5 Burst results for "Gary Newcomb"

Bear Grease
"gary newcomb" Discussed on Bear Grease
"That's a good Good question Clearing out hogs Chasing a trophy Whitetail Or you finally Drew that bull Elk tag Protecting your Hearing while hunting Is important Silencer Shop Powers over 5000 local Gun shops Nationwide Let us Help you Ditch the bulky Hearing protection And improve your and a more enjoyable hunting experience without tedious paperwork. The Silencer Shop Kiosk does the work for you. Getting a suppressor has never been easier. Visit silencershop .com where a portion of your online order goes directly to your local gun shop. We make silencer ownership simplified. Pavement can take you to some great fishing holes and hunting spots, but to find the real gems, you need to leave the road behind. And the hunt is over With Chevy Silverado factory -lifted trucks, ZR2, Trail Boss, and Custom Trail Boss, you can command attention on and off the road. The Silverado ZR2 takes you off the pavement and into the backcountry with next -level off -road capability. It comes with multi -matic dynamic suspension spool valve dampers for more suspension travel. Its front and rear electronic locking differentials, Gary Newcomb approved, ensure that max power goes to all the wheels, limiting wheel slip. Aggressive off -road cut front bumper, also Gary Newcomb approved, and large underbody skid plates make off -roading a breeze.

Bear Grease
"gary newcomb" Discussed on Bear Grease
"Was in between jobs, and in between baths. He didn't need no money to ride with us, but since it wasn't raining, and he smelled like a goat. He was assigned to sit in coach, which was the bed of the truck. He had an extra big straw hat on that was covering him well in the heat of the day when we picked him up. My dad told him hop in the back and with the grace of a Boston ballerina that rascal hopped up in there and sat down on the edge of the bed. My dad hollered at him to sit down inside, but he stayed perched up on the edge like a crow on a light line. One hand holding the edge and the other holding The Crown that big old hat. Now my dad told him to sit down again, and as we pulled out on the highway for safety, but he didn't budge. It was then I could see my father took this as a direct challenge to his authority as being the captain of this flat. He looked at me and said, he's going to sit down or I'm going to blow that hat, plum off his head in a way we win. At 65 miles an hour, the brim will not hat start to rise right to where you can notice it a little bit. But that man never flinched. At 75, it was flopping up and down like a jackhammer and he was mashing it down so hard with his off hand that you couldn't see his eyes. Ten minutes of 85 mph in the brink of that hat was hanging around his neck like a bouquet of flowers for winning The Kentucky Derby and The Crown of that hat looked like one of my grandma's shower caps. We had to slow down to almost a complete stop to let someone turn off the highway and I guess that feller had had enough and decided to be playing before we reached the terminal gate. He bailed out there like it was on fire in the last time I seen him, he was lighting a shook across the ditch into the Woods and cuts him up a storm. We felt bad about his hat. But had he had sense enough not to be walking and depending on the other folks for his transportation or if he had just sat down like my dad told him to. He'd still be sporting that cover. So where are we gonna find you a rear again? Word of mouth and somebody's yard. Unless you know the used car salesman at steer clear and hunt for the deal where you someone is settled themselves. You'll see advertised as just in time for hunting season or. Perfect for the farm. You know what you're getting there, and a seat warmer probably ain't gonna be on the list extras. Probably ain't gonna be a lot of wiggle room on the price either. But there will be some. And you need to haggle a bit. Remember what Gary Newcomb said about the measure of a man and buying to use vehicle. Haggling over price Mac min feel like men and both of you come away a winner. Remember, we ain't buying a show truck. We're not looking for this unit to do anything outside of getting us to the country and back without breaking a sweat or swinging their arms. So a little dead here and there ain't gonna bother us. It adds character, like a broken pair of leather boots, or scars that remind you of a past adventure. Heck, if we had a dinner till along the way, you first thought might have nothing to do with getting it fixed. It could be thanks for the check insurance man. Ain't nobody gonna notice that little dent goes, they're gonna be too busy looking at my new trolling motor when I cruise past them headed to the river. Well, that oughta get you squared away and pointed in the right direction if or when you

