Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
This is the Meat Eater Podcast coming at you shirtless, severely,
bug bitten, and in my case, underwear listeningcast. You can't
predict any of this. The Meat Eater Podcast is brought
to you by First Light. Whether you're checking trail cams,
hanging deer stands, or scouting for el, First Light has
performance apparel to support every hunter in every environment. Check
(00:31):
it out at first light dot com. F I R
S T l I T E dot com. All right,
we got more women in here than than normal.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
By a law.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Normally it's just Krinn. Everybody knows how lame that is.
Today we're joined by probably for the millionth time, Carmen
van Bianki. How many times have you been on the show.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
Maybe this is number five?
Speaker 1 (01:01):
Okay, she's our resident wildlife biologist. We've tracked Carmen all
through her career. Now she's she's a links researcher from
Home Range. You guys founded Home.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
Range Wildlife Research.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
We've participated in all kinds of projects trying to raise
awareness for your project. We did that thing trying to
raise up money for snowmobiles, yep. And now you're back
to give us a report yep. On what's going on now?
We've been doing a little trapping, but different.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Yeah, you got some beavers today.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
We called a raccoon the likes of which man has
never seen. I don't know what he's doing out in
that cold weather too.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
I don't know, he's just yeah, typically he'd be in
a dentrey somewhere, but he was out in about last night.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
There was a spot by there's a spot by this
rancher's place and there's a hole in the fence where
kylets are coming through in that raccoon coming through there.
Uh any tutament, guys, I canna tell you something before
I introduce all our other women. Uh, this rancher is
telling us how. So we get down there by the
river by his place, down the river bottom and there's
(02:07):
dead sheep carcasses. You can't tell what's going on. It's
just dead sheep. Get to talk to him, and he
had they had in the fall, they had a black
bear and it's kind of unusual spot for blackbird. They
had black bear come in killed, killed. He kept saying
the bear killed five bucks. Okay. I was like, how
(02:31):
do you know how many bucks? The bear? I thought
he met like deer then I realized he's talking about
buck sheep. These these are fifteen hundred bucks. Apiece killed
five buck sheep, killed a goat, killed a goose. He
calls fishing game. They're like, if you catch the bear,
go and shoot it. So he tells us if we
see the bear, to shoot it. And you can see
his track in the ice like he'd been walking on
a slew since it froze up. Then he says to
(02:55):
this dude, he knows it looks for that tries to
build stuff out of driftwood. And that guy is sniffing
around this big driftwood pile down on the bank, and
he finds the bear hiding in the driftwood pile the
other day. So he tells me and Seth to go
in there and look in that driftwood pile. And we
haven't gone and looked yet, and he said, he said,
he told me I'm scared to go looking there, but
(03:16):
if you guys go looking there, then I'll call fishing
game and you can get the bear. I'm like, I
think I'm gonna have to personally speak with fishing I
have to have a personal conversation with fishing game before
follow through with this plan looking through this, but we
looked at that log jam today, talked about having to
(03:37):
look down in there, and we haven't gone down there
and looked yet. Were hundred yards.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
From When you say hidden and there, you mean like, yeah, it's.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
Denn up in that log jam? I know, how do
you know what bears what? That's what I'm saying. It's like,
we're not going to get into that vigilanti justice, but
I am going to go look into that log jam.
Speaker 4 (03:55):
I can't believe you get curious enough to go looking there.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
I'm gonna I'm looking tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (03:59):
We wouldn't be here right now if we got to
looking in there.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
Yeah, we're already half hour later, we're looking in there.
You might not ever heard from this.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
Again, weird crunch for time.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
I couldn't said if I was gonna put a thermal in there,
but I don't think that's gonna work. I'm just gonna
shine a light in there and see if he's in there,
because I guess it's scared the hell out of this
driftwood guy. I can imagine it was awake in there. Yeah,
so I'm gonna see if he is. Well. It's kind
of a weird little spot. I don't know how much
I believe it could all be let myth Seth's here,
(04:30):
Doctor Randall's here, Jen Lewis from FHF is here, and
Jen Lewis's daughter, Brooklyn Stevens is here, and Brody Henderson now,
Brooklyn's here for a very special reason, because you have
recently got yourself into the skull cleaning business.
Speaker 5 (04:51):
Yep?
Speaker 1 (04:52):
How many? How many schools did you clean this year?
Speaker 5 (04:55):
Probably around twenty or thirty?
Speaker 1 (04:56):
Are you serious you did that many?
Speaker 5 (04:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Ok, huh? You got interested in tax How old are you? First?
Speaker 3 (05:03):
Off?
Speaker 1 (05:03):
Seventeen seventeen? What got you interested in taxidermy?
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (05:07):
I show him my first dear. I walked into the
text urmy shop and it just felt like home. I
like creating or like saving other people's memories, so uh huh,
I thought would be fun.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
Oh wow, And what do you have done with your
first dear?
Speaker 5 (05:20):
Just a europe amount?
Speaker 1 (05:22):
Oh and then you got it back and thought I
could do that better.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
Yep?
Speaker 1 (05:27):
What are your your How are you cleaning them?
Speaker 5 (05:29):
I just boil them and then bleach them.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Okay, and then but you did it, but you didn't.
But here's why it was such a careful job you did,
because the sinuses are still good.
Speaker 5 (05:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
I usually wind up taking a drill bit and just
like I get yeah, I get a little burned out
on the whole thing, and eventually I wind up running
a drill up in there to get all that garbage
out of there. Cut cussy that again, the job you did.
So Brooklyn's holding the buck that I brought to her.
This year old warrior a little a little war here,
he broke his beam off. So how do you how'd
(06:04):
you get that so clean? Boiling it? What'd you do
to eventually get it out of there?
Speaker 5 (06:09):
I sit with it for hours and hours, and I
just pick on it with dental picks.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
That's what you're using.
Speaker 5 (06:15):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Do you do any pressure washing every now and then? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (06:19):
I try and pick off all the meat though it's nicer. Yep.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
Well, gradient senior in high school? You're senior in high school?
What are you gonna do when you finish high school? Tax ermy,
you want to you want to go into taxi? Durm
how much you're charging for a skull like that? Deer
and one sixty for looks amazing?
Speaker 5 (06:37):
Thank you?
Speaker 1 (06:38):
That's a good price. See you're gonna think I'm lying
if I told you I've never seen a uh like
a boiled skull turn out like that. Really never Brody.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
It's good, it's great.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
I ring you Brody. I bring Brody because Brody boils
up some skulls. That's the work art, Brody.
Speaker 4 (06:56):
Yeah, it's it's really white, looks great.
Speaker 5 (06:58):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (07:00):
Yeah. I did fifteen this year and I went four
or five past my limit of patients.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
You're not an aspiring skull cleaner, not an inspiring do.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
You pressure wash yours?
Speaker 4 (07:13):
I have, man, but I've seen that blow them apart. Yeah,
especially like after they've been like if you really got
to boil them.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
For a while, so you pick all the meat too.
Speaker 4 (07:21):
Yeah, but I mean, like she was saying, it's really
just the nooks and crannies.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
You do it the right way.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
I have currently two deer skulls sitting in my garage,
one one that my wife killed, one I killed, and
it's like gotten to the point where all the ship
is like dried on there.
Speaker 4 (07:39):
It'll never look right.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Yeah, brook On, are people bringing you these with the
hide on them or they skin in them?
Speaker 2 (07:47):
That's what I want to ask.
Speaker 4 (07:49):
Do you think do you think the ones that do
you think they turn out better when they're unskinned or
they've been skinned.
Speaker 5 (07:56):
It depends. The ones that are unskinned do come out
I think better. But the ones that are skin I
can get it good too.
Speaker 6 (08:03):
She just did a big ram, a big deadhead ram.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
Are you serious? Yeah? From where I don't know.
Speaker 5 (08:10):
The lady bought it from the FWP.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
She bought it the auction Yeah huh, and brought it
to you. What condition was it in Turkey? It was
really all dried out? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (08:23):
Oh, so you'll mess around with dried out stuff that's
not You.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
Charge more if they don't skin it. You're in luck.
Speaker 5 (08:30):
Time to skin something.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
So see, I always think I'm doing people to favor
When I skin it and pluck the eyes.
Speaker 5 (08:35):
Out, it's nice, but I don't wand skinning.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
So they'll bring you a hair on head, lower jaw.
Their eyes there all desiccated, dried out, and you charge
them the same amount of money.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Do you have a paide set up for your business? No?
Speaker 5 (08:51):
I just have Instagram and the Gmail.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
How do people find you to bring you some business? So, so,
folks that are listening, Jen Lewis and Paul Lewis Paulus
has been on the podcast a number of times from
that FHEF and this is their youngster. So how do
people find your business?
Speaker 5 (09:13):
Either on Instagram or word of mouth?
Speaker 1 (09:14):
No? But how like what do they what do they
type up?
Speaker 5 (09:17):
Four h six bone Works?
Speaker 1 (09:19):
Four h six bone Works? Do you ever think about
getting a beetle room?
Speaker 5 (09:23):
No? I don't want to mess with beetles.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
That's that's a smelly business right there.
Speaker 3 (09:27):
I want to get into.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
You'd have to get your own house probably if you're
gonna get in. The man, that is a smelly business.
Speaker 4 (09:34):
I looked into it. You can order those beetles from Amazon.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
Yeah, at you can find them on the roadside. I
didn't know that Amazon sold them, but you find them
on the road side. So you're gonna stay with boiling Yeah,
but you're gonna go to taxa during me school?
Speaker 5 (09:47):
I don't know. I like YouTube?
Speaker 1 (09:49):
Oh you like doing it that way?
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Okay? YouTube university? Are you going to get into like
shoulder mounts or yeah? Nice? So you're going you're going
all in?
Speaker 5 (09:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (09:59):
So fours bone Works yep. And you'll clean people's skulls
and do that immaculate. Did you do that nice job
because you knew you were gonna use it as a
piece of sales, and normally you just brutalize them.
Speaker 5 (10:12):
That's how they all turn out.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
They all turn out that nice. Yep, it's impressive.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
That is impressive.
Speaker 1 (10:19):
One hundred and twenty bucks.
Speaker 4 (10:20):
Yep, that's a deal.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
Have you done any elk?
Speaker 5 (10:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (10:23):
What do you get for an ELK? Only forty dollars more?
Three times as big?
Speaker 5 (10:29):
Sort of? I don't like to think, so.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
Though, how did you come up with your pricing strategy?
Speaker 5 (10:35):
Just what pro paane costs? And then a bleach? And
then my time?
Speaker 1 (10:40):
How much are you making any money after all that?
Speaker 5 (10:43):
A little bit?
Speaker 1 (10:44):
Did you ever calculate what you make per hour?
Speaker 7 (10:47):
No?
Speaker 1 (10:47):
Do you want to or do you not even want
to know?
Speaker 5 (10:50):
Oh? I really want to know.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
That's a pretty good skull. Now, Listen, I had a guy.
You know what I paid this year? I hesitate to
tell you know what I paid this year to get
a moose cleaned?
Speaker 5 (10:59):
What's that?
Speaker 1 (11:00):
Take a guess?
Speaker 5 (11:01):
Probably two twenty five higher.
Speaker 8 (11:04):
That would have been nice, three twenty five higher, four
twenty five higher, Oh my god, nine hundred and seventy five.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
Listen, I had someone doing mo moose gold this year
six hundred. Kylie dropped it off and I come back
and there's an invoice for six hundred bucks on my desk.
I'm like, I think they Oh I dropped it off.
Oh you dropped it off. Yeah, I talked you, I
talked your text. Everybody mind said, dude, you're third the
way to his shoulder.
Speaker 2 (11:33):
Yeah. Yeah, I saw that. I saw the invoice when
I dropped it off, because he gave it to me,
and I.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Was like, never seen anything like that. That was a
big moose.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
So I was like, I'm assuming cleaning the antlers.
Speaker 6 (11:44):
I think I saw you that day because you were
at the shop and.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
He had a shock.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
Yeah, I just assumed you knew what it was going
to cost.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
No, how much would you done that for the problem
with those is the way they're shape. You can't dip
them in the tank. Real good. Yeah, process, you'd have
done it for three. I could have got two done.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
What's it called again? Four or six bone works? Four
or six bone works? Get your skulls clean. You can
do it next year too.
Speaker 5 (12:16):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
All right, thanks for coming on and plugging the biz. Yeah,
you're supposed to be in school right now, I am.
You're gonna hang tight though. Yeah, she's a links researcher.
Maybe you can fill out when you when you're taxi
during me slow, you can go chase links on a
snow and bill for these guys. Sounds good, yeah, uh oh.
You know what we were talking about the day mean
(12:38):
Seth had to drive on icy roads and I was
remembering this story I was telling them, is uh, we're
talking about what it's real icing to go to pass somebody,
how you're endangering everybody. I remember when I was a kid.
I remember so vividly when I was a kid. We're
driving down the road and this dude comes buy in
one of those wood paneled station wagons with the cowboy
hat on it kind of like blows passes in the
way that made my dad irate, you know, And come
(13:00):
around a few bends and there's this dude's car wrecked
and he's standing out in the snow staring at his
right car. In south of state, he had a guy
blow past and then later found him up front and crashed.
We did the same thing going up to a snowbowl.
Speaker 8 (13:14):
These kids in the car behind us passed and I
just gripping the steering wheel and clenching my teeth for
five minutes. After that, we get up to the top
and there in the ditch.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
I have I've two separate occasions while I was heading
to a hunting spot. One this year and one couple
of years ago. I've had Ryan Callahan passed me on
shitty roads. It's the same situation, but I haven't found
him in a ditch, but I've had him pass me
on on bad roads.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
Wait till you do, it's all worth it then.
Speaker 2 (13:47):
Especially one was this year in the dark. He passed
me on a just a normal road. Haul on the
trailer kale. Yeah, I called him. I said, you're gonna
end up in the ditch.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
He doesn't seem like a reckless person.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
He's just confident on snowy roads.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
I guess so, Jen Lewis, you just said handed me.
I'm not going to tell anybody what you just handed me.
Be handing me a new backpack. I did that you're
working on that I can put I'm not working on
it that, y'all.
Speaker 6 (14:13):
Paul is definitely working.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Paul's working on you guys invented the world's greatest duffel bag,
which is not available like that. What's that called the
pit devil?
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Dude?
Speaker 1 (14:22):
That is the best. Like, I'm sort of a Duffel
bag connoisseur. That is the I used to think that
the best Duffel bag ever made. PATTIGOONI had one called
the Shuttle Duffel. I have one after they quit making
it a million years ago. I used to go now
and then on eBay trying to find a used one.
Is how much I liked it. Yeah, this is the
(14:43):
new best Duffel bag.
Speaker 6 (14:45):
It's pretty sweet. I think you got the new one
with the new fabric sailcloth, which is yeah, same fabric
that they make sailboat sails out of. Oh really yeah,
so highly durable.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
Yeah. Paul was messing around with different ones over time.
He gave me one and the baggage handlers would ruin them. Yeah,
I'd send it back to him and be like, no
baggage handlers ruined it. He finally got a fabric of
the baggage.
Speaker 6 (15:11):
Handlers should be like nearly indestructible.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Yea. Some of the material he was using was great
in real waterproof, but it would get when it gets
when things get stuck in the baggage carousel. It would
have braid it because it was kind of catchy.
Speaker 6 (15:23):
Yeah, we're gonna do a few sizes of that.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
Well, I hope so, because that needs to be medium, right,
Well he knows, okay, Well, I mean I told I
told him that's what I think. I think it should
be medium and there should be small and large.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
I think that's the direction we're going.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
Because that one's a little for carry on. It's a
little it's a little sketchy.
Speaker 6 (15:42):
Too big, too small.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
No, no, you could carry it on, but it'd be
like if you stuffed it two of the gills, you're
not gonna be able to use it as a carry
on bag. I'm afraid there's a smaller one and then
and then a big giant Yeah, I mambo johnbo bag.
Speaker 6 (15:57):
Because we had a different bag kind of in the
works that I think you had, but I think this
is replacing that, and so there will be a larger size.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Oh okay, good, good, big enough?
Speaker 6 (16:05):
I mean the guy stuck me in it, so oh
that big? It's big.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
Wow, I've seen that. I have a cooler that two
people can fit in.
Speaker 6 (16:12):
Yeah, I don't know, how would you know?
Speaker 5 (16:14):
That?
Speaker 1 (16:15):
It's funny story. I had a buddy of mine who's
a kind of a lawyer. He's like a lawyer, but
he doesn't do any law dogging. So I'll try to
do I don't you know, that's a great question. So
he uh, I needed some paperwork drawn up for like
a thing I owned with some other like our cabin.
(16:36):
I need this paintwork drawn up. And he's like, I'll
do it because you just gotta get me a cooler
for my boat. And he tells me, what's that cooler
I got sitting outside? Any racer Britney got in it?
One time?
Speaker 4 (16:46):
We were able to I don't know what side they
I mean for those blue water boats that we'd have
to look it up.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
Takes two people to move it. It's like a four
I don't know eight. I don't know. Two people can
lay down length wise in it to shut the door.
My body says, I'll do the legal work if you
get me a cooler for my boat. And I'm like,
that's fine. So he says, this is the cooler I
want and it's a giant, the biggest yettie cool ever made.
(17:13):
That's not a fit on your boat. Oh yeah, I'll fit.
I get the cooler delared in my house. He comes over.
It's not a fit on my boat. So I still
have that thing. Uh, I used to store like bird
seed and stuff in it and like charcoal.
Speaker 4 (17:30):
Yeah, just what it was designed for.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
What it was designed for. What else is coming up?
So that when will that Duffel bag be for sale?
Speaker 5 (17:38):
June?
Speaker 6 (17:39):
I think it'll be June. We've got just a couple
of launches this year. So much New Year came out
last year in the spring. The rest of our Apex
Belt system, hydration pack that'll come out in February, and
then the pit Defell and a couple other small items
will be coming out in June that I can't talk
about yet.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
Yeah, it's no problem. Un Turkey's all spring in the
Apex Belt.
Speaker 6 (18:02):
Did you like it? Kind of a game changer that
it's great.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
So the Apex Belt is like what they like. Paul
calls it like he hesitates to use the term, but
it's similar to a battle belt. So that's kind of
different words. I don't know what the help.
Speaker 6 (18:14):
Yeah, make a tactical like load bearing belt or battle belt.
Obviously years of Swat Team he had, you know, a
similar belt. It's kind of actually what guy him sewing
is he had to buy a battle belt and he
was too cheap, so he said, I bet I could
make one, and that's what got himself. Yeah, so that's
how he got into sewing, but ended up making belts
(18:36):
for a few different guys. Obviously we've come a long way.
