't know it don't. I
can get on this thing, and I can do all
kind of wonderful things and close out all this bunch
of screens at one time and do all this that
Apple you got to flip through this and push that.
And I have to get my kids in there, baby,

(04:47):
how do I make this go away? And because my
kids use Apple? But I just all my kids use Apple.
I'm I've been Android from day one, and I will
stay that way.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
What I like a basket? An Apple computer?

Speaker 2 (05:01):
I know, and it'll talk to you. You ain't got
to tell me, my friend, I know it'll talk. This
MacBook Pro, we'll talk to your iPad.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
I have one, and it is awesome. I like it.
It's it's it. It never locks up, you don't get
viruses only it's it's cool. Apparently mine's outdated. I don't
know that could be a thing, but it works. I
do all I do, all kinds of graphics and stuff
on it. I'm good with that. Uh, it's backwards from
a PC, and I run, you know, laptops and PCs
all the time, so it takes me a few minutes

(05:29):
to get back into the swing of using it. But
I love those.

Speaker 3 (05:32):
Well, the thing about the Apple the computer is you
can synk it with your iPhone and I lose my
iPhone all the time, and you can go to the
computer and hit find my iPhone and it'll start beeping
and hollering at you and you can find it. You
could track it around the house.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
You don't have one of those watches.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
I don't have Apple Watch.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
You got one of those watches, don't you.

Speaker 2 (05:53):
Oh yeah, this is a galaxy or yeah, it's the
same song.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
I got one with some credit card points or something
one time or something, and that's a step too far
from me. I just need to know. I need to
know what time it was three minutes ago. And that's
what this watch is good for us to tell me
what time it was two or three minutes ago, when
after about a week, it's about four or five minutes ago.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Well, I this this. I actually I'm one of those
people that track my steps every day and I walk
and it does all that and then the EKG. And
then it's it's just you know whatever, and it'll sometime
and if I get a textual email or whatever it
you know whatever, it pop up there and I don't
have to pick my phone up and go yeah, I
can whatever.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Last weekend, speaking of watches, I was hit that craps
table again down Bahamas.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Yeah, did you watch You.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
Know it didn't lose my watch, but I.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
Figured out what that's got to do with a watch.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
Yeah, so and tell us he went to the Rolex
joint around the corner, going.

Speaker 3 (06:51):
In there to row X joint and started looking at
it and ooh and I and over it. Thankfully they
didn't have one that fit me in.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
So get ladies. You probably need a lady.

Speaker 3 (07:02):
No, they actually make a forty. Maybe it's a big
watch thirty something going there. Okay, whatever this one is
is a smaller than this one.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
And it's a ladies.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
That's not a lady's watch.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
That's not I mean, if.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
You're wearing a lady So.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
I always wear my watch on the on the on
the back of my you know, not not not the
way you all wear yours. I'll wear it right here
so the way you can well if you fly on
an airplane or driving a boat, you can look at
your watch and you don't.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
Have to You can do time over distance.

Speaker 3 (07:39):
You can do time over distance. Also, if you're holding
a drink and you're at a party and somebody comes
up and ask you what time it is, you spill
the drink on them and not yourself.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
That's that's kind of funny right now.

Speaker 2 (07:53):
That's for when I get drunk. I ain't got to
turn it over in my lap.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
I don't hold my drink in my left hand, so you.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
Know, well, I got a hole a drink in my
left hand, so I can explain with my right.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
Hand speaking of tayan, are you yeah?

Speaker 3 (08:06):
Yeah, Man, got to use your hand when you talk,
otherwise you're not going to get your point across.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
I hold a beer bottle and I have it in
my right hands. Of course I need to hit somebody
with it.

Speaker 3 (08:16):
Well, I ain't. I'm drinking a Martini. I'm not gonna
hit anybody with a Martini.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
Glass, not effectively do anything to them.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
Well, you could break the top off and stop somebody
with that, throw.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
It in her eyes and the burn drinks. Speaking of it,
you know, I like to use that soap, we sell
out there the cannon.

Speaker 2 (08:37):
Don't get in your eyes.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
Don't get it in your eyes. Oh good lord, I got.
I felt it creeping last night in between my eyelids.
I'd come in sweating out of the out of the
out of the off the farm. I felt it creeping
in there, and I couldn't rinse it all fast enough.
And my wife comes running from the far end of
the house, and I've got my face shoved down a towel, yelling,
and I could not tifle my angry yell enough to

(09:01):
where she hit. Here it on the far end of
the house, and she goes, my lord, what's wrong? When
it's I got soap, myicy and now bless her heart?
When when your husband, when when you say, well, I
know there's nothing I can do, But that's all the
conversation you need to have with an angry man was
opening his eye, because at that point in time, anything
you say beyond that is not doing any good. When

(09:22):
you know you can't do nothing, just walk away and
let me be mad.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
Don't exacerbate that.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
And so now my eyes burning, and young, I'm mad,
and I'm trying to be nice to my wife, and
so I'm watching. I can see through the glass. I
can see her feet out there. She's still there. So
I'm just waiting until I see her feet leave the room,
and then then anyway, I skated still married. My managed
to keep my mouth shut just long enough.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
He's just sick at that time.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Yeah, we'll be back just and we're back. You almost

(10:10):
you almost did it. I just start talking about you.
What kind of choke you're looking for.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
I'm looking for a full choke from a four ten.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
Fully choke you out.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
Sometimes JD's offended my my use of a full show.

