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Speaker 1: Welcome to this country Life. I'm your host, Brent Reeves from coon hunting to trotlining and just in general country living. I want you to stay a while as I share my experiences in life lessons. This country Life is presented by Case Knives from the store More Studio on Meat Eaters Podcast Network, bringing you the best outdoor podcast the airways have to offer. All right, friends, grab a chair or drop that tailgate. I've got some stores to share. The Arkansas Traveler, outdoor shows, dealer summits, and guest lectures at a university have kept me on the highway and in the air for the last few weeks. I got home last night from another out of state trip that I'll tell you about later. But I've been making the rounds and it's and great. I'm excited to tell you all about it and what I learned, and there's no better time to start than right now. The first hunting event I ever remember attending was the Doctor T. E. Ryan Memorial fox Hunt. I couldn't tell you the year or exactly where it took place, but I can surmise I was only six or seven years old and it was held somewhere in the vicinity of ford Ice, Arkansas. The hunt was named in honor of a famed South Arkansas country doctor who said to have delivered upwards of seven thousand babies over his storied career in medicine from eighteen ninety nine to nineteen sixty four. He passed away at the age of eighty six. My dad, as well as many others, at one time or another, were patients of doctor Ryan's, and he told me that conversations with him during any diagnosis for sickness would always turn to hounds before he left his office. So when the annual hunt was held, we would go occasionally to see folks trade dogs here and there, and visit with most of the men that my dad hunted with already, and of course listen to the dog races. Now, compared to the hunting exposed and outdoor shows that today, that is kind of a stretch. But there was usually a vendor or two there making name plates for dog collars and selling flashlights or a few other select hound related hunting items. There weren't a lot of kids there all women, but there was always a few of each. Now fast forward to the last couple of weeks and the places I've been in the world of hunting outdoor exposed, and you can easily easily see the huge progression that's been made in that arena. The first trip this year was the hair This's Burgh, Pennsylvania. Harrisburg is the capital of the Keystone State, and it was there that I met up with my friends from Case Knives to spend a couple of days in their booth, meeting and talking to folks that brave the February weather to attend the show. The wind Hill was twenty below zero and the Susquehanna River was frozen over. There was three feet of snow piled up in the backyard of the airbnb we were staying in the snow that had been pushed off the streets, lining the curves like river levees, directing the floor of traffic along icy corridors of asphalt. You don't have to be a detective to figure out that the people who lived side by side in the townhouses of Harrisburg, at at least on Penn Street, they have dogs. I felt like Indiana Jones, hopping around like I was meticulously picking and choosing each stepped to avoid stepping and in disaster. I left Arkansas that had been shut down for a week due to teen digit cold in eight inches of snow. Now that's what the folks out in PA call a Tuesday. Life was carrying on in what would have completely halted living from my folks down in the south Land. But there in the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex, over ae thousand exhibitors had gathered for a nine day event under six hundred and fifty thousand square feet of roof. Now that's fifteen acres. If we were going to flood that space with a foot of water to duck hunt in, it would take nearly five million gallons to do it. The show runs for nine days, and they told me that between two hundred and three hundred thousand people will walk the halls in the rows of exhibits looking at the latest and greatest items associated with the outdoor sports. Kyle cloud Line, who the zip O Case Museum and Store in Bradford, and marketing team Guru John Pantuso and I manned Booth two eighty on Saturday and Sunday the first week of the show. Sweet Jesus, I wish you had a Nickela just for everyone I met stop to visit. I can't tell you how many pocket knized folks brought along that when they pulled them out of their pocket, they lied with Grandpa gave me this knife, or I got this from my dad. Those were the people I went to see but didn't know they were coming. I talked to so many was similarly deep rooted connections with the knives they brought and the stories that they told. Also met a bunch from that part of the world who are regular listeners of this show. It was a blessing for me to look at them face to face and see their expressions and hear what they enjoy and get out of this weekly calamity. That was the top list item for me, outside of spending time with my case family. My only complaint there just wasn't enough time to listen to everyone's laundry list of stories. The people were so kind and generous with their time, but they didn't want to hold others up who were there to visit too, and they shuffled off just as they'd arrived, smiling and looking as if they were having the time of their life. I never heard one complaint or one negative comment. Those Yankees know how to have a good time and the hospitality they extended to me started the minute I got in the uber car at the airport. My driver started off the conversation by introducing himself and asking me what I was doing in Pennsylvania. When I told him about the sports show, we started talking about hunting and fishing. He said he loved fishing as a kid back in the country of his birth. And through his fairly thick accent, I learned that he was the father of three boys, seven, four, three months, and through my fairly thick accent, he learned that I had three kids as well. It was a twenty minute ride from the airport to the place where I was staying with Kyle and John, and in that short span of time made a new friend. I asked him about the long hours of driving folks around, and he smiled and said that it was loud at his house. The children were always making noise and breaking things. And he glanced back at me with a big smile and said, I told my wife I'd worked many hours if she'd stay at home with the children. I laughed when he said that. He looked back at me, giggling and said, sir, you know. Then he told me their names, and the