The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader

Ron Spomer has hunted wild terrain across six continents, tested elite gear, written thousands of articles, and shaped how generations think about the outdoors. But none of that explains the man behind the rifle.
In this rare and deeply personal conversation, Travis Bader sits down with the legendary outdoorsman to ask what no one else does: What’s he really been chasing?
Ron opens up about the quiet moments that changed him, the ego traps of the industry, and why the biggest threat to hunting today isn’t anti-gun activists, it’s our own disconnection from nature, each other, and ourselves.
They dive into legacy, ethics, spiritual frequency, and the kind of beauty that doesn’t need a trophy photo to matter. This episode will change how you see the wilderness, and your place in it.

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Host Instagram - @Bader.Trav https://www.instagram.com/bader.trav
Silvercore Instagram - @SilvercoreOutdoors https://www.instagram.com/silvercoreoutdoors
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⏱️ Timestamps
00:00 – Silvercore Club & Outpost intro
02:00 – Ron Spomer joins, and Travis shares why he’s inspired by him
04:15 – The high school English teacher who changed Ron’s life
06:00 – Discovering writing and the innate drive to be in nature
08:00 – Early childhood, grouse hunting, and connection to the woods
10:00 – “What am I really chasing?” – Beauty, vibration, and truth
13:00 – Finding the tiniest flower: humility and connection
15:00 – Vibrations, radios, and the unseen ways we connect to nature
17:00 – What should people be asking Ron that they never do?
20:00 – “Hunt honest, shoot straight”: ethics, integrity, and legacy
22:00 – Urbanization, habitat loss, and hard truths hunters avoid
25:00 – Modern media, YouTube, and sneaking conservation into ballistics
27:00 – First-time elk hunters and rediscovering awe
30:00 – Self-reliance, sourdough, and the post-COVID outdoor renaissance
33:00 – Surprised to still be alive—and grateful
35:00 – Land stewardship and making old dreams real
37:00 – Type II fun and memorable hardship in the wild
39:00 – Free beauty: the magic of seeing what’s unearned
41:00 – The cost of a career away from home and fighting ego
44:00 – German hunting traditions and communal values
48:00 – Division in the hunting world and how storytelling bridges it
50:00 – Social media negativity, comment sections, and fragile egos
53:00 – Industry rivalry vs. respect: why competition helps
56:00 – Optics innovation and price vs. value
58:00 – The power of narrative branding in optics and firearms
01:02:00 – Storytelling to survive censorship
01:04:00 – Travis on rebranding to Silvercore Outdoors
01:06:00 – Where did all the outdoor heroes go?
01:08:00 – The Rifleman and restoring personal responsibility
01:10:00 – Legacy: Passing on a love for wild places and honest hunting
01:14:00 – Hunters as conservationists—and how to reclaim the role
01:17:00 – Final reflections on legacy, mentorship, and shared joy
01:18:00 – “Where are you taking me moose hunting next?”


What is The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader?

Travis Bader, host of The Silvercore Podcast, discusses matters related to hunting, firearms, hiking, outdoor adventure, success, health and more with the people and businesses that comprise the community all from a uniquely Canadian perspective.

Before we get into today's conversation,
I wanna let you know about something

that's grown into an extremely powerful
part of what we do at Silver Core,

our members only community, the Silver
Core Club Club members not only get

access to exclusive discounts and
early access to year and events,

they also get access to the outpost.

Our private podcast is where I go
deeper, I share lessons learned, I

answer member questions, and bring
in guests to explore topics we don't

always cover in the public show.

It's real, it's personal, and
it's built to add value to your

journey outdoors and in life.

Here's a review from Silver
Court Club member Ray.

Each episode of the Silver Court Outpost
feels like opening a small mystery box

filled with insights, practical wisdom,
and a unique perspective on life.

All framed through the
lens of the outdoors.

One of the most impactful elements
of the outpost is how each episode

ends with a call to action.

These weekly challenges invite
you to step outside your routine,

try something new, and shift your
perspective in a meaningful way.

They've helped me change how I
approach my time in nature and how

I reflect on my personal growth.

Having access to Travis's mentorship
through the outpost is invaluable.

His insight, knowledge, and wisdom
come through in every episode, and his

ability to connect outdoor experiences
to larger life lessons is very powerful.

If you're looking for a podcast
that's quick, thoughtful, and

transformative, he should definitely
give the Silverado Post to listen.

Thanks Ray.

Members can find their personal private
link in the Silver Core Club dashboard.

If you're not already a member,
you can learn more@silvercore.ca.

Now, without further ado, let's head
into this conversation with Ron Speller.

I'm joined today by someone who
spent a lifetime paying attention to

animals and to l landscapes, and to
the quiet lessons you only hear when

you're still enough to notice 'em.

He's walked wild ground over
six continents with a rifle in

hand, and a story in his mind.

For over 45 years, he's written thousands
of articles, hosted shows, tested

gear, and taught generations of hunter.

But none of that explains
the person behind it.

And that's who I'm looking forward
to hearing from today, where

it started, what's changed, and
maybe if we're lucky, a few of the

moments it still catch his breath.

Welcome to the Silver
Core Podcast, Ron Smer.

Oh, Travis, that was a
remarkable introduction.

I'm almost starting to
like myself after that.

I love it.

Well, I mean, you've got a
larger than life personality

and persona and it precedes you.

And you know, I'll be honest,
you're an inspiration.

I'm sure you've heard this by from many
people before, but I'll say it again.

You're an inspiration to me in the way
that you can story tell so eloquently

the ethical storytelling and hunting.

Um, your constant pursuit
of knowledge is inspiring.

The fact that you're never resting on
your laurels, you're always looking

at ways that you can improve and,
you know, maybe learn something else.

And the amount of integrity and clarity
that you bring into everything you do.

Massively inspiring.

So thank you for all of that.

Well, thank you for, for, uh,
recognizing that I try to do that.

Of course, uh, how well I succeed is up
to folks who are listening to me, but that

kind of is my intent, you know, after all
these years of being in this game that

I think I, I have something that I have
learned, the information I've accumulated

and experiences that I've had that I think
can help inform, maybe inspire others.

And I certainly want to
pass that on because.

Anyone who has the, the passion I have
always had for outdoors, for nature,

for wildlife, for the pursuit thereof.

And I, I would just like to help 'em out.

Help 'em out.

Anything I can do to help folks out.

That's kind of what's
driving me these days.

Where did you first learn
that you had this passion?

For, and this talent for
storytelling and being able to

relate your passion to others.

Yeah.

That actually came from a high
school English teacher, ah, good

old Dwayne Sra, uh, rest his soul.

He was a great guy and he
was a hunter and a shooter.

And he lived just across the street
from where I lived when I was in,

uh, grade school up into high school.

And he had the reputation for
being a real hard teacher.

He had just made him toe
the line, which was great.

Uh, most of us students really
appreciated it because he saw in us

some potential and that he had insisted
that we live up to our potential.

So it was really quite effective.

So when I started writing papers for his
classes, he would write in the margins.

You've got away with words.

Um huh You ought to consider being
a writer and stuff like that.

Of course, he would catch me in class
with a. Field of Stream or sports of Field

Magazine put my textbook in the front of
it to disguise it so he knew what I was

up to, and he, he just knew that I was
taken with this stuff and he one day said.

He pulled me aside and said, you know,
you ought to think about a career as

an outdoor writer and I, a career as an
outdoor writer from a small town farm kid.

Well, what's that?

You know?

Right.

But of course, I recognize names like
Jack O'Connor and Elmer Keith and

all the old school guys, and he said,
yeah, those people are being paid to

write those stories you're reading
all the time in those magazines.

So maybe you could do that given your your
gift here for communicating and writing.

So that's what planted the seed for me.

Now the rest of it was
just innate in nature.

Uh, my appreciation for it, I don't
know how anyone comes up with this.

I always say it's an istic urge left
over from caveman days or something,

but I just think it's part of the human
condition to, uh, ex to experience nature

in a personal way and to be moved by it.

I don't know if you have
ever read Aldo Leopold?

He is a Yeah.

Some yes.

