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Ep. 262: The Jake Brake

Published: 2021-03-01 10:00:00
Description Show ▼

Steven Rinella talks with Jason Phelps, Dirk Dirham, Seth Morris, Phil Taylor, Corinne Schneider, and Janis Putelis.

Topics discussed: Chester The Investor makes a solid plan on a walleye boat; how skepticism is the chastity of the intellect; reconsidering the use of a sous vide wand to warm up your bathtub; Steve's FOMO were he to die while other humans got to keep living; Texas' record low temperatures wiping out piles of exotic big game; yet another nipple ripping tale; taxidermying an albino porcupine and getting a $70,000 offer for it; how The MeatEater Podcast solves tombstone mysteries; when turkeys are bad turkey callers; how turkey testosterone levels change daily, like Steve's; the reason God made naps; the incredible way turkeys hear and how they're basically GPS devices; how you get Jason Phelp's personal phone when you call Phelps' Game Calls customer service number; breaking down turkey calls; the otherwordly odor of a turkey buzzard; tuning game calls; MeateaterXPhelps calls: the Jake Brake, the Latvian Eagle, and the Easy Clucker; Dirk, the saxophone player; a single production of a black walnut tree; pink vs. red; and more.

 

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Referenced Books

Life & Death at the Mouth of the Musselshell
by H. Duane Hampton
Speaker describes this as their 'new favorite book' and explains how someone used it to solve a 15-year mystery about an unexplained tombstone found along the Muscle Shell River in Montana. The book provided a thorough explanation of what happened to a person named Constant Cassnell (or Quesnell) who was killed in a conflict involving arrows.
Referenced at 00:00:08
The Tenth Legion
by Tom Kelly
Described as a 'famous turkey hunt book' that tells stories about turkey hunting. The speaker references a specific story from the book about watching turkeys in the woods where a hen was calling but gobblers didn't respond, illustrating a point about turkey behavior and calling.
Referenced at 00:00:08
Book about the Fetterman Fight
by Michael Punke
Mentioned as a forthcoming book ('his new book that's coming out') about the Fetterman fight, a historical battle. The speaker notes that in this battle, the Sioux killed about 84 US soldiers mostly with bows and arrows, with about 2,000 warriors against 84 soldiers.
Referenced at 00:00:08