pride in which he spoke about him made me know that just like me, we were both working, but would really preferred to be at home with the folks that were breaking things and making all that racket. It was the same with the family I met at the show. People may have wanted to shake my hand and talk about how much they enjoyed the show, but they really turned it up when they introduced me to their kids, and their nieces and nephews, and believe it or not, some of their parents. It was all the same, regardless of the demographic I was speaking to or the geographic location of where I was doing. It from a man seeking to find a better way of life for his family in the new Country and the massive people I met and watched in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to the generational lineage of people I met in Knoxville, Tennessee, a week earlier. That's right, we're going backwards in time. Kids, Your old uncle Brin has been making tracks these past few weeks. And a week before I was in Pennsylvania, I had the dubious honor of being a guest lecturer at the University of Tennessee. Ronnie Cowan a wildlife biologist and professor at the ut Institute of Agriculture. He invited me to speak to his class on hunting heritage and how it connected with conservation. I was surprised and flattered and humbled by the invitation. Then the months of weeks leading up to being there, Ronnie kept referring to the task God I'd agreed to do as relaxed and basically an episode of the show. Just talk about the stuff you talk about every week. Simple enough, I can do that. I was scheduled to speak in two sessions, one class on Monday and the other on Wednesday. No worries. I got this. Talking is what I do. Then, a couple hours into my trip on Sunday, before the first class that was scheduled to start the next morning, it was canceled due to the snow and ice that had carpet bombed the South forty years since the last time I'd attended a college class, and I got a snow day. I was missing a scheduled college class some things. Ronnie picked me up Monday morning and took me to the campus to show me the classroom where I should have been speaking that day and would be speaking on Wednesday. Then we walked over to the Dean's office, where I met a host of ladies and administrative roles who run the Extension department, directed by doctor Justin Riin Hart. Now being in Arkansas, man, I thought it'd be fun to tease that group of ladies I only just met, and it was fun for them. I met my match quickly and one of them bested my jabs with a knockout left hook. Reminded me that they have a national championship in baseball. That was well played, missy. Doctor Ryan Hart and I visited in his office about growing up in the country and the things he did in his early years of extension work. We talked about my experiences with the Extension office and people who work there in Arkansas. Then he made me a little nervous by saying, doctor Keith Carver, the senior Vice Chancellor, is looking forward to attending your lecture. Lecture. I never said I was given a lecture. Lectures are what professors and angry wife and parents give. I know this because I've sat through countless numbers of them in all three categories. This thing just got serious, and I'm having serious second thoughts that I may not have prepared enough to do this properly. Then he added that there would be other faculty members and guests and attendance. I couldn't wait to get back to the hotel so I could jump out the window of my eleventh floor room. Friently. You took this assignment far too lightly, and not only are you going to embarrass yourself and meet either, but miss it from the dean's office is going to make me cry the next time she seized me. That night at supper, Ronnie and his wife Page and their daughter Emory treated me to some good groceries down at Calhoun's on the River. If you're in Knoxville, I highly recommend it. Doctor Reinhard joined us well, and I was feeling more and more at ease with my new contingent of friends, even though that lecture thing was still nagging away in the recesses of my brain. These were good people, and I felt as if I'd still be able to count them as friends. After I crashed and burned in the classroom the day after tomorrow, and they all looked at me collectively and said, bless it's heart. Tuesday morning started off early with coffee and a ride with doctor Reinhardt, who by now, at his request, had become just good old Justin as we shared similar stories of our upbringing and affinity for bird dogs. We met Ronnie at a predetermined location and followed him out to the ancestral home of Elias Crawford. Now, the snow was heavy and blanketed the hills a brilliant white and clearly visible through the leafless hardwoods that rose eleven hundred feet above sea level in Severe County, Tennessee. They're the family built cabin made from hand hewn logs, waited a lie, his wife, Victoria, and Sage. There are three year old, half pint sized and oven of a daughter who was about to come my new bestest friend, Elius had a smoke going in the wood stove, and we introduced ourselves and got better acquainted while warming up and sharing a pot of coffee. Now, the reason for our visit was for writing to show me part of the curriculum and the demonstrations he does with his students by going on a bird hunt. Now in the South, maybe up north too, I don't know. But down here, when you say bird hunt, everybody knows you mean quaill. These weren't wild birds, but the gist of the exercise is an introduction of hunting as part of conservation, and for many of the wildlife science students that take Ronnie's course, I was surprised to learn that a large percentage of those students had never fired a gun until participating in Ronnie's classes. They learned strict gun safety and are properly educated on the use of firearms by certified instructors before ever being taken to the field. The Crawford family graciously hosts the students for this and other events, and Elias is an integral part of helping each receive the best experience possible, not not only demonstrating the time on a tradition of hunting quail, but also how all three man quail in the environment are also interconnected. That was what Ronnie wanted me to address the following day in my lecture that I had respectfully asked justin to refer to a classroom visit so it might dampen some of my anxiety about who all was going to be there. The hours flew by, and I was up bright and early the next morning preparing for class to start that afternoon. I felt it important for me to get up