November 22, 2016
Evening Show
1h 3m
Complete
Radio Episode
2016
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, focusing on a serious injury to a water protector who suffered severe arm trauma from a police-deployed explosive device. He provided detailed analysis of the wound, emphasized the importance of medical preparedness at protests, and discussed proper first aid response to blast injuries. Nancy Kornke then covered food preservation techniques for the fall season, including making pumpkin jerky and processing venison, with callers sharing hunting and wildlife management experiences. The show concluded with product announcements for airsoft training tools and night vision equipment.
- dakota access pipeline
- water protectors
- police grenades
- blast injuries
- medical preparedness
- tourniquets
- food preservation
- pumpkin jerky
- venison processing
- deer season
- michigan
- preparedness
- self-sufficiency
- airsoft training
- night vision
Transcript
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We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver, but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit mainmilitary.com. Mainmilitary.com carries everything you need. Gas masks, fire starter kits, high-capacity magazines, chemical suits, military surplus items, and much more. Do you own a firearm? Mainmilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local stores sold out of ammunition? Call or visit them today for prices on hard-to-find ammo and bulk ammo orders. You don't need to worry about having a military surplus store in your area, Because MaineMilitary.com is the only story you'll ever need, all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at MaineMilitary.com. That's Maine, like the state, Military.com. I had a dream the other night that, well, I didn't understand. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said. We fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free, brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free, the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for war. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent, your children must attend a school that doesn't educate, and your Christian values can't be taught. According to this, you read about the current news in a regulated press, and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame number. You've traded in your net. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seemingly farm. And keep our country, keep put men of God in jail, harass your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children can be your leaders. Send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you will fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land. Preserve our great Republic and each God given right. We pray to God, freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he vanished in the mist for once. His words were true, not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample, each God given right. We only watch and tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave? FM Microstations, CB base stations, and UltraNet. Hallmark and Golden, spite technologies. East, David Jefferson on the Pacific. Today here in the bottom of Michigan today, couldn't ask for a nicer day and nicer weather. Outstanding and we ain't talking about outstanding in the woods. You could very easily. A lot of guys are out there hunting today. We've got rifle season in motion and of course not all that of snow on the ground. Makes it a little tougher to track when you do hit something if it gets away from you. A lot more work trying to figure out where the hell it went. No, people say, well, Mark, I come first time every time. Yeah, I'm sure everybody does plans the same way and then there's that hit that just goes somewhere else. Anyway, for everybody out there, huh, interesting. Well, thank you very much for that passing on that real quick. We'll get to that in a minute. Today's date, well, it is Tuesday, Communications Tuesday. It is the 22nd of November. It is the eighth year of open Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K, 2016, older calendar. 2016 year of battle, year of storm. Let's check real quick. Do we have Don with us? That's okay. I know where Don is and actually the rest of the crew. For all of our friends out there, it is a beautiful, beautiful Tuesday, communications Tuesday. In the works, well, there's been all kinds of stuff happening around the country as we know. Needless to say, of course, the ongoing speculation, there's not a whole lot more anybody can do with what's going on with Trump. In fact, it seems like they're almost desperately trying to keep us patterned with that, and there's a whole lot of other stuff that needs to be dealt with that's going on around the country with the enemy's preparation to cause more problems for us. The good thing, elections happen in November. The bad thing, the elections happen in November. Well, the good part, well, bad weather. You know you you gotta pay these fools 20 22 to 35 dollars an hour to get out there and do some damage because It's cold outside the