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Speaker 1: Welcome to Wired to Hunt's rut Fresh Radio, bringing you the latest reports from the White Tailed Woods and now your host, Spencer new Hearth. Welcome to Wired to Hunt's rut Fresh Radio powered by First Light. I have Spencer new Hearth and this is the kickoff episode to season six of the miniseries. Welcome to episode four of the Wired Hunt podcast. And this is the first episode of season six of our rut Fresh Radio miniseries six seasons. Mark, can you believe it? It's crazy. I can't believe what we've been doing this that long. We're we're getting old, my friend. Yeah, And the same conversation happened last s at the beginning, it was like, is it season five? No, now it's season four. Now it's season five, and it was the same sort of realization. So season six, September one is when this episode will drop. And this is the earliest we have ever released a rut Fresh Radio episode. Um, if you are not familiar with the podcast, this is something that's going to come out every single Wednesday from here until the end of one and on a traditional episode, which this is not, you're going to hear a little intro from Mark and I where we talk about what we've seen in the woods recently and maybe some historical patterns that we've noticed around this time of year. And then you're gonna get interviews from four or five white tail hunting experts, from voices that you're probably familiar with um that span across the country, and you're gonna hear what they've seen for the last week and what their preview of the haunting activity to come is and some of the things that you're gonna here talks about our moon phases, weather patterns, crop status, browse status, hunting pressure signmaking, anything that a whitetail hunter cares about. And you're gonna hear from public land hunters and private land managers and bow hunters and gun hunters and aggressive hunters and patient hunters and mobile hunters in a tree and still hunters on the ground and traveling hunters that are out to state and those that are on their own turf. The idea is to like bring you the most timely deer reports available anywhere in our space. And this is just you know, a preview of what's to come for the week and what these hunters have already seen. And we're gonna wrap the whole thing up in twenty five minutes, so you can listen to this on your lunch break at work, or on your commute to work, or wherever you can find just twenty five minutes in your weekly schedule. Mark anything to add to to what rout Fresh is, Yeah, I would just add my goal every week will be too stress you out by using some kind of law drawn story to really really push it tight to that minute. Let it and see if I can stretch out longer. But I think you nailed it. I think you nailed that. We we want to help people with in the field insights that they can put into action themselves the very next day. And uh and that's what we've been doing now for five years, and this will be the sixth. And I think the one thing that's a little bit different this year, Spencer, that you know, of course, you know, is I've got a crazier than usual travel schedule this year. I've got nine out of state hunts, So I think I'm gonna be gone eight or nine weeks this fall and sometimes completely off the grid for a long period of time. So I think there's gonna be more weeks than usual that I'm just not going to be able to join you for the intro, so you have the keys to the castle. My friend. I'm gonna let you run with this h as much as you want, and I'll be here when I can be there. If not, um, you know, I'm sure you will handle these episodes beautifully. Maybe you can bring a friend along or two as well, and uh, you know, the show will go on. So I'm excited that we're in a position now that you you have put together a beautiful a beautiful thing here with Refresh Radio Spencer, and I know that the listeners out there know you and are excited to hear from every week. So that's the only thing that's really different. Otherwise, we're gonna keep on getting great up to date from the Fields reports, and uh we don't have those today, they'll do a spencer today. Is a little bit different because we are you know, seasons have only opened maybe today or yesterday or tomorrow in the states that are opening this week. But I did feel like, shoot for people that do have a season right now at hate Ken not to have anything for him, you know. Yeah, Yeah, we're recording this on August thirty one, and I feel like some of the only states open the country an hour maybe, Like there's a very early season in Tennessee, very early see in South Carolina. Florida of course has has a weird brought that starts earlier than the rest of the country. Uh. But then the day that this episode drop September one, you have a whole bunch of states west of the Missouri River that are opening. Um, you have like Kentucky that opens, So this is a podcast for them. What you're gonna miss on this episode, Like, like we've said, you're not getting those interviews, Um, so you're not gonna get these one to ten questions that I ask everybody, and what that is At the beginning of every interview I ask every guess, I say, in the last week or so, what has been the buck activity on a scale of one to ten? And to the end of the interview, I asked the same question this coming week, what do you predict the activity is going to be on a scale of one to ten. So hopefully if you're sort of passively listening to this episode, you're in your garage working on some wrenches or something, you pipe up for those two questions. UM, so you can either get excited or feel pessimistic about the movement