Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Welcome to the Town Outdoors Show. I'm Charlie, I'm JD.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
And I'm I'm Captain Paul Tarr and I'm Grant.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
All right? That pop quiz all right? Who was the
third person entered it? Next? People are like, what, that's
just the noise we make at the beginning of the show.
Oh no, so you mentioned down in rifles's hunting season.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
It is hunting season as of right. I'm probably as
when this show is there, and I'm hoping to be
loading up a deer of some description into the back
of my truck.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
So, folks, if you're out there in deer hunting World
and you're going on that in Georgia, that Georgia or
coming up in Florida and all that, wherever you are,
whatever you're doing, if you haven't checked the zero on
your rifle, this is to be you do it. Do
(00:54):
it before you go huh.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
I'm in the tree and I know I've got four
rifles here today, and when we get done recording, I'm
gonna go down there and confirm zero on all four
of them. Mine, my wife's, my daughters, and my other
one my backup.
Speaker 4 (01:08):
So I got to wear that target shirt again.
Speaker 3 (01:11):
Yeah, and run around, run around, turn broadside and look
back at me.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
Put you and put you on my orange shirt.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
So you don't want to find out your gun ain't
sighted in when mister Big walks out into the food plot.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
Yeah, and if you don't think a rifle will now
I remember that. There's a quick story. Me and Steve
Woodcock was my sniper partner back in the day on
this White team, and we went to Gunny Hathcock's White
Feather Sniper School fourteen days of Literal HBL in Virginia Beach.
He was Gunny Hack. I was the famous Marine RiPP
(01:47):
Vietnam era marine course sniper had a Savilian sniper school
for law enforcement, and it was It was one of
the hardest things I've done in law enforcement, because cops
like to know when we're going to get a break,
we're gonna get there at a fit reasonable hour in
the morning, and I want to know what time I'm
getting off, and I need raping the brakes, and I
don't want to take tests or do anything physically exerting.
(02:10):
I mean, that's what caps do. Well. His was just
exactly the opposite of that. And it was fourteen days
and I don't remember if we slept the whole time
we were up there, and sometimes it was laying behind
a rifle. But the last day of the course and
you have to qualify or you don't get what they
call a piece of the rock, the marble slab that
I have in my attic now. But and Steve, the
(02:34):
night before we qualified, I walked around and we were
at the hotel room, and he was cleaning his rifle.
And if you didn't show up with a clean boar,
they'd run a white patch to your boar every day
when you showed up the class, and if it had
dirt on it, you was doing push ups and said
you were going to clean your rifle. Every time you fire.
It should be pristine, the barrel should be clean, no
filing shots, none of that, which I normally run a
(02:56):
dirty rifle during hunting season, but they wanted it clean
every time. And he was cleaning his and I walked
around the corner to bed and kicked it with my
foot by accident. I swear it was an accident. Now,
these are law enforcement issued Remington's seven hundreds with good
scope rings, good loophole scopes, solid rifles that we drug
around the woods all the time, and all that did
(03:17):
was fall over on a bipod and hit the bed frame.
It was two inches off. The next day about one
hundred yards when he took his coal board shot, were
like ooh, and you know they were qualification. You hit
one cold board shot and it was to the left.
I'm like, huh, man, you better aim to the right
to let you better aim somewhere else. And he did.
(03:42):
He just barely qualified because that thing. And so if
you don't think that getting in and out of your
tree stand and banging that rifle around can knock that
thing off no matter what kind of gear you have.
Speaker 3 (03:53):
Now, vibration of your truck motor or the vibration of
your vehicle going down a washboard road, which is where
hunting happens on dirt a lot of time, a lot
of dirt road traveling whatever, getting banged around, vibrations will
loosen screws, even with lock tight torque properly and all
this stuff.
Speaker 5 (04:10):
It happens.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
I experienced that with one of my guns this morning.
It wasn't the scope, It wasn't on the scope, It
was on the stock. The screw that the screw that
holds the stock onto the action was everywhere done up,
and I'm like, what the heck, Well.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
Everywhere something touches something else in there is the stock
to the frame, to the receiver to the this and
the barrel that the scope rings and then the scope
ring mount, and then every one of those things has
the potential to move just a little bit, and it
only takes a little bit.
Speaker 3 (04:43):
This was causing just enough wiggle that I could feel
it and hear it moving. The one it wouldn't have
I mean, probably wouldn't have affected accuracy whole lot, but
it might have because my eye is in a different
place or that whatever. So I had to, you know,
And that's one of the processes that I go through
on the first of the hunting season year, and I'll
do it again probably, you know. The middle of the
hunt seats, my wife had a scope quit working or
(05:06):
let go as we call it, and missed a absolute
trophy deer because of it. I'm sitting there watching it,
watching the whole thing, and she is absolutely deadly with
a scope rifle, and she shot at a deer at
about one hundred and seventy five yards and I watched
the bullet tear off through the frozen frozen bushes and
knock ice off of it, and she had missed it
(05:27):
by three feet.
Speaker 4 (05:29):
You said, let go what do you mean the scope?
Speaker 3 (05:31):
Sometimes medicals? Let go the radical. The crosshairs in there
their mechanical, Well, there's mechanic. There's little sets of gears
that move those should move the radical around is called
an erector. And something in there had loosened up, and
the crosshairs had They looked the same through the scope.
You can't look at it and see, but they She
(05:52):
had killed two deer a couple of weeks earlier with
the same said set up shot perfectly. Sometime in that
two week period of time. The scope was three feet
off and it was broken to the point where it
would not I could not read zero or we had
basically had to throw that scope and putting the scope
on there. So it happened. And this was a nikon.
(06:13):
This was not a cheap This was not a cheap
Walmart scope. This was a nikon.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
I got the one of drawer in there. The redick
just fell out of it.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
Charlie, I have a question, what's up when if you
was y'all are in the capacity as a sniper or
the Sheriff's department.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
Correct, Well, it have been.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
Yeah, how often would you check your you know what
I mean?
Speaker 1 (06:30):
And that every training, well once or twice a month
every time went out shoot a group cleaner rifle.
Speaker 4 (06:39):
So wondering.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
So I'm just saying, all that time and effort you
put in to feeding, planting food plots, going out, renting
the hunting lease, or taking care of your place or
whatever it is, and then you get out there and
if you haven't taken a shot with that rifle just
to see and you don't have to shoot a whole
group through it.
