35 Burst results for "Reno"

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"Everyone, welcome back to live wild podcast. Now today, we're doing a live Q&A from the Pope and young club convention in Reno Nevada. We're here surrounded by some of the best animals taken with a bow and arrow across North America. It seems like a fitting place to talk hunting. So let's now dive into the questions.

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"I'm Remy Warren, and I've lived my life in the wild. As a professional guide and hunter, I've spent thousands of days perfecting my craft. I want to give that knowledge to you. In this podcast, we relive some of my past adventures as I give you practical

The Eric Metaxas Show
Operation Rescue Was Shut Down by Pro-Abortion Janet Reno
"You said that Janet Reno, who was the attorney general under Clinton, they were so pro abortion that they decided number one priority shut down operation rescue shut down Randall Terry, and they brought the full force of the federal government to bear. On ending operation, rescue, so that you were forced to shut down in 1994. Yeah. We had, it was sad. I mean, when I look back now, you know, 30 plus years or 30 years later, I was a young man then. I'm a middle aged man now holding on desperately to middle age. But it's a fearful thing when evil controls government. And that's what we're seeing today. When you have a president who, as a candidate, as a candidate, I was in Philadelphia. I oh, you asked me, what have I been doing since then? Well, I've been doing radio. I've been doing television. I've been making movies. I've been writing books. We recently we released a time travel movie. This beard that I'm wearing right now is scruffy. I look scruffy 'cause I'm gonna play a villain in a movie this summer about fentanyl and the drug trade. We've got a time travel movie that's just been released, a second time travel movie. What is the title of that movie? Time boys. Time boys. And it's got over 60 awards.

The Eric Metaxas Show
The Evil Reason Why Randall Terry's 'Operation Rescue' Shut Down
"To ask you, so operation rescue was launched in 1987, ended effectively in 94. And what have you been doing in the roughly three decades since it officially shut down? The Clinton administration made it their mission to break our back. So Janet Reno and one of her first press conferences said that her main objective was to stop operation rescue. Janet Reno was the attorney general for Bill Clinton. And in case people don't remember her, she looked a lot like sasquatch. Yeah, she was not a lot of times people get the names mixed up. But she was the attorney general that looked a lot like Susquehanna. No, listen, I have to joke around because it's such bitter sick stuff we're discussing. She was evil. They passed a ministration decided. Think about this, folks. I want you to want you to hear the Clinton administration decided we want to break the back of operation rescue. Let's think about that. Why? Why would they put everything on the line? To end a movement, a peaceful movement to end abortion. Why would the clintons do that? But they did. So go ahead. Well, they were baby killers is the answer. They believed in shedding innocent blood. They were the villain in the story.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Donald Trump Changes His Tune on Ballot Harvesting
"What do you think of president Trump's change of tack when it comes to ballot harvesting? He's right. And that's why I launched early vote action on January 23rd because listeners at home, you're not going to like what I have to say, but if Republicans don't engage in an all of the above approach to voting, meaning election day voting early voting early in person voting mail in voting absentee voting and where legal ballot harvesting if we don't do those things were simply not going to win. And if you give me 60 seconds, let me identify why we should vote early. Number one, Arizona. 30% of machines stopped working on election day. We told the Democrats where we were throwing the football and thousands of Republicans were disenfranchised. Number two, Doctor Oz and John fetterman, 500,000 pennsylvanians already voted before the first and only debate. And four to 5 of those voters were Democrats. The Democrats are narrowing the amount of people that they need in order to win elections going into election day while Republicans are waiting to vote on one day and last. Adam lacks salt and Nevada. It's snowed on election day. Adam lacks salt laws by 8000 votes in washoe county and Reno, where our people live, it's snowed and a 150,000 Republicans in Nevada state home and election day. If we're going to win, we must engage in early voting, mail in voting and where legal ballot harvesting.

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"And enjoy your day. I hope you guys enjoyed this episode of the podcast. I want to give a special thanks to those of you that attended in those that asked questions. For those of you listening to the podcast, thank you guys as well. As always, I appreciate all the support. Feel free to drop a comment or rating wherever you get this podcast. And if you don't already subscribe, make sure wherever you listen, you just hit the subscribe button. If you have hunting questions, as always, feel free to shoot me a message on social media. You can find me anywhere at Remy Warren. And let me know what you want to hear about. That helps drive the direction and the things that I talk about here on the podcast. I really want this podcast to be a benefit for everyone and a lot of the things and topics that we talk about are from suggestions from listeners. So as always, feel free to send those out to me, looking forward to preparing for this upcoming hunting season. I think some of the future podcasts as we go in through this next month are going to be kind of focusing on how to get ready for those hunts coming up. What we need to look at, how we can prepare and how we can make sure that the season is going to be a successful one. So in the words of a wild sheep, I don't know, did that work? I think it might have, all right, catch you guys later.

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"Do a couple more questions here. And then Aaron, he lit from Juno Alaska. Back to the mental game. Especially when you're so low, how do you recognize that you're getting into a bad mind space and to how do you break out of that? And then also do you have any luxury item that you take with you on backpack ends? That's a good question. Yeah, I think part of it, when you get into that, you know you're getting into that bad mind space. When you just start thinking things aren't going to go good. And I think that the best way to get through that is anything like you can have a bad day a bad stock, a bad miss who knows what happens, right? Especially when you're by yourself, you kind of got to figure out ways to self motivate. And I've talked about this last year as well kind of one of these. But when you think about the way that you approach the hunt and you start to get down, man, there's nothing here. This sucks. This is very hard. You start focusing on. That's kind of like wherever you're thinking is where your focus goes. And when you start thinking like that, you start hunting like that. And I've been on it. I've been on really not great hunts in many ways. I went on a hunt recently where it was like, you look at it, the country, we are not going to see anything here. You're probably right. But by thinking you're going to see anything there, you don't need to sit around. You act like you're not going to see anything. And you actually don't hunt like you do when you have that expectation that that big buck is there. If I told you, there's a 200 inch buck in this canyon, right? And I was like, I saw him 5 minutes ago. You know how hard you're going to look. All you have to do is find that buck. And you are going to be in that glass. You are going to be so focused on that task because you know there's a 200 inch buck there. But if you think if I told you, there's actually no meal during this entire unit. You think you're really going to look around and put that kind of effort in. So you kind of have to trick yourself into saying, these things are here, and I need to treat it like they are there. And then what happens is you hunt it harder and then you do find those things because that's where your focus is going. And so my mental trick is just kind of you really just prepping pumping yourself up that at any second, that big buck is here. This is the area where whatever I'm looking for is and I just need to find it. And by doing that, you're continually in that posture of hunting hard. And that's probably the best way to kind of get over it. And then when stuff happens, it's just it's a learning experience and you just move on. You move on to the next one. I'm like, okay, it's going to happen again. It's around the next corner. Whether it is or not, you've got to make yourself believe it, because then you act like it's going to happen. And you end up finding more success that way. As far as luxury items, I like to bring a lot of sugar. Chocolate of some kind. If I can. And I also, this is a weird backpacking food that I like, but a can of smoked oysters that's like my, I don't know, it's just really good. Sounds weird, but maybe you don't like I brought them out on a recent trip, and everyone's like, that's disgusting. You don't understand. This is what keeps me going. This is what keeps me going until day 5 of day ten. Or day ten of day ten. So it's just having something you really look forward to. And then outside of that, you know, I think that if there's something that makes you comfortable, I've kind of, I bring a stuff sack for my puff of jacket to have like a good pillow and a good night rest. Always goes really good. And for those times where you can't get a good night rest to Tylenol p.m. works pretty well. I think outside of that, most of the comforts that I get. But if there is something that makes you more comfortable, bring it as long as it doesn't weigh you down too much. All right, yeah, one last question in the back. Dallas from Alberta. I know you primarily backpack hunt and obviously your kid changes depending on the location where you're at. But do you try to keep your pack at a certain wage or to even worry about your weight going into like when you're backpacking in there? That's a really good question. I've run out of space more than I run out of overweight to be a 100% honest. It's hardest to find space because everything's takes up so much room. Personally, if I don't have to carry a crazy amount of weight, then you don't want to. I think about weight. But over the years, like doing solo hunter and doing all these other things, I have to carry two cameras and extra batteries and memory cards. And then my hunting gear, and I got so used to carrying so much weight, then I'm like, yeah, whatever. Let's just bring it. But I don't like to carry unnecessary weight. So I really kind of think about my kit as far as fine tuning it. So because I've had to carry that extra stuff, I really fine tuned this, just things the sleeping bag, the tent, all that stuff, getting that as light as possible. You know, really fine tuning that type of year. I realized, okay, I can get by with certain things and having really light stuff made a big difference. Now when I don't have to carry all that extra camera crap and whatever, I just feel like I'm like dancing through the Woods. I'm light as a feather. It feels really good. The other thing that I don't mind carrying extra of is like, I don't mind carrying weight in food and or water because it's disposable weight. If you got too much food, you can just keep eating it and then that gives you more energy to carry more later. I like to be in a very, it's really hard to get it. You're always kind of running in a calorie deficit. So if I was like, if I'm throwing extra weight in, it's going to be in the form of food and not necessarily gear. So I just try to get that over the years really getting light gear makes a big difference. You shave a few ounces off of everything and that adds up to pounds and then you can throw an extra pound of food in and for the same amount of energy. And then by day three, you've got less weight, more energy. So that's kind of how I think about packing my pack. And as I forgot I had a couple, I should give aways. You're going to get this headlamp because everybody complains I don't give anything to Canadians. So congratulations. That's for you. This is in honor of your country, congratulations. All right. Yeah, thank you guys so much. For showing up, I really appreciate all the questions and everything. Thank you guys for coming here and listening to me talk. I appreciate it. So thank you guys and enjoy the sheep show. Oh, we got one last young man here. This guy, this is for you. Thanks for your questions. Appreciate it. Thank you. Yeah. So, all right. Well, enjoy the sheep show, and I'm sure I'll bump into you I'll be kind of hanging around for a little bit. So if you didn't want to be on camera and ask a question, I'm still around. So thank you guys so much.

