Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
You're on board with Ultimate Outdoors Radio on a quest
to bring the outdoors to you.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
Once again.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Our resident guides to the outdoors the Captain and the
Wall Dog, Hey Good.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Saturday Morning. This is Wally the wall Dog bamped me
along with Captain Terry Prye Morning, Captain.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
Hey Good Saturday Morning. Grab a cup of coffee, cookie,
or a big old juicy role and hang on board
with us for a half an hour. On this week's show,
we're gonna talk in vaso species with Jasmine Wyatt. Jasmine
is with the Upper Sugar River Watershed Association, and that's
(00:58):
a pretty important thing because transferring invasives all over the
place is not good in some states. It's actually a
pretty big fine. So and then time for the Cleary
open House coming next weekend eighth, ninth, and tenth plus
our kids Fishing event, which I think is about thirteen
(01:20):
years long now, I think we've been doing it about
that twelve or thirteen. Mike Lineman's gonna join us, and
that open house is nationwide, and we'll chat with him
about ordering and chat details on the kids fishing. Otherwise,
every week we get to talk about gear.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
Now, which time for the Ultimate gear heads. This week's
gearhead segment is followed by Middleton four Middleton, Wisconsin. Hey,
before you start spending all your money on outdoor gear,
have the ultimate gearheads check it out. They will set
you straight.
Speaker 4 (01:55):
Hey, folks, you don't see that Middleton forge sticker. You
paid too much?
Speaker 3 (02:00):
Hey, Captain, this week's really a cool piece of gears.
A spinning reel. It's the Acuma cimar ODT Limited Edition
Size three thousand A reel. The super smooth reel comes
an olive drab dream color. The Seymour three thousand A
is lightweight with an aggressively ported spool and rotor.
Speaker 4 (02:18):
This reel is tough.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
It has eight ball bearing system including quickset and reverse
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a great reel.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
Great price point there, well, folks. Following up from last
week's show, I had good response about our songbird interview
and people want to People that were going to miss
the show because of commitments want to know where they
could catch it. I mentioned it'll be loaded up on
our podcast on iHeart. But on that note, I came
(03:00):
across the little story and it still pertains the birds.
It was kind of interesting. Down in Rock Island, Illinois,
they when the bird migration in the fall is going on,
they turned their lights off on the Rock Island Bridge
and actually they recorded twenty eight thousand birds each night
(03:23):
flying past the bridge, but they turned the lights off
just for migration purposes. That's a lot of birds in
one night.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
Wally, that is a ton holy smokes.
Speaker 4 (03:34):
Yeah, you know, we don't know what happens at night. Actually,
you know in last week's show that Gal also mentioned
there is an app so you can see how many
birds are flying over your house at night migrating. I
forget the app. I would have to go back and listen,
but that would be pretty cool too.
Speaker 3 (03:51):
So well, I know we where Kate and I live
in pretty sick we have a large migration of geese
coming over and ducks, and we of course have eagles
and osprey and it's cap it's really fun to observe
what they're doing. And with the Wisconsin River being right here,
a lot of birds use that, including pelicans. Sometimes you
see a big swat of those flying over. So yeah,
(04:15):
it's this world is kind of going to the birds.
Speaker 4 (04:17):
Yeah. Hey, quick note before we get out of here,
if you did not bid on the Lake Erie cheaters
boat that was up for auction that was confiscated by
basically by the DNR down there for these guys cheating
with weights. The boat sold for eighty two thousand dollars.
It was a twenty two foot ranger. With tax It
(04:41):
ended up being ninety six thousand dollars, so I guess
that wasn't a bad price. I don't know where the
money end up ends up going, if it goes back
into conservation, but I don't know if i'd want the
boat or not. You know, every time something's easier, you're
going to go ahead, Wally.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
I wonder if there's some secret compartments with lead weights
in them it's stashed in that boat.
Speaker 4 (05:06):
So yeah, I don't know, but I thought about bidding
on it.
Speaker 3 (05:09):
A bidding started twenty five thousand, I knew it would
probably go for eighty or ninety thousand.
Speaker 4 (05:13):
This is a heck of a boat. Well, the thing
about it is the story would all is just follow
your boat, hey quick, not before we get out of here.