to come. How do you you how do you see people using this on a week to week basis, Spenser, Because we've got talked to a lot of people, and we've got to hear stories and things. And when I hear that, you know, when I listened myself, and I listened oftentimes when the new episodes dropped to hear all the interviews that you do, um and it often it doesn't necessarily make me feel pessimistic if I feel if we hear bad reports and people, but it does change my plans a little bit, you know, if maybe you know there might be something new coming down the road in the forecast, or there might be something you know, when we get in October and we're talking about prerode activity things and it might just be the little edge I need to say, you know what, I do want to get aggressive and jump in on this crazy thing I was gonna do, or maybe you know what everyone west to me over the last couple of days, we've been seeing a really slow activity. Maybe I should pull back and just hunt does and the edges tomorrow. It's that kind of stuff. It just kind of slides my reactions a little but this way or that, or sometimes they'll spark a little idea that gives me this kind of creative you know, push to try something new or to consider this idea that so and so recommended. Um, well, are there any other ways you've been seeing the stuff being useful for you or your listeners now and that's you put it really well there, Mark Um. Pessimism probably isn't the right word for it. It's probably just adjusting your hunting style for what's to come. If if it is uh an episode that drops on October and you have yet to be in the woods this fall, but you are going to be in the woods on October fifte and sixteenth and seventeen, hopefully what you hear from our guests can give you uh like an idea of what you should be doing this weekend. If you should be really aggressive and you should be hunting and cover around acorns or um, the weather has been stagnant um and and it's going to be even hotter this coming weekend, and so maybe you should do something untraditional like hunting near water, or you should play it safe and hunting observation stand and sort of get ready for pre rout that's to come in a few weeks. So you're right, it's not it's not so much about being optimistic and pessimistic. It's just about like appropriately adjusting your hunting style. Um. And so, because we don't have these four guests he talked to you you this week, I sort of went back and looked at what we've maybe heard from in other early September episodes and what sort of success is we've seen with those folks. And there was one thing that really jumped out to me when I was talking to hunters that were successful, whether it was in North Dakota or Kentucky or Nebraska. Um, and one of them is that they rarely entered the woods blind on September one and then had success. UM. We we published an article recently on the media dot com by Sam Lungri and that talked about how to kill a bowl elk on opening day. We also published an article from Dylan Tramp about how to kill a white tail bucking opening day. And it was really eye opening that the sentiment from sort of both of them was like, you have to know where the bulls and the box are. It's this isn't the rout, this isn't like November six where you can enter the woods and just like pick up on some fresh sign and then have really good odds at killing a deer. You need to have some intel, whether that's from boots on the ground scouting or long distance glassing or trail cameras or just knowing historical patterns. That is like sort of the difference maker this time of year between somebody like having good bucks in the area and they kill one or they don't. Yeah, I think you're right. This is the time for surgical strikes. This is the time for careful thought through hunts. You know, going in for a reason to a spot for a reason, with a plan in place, expecting a specific movement pattern that's definitely going to give you your best chance. There's there's very little that willynilly movement right now. Deer doing things and specific places for specific reasons, and you gotta know that. You gotta know where that's at. And if you don't know where that's that when you start your hunt, I think you need to spend some time on the front and figuring that out. So for example, I'm out here on an early season white till hot myself right now, which which I'll talk a lot more about next week. But the first day we got into this area, we weren't hunting, we were scouting. We got out and last and observed, and then the next day we went in slipped in some spots and are hanging cameras. So it's all about getting that intail so that we can start making thoughtful strikes. So make a really good point, I think that is that's key. And you know the great thing about these really really early seasons, and really a great team about any opening day is that these deer have not been pressured for months and months and months, right, so they are operating normally. But that will only last so long. So you get a handful of hunts before they catch onto you. So you want to make sure those first few hunts, those first few days, you know, are are smart there can take an advantage of them, because you know, three or four or five days in all of a sudden, they know, hey we're getting hunted. Time switch it up. So be smart with those first times and take advantage of these patterns that are still there. Yeah, and another common denominator from the early September rut fresh successful hunts that we've talked about and this will come as surprise, and nobody that food was a common denominator. Um. Of course, you have your obvious food sources that any hunter