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August 11, 2024 • 76 mins
In this episode, Doug talks about the new catfish weight record. Can you guess what the Texas catfish record is? Doug also reveal some new fishing spots around the Sunny Side area. Have you brought your new hunting and fishing license yet? Well, it getting to be that time. Doug, tells a story of a Game Warden who caught a hunter without the correct information. You have to listen to hear what happened. Fishing with soap? What? That's right soap. A long time caller along with Doug talk about this method along with nooding. Dougs callers confess to some of the crazy, stupid, things they did when they were younger that could have ended really bad. Plus, an interview with Nick Scheburne, discussing custom fitted golf clubs and how they can make your game better.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
This is the dog Pike Show, brought to you by
American Shooting Centers Guns Shooting at Instruction since nineteen eighty nine.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Now here's dog Pike, all.

Speaker 3 (00:12):
Right, Sunday this shear The program starts right now. Thank
you all for joining us on this yet another sunny,
sunny morning.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
It's gonna be a pretty one.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
It's gonna be pretty hot, it's gonna be pretty calm.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
A lot of pretty's.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
Going on out there right now, and we are rapidly
moving toward dove season. Don't let that get away from you. Okay,
still a lot more warm, dry days ahead. So if
you hadn't been able to get out and fish or
play golf or whatever lately, go ahead and make some plans.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
You're gonna be okay.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
And by the way, contrary to the hype all over
neighborhood apps from people who have absolutely no no reason
to think they know anything about the weather.

Speaker 4 (00:59):
And are.

Speaker 3 (01:02):
I get I just don't know where they get their news,
but I've seen two or three pieces recently posted like
in the last couple of days. Oh, here comes another one,
just right on the same path as Beryl.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
We better hold on tight.

Speaker 4 (01:16):
Well.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
First of all, to allay the fears of someone who
just moved here. Every thing that rolls off of Africa
and starts moving west is just doing what they all do, Okay,
They all go from east to west. They roll off
of Africa, they spin around out in the Atlantic Ocean.

(01:39):
Sometimes they form up early out there, sometimes it takes
them a while.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Sometimes they never form.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
But it doesn't matter what they do way out there
until they cross into the Gulf of Mexico. Whatever they are,
You and I don't have to worry about them. We
can just watch them go. And this one.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Wild, yes, indeed it did.

Speaker 3 (02:02):
It did boil up out there in the Atlantic Ocean,
and it is moving west. But there's a big old
high pressure system and some really good steering currents that
are expected by people who actually understand whether to just
lift that thing up as it intensifies out there, just

(02:24):
kind of pick it up and nudge it back north,
and nudge it back.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
It will hold it east of us.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
Even most of the models I've looked at in the
last couple of days show it turning even before it
gets anywhere near the continentally United States, and then just
kind of mosey in on out into the northern Atlantic somewhere,
and that would be just fine with me. I have

(02:52):
no intention of being hammered again.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
We already took. We took our turn in the well.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
It's very rare that than a destination anywhere along the
Gulf coast. The Atlantic coast gets two storms in a year.
And I'm not trying to jinkx us. Okay, knock on wood,
not trying to jinx this. But I'm just saying, if
you're brand new here, don't believe everything you read on
the internet about storms. Find a couple of really good,

(03:20):
reliable sources, mostly operated by men and women who understand
the weather and who know how to read it, and
who know the.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
Patterns that these things do.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
That being said, it's true that every one of them
is as unique as a fingerprint. They're all different, they
all go different ways and do different things, but they
don't all land in Houston. Okay, So just relax a
little bit, Go play some golf, go fishing, read a book,
watch an astro's.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
Game, whatever you want to do, but don't panic.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
Don't panic in other states fishing news outside of Texas,
I saw a story it kind of caught my for
about five different reasons. Actually, a guy in West Virginia,
guy named John Tyler Rutherford, recently caught himself a new
state record channel catfish that weighed forty six point seven pounds, which,

(04:16):
by the way, is if you're wondering, significantly larger than
the Texas state record. That was the first thing I
did was look that up our rate. Our state record
channel cat was caught in nineteen sixty five. We need
to make some extra effort here and see if we
can get that record broken, because that record doesn't come

(04:37):
anywhere near Rutherford's forty six point seven hours a mere
thirty six point five pounds. So we've got we've got
to pick up thirty percent. We need to fatten these
fish up a little bit, feed them more corn. That's
what I say. Uh but wait, there is more even
to this story than that Rutherford caught that fish on

(04:58):
his young dog, and by young, I mean.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Three years old.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
Somebody in the family, somebody who wanted to get her
into fishing. I can't imagine who that might have been,
bought her a little ten dollars pink riding real combo,
I'm sure, on a little piece of cardboard in a
department store somewhere, and she can't even cast it yet.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
He was kind of joking about that.

Speaker 3 (05:23):
That's why said, yeah, I had to cast it for
she can't even cast it herself, which tells me he's
never heard me talking about starting young kids on cape poles,
and which leads me also to believe, Nah, he's not
mashing his barbs flat either, so he's got a lot
to learn about taking kids fishing.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
He got lucky, But I digress.

Speaker 3 (05:44):
She can't cast it, so he did, and she was
sitting on his lap when the fish took the bait.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
Well done, and will let.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
You off the hook for now, mister Rutherford. But you
need to get that kid a cane pole. Need to
spend two dollars on a cave. You can buy a
Roden Real combo for ten dollars. Over there, Virginia, you
can find a cane pole for less than two dollars probably,
Or just go cut one out of the backyard and
let that little girl catch it on her own where
she can she can handle the gear and do it herself.

(06:12):
When are we going fishing, Melvine? I got two guys
in line in front of you, now, man, Okay, when
you want to do this. Well, it's first of all,
the first quality. The first rule we're gonna sit down
is that we're not going to go until like six

(06:32):
or six thirty in the afternoon, when the sun's trying
to get out of our faces. I agree. So no
one hundred degree fishing trips. I'm nah, I'm not really
much for that right now. But yeah, just one Saturday
or Sunday afternoon. That should make it easy on all
of us. Just let me know, and we'll go to
that little secret spot you and I have talked about.

(06:53):
And I'm really really certain that we can catch some
little fish.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
There's a peer on that lake.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
There are two piers on that lake, and I think
if we go to either one of them, the shade
underneath those piers will be enough to have attracted quite
a few of.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
The little fish in those ponds.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
And we will bait them up and we will chum
them up, and they will be there and they will
be hungry, and we may or may not have to
unhook some turtles, but that just goes with the territory.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
But yeah, we'll get them some little fish. Got you
to do that, all right? All right? I got two
more from yesterday that I have to address.

Speaker 3 (07:29):
I haven't responded to either of those men who Well,
one called yesterday and then another one emailed said, Hey,
I'm in the.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
Same boat this guy is.

Speaker 3 (07:38):
He's in his sixties, sling me and never caught a
fish in his whole life. But he's got the bug
man he wants to go. So I've got a good place.
He lives out close to me, so I've got a
good place for him. And then I also have a
good place for the guy in Sunnyside. I'm gonna send
him over to tom Bass Park. There's a huge lake there,
and then there's a little lake there, and on that

(07:58):
huge lake there a peer. And I got a hunch
once again, if he goes out there and chums that
place and sits back and just relaxes and has himself
a nice cold beverage for a few minutes, let that
chum work its magic. He'll um, he'll be able to
catch a fish. And like, I think the guy's name
was Morgan, I was I was responding to yesterday. You

(08:21):
gotta I know it was the guy in sugar Land,
And forgive me, I can't recall his name offhand, but
I said, Okay, the first exchange was are you willing
to just go catch a fish? And I wrapped a
quotes a fish. First, we got to start somewhere and
you can you can check the box if you're willing
to go out there and just go old school and small,

(08:43):
just tiny tiny hooks, tiny tiny fish.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
Catch a fish. Boom. Now we'll go start trying to
catch something a little bit bigger.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
And he said, oh, yeah, whatever you say, Man, I
want to catch a fish. So He's got the bug,
Morgan's got the bug, and I'm gonna get them both
dialed in. I think Tell Bess Park would be a
good place over close to Sunnyside where he can get
in there very very easy fishing, not a terribly long
hard walk to get to the water's edge.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
And it's actually pretty water over there.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
That's where Joe Dogget and I have done quite a
bit of our our rainbow trout fishing in Seniority Rendezvous
over there. Man called a lot of rainbow trout when
they stalk them in that pond. There were several years
in a row where they stocked by day. I mean
the Parks and Wildlife Department, this rainbow trout stocking program

(09:34):
every winter, once the water gets cold enough to sustain
those fish. In that one particular lake I'm talking about,
they were stocking four thousand rainbow trout.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
Now not big ones, believe me, a lot of them.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
Could you could have hidden between your two hands and
they say there, I think like nine to twelve inches.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
But there were both.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
Whoever was whoever was measuring those fish was lying about
how long they were. You kind of wonder what kind
of person that is would do something like that, lie
about something that's not as long as they say it is.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
All right.