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"Hunt it very similar to the way that I'd hunt tar in New Zealand. I was going to probably it's like, although it's a little different there, you know, like you get the pressure in the other things, but my plan was going to be to essentially be up above them before it got light. Because what happens is a lot of goat species, mountain goats, tar, whatever. A lot of species. They use those rocks as their sanctuary, but they move down kind of in the evenings and up in the morning. So it is very hard to catch them in the morning. You'll see them, okay, now I'm going to make a move and you can never you're always behind them. So getting into a position where I'm close enough it dark before that sun comes up where I can make a play or potentially theoretically make a play depending on the country, getting into those positions early. And then maybe redoing that in the evening. So kind of playing a patient's game of figuring out these animals. Now, when their pressure did that particular area, it might be, it might be a little bit different where you're using a combination of glassing back and then kind of doing a chess move where your glassing and then moving and trying to anticipate where they're going to go. And then reversing that and pulling back in glassing and then redoing that maybe in the evening or the morning. And we do that same tactic for Elk a lot of times in general units during the rifle season when there's a lot of pressure, things are moving around, and you don't know where the animals are, but once you find them, it's like, okay, we found them. Now we go make that play. Are they going to come out in that same meadow tonight? So we would do that if we spotted him in the morning, make a play for the evening and vice versa. If that makes sense. When it comes to applications in New Mexico, it just depends on for the most part, I generally put in for Elk there. And then I always put in for the ibex, I think that those are pretty cool. I generally don't put in for antelope normally, from or normally. And then I put in for meal deer. I've drawn one meal deer tag there in the just outside of the Hickory and to be pretty good area. Is that late archery hunt? It was a really fun hunt. I just didn't find the type of buck that I was looking for for that hunt. And I think that's pretty common. But as one of those, it's such a famed area for big deer that I wanted to go all or nothing. And I went nothing, but it was a lot of fun. And I spent it was one of those hunts where I was like, I'm going to hunt, I can't remember how long the season was, but I was like, I'm going to hunt a week, and then I think it was a two week season, whatever. I ended up hunting every day of the season. I kept extending it and extending it. So yeah, and yeah, but I think that there's a lot of cool opportunities with the exotics in New Mexico, which is a lot of fun. Especially with the over counter out and all that kind of stuff, there's a lot of cool experiences down there. See what time it is and then we'll start a couple more. I got a time for a couple more questions if there's a few. Yep, go for it. Hi, I'm Brian from Ohio. My question pertains to a non resident applicant out in the western states looking to do some western hunts here and there. What happens when you apply for coveted tags somewhere and you hit that unit? What next? Yeah, you know the first step is that initial research and I do that a couple of ways. So if you can find somebody, I like to do I like to do it in this order. I first look over the maps and think about highlighting places that I think are going to be good. And I'll do a little bit of research, whether it's reading stuff. I mean, I use go hunt a lot. They've got little blurbs on there. Obviously, everyone that can hunt that unit reads that blurred, but it just gives me an idea of like, okay, well here's somewhere that people are looking into. A lot of states even have that information. This is an area where there's a lot of success. This is an area. It just gives you a picture of what that area might look like. Here's an area that gets hunted a lot. Well, that means these other areas don't. Maybe there's a reason this area does. But here's more animals here. Whatever it is, I just try to understand that area a little bit. Then I go in and start looking for the things that I like to look for for whatever species it is on the 3D mapping software. I just kind of essentially fly around, do the preview thing, but from home, I scroll around and just look for places that look good and start dropping pins. The next step for me would be if I can find somebody that's been there, you gain a lot of information about it. And I generally don't ask, hey, where did you hunt? But it just understanding that unit and the kind of things that they found in that unit. What were the conditions like whatever? It's not always possible to talk to someone's hunted there. But in boots on the ground, a few minutes in the field kind of is a lot in knowledge that is very beneficial. So a lot of the hunts that I've been on if I can find someone that's been there and just talk to him about it. That just goes a long ways. And then I go back to the maps and kind of say, okay, well, places that I've already identified, what lines up? And maybe you look for places that lines up with something that someone said. And then start to build my plan from there. And you know, I mean, some of it, you go, well, how do I know if it's going to be good? And you don't. That's the kind of fun part about it, right? You do it, and then you get out in the field and you try it. It's like this sample it at home, and then see what happens in the field. And by doing that multiple times, you get really good at picking out the better spots. And then getting better in the field. And that's kind of the fun part about the game. There's no exact formula, but there's a formula that works a lot of the times. And then you just have to prove that formula in the field, if that makes sense. I'm Mitch from Boseman. My question would be, what would be your number one tip or tactic for late season Elk? My number one tip or tactic for late season Elk, I think is that strategy of finding the Elk, then moving in on them. They can be very are you talking like maybe like a rifle season, like in that real late? Yep, yeah, so late season they're more dependent on their food sources and their more pattern able. I really like hunting late season. I think it's probably one of, like if you've got the right weather conditions, it can be some of the best time to be successful. And we find it being able to pattern Elk is a lot easier that time of year. We're generally looking at food sources, south facing slopes for the most part, or this pockets of where grass is growing. The things that are everything else is covered up. Now, the one thing that you might, it depends how late it is, because there's a portion of time where the bulls now kind of break off from the herds. So you're looking in those pockets that are maybe controlling bowls, but you're also especially in Montana. A lot of those herds are transitory, migratory. And so you're finding those corridors, and then we do a lot of glassing for tracks and snow, getting that right conditioning going like, okay, here's where they're at. One tactic that I think has been the most successful for me personally, late season, is going way higher than everyone else. You only know those places where it's like, it is too deep and too crappy for Elk to be up here. And that's where the big bulls are going to be. If you want to kill a big bull late season, you need to get where the big bulls are. And it's not where all the cows are, generally. Every once in a while, you get lucky, but there's going to be a lot of cows in those gentle, more mild winter range, but if you get high, you're going to only most of the time, only find bowls, and you'd be surprised how many bowls are hanging out there until they just get completely forced out. And then finding those places on the ridges that are wind blown, even if it's like the wrong exposure if it gets wind blown, it gets that grass. So for late season, those are the kind of things that we look for. And because traveling is a lot harder in that deep snow, they become more predictable. So once you find those Elk in those areas, you can kind of keep going back year after year and finding the same bowls in the same time. There's many of the bowls that we end up killing are ones that we had watched the year before within a certain time window. And by kind of really figuring out that recipe, you can be really successful. I think it's probably one of the best times of year to kill a good bowl. All right. We'll

