12 Burst results for "Misty Nukem"

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

07:07 min | 2 months ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"A great deference. This pan Indian religious movement is so important to understanding tecumseh and tin squad. I want to hear doctor Dave Edmunds speak about it. They who had been, they called themselves, we were once the masters of the Ohio valley. We've lost things what's happening here. We've strayed. comes this man who has this vision who was a tense guitar with the Shawnee prophet, is a man of not much reputation before he has this fission, and he has this falls into this sort of trance and he falls over in his wigwam as his wife is preparing a meal, in fact he almost falls into a fire, and they think he's died, and then he comes back and he says, I have been taken to heaven and I've seen what it's like. And I know that what we need to do and we need to get away from these white ways. We need to give up drinking. And we need only with bows and arrows. We can use, we can use firearms to protect us. But we need to go back to the old ways. We need to wear clothing that's made of traditional skins or our own fabrics, et cetera. And that regulation about how fires could be started. Fire could only be started with sticks and he begins to preach this. Hey, winter is here. Like here, here, here. Like where I'm at, snow on the ground until spring for absolute shirt kind of here. That means ice fishing, maybe going out and filling some bee tags on doughs, who knows. Probably almost certainly a little bit of beaver trapping. Definitely going down to sonora, Mexico, pulling the can am down there for that trip, and also definitely the time of year in my neighbor uses my can am to do what I would describe as surgical grade snow plowing around his barn and where we park a lot of gear and stuff. My can am is great. You can even put tracks on it. Snow is real deep, gives you smooth ride. One of my favorite things about it too is it's warm. It has a heater in it, mine has a heater in it. I can turn it on, crank it, kids stay good, even though ice fish and everybody starts freezing their ass. Turn the heater on climbing there, take a little tool around for some fun. Moods come right back up. Don't just take my word for check out the full can am off road line at can am off road dot com. Get a rig, get it decked out just how you like it. Start loving winner. Born in the Midwest raised in the south black buffaloes everything you love about dip, but no tobacco leaf. Here to tell you about is my beloved colleague and one time hunting partner. Well, I mean, we went on hunting one time, had a hell of a good time. Sure, we'll go out hunting a bunch more times. Fresh out of the Marine Corps works here at meat eater, chili, take it away. I like black buffalo, 'cause I'm in smoking cigarettes in the service, and I'm trying to get off that. And I do like the blood orange, it's really good. It's kind of a toss up between the mint patches and the blood orange, but I'm pretty happy with both those products. All right man, it's a new year. You know you need to ditch the tobacco, but you love the ritual of dipping. Give these guys a shot, black buffalo, different leaf, same ritual. Buy online at black buffalo dot com with promo code meat eater. For 20% off your first order. Or check their store locator for thousands of locations, including town pump. Where we all shop here in Montana by our gas. In racetrack, one of the largest retailers in the southeast warning this park contains a nicotine nicotine is an addictive chemical black buffalo strictly intended for 21 and up current consumers of comparable products underage sale prohibited. Fishing Booker is the number one platform for booking fishing charters worldwide. Search and compare over 36,000 fishing trips at your fingertips when you download the fishing Booker app from the Google Play or App Store. Fishing Booker works at about 8000 charter operators and guides worldwide. So there are always plenty of options to choose from no matter where you are. They check thousands of charter rates every day to make sure you pay the lowest price online when you book with them. In other words, if you find the exact same trip with the same captain for cheaper elsewhere online, fishing Booker will match that price by refunding you the difference. If you're a captain and want to create a listing, fishing Booker will advertise your business on the world's largest online service for fishing trips. Absolutely free. They'll write an SEO friendly description. Make sure your photos look as good as possible and promote your business to their customers all over the world. They'll also advertise your listings on Google Bing, Instagram, Facebook, and other online platforms to help maximize your exposure and to get you bookings and they provide 24/7 captain support. Go to fishing Booker dot com today that's fishing, Booker, dot com. In 1805, Tim squatter was spiritual message of returning to the traditional Indian ways begins to spread. Remember, by this time, white technology had rapidly taken hold in native communities through Jefferson's trade agenda. And others, but the message is a combination of tin squad who was owned doctrine and some preceding Native American prophets. It proclaimed they need for repentance in order to be connected back with the great spirit. It involved intricate specifics of how Indians should live. One that I thought was interesting was that they needed to have a constantly burning fire in their wigwams, which symbolized rebirth in a new faith. Since squadron was said, quote, summer and winter, day and night in the storm or when it is calm. You must remember that life and your body and fire in your lodge are the same. But the fire couldn't be started with the white man's Flint and steel. It had to be started with sticks and burn year round. Misty nukem is always cold, so she would love it if we did this at our House. And it also reminds me of the home fires of rural frontier America. That was a real thing. People kept fires burning year round as a spiritual or philosophical statement. Anyway, the doctrine in the words of Peter cozens was a syncretic creed of spiritual and cultural renewal. Here is an interesting aside. This Indian revival coincided with and was a lot like the Christian revivals happening at the same time on the frontier. Here's Robert Morgan.

Booker Dave Edmunds Ohio valley sonora Marine Corps Midwest Mexico Tim squatter buffalo Google Montana App Store Instagram Jefferson Facebook Peter cozens America Robert Morgan
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