video games you're calling and so is the warm you know Coco and the Play-Doh and the Legos and they got a lot of stuff to play with. What are you going out there and doing the boo-boo burn with? It's just for fun. Ha ha ha. Well, you know, Soros doesn't always pay the way he's supposed to. Neither do the rest of the ring knockers that, you know, finance the rioters in the first place. I mean, after all, there's been a lot of rumors about Fergateeshu, and they're not rumors because everybody knows what happened. They even threatened to sue after the rioters threatened to sue the people who were supposed to pay them. Oh, man. That's just, you know, you get promised $35 an hour, maybe you take a rubber bullet. Maybe they walk up and beat the snot out of you. The cops aren't going to be happy with everybody doing everything. It's one thing if you bust up a stranger's car, but when you go to the cops' brother-in-law's car dealership, all of a sudden they get oil persnickety. Though they don't mind in reality because the insurance writes off a whole bunch of it. It's just that the insurance premiums go through the roof too. So there's a plus and there's a minus, right? Anyway. other stuff going on? Well, I mentioned this with the protesters, well actually the protectors, that's the term they're using, we need to acknowledge the Native American population who don't need our help because they hate white people. I've seen enough of the videos that they did and it's killed all the white people. It's no different from Black Lives Matter in many ways. Unless you chastise and self emulate, slash, or take a cat of nine pills and whip yourself and apologize for existing and so everybody can stop that up their arse. I think I'm going to do that. So anyway, there is some work going on up there to block one of the many thousands of pipelines around the country. And in this case, it's a big one, which we got another big one going in south of us here. One we have is totally underground. Now, I will point out that the ones they put back in service from the 70s, I'll jog your memory here, we had a really big multi- I think it was a million gallon. They had to come up with a number to make it sound bigger. It wouldn't be a million barrels, but it was like a million gallons of oil. That's big enough. Where nobody realized that the thing was not pumping to where it was supposed to, and a line, one of the old lines had fractured underground from on the west side of the state of Michigan here. And it was one of the lines put in during the energy crisis financed by Jimmy Cada. And there were several of those. One of them was very big, runs on a 45 degree angle from Monroe, Michigan to the pumping station southwest of Ann Arbor, due south of Stockbridge, Michigan. A couple of, or actually, forgive me, due east of Stockbridge, Michigan. Oh, no, no, wait a minute. Wrong, wrong hub. Due east of Manchester, Michigan, and then up and across to the east side of Stockbridge. There's a couple different routes. These lines ran the whole length of the state. They were financed with federal energy crunch money. Of course, there's always a government ticket to suck off from. And those lines then kind of went, they just kind of let them lay. I assume, I would hope, that they left them charged. That's the best way to keep them demi-safe. I mean, after all, oil is a lubricant. Since you're pumping semi-raw, what happens is you have a lot of other caustics that are still in the oil that are not necessarily, you know, they haven't been worked out with the process. And that's kind of hard on the lines, okay? Very hard on the lines, as a matter of fact. So what happened is one of the line systems over on the west side, well, it sprung a leak and nobody was paying attention to the meters and it just kept pumping for a while. They did eventually catch it because at the other end they were wondering probably why they weren't able to fill their trucks up. Okay, because they've still got processing or they weren't receiving it where they were going to be doing the processing or whatever you know smaller sub refinery because there's a series of those we have them all over the state of Michigan. Some are only as big as a pole barn for step one and that takes off some of the really nasty stuff so it makes it a lot more affordable to move because it's not eating the pipes from the inside out. Yeah, and they actually take that and typically burn it up in the fields and use it for energy. Originally they just burn it and you see fields of fire. Now, they have built up the technology so any energy they have, they're using it to pump whatever, even if it's a dirty fuel, they use it. And then they burn it off when they're done anyway. They burn it up by consumption and actually taking the energy and applying it to something. That does make more sense. So anyway, full circle back to what's going on up in the Dakotas. The protectors of course the other night over the weekend, the other side went into major attack mode Sunday and there were a bunch of casualties. People getting perforated with rubber bullets. that were a little higher pressure