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"And I've talked about it on my podcast before, but the mountain tough app and everything. They've put science behind what hunters do, which I'm really for that. I like when they actually have like a fitness lab where they test people for mountain sports. And they, their program, they use for military application and also hunting as well, because hunting is a very specific endeavor. And there's very few other things where you're carrying weight, you're doing it day in, day out. It might not be high intensity, but there is that kind of high intensity. And so their program is really designed for matching what you might encounter out there. And then doing all the little things in the off season of going shed hunting, going on those hikes, weighted pack training. That's all things that they also talk about. But building that muscle memory of doing by doing, there's really no substitute for doing by doing. So you've got to build that memory for that specific thing. You could lift weights all day and be really good at lifting weights, but that doesn't mean that you could put a heavy pack on and climb up a mountain. So you need to build that muscle memory for that. And that endurance too. And then I think there's another aspect to hunting that probably outside of the fitness stuff that doesn't get talked about enough. And that's the mental aspect of it. As a guide, I've seen so many abled people break. I think that when you get in that head space of that, there's just people that are very mentally tough. And those people are going to be able to take what their body can already do and excel with it. And there's people that kind of fall apart. And so building that mental toughness of doing things that are really hard in day to day life, doing things that are hard and whatever other endeavors. And I think that building a regiment and getting in shape. And that's a hard thing. And that's also building up mental toughness. So however you can do that, that's a good way to do it. But just learning that don't quit attitude. I think just as far as you could be in really good shape. But if your brain doesn't match that what your body can do, we're capable of doing a lot more than we think. As a guide, you see it, I mean, we've had to talk people off the mountain half the time. And it's like, this guy is in shape, he should be able to go day in, day out, but just can't do it. Like, I am tired. I'm this. I'm that and learning that trick of telling yourself you aren't tired. It doesn't matter if you are tired. You just tell yourself to suck it up and keep pushing through it. Because your body can do a lot more than most people push it to. Actually get out of the way. Yeah, it was her question was advice for young families and get out together. I think one of the things that my wife and I do is we've just kind of incorporated bringing our daughter on the adventures that we like to go on. It's a different kind of adventure, right? Set your expectations of whatever you used to do before you have the baby. And so we kind of tailor it toward what we're able to do with our daughter. One of the things that we like to do is put her in the backpack. And it might not be going as far or as long. Finding places that we can go that are like, it's easier to get to a road. Maybe we aren't camping out in the back country, but we've got a nice place to stay or whatever. And so tailoring it toward where they're at during that time. But also just getting them used to being out there and doing what you're doing. I think that's like a testament to the way my parents raised us was they just did what they did before they had kids with us. And so we tried to kind of keep that same philosophy of doing what we like to do, whether we have kids with us or not. And just by doing that, you just understand that the experience is a little bit different, but in many ways, it's a lot better. So I hope that answers the question. Go ahead. My name is Bill, I'm from Great Falls, Montana. First of all, thanks for everything you do, Remy. It's hugely valuable to me and it probably made everybody in this room. The question is, if you could do one only one international hunt. Where would you go and why? If I can only do one international hunt, I would go to New Zealand. I think that it's probably for as far as availability of hunting, the type of adventure that you can have, the accessibility, there's no better place in the world. It's a hunter's playground really. There's a lot of different species that kind of match some really exciting things. Like you get to mountain hunt, you can kind of go on this crazy mountain adventure almost any time. You can hunt tar, you can not shammy. You can hunt different species of deer, red deer, fallow deer. And there's a really good kind of mix of opportunity, but also that it can be a tough hunt, there's a public land aspect that you can kind of do it on your own if you put in the time and whatever. But also just like the beauty of the place, the accessibility of the place, the fact that it's pretty wide open for hunting. I think that it's probably one of the best international destinations for four hunters. And just the amount of opportunity that you have there to hunt in really cool country, I think it's something that it's the reason that that's the one place that I kind of go back to every year since I started going there. Yeah. My name is Evan yeomans. I'm local here from gardnerville Nevada. Based on your experiences from el counting all around the nation. What are the best calls that you would use different techniques to call in a bowl, or to get them to even respond? Yeah, that's a good question. I love calling out. That's my primary way of hunting Elk. And even in places where it's like, other call shot, I still call. I like to bugle. I think that if you were to learn three, I really like to bugle and the reason is I like that challenge of communicating with a bull. If I was to pick three calls to know, I would say a locator bugle of just broadcasting a long sound to get bulls to fire back so you know where they are. That's the first thing to know. The second thing would be, I mean, Cal calls do work. And a basic mu or a drawn out and I have a call with me, but it's like a ew, ew. And then more of an estrus wine. That kind of like wine sound. They like that. So the bugle that, and then the other thing that I would like, that's the first two kind of basic things. And then the thing that I would advance from from that is just being very, very mean sounding. A lot of people, it doesn't really matter how good you are, but if it sounds like you want to kill the other bull, then you sound dominant. Really understanding that dominant bull call helps because the bulls that you're calling to don't want to fight a small bowl because they know that that bull owns no stake in that herd. But if there is a dominant bull there, even the bulls that can't match that bull, one in on that action because that's the party. That's the big bull. He runs the show. That's where the cows are. And if you can be that aggressive dominant bull, then you're going to have a lot more success calling another Elk or getting other Elk to fire up. And I think that there's like a thing of like calling too much, but understanding how sound travels is probably more important than how much you call because there's calls you can make or you might have to in certain areas where you got to call every hundred yards. The biggest bull that I ever killed, I was calling every probably 75 yards, hundred yards, and I had called a 150 yards from my last call and heard nothing and move a 150 yards forward because of such dense forest and got a bowl to fire off. And he didn't fire off earlier because he just couldn't hear it, or we couldn't hear him. So understanding those three calls and getting those proficient and then just understanding when and where to call is probably the best way to be successful when it comes to calling, no matter where you're at. We

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"So you showed me the techniques, the first time I did, I was like, this is never going to work. And I started with like a genesis bow really light poundage, and realized once I did it, I was like, okay. And progressed pretty quick. I changed I had to shorten my draw length by I think two and a half, three inches. I think I was shooting 20, I shoot 30 inches normally. And I think I was shooting 28 inches with a mouth tab, something like that. I dropped the poundage from 84 pounds to 60 pounds to start and then worked back up to 60 or 65 pounds. It actually surprisingly progressed very quickly. I think I've shot a lot of traditional bows, like just every, I just shoot a lot of things shotguns, rifles. I've been shooting stuff my whole life. So I think the mechanics of it was just very similar. I actually encourage people. If you've got an injury that you aren't going to be able to draw or whatever. It doesn't take that long to get it to click, to be honest. I think the hardest part was just letting it down. You think about it. Instead of I started shooting and then I got about one draw, and I thought, wait, what happens is if I can't shoot and I got to let down, you know, you got to move your neck forward and bring the bow to your face and it's pretty scary because the Nox coming right back towards your teeth, you know, so you wouldn't want it to jump or anything like that. But once I mastered that skill, I was well on my way. And then just started practicing and learned a lot at cool things along the way. I didn't think that I was going to have a very successful season. And it turned out that I actually probably had one of my most successful Bose seasons. And I think it was because I had to change my hunting style a little bit. I had to treat that bow like I would a traditional bow. And I said, I'm really going to get close. I'm really going to make these shots count. Not that I don't do that. Otherwise, but that instead of shooting from whatever. You just really every opportunity had to kind of really pay more attention to. And so by doing that, I actually filled pretty much every tag that I wanted to fill. My shot, my best free range move lawn on a draw area in Hawaii, just to start it off. And a shot of bull Elk over the counter general area with only a couple of days to hunt. I shot a Pronghorn antelope a couple of Caribou and a mule deer in Nevada. And I was like, between all that stuff is like, I had a very successful season and I think I learned a lot about it that I think now being able to shoot normal. I'm like, oh, game over. You know, it just feels like I just felt like I learned even doing this my entire life got to learn something new or something new about the way that I hunt. And really played to the strengths that I already had and became more successful doing it. So I think in many ways, it sucked, but it was also pretty awesome. Kind of piggybacking on what you're talking about earlier when you show up to a new place that you've never hunted before and maybe you've done your homework before, but is there two or three things or four things that you want to look for like a checklist in the back of your mind that you want to see or do first when you go into a piece of property? Yeah, I mean, anytime that I go into an area for the first time, a lot of the hunts that I might go on might be the first time that I'm ever in there and I've got four days to hunt three days, 5 days on whatever. One thing that I do on pretty much every hunt, whether I have one day or if I got two days or a week, is the first day I call it a preview. And I cover as much country as possible. And it's mostly, I'll put in a lot of time, E scouting, and highlighting certain areas. And then I take a day to preview the area. And it's not like I'm not necessarily looking for animals. I am. But I'm just like covering country and just getting my eyes on places that I've already said. So it might mean driving the entire unit and just visually looking at this is what this mountain looks like. This glassing advantage that I checked, like I'm just trying to verify this. And some of the stuff you might be like, well, I marked places that are ten, 15 mile, 5 miles, four miles off the trails, whatever. But I just find places where I can just get a look at a lay of the land. And through that, I've found I can start to narrow down the places that what I've seen on my maps really match what's going on out there. And you might see animals you might not, but it gives me a really good idea of the places that I've already identified what might work. And sometimes through that, I'll just, you know, in the mornings, I'm picking those really good advantages where I can just get back and cover country with my optics. I'll get my spotting scope, binoculars on a tripod. I'll get I'll find a place where it's like maybe it's not somewhere I'd ever hunt from, but I can see a big portion of the mountain. There's been times where I'll drive ten miles away from the mountain that I'm hunting just to look at the entire mountain, I'll throw out my optics and just kind of peek in there and maybe you'll see, man, there's a pocket of Elk in this particular spot that I didn't even think about. And by doing that preview, it really gives me a good idea of verifying what I've kind of already learned on my maps. But by doing that, I've found a lot of success. And then kind of going back to that question back here in those new areas. If I'm not finding what I'm looking for because I don't know the area, oftentimes I move more often than maybe somewhere that I have knowledge in the past kind of goes back to that question of how long do you stay if it's an area where I know it's productive, then I tend to be more patient, but if it's a new area that I might say, there's been times where I've been hunting. I preview it one day. I've got 5 days to hunt. I go hunt two days. And I'm like, this isn't what I was expecting. Boom, I'll pull back out and preview again and go check another part of the unit and then go in and hunt those last two days on the information that I've gained from that little bit of a preview. Next week. Yeah, so I'm pretty new to archery hunt two, and I want to learn how to work on my bow. I've seen there's a couple of schools out there. You've got to be a Bo tech. Are there any books or YouTube guys? You could recommend how did you learn to work on your bow? Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of videos out there. I think there's a lot of guys that are really good at it. John Dudley's one that I think about is like school and knock stuff. To work on your bow, you need certain equipment, a boat press is the primary thing. So once you've got the right equipment, then you can do it. The nice thing about being able to do it yourself is you can tweak with it, you can learn your bow and what you like and what you don't like. But then there's always the option of it depends what you want to get out of it too. If you don't have that stuff, 'cause it's a fairly big investment as well. There are really good bow shops that that's why there are bow shops. Always generally sold through pro shops where it's like, that's the point of that shop is to help get you set up and all that kind of stuff. But there's a lot of information online now where you can kind of figure it out and then a little bit of trial and error when it comes just like anything else. The error you don't want to have as your book explode on you so you just kind of want to follow all the safety procedures and make sure you're pressing it right and got the right kind of press for your bow. That's the other kind of thing is you find an old press that you can get, but it doesn't work on certain bows or models or other things. So just make sure it works for your bow. And yeah, that's pretty much all you need. Oh, sorry, let's go back here. Oh, if you guys don't mind too, I probably should