Speaker 3 (06:58):
Yeah, my plan is to go down here and shoot
one round out of each of those four guns and
be done if everything is correct, or make the corrections
to get it, make sure it's zero.
Speaker 4 (07:07):
So here's the question for you. So what what what
is your recommended recommended yardage? Yeah? One yards you want
to say so for your average southeast you know part
of the country deer hundred one hundred yards on a
two forty three at two seventy.
Speaker 3 (07:24):
I like using the one hundred yards zero because the
math at four hundred yards is easier and it's just
easier for me to remember without having to write things down,
or to keep a to keep a card, a dope card.
What's called a dope card with all your uh, scope
adjustments and all that stuff, I don't have to think about.
Speaker 4 (07:43):
We have dope cards in my business, but it's not used.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
Right.
Speaker 3 (07:45):
So if you if you zero it at let's just
say you zero at two hundred yards, right, your average
hunting rifle, If you zero at at two hundred yards,
you're going to be somewhere between an inch and a
half to an inch and three quarters high at one
hundred yards sure, and then x amount of depending on
the drop, you're going to be this much low at
three hundred and this much below that at four hundred.
(08:06):
So with one hundred yards zero, I know I'm dead
on it one hundred. I know I can look at
my ballistic calculations and know that I'm two inches below
that at or an inch and a half below that
at two hundred, which you don't make its scope adjustments
for two hundred yards you're talking about it. You're either
hitting an inch and a half high on a two
hundred yards zero or you're hitting an inch and a
half low on a one.
Speaker 5 (08:27):
Hundred yard zero. What does it matter?
Speaker 3 (08:28):
You're within eight and three hundred blackout or something unless
you're shooting something weird, low velocity or whatever. But at
three hundred yards, I know that if my bullet drop
is this much, I got this many clicks, and it's
just easy for me to remember it based one hundred
yards zero.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
So you can also look at the box of AMMO
that you're using, and it'll.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
Have a lot of times.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
There are a lot of the manufacturers are now printing
that information on the box of AMMO.
Speaker 4 (08:54):
I don't buy them. If let's say I have a
little little hark on the back where I can look
at it and.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
See right well, And the thing is is if you
look at that and you like that two hundred yards zero,
and it tells you what one hundred yard, you know
it's going to be this distance low at one hundred.
In order to do it a two hundred yards zero,
you can dial it into that still sight it in
at a hundred. You just say, if it's an inch,
you just sighted in an inch low at one hundred,
and you can figure that it's probably going to be
(09:20):
fairly accurate, but it's not going to be perfect because
the length of your barrel matters. You know, there's there's
a lot of different things that can go into that.
So but at least it gives you an idea. Ideally
you would go out, like come to one of the
Talon ranges and both under midway here in Tallahassee, and
you would shoot out number one hundred yards and see,
you know, and if you're shooting past four hundred yards
(09:41):
and you probably have somewhere better to shoot because there's
a you're going somewhere else now, you know, shooting but
hunting on power lines and things like that when you've
got a long distance right in an ackfield, but dially
your rifle in know what you know what you're talking
about and we'll be right back. Have you been diagnosed
with a herniated disc or arthritis in your back or neck?
(10:03):
Doctor Joseph Miller, d C at the Tallahassee Spine Center
may have a druglist and non surgical solution waiting for you.
Called doctor Joseph Miller at eighty five O five eight
oh fifty two fifty two set up an appointment today.
Hi's Charlie at Tallon JD. And I are proud to
be sponsored by the great folks at recon Restoration. Stephen
and Ashley at Recon came to my rescue when I
needed mold mitigation performed on my house. At Recon they
(10:25):
do restoration from mold, fire and smoke damage, demolition and
repair services. Recon also performs full service cleaning, trauma and
crime scene cleanup. If you have repair or cleaning needs,
we recommend you call Recon Restoration at seven five five zero,
six two eight are on the web at recondash Restoration
dot com. Then we're back. So you were telling a
(10:55):
story before the show about some of the potential clientele
that we might run into. You know, as a as
a professional training facility, a family oriented shooting range, one
that allows people to come out and do tactical training.
We teach stuff like that, We teach person issues, how
(11:16):
to defend yourself, and you know, this is a place
for people to come and enjoy themselves. Occasionally and we
never call out names or anything, but occasionally we have
people that have borderline behavioral concerns or concerns that go
beyond where we feel like it's we're comfortable training these people.
Speaker 5 (11:36):
Or even allowing them on the property.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Now, So if we had a bunch of people to
come out here and says, we want it'd be like
a pilot school, wanting to teach a bunch of people
to land, not how to land. And somebody, somebody walks
in here and they say, I want you to teach
me how to shoot because I'm going to shoot somebody.
That's kind of yeah, yeah, it's it's.
Speaker 3 (11:56):
Clue, so kind of give me a So this person,
this person reached out to us a couple of days ago, uh,
this week, and said, I want to learn how to shoot. Okay, Well,
when we get those when we get people calling asking
for private lessons, we uh, we we try to cater
(12:16):
those private lessons to their needs. Okay, what do you
want to learn how to shoot? You want to learn
how to shoot birds? You want to learn learn to
shoot sporting clays? You know, skeet or do you want
to learn how to shoot our long range rifle a
carban whatever. We try to cater those things, so we
ask a lot of questions when somebody calls us about that.
This person basically includes uh, indicated that they had been
to the FWC recent meeting here in Tallahassee discussing the
(12:42):
bear hunt. And this person indicated they want to learn
how to shoot their gun so that they could shoot
hunters if they came near their property.
Speaker 4 (12:51):
For purposes of defending.
Speaker 3 (12:53):
Or defending the wildlife on their property, if they were
just going to shoot them. And this person also said,
I'd recently went to this meeting and there were a
bunch of KKK members.
Speaker 5 (13:03):
They're wearing orange shirts.
Speaker 4 (13:05):
They don't wear orange shirts, they wear white ropes.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
Well, but you see the mentality of their associating this
this hate, this racist hate group with people wearing orange
shirts hunters. The hunters were there, and.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
The anti gun anti wear red shirts to the capital
when they protest against gun rights.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
But then they're wearing the Grand Wizard outfits, right.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
Well, but then but then the red but then the
MAGA crowd wears red. So it's it's like it's the
color colored dazure, you know.
Speaker 3 (13:40):
So this person indicated they basically were wanting to learn
how to shoot so they could shoot people wearing orange shirts.
