00:00:05 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…
00:00:14 Speaker 1: My name is Clay Nucomb and this is a production of the bear Grease podcast called the…
00:00:00 Speaker 1: I need to apologize for something, and I was like, what. He goes. Back there when he…
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On Saturday evening, June 20, 2026, the Compton Hunting & Fishing Club in Southern California hosted another outstanding Friends of the NRA dinner. The event…
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00:00:04 Speaker 1: Welcome to the news show. This week, We’ve got a lake access dispute Wisconsin that you really need to pay attention to.…
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The United States Army dates its founding to June 14, 1775, after the Second Continental Congress proclaimed that the 20,000 militiamen arrayed outside of the city of Boston were officially soldiers in the Continental Army. Across 250 years of history, the actions of the Army have been closely intertwined with the direction and growth of the United States as a nation, and at the heart of it all was the soldier and his longarm. Watch our “American Rifleman Television” feature segment above to hear the story of the U.S. military’s first longarms, the smoothbore muskets. “After the events of April…
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00:00:02 Speaker 1: Hey, everyone, Welcome to the Foundation’s podcast. I’m your host, Tony Peterson, and today is all about when reality crashes into our dreams of perfect dogs and perfect hunts and what that means for our off season. You know how everyone is just super pissed off lately and we all want to kill each other and everything sucks. Well, part of that, at least in my extremely unprofessional opinion, stems from us just being exposed to so much BS in our lives. We go online and everywhere return. It’s propaganda mostly meant to either divide us or…
In this episode of the Bear Grease Podcast, host Clay Newcomb sits down with Teddy Villines, father to Cody Villines and uncle to Caylon Villines featured in the last episode. He is a lifelong Ozark logger shaped by generations of hard work, handshake deals, and respect for the land. Teddy shares stories from a life spent in the woods, including close calls, brutal injuries, and a terrifying runaway log-truck wreck that forced him to confront who is truly in control.More than a logging story, this episode is about character, faith, and legacy. What it means to provide for your family,…
00:00:07 Speaker 1: This podcast. 00:00:10 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 Steve Giannis, Randall, Brody, Seth and Cory. This is episode three of the fourth annual Meet Eater Trivia Championship. This competition will span three episodes. Whoever has the most points after thirty questions will be declared the newest Meat Eater Trivia Champion. We will crown that person today. Now there will be spoilers from the first two episodes, so if you haven’t listened to those yet, then pause this…
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Recently I wrote about the Elenco AM/FM radio kit and was pulled away from the build before I could do a full alignment of the radio. The kit was finished but my work took me out of town, and I wasn’t able to do a full and complete alignment of the kit per the builders manual. I should add that I am employed full-time as an electronics engineer and have been involved in electronics repair, design, and building for over 50 years. And as an amateur radio hobbiest, my experience goes further back than that timeline. My “shop” is equipped…
On February 25, 1791, the First Bank of the United States was chartered by the United States Congress for a term of 20 years. JWR’s Comment: Many economists point to this as the first in a chain of events that would lead the United States into perpetual debt and the positioning bankers as the nation’s ruling elite, opertating from the shadows. — February 25, 1855: Bowery Boys gang leader William “Bill the Butcher” Poole was shot in the back by the gang of archrival John Morrissey in New York City. (He died on March 8th of the same year.) —…
Magnified, fixed-power riflescopes have not been particularly popular in decades; certainly since the dawn of the 21st century. Once the only choice due to technological limitations, variable-magnification scopes have long dominated the market for all pursuits, apart from 1X (zero magnification) dot sights and the occasional low magnification reflex sight like some models of Trijicon ACOG. But, what if while embracing variable magnification, we forgot about speed? After all, turning the ring at the back of the scope takes time and some amount of dexterity to maintain a hold on target while moving part of the scope. Enter the Integrix…
Janis Putelis kicks off our "12 in 26" series as he takes his bow to Manitoba in search of a giant black bear. To make things even more interesting, he hunts over bait for the first time to see what the fuss is all about. Presented by Moultrie and OnX Maps. Read the full article here