The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader

Dive into the fascinating world of hunting and adventure with our special guest, Korth group rep. Matt Siemens. Matt, a seasoned hunter and wealth of knowledge, shares his experiences hunting on nearly every continent. From African hunts to his expertise in ballistics. Discover the lessons he learned from his first African hunt and gain insider insights into the current social and political climate that all firearms owners, hunters and related businesses are facing.    Don't miss this exciting episode filled with thrilling adventures and valuable tips for hunters of all levels.   https://www.korthgroup.com/find-a-dealer https://www.leupold.com/ https://www.hornady.com/

 

______

Silvercore Club - https://bit.ly/2RiREb4
Online Training - https://bit.ly/3nJKx7U
Other Training & Services - https://bit.ly/3vw6kSU
Merchandise - https://bit.ly/3ecyvk9
Blog Page - https://bit.ly/3nEHs8W

Host Instagram - @Bader.Trav https://www.instagram.com/bader.trav
Silvercore Instagram - @SilvercoreOutdoors https://www.instagram.com/silvercoreoutdoors

____

What is The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader?

The Silvercore Podcast explores the mindset and skills that build capable people. Host Travis Bader speaks with hunters, adventurers, soldiers, athletes, craftsmen, and founders about competence, integrity, and the pursuit of mastery, in the wild and in daily life. Hit follow and step into conversations that sharpen your edge.

Kind: captions
Language: en-GB

Travis Bader: I'm Travis Bader,
and this is the Silvercore podcast.

Silvercore has been providing its
members with the skills and knowledge

necessary to be confident and proficient
in the outdoors for over 20 years.

And we make it easier for people to deepen
their connection to the natural world.

If you enjoy the positive
and educational content.

We provide, please let others
know by sharing, commenting, and

following so that you can join in on
everything that Silvercore stands for.

If you'd like to learn more
about becoming a member of the

Silvercore club and community,
visit our website at silvercore.

ca.

I'm joined today by a man who has hunted
on nearly every continent in the world.

He is with Korth Group, deals closely with
Leupold and Hornady, and he is a prolific,

avid hunter and a wealth of knowledge.

Welcome to the Silvercore
podcast, Matt Siemens.

Thanks for having me here.

So we've been trying to line this
one up for a little while now.

Um, it's been a good to
finally make this one happen.

Last time we were chatting.

Man, you were blowing my mind with
some of your stories about hunting

all over the world, African hunts,
your knowledge on ballistics.

And I thought there's gotta be a way we
can distill some of this information,

some of your background, some of the
adventures that you've had into something

where others can learn from your
successes and your failures and, and.

Where you're at.

So, uh, this is, this is
going to be a fun one.

Yeah,

Matt Siemens: I'm looking forward to it.

I've been thinking about this for a while.

I've always been taught.

It's always cheaper to learn someone
else's mistakes and make them yourself.

Right.

So if you can get some
information from somebody who's

firsthand, it's always a good

Travis Bader: start.

I wish I could be like that, but for
whatever reason, I've always been

the kind of guy who will look at
somebody else's mistake and I got

to make it myself and learn from it.

Someone will say, Hey, don't touch
that stove, it's hot as a child.

Right.

And I'd be.

Hot?

Like how hot?

Like, what do you mean by hot?

Like, can I touch it really
quick and get my hand off?

Matt Siemens: Yeah, I think all, I think
that's in the man manual though, isn't

Travis Bader: it?

Maybe that is.

It's just obstinate, stubborn ADHD.

So you've, uh, you've got a hunt in
Africa lined up in a little bit, but

I guess what I'd be interested in is.

Your very first African hunt, lessons
you learn from it, things that went

well, things that maybe you would
advise other people to do differently.

Uh,

Matt Siemens: my first
hunt wasn't really planned.

Uh, you always dreamt
about going to Africa.

I never thought I'd ever get
there myself, to be honest.

It was always something somebody else did.

We grew up, um, no extra money.

A lot of month led.

And, uh, I was living, we were
living in Southern Michigan at the

time I was working with Cabela.

So I was in the gun library system
and my boss called me up and said,

Hey, do you want to, do you think
it's safe to go hunt in Zimbabwe?

This is when Mugabe was out of season,
the farms and all the advisories.

I said, Hey, Phil, we live in Detroit.

It can't be any worse.

So three weeks later, we were in
Africa and he had a deal, right?

Arranged.

I paid his airfare.

He paid my hunt.

And we went over there and,
uh, my only regret is not

Travis Bader: going sooner.

How

Matt Siemens: old were you?

Uh, I would have been early thirties.

Travis Bader: Okay.

Yeah.

And you know, for me, I look at this and
I say, man, you got to have pretty deep

pockets if you want to go hunt outside
of, even just outside of British Columbia.

But I'm starting to learn that
might not necessarily be the case.

No,

Matt Siemens: there's, it's much more
affordable than people think it is.

The airfare is what's the burden nowadays.

That's all changed since our pandemic.

But, um, animal for animal,
Africa is pretty cheap.

And then people will look at the high end
countries that have are thousand dollars a

day to hunt and think it's all like that.

But no, you can go over there.

I had a guy from Aldergrove.

I sent him over.

He did a 15 animal hunt and
it was under 5, 000 Canadian.

For a 15 animal,

Travis Bader: 10 day hunt.

But that wouldn't include airfare.

That didn't include

Matt Siemens: airfare, but at that
time you could fly for 11, 500 bucks.

Wow.

Travis Bader: So.

I mean, 15 different animals, 5, 000.

Yeah.

In how long?

10 days.

10 days.

So what's it like when you get over there?

I've heard, so a friend of mine, he was
a pH and he's talks about, it's kind

of like being in the lap of luxury.

He says he came over.

And did a hunt with a guide
in BC and he shows up and he's

like, okay, we're ready to hunt.

And they're like, uh,
where's your sleeping bags?

Where's your kit?

Where's your gear?

And he's like, what do you mean?

Like, don't you guys supply all of this?

No.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

It's a different world.

Like a lot of people, when I start
talking about it and they go, I, my

friend went and they had servants and
they had maids and they had a swimming

pool and they had this, they had that.

And I said, that's standard.

That that's basic rudimentary there.

Everybody has that.

Wow.

It's, it's a different way of life.

It's like spa for

Travis Bader: men.

Yes.

So, so walk me through it.

You arrive, what's it look like?

I was shocked

Matt Siemens: at how big
and modern Johannesburg was.

I knew it was going to be big,
but didn't quite comprehend

as big as it was flying in.

Um, the neat thing about there is when
you get out of the city, you you're

out of the city, there is nothing.

Really?

And, uh, we flew in, uh.

I'm from Johannesburg, and the
first ship we flew was the Belawayo,

Zimbabwe, and it was all the
Mugabe era, and there was nothing.

There's all these big We went to
the one version of Costco they

have there, I think it was called
farmers, a big discount chain.

They had Coke and corn chips
in the whole store, two racks.

That was it.

That was it.

That was it.

Uh, first time I was there, there was
lineups for about two, three blocks

for, for fuel, uh, fuel stations.

The next time it was probably a mile long.

And my third trip there,
there was simply no fuel.

Like you just couldn't get it.

They were out.

Travis Bader: You just don't
consider that from over

Matt Siemens: here.

No.

Yeah.

Like the Africans always have that term.

You have to make a plan.

And if you can't plan ahead
there, you aren't going to go very

Travis Bader: far.

So what do you do?

There's no fuel.

The pH will

Matt Siemens: have all that sorted.

He has all that.

But if you like, you couldn't do
it, do it yourself hunt there.

Got it.

Just because logistics
and legality anyways.

But, um, yeah, you have
to plan for everything.

I remember he came across in Botswana
with a load of stuff for the trip and

they tax the toilet paper as luxury items.

Travis Bader: Toilet
paper is a luxury item.

So it's, it's third world.

Yeah, I guess.

Yeah.

So.

Are you using firearms down there?

Are you bringing your own
over or how does that work?

I've done

Matt Siemens: it both ways.

Yeah.

Um, I always like using my own,
but the more you travel with

them, the more hassles you have.

The trip I'm going on
in March, I'm renting.

Okay.

Just, um, it's just so much easier.

Travis Bader: What are safety
concerns like when you go over there?

Is it on the top of your mind?

Like I had one.

Matt Siemens: No, no, I I've hunted places
where it wasn't on the top of my mind.

I couldn't sleep for the
first couple of days.

But, um, we're actually flying in
Johannesburg this time, then we're going

to drive four and a half, five hours
across the country, my boss and myself.

So we'll see how that goes.

Um, talk to several people, four
people say it's safe and they'll,

Fifth person says, absolutely not.

Do not even entertain the thought.

And it's all major highways
and set the last 40 kilometers.

So I, I feel confident

Travis Bader: in it.

Otherwise I wouldn't do it.

He had a, uh, a friend.

He was over there with his brother
and his brother is a U S army.

I think it was an A10 pilot.

And, um, anyways, they're,
they're in Africa.

I don't know.

Uh, I think they're in South Africa
and he was wearing a Casio watch.

He's like, you better take that watch off.

He's like, what do you mean?

He says your life.

Is worth less than what that Casio
watch that you're wearing is, right?

Is that.

Matt Siemens: There, there's probably
sections of that area like that.

And, uh, I plan the route
pretty close, like stay in the

major highways best we can.

We have a doctor friend of ours,
his family from South Africa.

They actually packed up and
moved back, uh, two years

Travis Bader: ago.

Packed up, moved back to South Africa.

Back to South Africa from,

Matt Siemens: from Chilliwack.

Travis Bader: Because?

Well, that's a whole nother

Matt Siemens: conversation, but he
just, like, we've had some pretty

candid talks and stuff and well,
their families from there and

stuff, but they just felt there was.

Travis Bader: Isn't that telling

Matt Siemens: though?

That's very telling.

Right.

And if it was up to me.

When I'm, when we're done this, I
get back in my truck and keep on

driving the sea island, get on a
plane and not come back myself.

Really?

Yeah.

I'd be there, not South Africa,
wouldn't be my first choice, but

I would definitely go to Namibia

Travis Bader: and not come back.

That'd be your first choice?

Yeah.

Namibia?

Namibia would be my first choice.

Really?

Yeah.

So, uh, property over there is.

Attainable?

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: There's some regulations
of buying agricultural lands and,

and stuff, but it's attainable.

And I've looked at farms.

I've been looking at farms for a
couple of years now, and I found

like 30, 000 acre farms for less than
what you can buy a lot in Chilliwack

Travis Bader: for.

Really?

Well, do you have to worry
about squatters or not having?

Property next time you go down there.

Matt Siemens: No, not,
not in Namibia per se.

Okay.

It depends where you buy to, but,
uh, the, the cheap land is cheap

for a reason and the water it's,
it might sustain natural game, but

livestock and stuff may struggle on it.

Like here you talk about how many
cows you can have on an acre.

There it's 40, 50
hectares per, per animal.

Like it changes.

It reverses quite dramatically.

I'm

Travis Bader: kidding.

How did you get into this line of work?

How did he get in?

So your, your Cabela's working in
the gun, gun counter, gun library?

Well, this

Matt Siemens: goes way back.

Um, I started working in a local
gun shop in Abbotsford in 86.

Just when I was in high school.

Which one was that?

Perfection Tackle and Guns.

Okay.

They're gone since,
well, since I think 89.

But anyway, so I started that and then
my goal was law enforcement, went to

university and stuff, and then I wanted
to move to the U S for law enforcement.

So I, um, we're looking to my,
we got married, my wife's born in

the U S we lived in Prince George.

We applied for my immigration.

We were told it would take
years to come through.

Three months, it came through here.

You have to move.

So I just look for the first job I can.

I fired off her resume to Cabela's.

They flew me down for an interview
three days later and, uh, the local law

enforcement agencies couldn't compete
with what Cabela's paid and benefits.

Wow.

That was before they went public.

Right.

I actually had to work over
them and they had two stores.

Really?

Yeah.

Dick and Mary and Jim
would come in the store.

My wife started work there as well.

And she was working the back door once and
Dick and Mary tried coming in without ID.

She wouldn't let him in.

She didn't recognize him
when we just started.

So it was, it was, uh, they, they
looked after employees very well.

Nothing like it is today.

Yeah, it's a little
different now, isn't it?

Yeah, it's, uh, you have
shareholders that changes everything.

It's the bottom line is,

Travis Bader: is what they look at.

Well, I guess you still deal
with Cabela's now with Korth.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So, uh, and then from Cabela's you
got on to Korth, is that, was there

a transition like that or what?

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: Cabela's, um.

I was in Idaho at the time with
them at the Pulse Falls store,

been there almost 15 years.

They'd gone public, things were
changing drastically and I was

looking for something else and I
said, if the next real job that

comes along, I'm going to entertain.

And I was dealing with a deal
with one of the guys from Leupold.

I worked in the Beaverton
plant and I said, Hey, you

know, I'm looking for somebody.

Let me know.

Two days later, Korth flew me to Alberta
for an interview and the rest is history.

