Episode Transcript
Smell off.
Speaker 2Now, lady, Welcome to Meet Eater Trivia podcast.
Welcome to Meet Eater Radio Live.
It's eleven am Mountain Time, that's one pm for our friends in Machias, Maine, on Thursday, December eleven, and we're live for Meet Eater, HQ and Bozeman.
I'm your host, Spencer, joined today by Seth Randall was supposed to be here, but for some reason he had to bail.
It was a good reason.
Now on today's show, we'll interview Kurt Steiner, the man who holds the world record for skipping a rock eighty eight times, and we'll have gear Talk, where Seth and I review hunting and fishing products.
But first, Seth, I just the biggest white tail in my life.
Speaker 1Oh I know, I know it.
I when I got that.
Speaker 3I love when my friends send me deer pictures, but your yours, your picture was the best one I got all year old.
I was just like overrun with with joy.
Good when you send me that.
Speaker 2I'm tickled.
I'm tickled.
Speaker 4He also like the biggest white tailed deer of most people's lifetimes, not just yours.
Speaker 1Like that's a really big deer.
Speaker 2Uh huh yeah, yeah.
For some reason, we have Ryan Callahan brogaining.
Max Barton also in the room.
Speaker 1You introduced us at the beginning.
Speaker 2He didn't.
Speaker 5He actually specifically said we will not be acknowledging you Christmas everybody.
Speaker 2Uh, I was in the Golden Triangle of Illinois.
That's Pike County, Adams County, Brown County.
Those counties are second, third, and tenth in Illinois for boone and crocket whitetail entries U.
And it's just like if you got to play Sims or play God with with the earth and be like, I'm gonna make the best white tail ground I can fathom.
Yep, that's what you would get in the Golden Triangle.
It's just like the perfect mix of timber and egg.
And since the invention of Outdoor Magazine Outdoor TV, the Golden Triangle has been a place on a map that the whitetail hunters fantasized about.
Oh yeah, I'd put it with like you know, like Buffalo County, Illinois, the Milk River in Montana, yep, South Texas, South Iowa, the bread Basket of Saskatchewan.
You know, it's just like notorious is all those places for like big giant white tail bucks.
Speaker 3Yeah, it's like it's like what Nashville is for country music exactly.
Speaker 6Yeah, that's a good analogy.
Speaker 2So my buddy invited me out to hunt his farm this year.
It was like the most excited I've been about a hunt in twenty twenty five.
And going into the hunt, I had told my buddy this, I was like, my anticipation is so high that there's no possible way it can meet my expectations.
Yeah, like I'm just I'm expecting too much at this point.
And then the biggest buck on the farm showed up.
Speaker 3So did you did you go into this did you know did you have like trail cam pictures of the deer that you could potentially be seen there.
Speaker 2Yeah, my landowner buddy was aware of like four or five bucks they thought that were like five plus years old.
Uh, this this was the biggest buck of them all.
They had three years of history with him, when he was a three year old, a four year old, and this year five year old.
They had seen him during archery season in October, never gave him a shot, and then he disappeared at the end of October.
They didn't see him again.
They didn't get any trailcam photos of him.
Right, So this landowner was hunting this deer he was hunting.
Yes, they tried to kill him.
Didn't happen this year, but then December old around and they got like eight inches of snow spencer.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 2Up on the TV, right, we have a picture of him.
Speaker 1It's beautiful.
Speaker 2He's a mainframe five by five, but he's got a lot of junk.
I think he has nineteen scorable points.
A lot of it is around his bases that are hard to appreciate.
Speaker 1You just think you're kind of guessing he's got nineteen.
He didn't look at him that hard.
Speaker 2Well, he's got stuff going on around his bases that are like crawling across into his hide, and some of it's going to be close to that inch.
I haven't put a tape measure on him yet, but I think it'll come out to nineteen points.
And if you look, I've got sheds here of the buck he's got like they're not really dirty sheds, but it's called a dirty shed when they break off some of their pedical with it, and typically that means they're gonna throw a funky rack when you have a dirty shed.
In this book, he has a few dirty sheds.
His three year old sheds were dirty, His four year old sheds were kind of dirty, and so then you know you're going to get some abnormal points.
So you're talking about those little Bumpser at the white stuff on the bottom.
Yeah, that's like part of his skull that's coming with, which is an ideal for a deer they want to make a nice clean breakof seems pretty ideal for him.
Ideal for him.
Yeah, it was working out.
So he was a mainframe five by five, uh, nineteen points.
Very exciting.
Speaker 5This landowner that that you got this little connection with.
Speaker 1Is this just a great guy.
Speaker 2It's a jaw tag.
But it's like, you know, the Golden Triangle is mostly private land and so it's not that competitive for a non resident god to be able to go there and hunt.
Yeah, the buck disappeared for five weeks, showed back up.
They had like eight inches of snow the week before I got there, and they were saying, it's been a very long time since the second gun season, which was what I was there for, had that much snow on the ground.
So it just worked out perfect where it made you show up in some places real heavy and disappear from others, and it just happened that they had the right soybeans to pull in the box.
Speaker 5That's fantastic one perfect crazy there.
Speaker 7Well, what's this that?
Speaker 2Here's something?
Speaker 1You look giddy?
Speaker 2Something foot in the Meat Eater studio.
Speaker 1I feel like just shadowed St.
Speaker 2Clause Sannah.
Speaker 7I wasn't rudy for that.
Speaker 2She was not ready.
Indeed, ladies and gentlemen, Santa Claus has just stepped into the Meat Eater podcast studio.
Speaker 1He's got a big sack full.
Speaker 7Of gifts a little boys and girls.
Speaker 1How are you doing?
Speaker 7I'm doing very well, Thank you very much.
Speaker 1Where you park the reindeer?
Speaker 7Old?
They're outside?
Speaker 6No they're not.
Speaker 7Don't don't be a grinch there, Brody, I'm just telling truth.
Buddy, you're full of humbug.
Speaker 2That is observed that you have a giant bag with you.
Speaker 7I do, I do, I cannot swing by my favorite Thursday live podcast airs at eleven Mountain time.
Just spread a little Christmas cheer.
Speaker 2Perfect okay, And and now it also appears that Cal Brody and Max have showed up.
Speaker 7Magic nice.
Speaker 1You sound like Daniel d Lewis from There Will be Blood.
Give me the.
Speaker 7Bloody a false profet Seth.
Someone told me whose gift this was, and I've forgotten it already.
Speaker 2Okay, does this go?
Speaker 1That's for Bill the engineer.
Speaker 2Bill the engineers.
Speaker 6Have to.
Speaker 7There's a series of gifts for Seth Morris that are numbered in this way.
Speaker 2Number one, you're supposed, my goodness.
Speaker 7Okay, this is for Spencer Newhart.
Speaker 2Okay, seen that?
What is it?
Speaker 3Good?
Speaker 2It's good and cold?
Speaker 7Maxwell.
I shouldn't have.
Speaker 1What else?
Speaker 7Ryan Callahan, n.
Speaker 2Oh, looks like a man wrapped that present.
Speaker 1Brody doesn't have anything.
Speaker 7No to Brody Anderson.
Speaker 2All right, same wrapping paper as cows.
Speaker 7This is a topper where that the Williams household borrowed from you.
Speaker 4Okay, it may have been very specific that I wanted it back.
Speaker 7Randy's not here, but I'll open that perfect gifts?
Speaker 2Is that everything?
Okay?
I think?
Speaker 7So?
Oh wait, he's done.
I also have a lot of candy canes and bottles of fireball.
Speaker 2Ten baby bottles of fireball whiskey have just been jumped out of You need more?
Speaker 7I have more.
There's a lot of it at my house, and I don't like it.