03:24 min | 4 months ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"It's been a long run since I've seen you guys on the bear grease render. It's true. Yeah. You're welcome. This is a monumental day for us. We have the poor life decision. The OGs. The OG original gangster bear grease, render crew here today. I have to my left, my lovely wife, misty nukem, welcome back, misty. Good to be here. Sporting her first parka. Actually clay's first when I'm really cold, I put on clay's really, really big puffy one. So you guys, the last time we saw, I saw you was before I went to Alaska in September. Because you guys did a render without me. On when I was in Alaska, and then the next time we did a render NLS. No. Wasn't that? No, we did multiple renders, and I've been traveling. And so you guys have been out of the picture for a little while. It's like our vacation time. You remember when I asked RT Stewart if poachers are jealous, I'm gonna do the surrender crew get jealous. No. Not me. Not Brent. Okay. I think it's envious. More envy? Jealousy is when you are concerned that someone's gonna steal what you have and envious when you want what someone else has. That's a good distinction. That is a good distinction. Gary, and I were just talking about the render you had with all the folks from back home. Although that was a pretty good record. I was there with me. That was a good rider. Incredible feedback from the render with Scott Andy Steve Phillips, Randy steppe, coy house, Gary newcombe. That was a good one. Those are really good. I really enjoyed the one with James Lawrence and those guys. And Gerald. Yes, that was fun. I would have Gerald brewer on this podcast every week and feet drive up here. I have so many good Gerald for your stories. We need to he's got a head hair like a movie star. So misty's to my left, and then Brent Reeves, who's, I've got little dialog to have together. Brent, welcome. Thank you. To your left, Josh Lambert, spill miker, Josh. Good to be back. Great to see you. Back in the saddle. Great to see you. To Josh's left, Isaac Neil, I'm just happy to be invited to the producer of the bear grease podcast. Got a nice mustache right now too. My wife said, why don't you shave your beard and do a mustache? And I said, yes, ma'am. Did she mean a fu Manchu? Okay, so I had not shaved. 'cause she might not have to throw that out there. There's a different thing. Right. So I hadn't shaved in 11 years at all like anything at all. And so I shaved and as I was going, I was thinking just like the cop mustache, the dad mustache just topped the lip. And then I started shaving and I was like, well, I don't know. So I just kind of stopped. It wasn't even like bottom of the jaw, fu Manchu is just like, that's when it occurred to me. And I was like, well, I'll just find out like she's getting hone an hour and so she came home and she's like, yeah, that's good. That's acceptable. Okay. Okay, we need to probably come back to talking about facial hair and do that. Yeah, after it just after you introduce our last person, because we need to talk about your most recent meteor video. Okay. So into Isaac's left is Gary believer newcombe, who your name came up on the podcast this week. You heard that. I did.

misty nukem RT Stewart Alaska Scott Andy Steve Phillips Randy steppe coy house Gary newcombe Gerald brewer Brent Gerald Brent Reeves Josh Lambert Isaac Neil James Lawrence Josh Gary misty fu Manchu Gary believer newcombe Isaac
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

05:22 min | 4 months ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Put your phone on salad, Ellen. Yes, ma'am. 'cause you know it'll go. Album, what kind of wood will we burn in there? That right there, I think that's some hackberry. That bigger stump. So we're sitting around a hackberry fire. It's November the third. And we're in southeast, Oklahoma. And you may have heard of one week in November, which is meat eaters, meat eaters, whitetail show. We're down here, white tail hunt. And I've got a very eclectic group of guests. That I'm going to introduce individually. Jerry, do you know that typically the bear grease render, which that's what this is. This is a render. So bear grease podcast is where we where we have a documentary style, big robust story. The render is where we just gather up a group of people that talk about it. Typically, there's one group of people, which is my wife, Brent Reeves, who now we all know. We're curious of his reasons for being my friend. My dad, Josh spill maker, misty nukem, lovely wife, and then a 6 person that bounces around from a lot of different people. For the last several weeks, I've been on the road. And so I've been having renders with all kinds of different people. And you get really people like that, but they also like the regular crew. So anyway, it's good to be in southeast Oklahoma. I'm being really hosted here by Alvin and sherri grigg. Man, Alvin and I was trying to think, we met, actually, I almost know exactly how long ago it was. 7 years ago, because fern, my plot coonhound is 8 years, she'll be 8 on November 11th. And she was about a year old and she was a year and a half old, no? She's younger than that. He hadn't really even started her in the Woods yet. Really? Yeah, you called me because I had some Steve Harvey's bloodline bluff creek. You didn't. And actually the one we had was sherry's dog, but anyways, and Stevie would give you my number. And I remember she hadn't really, I mean, that's almost like she was 6 or 8 months old. You know, you'd start filling with her, but I don't think he'd actually been. I remember her first cone she had treat. You remember tell me, I remember you talking about that. Well, I want to come back to that. I'm going to introduce everybody, but that's a big story. And I want to tell it. Alvin and sherry Greg, sherry say hi to everybody. Hello. Great, cherry. This is going to be fun having you on here.

Brent Reeves misty nukem Oklahoma Alvin sherri grigg Ellen Jerry bloodline bluff creek Josh Steve Harvey sherry Stevie sherry Greg
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