Travis Bader: Right.

And I like, uh, we're going to have
people chiming in, I'm sure they said,

no, it's not Leupold, it's Leopold.

No, that's Leupold.

Okay.

Yeah.

A

Matt Siemens: hundred percent.

Leupold.

A hundred percent Leupold.

If you call the plant, they're
going to answer it Leupold and

Travis Bader: Stevens.

Leupold and Stevens.

Yeah.

My very first rifle was a Stevens.

Okay.

Little takedown, 22 Stevens favorite.

Uh, I could fit it into my backpack.

I'd go across the street from my school
in a place that I called the desert

because they had a bunch of sand there.

And, uh, it's Joe Brown
park out in Surrey.

They actually had a bit of a range
there that the police would use.

And I'd shoot there same as
a Delta watershed and same

as the Burns bog out here.

I got a sign over there, uh, they
all had ranges in there and that's,

that's where I'd shoot growing up.

Yeah, it's a different
Stevens though, completely.

Different Stevens.

Yeah.

Right.

Okay.

It's loophole to Stevens, but nothing
to do with the firearm company.

Nothing to do with the Chippewa
Falls, Massachusetts, Stevens.

Got it.

Okay.

There we go.

Um, I probably should know that.

Shouldn't I?

You

Matt Siemens: know, the firearm industry
and stuff, you can never say never, right?

So you never know it's, but
it's a lot of people make that

Travis Bader: assumption.

Okay.

Well, Hey, I got to talk about
my first firearm anyways, so

nothing wrong with that one.

Yeah, I had a, um, custom made
stock on it for my small frame

and the shorter barrel on it.

And it came off of a, uh, I think it was
some old Cooey that was kind of cut down.

And I, I remember even at five years
old, trying to hold that thing up.

It was the heaviest thing in the world and
arched back and that, um, yeah, started

shooting at four first gun at five.

That was that one.

And there you go.

But you're, uh, you're pretty heavy
into the ballistics as well, too.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

I've always found it fascinating.

Yeah.

I couldn't do math to save my
life in high school, but all the.

You and me both.

And even before all the apps came
out and ballistic calculators came

out, I could sit down and figure
stuff out with your basic algebra

and cause I had interest in it.

And, uh, it's been great.

Um, I still am very keen on
terminal ballistics and I should

say keen interested in it.

Yeah, you always searching for
that perfect bullet and stuff and,

and, and being the Hornady rep,
a lot of conversations of people

with quote unquote, bullet failure.

And that's, that's

Travis Bader: a.

Tell me about

Matt Siemens: that.

As soon as someone recovers a bullet
that doesn't perform the way they want

to try claiming the bullet failed.

Well, I always, where would
you get the bullet from?

Well, the animal, well, was it dead?

Well, yeah.

Well then, okay.

How has it failed?

Right.

But I had an, be careful.

I don't want to mention names.

I had an account.

Contact me once, they had a bunch of
bullet failures with the ELDX in Africa.

Okay.

Had to shoot a Gemsbuck nine times.

It didn't die and all this stuff.

And so, well, I said, doesn't sound right.

Send me pictures.

Well, they were literally, there
wasn't a shot in the vitals.

It was all got shot, shot in that.

It was just by North American
standards, they may have been in

the vitals, but the African tropical
games vitals located differently.

Really?

Yeah.

And, uh, quite a, quite enough, like,
like some animals you tuck behind the

front, right behind the front leg.

Yeah.

That's a gut shot.

There's nothing

Travis Bader: there.

Okay.

Yeah.

I'll, I'll use you like right
behind the front leg or if

they're walking, I'll split the

Matt Siemens: V, go up.

A little dramatic, but the giraffe.

Okay.

All the vitals are in
front of the front leg.

If you, if you tuck it in, tuck
it in behind the rear shoulder,

you're just going through gut.

Travis Bader: Interesting.

Yeah.

So they're gut shooting.

They're shooting these things in tails and
hooves and saying the bullet's not working

Matt Siemens: right.

Blaming the bullet.

When the ELDX first came out,
I was really keen to try it.

Not a real good bear hunting spot.

We could watch this one
bank at 700 yards, 707.

It ranged across and we
were all set up for this.

So we loaded a bunch, we couldn't
even get the bullets yet.

So I had to buy.

Factory ammo, pull it out and load it
into the cartridges we were shooting.

And we shot three bears that trip.

All total, the yardage
didn't total a hundred yards.

So we were all, we're all
equipped to shoot long range and

everything was right in front of

Travis Bader: us.

So, yeah, I did, um, I like that ELDX.

I've used it in, uh, uh, 6.

5 Creep War with great success
and then, uh, 280 Ackley improved.

You know, I took a, uh, a moose at a much
further distance than I probably should

have with the, uh, ELDX in hindsight, who
was, uh, poor arranging and few errors,

everything went as it ought to, went down,
but that was, uh, almost 800 meters away.

And, um, uh, it performed,
performed as it ought to,

Matt Siemens: it's a, it's a good bullet.

It's, you can't have a bullet soft
enough to expand at low velocities

and then overexpand, not overexpand
when you're real close from

personal at extreme velocities.

It's softer.

So it expands at lower velocity.

So if it separates up front, if you
shoot something at 10 yards, well,

it wasn't really designed for that.

You're just, you're just, you're pushing
it beyond its limit, its impact velocity.

Another trend now is fast twist rifles.

Right.

I'm seeing that.

And, uh, you need the fast twist to
spin the bullet to stabilize it, but

you can also overstate over spin it.

Now your RPM jumps, you start getting
RPM over 300, 000 RPM, 320, 350, and

the bullets aren't designed for that.

Travis Bader: Burst apart.

Matt Siemens: Centrifugal
force will pull them apart.

Right.

Okay.

And is it the bullet
that a bullet come apart?

Yeah.

Well, it just didn't work, but
then people, people say it doesn't

work, but no, it did because
you just be on this limits.

Like I always say, you can haul
bags of manure in your Corvette,

but a pickup truck's better.

Everything has its purpose, right?

Right.

Travis Bader: There really isn't
one be all end all for everything.

No,

Matt Siemens: there's a lot
of great products out there.

There's some great competitors out there.

And, uh, but everything has its limits.

Travis Bader: So the faster twist rate,
I've always been of the assumption

that if you over twist a bullet as
better than under twisting a bullet.

Yes.

For accuracy.

For accuracy.

Yeah.

Uh, but you start.

Twisting a little too fast, pushing
them out a little too hot, too fast.

You're going to end up having centripetal
force and centrifugal force, uh, failure.

Well, you

Matt Siemens: start thinking if
you, if you do the math and there's

a formula and it slips in my
mind right now, I was remembering

on the way in, but now I can't.

Um, like there's some of the stuff, some
of the rifle, there's a rifle company out

there that's twisted their six, five PRCs,
a whole inch faster than Sammy's spec

and that's pushing it at 320, 000 RPM.

That that's spinning.

Yeah.

And it's.

Travis Bader: So why would
they do that outside semi spec

just for marketing purposes?

Matt Siemens: Well, I think the general,
general topic is, and I've always had it

too, when in Dell, it's spinning faster.

Right.

But I, I, with my thinking of that
was back when I was building dangerous

game guns and you want to be able
to get to the vitals from any angle.

And if it's too slow, it veers off.

So when in Dell, it's spinning faster.

But when you're shooting solids, it's a
different story than shooting cup and core

bullets, expanding bullets, I should say.

Cause some non expanding solids will
be cup and core as well, just reversed.

Travis Bader: Right.

So for me, I'm used to
primarily hunting within BC.

I've done a little bit in the U S, uh,
what are some of the biggest differences

that I'm going to find for my style of
hunting over here for North American

game than I would over in Africa?

The amount of

Matt Siemens: game you're going to see.

Yeah.

And, uh, this is going to sound
terrible, but spotlighting.

Okay.

Yeah.

I've done it in New Zealand,
Australia, Pakistan, Africa, and

it's an acceptable way to hunt.

It's a different way to hunt.

Travis Bader: Um, so are you just doing
that to see where the glare comes back

off of eyes or you try to freeze them or.

It's going out to,

Matt Siemens: uh, some animals
are more nocturnal, so you should

look for the nocturnal species.

It's just, you should do it one day
at one, I bring a group over, we'll do

one night at one day and night hunting.

Okay.

It's just a different experience
that you can't do here legally.

And it's a hundred percent legal there.

You're not, you're not shooting
your impala and your stuff.

You're shooting the night species,
like honey badger, stuff like that.

And jackal and all that fun stuff.

Travis Bader: I remember I was in,
um, an area here in BC and we're

coming back from our hunt for the
day, you know, sun's going down.

We've got, uh, one hour after
sunset for legal shooting.

And as we're heading.

We see a truck going up and people
sitting on the back of it and they

got their big spotlight and like, hold
on a second, what's going on here.

Right.

And so I get on the report, oppose
your polluter line and get a hold of,

just let them know what's going on.

And I, and I get a, um,
uh, someone come back.

Got back to me afterwards and says, well,
uh, certain people are allowed to do that.

Like, what do you mean?

Right.

And indigenous groups, they say,
we're, we're not going to touch it.

So I researched a little bit further
and I guess there was a court case

here in British Columbia and there's
an indigenous group over on the

island and they were successful.

And they said back in, um, ancestral
hunting time, we'd go with torches

and they made their case that way.

But it only applies to that one area.

And I guess it took a while for
conservation officers to kind of get

the grounding and know what's allowed
and what's permitted and what isn't.

Now it's pretty well accepted
that, no, you can't do that.

And, you know, we work with a lot
of different indigenous groups and

like, yeah, no, we don't do that.

You can't, this is just
a rogue group of people.

There's always a few

Matt Siemens: bad apples.

Always going to be that way.

And we're, we're dealing with that
stuff now in the province with,

with, with some of the first nations.

Are trying to do, and they have,
they're trying to, they're trying

to manage it as a resource.

And then you have other groups
that, from my point of view,

you're trying to eliminate it
because there's no sustainability.

Yeah, but that's, that's
another rabbit hole.

Travis Bader: Yeah.

You know, it's a friend of mine.

He was, uh, on the podcast before
conservation officer Ojibwe bear

clan is his background and the bear
clan is they're the protectors of the

environment and the people in the, um,
Very interesting talking to him about

that subject and talking to, uh, cause
he approaches it both from the indigenous

side, as well as the conservation officer
side, man, I learned a lot, like just

the sheer number of different groups
that we have here in British Columbia and

the number of groups that are going well
above and beyond what, uh, non indigenous

folks are doing to help conserve and
to protect what's going on there.

It was.

There's a really encouraging
conversation, actually.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: Like I said,
there's some guys out there

trying to do the right thing.

And there's some guys out there
with, with no, not looking

for the future, unfortunately.

Travis Bader: Yeah.

There's always going
to be those bad apples.

Um, you know, speaking of that, part of
the reason I thought this would be kind

of interesting is because you bring that
background and that wealth of experience

and you're, you're, uh, dealing in
an area that most people from North

America don't have familiarity with.

You know, you look at how the news
will portray African hunting and how

social media can portray it, but there's
a whole other side to that as well.

And this is something that, uh, my friend
who's a PH was getting into is like, you

know, the amount of good that comes out
of the African hunting, the amount of

conservation efforts and money that's put
back into the society and species that

are only around because of the hunting.

And that's something that, uh, hunters
will talk about, but I don't think

the, uh, the general populace is,
is aware of, of all of those ins and

Matt Siemens: outs.

No.

And how much of the animals actually
used in Africa would blow people's mind.

Really?

Yeah.

Like I'm, it would be funny if
BC conservation would enforce the

edible meat law to African standards.

What's their

Travis Bader: standards?

Matt Siemens: If it's made
of protein, it can rot.

You can eat it.

Travis Bader: Really?

Yeah.

Yeah.

We don't, uh, you know, BC conservation
has got to, and we've got a good standard

over here, but not to the same degree.

In Namibia,

Matt Siemens: when you shoot a Gamsbok,
they clean the colon out and then they.

Barbecue it till it's crispy
and they think it tastes great.

Well, have you tried it?

Oh, it's like eating crispy rubber bands.

Okay.

But, uh, it's, I'd rather have
a Reese's peanut butter cup.

Right.

But it's, um, they, they swear by it.

I mean, I always try everything just
be part of it, but no, they eat like

they'll clean the poncho, everything.

And if they don't eat
it, their dogs eat it.

I've seen them take stomach
contents in buckets.

Back to the house for
fertilizer in the garden.

It

Travis Bader: totally makes sense.

Matt Siemens: Yep.

It's nothing goes

Travis Bader: to waste.

We had a, a butcher on the podcast and
he's talking about how he uses every

part of the animals through his abattoir.

Yeah.

And he's watching how making
compost out of it and the, the

effects that it's having on, uh, the
orchards that he's putting it in.

Matt Siemens: I mean, the
North Americans got it.

We got it pretty, pretty
down pat with pigs.

Mm.