than usual and because of that we're seeing some perforations not just bumps and bruises, okay? Seeing full cuts. That means they're using a magnum load or they beefed up the load intentionally as part of their terror against the protesters, the protectors, okay? One of the other things that happened And I cannot emphasize enough that this is especially critical to remember is that the bad guys, the government, threw a whole bunch of flash bangs slash, they're not flash bang, they're offensive grenades. Now, this is the problem when people read or listen to propaganda and conditioning that, you know, dupes slash idiots are stupid enough to actually absorb and believe and it's like, well these are non-lethal and it's not going to hurt you. It's just like they're just designed to stun you. Well how do they do that? Well there's a shockwave. I mean it's a high explosive device and high velocity and when it goes off there's a burst radius. You know it's a grenade, right? No, no, no, it's a flashbang. That was a grenade and I can't emphasize enough For those of you who haven't seen some of the imagery of injuries like that, well, one of the women who was up there, a younger girl, I do not know if she lost her arm last night or today or not. They were supposed to determine what they were going to have to do and it might have an amputation. One of the reasons is because of that shock wave. And I cannot emphasize enough that whenever possible, get distance, and get something between you and I don't mean your friend, okay? And this stuff about jumping on a grenade. Guys, sandbag, grab the sandbag, do the same thing. Yeah, it's a mess, but you know what? This is a hell lot better mess than losing another soldier because, you know, their guts are splattered all over their buddies, okay? And I know that's tough, but it's one of those things where you think a little differently and you still end up with the same result. Because somebody's going to get hurt no matter what, even when you drop on a grenade. You absorb some, but it always leaks through and finds some of your buddy's shins, ankles, or just part of that grenade jumping on the grenade thing. The other thing is most foreign grenades are not as effective as ours. If it was an American grenade, have something to worry about. But if it's one of the little popcorn fart, chikum, or euro grenades, which are still lethal, which is why I'm bringing this up in the first place, but push distance. Push distance and repeat. Push distance. You're wearing body armor. Most of military personnel are, so push distance. That's the first rule. That's just something to think about. Anyway. So this woman, unfortunately for her, and I do have a connection actually, Tom last night gave me a link on this, there are several. Now the one report that Tom found right away, and I want to say thank you to Tom for doing that, had a couple of pictures. He showed the woman herself, but then it showed them actually exposing the wound area on what appears to be the left arm. The pyrotechnic slash the grenade went off virtually, it looks to me like point blank range, you're pretty close to it. The shockwave did what it was supposed to do, shearing muscle, flesh, and separating bone and tendon where possible. That's the whole purpose behind grenades. Mr. Grenade is never your friend. Mr. Grenade's job is to do great harm to you. They might try to baffle everybody with BS about what the grenade does. Grenades are destructive devices designed to kill people. at a particular range if they are offensive or defensive. The liars otherwise have come up with this BS that everybody has bought into and it is just exactly that. It is BS. The reason I bring this up again is because, and as a matter of fact, hold on here, I'm going to make sure that I share this before I go any farther so you can keep it in circulation longer this way. There we go. And again, forgive me, there we go. Come back, here we go. The address to go to, project.com, freethoughtproject.com. Anyway, it's thefreethoughtproject.com forward slash water protector in critical condition after DAPL police grenade blew apart her arm. I want everybody to look at this because I don't know if she's been knocked out, if she passed out or what's going on. Take a look at the imagery. The one thing that I don't see which makes me wonder about this is I'm not seeing, unless they get a tourniquet, and they might have applied a tourniquet to higher up the arm, but I don't see it. Okay. As a matter of looking at another batch of pictures here, it's pretty straightforward, surprising me in any way, shape, or form. What you'll see here is an expansion wound. This is not a perforation. It's not like what most people expect from a bullet traveling through an area. Bad enough that that happens. But remember that when that shock wave is close enough, especially with a grenade device like this, the burst radius is fairly tight. The closer it is, the tighter it is. And that's why it may not have been terminal or wouldn't have been terminal if the person had been a greater distance away, but they got a good lucky shot, so to speak. And if