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Speaker 1: This podcast.
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Speaker 2: Welcome to Meet Eater Trivia, the only game show where conservation always wins. I'm your host, Spencer Newhart, and today we're joined by Brody Nate, John, Marge Logan and am I missing anyone? Maxwell?
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Speaker 3: Maxwell? I'm here.
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Speaker 2: This is a ten round quiz show with questions from Meat Eater's four verticals, which are hunting, fishing, conservation, and cooking. There is a prize. Meat Eater will donate five hundred dollars to the conservation organization of the winners choosing. All right, we have a couple of mailbag questions today. Again, we're going to start doing more of this instead of the ifaq's that are just about trivia, So send your questions to Trivia at the medeater dot com if you would like the crew to answer them. This first one is from Matthew Meshkey. I'm from North Dakota and just drew a once in a lifetime ELK tag. I'm twenty five and this will be my first ELK hunt. Do you guys have any advice on judging elk Let's say a three hundred and thirty inch bowl compared to a three to sixty Thanks, I'm not the guy to answer this, but we work with some people who are the people to give you a good answer. The first one here is Jason Phelps. He says every bowl is put together so differently that it's hard to judge them off of just a quick visualization. He's saying, it's hard to tell the difference between a three thirty and a three to sixty just from a glance. He goes on to say that you need to do some studying, and he says, start with the base on a standard six point bowl. If you have fifteen inch time length, fifty inch beams, forty inch spread, and sixty inches of mass, you have a three hundred and fifty inch bowl. Then you can deduct and add on from there. He said, you just first you want to check that there's six points, then the frame, then see how it's all put together. So that's that's what Phelps says. Basically, there is no quick way to feel. Judge Jiannis Putellis. Here's what he says, here's a quick and dirty way to feel, Judge bull Elk. On big mature bowls, the average mass with and main beam length will be about two hundred inches. And then here's where the math starts. The last thing to score then is the time length on a six point bowl. If you take the average length of the times and multiply by ten, since he has ten scorable points, and then add that to two hundred, you'll get a good field judgment. For example, if you have a bowl that has an average time length of fifteen inches, I'd guess I'm looking at a three hundred and fifty inch bowl. The math breaks down fifteen times ten is one fifty plus two hundred. That equals three to fifty. If every point is pushing or exceeding twenty inches, then you're looking at a four hundred inch bowl. My buddy Jay Scott has done a lot of content on YouTube and Instagram about field judging. He also has an app called horn Score that will teach you how and help you field judge. Elk Yanni says he'd recommend both. Brody, do you have anything to add?
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Speaker 4: Yeah, Like, I'm never gonna be the kind of person that gonna walk around with those kind of math formulas or calculator.
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Speaker 1: Like I get it, Like.
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Speaker 4: I just feel like you're gonna know when you're looking at a giant number one. But what I would look for and in simpler terms, and what those guys described is a long ass main beam and long third and fourth points like tall third like that, especially that fourth one. If it's like twenty twenty four inches, you're looking at a really good bull.
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Speaker 1: Ok.
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Speaker 4: But whoever said it phelps, like the difference between a three thirty and a three sixties, like not that much.
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Speaker 2: He's saying you need to study it. Yeah, even when you study it, it's not a garant.
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Speaker 4: Ten or fifteen inches of that could be air if you're just looking at one that's wide and one that's an narrow you know, so.
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Speaker 1: Long main beams, long, real long.
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Speaker 4: Third and force is what I would look at first, like as a general impression.
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Speaker 2: Anyone else in the room, have some input from Matthew on how to field judge giant Elk?
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Speaker 5: I like Max's Yeah, whats input?
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Speaker 3: If you pull up the gun and start doing one of these, it's probably pretty big.
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Speaker 2: Did you like this question?
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Speaker 1: Max?
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Speaker 2: Somebody from North Dakota?
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Speaker 1: Very good?
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Speaker 2: Elk tag.
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Speaker 3: I wonder what where's he from or if I know him?
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Speaker 2: It's his first name, Max, Matthew Meshki but Maxwell also from North Dakota and Drew a good elk tag this year, so we're.
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Speaker 3: No, oh yeah, but not in North Dkota. No, no, no. Do you know non residents can't hunt North Dkota elk?
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Speaker 2: Yeah, well, I guess I assumed that it's the same way in South Dakota, and I feel like they manage similarly. Now again, I'm I'm not an elk killer in the room, but I spent some time around big elk and like Yellowstone specifically, the first thing that always jumps out to me, I'm like, oh my god, that's a big bowl. Is it's whale tails? If it's got like really big whale tails, I'm like, oh, I'm looking at a giant bowl right now. But long or with just both like it's like, oh my goodness, those those are there's some co into.
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Speaker 1: That, like long fourth point.
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Speaker 2: You know, any other input for Matthew Logan, What was your input?
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Speaker 6: I mean, I've personally never killed a bull elk, so and it sounds like he's in a similar situation where this is his first once yeah once, infime, But yeah, don't go home not filling your tag. So I wouldn't I wouldn't be too concerned.
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Speaker 2: Good advice about that. We have another male big question. This would be the last one from Joshua Fowler. If Phil played along with trivia, what would he score? We need some more episodes with Phil playing?
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Speaker 3: Oh, PHILM Yeah?
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Speaker 2: How would you do you think I would do?
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Speaker 7: All?
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Speaker 1: Right?
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Speaker 8: I think I've said before that I would I think I'd crush cooking. I don't I don't mean to like chock myself up. I feel like I know I know most of the cooking questions. Everything else would be I mean, hunting would be abysmal, fishing would be possibly worse. But I think I'd do okay in conservation or some of your weird, more esoteric categories like mountain men or geography or whatever.
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Speaker 4: For a non hunter. Phil has absorbed a lot of information. How long have you worked here?
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Speaker 8: Phil?
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Speaker 1: Since twenty nineteen?
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Speaker 8: And I've heard every episode of the Mediater podcast, some of them multiple times, but I don't know how much of that I've actually retained.