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"Successful in the back. What are your techniques for spotting and what makes you decide when you're going to either leave or move or go to a different location. Yeah, so if I'm sitting, I'm just going to pick a hypothetical. We're hunting meal deer. And I'm looking over this basin and it's I'm starting at dark sun's coming up and I'm like looking over this basin and I don't see any deer. I've kind of got what I would consider happy feet. Like I feel like my glass in it just kind of depends where you're at, right? Like I feel like I'm very good at picking out animals if they're there. And if I don't see what I'm looking for, I'm the type of person that will move until I find what I'm looking for. Because somewhere out there is that spot where those animals are. When you think about the country that you're hunting, 90% of the country holds 10% of the animals. There's a lot of really good country that just doesn't have anything in it. And when you look at a base and you go, this is perfect for mule deer. It's like, yeah, it's perfect, but they just aren't there. So go and find those other perfect places where they are. And I don't spend a lot of time. If I feel like I've covered it, then I move on. The difference would be. Now, what about that country where you can't really cover it with your optics where I can't really cover it really fast? Then I spend more time in that area, but I'm also depending on how much sign I'm seeing. The reasons that I believe that there's animals in that particular place. One of the biggest deer that I've taken with a bow was in an area where it was really thick country. And I hiked all over and this area had everything that I really liked about it. It was it was sheltered. It just for some reason to me it checked all the boxes of the things that I was looking for. And I knew that that particular area could hold a big mature meal deer. It was far enough away from the road is really hard to get into. It had a water supply. It had good exposure of northern and southern faces. It was very protected and sheltered, but also it just really had everything that I was looking for. It had a very innocent area with low density deer, but I knew if I stuck it out in this particular area because I couldn't cover it very well, that eventually I would find that bucket I was looking for. So in that particular instance, I spent an entire week hunting this one small drainage and found one deer and killed that one gear and it was a 185 inch buck. In other instances where I feel like I can cover the country with my optics and other things, I might sit 5, ten minutes in that prime time. And then move on to the next base and while it's prime time, because I know like, okay, I've seen what I can see here. I'd rather be moving and find those ones that are just standing out and really hone in on, okay, I don't want to waste my time sitting in one particular spot when I know that those deer might not be there and I can move on. So it's very specific to the kind of like how will I feel like I can cover the country and how will I feel like that area might hold what I'm looking for. So it kind of depends on where you are. But I'd say overall compared to maybe other people, I know I've got friends that are those patient hunters that they pick a spot and they just keep hunting it and hammering it. Whatever. If I don't see what I'm looking for, I move fairly quick. I don't spend multiple days in a place that it's not productive. I just go to where I can find the animals. If that makes sense. All right, go ahead. So I noticed this last year, your hunting with a cast, and you used a mouth tab or something with your bow. Can you explain what your injury was and how you came up with using a mouth tab. And you probably had to reduce your poundage or, I don't know. Yeah, that was a great question. So yeah, so I had a wrist injury, which essentially tore the tendons and ligaments that made the wrist move. And then by doing that, the bones in there are dislocated as well. The original injury started shot a duck is flying pretty fast and pretty high. And decided to try to reach out and catch it. And I think that was the initial thing. I didn't even think about it as these two fingers. I was wearing neoprene gloves and I reached up and those fingers went back pretty far. And I just kind of felt like I just jammed my fingers so I taped them up and just let it do its own thing didn't go see a doctor or anything. And then it was fine a little bit later on. I started shooting a bow a lot and it was like a lot of repetitions with the bow and then we'd also just had a baby. And so I think the combination of the shooting the bow and holding it that injury had never actually healed itself. And that started it and then shortly after that I went on a sheet punt in BC and my hand, I just hadn't been like I couldn't really use my hand, but I just figured get better. I was hiking and just risk gave loose and slammed it into the mountain and I think that's the part that dislocated it. And then I continue just talking about maybe I should stop talking because it's telling me how stupid hard headed I am. But then I was skinning out. I went on an Elk hunt shot the biggest boy had ever killed and in order to skin the bull out. I had to like duct tape the knife to my hand 'cause I couldn't hold it and the guys that are with me and you're like you should probably get that checked out. Yeah, you know it's been bugging me for a while and I got it checked out and figured they'd say yes just get better on its own and they're like, wow, it's such a very extensive rare injury that's going to be very hard to fix. So I've had two surgeries now. The first surgery failed. The second surgery is better. I've got motion and can move my hand and fingers and for what it is. I don't think I'll get the full mobility out of it. Now, between that, I actually waited, so I knew that it was damaged. It was, I think it was the September right after that L cunt. And then I they said it was a 6 month recovery, so I waited until February to get it fixed. And then I thought just in case I go into my hunting season, I don't want to be, I don't want to miss a bow season. So I've got a friend in the name of Nolan young. He lives here in Reno, Nevada. And he was born with cerebral palsy. And so he doesn't have use of one of his hands. And I've shot a 3D tournaments with him before and we've shot together. And so I knew it was possible. And I think that that was one of the things like, I knew it was possible. I didn't know what it would take to get into it. And there wasn't very much information online. I tried to do a bunch of research and just really came up short. I reached out to Nolan and he was like, yeah, man, I don't get you set up. You got to be set up and I think the initial just like biting down. So what you do, you line the tab up, it's a tab on the D loop, like a piece of fabric, leather, whatever. You line it up with your molars and you bite down, you push forward to draw back and then you drop your bottom jaw to release. If you open your mouth, it goes haywire because it's a little uncontrolled so you got to just drop the bottom jaw. And