this image is correct, it appears to me to be, I can see why they're talking about amputation because the material, the tissue is virtually slammed apart. It's just literally, it's like with, you know, something that weighs so many pounds and just literally slugging away at the material. One sweep, boomer, a giant spinger, but moving at incredible speed and with a lot of weight behind it. What happens is pulverization of the tissue. Now this is another reason you need blowout kits. This is another reason whenever you go to events like this you have to have designated medics. They need to be serious about their task. In fact, you also designate personnel. Everybody should be carrying medical support with them. If you're going to go out and get into somebody's face, you've got to treat it like a combat operation because again, the government is notorious for using extreme force constantly. They love doing it. I'm not worried about the debates about what happened here, what happened there. In any situation, you can tell how serious or how well trained people are by how well prepared they are. And in this case, especially with cash possibility of, again, military grade ordinance, which is what this is, being deployed against the population that you're with, you need to be ready with tourniquets, compresses, blowout kits. Any number of different types of injuries that can take place. Tell you what, hold on, I gotta answer something else. Yeah, check see what's going on. We've got heads up, something else is happening here apparently, so we'll see what it is. Anyway, looking to see if I can find any of the other images. Of course it looks like a military zone anyway. They've got MRAPs, they've got all kinds of other BS technology, hell they're wearing tan. Tan, Desert Uniforms, Black Combat. Okay, there are other pictures, but we're going to have to find the portfolio, guys. I'd like to do that because it'll give you several angles on the injury. Everybody goes, go, Ark, why would you want to see that? Well, because it gives you a better feel or understanding for how would you deal with this? How would you neutralize the threat of loss of blood and shock with a casualty like this? Well, it's actually a pretty straightforward military wound. It's a combat quarters wound, guys. It's exactly what we would expect. So the blowout kits, you know, again, small bandages, medium sized compresses, small compresses, medium sized bandages, wraparounds, tourniquets, all that apply with the blowout kit should have been here for this. Anyway, Matt, let's get this address out one more time. We have Nancy take over. She's going to cover some of the other stuff that's been going on. We've been going into the cycle out season. Pumpkin jerky, guys. We've got pumpkin jerky and a whole bunch of other cool stuff. Also, again, I'm just going to leave this up here so she can take a look at it also. I can imagine how this probably got caught into the, because of the angle and looking at how it is proportion to the casualty, I can assume that somehow the thing got snuggled up to her. In other words, it caught, you know, literally was beside her or she had her arm extended. It rested long enough for it to be in the right place. It's the wrong time for detonation. Because this is a very, very close proximity explosive, you know, explosive impact, you know, slash, you know, shredding. I've seen variations on this close up. We've had to deal with, you know, people injured by similar weapons and or injuries like this and the shearing and the material loss and how it's damaged. The only good thing, it doesn't look like the tendons are completely shattered or sheared. Looks like one or two. The other thing, it looks like I'm looking at a piece of linguine up to the side there, in other words a vein. Good thing is I don't see blood spurting from it, but the bad thing is it doesn't look like it's actually active, which means it's already been, it is separated, maybe sheared, and the tourniquet is what's keeping her from bleeding to death right now. I guarantee the patient, of course, you need to immediately treat for shock no matter what. I don't care how big or small the injury is, but you're looking at loss of blood shock slash other issues that immediately are going to be a part of the problem. This is another reason that we also need to look at oxygen. And it's something that's so cheap and ridiculous. Hell, there are even machines now that generate oxygen in the field nonstop. There are patients right now who walk around with their own oxygen machine, slightly smaller than even the old oxygen bottles used to be. The machines generate their own oxygen, recharge oxygen containers the whole nine yards. Well, if you're going to build an ambulance or a medical support unit up, that's a tool that needs to be invested in. I highly recommend it because air and water are life. In this case, lack of fluids, needless to say, the old pressure issue becomes a problem real quick. Of oxygen though, and all the blood in the world won't do you a darn bit of good. So anyway, this is an interesting case where we can actually see it. If we