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Speaker 1: Billion test you.
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Speaker 2: Keep track today and see how you would do on this episode. If we had Phil's four verticals, if this was his brand, Bill Eater, what what would the four verticals?
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Speaker 7: Oh?
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Speaker 8: Man, Well, I think video games would be my best category. Anything before nineteen ninety five would be spotty. I think I do okay, though, I'd say like the nineteen nineties and early two thousand Seattle Mariners, that's I think I do really well.
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Speaker 2: There is that the team that won how like how one hundred some.
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Speaker 8: In two thousand and one, they they tied the record for having a one hundred and sixty two wins, and.
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Speaker 4: One hundred and sixty two games are already gone at that point.
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Speaker 8: Phil uh No, he was still there in the in the mid nineties, but he was he was gone by the time they tied the record for a game.
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Speaker 2: Whiteboard most wins was one sixteen one sixteen Yeah, yeah, okay, so we video games, early two thousands Mariners categories.
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Speaker 8: Yeah, I'd say, like music, I think I do pretty well.
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Speaker 3: Well.
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Speaker 5: Here's the thing.
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Speaker 8: There's a part of me that wants to say like Star Wars and tiki drinks, but those are deep oceans and people. I think people will call me a poser and say that I've putting up rookie numbers there, and then I'd say, let's just stick with meater cooking as the fourth one.
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Speaker 2: Oh wow, okay, good good fulfillming. You'll do okay On today's episode, we have some housekeeping to get to before we play. On our previous episode of trivia, I had a question about the seven letter chemical that M forty four bombs spray in the face of coyotes. The correct answer with cyanide, and in the flavor text, I again referenced how they explode in the coyotes face, but Jay wrote in to say that this isn't quite accurate. He pointed out that cyanide is housed in a plastic capsule that's sealed with wax. When the springe, when the spring loaded plunger is triggered, it forces the solid cyanide out of the capsule and directly into the mouth of the coyote. There is no explosion and no cloud of side. The emailer points out that I'm using jargon from anti hunting propaganda by incorrectly referring to it as an explosion or a cyanide cloud. Uh. You know what, Jay, I think you're right that that it's important to be accurate with those things. So there is no cloud of cyanide. There is no bomb like explosion for those It is a a capsule that's deploying into the coyotes mouth.
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Speaker 1: All right.
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Speaker 2: The Shelby index for today is a four, so our winner should get eight correct answers. It's possible. With that, we're onto the game of trivia. Now play the drought fill.
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Speaker 1: Look, I need to know what I stand to win everything? Just tend to win everything.
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Speaker 2: Question one. The topic is Phil's vertical cooking, and this will be multiple choice. According to Outdoor Life, blank is quote universally the best wood for fish. Is it mesquite hickory pecan or older?
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Speaker 5: You're a can guy.
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Speaker 2: According to Outdoor Life, blank is universally the best wood for for what like bonking them on the head or I got smoking? I think they're referring to smoking. Universally the best wood for fish. Your four choices hickory pcan older. But he doesn't know much about smoking fish, does he? According to Outdoor Life, this is universally the best wood for fish, mesquite hickory p can older.
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Speaker 3: I'm trying to think. When I buy those wood pellets, it says it's got the graphic and it says like what it's good for.
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Speaker 2: Yep, it's a good place to are brody? Do you have this one right?
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Speaker 1: I have what should be the right answer?
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Speaker 2: Oh, Okay, that's a good way to put it. According to Brody Anderson, Logan to be smoked any fish.
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Speaker 6: You smoke a lot of trout. Okay, I kind of just use whatever pellets I have.
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Speaker 2: What's handy, John? How about you? Same exact thing? Okay, Nate, no smoke, not a big fish, guy, Marge smoking fish? No, Maxwell smoking.
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Speaker 3: Fish occasionally the salmon, like on a cedar plank.
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Speaker 2: I guess, Heather, but there you go, you were observing.
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Speaker 3: Yeah, what kind of wood did you use?
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Speaker 5: There?
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Speaker 1: Hey?
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Speaker 2: Your four choices for the universally best wood for fish Mesquite, hickory, pecan, older. Is everybody ready? Yeah, go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says Hickory, log Hickory, Marge Hickory, and she drew us a nice dead fish that's getting smoked, John Hickory, Maxwell Alder, Brody Alder. The correct answer is Alder, got that one right. Tasting table, Bradley, Smokers, Global Seafoods, and others agree that Alder is the top choice for smoking fish. They say it produces a mild, delicate, sweet smoke that enhances a fish's flavor instead of overpowering it. After alderwood. The next most popular choices for seafood are oak, apple, and cherry. Beautiful, bro, do you have any other input on choosing the wood for smoking fish.
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Speaker 1: I would say anything.
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Speaker 4: Like in the fruit tree arena is good for like sweeter and milder versus like heavy duty smoke flavor like hickory or mosquite.
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Speaker 1: Yeah.
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Speaker 2: I've seen it described as like mosquite and hickory is like taking a sledgehammer to something, while like an alder or an oak, or an apple or a cherry is like a paint brush to something, and so you're looking to do the paint brush when you're doing fish rather than hitting it with a sledgehammer. Question two the topic is hunting. This next great question is via David Rayome. According to Rock Island Auction Company, the Mosburg Blank is quote the most produced shotgun in history. Nate and Max had their answers before I finished the question. According to Rock Island Auction Company, the Mosburg Blank is the most produced shotgun in history.
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Speaker 5: I'm surprised by this.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, I feel like there's another gun you jumped to as like, oh, that's the most produced one, and we can get into the stats after this. But I think that one's not far behind.
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Speaker 5: That's what I shot with on Wednesday's.
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Speaker 1: Real disappointed with your answer? Max?
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Speaker 2: Okay, too late?
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Speaker 8: How you really feel?
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Speaker 2: According to Rock Island Auction Company, the Mossburg Blank is the most produced trying to think in history.