Yes.

Yeah.

His, um, sand County
Almanac book That's right.

Really captured me in high school.

I read that and it was
like he was speaking to me.

He and I had the same philosophies, the
same spirit about this interconnection

between ourselves and nature.

He talked about the thrill of goose
music and what it did to your soul.

Mm-hmm.

All of those wilderness experiences
that I'm sure you're aware of too.

And most hunters have that at their core.

I think that's what pulls us into it.

Hunting isn't.

I wanna go kill a big animal, an
animal and and thump my chest so

much as I want to be an integral
part of this whole natural

experience the way all wildlife is.

We are essentially wildlife ourselves.

We are subject to the same laws of
nature as every sheep and deer and

chickadee, and, and mouse out there.

And we cannot live without them.

They cannot live without us.

We're all part of that same cycle of life.

So I think that's what hunting and
fishing are about, is trying to connect

closer and closer to that whole program.

Did you realize that when you first
started out or is that something that

you kind of realized later in life?

You know, I think it was sort of inherent
or innate in me and my education and

readings of people like loophole.

Uh, that just cemented it for me.

It confirmed it, it helped me articulate
it myself, but I had this incredible

urge deep inside me that I just had
to get out, you know, in high school.

Yeah, I stopped doing all sports because,
well, the boys and my friends were

out in the football field practicing.

I was hunting pheasants.

Mm-hmm.

And to me that was way more important.

You know, I'm, I remember
this, um, same ilk.

Uh, I didn't get into hunting
until a little later on.

I was fishing, uh, family had a
commercial fly fishing lodge in mm-hmm.

Uh, central British Columbia area here.

And I say commercial fly fishing lodge.

It was purchased as a lodge.

It was flying or hiking access only.

Uh, and had a commercial license
that we held on it, but we

never ran it commercially.

We let scout groups use
it, and that was about it.

So I would spend a fair bit of time
out fishing and as a youngster I would.

I guess I'm gonna do air brackets.

I would hunt grouse because I
had no idea what I was doing.

I had no idea about hunting licenses.

I had no idea about seasons
or any of this other stuff.

I'm glad I figured it
out later on in life.

But, um, uh, but I knew I just,
I loved being out in the woods

and that connection to nature.

And it isn't if I was successful
getting a fish, although they're,

when you're younger, there's always
like, Hey, who's got the biggest fish?

And who's got, who's got the most?

And, uh, but I, that only lasts so long.

Once, once you get a big one or
once you get a big haul or whatever,

it might be like, well, that isn't
the thing that keeps me out here.

That was maybe something that originally,
uh, appeared to be aspirational

based on what we see on social
media, what we see written about.

But it's that deepening of our connection
with our natural environment that, uh, I'm

constantly learning when I'm out there.

That really, really drives me.

Yeah.

Uh, that's exactly it.

And I think so many people
listening to this will understand

that a few probably won't.

I know people who just, you know, you
could show them the, uh, the world's

biggest Moose or, uh, watch that
Peregrine Falcon stoop down and hit a

shorebird or something, and they go,
eh, let's go to town and have a beer.

Yeah.

They just don't, they just
don't have it within them.

But, um, that's okay.

We've got room for everybody, but you
can't drag me out of the country and

show me into the city is not gonna work.

Yeah.

Well, I'm, I'm too close
to the city right now.

I'm actively looking out, out outwards,
but, um, that, that's another story.

Um, so you've spent most of
your life chasing wild things.

Yeah, pretty much.

What is it that you've truly been chasing?

If you're to sit down and look back and.

Yeah, great question, Travis.

Great question.

What I've been chasing is essentially
myself, my own identity, which is

so wrapped up in all of this stuff,
but I've also been chasing beauty,

for lack of a better term, and
that encompasses everything within

nature that is so perfect in its in
its blood and gore as well as its.

Blossoming.

Mm-hmm.

Everything from wild flowers
to wildlife to a storm.

If you read, uh, Muir, uh, writing
about the glories of being up

in a tree in a big wind storm

mm-hmm.

Yosemite and how he was rejoicing at
the pelting of the rain and the howling

of the wind, and celebrating what
most of us would hide from, didn't get

away from the discomfort, but he felt
that even deeper than I probably do,

because he was out in that nasty stuff.

Just thinking this is all a part of this
incredible glory then, and that probably

extends beyond ourselves, beyond our own
nature here on earth and into the cosmos.

I think it's that the vibration
of the cosmos, if you look into

string theory and all the latest
scientific things about what.

Adams truly are, and what keeps things
going, and it's all vibrations of energy.

Mm-hmm.

And we are parts of that,
manifestations of that sort of thing.

It's a, it's the, the
great cosmic mystery.

It's, it's discovering God and,
and the, the goodness of it.

Um, and it's, as you said
earlier, it's a constant search.

You don't just get there and
say, okay, figured it out.

Now there's new things
revealed all the time.

A couple, three years ago or so here on
the ranch, my wife and I bought a small

ranch property closer to the grandkids
so that we can show, give them the

opportunity of getting out of the city
and having freedom roam around like I did

on the farms and stuff when I was a kid.

So, of course, I'm interested
in this environment that we're.

Sort of husbanding and trying
to improve some of the old farm

ground and the overgrazed pastures.

We're trying to improve those, but
I would go out and look for things.

What is growing out here?

What is a native plant
versus an introduced invasive

species in a weed and such?

And one march with cabin fever raging,
I just had to get out and find something

showing me that spring was coming,
we're getting renewed life and all the

wonderful things we want about spring,
uh, waiting for ice out so I could go

fishing and all that sort of thing.

Uh, and I went up in the hills to look
for the earliest wildflower I could find.

I knew that the, some of these glacier
lilies or fawn lilies were pretty

early and would come out in the snow,
but I'm up where there's just nothing.

It looked pretty desolate, and I
spotted a little white thing on

the ground and I got down close
and looked, and I found a tiniest

wildflower I have ever seen in my life.

And that was commonly called a Turkey pea.

It has a bit of a little rootlet
bulb that apparently turkeys and

other birds will dig up and eat,
or, or something is the, uh, genus.

But it was just an obscure,
wholly obscure little plant.

And I am speaking of a series of blossoms
in a ray seam that probably no more

than an eighth to a quarter of an inch
in size and the entire plant might be

lucky to hit two inches and it blooms.

When there's nothing else going on
and then dies within a couple of

weeks, does its thing, you know?

Mm-hmm.

It's fire pressure and then it just
stores the energy in that little bulb

until the next go around and you,
you look at a little thing like that,

inconsequential little nothing but
to that plant and whatever insects.

Need that plant to feed on.

It's all part of that whole
system, that circle of life.

Mm-hmm.

And

discover something like that to me
is that is as exciting as discovering

that giant ram on the mountain side
with the big dramatic horns curling up.

They're equally fascinating and
interesting just in different dimensions.

You know, it's kind of interesting how
you talk about the vibration of things.

A friend of mine, he's heavy into, uh,
radios and he rebuilds antique Collins,

uh, HF radios and he's like, look at this.

I take this one crystal out and
it oscillates at a circle FA

certain frequency, and I put this
other crystal inside it and now

I can transmit on this frequency.

Over here he says, Trav.

You know, everything
in life is vibrations.

We see things on a wavelength.

We listen on a wavelength.

Everything happening on
some sort of a wavelength.

I'm willing to bet there's some
wavelengths out there that we don't

even really understand that are
affecting us, and people talk about it.

John Sinani, he's a futurist.

He's been on the podcast and he talks
about operating at a higher frequency.

Um, Sean Taylor, x jtf two friend of
mine, who's, uh, uh, heavily believes

in the, the energy and frequency that we
kind of give off, and he would use that

as a tier one Special Forces operator.

He says, that's gonna sound crazy, but I'd
feel the energy in the room next to me.

And then, uh, Nikki Vandel, she's, um,
was on the TV show alone where they,

uh, have to survive in the Arctic.

And I was chatting with her and
she says, you know, when I go out

into the woods, I will say, hello,
forest, it's me, Nikki, I'm here.

She says, it sounds so corny.

She says, but.