Speaker 1 (10:24):
If you didn't shoot a four ten, you wouldn't need
a full choke.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
Well, I mean, but I like shooting the fourteen. It's
fun fish.

Speaker 1 (10:30):
That's because it's a little bitty gun. Let's recall I've
seen you shoot full on twelve gage with with high
brass and you.

Speaker 2 (10:38):
Can pick himself up off the ground, get up off
the ground.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
But that's unusual because you are extremely good with the shotgun.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
I will give you that that I mean it. It is.
If I don't hold my stance just right when I'm
shooting at twelve age, I'm on the on the ground. Yeah,
it'll it'll not be ever.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
I've seen it. We've got the video somewhere.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
I shot at twelve gage eighteen inch barrel, twelve gauge
Remington eight seventy pump. I think my brother has that
shotgun this day. And it was at the garbage dump
off of Pittman Hill Road in Jackson County. It used
to be a dump up bear Now it's just dirt
and planted by our pines. And Daddy took me up
there in his old seventy something put green Dodge power

(11:23):
wagon pickup truck and UH said, son, just see up,
just just hold this thing right here. And I pulled
the trigger and I'm looking at the drive shaft of
that truck from underneath, and of course Daddy being Daddy,
picks up the shotgun, checks it further.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
Sure is all right?

Speaker 1 (11:38):
All right boy? He said, you got to lean into
it a little bit, and I go, okay, yeah.

Speaker 3 (11:44):
You do.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
My first shotgun. I still have it. It was a revelation.
Was the brand name on it, which.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
I had a revelation that was a.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Western Auto Western Auto remember Western Audio stores. It was
a Western Auto store brand. It was made by I
want to say it's made by Springfield or so there
was a bunch anyway back in those days, Sears and Roebuck.
Everybody's like, oh, I've got a Sears shotgun. No you don't.
You've got a something with Sears written on it. But
Sears had Sears, and then they used like Ted Williams.

(12:15):
They had a bunch of store brands that they used.
So but they were all made by gun companies. They
were just what we call in the business a variant.
So you had Western, Audo, Montgomery Wards made shot guns,
or they put their name, They got somebody to make
them a shotgun or a rifle or a whatever, to
put them put their name on it. They didn't actually
manufacture them. My first gun that was a Youth Model

(12:38):
twenty gauge single shot, single barrel with a full choke.
That still to this day is the least fun gun
I have to shoot because it literally weighs nothing. It's
a little bitty, tiny little gun in twenty gauge and
it will kick that your it will kick the feelings
out of your teeth.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
Man.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
And so I started with that, and then when my
first real shot was a Remington eleven hundred twelve gage,
So I went from something that beats you to death
is something that shot pretty nice. You know, gas operated
guns tend to not kick as bad, but the worst
kicking a single barrel twelve gage or a pump, which
is just essentially the same thing that you know with

(13:16):
a with a magazine tube. There is no mitigation to
that recoil. You're eating all of it every time you
pull the trigger. So over unders are nice because they
weigh a little bit more. They got two barrels. The
weight's usually heavier on an over and under side by side.

Speaker 4 (13:31):
Well, if you're going to dove hunt, would you have
to use a twelve gage or twenty?

Speaker 2 (13:34):
It depends if I think it's gonna be really windy,
or if I'm in a dove feel that I think
is going to be a big dove feel with not
as many people to cover everything to make the dove
move Around'm gon shoot twelve gage. If it's a well
coordinated dove shoot with plenty of people to shoot and
the shots are going to be closer or whatever, I'll
shoot a twenty I'll shoot a twenty eight gage. You know,

(13:57):
it just depends on you know, I might take more
one gun with me to the field and actually only
get one of them out, So.

Speaker 3 (14:03):
I usually do that. Yeah, sometimes I take a twelve
and at twenty eight just kind of see how they're flying. Yeah,
I mean if they're flying high.

Speaker 2 (14:13):
I don't shoot like as skeet where you have non distances,
non angles and on everything on the skip field. I
shoot a twenty eight gauge just about as well. My
score won't be a whole lot different between shooting a
twelve gage and a twenty eight gage, So you're just
shooting less shot. But if you know what you're doing and.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
You you don't have to worry as long as you
break the bird. Yeah, when you hit it one, it's
not like trying to knock down something like a pheasant
that's hit it. You've got to hit it just right
with that same well, that same log.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
Yeah, with pheasant, I am absolutely shooting twelve gauge and
I'm shooting high brass because they are so dog on
hard to.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Got to hit them in the head.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
You have to kill them in the air, because if
you don't kill them in the air, they hit the
ground and both legs still working and they're still alive.
You we ain't gonna recover that.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
Bird soh y'all go up there, y'all, he's your twelve guss,
especially if it's in that crp or it's snowing. Yeah,
but when it when they hit the snow and they'd
break through the crust of the snow, they would haul
tail under the snow.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
You get two feet of snow over over the top
of c RP grass that's already two foot deep. So
you get this this snow sitting on top of this
viny grass that's growing up there, and they'll you'll see
right exactly where they fell. You'll see right where they
went through that punch through that snow and then they
hit the ground underneath that snow, and they've got you.

