Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Pudsonriverradio dot com.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
This is Travis Walton and you are listening to UFO Headquarters,
Beautiful Headquarters.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
And thank you Travis Fulton for that always amazing introduction.
Welcome everybody, tuning in to yet another fantastic episode of
UFO Headquarters. Michael Warden and with me as always today
is Linna Zimmerman, who unfortunately is very under the weather.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Yes we can call the subtitle of today's show podcast
hosts with COVID who are so so sick they're lucky
to get two sentences together. But fortunately I have notes
and I will rely on you to be even more
clever than normal boy to get us through this. Say
(01:00):
see what I do for you fans. I should be
sipping in bed, sleepy. Yeah. I don't know what I
should be doing sipping in bed, sitting in bed, sipping
a hot tea that I can't taste. It's because I
have no taste or sense of smell. But I digress.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
Ruh.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
So we're doing cats tonight, Cats, UFOs and something else
which I'm not saying till later. So some of this
we have covered. We've done two animal reactions to UFO episodes,
and i strongly recommend people go back and listen to those.
(01:43):
But there's another aspect to cats. But I'm I'm so
we're doing a cat's episode, so let me you have cats.
When I first told you we're doing cats, do you
recall what your your reaction was. No, you said, well,
cats are definitely aliens.
Speaker 3 (02:03):
Oh they are, yes, I mean I've I'm pretty sure
mine have transported from room to room and occasionally stare
at the ceiling as an uplink to the mother ship.
So there's yeah, they're definitely aliens.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
Yeah. So we are going to Freenois, France, which is
a stone's throw from Dijon, and I do have to
digress immediately if I haven't already, because I of course
had to. Anybody want to, either of you want to
(02:36):
take a stab at when was Dijon Mustard first made
takes a guess?
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Oh, fourteen hundreds, O.
Speaker 5 (02:47):
Brian, I was going to say sixteen hundreds, ish.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
Okay, thirteen thirty six is the first known thing. And
being France, what is the secret ingredient? Not so secret ingredient?
And Djon Mustard it's wine, of course.
Speaker 5 (03:06):
Now, when was the first time that they passed the
gray poupon from window to window.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Though, I was going to mention gray poupon because that
is a dijon. So when was that commercial? Was that
in US? I was like an eighties Yes, yes, do
you have any things.
Speaker 5 (03:21):
That people have no idea what we're talking about?
Speaker 1 (03:24):
Yes, look up? What is it? Two rolls royces they
pull up and the one asks, so do you have
any gray poupon? Because of course yes, but of course
so all right, So now that I've got I think
that's my last digression. But I might be a little
(03:44):
hopeful here. So fraun Wall, France, December twelfth, nineteen sixty eight,
about seven pm, numerous residents see a craft. The light
is so bright you couldn't look at it. Now. I
was trying to think maybe a searchlight on a helicopter,
(04:07):
Is that right? Yeah? Right, right, yeah, that's about it.
But this there was no sound either, so it wasn't
a helicopter. It moved through the village and appeared to
and it didn't appear. It landed somewhere near the village. So,
(04:27):
Monsieur Fouadevo, I can pronounce my French better with a cold.
His cat Fuadevo's cat is inside it said, exhibiting great agitation,
moving meowing plaintively. Then then it just kept building and
(04:50):
when the craft land, he said, the cat was literally
screaming the place down and it was impossible to comment.
And after several minutes the craft lifted up, took off,
cat relaxed, was fine, like a switch went off, like like,
(05:10):
what the hell?
Speaker 3 (05:11):
Yeah, that's the only time my cats act like that
is if there's like less than a full football. But
you know, cats definitely have a much better hearing range
than we do, so maybe whatever it was, whatever the
sound frequency was being emitted, was extremely agitating to the cat,
but to us, we can't we couldn't perceive it.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
Yeah yeah, and again we cover that a lot more
in the animal reactions. But yeah, they're hearings about four
times higher than ours and then their sense of magnetic fields.
So yeah, so poor Fuadavo's cat. But it was clearly
(05:55):
something the people were not. The cat was inside and
it's not even seeing this bright, bright light, And why
should a bright light make a cat go, you know,
climb the walls anyway, So, speaking of climbing the walls,
Silver Springs, Maryland, April twenty third, nineteen sixty nine the
(06:16):
farm of a Missus Virginia Gwynn, and she had a
border living on the farm. And they awakened because the
dogs were howling like they had never heard. And we
have coyotes in the back. And when we had our
dogs and the coyotes would go off and then our
(06:37):
dogs would. It was a whole party going on of howling.