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Speaker 5: If this, if this gets real ticky tacky, I'm gonna be pissed.
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Speaker 2: Okay, Nate is now I'm sure his answer. Between Brody and Max, I would feel like Max has a deeper knowledge of shotguns. So I'm excited to see what you guys have for your answers. I mean I can okay, okay, just not a Mosburg that he wrote down? Or did he write down a Mosburg?
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Speaker 1: All right, Bud, what I.
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Speaker 2: Think we're gonna give our other one?
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Speaker 4: Spencer was talking about a little bit like no, no, no, you gotta stop over there, brother Accord, he got the first one.
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Speaker 2: To the Island Auction Company, the Mossburg Blank is the most produced shotgun in all right, let's flip these bat Larry Marge, John Logan, how you doing.
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Speaker 7: I'm not answering.
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Speaker 1: I mean I keep thinking, I.
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Speaker 5: Keep thinking of a competitor that own all right, all right.
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Speaker 1: It's fine, everyone's got their answer.
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Speaker 2: John, give up, go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate Sayssburg five hundred. Logan says twelve gage marge juus a strutting turkey. John without an answer, Max says the Remington eight seventy says the Mosburg five hundred. Bro got it, Spencer Mosburg five hundred.
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Speaker 1: Why did I say seventy?
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Speaker 2: There have been twelve million Mosburg five hundreds made, which is about one million more than the second place. Remington eight seventy was created by Carl Benson in nineteen sixty one, with the user base in mind being hunters, but the pump action shotgun was quickly adopted by law enforcement and military, which raised its popularity. Is one of the world's most used guns.
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Speaker 5: We had eight seventies in the armory, not five hundreds.
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Speaker 2: I think it probably on what well I'm.
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Speaker 5: Just saying the military. I thought it was gonna the opposite of that.
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Speaker 2: Gosh, yeahs ND.
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Speaker 3: I had eight seventy in my mind.
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Speaker 2: I was like, yep, it's gotta be Do you own a Mossburg five hundred No, No, or in seventy Oh, oh, he's a fancy. You don't go with one or two on the most made Shotgun No. Question three. The topic is conservation. The invasive Eurasian blank dove is easily identified by a black stripe that sits on the bird's neck. Nate and Brody already have their answer. Max is joining them. The invasive Eurasian blank dove is easily identified by a black stripe that sits on the bird's neck.
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Speaker 6: Man, my last name is dove.
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Speaker 2: This is will educate you all about doves after.
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Speaker 5: This cousin Eurasian.
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Speaker 2: The invasive season Eurasian blank dove is easily identified by a black stripe that sits on the bird's neck.
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Speaker 4: Sometimes they have to get the old red rider for these things when they're in in my garden.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, Max, do you do you know this one?
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Speaker 1: I would, I would hope.
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Speaker 2: So, okay, that's right Max, good job. Yeah, that's back on track.
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Speaker 8: And Spencer, I've gone through the questions. The phil index is also a four today.
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Speaker 2: Oh okay, I like that.
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Speaker 1: Marge.
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Speaker 2: Did you have this one right now? John? How about you? I think so okay.
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Speaker 4: I bet you could walk out this door and go outside and find one of these things in like thirty seconds, I think so.
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Speaker 5: Yeah, you could also find a moose in about thirty seconds, I heard, yeah, I heard that.
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Speaker 6: Oh was that in the like actual pond?
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Speaker 5: Back there is that ma barker over here? Oh okay, but.
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Speaker 3: Some I don't know who it was, but someone told me that the moose was walking around.
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Speaker 5: Like, are dude, how are your chicks doing? I want to chick up date there.
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Speaker 3: I think I'm ninety nine sure there's a head nesting in our head house.
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Speaker 2: You need to swim out there and take a look.
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Speaker 3: I don't swim, so yeah, the drake is just like using the pond, and like the hen's nowhere to be found, and like you can't confirm it in the henhouse. But it's like there's a little bump in there that I think it's a well baby bump, little hen. Mallard.
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Speaker 2: So one more time. We're on question three. The topic is conservation. The invasive Eurasian blank dove is easily identified by a black stripe that sits on the bird's neck. Go ahead and reveal your answers, Nate said, oh rock Oh, Logan, mourning, Marge mourning, John Collared, Maxwell Collared, Brody Collared. The correct answer is Collared. What was Erasian collared I don't.
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Speaker 1: Think you were.
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Speaker 2: That's a pigeon.
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Speaker 1: Pigeon, that's it.
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Speaker 2: The Eurasian collar dove is native to Africa, Europe, and Asia. It made its way into the United States after some escaped from captivity in the Bahamas in nineteen seventy four. They are taller and heavier than the native mourning dove and white winged dove, and are easily identified by the black stripe that forms a semi circle on the back of their neck. Most states allow unregulated hunting for collared doves, as they outcompete native birds for food and nesting sites. As Brodie said, you'll find them in the Gallatin Valley here, as I think probably potentially all fifty states.
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Speaker 3: And all times a year or two. It doesn't matter. Mourning doves pitch it south like in the fall, but like Eurasian doves are here all winter long.
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Speaker 7: Do they taste it?
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Speaker 1: It tastes like a dove.
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Speaker 3: Yeah.
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Speaker 2: I think if you did a pepsi challenge, you wouldn't know the difference, is my guess.
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Speaker 1: Now.
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Speaker 2: The other day at my bird feeder in my backyard, I had a white winged dove, which was very exciting because those are typically found in the Southwest. They're a desert bird and it's kind of uncommon for them to make it up this far north. A white winged dove. Question for the topic is woodsmanship. This unit of measurement, which is the equivalent of four inches, quantifies the distance between the ground and a horses withers. Nate has his answer. Max says he's got it. This unit of measurement, which is the equivalent of four inches, quantifies the distance between the ground and a horse's withers.
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Speaker 3: I think.
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Speaker 5: I don't know any other that would fall into this category.
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Speaker 2: Hmm.
