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August 9, 2025 51 mins
Charlie, JD, Fred, Paul, and producer Grant get back in rhythm with tales about sleep machines, snorin’ spouses, and the mysterious “brown noise.” Charlie lays down a practical self-defense method called “Comply, Distract, React,” while the fellas roast each other over production mishaps and pet food mishandling. Later, they dive deep into Florida’s upcoming sales tax holiday for firearms and accessories, along with pro tips on buying suppressors before January 1st.

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.  
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Welcome to the Talent Outdoor Show. I'm Charlie. I sure
am happy to be here. Go ahead, Hey.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
That's j D.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
I'm j D Charlie.

Speaker 4 (00:18):
Ye, I fraid Charlie did a funny right before we start.
It was just like wit that he you see every.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Now and he's been planning that line.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
In my head. It popped in my head. And there's
Captain Paul Time here.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
And the reason everybody we are excited.

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Happy because guess who's back in the studio today. Your boy,
our executive producer, his his his co produce, his subject whatever,
subordinate producer who has been me for so many weeks.

Speaker 5 (00:47):
Which is sucks such a nice actually gotten better and
better for time.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
The problem is I quit losing those shows.

Speaker 4 (00:53):
And yeah, grant you understand. I mean I had to
sit there look at him and he just give me
his stink eye.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
The entire show, We've learned to look at the timer.

Speaker 4 (01:04):
And he well, then he starts being like a like
a like a producer nazi and ordering us to shut
up because he's trying.

Speaker 1 (01:11):
To man, it's just try to try to be part
of content. And the producer. That's that's terrible.

Speaker 4 (01:18):
You know that was not fun. We're glad you're back.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
From this side of the table. And and the thing
is is, now I can actually think about what I'm
anytime I would talk, I would be thinking, okay, how
much time? And then Fred's looking over there, eyeballing the screen,
looking over my shoulder, and and then starts doing weird
stuff with his fingers, like he's trying to count down
and reverse or so. I don't know what he was doing.

Speaker 4 (01:41):
I couldn't remember the signals taught us. I was trying
to do the signals, and uh, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
I came Hey, I came up with a great uh
gret terrible with stuff, but greeting card, birthday card, okay
for people who are old, all right, okay, hey, just
just a number and yours is five four three two.

(02:11):
I thought it was funny. I wouldn't give it anybody
I love, but I'd give it somebody idea. I knew that.
I thought we would get the jail now, so we
came in. So I'm hoping that this other endeavor that's
going on, and we may be promoting another podcast and

(02:32):
whatever coming up soon, won't get into it too much.

Speaker 3 (02:34):
Every already promoted on the radio this morning.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Okay, well, then there's gonna be a no new podcast
produced out of the studio. And yeah, yeah, that's the
whole reason we're talking about it is because it was,
you know, Grants expanding his realm.

Speaker 4 (02:47):
Of But it's going to be a show about roofing.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
Yeah, And I said. The funny thing was, I said,
it's you won't get it over your head, which I
thought that was pretty funny.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
Well, show and planned that since yesterday when you were I.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
Just came up with I mean, it could be a
show about it could be a show about off great housing.
It's three feet time and it'll be over Fred's head.
I mean to show about basements.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
So I mean, how much is there to talk about?

Speaker 1 (03:15):
I don't know. I'm anxious. I'm anxious to see what.

Speaker 4 (03:18):
I don't listen to it too.

Speaker 3 (03:21):
It's gonna air the hour before our show, I think
starting the last Saturday of this month.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
But it's gonna record the hour after our show. So
that's gonna it's gonna be weird. Well I'm gonna hear it,
but probably from across the hallway while they're recording it.

Speaker 3 (03:34):
All kind of time travel happening.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Yeah, I can see what's gonna happen is our segment's
going to air and then it's going to have a
segment of theirs and Grant's gonna I don't know how
that happened. And you keep your wires from getting crossed.

Speaker 6 (03:46):
Buddy, I'm gonna be keeping my files separate. You know,
there's gonna be no crossover.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
So if y'all listen to our show, you know that
that in the in the Tallahassee market that te Spark
is one of our sponsors for the show, and he's
a sponsor at the and all that. And Travis, I
guess on where along the line he thought he'd be
a good idea to get on the radio and talk
like us. I don't know it's a good idea for
us to do this, but Travis, good luck.

Speaker 4 (04:08):
But I mean, doesn't he do stuff other than roofs?

Speaker 1 (04:13):
Yeah? They do, all. Yeah, we don't talk about that
in public.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
Not that kind of stuff I do.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
I mean, I don't think I've ever seen a picture
of him trying to make love to a palm tree
in an island for a drink in his hand, like
I've seen you.

Speaker 4 (04:31):
I am going to Mexico on Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
Did you get splinters or wrapping your leg around that tree?
That's what I wanted now, the palm trees half splinters.

Speaker 4 (04:38):
I was pretty old up by the time.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
I bet you were inside that out.

Speaker 4 (04:45):
And that was rum. That was in the Bahamas. This
is Mexico, this is I don't know what's I.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
Ain't allowed to have that.

Speaker 1 (04:55):
I mellowed when I drank tequila. Earlier in my life,
if I drank tequila, I was trying to fight somebody.
Now it's not that way anymore. I don't have any
inclination to try to fight anybody anyhow.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
I'm forbidden.

Speaker 4 (05:08):
I know that when in law school. Once, when I
was dating my wife, she got a hold of some
tequila and tried to pay the bar tab with a
Parisian card.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
Remember that store.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
They wouldn't take it. She couldn't understand why it was
and I knew then that that was the woman of my.

Speaker 3 (05:33):
I need to make according to that kind of music.

Speaker 4 (05:37):
It does. I mean, well, not that I didn't need
to say that.

Speaker 3 (05:42):
I mean, Lord, have mercy, straight to the baker, straight
to the basement.

Speaker 6 (05:51):
I'm glad nothing's changed.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Did you did you take the opportune to listen to
any shows.

Speaker 6 (05:56):
When I did, I caught some here and there.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
He was shaking your head. My god, that terrible.

Speaker 6 (06:00):
Yeah, they're doing great.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
Here echo in the background and the we're on microphones
and the yeah, lord, just don't watch the YouTube videos
like you'll see. You'll see these three guys over here
in the corner nodding their head and I'm talking off camera.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
And I had it set up.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
I just had I couldn't remember to push the buttons
on the keyboard and do. It's just too much. It's
too much. I don't multitask.