But this was something agitated, something not bright. So they
get up and there she had Missus Quinn had four
cats and they always spent outside. Do your cats stay
(06:58):
outside at night?
Speaker 4 (07:00):
Really?
Speaker 3 (07:00):
Seven door cats?
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Okay, yeah, that's safer for everybody. The four cats are
climbing on the screen door trying to get in the house,
yowling and fighting violently. Never had done this before. They're
attacking each other because they're so frenzied to get in
(07:23):
the house. So it's obviously something I'd probably stay in
the house, but they wanted to see what's agitating everybody.
So they go outside and there's a craft the size
of two houses with a bluish white light like an
arc welding. We hear that a lot right the uh yes,
(07:45):
that intense arc welding light. It moved past the barn
and then just blinked out again like a switch. And
when it did, dogs stopped howling. Cats, Oh, what were
we doing? They sheepishly get off the door, I'm sure,
(08:06):
and just go about their business. So, whatever it is,
they're so frantic, they're willing to attack one another and
trying to claw their way in the house, which they
had never done. So the next morning Virginia went to
the barn and found that the horses had torn up
(08:29):
the barn. They were tied to their stalls, they broke
their tithes and everything was kicked off the walls, and
their neighbors house the barn the same thing. So, you know,
I think we're clearly establishing that animals and cats in
(08:50):
particular have really dramatic reactions to whatever it is. They
didn't hear. They were not freaking out. You know, they
saw something, and wow, that's unusual. But when you see
all of your your animals ready to kill each other,
(09:14):
something's something's not right. Something is probably harmful, I would say,
So why don't we take our first break. I will
take a deep breath and sneeze and cough, and then
we will be right back.
Speaker 6 (09:30):
Hudson River Radio Dot com Hudson River Radio dot com,
subsidiary of Glacier Entertainment LLC, blasting the competition in New
York's Hudson Valley.
Speaker 3 (09:52):
Something that you mentioned right before the break really kind
of stuck out, and that is in the last story,
it wasn't just cats, it was horses. So two different animals,
two different species, completely different you know, biology, hearing, sensitivities, whatever,
both reacting in a very similar manner. I mean for
(10:14):
the horses to use that much energy to you know,
to break free, and the cats have that same reaction.
To me, that's really interesting because it wasn't just the
cats where you could say, okay, maybe they hurt as
sound what else was being perceived that the horses were
picking up?
Speaker 1 (10:33):
You know?
Speaker 3 (10:33):
This is to me it adds another layer of complexity
but also sort of valid validation. That's something going on.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
Yeah, risking hurting themselves the horses in the barn, I
mean that cannot be those straps are not made to
be broken, and then kicking everything off the walls. They
could have gotten seriously hurt, but not as seriously hurts.
Phase two of our podcast Tonight, did we now we
(11:05):
all know about cattle? Mutilations. And everybody's always asking about
cattle mutilations and it's not something we've covered, so many
people have covered it. But did you know there is
a thing of cat mutilations?
Speaker 3 (11:21):
Oh no, now those aliens are going to answer to
me now it's personal. No no, no, no, no no. I've
never heard this.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
I had heard occasion and Brian, you know, you and
I on the Murder in the Hudson Valley podcast, we
hear of these sick individuals, serial killers and training. Yeah,
you know, slaughtering all sorts of small animals, all of.
Speaker 5 (11:49):
The biggest red flags in the serial killer world. When
they're kids. If there's animal cruelty involved, you know, you
might want to look a little deeper into that kind
of thing.
Speaker 1 (11:59):
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So over the years, I remember hearing
something in Texas, and I remember the Pacific Southwest that
oh it's happening again, and you know the media it's cults,
you know, those invisible cults that spring up when you
need a good excuse for something bizarre going on, or
(12:23):
its coyotes. Well, I had no idea of the hundreds
and hundreds of cases at least since the nineteen seventies
from around the world, and there's a term for what
is left of a cat. It's called a half cat. Yes, yeah,
(12:51):
a half cat. Because these cats are not only mutilated,
they're cut in half, and almost always the lower half
is missing. There is no blood, and these are precision cuts.