(15:35):
They're gone. If you don't, if they ain't right there
in the hole that they made in the snow, they
are gone. So yeah, and there's nothing I still say.
You know, we've been up South Dakota what six or
seven times now doing that, and that the year that
it snowed so heavy on us up there was the
most fun we've ever had, hands down, hands down. Loved it,

(15:57):
hands down. No, No, it wasn't the oldest trip we've
ever been up there.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
This last trip was pretty good, I thought.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
I mean, the last trip we had was this last
year was probably the best number of birds that we've
ever seen up there. And I talked to Jesse a
week or so ago, I say, taught. We texted back
and forth. He was on an airplane going somewhere. We
texted back and forth and he said, they had a
really good hatch this year. So really, they've had a
really good hatch so far this year, and the conditions
have been good for the birds.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
So that trip was a lot of fun.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
It's I tell people, if you're a wingshooter and you
like the quail hunt, and you know, we don't, unfortunately don't.
That doesn't exist like it used to for me. Anyway,
unless you have access to plantation properties, you probably ain't
quail hunting like I used toquail hunt two or three
days a week when my granddaddy and we just went
somewhere different and put the dogs on the ground and

(16:47):
went hunting.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
There.

Speaker 2 (16:49):
That's one of the most fun trips because the first
time we did it, it was kind of a one
of them bucket list thing, something we just want to
go do, and got invited and Charlie and I went
and it was one of the say this is going
to be a cool thing that will how.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
Can we get a trip? Yeah, and we don't know
if we're gonna get invited back or not. How can
we get our own trip? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (17:08):
It went the second day we were there, like, we're
gonna do this every year?

Speaker 1 (17:12):
It all, you know.

Speaker 2 (17:14):
Teases me because I thought that was a bucket list
thing that you just wanted. I'm like, well it was.
It started that way.

Speaker 3 (17:19):
How many folks signed up this year?

Speaker 2 (17:23):
We got more. We've got a few new people coming
this year. So I think we'll have a I think
we'll have a big We still got some spots.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
We still got some openings or somebody out there's just
dying to go with us. We'll we'll, we'll vet you
and sleep. We want to have around.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
Charlie and I's trip up there. We can take eighteen
other people with us. Eighteen so yeah, so we've never
gotten that. We've never had that. I think about fifteen
or sixteen.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
And I'm pretty sure. And so if you want to
go and you can't shoot, we want we want you
there because we have to. We can shoot so many
birds a day based on amber of people we take,
so we you know, well, I'd like to go, but
I can't shoot. Will you will have a good time
and all the AMMO in your pocket shooting at.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Birds and we will help you get your linen and
we'll we'll we'll let you drink.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
A little bit, will help, We'll cook for you. We
can figure out. Man, We're gonna help, We're gonna work
with you. Just come on.

Speaker 2 (18:19):
Fred makes an incredible low country bull with the Brussels
sprouts that you just you know, I really did think
you were crazy. I like, I don't even like brussel sprouts,
but I like them brothers.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
Fred likes to serenade us out there at night.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
And see that just depends on how much lid alf
is in the in the store.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
So for people that don't know what he keeps talking about, lidlf,
I think I coined that phrase at the liquor store
because he's got slowly elite and the label look to
me when I glanced at I said litlf because of
the way it's, you know, the funt And I don't
know if I was completely sober when I saw that
or not, but it was fun and uh so, yeah,

(19:03):
there's a little a little drinking you don't have to drink.
Not everybody drinks.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
That was at the That was at Ken's with the
the grocery, grocery, hunting, fishing, liquor bank.

Speaker 3 (19:13):
Let me tell you that liquor store.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
It is It absolutely is the I mean it's the
store they could.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
They could close everything else in town, and I think
they could work off of that one location.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
They really couldn't. I mean they got beaver in there.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
Yeah, they had light shot shells, shot shells, hunting rifles.

Speaker 3 (19:34):
Well, we're looking for something up there. They had?

Speaker 1 (19:37):
What did they not have there? Let's see what what
could what do you have to have that they don't
have at that store.

Speaker 2 (19:44):
I'm at a loss. I mean, you go financial advisor
and you go bank, and go pharmacy.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
You can go so if there, if the zombie apocalypse
breaks out, to go.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
There, go to Ken's in Aberdeen, South Dakota, and you'll
be all right, and.

Speaker 1 (19:59):
Barrica aid the doors and you'll be you'll be fine.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
You'll be fine.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
I mean you might have to go out and get the
gass out of gas pumps every once in a while,
set up a perimeter around the gas pumps, but pretty
much other than that, yeah, you're good's.

Speaker 3 (20:12):
That's one of my favorite players there is going to.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
That they got a casino in there too, Yes, yeah.

Speaker 3 (20:17):
Absolutely, I didn't see a craps table.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
Probably won't. That's probably one of them casinos that just
slart machines or something.