Were wearing honey Hunter's orange, which is a requirement if
you're hunting in public on public land in Florida. It's
a requirement on every land, and hunting in Georgia, you've
got to wear orange. So anyway, they basically were very
(14:05):
interesting to talk to, UH, and UH very adamant that
they were going to kill anybody that came onto their
property UH or hunters.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
And then she found out that our instructors would have
been wearing the same SI.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
The instructor that we put her in touch with to
get the to do the to do the training said, UH,
you know, if I'm a retired f w C officer
and I hunt, and if I if I had gone
to the meeting, which I didn't, but if I had gone,
I would have been on the side of the legal hunters,
and I would have probably been wearing orange too. And
(14:42):
this person lost their absolute mind over this and got
mad and called up here, and she went on the
phone waiting on the phone call back from me to
just say, I appreciate you.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Want long story short. She she's not going to be
trained by us.
Speaker 4 (14:57):
I understand that. But there are two questions you need
to ask her when she calls. One does she have
any money?
Speaker 5 (15:03):
And two does she want a good lawyer? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (15:06):
Does she want a good lawyer? I don't ask too.
If she didn't answer some you know one affirmatively.
Speaker 5 (15:13):
Yeah, So like I said, it is.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
That bothers me for a person of that mentality that
wants a gun. That's basically putting the lives of animals
that are legally harvested, legal activity, all that putting the
lives of those animal But that is a red flag call,
really good use of the words.
Speaker 5 (15:37):
They're actually the red flag.
Speaker 4 (15:40):
Well, no, I'll do you one further. I think you
need to notify a law for it. Thank you, red flagger.
Speaker 5 (15:46):
That's uh, maybe going on.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
We we we don't discuss that part of things on
the air. Fred. We prefer not to go down that
road right now. Listen, we are staunch advocate at the
Second Amendment all of your individual rights. We don't divulge information,
share information. We don't do that. We believe, I mean,
people can learn and protect themselves. However, when you start
(16:14):
talking about I want to proactively go out and harm someone,
and that crosses that crosses a threshold that we cannot
tolerate and will not tolerate.
Speaker 4 (16:22):
I tell you, I mean, guess further that ethnically, as
a lawyer client comes to me and says I am
going to commit a crime, not only is that not
protected by the attorney client privilege at that point, I'm
duty bound to report that.
Speaker 3 (16:34):
Well, A, it's a quandary for us, you know, because
we've but I didn't. I didn't create the environment that
that person is living in, and whatever mentality they have,
they don't need a gun in my opinion, somebody that's
that's with.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
And we're certainly we certainly wouldn't sell them one or
allow them to or train them to use one. I mean,
there's there's a lot of craziness because I mean I
saw something in this morning that some people that I've
done business with in the past, and they've got a
little blog I think they're doing now and posted on
Facebook about and conservatives posting asking for the feedback. On
(17:14):
the WCTV or whatever channel was talking about the auditors
going down Gain Street and college town down around FSU
with the AR fifteen and the video foot there. They're
the auditors. They were the ones that were over in
Calhoun or guess whatever county was, and yeah, and they're
same people, same guys, same same fellow, same AR fifteen
(17:34):
and went down to FSU campus right around the edges,
not on campus, but we're walking around down there and
everybody's kind of you know, there are some people cheering
them on, and there are some people that are absolutely
traumatized those people. A little things can But here's the thing.
Get take a temperature of the room. We had an
active shooter situation here not long ago. We had things
happen in this town, and you've got I won't go
(17:56):
right back to the same thing I was talking about before.
You know, they have the right to do that as
long as they are where they can be in public.
Speaker 3 (18:03):
Well, but man, somebody with the mentality that to want
to kill a hunter for hunting a person that's that's
conducting or involved in a legal, legal activity and you're
placing the life of the animal. That's the same person
that climbs up on a roof and shoots somebody for
(18:24):
having a different opinion than them. Yeah, that is the same.
You just may not have the skill now have the
skill set. That means got mindset. But the mindset is
no different than somebody willing to assassinate somebody with a
different political view or.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
Now understand, you can be from the left or the right,
you can be from any part of the political space.
You can have whatever political beliefs you want. You can
have whatever religious beliefs you want, you can have any
of that stuff, but as long as you're not potentially
violent towards other people. If you if you want to
come out here and wear high heels and rainbow uniful,
(19:02):
I don't care come out to the range and shoot.
We welcome you, We welcome, we welcome people. And the
thing is is a lot of these people with those
types of lifestyles, they really have a legitimate personal safety concern,
and we're happy to train them and prepare them to
defend themselves against people who might be doing harm to them.
But if your intention is to come here so that
(19:23):
you can turn around and I'm gonna do this so
I can do some harm to someone, that'd be like
that'd be like a woman coming in here and going,
I want to buy a gun because I'm gonna kill
my husband the next time he hollers at me. Now,
the next time he attacks me with a knife, I'm
gonna kill him. I'm all about training her, but you know,
you just got it. You have to. And so if
(19:44):
you're out there buying a gun and go on somewhere,
be careful what you say, because that's that's but you
know what crazy just it just bleeds right on through.
Speaker 3 (19:52):
I'm probably gonna sell a gun, and it's a presser
to somebody that comes in here and says, yeah, I'm
buying this to do some night hunting and I'm gonna
do some spotlighting. And and now if they say I
got predation tags on my farm and I'm looking for
a thermal sight with a rifle and a.
Speaker 5 (20:05):
Suppressor to kill the we're gonna to kill the hogs
that are.
Speaker 3 (20:11):
To night.
Speaker 5 (20:11):
Let me help you with that.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
But if you come in here and say, I mean,
I live in Claring Lakes and man, there's a bunch
of big deer walking around here at night and I'm
gonna start shooting Tonty yard, I ain't gonna help you.
I'm gonna say I'm.
Speaker 5 (20:22):
Just not I'm just not gonna give you no pointers
on that.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
I don't live there. I might say, I do.
Speaker 5 (20:29):
I feed them jokers in my yard.
Speaker 1 (20:30):
I don't. Hold on. Let me get you a three
other blackout so you can really suppress it. Let's get
you some sub sonic rounds. And the problem with that
is what happens when it runs in the neighbor's yard.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
Yeah, don't just don't just Yeah, my neighbor boils down
common sense. But some people ain't got no sense.
Speaker 5 (20:46):
Now you're yeah, or worse or worse, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
They're really insane.