Speaker 3I can't believe that that Fireball keeps saying a deeper host.
Speaker 1I want to gage you.
Now.
Speaker 2What doesn't Santa like about Fireball?
That's kind of an upset.
I assume that'd be right in his wheelhouse.
It's too sweet, too sweet.
Speaker 7I drink it too fast.
Speaker 2You need to go ice fishing, well, Santa.
Speaker 5Last year Santa went one minute fishing on our show.
I don't think he was successful.
Speaker 7We have great fishing weather today we do.
It's nearly sixty degrees.
Speaker 1Ice fishing weather.
Speaker 2No, no, sorry, Okay, Santa has handed out the gifts.
Let's start over with fill the engineer, Phil.
Speaker 1It's open up.
Speaker 5Sure, it looks like the internet at Meat Eater h Q dropped up for a secure But I think Sanna Santa were lying.
Speaker 1Cha.
Speaker 5Let us know, let us know if the if the stream's back, I believe it is.
Speaker 7Yeah, it looks good.
Speaker 5Okay, I'm opening my gift now.
It's on the floor since it's a little bit large to doing my lap.
Speaker 2People are asking if you've been drinking already.
Speaker 7No, not yet, not yet.
Speaker 2It's the middle of the day.
Speaker 1Dry commute back to Phil.
Speaker 5You're supposed to read that whole card, the whole card.
You want me to read it live on air here, Yes, okay, we go.
It says, because you mean so much at Christmas and.
Speaker 2Always it's kind of romantic.
Speaker 5I'm feeling things.
The holiday season isn't really about gifts and decorations.
It's about reaching out to the people who mean the most to us and letting them know how much we care.
So remove wrap before placing an envelope the car on the car and whoever gave you this gift.
Speaker 4I mean they were kind enough not to write in the card, so you can read gift.
Speaker 5That very conscious, thoughtful.
Speaker 2There's a guy who cares about the environment.
Speaker 5You're such a special person and you're you're wished every little happiness long after the holidays are over.
Merry Christmas.
Wow, Thank you to my secret Santa, whoever they may be pt.
Thanks for keeping it all together.
FYI, extra lean beef is seven Merry Christmas cow PS.
Well yeah, am I supposed to read that?
Speaker 1Go ahead, you can read the first part of the PS.
Speaker 2Okay, with only the first part.
Speaker 5I'm gifting you of BHA family membership cow for anything better, so much.
But that's not all.
There's also a bottle of some kind m oh here we are Sailor Jerry Spice drum.
Speaker 7Oh, the sailor in yourself.
Speaker 5That was the go to for my rum and cokes back in college.
Thank you so much.
Cold and look at this we've got.
We've got frozen beef.
And I'm glad that I now know the exact value you at least.
Speaker 7No ground out ground four pounds?
Speaker 1How much money I'm saving?
Speaker 5Yes, if you were to go.
Speaker 2Buying ground out, probably more than B twenty bucks a pounds.
Speaker 7Right right?
Speaker 1I just that's context.
Some people need context that.
Speaker 5It's not the money, Phil, that's right, secrets, Thank you so much, it's the thought that counts.
Speaker 7This will all go to givety gifts sake.
Speaker 2Phil, I think we've lost our bed of music.
Oh yeah, we'll.
Speaker 5Bring it back.
Sorry, I've been busy opening.
Speaker 2How did you pick Sailor Jerry's when you were looking at the realm shelf.
Speaker 4It's it's because Phil and I had a conversation a long time ago about like.
Speaker 1Because there's like scary high end realms.
Speaker 8But I believe that the tiki crowd feels like Sailor Jerry and Captain Morgan are totally fine for most things.
Was that correct for I'd say for for mixing cocktail like like like like a like into a soda mixer.
But if you're gonna make it my tie, I mean honestly, Cal, sailor Jerry's and and and uh and yeah, that's that's a that's that's a cardinal sin.
But I love Sailor Jerrys and I'll use it.
Speaker 2Phil.
Have you ever tried Mount Gay.
That's some good stuff I have.
Speaker 1Yeah, they got a lot of.
Speaker 7What a gift?
Speaker 2Okay, well done, Cal.
That's that's fun for you, Phil, Max, you're up next up.
Speaker 4It's supposed to be a little something for everybody.
Speaker 2Job.
Speaker 1I suck at rapping.
Speaker 2What do we got there?
Maxwell?
Speaker 7Is this a puzzle?
Speaker 3Uh?
Speaker 7Puzzle?
Him?
Speaker 1Itzed me?
Phil?
Speaker 2What is this?
Speaker 1How do you know?
Speaker 2That?
Speaker 3Was me?
Speaker 5That's a game that's a that's a very easy to learn board game called Cascadia where you create wildlife, corridor and habitats for different.
Speaker 2When I saw that game existed, I was pissed off.
I didn't come up with that.
Yeah, isn't this very similar to like what's that game with the square risk you're.
Speaker 5Talking about catam I'd say it's it's easier than pick up and play, which is.
Speaker 1Which is why.
Speaker 2Many fun nights to come at the bar house.
Speaker 1Board game season.
Speaker 2That's great for Maxwell.
Next up, Brody up, who's handed a fireball to Max.
He's now his gift.
Also a swell gift wrapping job here.
Speaker 7Someone said Santa's language is going to demonetize this video.
I hope the suits don't notice.
Speaker 1They definitely will don't.
Speaker 2What do we got over there, Brody?
Speaker 6Wow, some.
Speaker 2Ladies glass bug bug like it, jig heads.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2My kids were just asking about ice fish and I was like, man, it's gonna be a while, but we'll get those news this year.
Speaker 1Those really glasses.
Speaker 5Oh yeah, No, I didn't need the sex.
Speaker 1How do you know?
Speaker 2Look they're just round.
Speaker 7Look at the shape of them.
Speaker 2For christ Si, So Brody got a three pack of readers from the drug store and some ice fishing lures.
Speaker 1That's a great present.
Speaker 7That's good.
Speaker 2You know, I scattered these things everywhere.
Speaker 3That's what I was thinking when I when I picked those up for you, Brody, that uh, just leave the people.
Speaker 1You're gonna need to wear those to.
Speaker 2Tie I know, oh yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 1And you just leave those things everywhere.
So that's great.
Speaker 2Next up.
We have Ryan Callahan who had the same wrapping paper as Brodie's.
Speaker 7Gift, because we all used the office wrapping.
Speaker 2Paper, it appears.
So what do we have there?
Caw CEOs.
Speaker 7Suit for a suit.
Speaker 1That's great America.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah, he has a video so I can learn how to time.
Speaker 2That's great with some bald eagles on it.
Speaker 1Got some warm up juice.
Nice?
Speaker 4And what's this one say?
Speaker 2He gets a shirt?
Speaker 7I didn't mean sorry, I'm late.
Speaker 1I didn't want to come.
Speaker 2Who do you think gave that to you?
Cal?
Speaker 1I have so many occasions where this is.
Speaker 2He would have borne it today, he already had it.
Who do you think gave that to you?
Speaker 1People who pay attention?
Speaker 7Okay, I'll give you a hint.
That tie used to belong to my father in law.
Okay, very good, Wow a novelty tie.
Speaker 2Give me an example of a place he would wear that tie to work?
Work?
Very good.
That'll that'll work well for the future.
CEO of VHA, thank you.
Speaker 1All right.
Speaker 2I am now going to open my gift, my gift which was wrapped in a meat Eater Trivia Collector's edition animal box.
Speaker 7Oh oh, all right.
Speaker 2We have some halbit labeled twenty twenty five in here.
That is great.
I do not have any halbit in a freezer, nor have you got a nice gift twenty twenty five that is phenomenal.
I had to line up the gift exchange so I know this came from Brody, and Brody even warned me.