early. That way, I'd have as much time as possible to stress about volunteering in the volunteer state to do an upper class college level lecture being attended by the vice chancellor the university. Then, as if by a judicial decree, and with no governor's last minute reprieve, it was time to hit toward the classroom, where literally tens of people were as simple to what was loosely rumored to be a lectured doctor. Keith Carver stood outside the door, centing on for the education being provided to the students who would eventually be forming statutes and laws. Governor and how we interacted with the environment and its native is a learned protector for all who studied there under his watch. I thought to myself, really, this is your last chance to run away, because just like back in the old swat days, once you make injury, it's mission first and there's no turning back. I was as nervous as I've ever been, and I never really get nervous, especially when I'm talking about something I'm familiar with, and what they wanted me to talk about is what I talk about every week. So while was I nervous. I don't know, but after doctor Carver introduced me to every important person even remotely connected to the University of Tennessee's Institute of Agriculture that would be attended my lecture, I was seriously considered feigning a heart attack or having a real I hadn't made up my mind at that point either way. I was about to be leaving on a stretcher. All right, let's get started. Wait a minute, who said that, Ronnie? That gumt, Ronnie, we're really going to do this. I blacked out partially during Ronnie's introduction to me, and came to about ten minutes into my lecture. I was doing pretty good. I assumed everyone appeared to be awake and paying attention. Well, that mean they ain't chunking nothing at me. And regardless, the more I talked, the more I relaxed and enjoyed it. Two thirds of my presentation was just me bumping my gums about my life and experiences with sporadic moments of clarity. And then I opened up the floor to anyone who wanted to ask a question, and that's when we really started communicating. I was more than impressed by Ronnie's students. A few had actually reached out to me on social media long before I'd ever been invited to speak there. One couple, Rusty and Alexis, both students of Ronnie's, are engaged to be married. I remembered him reaching out telling me about the engagement and me saying, I prefer an Alexis over any other. And I met another student, Russell White, who's getting ready to graduate before long with his degree. He went to college after being in the service, and he said he was led to go into wildlife management after listening to this country life and how I talked about my love for wild things. That was a humbling moment and one I didn't take lightly or have stopped thinking about the impact that we all have on each other. I don't want to wish Rusty Is, Alexis and Russell and all the students that I met there that day the best of luck in their careers. The rest of you need to know that the Institute of Agriculture at the University of Tennessee is doing some great things and some great people are behind it. Keith Carver, Justin Reinhart, and Ronnie Cowan and my favorite Balls fans, Missy Kitts, just to name a few. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention a couple of ladies that I met in doctor Reinhart's office, Dawn and Ashley. These ladies compiled a huge box of swag from the university and they send it to our house. I get packages all the time, but when I saw it was from the Agon Institute, I knew it was going to be something really good. I opened it up and there was an envelope with a card addressed to me, and on the outside of the envelope it read, this card is for Brent, the rest is for Bailey. I opened the card and I read a very heartfelt thanks from doctor Justin Reinhart. Then, addressed to Bailey was this note, Bailey, we know that you're a razorback at heart, and rightfully so, but we would like to stend an invitation for you to visit the University of Tennessee when the time comes for you to pick your college. Now, how cool is that? I can tell you. Bailey thought he was very cool. That's how I've spent the last few weeks traveling back and forth across the eastern half of this country, visiting old friends, and making new ones. And one of my trips in and around Tennessee, I was asked to speak at the store More Dealer summ at Nashville. Now, this convention was for the company dealers that sell the buildings like the one I have where I'm currently recording this podcast, you know, the store More Studio. I would arrive late in the evening and get up the next morning, have a cup of Joe, and speak for fifteen minutes to all the good folks on behalf of the owners of the company. Then I'd be on my way to the next event, which, for the sake of clarity, was the trip I talked about in Pennsylvania. I'm not purposely trying to confuse you. It just comes naturally to me anyway. I wasn't there long, or as my grandmother used to say in reference and a quick turnaround, that lasted about as long as John did in the army. Now, I never knew who John was or why he left the army so quickly, but that would accurately described how long I was with the folks at the store More and More's the pity we've gotten to know them over these last few months. The owner and CEO Darren. Warren's story is phenomenal, and I've talked before about how he turned about with childhood cancer into a philanthropy for the folks that helped heal him at Saint Jude's Hospitals, so they in turn can help others. Daring's a master family within that business that I for want him happy to have been adopted into. Graham and Kevin, Caitlin, my new friend John and so many others that take pride in what they do and serving others. And that's something I can get behind if you think about it. All the things I've talked about in this episode is about those kinds of people, from the Uber driver to the students at the University of Tennessee, all of them, in some capacities are or will be serving others, either directly or indirectly. American novelist Henry Miller said one's destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things. With even the smallest amount of imagination, we can all find that connection between what we do and serving others, even if it's just a weekly attempt at making you smile and want me to feel it home. Thank you so much for listening. Until next time week. This is Brent Reeves, sign it off, y'all. We careful
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