Speaker 4 (20:51):
Speaking of neighbors, I sent a picture all last night
of my stone crab meal that came in the stone
crab opened on the Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
That was pretty yah.
Speaker 4 (21:02):
Yeah, I got I got a hold of the first
harvest man.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
Those things are good.
Speaker 3 (21:05):
I sat down one time and it five pounds of
them things right by myself. Buddy, you talk about I
love me some stone crab man.
Speaker 4 (21:11):
I cut my finger bust them up. You know, you
got a little hammer, and then I had a little thing,
and I just I got so into.
Speaker 5 (21:19):
A little peekon crackers, just.
Speaker 4 (21:21):
Just mowing on them, just sitting there with finger. Got
a hold of the bunk, one of the already been cracked.
Speaker 3 (21:25):
I take a little small little hammer. I got a
little little like I have a six ounce hammer or something.
I may, but I love stone crabs.
Speaker 4 (21:33):
A machine toned stone cower crab cracker cracker. Okay, yeah,
just specifically for that day, October sixteenth, every year every year.
That's because that's that's on my account.
Speaker 3 (21:45):
To me, there there is no better uh, no, better
seafood on the planet. And that's include I've had King
crab and snow crab whatever.
Speaker 5 (21:51):
Stone crabs. They're the hardest to get into for a reason.
They're good.
Speaker 4 (21:54):
I'm gonna tell you this. They they got a pile
of minute Southern seafood. I was there last night, and
and really they are there. Prices are coming there.
Speaker 5 (22:03):
Well, Tater's boyfriend works there.
Speaker 3 (22:05):
I wonder if I get some kind of deal on that,
get that to get at employee discount going on. I
want to hang out the back door, call him up
and say, hey boy, hey, you want to take my
daughter out Friday night. I might get me some stone
crabs claws to work for that.
Speaker 4 (22:24):
Yeah, and they've got the h They got the recipe
that they from Joe's Stonecraft, Miami for the sauce. It
tastes no different than the actual sauce from the restaurant.
Speaker 3 (22:34):
I went in there when it was fifty dollars all
you could eat once upon a time. I'm sure I
put I put a hurting on them that night.
Speaker 5 (22:40):
Yeah, that's some good stuff.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
Is your back killing you from sitting in an uncomfortable
disk 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
five two.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
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 Exmart lawnmowers, steal chainsaws, tremors,
edges and blowers, as well as generators, pressure washers and more.
If you need parts of service on any of your
(23:22):
outdoor power equipment, or it's time to purchase new equipment,
stop by south Side Moors at eighteen eighty five South
in Row Street, one mile south of the Capitol. Visit
the website Southside Moore dot com. Hand' back so I
had to go in the middle of the night or
(23:43):
the other night my daughter's van took a mess owner
and just quit running and cost too much. I went
over to chippole forward Maryanna with me and you were
doing some trading right now. And this afternoon i leave
recording the show, I got to go gee pee wee
and sign the paperwork on a new vehicle from my daughter.
And is that lowered the price on Earth any No?
(24:05):
But I am trading. I am. I am trading another
truck in on one of those little Mavericks. And then
I'm thinking of trading another truck on one of those
Mavericks because I like those things get some crazy mileage.
And so I'm the security company. I'm upgrading some vehicles
because if I'm gonna make payments on something that's got
a bunch of miles on, I'm gonna trade that in
and go ahead and get something under warranty.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
And like the little trucks I said in one one
of our customers have one. I'm looking at it, and
I'm a big old fellow.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
I got in one of these.
Speaker 5 (24:32):
It's not bad.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
I'm trading on an XLT and I'm getting out of
a twenty twenty two Nissan Frontier. It's my newest one,
but I'm making a payment on it. It's getting this
out of the warranty period now and they doing me
right on the trade, and so I got to get
the strips off of it. But I'm getting I got
into XLT. It was the one. I'm getting one brand
new off the showroom. It's actually the one in the showroom.
(24:55):
So I've never done that before because nothing I've ever
bought with it in the showroom. And so so I
got I sat in it and got to let your
seats and I could wear cowboy hat in that little
little thing. I mean, it's got plenty of room. And
the thing is is it and I'm buying a hybrid.
It just thirty eight miles to the gallon.
Speaker 5 (25:11):
It's a Maverick.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
It's a.
Speaker 5 (25:15):
Ranger. It's what a Ranger used to be, economy truck.
Speaker 3 (25:18):
It's a lot like the old Toyota, the old original
Toyota two wheel drive.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Well, it's like it's like the original Ranger. The Rangers
used to be a compact truck. Well now they're a
mid sized truck. And they should have named the anyway,
they should have renamed the Ranger and called this the Ranger.
Just traditionally, the Ford Rangers were small trucks. There were
little bitty things like the toyotas and back in the
day you had a little truck, you had a big truck.
Speaker 3 (25:43):
The original Rangers were made by Mazda. It was the
same as a Masda B two thousand. I had one
of that. I had a late eighties like I paid
eight hundred dollars for a Ranger because at the time
I lived fifteen sixteen, eighteen miles from where I worked.
And I also had a Ford Bronco that got twelve
miles of the gallon. I don't care what you did
with it. It got twelve miles of the gallon, so it
(26:03):
was killing me. And I wanted something a little bit
better on fuel. And I bought this wrecked and repaired
salvage eight hundred dollars Ford Ranger and drove it for
three years, put tires on it. I think I put
a starter on it, and I think that was it.
I paid eight hundred bucks for it, drove it, and
sold it several years later for fifteen fifteen hundred dollars.
Speaker 5 (26:23):
And once they never gave it. The starter was the
only thing ever read it.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
One they'd appreciate down to a point, a truck as
long as it's seeing good Mecanna.
Speaker 3 (26:30):
That was three different colors, three different color Yeah, it
was three different colors that didn't have no air condition
but it got me there and back for several years.
Speaker 1 (26:38):
So that's the.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
Three colors all at one time.
Speaker 3 (26:42):
Yeah, I had three different shades of black. It was
black with red interior with no air conditions. So it
got a little warm in the summertime, I would say so,
especially wearing a police uniform, polyestern body armor and that thing.
In the summertime. It was like riding in a sweatbox.
But it got me home, got me too, working home
for years and didn't cost me a thing to drive it.
(27:02):
You know, I love that little truck. And it was
it was three different shades of black from all the
body repaired and replace you know needed. Probably was a
green fender at some point in time, and K Kryline
made it black again.