22:49 min | 5 months ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Dear blue at me close. And I had his turn like that in this little O do she wouldn't have, this is on Thanksgiving. She wouldn't have grown. I mean, it didn't look to me like, although she had a year in wither, an urban buck. But when she wheeled when she blew, she wheeled in about, I don't know, 40 yards before I was set and there was just a little old bry finger come off the mountain. And then deer had come off there, and I had never seen them. Come off into the bottom, they're fixing to be right out of my lap. I've got the wind rather fixing me right out in my lap. Well, I raise up in a spit when it did she blows. When she headed up that ridge, there was a buck deer without question, a top three in my lifetime that I ever saw. Right on her nose. He didn't have a clue as anywhere in the world is the thing. I mean, he was just dogging her. When she went up that ridge, he had, he was just riding on her and they were running up that ridge. Well, I just wheel over and I'm, of course, I'm shooting it two 43 featherweight that I had for years and years and years. I just found me a hole, I knew that's going to have to shoot at him running right there. I just found me a whole lot on top of that ridge and when he hid it, I touched it off and I shot right in front of it. I mean, there's no doubt. I mean, I shot, I guess too soon. And when I did, he just took two jumps and stopped. Of course, she's in that junk like that in about that time. They took off up the mountain. And I'll never forget. I never got to see the deer. I don't know how wide he was. Don't have, I don't have a clue. In fact, all I'm looking at really is his right side. But that deer, he had them 12, 13 inch times, just stacked up on that right side. I mean, he was just hard to explain how big that there was. And he was twice as big as that though. I mean, he just dwarfed her. I mean, just, it looked like a, it looked like a big dough and a baby fond is what it looked like. And so up the mountain they're going and I'm trying to get on, I can't get on them and about that time. I look and here comes the deer running right at me coming off the mountain. And I'm thinking how lucky here he'll be right behind her, you know? And about that time he just kept coming and kept coming and running right up there as close as me and you're sitting right there and it was that nubbin buck. It left that no. That buck took it down, but that deer was absolutely huge. Andy loves hunting on Thanksgiving Day. I've always been a little envious of the guys that get to do that. I remember a family I grew up around that had Thanksgiving dinner at their deer camp every year. Man, I could get behind that tradition. Hint misty nukem. It's usually an interesting story when you ask a seasoned woodsman about the biggest deer they've ever seen while hunting. And I love this story of Andy's because the mystery of the size of this deer Andy described. Was it a boon to Crockett typical? Was it a one 60 or one 50? We'll never know. But coming from a and E, you believe every word of it because of its capture the details and how it grabs your attention. What's the biggest buck that you've ever seen in the Woods? And I'd like to make a public service announcement. Note that Andy said he used to dip skull. Emphasis on used to. And he's a smart man. Now I'm not trying to tell anybody how to live their life. But I am going to tell you, because I love you, that if you dip in skull, you probably ought to quit, man. As a matter of fact, for several years of my young dumb life, I dip skull too. And I quit, and you can do it too, and you know that you probably should. That preachy little segment was not paid for by the tobacco lobby of America. It was funded by the voice of reason in your life. This year, bear grease podcast. Anyhow, let's skip back to our stories. For the last couple of months, I've been using athletic greens and I actually really like it. I'm pretty health conscious. I'm not a health nut, but I'm very conscious of what I eat, how much I eat and getting the nutrients and vitamins that I need to stay healthy. And athletic greens is so simple. You basically just mix this athletic grid and supplement in with cold water. And I find it easy to do. And so I really like athletic greens. With one scoop of AG one, you are absorbing 75 high quality vitamins, minerals, whole food source super foods, probiotics, and adaptogens to help you start your day right. This special blend of ingredients supports your gut health, your nervous system, your immune system, your energy, recovery, focus, and aging. Right now it's time to reclaim your health and arm your immune system with convenient daily nutrition from athletic greens. It's just one scoop and a cup of water every day. That's it. No need for a million different pills and supplements to look out for your health. Make it easy. Athletic greens is going to give you a free one year supply of immune supporting vitamin D and 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. All you have to do is go to athletic greens dot com slash bear. Again, that's athletic greens dot com slash bear to take ownership over your health and pick up the ultimate daily nutritional insurance. For real, I really like this stuff. We've mentioned a bunch of times how a lot of the guys that work with when we're filming, like a lot of the folks in our film crew like to dip. Chester, what do you guys dip? We've been dipping black buffalo chew. Give us your take on it. Me and dirt were in Hawaii sitting on the porch looking over the ocean and I popped out a can of that black buffalo chew and I was really enjoyable sitting next to that guy having it. And yeah, it just did not give me heartburn. It's like the big thing, which I like about that. Some of these. Which comes from tobacco alternative stuff or not, I get it from tobacco alternative stuff and I get it from real tobacco chew. Heartburn. And this stuff was, you know, pretty dang good. So yeah, you can get black, go to black buffalo dot com on the website. They got long cut and pouches. Get a bunch of flavors. Wintergreen, mint, straight, peach, even blood orange. What's your flavor? I like the wintergreen and spearmint, the minty ones. Born in the Midwest, raised in the south, black buffalo, proudly manufactures their products. Here in the U.S., for adult U.S. consumers. Now use promo code meat eater one 5 for 15% off your first purchase at black buffalo dot com. Again, that's promo code. Meat eater 15. This product is intended only for legal use by those over the age of 21, warning this product contains nicotine. Nicotine is an addictive chemical. The air guns of today aren't the BB guns you remember from your childhood. The umex hammer is a 50 caliber AirPower, the umex hammer is a 50 caliber air powered rifle that is harvested everything from whitetail to feral hogs, American bison, black bear deer, and even cape buffalo. Since 2016, 27 states have legalized the use of air guns for deer hunting, 49 states allow small game hunting with air guns. Umex has everything you need to shoot with air. Shoot with air dot com is the premium provider of sporting and replica air guns and compassing everything you need to enjoy air gun hunting, target shooting, airsoft sports, and