He said, you drew the short straw by having by me or by Brody having my name.
But that is a phenomenal gift.
Speaker 5I gotta tell you, Spencer, I was really torn about giving that back.
Speaker 2What do you think I should do with this?
King salmon?
Give me a recommendation.
Well, you're gonna let your wife eat it with you or she's uninterested in Is that right?
That's right?
This is gonna be for me.
This is just gonna be for me.
I think I should cook that very simply.
You could grill it, you know, butter lemon.
Speaker 7Whatever.
Speaker 5Yeah, don't overdo it.
Speaker 1As you said, don't ever do that.
Speaker 2Don't overdo it.
Good advice, Brody.
That is a wonderful gift.
That's well done, very efficient.
Next up we have Seth Now who has how many gifts are in front of you?
Speaker 7Someone must have been a very good boy.
Speaker 2They're numbered so I gotta okay, I assume that you should start with number one.
It looks like, all right, here we go.
This one is wrapped like as though a candy, maybe giant piece of candy.
Sure a baseball bat would fit in there.
Speaker 1What could this be wrapped in?
Butcher paper, carrot?
Speaker 7My dogs have the same thing.
Speaker 2Okay, I wouldn't.
I wouldn't recognize that as a dog toy?
Speaker 1Is that what it is?
Speaker 2Giant dog?
That's the size of your dog.
The thing is that's a Boon and Crockett Carr your dog?
Speaker 1Do your dogs like it?
Will my dog like it?
Speaker 2Santa?
What do your dog like that?
Speaker 7No, they're scared of any toy that squeaks.
Speaker 2Now he's got a T shirt.
Speaker 7That's my shirt.
That's shirt?
What what the hell?
No arms from my own house.
This is cultural appropriate.
Speaker 2Seth is now open.
There's a T shirt.
Speaker 7This isn't a gun.
Speaker 2These are an ape on the front and the other is a lebron James jersey.
Now he's on the gift number three.
Speaker 7That's not yours, Randall, this is mine, It is mine.
Speaker 1Oh look at these A new pair of shoes had been warning.
Speaker 2It's very well used.
Speaker 7Shoes that looks familiar.
These are all my most treasured possessions.
Seth.
Speaker 2I didn't know you're going to start playing basketball.
That is a great shirt.
Speaker 7I was just wearing that the other day.
Speaker 2Well, that's that's kind of weird you would give him all this stuff?
Man?
Speaker 7Did you give all this to me?
Speaker 1Thank you?
Speaker 7No, I don't know how this got here.
Speaker 2You better talk to missus Clas.
Speaker 7Jackson.
Speaker 2Since Randall's not here, you might want to consider regifting those.
Speaker 7Jackson Hayes of the Los Angeles Lakers gave me a fist bump and said, sweet Jersey Bra, that's my legit.
Speaker 2Very good, lord, legit your hands off now it belongs to Seth Son of them.
That is set story.
Speaker 7Now, I'm bewildered by this.
This is a horrible prank.
Speaker 2How about you opened up Randall's gift now they're Santa.
Speaker 7Okay, he's gonna need a gift card to pay for all the stuff that he's lost.
Speaker 2Again.
We have a dog toy, jersey, a T shirt, and a pair of sneakers.
This is a gift card to d og d o g Oh, that's a pet place, a pet place.
Speaker 7That's good.
I have three Randall has three pets and they're all very needy, so he will be most appreciative of this.
Speaker 2Uh huh, Santa, let's try to solve the crime of how these gifts wound up in Seth's possession.
What do you think happened here?
Speaker 7My wife was in on it.
Speaker 5I know that.
Speaker 7But also we don't lock our house very often.
Speaker 2Okay, let's not look on it.
Speaker 7We caught that film.
Speaker 2I think your full name is on your land these shoes?
Does My dog hates this toy?
Speaker 7Sy hates that shirt, but I didn't know that she didn't like these shirts.
I was literally wearing this just the other day.
It's from the San Diego Zoom and it made her juvenile.
Speaker 2Orangutand okay, so you've accused Cal with it.
Was not Cal.
Speaker 7I only know.
I only think of Cal because he often is in and out out of my home.
Speaker 2Was not Cal?
Speaker 7Who else?
Well, I suppose anybody could have slid into her d MS.
Speaker 2On who's the next suspect?
Speaker 7Fill the engine?
Speaker 1It was not filled.
It's like he's just lashing out.
Speaker 7Yeah, Spencer, it.
Speaker 1Was Yeah, I slid into in these dms.
Speaker 2Yes, I did.
I actually did.
Max was so proud of this idea.
He hasn't done a thing at work all week, just preparing this.
Speaker 7To impressed that I recognized this toy and you.
Speaker 1Said it right away.
Speaker 2Oh my dogs have the same toy.
Speaker 5Missus Klaus gets lonely this time.
Speaker 7Ye watch your dirty mouth.
Oh I'm having so much I didn't wear much of a layer under this suit because it was so warm last year.
But I'm having so much fun sweating again.
Speaker 2Yes, Max and Sydney, you guys had to meet up in town, I imagine this week.
Speaker 7Oh that's fun.
Speaker 2Very good.
Now we have a real gift here for Seth.
Just pull that bow.
Speaker 6There you go.
Speaker 2This is our final gift of the day.
Speaker 7That's I hope it's something you treasure, someone's taken out of your home, your knowledge, apple butter.
Speaker 1Butter.
Okay, that's great.
Speaker 3Oh some salsa m m okay, spicy restaurant style, there you go, my favorite?
Speaker 2Your favorite?
Wow?
Speaker 7Okay, you like restaurant style.
Speaker 9I do.
Speaker 1Some big old cook cookies.
Oh my, who's this from?
That's for me?
Speaker 2When when pantry last night made you some cookies and trying to get good at baking a few things, made some cookies and then uh, it's.
Speaker 1Got some salt on there.
Speaker 2That's right, you can share.
Speaker 7That makes her a good cookie.
Speaker 2Seth also has a pregnant wife at home, so maybe we got to leave one for her as well.
Leave one sorry, no milk, Sanna.
Yeah, these are fantastical, thank you.
I'm just getting into baking.
I'm trying to be like not a one trick pony, but like a three trick pony.
So I want to learn how to make cookies first, and then you know, I think I'm gonna move on to banana bread soon.
The apple butter that was made with apples I found on my Idaho deer hunt this year off from the mountains.
I made that, and I made the sauce, the salta ingredients those are just from from Albertson's.
The cookies though, the eggs came from my neighbor, so some Gallatin Valley eggs there for you.
Speaker 1So did you make the labels?
Speaker 2My wife did.
That's being married to a graphic designer.
You even got there, made the labels for it, the ingredients on it.
That's right, then, you know, in case you're your allergic to anything, very good guest.
Speaker 8This year, s everybody did grating from Santa.
Speaker 7Now, I'm really the mood.
This was a terrible mistake.
It doesn't breathe.
Speaker 5Well, Santa Randall didn't show up today, if you wouldn't mind filling in for him, Yeah, I suppose.
Speaker 1This, Santa.
Speaker 2Your leatherman jacket from high school is upstairs in my office.
Speaker 7Oh ship, that one's awesome too.
Speaker 2Yeah, I was.
Speaker 7This jersey interestingly enough, has several typos on the back.
Speaker 2Oh, very interesting.
Speaker 7There's an extra digit under one of Lebron's Uh oh, where's that?
I'll find it.
Speaker 2Okay, good stuff from Santa Claus.
Speaker 7Yes, yes, good stuff.
Speaker 2That is the twenty five med Eater Radio gift.
Speaker 7So it says he won the most valuable player in the year two zero zero one zero, which, as we all know, was in the distant future.
Speaker 2That's right, Santa.