For all you people had heard that when the tornadoes
came through here a couple of weeks ago, it really
devastated the Wisconsin pheasant penn So hopefully guys out there
with pheasant hunting facilities will still get their pheasants. We
(05:35):
will see about that. Stay with us, Jasmin, why is
coming out talking invasive species? And Mike Whinhiman on the
Clary open house and kids, fishy.
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(06:13):
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That's all we do, available anywhere with your free iHeartRadio app.
You were listening to Ultimate Outdo Ours Radio. Let's get
back to the Captain and the Waldog.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Hey, welcome back, folks, and thanks for listening. This segment
is brought to you by Worldwide Marine Insurance. If you
need good coverage on your fishing boat, pleasure boat, charter
boat or guideboat, contact Bob Luellen and his experience staff
at Worldwidemrine Insurance dot Com. Joining us Next is the
Invasive Species Program Director for the Upper Sugar River Watershed Association,
(08:23):
Jasmine Wyant. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 8 (08:26):
Hi, thanks Sali, Thanks for having me.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
So, Jasmine, what are aquatic invasive species so hard to control?
Why are they?
Speaker 8 (08:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (08:36):
So?
Speaker 8 (08:36):
Aquadic invasive species are those that are not native to Wisconsin.
And usually cause some sort of harm economically to humans
or to the environment. So a lot of times these
species don't have the predators or pathogens that might have
kind of kept their population in balance or in check
with other species, and so they can be overly aggressive
(08:59):
or more comp it is in the native species and
for the aquatic invasives specifically, they could be harder to
monitor and find because people aren't always walking around where
there's deep water or in those mucky wetlands, so they
can be hard to even find in the first place.
But they can also be difficult to access to do
any sort of control or removal for these species because
(09:22):
again they're mucky, buggy areas or in water that folks,
it's a little bit harder to access. The last thing
that I would say about kind of why they're harder
to work with they're harder to control, is that a
lot of times we have to use specific management techniques
because we're talking about in an area that has fresh
water around it, and we care about the quality of
(09:43):
our fresh water, and we can't use all the same
herbicide or control techniques in that water area.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
As a frequent boaterer on lakes, myself in southern Wisconsin
and some trips to Pristine Lakes and northern Wisconsin. What
can we do to stop the spread of invasives in
Wisconsin's and rivers.
Speaker 8 (10:02):
There's a lot that people can do, whether you're boating, canoeing, kayaking,
or even just paddleboarding. A couple of main sets that
folks really have found to limit the spread or slow
the spread of invasive species is to just kind of
take a look at your equipment and your boat, inspect
it and remove any kind of plant fragments that you
find stuck onto the hole or inside the boats or kayak,
(10:25):
remove any animals or mud from it. And then the
next step that really helps is to drain all the
water from the boat, the motor or any equipment you have.
Really kind of removes any pieces of those invasive species
that could be stuck on your equipment and prevents it
from being moved to another water location. The other thing
(10:46):
that you can do, especially if you're fishing, is to
not move live fish away from any water body. Make
sure it's on ice but it's not living, and then
dispose of any bait in the trash if you're done
with it instead of moving it from lake to lake
and possibly moving water and other critters along with those species.
Speaker 3 (11:06):
Those are some really good ideas I know, Like for instance,
Lake Mendota at Marshall Park there's a spray off area,
so you can go spray your boat off, spray your
live well out, trim your motor down, let the water
run out, and like you mentioned, pick any weeds off
your trailer that could spread invasives exactly.
Speaker 8 (11:24):
Those spray stations make it a lot easier. But even
if you don't have access to that, just a nice
towel run along the whole can do a lot of help.
Speaker 3 (11:33):
What's the Wisconsin DNR currently doing to control aquatic invasive species?
Speaker 8 (11:39):
Yeah, Internally, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources does a
lot of prevention work through outreach and education of the public.
They also do a lot of planning as well as
the active management of removing invasive species. But this a
lot of times looks like a partnership instead of just
the DNR with folks like myself that work with not
(12:00):
profit groups, a lot of other governmental groups like land
and water departments at county levels, as well as just
individuals in the community and volunteers. They kind of all
we all work together to kind of monitor and prevent
the spread of these invasive species through a lot of
different programs, But we really do kind of work as
(12:20):
a collaborative to do some of the work that's actual
active management, like carp removal, especially in the Madison area.