Speaker 3 (20:25):
Because when when me and the unnamed member of the
judiciary arrived, uh, your brother picked us up, okay, and
we were looking for a casino, and I guess he'd
already been one night poor and lost a bunch of
money and want to try to win it back.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
Yeah, he he, he tends to make it. He takes it.
It takes us two days to drive up there. It
takes him two days to drive up there, even though
his drives a little closer and shorter coming from Texas.
But they they stopped halfway at uh, somewhere in the
I want to say, Oklahoma. I don't know where they stop.
They stopped somewhere every year, at some big casino on
the way up there. And neither he arrives really happy

(21:05):
or he arrives really sad.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
He probably he generally rives very drunk. You know.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
He just gets that way real quick when he gets.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
Yeah, he comes in sober, but by at the end
of the night he's and he's the one running around
in there trying to get everybody to drink more. You know, hey,
you gonna just and bring and sometimes bring some really
good stuff that Huckleberry Bearproof bear Proof. Man. I still
I still like that.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
Those steaks that he brought last year. Yeah, well wait
a minute, that was the year.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Four year before the last year it was the Faetus.

Speaker 3 (21:39):
I hope he brings steak again. Yeah, brings steak.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
He's probably listening to this show, So if you.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
Listen, bring the steak.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
He was on a podcast. I listened to him on
the podcast the other day with the barbecue some he's
a world famous barbecue.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
We'll be back just a minute.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
Amba So I was talking about my brother with the
World Barbecue Championship and out in Houston at the Rodeo
every year, they have a big tent set up called
the Something Yacht Club Houston Yacht Club or something. No
yachts involved, it's just what they call. No, it's not
not till you go to Galveston, but yeah, it's it's

(22:29):
that's the name of their tent and they make enough
brisket chicken ribs is basically what they the three categories
they compete in. But they feed I say.

Speaker 3 (22:38):
Four or five day event, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
I mean, yeah, the barbecue starts before the Houston Rodeo
and then the Houston Rodeo goes for like a month.
So they have they have the Rodeo in the evening
and then they'll have a concert afterwards. And it's just
that basically the whole city of Houston closes down for
almost a month because of the February March. Really yeah,

(23:00):
I'm I'm hopefully going to be going next year. Cody
Johnson plays that plays the Rodeo March twenty second, and
I'm I'm gonna try really hard to be there.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
So their weather is pretty much the same as.

Speaker 2 (23:15):
Ours, Yes, it is, just they get it three days
earlier normally in the winter. In the wintertime especially, they
because that front's coming from the northwest to the southeast
and it sweeps through there and we'll get we'll get
the same weather they do, just three days later most
of the time.

Speaker 3 (23:32):
But I mean it's not terribly cold. I mean that time.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
It can be. Yeah, you don't cold. They they had
them winter storms out yeah here and there in March,
and if.

Speaker 3 (23:44):
I always thought that would be a summertime thing.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
No, it's too hot in the summertime. Summer it's one
hundred and you know, one hundred and fifteen degrees in
the summertime.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
Can you imagine the last the last week or so
going out there trying to do a rodeo.

Speaker 2 (23:58):
Man. Yeah, but anyway, there there, they have all these
tints set up, and some of them are big corporately
sponsored tints that do the thing. I mean, you know
the Jack Daniels has a tint. It's huge. But they
feed his booth. I think he told me they feed
like six or eight hundred people a night. Really, So
when he cooks brisket or chicken and ribs, they have

(24:18):
a giant smoker Rotesseri smoker that they literally have to
crawl in. I've got to picture him somewhere inside the smoker.
They get in there and clean that thing out with.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
That.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
It's part of the yacht club. They all pitch in
and buy everything and then they sell tickets and it
says it's kind of a it's it's.

Speaker 3 (24:37):
Like, yeah, more unless you win the big price.

Speaker 2 (24:41):
Unless you win the big price. He normally places in
the top twenty five for something like usually brisket. He
places pretty high every year on brisket in ribs.

Speaker 3 (24:53):
So some would you know that's so subjective?

Speaker 2 (24:56):
I mean, yes, it's absolutely subjective.

Speaker 3 (24:59):
You have you know, somebody may have bad taste buds
come back.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
I've judged. I've judged one one time here locally. There
was a fundraiser, uh and it was a chili cook
off for a barbecue or something. I've done a couple
of those things. And yes, entirely subjective. It's just what
do you like? You know, It's like what judges do
you have? Now? If you had the same judges every
year doing the same stuff, but then you're almost guaranteeing

(25:24):
the same results every year because.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Because everything keeps the same recipe or whatever. And it yeah,
it is one hundred percent totally subjective. And I think
my chili is really good. It might not. You may
not like my chili. You might like his chili or
you might. You know that that's just whatever. I mean.
I like high cook things because I like it going.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
I have ever judge is a bikini contest with Pete Cohen?

Speaker 2 (25:49):
Of course, well, of course you did.

Speaker 1 (25:51):
Yeah, so how did Pete look in at.

Speaker 3 (25:54):
Akin he about put one on that night.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
It was Pete. Did he win? Ye? Pete, Pete, I'm sorry, brother.
We are part We Pete and I are part of
the ball headed uh fella something fellas. Yeah, we're we're
part of that ball headed club. We got called that

(26:20):
one night on a call late and there's this a
funny story, but I can't tell it on the air.

Speaker 3 (26:24):
And Peach's wife drove us home.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
She'll tell you that story. She thinks it's funny. She
tells me. She sent me a textas they said, I'm
telling the story about the b B B h M
F Club from back in the day. And yeah, uh huh,
somebody went to jail that night and it wasn't one
of us.