It changes the frequency and all of a
sudden those little brown birds that

would chirp at ya and the squirrels that
chirp at ya, they start, you start to

get on the same wavelength or frequency
that these things are operating on, and

you'll connect with nature and see the
critters that you otherwise wouldn't.

Do you have any thoughts on that?

No, you're absolutely right.

My wife is, has this extraordinary
ability to feel the vibrations

in the room and read the room.

And she will sometimes say
to me, you're so clueless.

Didn't, you know, things go over there
was, you know, feeling blue because her

boyfriend just left her, whatever it is.

And I'm going, duh, I don't know, but put
me out in the woods and it's reversed.

Mm. I'm seeing and sensing things.

And I said, what did you think
of that pheasant over there?

Where, what pheasant?

She didn't see it.

We just drove by this beautiful, gorgeous
pheasant all puffed out, showing off to

his girlfriends and she doesn't notice it.

So we're, we're each tuned into
the vibrations and the frequencies

that are different frequencies.

You know, I've.

In preparing for this, I was looking at
a bunch of your different podcasts and

past interviews, and I see a lot of the
same sort of things coming up and the

same themes, and it got me thinking.

What's something about you
that people don't tend to ask

that they should be asking?

Oh gosh, Travis.

I don't know.

You know, people are
welcome to ask anything.

Um, but I, I, I'm not so full of
myself that I think I can tell

people what they should ask about me.

I, I'm a pretty typical middle of
the road American, I would guess.

Country boy probably
puts me in a category.

Um, I don't like categorizing
anyone because we all have the,

the ability and the right to
become what we want to become.

Mm-hmm.

But I, I am pretty heavily into, um.

A hunt on a shoot straight,
which is our motto.

Um, I think that kind of sums up,
even though it's grammatically

incorrect for an English teacher
to do that, most people get it.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

And it's, it's the integrity
of whatever it is in life that

you're heavily involved in.

I think you need to do it with integrity
and honesty and try to do it right

while understanding that none of us is
perfect and we probably can't get it

right, but get it right, not just for
yourself so that you can win, but get

it right for the entire enterprise.

And everyone else who may be affected
by or influenced by your actions.

So in the realm of hunting,
I, I want to do it right to

honor the tradition of hunting.

We all know that there are plenty
of what we used to call slob

hunters and probably still should.

You know, people who don't quite get it
yet, they're not tuned in and not hearing

the vibrations and all the rest of it.

Um, but you get that
in all aspects of life.

You know, it's the same basic thing,
but I think it's critically important

for hunters to try to strive.

For a higher level of interaction,
uh, and respect for the

wildlife as well as ourselves.

And then the hunting traditions.

If we want to maintain this deep into
the future, I think we have to do that.

Uh, it used to be when we were fewer
and the wildlife were more, we could

get away with some fairly bullish
behavior and over harvest and whatnot.

All it's just like St. Louis and
Clark coming across the continent with

their voyage of discovery in 1805.

They were able to shoot a bison, eat
what they wanted, and then walk away.

Mm. 'cause there were plenty of bison.

Mm. 30, 40 million of them.

And they knew when they walked away from
that, they had taken what they needed for

their nourishment, and then the wolves
and the coyotes and everything else

would clean it up and be thankful for it.

And the whole system worked,
be because it wasn't abused.

Mm-hmm.

Now that we have thousands and.

Probably millions of miles of paved
highways and channelized rivers and

drained swamps and wetlands and cities
spreading across the landscape, and we're

digging up minerals from the soils to
make the world into our image so we're

more comfortable, et cetera, et cetera.

That makes it harder and harder
on the surviving wildlife and wild

places, and I think too many hunters
always go with the, oh gosh, what's

happening with the deer population?

We need to kill more cougars so
we can get more deer when the real

issue is what are we doing to shrink
the habitat available for the deer

population or the elk or anything else?

A real crux situation.

But then that that involves some
reflection and we have to say, wait

a minute, what is my role in this?

Maybe I am at fault.

We've met the enemy and he is us.

Mm-hmm.

That's.

So I, I think we do need to do it.

Each of us needs to consider that
because what is the impact we are having?

If I wanna enjoy pheasant hunting, I
have to, can do what I can to contribute

to maintaining enough open lands with
suitable habitat for pheasants, that

we can maintain populations of those.

And that just goes for everything.

Mm-hmm.

And

to me it's, it's fairly simple, but it's
also, I think, extremely frustrating

because I constantly see an increase
in developments, human development and

such, and people become complacent.

It goes back to an old
pop song in the sixties.

You don't know what
you got till it's gone.

Right?

Yeah.

And each generation is born into
a world that is what it is at that

time, and they base it from there.

That's their foundation.

So when I was a kid, you
know, the foundation was.

Probably one farmstead on every
square mile of ground in Eastern

South Dakota where I grew up.

And I just assumed that's the
way the world was everywhere,

pretty much, you know?

And it gave us a lot of room to roam
around and find rabbits and pheasants

and, and dive into the creek and saint it
fer meadows and mud puppies and whatever,

and then start to discover nature.

But now I can go back to those
places and, and there are fewer

farms there, but the ground has been
turned into a monoculture, right?

They've got huge equipment to crop
these fields that you no longer have,

the little side weed patches and brush
piles and things that provided that.

Wildlife that we enjoyed back then.

So now it becomes like ohoh, what's
happened to all the wildlife?

I think there's a, uh, a disconnect
that'll happen from people in their

natural environment, particularly
if they're growing up in an urban

environment and they're just not
exposed to it in the same way.

Now your writing exposes people to
a different aspect, and you started

that, if I'm not mistaken, and I don't
wanna put words in your mouth, but I

think you put five articles out and
they were all five were picked up

right when you first started, and you
just kind of hit the ground running.

And, uh, but now, now people aren't
going into the long form content, uh,

reading it in the way that they used to.

They're not picking up field
and stream and, uh, reading

it in the way they used to.

They're getting all of their information
and tiny little bites through social

media and as long as it can, can kick that
dopamine on and, and, um, attack their

attention for a fraction of a second.

How, how are you finding that transition?

Because you're into this digital
world now and, and how do you help

people connect with their natural
environment and make, make it meaningful?

The fact that they, they really should be
considering how we all are interplaying

within the wild creatures and animals.

Yeah.

Great points, great points, Travis.

And you know, I'm not so sure I'm all
that successful at it, but what I have

discovered in doing what I do now, which
is the YouTube channels and a podcast and

some blogs on our website, I'd be write
a few articles for the magazines anymore.

But as you noted, there's
just nobody's reading them at

the rates that they used to.

So how do you reach these people with
anything other than a 32nd soundbite?

Well, that's part of the challenge,
and what I try to do with my

soundbites is make them meaty enough.

I found that I pretty
much have to cater to the.

Uh, interest in cartridges and ballistics
and all the tools that just such a

part of being human is, is tool use.

Mm. We're enamored of the latest and
greatest tools and high technology.

Look what we're doing right
now, talking to one another a

thousand miles apart and Yep.

Like in the same room.

Yes.

I think what we have to do is figure
out how we can use these new medium,

uh, these new media to reach people.

And then as you said, with the shorter
attention spans we've got these days.

How do you get the message across?

I think by tweaking it a little bit.

We can do that.

So what I try to do is if I can
slip a little bit of a conservation

message in with the fun stuff about
the bullets and favorite rifles and

cartridge and scopes and such, Hmm.

Just

try and at least each one of my
broadcasts to have a one or two points

about some conservation issue, whether
it's wildlife in Africa or in the us.

Um, overpopulation issues, overuse,
whatever it is, just to get people to

say, okay, I learned all about the,
uh, six millimeter creed more cartridge

and how fast it goes and how flat
it shoots and all that great stuff.

And oh man, I better get thinking about
all the highway deaths of mule deer

that are reducing those populations.

They can't bounce back because there's
so much traffic now and they're

migrating and they have to cross
these highways and they're taking

out more deer that way than the.

Cougars and the wolves ever took out.

Right.

Maybe I should start thinking about
that stuff, or I won't be able

to use my six millimeter creed.