replicas. Uma X air gun sells and services a broad line of air guns, including air pistols, pellet rifles, airsoft, and paintball guns. Use the code bear grease to get 10% off your first purchase at shoot with air dot com. Shoot with air dot com code bear grease. The next storyteller you've heard before too. Mo shepherd is from northwest Arkansas, and he's as good a public land mountain deer hunter as they're making these days. Here's most story of the biggest buck. He ever encountered while bow hunting. Well I want to tell you a little hunting story took place back and I think it's like 2001 or 2002. Anyway, it took place in the rugged Ozark mountains of northwest Arkansas out on public land. The story started the year before. I seen a really large deer across the road and I hunted some that year but didn't find much sign. Didn't know if I was even hunting the deer or not. Then the next year I saw him again, he was crossing the road in the same place of a nighttime in the dark and so I made a point to hunt that deer. I hunted him for, I don't know, 5 or 6 days or so on and off through the open and a couple of weeks about season. And I thought I had it zeroed in where he was at where he was traveling a little narrow bench and some really rugged steep ground. So I made my way down in there that morning, got in there, I had a lock on Stan on a tree in there I was going to hunt out of. It was getting a lot where you could see the ground, but you still couldn't see much when I got to the tree. I tied my recurve bow and my quiver and stuff to my pull up cord and climbed the tree. Got up in the stand and well actually before I got up in the stand, I could hear leaves crunching. I think maybe when I was fixing the climb up in there, but I didn't know if it was that deer or what was making the noise when I got it cloud up in the stand and got fastened in. I could hear the crunch and it was really close seeing and about the time I looked and I could see a deer coming towards me. He wasn't coming off away from the tree. He was coming right at the tree at this climb. So I just sent real steel in my stand. I thought, well, if it's that deer, you know, maybe he'll get your clothes, but he was coming right to the tree and likes that he was pretty close at the time because I could see him in the darkness. And he stopped, made a few more steps, and he came right exactly to my bow that I had tied onto that string. And when he got there, I seen how big he was. He was really a big deer. It was still dark. I couldn't see how many points he had other than he just had some pretty big massive horns. And he sniffed that bow for a few seconds, and I'm setting up for my trade just nervous as I'll get out. And I think, well, it's going to be all right. It's going to be all right. He's going to mosey on by and I'm going to be able to put my bow up, maybe get a shot at him. Well, how about that time then? He made out, I guess he sent it my bowl right handled it that morning or something other. He just swirled and bounded about two or three bounds and then to stop and blow real big and then to start walking off. As he started walking off, I went to pull my bow up and I finally got the bow up and he was still out there inside of me, but we wasn't in my bow range of me anyway and it was getting lied to and I could seem pretty good, but still couldn't tell other than he was really big. One of the biggest fear I guess I'd ever seen out in the Woods and got my bow up there. Got my quiver got me air out, put it on my bow and I was shaking so bad. I don't think I could have shot him if he'd come back. I might have calmed down, you know if he came back, but that deer just walked on off out of sight. And I thought well he didn't speak very bad. He didn't speak very bad, you know, this is his travel corridor. I'll get his crack at him. Sometime during the rest of the season, a lot of rest that year for him and hunted some of the next year and never saw that deer again, never saw him cross the road. Don't know if he left plum out there or what happened, but you know, that's hunting. That hunt really stands out to me. That's why it's in my memory swell. It's because I was really anxious to hunt and thought I had this deer figured out and apparently I did have him figured out 'cause he came right where he should have that morning, but whether I was a little late getting there or whether he was just early and he was pretty much nocturnal deer and probably going back to these bed and area. But it just stands out because he was definitely a would probably been the best year at every take it with my recurve bow to this day. I've never taken one that's that large. And it just stands out my mind is that's the one that got away from me so. The one that got away, I've started compiling a formal list in my deer hunting career of the ones that got away. Sometimes sit down and write out the encounters with mature bucks. And I'm not talking little bucks. Mature bucks that were in the strike zone and were killable deer, but you didn't kill them. I wrote out 11 encounters that if things had gone just slightly different out of had a big mature buck. And what it did for me was make me grateful for the bucks that I have taken home. This next fella, we all know bear grease Hall of Famer James Lawrence is a mountain hunter deluxe. He's humble and he's one of those guys that never made any press for himself. But years ago, when I met him, I knew he was special. Here's James telling us the story of his Christmas hunt. I told you this was a holiday themed episode, but you didn't believe me, did you? Here's James. What about the big one you killed on Christmas Day? Oh, yeah. Tell me that story. Tell me. He's not remembered. It's mounted and it was, you know, kill Christmas Day, 1998. And that's supposed to spin off back family for Christmas dinner 2 o'clock. I'd left the truck at the foot of the mountain and just work my way up the mountain where the wind was and then I was going back hunting back to the west. Saying that the time I was running out of time, so I started easing off the mountain, found a good ridge to come off and for some reason how if I'd been trying to slip up on this Dirac had never done it. Conditions was just right. Eased off and I just stopped and when I looked down in the hollow to my left, the steep power. There was a buck grazing on acres. I mean, you know how they'll just walk around and move the leaves and a decent decent 8 point and I was using that muzzle loader Thompson. How can 50 caliber? I got a good rest. And I didn't try to stop him or nothing. I just called him when he did stop. I shot. Smoke cleared the deer went down. I started to reload and when I started to reload on the next ridge, this deer just come up out of his bed and standing and it was, it was a long range shot for a bit caliber muzzle loader, but I couldn't resist because it was. It was about iron sights. It was a buck I'd been hunting, but I wouldn't expect any more of that. I knew that there was in there. And I didn't know how big he was, but I knew he was a good one. I'd seen him a couple of times. He, when I was still hurting, he would just up and maybe one jump, he's out of sight. And I could see the wreck. I reloaded, had a little trouble putting those number 11 caps on it. It's not like the primers we