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Speaker 3: For some reason, I have a reason why I put this answer down, but I don't know where it came from.
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Speaker 4: You know, Nate, I don't think you get enough credit for being one of the most well dressed people that need it.
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Speaker 5: You know, what did I this morning?
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Speaker 3: What did I tell you this morning?
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Speaker 5: Thanks a lot.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, he also got complimented. We were filming something down in the kitchen earlier and he walked by letting his dog out, and Nick Glenn complimented him. And then Nate said that he wore this to church yesterday and he didn't want to fold it up say it was his Monday.
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Speaker 5: Outilated on the ground. I think Chip slept on it last night.
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Speaker 1: And then I put it back on this podcast.
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Speaker 5: I did discover that I have a hole right in my crotch, though, so don't look now.
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Speaker 2: They're they're too holy for church. This unit of measurement, which is the equivalent of four inches, quantifies the distance between the ground and a horse's withers. I was making some smoked salsa down in the kitchen. We taste tested it beforehand. Give give us a review somebody so that people want to go watch the video of it when it comes out a few days.
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Speaker 5: It was delicious. I thought it was great, so good.
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Speaker 7: I put that on chicken, not just chips. Very good tacos.
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Speaker 3: You did yourself.
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Speaker 2: That video will be up very soon.
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Speaker 5: I rolled up to the grill expecting to say you were smoking some fish or whatever, and it was also.
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Speaker 4: Contrastuned to the meat eater store chill.
00:20:54
Speaker 1: That sala.
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Speaker 6: It kind of tastes like hot Mama's salsa. I don't know if you've had that.
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Speaker 3: One, but it's like, oh, isn't that from Costco?
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Speaker 5: No, it's like this area that's a local Bozeman.
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Speaker 3: What's the one from costco. That's really good.
00:21:06
Speaker 1: Oh the aso.
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Speaker 2: So salty, but it's good. It's everybody ready for the unit of measurement. It's equal to four inches. Quantifies the dull things. Go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says hand, Logan says cap. Marge without an answer, John without an answer, Max says shoulder. Brody says hand. The correct answer is hand. Brody and Nate got that one right.
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Speaker 3: Maybe that's what I was thinking about.
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Speaker 2: This four inch unit is roughly the distance between your pinky and thumb when your fingers are held together. The hand measurement goes back to ancient Egypt, where a hand was three point seven inches and a fist was four point twenty five inches. On horses, hands refer to the distance between the ground and the top of the shoulders. The average horse is about fifteen hands tall, while a tall horse is usually greater than sixteen.
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Speaker 3: I knew shoulders was in there.
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Speaker 2: AI, what are Withers Weathers would be the top of the shoulders? I believe Question five The topic is fishing. This is our listener question of the week, which was one but one by Matthew Smith for sending this great question. Matthew is going to get a board game signed by the crew. If you want a chance to win the listener Question of the Week, then send your question to Trivia at the meadeater dot com. This ten letter saltwater fish is named after its teeth that resemble what you'd find in the mouth of livestock. This ten letter saltwater fish is named after its teeth that resemble what you'd find in the mouth of livestock. The room looks stumped. Wow, Yanni was supposed to be here today, and I expected that Yanni and Brody would immediately have this one right. This ten letter saltwater fish is named after its teeth that resemble what you'd find in the mouth of livestock. But this could be a zero percenter. I gotta read this phil one through five. Which of these would you have right so far in our first five questions?
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Speaker 8: Uh so this was my toughest stretchy I think the one I would have gotten right would have been the cooking one. That number one alder smoked salmon is a PMW delicacy.
00:23:28
Speaker 2: So of course, come on, Brody, do you have a ten letter fish?
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Speaker 1: Yep?
00:23:33
Speaker 2: Nate, do you have a ten letter fish.
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Speaker 5: Yeah, I feel like I'm in another tropical type situation.
00:23:38
Speaker 2: Okay, named after its teeth. This ten letter saltwater fish is named after its teeth that resemble what you'd find in the mouth of live stock. We will get a scoreboard update from Fill the engineer after this.
00:23:53
Speaker 6: I had a nine letter fish and I added one letter, so we'll get hands out, all right.
00:23:57
Speaker 5: It's always a good strategy.
00:24:03
Speaker 8: Yeah, number five here was one where it's one of those ones where you hear the answer and you're like, but I don't think I would have pulled. If that's a hint for anybody, I don't think it is.
00:24:13
Speaker 2: Ten litter saltwater fish is named after its teeth that resemble what you'd find in the mouth of livestock. Do our other three players give up? I'm gonna get Oh, you got you got a couple in you March, Maxwell, you give up.
00:24:32
Speaker 5: If I get this wrong, I'd like to present my case to the jury.
00:24:37
Speaker 2: Go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate says Cuddle, Logan sheep's head, Marge without an answer, John without an answer, Max without an answer, Brody sheep's head.
00:24:48
Speaker 1: He got it.
00:24:49
Speaker 2: The correct answer is.
00:24:53
Speaker 5: You'd find cud in the mouth of livestock.
00:25:05
Speaker 7: The biggest thing is.
00:25:08
Speaker 3: Fish.
00:25:09
Speaker 2: M okay, thank you. The sheep's head range stretches along the Atlantic coast from Nova Scotia to Brazil. They use those unique teeth to crush and grind shelled animals such as crabs, oysters, and barnacles. New teeth are constantly replacing old teeth that wear down and break. Here's a picture of their mouth. This is why they call them sheep's head.
00:25:32
Speaker 5: I thought they were.
00:25:33
Speaker 2: It was just it's weird. Different versions of this fish.
00:25:39
Speaker 1: Well that there's many.
00:25:41
Speaker 2: Fish that have this name, and sometimes you'll hear them called sheep freshwater drum, that's one that where I grew up.
00:25:47
Speaker 4: There's an Atlantic, there's Pacific sheep bed. They don't look anything alike like Yeah.