can identify, like corn or beans or hay fields. But what are maybe some of the less obvious food sources Mark Um, that hunter should be looking for this time of year. You know, it's so location dependent. There's not any one thing. But I do think a very generality or a generality to keep in mind is simply the importance of brows and the importance of native vegetation. You know, there's some places that I remember one year on a September hunt. Um, I was assuming that the deer would be keen on alfalfa fields, but they're pretty far away, and I saw there'd be this big, long travel pattern back and forth thoself alfa fields. What turned out to be the case is that there was actually this really lush food right along the river bottom, right on the river's edge, and more deer we're just going and hang out right on the river edge and feeding on that vegetation, then traveling half a mile to the alfalfa. So that was all of a sudden something I didn't really pick up until the end of the trip. But once I did, well, here it is, here's the bed defeed pattern. They're just traveling right to the edge of the water and walking along and feeding on that. So it's just something to keep an eye on, find out, you know, watch the deer, watch what they're doing, observed, and take notice of that. If there's certain types of you know, there's certain types of things they're browsing on more than others, go take a look at that the next day and see if that's something you can key in on elsewhere. Or little openings in the timber, little spots for more stun that gets down there, and there's a diverse mix of vegetation. Those are simple things, especially if crops fields are not available in your spot in your area that are worth Keevan tabs them because that's sometimes the best too available. Another thing which super dependent on what's going on in your area, but any kind of mass tree, fruit, trees, per simmons, if there's anything that's dropping early, um, you know, obviously key in on something along lines those lives, but that would have to be you know, what's happening in Florida will be very different that what's happening Kentucky, what's really very different than what's in North Dakota. So the key thing I think is be watching and be very very attentive to what those deer feeding on. So when you're glassing or if you've got a camera that's overlooking the field, pay attention to what those deer are keying in on right now. Once you know that, then that's what you need to key on. But you got to connect those two dots. Yeah. Um, there's just a ton of food available right now. And one of my favorite articles that we've published so far in something you wrote Mark, it was ten natural food sources every deer hunter should know and if you are a white tail hunter in September October, you should go check that out. Um, because everything in there, or most of this stuff and there is relevant to hunters across the country. They're trying to kill a white tail. There's a ton of options right now, so it's worth knowing what those options are besides the corn, soybeans and hay fields. Yeah. Yeah, And I will say you know, if you do have fields, it's it's pretty hard to beat alfalfa or clover right now. Or if you've got green soybeans, I mean, if you do have those, just don't forget about how effective those can be. Yeah, and then the the third um factor that's come up in early September successful haunts that we've talked about in the past on Red Fresh Radio, and this has been less of a theme, but it's still something to consider, especially this year. But that's hunting water. This is specifically relevant for hunters in the Dakotas or Nebraska, Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, which are also all states that have early September openers. But if you look at the drought monitor map for every single one of those states, pretty much anything west of the Mississippi is in like a D three or a D four level drought, which is like extreme level droughts. And so maybe water hasn't really been part of your game plan in the past when you're hunting in early September to early October, but for hunters in that part of the country, that should absolutely be part of the playbook this year. You brought up a really good point where that drought, I mean, water can be so the effectiveness of hunting water can be so dependent on the availability of it, right, And so when it's a rare commopity all of a sudden really focuses that movement to the few places where its found. So our mutual friend Tony Peterson and uh fellow water to Hunt podcaster, actually is doing a series the talking about water right now on his Foundations miniseries. So if folks haven't been listening to that, make sure you pull up the episodes of Foundations, which to come out every Tuesday and this month, I think this week and last week or this weekend, next week or come out here soon. He's got several episodes all about this very topic. So how to take advantage of hunting water, standing water, moving water, all that kind of stuff. So if you want to deep dive on that aspect, tune into that because Tony is a master using water, especially at early season public Land White Till Hunts, He's really figured it out. Yeah, and a spoiler, but this is something that's going to be a theme for probably every episode going forward of Rod Fresh this year. If you hunt left of the Mississippi River, Um, you're probably dealing with this drought that makes an impact right now where water sources are limited. In a few weeks from now, we're probably going to know what the damage has banned from e h D. A few weeks after that, we're gonna be talking about how it's been a really