More on that glorious
hunt I was hoping to take.

No kidding.

Uh, have you noticed a shift in the,
uh, the types of people that are

becoming interested in, in hunting
and learning about their environment?

Yeah, I have it.

It is always a younger crowd kind of
coming up, not as money as they used to,

because hunters are no longer heroes like
they were back in the mid 20th century.

Mm.

But still, there are
enough family connections.

My grandpa hunted.

I, I hear this a lot.

In fact, we just had an elk camp, an elk
bootcamp last week, and several folks

there were in their, Hmm, thirties to
forties hunting for the first time.

They had first.

Purchased a rifle and
gotten interested in it.

So they're starting to come around.

Even though, as you said earlier,
there's urban, suburban environments

and growing up that way, you don't
get exposed to grandpa walking out

the back door and coming back with
a brace of pheasants or rabbits.

Mm. So you have to find out about
it somewhere along the line.

And I suspect that they're picking
up a few shorts on the, uh, social

media where they see someone hunt and
it looks exciting to them, and then

they start digging into it and they
will discover websites or YouTube

channels similar to mine, where we're
discussing those sorts of things.

And then they'll start to get interested.

And when they start seeing more and more
footage of wildlife, or especially if

they get out, literally get out into
nature and have a close encounter with

something that really rings a bell for
'em, then they're all excited about it.

And just down that camp we had
here in the mountains, several

people were from the flat land back
East Ohio, that kind of country.

And they thought they knew what country
was like, but they get here and the

mountains are going up this angle.

Yeah.

And they're looking across a big
canyon at something four or 500

yards away and just the whole place
feels like another planet almost.

It's so vast.

Mm-hmm.

And that just exposes them to,
oh my gosh, I've been living

in a cocoon all these years.

They're like butterflies finally
emerging from the chrysalis.

And it just inspiring to, to
listen to them and see the joy

on their faces when they just.

It seems crazy, but it's just that
simple discovery of how big the world is.

Mm-hmm.

And they can be a part of it.

You know, I, I think that you
kinda nailed it on the head there.

'cause I, I look at when COVID
hit and the, uh, concept of

self-reliance, really kind of Yeah.

Stuck home with people, people like,
I'm gonna start making sourdough bread,

I'm gonna start gardening, I'm gonna
start hunting because that's easy.

I hear, I can get all my food hunting.

Right.

Yeah.

Um, and, uh, that was a, a bit of a, I saw
a big boost in the, uh, in the firearms

and hunting industry and interests there.

But more and more I'm looking at how
people are associating with their natural

world and vehicles to that are, uh, food.

Like, where's your food coming from?

And they're learning more about, uh,
like we had Malcolm Wood on, he did a

documentary on microplastics and how that
he kind of brought that term to light.

Uh, we've, we've talked about,
like you say, uh, mono crops and

monocultures and, and the impact
that has on our environment.

And I think people can start relating
how they connect with their food.

I think that, uh, people you brought
up, oh, grandpa going out, coming back

with a, a, a brace, that connection
to their history I think is a big

part that people are looking for.

But more than anything, I think they're
looking for a connection because in

this ever connected world where you
and I can talk thousands of miles

apart and, um, we're right, right
here as if we're in the same room.

W there's also a massive degree of
disconnection that, that we have.

Social media isn't a social aspect.

People aren't going out to the local,
um, pubs or local social gatherings

in the way that they used to.

Kids nowadays are being raised and they
have anxiety to go in public because all

of this stuff, they don't even want, they
have anxiety to pick up the phone and

talk because everything's a, a text and
get back, and it's especially formulated.

So I think what most people
are really looking for is a way

to connect to themselves, to
other people and, and to nature.

And I, I think you writing and your
way of storytelling is intriguing

for people because they feel that
connection to history and, and to others.

Well, good.

I'm glad to hear that.

Um, I sometimes think when I read
some really good storytellers, I just

think I'm pretty much a piker if some
folks are enjoying it and it helps

inspire them to get out and discover
the things you just talked about.

'cause I think you,
you hit it right there.

They're just as they're afraid to have
real social interactions with people,

they would rather do it on the phone.

I think they're doing the gaming and
watching videos on the phone and think

like, I'm out there hunting an elk because
they're watching someone else see an elk.

Mm-hmm.

When they really get there and
they feel the vibrations up

close and it's the real world.

It's com not completely different, but
it, it brings it all home and they, they

understand I have to become involved in.

Getting these things for myself.

Ke self-sufficiency.

Mm-hmm.

We are big on that because I obviously
out on the ranch here, we, we can grow.

We've got an orchard, we've got a
garden, we cut our own firewood.

We're completely off the grid, so we're
connected, but we're also old people.

You know, we kind of grew up that way.

And I can remember as a kid when
the telephone came into the house.

Oh yeah,

yeah.

At first, I must have been probably
seven years old or something.

And bingo.

This telephone thing up here.

Wow.

Can't imagine a kid
today listening to this.

Going, what?

Yeah, the telephone.

I remember we used to have to
rent our telephone and Exactly

rent it from the phone company.

And if you're lucky, you had a
really long cord on it and you can

kind of sneak into the other room
to have a private conversation.

But if not, you're having your
private conversation in front of.

Everybody who's walking
through the kitchen.

Yeah.

Not only that, when I was a kid, your
private conversation wasn't worrying about

just your family, it was worried about
everyone else who was on that same line.

That's right.

Yeah.

The lines where you would have
certain number of rings was yours and

then one shorter ring would be the
neighbor or somebody else on the line.

Everybody would know those rings
and say, oh, let's listen to what's

going on with Ron and his girlfriend.

That's funny.

So if younger you was looking at you
now, what would surprise him The most?

That I still alive.

I should have been dead
several times over.

Amen.

I have been blessed.

I mean, God has just really been
looking out for me 'cause I did

some of the dumbest things, you
know, guns going off where they

shouldn't have even been loaded.

Uhhuh and, uh, driving.

Oh, in snowstorms.

Where you shouldn't have even been on the
road and going across rivers where you got

sucked over the falls and churned around
a few times before you managed to pop up.

Yeah, I thought I wasn't
gonna get out of that one.

Tell me about that one.

That would've surprised me.

I tell you one thing though, that
I'm really grateful for when I was in

college dreaming about all this stuff.

You know, what do you want to be
when you grow up kind of a thing.

And planning for it.

I just, I planned like, I think
I'm gonna try that outdoor writing

thing that my English teacher said.

I think I can maybe make
that work, so I'll try that.

But if that doesn't work,
what am I going to do?

So I picked up a teaching
certificate so I could go into

the school systems and teach.

And that way I would at least
get the fishing season off.

Mm-hmm.

30 months

off in the summer.

Not ideal, but it's better than nothing.

Yep.

Um, so that's what I was planning to do.

And while I was doing that, I was
discovering all sorts of other

things about, and I thought,
I wanna live close to nature.

Ideally I would like to have a 10,000
acre ranch with a river running through

it, butting up against the mountains
in Montana or someplace like that.

And then all that national
forest land beyond.

So I've got pretty much the whole world,
uh, to roam and hunt and fish and not

have to ask permission or pay somebody a
trespass fee and all this kind of stuff.

So obviously it was this
big pie in the sky dream.

But now if I'd have been then
looking at now, I would've said.

My golly old man.

You came pretty close.

Yeah,

because I, I got through
my writing in this career.

I got to visit those places pretty
regularly and hunt in Alaska

and Asia and Australia and New
Zealand and Argentina and all over.

And it's as if I had this giant property.

But now here I am on this small property,
you know, it's not exactly my 10,000

acres, but I've got land and it, it's
mine on which to hunt, run my dogs,

uh, improve the habitat, grow the
gardens, whatever I want to do with it.

So I really feel blessed and
fulfilled at the same time and feel

a responsibility to leave it better
than I found it, improve the land.

And I think that's what a lot
of hunters are doing these days.

You know, you, the big deal with whitetail
hunters especially is to get a piece

of property and manage it for deer.

Right.

Hers or pheasants or something.

Right.

Managing for wildlife, that was unheard
of 50 years ago when I was a kid.