Speaker 4 (06:27):
I had to look like down at my hands because
every time I'd look up, he thought.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
I was looking at the camera. Quit looking at the tiler.

Speaker 4 (06:34):
Yeah, and then he'd get distracted a chicken running across
the road.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Well, you didn't just look at the timer. You looked,
and you'd like crane your neck over there, and you
you would getting this look on your face like something
had happened, you know. So we teach this this little
drill for years have been in personal defense and talk
about you know, so you're somewhere and somebody's somebody's pulls
a gun or a knife on you and you've got
a weapon on your fire you, but you can't get

(07:00):
to it because who you can't beat somebody to the
draw when they've already drawn, right, So you got to
So we caught to comply, distract, react. And so you're
somebody pulls up, pulls a gun on your, point a
gun at you. You're, you're, you know you're being robbed,
and you know you got a gun. Well, how do
you get to that gun and draw it fast enough
to be able to engage them without getting shot doing it?

(07:21):
Because if you make a movement towards where you would
in order to keep a gun, there's absolutely observed orientation, decision,
and action. They're ahead of you in the Udu loup.
And so we did comply. You know, you comply. You look, you,
you raise your hands, you surrender. You are like, okay,
please don't hurt me. I'll give it whatever you can
have what you want, hold on them and get it

(07:42):
for you. And that's comply. And then you look past them,
you know, because if you look over somebody's shoulder enough
and you're you're and you're you know, like you're paying
attention to what's beyond them, they're eventually gonna look behind them,
especially if it's somebody trying to commit a crime to
worried about getting caught in the all coming up, They're
gonna look over the show and see what it is
you're looking at. Okay, So that's the distract part, and

(08:03):
you actually go once you're reaching, it's okay, fine, I'll
give you, I'll give you my money, i give you
whatever you reach. And once you get your hand on
your gun and you're looking past them like and you
get a surprise look on your face and go, officer, officer,
he's got a gun or something to distract them, is
you know, is that other guy with a shot gun
with you or something? You know, you come up with
something and when they turn and look, okay, that's a

(08:26):
distract part. And the react part is when you step
off line so you're not where they expect you to
be when they turn around and realize you was pulling
their leg. The react part is to step off line
and to shoot them until they are no longer a problem.
So you don't draw your weapon until they look away.
But in that moment, that split second that they look
away to see if there's something over there, that's your

(08:49):
moment to react, so comply distract react. Well, Fred, you
were doing a great job of distracting me the whole
time by looking over my shoulder.

Speaker 4 (08:57):
Do you think there was a guy with a gun?

Speaker 1 (08:59):
No, but there something going on. And there's many times
now you've waited. You didn't do that right after Grant
wasn't in here. You waited until I had screwed up
a couple of shows, and I ran over. We ran,
We talked over the deadline a couple of times, and
I can grant you know this, I can go eliminate
all the thumbs and ohs and the breasts and the
blank times and the downtime, and then you know the

(09:20):
like that right there where I just stuttered a little bit.
I go in there and take all that out. Would
I sounded much better while you were gone because I
took all that out of the show. I went through
it and I left one.

Speaker 6 (09:29):
We're reverting to our default setting.

Speaker 4 (09:31):
Yeah, got me.

Speaker 7 (09:32):
Sounded like RFK And if I really had to, As
long as you don't start sounding like PELUSI, we're good.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
They do have something in common a lot probably.

Speaker 4 (09:51):
I can tell you that.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
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(10:21):
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(10:41):
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we're back.

Speaker 4 (10:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
So, Jay, he was making this racket on the break
over here.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
Got a Racket's that's an old an old radio sound effect.
The way that they would do this, it sounds like
a campfire.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
It does kind of sound catfire, doesn't It sounds like
I want I listen I put on. I put on
my my little earphones at night, and I'm listening to
my help me go to sleep, not listening to the
wife's snore, rain storm and so yeah, and so last night,
as a matter of fact, I got a new phone.
I can't get everything figured out, and I lost all

(11:25):
the settings. And the one that I was listening to
last night was was a rain shower. Don't have the
thunder because the thunder bothers me because I hear the
thunder and I'm thinking, crap, the dogs you fixing start
barking and fixing it. They're gonna start scratching at the
dog the thing or was it? You know? Did they
finally start the artillery attack on us? And Cuba coming?
So I don't do the thunderstorm, but I do the rain.

(11:46):
And the whole time, I'm thinking, ma'am that it's raining outside.
I'm half asleep. I get up in the morning, I
look outside. It's dry, and I go, how how did
it get so dry? Wick? It rained all night?

Speaker 4 (11:58):
Never envisioned you as one of these dudes who listens
to the babbling brook to go to sleep.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
I mean, you know, I listen to whatever sound I
can so I don't like. So I don't so I
don't hear.

Speaker 4 (12:11):
That's right, you have like one of these little n No,
but I like mud and put it on your face.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
But next to me in the bed is my my
beautiful wife that I love more than life itself. That
that that tends to occasionally make a very petite and
I can't sleep through that. And so now I know
I probably do it too, she says, I do. I
did wake myself up a couple of times, so I'm like, okay,

(12:41):
that was me. But but mine, but mine is uh
is very attractive, she's she loves it. Hers, on the
other hand, sometimes sometimes it tell you how to fix that.
I have a hard time. I have a yeah, another
bedroom got a hand getting out of them. We both
not one, sir, I did this to my wife last night.

(13:02):
I don't want to know your wife last night.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
Real.

Speaker 4 (13:05):
No, it's okay, you kick her. No, you don't kick her.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
I have to be careful because I bruised my wife
on a kick her and in her sleep.

Speaker 4 (13:14):
Now, if I did that, she'd wake up and whip
my eye. But no, you wait till they go to sleep,
and you get one of those like industrial strength breathed
right things and slap it on her nose. You put
it on just right, it stop the snort.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
Uh huh, yep, and she wakes up.

Speaker 5 (13:29):
I've got a sound machine, yeah, that I have had
since I was eighteen years old, right out of high
school when I first started working midnight shift.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
No, it's just little. It's this little uh, this little device.
It's you a little round thing, plugs in the wall,
got a motor on it, and it's just got a
fan inside of a shroud and it sits there and
goes sh all night long. And I have been using
that thing since I was eighteen years old. So it's
forty years going on forty years old. Uh forty years Yeah,
going on forty years old that I've been using this thing.