00:25:52
Speaker 2: If you ask somebody where else going up, if they like, would you catch today, and they were to catch a fresh water drum, there's like an eighty percent chance they would say a sheep head. But those drums do not have the teeth like this, So that I think you're like using the X turn or the the xterior of the fish to be like that looks like.
00:26:08
Speaker 4: The yeah, like growing up in Lake Erie, we considered those things trash fish.
00:26:12
Speaker 1: Oh this is so good.
00:26:13
Speaker 6: When we went to Florida, we caught a bunch of those.
00:26:16
Speaker 2: Drop this you're talking, Yeah, I caught one on the fly rod.
00:26:21
Speaker 1: These things are very good to eat, real good to eat.
00:26:24
Speaker 2: All right, we are Halsh baby black drum.
00:26:27
Speaker 3: I'm pretty sure at the stripes and everything.
00:26:31
Speaker 2: Do you remember those teeth? Mans, I remember those teeth?
00:26:34
Speaker 1: All right?
00:26:36
Speaker 2: All right, Phil, halfway through the game of trivia, give us a scoreboard up.
00:26:39
Speaker 8: Oh but here at halftime, Maggie's not on the board yet with zero points. Logan and John have one point a piece. We're tied up with two and with a perfect game. He doesn't have a flushed face doctor nipping at his heels today he's got five points. Pretty Henderson, we need like a colossal just to see the sweat pouring down his face.
00:27:02
Speaker 2: Brody could ramp up the earliest victory ever by question seven. We'll see how this goes. How about this, people, let's do all about finish.
00:27:13
Speaker 1: His second gets to pick the donations. Oh, I like it.
00:27:18
Speaker 2: Sure he's not going to give you the wind.
00:27:19
Speaker 4: Though, no, no, but you can pick who it goes to, so keep playing.
00:27:23
Speaker 2: Question six. The topic is hunting the Mitch blank Buck, which is widely believed to be a hoax, measured over thirty inches for its main beams and inside spread. Brody has the perfect game finish his answer before I finished the question. The Mitch blank Buck, which is widely believed to be a hoax, measured over thirty inches for its main beams and inside spread.
00:27:50
Speaker 1: This is sneaky.
00:27:52
Speaker 4: Steve's dream project is to do a big, big movie about this.
00:27:56
Speaker 5: I know, I think I got it.
00:27:57
Speaker 1: Yea.
00:27:58
Speaker 8: I was going to say, I thought it was pretty big hit. That's all right, Phil, I'm not worried for you.
00:28:05
Speaker 1: Brody. Well, it's like getting in the right direction. We'll see what Spencer says.
00:28:11
Speaker 2: Okay, but no, it doesn't sound like I got some letters mixed up in the wrong place.
00:28:17
Speaker 3: I thought I thought this them.
00:28:19
Speaker 2: Blank Buck, which is widely believed to be a hoax, measured over thirty inches for its main beams and inside spread. Nate, do you have this one right?
00:28:29
Speaker 1: Yeah? I think so.
00:28:30
Speaker 2: Okay, I thought it was.
00:28:34
Speaker 5: You almost got me, you sneaky sneak.
00:28:36
Speaker 2: I don't think you're going in the right direction. No, trickery, and I probably don't have it out. Yes. No, I think Steve is obsessed with this story, as I think mini hunters from his part of the world are.
00:28:54
Speaker 5: Dude, I got some juicy deets on the Beaty Buck. Okay, yeah, we'll talk about it after.
00:29:01
Speaker 2: It's not Mitch Beady Buck. The Mitch Blank Buck, which is widely believed to be a hoax, measured over thirty inches for its main beams and inside spread. I have heard that you need to be careful what you say about this year because the family is litigious.
00:29:15
Speaker 1: Oh yeah, yeah, it's a good word.
00:29:20
Speaker 2: It's everybody ready, go ahead and reveal your answers. No, it, says Letterman. That's a different that's a famous MULEI here in Montana. Marge without an answer, John without an answer. Maxwell says Mitch Paula. Brody says rom Paula. The correct answer is rom Paula. Now what do you have there? Show us again? You have r A p What else? Yeah, Paul so close? I thought it was two names, Max.
00:30:04
Speaker 1: Max.
00:30:06
Speaker 2: Max's answer is like if we played a game of telephone and he was last Mitch Rumpla, Mitch Rumpaula Buck, was supposedly killed in nineteen ninety eight in Grand Traverse County, Michigan. It measured over two hundred and sixteen inches, which topped the world record Milo Hanson buck, but the deer was never officially entered into the Boone and Crockett record books, which added to speculation about the rax authenticity. A fellow Michigan hunter even publicly offered to give ten thousand dollars to a charity of Rompaula's, choosing for him to get the skull X ray, but Rompaula declined. According to two thousand and six Pole two thousand and six polling from whitetail dot com, eighty three percent of hunters believe the buck is a hoax.
00:30:52
Speaker 5: It just looks like it. It looks like the freaking Bigfoot footage.
00:30:55
Speaker 2: We have a picture of the Mitch Rumpaula buck here, and Mitch was also known for like killing incredibly incredibly wide deer out of this same like area in Michigan that is not known for big deer. This was pre ai to so yeah, nineteen ninety eight, he had.
00:31:13
Speaker 5: To do some many bones.
00:31:17
Speaker 2: Allegedly allegedly, of course, yes, do you have any any story for us Nate on the Beady Buck.
00:31:24
Speaker 5: Okay, so what's the beat The Beaty bucket was the largest day typical until like what Mufassa was killed or whatever? That one in Illinois or I own god, you know what I'm talking about, Yes, Luke, yeah killed yeah buck believe, but that I was killed real close to my college Cedarville, Ohio.
00:31:42
Speaker 1: Shout out.
00:31:43
Speaker 5: And it was killed right on the edge of this like nature preserve. Oh that nobody gets to run around in and giant bucks get grown all the time, so everyone's always talking in that area like, oh, was it really killed on the edge. Yeah, But we were weird party and went down the basement and uh, there's a life size Beaty buck. What the heck? Whose house is this? And it is John Beatty's house.