This is a three piece belt, so different than what
you would typically find, and it's a structured belt. So
the other colorways of that product will be launching with
some accessories like box called pouch, a few other turkey stuff.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
So yeah, you put well, like everything at FHF always
fits together, so you put the belt on. There will
be a hybridration bladder that goes on that functions as
a backpack. There's a fanny pack thing. There's pockets for
pot calls. There's what I call the morel bag.
Speaker 6 (19:14):
Yeah, the dump pouch.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
There's this dump pouch bag that rolls up to the
size of like if you make the okay symbol. You
can't really do that. For a long time, people thought
you were making a mm hm. Now you remember this
that this was real bad to do.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
That's still that's still a thing. It's not listening.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Let me tell you something I don't want a name names.
Let me tell you.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
Something, the turkey call incident.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
You can tell us the best story I've ever heard.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
Now.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
I witnessed it in the height of all the paranoia.
Okay about don't say the wrong thing, do the wrong thing.
We're down in South Carolina and I we're turkey hunt
and we're on a dirt road that crosses a railroad track. Okay,
there's a stop sign because it's a rail track. I stop,
(20:01):
and I see a dude stop coming my way in
South Carolina on dirt roads. I see that he's got
his hand draped over his wheel, holding a turkey diaphragm
call to the point where I comment on it to
my fellow passengers, and it's blaze orange and I'm even
trying to wonder whose call it is. And I'm like, oh,
(20:23):
that guy's hunting turkeys too. He's holding it between his
thumb and the okay symbol. He's got it the turkey
call and his thumb and pointer finger, his palm rested
on the wheel. Some of our camera guys are behind us.
I drive past, he waves, They drive past. Apparently he
waves too. Later they get all excited that he had
(20:46):
given them, the white supremacist single symbol.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
Excited because it was a novel, fun thing to witness.
I hope I was like.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
That gentleman Fellas was holding a turkey call between his
thumb and forefinger, and that is why he had to
wave that way. During the height of that excitement, too,
A dude won three. A dude won three, like, uh
jeopardies mm hm. And so they're announcing that he won
(21:16):
three jeopardies and instead of going like, when I want
to do three, I do like, I guess thumb to pinky,
how do you do three?
Speaker 2 (21:23):
Yeah? Yeah, it's a whole plot pointing in Gloria's Bastards.
The yeah, the three or the three.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Or so he throws a three like he's doing Okay.
So they're announcing his name third time champion, and he
does this next day in the news White Supremacist. He's like, no,
I think it was I won three times? So what
was I getting at? Why was I talking about that?
(21:51):
There was uh the pouch. Oh yeah, that has nothing
to do with that story.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
Yeah, you're you're talking about the size of the pouch.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
And you I don't know small that if you make
a what was formerly known as an okay symbol. You
know they still use this in diving. M hmm, some diving.
Some his thumbs up, some is okay. So all day
long and you're like, there's no white surface, white supremacy.
(22:23):
So you make the okay symbol, and this pouch would
fit like through the okay symbol, but it rolls out
to be like a I don't know the size of
an Algeaene bottle. So when you find Morel's, which is
what I did, undid it and it's the perfect moral
pouch hanging off your belt, it's really comfortable. And then
it's got a seat too for turkey hunt. Yeah, like
(22:45):
I've always been. I've always been a reluctant user of
turkey vests. This thing is far, far, far better than
any turkey vest I've ever done. And when you sit
down and you open the call pouch outchel pouch, you
open that out, it kind of opens up, so your
strikers and your pots are sitting right there, your scratch
pads sitting right there. Then you zip back up. Youn't
(23:07):
be leaving everything laying out in the woods, which is
my problem.
Speaker 4 (23:09):
Oh man, I've left calls laying on the ground, So
many times.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
I remember calling Doug Darren being like, hey man, you
know that one tree way at the bat, Like, can
you look onto their front? You go there and learn
for my stuff. Uh So that's a good deal. And
some of that's out now and some's coming out. It'll
kind of roll out right, Yep.
Speaker 6 (23:29):
Most of it's out now, just in a couple of colors,
and then the rest of it will launch in February.
We've got a box call pouch that's launching, the dump
pouch that you just talked about, and then a couple
other small accessories like suspenders. If you really want to
load it up, you can buy suspenders. But the nice
thing you can use everything independently.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Oh yeah, and you can tie it into your biny
harness if you want. Yeah, absolutely no, it's a sweet system.
I use a lot for too. Fishing in the summer, yeah,
wading creeks.
Speaker 6 (23:56):
That's definitely what I use it for. So we spend
a lot of time this fall. We went down to
Sedona and did flyfishing, and I worked the whole time.
And it was great.
Speaker 1 (24:05):
You did fly fishing, yep, went I went fly fishing.
I did it. Did that? Anything else we should know about.
Speaker 6 (24:14):
Lots of exciting stuff coming in twenty five, so we'll
probably start leaking some of that out in the next
six months.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Oh, I don't want to show this. Let's say I
like this would be available, that'll.
Speaker 6 (24:25):
Be out in twenty five, right.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
Away, in the future. Yeah, all right, thank you for
letting me try one out.
Speaker 7 (24:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (24:31):
Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Do we want to get into this now, krin Does
it take too long to get into I.
Speaker 5 (24:39):
Mean, you can feel free to skip any of the things.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
I'm gonna talk about this because we spent a bunch
of time on this talk about already we got in
a big old argument. Yeah, this will be the end,
this will be We're gonna have to bring back that song, Kriinn,
we've done beat this horse to death?
Speaker 4 (24:55):
Are you going to bring Col's email? While you're at it?
Speaker 1 (24:58):
Cal's email?
Speaker 4 (24:59):
I remember he got all.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
We're talking about this. So we got a little bit
of a fight here in the studio one day about
the Ornithological Society's decision to rename sixty birds. I felt
was obsessive in a in a in a media grab. Nowadays,
it's like you just give a quick recap. Nowadays, it's
bad form. Have you ever named a species or been
(25:23):
involved in naming a species. Carmen, No, no, well, but
it's not like you think, like I know people that
have got to name them because you know, they split
so much in taxonomy. If you worked with invertebrates or
catfish or something, you get to be involved in all
kinds of species naming because everybody's like, you know, you
go down to South America and everybody's like, oh, you
know that little brown catfish. Then one day you go
(25:44):
to another river and you realize that whatever, yeah, yeah,
this one has eight rays on its tail. But next river, rover,
it's got nine rays on its tail. Then you get
to name it something new, so that those guys get like,
if you were in Beatles, you'd be naming something every day.
Naming worms in South America you probably name one every day,
(26:06):
But in your business of the cat business, you probably
don't stumble across the whole hell of a lot of
new cats. Uh. So it used to be that you
name stuff your last name, and then the sample we
always use is stellar. So Steller has the Stellar Sea Lion,
(26:26):
Steller's j Steller's Eagle. He just ran around naming everything
after himself. Turns out I didn't know this. He was
a hell of a nice guy. Uh and also is
very that's not true Randall's laugh And I don't know
if he's a hell of a nice guy. He's got
a random Will you not laugh if I say he's
(26:49):
got a hell of a resume? No, keep it straight face,
hell of a resume. And also, really, here's the clip,
here's the here's the here's the kicker. At a time
of weren't very interested in this, Stella really went out
of his way to study, understand, and record the life
ways of Native Arctic peoples. Do you know that I
(27:10):
read the same doc Randall's on fire Day? You know
if you just if you smile, you know these people
won't know listening. Yeah, that's true. Normally Randley used to
(27:30):
be a good guest. Remember that. Oh I thought I
thought I was just doing well? There, No, no, this
is about Remember who was a real good guest that
we didn't realize was Max. You should maybe get rid
of Randall and bring Max in more often. That's the
hell of a guest, right there. Have you ever been
in a room in Max? Some maxes I don't know
which Max Max? Oh, yeah, he's a great guest. You know,
(27:51):
reinds me of you when you were back, when I
was back a month ago. So it used to be
common to name things after oneself. That that has fallen
out of favor. So what these guys at the Ornithological
Society are doing is they're saying the hell that they
want to rename sixty some birds to eliminate anything offensive
(28:13):
and eliminate anyone's last name, so the stellars j would
become you know that one purple J or you know right,
just get rid of it. And this guy wrote in
who's actually involved in naming a species? And he this
guy's like, listen, none of this matters different than calch.
He's interested in it as an intellectual exercise. But he's
a researcher. What's he work on. He's a taxonomist bees,
(28:38):
and he works on native bees. Now let me ask you, guys,
are true or false? The honey bee is no native? False?
Speaker 2 (28:48):
False?
Speaker 1 (28:48):
Is that wild? He works on native bees and deals
in which means he deals in the nomenclature of native bees.
And he says, I want to start off by saying
that the push to not name new species after people,
even ones who aren't well known, like Stellar, etc. Is
(29:10):
one that's very strongly felt in the scientific community at
the moment. And I've been questioned a couple times on
some of my species names by people who didn't like
the fact I was naming them after folks, presumably not himself.
I had a friend that got to name some catfish
species in South America, and she named them all after
the indigenous tribes in that area, which is reasonable, He
(29:37):
points this out. He says, but it's important to note
that the changing of names after the fact is unheard of.
There remains to this day a species of beetle named
after everyone's least favorite Austrian painter. And how would you
(29:59):
pronounce that, Carmen, Oh, god, you're asking me. Yeah, you're
probably good on Latin.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
School.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
What'd you say?
Speaker 3 (30:08):
I would say, hitler reiah.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
No, no, no, no no, the first word.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
Oh, and of Thalmas.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
Hitlerai Hitlarai. So here we are. He's got a beatle
named after him. Uh, And he says, which stands as
a testament that scientifically, we don't change names for any reason,
no matter how offensive. It's worth noting this is him
still talking. It's worth noting However, with this whole situation
that the Ornithological Society is in trumpiann ot all Capital
(30:44):
is not the authoritative body on nomenclatural acts of animals.
That is solely the domain of the Board of the
i c z N, the International Code of Zoological Omenclature.
They are not changing the actual names of these birds,
(31:05):
but they're changing their own meaning the Ornithological Society. They're
not changing the actual names of these birds, they're changing
their own suggestions for common names, which is fun, as
the person writing in then editorializes and says, which is
fundamentally meaningless. It would be the equivalent of pheasants forever
(31:28):
deciding that they're going to call the bird the American
ring necked pheasant. So okay, right now, if you look
up a pheasant right now, you know, do you know
what the pheasant is called? Chinese ring neck face? Its
official name is the Chinese ring necked pheasant. He's saying,
the pheasants forever could one day say from now on,
it's the American ring neck pheasant, Like, oh, you'll you'll
(31:52):
find this interesting, Brooklyn. I got sick of people calling
skulls European mounts because I just didn't see what's so
European about it? Like Native Americans used cleaned up skulls
in the Sundance seapoint, did they called a euro amount?
They didn't. So I started calling them freedom mounts in
(32:14):
memory of when we had to reban French fries during
the Iraq invasion because the French didn't want us. The
French thought that that was not a good idea, stupid,
That was how dumb they were, and so in retaliation
they proposed that French fries become Freedom fries, and then
(32:35):
I think promptly went back to French fry after that debacle.
Uh So, he says if the if the pheasants forever
all of a sudden came out and said, hey, you
know what, we're gonna call it the American ring neck pheasant,
the rest of the world would be like, call what
you want, buddy. At the end of the day, it's
still Phasianus cole chicus. He says this is a sense
(33:00):
especially true for birds like Steve's favorite Stellar's j. The
Ornithological Society can change the name to the anti Stellar's
J all they want. The species name will still be
Cyan Nordica stellary which means that Stellar's j remains the
technically correct name, and if I've been paying attention to trivia,
(33:23):
it seems being technically correct is Steve's favorite kind of correct.
He goes on, Overall, this move by the Ornithological Society
seems strange to me, as someone whose literal job is
to assign and assess the validity of species names once
in place, provided they remain valid. Scientific names never change,
(33:46):
no matter how offensive, and they certainly don't prevent people
from entering the scientific fields associated with those names. So
the suggestion that some birds may feel excluded by the
fact that a J is named after Stellar holds about
as much water as changing its common name does. Dirk
(34:07):
and also our beloved friend Pat Dirkin, also wrote an
article about that covers on the changing of bird names
and also gets into mainly focuses in on a movement
this is this is gonna sound like a joke, but
it's not a movement to coin the term bob kitten
(34:28):
for a bobcat kitten. There's even a there's even like
a change dot org petition, and he tracks how the
media has picked up on bob kitten, which really, I
guess irritates the hell out of bobcat researchers. So watch
out for the word bob kitten. You ever throw that around? No,
(34:51):
you ever heard it. Pat might be trying to make up.
Pat might be doing that thing they do on Fox
a lot, or they take a thing that isn't really
a thing but make it like it's a big thing
to be worried about. M hmm.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
I read the article. It seemed legit.
Speaker 1 (35:02):
You'll think pass doing that. No, he had a lot
of cases of people trying to say bob kit. Pat
does not like that one bit. This is up in
your neck of the woods, Carmen, you're ready for this
news item? Yeah, US government wants five hundred thousand barred owls.
(35:29):
Cold cal told me this, and I thought that cannot
be true. But I didn't know that bard owls aren't
native to the Pacific Northwest. No, No, those dudes are
everywhere now.
Speaker 3 (35:40):
Yep. They're kind of like white tails. They can just
creep on in and they they do better and can
out compete spotted owls.
Speaker 2 (35:51):
Yeah, remember the ones at the fish Act.
Speaker 1 (35:52):
Yeah, I never ever at our fishack in Salt East Alaska.
Never heard them. They're up there ripping all spring of there.
Speaker 3 (36:00):
It makes some freaky noises.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
Seth will show you do it, Seth, they do the Yeah,
well do the main one.
Speaker 3 (36:12):
There's a screechy, screaming one too, then.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Seth can rip it. They say.
Speaker 2 (36:18):
They sound like a pack of monkeys sometimes, like up
in the trees.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
I had no idea they weren't from around. I mean,
I feel like, like, just anecdotally, if you just said
to me, do you hear more barred owls than you
used to? I would have said, like, definitely, Yeah, But
I never ever knew that they weren't from there.
Speaker 3 (36:33):
Yeah, yeah, they're creepers.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
So this is the news article from this was covered
in Newsweek. I'm not sure where else was covered. The
US Fish and wild They Service wants more than a
half million barred owls to be shot dead lively language,
not just shot my gunfire, not just shot, not just
shot and wounded, shot dead in a coal to help
(36:58):
protect other native species. These barred owls are an invasive
an invasive species in the Pacific northwest from the east coast.
Speaker 4 (37:06):
That's where I have a question.
Speaker 1 (37:07):
Though.
Speaker 4 (37:08):
If something makes its way there naturally.
Speaker 1 (37:10):
It's not invasive.
Speaker 4 (37:12):
It's not like we dumped them there.
Speaker 1 (37:14):
Yeah, this brings up a really interesting language thing, and
we've talked about this a million times. That'd be because
if you move somewhere on your own, are you invasive?
Because you would never say, like like, possums used to
not extend outside of the Mason Dixon line, but they
(37:34):
do now. But no one says possums are invasive. They
just moved. Javelinas have gradually moved northward, but they're not
invasive in the northern end of their range in Texas.
You would never say that humans who move themselves out
of Africa all around the entire planet, you would never
say humans are invasive. Some people would, but I get yeah,
(37:54):
you're right.
Speaker 3 (37:55):
I think the spirit of it, though, is that these
are species that have have moved into places because of
changes in the habitat and the ecology that that humans
have brought around.
Speaker 2 (38:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (38:08):
I get that. That's a good point, indirectly indirect to
human Yeah, meaning if a monkey hop down a plane,
two monkeys who were in love hop down a plane
and started a new population somewhere, you wouldn't go, well,
they moved themselves around by hopping out of the plane,
you would they would be very readily labeled invasive species. Yeah,
(38:31):
so I guess if you're paving the way from them
exactly like how white tailed, like how mild you are
coming into Alaska, they're coming along the highway corridor. Yeah,
that's a good point. Count back to being mad at
bart I was mad at them, Now I'm back to
being mad. This is so in areas where bard owls
are present higher numbers, Northern spotted owl populations are declining rapidly.
(38:56):
They are now listed as a threat as threatened under
the Endanger Species Act, with populations having declined to buy
between thirty five percent and eighty percent over the past
twenty years due to bar owls karma. You do having
to know the karma is not an ALLA biologist. What's
going on? How are they all competing? Is for nesting
(39:18):
cavities or what are they arguing about.
Speaker 3 (39:19):
I don't know the exact mechanism, but when you get
bart owls out of there, if the habitat suitable, you're
getting spotted owls back. And this is Yeah, this isn't
a new Controlling bart owls isn't a completely new thing.
I've got a wonderful friend and colleague and she's a
great biologist, total badass, and she her job for a
(39:43):
long time was going out hunting bart owls at night.
Speaker 1 (39:46):
That's the question shooting to kill?
Speaker 4 (39:48):
Yep, that's a quick question I had about this whole thing,
because they're planned to kill half a million.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
Over Actually we should point out here, Yeah, it's over thirty.
Speaker 4 (39:57):
Years, right, because it's like gonna go out and shoot
a couple of hundred of them at night. They're like
what I read is they call them, they use you
know whatever.
Speaker 1 (40:07):
Theremore and Clay could have got four or five in
Florida calling.
Speaker 4 (40:11):
Right, but four or five a night.
Speaker 1 (40:14):
Two dudes like going to take that good math. I know,
if we get to five hundred thousand, it just yeah,
do you know who's who's going to do it? They're
going to do it.
Speaker 3 (40:26):
Themselves, the government.
Speaker 1 (40:30):
Like citizen shooters.
Speaker 3 (40:31):
I have no idea. I have no idea. I mean,
you you know, you want to trust somebody that they're
good at their owl id Right, they're.
Speaker 1 (40:41):
About horns, got the northern spots like every owl I saw.
Speaker 3 (40:49):
It's a it's a careful operation.
Speaker 1 (40:51):
Uh. Long time ago we were having uh we were
covering this thing in the news it was it the
this involves Dirk and has to do with like whether
you could ever give someone You could ever say to someone,
kill bar owls, but don't kill all the other owls.
But think about what you're saying. Though we were laughing
about their inability to do it. How come you can say, okay,
(41:14):
you can get seven drake mallards, two hen mallards, one
hen northern pintail, no scop but on and on some
canvas backs, but no scoffs, redheads, okay, right, Like people
(41:36):
are capable of some pretty specific identification. We were covering
this push where they're trying to get in Wisconsin northern
pike spearing legalized. I had no idea until this happened
that you couldn't spear a pike in Wisconsin. And they
were like, well, anglers won't be able to tell the
difference between a northern and a muskie. Dirk and rolled
(41:58):
it in and be like, well, how can you be
trust to tell the difference between you know, a sharp
tail grouse and a greater sage grouse and a hen
pheasant and the male you know, on on and on,
or all the duck stuff you're trusted to tell the difference,
but you can't trust tell the difference between these two fish.