early harvest because these places didn't get a lot of rain. Um. So that's something that, uh, despite deer huntings, maybe deer hunters maybe not paying attention to the weather in June, July, August, it's gonna have an impact for the rest of the fall. Yeah. Yeah, it's a really really interesting point. And now that we've kind of done this so many years, we can sort of see how there are those trickled own effects where one thing impacts the whole season kind of unexpectedly. But now we're can I can see those patterns now you bring that up. It's interesting. Yeah. And so looking specifically at the forecast for this weekend, I'm not seeing anything out of the ordinary for weather. It's not gonna be really hot, so I can be really cold for in these states that have the early September opener. But I have noticed like really erratic wind directions that I normally don't associate with this time of year. Um. And that's something that can really benefit mobile hunters that have the pility to hunt a southwest wind one night tear down and then hunted northeast wind the next night, tear down, then hunting west wind the next night. I know that's the strategy that you're going to be using here, Mark, So, like, what is your early September gear list look like now versus how is it different in October and November specifically with your mobile hunting gear. Yeah, you make a good point. Um, I've noticed the same thing, pretty standard. Pretty um oh, what's the we'd' looking here for? Temperatures that are all kind of average temperatures right now pretty stable as what I'm looking for, but the wind not as much, which is kind of funky. And so yeah, being mobile is a great Um, it's a great tool to have in your toolbox when you have a hunting situation like that. And I am, like I mentioned hunting that style right now. I don't think my gear looks terribly different right now than at other times of the year, with a few exceptions. Um, but you know, the key for me is having a good silent, lightweight pair of tin sticks and some kind of you know, elevated hunting tools. So for me, that means the saddle. Some people would use a mobile tree stamp, but The big thing is just making sure that you have that system dial so being very comfortable with getting up in the tree quietly, quickly, and efficiently. That's something that you know, if you've got to hunt. Come up this weekend and you're listening to this on a Wednesday, and you plan on being out there on Saturday and you are gonna be hunting mobile, here's one piece of advice I can give you. Take an a half hour tonight or an hour tomorrow and go practice climbing up in a tree in the yard. Do it quietly, do it with all your gear, use the whole thing, and just get the kinks out of your system. Make sure you remember that, oh yeah, I gotta make sure I clip on my stick to my right hip, and don't forget to tie my bowl roper. All these little things I mean for me every year, the first hunt of the year, the first couple of hunts of the year, there's just always something stupid. I forget, something silly that I do wrong. So get a practice run before you start hunting. Make sure that when you get out there on that first hunt, that that first ton is as good as it possibly can be. Because we alluded to earlier. You know, we only get a few first tons of the year, so you want to take advantage of them. But yeah, I'm going in there with my lightweight climbing sticks, going there in my sattle. I can slip in, you know, just yesterday, this is what I did on our opening day. We're slipping in quietly and got set up in a brand new spot and didn't turn out the way I wanted. So I pulled everything down after dark and I'm slipping out again. And now today I can set up in a brand new place just based off wind direction, just based on sightings. Um. And you're not beholden to anything. You can constantly be on the best sign with the best wind every single day. It's it's a great way to do it. It is a little extra work, um, but it's one of those things that I always think it's worth it. So highly recommend that mobile system. When you've got wonky wins like this. It's really easy if you're just stuck on per minute sets to say, well, when is not quite right, But I've got that set already set up, so might as we was hunt again. Um. You don't have that temptation when you're constantly adjusting based off what's there with a mobile set up, So highly recommend it. Definitely good tool with this forecast coming up, and you've already been in the field mark and has some intel in a way that most hunters across the country probably don't. So although this isn't the traditional episode of the four guests lineup and talking to hunters from across the nation, I do want to ask you, like, what is your prediction for the coming week on a scale of one to ten for buck movement. Yes, I'm glad we get at least one of these predictions in here. Um. You know, as you mentioned, we have a relatively unexciting forecast, and you know, both in the West where I am, as well as over in Kentucky, North Dakota, South Dakota. A bunch of these states that checked their forecasts and pretty much everyone has the same thing. Stable temper, sure's kind of average warm stuff, no major precipitation events. UM. So because of that, I'm not super duper. You know, shooting the star is optimistic. I'm kind of the middle of the road right now, So I think it's like a five, five or six. Um. I say that because there's no weather that makes it extra special. But at the same time, it's not bad because this is the beginning of the season and opening days, opening weekends, opening weeks. You know, as we've mentioned, they can really be a great