00:32:10
Speaker 2: Hopefully, But that doesn't settle the controversy.
00:32:13
Speaker 1: Well that's how it.
00:32:14
Speaker 5: All got started, and we were like, what the heck?
00:32:16
Speaker 2: And then yeah, today's point story. Whenever a really big year gets killed, it doesn't matter if it's Mite and Palmer or anybody in the world. There is speculation about how it died and the legality of everything. When Dustin Hoff killed his United States record typical Buck and I had talked to him that next morning. I told him, I was like, dude, get a game warden to come out today and just like verify all of your facts and then there will be no question as to how any of this went down. And that was one of the first steps he took, just because this naturally happens no matter what. Question seven the topic is conservation. What ocean are the Galapagos Islands located in? What ocean are the galop the Ghost Islands located in? This is question seven? The topic is conservation. Oh dude, this could ruin Brodie's game.
00:33:13
Speaker 1: I believe it.
00:33:14
Speaker 2: Maxwell rocking his Minnesota Wild hat today, Big Game tonight. How they're gonna do in the playoffs.
00:33:20
Speaker 3: Well, they beat the Stars first game round one, So I have hopes, from not high hopes, I just have hopes.
00:33:29
Speaker 2: What ocean are the Galapagos Islands located in? This? This episode's coming out a couple of days. Maxwell make us a prediction for the Wild tonight.
00:33:39
Speaker 3: The Wild win?
00:33:40
Speaker 2: Okay by a score of three to two. All right, is everybody ready?
00:33:47
Speaker 1: No?
00:33:49
Speaker 2: We got Max distracted with oceans.
00:33:51
Speaker 3: I know I'm trying to name my oceans.
00:33:54
Speaker 2: What ocean are the Galapagos Islands located in?
00:34:00
Speaker 3: Trying my cors Yeah.
00:34:03
Speaker 2: Nate, did you change your answer?
00:34:05
Speaker 1: No?
00:34:05
Speaker 2: I should have, though it's not too late.
00:34:08
Speaker 1: I know.
00:34:08
Speaker 5: I know I'll be more pissed if I change in theater.
00:34:11
Speaker 2: On Marge, do you have this one right?
00:34:14
Speaker 7: I think so?
00:34:15
Speaker 2: Okay, She shook her head. No, instaid, I think, so. Gosh, why am I I'm just blanket Maxwell. We're waiting on you.
00:34:23
Speaker 3: Yeah, that's fine, you can wait all day.
00:34:27
Speaker 5: I'm just recalling, think of a Christmas song.
00:34:30
Speaker 2: I think there's a few you can eliminate pretty quickly. Man.
00:34:34
Speaker 4: But I'm not aware of your like grasp of geography, so I know.
00:34:41
Speaker 3: But I'm just trying to think when one starts in one end.
00:34:45
Speaker 1: Me and Max.
00:34:47
Speaker 2: Me and Max grew up in the Dakotas, and in western South Dakota. You have the point of inaccessibility, which is the furthest you can be on the continent from salt water. Wow, Me and Max. It's it's tough going.
00:35:00
Speaker 3: It's got cross.
00:35:05
Speaker 1: Man.
00:35:08
Speaker 2: Mm hmmm. A couple more seconds. You're Max? Good? John? Are you good?
00:35:13
Speaker 1: Yes?
00:35:14
Speaker 2: Go ahead and reveal your answers. Nate Atlantic Logan Pacific, Marge Pacific, John Indian, Max Atlantic, Brody Pacific. If it's Indian, the correct concert it's not Indian is the Pacific Ocean. Brody keeps his perfect game.
00:35:35
Speaker 7: Going across Ecuador.
00:35:39
Speaker 2: The gals Islands are located.
00:35:41
Speaker 1: Kept going, you'd hit the Indian Ocean. Kept going that way.
00:35:45
Speaker 7: I mean between China and India is the Indian Ocean.
00:35:49
Speaker 2: The Galapagos Islands are located about six hundred miles west of South America. They consist of thirteen main islands and six smaller islands. The Galapagos are home to one hundred eighty eight species that are labeled this critically endangered, endangered, or threatened.
00:36:05
Speaker 5: I was just stuck on mastering, Commander Dude. I was thinking, I thought the whole Australia like.
00:36:13
Speaker 4: Eventually, okay, traveler, margin two oceans touch each other, I mean all oceans.
00:36:21
Speaker 1: No, they don't.
00:36:23
Speaker 2: The Arctic Ocean doesn't touch like the Southern.
00:36:27
Speaker 3: Antar All water is connected, all connected.
00:36:34
Speaker 5: He's saying adjacent.
00:36:35
Speaker 2: Question eight, come on, the topic is geared.
00:36:39
Speaker 1: He still got it right.
00:36:40
Speaker 5: He's still whacking all of us.
00:36:44
Speaker 2: Question eight, the topic is gear bunny boots, which are also known by this cartoony name, were created by the US military during during the Korean War.
00:36:56
Speaker 5: N the third story, yesterday.
00:37:00
Speaker 2: That's a good place to find these, Brody, Do you have this one right?
00:37:03
Speaker 1: Yeah?
00:37:04
Speaker 2: Bunny boots, which are also known by this cartoony name, were created by the US military during the Korean War. In fact, I only knew them as yeah, okay, Nate, do you own a pair of these? No? No, No, that's about you. Did you ever put your feet in in bunny boots?
00:37:23
Speaker 1: Maybe?
00:37:23
Speaker 2: Yeah?
00:37:26
Speaker 5: Ice fishing?
00:37:29
Speaker 2: No, I can't remember. It was some meat eater thing. Maybe it was ice fishing. I don't know, Brody and Nate habit.
00:37:36
Speaker 1: But it used to be.
00:37:36
Speaker 4: I don't know, Like I haven't been in an Army surplus store in so long, but it used to be able to just go pick the money.