Speaker 5 (27:13):
You know, I mean so well.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
I was sitting in I was sitting in Chipolla Forward
talking to them yesterday and I said, you know, I'm
sitting there looking at trading multiple vehicles for the comp
you know, work trucks and this and that and the other,
and talking about our new trades, and I said, you know,
it's come a long way from from the night I
was driving right here in front of this dealership when
(27:34):
the piggy wiggily was over here and the drive cheft
fell slap out them in nineteen seventy nine forward and
pulled it over here and had to drop the rest
of the drive out and then running on the front
wheel drive. That's a good thing about a four wheel
drive back in the day, when you were in and
went out of your drive shaft twisted off from being
stupid and just goosed and twisted it into you. Just
(27:55):
take that off and run on. I had a front
wheel drive nineteen seventy nine Ford Ranger F one fifty
for a long time. You know. That's all the rage
now is front wheel drive. Pick a little pickup truck.
I had one in nineteen eighty five.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
It probably wasn't good for the transfer case at highway speed,
just say well.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
I sold it. Finally, Daddy sold it to the Ford
mechanic at the Chipotle Ford place, so he knew how
to work on that fix. That was the one that
had to lift kit that was half metal and half
wood two by forward. Well, it was one byes and
some two and a half inches square too. When I
cut off one of Trat Triumphants. But that's the way
it was back then. We'll be back.
Speaker 3 (28:34):
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.
Speaker 5 (28:40):
I'm JD. Johnson.
Speaker 3 (28:41):
Both Charlie and I use the Shoe Box for all
of our work boots, casual shoes and shirt.
Speaker 1 (28:45):
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 (28:55):
If you see us, we're probably wearing a car heart
shirt and bordered by Jeff and shoes from there as well.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
They're located at twenty eight twenty South and Road Street,
just north of the Fairgrounds. Tell them we said hello, Hey,
it's Charlie and Jedd from Tilling. Do you have residential
or commercial roofing needs? What about a bathroom or kitchen remodel?
How about commercial construction?
Speaker 3 (29:13):
If you do, call our good friend Travis Parkman at
Teespark Enterprises. They do roof replacements, roof repair, and new construction.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Travis does commercial and residential work, has come to my
rescue on more than one occasion, so I trust him
to get it right. Find him at t Spark Construction
dot com or call him at eight five O seven
sixty six thirteen forty. And we're back, sit here on
(29:42):
a break telling about how deaf I am. Yeah, I
was talking about what Because I was talking about he
was reading off the ven number on a truck I'm trading,
and I said, I told y'allbout it, telling the people
listening who probably don't care. But I said, what's the
then getting it from insurance? And he started reading it
(30:04):
off to me. He didn't give it to me like cops.
Do you know H Hotel T tango? And you know
it wasn't. He just started reading at A H T
eight eight And I can't tell there's one A H
and eight. And if you give me numbers, I know
eight is eight seven and seven nine is nine. There
ain't but so many numbers now they don't sound the same.
(30:24):
But if you get into letters, there's too many of
them that sound the same. And I got new new
batteries of hearing age, and I missed every half of
what he told me. I went back and looked at
it and I said, you know, I am in bad shape.
But you get I like it when you get these
people from overseas in the call centers to trying to
read something back to you, and they and they they,
(30:46):
and it'll be something like from Verizon or some legitimate company,
because you know, I just hang up on the rest.
It'll be some but their call centers overseas, or it's
in Atlanta and a bunch of people from overseas are
in the call center. Atlanta's got a bunch of call
centers in there. See, just because they speak that version
of English doesn't mean that's where they are. They may
be here, but they just hired people that have different accents.
(31:09):
But when they start talking that they give you fanetics
back and it'll be like, oh, Orangutan or or T
Thomas or you know, R Roberto or some crap like that,
and I'm going, where are you from? You know, and
they come up with some weird ones. Sometimes yeah, well no,
it could be it could be somebody here that you know,
(31:32):
there's a bunch of folks from all over the world
in our big old melting pot here just because they
talk funny, you know, but when you hear twelve more
in the background, then that's that's in Bangladesha, you know.
Speaker 3 (31:44):
Every now and then I get older on them and
I just tell them myself, Look, I'm sorry, I have
a speeches or I have a hearing impairment. I just
can't understand you. Do you got anybody else. I'm sorry,
I'm racist, and I don't listen to apologize.
Speaker 5 (31:58):
I can't understand. I'm like, look, dude, you know I
can't understand you.
Speaker 4 (32:02):
I called an American number and I'm talking to somebody
in China that I don't know what, and I can't understand.
Look what they're saying.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Yeah, well, you know you get calls now where it
is someone with what I would call an American accent,
and then they start talking to you and you're like hey,
and then they said, well, I'm calling to you from
the healthcare it. I'm sorry by clip. Yeah, you know,
I've been trying. We've been trying to get in touch
with you about your extended car horn.
Speaker 3 (32:30):
I go out of my way to do business with
like Spartan, the game cameras. We sell Spartan game cameras
I had an issue one of my cameras. They offered
me a deal. I couldn't refuse to on a new
one because my old one was out of warranty and
they couldn't fix it, and blah blah blah blah. And
it was the lady that I was talking to the phone, honey,
what's going on with your camera? You know she was
(32:50):
from Georgia, Okay, she was. I mean there are companies
in Georgia. Well, yeah, honey, do you want us to
send that to your home address? Or do you want
us to send that.
Speaker 5 (32:59):
To the store. And while you send it to the house,
it's mine, all.
Speaker 3 (33:02):
Right, then, Well let me get make sure I got
the right address for you, Yes, ma'am, All right then,
but it'll be on the porch when I get home today.
Speaker 5 (33:10):
Loan with the porch fiers, don't get me.
Speaker 4 (33:14):
That's the thing, not at my house.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
I might hypothetically have video cameras with something attached to it.
I want a paintball, one of the some of them
paintballs that shoot the pepper pepper balls that they use
on the riders. You mount them to a camera on
the yard and somebody, well, I mean I would have
to activate it. You know, I'm not going to do it.
Let it be on AI just yet. When they get
(33:41):
AI gets a little bit better and it recognizes that
like you. And then I shoot back with real bullets.
You know, I'll take a couple of I'll take of
them pepper ball hits.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
You get you one in burning pistols and shoot pepper
balls at you.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
I keep.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
I'm gonna put an offer out there on the burner thing.