Live Wild with Remi Warren
"reno" Discussed on Live Wild with Remi Warren
"It's just one of the many things that we as hunters bring to the table. So let's jump right into the live Q&A and talk hunting. Yeah, thank you guys so much for coming. I like to do this kind of a Q&A format, as opposed to just talking to people about what I want to talk about. I really love interacting with everyone and getting to know what the things in hunting that you want to know about. A little bit about my background, maybe if you just saw the sign when we're stopping, seem like it'd be a cool thing in this hallway in the back of the convention center or whatever. I started out I'm from here in Nevada. I see a lot of familiar faces. Some people that I've seen at these things at the sheep show and the last couple of years and some people have seen around as well. So it's awesome to see you guys thank you guys so much for coming. One of the things that I got my start here hunting a lot of these mountains that you see around you, if you aren't from here, I grew up hunting with my dad and my family. And then I right after high school started guiding Elk hunts in Montana became a professional Elk guide and worked my way up to becoming an outfitter running my own outfitting camp in Montana and around the world guided in New Zealand, South Africa. New Mexico, like all over the place. So wherever there's a hunt, I kind of just chased the seasons. And by chasing the seasons, I ended up finding myself hunting 320 days a year or in the field, and that was kind of how I got a lot of experience. And so I feel very fortunate to have a lot of experience in a lot of different types of hunting scenarios. And that's why I like to open it up to question and answer because if I was just talk on one topic, I feel like there's a lot of people that would maybe not get the information that they maybe wanted to get out of something like this. So yeah, so I really just enjoy that kind of aspect. So that's going to be our format today. And as soon as we get everything rolling, we'll get going. Hopefully you guys have some questions. And at the end, I'm going to reward a few of our question askers with I've got a brand new Yeti yonder bottle here. I've got a sweet new headlamp. I actually haven't tried this one out yet from last light. They've got a booth in here. I picked these up today. And then a power bank and light rope. Got to try those out the season. And it worked really well. So I think we'll get started here. And we'll open it up to some questions. Thank you guys so much for coming. And like I said, this is going to be an episode of our live wild podcast so long as it's not too echoey and doesn't sound too weird or nobody asked me something really embarrassing and I stumble in my words and make fun of myself. But let's get started. Anybody want to open it up with any questions? And if there is no questions and I'll just talk about what I think is cool. But somebody's got to break the ice. All right, our icebreaker. Yeah, there you go. This is how this game works, guys, all right. A little bit of bravery. What one piece of equipment do you always have on you in any type of hunt? Like the one thing that you always make sure you have. The one thing that she asked, you can hear it. I think if I were to pick up a piece of a piece of equipment outside of whatever I'm shooting the animal with, it would be my optics. I feel literally naked without my optics and it's because I use them so much. It's just like a part of me. If I was to walk around hunting without a set of binoculars, I think it would just feel really off. And it's because I use them so much and I rely on them so much. Not just because it's my primary hunting method of spot and stock hunting the spot is the most important aspect. But even when I'm in thick cover, I use those binoculars constantly and the mistake that I see most hunters making that come out unsuccessful is they might have optics that they aren't using enough. Like I just can't put enough emphasis on how much of those optics are to my face. If they're on your chest in your backpack, they just aren't being utilized enough. And you can't really use them enough. It's an enhancement tool where you can see ten times your vision for an animal that is escaping predators by hiding and you've got something to give yourself like a major edge. And so I see people all the time. When I'm guiding, especially, we'll be walking in. No, we haven't seen anything. You know, there's no Elk back here, whatever, and you see they've got no binoculars on. They're like looking through an old rifle scope or whatever is their glassing, they're just using their eyes. And we already know that there are Elk there because we've seen them from the trailhead essentially. So the optics, in my opinion, if somebody's like, you can go out without a jacket or I'd probably rather just hunt in underwear and have optics than have clothing in no optics because I know that I'll be successful with the optics. Anyone else? As kind of a new hunter with Bose, what do you suggest to be most successful on like a spot in stock hunt with a boat? Yeah, I mean, when it comes to archery hunting, if I was to pick one specific tactic, right? Like with Elk, you can go calling with white tails. You can set up a stand with mule deer. It's all spot in stock. But the technique that can work for pretty much every species is a spot in stock child hunting. And I think that in order to be extremely efficient with it, there's a certain amount of patience and understanding like this weight and go factor. There's certain times that you need to move really, really fast. And there's other times that you need to move really, really slow. And so by understanding that I need to make a move now or I need to slow down and be really patient. Learning that timing game makes the biggest difference when it comes to bow hunting. Especially when it comes to bonding a myriad of species in different places or wherever you're at. Because if you can understand that timing, when I'm guiding someone for Elk, most of the time, the reason that they might not get the opportunity that they could get is because they went too slow at a certain point. And then other times like if it's a guy stalking Mulder, they didn't go slow enough at a certain point. They didn't pay enough attention to certain things. So understanding the timing of the stock, you'll see an animal that gets into a position where it's now advantageous for you and you need to be there now. And that's that time that you speed up. You get there, you do what you can to get close. And then that time where maybe I got to sit back and let this mule to your bed and be patient about my stock because it's not the right opportunity for me right now. I like to put whatever I can do to swing the odds in my favor. The animals that were hunting are adapted to survive from animals like mountain lions that are extremely silent that can hunt and move and be very quiet. So the prey species that we're hunting is adapted to here to smell. Like we're at a disadvantage. So you need to wait for that opportunity where you have that slight advantage and then use the right timing to get there, whether it's move faster, move slow. And I think by understanding that concept, you can hunt really anything in the world and be very

The Eric Metaxas Show
Patrick Knapp Looks Into the Abuses of the Church
"Final segment with my guest Patrick Knapp, the book is understanding religious abuse and recovery, the organization is becoming free dot org. Patrick, my producer Alvin just said to me that the Branch Davidians in Waco, that happened in April of 93. It is astonishing to think that it is almost 30 years. It really is mind-blowing to think that this is 30 years seems like ten minutes ago, but it's 30 years ago. It was the first days of the Clinton administration. I remember Janet Reno was part of what part of the horror of how that unfolded. Unfortunately, in any event, so in a remaining time, what are your, what would you like to talk about? And what should we touch on? Well, one of the things that Heidi and I are very passionate about is passing on to other people education about this topic. We certainly want to do the life coaching. That's our number one goal is to work with people on a one to one basis, helping them to process their religious abuse and their recovery. But we also really look forward to doing more educational kind of opportunities, whether for myself, one of the things that I would love to be doing is specifically to be able to teach a class at a college level or a graduate level, I've got a tentative syllabus. I would have put together and would love to have a 12 or 14 week period, be able to educate college students into a broader picture or broader understanding of what religious abuse and recovery might look like.

AP News Radio
Actor Jeremy Renner is in intensive care after surgery
"Actor Jeremy Renner is recovering in an intensive care unit after suffering injuries in a snowplow accident near Reno Nevada on Sunday, a marchesa a letter with the latest. A publicist for Jeremy Renner says he suffered blunt chest trauma and orthopedic injuries in Sunday's accident. Runner remains in critical but stable condition after surgery yesterday, neither renner's publicist nor authorities have said how the accident happens, but they do say he was the only person involved. Renner is known for playing Hawkeye in The Avengers for marvel's TV and movie universe and for playing a bomb disposal specialist in the film the hurt locker

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
An Update on Damar Hamlin of the Buffalo Bills
"Let me start with an update on the condition of the Buffalo Bill safety demar Hamlin. According to the bills, he is still under sedation and critical condition, his heart stopped after a hit last night, and they revived him on the field, but he is sedated in a Cincinnati hospital forget the anti vaxxers who flooded the web last night and blamed really not a REIT. It's finest. Commodity Cordis is likely, according to medical experts, it's a blow to the heart. In 58% of patients, they recover, will pray for young mister Hamlin. No, the update on marble actor, Jeremy Renner, who was hurt when his snow machine tipped on him, his Reno, Nevada, retreat, no word beyond he is also in critical condition.

AP News Radio
Jeremy Renner seriously injured while plowing snow in Nevada
"Extra Jeremy Renner is recovering from serious injuries suffered while plowing snow in Reno, Nevada. I'm Archie's are a letter with the latest. Jeremy Renner's representative says he is in critical but stable condition, but did not give details on his injuries. The washoe county sheriff's office in Nevada says renner was the only person involved in the accident, and he was flown by helicopter to a hospital. It's unclear how the accident happened. Renner, who is 51, is known for playing Hawkeye in the marvel Avengers movie and TV universe

AP News Radio
Reno mayor sues after finding tracking device on vehicle
"Reno's mayor is suing a private investigator David mcneely and his company 5 alpha industries after finding a tracking device attached to her vehicle that was capable of tracking its real-time location. Hillary Shiva's lawsuit alleges that the investigator, trespassed onto her property to install the device without her consent. She says she was unaware of the tracking device until a mechanic noticed it while working on her vehicle. She be brought the device to police in neighboring sparks, where they were able to determine that

AP News Radio
Winter storm barrels into Sierra Nevada, prompting avalanche warning
"A powerful Sierra Nevada winter storm prompts back country avalanche warnings, closes a Lake Tahoe highway and knocks out power to some California customers. A 250 mile stretch of the Sierra from north of Reno to south of Yosemite National Park is under a winter storm warning with as much as four feet of snow expected in the upper elevations around Lake Tahoe and a flood advisory along the California coast from Sacramento to San Francisco. Mammoth mountain ski representative Lauren Burke says all the snow is a blessing for business. Gears and riders have been ecstatic with how good it's been out there. We've been able to open more

AP News Radio
Nevada geothermal power lawsuit bound for US appeals court
"A a a a federal federal federal federal appeals appeals appeals appeals court court court court will will will will have have have have to to to to decide decide decide decide whether whether whether whether protecting protecting protecting protecting historical historical historical historical tribal tribal tribal tribal lands lands lands lands and and and and a a a a rare rare rare rare toad toad toad toad warrant warrant warrant warrant blocking blocking blocking blocking a a a a major major major major geothermal geothermal geothermal geothermal plant plant plant plant in in in in Nevada Nevada Nevada Nevada the the the the site site site site one one one one hundred hundred hundred hundred miles miles miles miles east east east east of of of of Reno Reno Reno Reno is is is is home home home home to to to to the the the the Dixie Dixie Dixie Dixie valley valley valley valley toad toad toad toad being being being being considered considered considered considered for for for for U. U. U. U. S. S. S. S. endangered endangered endangered endangered species species species species listing listing listing listing Ormat Ormat Ormat Ormat technologies technologies technologies technologies says says says says it it it it could could could could lose lose lose lose tens tens tens tens of of of of millions millions millions millions of of of of dollars dollars dollars dollars if if if if it it it it can't can't can't can't begin begin begin begin construction construction construction construction before before before before March March March March and and and and may may may may abandon abandon abandon abandon the the the the project project project project it's it's it's it's lawyers lawyers lawyers lawyers say say say say geo geo geo geo thermal thermal thermal thermal development development development development is is is is important important important important in in in in slowing slowing slowing slowing climate climate climate climate change change change change critics critics critics critics say say say say format format format format brought brought brought brought this this this this on on on on itself itself itself itself by by by by not not not not preparing preparing preparing preparing a a a a detailed detailed detailed detailed environmental environmental environmental environmental impact impact impact impact statement statement statement statement I'm I'm I'm I'm Julie Julie Julie Julie Walker Walker Walker Walker

AP News Radio
Knapp Scores Winner in 9th for Phillies in 6-5 Win Over Cubs
"Going on a passed ball by catcher Robinson Chirinos with two out in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the Phillies a six five win over the cubs Philadelphia led by former Chicago tied the contest at the top of the ninth inning with a solo home run by Matt Duffy G. two will be jealous forty Galveston also homered for the film to snap a two game losing streak the wind chill Reno's and Frank Swindell holder for the cubs in the loss Michael Luongo below via