(14:01):
And it's to the point where I have to take
it with us with me on vacation. It's got to. Yeah,
sometime we do it it definitely. My wife's got something
on her phone that she does. It kind of makes
a little bit of noise, but I man, I don't know.
I have a hard time sleeping without it, but it
just keeps on running. That's what kills me. You're turning

(14:22):
on and it keeps going, and it's they got to
be out of business, because it ain't like you're gonna
you know, I would die another one tears up.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
You have to get it fixed.

Speaker 3 (14:30):
I'm gonna have to get on eBay and try to
find a vintage one to buy. It's called a sleep mate,
and it's just cool.

Speaker 4 (14:36):
I just don't do that.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
Yeah, drowns out the noise going on in my head.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
You know.

Speaker 5 (14:41):
We play fall Asleeping under three minutes through Spotify, and
I won't tell you. I got it going to Alex.
I come in there and say, fallows Alexa, fall asleep
and on a three minute that starts.

Speaker 3 (14:50):
You just turned somebody's radio off. I'm just saying, well
it works.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
I know exactly what you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Yeah, it's I got to my brain doesn't shut off,
and I have a really hard time going to sleep
to night. So I sit there on the phone watching
stuff and do it and I get to where I'm starting,
So I put my phone over there on the little
wireless charger now and I got these I forget which
what version is, but it's the bone induction wrap around

(15:19):
the back of your head. I sleep. I can sleep
with it. Yeah, really, I can sleep with that on,
and so I just I never wear it during the daytime.
I just plug it in. Every morning I get up
and brush my teeth, I plug it in, charge it,
you know. And at night when I go to bed,
I put it on my head. And now it'd be
easy to sneak up on midnight because all I'm listening
to is you know, and it's and uh, there's all

(15:40):
you know. You see it on TV advertising the green
noise and the brown noise, and you have to be
careful about the brown noise noise. There's the deep brown
layer of the brown.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
Scared of the brown noise, kind of like wearing the
brown pants.

Speaker 4 (15:58):
But uh, you know, the market the brown noise.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
This on it's on TV. And actually that's that's the
one I kind of like because it's a deeper noise.
I bet it is a deep but I can't hear
how pitched sounds.

Speaker 3 (16:10):
So something something in the ancestors.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
I don't want to fall asleep.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
One of the one of them things from Australia whatever
that whatever that instrument is that the Aboriginal digger we do.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
That's the trivia.

Speaker 4 (16:39):
That's the one that the crocodile flies around.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
To know, that's a that's a sound making thing too.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
This is some guttle. It kind of makes ad words
and sound. It's making sound today it's a.

Speaker 4 (16:54):
Crocodile. Dundee guy flying that thing around his head. What
did that do?

Speaker 2 (16:58):
You'll play anything?

Speaker 3 (16:59):
Look, you was calling the movie. Got a bunch of
fruit bats to wake up and fly in?

Speaker 1 (17:05):
We did you?

Speaker 3 (17:05):
Yeah, that's what happened doing that.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
I was.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
Australia Australian Wildlife call called all the bats in.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
So you listen to nothing, you just go straight. I
do your aration.

Speaker 4 (17:21):
I do have a problem sleep walking.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
Oh god, I ain't doing that.

Speaker 3 (17:25):
It's called the drunk staggers.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
No, it's it's you know, without fail. You know about
almost every night, about four o'clock in the morning, I'll
go walking into the refrigerator storty, grabbing something out of
there to eat. Not don't don't remember it. Don't know
what I ate. One night, wife left a half can
of dog food in there and ate that.

Speaker 2 (17:49):
Yeah, I could see that.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
Surprised man.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
As long as you don't lay on the side the
road after that and clean start cleaning yourself.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
You probably did that on purpose, Fred, I mean, because
why else would you leave a half a can of
dog food and refrigerator?

Speaker 3 (18:06):
Can you see Fred sitting on the side of the
road in his neighborhood, licking hisself, you know, like a
dog eat dog food.

Speaker 4 (18:12):
I was barking out orders next day.

Speaker 3 (18:14):
Anytime get run over by car, get off skin up.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
What kind of dog do you have?

Speaker 5 (18:22):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (18:22):
Well, we've got an English cream retriever.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
What English?

Speaker 4 (18:26):
It looks like a yellow lab. It's a it's a
it's an English cream retriever. Actually the fat dog.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
Did it not? Does it not eat a whole can
of dog food?

Speaker 4 (18:37):
Know, it eats a lot. But then that we have
the little yip dogs, a little York my wife's dog.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Okay, yeah, k Yorkshire. That's why there was a partial
can in there.

Speaker 4 (18:45):
Yeah, and so it was it was a mighty dog.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
So it was something. So she's probably feed some good
those kinds of dogs.

Speaker 4 (18:52):
You just got this new stuff called the Farmer's dog stuff.

Speaker 1 (18:54):
Oh yeah, that's almost like people food. You can eat that,
you'll be all right.

Speaker 4 (18:58):
Yeah, So it comes in this little thing, you keep
it afraid.

Speaker 3 (19:02):
Just telling you he's gonna get run over, get run
over on side of this hand.

Speaker 5 (19:06):
He gonna he's gonna come in and start sniffling. Oh boy,
they're gonna come here.

Speaker 1 (19:12):
They're gonna come in and try to hunt somebody's.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
Like he did that tree.

Speaker 3 (19:22):
We always go there, We always go there.

Speaker 4 (19:25):
Take us there. I mean that was not me. Dad.
I don't know what to say here. I've got I
got nothing.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
Fine, Lord, have mercy. We've been on show. How long
you finally we finally got him to the point where
I just can't talk. We didn't even have to talk
about bird.

Speaker 3 (19:46):
We've had a breakthrough. He ain't gagging. He ain't gagging.
If it's nice, just it's just he's speechless.

Speaker 4 (19:53):
I don't know what you're saying. How a longer break?

Speaker 3 (20:01):
Three more minutes to pick on fred? I talked to
h I talked to Casey Smith on via text yesterday.
He wants about two weeks from now, we're gonna have
him and another fellow on the show, uh to talk
about They're about the bear hunting. We talked about bear
hunting last year, or last month, last last week, whenever
the heck it was last show. They want to come

(20:22):
in and and kind of explain what they're doing and
they're they're the im probably gonna say it wrong. The
Dog Hunters Association, the local North Florida Dog Hunters Association,
just talking about association. Yeah, and it's you know, it's
it's there's there's still this is one of the few
places in the country where people still run hound.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
Dogs all the time, right, But this.