That is something that happens quite often through partnership with
nonprofits like myself, as well as the county, like Dane County.
Speaker 3 (12:38):
One thing we noted is Lake Mendota used to have
quite an infestation of zebra muscles, and I know they
have spiny water fleas. Doesn't seem to be as bad
as it was maybe ten years ago. So that are
these little item cyclic or how does that work?
Speaker 8 (12:53):
Yeah, it's where we don't fully understand kind of especially
how things like the spiny water flea and the zebra
muscle interact with each other in the Madison links because
some of them kind of eat similar zoeplankton food sources.
And each year, especially when we get kind of drastic
years like the drought year last year and then a
(13:14):
ton of extra rain this year, it's kind of hard
to exactly quantify how they're impacting it individually, but we
definitely see that it kind of is a cycle, right,
not These species aren't as prolific every year, and there's
probably a lot of environmental impacts that are changing their populations.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
Jasmine, is there a website people can go to to
learn more?
Speaker 8 (13:37):
Yeah, definitely. So if you just Google or in your
search bar, look for the Wisconsin D and R and
then invasive species, there's a whole page that will come
up that will specifically give you information about the aquatic
invasive species, how to get involved in the prevention of
their spread, or how to learn more.
Speaker 3 (13:55):
Fantastic, Jasmine, thanks for joining us today and we learned
a bunch.
Speaker 4 (13:59):
Have a great day.
Speaker 8 (14:01):
Awesome, Thank you very much.
Speaker 9 (14:03):
Books.
Speaker 3 (14:04):
That was Jasmine, Wyant stay tuned, We'll be right back.
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Speaker 7 (15:23):
Com, available anywhere with your free iHeartRadio app. You were
listening to Ultimate out Tours Radio. Let's get back to
the captain and the well done.
Speaker 4 (15:34):
Hey folks, for all your summer fall building needs, winter
building needs, contact Claribuilding Corp. They actually have an open
house coming up August eighth, ninth and tenth. Mike Winneman
from Clarybuilding Corp. Is joining me today to talk about
the open house and also to talk about our popular
kids Fishing Good morning, Mike.
Speaker 13 (15:54):
Good morning, Terry.
Speaker 4 (15:55):
Well, Mike uh Man, the summer's flying by. I don't
really go on talking about our kids Fishing event, but
here here it's just around the corner. But you've got
your nationwide open house coming up, so do you want
to talk a little bit about that.
Speaker 13 (16:12):
Yeah, it's a great time, I mean going into the
middle of summer starting to plan for the fall. I
mean started to say that, but that's that's where we're at.
I mean from a building standpoint and our open house sale.
Like you said, and on August eighth, ninth and tenth,
you can come in and meet with one of our
building specialists. Use our dream Maker software so you can
visually see the buildings that you want to look to
(16:34):
put on your property or building, and we can design
a variety of things for you right there and you
can see it in full color.
Speaker 4 (16:42):
Yeah, Mike, have you you know, before we get into
building design, as much changed in the building your end
of the building business in the past twenty years, pretty
much the same thing or people just I know, people
are looking for more combination home and storage areas, which
is becoming very popular.
Speaker 13 (17:03):
Correct, I mean the structure itself hasn't changed. I mean,
I mean the lifetime warranty on the steel and the
different you know, offering thirty eight different colors and different
patterns and styles. I mean, that's evolved. It's been insulating
and heating, you know, the post frame building for nearly
our forty seven years in business. But you're right over
(17:25):
the last decade especially you see you hear terms like barn,
dominium and shouse. People are doing them for office buildings,
so you have your cold storage in the back and
your office in the front. That's been happening a long time.
But the beauty of what happens with our product is
that you can you know, you can insulate it. You
can line it with steel and the inside for your shop,
or you can insulate it and put drywall. And I
(17:47):
mean once you walk in, it's like any house. You
just have to make sure you have the right blocking
and everything in place. So you lay out your cabinets
a little bit better, you lay out bedrooms a little
bit better. Let your office space is a little bit better.
But you just have to think it through where you're
going to have the attachments because it's not a normal studwall.