You know, the only thing
they don't use in the pig.

Right.

Travis Bader: Well, what's that
the toenails and the snout?

The squeal.

The squeal,

Matt Siemens: okay.

Everything, everything else is used, but
Africa, everything is treated that way.

Absolutely everything.

I was shocked, like shooting
hyenas and jackals, they eat that.

Okay.

Yeah.

Some of the, like I've shot cats
there and they eat them like,

like nothing goes to waste.

So I

Travis Bader: had, um,
I've had cougar here.

Yeah.

I've never hunted cougar.

Um, last SCI dinner I was at, uh, I
think it was Tammy, she was doing the,

the cooking out there and cook some up.

That's fantastic.

Yeah.

Yeah, she did.

Uh, and you don't think, I don't know,
I don't think most people would normally

think eating cougar would actually be
a good meat, but yeah, it was amazing.

Matt Siemens: You know, and
there's been a big push.

Like you see some of the guys now
trying to push eating coyotes and stuff.

Well, okay.

I'll draw a line there, but, um,
I'll, I'll try most things, but.

Travis Bader: Yeah, I can't see.

I'd be too keen on that.

And I don't know if that's
because we have a, an emotional

connection to our own dogs.

And you look at that or you look at
what these things eat and the amount

of bugs that they have in their body.

Um,

Matt Siemens: yeah,
it's something, no harm.

Anybody wants to try it, but it's not

Travis Bader: my cup of tea.

I think Ranella said that he tried,
uh, Eaton, Eaton Coyote at one

Matt Siemens: point.

Yeah.

I've seen one of his, uh, shows on it.

Okay.

And I guess you can put enough spice
on anything to make it taste what

you want, but it's, it's just the

Travis Bader: thought of it.

Right.

Remember that guy in the States, I think
he was a dentist, maybe a doctor and

he, uh, shot a lion over and after it.

I think he, from what I understand,
everything was done above board legally.

Matt Siemens: 100 percent legal.

Travis Bader: And he posted it on social
media and he was getting death threats.

Dr.

Matt Siemens: Walter Palmer.

Okay.

He came, he used to come to
the Cabela store I used to work

Travis Bader: at.

Okay.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

And, uh, he had even guilty of
what they accused him of, and

then they found out he wasn't.

Right.

It would have been a 300 fine.

Like it wasn't even a, it was
breaking the law is breaking the law.

So it's not right, but they hadn't.

Right.

And, uh, it's an area I've hunted
real close to where he shot that lion.

Okay.

And the national park boundary,
they come and go all the time.

And that's all it was.

It came out of the park
and they shot the lion.

Okay.

And the big thing, funny thing there
is they called it Cecil the lion.

Oh, you name it.

Yeah, you name it.

And that's the first thing, but.

No self respecting Zimbabwean
is going to name a lion after

the big oppressor Cecil Rhodes.

So it was fabrication
right from the start.

And they played on heartstrings,
people who didn't know.

And, and when I talked to people
over there about it, cause I hunted

there since and like the locals
would never name something Cecil.

No kidding.

Travis Bader: Yeah.

We'll just watch a watch.

It keeps, oh, there we go.

Not, not in positive

Matt Siemens: light anyways.

Right,

Travis Bader: right.

Yes.

Um, so is that something that, uh, you've
had to deal with is people, uh, I don't,

I don't see you posting a whole bunch
of, uh, stuff that would be controversial

on social media, but if you had to
deal with, uh, Uh, individuals who are

just adamantly against us who might not
have the background or knowledge of,

Matt Siemens: of what you're doing.

Yeah.

I've had death threats.

Uh, the first one we thought was
kind of comical, uh, was back when I

was in Michigan in the gun library,
we put pictures up of stuff we'd

shot, credibility to gun library.

And I put a picture up
of a giraffe I shot.

Okay.

And, um, one of the guys
from work sent me a link.

Hey, check out this link.

And here, here was this blog and
they were going to find the guy who

killed this giraffe and come get him.

And my picture was on the blog.

I thought it was comical.

So I jumped on the blog and asked
the guys where they wanted to meet.

And of course no one piped up.

I don't think it's those.

It is a dangerous situation.

Some of these people are quite
fanatical and with the family and

stuff, it's any death threat I get
now, I deal with it accordingly.

I have contact authorities and, and,
um, try getting it dealt with because

it is, what I'm doing is legal.

Science, conservation based,
and there's a reason I do it.

I, I enjoy it for one, but it's money
back in the environment, it's things

working, it's managing the herd, right?

Travis Bader: Yeah.

If somebody is going to threaten
you, whether it's a death threat

or just a threat in any way, shape
or form, one thing I've learned

is you never laugh them off.

Nope.

You always take it seriously.

Worst case scenario, you're wrong.

The other way around, worst case scenario.

I'd rather be wrong acting accordingly
than treating it as if it was

Matt Siemens: a joke.

Yeah.

The whole hunting thing draws very
heavy emotions from both sides.

And you get fanaticals on both sides too.

And like I said earlier, bad apples,
but it seems like the anti hunting

movement is based on a whole lot of
things on emotion without any scientific,

very little science behind it.

Travis Bader: And that's one
thing we see over and over again.

I mean, when we're talking about,
uh, uh, wolf culling over here and

we're talking about caribou herds
and, uh, everyone talks about,

oh, this is, there's no science.

This is all emotion.

Then you're reacting to it.

And then people will pull out
or cherry pick their science

or cherry pick their stats.

And I don't know if it was Disraeli that
said it, but someone attributed it to him.

He says, you know, there's liars,
damn liars and statisticians, right?

You can make that look any way you want.

Um, how do you start separating that
emotion to be able to, uh, articulate

what it is that you're doing, or do
you bother, like, do you just let

people have their emotions and you
say, look at what I'm doing is legal.

It's helping the environment.

It's based on conservation.

Like, where do you fall in that?

Matt Siemens: You have to kind of
take it and, um, try to weigh your

audience to see, see if you have
any chance of making any headway.

And it's, I've seen it.

I've converted a few people, but there
are some people you can't convert.

When I lived in the States, it's a little,
little different topic, but very similar.

Gun control and the
classic word machine gun.

One of my good friend I worked
with, he had his class three, he

had a bunch of neat stuff and he
had an old original Tommy gun.

Right.

And we would take people out
who were anti gun, anti machine

gun, nobody should own this.

Nobody knows what it takes to own them,
the cost of them and all the licensing.

You could take the biggest anti
gun person and give them that Tommy

gun and you couldn't remove their
smile with a jackhammer after.

They might not be pro gun, right, but
they come out with a different point

of view, especially when they start
talking and asking questions about how

much it costs to get a gun, legal gun
and the paperwork and the background

checks and all your tax stamps and stuff.

And they realize that these things
aren't for sale in the street corners.

No, they're a heavy investment.

Travis Bader: Well, how is, cause
of course we've been under a liberal

government for the last number of years,
looks like things might be changing based

on polling and where things are at, people
are getting tired of the same old, same

old, and where that's been leading them.

But one of the big pushes that you've
been seeing is obviously on the

firearm side and trying to restrict
or eliminate classes of firearms.

How has that been?

Impacting your livelihood and
the business that you work with.

Have you been seeing that as
a, uh, significant threat?

Matt Siemens: Substantial downturn
with loss of handguns, handgun sales,

ammunition sales and handgun calibers are.

I've slowed down as well.

You don't sell as much two,
two, three as you used to.

Travis Bader: No.

Matt Siemens: And it's,
it's definitely a threat.

They're not going to stop
with what they have now.

Travis Bader: I think we
made that pretty darn clear.

Matt Siemens: It's if they were based
on actual science and crime reports

and listening to chief of police and
all that kind of stuff, we wouldn't

even be having this conversation.

It's not you and me causing the problems.

Travis Bader: Well, the police don't even.

They used to have, Hey, you know, chief
of police, you union of police officers,

and, uh, they're, they're backing this.

They don't even have that.

Matt Siemens: No, it won't make any
difference because it's not the legal guy.

That's the problem.

Yes.

A handful of guns get stolen every
year and it shouldn't happen,

but in the courts, the guys get
caught stealing a gun in there.

They're out before the
paperwork's finished.

Travis Bader: They're in, they're out.

Yeah.

Right.

Yeah, it's, uh, it's funny, the tie
between the firearm side that we see, the

emotions involved there, as well as on
the hunting side, the second you name the

animal, a second, it's furry and fuzzy.

You don't see, you see, um, Uh,
seals, they're cute and big eyes

and baby seals and all the rest.

And so there'll be the poster child on
a, on an anti hunting, uh, campaign.

You don't see slugs and eels and,
uh, the, the ugly critters out there.

No, it's only the, only the cute ones.

Yeah.

Is there a case to be made,
uh, for hunting, uh, that can,

uh, elicit similar emotions?

In what way?

Well, I mean, if anti hunters, cause
we were talking about this before,

and you're saying, you know, if,
if the, uh, hunting community could

get together and work together as a
team in the same way that the anti

hunting community will get together.

Um, and we'd be an unstoppable force.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

If the, if the hunting community
would be a cohesive as the

antis, we'd be unstoppable.

Right.

But here you have the bow
hunters against these people,

Oh, you hunt with a crossbow.

You're not a real archer.

And it's, it's, this goes down that road.

Right.

It's never ending.

It's global.

Uh, we're this industry or just
sport is full of A type personalities

and everybody wants, wants to
have their, their voice heard.

And they're the most
important way of hunting.

SCI fights for all hunting
doesn't make a difference.

And I use the term sport and I don't even
like using that when I talk about hunting.

Sport hunting term came from my
research on it came way back when they

actually, actually have market hunting.

Okay.

So the guy would say, I'm going hunting.

Why are you, is that for your job?

No, it's my sport.

I'm going out for my own enjoyment.

It's not a sport like football is, but
it was a recreational activity where

the guy could fill his freezer and do
that kind of, he wasn't going out to

sell the meat, he's going out for his

Travis Bader: own, own use.

I, I heard a Ron Spomer recently
come up and he's like, you know

why it's called sport hunting?

He says, because there are rules
and regulations and limits to

what you're like any other sport.

It's not just go out there and.

And kill whatever is out there.

There's very strict protocol
that needs to be cut followed,

which is why they call it sports.

So that was, that was his take on it.

I thought, you know,
that's very well said.

I thought so as well.

And the, I know in the province
here, everyone talks about,

you look in our provincial.

Uh, websites and legislation
and everything that they

talk about sport hunting.

And everyone says, we got
to get rid of that term.

It's such a bad term.

Well, do we need to get rid of
the term or do people need to

understand, need to educate, right?

We it's a sport, not in the same way.

Like, ha ha, this is a fun sport.

It's go and kill something.

No.

There are strict protocol
that we have to follow.

We need to be able to harvest only
within certain times of the day,

certain times of the year, certain
species, certain, uh, age groups.

And we need to use all, all of the animal.

And it's all done in conjunction
with, uh, biologists who are looking

at, uh, reproduction rates and,
uh, what's going to be the best

Matt Siemens: for the environment.

Caring capacity, the
land and all that stuff.

That's right.

Another one that's real bad
connotations is trophy hunting.

And if people look at me and I say, I'm a
trophy hunter and they just go off irate.

So let me give you an example.

You have a field of 14 deer out
there, seven or bucks, you have seven

trophy hunters, you have six bucks
left in the field when the hunt's

over, you have seven meat hunters.

They're all gone.

They're all gone.

Right.

It's, I haven't shot.

I've not shot game before, cause
it was raining and I didn't want to

deal with a wet animal in the rain.

I mean, it's, I enjoy being out there.

Yep.

It was nice and a whole
lot, but it wasn't.

I didn't have to take it.

I didn't have to feel the freezer, but
anything I do take, everything is used.

Not that African standard, but
everything, everything's used.

Travis Bader: I, you're not deep
frying up the, uh, the colon

Matt Siemens: and.

No, I, I do a lot of, I make a lot
of bill tongue and drawer wars.

I love bill tongue.

The South African dried
meat and dried sausage.

What was the other one you

Travis Bader: said?

Drawer wars.

Drawer wars, dried sausage.

Okay.

Okay.

Yeah.

I didn't know that's what it's
called, but I quite like that.

I make

Matt Siemens: quite a bit of it.

And a lot of times I'm running to
the store when they have ground beef

on sale, I'm making it with that.

But otherwise I'm using loose
term venison, all this stuff.

I, all the stuff I shoot,
whether it's antelope or moose or

Travis Bader: elk, it's.

I find it's got to have a good fat
cap on it for the biltong just to be.

Matt Siemens: Yeah, it's, I was on a
hunt in Africa and it was probably, I

posted a picture and it's three, four
times, three or four times more fat

than there is, than there is meat.

But it's, it's the, it absorbs the
flavor differently, the texture.

If people look at me and I say,
well, try it first and then try it.

It's like, Oh, I didn't
think it'd be like that.

You know, it's, it's

Travis Bader: good.

Yeah.

And it's an excellent energy source.