And someone rode in to say, you don't know how
drunk these people are and talking about the ice fisherman
(42:21):
in Wisconsin. So we'll see what happens there.
Speaker 3 (42:28):
Yeah, I think that. I mean, I got I have
lots of thoughts about invasive species control and all that,
and I think it's I'm not an invasive species manager,
but I can appreciate what a difficult job that is
because on the one hand, you know, crowdsourcing this or
(42:48):
using you know, the community to help out, I mean,
that's that's an obvious way to get more shit done.
But you're weighing all these other things. You're saying, Okay,
what are the consequences of, like government sanctioned hunt where
we've got people out at night who are not just
(43:09):
telling two birds apart, but trying to tell an evasive
species at night from spotted owl, which would be a
big bummer.
Speaker 1 (43:18):
How big is the spotted owl? Same size?
Speaker 3 (43:20):
Not the same size? Yeah, I mean, they're not wildly
different creatures, you know, it's it's a that's a higher risk,
and when you've got a population of owls that is
is really low like spotted owls. You want to make
sure people are getting it right.
Speaker 1 (43:35):
Got it. You're pro big government. Here's a good SEGUEU.
What's the most ready way can you be? In a
links researcher, you have to have a lot of people
who tell you they saw links. Yes, and it's a bobcat.
Speaker 3 (43:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:53):
I was dogging on my sister. I was dogging on
camera guys a minute ago about that dude holding the
turkey call. So I don't want to dog on them again.
So I'll tell you that I can't remember what type
of person does happened to. There's one of these types
of people. I can't tell you what type. Swear always
swears me up and down about the links he saw
and just by where it was. I'm like, no, you
(44:15):
just didn't. It had toughs on its ears. I'm like
it did, but not that kind.
Speaker 3 (44:22):
The way I handle that is I hate bursting people's bubbles,
and so I try to do it pretty gentle. Plus,
links go weird places, and when there's invasions of links,
or one has gotten kicked out of its its own
home range because it's an old links or whatever, they
end up in strange.
Speaker 1 (44:39):
But they do. Oh yeah, so maybe this guy's right.
Speaker 3 (44:42):
There's always a chance, And so I will usually say something.
Speaker 1 (44:45):
Like, I know you're out there. If you took offence,
i'd take it back.
Speaker 3 (44:48):
I would say something like for where that was, I
would be very surprised. But links go weird places, you
never know. So that's pretty.
Speaker 1 (44:57):
Cool, that's what you'll say. Yeah, you'll throw them a
little bone.
Speaker 3 (45:01):
Yeah, yeah, And because I keep the dream alive exactly, Yes,
I don't want to be a dream smasher.
Speaker 1 (45:07):
I've laided my eyes on one LINX. I know it
was a link because it was in the Arctic.
Speaker 3 (45:12):
Yes, that's pretty solid.
Speaker 1 (45:13):
It was just on the south slope of the Brooks Range.
It stepped out into the pipeline road and twenty feet
off the bumper, and it was like looking into another planet.
It was the first links I saw. I'm convinced I
was the first person it saw. It looked at me
with like uttered, like disinterest, but also no sort of
(45:37):
preconceived notion of what that I might be trouble as
I opened the door and then he just walked off.
Never that has on another one.
Speaker 3 (45:46):
That's pretty special.
Speaker 1 (45:48):
How many people for the one?
Speaker 9 (45:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (45:49):
I don't know if I'll get to see another one,
but that was the one I saw, and it was
it was like they have a face like it's like
they have a human baby face.
Speaker 3 (45:56):
That's funny. I always say they have an old man
face the same.
Speaker 1 (46:02):
You know, Phil lost it. It was one of my
favorite things I owned. Phil lost it. I used to
have responsibility. I used to have this quote. It was
framed in our old studio. You might have read it.
It was a guy talking about on seeing his children born.
It was an Irish writer talking about and seeing his
children born that when they come out, how ancient they are.
(46:26):
And he said, like Egyptian pharaohs, like with their features
smoothed by time, traveled across this immense journey to be here,
and he goes and then in an instant they become young.
So meaning it can be an old man in a
little baby like a human baby.
Speaker 3 (46:45):
The same page.
Speaker 1 (46:46):
Human babies come out, they look like crazy old men
for a couple of seconds. What else are you looking
at when you're looking, Just to verify, when someone says,
oh my.
Speaker 3 (46:54):
God, a Lynx, the feet they got kind of a
jacked up back end, meaning that their their butts are a
little higher than.
Speaker 1 (47:02):
Their Now you say that, that's a good point.
Speaker 3 (47:05):
Yeah, and then they're there are tails, so bobcats. The
tip of the of a bobcat tail is black on
top and the sides and then white underneath, whereas a
bobcat it's like their tail was back or sorry, a
lynx is dipped in ink like it's black all the
way around on the tip yet white. Okay, bobcat white
(47:27):
on the bottom links the end of their tail completely
black all the way around. No white on the bottom.
Speaker 1 (47:33):
Oh, I mean if he turned his tail up, yeah.
Speaker 3 (47:35):
Or if you can you can see it from the side,
even on a bobcat, that's that's one of the.
Speaker 1 (47:38):
Under So the underside of a lynx's tail.
Speaker 3 (47:42):
Okay, yeah, if you're saying about a lynx's tail and
there's the tip of it and the top of it
and sides are are black there, but on the bottom.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
Is white on a lynx.
Speaker 3 (47:52):
Nope, bobcat, you'll get it. You'll get it.
Speaker 1 (47:55):
No, I'll get there. Okay, let's start with a bobcat.
Tell me about a bobcat's tail. Bobcat's tail and people know,
just so you know, people, this is helpful people that
send us in photos wondering what they're looking at.
Speaker 3 (48:06):
This is a good one for photos.
Speaker 1 (48:08):
Bobcat, it has a It means it's a cat with
Bob's tail.
Speaker 3 (48:12):
Yes, which a links also has a.
Speaker 1 (48:14):
Has a bobtail. So Bobcat's tail looks like this.
Speaker 3 (48:17):
Looks like this black. Okay, we're talking about the end
of the tail, a tip of the tail. It's black
on top, white on the bottom.
Speaker 1 (48:26):
And I wouldn't have been able to tell you that
that mean I've handled him, and I wouldn't be able
to tell you that's true. I believe I just never looked.
Speaker 3 (48:31):
At Yeah, and so even from the side, So if
you're looking at trail camera pictures and you can see
the tail, this is really really helpful because you'll see
some white on a bobcat. Even from the side, you
can you can see that the bottom is white, whereas
a lynx, the entire end of the tail looks like
it was dipped into black ink.
Speaker 1 (48:49):
No kidding, Yeah, just funny about links is I want
you to talk about the range of links. But are
you familiar with the comedian Jerry Klower. He's dead. No,
he was a storytelling He used to get up at
the Grand Old Opry between musical acts and tell hunting stories.
Different time. He has a story about a guy that uh,
(49:12):
he has a story about Some of his characters are
out raccoon hunting that night in Mississippi, Okay, and there's
a guy they're hunting with who won't let anyone shoot.
He thinks it's disrespectful to shoot a raccoon out of
a tree. He thinks the only respectable way to do
it is you got to climb up into that tree.
(49:32):
And Cloward talks about how they their dogs tree a
raccoon in the quote biggest sweet gum tree of all
of Amax County, and this dude, John new Banks. They're like,
I bet you can't climb up that tree, John, because
he'll climb them up and knock them out with a
stick and then let the dogs fight him. So he says,
you got to give a coon a sporting chance. So
(49:54):
he Cloward talks about how he takes off his brokenne
shoes and digs his toenails into the bark of that
sweet gum tree and is able to climb into the
sweet gum tree and then all hell breaks Lewis and
Clower says that it was a lynx up in that
tree in Mississippi.
Speaker 3 (50:12):
Okay, I'm gonna say no, But here's the name.
Speaker 1 (50:16):
That always bothered me because everything with Klour is so precise.
I think he meant to say a mountain lion.
Speaker 4 (50:21):
You know what. I bet you wasn't because in Durkin's
article he lists a bunch of common names, like semi
common names for bobcats, and there was a couple of
different versions of Lincoln.
Speaker 1 (50:32):
But Clower says this, but it wasn't no coon. This
is a quote, but it wasn't no coon. It was
a lynx, a souped up wildcat.
Speaker 4 (50:45):
I'm just telling you. They had like some Southern Yeah,
it was like vernacular kind of names for that's God.
Speaker 1 (50:53):
This was all my faith back into Clower.
Speaker 3 (50:55):
Yeah, you can have that back, because that's one of
the difficult things about figuring out the historic range of
Links in the lower forty eight We're relying on trapping records,
and people were not consistent with calling bobcats bobcats and
links links. There'd be Linx cat and you know, yeah.
Speaker 1 (51:14):
You'll sometimes look at Mark Ferbear market reports and I'll
see links cat. Yeah, that means a bobcat or lynx.
Speaker 3 (51:21):
I'm not sure. People, it's this common name thing, right,
people can call them whatever they want.
Speaker 2 (51:25):
Kind of what's the most southern links that's like confirmed
that you're aware of.
Speaker 3 (51:31):
Now, Yeah, Colorado maybe down into Utah every once in
a while, but like as a resident population Colorado.
Speaker 1 (51:40):
Let's say European contact. Huh, let's say a good stab
where Oh yeah, like give me a good stab. Okay, Yeah,
so the distribution is it isn't changed.
Speaker 3 (51:52):
Remarkably, right, Yeah, we don't think the distribution has changed much.
It's just how many animals are in those spots.
Speaker 1 (52:00):
Density has changed. Yeah, got it. So they'll follow the
rock he's down into Colorado, maybe Utah. By the time
you get into how far into Canada are they across
the whole top of Canada.
Speaker 3 (52:11):
Not much further north than the border. Oh, across all
of Canada.
Speaker 1 (52:15):
Yeah, you gotta get way up or.
Speaker 3 (52:17):
I no, you don't have to get well wherever there's
boreal forest, that's what they are. So you know in
places like Alberta, where there's there's more prairie and stuff
like that, they're not going to be down in that.
But they get pretty ubiquitous in the boreal forest.
Speaker 4 (52:32):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (52:32):
I've read that the boreal forest is the largest biome
on Earth.
Speaker 3 (52:37):
Yep. It's a cool space.
Speaker 1 (52:39):
Yeah. Uh, lay out the work you work layout where
in what work you're doing right now currently?
Speaker 3 (52:46):
Okay, with just a LYNX project. Okay, So let's see,
we're starting on year two of of our field effort,
uh for our LINX and wildfire project. So in in
the lower forty eight we were just talking about their distribution.
There's five resident populations of Links. There's Washington, there's Idaho, Montana,
(53:13):
there's Minnesota and Maine, and then Colorado.
Speaker 1 (53:17):
Minnesota has lynks. Yeah you know that Brony I did
not You got that wrong.
Speaker 8 (53:23):
Yeah, are to have the NBA team, isn't it the
Minnesota Lynx?
Speaker 1 (53:27):
Yeah? But the Michigan Wolverines.
Speaker 4 (53:29):
Dude, but it makes I mean you think about that
North Country stead They got fishers and Martin not a
spruce forest, and they got links there.
Speaker 3 (53:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (53:39):
So in Minnesota, don't lie, no, doctor, Ana. I didn't
even know Maine had them.
Speaker 3 (53:46):
Yeah, good population.
Speaker 1 (53:49):
Maine had Caribo until the nineteen twenties.
Speaker 2 (53:52):
There's a I think the furthest North City or town
Town in Maine is called Caribou. It could be wrong.
Speaker 1 (54:01):
Mm hm, anyway, I don't know that good job.
Speaker 4 (54:05):
I want to hear some common Bobcat names.
Speaker 1 (54:08):
Bobcat or Lynx names.
Speaker 4 (54:09):
Bobcat well like vernacular names Lynx Rufus.
Speaker 1 (54:15):
Well Link Rufus, scientific.
Speaker 4 (54:17):
Include bay Linx Bard, Bobcat, Catamount, Cat of the Mount,
Lynx Cat, Pallid, Bobcat, red Linx Wildcat, and shot Savage.
Speaker 1 (54:28):
When they get into those lists, I feel like they're
starting to throw in stuff that some dude said once.
Speaker 4 (54:32):
Yeah, I don't know. I'm just saying Klower was.
Speaker 1 (54:37):
Yeah, I'm back to love and clour. Anyone interested in
Jerry Klower? Besides listening to Jerry Klower, you could go
listen to the Bear Grease episodes about Jerry Klower. He's
one of my favorite people. My kids like Jerryklower. You
never heard Jerry Klower? Go type up? Will you promise
me something? Type up? Jerry Klower A coon hunting story
(54:57):
that's the one that has the Lynx cat in it.
All right, Brooklyn track and all this. Yeah, how would
you get how would you if you had one on
one to ten? How interesting? This is? What would you give.
Speaker 5 (55:06):
It like six?
Speaker 2 (55:11):
All right?
Speaker 1 (55:12):
That's that's a reliable That's what you need around man,
someone that gets it to you straight. Yeah, because you
can see her being yeah, you can see her being
like oh yeah nine and being in your head like
yeah right, she might have been like three, but I
can't say that. No, it's encouraging. There's room for improvement,
but we're not as bad as it could be. Yeah right, Okay,
(55:35):
I didn't know that. I mean it's like, like, do
you have rough ideas? Oh, you were doing the five
so Washington? Yeah, now why is it not Washington? Oregon?
Organs too far too far south?
Speaker 3 (55:44):
So in Washington, our our links range is is interesting
because we've got the North Cascades. Yeah, and they quickly
start to transition into more southerly forest types. Links rely
on snowshe hears, there's predator. Eighty five to ninety percent
of their diet is snowshoe hairs. That's what they're built for.
(56:06):
That's that's what makes them different from from bobcats. And
big part is there.
Speaker 1 (56:10):
You sent me the coolest photo of brand new snowshoe
hair tracks. Oh yeah, both of them run.
Speaker 3 (56:19):
Yeah, that is that is their thing is there. They
rely on snowshoe hairs, and they've snowshoe hairs. Obviously because
of their name. Uh, we all know that they've got
those big feet and that makes them able to get
around in these deep snow environments. Links same thing. It's
like the armswar thing. They've they've evolved with big giant
(56:41):
muppet feet and they're they're really light framed and they
can just walk on the snow same way, so they
they're like built to pursue snowshoe hairs and live in
these deep snow environments boreal sub boreal forests. So in
Washington it's we're in this place where this boreal forest
(57:02):
is starting to transition into more southerly forests and they
they so we're right on the range edge of Lynx
because they're habitat's about to just peter out. So we've
got a naturally small population because of that, because their
habitats just sort of marginal. Now we're getting megafires, which
(57:26):
are fires that are over one hundred thousand acres. Warmer, drier,
windier summers, we're snowpack in the winter. We're just having
more frequent, bigger, hotter, high severity fires, and that is
not good for links because snowshoe hares rely on a
(57:49):
forest that's got a bunch of branches down low, a
lot of horizontal cover, so like stuff that you wouldn't
maybe want to bushwhack through. That's what snowshoe hares love
because they eat those bras branches, and everybody wants to
eat a snowshoe hair, So those branches and that understory
gives them some protection from predators. So, because snowshoe hairs
(58:11):
need that kind of forest, that's where links are. When
a huge, high severity fire, and high severity means like
it's killing almost all of the trees in that patch.
When a big fire comes through like that, there's pretty
much no trees left. Its match sticks. And so there
goes the snowshoe hairs, there goes the lynx. And so
(58:32):
Washington is in this unique place where we are just
getting hammered by these fires, partially because of our changing climate,
but also because we just have kind of a unique
and I don't know why this is, but we get
a ton of lightning strikes and so from starting in
the year two thousand, we just started getting hit boom
(58:53):
boom boom by these giant fires to the point where
now you look at a map of Lynks habitat and
it looks like it's mostly burned recently. And so this
has put a big herd on our links population.
Speaker 5 (59:08):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (59:08):
Absolutely, How many links are in Washington there? I mean,
no one knows, nobody in thousands?
Speaker 3 (59:16):
Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no, around sixty maybe, yeah,
it's bad, it's really really bad.
Speaker 1 (59:24):
Sixty in the state. And then and I know we're
a lot of secret, but I when to revisit something Washington,
and you said Idaho, Montana, Okay, and that that's what
not thousands?
Speaker 3 (59:38):
Hundreds, maybe hundreds in Minnesota. I don't. I don't know
about Minnesota. Main is hundreds as well, hundreds. But all
you know, all.
Speaker 1 (59:46):
Of these you're the population you're toying with. Is it's
sub one hundred?
Speaker 3 (59:50):
Yes, it's We're.
Speaker 1 (59:51):
How certain are you that it's sub one hundred?
Speaker 7 (59:55):
Mmmm?
Speaker 1 (59:56):
On a scale of one to five.
Speaker 3 (01:00:01):
Four and a half. But I like to be optimistic.
Maybe we've got one hundred.
Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
But you don't have three hundred.
Speaker 3 (01:00:06):
We don't have three hundred.
Speaker 8 (01:00:08):
No, no, And if you go back twenty five years,
how many are you talking about, Like, what's the.
Speaker 3 (01:00:14):
Reasons get really sketchy on estimates. Yeah, it's not a lot,
it's maybe, Oh, I know, I've read this summer somewhere
maybe maybe between one hundred and fifteen two hundred.
Speaker 1 (01:00:26):
Sure, So.
Speaker 4 (01:00:29):
When a fire happens in one of the like the
snowshoe hair population just gets nuked, is it like an
immediate precipitous decline for the bobcat, I mean for the
Lynx or like are they such specialists they can't like
adjust and be like I'm going to go after squirrels
or I'm going to go after birds or whatever.
Speaker 3 (01:00:49):
Yeah, So the the I think the answer is it
kind of depends. So when a fire burns. So for example,
two thousand and six was our first big burn. It
was called the Tripod Burn, and it burned most of
what was considered the best links habitat that we had
in Washington and that let's see, the winter following that burn,
(01:01:14):
we started or a Lynx project started, and we got
callers out on cats that were living right adjacent to
that burn. And what we found was that it's just
a habitat. It's a bunch of habitat lost and so,
you know, we don't know exactly what happened to those
links that we're living right there. Maybe they dispersed, which
(01:01:36):
that's you know, that's a dangerous thing to do because
you might not find another home range. Maybe they went
up to Canada and found something. Who knows, but that
becomes largely unusable habitat.
Speaker 1 (01:01:47):
Presume a lot burn up, right, I.
Speaker 3 (01:01:50):
Think less animals burn up than we think, really. I mean, yeah,
I mean you were able to.
Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
But like take something like pine squirrels, there's no way
pine squirrels are getting away from a fire.
Speaker 3 (01:02:00):
I think they've got some time. I have found burned
up pine squirrel so, but I.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
Think links are just moving ahead of it instead.