Speaker 3 (10:12):
A quick reminder to us all, by the way, speaking
of going fishing and having fun in the outdoors, new
hunting and fishing licenses go on sale. I mentioned this
briefly yesterday, but I want to kind of dig into
it a little bit deeper.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
Go on sale. I think it's on the fifteenth.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
That sort of thing can slip up on you this
close to dove season, but you better have it in
your pocket when you march out into that field before
daylight on September one.

Speaker 2 (10:39):
If you're doing an afternoon hunt.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
Then you wake up that morning, you're all fired up,
and you throw everything in the car and you get
halfway to where you're gonna hunt, and you realize you
don't have your license, You've still got some leagueway.

Speaker 2 (10:51):
You had some time before you go out in the field.

Speaker 3 (10:54):
You're not gonna go out before about at least three o'clock,
and the birds aren't gonna fly till about five thirty
or six.

Speaker 2 (11:01):
But still you have time to go get that license.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
So please do don't make that mistake and be that
guy out there. I think no license probably would rank
pretty high on fishing and hunting laws for which there's
really no excuse to be on the wrong side. You've
had ample ty, you've had a year, You've had a
year to go get this license, and I'm betting that's

(11:25):
an easy ticket for game wardens to write too. There's
not a whole lot of gray on the license palate.
You just either have it or you don't. And when
you're buying, here's another Well, I'll tell you what when
we come back. I'm going to tell you a reason
that you should do your own research. And I'm going
to use a real life example of what happened to

(11:46):
a friend of mine once when he was duck hunting
down on the Middle Coast with his two young sons
and the game warden walked up.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
I'll tell you about that when we get back.

Speaker 5 (11:54):
Okay, this is Sports Talk seven ninety at Sports seven.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
Nighty dot com. Now more Doug Fight.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
All right back, we are back. We are a Doug
Pike Show on Sports Talk seven ninety. Thanks for listening. Certainly,
do appreciate it. Got a whole lot going on before
I get to what I was going to talk about
about buying licenses. Let's some Let's see if we can
get is he really has his own walk up music?
You know who's gonna want one next time? Now we

(12:27):
started something.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
What's up? Dave's that your song?

Speaker 3 (12:31):
Man?

Speaker 2 (12:32):
Come along?

Speaker 4 (12:32):
Hey?

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Can you hear me? Yeah, of course we can hear you. Hey, yeah, yeah,
that is a good song.

Speaker 6 (12:38):
My youngest my youngest daughter.

Speaker 7 (12:40):
Her name is Ashley Marie prior Plu. So yeah, yeah,
that's cool.

Speaker 6 (12:47):
Yeah Ashley Marie.

Speaker 7 (12:49):
Okay wait a minute, wait, I'm glad that uh oh,
I'm glad that Shipley's on us.

Speaker 6 (12:55):
You've been just sponsoring daddy again. Oh lordy, I'll tell
you what I did.

Speaker 7 (12:59):
Like I said, I'm not going to stay too long
on that, but you know that's been since I was.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
Born, and.

Speaker 7 (13:09):
Mother nature, you know, like she has a mind of
her own. So I mean, guy, Lee, we gotta played
by the rules, you know, just watch, watch your back
and everything. Oh and then and then, uh, you were
talking about catching the big catfish. I remember when we beat.
I would we beat up up there at Stubblefield Lake
Park before Lake Conrade was built. And my aunts and

(13:32):
uncles and my grandpa and my mom and all them,
and they would tell us stories about uh going to
fish at the Mannesota River all the old all the
all the old Polish people called it Navasat. Let's go
down to Avasat and they would fish with the ivory
soap because it floated.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
Yeah, you know, I've heard about that. I've never done it,
but I've heard about that.

Speaker 2 (13:55):
You can what you can do?

Speaker 3 (13:56):
Yeah, well, what you can do is you can set
it above a sinker, kind of like a Carolina riged worm.
You set that soap above the sinker about a foot
and it rises off the bottom a little bit and
the current it doesn't get caught down in the siltan sediment.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
That's pretty thick, that's pretty slick.

Speaker 6 (14:14):
Many do what they would catch them on a trotline
or something I heard by my grandpa and my uncles
and stuff. Then caffish would be so big. They would
be in.

Speaker 7 (14:25):
There like maybe it may have been a wooden boat,
you know what I mean, or you know, you know,
and they would take their foot and stick it into
the catfish's mouth and then get the other guys to
put it up into the boat.

Speaker 4 (14:40):
That's what I.

Speaker 6 (14:42):
Well, it's kind of like noodling almost. Yeah, I wouldn't
do now.

Speaker 7 (14:48):
I wouldn't do no noodling down underneath the water.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
No, I would drawing the line there.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
I did a lot of stupid stuff as a kid,
and I was thinking about asking this audience about what
some of the dumbest things you did in hindsight in
your youth would have been outdoors, because I boy, I've
got a laundry list of them. But man, noodling, No,
I'm not doing that.

Speaker 8 (15:10):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (15:10):
And I've seen it on TV and that's not a
and I mean, but I do.

Speaker 7 (15:15):
On both sides of my family, my dad's and my
mom's side, we had them like get up there in Temple,
Texas at uh the like the river that's up there,
and uh, you know, and you know all around here.
They would you go in there and they get down
in there, and they and your only breathe. You got
to take a deep breath and go down in there,

(15:35):
and then you gotta get up.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Shit, you gotta get back well.

Speaker 3 (15:39):
And honestly, the next person who dies noodling won't be
the first.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
That's the scary part. Well, I hear you. I just
don't get it.

Speaker 3 (15:47):
Man, there's no way they would have to have there'd
have to be two guys on the four guys on
the bank. Okay, I'm gonna have a rope tied to
each ankle, each ankle, and I'm gonna have two people
on each rope to make.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
Sure that I come out of that hole.

Speaker 9 (16:02):
Man.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
No, some bil you're.

Speaker 6 (16:06):
Speaking in there. There's a snapping turtle you're in.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
Yeah, well yeah, then suddenly you can only count to nine.
That's real quick.

Speaker 7 (16:15):
On Uh, I think next weekend, Uh it's around uh
uh poort of the boxer down that where someway, that's
where we're gonna be going fishing out there and front
it's gonna be on the beach over there and hanging
out and I'll give you a holler and looking into
the ocean.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
Chilling and fishing. Man, there's nothing better than that good stuff.

Speaker 6 (16:37):
We're already we're already trying to find a.

Speaker 4 (16:39):
What do you go to a beach umbrella?

Speaker 2 (16:42):
Gosh, I saw a video speaking of beach umbrellas. I
saw a video yesterday on Facebook.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
Uh, somewhere over on the Gulf Coast of Florida, where
just kind of a little a little baby twister, you know,
like a dirt or dust devil kind of thing.

Speaker 2 (16:59):
Us was hog popped up on the beach and it picked.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
Up beach umbrellas and had them like up at four
or five stories up in the air, just twisting and
flopping and then coming back down and slamming down onto
this beach full of tourists. And I didn't see anybody
get hit or hurt, but there was a lot of
scrambling going on trying to be out of the way
of that pole of a beach umbrella coming at you.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
It was crazy.

Speaker 6 (17:25):
Man.

Speaker 7 (17:26):
What I would do is dive on my stomach, get
into the sand and start burying in.

Speaker 6 (17:32):
Ostrich Come well, no, I was just saying, no, I
lay on my stomach.

Speaker 7 (17:37):
Kind of.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
I'd turn over and I'd be looking.

Speaker 3 (17:42):
I'd be watching for that umbrella, and and making sure
I didn't catch the pole right on the top of
my head.

Speaker 6 (17:48):
Oh that's.

Speaker 2 (17:51):
Great to hear it from you, man, sir. Tell Marie,
all right, let me get back to what hold on.
I gotta type something real quick.

Speaker 3 (18:01):
Okay to you, period, and then I got to go
over here and click send and that's taken care of.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
So back to when you're buying your license this year.

Speaker 3 (18:14):
If you're anything like new to what we do around
here and how we do it in Texas, be sure
that you have done your homework, because ultimately it's your
license and your responsibility to make sure that you've got
all of the endorsements, You've.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
Got all of the extras that you want and need.

Speaker 3 (18:34):
I'm old enough now that I qualify for the Geezer license,
the old Person Senior halfway over the Hill license, where
I get it for half price. I get everything for
about half price, I think it is, finally, and I
found out last year that I had to ask for it.
They weren't just going to offer it just because of
my age, and I hadn't really thought about it. I'd

(18:56):
been buying it at full rate, which I don't mind doing,
but I also don't mind saving a few bucks. I
can buy a couple of boxes of shotgun shelves, nice
ones with what I save on my license. So anyway,
here the reason I tell you this is an old
friend of mine who relied on a very young and
very green, it turned out, sporting goods store employee in

(19:18):
this city relied on that kid to selling the right
license and write everything he needed for a duck hunt
down on the Middle Coast.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
And the guy in the store wasn't.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
There when my friend and his two young sons were
in the duck blind with a guide when the warden
showed up. So this this guide is welcomes the warden
into the blind, and everybody's checking for plugs on your shotguns,
and let's get those licenses out now and let the

(19:52):
warden check those. And the warden looked at my friend's
license and said, where's your federal waterfowl stamp, to which
my friend replied, my what he had no idea. He'd
never been duck hunting, this was his first experience. He'd
chosen to bring his sons along, and the person who

(20:13):
sold him that license hadn't even mentioned.