Speaker 5Will you still be around them?
Speaker 7Yes?
Speaker 5I wasn't sure if there was like a Santa Claus ten Allen situation where someone would take your place.
Speaker 7No, there's no plan for succession in my line.
Speaker 2Okay, Media radio will still be going on as well, that's right.
Oh, and Santa is gonna stick around for the rest of the show.
Speaker 7Yes, I will do.
Thanks for joining us for this holiday.
Speaker 2Yee, Brody, Maxwell and Call are going to disappear, Phil, thank you very much.
Speaker 5Oh yes, of course, fireball to be gone when I check in later.
Speaker 2Yeah, we'll work on it.
We'll work on it, all right, Thank you boy, Christmas, We will see you later.
All right, let's take a break for some listener feedback.
Goodness, what's the chat have to say?
Speaker 5Okay, a Hunter says, ask Santa if he thinks anybody is gonna stop the thunder this year?
Speaker 7The two damn good.
But if recent NBA history tells it's anything, it's that uh Shay gilges Alexander will rupt her as a Chilleres tendon because that's what happens to the best players in the league.
Speaker 2Very good, Well, nicolea Jokic is the best player in the league.
Oh sure, so you take that back.
Oh the Nuggets are gonna stop Okay, see this year, that's what's gonna happen there, M Hunter's hut.
Speaker 5Jonathan Wahlberg asks, what is your recommendation for processing dear shanks, specifically for Asbuko, I struggle to make clean cuts through the bone when thought and don't have a band saw to use when frozen sALS all.
Speaker 1Yeah, I use sALS all.
Speaker 2Cut through the meat that you can with a knife and then do the rest of it with the sALS all and you'll be just fine.
Speaker 7Or go to a butcher and ask if they can band saw it there.
Speaker 3You go, like the salls all too, specifically the ones that you can just like you grab bond to the kind of the top of it.
M h.
It's easier to hold that one that kind and and then be able to hold the shank too and just zip through them.
Speaker 2You know, pretty quickly if you have the right blade on your saws all when you're going through bone.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3And you can go on Amazon two or wherever butcher products are sold and buy stainless steel saws all blades specific for that.
Speaker 2Do they do they are they labeled like steel or wood or do they say bone on them?
I'm always using ones that are labeled for wood or steel.
Speaker 3You know, I just I just went on on I think I got them on Amazon, and they're like specific bone saw like butchering blades that to the tool chest.
Speaker 2M you know.
Speaker 5Those are pretty much the only real substantive questions people have been.
Speaker 7Distracted And I would hope entertain one question.
Speaker 2Hopefully entertained chat maybe maybe brew up some questions for Santa for the next time we check in with you.
If you want to know, if someone's on the knot of your nice list, what Santa does in the off season.
Please shoot those questions over well and we'll address him in about a half hour.
Speaker 5Oh, this one's very substantive.
Seth Jones says he was skeptical at the start of the D and D episode, me and you both, Seth.
He didn't really enjoy it though, and would like to see more interesting comments.
Seth, thanks agating it.
Speaker 2Okay, good stuff.
We'll try to get more of that in twenty twenty six.
Speaker 7Spencer, if you had to eat Randall, how would you cook him?
Speaker 2Well, what do you think, Santa?
Speaker 1Oh, well done, well done?
Speaker 7You don't know.
Speaker 2Yeah, he's an old ruddy buck.
We probably got to marinate him overnight.
Go low and slow, not the hot and fast kind of meat.
Speaker 7And you're gonna have a lot of rendering to do afterwards.
Speaker 2Okay, that we'll sort that all out in the crap.
Speaker 5How about one more, Spencer, because this one it's a gun to deer season.
Speaker 1What does that mean?
Speaker 5Does that mean something.
Speaker 2It means they have multiple gun seasons and this is number two.
Speaker 5Gun beer I gotcha this week in Iowa and the daily Heiser three and one degrees.
You think it's worth my time in the woods to go out or should they wait until Monday when the heiser in the thirties.
Speaker 2Absolutely, that is the best time to go out, especially if you have access to agriculture in Iowa.
I assume it's going to be beans or corn for you, even if that field has been harvested already.
The deer got to eat every day.
They're going to be out there.
They're going to pile into agriculture in your neighborhood.
If you have it, be out there, PMJ.
I would be very excited about those temperatures rather than pessimistic.
Speaker 3Yeah, and I wouldn't I wouldn't be shy about sitting all day if you can, if you can handle.
Speaker 7It, Yes, when it's very cold at the North Pole, my friends are on their feet all day.
If I were trying to shoot them, that's when I'd go out.
Speaker 2Very good.
And what cartridge would you take if you were trying to shoot them?
Speaker 7Oh?
Speaker 1What census gun safe look like?
Speaker 7I'm a traditionalist.
As you know, I'm atritionalist.
Frequently.
If I were to calm I herd, it would most likely be with a thirty thirty.
Speaker 2Okay, that is a tradition.
Speaker 7Wow, there's a lot of guts in reindeer, so you know they're they're bigger animals.
But you really don't need to shoot them with a big magnum or anything.
Just get a nice expanding bullet and put it in the front half.
Speaker 2There you go.
All right, we will do some more listening questions at the end of the show.
Speaker 5Please, I'll try to pay more attention to this name for Santa.
Speaker 7All right.
Speaker 2Joining us on the line now is Kurt Steiner, the man who holds the world record for skipping a rock eighty eight times.
Kurt, Welcome to the show.
Speaker 6Good to be here.
Speaker 2First, first thing, Kurt, thank you.
Take us back to that day in twenty thirteen when you set the world record.
Where were you at and what was it about that particular throw that made it the greatest throw of all time?
Speaker 6Yeah?
Well, can I give you a brief bit of context here?
Speaker 2Yes?
Speaker 7Please?
Speaker 9I had actually I set the record originally in two thousand and two, where I kind of introduced some new power kind of attack methods to stone skipping, and that held for five years, and a guy, a buddy of mine since passed, but he took the record in two thousand and seven.
Speaker 6So then it was on.
Speaker 9You know, we've been fighting each other for ten years, kind of developing this whole sport really, and twenty thirteen came and I've been saving stones probably for ten years, wait for the day.
Yeah, yeah, because you know, mother nature never seems fit to like make exactly the right stone, so you put it aside, you save it for tournament or in this case, a record attempt, And so I had about five hundred stones set aside, which was it was enough for two attempts.
The first one I kind of blew early in twenty thirteen in July because I didn't get a good camera angle on it.
Speaker 6So September rolls around.
Speaker 9Long story short, I was ready for a second attempt, and so I had my wife put her up on a bridge and so you could look down on the stones and you could count the ripples much better, and it was it was.
Speaker 6It was a bit of a magical day.
I won't lie.
Speaker 9I kind of had things lined up for me I had a bit of a tailwind, which helps, but I also had a little bit of a low onshore kind of ripple coming at me.
So it was a good combination for various technical reasons.
And I just threw the hell out of that stone.
Speaker 6And you know, I went through.
I probably threw one hundred that day, and I narrowed it down to looking at a frame by frame, finally sent it out and I, you know, I had a group of counts between eighty eight and ninety, so I just took the lowest one, figuring that's kind of like everybody agrees on that.
And it's held up very good.
Speaker 2Wow, eighty eight skip throw.
It's still the record to this day.
Now, you've been competing in stone skipping competitions around the world for twenty five years.
Explain to us how these competitions are set up and how they differ in the US versus Europe.
Speaker 6Right, Well, the US, yeah, oh oh okay, yeah, yeah, I thought you lost me.
Speaker 9In the US, we basically count skips and that's what stone skipping is.
In Europe, they actually count distance.
They measure the distance you throw and to distinguish what they call it skimming.