Often all the eyes and organs are gone. It's just
(13:16):
let me give. I have so many cases I could
not cover them all tonight. So let's go to Oak Harbor.
Speaker 5 (13:24):
You talk half a cat, the lower half, which.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
Top half is yes, the top so the back legs,
the back legs. So if a cat was lying, people
are final that the cat is lying on your lawn.
It's like somebody took a scalpel and right along the
(13:49):
stomach line just so only the fact I was going
to save this. But one of the women who found
her cat like this, she described it as like a
child's hand puppet, just in an empty skin from the
waist up, like you could put your hand you remember,
(14:11):
you know those little animal hand puppets, like you.
Speaker 5 (14:14):
Were going to make a kermit.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
If that isn't that's gruesome, that's gruesome. Yeah wow, okay,
So the half cat.
Speaker 5 (14:22):
This is what happens when you put the murder code.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
No please so Oak Harbor, Washington, July two thousand and five.
For a period of six weeks, there were seven dead cats.
Four of them were cut in half that way, and
police dismissed it as coyotes, but it was clear to
(14:44):
see these were not jagged cuts, they were precision. There
were no tracks. There was no coyote tracks. There was
a cat is going to fight like hell right, no
signs of a struggle, not a drop of blood. So yeah,
so then that was where the woman said her cat
(15:06):
when it was found, it was like a hand puppet
and then it just stopped. So what the coyotes weren't
hungry anymore?
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Yeah right, so.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Excuse me. So I unfortunately have seen photos. Boy talk
about things you can't unsea. They look like they're just
laying there asleep, except they're a half cat. Often every
bone in the body is broken, like it was dropped
(15:46):
from a high height, which is also a case with
a lot of cattle mutilations. They'll find a cow laying
in a field with every single bone shattered, like it
was dropped from a helicopter or perhaps some other strange craft.
(16:07):
And sometimes the spines are removed. Now we all took
dissection and anatomy classes. Correct, How hard is it to
pull out a spine?
Speaker 5 (16:23):
I've never done that.
Speaker 3 (16:24):
I mean, I don't think we ever tried to actually
pull the spine out, but just to even in when
we dissected cats and College and Addie and Fizz working,
you know, certain structures for you just to show the
you know, the bones of a joint for example, was
a lot of work with a scalpel and medical grade
(16:47):
cutting tools.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (16:48):
Forget removing an entire spine. I mean that would have
taken it.
Speaker 5 (16:51):
You would literally have to dissolve everything to get down
to you know. I mean, I know sometimes you'll flip
your face down and cut along the back in order
to expose the spine for educational purposes, you know, but.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
I don't know how you get it out, so that
I'm just that is why this was flipping me out.
Let's go to Harris County, Texas twenty eighteen. There was
a news headline It's escalating, and what it was was again, oh,
(17:28):
it must be coyotes. For about three weeks, this one
woman's cat was missing and then it was found on
the lawn and quote just found half his body so
the other half was not placed there. Get that term.
(17:49):
It was like the cat was placed there because it
wanted to be. Whoever did this wanted, whether it's a
serial killer or whatever, wanted this to be found. It's
very clean, crisp cut. It's not an animal bite. There
was no blood. Later they had someone examine it, and
(18:15):
again they termed it a half cat precision. No blood
broken jaw, okay, which may be signs of a struggle.
But where's all the blood? All right? Springdale, Utah, twenty fourteen.
So we're already been to the state of Washington, Texas,
(18:37):
Utah over the span of what thirteen years? Okay, So
this is a lot of crazy people who have some
mad surgical skills. Right. This is not just one case
where it happened a few times by someone who knows
what they're doing. The same thing is happening. Yeh. It
(19:03):
was a half cat. The heart and lungs were gone.
The owner posted a reward with the Humane Society of
fifty five hundred dollars. Good for her. I'd be out
there with a reward and a shotgun if somebody ever
harmed one of my animals. She decided to had Sherry
(19:27):
Teresa have the claw. You know when you guys, know,
when there's a victim, you do fingernail scrapings under the
victim's nails to look for DNA. She was having the
cat's claws what were left of them, scraped for DNA.