Speaker 2 (20:17):
The federal waterfowl stamp. That this guy needed to have
on his license.

Speaker 4 (20:23):
Well.

Speaker 3 (20:24):
To make matters worse, the warden was one of those
who and they're all different, they're just unique, each and
every one of them. Each and every one of them
plays by the same rule book. But there is discretion
available to wardens in some cases where they can issue

(20:45):
a warning instead of a citation if they think the
circumstances merit that. In other words, if you're straight up
and you're telling the truth, and you have hopefully a
story they've never heard before, that would be good. But
the bottom line is this warden was straight up, yes

(21:07):
or no, black or white. There's no shady area, no
leeway given to anybody in this warden's mind. And in
front of that man's two young sons, he wrote the
guy up, wrote.

Speaker 2 (21:20):
A ticket for him. And I was very disturbed when
I heard about that. I really was.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
It was disappointing on so many levels for the kids,
disappointing for that man having to be dressed down in
front of his sons like that, like this guy the
game warden kind of did to him. And to make
it it just I don't know, I called two friends
of mine, two game warden friends of mine after that happened,
and both of them said, no, I would not have

(21:51):
written him a ticket, one said. One said it was
because he had his kids with him and he didn't
want to do that in front. He would have pulled
the guy aside and said, look, man, I'm cutting you
a break because you got your kids with you, but
you are responsible for your license. Make sure you get
it right next time. I'm just going to issue you
a warning. Be sure when you get back to civilization,
you go buy that federal stamp and you get it

(22:12):
on your license. And the other one said he was
doing it because the mistake with a brand new hunter.
The mistake didn't even really necessarily fall on the kid
who's sold in the license, but the store that put
that kid who didn't know how to sell a license correctly,

(22:38):
the store put that kid in charge of selling honey
and fishing licenses, because it goes all the way to
the top on that. And if this guy was just
sitting in a staff meeting one morning and they said, okay,
who wants to sell hunting and fishing licenses this morning?
And that kid raised his hand and that's the only
reason he was behind the counter that day, then that's

(22:58):
messed up to that's messed up too. So anyway, all's well,
that ends well, And it turned out okay. It turned
out okay. But he came back and he couldn't wait
to tell me what had happened to him down there,
and I felt horrible for him. I felt horrible for him.
Shouldn't happened, should have never happened. Wardens are just like

(23:19):
anybody else. They are doing the same job, but they
and be keenly aware that just because you made an
honest mistake even doesn't mean they don't have to write
you a ticket.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
If you've broken the law.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
The best thing you can do is say you got me,
I'm so sorry, here's why it happened, and then shut
your mouth and let them decide whether that's a reason
to give you a warning instead of a ticket. Because
I do know this from working with a lot of
game wardens out on the Katie Prairie when I was
waterfowl guiding and bumping into a lot of them on

(23:57):
the water over the years, not as many as I'd
like to see, Frank, but bumping into them. Nonetheless, if
you smart off to a game warden, if you get
get an attitude with a game warden. They'll find something
to write you for. They will, They'll they'll leave you
with a partying gift, and I can't blame them. Uh,
These men and women have to walk into duck blinds,

(24:19):
they walk into deer camps, they board other people's boats,
and in the especially during hunting season, they're dealing with
total strangers, all of whom are armed, and that that
can't be a comfortable feeling in a lot of cases.
And in a lot of cases they're trying to sneak
up on people as well. And if those people they're

(24:42):
sneaking up on are doing something really really wrong, there's
probably one of them in that group that just wouldn't
mind turning around and eliminating the situation's problem. So hats
off to anybody who has the gumption and the determination
and the and the passion for I don't know if
a lot of them have the same passion for the

(25:04):
outdoors as some of the older game wardens had. It's
a branch of law enforcement. And if you want to
do that and be in law enforcement that way, I'll
still tip my cap to you. For whatever reasons you
joined up. If you can take care of the fish
in the game in this state and keep people from
stealing it from the rest of us. And more power
to you. And I'm on your side all the way through. Oh,

(25:28):
I got so many things to talk about when we
come back. Oh, by the way, I'm still a train magnet.
Remember my story from yesterday about my train?

Speaker 10 (25:37):
I got it?

Speaker 3 (25:37):
Yeah, remember that ding ding ding ding ding. I heard
that yesterday afternoon. I'll tell you about it when we
get back.

Speaker 5 (25:46):
This is Sportstock seven ninety, Facebook dot Com, Slash sports
Talk seven ninety.

Speaker 2 (25:52):
Back to the Doug Bike Show Dugpike Show on Sports
Talk seven ninety.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
A couple of quick points to make the train it
ran up against yesterday.

Speaker 2 (26:02):
It was not really that big a deal.

Speaker 3 (26:03):
It was just on the way home from some place
I'd gone, and at least I was first in line
on that one. That just right as I'm coming to
the tracks, down go the arms, ding ding ding ding ding,
and then here comes this train. It lasted almost forever.
A couple of quick things David ways in the first
time you get your senior discount when you buy your
new super combo hunting and fishing license, he said, it

(26:25):
is an awesome feeling. What an awesome feeling. I couldn't
agree more. It felt like I'd won the lottery. I mean,
my super combo is how much?

Speaker 2 (26:34):
That's all? That's great?

Speaker 3 (26:36):
And then James James Trump's that Shooter's Corner offers license
as well as honoring military disability status. His license is
absolutely free, James said, and his wife's is only three dollars.
That's pretty darn good too. I'm gonna have to go
see what Neil Wilkins, my old golf pro buddy, had

(26:57):
going on. By the way, we've got an interview this
after noon, or well this morning later. I'll i'll clue
Melvin in on it in just a few minutes. I
got to get him a phone number.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
What Alan ways in? What about an electronic copy a
picture on the phone? Yes, you can do that.

Speaker 3 (27:12):
You can in this day and age. You don't have
to carry that paper license. You can carry everything on
your phone. The problem I have with that is that
if it's on your phone and your phone dies, you
got no proof. You're gonna get a ticket and you're
gonna have to deal with it. All right, let me
get to I'll start with Rick. Now, I'll get to
Aaron after that. What's up Rick?

Speaker 10 (27:32):
Good morning mister PI today.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
I'm good, got your son rise photo?

Speaker 6 (27:39):
Yeah good, don't doo and bother good in this time
of ar in this weather.

Speaker 10 (27:42):
But anyway, I put railroad tracks in train tracks right up.
That's a real ribble in my mind with comraants. Oh yeah,
and now there's a limit making them acrossing and it's
not long. Do they ought to pay attention to it?

Speaker 4 (28:05):
No? Uh?

Speaker 10 (28:06):
I know the engineer and the crew and everybody. You know,
they got things happen, you know, But I've been blocked
a long time. I've had them killed some of my
farming rationals because I and I've always felt bad about
showing farms and wrenches for sale to people that you
have to cross a railroad track to get to it.

(28:27):
When you're out in a rural area.

Speaker 11 (28:30):
And you have an emergency and you come around that
dusty Colichi road and there's a train sets there, and
that engineer's asleep because that's what they do, so they
wait because.

Speaker 10 (28:41):
Some of them park through old Oh my god, and
you know, how do you get out? I mean, the
only way you're gonna have to get life blick. But anyways, yeah,
there is a certain amount of time there's supposedly alive
to a cross, and it's it's less than you think
it's like. Listen, I don't say it's less than twenty minutes.

(29:01):
It's what I was told. And the railroad is general.
I can guarantee you if somebody says, Rick, what is
the hardest entity in the world to try to deal
with and communicate with and work with, It's gonna be
the Texas Railroad Commission. Oh boy, when he comes to

(29:24):
the railroads, the railroad tracks.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
All right, it's good to know.

Speaker 10 (29:30):
I give you one quick example. Okay, big branch been
there one hundred years. The only way you can get
to it, you got to and the only way they've
got to it for one hundred years is you have
to drive through and under the track through a trestle. Okay, yeah,
we sell this big branch, and then all of a
sudden the railroad says, that's our trestle. We don't want

(29:52):
you using it no more.

Speaker 2 (29:53):
Holy cow, it's.

Speaker 10 (29:55):
The only way for thirteen hundred acres over here, holy
cow something.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
Yeah, that's how.

Speaker 9 (30:02):
You know? How much how big did you pocket on
that one?

Speaker 2 (30:09):
All right, man, thank you?

Speaker 3 (30:11):
Rick, I appreciate you, buddy. I'll see audios. Let me
get Aaron before we go to this break here.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
What's up, Aaron?

Speaker 8 (30:18):
Hey, good morning?

Speaker 2 (30:19):
Deg how you I'm good? How are you good?

Speaker 8 (30:22):
Just crossed into Wyoming?

Speaker 6 (30:24):
Uh?

Speaker 8 (30:25):
Rick Bis's guy and I would like to hear from
on this issue here. But I was talking to my
client about wolves up here, and he says they've had
a significant impact on on the moose and elk up there.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
I'm sure.