have now. Anyway, took me a bit to do it in the deer to stood there. But I guess he was watching the smoke from the first shot because I understood up and standing in to bed, just stood up. I got arrest, and how far was it? Pushing a hundred yards probably. Just pay your lies and now, yeah, but it's stand in charge and I had a rest. And it might have just been my day, but when the smoke cleared when I shot the deer just went down in his bed that he just got out of it. He didn't run off the buck over for about a little bit of thrashing, but I mean, in this dear, this went down in his bed, didn't kick didn't do nothing. He went down and I knew I was already in trouble because it was after 2 o'clock and I supposed to be for Christmas dinner. And here I am up on the side of a mountain with Burke on the ground. I wasn't real popular when I did get home, but it didn't matter. You know, I get over to that buck and started counting the points and one, two, three, four, 5, 6, 7 on the rat and 7 on the left. I had a 14 point down on the ground on Christmas Day in 1998. It was a, it was a happy Christmas for me. And my mother, even though I was late for Christmas dinner, my mother said that she would love to pay for the deer being mounted if I would use her pastor. And did, you know, you've seen the good job. He was taxidermist, but mother mounted the deer for me. James only has three deer mounted. And I know for a fact that two of those mounts came from someone insisting to the point of paying for the mouth. Years ago, when I asked him about the 14 point, the first thing he said was that his mother paid for the mount. It must have been a lot to him. We're about a third of the way through this podcast and the remaining two stories are robust. They're both complicated and involve some joy and heartache. You're going to enjoy them, but I think we'll also learn something from them. The next storyteller is my friend and the thrill kill. Also from western Arkansas. Andy told me the first part of the story in 2012. In ten years later, in the spring of 2022, he told me the last part of the story. When I heard it, I knew I had to get him to tell it. Let's see. I got permission to hunt this private piece, it was a Hayley's. We had cows at about every evening when we'd go up there to get a bail hay or something. There'd be just a whole bunch of doughs, so we knew that there was a bunch of doughs and it was a good place to hunt. So eventually I ended up asking for permission. And so I put quite a bit of time and effort into it. I put a buddy stand up there and it was a really, it was a killer setup because we predominantly get the southwest winds around here and you could come up from the creek, you could park down where you'd pull in and you'd walk up across the creek and up into this little pasture. You'd kind of come up a rise into the lower pasture. I had the buddy stand right at the mouth of that plateau field and it just sit up perfect because you could climb right up and scope it out and see if anything was in there and you could climb up in that buddy stand. Andy hinted the property for a couple of years and killed a nice 135 inch buck in 2011 and he learned that the deer bedded in a pond thicket adjacent to the hay field and often entered the field between a ridge and a creek funneling the deer down a dim login road. Anyhow, the piece of property should prove to be like a really good piece of property. And I had killed that buck in 2011 on that field. In 2010, I had killed the very first really what I'd call big book. I had read a book called mapping trophy books by Brad herndon, and I just said, teaches you how to read topos and that kind of stuff and where to set up based on different topography. And it was like my first introduction to map reading and hunting with a strategy versus just kind of piddling around and looking for sign basically. Because herndon's theory is not really he don't hunt sign. Herndon's kind of like, you know, the signs typically in the bottoms were beautiful and you want to hunt, but the winds never consisted. So he was always a big saddle guy. He was always get on the top where the wind's consistent because even if the sign is not there, if it's close, eventually they're going to slip through that. That saddle. And so I adopted that theory. And then I learned about Dan infall, and I learned about his mountain hunting series and how he uses thermals and he talks about how they bed based on north and south winds. Man, in fact, wasn't the revolutionary because it was like you took Brad herndon strategy of just use hunt in the saddles and that kind of stuff. Well then you learned when to hunt those saddles based on the wind because in false theories about, okay, it's a south wind that we bet on the north side or if it's a north wind and we bet it on the south side. Andy grew up in a hunting family, but it wasn't until he was an adult that he started to study about deer and started becoming successful, and he's become very successful. Lots of Andy's hunting is done on public land and he's learned how to kill mature bucks. Anyhow, it was during this time that he started getting pictures of a unique racked young deer. I had actually got pictures of him in 2000 11. And you could tell he was only like, I mean, I'm not trying to be like dear expert here, but you tell he was young, dear. You know, I say three and a half just because he had a humongous, like I'd say a 130 inch rack. He had kickers and he was trashy, but he was young looking. And I was like, holy cow, you just don't see that around here. You could see the real potential in it. And I would have killed him that year if I'd had a chance. No question about it. I just, I don't know that I could have passed him up. Anyhow, thankfully I didn't. And I'm certain that this is the same deer in 2012 because he had grown to like a 145 is what I estimate close pushing one 50 had like 13 points like mainframe ten with a bunch of kickers, had a split G three with the kicker, like a 5, four or 5 inch kicker coming off that G two there had a split eye guard on one side. Just a really impressive deer. But his pictures were always at night coming out into that field. And I knew that bottom that was right off to the west of that plateau field, the backside of that. It was a huge thicket of sweet gum and it had just grown up. It used to be field and they let that kind of progressively get overtaken. And it was probably two acres, but it was just thick. And I knew that's where the deer bedded. And they would come out of the backside of that into that bottom, which was a wooded bottom along the creek. They would just come out of there and I knew the bucks would bed up in that behind thinking on the hill, but all the stuff I had read from herndon just had me scared to death to get down in an area that was a bottom that I knew the wind swirl because I tried to hunt it before and it always boogard up and always ended up swirling what I had figured out by the couple of times I'd went in there and figured I'd blown it was you get in real early on a calm morning, 8 39 o'clock. You can have a good pretty much a no win. But by 8 or 9 o'clock, the first swirl of the wind you feel, you need to get out and leave. But you can get like an hour or two of decent hunting in a area that doesn't get good wind