She wanted a DNA profile, hoping the cat had had scratched. Whoever,
(19:51):
this was again removed the the Organs. They they knew
it was not an animal attack. I mean, I've unfortunately,
you know when our coyotes catch a rabbit or something. Wow,
it's it's a you can tell. Yeah. So they actually
(20:14):
had well it's not called an autopsy, it's called a necropsy,
right when it's animals. They had a vet doing a cropsy,
and this vet said, due to the symmetry of the
cuts and straight lines, I suspect a knife or a
(20:35):
saw was used. Okay, Louisiana twenty eighteen. Skin clearly cut
in a straight line, no blood, no pieces of fur
had you know, the fur was not flying floor at
a twenty fourteen. It was a precision cut, no blood
(20:58):
and no blood in the animal or on the ground.
So whoever was doing this was cleanly draining the blood
I have a few more here twenty fifteen and twenty
seventeen in Austin, Texas, twenty five cats, okay, twenty five.
(21:20):
This is not just one. Now you do twenty five
of anything, someone's going to probably catch you. Whoere see,
cats are not easy Outdoor cats are not easy to catch. No,
you're catching a cat. You're doing this horrible thing, and
then you're displaying it twenty five times in a major city.
(21:47):
The police described the cuts as meticulous and in a
precise way, with no blood. Tustin, California, nineteen eighty nine,
we go way back, sixty seven cats were found mutile.
Did you have any clue?
Speaker 2 (22:06):
No, this is.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
Yeah, Vancouver, Okay. Canadians are not immune to this. They're
clearly being butchered by someone. It's a real surgical job.
They sent some of the carcasses to a pathologist and
(22:29):
hematologist in Denver, and his con conclusion these cats were
cut with high heat, in other words, a laser scalpel.
All right, So how many maniacs across the country are
running around with laser scalpels? Right and have the skill
(22:52):
to do this? And it apparently goes in cycles. Several
researchers or several police said oh, yeah, that we're going
through another cycle, like oh, like this is normal, it's
a cat mutilation cycle. And so clearly this is not
the work of one person or even ten people, because
(23:16):
we're already talking forty to fifty years from Canada throughout
the US. And I found this by a taxidermist. He said,
I can tell you I cannot imagine a human being
being able to draw all the blood out of an
(23:38):
animal without making a huge mess of the specimen. Also,
cutting a specimen completely in half with no jagged edges
is a difficult task. And this is a man who
cuts up in stuff's animals for right. Did you ever
(23:58):
know any taxidermists there?
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (24:01):
Yeah, there, So I would take his word.
Speaker 1 (24:05):
Yeah, they're they're they're very meticulous, and that I mean,
I think it's a I think it's a horrific thing
they're doing, you know, but they're good at what they
do and this person should know. So, so what is
it sick humans running around with surgical skill and laser
(24:26):
scalpels for fifty years? Is it something else? And like
the UFOs, no one sees them take off or land
or they don't know where they come from. No one's
been seen taking these cats or leaving them. Which what
(24:46):
did we have sixty seven twenty five? This is? This
is probably I just probably mentioned one hundred and fifty
two hundred cases. I don't know what is what is
your thought?
Speaker 3 (25:00):
I I know thinking back to when I had to
take you know, A and P one and two in college,
and we we dissected a cat for both sections. And
it was because the cat anatomy did share some you know,
it was analogous in a lot of ways to human anatomy,
not exactly, but it was a good approximation. So that's
(25:21):
why we did the cats. Is it somebody studying cats
because they're also studying us? Is it a substitute for people?
You know, did they get a hold of my old
lab anatomy book? But I mean, you know, I as
gruesome as it sounded, that's what we did for two semesters,
(25:42):
top the bottom. And but that was the reasoning. Why
is the close approximation and anatomy and some other structures.
So my mind immediately goes back to that thinking, is
this a substitute to dissecting and leaving humans all over
the place?
Speaker 1 (26:00):
Yeah, which we could probably do a show on that too,
not as many, but uh oh yeah, yeah, but yeah,
And that's one of the arguments for cattle mutilations because
they are kind of bell weathers to the environment. If
you're trying to test is there's some contaminants in the environment, right,
(26:21):
you know, and their anatomy. When I worked in the lab,
we used bovine serum as a substitute for not to
put in someone. But when I used to work on
a I developed a spinal fluid control for instrumentation, and
spinal fluid's expensive, real spinal fluid. So we'd get bovine
(26:44):
serum and developed a filtration system to get the right
proteins and everything, and so then you could make it,
you know, for eleven cents rather than one hundred cents.