Like if I'm doing a fly
in hunt, I'll have Biltong

Matt Siemens: with me.

Is this basically a little
bit of vinegar on it?

Um, with some coriander and
salt and pepper and dried.

That's all it

Travis Bader: is.

That's all it is.

But over in Africa, don't
they just dry it out on rocks?

Is that.

Matt Siemens: Yeah,
they still use vinegar.

Okay.

Just as an antibacterial.

I believe I could be wrong on that.

It adds flavor as well.

Right.

And I've done, we went
on a tuna fishing trip.

So I made a bunch up and I had
all the different types of vinegar

and it did make a difference

Travis Bader: in flavor.

So what's the best vinegar to use?

Matt Siemens: Malt, brown
malt vinegar is my favorite.

But I use like, uh.

Red wine, apple cider,
white, and brown malt.

And brown malt I found was the best.

Do you

Travis Bader: put it in a
dehydrator or what do you do?

How do you?

Matt Siemens: I built my own, just,
just pulling warm air over it.

That's it.

And then you always that
thing, how, how dry.

Some guys like it moist.

Some guys like it bone dry, three or
four days, and then it's done for me.

Travis Bader: Okay.

And it lasts pretty long.

Never

Matt Siemens: goes rotten
cause you're eating it, right?

That's what I thought.

It doesn't last that long.

I mean, never tried it that way.

Cause it doesn't last long enough.

Travis Bader: So.

With the difficulties that firearms
businesses are facing under the current

legislation and our current government,
uh, are there, is Korth Group hiring?

Are they, uh, are they kind of
holding, holding the pattern right now?

We're

Matt Siemens: holding the pattern.

The warehouse is always looking
for good people to, to work.

Yeah.

In Okotoks there.

The rep group, we've got
a pretty solid group.

Everybody.

It's not just a bunch of salesmen,
and I'm proud to say that I was

lucky when I started with Korth,
I didn't know what to expect and,

um, they had basically everything I
was using already, so I didn't have

to sell myself short on anything,
everything that the, all the lines we

had and stuff I had at home already.

Perfect.

I've been diehard
loophole for a long time.

Yeah.

When I graduated high school, I bought
myself Webby Mark five, and I put a

loophole on it, , and then when I got
done with university, I went and bought

myself a high-end European scope.

Okay.

Wouldn't hold zero really?

When I was guiding my particular
one, I'd have to check my rifles

with new clients all the time.

Went back to loophole.

Never had that happen.

Interesting.

They're man made, anything can happen.

Sure.

They have a warranty.

We can fix them right in Okotoks.

Generally speaking, they'll
spend more time with Canada

Post than they'll spend with us.

Really?

And I've never had one lose zero.

On one African hunt, I had an adjustment.

I had to make some adjustments
on my gun and the O ring.

The seal on the adjustment came out.

Didn't affect performance.

Sure.

If, if hunting coastal Alaska
might be a different thing, but.

It'd be an issue.

I was hunting Matezi in
Zimbabwe and it was dry.

Yeah.

It wasn't an issue.

Sent it back,

Travis Bader: had it back in a week.

Well, don't you guys have a
range in your basement as well?

Yeah, we have a

Matt Siemens: 425 yard pistol
base and 200 yard rifle base.

So we can go down there and check
zeros and, uh, We had a guy come

in once, uh, send a scope back.

Wouldn't hold zero and they
had, he's on a 378 Weatherby.

So the tech came to me and this
is when I was working there.

He goes, Hey, what's the
biggest gun you have at home?

He put a scope on.

I got a 500 A square.

We'll bring it in.

We got to test it.

Well, I shot literally three,
three holes touching with it.

The scope held zero.

It's just the guy was afraid of his gun.

Mm.

Travis Bader: How often do you find that?

Matt Siemens: Most of the time.

Really?

Yeah.

The, the, this stat goes back a few
years, but I believe it was loophole made

more scopes in three months than all the
European companies did in a year combined.

Holy crow.

Out of those, out of those
scopes, did I say scopes and guns?

Any scopes?

Yeah.

Out of those scopes, 3%
would come back for warranty.

Okay.

Outta that 3%, one third of
1% was actually defective.

The rest was user error.

Travis Bader: And it was kind
of like websites or technology

versus like, it's not working.

And so the person, have
you reset your computer?

Oh, it works now.

Okay.

Or are you clicking on the right thing?

Right.

Oh, okay.

So there's gotta be a heavy
education piece in there as well.

We'd have people

Matt Siemens: send them back.

I put my scope in the safe and
now I take it out, it's reset

itself to factory defaults.

Oh yeah.

Travis Bader: That's.

It doesn't do that.

Like.

Totally, totally

Matt Siemens: happens.

It's, people's a betting issue.

The biggest thing is a lot of
people think all these rifles

we're shooting are square.

But like you have all
these different accesses.

So you have the line of the
board to the line of the action.

And is it threaded straight?

Is the barrel threaded straight?

The action threaded straight?

I used to have some long 648 screws,
probably six, eight inches long.

Okay.

I used to screw them into the action
holes and look, look back and show people.

And they, they didn't line up.

They were close, but you don't see it
when it's short, but when you have them

long, you could see how far they were out.

Travis Bader: Totally.

Oh, that's an interesting, I've
never thought about doing that.

Yeah,

Matt Siemens: it's, we live
in a world of tolerance.

There's not absolutes and making
a base square is easy, but the

first thing that gets blamed is
the optic and it's the ammunition.

And it's never the nut behind the
trigger, which is usually the problem.

Travis Bader: Yeah.

You know, I, I remember there is,
so prior to being, uh, silver core

outdoors was silver core training and
it was silver core gunworks and would

do firearms repair and maintenance for
the general public, as well as for, uh,

different law enforcement groups who do
extended work, um, armor car companies.

There's one government group that,
um, we're doing all of their, their

handguns, all of their pistols.

And, um, I would get called on down to
where they're training on a training

day with a bunch of fresh recruits.

And they like the gun's not working
and you got to get this fixed.

You got to get it right for us.

And I said, well.

Have you, and this would
be the instructors, right?

Well, have you shot it?

Well, no, but the student,
it was all over the place.

And they said, and so,
okay, well, let me see.

And then they got the whole class.

They're watching me and the instructors.

They're watching me and I take
it out and they run the target

all the way to the end for me.

This is how you got to test your accuracy.

I'm like, okay, here we go.

Right.

I better, better make sure I do my part.

Everybody here is watching all the
bullets go exactly where they're

supposed to go and it comes back.

Oh, what'd you do?

I'm like, Oh, you know,
in front of everyone.

Oh, I made a few tweaks on it.

It shouldn't be a problem anymore.

And then separately aside with the
instructor, next time you call up,

make sure you get a second person
to take some shots on it, and that

should be the number one thing I would
think that any, any company would say.

It wasn't performing for you.

Did you give it to somebody else
who, you know, to be proficient

that it wasn't performing for?

Matt Siemens: I always tell
people, if you keep your eyes

open, your accuracy improves too.

There was another case when I was out of
the office in Okotoks, a tech said, Hey,

I got to test some scopes for an agency.

So we had two Kimber rifles at that point,
the 308, I'm going to use police tactic.

I can't remember exactly what your model
it was, but there were no one shooters.

So we had them all in rings.

We went up to the Rosebud range and
we sat a hundred yards and we shot

groups and just Cut them out and attach
them to the scope and sent them back.

Then the agency contacted him wanting
to know what rests we were using,

because they wanted to buy the same
so they could test it themselves.

And he went back, no, no,
they were shot off sandbags.

They'll burn, I was a burner at the time.

It was a burner up in myself.

We just shot him off sandbags
and they couldn't believe it.

And this is ERT stuff.

Yeah.

There's a lot of qualified ERT
people out there, but there's.

Travis Bader: Sometimes ego
gets in the way too, right?

Something's not going

Matt Siemens: right.

Can't be me.

Back to A type personalities, right?

Well,

Travis Bader: that's it.

You know, we are a group of
individuals, people who find solace

in the outdoors typically don't want
to be surrounding themselves with a

whole bunch of other people, right?

Yeah.

Um, people who want to.

Uh, hunt or fish, or they're typically
people who are self sufficient

and they have their way of doing
things as work for them in the past.

Uh, even just in the firearms
community, there are some social

aspects to that, but even in there,
there's a lot of aid type, uh,

individualistic type, uh, personalities,
and I think that's probably.

The number one thing that the, uh, hunting
community and the firearms community

has to recognize and square themselves
with if they want to all work together.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: I find a lot of the
old wives tales from 40 years ago,

aren't dying or even 50 or 60 years
ago, like which ones, uh, how a

bullet flies through the air and, and.

A scope gathering light,
nothing gathers light.

It transmits light.

It doesn't gather light.

Tell me

Travis Bader: about that.

Matt Siemens: Well, people think it's
gathers light because we, when you

look through the scope, if you're
low light situation, like last

light, you're out and you look and
it looks brighter through your scope.

Well, now it's focused to your eye.

Right.

And it's coming right back to your pupil.

Because, well, I need a bigger lens.

We'll gather, gather more light.

No, your erector system inside
the scopes the same size,

the transmission is the same.

It will affect your exit pupil, right?

But a lot of that times when you get
to our age, our eyes, our pupils aren't

expanding that much anymore, anymore.

Doesn't help anything.

Right.

Within reason.

There's always, some of the
higher power scopes are huge.

Like when I was culling in,
in New Zealand, I had a three

and a half, 10 on my rifle.

I was doing quite good, but I
went back to next season and

I was going to be the bad guy.

I was, I was going to rack up numbers.

I put a six and a half,
a 20 on my, on my gun.

Target dot, and I had it dialed,
cranked it up to 20 power and

just made a fool of myself.

Cause early morning you
couldn't, it wasn't a knife,

exit people wasn't big enough.

Right.

Then you feel the view was so small,
you're trying to find these goats running.

And then I ended up cranking it
back down to 10 and left it there.

I've got my numbers back up.

Travis Bader: That's usually,
it's amazing how that works.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

It's would have been cheaper keeping it.

Right.

But it's one of the things that it's
all this stuff, like the, my culling

in the South Pacific really taught me
a lot old, like testing his old wives,

tails with different bullets and stuff.

Cause you go down and you're
shooting quantities, animals.

You could shoot in a day, what you
couldn't shoot in several lifetimes here.

Really?

And so with different bullets
and stuff, it really taught me

what worked and what didn't.

Travis Bader: So this, the whole
culling aspect, they take a look,

it's usually with invasive species.

And they say they're overrunning,
it's going to cause damage to the

environment and to the other species in
here, carrying capacities diminished.

Yeah.

Now we had a, um, a cull here over in BC,
uh, one of the local little islands here.

And they will bring people in.

You were going to New Zealand and these
guys were New Zealand fellows that were

coming over here, coming over here.

Matt Siemens: I was, I helped him out
with that little bit in the beginning

as the loophole horny rep, I tried
talking to them and they wouldn't listen.

And their second purchase was more
geared to what I, what I told.

But I think the whole thing was wrong.

You're paying a company, come in,
come in here, kill deer when you

and I would have done it for free.

You could have had a draw.

Sure.

Yeah.

It's a national park.

Okay.

We'll have it a draw basis.

When I lived in Detroit, we used to, we
always talked about guarding piles of corn

in the Metro parks in downtown Detroit.

Okay.

They would stack corn up and
get all the deer coming in.

And then in middle of winter,
we would guard the pile of corn.

And shoot any deer.

I tried to eat it and all, all the, all
the meat went right back to It was all

processed through Whitetails Unlimited.

Yeah.

But I mean, that wasn't invasive,
but it was just the Metro parks, you

couldn't control it any other way.

You can't, you couldn't
open it up in the cities.

Right.

I feel if we did a call like
that in a metropolitan area in

Canada, there'd be such outcry.

Down there, I'm not sure
if they're still doing it.

This goes back 20 some years now.

But it was always, it
was always interesting.

And then that was muzzleloader only.

And we would try different bullets
and that's a, my terminal ballistics

fascination is always, I'd go
to New Zealand, I'd have my, so

much of my regular go to bullet.

And I try a few new ones that were on
the market and see how they worked.

And when you can try.

A bullet on 50 different animals in a day.

It's not, it's a much broader
snapshot than just that focus.

Well, you tried it once, it didn't work.

It didn't, maybe that was the one off, but
came pretty apparent what worked and what

Travis Bader: didn't.

What do you find works for you?

Most of my killing

Matt Siemens: bullet was
the Hornady interlock, even

before I worked for Hornady.

Okay.

And it was performed very good.

Yeah.

And they were economical when you're
shooting that kind of volumes.

Hmm.

Yeah.

I'm talking hundreds
of rounds a day, right?

Like it's, and it made a difference
if you were shooting some of the stuff

that was four or five times the price.

And when we experimented with
them and I found the best bang

for the buck was that Hornady

Travis Bader: Interlock.

Interesting.

So what I heard back from the, the
local culling that was over here, um,

They said, well, why are you bringing
people in from New Zealand to do this?