Speaker 2 (26:43):
Y'll both had y'all both had the seventies mustache and
the ball head at the same time. So he was
just a smaller version of you at.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
The Hey, we'll be back, and we're back. So I've

(27:11):
been getting a lot of people reach out to me
recently looking for active shooter training, you know, with the
stuff that happened a FSU, you know, we've had a
lot more renewed interest in that and in church safety.
Training because of what happened to Michigan recently, because there
was a shooting, and I want to compliment the security
staff at the Michigan church because that's the way a

(27:33):
church security program is supposed to go down. Yes, guy
comes up, starts shooting up outside of church and the
staff what hit him with a truck.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
I think it was actually a parishioner at the church
that actually attempted to hit him with the truck, which
caught the attention of the security staff or whatever. They
were already everybody was kind of so you had parishioners
and the staff of security people's responding to this guy.
He only got off like two rounds at the church apparently,

(28:05):
and then got hit and hit again, hit with a
truck and hit with a bullet.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
So that's the way this is supposed to happen. That's
the way this is supposed to go down. And it
doesn't happen if you don't pre plan. And so what
we're getting more and more of is requests for active
shooter training for different organizations, and that's something we do here.
But if anybody's out there listening, obviously having a plan,
putting a plan together, talking to your people, working on
your communication skills, making sure people are armed and are trained.

(28:34):
But on a corporate level or an entity level. Nonprofits.
I've got nonprofits lined up. We do active shooter training
for We do the active shooter classes here with Right
to Bear, which is one of our organizations. Well it
is basically it is the same active shooter course we
teach in organizations. I've use the same power point and

(28:57):
we talk about the same stuff. We talk about situational awareness,
we talk about critical incident stress, we talk about weapons
of opportunity, we talk about all the things now beyond
the run hide, fight model, which is promoted all over
the world and they've got videos and reenactment videos and
things like that. But really and truly, if you're not

(29:18):
going beyond just the runaway, if you can hide or
barricade now it's hide, slash, barricade and then fight. If
you're not talking about what weapons of opportunity you're available,
if you're not talking about the mindset situation where if
you're not discussing those things in your classroom, you're really
spending your wheels and you're using cans just stuff. I mean,

(29:40):
you can get that anywhere as a matter of fact,
if you're at an active futer saying you need to
run away, you need to hide a barricade if you
can't run away, and then you need to fight as
a last resort. Do you go That was a thirty
minute video and you got nothing from that, just like
you get nothing from those can videos. But if you
reach out to someone to provide real training, and it's

(30:03):
best if we go to a facility and actually do
the training. End the facility so we can.

Speaker 2 (30:07):
See, so we can point at things and say.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
Yeah, so did the which way do the doors open?
And what do you have cameras? You know? Where where
can you hire? You go to medical facility and guess what,
the doors don't lock in the treatment rooms you need
you go in. You go in there, well, this is
where the patients are. Well, you have a duty to
provide care for those people that are in there. And
and if you're a boss, then you have a duty
to make sure that your employees are protected in.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
Your There's there's equipment and stuff out there that we've
done research on and know about and can recommend, Like
you know the doors with the hydraulic closed door closers.
They make devices that can slide over the end of
those to keep them from opening. When you have places
that are hard to say, take your belt off, and
take your belt off, sent it tight. There's wedges. You

(30:53):
can throw a wedge under the door. There's different ways
to do things. And it's really good if we're at
the facility and we can go yeah, that there. You
can do this too. Because buildings are all different, layouts
are all different. That's your best you know, we can
say that's probably your best escape route because you're most
likely going to encounter coming from this direction.

Speaker 1 (31:11):
Well, when you go to churches, and you know, you
have a lot of churches nowadays have an audio video
guy or somebody controlling everything, and that person really that's
a perfect person to have a computer monitor set up
with a camera surveillance system looking at the outside. You
need somebody outside or you need a view of the
outside with cameras and the door is locked during the service.

(31:34):
I mean, that's just because if you can put a
barrier between people who are coming there to do harm
and you be at a locked door or cameras to
see who's out there, or armed staff or armed security
or off duty law enforcement or whatever. Not every church
can swing out. Somebody the other day was like, Hey,
you know we've got we have a deputy in the

(31:55):
parking lot. I said, that's awesome. What happens if they
get shot? Then do you have a backup plan? You
need a backup plan. And also not every small church
can afford to pay somebody fifty something dollars an hour
to come in on Sunday and sit in the parking
lot with a mark car. So everybody, there is a
way for you to make your house of worships safer.

(32:16):
I'm working with our organization is going to be working
with a local religious group over the next year doing
a year long training program and to look at all
facets of their safety and security. This is what we
do here at Talent. And so if you're in the
Dothan market and you have a business and you want
active shooter training, I go to Doathan. That's part of it.

(32:40):
And if you've got a nonprofit, I mean, we do
charge a fee for those things, but like I said,
you're going to get you get what you pay for.
And or if you want a seminar, we can probably
get right to bear to do a seminar as long
as you can get about twenty people or more in
a room than typically. That won't have any cost because

(33:01):
we can talk to the people about the right to
bear plan, which is actually, if you are going to
use force to defend yourself, any level of force, the
right to bear is definitely a good product because it
defends you civilly and criminally in a use of forces.