It was all out, how can this
land put money in my pocket?

Mm. That's prior to that, my,
like my grandfather probably,

or the, at least his father.

Before him, it would've been, how
can I use the land just to survive?

Mm.

Folks were essentially
living off the land.

They were farmers.

What are they farming for?

So they can feed themselves.

Sure.

And then if there's a little leftover,
they can sell that and get a washing

machine from, or something like that.

But they were, they had the
chickens, they had the cow for milk.

They great.

Raised a pig for bacon on down the line.

It's just good old fashioned
homesteading sort of things.

But you know, what it's turned into
now, of course, is that you can

specialize with all the big equipment
and you can produce enough food for 40

people, a hundred people, 200 people.

I don't know what farmers claim these
days, but one farmer feeds incredible

number of people and that's what
enables, of course, cities to be there

and people to live in those cities
and have no connection to the land.

Mm. Going into a store and purchasing
the food product ready to eat.

Mm-hmm.

So, I, I, I just think that,
as you said earlier, folks are

discovering there's something missing
within them when they do this.

Um, I don't mind spending a week
or two on a, a vacation in a town

where everything is done for me.

And it's just like, this is kinda easy.

Sure.

Everything's right there.

All they have to do is
pay for it and heat it up.

Uh, but after a bit of that,
it's like, I wanna make my own.

I don't know.

I wanna get my fingernails in the dirt.

And, uh, I was just pulling
carrots yesterday, I of the garden.

There's just something
so satisfying about it.

Yeah.

You know, nothing worthwhile in my
life has ever come easy, and I've

heard others say the same thing.

And when things do come too easy.

I don't find they're that worthwhile.

And I look back at all the
things that really matter.

And you know, we've heard
people talk about type one fun.

Hey K, we're on a rollercoaster.

Lots of fun.

You look back and you say, it
wasn't a memorable time in my life.

Uh, some people talk about type two fun.

Uh, during the time it's got a
pack on my back, all this meat,

it's pouring rain, it's freezing.

I can't get a fire going.

But you look back on that and
that sticks in your memory.

And that's, then of course, I had one
friend tell me about type three fun.

I said, I've never heard of that.

What is that?

And he said, well, that's when you go out.

And it's just terrible.

It's like your situation.

You talk about I can't get the fire going.

And then you think about it later
years and it's still just as bad.

It's Oh, okay.

Fair enough.

Full circle.

Right.

Fair enough.

I would add this though, Travis.

Uh, there have been many things given to
me that I didn't have to work for and, but

it's all pretty much the beauty of nature.

The, the feeling that you get at
certain times, it's just so intense.

You get almost, almost cry.

Mm-hmm.

When you see this incredible
scenery, a mountain and a a, a

rainbow, you get the picture.

Yeah.

There's just certain scenes in places
in life, even wood smoke in the woods.

When you smell it at a certain time,
it just moves you internally so

much you can't quite figure out why.

Um, you does it remind you of home
and, and grandmother back in a

day once when you were a kid and
you really didn't even register.

But that, that scent of wood smoke
means home, hearth, family safety, all

of the things that stirs within you
that you don't necessarily articulate.

And that's like that.

With nature.

Mm-hmm.

You're out

doing your best hunting to see
the, the legal buck that you can

take with your tag or, or a big
one that you've been looking for.

And then you happen to see
something completely different.

Uh, I remember one time I was mule
deer hunting and at the crack of

dawn with the red sky up on the ridge
above me here came a line of elk.

There must have been 40, 50 of
them all in single file Wow.

Silhouette against that red sky and
just going about their business.

And it was the, the, the daily walk to
back to bed or whatever they were doing.

And it was just the magic of that
moment is what I remember about that.

I don't even remember if I shot
a deer on that hunt or even

saw one, but I remember that.

Yeah.

And that'll stick with you

and he'll stick with you
for the rest of your life.

Yeah.

And that was free.

That was a given.

That was just all I
had to do was be there.

Well, that's some of the benefits
of the lifestyle that you've chosen.

Those are some of the benefits of
you putting yourself out there.

Taking that step and being bold and
seeing how far you can take your passion.

What are some of the costs?

You know, my particular lifestyle is.

It has a pretty heavy cost for
relationships sometimes, and I

have many friends in the same boat.

When we were really active rider,
outdoor rider, gun rider type,

uh, it involves being away a lot.

You've gotta go on a doll, sheep hunt to
Alaska, you're gonna be gone for a week

or two and the family's at home and, you
know, truck drivers, anyone who does a lot

of work away from home, you've gotta have,
you gotta work at it pretty hard to keep

things going so things can fall apart.

And then there's a little bit of a an
ego, potential ego issue if you start

to think you're somebody important
because there's your story and picture

on a magazine cover or something.

Uh, and, and you could
start to act like a jerk.

And I certainly went through a
more than a short phase of that.

Thinking you're really somebody important.

But when you, you get a little older
and you come to the realization that

you're really no better than anyone else.

You just try your best.

They try their best and you give
everyone the benefit of the doubt.

You turn the other cheek and
you just try to do your best and

help others to do their best.

So now you're working as a team,
or at least as you know, not

antagonistic, you know, it's not a
contest on who did the best, who shot

the biggest and all the rest of it.

Um, once you realize that, it
just becomes a lot more pleasant.

Mm-hmm.

And, and then success is
measured in many ways.

Of course, I can look in the wall and
say, boy, am I ever a great sheep hunter?

Look at the size of that doll
ram up there on the wall.

Every time I look at that baby, I
remember the glacier, we hiked up

and I remember sleeping on the ice.

And I remember, uh, waiting across that
river and all the rest of the adventure.

But, hey, wait a minute.

I had a guide.

And I had a packer and they
helped me and they were an

integral part of the operation.

The only real difference was I had
the rifle, they didn't, but otherwise

it's as much their ram as it is mine.

Mm-hmm.

So

that's sort of a humbling, eh, not
really humbling, but just appreciation

for what others have done for you
rather than, well, look what I did.

Yeah.

You know, I was in, um, uh, Nuremberg
and we were, uh, what is it, AWA

over there at the, uh mm-hmm.

At the AWA show.

And, um, friend says, uh, Trav,
uh, I want to hook you up with

a friend of mine over there.

He's head of, uh, hunter training
and firearms education for the

Bavarian region and mm-hmm.

Excellent.

Had a good chat with him
and, um, excellent fellow.

I. Anyways, learning a little bit about
their culture and, and what it's like.

'cause he's very heavy into the
traditional hunting culture.

And, and I, I talk to my
friend, he's like, yeah, we'll

get you out over in Germany.

We'll do some hunting over there.

He is like, my first hunt,
holy crow, what was that?

Ever expensive?

I'm like, okay, well
like, what do you mean?

He says, well, you gotta get all
the traditional attire right.

You gotta wear the, the right gear.

Okay, sure, fair enough.

I get ya.

He says, but when you get your, um, first
buck when you're over there with them,

now you gotta pay for everything, drinks
for everybody, celebrate for every,

it's unlike in North America where the
hunter has looked at, Hey, look at this

great hunter in what he came home with.

When the hunter goes out and they're
successful, they now have to turn around

and thank all of the people who brought
them there, the people who helped set

up camp, everybody else who was out
hunting, who had eyes and ears out

and passing intel back and I thought.

Isn't that interesting?

I, I really like that idea behind
celebrating the community and

everybody who made it happen,
because we're not all gonna be the

one with the rifle in our hand, but
we all play a very integral role.

Yeah, that's, that's interesting.

It's part of the, the village tradition.

The tribe.

Mm-hmm.

The

tribal experience of hunting
when everyone worked for a common

goal with his extended family.

Uh, I think we kind of got away from
that in the States with the pioneers.

Obviously the Native Americans were
doing it, uh, but they had fairly small

tribes, but they all sort of had to
work together and I'm sure there were

better hunters in the group and others
were better at, at setting up camp.

And the women were obviously doing the
cooking and a lot of the grunt work and

such, but everyone had his role to play
and we've kind of gotten away from that.

Once we went off and got our.

160 acres and plowed the ground,
put up the Saudi or the log

cabin and raised our families.