I said, well, they're the ones with
the expertise and they're going to be

shooting from helicopters and they're
going to blah, blah, blah, blah.

But he, a mighty flies helicopter.

He's like, you know, we train the New
Zealanders how to shoot from helicopters.

I, uh, Canadians know how to do this.

Matt Siemens: I've shot from
helicopter in New Zealand.

Yeah.

I'm a hundred percent
success rate in helicopter.

Okay.

Never missed a shot.

Okay.

I've only taken one.

That

Travis Bader: was going
to be my next question.

That was going to be my next question.

Cause that'd be a pretty darn impressive
shooting from a moving helicopter.

It

Matt Siemens: was, um.

We were, we were culling tar
and, uh, it ran into the bullet.

Okay.

Like it, it, it's, I act like it was all
me, but it's, do you want to try again?

Nope.

I'm fine.

Yeah.

Travis Bader: Yeah.

Just rest of

Matt Siemens: my laurels here.

No, it was.

It was a lucky shot, but I mean, I
always tell people I'm a hundred percent

from helicopter, which isn't a lie, but
that's another one of those stats things.

Right.

Like statistically, I'm not telling them.

I'm just physically, I'm telling
the truth, but it's, it's a

very, very small cross section.

Travis Bader: Well, I heard there
is no, um, No Canadians, uh, put

in for the, uh, for the call.

I don't know if that's true or
not, or if that was just something

that was, uh, said afterwards, but.

I'd never, I'd never

Matt Siemens: heard it
being offered to anybody.

Travis Bader: I never did either.

Because when

Matt Siemens: I, when we were
involved with it, it was Parks

Canada trying to do it themselves.

Travis Bader: Gotcha.

Yeah.

Interesting anyways.

I mean, you know, they've
got a reason they've got a.

They've gone through, they've
looked at the science.

They've looked at why they need
to do this, but the next step

seemed a little ridiculous.

The amount of money
that's spent in the, uh.

Didn't it work

Matt Siemens: out like 83, 000 a deer?

I

Travis Bader: think it
was something like that.

It's just brutal.

Yeah.

I don't understand that,
but, um, interesting.

Matt Siemens: I hunted on the, on
the islands there a couple of years

back and we weren't welcome there.

No, by most of the people, it was
clear they didn't want us there.

A few, a few guys were fine, but so
now they have the problem of the deer.

It's everybody wants
their cake and eat it too.

Right?

Travis Bader: Yeah.

Well, I mean, they're, they're cute and
they, they're little guys and they're,

they're like little pets and they come
by all the time, but you can't stick

your finger into the bowl of water
and not expect to see some ripples.

There's going to be a
consequence one way or the other.

And I guess we come to a
point where you either say.

Okay.

The consequence is, is the
environment's changed completely,

or you get in there and you try and
make some changes to, to correct

some of the mistakes that were made.

Well, it's a

Matt Siemens: textbook example of how
managing herds and hunting can help not

only the herd, but the, but the landscape
and the carrying capacity of the land.

Mm hmm.

Keep it healthy.

Mm hmm.

And people have to realize that people,
biggest thing that aunties don't

understand are animal rights people.

Well, you're killing an animal.

Yeah.

You're not managing for an individual.

You're managing for the herd long term.

Mm hmm.

And you have to give some stuff
up for it to be viable long term.

Travis Bader: Yeah, because
the consequence otherwise is

they'll, they starved to death.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: Disease comes
in, wipes them out and.

Right.

You take a look, what's happening in
the prairies and in the States with CWD

now is, and that was from supposedly
coming from the deer farming, crowded

pens and it disease wipe stuff out.

Is that where it

Travis Bader: came from?

That's the story I heard.

CWD, chronic wasting disease for anyone
who's listening, who doesn't quite.

Um, and that's, I think
it's in Alberta now.

Any reported cases in British Columbia?

Not that I'm aware of.

I don't think there is yet.

Do you think it's coming?

Matt Siemens: I don't know.

I sure hope not.

Travis Bader: Yeah, that's, um, just,
it's decimating populations and I, I

never, I never heard about where they
were speculating where he came from.

So that's

Matt Siemens: interesting.

I hunted Alberta this fall for antelope
and in what was once a prime mule deer

area, there wasn't a mule deer left.

They wiped them out.

Not that they purposely
culled them all out.

It's my understanding.

Just so the disease wouldn't spread.

Now that what comes
back should be healthy.

But you have to manage that too.

I know every deer you shoot in Alberta,
when, once I've shot, you submit a head

for testing and then if it comes back
positive, they give you another tag

and they don't recommend eating it.

They say it can't jump to the human,
but you don't want to be that.

Travis Bader: Case number one.

Didn't realize they gave another tag.

I thought you just, maybe that.

Maybe

Matt Siemens: that stopped, but
I know at first it was guys I was

hunting with when I lived there
were getting replacement tags.

One year we we got, you got drawn and
you go buy your tag and you get two tags.

Next year.

Next year it's three.

I heard one year being six.

They're trying to get rid of them.

They're quite aggressive
on managing it there.

Travis Bader: So I gotta ask
right now, shot show's on.

How did you manage to get outta that one?

Like for me, I have a hard time at shot.

It is too many people,
too busy, too much stuff.

I'd rather be in the ocean, up a mountain,
in the woods, shot's a tough place for me.

Yeah.

Shot

Matt Siemens: opens tomorrow.

It is to go and work.

It is one thing to go and visit it as a
consumer, or I guess it's not consumers

and industry related, but to go there
as a guest is a different thing.

It was lots of fun the
first couple of years.

If I had to be there, I'd be there,
put my best foot forward, but it is.

It is four days of
grinding it out nonstop.

You can barely walk while halls
are so full, thousands of people,

tens of thousands of people.

And I'm just not a crowd person, but
no, I, it's half the crews there.

I'll be there next year.

Okay.

And it's, it's a phenomenal place.

Like you realize how small
the Canadian market really is

Travis Bader: when you walk through Shaw.

I got to wonder why they even
care, even listen to us, honestly.

I mean, it's, we are so small.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

We're.

If anywhere from three to
7%, depends who you talk

Travis Bader: to.

And we make their life difficult
by having all these weird

import export laws and yeah.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

And magazine restrictions.

And now that, yeah, it's just brutal.

You, they can't just ship a gun up
by changing, throwing a mag out.

They got to do so many, a lot of a
hundred or whatever, and it just changes

Travis Bader: things.

And have you been keeping up on the,
uh, the newer magazine laws that

they're talking about here in Canada?

Matt Siemens: I know
enough to be dangerous.

Um, I've been trying to keep up with it.

What's actually, once it passes, I
will, I will educate myself a hundred

percent on it, but there's so much
speculation out there and stuff I want it.

I don't want to get myself confused.

I've lived in enough places and
hunted enough places that naturally

I'm getting stuff mixed up.

Well, where was this?

How do I, just because I've lived in
different places and things have changed.

Travis Bader: From what I understand,
they're looking at, uh, pinned

magazines and magazine capacities and.

They say they keep bringing in
new regulations and legislation

as to the number of rounds that
you can have in a magazine.

And well, if a restricted firearm,
you can have 10, but if it's a

non restricted center fire, semi
auto, you can only have five.

But if it's a restricted,
that's kind of looks like a

non restricted it's five again.

But if it takes a pistol mags and it's
10, they said, tell you what, anything

that's pinned, uh, it's going to be
made prohibited is what I'm hearing.

I

Matt Siemens: heard the same thing.

And then like.

We get stuff up from Ruger.

Mm-Hmm.

. And they won't be pinned to be dimpled.

Right.

And 'cause pending is
not legal in some states.

Mm.

'cause it could be removed.

Right.

So they dimple the mag and
they sim simply with a hammer.

They probably have a jig, they
put it in the hammer and a

punch and it deforms the mag.

Mm-Hmm.

And then they get people upset with
that because the mags deformed.

Well, you know, P'S not legal, so
this is what it is and we aren't

big enough for them to to, to do it.

Travis Bader: Yeah, I remember back
in the day when, uh, Vancouver police,

you know, they transitioned from their
Breda's to their Sig's and it was my

job to dimple thousands of magazines.

And that's exactly what I did.

Made a little jig, slide the thing
in, get the torch just to heat it and

then give it a smack, bring it out.

So they all have a little bit of
discoloration from the torch and

a little bit of a dimple, but
they're all in the same place.

Made them legal again for them to be able
to sell it prior to them, uh, enforcing

some, uh, legislation or regulations that
were on the books about law enforcement,

being able to recoup costs through the

Matt Siemens: city of Margaret.

My understanding, they can't anymore.

Travis Bader: They can and they can't.

I mean, the legislation was on the books,
um, but they just weren't enacting it.

Some stuff happened.

They decided they're going to enact it.

And from what I understand,
there is a little bit of a, um.

It's a bit of a gray area.

I think they came down really
hard and said, you can't.

The same reason why, let's say safety
course instructors in Canada, they used

to get all of their firearms through
seized guns from the police stations.

And they'd in BC, they'd either come
over to, at the time it was, uh, Murray

Charlton, who was doing it or myself.

And we would be, um, Deactivating
or the, now they call it disabling a

firearm so that it'll still click and
it'll still do what it's got to do.

And, but it'll never go bang again.

And we get it all from the.

And then they said, you
can't do that anymore.

And I think that's
certain to lax up a bit.

I've certain areas.

I still hear instructors saying,
Oh, I went to my local RCMP

and they put some aside for me.

So there's a lot

Matt Siemens: of officer
discretion involved.

Yes.

And it depends where you are.

I have some friends who are
members and, uh, they're night

and day how they interpret things.

Travis Bader: Sure.

Yeah.

Yeah.

It's like calling up the firearms program.

Yeah.

You can call five different times
and get eight different answers.

Yeah.

Interesting world that we try and
navigate, create, make sure that like

operating a business, I got to imagine
it's got to be incredibly difficult

for a company as large as the one
you work with to, uh, operate under

the auspices of certain rules and
regulations only to have somebody else

interpreted differently the next day.

And

Matt Siemens: this is why we draw
the company makes policies are

black and white and people want
to see, well, can't you help me?

No, we're black and white.

We have to be, there's too many variables
involved and we've been advised or we, the

company feels that this is what it means.

So we stick to that and we don't

Travis Bader: deviate from it.

Do you guys seek permission
or do you seek, um, do you

say this is what we're doing?

Does it meet, do you
look for tacit approval?

Do you look for it?

Because if you want to
get everything in writing?

You're going to be waiting years.

Yeah.

That's

Matt Siemens: above my pay grade.

Okay.

It comes down to me and I
just follow what I'm told.

Sure.

Fair enough.

I I've, yeah, I don't need to put
that responsibility on myself.

If someone else is going to do it, I'll
listen and do exactly what I'm told.

Travis Bader: Right.

Yeah.

Fair enough.

Where do you see the future of, uh, of
firearms in, in Canada and, and hunting?

That's

Matt Siemens: a tough one.

If something doesn't change now,
it's not going to be a good future.

And that, that can be
interpreted in many ways.

And that's just how I feel though.

It's brutal what we're going
through as history repeats itself.

You can draw all these parallels
from other regimes and stuff.

And some of the stuff's word for word.

Travis Bader: You talk to some
people and they say, you know,

the writing's on the wall.

I mean, it's just a matter of time.

Um, I got to wonder what would
have to happen in order for

that not to go down that course.

Matt Siemens: There has to
be a change in government.

I mean, that that's, that's the first,
but can the Canadian with a Canadian

public allow the next government, give
them enough leeway and time to fix.

What it is, where most Canadians
can't buy green bananas to plan ahead.

And then they aren't, they aren't
going to be able to sit here and wait

for the cons, if say the conservative
party is going to be our saviour,

they aren't going to give them two
terms to fix what the last guys did.

Right.

They're going to, Oh, this is soon
as soon as they start tightening

the belt and stuff, they're going
to, Oh, it was better the other way.

And it's just, they can't see the future.

Travis Bader: Well, I look at COVID
all of a sudden, there's a resurgence

in people wanting to be able to
be self reliant to get outside.

Obviously, uh, self
protection was another one.

They kind of brought it to the forefront.

And I guess if I'm to be pessimistic,
I'd say that's probably the only

thing that will course correct,
even different governments coming in

might slow or bait these different,
uh, the course that we're on.

But it's going to take either natural
disaster, war, something catastrophic

in order for people to reevaluate,
um, what they find important.

I,

Matt Siemens: I've been
saying that for a while.

It's going to take an act of God or a
catastrophic event to get the country

back on, on, on the right course.

Especially if we get another
liberal government in.

And I say, I'm not picking on the
liberals here because Mulroney's

conservatives and Kim Campbell
brought a bunch of this crap in.

Sure.

Yeah.

So it's the best way to look at it.

They're, they're, they're
all in the same party.

It's just different money wings.

Travis Bader: Right.

Well, I, I look at it and I know, you
know, the macro politics are going to

be different from the micro politics,
but I remember, And there were years

ago, here we are in the incorporation
of Delta, which is now the city of

Delta and at the time of the corporation
of Delta says, we don't want any more

firearms related businesses in Delta.