So I've been in both tournaments.
I went to UK in twenty eighteen and and I threw three hundred and seventy three feet and it and that, and that was at that time the longest recorded throw of a natural stone.
But then the next day, twenty four hours later, Scottish guy came down and Dougie Isaac's and threw four hundred feet.
So so I'm still he still got the record at four hundred there, but I'm I still got the skip count, and I'm and I'm and I'm well placed in the in the skimming category.
The other thing is the Japanese happened to also be a bit of a hotspot, so it's kind of New England, US, the British and then and then Japan and the Japanese kind of combine everything and they just they have two guys throw and decide they just judge who threw the better rock on that throw, and they just kind of go through that and a kind of round robin and a best of three format, and eventually you know, they spit it out a good winner.
It's kind of a combination of the esthetic appearance of it, distance, skip down, all of it together, so they're all different flavors, and we've all kind of cross pollinated each other over the decades here, and and I kind of take you know, I would take a little bit of pride in being kind of pushing all that, sacrificing a lot of my life to.
Speaker 6Do, you know, playing playing you know that's great now, even making the thing.
Speaker 2You know, you usually bring your own stones to competitions.
Where do you gather your rocks from?
Speaker 9Yeah, I get about ninety percent of my stones from the southeast coast of Lake Erie.
I grew up in Erie, you know, which is between Cleveland and Buffalo there and the geology and the water, you know, the waves of Lake Erie kind of combined and make a really good skipping rock.
Speaker 6That's where I grew up right there.
Speaker 9Now, of course I'm living up on a mountain off grid here in Apalachia, PA.
And so I have to drive three hours to get my rocks.
I got all the water in the world, but the stones are ship you know.
But uh, I'm going up to see my mom, get some rocks, come back and have some fun.
Uh Yeah, And and uh, the the Scottish have a place up in North Scotland with some really great slate, And there's a place up in North Vermont with some really really beautiful rocks, but I put.
Speaker 6The ones I go to very accessible, and they're kind of like number four on my World Best list, you know.
Speaker 2So I got Lucky described for us the perfect rock.
Speaker 9Uh, it kind of depends like that's like saying, what's the perfect tool?
You know, it's it's you got to know what is it?
What is it you're trying to do?
And then and then you look for those features in the stone and and it takes many years of kind of being able to imagine.
Imagine if you were a you know, I don't know, a pitcher or a bowler or a hockey player or something, and every time you went to take a whack at the thing or throw the thing, it was a different size of different shape, different weight, out of balance.
Speaker 6You know.
Speaker 9So so the skill is in learning how to look through all the junk and find the one that's gonna do what you want.
And and so with that preface there, what I would say is, in general, you're gonna want something that's got a very flat bottom.
You're gonna want something that's kind of got a very smooth texture.
Those are kind of the obvious ones.
Something to look for is between the bottom side and the edge, that kind of transition edge right here.
What I would say is that the flatter the water, the sharper that edge can be.
And so you there's a lot of experimentation, a lot of trying this, seeing what happens, and then and then adapting your next throw to that.
And what I would say though, is, you know, I generally throw four to six ounces.
Uh you know, we're throwing probably around seventy miles an hour and maybe twenty five maybe twenty five hundred or three thousand rpm.
Speaker 6Right so.
Speaker 9A distance thrower will back off the spin a little bit and go for more velocity.
Speaker 6You know, I spent like five years, you know, figuring out like that kind of whip rate there.
Speaker 9If you can see that where I'm pulling down to the ground and then driving back up against my my my body and then letting my hands snap out, and that really generates some good spin and that and that spin and turn with all the well kind of chop the water kind of like a like maybe a hydroplane boat propeller kind of you know, chopping at it, and that adds up so uh so basically flat bottom kind of a maybe a radius of curvature on that bottom edge of maybe maybe an eighth of an inch.
Uh, you know, something about the size of your palm, maybe four to five ounces.
Speaker 6Uh and and uh smooth.
Speaker 7You know.
Speaker 6The main thing is that bottom edge.
Speaker 9You just can't have any jaggedness in it or it will bite the water, just like like trying to run a radio saw backwards.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 9It's you need you need all the sharpness on your the bottom edge of that stone to be kind of feathering the water rather than biting into it.
Speaker 6If you can understand what I'm saying.
Speaker 3Sure, Yeah, Kurt, you mentioned when you the day that you threw the record there, you had some ripples in the water.
Speaker 2Do you prefer that over flat calm or what do you prefer there?
Speaker 6Yeah?
Speaker 9Yeah, I mean I think of think of driving over rumblestret right you're tired, gets some kind of a harmonic there and uh and so you're you're kind of it's the same kind of deal where if you're running over the tops of just very regular ripples, it kind of creates a like a stone's running over rumblestick strip.
And uh, the way I I mean I had some lucky waves coming out.
I say a wave, I mean I'm talking like that much of a wave.
That regular like one foot intervals was just enough.
But I also did kind of a trick where I threw like a real deep stone out and then if you wait just the right amount of time ripples right, they kind of leave a nice Uh.
Speaker 6Wow, that was a bit of a veteran trick there.
Speaker 9Yeah, yeah, and uh so, uh yeah, Because if the water's too flat, what will happen is that the stone will eventually bog down, just like like a baby.
You throw a baseball and all bounce, bounce, bounce like a grounder.
But then it'll kind of roll on the ground.
This is just like having a bumpy ground.
So it kind of keeps kicking up, you know, and it keeps kicking it up, and so you can get more count out of it.
But power, there's usually enough power in your throat you get a lot of skips, but once it bogs and sticks to the water, like guinness, basically will only count.
The basic rule for counting in a world record is you have to have a distinct evidence of the water stone contacting the water, and then in whatever next frame at some point you have to show clear water between each contact point.
So if you have a stone that hits the slides ten feet, even though it might look like ten or twenty skips in there and it comes out as like one, right, you have one water intext And so the great thing about that throw I didn't thirteen with.
It had very distinct, separate skips.
And you know, and I won't lie, it's it's been kind of hard on the old body here.
I'm starting to age out.
Speaker 6I won't lie.
I got some veteran tricks, but you know, I've had i'd be like a rotator cuff surgery.
Speaker 2And in.
Speaker 6Twenty eighteen when I threw that three seventy three, I.
Speaker 9Ripped an oblique muscle and I blew up like a football and that was That was a nasty one.
Speaker 6On that one.
Speaker 9But now now I need knee injections, you know, from coming down hard, because if you imagine, it's like a baseball player maybe starting real high, like maybe seven feet up, but we're letting the stones leave our hand, like maybe only a foot off the ground, but we're really coming down into that shot, and it just you know, it just it's it's it's it's it's you know, I took this fun little thing and turned it into like this.
You know, it's great, brutal, brutal like sports science kind of thing, and oh it's great.
You know it's great.
Now it's uh, Kurt.
Speaker 2We want to we want to be better at skipping rocks ourselves.
So please walk us through the perfect form.
What should our feet, our arms, our hands be doing to make the best throw?
Speaker 6Difficult question to answer.
But what I can do is give you some pointers.
Speaker 9Right, I'm not going to tell you here's how you throw a stone at thirty Yeah, you know, but but as a rule of thumb, you.
Speaker 6Know you want to stand more.
Speaker 9You don't want to You want to kind of stand maybe forty five degrees almost perpendicular to the water, right with your your your fallow foot to the water.
Speaker 6But the main thing is you're gonna want to come down at the water.
Right.
There's like, there's five things to think about.
I guess, Okay, the angle of the stone.
Speaker 9Coming at the water, right, if you let go from around your knees and hit the water maybe ten ten twelve feet out, that's a good all round angle, right, So figure leaving the stone leaving between your waist and your knee and hitting you know, maybe ten feet out, and then there's the tilt of the stone right the front edge of the rock.