00:37:42
Speaker 1: Dude.
00:37:42
Speaker 5: That one that coming back from Salt Lake is so good? What's that one called?
00:37:46
Speaker 3: Phil? Do you got this one right?
00:37:48
Speaker 8: This was when I did not get correct?
00:37:50
Speaker 3: Can I call my dad?
00:37:51
Speaker 5: Mag I feel like you just wear these to work sometimes. I feel like I've seen that.
00:37:56
Speaker 2: No, Max, do you think do you think your dad owns these?
00:38:00
Speaker 3: Do you think he does?
00:38:01
Speaker 2: Do you think your father in loans these probably does, okay, he would know what Bunny boots are also known as bunny boots, which are also known by this cartoony name, were created by the US military during the Korean War. I this Max new trick. He likes to phone a friend, but it doesn't count.
00:38:28
Speaker 3: Well, I just I don't know the answer until they text.
00:38:31
Speaker 2: Back logan, do you have this one right?
00:38:33
Speaker 6: I don't think so.
00:38:34
Speaker 2: Okay, they probably have these at the army surplus store in my dad worst text or too, so he's not gonna reply for a while. It's everybody ready, go ahead and reveal your answers. Name says Mickey Mouse Logan space boots, Marge without an answer. John says Mox Maxwell without an answer, Brodie Mickey mouse boots. The correct answer are miss Mickey mouse boots.
00:38:57
Speaker 7: Do you have a picture?
00:38:58
Speaker 2: I don't your recognize them?
00:39:01
Speaker 1: Yeah?
00:39:01
Speaker 2: They Well, I'll describe for you what they look like. Bunny boots are extreme cold vapor barrier boots that are designed to be worn and tempts down to negative sixty degrees fahrenheit. They were also referred to as Mickey mouse boots due to their oversized appearance that resemble the footwear of the Disney cartoon Army Surplus Bunny boots can be purchased for about one hundred dollars, while some commercial brands will sell their own versions that retail for between two hundred dollars and four hundred dollars.
00:39:28
Speaker 1: The whole deals you inflate them, right.
00:39:31
Speaker 2: I don't know how, but like the thing is, they have the vapor lock, but they're giant boots that are either like pure white, which I think is when it's a Bunny boots, or black when it's a Mickey Mouse boot. And Phil is not a great job of producing over there, and he pulled us up a picture.
00:39:52
Speaker 7: I don't know those are, but it kind of looks like the Alaska company boots.
00:39:57
Speaker 2: Those are the Mickey Mouse boots. You're right, Mar, And I bet some people call them space boots. Logan, but that we're not going to count that as a cartoony for space Jam.
00:40:07
Speaker 6: I originally had Looney Tunes written down.
00:40:09
Speaker 2: I spelled two questions left, Please get a scoreboard update.
00:40:13
Speaker 8: Everyone's on the board now. Maggie and John have one point, Logan and Max tied up with two. Nate's got four now and Brody's still with a perfect game here and the final stretch has eight points.
00:40:25
Speaker 2: Question nine, the topic is wildlife. This next great question is via Chris Devrees. This six letter word refers to the bristly plates that some whales have instead of teeth, which they use to filter krill, plankton, and small fish. My goodness, probably the first time in Mediator Tribute history where we have had two questions about animal teeth if wrong? If you got everything else right there, Marge, but a letter two is wrong, that's okay. This six refers to the plates that some whales have instead of teeth, which they used to filter krill, plankton, and small fish.
00:41:08
Speaker 3: I know what we're talking about.
00:41:10
Speaker 5: As soon as I hear it.
00:41:13
Speaker 2: We have a picture of those teeth after this answer is revealed, Brodie, is this going to keep the perfect game going?
00:41:20
Speaker 1: Okay? I wish someone would give for second place about this.
00:41:26
Speaker 2: Yeah, you good job man. We don't even need to show the picture.
00:41:30
Speaker 5: Look.
00:41:31
Speaker 2: I hope that Marge one ups you though and show I didn't.
00:41:34
Speaker 7: I didn't draw a picture.
00:41:37
Speaker 2: Spell six letter word refers to the bristly plates that some whales have instead of teeth, which they used to filter krill, plankton and small fish.
00:41:47
Speaker 5: Cash. Give me a sick, Just give me a.
00:41:50
Speaker 2: Nate thinks it's it's in there somewhere.
00:41:52
Speaker 7: Say it out loud.
00:41:53
Speaker 2: And when we before we flip over the boards, Marge, you can just say your answer and the mic and if that's right, you'll get the point. Do you think it's in your brain as well? Maxwell? He drew it for us, and I think his drawing is accurate.
00:42:15
Speaker 3: So I erased it. It wasn't my best Picasso work.
00:42:17
Speaker 2: We are now into late April, and I don't think we've had a perfect game yet. So Brody is flirting with.
00:42:25
Speaker 1: One really all year long.
00:42:27
Speaker 2: I think it's I think we've been in a drought this year of perfect games. Six letter word refers to the Bristly plates some whales having set of teeth which they used to filter thrill, plankton, and small fut Maxwell really excited to.
00:42:42
Speaker 7: Get the question, Hey, Brody, some of these whales cross many oceans.
00:42:49
Speaker 2: Is everybody ready, okay? Marge? Did you say your answer for us?
00:42:56
Speaker 1: Answers?
00:42:57
Speaker 2: Nate says, filter Logan without an answer says, and one of her three spellings is correct. John without an answer, Max, without an answer, Brody says baileen. The correct answer is baileen beat a l e eat.
00:43:12
Speaker 5: Okay, I knew that. I knew it's a type of whale.
00:43:16
Speaker 2: Ah right. There are fourteen species of bayleen whale, which include the blue whale, gray whale, and humpback whale. The bayleen is made of keratin, which is the same protein that makes up our fingernails and hair. In some species, the bayleen can reach thirteen feet long. During feeding season, blue whales can consume thirty five thousand pounds of krill per day. There is a picture of what Max drew us. Yeah, Baileen, wait in a whales mouth? Believe that is a hum?