Speaker 8 (30:40):
And and one of the issues is is the wolves
that are releasing are are gray wolves, they're timber wolves.
Well you show you showed me pictures of some of
these wolves.

Speaker 4 (30:51):
He's every bit of six one.

Speaker 8 (30:53):
He had him hanging out, he had he had some
of them hanging, uh you know, hanging up next to him,
and they were a good six to eight inches.

Speaker 2 (31:02):
Yeah, they're big, am They're very big animal.

Speaker 8 (31:05):
One hundred and sixty pounds. And he says that you know,
they're not necessarily calling the weak and young and elderly.
They're they're going after bull, elk, bull, boose and anything
that comes in the path. You know, I don't know
how much of it's propaganda they or not, but uh,
you know, I'm curious, you know, I think I remember

(31:26):
rich Sun is a hunting guy up there, what his
opinion is on the If they're really big in that
big impact on the herds, it was supposedly to really
put again to the in the elk heurd of Yellowstone.

Speaker 3 (31:40):
Yeah, I remember a story I think it was about
Yellowstone that, you know, at least part of Yellowstone when
they reintroduced wolves, they started out with an elk population
of like six or eight thousand, maybe ten thousand, I
don't know, and not many years later it was down
to about twelve hundred and they just wiped them if.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
They told me, yeah, that's almost exactly told me.

Speaker 8 (32:03):
I mean that that well you considered that few wolves,
you know, but like I said, apparently that these timberwolves
are just shine.

Speaker 3 (32:13):
Yeah, that's that is the North American line is what
it is. It's the North American line and there. Yeah,
they're big and bad.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
They really are.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
It's good to hear from you, man, Stay out of
the stay out of the way of those timberwolves.

Speaker 10 (32:30):
Dude.

Speaker 2 (32:31):
Safe travels home from timberwolves to man. Oh my god.

Speaker 3 (32:38):
Yeah, that'll be a big change in a lot of way.
That just kind of sums up where you're headed. Uh, well, yeah,
I think I like where you're headed more than where
you've been.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
I don't know, though. That's tough, isn't It's pretty up there?

Speaker 8 (32:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (32:50):
Yeah, I just got my cow, so wow, good for you.

Speaker 3 (32:55):
Ah, go tip one over man if you Yeah, I'm
just gonna let you know that oak backstrap is horrible
and I'll take it off your hands.

Speaker 2 (33:03):
If you want me to. Okay, man, Yeah, all right,
I'll see audios.

Speaker 3 (33:09):
Yeah, terrible. Anybody boy access deer backstrap?

Speaker 2 (33:14):
Ooh horrible. You just can't hardly stand it. It's just nasty.
I'll take it off your hands seven one three two
one two five seven ninety.

Speaker 3 (33:21):
Email me Doug Pike at iHeartMedia dot com as if
I hadn't had all kinds of goofy stuff happening to
me in the last seventy two hours.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
I'll tell you how I got a little cut over
my eye last night. It just.

Speaker 3 (33:36):
I don't know whether it's because I'm getting older, whether
maybe I'm going back to my youth and just taking
more chances and doing stuff spontaneously without thinking about it.

Speaker 2 (33:47):
But it was some Yeah, it was quite the eye opener.
I guess you could call it.

Speaker 5 (33:53):
This is Sports Talk seven ninety, Hey, Houston sports fan
on air and on Facebook. Back to the Doug Pike Show.

Speaker 3 (34:03):
All right, Welcome back Doug Pike Show on Sports Talk
seven ninety. By the way, in the nine o'clock hour,
if I go get the paper and remember to do that,
we're gonna talk to Nick Sherburn from Club Champion about
club fitting and if you've got a question about that,
I'm pretty sure Nick would be happy to take your questions.
I've got a whole list of him for him when

(34:25):
we get there. So last night, long story, my son's
over at one of his buddy's houses. He's gonna spend
the night, and then he decides he's not gonna spend
the night, and so he's coming home at midnight and
they're like, okay, that's fine. And we've just got this
one driveway that comes up to the garage, up and back.

(34:46):
So my car was all tucked away, thinking his little
truck wasn't gonna be there, so I'd climb out of
bed and meet him in the street. Basically, I backed
my car out, he puts his in, I put mine
in behind his club the gate. We go in the house,
I go back to bed. I got two pillows propped
up behind me so I can just do about ten

(35:06):
minutes a crossword puzzle and knock myself out with that,
and at the end turn out all the lights and
I take that second pillow and just a wife still downstairs.
I took that, take the second pillow and lay it
by the night stand and realized that I had a
bottle of water on the floor, on the carpet next

(35:26):
to the night stand, and I'm pretty sure I had
the top on it, but not one hundred percent sure.
So I think, well, I better reach down there and
just see if I can feel that water bottle, make
sure it's standing up. So I reached down, I grabbed
the pillow, throw it back up on the bed, and
then just kind of leaned forward and down and catch
the corner edge of the night stand right above my

(35:48):
right eye. And it looks like it's like here in
a rock ship, you know, you know, it feels like
it might have cut me, but I'm not sure. And
so I take my finger and put it up on
the space where it was and rub my fingers together
and like, damn, that's liquid man, there's only the ain't

(36:10):
a whole lot of different liquids, and blood gonna come
out over my eye. So I turned the lamp back on.
Sure enough, I got blood on my fingers, I got
blood on my face.

Speaker 2 (36:19):
It starts.

Speaker 3 (36:20):
I can now I can kind of feel it on
my face too, and I'm thinking, Okay, just how bad
did I cut this damn thing?

Speaker 12 (36:25):
You know?

Speaker 2 (36:26):
And I grabbed a tissue and start blotting.

Speaker 3 (36:31):
And there's what seems like at first a pretty significant
amount of blood coming out of my head. And I've
had my head cut I don't know how many times
over the years as a kid, and mostly as a kid.
But now I can add this one. And as it
turns out, it wasn't bad. But it took me a
minute to get it to quit bleed, and I cleaned

(36:52):
it out a little bit, just shove some alcohol in
there to make it sting really bad. So I don't
do that again. I'll remember that, didn't remember leaning down. Really,
that didn't make an impression hitting that thing. I've hit
my head so many times. You pour a little alcohol
in a cut like that, it it'll it'll jog your memory.
Next time you get close to leaning out of bed
close to a night stand. The thing I didn't realize

(37:13):
those edges. You know, they're not sharp edges obviously, but
sharp enough when you're slamming your head into them like
a dope.

Speaker 2 (37:21):
What a fool.

Speaker 3 (37:22):
Next time, I'll just let my son move both cars.
That would have solved that problem. I wouldn't even have
to get out of bed, all right. Seven one three
two one two five seven ninety Email me Dougpike at
iHeartMedia Dot.

Speaker 2 (37:33):
Come, like I said, in a few minutes, we're gonna
go and talk to Nick and and.

Speaker 3 (37:39):
In the In the meantime, be thinking maybe about the
the dumbest thing you did without actually really really hurting
yourself permanently. Maybe as a kid in the outdoors, because boy,
I had a bunch of them, We did some stupid stuff.
I almost fell out of a deer stand once, a
little tree stand. I mean, I wasn't really I was

(38:00):
only about ten feet off the ground. And I've been
in tree stands that were twenty feet off the ground
and you feel like one of those Kozamel cliff divers
up there.

Speaker 2 (38:08):
Man, that's crazy.

Speaker 3 (38:10):
But I just nodded off, and I was too young
and too stupid to realize that, Yeah, you really should
wear a harness if you're in a tree stand and
I caught myself.

Speaker 2 (38:22):
I woke up and caught myself just in time.

Speaker 3 (38:25):
I mean I was leaned out over where the center
of gravity was and I was just about to go
and was able to reach back and grab the frame
of that thing and hold myself in there.

Speaker 2 (38:36):
That could have been kind of ugly.

Speaker 3 (38:37):
Probably been somebody El Melvin might have been hosting this
show if I fallen out of that tree back then
who knows.

Speaker 10 (38:43):
Man.

Speaker 3 (38:44):
All right, let's go ahead and get out early, and
then I'm gonna go run, get something off the printer,
and we will be good to go with Nick.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
I'm sure when we get back.

Speaker 1 (38:54):
This is the Doug Fike Show, brought to you by
American Shooting Centers Shooting an Instruction since nineteen eighty nine.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
Now here's Doug Pike.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
All right, welcome back, appreciate you listening this morning, going
into our final hour, that's only two hours this morning,
three yesterday too, today eight to ten. And in this
segment we're gonna talk at least in this segment we're
gonna talk about club fittings and how important they are
really for anybody who wants to get better at golf
and to help, I'm gonna bring in Nick Sherburn with

(39:27):
Club Champions Company that well, they pretty much they do
fittings and that's it. They're not out to change your swing.
What they're gonna do is is get you the right
clubs so that your swing is better. With that, I
will welcome you in, Nick Sherburn. How you doing, man?

Speaker 6 (39:45):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (39:45):
I got to click him in deink. Oh, I'm some
spoiled I gotta never mind. Nick. How you been man?

Speaker 4 (39:53):
I'm doing all right? Thanks for having me good? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (39:55):
Did you hear that little introduction there? I just want
to make sure we were on the same page.

Speaker 10 (39:58):
Here, I did.