We were sort of individual.

That's always been a big part
of America's individualism.

Mm-hmm.

And that

freedom, which I think is a great
thing, but we really are not isolated.

So the, the sod buster who was out
doing that with his family, he was

probably using a plow made out of iron
or steel that was built by somebody else.

Mm. Mine out of the ground in another
country, you don't realize that, you

know, you think, oh, aren't I sufficient?

Well, wait a minute.

Who made the plow?

Yeah,

that's fair point.

Yeah.

And you gotta think
about all those things.

So yeah, it's, it's kind of the tradition,
I think, in America as opposed to Europe

as you were discussing, where we're,
we're still a little bit fresh with that.

Do it yourself.

Attitude and that that way of life.

But obviously now we've gotten
pretty, pretty well away from it

other than the back to the land
movement, the self-sufficiency

movement, which I think is pretty
exciting, I think is a good move.

I think most people should consider, how
much can I do to become self-sufficient?

Uh, we're living in an area, in a
community where we have a lot of

like-minded folks, most of whom
are at least indulging in some

production of their own food sources.

A lot of hunters around here,
obviously, but then we have cattlemen

and some people raise goats and
some people specialize in honeybees.

Some of 'em are doing
sweet corn and orchards.

And when you get to know folks
and you go realize, well, I don't

have to grow everything myself.

You're better at growing cherries
than I would be, so why don't I get

my cherries from you and you can get
your squash from me, or whatever.

We have to trade.

Mm-hmm.

That's a, a useful old fashioned
lifestyle that I think can be

done even in suburban areas.

And you get to know folks who
have, they may have a connection to

somebody in the country, but they
also may have it in their backyard.

Mm-hmm.

Have suburban backyards in which you can
grow enough vegetables to probably feed

a family of two for a year or close to
it if you really know what you're doing.

Yeah.

There was a book back in, when I was in
college, five Acres and Independence.

Someone had written about, we live on five
acres and we provide everything we need.

Wow.

Obviously not, not the steel tools,
but the food, they were growing.

They were making honey and maple syrup
and they had rabbits and chickens and

eggs and uh, I think a milk goat or
something like that, but they laid

it all out in this book on how two
people could produce enough to live on.

Completely.

Huh.

Acres

might have to give that book a read.

That sounds very intriguing.

Five acres and independence.

Can't remember the authors, but it was
pretty fascinating to me back in the day.

You know, we talk about
independence and individuality.

Uh, my wife and I were in
Sweden and we did a driven hunt.

That was the first time I've
ever done a driven hunt.

That was pretty neat.

We're in historic solar on, and, uh,
it's a, uh, it's a bit of a throwback

for, uh, Sweden, the whole community.

And, uh, the men, the women, they're
all out there hunting and it's a little

different than in North America would
being such a male dominated activity.

But the hive mindedness is, I guess
the best way that I can put it,

the way that they all, they're,
they're a very social culture.

And, um, red Deer goes down and
everyone's working together and get

it on the sled and get it, drag the
thing on out and get it up in one of

the farms hanging up and everyone's
out there working on the different

animals and butchering 'em up and.

It's, uh, it's a very
social sort of event.

Very, um, very natural.

And over in North America, I
find there's, uh, this level of

individuality that tends to kind of,
uh, tear, tear our community apart.

Firearms, community hunting community.

Well, I'm not a bow hunter.

Forget them.

Well, you know, I'm just
a pistol shooter, right?

Forget those, uh, shotguns
or whatever it might be.

And there's this sort of, um, uh, less
cohesive nature that I've, that I've seen.

And I don't know if, I
don't know why that is.

I don't know.

I, I, I have a feeling in Canada,
I see it a lot because in Canada

I'm gonna do my air quotes.

Guns are special because you've gone
and done a, um, uh, a two day course and

you've been criminal record checked and
vetted, and not everyone can have it.

And they got all these
rules that apply to you and.

So when you have all of these extra
rules, I see these sub communities go out

and they start trying to have some sort
of control over what they're doing and

they create their own rules and mm-hmm.

And I, and I don't know if this is a
level of social engineering that's been

brilliantly put upon to try and divide
things that are looked at as negative

guns, hunting the rest by, um, by society.

But I, I can see, um, I can see
work like what you're doing and,

and others in the storytelling and
the connectedness of helping break

down the chinks in that armor.

Like when I look over into the states,
and of course grass is always greener,

but when I look on over, uh, there seems
to be a lot more camaraderie between, uh,

different factions and less divisiveness.

Um.

I'll just throw that out there.

Yeah.

I didn't, I don't know enough about, uh,
your Canadian gun and hunting cultures

to make that assessment, but I do know
that we have a similar issue here with

the, I only shoot a bow, you know?

Right.

I'm a better father than you are.

It's not, some people really
jump on it and they wear it as a

badge of honor, which is sort of
silly, but it, it is part of it.

But what I do notice is there seems to
be a built in negativity, and maybe it's

social media, but I noticed it before
social media came in to a degree, but

it wasn't as blatant and noticeable
because people had to do it face to face.

Right.

If you were out in the raffle range and
you were shooting a, say an auto loader,

and the next guy was shooting an old black
powder muzzle loader, he could climb on

his moral high horse and give you a bit
of a ribbing about how he was the superior

hunter and shooter because you're using
this newfangled high tech stuff, Uhhuh.

That always goes on to a degree.

But what I've noticed on social
media is that people really

go to the hate side of it.

Hmm.

And I

think that's, that's a product of seeing
the hatred on all the political issues.

Nobody can make a comment and say, I have
observed that X, Y, and Z, so maybe we

should consider Z, Y, and X next time.

Mm. It's you worthless blankety blank.

So-and-sos who like the
YZ Xs are full of it.

We're gonna kill you all.

Yeah.

Worthless, blah, blah, blah.

Oh my gosh.

You think, what is
wrong with these people?

But I think part of it is, of course,
they just need to vent whatever

undisclosed anger is within them.

Here's a place where you can spit it out.

Mm. Just

get your anger out there and be as nasty
as you want because you're incognito.

Mm. We see you do it.

Or, or come after you after
you've done it sort of thing.

That spills over into this.

Some of the things I cover,
uh, just the other day we did.

A review, Tate on my channel did a
review of a rifle, I think it was a ra.

Mm-hmm.

And

somebody had to write in and
say, why didn't you do a, um,

a show of Tika in that review?

That was disgusting that day.

Well, how can you do a review
of a ra if you use the Tika?

You wanna see the Tika review go there?

Yeah.

But they've just gotta complain
about something and bitch about it.

It's just crazy.

And then the worst one is when they
say, oh, that new cartridge they came

out with, what a piece of junk that is.

Nobody needs that.

Why my grandpa's old whatever
is more than good enough.

You know, they're just gonna, they're
just trying to take your money.

And I always have to remind these
guys, of course, the ammo and firearms

manufacturers are doing it to make money.

That's what's called a business.

That's right.

That's right.

And they're making the
tools that you need.

Do you really want them
to go outta business?

That's right.

Well, whose side are you on here?

Yeah.

You

sound like an anti gunner to me.

Totally.

And, and people don't see that.

I don't.

Yeah.

It's, um, being in the business and
having been here for, um, I guess

1994, I started, uh, training.

I was in high school at the time, and, um,
I decided I'll try and make a go of this.

I applied with the local police
department in my early twenties and,

uh, the Vancouver police, they said,
Hey, you did awesome on the physical.

You came top on the, um, on the
written, on the, uh, intellect side.

I don't know what that means,
but, um, but you're young.

You need life experience.

I'm like, okay, well I'll do this
thing I've been doing on the side and

I'll make it into a business and when
that fails because all businesses

have a high likelihood of failure,
then, then I'll, I'll come on back.

Well, it never failed and they
ended up becoming a customer and

I'm doing gun plumbing for them
and for other police agencies.

And it kind of, uh, built out from there.

But I, and so my view has always kind
of been in this industry, so maybe it's

a little myopic, but I, I see a lot
of, I want to tear down your building

to make my building look bigger.

And maybe that's like it everywhere.