You want something that's maybe ten degrees ten to twenty degrees coming out of your hand.
And the rule there is if the stone bounces up too high after that, after that first skip, then lower the edge down right.
So most people will throw with too much of an angle, it will bounce high, and the pros tend to throw with a real shallow angle, so it comes down and then takes off horors only.
So if it bounces up lower that tilt come in, you know, maybe like that.
And then other things is the spin.
The spin is just gonna come out naturally, but you are gonna want to hold the stone at What I would say is if you look around the perimeter, it's gonna have different like radii like it's it's got different lengths depending on the irregularity of the rock.
Speaker 6You want to grab.
Grab the longest point on the rock, like put it right in the middle of your pad of your finger.
Speaker 9Or your middle finger, which which I have developed also for different throws, but but right in the middle of that tip of the pad on the point down at that angle.
And then if you want a little throw tip or secret when you when your rocks leaving your hand right this direction, I usually throw it just a little bit of right hand roll in it right like the stone is spinning clockwise for a right handed person, and I'm leaning that right edge, the outside edge, if you will, of the stone towards the water a little because as the stone flies through the air, if you notice, it'll roll over, uh counterclockwise.
So just kind of loading that stone a tad with just maybe two degrees of of roll pre roll, pre loading the stone.
By the time it hits the water, it'll come down a little bit flatter, and it makes it a little more stable and sticks a little better.
Speaker 1You know.
Speaker 6It's it's it's subtle stuff.
Speaker 2A lot of physics.
It sounds like it is it is, and and it does come.
Speaker 9Down a lot to the difference between a natural and an artificial rock.
I'm kind of a purest.
Natural rocks are much harder to uh master, so there's a little bit more prestige, I think, yeah, and throwing what.
Speaker 6I won't lie.
I mean, we have especially in Europe where they're they're just looking for distance numbers, right they they they'll go, they'll make artificial rocks and they'll blast the guy just last month threw a stone over five hundred feet, as I understand it, using an artificial stone.
So that's that's all well and good.
Speaker 9But uh, you know, Isaac's when he beat me, he threw he threw four hundred with a natural rock, and I consider that actually even more impressive because he went out and dug it out of the ground.
Speaker 5You know.
Speaker 2Good, Yeah, all right, Well, good luck to your next competition.
Kurt.
Congrats on that eighty eight skip world record throw.
Thank you for educating us, and thank you for joining us.
Speaker 6Yeah, hey, thanks for the opportunity.
Dudes cost some fun.
Speaker 7Thank you, Kurt.
I think that's the best interview I've ever done.
It's not often we have an interview where I just sit there and watch and I'm fully entranced by our guest.
But that was that was something special.
Speaker 5Means a lot that you're saying, we Santa like you just kind of feel like you're a part of the crew.
Speaker 2That's a good phil Do you you boys fashion yourself good rock skippers?
Speaker 7No?
Speaker 1I you know, I grew up.
It sounds like not too far from from where.
Speaker 2He's in the blood.
Speaker 3Yeah, and uh, you know, I never really hit the banks of Lake Erie to find a good skipping wrong, but I've skipped some rocks in my day.
Speaker 7You've missed out on your calling.
I guess I prefer to find the biggest rock I can get one skip out of.
Speaker 2That's that's awesome, that's my approach.
See how badly you can hurt your arm.
Speaker 7That was fascinating.
Speaker 1That was That was good?
All right.
Speaker 2Our next segment is gear talk.
Speaker 7Turn it up, Phil.
Speaker 2Feet because he doesn't have a choice.
Speaker 5Gear again?
Speaker 2Who the problem?
Speaker 5The problem with that one is that Giannis isn't here today.
Speaker 2That's brilliant and he rewrote that jingle.
You must have been feeling inspired.
Speaker 5I give us a new version the true story Spencers.
I forgot that I had a jingle for that.
Oh talk jingles.
Speaker 7Okay, Phil, I don't mean to tell you how to do your job, but.
Speaker 5Put the one up.
Speaker 1I meant to do that one.
Speaker 5Thank you, Santa.
This is you are a part of the crew.
Speaker 2All right, Yes, Sanka, please start us off with some gear talk today.
What do you got?
Speaker 7Well, hold on one second.
Speaker 2Okay, he's uh, he's not fully prepared.
Now he's grabbed something from the shelf.
I brought two items today, all right.
The first is this hat.
Beautiful hat.
Speaker 7Now folks out there might say, oh, he's plugging first light again in first lighting, He's not.
This is the best hat I've ever worn outside.
It combines an almost full sized brim that you'd find on a baseball cap with a very warm wool, much like the wool in our heavy, heavyweight sweaters and things of that nature whose names I'm not remembering, but I often wear two hats.
When I have two hats when I go outside.
I'll have a lightweight hat in late season that I can hike in and get sweaty, and then I like to have a heavy hat that I can put on when I'm gonna get cold.
The problem is I don't want to carry a third hat, so if I need a brim, it often requires me to either bring a baseball cap or bring a third hat, which I don't want to do.
So this is my first piece of gear.
Speaker 2Very good.
Speaker 1Where's this hat fit in your kit?
Speaker 5Oh?
Speaker 7This isn't performance kit.
This is just a uniform ceremonial.
Really, the second is this Asiac tripod head.
Speaker 2Now I'm in the market for a new tripod, so I'm going to need you to sell me on this one.
Speaker 7I'd like to focus just on the head.
I have never never liked lightweight tripods very much.
Speaker 2To me.
Speaker 7They don't serve the purpose of a tripod, which is stabilizing your gear, your glass, what have you.
And I find a panhead to be the most useful type of head for glassing large areas because you can work your way methodically across the landscape as opposed to a ball head where you simply loosen it and tilted around, especially when using a heavy pair of binoculars like osi IS eighteen with a fifty six milimeter objective or a spotting scope, and so this head.
Typically you need a heavier pan head.
But this head, which I just got this year, is extremely white, lightweight, it's extremely compact, and it allows a much lighter tripod to function as with the same performance as a heavier tripod.
So I'm now a light tripod man, okay.
And it's all due to the quality of this head.
It has very fine adjustments, so you can have it so you can use your nose to knock your binoculars around if you've got your hands in your podusts.
It also locks up tight if you're in a windy environment and trying to glass something far away.
And I just can't say enough about this pan head.
It's just fabulous, very good gear talk review.
Speaker 2This year, on my South Dakota deer hunt, I had pulled up to an approach for the property I was hunting.
I'd gotten out, I was glassing some deer off of my spotter that I could see about a half mile away.
Messed around for a while, got in out of the truck, looking at on X, looking through the spotter.
Probably sat there for like a half hour, went to leave, pull away, and crunch.
I run over my tripod with the spotting scope on.
It did not damage the spotting scope, luckily, but I crushed my tripod that I've had for like a decade and it was a crampy tripod.
So now like conveniently, I just get to get a new tripod.
Speaker 7That's fantastic.
Highly recommend this.
Okay, Okay, I ran over last year, did the same thing back in my truck in the dark, lean my tripod and binos against the truck while I fumbled for my keys, got in the old truck and drove home and thought, damn, where is those binos?
Went back the next day.
I didn't run them over.
Someone else did, but they were just toast.
Speaker 2How do you know you didn't run them over?
Speaker 7Well, you could see the trucks, okay.
And I wouldn't be happy with myself if I were responsible, So I blame it on whoever pilled in there.
Speaker 2For me there.
Yeah, you gave it a quick death.
There was no suffering, all right, seth?
What do you got for gear?
Talk?
Speaker 3What I got is very inexpensive.
In fact, it's free and it's very effective.