Similar to what Syria has done.

If you're in there, you're grandfathered,
but, uh, that's it no more.

Right.

And so I went in there and I had myself
all prepared and got my suit on and

I've got all my notes and I'm in there
and I'm talking, given all my different

points and you know, that there was one.

Um, firearm business that thought
this was the greatest thing in the

world because they were close to
retirement and this was just making,

um, it was a short sighted approach.

And, um, I didn't see eye to eye with
that individual on that one point.

Great person, but just that one
point, I didn't see eye to eye on.

Anyways, I'm given my spiel
and one of the guys stands up.

One of the politicians says, Travis.

Like, how, how much longer
are you going to go here?

And it's cause he sees all my notes.

And I says, well, I don't know.

I got this much more to go through.

And he's like, let me just stop you short.

I agree with everything you're saying.

This has got nothing to do with what
makes sense and it's got everything to

do with what we think that people want.

Oh, I didn't know how to respond to that.

He says, yeah, no, you're right.

Nothing here really makes sense,
but this is what we think the

constituents who elected us in want.

And I.

Look at that more on the macro side.

Is this what people actually want?

I think people want safety.

They want security, but I think the
story that's being told over and

over again, either through either
inadvertently through let's say

media, which glorifies firearms and
in a certain way, or through, um.

Like legacy media and social media and
all the rest that may be objective driven

to, to paint a picture in a certain way.

They'll say, you know, firearms
are bad or hunting is bad.

And majority of people say, well,
yeah, you know, I want to be safe.

I don't want to walk out and see
everybody carrying around a gun.

Cause that doesn't make me feel safe.

I don't want to see people out there
hurting these poor animals because,

you know, I'd rather just get it
from the abattoir and don't, don't

you just get meat from Safeway.

And I think there's an education piece
in here that can bridge the gap of.

What people actually want, because
they want safety and security and

they want their environment to
thrive and the animals to do well.

And how we get there.

And I think there's, there's a,
a divide in there that we aren't

adequately bridging at the moment.

No,

Matt Siemens: and it's uphill battle
because like you say, the media

is giving people what they want.

Right.

And, and it's the politician, all
the politician wants is another term

and it's keeps on going that way.

If it was all based on science
and common sense and all that

kind of stuff, it wouldn't be an

Travis Bader: issue.

It's based on money.

Follow the money.

Right.

Media doesn't sell stories.

They sell advertising, right?

They want eyes on so
they can convert that.

And there's going to be money involved,
or there's going to be money back through

the government, if certain governments are
in power that are favorable to the media.

And I think people are starting to wake
up to that, you know, just all the.

Um, fake news, all the, like what
Trump, Trump would go on about.

I think people are waking up to the
amount of bias that's out there, but it

also creates a very dangerous category
where people just can't believe anything.

They don't know what to believe.

And

Matt Siemens: it's something
comes across as plausible.

Well, if you look at how many of
these tinfoil hat conspiracy theories.

Mm.

Have the, have been proven correct and
actually exist in the last three years.

Like

Travis Bader: it's, it's just brutal.

I actually got my tinfoil hat back there.

You can just see it up behind me.

I haven't had a chance to wear it yet.

I'm just waiting for some guests to
come on with some real tinfoil stuff.

And I put my hat on.

Matt Siemens: I was in Africa when
COVID hit and I flew back through

four or five major airports around
the world after the lockdown.

Yeah.

And all I can say is my firsthand
experience for what that's

worth, this and two bucks will
get you a coffee at Timmy's.

It's how they were talking about the
lockdown being handled in all these

countries and all these wasn't the case.

I, I, I seen it myself
completely different.

Did it change right after I left
or was it like that before I came?

I don't know, but I went through these
places and it wasn't, wasn't with

anything, anything the news was reporting.

It was definitely agenda
driven and a lot of fear

Travis Bader: mongering going on.

I likened it to fog that whole thing,
because I'd talk to people and no

fellow in Spain, he was doing some
work on one of our websites and he's

in Valencia there and COVID first hit.

He's like, Oh, it's bad.

Okay.

Tell me about this.

Right?

Like we don't, I'm, I'm learning here.

Oh, you know, the lockdowns are
going to happen and people are going

to start dying and this and that.

Are you seeing that in your
area there in Valencia?

Well, no, no, but it's, it's over in these
other areas and just like fog, right?

Are you, is it really
foggy right where you are?

Well, no, I can see all around me,
but it's really foggy over there.

You walk over there and you look
around, it's the same thing, right?

There's a

Matt Siemens: European vendor
we were dealing with and the

conversation was, how's it going?

And they go, this is great.

There's no tourists.

And I'll leave it at that, right?

Right.

Like

Travis Bader: it was.

Well, it also had an effect of, on
firearms businesses, which was positive

in the short term, it's not a sustainable
sort of model, but I mean, it got

everybody wanting to learn to hunt,
wanting to learn to garden, wanting to

purchase firearms and you couldn't keep
them on the shelves for quite some time.

Yeah.

There was

Matt Siemens: that time where you
had this happening and political

stuff happening around the world.

It was a perfect storm for the
industry, but not, not sustainable.

And we're going through
the correction now.

It's still, there's still strong sales,
but it's, well, even if we went back to

quote unquote, normal, people would think
is the bottoms dropped out because it was

Travis Bader: just so, so
busy for those few years.

Yeah.

Yeah.

That was, uh, it was interesting.

Uh, you're not seeing people wanting
to go outside in the same way anymore.

It's funny how quickly people can
just go back to, well, this is normal.

This is, this is easy.

The easy path, I guess that's why
we have game trails because we are

animals, just like anything else.

This is an easy way.

And I can, I was go back and
forth kind of on autopilot.

Yeah.

Path least resistance.

Yeah.

Interesting.

Um, any other, any inside scoops from
the industry that we should be, uh,

chatting about any up and coming things?

That you're allowed to talk about?

Well, it's not the real

Matt Siemens: secret now.

Everything will be released at
SHOT Show, that type of thing.

Right.

Um, on the, on the loophole side of
things, they brought the Mark IV back.

Okay.

And it seemed that Mark IV HD.

Yeah.

And it looks like they've
done a great job on it.

Nice.

Hit it out of the park.

Nice.

We'll, we'll see how the
sales translate to that.

And Hornet is always coming out
with these new cartridges and what

a lot of them are designed for.

Military application and then released
to the public as a secondary thing.

But a lot of that stuff is AR driven
and we've lost that market here.

It'll still work in a bolt gun, but.

For the, for the Americans and their ARs.

It's some

Travis Bader: neat stuff out there.

Do you think, do you
think ARs are coming back?

I sure hope so.

Yeah.

I, um, cause they're talking about a
complete rewrite of the firearms act.

It's so patchwork together as it is right
now, and it's so open to interpretation.

It's, um, it's a little ridiculous,
you know, people will call up and

they'll say, you know, I got this issue.

Do you know a good firearms lawyer?

And I always tell them the same thing.

You don't need a firearms lawyer.

You just need a good lawyer.

Somebody knows who's got a sharp head, who
knows procedural law and everything else.

Because that, that's not
where these things are going

to be won or lost for you.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: But it comes back
to our talk there about educating,

educating people, like so many people,
all the semi auto, the auto, uh,

automatic is everything that's, they
have no place in the sporting field.

Well, actually they were made for the
sportsmen long before the military,

when Chester came out with that.

Self, self loading rifle,
Remington model eight.

And that's where Kalashnikov,
Kalashnikov got his safety for the

AK off the Remington model eight.

They were built for the Hunter
that at early in the early part

of the century, last century.

And the military didn't start using them
successfully until the grand World War II.

But, but the semi auto rifle was made.

Travis Bader: And most people
don't think about it like that.

No, no.

Interesting.

So, you know, SHOT Show, the one thing I
did like about it, they'd send us media

passes, so I don't have to pay to get in.

I get to go down to the range days ahead
of time, and that was always a fun thing.

You get to go in, shoot all the
new things for free, meet all

the people that are out there.

Um, is that something
that you guys would Uh,

Matt Siemens: the LE guys would
be down there with our various

vendors on the line and stuff.

Yeah.

As we'd separated, uh, I
used to do LEN commercial.

Now I just do the
commercial side of things.

So I'm not dealing with
that nearly as much.

I'll pick up some slack once in a while,
but I never went down there and shot that.

I've done it before in previous life
and played with all that kind of stuff.

It's fun.

And I'll let someone else go.

I've not had a chance yet.

Travis Bader: Yeah, makes sense.

I just like free food, free, free shuttle

Matt Siemens: down.

Anytime you can shoot a full
auto on someone else's animal

bill, that's the way to do it.

Travis Bader: Yes.

Um, what else?

Um, so looking at these African hunts,
um, you're saying before, you know, caviar

tastes on a, on a peanut butter budget.

Um, what advice would you have to
somebody else who's looking to, to do

the same thing, go on an African hunt?

It's achievable.

Matt Siemens: That's,
that's the bottom line.

If you go to vacation, if you go
on vacation to Hawaii, Mexico,

if you do a cruise, you can do
an African hunt if you want to.

It's, um, I'm very lucky that the, my key
thing that gets me to Africa is my wife.

She's a hundred percent supportive.

Okay.

And that changes it that I know
people who wives aren't quite as

encouraging as when it comes to hunting.

My wife's a hundred percent behind it.

And actually on the hunt I'm going on
now, I was going to go shoot a female lion

Travis Bader: on a management hunt.

That's going to raise some eyebrows

Matt Siemens: and get some people upset.

And, uh, I, because the price
was, uh, In my budget and my wife,

no, they're going to close this.

It's not going to be
something you can do again.

Go, go, go shoot a male, go
shoot the big main lions.

Well, go hunt for me.

Whether you get one or not,
it's a different story.

Right.

And so he twisted my arm and
that's what I signed up for now.

Like I'm not.

I don't have the money.

I'm just financially irresponsible.

Right.

So.

Travis Bader: You got the perseverance.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: It's, it's one of
the things it's, I wanted something

I never thought I'd ever do.

Travis Bader: Well, there's also
the aspect of, uh, the hunter can

be hunted with these things too.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

It's called dangerous game for a reason.

And then it's part of the big five.

And I, if you had told me 15 years ago,
I'd be talking about hunting the big five.

I would've thought you were nuts.

Like there's no way someone in my income.

And if I'm successful in the lion hunt,
it'll be my number four of the big five.

Wow.

So, and it's something I've, and
it's just chasing things down.

The buddy came to me a couple
of years ago, asked me if

I want to shoot a leopard.

And of course I want to shoot a leopard,
but that's not my income bracket.

That's.

A quarter of my annual salary or
more, I can't do that kind of stuff.

And he, he, well, yeah, you give me
this, I'll give you a lion as a leopard.

And so, well, what am I missing here?

The numbers don't add up.

He's no, I'll just, you help me.

I'll help you out.

So the right place at the right time.

And when I hunted Pakistan back when,
uh, I had my friend from Georgia up here,

we're hunting the, the bison in Alberta
when they were concealed, considered

pests, when they didn't need a license
or anything, that's just a few years ago.

Right.

And we were way back up hunting
bison and his cell phone rings.

There's no cell phone
service, but the phone rang.

It must've been, I don't know what
they call it, skip or whatever.

And sure.

And it was one of his pro staff.

Was canceling the Pakistan
hunt for that January.

Okay.

This is in the September.

And so he ended up the phone and he goes,
Siemens, do you want to go to Pakistan?

What's it going to cost me?

He goes, the hunt's free.

So you got to get there.

I said, well, sign me up.

And that's how I got the

Travis Bader: Pakistan hunt.

And he works all on board with this.

Yeah.

We're going to lose you for.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

Well, I, I flew, uh, I flew over Pakistan.

I landed the 13th of January
and shot show started the 15th.

So I did a quick turnaround and
going back to us customs after

visiting Pakistan was interesting.

Yeah.

I should imagine, but it was one
of the things that's, that's,

that's I run everything down.

Someone offers me a hunt, I'll run
it down and see if it's legit or

if the guy's just blowing smoke and
if I can do it and then more off

the beaten path is more enjoyable.

Right.

Travis Bader: Are there
many scams out there?

Many people, uh, run, run and scam hunts.

Matt Siemens: Yeah, but not as
bad as other industries, I'd say.

I mean, there's people not
reading the fine print.

Like, like a lot of people,
these hunting and conservation

groups, we have fundraisers.

Like SCI, we have a
fundraiser on April 13th.

And we have some African
auction hunts there.

And you can save some money
by buying a hunt there.

Now.

Is the hunt going to be
pennies in the dollar?

Not if you do it right.

Like you're going to save
a little bit of money.

It's still going to cost you.

Instead of spending 10, 000,
you're going to spend eight.

Right.

But it's, and you can do it for less
than that too, but you just have

to, you just have to run them down.

Like my first trip to New Zealand
was guy made me an offer and I

kind of lost contact with him.