Andy buffalo tobacco lobby of America Mo shepherd Arkansas Crockett cape buffalo U.S. loader Thompson buck James Chester Brad herndon Midwest James Lawrence Hawaii
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

08:21 min | 5 months ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Day. That's been 25 years ago, but my family gets together with my sister and her family. And we did for years, Thanksgiving Day. Back in those days. And we had always had a big deer hunt, because my brother in law liked to run dogs, and I do too, but I'm the guy that called it an abort. And I said, Doug, I'll be I'll be up the creek. Early, so just turn the dogs loose when I'll be there, you know? And so I went in that morning before. Daylight and walked up the creek and there's big bottom that lays between what we call in the main mountain there. I had got up on the side of the main mountain where I could watch that bottom. I set my big old gum tree and it was one of them cloudy misty, you know, it wasn't really raining, but it was just like you won't. I mean, a super morning. Anyway, I was sitting there and actually the wind for running dogs. It wasn't going to happen where I was at because it came up the creek. It was right out of the west, the wind was. And I sit there in about 9 o'clock, probably. Of course, back in those days, I dipped skull, you know, I had my big old lip sculpt and the parent and I was sitting like a big chief Indian with my legs underneath against that tree. And I just raised up and spit. And when I did, right here, behind me, a dear blue at me close. And I had his turn like that in this little O do she wouldn't have, this is on Thanksgiving. She wouldn't have grown. I mean, it didn't look to me like, although she had a year in wither, an urban buck. But when she wheeled when she blew, she wheeled in about, I don't know, 40 yards before I was set and there was just a little old bry finger come off the mountain. And then deer had come off there, and I had never seen them. Come off into the bottom, they're fixing to be right out of my lap. I've got the wind rather fixing me right out in my lap. Well, I raise up in a spit when it did she blows. When she headed up that ridge, there was a buck deer without question, a top three in my lifetime that I ever saw. Right on her nose. He didn't have a clue as anywhere in the world is the thing. I mean, he was just dogging her. When she went up that ridge, he had, he was just riding on her and they were running up that ridge. Well, I just wheel over and I'm, of course, I'm shooting it two 43 featherweight that I had for years and years and years. I just found me a hole, I knew that's going to have to shoot at him running right there. I just found me a whole lot on top of that ridge and when he hid it, I touched it off and I shot right in front of it. I mean, there's no doubt. I mean, I shot, I guess too soon. And when I did, he just took two jumps and stopped. Of course, she's in that junk like that in about that time. They took off up the mountain. And I'll never forget. I never got to see the deer. I don't know how wide he was. Don't have, I don't have a clue. In fact, all I'm looking at really is his right side. But that deer, he had them 12, 13 inch times, just stacked up on that right side. I mean, he was just hard to explain how big that there was. And he was twice as big as that though. I mean, he just dwarfed her. I mean, just, it looked like a, it looked like a big dough and a baby fond is what it looked like. And so up the mountain they're going and I'm trying to get on, I can't get on them and about that time. I look and here comes the deer running right at me coming off the mountain. And I'm thinking how lucky here he'll be right behind her, you know? And about that time he just kept coming and kept coming and running right up there as close as me and you're sitting right there and it was that nubbin buck. It left that no. That buck took it down, but that deer was absolutely huge. Andy loves hunting on Thanksgiving Day. I've always been a little envious of the guys that get to do that. I remember a family I grew up around that had Thanksgiving dinner at their deer camp every year. Man, I could get behind that tradition. Hint misty nukem. It's usually an interesting story when you ask a seasoned woodsman about the biggest deer they've ever seen while hunting. And I love this story of Andy's because the mystery of the size of this deer Andy described. Was it a boon to Crockett typical? Was it a one 60 or one 50? We'll never know. But coming from a and E, you believe every word of it because of its capture the details and how it grabs your attention. What's the biggest buck that you've ever seen in the Woods? And I'd like to make a public service announcement. Note that Andy said he used to dip skull. Emphasis on used to. And he's a smart man. Now I'm not trying to tell anybody how to live their life. But I am going to tell you, because I love you, that if you dip in skull, you probably ought to quit, man. As a matter of fact, for several years of my young dumb life, I dip skull too. And I quit, and you can do it too, and you know that you probably should. That preachy little segment was not paid for by the tobacco lobby of America. It was funded by the voice of reason in your life. This year, bear grease podcast. Anyhow, let's skip back to our stories. For the last couple of months, I've been using athletic greens and I actually really like it. I'm pretty health conscious. I'm not a health nut, but I'm very conscious of what I eat, how much I eat and getting the nutrients and vitamins that I need to stay healthy. And athletic greens is so simple. You basically just mix this athletic grid and supplement in with cold water. And I find it easy to do. And so I really like athletic greens. With one scoop of AG one, you are absorbing 75 high quality vitamins, minerals, whole food source super foods, probiotics, and adaptogens to help you start your day right. This special blend of ingredients supports your gut health, your nervous system, your immune system, your energy, recovery, focus, and aging. Right now it's time to reclaim your health and arm your immune system with convenient daily nutrition from athletic greens. It's just one scoop and a cup of water every day. That's it. No need for a million different pills and supplements to look out for your health. Make it easy. Athletic greens is going to give you a free one year supply of immune supporting vitamin D and 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. All you have to do is go to athletic greens dot com slash bear. Again, that's athletic greens dot com slash bear to take ownership over your health and pick up the ultimate daily nutritional insurance. For real, I really like this stuff. We've mentioned a bunch of times how a lot of the guys that work with when we're filming, like a lot of the folks in our film crew like to dip. Chester, what do you guys dip? We've been dipping black buffalo chew. Give us your take on it. Me and dirt were in Hawaii sitting on the porch looking over the ocean and I popped out a can of that black buffalo chew and I was really enjoyable sitting next to that guy having it. And yeah, it just did not give me heartburn. It's like the big thing, which I like about that. Some of these. Which comes from tobacco alternative stuff or not, I get it from tobacco alternative stuff and I get it from real tobacco chew. Heartburn. And this stuff was, you know, pretty dang good. So yeah, you can get black, go to black buffalo dot com on the website. They got long cut and pouches. Get a bunch of flavors. Wintergreen, mint, straight, peach, even blood orange. What's your flavor? I like the wintergreen and spearmint, the minty ones. Born in the Midwest, raised in the south, black buffalo, proudly manufactures their products. Here in the U.S., for adult U.S. consumers. Now use promo code meat eater one 5 for 15% off your first purchase at black buffalo dot com. Again, that's promo code. Meat eater 15. This product is intended only for legal use by those over the age of 21, warning this product contains nicotine. Nicotine is an addictive chemical.