I have to answer so many questions here at the
shop about burna and it's just one of those things
where I would let you for five hundred dollars five
one dollar bills. If you want to find out whether
or not burner works, bring your five hundred dollars. I'll
let you shoot me, and if if it stops me,
you can keep your money.
Speaker 1 (34:18):
Well, I got a better offer. I'll pay you five
dollars to let me shoot you. That being the current
customer they come in I wanted. So I'll tell you what.
Pay me five bucks and I'll go out to parking
lot shoot you with it, and you can tell me
if it works or not. But here's the thing. I
got to work on them, because they're expecting it to
work on them. It is a matter. It is mindset
if you come at something like that with with the
attitude that this is not going I'm going to fight
(34:40):
through this, because I mean I've shot almost every deputy
sheriff that worked at the Lynn kind of Shares office
back in the day.
Speaker 5 (34:47):
With paint boss you because you couldn't get me. I
was moving.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
I planned, I promise you, I planned on it. And
if you had have gone where I told you to
go out.
Speaker 3 (34:58):
And got you, that is not how life works in
a gunfight, sir.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
So that so that story real quick. Were we set
up a serpentine drill out at the academy one year,
and we put up these barricades and I made them
look like brick columns with this frow brick stuff. And
I said, we were working on active shooter training and
I was in a training section at the time, and
so we brought all the deputies out and it caught.
We give them plastic bullets in the semunitions guns. So
(35:27):
those things, they will leave a huge whelp on it.
Speaker 5 (35:29):
Hurt.
Speaker 1 (35:30):
They hurt. Now, they wouldn't stop somebody who were trying
to get off of you, but they hurt, and they
will leave a big bruise, they'll break the skin.
Speaker 3 (35:37):
Sometimes they can not want to stick your foot, leg
or arms out there to get hit with it.
Speaker 1 (35:41):
So the drill was, we start you in a box
behind cover, and then we have some of our innocent
people standing in the way, and we're teaching you to
move through a crowd. Move it through a crowd sometimes
and I've been shot, that's another story. And and you
moved from cover to cover using concealment, and I or
another instructure was down behind hardcovered down range. And what
(36:03):
happened is I had a paintball gun because it's cheap
to shoot paintballs, and so I would sit there and
if they were using cover correctly, if they were not,
you know, pointing a gun at people, they were moving past,
and they were doing all the tactics they were taught
to use, and they'd move through the scenario. Eventually, I'd
let them shoot me, and I would not shoot them.
I'd shoot at them to keep them behind cover. Now,
(36:24):
if they showed me a leg or an elbow or something,
they weren't utilizing cover correctly, or they weren't shooting at
me as they were moving or pointing a gun at
me as they were moving across in an open area,
just to provide suppressive fire, I would shoot them with
the paintball and that was that was that was caught.
A learning tool was tough love, you know. And you
got some guys from the courthouse or a little bit older,
(36:44):
and they and it was one day it was wet,
and they'd slide out there and I'd popped right along
the inner side of their thigh and I'd bruise them up.
And that was all, said a lot of them, like
Charlie's best train I ever been to. Man, this is awesome.
We get all these bruises. Man, I wish all training
was like this. Well, then jd shows up. He wasn't
in the whole class. Jeddy just shows up and we got, hey,
you're gonna go through this thing. He goes, I don't
(37:05):
get to know, you're gonna go there. And Jenny's all
right with glee in his voice.
Speaker 3 (37:10):
And there surveying that course the whole time, and I'm
going uh huh.
Speaker 1 (37:14):
And so instead of going from cover to cover to cover,
they said, all right, it's there, you're on And I
piled around the corner and I'm looking for him. And
I mean, I mean like three seconds. I leaned out
to look for him, and he wasn't there, and by
that time he had come around behind me. He just
ignored all the cover everybody. He ran around and came
right up behind me and just started shooting the absolute
(37:35):
crap out of me. I mean, I had a minute.
Speaker 3 (37:39):
I didn't ignore the cover. I figured out that. I
figured out there was a certain blind spot. If you
got when your movie talking about moving diagonally latterly and
going forward, there is you can line up three or
four pieces of cover if you take the right angle. Okay,
So I said, okay, well I got cover here here
(38:00):
and here somewhere on that asthmas on that in that path.
Those things are gonna overlap each other, so I can
cover it in a straight line. I can cover a
whole lot of ground using all that cover. He'll never
see me, and I'm I'm just gonna bolt down there
from this angle I took. I picked one one angle,
(38:21):
and either it was gonna work or it wasn't. And
if it didn't work, I reckon. I got paint balled
up and Charlie would have enjoyed shooting me, but instead
it did work, and I enjoyed shooting him.
Speaker 1 (38:30):
That's been that's one fifteen years ago, and I still
feel like, I, Oh you want.
Speaker 4 (38:36):
A paint is that's just not gonnaaugh.
Speaker 1 (38:37):
Oh you you come to our training, I will, and.
Speaker 4 (38:40):
You're not gonna get I do not like paint. You're
not gonna give us.
Speaker 1 (38:44):
Oh man, that's some of the best training you can
go to. We did. We used to do US Innario
base training with our airsoft and I'll tell you you know,
it didn't hurt as bad. But if you get shot
with airsoft all day long by a bunch of students
because women love to shoot you into critch and and
that'd be to one place. I didn't wear protection normally.
I learned that on that paintball. Of course, I was
(39:06):
behind the student one day and it was Pat Kennedy
was the role player down there, and I was standing
behind I think it was Deputy E d. She was
shooting and I'm standing behind her watching her move through
the course, and as an instructor, I'm falling along and
Pat shot one time, hit me right in the crotch,
and I doubled over and it took three people up
(39:26):
off the ground.
Speaker 5 (39:27):
I go by the I'm the weapon, the gun is
the tool.
Speaker 1 (39:33):
Be right back.
Speaker 6 (39:36):
Some battles are worth fighting. They build character and teach
important lessons. Other times, the more we ressessed, the longer
we stay stuck. When a simple change would change everything.
Is your bank holding you back? Try my bank, Prime
Meridian Bank.
Speaker 5 (39:56):
Changing is easy.
Speaker 6 (39:57):
We'll show you how Prime Meridian Bank, tallahassee Crowfitville and
on the web at trymibank dot com.