I didn't think he was legit.

Then I found them and send him an
email and, Oh no, the offer stands.

Let's do this.

And that was my first of
nine trips down there.

Right.

And it was just, but I pursue everything.

And a lot of times it's.

You're spinning your wheels for
nothing, but when it does come

true, it's, it's, it's brilliant.

Travis Bader: I did a
hunt over in Molokai.

And yeah, you know, trying to
figure this thing out, hunting

in the States and access deer, I
can bring all the meat back home.

This is fantastic.

And, um, met some great people over there.

I don't know if I'd do that hunt again.

Um, Just from my perspective, cause
I met with the, um, uh, some other

locals and they said, if you want to
hunt, you just let, let me know next

time we'll, we'll go out together.

That was the hunt that I want to
do is with the locals is, uh, I, I

did a recce of the area beforehand.

I'm looking around and getting
things kind of sorted and, uh, met

with the, uh, the fellow there.

And, uh, he said, okay, well, let's get
in this, uh, great big, it wasn't an

Argo, but it was a multi seater side
by side and we'll drive around and so,

okay, well, how would I get out here?

I'm going to hike over the next hillside
and I, the wrecking I've been doing,

he said, no, no, no, just sit here.

We'll drive you around.

And it was, it was a different style
of hunt that I've ever hunted before.

It was interesting for the experience.

Got to keep all the meat.

It was, uh, uh, used.

Everything on it, got the hides, all
the rest, um, made me feel good about

myself, but I wanted to put some more
legwork in and I wanted to make it a,

um, uh, a different type of a hunt.

So definitely a hundred percent,
I'd do access to area again,

uh, just in a different way.

Do you have that sort of, uh, freedom, uh,
if you're doing an African hunt or do you?

Well,

Matt Siemens: absolutely.

Like I know, like in place I hunt in
Namibia, If you want to walk from the

lodge, you can walk from the lodge.

If you want to drive out, you can
drive out and get out in stock.

Um, I know I avoided hunting in
South Africa for quite a few years.

Cause I heard horror
stories about South Africa.

So have I.

And then I went last year in March with
an outfit there and I was very impressed.

I took my son and a friend and the
outfitter really, the outfitter really.

Spent time with my son
and it was brilliant.

And it was, there was, there
was a fence around the place.

It was a huge, huge

Travis Bader: farm.

Like how big?

Uh,

Matt Siemens: 15, 000 acres.

That's pretty big.

And you know, the animals didn't know
the fence was there, but they knew where

every rock was, every tree, every bush.

And I've had many free range, true
free range BC hunts here, much

easier than that South Africa hunt.

It's that high fence.

It isn't my first choice.

I'm never going to say it is.

Right.

But the hunt is still a spirit of
fair chase and it can be challenging.

Right.

But then you hear stories of guys go
up and they're hunting a very small

pool table type thing, like, like
this, this go out and shoot and stuff.

And that's not for

Travis Bader: me.

No, me neither.

Yeah.

Um, anytime it became dangerous
when you're out there, anytime

you've been concerned about, uh,
either the environment or the game.

Matt Siemens: In Africa.

Yeah.

My elephant hunt.

I have never been more scared in my life.

Yeah.

But never felt more
alive at the same time.

Travis Bader: Well, you never feel quite
as alive when you're almost dead, right?

Matt Siemens: It's, uh, and it was truly
the most addictive thing I've ever done.

Yeah.

It's, I'd never be able to do it again,
just because the costs and stuff.

And I just happened to be at the
right place again and had a thing.

And I first seen a wild elephant on my
first trip to Zimbabwe and I thought, wow.

And you see him in, in the zoo and stuff.

I had no interest.

Didn't interest me at all.

Yeah,

Travis Bader: I

Matt Siemens: agree.

But, but in the wild,
it's a different thing.

Yeah.

And it's a whole lot more level
playing field than people think.

If you screw up.

Someone's getting hurt, getting stomped.

Yeah.

And it's, it's not for everybody.

Like my pH told me when you shoot an
elephant, you're going to have a very

emotional response one way or the other.

And everything is going to be, you're
going to not regret doing it, but,

but you will never do it again.

Interesting.

Or everything else you do
after this is rats and mice.

He said his term.

And I had the expensive
reaction, of course.

And it was most.

Amazing thing.

We looked over my first hunt.

I did a hunt was unsuccessful.

My first time they let
me come back in a second.

And we looked at, we're
probably 400 elephant.

We probably walked 10, 15 miles a day.

And it was incredibly challenging.

I couldn't believe the fact that
there could be elephants standing

in trees, 20 yards in front of
you and you couldn't see them.

Really?

Yeah.

Like it was just like.

20 yards.

20 yards.

We were driving on the road and there's
some elephant tracks across, I can't even

tell which way they're headed because
it's just this round disc in the sand.

The tracker looks at it
and says, 20 minutes.

They're 20 minutes in front of us.

And I'm like, yeah, this guy's.

Travis Bader: Like crocodile Dundee

Matt Siemens: type?

Drinking all that rotten corn
maize, corn drink that they drink.

And so we jumped out and 20
minutes later, we were in the herd.

Wow.

And I say in the herd, like
you're 10 yards from him

sometimes, you're right there.

It's up close and personal.

You're, you're, when I first booked the
hunt, I asked him, well, what do you want?

How do you want me to sight my rifle in?

He goes, well, zero at 25 yards.

I said, 25 yards.

Yeah, don't worry.

We won't shoot that far.

We won't shoot that far.

And, and it was, no, year right
up, personal, if something goes

wrong, it goes wrong in a hurry.

No kidding.

And, um, what people don't understand,
there's not as many elephants as there

used to be, but based on carrying
capacity to land, they're overpopulated.

That has to do with geopolitical stuff
and farming and all that kind of stuff.

And they have to manage to hurt.

Interesting.

And then you get the bad apples again.

Like there are some fish and game
guys in one of the countries,

they're poised on the water holes.

And then it went and found all the ivory.

They killed hundreds.

Well, that doesn't help anybody.

That's not conservation.

I

Travis Bader: was having sushi
with a, uh, a friend and.

He's, um, uh, British individual has
a family over in, um, Zimbabwe and

anyways, or he gets a text coming
through and looks, it makes a bit of

a face and like, Oh, what's going on?

Say, Oh, you don't want to see this.

Okay.

Yeah.

You know what we do with
poachers over there?

Anyways, they, they deal
with them rather harshly.

Yeah.

When I was

Matt Siemens: both elephant
trips to the Zimbabwe, when

I was there the week before.

There were poachers shot in
the area by PHs and stuff.

Just line

Travis Bader: them up and take

Matt Siemens: care of them.

But Fish and Game have
no problem with that.

National parks, what
they're called over there.

But the police department
has serious issues with it.

Interesting.

Yeah.

And even though that they, the one,
the one time that they were shot

at first, they returned fire, but
it's, they, they don't deal with it.

I have signs when we're going through
an area, don't get out of your vehicle

because there's no hunting in the area.

Travis Bader: You get out,
they're going to think

Matt Siemens: you're a poacher.

And it says right there, if you, if
you're out of your vehicle, you'd be

dealt with as a poacher and shot in sight.

Yeah.

Travis Bader: Yeah.

It's just a different world than
what we're used to over here.

And poaching

Matt Siemens: there is what's
killing African wildlife.

It's not the hunters.

Travis Bader: Well, what's
driving the poaching, obviously

there's a market for it, right?

Matt Siemens: There is.

Yeah.

If there was no market for it,
they wouldn't be going after,

they wouldn't be doing it.

Right.

Travis Bader: Huh.

Well, um, what else?

Anything else we should be talking about?

Matt Siemens: Oh, there's so much stuff
that we start going down these rabbit

holes and stuff and Cape Buffalo.

Travis Bader: There's, uh, uh,
they're on the big five, aren't they?

Yep.

Matt Siemens: I shot a
Cape Buffalo in March.

Okay.

Past March with my son and distance
on that, uh, about 70 yards.

And it was, I practice, I'm on it,
shoot as fast as I can, but everything

in Africa bites you, the bugs, the
trees, and I got tangled up in the

bush right in front of me and it grabs
onto your skin and incredibly painful.

And the time I got cleared,
the Buffalo had run 10 yards,

turned back, I'd run another way.

So I hit him on the other side, almost.

Exactly mirror image of the other side.

And he went into this real
thick stuff and piled up.

So then he, I was, we were walking up to
him and I see his tail was still moving.

So then I gave him two more with
a 458 and that was all she wrote.

And that's a hunt that was great to
do with, with my son, but it's a hunt.

And another one of my hunts, I never
thought I'd be able to do on my income.

Right.

So that hunt, like trying
to run things down.

I was serious.

I had a budget.

I reached out to three people
I knew in the industry.

Hey, I want to do a Cape Buffalo hunt.

What can you do it for me?

Two guys came back with,
what's your budget?

And the next guy came back with a price.

So I went, I

Travis Bader: went.

I'm not giving you my budget.

No, because whatever,
whatever it is, it'll be more.

Yeah.

It'll be at or more.

Yeah.

So you're in luck.

It's exactly that amount.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

It's just like, I remember watching
one of the duck commander guy and

Phil Robertson was talking about when
he bought his first lathe, he went

to the lathe shop and I got 30, 000.

Well, you're in luck.

I have one here for 30, 000.

So I am.

I did that and it was a
great hunt, great memories.

My son shot two head, shot
an ostrich and a warthog and

he had to hunt hard for them.

And even this quote unquote high fence,
I didn't think he was going to get them.

Really?

Yeah.

Like it

Travis Bader: was.

So what would happen if they
got rid of that hunting?

Matt Siemens: All the
game has to be euthanized.

Like it doesn't get let go.

So like with, if South Africa finally
shuts down their lion hunting, they have

all these lions behind the Hiawatha wire.

And some of these farms are 75, 000
acres plus, and people think the anti

hunters, well, we're going to show
the hunting and save these lions.

Yeah.

No, they're going to kill the lions.

The lions have to be euthanized.

So you're not saving

Travis Bader: anything.

They just can't put the captive
lions out into the wild?

No.

Matt Siemens: Even though there
has been cases where they will

survive and we'll, we'll breed.

No, they have to be euthanized for case
in point, uh, the guy was hunting with

us in March, his, the property next door
sold, and there were 75 bounty buck on it.

And bounty buck looks very close to
a Blesbuck, but there are sighties,

endangered animals, dangerous species.

So the other property owner said to
my buddy, you can have them for free.

You had to pay to catch them and
you can put them on your farm.

The government said no
one killed them all.

Really?

Yeah.

So like, like there's no
rhyme, no reason to it.

And why would you just
kill and bury 75 of these?

No kidding.

Even if they weren't endangered.

Travis Bader: Well, what would
the economic outcome be if

they got rid of these hunts?

Oh, it'd be

Matt Siemens: for the South
African farmer and hunter.

Huge.

Like it's some of these guys
only, it's such an industry

down there that it's, it's huge.

And the vast majority of
outfitters are doing it, right?

Some guys are doing it for pretty small
pieces of property, like we talked about.

It's not my cup of tea,
but there's some places.

For instance, my buddy in Namibia,
where I hunt, he has his farm separated

to North and South across the highway.

His property, his fence line, I think
is 13 kilometers by 17 kilometers.

Like we aren't talking 40 acre plots.

Right.

It's big enough there.

If you walked onto there and you
didn't have water and you got

lost, you'd be in serious trouble.

Travis Bader: Right.

Decent

Matt Siemens: size.

Yeah.

It's like I said, I, I, I'm not a
high fence guy, but the spirit of fair

chase does come into play down there.

Travis Bader: So do you get to go
hunting with other people from work?

Matt Siemens: Yeah, I'm
on the lion hunt in March.

Um, my boss is coming with me.

Nice.

So.

Travis Bader: Nice.

So full support for why you're
not going to be at work.

Oh, yeah.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: So he's looking for,
he's looking for a good male lion too.

We'll see, we'll see
what we can come across.

Travis Bader: Right.

Interesting.

Oh, it'd be interesting to see
how that, uh, that works out.

Love to hear the story on that.

Um, yeah.

What else, anything else?

Trying to think of the list we discussed.

Oh, we got some stuff about, uh,
you got SCI, uh, First Safari, um,

um,

yeah, you know, talk, you've talked
about ballistics there a little bit and

you're, you're, um, and that, that's
something that you, you're dealing

with the general public mostly with
your, uh, with Korth group there or.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: Well, I generally
deal with accounts directly, but

the consumers would get ahold of me
sometimes and I steer them in the right.

Right direction and get them
looked after if they have issues

and try to educate people.

But the biggest thing is like, we can
do a whole, whole talk just on this is

what people consider a bullet failure.

And you killed the animal,
you shot in the right place.

It died.

The bullet came apart while,
okay, did it really fail?

It's, I mean, when you go back to the.

Weatherby cartridges, which were
developed long time ago and they're still

holding their edge, like velocity wise.

And they're still right up in the
top, even with today's standards.