Speaker 3 (20:47):
This general area here, and there's a few places up
in down in South Florida and a few places up
in like South Carolina if you sporadically, but it's almost
a lost tradition way of hunting. I mean that was
the way everybody used to be a big regular I mean, yeah,
I grew up. I grew up running dogs.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
Yeah. Down where I'm at, they run dogs all the time.
And everybody had a you know, had a big old
dog box on their truck and they had a seat
up there and it's the platforms and they'd run around
and and you you didn't want to be on the
dirt roads during certain times of the year because next thing,
you know, I mean, on the county roads and running
across all kinds of property. Now it's kind of relegated
to large places like casing them have access to you know,

(21:30):
got large pieces of property and they lease out huge
wasps of property to be able to do that.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
And it's gotten, uh, it's gotten super high tech as well.
There's that you talk about high tech rednecks. It has
gotten high tech dogs know the tracking GPS, tracking callers
and they're sitting there looking at a map and can
see where their dogs are and uh, which way they're
going and that you know. So it's it's it's a
cool sport though, and it's not. It's really more about

(21:56):
the more of a social almost as almost as much,
if not more of a social event as it is actual.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
Yeah, it's the civilian version of us. Uh chase guys,
That's exactly what it is. And that's what we were
talk about. You want you want to go done. I've
done that.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
I've done that all week. I'm ready for a day.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
Off and I will tell you anytime. I want to
go about about twice a week in Jackson County to
share this office canine unit's out on somebody that has
run from them. All I gotta do is turn on
the radio and tell the sheriff, Hey, I want to
come play. I go in there and do it right now.
But uh, you need different. Only difference things You can't
shoot them when it could run across the road.

Speaker 3 (22:37):
Well, it depends.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
Well, Uh, anyway, We'll be right back.

Speaker 3 (22:46):
Is your back killing you from sitting at an uncomfortable
desk all day? Do you have pain radiating down your
leg or down the arm? Called doctor Joseph Miller, d
C at the Tallahassee Spine Center and ask about spinal
decompression therapy at eight five zero five eight zero five two.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
Are you tired of that chainsaw that never starts when
you need it? Do you spend your whole weekend fighting
your old lawnmower? It doesn't have to be that way.
South Side Mower has been serving to Tallahassee and surrounding
areas for thirty nine years. They have a wide range
of hus Varna, Gravely and ex smart lawnmowers, still chainsaws, tremors, edges,
and blowers, as well as generators, pressure washers and more.
If you need parts of service on any of your

(23:21):
outdoor power equipment or it's time to purchase new equipment,
stop by south Side Moors at eighteen eighty five South
in Roe Street, one mile south of the Capitol. Visit
the website southside Moor dot com and we're back. Good lord,
y'all talk for ten minutes, break and out of that's back.

(23:42):
It's kind of gone.

Speaker 3 (23:43):
I gotta go. I'm headed, conversation. I'm headed. I'm headed
to Alabama. Soon as we get off the I'll be
driving Dothan. Here at Bama, yeah, i'll be hit. I'll
be driving through Dothan on my way to Troy.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
And about you'll go through or around. You're gonna take
your circle.

Speaker 3 (23:58):
I'll tell you I'll hit the circle all to take
eighty four over and hit the circle and.

Speaker 1 (24:01):
Look out for the construction. I don't know where it's
at this way, but there's always construction on the Circle
and Dothan. I mean there's I don't know that they've
ever I don't know when they started on that thing,
but they ain't never finished it.

Speaker 3 (24:11):
I can tell you that it has gotten bigger because
I remember when it was two lanes all the way.
Let's see, Troy is north of Dothan, almost due north.

Speaker 4 (24:20):
Yeah, it's on two thirty one.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
It's on two thirty one, the other side of Ozark.

Speaker 4 (24:24):
Okay, yeah, all right, that's why I got a good friend. Listeners.

Speaker 1 (24:27):
I go back. And I think growing up listening to
the radio and watching TV out of Dothan was just
just helped define me for who I am. I mean
everything from from wrestling to the what youre doing. I
heard what's doing up there. I'm tearing down these prosings
now these load prices and they're still there.

Speaker 3 (24:50):
Yeah, they're still Wand Red Holland oning and satellite come
on in out there with the number three washed tub.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
You know.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
There was a guy named Red Holland that had a
had a had a TV show on w TV. Why
I had a Dothan He was fishing the Red and
he was a song he did like a morning show.
Uh he but he'd come. He'd go fishing on fishing trips,
local fishing trips right here and Applas, Cold River Lake,
some and old wherever. He was just a card he was.

(25:21):
He was just funny, you know. And uh but he
go out and catch fish or whatever. And he'd do
commercials for people, for sponsors or whatever. And he was
back then everybody if you lived out in the middle
of nowhere, you had a big old satellite dish in
your yard. If you wanted to watch more than two channels,
and uh, he was advertising for some satellite company and
he gets a washtub out there and he's trying to

(25:41):
pick up satellite signal with that. Gavin, I still wash tub.
It's just I just it was a commercial that I remember,
just like the one Charlie and I are talking about
with with the appliance store, you know, and the local highway.

Speaker 4 (25:54):
We had one when I was gross Satellite because we were.

Speaker 1 (25:56):
Out of the stack, right, you know how it runs
that business. He was there.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
It's probably a little bit older than us, but.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
He's a satellite this he was there last time. His root.

Speaker 3 (26:06):
I mean, oh yeah, there's huge, big, big wire mesh satellite.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
I still got skeletons of those things. I went back
of the house, but I think I've run over with
a tractor a few times where it was is up
there for years after got the direct TV and all
that stuff, and that thing is just sat out there,
and I'm like, Daddy wants you to take that thing down. Well,
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (26:24):
It's trying to turn it upside down and put a
tarp over it and make a nice little gazebo out
of it.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
Now, this one became structure in a lake for.

Speaker 3 (26:33):
That'll work too.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
Uh huh, that'll work. I think I think I finally
buried it with the bulldozer one day. It was along
with a bunch of other stuff. There's there's a lot
of stuff. This whole house is buried out there on
the farm now where I got tired of looking at
it and just we're gonna dig a hole, push it down,
set it on fire. I don't know how much how
legal it was, but it was, it was what it was.