Speaker 1 (40:04):
Remember Fdi c Hey, It's Charlie and JD from Talent
Tacticle Outfitters. Are you in the market for a firearm?
Speaker 5 (40:10):
How about Holster's optics, cleaning gear or apparel.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
We offer all of that and more and provide expert
advice and a one of a kind try before you
buy a program.
Speaker 3 (40:19):
We can even help you build your own Talent tac
ops AR fifteen from our huge selection of parts in
our Armors class. You can build a nine millimeter for
personal defense or a larger caliber hunting rifle with optics.
It's all up to you, your color, your style.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
Come see us a midway right off Ien or call
us at five nine seven seventy five fifty.
Speaker 5 (40:38):
It's a driving.
Speaker 4 (40:40):
I'm so hug lining.
Speaker 5 (40:42):
See.
Speaker 3 (40:44):
Yeah, we started out talking about hunting. Now we we'll
talk about fishing. Yes, we all come in here old
Fire today.
Speaker 2 (40:49):
I tell you what guys, last last show Friday, when
we're recording that morning, we call it twenty We ended up.
I had the four guys fishing. When we fished Friday morning,
Friday evenings, Saturday morning, Saturday evening, end up catching seventy
three baths. Wow, they were biting and the wind was
twenty twenty five miles prior and week. I want to
kind of show what we was catching them on. Everybody knows,
(41:11):
or you might not. A spinner bait, and that's a
will of willow leaf about gold will of shad. You
see them there, But that's what we were. We were
catching them on that in that wind. They were biting that.
And these rattle trap I mean, I'll tell you last
week they were biting these rattld traps. Well, they really,
they were really biting. And one of the key things
of fishing this is throwing it out over that top
(41:34):
that hydrill and just work it back, just pop it,
just a slow retrieve, just lifted up, let it fall,
and as it falls and it rattles it makes it
and ma'am, I bet we call it.
Speaker 5 (41:44):
That's just five? Was that the suspending or the floating?
Speaker 2 (41:47):
No, this this one actually we'll sing. You're just throwing
out and reel it in, so you're we're not you
don't pause really it no, you just you just throw
it out, just cast it out, really in, just pop
it and it'll flutter and it makes a lot of noise.
But man, that spinner bait was unbelievable. And then I
had a trip on Sunday and actually granddaughter of net
all Day, you remember the all Day and man, that
(42:09):
was that was an awful experience town about you know,
I always knew about that story of that, but in
some inside information it was really something. But they we
we had fifteen bass we fish from seven thirty eleven thirty,
and ten of the fifteen were bigger than once on
seventy three we had like two six pounders, had one
(42:29):
like a seven pounder. It was awesome. So the these
masts have really feed up now for the winter it's
even better. But as I haven't really seen a bunch
of crappy yet bunched up starting to they're still scattered
and that's what's coming next to is the crop you're
going to start bunching up.
Speaker 3 (42:45):
As that word low temps and right right sixties, we're
getting those, not time temperatures ring the it's.
Speaker 2 (42:52):
A seventy threes. The water temperature right now is out
there this morning. There was a big tournament this weekend
on Lake Seminole. Today is Friday. There's that's a first
day and then Saturday. But I'm I got a feeling
that's gonna take probably fifty to fifty five pounds.
Speaker 1 (43:07):
To win that.
Speaker 2 (43:07):
Wow, it's it's it's it's on right now, really good.
I went looking around because I got a trip tomorrow,
was like, where are some of these guys out? I
have about fifteen schools found over in Spring Creek, and
about half of them there were boats around. The other
hath they wasn't nobody around. So I got hopefully tomorning
they bikes and put my customers on them.
Speaker 4 (43:24):
Heck you so, I'm not gonna be with you all
next Friday, but Friday after that I will have a
fishing story. I hope, yes you're going to. I'm going
headed out Tuesday to Beaver Creek, Colorado. Go fly fishing man.
Got a couple of float trips schedule.
Speaker 2 (43:39):
To get you got some waiters float you'll.
Speaker 4 (43:42):
Float okay, So I'll float down and one of those
you get guide with the oars, yeah, you know, and
he'll drop a ancher from it's it's not an anchor,
it's like a weight, yeah, a little real and you
hold right there and then you throw up behind the
eddies and you yeah, your line coming down and hoping
that I get on a hatch where you have a
(44:04):
If you fly fishing, when you have a hatch, that
means that they start the bugs are coming out of there.
That's right, that's right, and the trout start rising and
they just go to town.
Speaker 3 (44:15):
If you get the translation of that is, Paul, you
got top water fishing going on.
Speaker 5 (44:19):
Yeah, you got them. Bugs are on top of the order.
Speaker 2 (44:21):
And they just like when you have the mayfly hatches,
and like every fish in the lakes.
Speaker 4 (44:26):
It's a dry fly. I mean, that's that's like the
pinnacle of fly fish is catching catching them on a
dry fly when you have it going down the river
just so naturally looking. And that's right. And I've been
polishing up the fly line and all ready go.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
Well, you've gotta have that floating line.
Speaker 4 (44:41):
Don't you worry, floating line.
Speaker 3 (44:42):
You need me to you need you needybody to carry
your suitcase and your gear that you want to bring along.
Speaker 5 (44:46):
As a porter. I'll act like.
Speaker 4 (44:47):
A port as long as you're doing a little round
hats on it.
Speaker 5 (44:50):
I will. I will wear anything you want me to wear. Fred.
Speaker 3 (44:52):
If you won't take me out there, fish, let me
fish a little bit out.
Speaker 2 (44:55):
And I want to mention this book. I didn't this
jah Brent pictured. I've been eating his dogs and ducks.
This is really good, very good man, he said, such
a long time. Yeah, that's the I think you said, Charlie.
To find this, you go on Amazon. You can get
this pocket edition. It's it's it's really good. It's really good.
Speaker 5 (45:16):
Absolutely, I'm enjoying it.
Speaker 4 (45:17):
I do want to take a minute to thank a
client loyal listener to our program who dropped by the
office this week. And if you're a client or a
loyal listener or both, because you want to do the
same thing. Yeah, and bought me a bottle a five
like almost like five gallon. This thing is almost big
as I am. Bottle of stolely Elite lit elf. Oh wow,
(45:40):
I mean ah, I just got to bring it next week.
I thought about bringing it. Look like it was sitting
there just in awe of this. Yeah, I mean, because
if I do, it'd be gone.