Bear Grease
"gary newcomb" Discussed on Bear Grease
"Box in the bed of my truck waiting for a hound to come back, or to just have a jump start on a spot where I thought a turkey might be gobbling in the next morning. Now Harry had removed a whole rear seat from his little rambler, customize his Rick to fit his mission profile. Here it'd be consistent. It is spring. April, turkey hunting time. And I will be doing a bunch of turkey hunting in my can am defender, which I just love running around with. You know what you take kids somewhere normally in a truck and they complain all the time? I'm like, yeah, get this problem. I'm car sick. All you all the noises they make. And I love my kids, but they still make those kind of noises, drive around all the time. I put them in my can am? They got smiles on their faces. They love cruising around. And we'll be doing a lot of turkey hunting this season. We do turkey hunt out of the can am, gets everybody around, gets you where you need to go against the trailheads. Makes it fun. Crank the windows down in the daytime and you can kind of look around and see real good. You can get climate controlled ones. I got a heater in mind for cold mornings, which makes all your passengers comfortable. You can get around way better. You don't beat up your normal vehicle. Smoother rides on bumpy roads and you're going fast. And I think my can hands even looking forward to spring because it has been plowing snow all winter. To check out their full lineup and find the can am that's right for your next hunt talking to you, turkey hunters. Visit can am off road dot com. Slash hunting. And you will find as well. Some awesome accessories. We're talking everything from gun racks in the back to winches in the front. Can am off road dot com slash hunting. For over 70 years, Hercules tires has been empowering more drivers to blaze a better trail forward. Whether it's the trail away or the highway, the camp side of the work site. Customers count on Hercules to deliver the performance they demand, the choices they desire, and the affordability they deserve. And the company has always stood proudly behind their tires by their comprehensive warranty called the Hercules performance promise plan, which has long been ensuring drivers that they have the peace of mind to match their performance. The promised plan provides a road hazard protection program, a trust our ride 45 day trial, and a mileage warranty on most tires in their broad product offering. And now they're putting a little bread behind the tread too, offering customers a Hercules tires, prepaid Mastercard for up to $70 on qualifying purchases from April 1st through May 15th. You can head on over to Hercules tires dot com slash meat eater to learn more and find what moves you. There's a bond among anglers. I know this guy grew up comfortable long line of fishermen and I grew up around fishermen and there's a kinship there. It's as old as the water themselves based around life on and love of the water and all that stuff that lives in it. Now, trusted for protecting you on the water, Columbia PFG is sounding the alarm for the water itself. Columbia PFG has partnered with captains for clean water. A nonprofit organization focused on conserving Florida's Everglades and fisheries for future generations to enjoy. Started by a couple of fishing guides that had had enough of poor water management practices, the captains now unite anglers guides, residents, and businesses from across political and geographic lines to join the fight for clean water. From red tides, the hurricanes, captains for clean water rallied support around protecting critical waterways and their efforts have contributed to historic funding and action for Everglades restoration. As a member of the angling community, Columbia PFG believes in protecting our waters and keeping them pristine for generations to come. We love it out on the water and you always protect what you love. Columbia PFG proud to protect you and your passion, learn more at Columbia dot com slash P F G. On the other hand, Michael roseman, the owner of sunspot, hunting lights, the man who had the vision and wherewithal to say, hey, why don't we put the light and the battery on the coon hunting helmet? That electrical wizard of sunshine and literal light. My friend, my coon hunting buddy, his first hunting rig, it was an 80 model two door old mobile cutlass. It's been said that poor folks have poor ways and oh my God, like a lot of comes from humble beginnings, but through hard work and perseverance he's risen to the top of his game in a coon hunt world and become a successful businessman, and that his first hunting rig might have been what lit the fuse on his methodical rise to glory. Michael told me about him and his best friend, Timmy, bar on that cutlass from Timmy's aunt, and how they'd load the dogs up in the trunk and leave to go hunt. He said the rear deck speakers had long been removed from that car, and the hounds would take turns poking their heads up through the holes to see where they were going. I'm sure that was the side, they won that makes me laugh every time I hear Michael tell that story. It's a feel good story to me. Two young boys find a way to do what they love to do, and one of them loved it so much. He now makes a living inside the coon hunting world. It don't get much better than that. God bless America. There's two examples of a country boys having rigs that suited their needs even when it first glance you wouldn't think so. Because if I ask you to pitch your hog hunting or a coon hunt ride, I'm gonna go out and limb and say that neither one of those conjured up a modified rambler or a cutlass. Airy and Michael. They beat the system. Gary nukem. You know Gary Newcomb, daddy to clay, patriarch of the Newcomb covey, seer of panthers and other mythical creatures? Well, Gary says the measure of a man is directly tied to his ability to buy a used vehicle. At the end to agree. It says imported a skill as knowing where north is and being able to be able to fire. If you can do those three things you can drive, survive and navigate to better places and friendlier people. Be bad at buying a car and you could end up walking everywhere you go. Move in at the speed of flip and flop will get you nowhere fast and having you dependent on others for transportation, and since I don't recall ever seeing the city bus rolling down the country road picking folks up and toting them places, you best acquire that skill stat. I recall my dad and I driving through Kingston Arkansas, birthplace of Johnny Cash on our way to rise and where my dad's office was. And we picked up such a fellow once. This man was unknown to us, but back then it wasn't uncommon to give folks a ride you didn't know. It wasn't a whole lot of mean that's going on in. My pat wasn't there out of reach of a pistol of some sort should someone take a notion to try to rob us. Anyway, this feller was what we'd call in, and in between her. He was in between where he started, and where he wanted to go. He