Speaker 5 (26:56):
You know.
Speaker 1 (26:58):
So, yeah, there's a lot of similarities. So you know,
I didn't find a case where someone said I saw
this UFO come down and suck up a cat and
drop its mutilated body. But clearly there's a phenomenon here
that goes beyond a couple of local crazy people, it seemed.
(27:22):
And how many times did I read the same thing
precision cut, no blood precision cut, no blood, and why
leave the top half all the time? The half cat?
So that's let's take our second break and I will
push into the home stretch. Here.
Speaker 7 (27:44):
This is Hudson River Radio dot com, your local Rockland
County station, Linda.
Speaker 3 (28:01):
Again, as has often happens during the break, my mind
starts to go in different directions, and I think to
the cattle mutilations, and one of the consistent aspects of
that being the often the genital genitals being mutilated or removed.
Are they possibly leaving the upper half of the cat
(28:21):
because they're taking the reproductive portions of the camp?
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Oh yeah, yep, yeah, that's all we need.
Speaker 3 (28:30):
Yeah, are they interested in that particular anatomy or physiog
you know, the function of the of that part of
the body.
Speaker 1 (28:37):
Right right, Yeah, it's And as I said, I had
to pick and choose, you know, some representative. I could
have gone on for an hour with the number of
you know, half cat mutilations. It's it's and I'm sure
and I know there's international you know, Europe and probably
(29:02):
so if anyone has any other information or any insights
on this, you know, and I know they catch the
occasional sick guy. There was somebody recently who was luring
cats with food and then doing terrible things. But people
saw them, the neighbors. You know, the neighbors wanted to
kill them because they saw him lowering the cats. This
(29:24):
is not that. This is a whole other level of
sick and twisted. So let us leave the half cats
for now. I think there's going to be a lot
of people having nightmares and holding their cats very tight tonight.
But there's just two more things I want to mention
along with cat reactions. Ramona, California, October fifteenth, nineteen seventy four.
(29:51):
There is a round craft. This is interesting making the
mix of a sound of a hum and a foghorn. Okay,
so this one the people are hearing. At least there
had to have been an extremely high magnetic field because
one of the people witnesses was holding a compass and
(30:13):
the needle pegged to the top of the glass. It
didn't go left or right, it went up and stuck
to the glass. So that's a magnetic field I would
not want to be in, because that's not that it
is not healthy. In this case, Horses, dogs, goats, and
chickens are going frantic and a cat is so terrified
(30:40):
and disoriented it runs into the side of a garage
with such force it practically knocks itself out. It's stunned.
So that's how desperate this, Well, all the animals, but
this one cat. And if we think how cats used
magnetic field to navigate, and if you've got a strong
(31:04):
magnetic field, it might be like he was on a
merry go round and had no idea where he was
right and just goes running full tilt into a garage.
So I want to stop on a different one, not
a terror one. I know I've mentioned this before, but
(31:25):
worth mentioning again. This was one that I was present
for for part of it in pine Bush July of
twenty thirteen. I can't believe it was.
Speaker 4 (31:37):
That far back, already on a UFO stakeout a SkyWatch
with Bob our friend Art and mister Burns was there
that night and it was a great location on a
friend's property overlooking the real hotspots of pine Bush there
(32:00):
and around midnight it was like a flashbulb went off
behind me.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
I'm looking at standing up, looking at them. Everybody saw
the light behind me, but I saw them light up
like someone had just taken a flash. Now, of course
you immediately go to your weather tracker. The nearest thunderstorm
was at least seventy miles away, And yes, it could have.
I suppose it still could. But they said the flash
(32:28):
came out of the woods, described as like being an
M eighty but silent. Okay, I do not know of
any silent M eighties. I don't think you can put
a silence how many no matter how many tin cans
you pack that thing, which he'll just make it worse.
(32:50):
Do not try this at home. Kids will not hear it.
So I did not see the light except for it
reflected on them, but I did suddenly the air was
like really tingly, like you put your finger in a socket.