You're you're saving on lumber and you have more insulation
in those walls so you have better heating efficiency. So
(18:09):
that technology has evolved over the years, and just with
that experience that we've gained, we've been able to, you know,
make it a very affordable and solid product for a
variety of uses across the.
Speaker 4 (18:20):
Count And if the ladies are tired of their husband,
they can build a cute little building in the backyard,
right Mike, and go escape with them. And you'd probably
include a bottle of wine or something with that, wouldn't
you for sure?
Speaker 13 (18:34):
Do you think, Jerry, that's good?
Speaker 4 (18:36):
You know, yeah, Mike. The amazing thing is how people can,
uh every year when we talk about this, they can
walk into basically your your office and design that building
and know exactly what it's going to look like inside
and out. Into me you know, years ago we just
kind of scratched something together and threw it and you know,
(18:58):
wait until it came up. But now it's so cool
to just see what you're actually going to have.
Speaker 13 (19:04):
Yeah, I mean, and you know, I'm working in an
on a daily basis, so you don't take it for
granted though, because I mean, when people are looking out
at their blank property or they're going to add something
next to their house, how is it going to look?
They can kind of compare it and get a visual
and you know, you still got to make sure that
you're thinking about those things and looking at the colors
and there's lots of details. But you know, like when
(19:25):
you build a house, you don't know what it's going
to look like. You know. Most of the times, I
mean maybe you see a two D rendering, but now
this is a three D rendering in full color, and
hopefully you can take advantage of that and visualize what
you're going to do. And we have a floor planner
on our website, So where do you start. You start
with you go to clearbuilding dot com, click on digital
floor planner, and you start laying out that space and
then we help you with all the heights, yeah, how
(19:47):
to get in the building and different things like that.
Speaker 4 (19:48):
There you go, so remind folks the open house at
Cleary Building Coordination Wide eighth, ninth, and tenth. Mike Winneman's
joining me. Mike, let's jump over to the kids fishing.
We got a couple of minutes left. Was popular. I
believe Saturday the tenth is the kid's fishing, correct.
Speaker 13 (20:07):
Yep, yep. We go from like nine to noon, a
lot of people to come out to the Cleary Pond
and do some fishing. And you know, it's amazing because
every kid that drops the line in the water gets fish,
some get ten, twenty thirty depending on how they want
to go about it, and some kids catch their first fish,
which is always fun to post on social media as
well as the other pictures out there. So we got
(20:29):
we have a high lake in the pond with all
the rain that's been out here, but you know, I'm
sure the fish will gather and it should be fun.
Speaker 4 (20:36):
Yeah, And we will have some bait available. Wally and
I will be there. We'll have some extra polls. And
that is one place that we can guarantee parents that
every every person will catch a fish, because that's that
it's probably only fish like once or twice a year, Mike.
So sure, they love, they love to see the bait.
So Mike mentioned your open house dates.
Speaker 13 (20:59):
And again, so Clearbilly dot com or eight hundred three
seven three fifty Guinness call August eighth, nine and ten.
Call us now and we can start the process. I
don't have to wait for.
Speaker 4 (21:11):
The sale, Okay, Mike. We will see you the weekend
of the eighth, ninth and ten.
Speaker 13 (21:16):
Thank you much, looking forward to it.
Speaker 4 (21:18):
Thank you, bet remember it. Catch us live worldwide on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 5 (21:24):
Have you ever tried to put a roof on your house?
Speaker 8 (21:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (21:28):
What about trying to run power to your new hot tub? Yep,
We've all made that mistake. Hi, I'm showing Cleary. We
have an amazing team of experts that are ready to
get to work for you. We use the latest technology
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(21:49):
August eighth through the tenth. Stop in or explore Clearybuilding
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Speaker 7 (23:26):
One look at these two guys and you can see
why they're on your radio and not your TV. Let's
get back to the high power half hour. It's Ultimate
Outdoors Radio.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Hey, welcome back, folks, and thanks for listening. You know,
people do some incredibly stupid things outdoors, and now it's time.
Speaker 4 (23:44):
Now it's time for the Ultimate Damas segment.
Speaker 3 (23:50):
This segment is brought to you by Grandpa Ray Outdoors.
Now's a good time to get some food plots in
for your fall deer and other wildlife on your property.