00:43:46
Speaker 5: Are they pushing the water back out? And then the krill are getting stuck in their mouth?
00:43:50
Speaker 2: I assume that's what they stuck it in Gott's And yeah, blue whales will do thirty five thousand hounds of filter feeding a day a day. Yeah, I thought you were gonna say a year during feeding Season's crazy. The ocean has that much. It's always feeding season. One scoreboard update before we do question ten, and I never thought about having a feeding season, breeding season, feeding season.
00:44:18
Speaker 8: Two points migration John has one point, Maggie has two points. Logan and Max also have two points. Should have lumped them all together. Nate's got four and Brody has over double The second place players score with.
00:44:35
Speaker 5: What if I pass along my winnings from Brody to the third place?
00:44:43
Speaker 2: All right, here's the correct answer review so far. One was Alderwood two Mossburg five hundred three collared dove. Four. Hand is how you measure a horse? Five is sheep's head? Six Mitch rumpaula seven, Pacific Ocean eight Mickey mouse boots nine Baileen. Here is question ten. The topic is fishing. This next great question is via Clay Smith. According to twenty twenty three data, what month has the fourth most boating accidents?
00:45:19
Speaker 7: Four?
00:45:23
Speaker 1: I knew it?
00:45:25
Speaker 2: I am looking for number four God. According to twenty twenty three data, what month has the fourth most boating accidents?
00:45:35
Speaker 8: You're you're wild for this one, Spencer and may.
00:45:40
Speaker 2: I think it's a great question. As soon as you start thinking about it. I think you'll arrive, Brody if you start thinking about it. The right answer, Brody. Yeah, And if Brody can get this one right, we will double today's donation to one thousand dollars for some lucky conservation group that Nate is going to pick, oh thousand dollars now a little bit. According to twenty twenty three data, what month has not one, not two, not three the fourth most boating accident?
00:46:11
Speaker 5: How conservation? He doesn't need? Can it be like conservation adjacent?
00:46:17
Speaker 2: Sure?
00:46:17
Speaker 1: Okay?
00:46:17
Speaker 3: Yeah, question your question or your answer?
00:46:21
Speaker 1: Right?
00:46:21
Speaker 5: No, my donation?
00:46:22
Speaker 3: Oh okay?
00:46:23
Speaker 2: According to twenty twenty three data, what month is the fourth most boating accident?
00:46:29
Speaker 3: I'm going to donate to TSS dot com a the TSU.
00:46:35
Speaker 5: You know what I'm I can't show you get my answers on there? No tungsten in that Turkey I shot?
00:46:44
Speaker 4: No, I mean I used some form of logic to get there.
00:46:48
Speaker 2: But sure.
00:46:49
Speaker 5: It's just like which which holiday does do people get more drunk during? Wow, that's the question, the fourth most No?
00:46:57
Speaker 2: But yeah, yeah, he's done his proper rank and he's arrived at what he believes to be number four. According to twenty twenty three data, what has the fourth most voting accidents?
00:47:08
Speaker 3: One in twelfth chance here?
00:47:10
Speaker 5: I don't think it's December. You never know.
00:47:15
Speaker 3: It could be December and Texas or on the coast somewhere.
00:47:18
Speaker 2: I think this is one of my favorite questions we've done in a while. Is everybody ready go ahead and reveal your answers, Nate says, May Logan September, March, September, John June, Maxwell, September Brody September number one is July. Number two is August. Number three is June. Number four, September is May. Nate got that one right. It is May. July is when the most voting accidents take place, with nine hundred and thirty six reported in twenty twenty three. That's followed by August at five hundred and seventy four, June at five hundred and sixty one, May at four hundred sixty two, and September fifth place at three hundred sixty eight. So that's got for one hundred twenty five fewer.
00:48:16
Speaker 4: If I was asking that question, it would have been in order list the top three.
00:48:20
Speaker 2: The deadliest months are in the winter, though, which is when the highest percentage of voting accidents result in a fatality. In January, twenty nine percent of accidents had a death, which is about two and a half times higher than July at twelve percent.
00:48:35
Speaker 3: Of those Crazy Duck hunters. It is those crazy going out when the weather's not good.
00:48:40
Speaker 2: All right, Brody is today's winter with nine points, but second place Nate, who got five correct answers, is going to choose where the five hundred dollars donation goes.
00:48:50
Speaker 1: Nate, We'll take a good one.
00:48:53
Speaker 5: We're going to donate to the Station Foundation, which is a nonprofit that caters towards kind of like Tier one military community, and they just started a hunt track where they take super they take like four Tier one vets, maybe Tier two, they take four vets and they run them through the entire process of like never having killed anything in your life besides maybe a human too, running around with guns or running around with bows and shooting a critter.
00:49:21
Speaker 3: What's the difference between Tier one and Tier two?
00:49:23
Speaker 5: Tier two would be like your Navy Seal Ranger Regiment type guys, and like, no, you don't, I don't know. That's a good question. Tier one would be like Ranger Reconnaissance Seal Team six.
00:49:38
Speaker 2: What's the name of the place, one more time?
00:49:39
Speaker 5: The Station Station Foundation Hunt track specific. Yeah, they do phenomenal work. It's it's a really small group that they cater to, but it has a huge impact on those guys, and uh, we'd love that they get a little more recognition.
00:49:53
Speaker 2: That's a worthy place to get our five hundred dollars donation. Join us next week for more Meat Eater Trivia, the only game show where conservation always wins.
00:50:01
Speaker 3: Thanks Spencer.
00:50:02
Speaker 2: Thanks Yes, Spencer from South Dakota.
00:50:05
Speaker 5: He's the host, using those smooth mellow tones.
00:50:08
Speaker 3: He lays them questions down, and he likes taking those two and three year old bucks.
00:50:21
Speaker 1: It is an avid amateur lockhouse
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