(26:56):
I went there with a fire hose in a five
hundred gown water tank making shirt. Didn't get away.

Speaker 4 (27:01):
Come a long way with TV these.

Speaker 1 (27:02):
Days, Yeah, it's uh, I mean now it's so fast.
You got so many When I just back when I
moved back to Marianna out on the farm, we were
one house passed where the slow internet on the phone
line was so we can't get you internet and uh
and my daddy's house was the last house on the line.
And it was like remember when it was, well it

(27:25):
was it was. It wasn't much better because all the
stuff takes so much. Now, you know, I ain't can
barely play solitary on the internet. I mean, you know,
he check her email, take five minutes and then it
and then T Mobile came out with some stuff we
were we were working on that Verizon stuff with slow.
Now Verizons got a five G tower. I can see
it out back across the tree line, across the river,
over off the next highway. I can see it by

(27:47):
G tower. And then Starlink and Starlink is the bomb.
Star Link is the bomb. And but now there's so
many different versions. I got a new phone that long
ago and like, hey, we've got five G at your house.
And I said, well, you had crappy three four G
when I bought the starlink. Oh you got starlink. Another guy,

(28:09):
hey is he is? He want to get the He
want to get the five G Internet unlimited Niggas he's
got a Starlink. Oh never mind. So even they acknowledge,
you know that it's just that good. Plus when the
power goes Now, those towers might not last for a
few days, but the five but the satellite's still going
to be up there, still the Chinese bomb.

Speaker 3 (28:32):
Are you looking for a place to buy quality shoes
but want to work with a local small business that
greets you like a friend and still knows what they're
doing I'm j D. Johnson, and both Charlie and I
use the shoe box for all of our work boots,
casual shoes and shirt.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
Jeff Weldon runs a great store that carries men's, women's,
and children's shoes and a number of major brands. They
know how to fit shoes properly and can even fit
you in orthotics to make great shoes fit even better.

Speaker 3 (28:54):
If you see us, we're probably wearing a car heart
shirt and bordered by Jeff and shoes from there as well.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
They're located at twenty twenty South mon Road Street, just
north of the Fairgrounds. Tell them we said hello, Hey,
it's Charlie and j D from Tallan. Do you have
residential or commercial roofing needs? What about a bathroom or
kitchen remodel? How about commercial construction? If you do, call
our good friend Travis Parkman at Teespark Enterprises. They do
roof replacements, roof prepare and new constroction. Travis does commercial

(29:20):
and residential work, has come to my rescue on more
than one occasion, so I trust him to get it right.
Find him at Teespark Coonstruction dot com or call him
at eight five O seven sixty six thirteen forty am
right soon. What we want to do. I want to

(29:43):
tell about what you talk about. Seek, folks, we spend
so much time preparing for our show. Well there's an
occasional math. Look down here, tall you this.

Speaker 3 (29:51):
There's a whole bunch of stuff in the next few months.
It's going to be kind of exciting for the gun
industry if you want to hear by that.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
About I was talking out of a month show about that.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
About a month from now, Florida is going to take
away there will be no sales tax on firearms accessories,
I mean, scopes, ammunition, fire arms, all that stuff will
be tax free through December.

Speaker 4 (30:15):
So dove shull shells or tax free?

Speaker 3 (30:19):
Is that ammunition for you?

Speaker 1 (30:22):
There you go.

Speaker 4 (30:22):
I just I'm just ammunition, firearmsss, gun accessories for how
long through December September.

Speaker 3 (30:36):
Eighth or thirteenth, I can't remember it. Sometime in middle of.

Speaker 4 (30:38):
September, so like two and a half months.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (30:42):
Guns, Have they done guns?

Speaker 3 (30:44):
Gun? No? I never have. They tried to do it
earlier in the year, and I'm kind of glad they didn't.
They were going to do it in June. But this
makes more sense, right, before seasons, so.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
Our business definitely picks up. You know, we're in the
summer slow down time right now. Thanks for a little slope,
Not so much on the range as far as people
were coming out, but as far as buying guns Christmas.

Speaker 3 (31:06):
And then and then UH January one h is the
UH suppressor H two hundred dollars tax stamp on suppressors
goes away federally. That's a federal tax that goes away.
So you can buy a suppressor in Florida from September
the middle of September to the end of December and
hold on to it and don't file your paperwork until January.

Speaker 1 (31:29):
We'll hold on to it.

Speaker 3 (31:30):
We'll hold on to Yeah, we have to hold the store.
We can hold on to it.

Speaker 4 (31:33):
So that's the way to do it. So you buy
it in December and then.

Speaker 3 (31:36):
Yeah or whenever. I wouldn't recommend waiting until December, to
be very honest with you, because the supply is already
drying upber.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
So here's the way it works is they they formed
three of.

Speaker 3 (31:52):
Us.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
Manufacture comes in. It sits on our on our s
O t our, our occupational tax, our license, it sits
here in the house you can pay for it, but
it stays here until you file and get your tax
stamp back, which it's not really a tax stamp anymore.
It's gone. I don't know what they're gonna call it anymore.
But normally you would pay the two hundred dollars to
ATF and then once that tax stamp was issued, then

(32:14):
you can come in and you can pick up your
suppressor and you can take it home with you. In
the meantime, it stays here now if you pay for
it now the way it is now, if you pay
for it, we hang on to it. And then in
January you file for your tax stamp, which will now
no longer cost you two hundred dollars, but you won't
have to pay the sales tax from September to December,

(32:35):
so you don't have to pay the seven and a
half percent sales tax, and then you don't have to
pay the two hundred dollars.

Speaker 3 (32:40):
Yeah, And so one thousand dollars for pressor is going
to be one thousand dollars.

Speaker 4 (32:43):
Yeah, but I mean, and then so instead of.

Speaker 3 (32:45):
Being almost thirteen hundred dollars, it's gonna be a thousand.

Speaker 4 (32:47):
Yeah, they'd say, you know, like I spent a total
of one thousand dollars on the pressure a couple of
years ago. Two hundred dollars of that was tax, and
seventy percent of whatever it was with sales tax. I
just saved three hundred dollar three hundred dollars.