can guys share or if you want to call if you found the other pages there's another photo essay on this and it's a demonstration of what it is that transpired with this particular action. I don't know the way she's sitting in the vehicle for instance. I don't know whether or not a tourniquet was applied. Like I said that's what I'm curious about. Resting lower than the heart. You can take a look at it. Again one more time and I'm going to have to let Nancy take over here. The FreethoughtProject.com, the FreethoughtProject.com water protector in critical condition after DAPL police grenade blew apart her arm. As of Saturday night, Monday morning, they were talking about possible amputation. They would have decided that by now. The only good thing is that there's a lot of work that can be done to rebuild things like this, but it is a project unto itself. It is a You're looking at eight, 12 to 12 hours of surgery for the man to start out. We know trauma surgeons have dealt with injuries like this. And looking at the amount of rebuilding or lack of, again, the other option, this sounds weird. But they will take muscle from the buttocks or other parts and reintroduce into areas while they can if they don't have the muscle to work with. The muscle in the lower areas will regroup, will actually rebuild. And the one good thing is, you're not going to see any rejection, it's your tissue. But that's not something you don't want to be, again, considering. Here's the other reason for body armor, guys. We've talked about even just now, again, Kevlar arm sleeves make a big difference. It still would be a thud, still going to be all kinds of bruising. but higher probability of being able to keep the limb intact. Okay, more on that in a little bit. But meanwhile, I'm having Nancy take over and the kitchen militia have got a, you know, again, major effort in front of them, taking care of feeding the troops and the families, especially right now, because we're getting into now, we're past the growing season, into the processing season. Here we go. Well, ladies and gentlemen, this is Nancy Kornke, of course. Mark was talking about actually just looking at the injury on this woman. And I can tell you that's a major, a lot of the muscle is just destroyed. Totally destroyed, gone. Yeah, that would have to be something where it's taken from the legs in order to repair that. And when you start looking at doing work in the shoulder, the shoulder is a couple of bones that are knit together with ligaments and it's very iffy. to begin with. That's going to be rough. Thousands and tens of thousands of dollars worth of surgery to be done if they were to try to recover that arm. Unbelievable. But getting into food processing, it is that time for those of you that have your long-term storage, if you have it into your root cellars, anything that starts to get a little soft or looks like it may start to dry out, you want to take it and process it. By that I mean either freeze it, can it, or dry it so that you do not lose that product. You put a lot of time into the growing of your product or if you purchase it, And man hours and labor, just trying to get it taken care of, you know, to purchase it. How many hours did it take you to buy that product, to put it on the shelf? It's not something you want to throw away. It's something you put there for your family. So that's something you want to make sure you get taken care of. Right now, just from the fieldwork, a neighbor of ourselves, pumpkins, for Halloween. as well as for pie pumpkins for baking. Picked up a couple from him after Halloween for a buck a piece, the larger ones. Just baking those up. Bake it partially, just enough to take that outer skin off, that shell, a pumpkin shell, to peel that off so you don't have that hard exterior. Slice it into one quarter inch thick slices. Put a little pumpkin spice and sugar on it and put it in the dehydrator and let it go until you have pumpkin chips. Or like we like to call it, pumpkin jerky. Very good, very delicious. But that's something that you can do very quick, very fast, and doesn't take a whole lot of your time up. I think the longest time you're going to be spending is is of course taking the seeds out of the center and you can even take those and wash them up, put them in the oven and bake them up for a little salt and have those for pumpkin seeds. So again, one more thing you don't need to buy that's a quick and nutritious snack. A few family later on down the road. But pumpkin jerky is something you do that's very, very quick and easy. You can can it, cooking it thoroughly, either baking or steaming, and then taking the pulp out, pureeing that, making sure it's good and hot, put it into jars. You want to make sure you process it the full amount of time that your canning book suggests. And it's going, being that it is a low acid food, you're going to have to either pickle that or you are going to need to pressure can it. And that's something that can be done without a whole lot of problem there. So very quick, again, it's something that it takes time. It takes effort, but it's something that is worth your time