Speaker 2 (33:20):
And now I think, if I'm not mistaken, they're the
only one of those companies that will ensure if you
will a church security team.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
And they do church security teams. Yes, and they and
they cover you whether you win or lose. You don't
have to win the case in order for it to
be covered, because it would it would be it would
be terrible to have a legal plan that covers you
only if you won. Yeah, And some of them do that,
and that's kind of now. They will let you use
your own attorney, and so, against my better judgment, I

(33:50):
would use Fred So and get them to pay him
so the.

Speaker 3 (33:57):
They can always use the money.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
You quitch spunging off your wife.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
Then quit having to go to the crack new rolex.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
I need.

Speaker 2 (34:10):
You have an old rolex? Okay, Well I don't either.

Speaker 1 (34:15):
I mean there and we ragged Fred all the time.
But yeah, if I was, If I.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
Was, Fred is one of the funniest human beings. I know,
he's fun to be around. But there is no question
who I would hire as a defense attorney if I
needed a defense attorney now, because because I know Fred
would say it, would look me in the face and say, hey,
we we're gonna try to get you a really good
deal because you did something stupid. Do you can you
practice I'm going to New York in a couple of weeks.

(34:41):
Can you practice in New York?

Speaker 3 (34:43):
You know a guy who knows a guy? All right?

Speaker 1 (34:45):
Cool?

Speaker 2 (34:46):
I just you know, I am. I am truly concerned
about being up there and and being myself in New
York City and somebody bothering with me, not worried about
bothering me. And we're about bothering. Happened a friend of mine,
friend of our horse, Yes, yes, so yeah, yeah, I
just you know, a Florida man is going to New
York City for a week. Is what could have? What

(35:08):
could possibly go wrong?

Speaker 3 (35:09):
Hey? You got I mean we just went over there
and bombed Old the Extreme Leader and uh yeah, now
we got you know, there's gonna be some crazy people
up there.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 1 (35:21):
Oh you got you got to hear the story for
the show runs out. We got, we got time, Yeah,
we do. So I'm going. I am in Cottondale, Florida
the other day in Jackson County metropolis. Yes, and I'm
driving down the dirt road and as I'm going to
buy a little pickup truck for the security countany and
I look over in the ditch and there's a dead

(35:41):
gum alligator running down the side of the road. I
don't know water around. He's just hauling but down the ditch,
just pacing me, chasing. We're almost chasing the car like
a like a dog on dog wood. And and I
get around the corner, I look up and there's this
old man bringing his trash to the road. He's walking
down to the trash can with a bag of garbage
in one hand and a pump camouflage shotgun in the other,

(36:06):
taking the trash to the road. Now I go to
the road arm too, but I'm wearing a pistol. This
guy is walking down, this old man with a shotgun,
and he just raises a shotgun up and he waves
at me with and I'm like, oh my lord, I
looked at my I I looked at my wife. I said,
we are in Jackson County right now. I'm telling you,
we are in the boondocks, old wash.

Speaker 2 (36:29):
New York City cannot wrap their head around what you
and I are talking about. And I don't even find
it hard.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
To it's normal. I don't even find it hard to
believe it's normal. And my wife had just said, this
is kind of a rough part of the county, and
I looked there and I go, yeah, apparently he lives
here and thinks so too.

Speaker 3 (36:44):
I mean, where was the alligator in proximity to the
shotgun guy?

Speaker 1 (36:48):
About a half of well, what a quarter mile away?
We'll be back at just it's a dripping anchor.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
I'm sort of going show me.

Speaker 3 (37:07):
I was gonna tell you I was an appletch cold
a couple of weeks ago. Have you been down there lately?

Speaker 1 (37:12):
Now?

Speaker 3 (37:12):
That water is some of the most disgusting stuff.

Speaker 2 (37:15):
Drinking the drinking water.

Speaker 3 (37:18):
No, not, the river water is like pure is Yeah.

Speaker 2 (37:22):
Then I heard they had some kind of they've had problems.
I don't know what's going.

Speaker 3 (37:26):
Yes, apparently the hurricane came through and messed up something
and they got some money.

Speaker 1 (37:31):
It was a water clearfier.

Speaker 3 (37:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
And how they're under investigation. They are, It is under
investigation by the Attorney General.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
Correct miss misallocation of funds.

Speaker 3 (37:42):
Yes, but they didn't do jack to get that thing
fixed and the water.

Speaker 2 (37:46):
Who got the money?

Speaker 3 (37:47):
That's a good question.

Speaker 1 (37:48):
That's what they don't bet you. They're gonna find out.

Speaker 3 (37:52):
But I'm telling you I was yacking in the I
mean just taking a shower. It's if you took a shower,
you'd have to take a gallon jug a drinking water,
pour it over you just to get the stink.

Speaker 2 (38:01):
Off smell that bald eggs.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
It was offug water.

Speaker 3 (38:06):
It was so nasty smell.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
Or can I ask, well, I mean there was.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
We stayed there.

Speaker 2 (38:12):
They were at the motel at the end.

Speaker 1 (38:15):
At the end, at the end. Yeah, stayed in the end,
in the end.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
Do you need a group of sandwich? Whee done?

Speaker 1 (38:20):
There?