Speaker 1 (33:01):
Yeah, yeah, so it makes it more forward. Now there's
people that want them this hunting season.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
None of this is liable to help you if you know,
except well if you pay the tax. Now we've been
seeing tax stamp that we're still selling suppressers right now,
and people that want for hunting season are still going
through the process paying the two hundred dollars because they
want to hunt with them this hunting season, right and
they get them to the gun and they're people we're
seeing twelve hour twelve yeah, seven eight hour returns. Now.

Speaker 6 (33:28):
If you would have told me that like four years ago,
when it was thought you were on the moon, you're.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
Waiting a year. Now now it's you can, it's it's
it's shorter than the three day weight. If you don't
have a permit in Florida to get a gun. And
this is in Alabama, two folks, This this turnaround on
the suppressors is happening almost immediately.

Speaker 3 (33:45):
And it's one I'm assuming is because they're probably slack
right now because people are waiting until January that want
to wait. But two, they have automated the process, so
it's no longer no longer assigned to a an investigator
that it sits on their desk for however long or whatever.
It is an automated process now because everything's digital. Everything's
filed digitally, the fingerprints are digital, the form is digital, everything,

(34:08):
So it's probably just running through an algorithm. And they're
they're doing.

Speaker 4 (34:11):
A background approved for one or two of them. You
ain't gonna have ane.

Speaker 3 (34:14):
Yeah, So, so I recently did one on my trust
that has me and my wife on it. So anytime
we buy, anytime my bias oppressor, both of us are
getting a background check done and all this stuff. And
the one I've had them eleven or twelve months, and
then did one with the automated system it was about
three months. And then the last one I did was

(34:36):
eleven days, which is just like, holy cow, eleven days,
and that's what the last name of Johnson, uh so,
and that was, and that honestly was Some of the
problem is that how many people with my exact name
exist in the country. Well, I have the three most
common names in the English speaking world, John, David and Johnson.
So uh you know, so Smith's Smith's and Johnson Johnson competitor. Yeah, John, Yeah, exactly.

(35:03):
John John Smith and John Jones are my two big Williams.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Yeah yeah. But but Jady has a unique middle name,
John David John.

Speaker 3 (35:15):
That is so unique, especially for you know, kids born
in the sixties and seventies that David's been on you know,
David's been on the top of the list of names
for boys until Hunter and Trevor and whatever.

Speaker 4 (35:27):
All these others would name my kid Hunter these days.
I mean, it's just born to be a crackhead. What Wow,
you name your kid Hunter?

Speaker 1 (35:39):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (35:39):
Hunter b Yeah, Hunter Biden.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
Uh yeah, there you go.

Speaker 3 (35:44):
Talking about over your head.

Speaker 1 (35:46):
I'm trying to I was trying. I know some people
name Hunter and I'm like, that's statistically I think you'd
be all right, But you got it, But you gotta
be careful, you know. It's names are signs at the time. Now.
My name, on the other hand, Charlie Brown came from
the funny papers. Literally, Yeah, dad was a joker. Daddy
was a joker's Yeah, Charlie Brown named Charlie Brown. The

(36:09):
doctor put Charles on the thing, so I'm Charles Brown.
Striking sounds more official. But Charlie Brown and I grew
up with. You know, you're talking about marasing the mean
young and you know it's like a boy name. Yeah,
it's uh yeah, Charlie Brown. He's a clown. He Charlie
wears snoopy. Charlie wears your too, you know, you know
that's the whole well, I never I never tried out

(36:30):
for a place kicker.

Speaker 3 (36:31):
For the record, For the record, if I'm ever in
a clothing store and i see an adult sized version
of the yellow shirt with the zig zag black line,
I am going to buy it for I've been saying
that for since I've known you. If I ever run
across one of them shirts, I'm gonna just I'm gonna
go ahead and get it.

Speaker 1 (36:48):
Yeah. Yeah. When I'm when I first came to Tallahassee
to go to f s u Plice, I started trying
to go by Charles, you know, because I didn't want
to get the whole Charlie thing. I gave up after
a while. And there's a few people that still, but
I you know it, I don't. I tell the story
and it's funny, and Daddy, I know you up there
somewhere mm hmm, yeah, you know I feel you know

(37:13):
how I feel? Well, Daddy grew up. His name's Carrie,
so you know boy named well, yeah, it's c A
R E Y. But so many times somebout that carry
struck on? Who's that, lady, cath carry? Is that? Is
that your mama? Note no? And then my mama's name
is Tony, which can go either way because her daddy
was Tony two N why and she was t O

(37:33):
n I now most now my daughters all have I, Dusty, Kelly, Jesse,
all have an idea that my mama's naming it. And
so you know, it's just where we come up with
this stuff.

Speaker 3 (37:45):
I had so my background check stuff. You told about
running background checks. I used to play a trick on
my recruits. When I have a new recruit in the car,
I'd teach him how to run the n CIC and
operate the computer stuff, and I'd hand them my driver's license.
Here run my driver's license, and they would run my
driver's license and the remember the old uh uh when
you got a hit on a on a name or whatever,

(38:06):
and you run it in the computers in our car
the old computer system in our cars with red lights,
go to flashing the screen to start flashing red and
b b B just go and send out a signal
to everybody working, and they're like, are you for you? Okay.
I had a cousin that a distant cousin that lived
up north Jackson County, and uh he had the exact

(38:27):
same name as me, in about two years apart, and
he was a bank robber and a short enough. He
was a four yearl bad guy stayed on you know,
he has he has just ceased at this point, and
I think that has made my life easier. But you
got you got a white guy with the same name,
date of birth, kind of within a couple of years

(38:47):
of each other, and in the same part of the
same part of the world, you know, an hour away,
and that that kid goes, well, what's all that? And
it was it was an exercise to say, Okay, do
you think I'm this guy that's wanted for bank robbery?
And he goes, oh, probably not. I said, okay, well,
how do you figure that out? And I'd make him
pull up and compare the criminal history. Yeah, I have

(39:11):
thought about it, anyway, How would I get away from that? Yeah,
that's where they keep the money. That's why you rob
the banks. But I'd make him go through the criminal
history and figure out that. I wouldn't that guy anyway.
It was a good exercise for a new police officer.

Speaker 1 (39:27):
I can say the story and he's sticking to it.
We'll be right back.

Speaker 8 (39:34):
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important lessons. Other times, the more we resist, the longer
we stay stuck. When a simple change would change everything.
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Meridian Bank. Changing is easy. We'll show you how Prime

(39:57):
Meridian Bank, tallahassee cross deal and on the web at
trymibank dot com.