Speaker 3 (01:02:09):
Yeah, I think so. I think they'd have to get
cornered or trapped.
Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
That's interesting.
Speaker 3 (01:02:13):
Yeah. I did have a friend find a how he
described it was barbecued cougar after a big fire that
we had. It got trapped in a little canyon. But
I don't think they're burning up. I think they're getting
out of there. They've they've evolved with fire.
Speaker 4 (01:02:30):
Have you found like other things links have killed, like
deer or do they feed on they cannibalize themselves or like,
have you found anything that was surprising?
Speaker 3 (01:02:43):
Right, I haven't found anything surprising. They'll eat so Litstene.
Let me back up. They rely on snowshoe hairs to
the point where there's this sort of classic ecology lesson
that in the northern part of their their range, where
there's lots of snowshoe hairs and lots of links, there's
(01:03:04):
a cycle where links slightly lagging behind snowshoe hairs. Population
numbers will increase as snowshoe hairs increase, and then as
snowshoe hairs start to decrease, links start decreasing. And so
this it's this this cycle. It's more than just links
(01:03:25):
driving that cycle. There's a whole suite of predators. Every
Like I said, everybody wants to eat a snowshoe hair.
That's just like it's a it's a.
Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
Great friends friends in Alaska to have told me who
trap links have told me that it's almost immediate the
boom buss that goes along with snow because like down
here we don't have the snowshoe hair cycles.
Speaker 3 (01:03:42):
Right, they're they're either you know, just we're kind of
at a constant low or just really dampened amplitude.
Speaker 1 (01:03:49):
We don't have those like the insane swings, right, have
you ever seen that stuff where they went through Hudson
Bay Company links records and they're able to see a
seven your swing on how many links pelts the Hudson
Bay Company was dealing with, like in the seventeen hundreds,
eighteen hundreds whatever, and they're able to kind of correlate
that to the to the calculating population yep.
Speaker 3 (01:04:13):
Yeah, And so that's those fur records are where sort
you know, people started to notice, oh, this isn't like
a steady, perfectly balanced ecology here. You know, things things fluctuate,
and so the yeah, the cycles about every tennis years
booms and bus and so anyway, that's just to illustrate
(01:04:35):
how reliant on snowshoe hair's links are and.
Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
They're chasing them in the summer when there's no snow. Yeah,
they still the same thing.
Speaker 3 (01:04:41):
Yeah, exactly. When there's a low, they will rely more
on red squirrels. And so there is some of that,
but it's it's it's rarely a significant part of their area.
Speaker 4 (01:04:54):
I've seen that. It was a fairly viral video of
a links killing a caribou.
Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
It's wild.
Speaker 4 (01:05:01):
Oh, it's cool. I think it might be in Europe though.
Speaker 1 (01:05:04):
There's a there's a record of one killing a there's
a record of a lynx killing a doll sheet. Oh really, yeah,
a witness.
Speaker 3 (01:05:11):
In North America in Alaska.
Speaker 1 (01:05:13):
It was in a book by a bilegist from fair
who's at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks for a book.
And then there's a person watched it happen.
Speaker 3 (01:05:20):
Oh, that's cool. There's I've never seen it, but there
are records of you know, a big links, which when
I say big, I mean like thirty thirty one pounds
taking down a deer if it's you know, mired and
snow or something like that, held back by the snow,
but really it's snowshoe hairs or where it's at for them.
Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
Yeah, everybody knows, like bears eat honey dying now and
then besides honey, yeah no, no, no, eat your buck sheet,
they like honey.
Speaker 9 (01:05:51):
Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:06:01):
So back to the fires. Links are listed as threatened
all across the lower forty eight. In Washington, they're listed
by the state is endangered, and that's in large part
because of this blow up of fires that we've had,
and so what we're trying to do because it's really
it's a whole paradigm shift of what we think we
(01:06:25):
know about their habitat. Here in Washington, all the or
many of the habitat studies that were done earlier on
were on a landscape that was largely unaffected by wildfires
because it was the suppression era when the Forest Service
was doing a really good job of putting out starts.
Now we're to the point where climate conditions are such
(01:06:47):
and our fuels out there are so loaded and contiguous
because we were excluding those small fires that would naturally
happen and so to break up the fuel bed now
they just blow up. Are often beyond our firefighting capabilities.
So we can't we can't rely on suppression, and nor
should we if we want to try to get our
(01:07:09):
landscape back to a place where it's it can have
somewhat of its own negative feedback loop with fire, where
little fires are sort of dampening the effects of future fires. So, anyway,
what we know about habitat was largely based on that
that really fire unaffected landscape. Now we've we've flip flopped.
(01:07:31):
Now most of our landscape is affected by fires, and
not just fires, but really big fires that burned with
a high severity, so killing a lot of the trees.
And so we need to get in there and figure
out how links are using this new novel landscape. They've
got a whole new menu, the regrowth, the different Let's
(01:07:52):
see when we talk about boreal forests. Yeah, there's forest,
but if you really think about.
Speaker 1 (01:07:56):
That, can you describe bore So it's.
Speaker 3 (01:08:01):
More ubiquitous up in Canada and Alaska. It's that that
spruce and fir lodge pole pine forest that's you know,
in mountains. It's sort of that that sub alpine right
before you get at a tree line. Yeah, it's it's
that ecosystem that spruce f like you'd see up in
(01:08:22):
Alaska or Canada.
Speaker 1 (01:08:24):
Here and there you'll see aspens, which doesn't rule out sure, yeah,
it doesn't rule out it being boreal forests.
Speaker 3 (01:08:30):
Right right right? Where was I going with that? Oh,
boreal forest we think about, Okay, a forest, we can
picture a forest, but with we can think a little
more thoughtfully about that and realize that there's all different
structure types within that. So what I mean by that
is there's little short regenerating forests, there's you know, older
(01:08:53):
growth forests, there's forty year old forests. That's you know
sometimes when you come across a patch of lodgepole pine
and it's it's maybe you know, the the trunks of
the size of dinner plates, and it's just the canopy
is so thick that the understory is totally parked out
and you could just stroll through there, no problem. So
there's that type of structure. There's all these different structures,
(01:09:13):
and again for snowshoe hares, it's about that understory. It's
about that dense structure. And so for links, it's about
that dense structure. And so while we've still got boreal
forests out there, there's all different structures of it. There's
just freshly burned, there's regenerating, there's that parked out understory,
when there's sort of middle aged and there's old growth.
There's different shapes and sizes of those patches of forest
(01:09:36):
after a burn that are left. And so we need
to figure out what are those structures and shapes that
Links are using, because that's what we need to be
focusing on now, because that's what we've got and these
mega fires are not stopping, and so that we just
need to learn the basics of this new habitat that
(01:09:59):
they're using. And so that's what we're trying to learn
about and focus on, is burned habitat. So we were
working in that burn. I was talking about that tripod
burn the burned in two thousand and six, and we're
going in there, we're getting links, callers on links, and
we're backtracking, and we're using a whole bunch of cameras
(01:10:21):
to figure out how they're making that burn work. Because
they are making it work. This is something that's really
hopeful and cool that's happened in the last seven years
is it's gone from we'd go out there looking for
links tracks and see nothing, not even very many snowshoe
hair tracks, to all of sudden are starting to see
links tracks and seven years, yeah, not very much time
(01:10:46):
to now one of those.
Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
So in your time out there, you've seen a difference.
Speaker 3 (01:10:50):
Oh yeah, big time. Yeah, yeah, Okay. One of the
cool things we're seeing now is right after the burn,
when we had those GPS callers on cats back in
two thousand and six, seven eight, there were cats that
were living right next to the burn, and if there
were nice places in that burn that had skipped fire skips,
(01:11:12):
so places where the burn went around for whatever reason,
they'd junt in there and use those for hunting. And
so we learned from that study that if there is
some structure, there will be snowshoe hairs, and the links
will make the most of them.
Speaker 1 (01:11:25):
They'll find those spots.
Speaker 3 (01:11:26):
They'll find those spots. But those spots in the immediate
aftermath of a fire where were places like fire skips,
and they'd they'd preferentially use lighter area burns, you know,
where there was still some live tree, just a little
bit of cover to get to those spots. I mean
you've probably tried.
Speaker 1 (01:11:44):
You like to have overhead cover.
Speaker 3 (01:11:45):
They like to have something. If you've ever followed any
kind of cat tracks, they are so meticulous about hugging cover.
They'd really rather not be out in the open. I
think that's I mean, I don't know what a cat's thinking.
I'm not a lynx, but I think that's probably a
mixture of just protection, but also if there's in a
little bit of cover, there's a little chance there's some food,
(01:12:06):
and they're just they're always looking for food, and so
you'll see them do things like preferentially, you know, walk
between two trees rather than just you know, going alongside them.
They're just they're cool like that that they're really using
that cover.
Speaker 1 (01:12:20):
How big is their home range?
Speaker 3 (01:12:23):
That really varies.
Speaker 1 (01:12:25):
Probably like how much food is around exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:12:27):
So in Washington from our previous collaring, we had home
ranges that were as small as like seven square miles
all the way up to you know, ninety or one
hundred square miles.
Speaker 1 (01:12:40):
They can be bigger. I mean that that a male
female thing. Largely the personalities.
Speaker 3 (01:12:45):
Males tend to be have larger because I want to
overlap several females. But it's also what how much space,
how much habitat do I need to make a living?
So the you know, the theory is if the habitat
is less PRODUCTI if you're gonna need more of it,
you're gonna have to cover more ground.
Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
So one snowshoe hair paradise, he doesn't need to.
Speaker 3 (01:13:07):
Go right, It could be a really small home range.
Speaker 1 (01:13:10):
Did you see that study years ago, maybe five or
six years ago, I don't know if you call it
a study, but this observation from some years ago where
there's guys looking at They used to these researchers used
to wonder about rivers and how links related to rivers,
thinking that big rivers like the Tannana right in Alaska,
(01:13:31):
that the tan and aw would be an obvious barrier
for links. But they'll swim back and forth across that thing.
There's not much that they had come up in those areas, dudes.
And it's just so it's be so weird to think
you'd be coming down the river and having a link
swim across something like the they would they would just go.
Speaker 3 (01:13:46):
Yeah, they those things scooped. They will go long distances,
they'll disperse long distances.
Speaker 1 (01:13:53):
And no one ever sees them.
Speaker 3 (01:13:54):
Well now I'm about callers on those.
Speaker 1 (01:13:56):
No I'm saying, but it's like when you see that,
like how could you never see? What I mean? I
think of them always tolled up with some little thicket
because you just go your whole life and don't lay
eyes on sure.
Speaker 3 (01:14:04):
Sure, yeah, I mean they when they in my experience,
unless you, you know, sort of come up right on
them and you jump them, they'll just stand there and
kind of look at you and hunker down. And it's
it's really easy to miss.
Speaker 1 (01:14:17):
Them, so you you've approached them wearing the collar. When
you've approached your collared cats.
Speaker 3 (01:14:24):
Not the ones that we have collared right now, but
just being out there so much, have come across a
lot of links, I mean a lot for seeing a link.
Speaker 1 (01:14:34):
So you okay, this is outside of ones that you've caught,
and outside the ones that you were guided to because
you knew where they were because they have a collar on.
You've bumped into links?
Speaker 3 (01:14:46):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
How many times?
Speaker 3 (01:14:48):
I don't know a handful of times I bumped into them? Yeah,
I bumped into collared links, not using the telemetry, not
trying to, but bumped into them. I summer before last,
I had a cool sighting where I was. I was
hiking into the wilderness to scout for deer season, and
I got to our camp and looked up and there
(01:15:09):
was a links jumped away. Yeah. It was very cool
and it was actually no, no, it was actually special
too because this was in I was in a new
Burn area, but I was in a fire skip and.
Speaker 1 (01:15:20):
Scouting for deer and there you saw one. Nothing to
do with your research, no, No, yeah yet.
Speaker 3 (01:15:29):
Positive, I got I got the rear view and I
saw that tale.
Speaker 4 (01:15:33):
Yeah, so you know what you're looking at in an
area where they got plenty of food, Like, what's a
good lifespan? Like if they don't have some unfortunate thing.
Speaker 3 (01:15:43):
Yeah, maybe seven years, seven or eight years.
Speaker 2 (01:15:48):
Yeah, how are you guys trapping them?
Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
This is good?
Speaker 3 (01:15:51):
Yeah, so this is this is what I like.
Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
Can you put in whether Mercer Longing ever told you
anything helpful?
Speaker 3 (01:15:58):
We've been talking a lot.
Speaker 1 (01:16:00):
Yeah, he gets excited about catching cat.
Speaker 3 (01:16:02):
Oh yeah, no, Yeah, it's fun to talk with him
because we both do.
Speaker 1 (01:16:05):
Yeah, lay it out how you catch one?
Speaker 3 (01:16:07):
Okay, let's see. So, like I said, there are maybe
sixty in Washington. Our study area is I don't know,
maybe one hundred thousand acres. So that's a lot of space.
Speaker 1 (01:16:24):
How many are in that study area? If you had
to take a ballpark.
Speaker 3 (01:16:27):
If I had to take a ballpark, I mean last
year this time when I was on the podcast, we
hadn't started trapping, and I would have been hopeful that
there were maybe four.
Speaker 1 (01:16:38):
Or five in one hundred thousand acres.
Speaker 3 (01:16:40):
Yeah. Now that we've got some links on air and
spent you know, I've spent three months tracking them out
in that landscape. We know our collared links are content
tray to what we thought might be happening, making their
(01:17:02):
entire home range, their entire living within the burn. Which
that's really cool because that says to us, there's something
about the configuration of this burn where there are fire
skips where there aren't, or maybe it's that there's places
that are regenerating enough that that's actually, at this point,
really rich habitat. Whatever it is, which is what we're
going to find out, is making it so that links
(01:17:24):
are living entirely within the burn.
Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
God instead of just ducking in there now and then exactly,
So one hundred thousand acres. Yeah, and you're going to
take a You're going to take a like, do you
can do this too? You can be I'd be surprised
if it was more than what.
Speaker 3 (01:17:37):
Okay, I'd be surprised if it was more than sixteen,
but I'd be surprised if it was less than.
Speaker 1 (01:17:47):
Nine, because you guys trapped your asses off from collegn trapped.
Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
We caught four in two months, and then we got
a bonus cat this fall, which was super exciting. Well, okay,
so I'll explain how we normally trap. So this is
what we're doing to our official season, and this was
how I was tied to traplinks and have how I've
always done it. It's snowmobiling. Every single day we're out there,
(01:18:17):
we're riding around one hundred miles a day. We're covering
ground and we're we're looking for tracks. You get really
good at snowmobiling and tracking at high speed. We're looking
for track.
Speaker 1 (01:18:30):
You know what you want to.
Speaker 3 (01:18:31):
See exactly, and you start getting you know, an idea
of all right, I see tracks here regularly, or I
see and and they're crossing you know, a saddle here,
or crossing down a drainage here, crossing the road here,
or they're just using this road as a corridor, or
maybe this is good habitat, and you can see where
they're hunting along. They like to use roads, and then
(01:18:52):
they'll they'll sort of pop over to the edge of
the road. You'll see where they put their little butt
down and sit, and then you know they're they're they're
looking for snowshie hairs and they'll do that a lot
on the road, so you know where they're hunting too.
Once you find little honey holes that you think are
gonna be good, then we set a trap, and our
traps are they're box traps. We made them ourselves. They're
(01:19:13):
made out of This is not our invention, but it's
it's just a cheap er, cheap ish way to do this.
But it's a PVC pipe frame and then we wrap
it with chicken wire. I had a local welder welds
up some some just thin metal frame doors and that
goes into a PVC pipe frame. It slides up and down,
(01:19:36):
so it's a guillotine type door. Here's where it gets
a little wacky. It sounds like a Rube Goldberg, but
it works. It works really well. We've got in the
back of the trap a little fishing line trip line,
so it's in the back quarter of the trap. That
fishing line goes spans spans the let's see, it's such
(01:20:00):
that when an animal goes in there and reaches for
the bait that's behind it, they're they're going to hit it. Now,
that goes up to the top of the trap. That
fishing line, where there's a mouse trap wired onto. The
traps get very yeah, tied mouse traps with the little
fake cheese tied. Yes, well, you tie the fishing line
(01:20:26):
to the fake cheese the door has paracord that is
holding it up. That para cord goes back to the
mouse trap. It's got a loop in the end blade.
Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
Yeah, glue to the mouse trap bail.
Speaker 3 (01:20:42):
It's not quite that bad. The loop goes over the
arm of the mouse trap so that when you set
the trap, it's it. It doesn't make it go off.
The the the door is being held up by the
rope that is being held in place by the set trap,
and when linx or a bird or anything hits that
(01:21:04):
that trip line, it pulls the cheese down. Trap goes off,
releasing the door and it drops.
Speaker 1 (01:21:12):
Is that door weighted so it drops quick?
Speaker 3 (01:21:14):
It weighs enough just because it's got that metal frame. Okay, Yeah,
Everything in the design of our trap is also geared
towards really making sure our animals are safe. So we
don't want a super heavy door that should it go
off early, it could. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:21:29):
Yeah, what what what are you baiting and luring with?
Speaker 3 (01:21:32):
Oh, we're using all kinds of different lures, but I
like to have Well, let's see, we're using road killed deer.
And the reason we're using road killed deer is that
it's usually readily available right now we're hurting for bait.
We are desperate.
Speaker 1 (01:21:47):
Well, not beaver meat.
Speaker 3 (01:21:49):
I've used that in the past, and I love using
that because it's got a nice smell, but our state
vet advises not to just in case of disease transfer.
Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
And so we're we're using We're going to get in
and eat that bait.
Speaker 3 (01:22:02):
Exactly, and so yeah, so I use that for yeah,
deer meat. So we're constantly on the lookout for roadkill.
We've got a whole routine.
Speaker 1 (01:22:10):
I think every better roadkill.
Speaker 3 (01:22:12):
Oh yeah, well we've but we've got our whole community
is looking out for us because we're we posted it everywhere.
We're desperate because like here in Bozeman, we haven't gotten
a ton of snow, so the deer haven't all pushed
down to the valley bottom.
Speaker 1 (01:22:24):
You ever find anyone who's a little too good at
getting meat I have, I don't know. I just let
the other one jumped out in front of my truck.
Speaker 3 (01:22:32):
No, we're getting so desperate that I'm like, good people,
they need to drive faster something. Yeah, so we're we
get calls right now and right now we're doing We're desperate.
We're going at any time of the day because it
is cut throat right now.
Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
We've had competition.
Speaker 3 (01:22:49):
Oh my god, we've had calls where somebody's like fresh
road killed corner of blah blah blah, this creek. We
zoom down there and it's gone. People are salvaging for
the meat.
Speaker 1 (01:23:00):
And so there's so few of the researchers out there.