Speaker 3 (38:21):
I ate some flounder, Okay, I ate some red fish too.
I saw that, And I mean I couldn't clean the
fish with the hose water. I had to use the
water from the boat.

Speaker 2 (38:30):
The water you took down there in the boat.

Speaker 3 (38:32):
Yeah, the water you know in the spicett the boat
spictt it's dry. Now that thing holds like twenty five gallons,
I think. I mean, it's just nasty.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
You know, Fred, Fred's got a nice Is that your boat? Yes,
Fred's got a nice boat. If he's got fresh water
supply on the boat. I'm just saying, well.

Speaker 3 (38:49):
You got to have fresh water if you're going to
be in salt water.

Speaker 2 (38:53):
Well, now, I had a salt water off shore boat
one time. I it had a water pump on it,
but it pumped the sea water into the and that's
what you washed the boat down was with salt water.
We didn't have no fresh waters, didn't have a tank
on it. Yeah, your fancy. See, I'm just you.

Speaker 3 (39:08):
Know, they're just things that to break.

Speaker 1 (39:11):
I had a boat. We have bottled water.

Speaker 2 (39:15):
That's what I have. Now. That's what I have now
is I got a cooler with some with maybe water
in it, maybe not water, maybe flavor.

Speaker 4 (39:21):
Was taking a five gallon bucket of water with a
mister fan on it.

Speaker 3 (39:25):
Hey, that is.

Speaker 1 (39:27):
Are nice. Nice.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
We see those at the soccer games. I'm a little
more sophisticated than that. And we have to go play
soccer in the summertime and it's really hot. I've got
a cooler set up that works with one of those
Rubi battery powered fans, and I'll make a swamp cooler
out of it and blow cooler through the ice chest.

Speaker 1 (39:44):
I found I found I found on Amazon. They've got
these real inexpensive fans that plug into the the Walt
batteries and you just stick a de Walt battery on
it from your cordless drill and then it's it's like
a school bus fan. There's a little round metal metal
and uh it puts out. Some are too well.

Speaker 2 (40:03):
Last year when we had our big Fourth of July
employee celebration and party out here last year, you know
those big barn fans, and we've got down there there's
big stand up four foot tall barn fans. I bought
a mister kit from those and plug plugged these.

Speaker 1 (40:20):
I have one of those at the house with the
Mister Kit and I hook I got to quick connect
water host thing and then I just put it out
by the pool.

Speaker 2 (40:27):
So you take one hundred and fifty cork cooler full
of ice and put it in there, and you put
that cold water in that, so your ice cold just
above freezing water through that mister kit and that big
old fan blowing across there. That is air condition. When
it's one hundred and ten degrees outside.

Speaker 3 (40:43):
It's pretty nice this weekend.

Speaker 2 (40:44):
It is good funny. We had that horrible day, like
was it Tuesday afternoon?

Speaker 1 (40:48):
I think it was.

Speaker 2 (40:49):
I got in the car Tuesday afternoon.

Speaker 1 (40:51):
My head grew. My grass is growing. I got everything
seated out. I'm hoping that they'll come cut the seed
out of it and then fall right behind.

Speaker 2 (40:58):
It so that it just reminds me not go to
your house anytime in the next.

Speaker 1 (41:01):
Oh, you would die. You pull my driveway right now,
you would die.

Speaker 2 (41:06):
Yeah, I probably would.

Speaker 1 (41:07):
That's see his truck come in and just ride off
in the field and stop. What happened he broke.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
The first thing that would happen was I couldn't see
because it would swell behea. Grass will literally swell my
eyes around with you, No, I carry ben adrill, but yeah,
that but hair grass will literally cause my eyes to
swell shut. That's the only thing I'm that allergic to.

Speaker 1 (41:30):
On the picture of field is this guy going there
and you'd start sneezing.

Speaker 4 (41:36):
Get you how big is your field?

Speaker 3 (41:39):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (41:40):
Well, we got I think we got about one hundred
and thirty acres in right now, so.

Speaker 3 (41:44):
That's I used to.

Speaker 2 (41:46):
I've had to go home from work from the Sheriff's office.
I've had to go home from work sick because I
had to drive across the median on my ten when
it was beheir grass seated out and I had to
go from in an emergency situation, go from one direction
on night ten of the other and drive through the median.
It would I've had to go home, but because of
the that's being inside the car with the windows rolled

(42:07):
up and getting enough of it in.

Speaker 3 (42:08):
The What kind of grass you got in your yard?

Speaker 2 (42:11):
Bermuda, bermuda and uh, a little bit of centipede bermuda and.

Speaker 1 (42:21):
There it comes up you can't get rid of.

Speaker 2 (42:23):
Yeah, you can. I get out there with a shovel
if it, if it pops up, and I will dig
it up.

Speaker 1 (42:27):
And then you just sprays o your pirquut gravel down.

Speaker 2 (42:32):
I'll tell you one of our customers uh uh exterminators.
Uh Joe King comes to my house and praise my
yard every quarter to kill everything but the grass in
there because it's just and if his bea grass pops up,
I will dig it up anyway.

Speaker 4 (42:47):
You catching fish, pall, Yes, sir, I'll tell you what
they've went. Well, yesterday they were biting in that rain
and the cloudy weather. Yeah, the temperature it didn't get
a mid eighties yesterday, it was really beautiful. But man,
earlier last week it was definitely early in the morning,
late and evening.