Environment: NPR
Firefighters Battle Wildfires, Fatigue as California Braces for an Extended Fire Season
"There's hope for the evacuated residents of south lake. Tahoe who waiting to return to their homes. Firefighters have made progress against a massive kaldor fire. Threatening the california resort town calmer winds and higher humidity have helped their efforts. But with mega-fires the new norm the work of wad line. The work of wildland firefighters is harder and longer than it used to be. Extreme weather fuelled by climate change is putting a strain on them and other emergency workers. Npr's eric westervelt has this report. In a stretch of bone bone-dry pine forest on the edge of south lake. Tahoe crews putting out windblown spot. Fires is hard tedious. Work scraping the ground with hand tools. Just up the road. Helicopters are dropping water on a main edge of the massive kaldor fire as it crackles toward the tahoe basin like most wildland firefighting crews. This one from reno has been jumping from fire to fire with little downtime already. This year reno. Fire has sent screws eight different states. Most of this crew just shifted from the nearby dixie. Fire california's second largest fire on record to help. Defend lake tahoe. Smoke ash heat sleep deprivation battalion chief. Bill erlich says yes to remind his team not to overdo it. You can see some guys get a little fatigued and just remind him. Hey there's enough of us you can take time out you know. Take care of yourself. And we'll take care you too because we gotta pay ourself pacing and avoiding firefighter. Burnout is a nationwide problem. The federal office decides which wildfires get priority says. The us is currently exhausted all national firefighting resources from personnel to equipment. They've been at this level five alert since mid-july so now the pentagon has been tapped to mobilize hundreds of active duty servicemembers as well as aircraft to help fight wildfires. Some states have also activated the national guard critics charge at the old firefighting deployment models and the mutual aid. System are near a breaking point. Exhausted crews resources stretched thin. That's the reality. In the era of climate change fueled mega-fires ad in record drought and the routinization of extreme weather. And you've got a serious problem

Chasing Poker Greatness
2015 WSOP Champion Andrew Barber on When the Game Clicked for Him
"The realization. You you eventually come to. Which i think put realization every poker player has is like cash is going to be better for my sanity than tournaments If i care about the swings adult and so. I started playing cash. But i had gotten into Omaha hi lo through my experience with with going to reno for mixed games and stuff and i just like fired up like a small stakes six handed omaha hi low table in just clicked. It just clicked the way that i've heard other poker players talk about specific formats where they just they. Just get it and i just seem to get it and i i went from. It was fifty cents a dollar to seventy five one fifty on stars within nine months something like that solely solely playing oma hiwa solely playing omaha. Hi lo still dabbling in like Sitting go stuff and some empty teas. But like i became obsessed with the game. I like i had a poker journal. I was always thinking about the game. I was talking to other people about it. I mean like some of my best poker friends or people that i that i kind of met around this time. We're talked omaha. hi lo with. Why do you think it clicked so much. And i'll follow up question down. The line is also why did mixed games resonate with you so much well. I don't know if everyone's experienced this. But i kinda got bored with simplicity of holdem. I mean i respect that like it is A game that can be Extremely deep And that you can run. Sim after sim episode in different spots. but i think ultimately i didn't like the lack of complexity in strategies And with mixed games you have like you know constant variation like i love playing a multi game mix. Where like the game is changing every orbit. So it's like okay. Let's shift is something new. I think maybe i get bored. Or i liked shifting gears and thinking of the different way but omaha. Hi lo is. I love split park games first of all so like if i were to rank my favorite game split games are going to be at the top of the list. I love the idea that we're like playing two games simultaneously like that's really cool to me. you know it's So there's that i think there's this Maybe a concept that came naturally to me that maybe other struggle with is kind of seeing where my hand is on a spectrum like the weaker your low hand is the sorry. I'm making the Are you relatively familiar with them. A high low. I know the rules of how became operates. Okay so there's there's these trade offs that like the worst year low hand is the better. Your hand has to be and vice versa and just seem to understand where my hand fell on that that distribution You it's not often that you have like the nuts and the high side in the nuts and the low side and especially playing shorthanded or heads up You're gonna have a trash on both ends chair. It's kind of like trying to understand. How does my trash measure up to my opponents trash in what's that might like my optimal strategy here So yeah i really. I took to that in that. I think the game was also like Poised for a Poised for evolution like it was a very people are still playing a very primitive elementary strategy. There was like a little more not pedley back back then. And i was able to take advantage of that that i think i just saw There's maybe an holdem analog. That could be made

Weird AF News
"reno" Discussed on Weird AF News
"Reno nevada is banning whips in public. A school is dealing with an unusual situation. Students dressing and acting like cats and the police suspect a poisoning at a university as students. Turn a blue. These are the weird stories for thursday on weird af news. You're only daily weird news. Podcast hosted by a los angeles comedian. I'm joan z. And i'm grateful that you're here. I have three weird stories from around the world for thursday. Today all right. let's do it. A city in nevada is cracking down on whips. They're moving forward with public ban of whips. Yeah whips squash. That is one of the best sound effects. I do the whip sound effect so this is the city of reno reno nevada. Have you ever been there guys. You don't need to go. i was there for you. So reno council members voted unanimously to move forward with a ban on whips in public places saying that whips can scare and intimidate people and strain police resources. So you can't bring your whip out into public but good news guys in reno you can still use your whip in the bedroom. So the proposed a whip. Ordinance would make it a misdemeanor to quote us carry or possess whips or crack or use a whip to annoy interfere with or endanger a person on public grounds because a lot of people are just cracking whips in public. And reno is that. What's going on interfering with persons on public grounds with their whips. Now i was in reno for an entire week. Doing shows at the comedy club up there. That's in a hotel. And i didn't leave the hotel too often Because if you were to see the neighborhood of reno you wouldn't want to leave either. You'd stay in your hotel. I mean unless you had a whip to protect yourself you're going to need a whip you're going to need a weapon of some sort if whip is your weapon of choice though i have to say you'll have to mix it up with something else. Perhaps a taser. If you're going to be in reno because you can't be using whips not even to crack in public and we all love a good whip crap crack. It's a good time right guess. Whips apparently have become more common especially in downtown reno in recent years. That's what it says. I can't believe it. But yeah i guess they're really turning back the clock. Everybody thinks they're indiana jones. When they're in reno reno police told council members. They responded to over over one hundred and seventy whip related calls in the last year. Hundred and seventy whip. Related costs this outstanding. Well the whip is really making a comeback guys. It's not just for the rodeo. Now take it to the bar with you. Take it to starbucks. It says since people often mistake the whip-cracking noise for gunshots police respond to dozens of quote. Shots fired calls that. Just turn out to be people snapping their often homemade whips. I don't know how you make a whip at home but apparently people are making homemade whips. And they do sound like a gunshot. I suppose and so when it says in this article. It's a drain on police resources. I guess what they mean is. The police are wasting their time responding to these shots fired calls. They're going to the neighborhood and just finding a homeless cowboy on the street. Just whipping it up. You know cowboys are homeless now. It's tough life tough living if you're a cowboy. The mayor of reno name. Hillary called the whips quote intimidating dangerous and she pushed back against the notion that some people use whips as an art form. Do they use it as an art form. I guess perhaps there's street performances with whips. Maybe i'm trying to wrap my head around. That could be. It's a very archaic form of street performance. Kind of like the mime. You don't really see the mime anymore. Hillary's very concerned with it and she's right they are intimidating and they can be dangerous is councilwoman involved in this neo. Mma shared an example of how the whips. She said contribute to a very less safe and less enjoyable downtown reno experience. She says i watched a father with his son on back. One of these whip crackers crack that whip in the direction of the young boy and he responded by crashing his bike because well it was such a shock. Well yeah you can't be cracking your whippet kids man. What's wrong with you. The proposal to get rid of these whips received some pushback from the aclu of nevada and homeless advocates. Who said the ordinances unfairly targeting the homeless population. Okay i mean i. I live in los angeles. I see a lot of homeless people. I mean tent everywhere in every neighborhood. I've ever moved to. I've lived in about four different neighborhoods. It's the same everywhere. The homelessness situation is is out of control. Here never wants that. I see a whip. I guess this is reno thing. There's someone named holly of the aclu. She said the new law would be too broad and should be more specific to avoid limiting people's rights to free expression who's expressing themselves with whips. I want to know that. I mean unless you're a john wayne impersonator. Like what are you expressing themselves with whips and if you are expressing yourself with a whip how about move onto something like a cello or a trumpet or maybe juggling okay. I'm not even against fire-breathing in public. Okay because that seems safe to me you stick it down your own throat not somebody else's this whips in public. This just seems strange. If you're expressing yourself with whips and public. Yeah maybe not do that. It's like if you were trying to express yourself in public with numb chucks on a busy street corner. I'm not okay with that either. You agree disagree. Six four six four five zero twenty twelve. Do.