But for me, being in the industry,
I sure see it a lot in the hunting

and firearms kind of community.

Yeah.

Yeah.

It's crazy.

It's just human nature building,
you know, trying to build yourself

up by tearing someone else down.

Hmm.

One needs to recognize it
and fight against it, but it

really does hurt our industry.

What's the point?

But I am amazed at the number of
manufacturers who are buddies with others

in the industry, say, you are building.

You're making bullets.

Hmm.

And

I'll, I'll get these bullet people who
are visiting with their competition

and comparing notes and getting along
just fine and they respect one another.

And I think that's because they've
been around long enough to realize

that the competition helps everyone.

Mm-hmm.

You see that your competition's
selling more bullets because

they have a new designer or a new
material that you didn't think of.

Now you get your brain going, wait a
minute, I can't rest on my laurels.

I need to come up with something better.

Right.

And that's what pushes, uh, the,
the product development throughout.

I've really seen it in optics,

scopes,

and binoculars in the last 25, 30 years
is, for a long time it was, there are

two or three top line European makers of.

Binoculars and scopes.

They really have it figured out.

They've just got the optical science
down to an art, and the others really

didn't know some of these secrets.

Hmm.

One of the first secrets that
came out in the 1930s was zes.

They found, accidentally found out that
a coating of magnesium sulfite on the

surface of a lens would cut the light
reflection or the light loss in half.

Big deal.

Huh?

So they start making binoculars
using this, and people would look

through 'em and go, holy mackerel.

This is the most incredibly
sharpened, contrasted,

binocular image I've ever seen.

So they own the, they own that field.

Hmm.

Until others

finally figured it out.

Well, these days everybody's figured
out all the secrets, as much as I can

tell, and they all know how to make it.

Now it's just a matter of finding the
cheapest way of getting it done, whether

that's offshore with cheaper labor, or
finding a source where you can save a

nickel on your materials here and there.

Or maybe skip the middleman.

Like some of 'em are doing it sell direct.

But the upshot is we're now
looking at optical quality

in our binoculars and scopes.

The, that are half the price
they were 10 years ago.

Yeah, yeah.

'
cause of the competition.

Yeah.

And, and the benefits

everybody.

Yeah.

Well it benefits the end user for sure.

I, it's gotta be tough on the optics
companies if they're uh, uh, always

looking for the cheaper outsourcing.

Like,

yeah, you can go too, too far
down, I think to the bottom.

But I think what's also
interesting is that how many

of them are still in business?

They pop up and they.

Shine for a while.

They, they start to get accolades for
making an incredible instrument and

then they hang on for quite a while.

Um, I see way more optic companies staying
in business now than were 30 years ago.

Yeah.

With, with the Optic.

So I've got some friends at Armament
Technology and they do SAI optics

and tangent Theta and like super
high-end, uh, crystal clear optics.

They're, they're really cool.

And what I'm noticing in, at least from my
outside perspective looking in is that not

only is it a process of trying to make it.

The best out there and the most
robust and, uh, sing and all dancing

and like, they'll innovate toolless
re zero, so you don't have to, uh,

like cool little things like that.

But it's the storytelling
that I'm starting to see

really kind of bleeding in.

I, I think people are
becoming less interested.

I, I guess there's gonna
be different groups.

There's gonna be those who are always
looking for the cheapest one, the best

they can get for the cheapest price.

But then there's gonna be those who want
to know the individuals behind the brand.

And if they have money that they can spend
and they got their choice, maybe I'll buy

made in Canada, or maybe I'll buy Made in
America over top of, uh, getting something

that's gonna be made, made in China.

And the, the level of storytelling that
I see, uh, in marketing essentially

is, uh, really seems to be the thing
that's amped up over the years.

And I've seen it in the gun culture too.

Like when, uh, uh, Magpole started making
training videos because they're like,

well, we can't advertise our guns, but
we can put out a training video and if

you have this mag pull device on your gun
and you follow our training, look at how

much of a better shooter you're gonna be.

So, um, uh, that, that's one area
that I've seen really kind of propel.

And that's probably an area that
you've had a fair bit of experience in.

Yeah.

And that might be answering your
earlier question about storytelling

in social media and in YouTube instead
of people reading the magazines

or heavens forbid, a book, can you
believe that people ever did that?

That's right.

Yeah.

They're telling their stories in
this new media and that is the,

the short film or the long film.

But you get to see the personality.

You get to hear the voice, and it helps.

It's a lot more challenging to
get that through in writing.

Mm-hmm.

If you've read good literature and
you remember some characters that

just struck you, they stick with
you, you, you know, this person.

Mm-hmm.

How do you make that happen?

It's an imaginary person and
you wrote words that made people

feel that they know this person.

But then you look at something like
Lonesome Dove, Gus, um, Gus Mo it Gus call

on Lonesome Dove, the character in that.

I call it a movie.

It was on television.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And stuff, but the, the Best Western
ever made because of that character.

Mm.

Robert Duval's character
in that just grabs you.

And I try to imagine writing, well,
heck, I don't have to imagine.

I read the book.

Mm. And it's just as good in the book.

You love this guy, you
love this character.

In the book, I guess Val's Art
as an actor was portraying that

e with equal effect in the movie.

And just what you mentioned now, if
you've got a manufacturer who puts

out YouTubes on his website, or maybe
he's putting him on a YouTube channel

or something like that, they've gotta
be careful how they tiptoe through

the minefield of This is a bad gun.

Mm-hmm.

Mention this word and that word and
all the thought police out there.

Yeah.

Yes.

How do you get your message across?

And storytelling is probably
the, the right answer.

I think you nailed it,

huh?

Well, that's, do you
find a lot of hurdles?

Like, I don't think, I don't think
TikTok will let images of guns and

stuff, uh, easily, uh, Instagram
meta that they, they clamp down

pretty hard, but not like TikTok.

And then YouTube is sort of a little
bit broader of what you can talk about.

Do you, do you talk, see hurdles there?

Oh yeah.

There're hurdles all the time.

You're always tiptoeing you through
the minefield and walking on eggshells

because you don't know exactly
what thing you might say that gets

YouTube to say You're canceled.

Your

channel is gone forever.

It's so arbitrary.

They can do it if they want.

And you ask them what are your rules?

And then you try your best to follow
those rules and then the next time

they're, they ding you and say,
well, we're gonna pull this one

off because you violated the rules.

You go, what rules?

So they changed them.

Mm-hmm.

So the rules are constantly changing,
but also individuals who check that

video, I think it's all done with ai,
computer bot stuff, but you can ask for

a real person review saying, mm-hmm.

I don't think they got this.

Right.

That usually works.

Yeah.

You know, some guys won't even say
the word rifle or bullet or shoot,

and they've got code words like pew.

Pew Sure.

And bang stick and freedom pills
and all sorts of silly things.

I hate that because it's slow.

I know there's language, but

it's, yeah.

Like why?

Why do you have to hide what it
is that you're talking about?

It's not nefarious.

Yeah.

But that's, that's the way it is.

So you've gotta be careful, and I'm
glad we're having this conversation

because I hadn't really thought
of the power of storytelling to

get around some of this stuff.

I don't necessarily have to mention
specifically all the items and what

they do if I have a riveting story.

Mm-hmm.

That inspires people to
investigate on their own.

Because everybody knows once you have the
name of a product, you can come close to

approximating the correct spelling of it
on a search and you're going to find it.

Yes.

So I gotta remember that
and put it to effect here.

Well, it's, it's a direction that I
took with my company a few years ago

and I was, um, silver Core Firearms
training for the longest time.

It was started as Silver Core Gun
Works and doing gunsmithing for

every Joe Blow who came through.

And I mean, anyone who's gonna
bring their gun to a kid to work on

is not gonna be paying top dollar.

And, uh, every gun that I worked on was
gonna be different, different issues.

And I learned, okay, start picking up
armored car companies, police agencies,

they're all on the same platform.

I can tool all the same
and they pay their bills.

So then it was silver Court firearms
training, silver court training.

'cause the word firearms was
getting blocked all over the place.