Speaker 4 (39:59):
I did hear it.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
So I would guess that since you and I last talked,
you've added stores around Houston. Is that correct?

Speaker 4 (40:07):
We have? Let's see, we're in Shannandoah, We're in Woodlands,
We're still we actually moved our Kadie store. We made
it still in that same mall. Yeah, but we added
some bass to it and we actually made it bigger
and newer. And so yeah, Houston's great golf market.

Speaker 2 (40:24):
Indeed, it is holy. How many stores overall worldwide.

Speaker 4 (40:27):
Now worldwide, I think it's one forty one is.

Speaker 2 (40:31):
The count, my word, And there's a good reason for that, honestly.

Speaker 3 (40:34):
So the confession for me on it for a long time,
like like right up until I actually got fitted by
you guys here in Houston a few years ago. For
some irons, I didn't realize how valuable that fitting was
going to be to improving my game.

Speaker 2 (40:48):
What's the what's the elevator pitch?

Speaker 3 (40:50):
What's the short definition of how getting fitted for irons
or drivers or whatever?

Speaker 2 (40:55):
What does it do for a golfer?

Speaker 4 (40:58):
Yeah, you know, there's just a lot. People kind of
think of club fitting in a couple different ways. One
is they don't think they're good enough, which I want
to just get in front of everybody that plays the
game of golf should get fit for clubs. If you
play once a week, you spend way too much time
on the in the game of golf to not have
stuff that fits you. But what I like to tell
people is this is not like a soup fitting. It's
not like you go and you get a bunch of

(41:19):
measurements with a with a tape measure and then you know,
you build it. There's the golf clubs can dictate how
do you swing the golf club. So listen, I believe
in lessons. You should always take lessons.

Speaker 9 (41:32):
At club Champion.

Speaker 4 (41:33):
We only do club fitting. But you can't make the
swing somebody wants you to do if you have clubs
that your body is fighting. And so you know, a
club champion, we look at the cheft, we look at
the head, we look at all the specs like swing weight,
total weight, because all those things are going to affect
how you swing the golf club. And for us, we're
trying to find a golf club that you can swing
naturally and make your move with and then as you progress,

(41:54):
you get better.

Speaker 3 (41:55):
Yeah, that's what I When I walk in for my
fitting that time, I had a very strong preconceived notion
about what irons it was probably gonna be that worked
best for me. I was so hard headed, and I'd
had a pretty good relationship with one particular club company
for a while and they were their marketing guy. I

(42:18):
was his only left handed friend. So everything that was
in the in the sample closet that was left handed
came to me and it was It was pretty fun,
I'll admit it. It was great. But I got in
there and we started. You know, I got in there,
loosened up. I think I was swinging six irons and
loosen myself up.

Speaker 2 (42:38):
And then the fitter. I can't remember the man's name.

Speaker 3 (42:42):
I wish I could, because he was great and he
spent a lot of very patient and he said, okay,
let's try this, and.

Speaker 2 (42:48):
We did and it, Wow, that was a little better.
I was like, what do you know?

Speaker 3 (42:51):
Better than the clubs I'd been hitting and I was
playing pretty well, and then all of a sudden, we're
doing this and we're changing the shaft, mostly shaft that
as you you I'm sure will verify. The shaft is
really the probably the most important piece of that piece
of golf club, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (43:08):
You agree? Absolutely? Oh yeah, that weights. And then the profile,
when I say profile, is how the shaft beinds is
stiffer in the handle software and handle vice versa, all
that stuff, And that's kind of like I say that
the shaft is the timing device. It's what's going to
give you speeding consistency. The head's going to dial in
that launch and spin more. And people take it for granted.

(43:30):
You know how important the shaft is and it truly
is you know, I don't want to say it's all
of it, but it's it's over fifty percent of getting
the golf club fit it dirrectly.

Speaker 2 (43:38):
No question.

Speaker 3 (43:39):
And that's that's what it really opened my eyes, because
once we the fitter, he was honestly he said, look, yeah,
if you see a head that's pretty and you like
it and you think you'll swing better with it, then
let's put that on there.

Speaker 2 (43:51):
But then let's figure out what shaft to put in there.

Speaker 3 (43:54):
And after testing, I don't know, we probably tested a
dozen combinations of stuff and it turned out to be
one of the one of the clubs that I would
have never guessed was going to be the one, but
I got. I hit the ball higher, I hit the
ball about ten yards farther, and I hit the ball straighter,
and like, how.

Speaker 2 (44:12):
Can you argue with that?

Speaker 4 (44:15):
Well, and you know, when we set up, when I
set up the business twenty five years ago, you know,
it's not that we can't work within many many budgets,
because we can, but it's not really like we're not
really trying to sell golfers a price or a brand
or a product. Right, We're selling like I like I
say whenever anybody tells me, we sell performance. That's what
we're doing. Our whole goal when you go into a fit,

(44:36):
we want to listen to you and hear about everything,
but our real goal is to help you leaving, eliminating
bad shots, eliminating misses, helping your good shots get better,
and truly take club fitting from just this fit to
actually helping you lower your scores. And that's what we've
The goal has been for twenty five years and continues
to be is let's figure out how we can set

(44:57):
up golf clubs in a golf bag, it's gonna you
to score better.

Speaker 3 (45:01):
Nick Surburn from Chip Club Champion here with us today.
You mentioned not selling price, and you guys really worked
with me when I brought my son in there to
fit him for irons because I knew he was growing.
I knew he was not going to be in a
particular set for a whole lot longer because he was
growing like a durned weed. But I wanted him to

(45:21):
get some better clubs, and rather than go to a
super expensive club, we were able to get him fitted
in irons that have served him. In fact, he's probably
gonna have to come in and do it again, I'm afraid.
But they served him really well, and they really did
improve his game because he saw it just like I did.
The numbers don't lie when you're in there with all

(45:43):
that technology showing exactly where the ball's going and spin
and everything that's involved in all that technology. And I
got a reasonably priced set of irons for him that
I knew he was going to grow out of and
he's right about there.

Speaker 2 (45:59):
Unfortunate, but yeah, it was. It was a perfect setup.

Speaker 6 (46:01):
The guy.

Speaker 3 (46:02):
The guy listened to what I needed, he found what
would work in that range for my son, and we
got him going.

Speaker 2 (46:09):
He's fired up. He likes the game still.

Speaker 9 (46:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (46:13):
I mean it's just I can't stress it enough. If
you're a beginner golf for a year a tour player,
you know, make sure you have clubs that your body's
not fighting. You know, have something that makes it, you
know that you can swing, have something you can make
better contact with, and as you progress and take lessons,
have stuff that again you're not fighting. That's why we
love We work with a lot of big name instructors

(46:33):
and that's one of their big things, is well, I can't.
I can't work with a student if I'm fighting their
golf equipment. So anyway, that's really important for us is to,
you know, like I said, make sure we get golf
clubs in a bag that truly help a person play
better golf and not just sell them, you know, a brand,
you know.

Speaker 3 (46:50):
And I thought that for years, Nick, I really did,
because because I had that relationship with those people and
they were sending me clubs, I thought that just because
they sent me a club and had a stiff shaft,
that I was home free driver. Yeah, but brand new driver.
I'd get a brand new driver when it six weeks
before it was released. And you see them on TV

(47:10):
and everybody's hitting them a mile and then you can
hit them through a hula hoop at three hundred yards,
and man, I just couldn't make them work. And I
couldn't figure out what was wrong with me that I
couldn't hit those clubs. And once I got that fitting, man,
it finally dawned on me that if you have the right.

Speaker 2 (47:28):
Hand in your hand, you know, go ahead.

Speaker 4 (47:31):
There's no one size fits all. Yeah, and we carry
every brand, as you know, and listen, we love all
our partners and title list and tailor made and keeping.
They all make great golf clubes. But what you saw
in the fit, and what most of people see in
the fit is, yeah, if we can make that brand
that you're interested in work great. But all these clubs
have different center of gravities. They have different bounced on

(47:52):
the soul, they have different grinds on the soul. They
have just all kinds of different properties that are going
to work better for certain swing style. Sure, people that
launch eye and spend more, spend less all those things,
and so you know, when you marriage up a club
for that instead of you know, just focus on a brand,
it's amazing what you'll find may work.

Speaker 3 (48:11):
Yeah, advertising for clubs is big business. Every time you
turn on a golf tournament, there's every every name under
the sun is out there pitching their stuff.

Speaker 2 (48:22):
But it may not be right for you. It may
not be right for me, Or.

Speaker 3 (48:25):
It may be if you get lucky, you you're just
the right size and shape for a particular club off
the wreck. But I would be willing to bet that
very few people fall into that category.

Speaker 6 (48:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (48:37):
I always tell folks that go listen when when I
when you, when I meet you, I still do fits
after twenty five years. You know, I look at their
bag and there's fourteen opportunities there. That's what I want
to look at. And I want to make sure that
every club in your bag is fit for you. Now
what that people think that and they go, oh, you're
going to sell me fourteen clubs. No, no, no, no, no,
there's clubs in your bag. I'll probably say, you know what,

(49:00):
there's not a lot of value in doing anything to
this club. This club is just good for now. Just
leave it alone. And then there's opportunities where maybe it's
just tweaking the club, not even getting a whole new
golf club, maybe putting in, you know, a new shaft
or changing the waiting or changing the setting. And then
there's going to be opportunities. But it's all going to
be data driven, and that's the question. But take the
emotion out of it. We'll do that and make it

(49:21):
more data driven.