If you haven't any questions or want to learn more,
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Speaker 4 (24:07):
Yeah, weally on that get back. If people could only
see us when we get up in the morning, right,
that's why we're on radio. Hey. On this week's UDA,
we're traveling back over to Iowa, our favorite state for UDA's.
A farmer in Iowa ended up losing a tank of
(24:31):
ammonia phosphate during transport, which, okay, that was an accident.
It spilled seven hundred gallons of ammonia phosphate. Well, the
farmer decided he was just going to take off. It
covered one thousand foot of the roadway plus eventually ran
into a creek that ran into the Mississippi. But he
(24:54):
decided he was just going to leave, and he did well.
They eventually caught up to the fella, and it sounds
like he's obviously going to have a few charges. But
I mean, to drop seven hundred gallons of ammonia phosphate
on a road running to a stream and you don't
report it for containment, It's like, hello.
Speaker 3 (25:18):
Yeah, that is definitely a UDA there. I wonder if
a lot of wildlife was killed by that and fish
and stuff.
Speaker 4 (25:25):
I'm sure some fish in the stream, especially if it
was a trout stream. Yeah, that's it.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
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Speaker 4 (25:45):
Captain Well, I like to update you on all the
political legal news regarding guns, so you know what's going
on out there. But the latest is the administration right
now is targeting firearm exports. They're trying to prevent these
(26:05):
gun manufacturers from exporting firearms. Well, basically what that does
is hurt their business, hurts the amount of people they
can employ, YadA, YadA, YadA. So obviously there's some people
fighting that, but you know, they're estimating the total impact
of that would be two hundred and fifty million dollars
(26:28):
if manufacturers could not export. And here's another one. Georgia
and Tennessee fighting this financial privacy gun owners act where
they want to when you go purchase a gun, they
want to have a code that you have to enter
which identifies you so the government can then look at
(26:48):
all your gun purchases. And they're trying to limit you
to so many gun purchases a month, but they can
look at all your purchases, look into your private life.
Georgia and Tennessee has stop that, but this stuff is
just going on and on. They fought the miners and
gun ads in California where you could not have a
(27:09):
miner in a picture of a gun ad. It sounds
like they are fighting that and possibly going to get
that law overturn. But behind the scenes, they're coming for
us guys.
Speaker 3 (27:22):
So Wally, Yeah, you know, it's really a shame, Captain,
that they want gun registration. That's one of their angles
to try to get that. They want to know how
many guns you have in your home and why, and
how much amo you have and why. And you know what,
it's really nobody's business, Captain. If we hunt and fish
(27:43):
and we have a lot of guns, you know, maybe
we're pheasant hunters, duck hunters, deer hunters. You know, it's
our right in this country, our constitutional right to own
and bear arms, and they're trying to change the whole
way of life in America. What makes America great is
that we can have guns so the government can't tell
us what to do all the time.
Speaker 4 (28:03):
Yeah, that's what our based on maybe people will be
happy when the Chinese and Russian come for us and
the deer hunters save the country.
Speaker 3 (28:14):
Yeah, Wisconsin. You know, he got over six hundred thousand
deer hunters. So that's why China doesn't want to invade,
because we can protect ourselves.
Speaker 4 (28:23):
You know, where's your neighbor? Yeah, where's your neighbor going
to go? That's a non gun owner. He's going to
run to the neighbor that's got the gun, right exactly anyway,
you know, Wally, Another story here, kind of interesting. The state,
the State of Michigan is going to auction off ninety
(28:43):
one public properties. They range from one acre to one
hundred and sixty acres in size. Most of them are
you know, public forest lakes, but they do have some
lakefront properties and a mix of everything. They're doing this
in August and September, and they're just gonna go county
(29:04):
by county. So if you're interested in, you know, putting
a bit in on Michigan land, there you go. So Hey,
thanks for spending other Saturday morning with the Ultimate outdoors
radio remember the Clearing Building Corp, Open House and kids
Fishy Wally.
Speaker 3 (29:19):
Yep, and thanks for joining us and catch us worldwide
on iHeartRadio. Well at another show on this train loop,
she around the campfire. Don't forget to catch us on
the neck at Ultimate outdoors Radio dot com.