Speaker 1 (40:03):
Remember fdi c Hey, It's Charlie and JD from Talent
Tactical Outfitters. Are you in the market for a firearm?

Speaker 3 (40:09):
How about Holster's optics, cleaning gear or apparel.

Speaker 1 (40:12):
We offer all of that and more and provide expert
advice and a one of a kind try before you
buy program.

Speaker 3 (40:17):
We can even help you build your own talent tac
ops AR fifteen from our huge selection of parts in
our Armors class.

Speaker 1 (40:24):
You can build a nine millimeter for personal defense or
a larger caliber hunting rifle with optics.

Speaker 3 (40:28):
It's all up to you, your color, your style.

Speaker 1 (40:30):
Come see us a midway right off Ien or call
us at five nine seven seventy five point fifty.

Speaker 3 (40:35):
It's a drive. I'm shun.

Speaker 1 (40:41):
Then we're back. You're talking about a nsaid, what is
it not safe? Or now that's not safe for wife
because there's some jokes you don't want your wife to hear. Yeah,
that was that.

Speaker 3 (40:53):
I'd be shamed getting caught telling some of the jokes
that I remember and tell sometime when I'm in the certace.

Speaker 4 (40:58):
It all start.

Speaker 1 (40:59):
There was a I the first time around the campfire,
the first time I was the first time I was
exposed around.

Speaker 6 (41:06):
We got stories.

Speaker 1 (41:07):
You remember, you remember the stereos you had at home.
That was the big old cat with the little top
lid and yeah, and that had then it was just
empty air in there, but you'd open it up and
there was a record player and there was eight exactly
eight track, had the big old knobs on it and stuff,
and then the dial went all the way back and
forth to tune in the radio station. Well, when we

(41:29):
lived down in Dry Creek, Mom and Daddy lived in
Uncle Herman's house was rinten from him down there, and
and uh, they that's where I found my first Eagles
eight track that I used to listen to on the
on the tractor, and my first Merle Haggard eight track
and all that then, and of course all the eight
tracks disappeared went on to the tractor and was played

(41:49):
in the sparkamatic eight track player that I had bolted
to the roof of that old tractor, you know, in
years of dust just destroys them. But that's where I
got my taste of music. But also in there from
eight tracks was yeah. But also in there was was
an eight track and it was Trucker humor Trucker Comedy.
It was Trucker comedy, and it was a picture of
a dude with a would a would a Trucker cap on?

(42:12):
And and I played that and I learned some things
I don't think they knew. And the jokes on that thing,
I still remember most of them, but I can't tell.

Speaker 4 (42:27):
Them to think all this started with a camaro.

Speaker 1 (42:32):
Yeah, it was. That was that was and I.

Speaker 4 (42:37):
Had not heard that Camaro joke. I'm gonna go google.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
I wonder if there's a if there's still any of
those old stereos still floating around.

Speaker 3 (42:47):
My grandmother had one, and uh it. Finally, I think
the whole thing basically died. And I had to break
it down because I had to was cleaning out their
house and I had to tear that thing apart. I
couldn't pick it up by myself to get it in
the back of my pickup truck to haul it off.
And it's what you're talking about, all the airspace that
it had that old gold or red, fancy looking cloth

(43:10):
in front of this Spanish looking you know, a.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
Little Spanish looking Yeah.

Speaker 3 (43:13):
I had had a little bitty paper yeah, and a
little bitty paper speaker.

Speaker 1 (43:19):
Yeah. I thought the thing had huge speakers in it.
And then you got in there, and I ain't gonna
say how I found out what was in it, but
I was. I was a I was like the tinker
as a kid, and I got it. Yeah, And you're like,
what us all the speakers in this thing? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (43:31):
I still I still remember the I still remember the
television that my parents had that we had until it
was post I would say into the early eighties after
nineteen eighty one. Uh, well, my dad died, you know,
in my young life. I kind of that was such
a pivotal part of my life. My dad died when
I was young, and we had an admiral color television,

(43:53):
like a twenty four inch color TV. That's hot, and
it was in this beautiful piece of furniture, right it
finally but it was one of them you had two
dolls and a knob for the you had a knob
for the volume, and you had a UHF VHF doll.
There wasn't none of them UHF channels.

Speaker 1 (44:11):
And that made a great table to put the next
TV on top.

Speaker 3 (44:14):
It absolutely did. Uh And I remember my mom and
I going and buying a TV to, you know, to
replace that one with when it finally died, because it
was like one shade of green. You could see some
stuff moving around in there and see, yeah, I think
it's about time. But that TV was like thirty years
old when we got rid of it, because they had
had it long before they got me, and it was
a hand me down from somebody.

Speaker 1 (44:35):
Your TV is one of the sturdiest pieces of furniture
in the house. That's a Yeah, that's the old stool
right there, an ten on the house with the motor
on it. You turned it.

Speaker 3 (44:45):
Oh oh yeah, we had that on on top with
a big tier out there and you turned the doll
upon a torstyle has here or doping microwaven house.

Speaker 1 (44:53):
Back then it was a cast iron.

Speaker 3 (44:55):
Remember the one of them, that's right, a man of
radar range, one of them. I ever saw my grandparents house. Boy,
you could blow a hot dog up. I used to
just have all kind of fun, just torturing hot dog.
You put a hot dog in there and turn it
on for ten seconds. I wanted what's gonna happen if
you put it on for two minutes? You know, it's
flattered hot dog all over the inside. Sit there and

(45:16):
watch it. Probably got it radiated like nobody. Probably probably
was wrong with me.

Speaker 4 (45:23):
Did you ever do the send opinion and get one
hundred and eight, you know, eight tracks and then they
get you on the hook like.

Speaker 3 (45:30):
Yeah, the Columbia Columbia record.

Speaker 4 (45:32):
Oh yeah, yeah, So they tried to enforce That's when
I started thinking of that going into log because.

Speaker 3 (45:37):
They they tried to make you buy something.

Speaker 4 (45:41):
Yeah, they tried to make it. Try to enforce contract.
I wrote them a lot of backs that can't force
contract minor in state of Florida.

Speaker 1 (45:48):
How much time we got, how much time we got,
time for fish and stuff? Over five minutes we got
some time?

Speaker 2 (45:54):
They are biting.