Andy Doug tobacco lobby of America Crockett buck buffalo Chester Hawaii Midwest U.S.
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

04:48 min | 7 months ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"No, really. You weren't cut out for it. But you did the same thing. I mean, you had a lot of diversity. Yeah, I was saying. Exactly. I felt like I hat tipped to exactly what you wanted to see. But also, you were specialist. I mean, you know, your diversity was fishing canoeing, hunting, redneck trucks, good-looking women. I mean, it all fit in there. Yeah, yeah. Anyway. No, I had to bring yep in that because that was a good question. Okay, that was just the intro man. It's going to be hot today to Gary's right overpassing our guest is misty nukem. Welcome, miss newcombe. The only good-looking woman, right? That's exactly right. The rest of them were ready. That's exactly right. So there's something that we got to talk about later. I'm going to wait. There's a campaign going on in the world that I would like for misty to introduce. But first of all, Brett Reeves, great to see you. Thank you, buddy. We're in the good overalls. Always. We're in a Waylon Jennings hat. That's way long hat. It's generic. When you're coon dog's name's waylon and he's named after the one of the icons of outlaw country music real country music. It doesn't hurt. It's just a, it's a happy coincidence. Gotcha. But I like both of them. Okay. Well, good to see you. Thank you, bud. And back to the middle. We have today, tavin Dillard. Kevin. Hey clay. How are you doing? Man, I'm good. It's a pleasure to have you as a guest. It's good to be here. I'm glad you have to air on in here. It's hotter than a little sock full of baked beans out there. I'm glad I found my way in here. Yeah, man. I got it cool down in the office. Will you call this the office? Well, I call it the global headquarters of the former global headquarters of the bear hunting. Bernie magazine. There's acronym for it. No, I don't know. I don't know. That's a lot of spelling. That's a lot of words you thrown out, but I'll tell you, I'm glad to be here. And I hope I can be a help. I'm not sure what we're doing today. If we taxidermy and animals, or we just talking about them, but I'm game. What do you think of the office, man? I love it. This is the first time in here. I got my feet on a bear. That's right. Bear skin. That's right. I don't want to lean into this thing. These things are sharp over here. Yeah. What up belly? You aren't that one, didn't you? Who's that behind me? Yeah, big bear right behind you. How'd he get here? Did you do that? I mean, in the space, I wouldn't say I did that. That's not the words. Looking at a full body. I would say this is a bear that I harvested that I killed. Okay. Ate his meat. Yeah. That's what I meant. Yeah. I did was a quicker way to say that.

miss newcombe Brett Reeves tavin Dillard Waylon Jennings waylon Bernie magazine Gary bud Kevin
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

03:53 min | 9 months ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Misty nukem. Hello. It was accompanied me on the banjo. To misty's left, we have Brent Reeves. Brent, great to see you. You put too much salt in the gravy. Mmm. I don't know if that's possible. Okay, we just made a big, huge like 12 man. Skillet size. We figured we could have fed 12 men on average, helping to gravy, which is about a quarter. Grant says too much salt. I wasn't gonna say this, but last time Brent cooked me gravy, I didn't think it had enough salt. I have to say, I saw that video. And I don't remember you putting salt in it in the video because he didn't. Oh, brand. Well done. Wow. You basically made.

Brent Reeves Brent misty Grant
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

04:09 min | 1 year ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"I wouldn't tell people about it, but I'm telling you for months, I've been a room with a group of guys. I just say, I wish somebody would just ask me if I killed a deer this year. And no one ever would. But it meant so much to me because, you know, it was a boat kill and back then, that was kind of different. What year was that? 77. Yeah, that was way different. Yeah. In south Arkansas, for sure. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, there weren't a lot of people killing deer with a bow, very consistently. You know, when I was pretty lucky on that deer, he was trailing a dough. And I was on the ground. Oh, you killed it from the ground. I killed it on the ground, not in the stand. Quite the deer. Yeah. So that's a tour of the office. And then I've got bear hides hanging from hooks. No rock slide. Yeah, some big bear skulls. Yeah, and then I have one big mounted bear in the office, which is not the biggest square of ever kill, but probably the most valuable bear to me personally. I've ever killed killed one, national forest, public land, last day of the season, shot the bear and the head. Snuck up on it while I was asleep, not a joke. Pretty incredible deal. But anyway, couple of things, we're going to talk about, we're going to talk about this turkey podcast. But I also want to give you guys an opportunity to talk about the flower podcasts. Because Brit was the special guest. Pretty boy. Yeah. So we're going to talk about we're going to talk about Clara. We're going to talk about turkey hunting. We've covered a lot of ground. What y'all think of the last render crew that I did okay? B team. Yeah. I get my B plus. Because they recognized all of us on here. They got funny accents. Josh you're from Michigan. Near people are from my people are. I've spent way more time on this. Hey, I was pretty happy that Steve rinella knew who Clara was. And he didn't just know who clower was. Yeah. He was he was passionate about flour. Yeah. Which I was impressed with. I actually thought I thought they did a good job. I thought it was a very entertaining podcast. They did a great job. I was a little hurt when Brent got the call out and Josh and I got the shaft. Yeah. Exactly. That is the price you pay for fame. When you run in this micro celebrity. When you're running this circle, you gotta be prepared for that counts. Hey, talk about micro celebrity. Did you guys know that misty nukem works for wild and whole, which is a brand inside of meat eater? What? We've never true story. We've never officially said this on the podcast. So wild and whole is like a sector inside of meat eater that. How would you describe wild and whole? Wild and whole focuses on in the sense that media focuses on hunting is primarily focused on hunting while on hole is more focused on preparation of food and sourcing of food and so they look at farming, homesteading, foraging, gardening, gardening, and so misty, she works for them and she does a lot of stuff about her garden about cooking. Yeah, it's just about feeding our family. Yeah. So you can follow misty it. All the food. At Newcomb farm. At nukem farm. I do. That also reminds me of one of my favorite George Bush junior isms..

south Arkansas Steve rinella Clara clower Josh Brit Michigan Brent Newcomb farm nukem farm George Bush
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

05:44 min | 1 year ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Yeah, like they were putting ochre on this on these points, whatever they did. So I think misty nukem nailed it on the head. Despite a little bit. He's probably trying to make up for that. What did she say about the Mac computers? It's a function function could also kind of cool. That's it. Functional but cool. I mean, I don't think it's a stretch to think that one led to the other, either, right? Right. And it could also be the chicken egg thing..