Speaker 3 (01:23:03):
Well, there are some other researchers that we're that we're
competing with. They're a wolverine project. We've got to compromise though.
They can have the head because that's not super meaty.
But they like that for the wolverines because they can't
just a little more of a puzzle and they have
to work harder to get it that so it lasts longer.
Speaker 4 (01:23:20):
I was going to ask that, like what other predators
are in the area that might be attractor of those
like wolverines.
Speaker 1 (01:23:29):
Yeah, bye, catch for sure, but let her finish the bait.
And I want to get the bobcatch by caatch using flagging.
Oh yeah, CDs wings, what do you use?
Speaker 3 (01:23:40):
Let's see, so we always do a little a little
eye catch. I've used CDs. I like what we usually
use now just because it's super easy. Is that flashing
bird tape for like you put up in an orchard.
You just hang a little of that. It flutters in
the breeze. Really nice.
Speaker 1 (01:23:56):
You know someone told me recently drives them crazy, bobcats crazy?
Is uh. He takes peacock feathers. This guy lives in
a state where you can't use game bird parts. He
takes peacock feathers and sticks them just in because it's
got that iridescence and the way they blow, he says,
like a magnet. You picture that little eye, that eye
(01:24:19):
shape on a peacock feather, just flickering in the breeze. Says,
it's like irresistance. They got to come. What they wonder
what that thing is?
Speaker 3 (01:24:27):
Well, we got new this year some little I think
there must be Christmas decorations or something. But it's shaped
like an icicle, but it spins, so it's flashy and
it spins.
Speaker 1 (01:24:38):
Try those turn you on to a new product, you
might like, Oh please do are you aware? Tom Miranda
and someone else they make this thing that you're not
they're not legal here. It's a mouse emitter, a mouse
noise squeaker. Have you tried squeak?
Speaker 3 (01:24:51):
Got squeakers? Got squawkers? When you've got nine maybe ten
links some ten thousand acres that you're trying to catch.
Oh yeah, big time.
Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Do you ever worry that gets a little too busy
around your set?
Speaker 3 (01:25:05):
Yeah, yeah I do.
Speaker 1 (01:25:08):
Are using a commercial lure too, Yep.
Speaker 3 (01:25:11):
We buy lures so the because to use for lure.
We've got all kinds of stuff because but but I
always like to have because we're using deer, I like
to have some castor in there. And then to appeal
to you know, territory reality or breeding. We've got you know,
squeez bottles of Lynx p cat nippy stuff. We've got
(01:25:35):
a whole drawer. It's I'm a huge well we had
to move, so the long distance lures were like something skunky,
we'll put that up over the trap and you know,
like a lot of people Gusto is a great brand
of that, but it is poke ten. Oh hell yeah,
(01:25:56):
I've used that. I mean universally that stuff is great.
Speaker 1 (01:25:59):
But huh, it can be. You're all you're like, you're
like all checked out. Oh my god, there's nothing you
know all the like all the I just hear all
like I'll talk to cat trap bobcat trappers and this
is all stuff they bring up. So it's funny that
you're like, onto all these.
Speaker 3 (01:26:14):
Oh yeah, a little a little skunk is good.
Speaker 1 (01:26:16):
But we.
Speaker 3 (01:26:19):
That you can just you can order all these things
online and it's usually not a problem. But the gusto
you can smell. And I did have the post office once.
Be like, hm, next time you order that, it'll be
on the back porch. You're gonna have to go around for.
Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
That if you want. I have it here in the
parking lot, and I'll happily give it to you. I
have a bottle of skunk essence and beaver castor blank
together to fly or drive.
Speaker 3 (01:26:43):
I flew, Yeah, we had. We get so used to
the smell that we don't smell it.
Speaker 1 (01:26:50):
But oh, you know what, can I can I tell
you something real quick that I didn't mention? How do
I miss this? Krinn? We were recently telling a story
about the world's greatest tsa agent who instead to stealing
people's knives, we couldn't tell where what states happens in.
Instead of stealing people's knives, she instructs them to put
them in the drop ceiling of the bathroom. And someone
went up there to get their knife back and there
(01:27:10):
was several other knives up in the drop ceiling. This
guy was talking about moving from Australia and he's moving
from Australia to the US. So he's trying to bring
guns and AMMO. I don't know why I didn't buy
a new ammal when he got here or new guns
when he got here, but he's trying to move guns
and AMMO from Australia. And in Australia they somehow tell
them to put the ammal in a carry on and
(01:27:32):
he's like that can't be right. To the customs people like, no,
you had to put in the carry on. So he
gets in the Australian version of TSA has to confiscated
from to be destroyed. He later gets to the US
and one of his bags is missing. One of his
bags didn't make it, so he files for a lost
(01:27:54):
bag and then when the bag turns up, it has
all his AMMO in it. Oh, someone had taken pity
on him, pulled his bag, put his ammal back in it,
and send it alongest way on a later flight rather
than destroying the guy's animal. Wow, very civilized. Yeah, it's
like you know on Christmas to do happy stories in
the news good news. Where I buy gas, they'd have
(01:28:16):
a thing the pump plays you happy news stories, cheddar news.
Speaker 4 (01:28:22):
You find yourself just standing around.
Speaker 1 (01:28:23):
Watching us for a while. I mean, I'm annoyed. But
there used to be this person called like Eva Menendez
or something. I should tell you how to make like
get like a jar and put some marbles in there
for decoration or whatever, and then or how to not
be so stressed out. But today it was some dude
telling happy news. It's called good news.
Speaker 8 (01:28:47):
I've just never noticed that there was a I've never
paid enough attention to notice that it's.
Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
All good news. It's called good news.
Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
I've just never paid enough attention.
Speaker 1 (01:28:58):
We scooped him because this would be good news about
the guy's ammo, that's all. Yeah, this reminds me of
that sure you taking my skunk sent home?
Speaker 3 (01:29:08):
Yeah, it could be probably remind me of that.
Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
You don't want to do that. Well, I mean, you
know that thing that happened in the Laska Airlines flight
there night.
Speaker 3 (01:29:15):
I heard about that as I was.
Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
They have to ground all them planes.
Speaker 3 (01:29:24):
Yeah, we we have an official office now right in downtown.
Winthrop was just the town we live in, and we
were told we needed to put the the gusto outside
because you walk in and it smells like straight up
a hot box.
Speaker 1 (01:29:39):
How do you get links? You're in F and T
or so it must be trappers up in the far North.
Speaker 3 (01:29:46):
So yeah, I guess.
Speaker 1 (01:29:47):
So we got all as a bottle of links. You're
in really expensive.
Speaker 3 (01:29:52):
It's not well in the mounts that we're using it.
It adds up.
Speaker 1 (01:29:55):
It's gonna be like a really limited supply.
Speaker 3 (01:29:58):
I don't know how limited is. Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:30:01):
See, buy it comes in a bottle.
Speaker 3 (01:30:02):
Comes in a bottle. Gotta make sure. They often don't
have good lids, and so we everything usually smells.
Speaker 1 (01:30:07):
Like the piece here, uh huh.
Speaker 3 (01:30:09):
And yeah, so we've got score bottles of that. Mix
a little glitcering so it doesn't freeze.
Speaker 2 (01:30:17):
You need to do that.
Speaker 3 (01:30:19):
Yeah that's good.
Speaker 1 (01:30:20):
I got some glitier on my counter.
Speaker 2 (01:30:21):
Keeps freezing, Yeah, it does.
Speaker 3 (01:30:24):
It keeps it from freezing. Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:30:26):
Like let's say you got you know how they sell that.
Your pea comes in those bottles like, yeah, ten ounces?
How much glister are you putting there?
Speaker 3 (01:30:32):
I don't know. No, No, you just buy it and
you can mix it up.
Speaker 1 (01:30:37):
I'm saying, how much glister do you shoot in there?
Speaker 3 (01:30:39):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:30:40):
I have a tablespoon.
Speaker 3 (01:30:41):
No more than that, I don't Yeah, just depend you
just yeah, I don't know the other.
Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
So you go to a trappers supply house and buy
glitcering too?
Speaker 3 (01:30:50):
You can, Yeah, you can order it.
Speaker 1 (01:30:51):
I have a bottle. I'm just curious how you guys do.
Speaker 3 (01:30:53):
Oh yeah, we just order it.
Speaker 1 (01:30:55):
Do they ever wonder what you guys are doing when
you're ordering all this equipment?
Speaker 3 (01:30:58):
No, but we order enough that they write us nice
notes and give us free hats.
Speaker 1 (01:31:03):
And stuff, and they're never like why are you do
you know you're not? Did they never let you know?
Like you know you're not allowed to trap links where
you're at?
Speaker 3 (01:31:10):
Like, does you know we're trapping links? I mean they
do you use F and T or Minnesota trap line?
Speaker 1 (01:31:16):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:31:17):
Yeah, yeah. We just go on there and try new
things and all those I'm such a sucker, all those descriptions,
you're like, this is the magic bullet they make them.
Speaker 1 (01:31:27):
You'll read those lure descriptions.
Speaker 3 (01:31:29):
Oh yeah, and they all feel like this is the one.
I'm a total sucker. So we got all kinds of yeah, exactly,
I'm like, great, that's what I need. So we've got
all of our lures and we try to change those up.
But yeah, always a caster, some pe or links.
Speaker 1 (01:31:47):
Glands are using cameras on your traps too.
Speaker 3 (01:31:51):
We uh, sometimes not very often. We're just beating cheeks
and running a gun and so much out there that
we it would the camera to Yeah, and.
Speaker 1 (01:32:02):
You probably don't have cell service anyway, so you can
sell you their cas and do you get links that
work the set? But just never committed.
Speaker 3 (01:32:07):
Oh that's the norm.
Speaker 1 (01:32:09):
Really, Oh my god, what do they want to do?
Speaker 3 (01:32:13):
Not go in the cave?
Speaker 1 (01:32:14):
They'll circle down wind or they'll even come up to
the door or what like, what's the hang up for him?
Speaker 3 (01:32:18):
Various things? I mean, they'll let's see, for example, we
had a cat last year that we could not catch.
We tried everything, We threw all sorts of things at him.
We you know, just just different variations in our sets.
And he would often twice a day, so we'd come
on the line in the morning, there'd be fresh tracks
(01:32:39):
of him walking by the traps. You could tell he
was spending enough time around there that he was checking them,
he was checking out the scene. He certainly was not
going in and poking his head in or anything like that,
but it close nod.
Speaker 1 (01:32:52):
So he knew that that thing was bad news.
Speaker 3 (01:32:54):
Yeah, And I like to so when we we we
put our trap in the snow, we s you know,
we pack snow around it. I like to make sure
there's plenty of snow in the bottom so they're not
feeling that chicken wire or anything funky. And then we
put boughs along the side just to give that sort
of tunnel look kind of you know, like a cat
likes a paper bag or something that's gonna be sort
(01:33:15):
of exciting, but it also just keeps snow from blowing
in and piling up in your trap, gives them a
little thermal protection if they're in there. And then on
the top, we've got a piece of clear plastic and
that's again to protect the cat in case there's a
thaw and it gets wet. We don't want to getting wet.
And then we pile boughs on that and I like
to make it so it would be unattractive for a
(01:33:35):
cat to jump on top because that would set off
the trap. And worst case scenario would be, say there's
a mom and kitten and mom's going in the trap,
and then a kitten jumps on it and the door
you know, closes and spooks her, and then you're ten
steps behind where you were. So yeah, I try to
to make it unattractive for them to jump on top
of the trap, but this cat would just sort of
(01:33:59):
check it out. Mosey on. We got, you know, camera
footage of him just walking right past, just breezing on by.
Speaker 1 (01:34:06):
We not even stopping. He just comes through but then
takes off.
Speaker 3 (01:34:09):
Yeah, like he's just walking by, maybe looks at it,
but keeps going. And he was driving us nuts. I
got a little obsessed. And he would. Then we'd go
out to the rest of our line, be out all day,
be coming back, and there'd be fresh tracks. One of
our a couple, oh yeah, a couple of our trappers
saw him just sauntering down the road right by one
(01:34:32):
of our traps. Never could get him. That brings me
to our bonus cat. This fall, we had maybe a
little bit of a vanditta and we were like Moby Dick.
(01:34:53):
He was our white whale. So we decided to do
just a little bonus trapping. And so this fall, before
the snow even flew. I went out there, and I
wanted to condition him to the traps. And this is
a technique that is used in career trapping and bobcat
(01:35:14):
trapping for research, but I'd never used it for length.
And so I took a full quarter, so a nice
big chunk of meat. I drilled a hole in the bone,
cabled it and staked it down so nothing could come.
Wolves couldn't come and take it.
Speaker 1 (01:35:29):
Cable it through the bone.
Speaker 3 (01:35:30):
Yeah, I didn't want because bears were still out. I
didn't want somebody dragging it off. So I staked that
sucker down. Then I set a trap maybe six feet away.
Not the door was tied open, it was just there
and ready to go. So the idea was a Links
could come start nibbling on that bait, get a little
taste for what we've got, and get used to the
(01:35:52):
trapp being there. And we had a camera on it.
So I set four of those stations in this area
where I knew this this Links went a lot. Three
nights later, I checked the camera and he'd come and
started eating that bait, and so great, Jay's nothing else.
(01:36:14):
So I moved it closer to the trap, so the
part it was partly in the door. Waited he didn't.
He came back ate some of that. I was like, oh, buddy, yeah,
it's on and uh, within a week. We probably could
have done it faster, but we were. It just worked
out that within like a week and a half, he
was eating bait that was in the middle of the trap.
(01:36:38):
And then once I saw that, that night I put
at all the bait stations meet in the back of
the trap and he came that night and we caught
him just the first night that the traps were actually set.
Speaker 1 (01:36:49):
Mature cat.
Speaker 3 (01:36:51):
Oh, beautiful, biggest cat we've caught in Washington.
Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
He was thirty one.
Speaker 3 (01:36:59):
No, he was a beautiful, just really nice cat. I mean,
just holding him, he wasn't that old, maybe three to five.
It's really hard. We age him just based on how
much where they have on their teeth, but it's it's rough.
It's really hard to tell. But he wasn't an old
grandpa by any means. Put a collar on him and
he's out and about.
Speaker 1 (01:37:18):
Did he just get the hell out of town when
you let him go?
Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:37:22):
No, he So we let him go. He jumped out
of the trap and then just stopped and then just
sauntered off.
Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
But his ass is never going back in a trap.
Speaker 3 (01:37:32):
Now, well, here's the thing. The first links will and
and other animals too, will get trap happy where they realize, Okay,
I can yeah, exactly, I can go in that trap,
get a pound or two of free meat. They'll come
and let me go in the morning. So we had
(01:37:53):
the first no they I mean, it's it makes sense.
The first hat that we caught.
Speaker 1 (01:38:00):
I imagine how scary it's got to be. A person
shows up.
Speaker 3 (01:38:05):
It's worth it, apparently. I mean, that's a lot of meat,
and it's there every night, and if you let them
out early, they can go to another trap for that afternoon.
We've had that happen.
Speaker 2 (01:38:16):
Like that.
Speaker 4 (01:38:18):
That cat was real hard to catch. Is there are
other cats you've just caught over and over again.
Speaker 1 (01:38:22):
Right, So the first one you can't keep away, right right.
Speaker 3 (01:38:25):
The first links that we caught last winter, he was
like that. He he was his personality was such that
he was just not as cautious and he went right
in the trap. I think probably the first time he
saw one of our traps, he went in. He ate
the bait. We came the next morning, we processed him,
We let him go and I don't remember how long later,
(01:38:47):
but he figured it out and then from then on,
it was almost every morning he'd be in a trap
and we have to let him go. Here's our snowmobile
come and he's like, oh, they're sending a trap over there.
I got to check that out. So we we had
to just start ripping traps out of his home range
(01:39:07):
as fast as seriously, yeah, because.
Speaker 1 (01:39:09):
It was something might happen to him eventually.
Speaker 3 (01:39:11):
Right, Well, I guess there's could be some risk of that,
but we're really careful. But he was, I mean, he
was just banging up our trap line and because he's
collecting data now, so he was he was ruining his data. Yeah,
if we run an analysis, would be like, well link
(01:39:33):
select trap lines and traps. So yeah, so we tried
not to let it come to that, but he's he's
kind of putting a wrench in our game this year
because there's a female that it overlaps with that we've
gotten on camera that we'd love to trap, but it's
kind of a no go zone because.
Speaker 1 (01:39:49):
We know he's just going to be, oh, he'll just
plug it all up.
Speaker 3 (01:39:52):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:39:53):
Have you ever Okay, there's by there's bycatch, So I
want you to do bycatch, I want you to do
what the different says you see and how these things
move and what they're doing once you get a collar
on them. There's a thing I want to ask.
Speaker 4 (01:40:05):
I want to know what they got to worry about,
like as far as oh.
Speaker 1 (01:40:09):
Yeah, yeah, that's a good one. So bycatch, how they're acting.
And then when you get them, when you get a
collar on, they die. Where are they dying from?
Speaker 2 (01:40:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:40:20):
Do you have collared right now?
Speaker 3 (01:40:22):
We have three on air?
Speaker 1 (01:40:24):
Okay, on air collared.
Speaker 3 (01:40:26):
Collared callers are functioning. They're giving us data. Yeah, so
where did you get the first one?
Speaker 1 (01:40:33):
By catchy catch, it all turns up in your traps.
Speaker 3 (01:40:36):
We get a lot of Grade.
Speaker 1 (01:40:37):
J's still walking area.
Speaker 3 (01:40:41):
Oh yeah. And then once they find a trap, they
can be kind of a pest. But that that is
one of the drawbacks of our trigger system, that mouse
trap system, is that it's so sensitive that uh, you know,
a Grade J goes in there and they're setting the
trap off. Weasels go in there, certainly, but they can
get out. There's enough, you know, they can just squeeze out.
Speaker 1 (01:41:00):
They throw the door first.
Speaker 3 (01:41:01):
Sometimes they're also so short they often go under under
the trip line. We got ssh hairs I've.
Speaker 1 (01:41:07):
Had after just whatever.
Speaker 3 (01:41:10):
Well, they'll eat the boughs off of our traps, but
they also just it's a little hiding spot, so they'll
go in there. I've caught a snowshoe hair in a
trap and then it was just being circled by a
lynx trying to get it. Yeah, so that is that
makes me want to vomit.
Speaker 1 (01:41:27):
Yeah, that's a rough night, man. Yeah, so did you
add him to the bait pile? Did you let him go?
Speaker 3 (01:41:33):
We let him go? Yeah, let's see. But more exciting
by catch. We caught a bobcat last year, which I
was surprised it didn't break out of that trap because.
Speaker 1 (01:41:43):
They're That was what Mercer was saying, because he's used
to bobcats. I remember he was saying when I first
connected you guys, he was saying that he was worried
that that wouldn't hold them, and you were saying, well,
links are chill compared, like they don't fight the trap.