Roy Weatherby wanted
that bullet to blow up.

Okay.

He believed in the hydrostatic
shock theory, goes in and comes

apart, massive damage, shock power.

Right.

And that's what he
believed in way back then.

And so guys are shooting the modern
Weatherby cartridges or the Weatherby

cartridges, the 300 Weatherby, and which
came out in the forties, I believe.

And they're putting these controlled
round controlled expansion bullets

in them and having great success,
but that's contrary what Roy wanted.

But there's, well, what I'm trying to
say there, it's there's two schools

of thought and they both work.

Travis Bader: What are the
biggest education pieces that

you typically have to deal with?

And how do you guys tackle that?

You educating consumers, you
educating the, uh, uh, the retailers.

We'll, we start with

Matt Siemens: the
retailers, but we will do.

Like we've been at some, at some
of the trade shows and hunting

shows with our booth there.

And we're there to talk
to people firsthand.

And we love video displays sometimes,
depending what the comments and we'll

have people from the factory come up.

It's funny, you can have a guy who
works at Hornady in Nebraska, come

up and tell a person something.

And they'll means a whole lot
more coming from him than me.

Sure.

Even though that guy sits behind a desk.

Sure.

But it's just because of
the credibility thing.

Right.

Yeah.

And so that always helps, but no,
we'll, we'll get with the, with

the dealer, try to educate them
and we'll do events with them.

I'll what we call PK
product knowledge sessions.

I'll go in.

Usually right time to close
and go over with employees and

have a chat and go over stuff.

And they'll ask questions and
we'll explain why we do this,

why it's this and how it competes
with our competitors or, and

Travis Bader: that kind of stuff.

Right.

You know, there's never going to
be an end to people modifying or

doing things differently than what
the manufacturer intended it to.

Yeah.

I haven't been through a number
of the different manufacturers

courses and programs.

It's always neat.

The things that you pick up
that you thought were maybe, uh,

they didn't realize are actually
design features because he didn't

know the proper way to use it.

Um, I can see the education piece
being a very valuable, both sales

tool, as well as, uh, uh, ensuring
that people are getting the most

out of whatever product they

Matt Siemens: have.

Yeah.

I was shocked at how many
people don't focus binoculars

Travis Bader: properly.

Okay.

Talk me through it.

Matt Siemens: Well, you have your,
your main focus, then you have your

diopter, which adjusts the one eye.

And, um, so when you're looking
through, you, you pick up, pick out

an object, uh, you're in a store.

So obviously pick up that stop sign
across the street, put the lens cap on.

The right eye focused your
left eye with the main focus.

Close that one, open the right.

Now adjust the diopter and the same thing.

And, uh, so you're focusing each eye
individual, but you have your diopter

you're focusing, and then your focus,
your course focus are set up the same.

Most people have both eyes
open and they're focusing, oh,

sorry, focusing, hitting that.

Or they squint with one eye, but
when you squint, your body changes.

Travis Bader: What if he, what
if he said the diopter first?

Well, it doesn't matter, probably
your way is better because then,

you know, at least you've got a,

Matt Siemens: I, I, maybe the way I do it
is backwards supposed to do the diopter

first, but along as, long as you're
doing it both individually with the lens

cap on the, on the optic or covered.

So you're not squinting
with both eyes open.

It's going to give you the

Travis Bader: best performance.

Awesome.

Okay.

So diopter first and the other side,
but I might try the, try it doing, okay.

I mean,

Matt Siemens: and it's, I was
taught, the guy who taught me.

Well, sitting in a PK, he
said, this is how you do it.

And you know, human nature,
that's what I was told.

So that's the right way.

It doesn't

Travis Bader: mean it was.

Well, if that's what the manufacturer
designed it, you might as well

try using it the intended way.

Matt Siemens: Yeah.

Like as a rep, I get
things wrong sometimes too.

Right.

So he could have had it backwards too.

And, and, but it, it makes a huge
difference on focusing it that

Travis Bader: way.

No kidding.

What about, uh, scopes?

If you put too much, you know, a lot of
PRS shooters will put their hand over top

of the scope and when they're shooting.

I've watched videos that, uh, MDT has put
out about pressure testing on barrels.

What if you press on the scope?

Is that going to make a big difference?

Matt Siemens: Maybe in
laboratory conditions, but

I can't see it in the field.

Okay.

Um, I know when you're resting your,
resting your rifle on something, you

want it on the forearm, not the barrel.

That's going to affect harmonics.

And all these things, I know what drives
me nuts when you see guys carrying their

rifle by their scope, like a handle.

It's not a handle.

It's don't use it as such.

Note to

Travis Bader: self, stop
carrying rifle by scope.

It's, uh, it's

Matt Siemens: yeah, there's
so much stuff out there that.

I still will find myself using
incorrect terms, even though.

Like I'll be talking to people and
I start talking, I use the term

gather light, like we spoke earlier.

Sure.

It's not, it's, it's transmit and it
focus lights and all that kind of stuff.

But Leupold's put a lot of
stuff, money into training us.

They have a range out
down in central Oregon.

I can't remember if it's 2, 300 meters
or 2, 600 meters, but it's a ways.

It's well, well past the mile.

And, uh, they have us lined up there.

With all our competitor
scopes and our line.

And then you get there before sunup.

And as soon as you can start,
as soon as you can start, you

can see, you can start shooting.

And then the same thing in the evening
when you shoot till you can't see.

Right.

And there's two optics that are
consistently the first one shooting and

consisting of the last two shooting.

Interesting.

And Leupold's one of them with
their new light system with the

new lenses and they've put stuff.

And there's some, we've got some great
competitors out there and we've got

some competitors that aren't so great.

Travis Bader: I think the
biggest thing that makes her

company is the people behind it.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Matt Siemens: And it's still
a family owned business, fifth

generation, fifth generation.

And when we do these tests and
when they do the, the punisher

test, the impact test, they don't
go take a scope off the floor.

They run down to the local
sports shop and buy everything.

Even the loophole product
they buy off the shelf.

Yeah.

So it is a true test.

Very cool.

Travis Bader: I was just thinking of,
uh, you know, if there's education

pieces, maybe we, uh, create little,
uh, short education content that'll get

people out there using products properly
and, uh, or maybe that's something

that, uh, Korth is interested in doing.

Matt Siemens: Yeah, we,
we've talked about that.

And it's always, always intend to do it.

And then the next thing you
know, a year's past, right?

Yeah,

Travis Bader: shot again.

And everyone's ramping up
for that and then dealing.

Matt Siemens: But it's funny, like this
industry back to A type personalities.

Um, I was at a event with Rob Furlong
and he was talking to a guy about

shooting and about shooting down
here, uphill and how the range finder.

And this guy looked at Rob, he goes, well,
obviously you haven't shot very much.

He goes, because the bullets defy gravity.

Nothing happens.

And Rob, Rob goes, yeah, I'm just new.

I'm just learning.

And I, I always thought like, why
didn't you put that person in his place?

He goes, what's it going to change?

Yeah, exactly.

Yeah.

So here's a guy at this time, at this
point, I think Rob was still number

two in the world for, for length.

Here's a guy, Talking to him, like
doesn't have, uh, doesn't have

a clue what he's talking about.

Yeah.

Talking down to him.

And if you only knew, if you only knew
who he was talking to, but you can't,

Travis Bader: you can't help some people.

You know, sometimes it doesn't
rise to the dignity of a response,

Matt Siemens: right?

And it's no matter what you tell people,
people, some people just want to complain,

want to find something to argue about.

Yep.

And they don't quite listen to what was
said, or they take it as a absolutely

every scenario, this is how it works.

And it doesn't, there's too many variables

Travis Bader: in this stuff.

Yeah, you know, I've spent some
time with Rob in the past and,

um, you know, good, good fellow.

Definitely knows what he's talking
about when it comes to, uh, shooting.

I remember I was at SHOT Show one
time and I'm at the, um, uh, AI booth

and there's a fellow there who's
really looked like he was dyed black

hair, really dark hair, looked like.

You could smell it on him.

He was giving her the night before
tattoos up one arm down the other.

He's just standing there in the AI booth.

And I'm looking at, I think
there is some, uh, packs, maybe

they're ever, ever really sock.

Maybe I forget what it was.

And he comes up, he's like, Oh, I'm
doing some, um, uh, pack design.

Oh, okay.

And he's like, yeah, no, they,
they wanted my input on this stuff.

Oh, are you with these people here?

Well, no, no, I'm not with them.

Okay.

Right.

And we had this little conference,
very awkward conversation.

Basically he's like,
don't you know who I am?

Right.

So the guy who was Craig Harrison,
who took the, he took the, right.

And, um, and, You know, he was, he
was looking rough, maybe from the

last night in Vegas, probably going
out with all the other, uh, industry

reps and then taking them out.

But I had no clue.

I've seen pictures of him, like
he's fully, he had shirts on,

his beret and everything else.

And he looked to this
guy was like, like, okay.

So, and he was talking about the
rifles a little bit and like,

oh, so you're, you're, you're
in the manufacturing of these.

Oh no, no, no, no.

And he skated all around the issue.

Yeah.

If he said, Hey, I'm Craig Harrison,
I would have known who he was, but

we just had this probably about a 10
minute long, very awkward conversation

where he left like, Oh, I guys.

So probably maybe similar to
the whole Rob for a long one.

Well, it's

Matt Siemens: one of the things that's
like most things when the people.

People have to tell you what they've done.

They probably haven't done

Travis Bader: it.

Yeah.

Or maybe they're just, you
know, surrounding themselves

with the wrong type of people.

I clearly didn't recognize
him out of uniform and all the

rest and not diminishing what
he's done or his achievements.

And, you know, he's
had a rough go as well.

Afterwards, there's some pretty difficult
things that he had to, uh, work through.

And that's, um, but, uh, Yeah.

Yeah.

You know, sometimes it's better just to
keep your mouth shut and be thought a

fool and to open it and remove all doubt.

And

Matt Siemens: that's just like,
sometimes like when I'm in a

situation, someone's talking, I'll.

Sit there and think, should I interject?

And I don't, and I regret
doing it, but then when I do,

it's like I shouldn't have.

And then you really regret it, right?

Yeah.

It's like, so it's keeping your mouth
shut, like you say, just Mm-Hmm.

it goes a long way sometimes.

So I like to sit and listen and, um,
hear people talk and social media's

and thing out, watch these chat
rooms and stuff and people discussing

stuff and it's like, yeah, I know.

You dunno what you're talking about.

Yeah.

But it's, you get in there
and try correcting it.

It just, it goes nowhere.

And it just digresses and this
raises your blood pressure.

Nothing else seems to happen.

Right.

Travis Bader: It's all about
finding the right group of people

that you're going to surround
yourself with, who value your time.

And you don't have to get into the, the
convincing, you know, I, I guess it's

difficult when you're really passionate
about something and you see things.

The consequence of not stepping in
and saying something would just be the

continuance of that ignorance, or at least
less openness to that way of thinking.

But generally

Matt Siemens: speaking, no matter
how well versed you are in this,

you learn something every day.

Even from people who don't know a fraction
of what you know, but they might know

something that you don't, and you listen
to them and it can go a long ways.

Travis Bader: There's always
something that you can pick out.

And even if you think it's a little
offside, go give it a shot or

do your own research and find it
out before jumping on the person.

Nice.

Well, why don't we take a
look at wrapping it up here?

We can, we can, um, uh, look at
future, future educational type things.

Absolutely.

As we work through, because I
think that's, I think that's

a really important part.

I mean, we're not going to convince
people listening to this at

Africanadu is great or terrible.

We're not going to convince people of, uh,
different politics that they're already

set in a certain way, but Hey, maybe some
people are going to be able to use it.

Their, uh, binoculars a bit
better moving forward, right?

Or understand the high
twist rate on their, um.

ELDX bullets and what's happening there.

Matt Siemens: You know, I mean, long
people listen to each other and, and

we start working together as that's,
I mean, that gets beat like a dead

horse, but it's, we still have the same

Travis Bader: issues.

Right.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And I think that just comes down to what
you're saying before, maybe keep our mouth

shut a little bit, take a listen, see
where it's at and we find the correct way

or the correct audience that we, I mean,

Matt Siemens: everybody has their passion.

And like living in the
States for as long as I did.

A lot of people like sitting
in a tree stand with a bull

waiting for a deer to walk by.

I can't think of a bigger waste
of time personally, but I will

fight for their right to do that.

Right.

A hundred percent.

Yeah.

I mean, it's what they
have, it's what they do.

And they love it.

And yeah, exactly.

Yeah.

Some people get the sheep bug.

Yep.

I, I've shot sheep, but I
never got the sheep bug.

Yeah.

So.

Yeah, that's nothing wrong with it.

It's everybody has their own
passions and you've got to follow

Travis Bader: those whole different world.

And is looking down at the other ones who
are doing the exact same thing as you just

in a different way is not helping anybody.

No.

Well, Matt, thank you
so much for having me.

Matt Siemens: Really enjoyed this.