It's not the bino harness, which this is a great bin of harness, a bitchf gear.
But it's what I keep in the side over here.
And this is you know, this has become I would say, more and more popular over the years.
But instead of having one of them, like you know the little puffer bottles for my wndicator, this is milk weed.
Speaker 2Love it.
Speaker 1Oh, this is just natural material.
Speaker 2Send some of that into the act milkweed for us.
Speaker 1Look how I don't know if you can see this?
Look how it just floats?
Speaker 2Uh huh it's wonderful love milk weed.
Speaker 1It just floats.
Speaker 2You can watch that stuff float away for one hundred yards.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, especially if you're in a tree stand where you're elevated.
You drop a piece of that, you can see exactly where your sense going.
And like you said, I've sat there with my binoculars and watched it go one hundred plus yards out from where I was sitting.
Speaker 1You can, you can see exactly where your sen's blowing.
Speaker 2You just keep some in the side pouch.
You're buying a harness, Yep.
Speaker 3Yep, keep it right there, and it's just always ready to go when I need it.
And it's very cheap because it's natural, and I get it right off the landscape.
Speaker 2And I know Seth did this.
I'm just reminding others.
But leave the seeds where you find them.
Just take the white stuff.
What does it even call it?
Zabname?
Just like that whatever that hair?
Yeah, probably like substances.
Speaker 1Probably it's Yeah.
Speaker 2That way, you're not spread and milkweed all over the continent.
The best wendicater nature could give you good stuff?
All right.
For gear talk today, I am revisiting the gas can dilemma.
Last month I had declared that I haven't used a good gas can in a decade, and all the best gas cans in my life came from my dad.
That are, you know, as old as I am.
So I asked folks to write in with gas cans that they really liked.
I got one hundred and sixty one emails from listeners recommending gas cans, and there were four brands that were recommended, far more than the others.
Those four brands made up sixty four percent of the emails I got.
So here they are starting at number four.
That is the no spill gas can.
I had fourteen folks right in about this one.
A five gallon no spill can is thirty nine dollars at Walmart.
They claim to have one of the fastest cans on the market.
They say it drains three gallons a minute, has a thumb controlled fuel spout and view stripe.
J Hatrup he said, if you're filling something that's filled from the top, like a lawnmower or snowblower, there is nothing better than a no spill can.
These are dead simple for top filling, but are basically worthless for filling a vehicle.
So that is the no spill can.
That is fourth place.
Fourteen people that'd four of these four of these.
Number three is the sure Can.
Nineteen folks wrote in about this one five gallons Surecan is eighty dollars at ACE.
That is the most expensive one from our list.
It's got a spout at the bottom, thumb control on the top.
They say this design gives you the best control when filling large machines.
Ethan Lindquist specifically said, I highly recommend sure Can gas cans.
I have six, and if never spilled.
Best of all, you can fill most things while standing up instead of bending over.
So that is the sure Can at number three, number two, number two, we have the Tough Jug.
Twenty one folks wrote in recommending this five gallon Tough Jug is forty two dollars from their website.
They use an auto stop technology that instantly shuts off flow when your container is full, and has internal venting that helps prevent leaks.
John Foley he said, there's a reason these are on back order.
They're worth every penny.
No leaks or glugs.
I'm a fire chief and after replacing my personal ones, every gas can at the firehouse for small engines is now a tough jug, so that is number two.
Twenty one folks recommended that number one.
This had a dominating lead in the polling from our listeners.
Forty eight folks wrote in recommending this one.
Everybody seems to love this.
It is the VP Racing gas can.
Five and a half gallon VP Racing can is forty eight dollars at lows.
They have a wide grip and deluxe hose that won't spill.
Now here's the kicker.
These are not sold as gas cans.
They explicitly say on their website that this is only intended for non fuel products.
Instead, they advertise them as quote motorsport containers that can also pour auto fluids, bird seed, deercorn, and water.
But clearly most customers are putting gas in them and by skirting some EPA regulations.
They say the best gas can on the market.
Justin Bowman, he wrote in to say VP Racing gas cans are by far the best on the market.
They'll make you feel like you're pouring gas in two thousand and five, which is about the strongest endorsement somebody could give to a gas can.
Forty eight folks wrote in recommending that about thirty three percent of our audience said, that is an amazing gas can from VP Race.
Speaker 1That's great.
Speaker 5I like how they use terminology to skirt the whole gas can thing.
Speaker 2Yeah, it's not for fuel, very clear, it's not for fuel.
And somebody actually wrote in saying they live in one of the states where you can't pump your own gas, which I think New Jersey is Oregon used to be.
They said they've pulled up to a gas pump with one of these VP Racing and the attendant will not fill it, so you might run into that.
Speaker 5You may only use this bong for tobacco exactly.
Speaker 2Yes, very similar thing.
VP Racing forty eight dollars can.
Everyone seems to love them.
That is probably the can I'm going to get.
And there is your gas can round up from Meat Eater listeners.
Speaker 7That's great, that's great, fantastic.
Speaker 2All right, that brings us to the end of the show.
Speaker 1Phil.
Speaker 2Let's get some final feedback from the chat.
Speaker 5Oh, let's do it get these in folks.
You have a trapping question.
I thought, since Seth was here, we tackled it's specifically northern Minnesota trappings.
Hear Seth Crack at Washington asks what terrain slash features or terrain features would you look out for during his first Northeast Minnesota bobcat slash fisher trapping season, and it's got a two twenty cubby set by the way, Uh have any insights, that's a.
Speaker 1Good start fisher.
Speaker 3So fisher trapping which I've done in Pennsylvania and I actually caught one.
Speaker 1I was trapped.
Speaker 3I was trapping an area that was heavy with uh some porcupines which they like to feed on.
Speaker 2Oh I didn't know that about it.
Speaker 1Yeah, they'll they can.
Speaker 3They can somehow roll them over and get at them without getting stuck from what they say.
But and I, you know, I had some trail cameras in that area and was getting uh getting fishers on my trail cameras, so I knew that they were there.
So but like terrain features, I was just in hard like hardwoods mixed with some white pine that that just had like the right forge for him.
I guess, lots of pork pines, lots of squirrels.
So basically hardwood timber mixed with some conifers.
And then bobcats they like rocky stuff.
So if there's any sort of outcropping or you know, big boulders, they like to work those edges.
Or Steve and I actually just call a bobcat yesterday here in Montana.
Speaker 1Good one.
Yeah, thirty three and a half pounds.
Speaker 7Whoa.
Yeah, that's a big kitty.
Speaker 3That was river bottom, the thick brushy stuff that had plenty of pheasants and birds around.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2Here's some insight from someone who's never trapped a bobcat or tried.
So this doesn't mean anything, but I grew up in southeastern South Dakota, a place that is pretty marginal bobcat habitat.
But when I would come across bobcats, it was in my places that were also the best spots for turkey hunting, whether it was because the turkeys were there or the bobcats and the turkeys just liked the exact same thing.
I imagine northern Minnesota is not crawling with turkeys.
So maybe if you come across pheasants like Seth said, or turkeys, which is something I observed in eastern South Dakota, uh, maybe you're prime for a bobcat there.
Speaker 1Yep, good luck.
Speaker 6Cool.
Speaker 5Stephen Bullet says, please more, no more D and D episodes.
Speaker 1Wow.
Speaker 5Interesting couldn't it Steve.
Speaker 2Steve Barnello didn't even try to come up with a good burner for that.
He just had his own first name in there and everything.
Speaker 5Hayden Fiddy.
When rifle hunting for big game, do you value full penetration or energy expansion of your bullet?
Speaker 2Santa?
Speaker 1What do you think?
Well?
Speaker 7I have a couple answers.
I would go for a bullet that creates a wider wound channel.