Speaker 3 (01:41:55):
Right, Yeah, and I so bombcats and links are pretty
pretty different personalities for lack of a better word, where
bobcats are just like go them flying demons, because especially
in like a foothold, they are just going nuts. Their
stress response is the fight or flight, and in a
(01:42:17):
box trap, you know, they're all over the place and
they'll I've had a bust out of you know, manufactured
all metal traps.
Speaker 1 (01:42:28):
They put a collar on the bobcat you caught, no
want that.
Speaker 3 (01:42:35):
Links tend to go into freeze as their stress response.
They'll they'll test the walls of the trap a little bit,
but they're not they're not working hard on getting out,
and so they'll tend to just sort of hunker down
a little bit more in the trap. So that's why
we can use these traps. I would not use them
for any other type of cat.
Speaker 1 (01:42:56):
Wolverine's gonna be out of there in a second.
Speaker 3 (01:42:58):
Yeah, a fisher would be out of there in a second.
Speaker 1 (01:43:01):
Have you caught those?
Speaker 3 (01:43:02):
We actually did so we you know.
Speaker 1 (01:43:05):
We're almost caught one or whatever.
Speaker 3 (01:43:07):
Well, I've caught them a lot links trapping in other
areas in Maine. Here very surprising because we don't have
technically on the east slope of the Cascades in our
area a population of fisher. But we did catch one.
Luckily it wasn't in one of our chicken wire traps.
We were borrowing some some manufactured traps and it was
in one of those, so that was pretty exciting.
Speaker 1 (01:43:30):
Definitely, Not what about Martin.
Speaker 3 (01:43:34):
I have caught lots of Martin. Either we're not catching
Martin in our traps or they're getting out. I think
we're not catching them because again we're in a burned area,
so there's not a ton of Martin.
Speaker 1 (01:43:43):
Got you.
Speaker 3 (01:43:44):
Yeah, Yeah, let's see other by catch that's red foxes. Nope,
we also barely if any have those no coyotes, no
a cane, it is going to be they're not They
do not want to go into a box trap. They're
way too wary.
Speaker 1 (01:44:02):
They might pass through, but they're not going to put
their head in there.
Speaker 3 (01:44:04):
Yeah. Yeah, I've had now bobcat trapping I've had I've
had cougars go into the traps, but they're so big
that the doorge just falls on their butt. Yeah, and
they just back out. But they can be a problem.
Speaker 4 (01:44:17):
And you're doing most of you're trapping after the bears
have denned up, so they're not trash in your traps.
Speaker 3 (01:44:22):
Yeah, that's a big part of why we trap in winter,
so we're not having to deal with that now this fall.
I was willing to sacrifice a trap or two if
if we were going to catch this, We're going to
catch this links.
Speaker 1 (01:44:34):
So what are you seeing on like anything surprising and
how they're used, how far they're going, or like that
you let them go and they kind of hang out
in the immediate vicinity, they go to the next state,
or what do they do.
Speaker 3 (01:44:49):
I mean, what's been surprising to me is like I
said that they're not moving that far, that they're making
home ranges entirely within this burn and so far, I
mean it's we only have three you know cats on air,
but so far they are not giant home ranges, which
could indicate that it's decent habitat. They're not having to
go super far. This this burn is big enough that
(01:45:11):
as we sort of move our trap line north, maybe
the conditions are different up there and maybe it won't
be the same story. But at least the links we
have on air right now are making a pretty tight
home range.
Speaker 1 (01:45:24):
When do they rout what's their previous season.
Speaker 3 (01:45:26):
Uh, March February and then they have kittens May June.
Speaker 1 (01:45:32):
Have you maybe probably doesn't work. If you had a
female and then at that time and you knew where
they were, it might be plausible that there'd be like
multi like more males in that area. Or is that
not that that's not something really factors in.
Speaker 3 (01:45:48):
Oh, like if we see she's like a.
Speaker 1 (01:45:49):
Jewdas, she winds up being like a Judas animal, right
like that with her, you know that in her zone
there's gonna be cats coming through.
Speaker 3 (01:45:57):
Yeah, I mean they all move so much. If I
knew where a female was, I'd certainly be setting traps
there anyway, because we want to get female cats on air.
Speaker 1 (01:46:07):
You want to have males, all males on air right now?
Speaker 3 (01:46:11):
Yeah, yeah, right now. The males are more apt to
go in a trap in general.
Speaker 1 (01:46:16):
In general, So, have you had any cats get immortality signal?
Have you had any cats die while while collared?
Speaker 3 (01:46:22):
Yeah? And that was a bummer because it was the
one female that we caught last year. So we caught
a female and it was a really cool handling. It
was just you know how some times when you're hunting,
there's there's a deer you get that just feels special
because of everything around it, the scenery, the day, the whatever.
(01:46:44):
This was kind of one of those those moments with
this cat. We we caught this female lynx and she
had a kitten with her, and this was in March.
And so this kitten is you know, pretty almost full grown.
Speaker 1 (01:46:59):
It's almost the kittens outside of the trap.
Speaker 3 (01:47:00):
It's outside of the females in Yeah. And so I
was right in my snowmobile checking the line, checking the line,
and I'm looking up at the next trap and I
just see it wiggle a little bit, and I just
jam on the brakes and I go up there and
there's this female links in the trap and I can
see kitten footprints around it where he's been, you know,
(01:47:22):
trying to be close to her. And as I was
waiting for the rest of the team to meet me
to do the handling and collaring, I heard and saw
that that kitten was kind of checking in with her
and he was just sitting up on a hill above her.
Plus it was just.
Speaker 1 (01:47:39):
This making what noise.
Speaker 3 (01:47:41):
It's like a little sort of bird, little.
Speaker 1 (01:47:45):
Make the noise. I'll do it till I get it.
Speaker 3 (01:47:51):
Right, Okay, No more like uh, we're like yeah, got
it now. They make some real ugly noises. This was
probably one of the cuter noises they make, but in general, no,
in general, they sound like they're throwing up or something.
They kind of make this yowling demon noise, the cornered Nope,
(01:48:13):
just talking to each other.
Speaker 1 (01:48:14):
You hear it?
Speaker 3 (01:48:15):
Yeah, okay, yeah, anyway.
Speaker 1 (01:48:19):
So hit me with the demon noise. It's like that,
oh is that right? Like that that weird?
Speaker 3 (01:48:24):
It's weird. It's not. It's not a cute cat noise.
Speaker 1 (01:48:27):
Like someone wouldn't be like that must be a lynx.
Speaker 3 (01:48:29):
No, you'd be like, what was that. There's some some
cool YouTube where you can hear them.
Speaker 1 (01:48:37):
Okay, yeah, uh.
Speaker 3 (01:48:39):
Anyway, So I'm sitting there, I'm alone with this, with
this cat. I'm at a distance. We like to try
and keep them as calm as we can because it
just it's a better experience for them. The drugs works better,
everything just goes better if they're calm. So I'm a
distance away. But it's this cold, beautiful, snowy high mountain day,
this sort of meadow with a creek in it, and
(01:49:00):
then these you know, trees and burnt trees along the
side of it. It's snowing. It was. It was just
one of those moments and then we you know, crew arrived,
we processed this cat, and.
Speaker 4 (01:49:14):
You just for the audience, can you go like quick
rundown of what processing is?
Speaker 1 (01:49:21):
Stretchy.
Speaker 3 (01:49:26):
So, when we're handling any wildlife species, it's our professional
responsibility and our our ethics to do it in the
most humane way possible.
Speaker 1 (01:49:40):
And you're dealing with you're dealing with a feederally, yeah, threatened.
Speaker 3 (01:49:44):
Speed exactly, And so we baseline whenever, no matter what
species we're trapping, we have a really high bar for
how we do things and how we try to minimize
stress and obviously minimize risk and all of that because
it's I.
Speaker 1 (01:50:00):
Interrupted real quest. A friend of mine was doing doc banding,
and I don't want to tell you who said this,
but he was doing doc banding and his boss told him,
if you're not killing birds, you ain't working hard enough.
That's doc I was going to tell you that in
your links area. It was just a funny thing that
he remembers being told because he was like, very they're
(01:50:22):
doing those nets and everything was very dainty, and the
guys like, listen, we gotta get some birds banded here,
Like there's going.
Speaker 3 (01:50:28):
To be some Yeah, I mean I think I get
the gist of what he was saying. But I think
there's a little bit of a tide change.
Speaker 1 (01:50:36):
No, no, I'm not giving you professional advice, was I
was just observing that.
Speaker 3 (01:50:40):
I was just remarking on that and standing up for
the wildlife profession. I think that we're getting a little
as we're getting more thoughtful yeah about these things and
refining techniques. So anyway, we have a really high bar
of how we do things and animal safety and all this.
(01:51:00):
So everything we do is geared around minimizing stress. So
when we do a handling, it's it's all whispering, it's
it's all reading the cat's body language, using our body
language to seem as minimally aggressive and threatening. And so
when we've got a cat in the trap, first thing
(01:51:22):
we do is we put a big sheet over the trap.
That just helps calm the cat. It's just cuts down
on visual stimulation. Obviously, we have to drug the cat
or we can't handle it. So the way we're doing
that is we've got it's called a syringe pole. It's
it's a pole and on the end of it is
a plunger and you you put your your drugs in
(01:51:44):
a syringe. But the pole is now the plunger, if
that makes sense. So that when you so.
Speaker 1 (01:51:50):
That when you a little bit yep.
Speaker 3 (01:51:53):
You you wait until the cat's in the right position.
You want to get it ideally in the it's butt
right and it's haunched and that meat there, and you
just you slowly bring it in the trap and you
just poke it in the butt and just push a
little bit and that's it.
Speaker 1 (01:52:06):
And what's that drug.
Speaker 3 (01:52:08):
We are using a mix of ketamine and metatomitine. So
what that does is the but you don't want to
use your straight ketamine because it's a really it makes
them really rigid. There's risk of seizure and different side effects.
It's it's a very safe drug. But we can do
a little bit better and give them a more relaxed sedation.
Speaker 1 (01:52:31):
They out or just grog.
Speaker 3 (01:52:33):
They are out out. You want them out out. I
mean think about if if you're going to get an
ear tag and be handled by you know, this alien species,
you'd want to be out out, no memory, Yeah, you
want to be out. So we we drug them and
they are unresponsive. You know you could you could you know,
do surgery on them if that's what you were doing.
(01:52:55):
Obviously we're not. You drug them, you bring them out
of the trap once they're ready. Again, it's always just
minimizing that stress. And so we put an imask on
them and we're minimizing even like touching it, because that's
just more stimulation. And if they are more stimulated, the
drugs don't work as well. They've got to burn through
more stress. And so the last thing you want is
(01:53:17):
your cat waking up before you're ready. And so we're
doing everything to just make that a smooth, calm ride
for the cat. And so the handling what we're doing
is the primary goal is to get this GPS caller
on them. They're little callers that will take a GPS
point on collection days every thirty minutes and that shoots
(01:53:38):
up to space and then shoots down to my computer
and so every couple of days I'll get an update
of what that cat's been doing. So that's our primary goal.
Speaker 1 (01:53:46):
But and that thing eventually falls off or what.
Speaker 3 (01:53:48):
Yeah, they have a little release mechanism that you can
program that does a tiny, tiny, little explosion, but on
a micro scale, and it just parts the piece SIT's
holding it together and it'll drop off. Really yeah, So
February you could go grab it if you want to, exactly. Yeah,
so February second, hopefully that's what we'll be doing. That's
when our our colls will drop off.
Speaker 1 (01:54:09):
Really coming right up, coming right up.
Speaker 3 (01:54:11):
Yeah, So it's getting the collar on, but you're also
you're you're you've got this cat that needs you know,
it doesn't that the drugs can depress their respiration and
temperature and things like this, and so you're having to
regulate and make sure that that the cat's safe.
Speaker 1 (01:54:26):
And so is that collar valuable? You need to go
get it because it's valuable, or you just go get
it because of.
Speaker 3 (01:54:32):
We will theoretically have had all the data on it.
But it's just another way to get it. You can
have them refurbished, doesn't save you that much money, but yeah,
they are expensive.
Speaker 1 (01:54:41):
But but going and getting it doesn't. It's not like
a financial reason to go get it, not really.
Speaker 3 (01:54:45):
Okay, Yeah, anyway, so during the handling, a really important
job is to be monitoring temperature, respiration, heart rate, you know,
these sorts of things, so that if things start to
drift out of you know, a the correct zone of temperature,
heart rate, and respiration, we can correct that.
Speaker 1 (01:55:04):
And you have a drug that helps with that. Like
let's say you oded it on an.
Speaker 3 (01:55:09):
Accident, that's really unlikely. The drugs we use have a
they have a huge safety margin. We're not gonna do it, yeah,
but there are drugs it. You know, there's there's different
things that could happen. For example, I had a bear
and this is more common embarrassed for whatever reason with
some drugs where the breathing got a little too shallow
(01:55:30):
and interrupted for my comfort. I had a drug with
that just gave it a little bit of that boom
started breathing well. So we have tools for these common
things that might go wrong. We've got drugs for if
they have a seizure, things like that, or I mean,
if it's temperature, it's it's putting snow in its armpits,
or if it's hot, Yeah, if it gets too hot,
(01:55:51):
if it gets too cold, we've got we've got we
always have them in blankets on a on a foam
pad we have If they get really cool, we have
socks and we can put little handwarmers in there and
put socks on all of its feet. So we're prepared
for for a lot. But these things, you know, hopefully
by keeping that stress level down. That's one really good
(01:56:15):
way to make sure things are just smooth and steady.
Speaker 4 (01:56:17):
Are you also taking samples for like DNA, genetics, disease, stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:56:22):
Like that, or we're not taking blood. We're not, we're
not looking at disease. If we had a cat that
something seemed wrong, we'd certainly take a lot of notes
about that. If it had an unusual parasite load, we'd
probably collect that.
Speaker 1 (01:56:35):
We just know that from scat analysis. Like, how would
you know if we had a parasite load, Well.
Speaker 3 (01:56:41):
If you see them they sometimes have tapeworms, or if
they had an exorminant amount of ticks or fleas or
lice or something like that, we'd probably collect that. Right,
We do collect DNA, So when we give them a
ear tag, we first rather than just jamming the ear
tag through, you take a little biopsy punch and it
makes a little hole and then we've got that little
tissue sample. So call her a couple of DNA samples.
(01:57:04):
No tattoos, no tattoos, no need for that. We're not
pit tagging.
Speaker 1 (01:57:12):
What's the ear tag for?
Speaker 3 (01:57:14):
The ear tag is so that if it shows up
on a camera, you might be able to read that number.
It's also got my phone number on it, so if
somebody finds its carcass, they could call us and we'd
know what was going on years down the road. You know,
if it's the callers come off and we retrap it,
we know who it is.
Speaker 1 (01:57:31):
Well, you never finished what you were saying the female
Oh yeah, you don't have on it's no longer on air.
Speaker 3 (01:57:38):
Right right, so right, yeah, So I was describing what
a cool handling that was, and we let her go
and there was this just incredible moment of getting to
watch her and her kitten reunite and and you know,
go off. And we're ecstatic about this because now we've
got a female links using the burned area, and to
know what habitat of female links is you us is
(01:58:01):
really that's just gold because they're the ones reproducing. And
so if if if there are things we can learn
about how to support a female links, all the better.
So we're really excited about that. We're really hopeful that
maybe we'll see where she's detting and and be able
to learn about that type of habitat. Anyway, a month later,
(01:58:26):
these callers, if they stop moving for eight hours will
give a mortality signal, and and that pushes an email
to me. So I wake up Sunday morning, check my
email and there's a there's a mortality email.
Speaker 1 (01:58:38):
What's the subject line?
Speaker 3 (01:58:41):
It might have been the number and mortality or something.
Something comes in an email and just makes your Yeah,
it's a right, yeah, it's not when you want. I mean,
mortalities are fascinating.
Speaker 1 (01:58:57):
Just the delivery mechanism of an email.
Speaker 3 (01:58:59):
Yeah, yeah, they don't. They don't sugarcoat it or pack no. No,
So I I shoot out there. Our season has ended,
but there's still a ton of snow, and I went
out there with a biologist colleague and friend and it
was this kind of a harrowing adventure to get to
this spot. But once we got there, we were a
(01:59:24):
little bit hamstringed because her caller was not transmitting a
v h F, which that's the little radio beep beep
that you can hone in on. It wasn't it's not
worth explaining, but it wasn't on that day. So we
we get to the area where we know.
Speaker 1 (01:59:40):
She is ish and how big How big is this.
Speaker 3 (01:59:45):
Maybe a two hundred meter radius, But if there's snow
on top of her or if she's in a hole
or something. Those GPS points that that she was spitting
could be pretty off. Plus it has just snowed that
night into the morning, and so we get to this spot.
(02:00:05):
We'd had a hike a bunch on the snowmobile trail.
She's not very far from the snowmobile trail, but she's
down in a little metal with a creek in this
burned area. And like I said, there's a fresh blanket
of snow, and that right there is devastating for mortality
site investigation because so much of the of what you're
(02:00:27):
learning is from track and sign that you're seeing around.
We're not going to have that. We start hiking down
this creek and there was a kyote that had gone through,
and it must have been sometime that morning because there
wasn't much snow in its tracks. Those are only tracks
we're seeing, and we sort of note that. We get
(02:00:48):
to the area where we think she is ish and
and it's just there's zero sign of anything. I put
my bag down, sort of rummaging around, and the guy
I'm with he is thinking about those kyot tracks and
he's starting to circle and he sees those kyoutracks. He
cuts some of these things, I should just follow those tracks.
(02:01:10):
And within very quickly he saw where those tracks had
gone up to where a big log had fallen. But
picture feet and feet and snow of snow, and they're
stow on the log and stead of draping over the log.
And so it's the snow cave with a little crack
of space along the side of it, and then the
front of it you could see down into the snow cave.
(02:01:33):
The coyote had come and stuck its head down in
that little cave opening, and so that prompted him to
also look at that cave opening, and that's where she was.
So he saw what he saw was the lynx I
wouldn't say curled up, but sort of flopped over a
bit dead. Yeah, dead, And it looked as though she
(02:01:59):
had intentionally gone under there to die. And so we
we pulled her out and she was completely frozen, and
we did an examination there. There was a slight abrasion
on her face. That was all we saw. And so
we and and like I said, there were no other
track inside. We couldn't backtrack to see, you know, just
(02:02:22):
looked in there and moved on. That was it. So
we thought nothing obvious here. This isn't a predation event.