Bear Grease
"gary newcomb" Discussed on Bear Grease
"Great job, guys. Welcome to the live bear grease render podcast. Thank you guys so much for coming. It means a lot to me and misty and I know all the burgers people for everybody to come out. I know a lot of people travel the long ways to get here all the way across the country. Have we done the whole who traveled to furthest thing yet? Is that happening? We did a little bit of that earlier this morning. So we got tickets from North Dakota, South Carolina. South Carolina. Texas. Down in the tip of Florida out west, Montana. Yeah. Young lady from Minnesota. Minnesota is here. Yeah, so it means a lot to me that everybody would drive that far to come to a black bear event in Arkansas. So that's awesome. And I don't do this kind of stuff very often. I feel like I feel like my community has supported us. You guys and why do people not from Arkansas, but really northwest Arkansas has been really good to me and so I wanted to do an event where we just came together and had a good time. And so I'm thrilled that everybody's here. And everybody knows who's here. This is Brent Reeves. Grants from down in the swamps. Does not like being called a hillbilly. No. I mean, he's like, well, I'm not the hillbilly. I literally live in flat ground. So, and on the next bear grease podcast, you're going to learn why he doesn't want to be called the hillbilly. Like the deep, the deep anthropological science of wa being from the flatlands delta of Arkansas. He is opposed to being called at the Sue learned something about yourself. I'm fitting to teach you some. The superficial reason is because if a cat had kittens in the oven, you wouldn't call them biscuits. One time I called Brandon hill bill and he said, don't call me a hillbilly. We had hillbillies mowing our grass. This is my wife, misty Newcomb. Man, I think it's pretty cool that I can have my wife with me on my podcast. Misty, do you know anybody else that puts their wife on their podcast? I use this to my advantage. Asking to be on the podcast. Yeah, she didn't want to be. No, it's so great to have misty. And then everybody has met Myron means he's been up here earlier. Myron and I have been really, we've known each other for a lot of years now. And I mean, when you first got the job as the bear coordinator, which you were, the bear coordinator of the state, correct? Yes. That changed, but I think I talked to you within a month of you having that job. About 15 years. Yeah, probably so. Too long. Too long. Yeah. But no, it's great to have Myron here for real. James Brandenburg. James, he's a big wig here in Arkansas for Arkansas BHA. James and his team are responsible for this and I don't really have anything to do with this other than just show up and so James is one doing all the work in his team. Thank you so much. Thank you. It's the guys. Everybody else is doing all the work. And Josh land bridge feels like what's he doing up there? Yeah. Josh is Josh has been one of my best friends for a long, long time. And his three years. His mustache inspired me in 2006 to learn about the Bering land bridge. So that's a different story. But now you're welcome America. Yeah, yeah. We have, I think we live in an incredible. We live in an incredible state. Did you guys hear the podcast that just came out about the bear state? And the Arkansas, the big bear of Arkansas, that story, man, what's so wild about this place that we live, not this place being Arkansas, but this world that we live in is that humans are only here for just like a really short period of time. So we typically gather information that seems pertinent to our to our best interests in the moment and we can lose the bigger picture of why stuff is the way that it is. And there's life is so complex. Stories are so complex. And I love it when you can almost any single thing that you wanted the mind down into, like, why is Arkansas why were we called the bear state? Why did we move away from that? Then there's like deep stories inside of it. Deep, deep stories. interesting because we now get to script who we are, what our identity is, and when we look back at history and see how things happened, it's like you can, you can begin to say, okay, we are active partakers and something that's happening right now. That we get to build on purpose. And I don't know why, and I think everybody up here would agree, admiring for sure someone who's dedicated a big part of his life to bears from the first time that I killed a bear and Arkansas in 2001 is the first year that it was legal debate in Arkansas. And I've said it before. I think I said it last year. I claim to have killed the first legal bear in the state of Arkansas over bait. Because October 1st, 2001, at the crack of dawn. Me and Gary Newcomb were, where's dad at? Is he over there? Where's dad? He's somewhere. Me and my dad were hunting and killed a bear. I mean, I'm serious. It was hardly daylight. And killed a bear, hardly daylight. It was legal. It was right after.

Bear Grease
"gary newcomb" Discussed on Bear Grease
"The world for that. You and ronnell are really, that's funny. My hats off to both of you guys on this deal. I think rinella really hit it hard. To the heart. Steve so sharp, man. You know, he's never read that before, had no knowledge of Thomas bang Thorpe. I gave him that essay. Well, I sent it to him. He printed it off. We were hunting together in Mexico. Here's the backstory. We're hunting together in Mexico. I knew I was going to be with him and have my podcast staff, and I said, I want to hear what you have to say about this essay. All I told him. I told him it was the influential and gave it to him. He prints it off, takes it to Mexico. And we're like, okay, we gotta do this. This afternoon, and he's like, okay, well, let me read that essay. And so he reads it. And then we go right into it, and he has some pretty in depth analysis. Analysis of it, you know? So yeah. He's sharp with literature stuff. Yeah, he was cool to have on there. I was disappointed only one aspect. What was that, Brad? And they said, James last name wasn't Reeves. That's what love was waiting for. We wanted him all to all to be our last name. For real. Man. It's interesting to me. So as newcombs were lucky that we had somebody did a pretty extensive genealogy search of the newcombs, like our last name. And there's a book, I think it's Thomas Joseph Newcomb has written on the front of it. One guy from Scotland that came over. And it's his genealogy. And it goes all in Gary Newcomb's name is in the book. And that's how that's how we know our history. History gets lost so easy. I mean, it would be nice to say it's amazing how easily it gets lost even in modern day. Oh yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's neat for me to think that