Speaker 3 (49:22):
Yeah, and it's not going to happen in five minutes either.
Explain how long it takes to get to a good fitting.

Speaker 4 (49:28):
Yeah, well, it depends. So like a driver, you're going
to be there for an hour and a half. A
set of irons are going to be there for an
hour and a half. If you do the full bag
where we go through the hole, whole shebang, it's going
to be three three and a half hours. Now, you're
not hitting balls that entire time. There's a lot of
conversations that happen, things like that, stop and go. But yeah,
it takes time to get it right, and we don't

(49:49):
want to rush this. We want to make sure when
you leave we have the very best spec data and
the very best specs and make sure we get a
golf club that marriage is what we saw in the fitting.

Speaker 3 (49:58):
Yeah, and it's important to go in there and warm
up before you get on the machine too. It doesn't
do you any good to put twenty cold swings on
the end of the technology and have to work against them, right.

Speaker 4 (50:12):
Yeah, I mean, listen, everybody goes the man, I want
to come in there and give them. I want to
give the club champion or my fitter the A stuff. Well,
you're not gonna you can't give your A stuff all
the time on a golf course. Don't expect to give
it all the time on the sittings. But don't get
two words that being said. Yeah, you want to be
warmed up. You want to feel good, and when you
come in, come in, you know, and get wo wolf.

(50:33):
Make sure you get warmed up, and we'll get your
best stuff. I want to see your missus. I want
to see your good shots. I want to seefel and
then we'll fit some clubs around it to make sure
we're helping you a score.

Speaker 2 (50:42):
Better club champion. That's where you are, man, What what
city are you in?

Speaker 4 (50:47):
So I started this in Chicago and I'm just outside
this summer. Yeah, so that's where we started twenty five
years ago and we've been expanding ever since. And let's
see here, Houston are our Katie store would have been
our fifth store in our fleet fifth store. I opened whatever.

Speaker 2 (51:06):
All we can, man.

Speaker 3 (51:08):
Yeah, and how many approximately, how many people have you
sent out in the door feeling really really as good
as I did.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
When I left there?

Speaker 4 (51:17):
Well? Nationwide right now, we do about two hundred thousand
fifths a year, which is pretty hard to believe. It's awesome.
There's a lot of fittings that happened.

Speaker 6 (51:25):
So yeah, yeah, so yeah, we take.

Speaker 4 (51:28):
Care of a lot of golfers. It's something we take
extreme pride in.

Speaker 6 (51:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (51:31):
And one thing you said before I'll let you go,
is that you you aren't married to any manufacturers at all,
and you you if it's the right club, you're gonna
suggest it for somebody who's in there getting a fitting.
It's not like you have to meet a quota for
Tailor Made or tile Lester, Callaway or anybody.

Speaker 4 (51:48):
Right, not at all in none of our fitters. So
that's one of the coolest parts is there's a lot
of behind the scenes that happen in any golfer in golfing,
but it happens in all retailers. To be honest with you,
but ours, our fitters don't know our inventories, don't know
our margins. They have no spifs, they have no nothing
spiff as means they get paid to sell a certain brand.
They're not allowed to do any of that or take

(52:09):
any of that. We have a different way of making
sure they get taken care of because, yeah, we work
with them all and we have great relationships with all
these different brands. In fact, we have not only all
the major brands, we have some obscure brands that are
harder to get for the true golf junkie that want
something different. But lockstory short, is. At the end of
the day, all we care about is performance. We'll worry

(52:29):
about the rest of that later.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
Yeah, that's all.

Speaker 3 (52:31):
I'm caring about these days is performance in all aspects
of my life.

Speaker 2 (52:36):
All right, Nick on that.

Speaker 3 (52:37):
We'll let it go, man, Nick Sureburn from Club Champion,
go get fitted, boy. It's it's it's an eye opener,
and I appreciate your time this morning.

Speaker 2 (52:44):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (52:45):
Thanks, Yes, sir boy. All right, we'll let him go.
We'll get back to it. We're running late, imagine that
all the way out.

Speaker 5 (52:53):
This is Sports Talk seven ninety, Breaking sports News on
Facebook twenty four to seven.

Speaker 2 (52:58):
We'll get that information to This is The Doug Pike Show,
nine four.

Speaker 3 (53:03):
It is on Sports Talk seven to ninety, The Doug
Pike Show. How about them Mastros, Melvin, they're doing well again, man,
and all without their best pitching, without one of the
one of the best hitters in the entire league out.

Speaker 2 (53:18):
For what three years now? It seems like Tucker with
a bone bruise.

Speaker 3 (53:25):
That's I I've heard many people in sports, many people
who are closer to this than I, scratching their heads
trying to figure out how bone Bruce.

Speaker 2 (53:35):
Keeps you out for six eight weeks. I don't understand that,
but I'm no medical man.

Speaker 3 (53:42):
I asked a little while ago about things some of
us may have done in our youth that probably could
have got us torn up, beat up pretty badly, or.

Speaker 2 (53:53):
Just something dumb you did, and this is hold on.

Speaker 3 (53:59):
I'll go to question real quick about club fitting and
then we'll we'll move on from there. Oh I never
did tell Yeah, I told that trained story about yesterday.
I just got stuck.

Speaker 2 (54:12):
Behind one on the way home. It was it wasn't
nearly as good as yesterday's story.

Speaker 3 (54:16):
Uh. When you go to a club fitting Billy Wright's,
do they provide the clubs or do you bring your
own clubs? What you do is bring your own clubs
and then you'll probably pick six iron to do the fitting.
And once you get that fitting done, then they offer

(54:37):
to sell you that particular club in a full set.

Speaker 2 (54:42):
That's what they're trying to sell to you.

Speaker 5 (54:44):
Now.

Speaker 3 (54:44):
Driver, you don't have to buy a whole driver in
Fairway Metals, but you could. You can get fit for
any club in the bag. And the iron fitting I did,
I've got three iron through three through wedge and then
I have other wedges that I carry. But that set
of irons I got were three through wedge, and they

(55:06):
were nowhere near what I thought they would be.

Speaker 2 (55:08):
Like I said I had, I went in.

Speaker 3 (55:11):
I had a deal with tailor made years ago, and
I was getting all these club set to me to
try and whatnot. And I did try them all I did.
I did what they asked me to do with and
really play them and see how I liked them. And
I told them, but as it turns out, they really
weren't fit for me. And until you've gotten clubs fit

(55:32):
for you, if you're just buying them out of a
sporting goods store off the rack, you're doing yourself a
tremendous injustice.

Speaker 2 (55:40):
It's really it truly is.

Speaker 3 (55:41):
If you cared all about your golf scores, it truly
is worth it to invest in that fitting and then
and explain to them, look, I'm on a super tight budget.
Don't show me the most expensive stuff in the in
the in the shop. And what they'll do is they'll
work with the more affordable brands and the more affordable
shafts to find the best combination within that price range.

Speaker 2 (56:03):
They're really good about that, they really are. They helped
me a lot with my son.

Speaker 3 (56:07):
There was I'm sure we could have gone way higher
than we did, but we found something that fit him
very well at the time and still does really and
so that worked out well. All right, So got that
let's move on, call them and talk to them, Billy,
and you'll understand what I'm talking about. I just I
took my whole bag in there, and they said no.

(56:29):
The guy said, just swing some six irons because that's
what we're gonna work with. And then once we kind
of dialed it in, we put longer and shorter heads
on a couple of them and really proved that the
technology shows that it definitely worked. It definitely worked to
straighten that ball out. I have a much narrower dispersion.

(56:51):
I was hitting the ball probably twenty percent higher, and
I was hitting my six iron ten yards farther a
full club link farther with those new clubs.

Speaker 2 (57:01):
Like wow, this is kind of fun, all right.

Speaker 3 (57:03):
Back to the stories from Young From Youth, I'll start
with Mojo's. We had a barn that was the absolute
best playground in Jungle Gym. You could imagine just the
hayloft was the size of a three story framed out
building with no inside walls, just support beams and holes

(57:26):
in the floor to drop the hay to the animals.

Speaker 2 (57:30):
I don't know how I never broke a bone.

Speaker 3 (57:32):
I'll tell you how you never broke a bone, because
the few times that you slipped and almost fell through
there and broke a bone, it printed a big poster
in your mind that said, don't do that again.

Speaker 2 (57:48):
And you didn't do that again.

Speaker 3 (57:51):
It's like it's just like having a snapshot of hey, stupid,
don't do that again, because the next time you do,
you'll break your leg.

Speaker 2 (58:00):
And Yeah.

Speaker 3 (58:01):
I've been in big barns and big hay loss like
that a few times in my life, and twice I
was young enough to kind of play around. It was
a friend of a friend's cousin and we were at
their farm and goofing off and having fun. And then
the last time I was too old to really be
able to take advantage of the places I saw that

(58:23):
as a younger, as a kid, I would have tried
to jump from this to that or whatever like Mojo.