Speaker 3 (43:07):
You on fishing. I mean they are biting this hundred
degree stuff.

Speaker 4 (43:11):
Yeah, they will, but it's just without that fan.

Speaker 3 (43:14):
It's it's hot.

Speaker 4 (43:15):
That's why right now I'm fishing late, late evening and
in the morning, okay, and in the basstbing bite. I
brought some frogs.

Speaker 2 (43:23):
You bought that fancy new flipper flip flipper foot from.

Speaker 3 (43:26):
This thing here, because it's this is the one you
were talking about a couple of weeks, Agyes, it was.

Speaker 4 (43:30):
This is how it comes. It's a lunker hut. It's
got these little feet on it. Well, what I've done
is take these things off, Just pull this out because
when you catch it big and it's gonna come off anyway, yep,
you know what I mean. And then I'll add these
little keepers into it, hook two of them together and
screwbling into that.

Speaker 1 (43:47):
And then it becomes this.

Speaker 3 (43:53):
Uh huh. I see you put the little jigs tagles
on it.

Speaker 4 (43:59):
Yeah, and it makes a little bit of a fluttering sound.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
Man that thing, that thing camera that they keep in
mind that ninety everybody listening to show right now, I
can't see anything you got.

Speaker 4 (44:11):
That's right, hollow body frog made by the lunker hunt.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
Uh huh.

Speaker 4 (44:18):
And I just take the feet come off the back
of it. That this works too. This works good the
way they come. But the problem is there's that filamentous algae.

Speaker 1 (44:29):
So you took so you took, you took the the
feet out of it. What did you put back on there?
The tail of a of a.

Speaker 2 (44:38):
Fate holder that's basically a spring looks like a spring spring.

Speaker 1 (44:42):
Where did you get those feets from?

Speaker 4 (44:44):
Those are called a zoom horny toads?

Speaker 1 (44:46):
Okay, So you took the you took those and cut.

Speaker 3 (44:48):
Them off the zoom and a half and then screwed
it on there, and you screwed it on for.

Speaker 1 (44:55):
The get dressed up for the prime right there.

Speaker 4 (44:58):
It looks like a and it's kind of an aberration
and it's been catching something because you can throw this
in anything and it doesn't catch.

Speaker 1 (45:06):
It pretty good the frog, Yeah, because I see that
the hooks are up on the back and it's touching
the rubber there on the frog, so it'd.

Speaker 4 (45:15):
Be hard doesn't hang up, but and it and and
the hook raytio is actually pretty good. So it's been
it's been working really good.

Speaker 1 (45:23):
You know.

Speaker 4 (45:23):
There's all kinds of different frogs, the difference types, and
I'll get into that next week. But if the fish
are aggressive, it all in there and they want something moving.

Speaker 1 (45:31):
This has been.

Speaker 4 (45:33):
Very productive, and I'll do them in black. They don't,
they don't, they don't that just the top color catches
a fisherman. That's what the fish they don't see the
top of it, you know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (45:46):
That's a successful, successful fish bait if it catches fishermen.

Speaker 1 (45:50):
That's right.

Speaker 4 (45:51):
I want a white one and a black one with
them two colors. You don't need to be more complicated
in that.

Speaker 1 (45:56):
That black one looks like it's got flippers on, like
it's fishing and go scuba. Div Yeah, this is want
to make some noise.

Speaker 4 (46:01):
The creature grass gets caught up in there, it stops spinning,
and so I wanted to make something that I could
kind of resemble a zoom horny toad. But the horny
toe sinks, this floats. You just really to stop it.
And they have been blowing up on it.

Speaker 2 (46:17):
Sometimes they might be doing that just because it's something new,
a new base.

Speaker 3 (46:21):
That's true.

Speaker 4 (46:21):
A lot of times, a lot of times hit.

Speaker 2 (46:23):
Something, especially on public water. When when that some of
those fits. That's kind of like decoy and ducks in
the during duck season and late in the year, those
ducks have seen decoys from Canada to Florida and sometimes
not putting any decoy. Putting one decoy out works better
than putting the whole decoy spread out. You know, those

(46:44):
ducks have seen every heard every duck call, and seen
every decoy between Canada and here in the wintertime.

Speaker 3 (46:50):
That's just don't work good in the late season.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
Because they can see them run one of those tied
to that's illegal. I didn't say I actually do it.

Speaker 2 (47:03):
I hypathetically. Hypothetically it would work very well. That's why
they outlawed it, because it worked very very well. Yes,
against law, Yes, sir, that's been against law.

Speaker 1 (47:15):
It's like turkey hunting around my house. I got so
many turkeys now, oh yeah, I mean I walk out there,
and you'll you'll see a turkey running cross the hill
over there in the pasture.

Speaker 2 (47:22):
That one out when I see in your situation, that
would be normal agricultural practices. Yes, so, so it's not
considered baiting or or decoying. If you've got a hotel
the game work.

Speaker 1 (47:33):
You don't understand that, you don't know how a farm.
We are a non traditional farm here.

Speaker 2 (47:39):
Well, I almost got in trouble one time for for baiting, uh,
baiting dove. And it's because somebody was feeding

Speaker 1 (47:45):
Their het up and we'll see all that
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.