and effort. You will find in your ball or curcaneing books both how to process, do canned plain pumpkin or to do the mix. But that's something that you can do. And again, you can do pumpkin soup using cream and butter to go with that. I sent it out maybe with a little chicken broth. so that you get a nice hearty soup that you can can as well. There are a number of different things that you can use to can it up and make it a good thing for your family later on down the line that is going to be delicious for you. It is deer season. We have deer, you know, that the rifle season has started. One of the things you're going to be looking at is how to preserve that meat. A lot of people will take it down on my butcher and he'll wrap it up and put your paper for me and it goes in the freezer. But if the freezer goes out, your power goes out, what are you going to do? One of the things you can do is can that meat or dry it into jerky. These are things that will work well. You can just dry the meat without adding flavors to it and put it aside so that you can rehydrate it later and use it in soups. So that's something to think about also. You can take those venison patties or venison burger and make a fine sheet of it in strips. and dehydrate that without adding any seasoning to it. No salt, anything else. Just totally dehydrate it until it's brick hard. I mean, you can take it and it snaps. You want it really, really dry. Then vacuum seal it and put it into a can. But you can take that out later. and use that in your cooking. And that's without cooking it, folks. This is something that can be done fairly easily. If you want to put some salt and pepper on there, fine, you can do that. But you do not need to cook this prior to. Take it out and rehydrate it. Put it in your soups, your stews, for your winter eating. Again, it's going to take up one third the amount of space that it would if it was in your freezer. Because once you take that excess water out of it, then you are looking at a lot less space to be taken up in the storage of that product. I believe we have a caller. Go ahead, caller. I think we have a caller. I heard a bell there. Star six, if you would like to join the conversation. If not, we'll just continue on. Mark will be back in just a few minutes. We had a little emergency here. Snafu had to be taken care of. So he's off doing that right now. But right now, again, this is deer season. It's the squash, the winter squash. Of course, it's out of the field. What you have in your root cellar. should be set aside. Or you can, one of the other things my dad used to do when we didn't have a root cellar was to take an old freezer that didn't function anymore and wrap the apples and winter squash up in newspaper and set it down inside that freezer and then close it up because that freezer, of course the other wall, is a good insulator. That was his way of having a root cellar in the garage just out where he could grab it real quick. So that's another thing you can do. You've got a freezer that dies. It's a great way to do that. Of course, you want to make sure the seals on it are good. But if it's the cooling... You should give it to him just to carry it away, Nancy. Oh, I know. You can find these on Craigslist. But if you can find a small chest freezer, they work fabulous for that. Oh, yeah. Absolutely fabulous. Have you got your deer yet? No, I haven't been in the woods. I've been playing in the dirt. Yeah. Hopefully that's coming along well. Yeah. I really hope so. I'm anxious for that to happen for you, hon. Oh, thank you. Oh, boy. Yeah. Particularly before we start looking like Minnesota. Two feet of snow overnight. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, your cues got hit pretty hard too, someone I understand. So, yeah, we've been lucky. We didn't get that much snow. We still got a little snow on Saturday. Yeah, we just had a little snafu with my car. She decided the blower didn't want to turn off on the heater. So we're having to disconnect it at the battery. Oh, even when you turn the key off? Key's off. It's being really stubborn, huh? Well, I shut it off and shut off at the switch. And it didn't shut off, which is weird because normally anything below four, below five, the setting of five on it, which is really kicking it out, will shut it off. So even putting it to off didn't turn it off. Then I turned the key off, still running, opened the door which shuts everything off. And it's still running. I came inside. I got lunch going and went back outside and it was still blowing. I told it maybe a resistor, but Mark even, we had an appointment in Ann Arbor today. So I thought, well, I'll just go pull the fuse, right? Yeah. It still ran with the fuse pulled. That's not supposed to happen. I know. See? color. I heard go ahead. I just want to say you are such a blessed work and I want to cover in the same ground and get nowhere. I appreciate that. I just want to thank you for that. Talking about deer season, a neighbor of mine just sent me a son 70 pound beaver, a fair sized beaver. The beaver don't take it. Holding it up and I know his son's about six Now he's grown