Speaker 5 (45:55):
This week has been with this rain, the uh and
cool the water down, the water amature. This morning was
eighty degrees and then and they were back and we
caught ten or eleven this morning in like an hour
and a half. They were chewing and I brought Yeah,
you brought across the time. Yes, I think we're going
to be able to have them. And then I've got
several baits. Now, Charlie, I want to make sure I

(46:17):
explained this to other radio tapeople.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
That camera over there, so yeah, do that if I
can get a watch some hook.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
Now, now I go through your finger.

Speaker 1 (46:28):
That's a lot of give it the friend, JD.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
I want to tell me explain this. Now you know
what this is.

Speaker 5 (46:32):
This is a This is what they call a spook,
old school the old school stuff, old zeraspook. This is
actually one made by six cents. This is called a
magnum catwalk. That thing, when you're working it back and forth,
will walk the dog action on it. It as big
as it is, it'll blow a lot of water around it,
but it'll pull the fish up, like in Spring Creek
up from.

Speaker 2 (46:53):
Seventeen things huge.

Speaker 1 (46:55):
Yeah, that's that's and then this one right.

Speaker 5 (46:58):
Here is just a little bit small. And I like
to throw them based on what.

Speaker 1 (47:05):
Put it over there in front of the camera. Hold
it up for us. I know what it looks like.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
You see it?

Speaker 1 (47:09):
There we go.

Speaker 2 (47:10):
I want the radio folks that I think most people is.

Speaker 3 (47:14):
But this is a it's a It looks like he
cut the end off a broom handle and put some
hooks on it. Is what it looks like. I mean,
that's they used to do that. I've seen my grandaddy
take a broom handle, cut, cut the end of it off,
put screw hooks in it. Screw It.

Speaker 1 (47:31):
Looked shaped like a fish.

Speaker 5 (47:33):
Yeah, face like a fish, looking a cigar shaped like something.
And here's another one that called it.

Speaker 2 (47:40):
Yes someone you know.

Speaker 5 (47:41):
Sometimes sometimes they prefer magnium sized ones and sometimes in
bastam want the more normal.

Speaker 2 (47:48):
That's like, that's right.

Speaker 5 (47:50):
But if you notice right here these I mean, this
is a you don't have to have paper all thing
we added to it was this this spin right here,
a reel and this thing backs to the water.

Speaker 2 (48:02):
Whopper popper, whopper popper.

Speaker 5 (48:04):
It draws a commotion and them big bast will hit
that thing too.

Speaker 3 (48:08):
Yes, sir, very good, especially schooling fish.

Speaker 4 (48:12):
And that's right.

Speaker 5 (48:13):
I've been seeing the fish schooling for the last two
or three weeks now.

Speaker 1 (48:17):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (48:17):
They first started I seeing I was catching little ones
pound and a halfers, and then in the last ten
days I started getting the bigger fish starting school.

Speaker 1 (48:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (48:25):
And the bremer still bedding up on lake some of
all the shell crackers still bedding, and they're bedding on
lake tapling.

Speaker 3 (48:32):
I got a question for you, Paul, okay, and I
know you. You can smell a fish bed. I can
smell a fish bed. Why why? Why does what? What
is happening?

Speaker 1 (48:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (48:42):
I mean you know what but if you know what
you're if you know you're riding around and you start
smelling a certain smell, there is a very distinctive smell
to a brim bed or whatever. I yes, is there?
Is it the chemicals that they're putting off when they're
all those eggs and the smell.

Speaker 5 (48:58):
Yeah, Okay, here's what happens. The because I've been on
the water and watch them, the smells come in and
make a bed and watch it grow. And I'm like,
I don't smell nothing. Well, man as well, he says,
Then you're not. They're males.

Speaker 2 (49:11):
Okay, you come back a couple a couple of days.
They're making the beds. When the females come in, you'll
smell me.

Speaker 4 (49:16):
Females are making a smell.

Speaker 2 (49:18):
And I've learned that. You know when you Shad's got
a unique smell. Bass have an unique smell.

Speaker 5 (49:23):
You can kind of learn over time what those what
type of fish or beading.

Speaker 3 (49:27):
And these baits work. And a lot of time you
do these these top water baits we're talking about, some
of them make more racket and more disturbs on the
top of the water than other son. Sometimes the bass
want something with a real low amount of disturbance, and
sometimes they want something to make a lot of noise,
like a Harper copper or double like a torpedo, or
something that's got two spinners on it that's kicking water
everywhere and.

Speaker 1 (49:46):
It's just like.

Speaker 2 (49:49):
It's got too.

Speaker 4 (49:51):
Is there a scent that you could put on one
of these that would attract bass?

Speaker 1 (49:56):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (49:57):
Maybe that's stuff that maybe the the juice.

Speaker 3 (50:00):
Yeah, some of the different stuff leave a little trail.
There's some, uh, but.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
Now it draped. The action of it draws it to them,
I know.

Speaker 4 (50:07):
But I'm wondering if if you had action and sin.

Speaker 3 (50:10):
Yeah, probably getting the scent to stick to a hard
plastic bait, it's gonna be not.

Speaker 2 (50:15):
There is kind that they make now jay that you
can kind of.

Speaker 3 (50:18):
A jail that you can paint on there, hang.

Speaker 2 (50:20):
It on there. But usually this is drawing them to it.

Speaker 3 (50:23):
It's this all about the disturbance in the water and
the noise.

Speaker 4 (50:27):
Done it with flies.

Speaker 5 (50:28):
But I want to let people know too, going into
the doing into the uh August, that we any trips
we're doing in the afternoon or in the mornings, we're
gonna we're doing a kind of a discounted rate for
this for the for August as we go into the fall.
So just give me a call it eight five zero
two six four seven three four take a fishing.

Speaker 3 (50:46):
There you go, there you go.

Speaker 4 (50:47):
Have you ever see one of them a magnum?

Speaker 5 (50:50):
Yeah, and if some of them prefer you know, you've
got a trick worm.

Speaker 2 (50:56):
You got a magnum trick.

Speaker 1 (50:57):
Worm, have you.

Speaker 4 (50:58):
That's what I have.

Speaker 1 (51:00):
Just to imagine.

Speaker 2 (51:01):
I'm gonna bring them next week.

Speaker 3 (51:03):
Well, the bigger, bigger, bigger worms. And I had somebody,
a guy, explain this. Bigger worms look better to fish
later in the year, because that's the snakes and the
worms and throwing all summer.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
I did know that's what we got. We got to
get a show with so I can laugh. We'll see
all next time.
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