First Light
California Fires Close in on Communities as Smoke Chokes Lake Tahoe
"And Reno, Nevada is thick with brown smoke this morning, the region experiencing the worst air quality in the nation by far Causes that massive Kildare fire, which is torching his way through the Eldorado National Forest and getting perilously close to tourist destination. Lake Tahoe. The fierce blaze has already gutted hundreds of homes. Former President Donald Trump

Morning Edition
California Wildfires Affect Air Quality and Health of Nevada Residents
"Multiple large wildfires are continuing to burn in California, and smoke and ash from these blazes are blanketing communities in northern Nevada, A U. S senator from Nevada is calling for research into the health effects of these deposits. From member station K U N. R Lucia Starbuck has more Reno residents haven't seen a blue sky in awhile. Air quality has measured unhealthy for eight days this month, meaning members of sensitive groups may experience serious health effects in firefighters face special challenges. Local fire chief says his crews will face 20 years of smoke exposure over the course of their careers. Senator Catherine Court has Masto thinks more information is needed. We need to study the impact long term impacts that this air quality is having on our health for for our firefighters, and for so many others, Cortez Masto says some of the funding in the Senate passed infrastructure bill should be used for the

Cardionerds
"reno" Discussed on Cardionerds
"That he helps reno from business models and outside medicine even in medicine that diversity drives innovation diversity drives creativity in and then we talk about the leaky pipeline. How do you plug the leaky pipeline. The way we need to do that is by making it more diverse so more women more underrepresented minorities join outfield. The more faces like me is visible out there. The moral come and join us. So that's a simple answer for that..

Chris Krok
Airports in the US West dealing with shortage of jet fuel
"Participating a jet fuel shortage coupled with supply chain issues and an urgent demand from firefighting aircraft, causing problems at airports around the west. In Nevada, state and federal lawmakers are investigating a possible shortage of jet fuel that could delay cargo delivery and passenger travel at Reno Tahoe International

Rare with Flair
"reno" Discussed on Rare with Flair
"I'm visually impaired. There's like literally monks back and they never like if it were just up to that. It wouldn't even matter if that makes sense like if it were just if you're just relying on the checkmark till like be helped owner to start for like layer one when you walk in that door. You have to be willing to advocate for yourself. Risk getting left yes and this is why using cane guy dog is helpful if you want assistance because generally someone will come up to you and be like. Hey i need help and at that point. You're like yes. I need assistance. So that check mark on the website. When you're booking your ticket is a bunch of baloney because it literally means nothing like you still have to be prepared in waiting for you ever. Oh no i wonder maybe if you buy an expensive like first or business class ticket or something like maybe they'll take you. Maybe you they roll out the red carpet just for you. I need to try that out. One day i know right. I just got really. I just got a little passionate because of how crazy. It is how i mean. I've waited like forty five minutes before just to get assistance. So it's crazy but at least you get to skip the line so that is true. Yeah so usually might might. Tactic is often like look lost. And then they'll then they'll let you cut i purposely went on. You know the desk where you check your baggage yes. I purposely was walking right in front of those desks with my cane. Just to like so. I didn't even have to ask me what i just knew. They would say something to me like. I was like look lost. Walk seriously. i've done that before. Usually like often works. Because you know they're like you're kind of sometimes in their way and you don't necessarily but like still they're like. Oh well i guess. I think we should help you. And then they. I feel like they feel more inclined to help you spend. They're like oh clearly. She needs assistance. I don't know it's silly that we feel. We have to prove ourselves but at the same time like in a situation like this. It's like we need what we need. We need it in an expedient amount of time because you're clearly like need to get somewhere so sometimes it like we just need to make our point known yes and then after the flight at the very end finding like your uber. The taxi line is has such a struggle with. I was telling case i had this like nightmarish trip to reno for a conference one time but i arrive pretty late like it was an evening flight and so when i finally got there. It was like almost midnight..

The Dental Marketer
"reno" Discussed on The Dental Marketer
"So i. I do want to emphasize another thing. This is gonna be a little off topic. But i can talk about like the psychology and the emotions that go in to that timeline that i was talking about earlier so my background is engineering right so when we were first opening the business i'm very like connection oriented like okay. If we do this we do this. We do this right. So i didn't see it the dentistry as an emotional thing just personally like lie. Pattern of thinking was my wife. She was much more connected to. How does this impact us. What are the things that are going to connect all this together right. So it's easy to tell a story and say that it's easy or it was. Just here's how things work out when you're waiting like earlier story when we were waiting for that letter of interest come back from the landlord. That was like really really painful. Because you can't go do anything else. You're waiting for somebody else to make a decision in every week or every other week when you get an update. They're not making it in your like. What can we do better. What can we do to improve our situation. There's nothing you can do. And i come from an engineering world where this is. Actually it can be fairly common The mantras called hurry up and wait so for us to go through this together. It was great to see both sides. Because i think in dentistry when your patients come to you they want instant results. They want the pain to go away. Instantly in year expected to deliver that. In what i think the dentist. They also feel pressured to just get things done quickly. Not wait around same day during the street. that's becoming more common reno. Everything is coming quicker quicker but on the business side of it. It's a complete opposite rate. It's a game of patients strategy finances analysis. All the stuff in enough takes time so it was an awesome experience working together through all those challenges but completely different mindsets approaching the same problems so with that. Was there any times where you guys were like. Maybe we shouldn't do this. Oh absolutely i. I.

Code Story
ClickUp Founder on Why Progress Is Better Than Perfection
"As an engineer. It's probably when. I know it is a similar to being an artist right and if you have to cut a feature like you mentioned due dates and you have to release the product without that. It can sting a little bit right. So how was that for. You releasing him in stressing the emini. Mvp and were and seeing your product. Go out a little bit immature. We were fine. We understood what it was and we knew we were going to continue to push forward if you keep the mindset that hey we want to see people use this first and hit the product and understand how they're gonna use it before we make some decisions on on pieces of this product. I think it it doesn't stink too much. There's still work like to get those out. There would be work to be done if you're pushing for perfection you're never gonna hit you're never gonna have customers using your things. One of our core values it. Click up his progress towards perfection. Like reno we can't ship something. You don't have the bandwidth if we want to get something to our customers for customers. Want it now. Have to take that into consideration. And i think it's important also that our engineering team works closely with product that i mean career. Mvp is pretty easy. You know had full people working on it and so everyone you know wears a lot of acid. Even today. it's important. That engineering works with product. Understand the trade offs in of planets.

Code Story
ClickUp Cofounder on Creating an All-in-One Project Management Tool
"So how was that for. You releasing him in stressing the emini. Mvp and were and seeing your product. Go out a little bit immature. We were fine. We understood what it was and we knew we were going to continue to push forward if you keep the mindset that hey we want to see people use this first and hit the product and understand how they're gonna use it before we make some decisions on on pieces of this product. I think it it doesn't stink too much. There's still work like to get those out. There would be work to be done if you're pushing for perfection you're never gonna hit you're never gonna have customers using your things. One of our core values it. Click up his progress towards perfection. Like reno we can't ship something. You don't have the bandwidth if we want to get something to our customers for customers. Want it now. Have to take that into consideration. And i think it's important also that our engineering team works closely with product that i mean career. Mvp is pretty easy. You know had full people working on it and so everyone you know wears a lot of acid. Even today. it's important. That engineering works with product. Understand the trade offs in of planets.

NewsRadio KFBK
"reno" Discussed on NewsRadio KFBK
"Is dead crews, Reno said died Friday at 90 years old. He received the presidential Medal of Freedom for former President Clinton in 2000 and served for years of the UC Davis School of Law. Reno So was the son of migrant farm workers, and he became one of the leaders and civil rights law. His cause of death is currently unknown. Four people are injured after a nightclub shooting in Citrus Heights. We see the received a call around 1:25 A.m.. Yesterday when officers arrived, there were several fights happening. All wounded victims are receiving medical treatment and are expected to survive. Detectives think the motive could have to do with gang involvement in her actively investigating near critical fire weather conditions for parts the Bay Area or prompting red flag warnings this weekend. The National Weather Service says warnings have been issued for the North and East Bay Hills as well as the East Bay interior valleys until six a.m. Monday. This is the Bay Area's first red flag of the season. I'm Jodi Guerrero. Now Sacramento traffic and a very pleasant good afternoon to we kick off in Colfax Westbound Idiot. Secret Town Road. There's a truck on fire traffic is being diverted at gold run traffic backs up toe, all to Bonnie Nook Road. North Sacramento. See and the residual effect of an earlier accident North down five slam between the 17 99 splits and rode 22 all lanes open Following that crash. You coming to a grinding halt on westbound 50 between Harbor Boulevard and I ET and be careful in Rancho Cordova. Westbound 50 just before Zinfandel Drive. I'm seeing a chair in the third lane from the left Steve Herrera Agnew's 93.1 kfbk. Now. Sacramento weather Mostly sunny, breezy this afternoon 87 to 91 mostly.