like a weed. And he's holding up this beaver. I'm like, Jesus, Lord. This thing is big. Ate the beaver. And I've had a few beaver in my time to me. But people talk about that and the other. When things get weird, and I think we all know, beer will disappear quickly. And we will have to learn other things to that nature. that Mark has mentioned many times, Mike, that delicacy, you know, the, the, my friend around the corner here, his mother used to brag about her possum gravy, but you know, that delicacy possum butts do, you know. I got a recipe for him. Oh my God. North American game. Yeah. Because everything from to moose and I'm not talking about Bullwink or Rocky. They'll be edible too. And we just got to touch. Just saying. I will warn you about woodchuck. Get the stink glands out. Oh my god. Yeah, I had one dressed out and gave to me. I put it in the oven and not realizing the stink glands weren't all out. Oh my word. My house stunk for two weeks. Was awful. You got you got to take those clams out if you don't you will regret it. Oh, yeah, the coyotes here is something awful There's no problem about those here. We have hired some of them They'll become nice warm coats They keep my dog up all night I think I've had a full life five full life to sleep last five years because the dog bark all night and because they get worked out so I'll get out and smoke her up blah blah blah but maybe once every six months I'll take a nap in the afternoon. I haven't stopped the full night sleeping in years and so in the coyotes I call them children of the night. You open up the storm window and you hear beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep So between the dog going and dipping it in the oven, it's kind of like a musical thing. And you have a cigarette, so then you finally get on the internet and it's 2.30 in the morning, you can't sleep, so I'll get on the air. You've got probably two hours or so. They need like maybe a 270 or a 308. I'm asking Santa, I want an AR-15 platform, a 308, with the big one. The big one that you put on. I'm sure Santa's listening. You need to get out there and knock on some of them coyotes. It'll help you with your shooting at night and getting familiar with it. Well, I actually saw some in the daytime. A 2010 pound German Shepherd. And that's a female, mind you. These things were every damn big as big as her. I'm not even kidding. Oh yeah. Yeah. What they do is, because the pig farms, they got these big containment barns. Well, what they do is they bash them in the head with a 2x4. When they get sick and they drag him out of there put him in to decide to apply with a containment thing for a runner-in-truck After what was coyotes come out there in there for years now they go right to the pit he is and Matter of fact, I remember one time runner-in-truck came by because he carries like a 22 rifle with him straight dog cute little it was this cute little black and white dog kind of look like a the snows are supposed to be the dog and left them dead on their side. And then finally the road gragic guy came by and he road graded the dog right, pooped him up on the... Look how people are out here, uh, persubbing your, uh... There, you know, kind of... Yeah. That God I wouldn't ask. It is. If I can get that through with 10,000 rounds, it's about 100. Not that I'm asking for two months. I'm really happy. Honest to God. I saw it in, uh, The Offgrid magazine. The annual arms, I think it is, they make air like, yeah, that's the tech. Hey, hence study, buddy. Well, you know, how does that go? You're in charge of your own house, you know, you can figure out what goes under the tree, right? So lucky. I have control with that one other tree. Jesus is Lord. I have one of those Swedish 20 millimeter guns. I'm just saying. Full of ammunition, yeah. Now you can't ask for much more. Unless you need some air cover. Thanks Mike. Well, we enjoyed your call. Yeah, we did. We are just almost to the top of the hour here. Yeah, it's always good to have a wish list for Christmas, I guess, even if you know that Santa guy ain't real and all of that. There are some really good wildlife cookbooks out there. Typically, you'll find some at your gun shows, playing around on the tables. Older ones are better because you get into some of the older recipes that are, well, it's more from scratch. You're typically going to find those are really good recipes and will give you ideas on, you know, an instruction on how to get those stink glands out because if you don't, oh my word, the stench is, like I said, it took two weeks to get that smell out of my house. And I mean just the kitchen, I mean out of the house. Just reek through the place, huh? Oh my gosh. Yeah, that stink gland did quite the number. But they missed the ones in the armpits. It was not a good thing. It was slow roasted and it was still stringy and tough. It's like parts of a turtle. I was watching a guy cook a turtle the other day on television. And he'd talk to me, you know, Louisiana talk and all that and I've been cooking these turtles since I was a little kid and all and going on like that and he said there's three kinds