And the way I would begin thinking about projectile selection is I would find whatever you're looking for, figure out what the minimum terminal velocity you need to make that bullet expand as fully as it can, and then determine which cartridge is going to launch that bullet at that speed to get to the given range that you'd like.
I think you want big wounds.
Wounds are what kill.
Energy doesn't kill.
Big wounds kill full penetration.
I think there aren't very many bullets that you don't have to worry about penetration.
So that's a rambling answer which sort of skirted around your question.
But I like a bullet that upsets violently, and I'm not too worried about shooting through you know, four feet of wood.
It's just bones and skin and muscle.
Speaker 3In Africa, when Steve was buffalo hunting, the first the first round in the magazine, I guess the first round that would come out of the magazine was a bullet that would expand well, and then the other ones behind that were penetrating rounds.
That way, the first boll went in expanded, created that good wound channel, and then the follow up shots you just keep shooting into interesting.
Speaker 1You don't have it shots anymore, you know.
Speaker 2Do you know how deep you were penetrating those critters?
Speaker 1I had no clue.
Speaker 7It's all depends on the angle.
Speaker 5So that's just that's for buffalo hunting in Africa.
But you know something else, No, I.
Speaker 7Would just say.
I would just say, I don't think that energy is a good measure of a bullet's efficacy.
Okay, it's it's all about what that bullet mechanically does when it hits an animal at a given speed.
Speaker 2Good answer, santive?
What else you got?
Speaker 5Phil Cliff is wondering if if Randall and phill are going to release any footage from the Big Buck Hunter World Championships.
Yes, look out for it early next year.
Speaker 7Q one that sounds like a fun little video.
Speaker 5It'll be a fun little again.
It's going to be like a short thing.
It's not going to be like an episode of Meat Eater or with that production value.
Speaker 1He's going to be.
Speaker 2Exactly I heard.
Speaker 7I heard a rumor in the office that there's some sick footage of.
Speaker 5Real spoil it.
Santa very very good.
Mark asks, what's the worst injury each of you have endured during hunting or fishing?
Speaker 2Hmm I I And this was in twenty eighteen.
I was coming out of a tree stand one night in South Dakota after a bowhunt in late October.
My like third to last step was not a step.
It was a tree branch that I had trimmed down to be like six inches that I had put a lot of faith in over the years, and that night it broke and I fell, and it was a very shortfall, like I landed on my feet, but on the way down I hit a metal tree step that I had also put in and it opened up my side and I drove to the er.
Yeah, they took some scans, UH, stitched me up and I went on my way home.
And I was most devastated because one like I was now going to worry my wife, who I'm always telling like it's gonna be fine.
I'm good, you know, like it's I'm by myself, It's all gonna be whatever.
But then also the rut was coming up and I had a rifle tag I was excited about, and I was like, I'm gonna miss some rud haunts.
About two weeks later, I was back to hunting again, so it was all it was all fine, and I still got that scar seth worst injury.
Speaker 3I don't really have anything good cuts from knives and whatnot, hooks in hands.
Speaker 5Hmm.
Speaker 1I I did something.
Speaker 3I tweaked my knee this year when I was packing out my bowl.
I've kind of been suffering with that ever since.
Speaker 1But I don't know.
I don't know if i'd call that an injury.
Speaker 2Santa O.
Speaker 7Outside of the usual cuts, the first thing that comes to mind is I was driving a jet boat that was it had a poor design, very steep chimes, and occasionally when you're power sliding it, it would grab and Uh, I was coming around this big log We're at up in Alaska, going full tilt, you know, and uh it grabbed and I was thrown forward in the boat and gave myself a concussion.
We're pretty sure I didn't go to a hospital, but I was pretty sick and nauseous for the next day or so and hit my head on the floor of the boat.
YEP, I didn't like that boat.
We eventually, uh, we eventually put some floats on the back to try to alleviate its handling characteristics because again, the geometry of it was all off.
But I never really trusted that boat.
Speaker 2Santa made it here today.
Speaker 7Though, Yes, stung by bees too.
I swell up quite a bit.
Speaker 5Three crank asks or says first, I've gotten two roadkilled deer this year.
If you guys get roadkilled, do you treat it differently when processing?
Santa?
Do you snag roadkill in the sled?
Speaker 7The only roadkill I've ever taken was a bus that my dad hit driving home from work when I was a senior in high school.
I had a broken leg at the time, so my buddy picked me up and we went and the cop shot the deer in the head because it wasn't dead yet, so then we euroed that skull.
But we took the deer to a processor because I wasn't hunting that year.
There's a man named Patterson.
He had a tattoo on his arm of a castle with a dragon flying over sick and then he skinned it up and he said it was too bruised to eat, so he wouldn't accept it.
So that's my roadkill story.
Speaker 2I hit a dell last year driving home from a hunt in South Dakota, and that thing had too much trauma as well to take most of the meat, so I took I had the backstraps that took the tender loins and then like a roast on the backhand.
But otherwise it was just like, you know, pretty well ruined that you wouldn't.
Speaker 1Want to be eating that.
Speaker 2A lot of trauma, a lot of blood seth and he rode kill in your day.
Speaker 3M I don't think I've picked up a road killed deer.
I've picked up some roadkill fur bears and skin them.
Speaker 2That any different than one that was in your tramp?
Speaker 3No, just I mean, you know, try to avoid picking something up that's sure full of trauma.
But no, I don't dream different.
Speaker 2Phil one more.
Speaker 7Okay, first, Phil, I've seen a few suggestions in the chat that I've had.
I've been over served today and I'd just like to address that I haven't had anything to drink yet.
Speaker 2He yet?
Speaker 7Yeah, yeah, I'm just full of the Christmas spirit.
Speaker 5Yeah, yeah, it's intoxicating.
Santa.
What was the mascot at your high school?
Speaker 7The Warriors?
Speaker 2Oh?
Speaker 5That's I thought you'd be a little bit more, you know.
Theme.
Speaker 2Was it portrayed as like a Native American or well?
Speaker 7Yes, but they changed it.
They changed it in recent years to fit more of a spartan theme, with a with a gladiator type helmet with a nose shield and a sore, and people were very upset about it.
Speaker 2Sure, yes, yes, that's a good one.
Speaker 7Marry much Warriors.
Speaker 5Okay, last one this is from mister Hunterman sixty nine.
Santa is Brody on the Naughty List because he wins more in trivia than Randall?
Or is Spencer on the Naughty List for asking all those fishing questions for number ten?
Speaker 2Good question.
Speaker 7It's all about the questions for me.
It's like playing golf.
You're really playing against yourself, trying to pick up a stroke here and there on your opponent.
But if the course is shitty, there's not much you can do.
Speaker 2That's right, Santa, thank you for joining us.
Speaker 7It's so much fun to be on radio live.
Speaker 1Mary Warman here too.
Speaker 7I mean, yes, yes, itches tremendously.
Yeah, No, I need to get this off.
Speaker 1You're about to be real busy here.
Speaker 7Oh yes, yes, it's coming up quickly, and there's all sorts of boys and girls all over the world who know their gifts.
So I better better sign off and get back to the workshop.
The elves are busy.
Speaker 2Speaking of the holidays.
We have some pre recorded episodes for radio coming up.
Send us your questions to radio at the meadeater dot com so we can interject those where the live chat normally participates a Radio at the meadeater dot com send your questions our way very soon.
One last thing seth about that apple butter.
I was driving by a ranchers place.
I had picked some apples that day while I was hunting on the mountain, and then they had some beautiful apple trees in their driveway.
I swung in and asked for permission to pick their apples, and they let me.
So that's the first time I've ever gotten apple hunting permission.
And now I turned into that apple's right, all right?
See you back here next week, same time and place.
By now