misty nukem
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

04:57 min | 1 year ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Fish hunt fight. If kind of a moment they would mr new we bother knew anything. That's just playing candy crush. He's on the podcast. Is a little bit overwhelming for those of us. Who have alternate jobs today it can kind of dominate your life. A little bit love. It love it outside of coming in the bear greece's and a full time position. We do poorly side-hustle hustle. Welcome to the bear grease render man. I'm very excited about today. I i've got a lot to say. Oh boy man. I've got a lot to say. Wow yeah those dozer. Hey we've got. We've got one person that is back from wherever they came from. We've got one new person on the bear grease render. We've got three three Old hats. We've got three really good to our left to my left misty nukem. Welcome back. misty hangs missing comes birthday today. Special episode love birthdays to stop having them. There's an issue so happy birthday to misty's left malachi nichols. Did you hear you. Gotta shout on the last render. I didn't oh you okay shows test that means you didn't i know we said we said Someone was dressed. Like malakand nichols sir. I can't remember who it was. You set the standard. They were well dressed. Though they were well-dressed good and they like malachi nichols where you been man man. I've been grinding. Just doing what you have to do. Yeah you wanna tell people what you do for a living. Sure sure like i. I work for education nonprofit. So i manage and develop programs for school districts and state leaders. So i'm traveling around the state and working hard and you're an arkansas hunting license holder. I am two years in a row. New year's israel support and conservation warrior. That's real serious to your left. The new man in the render in the circle in the arena. jackie webster..

malachi nichols dozer malakand nichols greece misty arkansas israel jackie webster
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

06:55 min | 1 year ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"We'll get their introductions to my to my to my right is our guest of honor. This is my wife misty. Nukem you guys know but misty. Misty is for many reasons qualified to be here. But she's been on the batteries podcasts. We've said a couple of times the only person that's really not qualified to be. Here's josh he hasn't been on that actual beggars podcast but everybody says that misty was on death of a bear. Hunter has been one of the probably the most talked about of the podcast today. Eight probably my specific contributions. Contra talked about at the end. You guys remember. We were down where we believe ursus grave to be and we got some commentary so missy how are you. i'm good. Thanks for asking nice by ngo work. Thank you glad to be here. I'm very glad to be here in her farm boots. It's true mississippi maximum force of the halley. I want to say that. My dad gary nukem was unable to come today. He loves coming up here and a lady that was ninety eight years old. That was quite influential in his career. Passed away in the funeral today and he couldn't get around coming so he went to that funeral way to bring well. No it's a celebration man celebration. Golly if you have ninety eight years old people wanna come to your funeral. You probably are doing pretty good so get but hey gary nukem. There is rumor on the internet. Of like gary nukem fan club people multiple panthers. I think it's called the black. The black parents are believers. Yeah no so. There's a couple of things. I want to bring up that some some feedback that i got in. I want you guys chime in with your commentary. So on the acre and podcast. And that's what we'll talk about. I okay we're going to get to a point where we don't have multiple episodes to discuss in every beggars render this one. We have to last beggar surrender. We had a bunch more. But i had some guys hit me pretty hard for the way i think i was. One of these people will tell me what you say. I have no problem with your use of the whether you choose to to say acre n- or acorn makes no difference to me. What i do have a problem with is the way you pronounce pronounciation. I didn't know that was a word was thought it was pronunciation. It was spelled but apparently there's a dialect. How do you pronounce okay. Yeah for many many people. Were like clay. great podcasts. Do your say pronounciation is totally wrong. I never even. I didn't hear you dare. I say pronounciation do you really. Yes you say pronunciation. Its pronunciation germ pronunciation just a few miles south of him and we said pronunciation pronunciation. No it's fair game. That's exactly the kind of feedback on need. I think i'm not going to change doctor. Dana rupe can work with you on. You would say pronounciation i would. I guess i'm wrong. Say that the way that i think about it is i. Don't i've never pronunced a word. Been worried about the way a pronuncia word until now that i have to say pronunciation. I couldn't see where i'm going with this. I thought you had a mini stroke. Because that's the thing that was one thing that came up. Hey the people came out in droves to leave reviews on itunes for us is awesome. And we i mean like i dunno sometimes like you just wanna do somebody favor just for no good reason and and it's it's helped us in overwhelmingly like positive reviews a couple couple. Not so positive buddy. Stand up for me. Not having been on the beggar's podcast. Nobody was worried about that. We think it's a silent majority. Yeah so to find those bad reviews. You'll have to go through and read all the other reviews so you're not gonna read them about your message about giving too much credit to the bad guys and the people are going to be like well. Let's leave a bad happens if you've read one and somebody's like oh yeah. I never thought that. Change my review so thanks to everybody. That's listening that gave us two interviews. I was really great acorn podcast. A guy sent me a guy from amador. California sent me a private message on instagram about this. First nation tribe called the me walks m. w. o. k. s and. There's this big. And i believe it. Sandstone i'm not sure the type of rock that it is but it's in this area that they used to camp and whatnot and a lot of the the indians in california they. There's several tribes that milled acres into flour and made bread. And so there's this rock this big rock that spent as big as the the building here that we're in and there were holes divots in the rock where they had ground acres flower four presumably thousands of years and so he he wanted to show me that and there's an incredible video that was made in the nineteen thirties making acre bread. And it was you could tell it was like a real deal. Native american lady and it was in california. I'm not sure if she was one of the me walks. But there's a. There's a video making bread from acorns. I think it's on youtube but this guy said he's friends. One of his friends is a me walk and he told his me walk good friend about the akron podcast. And he said hey. This guy made his podcast about acres. This is what his friend said to him. He said well he said i told my me. Walk buddy about your podcast. And he said thank god. I don't have to eat my uncle's acre and soup again..

gary nukem Dana rupe Contra misty missy acorn josh Hunter panthers mississippi amador california California youtube
"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

03:08 min | 1 year ago

"misty nukem" Discussed on Bear Grease

"For some fun on this one all right. Welcome to the vagaries degree surrender. We're singing this song. In honor of the clark family over in eastern see roy was on fifty years in the fakher field podcast. This song's called old slough got misty nukem on banjo on washboard. Josh filmmaker on the guitar daniel rupe on the cabinet. Back elam mr ballycotton on percussion top. Tell me what you see. Bear.

clark roy daniel rupe elam mr ballycotton Josh cabinet