of meat in a turtle. There's a real tender sweet and then there's a medium stuff and then there's the real tough stuff. What you do is you take the whole turtle and you dice it up really, really fine so that real tough meat is real good and becomes real tender. Yeah. So, you know, we're Americans. We like, you know, a cut of meat that looks like a steak even if it It did come from the diaphragm of the lungs there and that's a flank steak. Mark commented on that years ago, you cut it across the grain and call it a steak. You know everything from a cow to steak these days. Well, that's it. And you know, I worked in the meat department. Yeah. Yeah, if people don't say, no, no, no, I don't want a steak, I want a roast. It's like the only difference is how thick. Yeah. Of course, with some people like my boss, what I would call a roast, him at the steak. You know, two, two and a half inch steak for him is, you know, that's what he likes. Hey guys. Hey. Yeah. I recognize that voice. Good to see you, Don, and good to hear you, Nancy. It reminded me to remind everybody that... Very good. Thank you. God bless you. Have a happy Thanksgiving. Yes, ma'am. Thank you and you and all the lists. Very good. Very good. I have an easy Thanksgiving this year. My son's cooking. Yay! I have double-wee, you know, to be thankful for. Yeah, I've got some good kids. Amen. Amen. Yeah. All right. Well, you all have a pleasant evening, and I'll just sit back. Thank you so much. Well, we are at the top of the hour. We should be hearing the music here any second. So, you want to get out your information please? Hey, if you're looking for night vision, thank you Nancy. If you're looking for night vision, go over to the website. That's ydpoe.us. You'll see gun sites there and gun sites and other gun sites. And if you have any questions about the gun sites, you'll see there. Give me a call, like if you want to reduce the price on the gun sites, and I did that on purpose, but see what we move out of there, and there's a reason for that. And if you want to reduce the price on anything you see there, like the gun sites, give me a call. My number is 23179658. Again, 23179658. Thank you, Nancy. Thank you, Don. The other thing we're going to do is we have Airsoft here. We're trying to get out there to everybody that would like a mix of things for training. You can send $60 and will be a box of mixed goods that will be well worth more than $60. If you send that to PB and PO Box 194, Dexter, Michigan. 48130 is the zip and make that check out to Nancy Kornke, K-O-E-R-N-K-E and then we can get that out in the mail to you. You're going to find these are a really great thing to use for training folks. Oh yeah. Yeah. Well Don, you've seen a few. They work very well and we've got a great price on them so you want to pass that on. to our listeners, but we will send a mix of things your way for training purposes on commonly used firearms. And this is the airsoft version of those, so you can take them down to the basement and practice all day and nobody will ever know that you're practicing. And the thing is, they are exactly like the regular firearms. in the way that they function. And a lot of them are the same weight, so that muscle memory is ingrained. But you go to pick it up, so you're spending less money on ammunition in practice. And you're not out on the range, not out where people are gonna see you or bother you about whatever. The other thing to point out is this is a finite supply that we have available. It's not like we can do this until the end of next year. This train is going down the track you guys and if you don't stop the bus or hail the cab or something like that, I can't remember which. If you don't get on board that one, it'll be gone soon. I'm not sure if we'll be able to do this again, but we grabbed what we could when we could. It was a little excursion for us a couple days out and about and on the road. loading and unloading and reloading and oh my goodness. Yeah, but we need to get these things down the road and out into the hands of people that would like to use them as training tools. Or even as gifts. Goodness gracious, Christmas is coming. Oh yeah. Yeah, I mean it's right around the corner folks. We're at the end of November already. Where did it go? Oh my gosh. Mark just pointed out many times, even for filming. Oh yeah. You will not. Yeah, a little spray paint on these things and for filming you will not know the difference. As a matter of fact, we've sold some to a film crew and actually talking to the local theaters that have been doing really stupid stuff using live platforms on stage. Oh my God. Yeah. I heard that and I lost it. It's like you're kidding me with everything that's available today and they had to borrow somebody's life firearms. Oh, that's just a recipe for disaster, what's to happen? With actors. Well, there's a few that have blown their brains out. Well, sounds like we are at the top of the hour, Dad. God bless the Republic. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. Hey, you guys, we're gonna go to break. We'll be back in just a couple minutes. Don't touch that dial.