opportunity to catch a deer unaware, a deer still on their major bad to feed pattern, and if you know it, this is a great time to get out there and move. And a lot of times that these deer they're moving a lot in daylight still regardless of how warm it is, because they've been doing that all summer, and until they have a reason to change, you know, hunting pressure, or once we get later into the year, they do start adjusting and reacting to hop whether differently. But right now, I'm not too concerned about being eighty degrees. That's okay. Five days, three eighty degree is you know what. I love a coal front shirt. But I still think I got a chance, and I think everybody else out there does too. So you know, a five or six to get out there, make your own stars and uh get that, get that opening with buckets. Yeah, and you can tell me this is hyperbolic, Mark, but I consider like this first week in September to be maybe like the best stretch for the next eight weeks until we get to like October UM. And this is sort of ignoring the like perfect cold front that might land on October eight um, and like what your crop status is on October fifteenth and stuff like that. But I think this first week in September is like maybe your best shot at a mature buck for potentially like the next two months or so. Yeah, you know, I don't think you're too far off. I think um, I think it really is. And and that same thing could apply to anyone's first week to a degree. Right, whatever the first week you're see in the first few days of your season will be one of your best chances until late October, whether that's now or mid September or a little later in September. But if you do have that first week right now, it is probably the best of the opening weeks because of all things we just talked about. There's there's no better time to catch them on their bed feed pattern. There's no better time to catch them still in those summer kind of stupid phase, or they move as much as they do and they're as active as they are in that rowed up still and unaware and and not too concerned about what's going on. So so yeah, it is. It is a good time to be in the tree. I think a lot of people are gonna pass some success this week despite the kind of blah whether well said, all right, Mark, let's do a preview of the Wired Hunt content that's to come for the rest of the fall. And I am like a big Minnesota Vikings fan, but when the season ends in like January, I don't usually start listening to Vikings podcast again until like August. And I think there's a lot of hunters that are in the same boat. So maybe we have some listeners that stepped away, uh from listening to hunting podcasts since like December, and they're just now getting back into it and they've maybe missed all the news that we've talked about for the last few months. So what should folks know about for Wired to Hunt this fall? Oh my goodness, Spencer. First off, shame on anyone who stopped listening until now, but welcome back, um, But you make a great point. Uh, there's been so much man, we as you know. Obviously, we've kind of relaunched Wired to Hunt this year in a big new way, so there's a lot. We've got our own website now of sorts. It's it's the v meat Eater dot com slash wired and that's the Wired to Hunt website homepage now, and there's dozens of new articles, lots and lots and lots of new content from some really great hunters, covering off facets, covering hunting, scouting, management, uh, habitat work, public land, private land, every thing you could think. We've got to cover now. So there's these new articles on the wire to the website. We have the Wired to Hunt Weekly newsletter which comes out every Monday, which has kind of an update for me and then links to the best of our new articles. We relaunched the wire Dunk YouTube channels. We have new how to videos coming out every Monday there which are coming from folks like me, Tony Peterson and guests, guest contributors like Levi Morgan, who just posted one from Levi. He's a like seventeen time world champion archer talking about how he fine tunes his bowl accessories. Tony his covered stuff about staging areas, and I've covered stuff up betting areas recently. And these are short, punchy, helpful how to so definitely check that out. Um, we have a new podcast mini series which I alluded to earlier, which is Tony's Show. So we've gotta we've gotta pack podcast schedule. Every Tuesday is the Foundation's mini series and that's this episode was Tony breaks down one specific foundational whitetail topic in detail and kind of gives you like a college masterclass lecture on that for about fifteen minutes every week every Tuesday, and they're they're great. And then Wednesday, of course is this one the rough Fresh podcast mini series, would you Spencer? And then every Thursday is the main episode with me and my guests in the kind of long form conversations we've traditionally done. So that's the podcast. Those are the videos. Um. You know, of course you are helping manage a lot that's going on with the website, and we've got a lot more contributors there. Um myself, you play newcome Tony. We've added some new contributors people at Bomartonic, John Eberhart, EMILEC. Kantner, uh Andy May, Tony Hansen, El Gilstrom and more. Um, there's a lot, so so yes, in short, be checking out what we've got going on at Wired to Hunt because if you love white tail hunting, we are pumping it out for as a rate that has never been done before. Um, and it's keeping you and me very busy, isn't it. Yeah? And then the Back forty though is over with, So is there something that's like taking its place, mark or anything you can talk about on that