You know, we're not there. We have no clues other
than she seemed to intentionally go under that log, and
that always makes you think disease when they, you know,
have sort of curled up in an intentional spot and
just died. So we put her in my backpack, hiked
(02:02:46):
her out, and then I shipped her to a lab
to do a knee cropsy because they can do all
the pathology and you know, test for different diseases. Turns
out they didn't have to do that. They they skinned
her out and then their amination found that cause of
death was blunt force trauma and so she had some
broken ribs and some bleeding internally and that's all we know,
(02:03:11):
and we can speculate about how that may have happened,
but we don't know. One idea is that, because this
was only about, you know, four hundred yards from the
snowmobile trail, she could have been hit. They're not. That
has happened before in other states that we know of.
They get hit by cars. People you know, rip around
(02:03:35):
up there. So that's one idea, or you know, you
can come up with any number of other sort of
freak accidents that.
Speaker 1 (02:03:42):
Could not got hit by not bit.
Speaker 3 (02:03:47):
There are no puncture wines, no puncture winds. I don't know,
snow corn is broke that it was standing on and
it fell on a rock or I don't know, kicked
by a moose, which seems really unlikely to me. But
that's been floated.
Speaker 1 (02:04:04):
That's not that wild.
Speaker 3 (02:04:05):
Some people, well, I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (02:04:07):
I just you know one time we uh killed a
meal deer and its whole underside was totally infected and
it was full of porcupine quills. Oh yeah, like what
is the scenario? It was jumped, it walked over porcupine
and the portpine fo Yeah. Probably, so just weird, you know,
I mean, yeah, weird to only being that, like who
(02:04:28):
knows Mayne, Yeah, I mean.
Speaker 3 (02:04:29):
I've seen some weird stuff out there, So yeah, you
don't it could have been anything. But anyway, that's all
we'll know. So she so we got a month of
data from her and that was it. Unfortunately, I'm hoping.
Let's see. Later that season, we caught a Lynx kitten.
And when I say kitten, you know, it was almost
a year old. But it was. It was too small
(02:04:52):
to call her, so we gave it an ear tag
and sent it on its way. I don't know for sure,
we don't have the DNA yet, but it was in
her zone. That may have been her kitten, and so
it will be interesting to see if he shows up
this winter, if he made it through you know, the
rest of his his year having prematurely lost his mom.
Speaker 1 (02:05:14):
Yeah, we'll see, man, I could see that having a
female and finding out what she does around danding season
be cool as hell.
Speaker 3 (02:05:20):
Yeah, dens are Linkstons are really cool and that's what.
Speaker 1 (02:05:24):
They like, cracks and rocks or.
Speaker 3 (02:05:26):
They will use a lot of different things. They often
are in mature forests where there's lots of down logs,
just total jackstraw, and they'll find a gnarly spot in
there because that's going to protect him from cougar or
probably not cougar's but wolves. And so they'll find a
gnarly spot in these just giant piles of logs and
(02:05:49):
going to there. I've seen them in hollowed out stump
rock crevices, slash piles in cut areas, upturned Well, they
just they need a nice bit of cover.
Speaker 1 (02:06:02):
Yeah, cool to have that.
Speaker 4 (02:06:04):
Yeah, how much do they got to worry about cougars
and wolves?
Speaker 3 (02:06:07):
They have to worry about cougars. Ye, they have to
worry about cougars places where there's lots of fishers. That's
been the mature ones I've been.
Speaker 1 (02:06:17):
Fisher can outduk.
Speaker 3 (02:06:19):
They can, I mean, come on, Yeah, they're reasels.
Speaker 1 (02:06:22):
Man losing a lot of respect for links. Here a fisher,
a fisher can whoop a Lynx.
Speaker 3 (02:06:29):
Yeah. Yeah. I've been to several more links mortalities where
it was a fisher and one I can remember in particular.
Speaker 1 (02:06:36):
They can whoop porcupine.
Speaker 3 (02:06:37):
Yep, so can the links or a bobcat.
Speaker 1 (02:06:41):
The links will be all to do it.
Speaker 3 (02:06:42):
Yeah, that's not a normal prey item, but they can
do it. Yeah. I've seen where Lynx was curled up
in the snow and then you see the fisher tracks
come and it basically just jumped it in its bed.
Speaker 1 (02:06:52):
Huh.
Speaker 3 (02:06:52):
They are when you see them and they see links
look big. A lot of that's just linky ness and
there they're so fuzzy, especially in the summer. Their average
weight is the same as a bobcat pretty much.
Speaker 2 (02:07:05):
They're just lankier.
Speaker 3 (02:07:07):
There's lankier and fuzzier.
Speaker 1 (02:07:10):
They look like something if it got a little bit
of blunt force trauma, it's not gonna live. Yeah, cause
it's just like they're like they're just so spread out
and slender.
Speaker 3 (02:07:19):
And yeah, they're they're they're not meant to take a hit. Yeah,
when you pick one up, it's like, whoa, this is
like a little bird. I mean, they're meant to float
on the snow.
Speaker 4 (02:07:26):
Yeah, they're not climbers, Like, they don't go into trees much, right.
Speaker 3 (02:07:30):
Don't go into trees. But it's not like a daily
thing by any means. Yeah, Yeah, they're more of they'll
just bed right in the snow and some cover and.
Speaker 1 (02:07:38):
They don't throw it. They don't throw any claw mark
on a track, right, it's just like a regular cougar bobcat.
Like their claws are retracted.
Speaker 3 (02:07:46):
Well I mean like any feelid. Yeah, they're their claws
retract and so often most often probably you're not going
to see their their claws register. But if they're in
slippery substrate and they need an.
Speaker 1 (02:07:58):
Electra grip, they'll pull see it come out.
Speaker 7 (02:08:00):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:08:00):
Yeah. In fact, that that track, that picture you were
talking about earlier, where there was a snowshoe, hair tracks
and the links going after it. It was going up
a steep bank and you can see it's it's closed.
Speaker 1 (02:08:10):
Click them out.
Speaker 3 (02:08:11):
Yeah, it's like that guy in his toils climbing up
John new Banks.
Speaker 4 (02:08:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (02:08:17):
You use them when you need them.
Speaker 1 (02:08:28):
So what, uh? Where? Tell me where Home Range Wildlife is?
Right now? So you have a nonprofit and this is
all done as a nonprofit. The nonprofit has employees. You're
one of the employees of nonprofit. Yeah, what is uh?
You know, we've kind of followed you through your career
a little bit. Yeah, are you guys like in in
(02:08:49):
We're gonna make it? Is it? You don't know what
you're gonna be doing in five years?
Speaker 3 (02:08:54):
We know what we want to be doing in five years.
We've got, you know, all sorts of plans.
Speaker 1 (02:09:00):
I mean, is Home Range Wildlife viable?
Speaker 3 (02:09:02):
We are according to the little like non start you're
starting a nonprofit. Take this quiz with your board to
see where you're at you're starting. Yeah, yeah, we are
still in the struggle phase, which basically means we are
I mean, it's hard work. We are having to hustle
big time. Yeah, oh yeah, big time. So we're it's
(02:09:25):
not like we're just cruising financially. We're in the hustle phase,
but that is not stopping us. So right now there's
three of us that are full time, so co founder
and I and a super badass woman who who started
(02:09:45):
on the Links project and we've just we've kept her on. Uh.
And then we've got seasonal texts, so we've got some
seasonal texts. We wrap community scientists into our work, so
we've got community scientists that will go out and help
with the backtrack portion, so we part of the study
is not just coloring, it's also going out and tracking
links and recording their exact really bind scale habitat use.
Speaker 1 (02:10:10):
Yeah, you explain that backtracking because you don't want to
bump them exactly. Backtracking ain't as fun as forward track.
Speaker 3 (02:10:16):
Well, if you're less likely to see the animal, it
is still fun.
Speaker 1 (02:10:20):
Picture, but you know you kind of want to be like,
let's just go after it.
Speaker 3 (02:10:23):
Yeah, well, but then we're messing up the data, right,
and then you spook it exactly.
Speaker 1 (02:10:28):
It starts evading you, right.
Speaker 3 (02:10:30):
And so part of what we're looking at also is
from reading the tracks what they're doing behaviorally, because that
can help us figure out, Okay, of the habitats that
they'll use for various things. Where are they hunting, where
they trying to hunt, where they're actually making kills, where
they're hunting and they're successful. That is like the best
(02:10:51):
of the best.
Speaker 1 (02:10:52):
When they kill a snow issue, do they mop that
whole thing up or do they leave something behind?
Speaker 3 (02:10:55):
They will usually mop it up, except maybe a foot
or two the guts and for whatever reason, a patch
of the of the hide from the back. And then
I'll often have like hemorrhaging in it. You'll see where
it was I see. Sometimes usually they'll eat it, especially
if there's not a lot of snowshoe hairs around. They
(02:11:18):
may cash it to save something for later, but usually
they're just eating it.
Speaker 1 (02:11:22):
When you find a link scat and the winter, is
it white because the snowshoe hair hair.
Speaker 3 (02:11:27):
Yeah, it has white hair in it, but it's not
like it's still yeah still dark. Yeah, that meat, the
meat makes a really dark scat, especially the organ.
Speaker 1 (02:11:33):
You'll be on the tofts. You'll see that it's white.
Speaker 3 (02:11:35):
Yeah, you can. If you picked it up and looked
at it, you'd see it was white hair.
Speaker 1 (02:11:38):
White hair inside there.
Speaker 3 (02:11:40):
Yeah, a little chunks of bone, little chunks of bone
toenails and stuff.
Speaker 1 (02:11:45):
So explain again where you guys are at on like
the long term viability. You're struggling the struggle phase results
kick out struggle.
Speaker 3 (02:11:53):
But I would say it's clear that we're We've got
a lot of momentum and a lot of support from agencies,
our community. We're partnering with the university on the project,
so we've got a master's student on the project. But
(02:12:15):
it's just it's hard to raise money for a nonprofit
and we're not like the normal This isn't the normal path.
Usually wildlife research is done by universities or the agencies,
and so this is there are there are other organizations
that do it, but this is somewhat unique and so
we're really lucky that we are partnering with agencies and
(02:12:39):
the universities. But a large part of our money also
comes from fundraising, and so that's that's kind of a
whole new.
Speaker 4 (02:12:48):
Who's using all the data you're collect Are you turning
it over to the US Fish and Wildlife so's.
Speaker 3 (02:12:53):
Yeah, So that's a huge part of our mission is
to be doing research that is address seeing what we
see is really urgent conservation issues in our area. And
so this whole project is geared towards having results that
can inform land management and LINKS conservation because for LINKS,
(02:13:17):
a large part of LINKS conservation is habitat conservation.
Speaker 1 (02:13:21):
But can home range wildlife exists as just a LINKS
research org or at some point you're gonna have to
jump into something else.
Speaker 3 (02:13:27):
I could. I would love to make this a really
long term project because there's a lot of value in
those long term data data sets. And that's also another one.
A part another part of our values is to be
an organization that is really boots on the ground and
have our research and biology be really based in the
(02:13:52):
naturalist skills that we have. This is not universally true,
but there's a trend towards a lot more modeling and
the sort of you know, office based research, which is
really valuable, but it can't be at the expense of
people who are out there on the landscape and who
(02:14:12):
are good naturalists and who are there long term.
Speaker 1 (02:14:17):
Well, the model with without your work, the model is
the modelers don't have anything to do. I mean, your
work is what's going to tell them is the home range.
Speaker 3 (02:14:25):
Of a female It compliments, right, It compliments, but there's.
Speaker 1 (02:14:28):
Also like they have to have something to plug in.
Speaker 3 (02:14:31):
They have to have something to plug in. But there's
a lot out there that can plug plug in, and
there's a lot out there like right now, like I
was saying, this is sort of this whole new habitat
habitat paradigm with all the burns, and so it is
so important that we're not only building models based on
what we think we already know, but we're going back
to the drawing board and learning from the landscape and
(02:14:52):
the links and again long term, that's that's a I
think something that's also being somewhat lost in wild life
is there's so much turnover and people are hopping around.
That's sort of through line for an area where you've
got bios that have been there for decades and have
seen changes and been noting things. We're losing that somewhat
(02:15:14):
and we do not want to see that happen in
the met how we're sort of the generation of biologists
that have been there for decades and know that landscape
intimately and have seen it change and are just good
naturalists that like to be out there, and they're the
ones that are going to notice I'm not hearing as
many X y Z bird or you know, we're not.
(02:15:36):
They're just noticing those changes. And that takes being out
there and being there long term. And so that's what
we want home range to be because we're losing some
of these these long term bios. They're retiring, and so
we want to make sure that there's somebody always watching
there in the value.
Speaker 1 (02:15:52):
You know what I could use some help with. I
was telling you, Mike Gright before we started recording. They
have everything south of us. They have as this Lynx
recovery area, okay, and there's all these separate trapping regulations
in the Links recovery area. Now, I've had furbear biologists
tell me that most of the stuff in the Lynx
(02:16:13):
recovery area has never had a lynx and never will
have a lynx. It's completely wrong. Habitat.
Speaker 3 (02:16:21):
Are you talking about like Yellowstone that area that well, no,
it's everything around that.
Speaker 1 (02:16:27):
It's huge, everything south of town everything, Okay. A friend
of mine in the four Service who's doing a lot
of Links work, he even said, you know, our understanding
of what Link's habitat is has gotten very refined since
that went into effect. He pictures sometimes down the road
that could be eased up because it's just not representative
(02:16:49):
of Link's habitat. He said. If they go to do that,
that'll get the hell litigated out of it. When they
come out and say, you know what, we were wrong.
This is Link's habitat, that's not Link's habitat. It'll get
litigated because people will want to keep restrictions in place.
The debate will get weaponized. I would love if you
guys came in collared a couple links so people could
(02:17:12):
see where they hang out and where they don't because
they're not down in the juniper in rock piles. Yeah
you agree or don't?
Speaker 3 (02:17:21):
I mean, let me explain that with a little more nuance.
Speaker 1 (02:17:24):
So links, we'll, kay, I give you one more tidbit,
let's get it. I have a friend who's a lion hunter.
He's been hunting lions here twenty years. Okay, hunts all
over the state in twenty years. He's yet to cut
a LINKS track in this area.
Speaker 3 (02:17:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:17:36):
Now, unless you think he doesn't think there's any links.
When he goes to Region one, he sees more LINKS
tracks than bobcats and mountain lions. Combined. So this is
not a guy that doesn't say there's no links tracks.
He's like, the Links Recovery area ain't got links.
Speaker 4 (02:17:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:17:51):
So I was talking earlier that there's five populations. There's
six areas that have been designated as by Vision wild
Life Services critical habitat, and that one is not. There's
not a known population there. Now there have been intermittent sightings,
you know, but there's not a known breeding population there.
(02:18:13):
It's possible that in the future there could be. It's possible.
The other thing is that wild links are fairly specialized
in their habitat, meaning boreal forest. They move so much
that they'll they'll use just about anything to move through. So,
(02:18:36):
I mean, I'm not a land manager down there. I
don't know the area and all that, so I can't
say too much about it, but I.
Speaker 1 (02:18:42):
Could say this. I could say, Hey, you shouldn't be
able to set certain kind of traps because little children
generally aren't lost. But a little child could get lost anywhere,
and you shouldn't have that set because how can we
say that a little child wouldn't get lost and get
caught in that set. I don't know. Maybe I've heard
of little children getting lost.
Speaker 3 (02:19:02):
Yeah, I don't know. You have to take it up
with fish and wildlife.
Speaker 1 (02:19:05):
That's no, I'm taking that with you because you got
to go collar some links and even though there aren't
you there, maybe cut one loose and see what it does.
Speaker 3 (02:19:13):
All right, I'll try trapping anywhere.
Speaker 1 (02:19:17):
That's all, Okay, good? This is I have a huge
list of gripes that I'd like to get addressed. This
is like low you know. My first one is Universal
Hunter's orange policy. Just a hat somewhere below that is
his links for covering unit issue. But it's some day.
I'm going to get to all this. All right, I'm
going to take it up.
Speaker 5 (02:19:37):
Look for your letter.
Speaker 1 (02:19:42):
I have a problem. I think I know where that
letter is going to wind up. Where's the recycling been?
Speaker 3 (02:19:49):
No?
Speaker 1 (02:19:50):
How do people find you and support your organization? I
love I love what you guys doing. You know, it's
like and it really resonates with listeners who love it
that people are out on the land, find it out
studying wildlife. Right, everybody's got their like myths about stuff
and what lives were and what don't live where, and
to have someone come and say here's what lives there
here's how many, here's what they do. It's valuable. Yeah,
(02:20:12):
I mean it's information, right, yeah, like real.
Speaker 3 (02:20:14):
Information exactly, and it's well. Yeah, So the work that
we do is research, and so that I think sometimes
is hard for the broader public to connect with because
it doesn't feel like I'm directly this organization is directly
helping that animal. We're doing the research. That's one step,
(02:20:37):
but a really important step in knowing how to manage
and conserve species. That's slightly more abstract. But I feel
like in my short experience running a nonprofit that and
after last year's experience with doing the Traffic Cat fundraiser
with you, I feel like I just have so much
(02:21:00):
gratitude for the hunting and fishing community because I feel
like you guys get it, and that that fundraiser was
such a success because people really put out and saved us.
You guys really saved us last year from having just
(02:21:23):
her old ass LEDs just completely die and that would
just shut us down. That's such crux equipment. And so
the fact that this audience just gets that research and
learning about wildlife populations and managing the populations is really valuable,
not just saving an individual animal.
Speaker 2 (02:21:46):
Is.
Speaker 3 (02:21:47):
That just gives me a lot of hope that there's
there's this audience that really understands that.
Speaker 1 (02:21:52):
Can I tell you something. My brother, who's a he's
a fisheries researcher in Alaska told me he was one
time describing me the difference between Alaska and the Lower
forty eight, as he said, in the Lower forty eight,
you're kind of you're in conservation phase, preservation phase, right,
he said. One of the things that makes me in
(02:22:13):
research and Alaska different is we're still in how discovery
phase in a lot of ways, like where are sam
you know, you know, like where are salmon? How many
salmon are there? You know? What are these things doing?
Speaker 3 (02:22:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:22:28):
And what's cool is you're in a case of you're
facilitating discovery. Right. It's like there's this thing, there's this
cat that lives here. How many I don't know, where
do they live? I don't know, how do they use
a landscape? I don't know. It's like discovery science, right,
it's not sort of you know, it's not specifically saving something.
(02:22:49):
It's just trying to like understand our world, you know.
Speaker 3 (02:22:52):
But I would I mean, I would say, especially in
this case, it is how do we save this species?
Speaker 1 (02:22:57):
It leads to that. Yeah, it leads to that. Granted
I'm not trying to blittle it, but I'm saying it's
like you're discovering things about right, You're discovering about how
animals relate to their environment.
Speaker 3 (02:23:07):
Yeah, that's true.
Speaker 2 (02:23:08):
It is. It's this.
Speaker 3 (02:23:09):
Yeah, things have changed out there in the last twenty years,
and so we're trying to catch up and learn that.