Speaker 2 (58:29):
I'm sure did a hundred times and got away with it.
That's off. That's off. Thanks for not breaking any bones
to Carl.

Speaker 3 (58:38):
This is a little different type of a story, but
it's interesting and it's not something that would have gotten
him hurt, but it could have gotten him in a
lot of trouble. Said, I was about fifteen years old,
wanted to try thick woods across the fence, thinking nobody
would ever know, climbed up a tree with an open
site model ninety four Winchester thirty thirty. Shot my first

(59:00):
buck seven points out of this tree, and shortly after
I fired the shot, the landowner surprised me, and as
angry as he was, he used the incident as an
opportunity to teach even let me keep the buck.

Speaker 2 (59:16):
He said.

Speaker 3 (59:17):
He watched me climb the tree and was just waiting
patiently while I hunted before he would make his introduction.
And Carl said he told himself that he was a
pretty lucky boy at that point and never again. And
he did learn his lesson, apparently because he'd not been
in any trouble. Oh man, Speaking of rifles, Dan's about

(59:41):
to go pick his up. He didn't go in and
pick it up A two seventy very soon. That's a
that's a fantastic deer caliber and probably for Texas deer
South Texas and maybe North Texas. I might carry something
a little bit bigger, just to be sure, because I
don't like having to chase animals.

Speaker 10 (01:00:01):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (01:00:02):
But two seventy in the hill country, two seventy in
East Texas, two seventy in most of the.

Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
State is just a rock solid, rock solid deer caliber.

Speaker 3 (01:00:12):
Probably arguably certainly and probably the most popular deer caliber
in Texas. Seven one three two one two five seven ninety.
Email me Dougpike at iHeartMedia dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:00:23):
Preven ninety.

Speaker 5 (01:00:25):
This is Sports Talk seven ninety Houston, sports online at
sports seven ninety dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
Back back to the Doug Pike Show.

Speaker 3 (01:00:34):
All right, welcome back, Thanks for listening Doug Pike Show
on Sports Talk seven ninety nine thirty six.

Speaker 2 (01:00:39):
It is already sip of coffee. I had to go
make a fresh pot of coffee.

Speaker 3 (01:00:44):
There was a coffee pot full in the newsroom, but
I had forgotten that the young man who does the
news reports the newscasts on Saturday and Sunday mornings doesn't
drink coffee, and so that was.

Speaker 2 (01:00:56):
Probably the last pot that was made on Friday.

Speaker 3 (01:01:01):
And even in that heavily insulated pot, it's in the
it was cold as ice. I might as well have
gotten a moke, a frappuccino, latte, double pump something that wherever.
Yeah foo food coffee, Yeah no, it might as well
have been ice coffee. I think that's just kind of

(01:01:22):
that should be an oxymoron. Coffee should not be cold.
It should not be cold, it should be hot. Period
into story. Let me see what Trey Trey wrote in here.
Let's see what he's got going on. Have a listener
from Round Rock, Texas. Welcome aboard round Rock Listen on
the iHeartRadio app. In a bit of a pickle, he
says here, my son and I love shooting rifles and

(01:01:45):
have been bonding over twenty two's. He's one of the
best shots I've ever seen, and he's twelve. We are
entering a father son shooting competition. But I'm not as
good a shot as he is.

Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
What do I do? Don't want to let him down?

Speaker 3 (01:02:01):
Well, first of all, remind him that but for you,
he wouldn't be a really good shot with his twenty two.
Just pat him on the back and say, son, I've
taught you all I can teach you now, and I'm
gonna I'm gonna be in this competition with you if
you have any time, unless you're driving to the shooting match.

Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Now we're g in a lesson or two with a
qualified instructor.

Speaker 3 (01:02:26):
You were good enough to get your son started in
the shooting sports, and that's fantastic, And it sounds like
he has kind of jumped over you as far as
as far as accuracy and just being a natural shot comes.
But maybe the two of you could go get a
lesson together and you could become better and he could

(01:02:50):
become better at the same time. If you ever get
down this way, by this way, by the way, go
out to American Shooting Center for what I was just
talking about.

Speaker 2 (01:02:57):
They have a pop up.

Speaker 3 (01:02:59):
Silhouette centerfire range center fire or not center fire but
rim fire only.

Speaker 2 (01:03:04):
Rim fire only.

Speaker 3 (01:03:04):
You got to take your little twenty two's out there
and those little pop up targets come up all the
way out to two hundred and fifty yards. You'll have
a blast. You'll be there all day. Bring a couple
of bricks, Ammo, because you'll shoot them all day.

Speaker 2 (01:03:17):
It's fun. Bink and then that two point fifty it's
like pop pink.

Speaker 3 (01:03:23):
Well mostly I just I don't know what sound a
little twenty two bullet makes when it goes through grass.
But that's mostly what I hear when I shoot at
that long target out there.

Speaker 2 (01:03:33):
Let me good luck to you. Good luck to you, Tray.
I'm glad you're on board, and I hope that helps.

Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
But I would highly recommend at least one lesson so
that you can you can dial in and help your
son in this father son thing. That's kind of cool.
I wish I could join you, guys. I bring my
son out there. He's a pretty good wing shot. I
don't know about his rifle shooting right now, he's pretty
good forest where old Wait, there we go, hors what's up?

Speaker 6 (01:04:00):
Man?

Speaker 2 (01:04:01):
What's up?

Speaker 4 (01:04:02):
Mister Pickerel?

Speaker 2 (01:04:03):
You know Chain Pickerel it is.

Speaker 3 (01:04:05):
I know we're gonna We're gonna dial it into this
week Melvin watch Sis not instead of Chain Pickerel. Now
I am train Pickerel because I've been stuck behind two trains.
For one was only for about five minutes, but Saturday morning,
when I was Friday morning, when I was trying to
get down to Galveston to jump in and go fish early,

(01:04:26):
I got stuck behind a train on Highway six, four
miles from the golf freeway and sat there for almost
thirty minutes.

Speaker 2 (01:04:33):
Dang, yep, ain't no fun in.

Speaker 3 (01:04:35):
That, no, And of course we get on the water
and the chatter on the water on the phones back
and forth between all the captains out there. Oh yeah, man,
we got them pretty good early and then they just
kind of slowed down.

Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
Like boy, yeah, I made that.

Speaker 10 (01:04:48):
I did that.

Speaker 12 (01:04:48):
Cardinals saying today we were on you know, catch one
every fifteen minutes or so, and me being greedy, I
ran all the way to the west side of the lake,
far side of the one nighty road bed, thinking we're
gonna go load up, and uh, well we're on that
gashpergo pattern now, so about to go back to where
I started catch what every fifteen minutes. Eventually you'll get there.
But I've been getting greedy looking for that mother load.

Speaker 2 (01:05:09):
Never leave biting fish, I know we did. We talked
about that.

Speaker 4 (01:05:13):
I got one more.

Speaker 12 (01:05:14):
We got another place out of they call Walker Lake.
We're gonna go check that out. Then we're gonna go
back to where it all started. And we probably donet
have we got We're crowding ten, I guess, but all right,
we're a long way we're a long way from seventy five.
We might not hear seventy five unless we stay out
here till dark.

Speaker 2 (01:05:31):
But we got in that lake, so no, I hope not.

Speaker 12 (01:05:34):
I got my next door neighbor out here with his grandson,
and good everybody. Everybody's caught some fish. We got one
guy catching seven inch catfish, one guy catching eight inch
ten inch goo, and all of us caught occasional white
mass every now and then, so you're dialed in, man,
catch with biting them, throw them in the box. Well,
that big white bass starnam me yesterday, so they may

(01:05:55):
have broke the big schools up yesterday.

Speaker 2 (01:05:57):
Everybody changed them around probably, so yeah, she patted and
see what we can did, so all right, was great
to hear from you. Fok pro.

Speaker 12 (01:06:04):
All right, man, I'll give you up to date this
outh noon on email.

Speaker 3 (01:06:06):
Probably did just Yeah, get off the water before dark, man,
you'll burst into flames about four point thirty about noon.

Speaker 2 (01:06:13):
Call I can take. Yeah, that's all we could take
the other day. Even though I got there late.

Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
We were smart enough to get off the water early
instead of waiting and just waiting for it to get
any hotter. Because it did thanks man, it's great to
hear from you. Budy, all right, Buddy, I ben audios. Yeah,
good guy, good guy. He's got a father and grant
he said, father and grandsons.

Speaker 6 (01:06:34):
That what it was.

Speaker 2 (01:06:36):
Yeah, that's what it sounds like. Yeah, I think that's right.
That's good man.

Speaker 3 (01:06:39):
I've got I got to get these two guys from
yesterday dialed in. I'm gonna I'm gonna write them emails
once we finish off.

Speaker 2 (01:06:45):
I'm gonna stay in here too. After the show.

Speaker 3 (01:06:48):
I'm not going back over there on the other side
of the office because it's about ninety degrees inside over there.
It's driving me crazy, absolutely driving me crazy. Seven one
three two one two five seven ninety Email me, dug pocket.

Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
iHeartMedia dot Com. Let me put this piece of paper down.
That's covered. That's covered.

Speaker 3 (01:07:08):
I'm still I'd love to hear another story or two
between down on the top about something crazy and dumb
you did could have gotten you hurt. And not from
anybody who wants to tell me they got thumb cramps
from playing video games either. That's that's not my thing, man,
and I I almost got caught up in it. When

(01:07:28):
video games first started being kind of cool. And Mario
Brothers was out, and there were I think one or
two more that I actually got. And then I realized
that in a couple of weeks time, I was doing
that Mario Brothers thing or what was it?

Speaker 2 (01:07:46):
Yeah, is that the one where they Yeah, it was
Mario Brothers. Donkey Kong. Donkey Kong was one of those games.

Speaker 3 (01:07:53):
But I got to where I could just run through
the whole thing at full speed and never miss a lick,
you know, And it just think, Okay, I'm bored with this.
I'm going back fishing. I'm going back and playing more golf.
I'm gonna do more hunting. And I just got right
back outside. It just called to me. Yeah, I'm video
games don't call to me at all. My son likes him,
but his entire generation grew up on him and I didn't.

(01:08:17):
And I'm kind of glad I grew up the way
I did. On the way out of this break, the
final one of the program twenty twenty four.

Speaker 5 (01:08:24):
We are Sports Talk seven ninety. Are you ready listen
online at Sports seven ninety dot com. Now more Doug Fike.

Speaker 3 (01:08:33):
All right, Welcome back, Doug Pike Show, Rounding Third Headed Home,
kind of like the Astros. I don't know how many
runs I've got on the board yet. Today it's hard
to tell. Sometimes I know I've been injured, but that
was last night.

Speaker 2 (01:08:47):
Uh, let's get the cue. Get him on the phone here,
what's up, cue?

Speaker 9 (01:08:51):
How's it going? Doug Man, long time listener, first.

Speaker 2 (01:08:54):
Time calling, first time. Come on, man, let's go.

Speaker 9 (01:08:58):
Hey man, Hey, I will tell you. Hey, you seizaus
A Daniel was mine astro buddy. Now I'll tell you
something about me.

Speaker 2 (01:09:06):
We're about man? What it tells me?

Speaker 9 (01:09:09):
Well, I'll be sixty three the Lost, say the same
on on Thursday.

Speaker 2 (01:09:13):
See yeah, I got a few on you. Then, okay, well,
good for you. Welcome to the glove man.

Speaker 9 (01:09:19):
Well, let me tell you this stupid thing we did
in nineteen seventy one, me and my brother who is
he's gone now, but well you remember those big tires
used to rent out of Galveston. Yeah, yeah, we got
the other tubes and we went so far out that
we could barely see the shore, and we had no

(01:09:42):
idea about real tides, very white show, and we just
having fun. And finally one of us had the brand.
I said, hey man, we can barely see the show.
Maybe we all go on trying to get back in.

Speaker 4 (01:09:53):
And we got spat that day.

Speaker 9 (01:09:55):
And I think about it now when you said the
stupid sting.

Speaker 6 (01:09:59):
Holy ca.

Speaker 3 (01:10:00):
Yes, you know, I did a lot of surfing down there,
and every now and then you'd see somebody on an
inner tube, or you'd see somebody just on one of
those little blow up inflatable mattress looking things, and they'd
be one hundred two hundred yards off shore, and just
like you and your brother, not really realizing how difficult

(01:10:22):
it can be to get back once that water gets
vibing on you.

Speaker 2 (01:10:26):
Holy how long did it take you all to get back.

Speaker 9 (01:10:29):
Oh man?

Speaker 4 (01:10:31):
Who knows?

Speaker 9 (01:10:34):
Yeah, we were to understand what baby would not looking
at all these shark shows, looking at people sadly thinking
it's a seal or something.

Speaker 2 (01:10:46):
That seal over there. Let's go take a bike out
of the thing.

Speaker 3 (01:10:50):
Those truck tire entertwos were huge, man, I remember those
very vividly. That was funny, Holy cow man. And if
people knew how many sharks were in the water off
Galveston in the summertime, they probably wouldn't get in the water.

Speaker 2 (01:11:05):
But the odds of being hit by one.

Speaker 3 (01:11:08):
Are pretty slim, they really are. Those sharks don't want
to bite people. And that unprovoked attacks you are very rare,
they really are. Of course, if it happens to you,
it's bad. But yeah, man, it's a lonely feeling on
an inner tube. I can remember sitting out on surfboards
on really big days and out where it was breaking

(01:11:29):
where we wanted to be. We were a good two
hundred and fifty three hundred yards off the beach. And
this is before there were leashes on those boards, man,
And if you lost your board you had to swim
back to the beach.

Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
And yeah, it was tough. I'm glad you made it,
and I'm glad you got this call done. Q.

Speaker 3 (01:11:45):
Don't be a stranger man. Oh that's awesome. Yeah, thank you,
I appreciate it. Oh that was a good one, Melvin.
If you ever seen you remember going to the beach
and seeing those giant they were giant truck inner tubes.

Speaker 2 (01:12:00):
Yeah, I remember it.

Speaker 3 (01:12:00):
And you could rent one for a couple of bucks
or something like that and then just go float around
and try to paddle to Cuba. We would always talk
about that, let's paddle to Mexico. And we get up
there paddle around on those things, and then you get
about half tired and realize you got to paddle back exactly.
Oh man, you try to catch a wave on one,
it would just flip over on you.

Speaker 2 (01:12:20):
Remember that. Oh my gosh, that's good stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:12:23):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
I'm glad I heard that. That perked me up right there.

Speaker 3 (01:12:26):
Let's see what memories Scott alan Allen ways in, we
tried to use cattails as young people to ward off mosquitoes.
A pal and I soaked them in gasoline and as
I struck the match one time, and Ember flew into
the fumes over the gas can and set the whole

(01:12:48):
thing on fire like an idiot because he was thirteen.
I went and knocked the can over and started spraying.

Speaker 4 (01:12:57):
Water on it.

Speaker 3 (01:12:59):
Oh my lord, holy cow, that's that's not how you
put out a gasoline fire. No, they got really, really lucky.
I can remember burning cat tails to keep mosquitoes away.

Speaker 2 (01:13:13):
There's a real and I think the people who.

Speaker 3 (01:13:16):
Were doing it back then around me were adults, and
they were dipping them I think in kerosene maybe or
diesel fuel or something. I don't know, but it was
some Yeah, all of that stuff pretty dog on stupid. Uh,
ninety percent of shark attacks happened in less than ten
feet of water. I would agree, I would agree. Just

(01:13:37):
make sure you're swimming in eleven feet or deeper. Oh thanks,
that's awesome, Kevin, that's great. Great playing there. Oh my words,
someone three two, two, five seven to ninety. Thinking of
burning those cat tails reminds me of peewee baseball in
Little league baseball when I was growing up. After a rain,
if the field was muddy, Melbourney. You old enough to
remember this, how they dried the fields back then so

(01:14:00):
we could play. Somebody would go to a gas station
and bring back two or three gallons of diesel fuel
and pour it on the field and set a match
to it.

Speaker 2 (01:14:13):
Wow, I never burn and burn and burn.

Speaker 3 (01:14:16):
It'd be just this, a giant cloud of black smoke
billowing up off the fields. It would look like Armageddon
was happening and we were just getting ready to play ball.

Speaker 8 (01:14:25):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (01:14:27):
Oh yeah, that's probably frowned upon these days. I don't
think I've seen that method used since I was about
eleven years old. Maybe, My goodness, gracious, So I've got
some I've got some trips to plan for a couple
of guys here who have never fished. I'm going to
try to get them dialed into some places they can

(01:14:47):
go and actually for sure catch fish, because that's what
fishing is all about. When you never caught one, your
first objective is to catch a fish, it should be anyway.
If your first subjective is to catch a giant trout
or a giant redfish, you're doing it all wrong and
somebody spoiled you.

Speaker 2 (01:15:05):
As a kid.

Speaker 3 (01:15:07):
It frustrates me to see very very young children with
trophy deer and trophy bass, and trophy this and trophy that,
because they've already reached the top of the game.

Speaker 2 (01:15:20):
There's no better trophy.

Speaker 3 (01:15:23):
And what they end up doing in a lot of
times is they go hang out at the mall with
their friends, or they just they get out of the outdoors.
Don't let that happen. Bring them in young, even these adults,
I'm gonna be helping. I'm gonna start them off slow,
let them build up. It's worth the weight, I guarantee
it worth the wait to get outside too.

Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
I'm gonna let you go. Now go outside, have some
fun with your family.

Speaker 3 (01:15:45):
Sunscreen, hydration, all that stuff matters for the next couple
of weeks, it's gonna be hot as blazes. Be careful
out there, have as much fun as you can, and
then get back inside where it's nice and cool so
you can get a good, nice sleep and do it again.

Speaker 2 (01:16:00):
Be back tomorrow on kPr C at noon.

Speaker 3 (01:16:02):
I'll be back in here on kbm E next Saturday
at seven o'clock.

Speaker 2 (01:16:06):
Thanks for listening, Audios
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