And the homeowner's cats, she had several cats. We were
(33:13):
out on this field. They were with us on the
field at that point. They liked to be out there
until she goes to bed, and she said they always
always go in at night, and they this night. We
had left. At this point, they start to follow her,
and she said, I couldn't get the cats to come
(33:34):
off the field. They started to follow me, but stopped
and went back to the field and stayed all night.
That has never, in big letters happened before. So this
is a case that whatever that was, it was an attraction,
(33:54):
a very strong attraction, and they wouldn't come off field.
So was that a distant flash of lightning in Brooklyn?
I know that the cats so oh we want to
stay out in the field all night. I mean, there
(34:16):
is just no rational that I can can you think
of nothing?
Speaker 3 (34:22):
Yeah, it really defies any type of explanation that makes sense.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
Yeah. And two, and it is very odd. We just
saw cats and other animals practically killing each other to
get away from whatever the phenomena is. In this case.
You couldn't pry those cats off the field last night.
So I know, for me, I don't think it was
(34:50):
an a Troy. You know, I wasn't attracted to the energy.
But I couldn't sleep that night. My brain was buzzing.
It was like I had a court of espresso. I
don't even drink coffee. So it was something. It was
not just a flash of light. There was something behind it.
I will swear in a court of law all day
(35:12):
long that that's what it was, and everybody else saw it.
It's it's in It's in my book. You can the
Hudson Valley UFO's book. You can read about the episode there.
But the cats that that really in a in a
bizarre episode that stood out because whatever it is, they
(35:33):
wanted to be near it, which is kind of scary.
Speaker 3 (35:36):
Yeah, more evidence that they're aliens were they were familiar
with this.
Speaker 1 (35:44):
Oh is the mothership coming back to give them some
green kibble?
Speaker 2 (35:50):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (35:50):
So so that, uh, that is all I have the
energy and notes for. So what is your comments on so?
So now, Brian, I can tell you the title of
the episode is Cats, UFOs and Mutilations, right, but I
wanted to spring the mutilations on you guys.
Speaker 3 (36:12):
I knew it was about cats, and I did not know.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
Yeah. Yeah, it's definitely something that do you recall in
your jurisdictions anything like this where people were doing terrible
things to animals in large quantities.
Speaker 3 (36:30):
I don't think I ever had any anything when I
was working in Port Jervis or otherwise and growing up
as a teenager. There was of course that satanic scares
in the eighties.
Speaker 1 (36:44):
That were everywhere and satanic panic.
Speaker 3 (36:46):
Yeah, and the rumors that they were sacrificing cats in
the cemetery that's never been verified to be true, you know,
but that was what all the local parents were under
the assumption of. You know all I had to go
back to listening to that darn music, as my grandma
would have said. Oh and she wouldn't have used.
Speaker 1 (37:07):
Darn that satanic rock and roll. Oh my god, speaking
of satanic rock and roll, you should all listen to Brian.
Speaker 5 (37:18):
Would your history show the other one that I do,
which we have never mutilated a cat?
Speaker 1 (37:24):
Dary, No cats have been harmed in the making of
rock and roll history, nor have they been harmed in
the making of this show. So as you can hear
my voices about Fried So, yeah, you.
Speaker 5 (37:41):
Need a nap man. You power through this. I'll give
you credit for that.
Speaker 1 (37:44):
Thank you, thank you. I am going to go right
to bed after this and probably sleep another eighteen hours.
But yeah, I wanted to get this one done because
you know, we only do this once a month, and
I know, I really appreciate all the listeners. Have been
getting some great comments from people, and it's just really
(38:09):
that's why we do That's why we drag ourselves out
of bed and mumble incoherently for a while. And uh
so take us away Mike, So thank.
Speaker 3 (38:19):
You Linda for powering through this. I know you have
not been feeling very well at all with this COVID
and wish you a speedy recovery and Bob. To our
listeners out there, whether you're new, you've been with us
for years, or maybe you've just been in for a
few months here, we thank you because without you listening,
we would not be doing this show at all. We
(38:40):
appreciate your support, We always appreciate the kind words that
you send us, and love hearing from you. So until
next time, we recommend, or i strongly recommend, you keep
your eyes on the sky. You never know what you're
going to see.
Speaker 6 (38:54):
Puts indriver radio dot com a favorite among shut ins
and dogs