Speaker 5 (45:56):
Just how much how much lidlf can let elf drink?
Speaker 4 (46:00):
We don't find out if I start texting y'all strange
stuff you took it?
Speaker 2 (46:05):
Will you if.
Speaker 5 (46:06):
You don't quit texting me? I appreciate that.
Speaker 3 (46:08):
I appreciate the picture you said last night of the
stonecrab claws. I do because it looked delicious.
Speaker 1 (46:13):
Yeah, some of those pictures you can keep.
Speaker 5 (46:15):
Well, I go to sleep.
Speaker 3 (46:17):
I'm in the bed that woke me up when you
sent the text message because I had not remembered to
turn my my don't bother me thing on my phone,
And so I'll wake up and go.
Speaker 1 (46:28):
I have to remember that there's times when I want
to reply to stuff when I go Gad's in bed,
and sometimes I do it anyway, but.
Speaker 2 (46:36):
Most ofttil like nine thirty at night.
Speaker 1 (46:38):
Well, I have I have discovered that I can schedule
a text for the next day. Yeah, And so when
I'm up at two o'clock in the morning and I
can't sleep, I'm working on my phone in the bed
and going and doing all kinds of stuff on the phone,
and all of a sudden, I go, I got you
know what I need to tell this person. I have
discovered that you can put into text and then press
(46:59):
and hold down on send button. It'll come up with
the window you send this thing.
Speaker 5 (47:02):
Oh yeah, now you got apple. I don't know if
they'll do that or not. No, I get up. I
get up very early in the morning. I like to.
Speaker 3 (47:11):
I like to get up and relax and watch the
news and read a little bit and you know all
that stuff, drink my coffee, and so I get up.
If I sleep past about six thirty, I have slip
in right, So that means I go to bed early,
and y'all night owls stay up till whenever.
Speaker 5 (47:29):
In the morning. I cannot function like that. I would.
I would be slobbering in here.
Speaker 1 (47:34):
I'm not a morning person, never have been, ain't gonna
be at that point in time in my life. I
don't plan on being in a morning person. When I
work day shift something, that's fine. But now I live
in Marianna, which is in central times on JD well
even slow time, slow time, so I'm an hour behind.
So you say you get up at six thirty. That's
five thirty my time. Okay, Well I don't do that.
(47:54):
And so what happens is people to say I need
to call Charlie this morning. There in Tyler hassee I'm
gonna him. He'll be up. It's seven thirty. What I's
six thirty and I ain't up, and uh, but I'll look.
And so if you call me in the morning and
I don't answer, you woke me up, I just I
just ignored you. Now leave a voicemail, shoot me a text.
(48:19):
Nine times out of ten. What happens is people will
call me in the morning. I'll reach over now, I'll
just swipe and make it go away, and then they'll
text me. Well, then, now, if I'll look and see
who it is, and if it's somebody that I'm gonna
make money on, I'm gonna answer, or somebody that you
know is close to me, I would answer.
Speaker 5 (48:37):
For y'all, I don't know about that.
Speaker 1 (48:43):
Well, well, I mean, well, I may wait until I
can clear my voice a little bit and call back,
make it and pretend I ain't still in the bed.
Speaker 2 (48:49):
Say Charlie, what's the latest. We can text you the latest.
There ain't no time like that. Text me anytime you
want to me if I hear it, if I if
you if you tell makes me.
Speaker 1 (49:00):
At three o'clock in the morning, there's a fifty to
fifty chance I'm gonna roll over and pick it up
and look.
Speaker 4 (49:03):
At I tell you last night midnight.
Speaker 1 (49:06):
I mean, I was to expect twelve responses. I'm gonna
keep you up too, right.
Speaker 4 (49:10):
I had just finished putting together a twelve foot scarecrow
that makes noise that sits on my front porch. It's
got a big old pumpkin things. Oh and then I always.
Speaker 3 (49:20):
See, I started falling. I started falling asleep in my
reclining chair. But unless there's something real good on.
Speaker 5 (49:26):
TV, you know, watch the ball games, the ball game
on or something like that.
Speaker 3 (49:29):
I watched the FSU girls get beat by Stanford last night,
or saying last whatever they work.
Speaker 4 (49:34):
And of wife passes out about nine o'clock.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
Yeah, old me and your wife get along. That's past bedtime.
So yeah, I said.
Speaker 1 (49:40):
This is this is interesting. Just came through from Eric Pratt,
g O A there in the current. During the current
government shut down, the ATF furloughed all the NFA processors
meaning you can't get cans or do four and fours
or anything else.
Speaker 5 (49:53):
Their system has been completely down for about three days.
Speaker 1 (49:55):
Meeting applications for NFA regular firearms were on a hole.
Just prevented law abiding American from accessing the firearms and
equipment they need to protect themselves or loved ones in
their property. GA and Congressional ally I spent the first
seventeen days to shut down, demanding that acting ATF director
immediately classify NFA processors as essential. We came out on
top and the ATF is now recalling it's NFA examiners
(50:18):
to work during the shutdown. They're expected to return to
work on Monday and clear the backlog within seven to
ten days.
Speaker 3 (50:25):
Yeah, that's good. Yes, we got that notification this morning
from them.
Speaker 1 (50:29):
That's good news.
Speaker 3 (50:30):
That's good because we've been we've been unable to and
we haven't been able to submit for and four US
for about three or four days because there there nobody's
been keeping their computer running. And you know, if you
don't have a person working on a computer about every
three or four days.
Speaker 5 (50:44):
It'll quit working.
Speaker 3 (50:46):
So spent on a network system or a program whatever
that program they're runnings probably made nineteen.
Speaker 1 (50:51):
I know, cans that are sitting and waiting and things,
and that'll get that'll prime the pumps again, get it
flowing again.
Speaker 2 (50:56):
I mean yeah, Well, everybody going hunt and fishing where
your life. Jackets on the water and be careful.
Speaker 5 (51:03):
Water is getting cold, so even cool.
Speaker 2 (51:06):
But it's a tempter seventy three.
Speaker 4 (51:08):
Well it is getting cold, yeah, I mean I can't
deal with that.
Speaker 3 (51:11):
Water timp gets in the sixties, your risk of hypothermia
goes from maybe an hour to down.
Speaker 5 (51:16):
To some minutes.
Speaker 1 (51:17):
I mean, it's it's a it's a difference. I just drowned.
Speaker 5 (51:20):
We know on swimmers, y'all.