Speaker 4 (02:23:13):
As far as saving them goes, if you had to
make a prediction like state of the links in the
lower forty eight whatever, like twenty years or fifty years,
like what would you be comfortable saying like.
Speaker 1 (02:23:25):
They needed to burn more stuff in two thousand and six.
Speaker 4 (02:23:28):
Like are they gonna? Are they doing well? Is it
bad news?
Speaker 2 (02:23:32):
Is it good news?
Speaker 3 (02:23:33):
It all depends on what we do. If we do nothing,
it's not looking great. Especially for Washington, it is not
looking great. Yeah, because of these I mean these just
sweeping fires are just The worry is that they burn
enough in a short enough time frame. Then that's skewing
the landscape towards that recently burned there's not much of
(02:23:57):
that structure that we need type of landscape. Whereas if
we can just have patches that burn here, patches that
burn here, then you've always got some of something out there,
and you've got enough of that structure, that forest structure
that links and hairs need that you're supporting the population,
(02:24:17):
but you've got enough burning going on that you are
reinstilling some resilience onto that landscape because all those those
little burns are acting like little speed bumps for subsequent fires.
And so if we can figure out ways to if
we understand how links use burned habitat, then we know
how much of that they need and how much we
(02:24:41):
can spare for reinstilling that resilience to fire or yeah,
because it's it feels like opposing objectives when you talk
about conserving links habitat because they need that thick forest.
That's a lot of fuels. And so when you're trying
to trying to save links habitat that short term while
(02:25:01):
simultaneously slow fires just for the ecology of the area
to bring that that that fire resiliency back and to
save links habitat over the long term, it feels like
you're in a rock and a hard place. But if
we can find that sweet spot where we've got enough
habitat for links now and we've got enough firebreak and
resiliency out there to save it long term, Well, then
(02:25:23):
that's going to be progress for Links.
Speaker 2 (02:25:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:25:27):
Uh. Back to how people can find out information and
be supportive. We got the traffic cat thing.
Speaker 3 (02:25:33):
Well hell yeah yeah. Well so if you want to
find out more just about home range in general, and
like I said, we've got we've got this research, but
we also want to help address the issue in wildlife
research where young, you know, new biologists are sort of
a lot of the culture of this field is that
(02:25:54):
you just sort of get thrown out there and you're
having to learn on the job, and that does a
couple of things. It's not safe. It's often costing a
project equipment because you're out there snowmobiling and trying to
keep up with the rest of the crew and you've
never done it and you're just more likely to wreck
things like that. So that's safety and equipment, and it
(02:26:14):
means if you're trying to learn just how to do
the basic skills, then you're you're not maximizing how much
data you're getting in and it's not going to be
as quality. So we're trying to offer or we are
offering field skills courses and so those are offered in
the summer and they're they're really cool. They're mammals focused
right now. But for example, you can sign up for
(02:26:36):
a course where you're doing everything from how to set
cameras to mammal or any animal track and sign. That's
such an important skill, just being able to read animals
sign and the tracks and knowing your scat things like that.
Oh it's yeah, I love.
Speaker 1 (02:26:56):
One of our guys of visual identification of no any
just animals.
Speaker 3 (02:27:02):
Animals. We're starting there. Okay, that's doable, and then that
that session culminates with we get road killed deer and
we mock up mortality sites from different predators. Because a
lot of mammals, there's a lot of work in research
that involves being able to go to a mortality site
or kill site and know what happened, who killed it,
(02:27:22):
all that sort of stuff.
Speaker 1 (02:27:23):
Do you guys do snowmobile recovery and stuff like that too.
Speaker 3 (02:27:26):
We've done a winter skills course that had snowmobiling, trailering,
avalanche awareness, that sort of thing really, and then we're
doing a a trapping course coupled with a chemical immobilization,
so all that drug stuff that we were talking about.
Speaker 1 (02:27:40):
Yeah, yeah, small classes, I'm going.
Speaker 3 (02:27:42):
Yeah, yeah about you know, ten to twenty people. So
those those are a way that people can learn those
skills before they're on the job.
Speaker 1 (02:27:50):
And have you had agencies send out students ever.
Speaker 3 (02:27:53):
Yeah really yeah, yeah, we've had everything from you.
Speaker 1 (02:27:55):
Guys, probably got a lot to teach. When it comes
to the wintertime, like time trapping, winter time, snowmobiling, when
time survival. Yeah, it's just it's like an arena of
consequence in the mountains.
Speaker 3 (02:28:07):
Yeah, it really is. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:28:09):
Yeah, stuff can go bad.
Speaker 3 (02:28:10):
Oh yeah quick, yep, real quick. So anyway, so there's
that sort of education part, and then we've also got
our community science angle, which is sort of built around
the knowledge that we can do all this research, but
if we're not communicating it to the public, especially the
communities that are going to be impacted by any possible
(02:28:32):
management outcomes, If people don't understand and support it, then
that's going to really decrease what you can do out
there as far as management and conservation. So we want
people to understand what we're doing and to sort of
help facilitate that. We've got like a bear co existence
program and some research going on that community scientists are
helping with. So we've got kind of those three different prongs.
(02:28:55):
All that is to say, if you want to learn
more about that, you can go to home range dot org.
All right, and we have an Instagram which is home
range Wildlife Dot or is there a dot? I don't
know home.
Speaker 1 (02:29:08):
Range Wildlife you'll find it. Yeah, and then are you
to explain for the last thing, explain traffic Cat And yeah, So.
Speaker 3 (02:29:15):
I eluded it because I'm it was. It saved our
asses last year, and I am so grateful that this
community gets it. So we've got a fundraiser and we're
doing it again. A because it's super fun and b
because we find ourselves again with some desperate needs. People
who hunt and fish know how important equipment is and
(02:29:39):
how fast it can break down when you're using it hard,
and we use our equipment really hard. Just as an example, we,
because of traffic Cat, bought two new snowmobiles last year.
That meant we weren't riding twenty year old held together
with baling twine and duct tape snowmobiles and we were
using two new snowmobiles. And that just that is that
(02:29:59):
is everything being able to get out there in the winter.
We had those for one month and they each have
two thousand miles on them, so they're getting a lot
of use. So we're thinking ahead about just our fleet
management and that this year a loan, those sleds are
going to get another six thousand miles on them. But
(02:30:21):
we've also expanded our crew and so some of our
crew is back to using the old sleds and I'm
just sort of crossing my fingers every day that nothing
happens there, and so we desperately need a new sled
so that it's the backtracking crew that we've got a
separate crew that's in charge of the tracking so that
(02:30:41):
they're not fifty miles out and having a snowmobile issue.
Not only would that be a bad day, but then
that part of the study just kind of shuts down.
That's how important these are. We also find ourselves happily
in need of more callers. You're going into this, we
thought maybe we'll catch one links this season, maybe we'll
(02:31:06):
catch two. Well, now we've deployed all four of those callers,
and we know that there are more links that we
had hoped living in our study area, and so we
need more callers because more callers more information. It just
makes the study that much more confident in what we
can say. We just we every one of these callers
we learned so freaking much from so we need to
(02:31:28):
get more callers. Our trailer is a sad story. That
thing's falling apart. I mean, it's just it's just this
basic equipment that allows us to do what we can
do and gets us the information that we need that
we find ourselves needing to fundraise again. And so we're
we're redoing Traffic cat. The game here is that over
(02:31:51):
the next three months of our trapping season, so we'll
be trapping starting well today, they're out there checking our
first bait. Through March, we'll be trapping where if you,
let's see, for every one hundred dollars that you donate
to Trafficict, you get a trap set in your name,
(02:32:14):
and we'll keep track of all that you get that
trap set, and then throughout our season you'll be getting
like behind the scenes content and so every week we'll
be sending out videos and stuff of just what it's
like on the trap line, any cool camera footage that
we get, stuff like that and that's super fun. Then
(02:32:34):
if your set catches the links, you win fame and glory.
We're gonna have two hundred and fifty dollars first Light
Gift Certificate and Steven Manila will announce winners on his
social media will announce it. That's where you'll get your
(02:32:55):
fame and so it's it's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (02:32:58):
Oh and I'll send you a video. It'd be like,
what's that service that they have where you send videos?
You buy them?
Speaker 2 (02:33:04):
Cameo?
Speaker 1 (02:33:04):
Cameo. Yeah, you know, dude, the guy what's the name
for New York Congress Santos? Santos got voted out and
the next day it turns up on Cameo. It's a
good it's a good grift if you can get it.
I'm not on Cameo, but I'll send them a video.
I'll be like, hey, thanks someone that.
Speaker 3 (02:33:20):
Okay, there you go, folks. How cool is that?
Speaker 1 (02:33:24):
Soethill record perfect.
Speaker 3 (02:33:27):
The other cool thing we've got this year, we've got
little in pats that we can make a pop print
from the from the.
Speaker 1 (02:33:35):
Oh really yeah you can?
Speaker 3 (02:33:37):
Yeah that's great, man, which is mostly just gonna look
like a fuzzy mitten.
Speaker 1 (02:33:42):
But Spencer can get that tattooed on him, then there
we go. He's like looking for something to get tattooed.
Speaker 3 (02:33:49):
Yeah, I get a links pop friend. Yeah. So winning's fun.
It makes a really cool gift. We had a lot
of people getting it for their kids and it just
it It means so much for our project, and it's yeah,
we we rely heavily on this fundraiser and so yeah,
(02:34:10):
we just appreciate everybody.
Speaker 1 (02:34:12):
So people don't want to get involved in Trappic Cat,
go where same home range.
Speaker 3 (02:34:15):
Go to home range dot org and there's a banner
up on the top of the website. You just click
that and it'll give you a little more information and
you can donate there and you'll get put into the
trap cat system and start getting videos and stuff like that.
Speaker 1 (02:34:29):
Excellent.
Speaker 3 (02:34:30):
Yeah, it's pretty fun.
Speaker 1 (02:34:31):
This is the fifth time you've been on Yeah, okay, Yeah,
better have some adventures for the sixth time. Yeah, okay,
when you come back next year, Yeah, let's do it.
And then we'll start talking about my little problem south here,
which might not be a problem. If you go and
find that there's all that, you know, it's all habitat,
(02:34:52):
I'll be like, cool, I understand. I'm all for it,
But if it winds up being that it was a
little willy nilly, a little reflexive, then that then then
that's an annoyance to me. And in the meantime we'll
work on that letter.
Speaker 3 (02:35:05):
Maybe I think willy nilly is probably not it.
Speaker 1 (02:35:08):
Maybe over ambitious over or or just.
Speaker 3 (02:35:12):
Overlate, more cautious than you would do. Not sure, not
willing nilly, though, I don't think they're willing nilly.
Speaker 1 (02:35:20):
Okay, I appreciate it. I appreciate it. Sentiment, Yeah you are,
uh you love them links?
Speaker 3 (02:35:31):
Yeah, I mean I do.
Speaker 5 (02:35:33):
I do.
Speaker 3 (02:35:34):
I just sometimes for you know, for women in wildlife,
the stereotype is, oh they love wolves, they're obsessed with wolves,
or they.
Speaker 1 (02:35:47):
Love links, and you know, is that a stereotype.
Speaker 3 (02:35:50):
Yeah, I think so.
Speaker 1 (02:35:52):
Like that you're not able to look at it like
a cold meanness.
Speaker 3 (02:35:57):
I guess a little bit. Not not that anybody wants
to be looking them with a cold meanness, but I
think for women sometimes that is seen as the inspiration
behind Yeah, I've had it. I've sort of experienced that
myself or somebody they hear, oh you're working with wolves,
Oh you love like you know they're picturing you as
(02:36:19):
a little girl drawing wolves on your binder at school
and stuff. I would say that links are cool animal.
It's also they're a hard animal to study, and that's
intriguing to me. I love the mountains, that's where I
have to be. I love the boreal force ecosystem, and
I'm fascinated by the problem of how we can conserve
(02:36:46):
them in the face of increasing megafires. And i love
wildfire wildlife ecology. So it's not as Yeah, I just
like to be clear that it's not just that I
love links or something.
Speaker 1 (02:36:58):
Thank you for coming in, Thanks for having me home Range.
Speaker 3 (02:37:01):
I really appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (02:37:02):
Wildlife Traffic Cat program, get into it. We're gonna do
big announcements about who wins the traffic Cat Okay.
Speaker 4 (02:37:10):
Will you still do a video?
Speaker 1 (02:37:11):
If it's my kids, Oh yeah, I'll t to tell them.
Let's tell him. At first, they'll be like, what really
is you only got to send me a video? Brooklyn
Nicks coming down? You're still gonna make it back to
school or did you get some bag it for the day?
Speaker 5 (02:37:28):
Now I can make it back.
Speaker 1 (02:37:30):
Yeah, well, class, you gotta get.
Speaker 5 (02:37:32):
Early grad English early what early grad English. It's like
my other English classes. I'm graduating early.
Speaker 1 (02:37:40):
Why are graduating early?
Speaker 5 (02:37:41):
Is it all like school?
Speaker 1 (02:37:42):
Oh? They're letting you the cutting you loose early? How early?
Speaker 5 (02:37:46):
I get out in five days for good?
Speaker 1 (02:37:49):
Really? Whoa, that's graduations fantastic. Oh that's cool.
Speaker 2 (02:37:54):
Then you go right into taxi army full time.
Speaker 1 (02:37:57):
So you need these schools kind of Yeah, you should
have put that into your pitch. Oh, okay, that's cool.
So you're gonna enter the workforce? Yep, congratulations, good all right,
Well thanks for coming down. Four six bone works. Yep,
all right, thanks, good luck. Keep us posted on what's
(02:38:18):
going on. I got another skull hanging in a cherry
tree in my yard. You'll see it by the front
door if you get by there and needs a good cleaning.
I skinned it. Unfortunately it's okoduse.
Speaker 2 (02:38:31):
I'm not gonna here's a question before we leave, will
we do any skull like coyotes? Beaver's yeah, Pine Martins,
lynx links.
Speaker 1 (02:38:41):
I'm a joking. I want When Karma was on before
I was talking at how bad I wanted a Lynk skull,
and someone from Canada sent me a link. Skoo. I'm
trying to give it to Carmena for her collection.
Speaker 2 (02:38:50):
Cool.
Speaker 1 (02:38:51):
Cool, I don't want to. Uh, it would take a
very trained, astute observer to tell that from a Bobcats. Yeah,
like you could just say it's whatever. Yeah. I sent
my buddy has he's a science teacher in Michigan. I
send him a huge box of schools and he had
his kids do the what do you call it? You know,
like the there's a the idea. Yeah, but there's like
(02:39:14):
a thing you what's the term, man, you key it
or something?
Speaker 6 (02:39:18):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (02:39:18):
Yeah, like using a key to to figure out which
school is which.
Speaker 1 (02:39:22):
Yeah, And then we did where the ones that got
it right got a prize. They were fun. Oh, they
were phenomenal. He had like twenty some students and like
I don't know everyone it was toms of them got it right,
like a whole box of schools by using the key.
Like I would just look at like, I don't know,
it looks like a.
Speaker 3 (02:39:37):
Well if it's a good key.
Speaker 2 (02:39:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (02:39:39):
No.
Speaker 1 (02:39:39):
I was impressed. Man, I'm gonna so I'm going to
keep supplying little schools or to his students so they
can check them out, all right, So you'll do any
kind of school ye, all right, Okay, thank you very
much for coming down.
Speaker 5 (02:39:52):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (02:39:52):
Good luck with your business. I'm going to keep sending
your business. I'm not using Brody services anymore. Nothing not
hacking Brody. I just want to support. I want to
support the business over here.
Speaker 4 (02:40:02):
I might start sending to her. I think you should
raise your prices just a little bit.
Speaker 1 (02:40:07):
Also, yeah, it sounds like it, but I don't know.
I like that. I like that price right there. Now,
how do you how do you envoys? Are you going
to send? Uh? You know you could do? That's really convenient.
I had someone I bought something near day from someone
that sends you a a like a little scan code,
and then that scan code pulls up Venmo. Have you
tried something like that?
Speaker 5 (02:40:28):
No, if I use Venmo, you need.
Speaker 1 (02:40:31):
To get this whatever the hell he's got. I don't
know what it is. It made it so easy.
Speaker 6 (02:40:34):
I think she's waiting for her business manager.
Speaker 1 (02:40:37):
Yeah, yeah, it was just like, man, I don't have vembo.
By grabbed my wife's phone and open that code up
and was able to just hit a couple of things
and payment over. Super easy, super convenient. I don't know
what it is, but trust me, just the thing out
there that makes payment a breeze.
Speaker 2 (02:40:51):
Okay, it's probably Venmo.
Speaker 1 (02:40:53):
No, it is out yeah it is. But I don't
know how they did this thing. It was great because
I don't have them much of my wife's annoyance I
had not. All right, thanks, everybody, talk you soon.
Speaker 10 (02:41:13):
It's a story of a man the steward of the
land fixed on griev So I'll try to be brief.
He's written Forefield and streaming all the other magazines. Kids
more about truth than common believe about already know this
buddy Astricken noses from beating the meat of a uncooked
(02:41:36):
bear about already know. Then you can find him and
Bozeman or hunting some mountains somewhere here. That's Seemingnella. He's
a fine fella. It's dreading middle of like a shaggy
Manson mellow. He's not very in the sing. Aka fella.
(02:41:58):
I've been reads like no time, No fella.
Speaker 1 (02:42:01):
He's got some.
Speaker 10 (02:42:02):
Good folks under them media the umbrella. He's a fine
fella that he's written half a dozen bucks. He's a
pretty good cook, married to a fence that won't seem
(02:42:25):
to mope. Loves his home, steak tails, from Twins Lake, Michigan,
where they picked up those quoats in Alaska on a
skiff for with Doug and the Drifts with his main
man Gianni's food tellers on the mountain, trying to score
in a double Remy Warren or Old Chalcey and Lady
(02:42:47):
Bears Smellings. That's Steven mmella. He's a fine fellaw's dreading
the love like a shaggy Maine's a fella. He's not
not afraid to sing at a fella. His lie it
reads like can no time, no fella. He's got some
(02:43:07):
good folks into the media umbrella. He's a fine fellow
that manella, Dude, I want to talk dip, get him
stop fast. Hell, that's half the content of the media
(02:43:30):
to podcast classing from a knop trying to clear out
his head going from the meet you. He could have
been dead, but that's the story for another day.
Speaker 1 (02:43:45):
That's Deephen Mellow.
Speaker 10 (02:43:47):
He's a fine fellows spreading a little love like us
shagging fans the mellow. He's not afraid to sing.
Speaker 3 (02:43:55):
Got the fella.
Speaker 10 (02:43:56):
His lif fit reads like I can no time, no fella.
He's got some good books under them umbrella he's Vambela,
that HeLa. He's Fambelddela Doo doo doo
Speaker 3 (02:44:16):
Do