front? Yes, good point, Back forty. The Back forty show is done. Um, although I am going out there and helping with some of the new hunter mentorship programs out there. Um, so we're actually gonna do a hunt a couple of hunts this year there where I will be mentoring some new hunters, which would be cool. But yeah, we're actually working on a couple of new shows. UM. Too soon to announce all the details, but I can tell you one of them is going to be filmed this year and released this year, and that is actually gonna feature YouTube. My friend, you and me and a couple of our friends will be going and chasing some running white tails across the country and we will be documenting that for a new show that super excited about that will be coming out later this year. So stay tuned. You will have some some exciting time in the tree or in the field with Spencer new heart to watch very soon. So not only so you get to watch Spencer in his apron took an up tasty coyote me, you can now watch Spencer chasing white tails so big hear my friend, I'm stoked. It's it's the thing I have been most excited about all year from medory content, So I'm really excited to get started on that. But the takeaway messages that there is like an overwhelming amount of Wired Hunt content being made. Um whether you want to read what we have to say, listen to what we have to say, or watch this new stuff. Uh there there is more than ever. And then specific assignments Mark if if you're hitting the woods this weekend, I want you to go to the media dot com backslash Wired and to check out some articles that we have if you are going to be hunting this weekend, we have some really useful material like how to kill an early season buck in September from Tony Peterson, the best setups for killing a Velvet buck from Tony Peterson, how to kill a white tail buck in Opening Day from Dylan Tramp, and how to kill a white tail buck hunting water, which we talked about earlier. Mark, why that's gonna be so relevant again from Tony Peterson. Now, if you don't have an opener this weekend, say you gotta wait like another four or five or six weeks. The hunters that can't hunt quite yet, we have a ton of useful material for you as well, like a Beaumartonic piece on how to how to eat scout big woods for white tails, the best archery advice I've ever gotten from Mark Kenyan, how to chum white tails, which is something that is very seasonal right now from Alex Gillstrom. And then three mods that will improve your mobile hunting setup from Andy May. Now those are are written things that are gonna help folks out right. Now, what about Mark for old videos or old podcasts that you would recommend for white tail hunters in early September. Yeah, h you got a lot there on the written side. And it's funny you bring it up because I actually was working on a new episode of the wire Time podcast. It's gonna go out tomorrow, So if you're listening to them on Wednesday on Thursday, you're gonna hear this new episode that I'm working on, and I was going to do a compilation episode in which I go back and pull all of the best insights from previous podcasts about Honey in September, because I thought for sure there must be a lot of great stuff that we could point back to. And I went and looked, and we didn't have anything. I have no good September podcasts, so I don't have anything good to point people towards. But I do I can tell you that we created new stuff for tomorrow. So everything you know what we covered here today is going to be like really nice appatizer for tomorrow's episode in which we do a really deep dive into a bunch of these topics with A self and Tony Peterson and four other guests. So we kind of have a best of September full month strategy conversation that I think, Um, if you if you got excited what we're talking about here today, you're really gonna like tomorrow's as we get kind of an expanded view of all these ideas and more so, So I would just stay tune in for our main episode coming in hot It's called Mastering September, So tune into that as soon as it drops. I like it. That is going to be a fun listen any other final words of wisdom Mark before we get out of here. You know, the only thing I would say is you listed a whole bunch of homework for us UM with all those articles sensor. Uh, and that's I love it. I think we should drop all the links for those in the show description so that people can have a place to go find them. So let's try to do that. Let's try to put this in the show notes. Like so if you were to go to Spotify you click the link for the information, or if you just go to the podcast page on our website, the media to dot com and navigate to this episode, you know website, you would be able to see the links so that you know, I don't think anyone's can remember all those nine different articles, but just go to the website to the podcast for this episode, you'll see the links there and there's all the reading that Spencer mentioned. I think that's probably the easiest way for people to do that, don't you. Yes, I like it. That is something that we will try to do on every episode is drop some relevant links in the description. Uh. And I genuinely mean it. That these are like some of the best white tailed white tail killers I know. UM, and they're writing about their specialty, whether it's Tony Peterson hunting water Baumartinicke scouting big woods UM or Andy May talking about mods to a mobile hunting setup. UM. I'm really excited about this content. To go to the show notes and you'll find what we have available there. Um alrt Mark, Well, let's get out here. Good luck in the woods this weekend, and until we talk next time, stay Wired to Hunt.