Standup Comedy "Your Host and MC"
"reno" Discussed on Standup Comedy "Your Host and MC"
"On my way over here. Tuesday to make it. I got lost in la. I turned a corner. I see ricardo montalban and white tuck selling flowers to honk the horn. excuse me mr multiple monastery from sf. Can you help me back as range. Welcome to kelly. Nice own wish to score you. Must i think i'll have an amendment and the role will take your to i five north however. I must warn you decide. Today i mind. You'll be sounding strange hypnotic powers more boring highway idiot now liam lost. I'm afraid to go home. So we've been to the seven eleven. There's surfer punks out kids. Can you help me out. Give me some directions. Free everywhere so i say pretending to find. A hotel started getting the morning so it around the corner. I go great because down at the end of the road. I see this taxi driver. Pull into the hor- listen buddy. You're my desperation. you gotta help me out. please boy. pretty lucky you'll found. La aback my hand. It was all right. You want to go and you know go back. You'll want to know why we all right now. Young thanks very much. Ladies and gentlemen carlos rocky one of the best in the business got his start at laughs and limited back in the early eighties and has gone on to fame and fortune. Hey keep an eye out for the remake of the movie. Nine reno nine one one and get a chance watch. The old shows online very very own if you get a chance. My godson is an animator on kasich. On and carlos does voices on that cartoon. Check it out. We hope you enjoyed this. Special interview of carlos ala's rocky. Thanks for listening and don't forget next week. Another great show by. We hope you enjoyed this episode of standup comedy. Your host and emcee for information on the show merchandise and our sponsors or descend comments to scott. Visit our website at www dot stand up your host and emcee dot com look for more episodes soon and enjoy the world of stand up comedy visit a showroom near you. Hey thanks for listening to the show. I hope you enjoyed it as much as i enjoyed making it. Here's the special offer. I told you about if you wanna shoot me. An email at laughs history at gmail.com l a u g h s history at gmail.com. I'm about to launch a new member ships site sharing some Videos of famous acts from back in the day. And because you're a regular listener and you made it all the way through this show. Shoot me an email and i'll send you a sample of what i'm talking about. I've got a great video of dana. Carvey doing chopping broccoli live on stage with his whole banned. From before saturday night live it is really cool. So shoot me an email and let me get that free vintage video to you to say thanks for being regular listener and making it through the show. Don't miss out a- nba winner. Shoot me an email. It laughs history gmail.com. Thanks for listening by..

Standup Comedy "Your Host and MC"
"reno" Discussed on Standup Comedy "Your Host and MC"
"Dryer was right up. There was one of my birthday. Now that brings us to a really important part of the carlos allies rocky career. You are very talented voice specialist. You're famous for playing the taco bell. Dog you were Roscoe's modern life. You you've done so many things it'd be impossible to list them all but how did that come about. Were you doing norway's sound effects and voices when you were a kid or did you develop that as a teen in young adult through the or my parents from south. America dad british educated with no accident. My mom got nathan and then head over my friend. Kevin thousand started though scotland. One too many haney the signed. Feel as it on donny. And i'm hearing lethal their body. You'll hear way easing cow. Tow free of dialect is so dialects. Got you started. I think like every other kid. I'm watching. tv like hey listen if you stay ahead. We'll watch monty python. And so hearing all these dial in sounds. I just soak it up and started spitting it out on stage. I knew that i could be worse than that. Sort of hide behind us. You know i was always mba of the comedians. That could come out as them sell. And get you on wolf word or lois bromfield that well big carlos it. I mean everybody in show business. If you're really going to succeed you need a hook and for some people. It's their look like imo. Fill up some people. It's their attitude. Like bobby slayton other people. It's it's pure seinfeld atlano. It's their way to relate to everyday life in a funny way. There was nothing wrong. In fact. I think it's an attribute if you can take something like your voice characterizations in sound effects. It you could do and meld it with professional Creative comedy to the point where you're entertaining a bunch of strangers. I mean you're not just cracking up your brother sister. You're doing stuff that everybody enjoys. That's a big difference. My friends thing funny but just stepping in out of the front row and putting your feet on stage turning around and see an audience hold if your it exciting skydiver. fifteen years. I started in ninety five and went through two thousand ten. But you can watch videos this guy diving and watching the video on the ground and you go okay. I know what's going to happen. But once you get up on that plane and that door opens and that sound is coming the win and you keep playing. You're like what the after my doing. That's you know that's an analogy. Haven't heard before. But i think it's perfect because a lot of people wanna think they can be a stand up comic. Wanna try being a stand up comic and the one of the biggest fears to get over is getting out on stage and talking in front of a bunch of strangers and actually being able to talk intelligently and watching it making it look easy and then doing it is a whole different thing. Just like skydiving. My were my suit of armor. You know that. I can hide behind and it took me a long some. It's you know right away. They've got they've got their in there there. I always thought clinton jack was one of those guys. Clinton was who he was early on. You know just a good storyteller. Relax and i thought i gotta be funny every second. I can't let any gaps happen. And so that i was good at it i could entertain people and i could get up and ahead confidence but great on great example of what you just said would be. Larry miller These days the the the audience has no patients they want to. They want a punchline. Like every fifteen seconds. But one of the geniuses of larry miller was And if you haven't ever seen him live on stage look them up on on the google and he would do a twenty minute story and yet you were laughing all through it. And and he was not in any hurry he was just like reading a book he was telling story. But you were riveted and it was funny and yet you know like you said there's other people that it's like joke joke joke. Look stephen right. There was no energy but it was joke. Joke joke joke joke and i still think that You being able to put the two together now. Before i mean you were all around the laughs in the mid and i want to talk about that in a minute but even before that or around the same time. We're also in the san francisco comedy competition hip eighty-seven so i cut my teeth. A couple years it lasts limited. And then i moved with john boyle moved to thirty eight zero in an illegal garage converted. One bedroom moldy as all get out of the russian landlord named bore guys went win. What's happening. i'm literally and i worked at beautiful health clubs and work at the telegraph hill club. No longer there the old town stages for streets as they just go. And i worked at cole. Valley's fitness seeking novelist Cold and i would you comedy at night. And then i entered nineteen eighty-nine with my first san francisco comedy competition. I think i came in like thirty something like that. And then in nineteen ninety three. I entered a entered again and i don mcmillan or johnny seal had just one and i ended up winning and i beat out patting off all and marc maron monning. Some years later i would go on the. Wpf podcast with marc maron. And he wanted to talk about that. How did you feel fell lighted. And i said listen. I always thought you and pat were better. I was the better performing. That's a good way to put it. There's a difference between a performer in in a writer. But i the reason i brought it up. Is that being one of the winners of the san francisco. Comedy competition is certainly a feather in your cap especially in young career. But you as you said. We're already emceeing performing at laughs. And i don't remember. Because i'm getting old myself if you did the great northern california comedy competition but no. I wouldn't del van dyke would always he did win one or two of those. He was one of our top local headliners but still the history. We have with you at the club. Now we were talking about Jill my wife was said to say she remembered that Every sunday i would go work. One of the other Rooms that i had. I had three clubs at the time and that she would refuse to. Mc and so you were her house mc she said for almost a year and she just always appreciated what you professionalism in in comedy and how easy were to work with hanky. Yeah i learned it for some of the other comics buddy. Brunner who now lives in santa rosa. He he really kind of instilled in me that workout that like you gotta get as messy. He can you gotta show the emceeing and you've gotta.

Standup Comedy "Your Host and MC"
"reno" Discussed on Standup Comedy "Your Host and MC"
"And voices when you were a kid or did you develop that as a teen in young adult through the or my parents from south. America dad british educated with no accident. My mom got nathan and then head over my friend. Kevin thousand started though scotland. One too many haney the signed. Feel as it on donny. And i'm hearing lethal their body. You'll hear way easing cow. Tow free of dialect is so dialects. Got you started. I think like every other kid. I'm watching. tv like hey listen if you stay ahead. We'll watch monty python. And so hearing all these dial in sounds. I just soak it up and started spitting it out on stage. I knew that i could be worse than that. Sort of hide behind us. You know i was always mba of the comedians. That could come out as them sell. And get you on wolf word or lois bromfield that well big carlos it. I mean everybody in show business. If you're really going to succeed you need a hook and for some people. It's their look like imo. Fill up some people. It's their attitude. Like bobby slayton other people. It's it's pure seinfeld atlano. It's their way to relate to everyday life in a funny way. There was nothing wrong. In fact. I think it's an attribute if you can take something like your voice characterizations in sound effects. It you could do and meld it with professional Creative comedy to the point where you're entertaining a bunch of strangers. I mean you're not just cracking up your brother sister. You're doing stuff that everybody enjoys. That's a big difference. My friends thing funny but just stepping in out of the front row and putting your feet on stage turning around and see an audience hold if your it exciting skydiver. fifteen years. I started in ninety five and went through two thousand ten. But you can watch videos this guy diving and watching the video on the ground and you go okay. I know what's going to happen. But once you get up on that plane and that door opens and that sound is coming the win and you keep playing. You're like what the after my doing. That's you know that's an analogy. Haven't heard before. But i think it's perfect because a lot of people wanna think they can be a stand up comic. Wanna try being a stand up comic and the one of the biggest fears to get over is getting out on stage and talking in front of a bunch of strangers and actually being able to talk intelligently and watching it making it look easy and then doing it is a whole different thing. Just like skydiving. My were my suit of armor. You