And, and recently I thought, you know
what I mean, I, I know the gun stuff.

I was raised around the gun stuff.

Um, I know some, not all,
I mean in, in my area.

But there's so many other
things that I'm interested in.

And I rebranded to Silver Core
Outdoors because firearms are a natural

portion of some outdoor activities.

And I found greater success in being
able to tell the story of connecting

with people, connecting with their
environment, connecting with their food.

And I reached far more people
who I ever would than if I

just looked at the gun side.

Now, uh.

I, I can't deny that if you put
the word gun in a post, it's gonna

have a very vocal crew of people.

But it's, it's the echo
chamber, so to speak.

It's the people who would
already be looking at your stuff.

Mm-hmm.

Um, if you want to try and win hearts and
minds and show people that there are other

ways out there, and you know, guns can be
really scary in the wrong person's hands.

Guns can be a, a dangerous thing if used
improperly, but so can cars soak, can

household cleaning chemicals, right.

Um, let's, let's look at the
story and the lifestyle behind

how you can connect to nature.

And, you know, there just so
happens to be a gun in the

background in some of these things.

I found some success doing that.

Yeah, I can imagine.

Um, I think it's a lot more,
it's a lot harder work, more

challenging to do it, but yeah.

Great storytelling.

I've, uh, for the several years now
I've been sort of bemoaning the fact

that we don't have hunters as heroes.

Um, who's that author
writing about a game warden?

His protagonist is this game
warden in Wyoming, I think.

Uh, okay.

Box c CJ Box.

Does that sound right?

Okay.

The last name is Box.

He's got a series of paperback
little novels that are, you

know, fairly good, pretty, pretty
riveting, uh, for some folks.

He's real popular anyway.

Yeah.

But that's the first one I've
seen in a long, long time.

Who made sort of the gun
user hunter the hero?

Mm. He, I assume he had to sort of.

Ca couch it or cover it with Game warden.

So he's an official, officially
government approved gun owner.

Right.

But still, at least the guns
end up many times being part

of the hero, saving the day.

Mm.

In novels like that.

But now I think back when I was a kid,
when a heroes were, we were seeing

them on TV with some Disney movies
about Daniel Boone and all the old

Pioneer Heroes and the Cowboy Westerns.

That was a big deal in the
1950s into the seventies.

So people like Davey Crockett and
Daniel Boone and the Lewis and Clark

Expedition and all these things that
were not that far in our background,

which made America, which made us great.

A kid with a love for the outdoors
and exploration and discovery and

adventure, would hear about those people.

And we heard about 'em in school.

They were on pop culture
in those days, these days.

What does pop culture give you?

Mm-hmm.

Urbanites playing makeup space games and,
and who can dance better than the next guy

on the street corner and things like that.

And, you know, more power to you
that takes a lot of talent, but

it doesn't have that connection to
the real world that we were getting

with our heroes back in the day.

Even a, a hero as fake as John
Wayne or some of the Yeah.

Cowboys on, you know, that's like,
obviously this guy's just a Hollywood

star and he's pretending to be somebody
who was probably never really did exist.

Mm. But

there were people, there's a, there's
a gram, a grim seed of truth in

that there were people like that.

Uh, they weren't the white hat
perfect Western cowboy saves the day

sort of person, but they were were
real people living out there who did

the right thing at the right time.

And they used often
firearms to accomplish it.

Right.

Because firearms were a tool just
like an ax or a plow or your horse or

whatever you, whatever else you needed.

In those days, the technology was
what it was, and you used that

technology and did the right thing.

Of course, people could say, oh,
what, what about all the people they

killed and the bad guys shooting and,
and then the treatment of the Native

Americans are taking away their land.

You can always go to the dark
side on all of this stuff.

Sure, it's human nature, but the idea
that some good guy with a gun can

save the day, I think is still valid.

We just don't see it in pop culture.

You don't?

Well, it's shifted, uh, like I think
you nailed it there when you talk

about good guy, it was the, the white
hat individual who, and it just so

happened to be that the situation was
such that a firearm necessitated the,

uh, prevailing of good over evil.

And over the years it changed
from a moral, ethical.

Um, high ground.

Yeah.

Based on the zeitgeist, based on
the culture to, um, to Rambo, uh,

who's, and it's more about, well,
the person with the biggest gun and

the biggest muscles, and there's this
whole fascination in Hollywood with

the just go out and shoot 'em up and,
you know, it ends justify the means.

But the, the human ethical
part of the whole story, um,

seems to have been minimized.

And I,

yeah, and they, they also
celebrated the actual evil guy.

Right.

Many of the movies would have
the bad guy in the end getting

his riches and his rewards.

And the good guys didn't.

Mm-hmm.

And you, you look at those and
think this is not helping anyone.

I mean, I get the artistry in the
story, but what a downer of a story.

And then I think back to something as
simplistic as the Rifle Man TV series.

Mm-hmm.

Back in the sixties, love that show.

Mm-hmm.

Still

do.

But like most of the shows in the sixties,
there was a moral lesson in there.

Mm-hmm.

Pretty,

you know, pretty, uh, softly delivered,
but it would be paw showing the son

that you, you can't just go around,
uh, bullying everyone in the streets.

You're probably not gonna work.

Right.

I have this rifle that can settle the
score with these crew of bad guys.

Yep.

Yeah.

But, okay, great.

So you've got your white hat hero
and he's usually, well, he was

always depicted as doing the right
thing in all aspects of life.

He took responsibility for himself.

He didn't stick his nose into other
people's business generally until it

was required, you know, push him to the
edge and now he's gonna do something.

But I think the story that came
through is that each of us, within

the community has to do our part
to make that community successful.

To make life worth living.

Mm. Help

one other out, mind your own business,
work hard, do your part, and it'll

all mesh pretty nicely, but as soon
as you get the, the greedy guy who

wants to come into town to make easy
money, whether it's robbing the bank or

cheating at cards in the bar and all the
rest, all the stories that they told.

Sure.

Sure.

Yeah, the moral was always
the right, do the right thing,

and it works out in the end,

right?

We're away from that and now we're
to the, the guy who's the strongest,

the toughest, the meanest and cheats
the most is going to win heck of

a message to send to our kids.

Yeah.

Yeah, it is.

Well, looking at the different
legacies that these characters have

left over the years and how that's
changed, if I were to look at you

and say, what would your legacy be?

What would that

be?

Hmm.

You know, I used to never think about
it, but I hear a lot about it from my.

Viewers and listeners and fans these days.

And I'm beginning to appreciate it
because to them, I'm Grandpa Ron

or Uncle Ron, somebody who's been
fortunate to have done the things

that they dream of someday doing.

So they, they look up to
me, uh, because of that.

And then IF feel that it's my
obligation to provide them with the,

the best information education, if
you can call it that, that I can.

And ultimately I would like my
legacy to be that I helped prolong

our tradition of outdoor mm-hmm.

Of, of, I don't wanna say
hunting specifically, but

that's definitely a part of it.

A huge part of it.

But our outdoor lifestyle.

Let's go with outdoor life, you
know, the outdoor life adventure,

the canoeing and the camping, and the
exploring and the fishing and, and

finding mushrooms and, uh, just living
off the land and staying connected

to nature as we were designed to do.

I mean, you think about how long man
lived that close to nature, the stone

age cultures, of which we might have two
or three left on the planet that haven't

been influenced by modern things, but what
it was like to be that close to nature,

to understand that you could eat this
plant in this season, but not this plant.

And you could, how you would get
this meat to keep you and your

family alive without destroying
the environment that supported you.

I, if my legacy can do that and the
same time maintain or restore, uh,

a bit of, um, let's say glory, but.

A proper place for hunters.

In other words, we're not the
bad guys, we're not the anti

hunter's ideal of an evil.

Kill all the animals.

You don't care about 'em thing, which
is ridiculous, but it's out there.

Mm-hmm.

I would like for more and more people
to understand that hunters can be

an influence for good in nature.

Uh, we, many of us have been obviously
what we've done since the start of

the conservation movement, uh, ending
market hunting, establishing wildlife

lands and refuges and Nashville forests
and grasslands in place, protecting

the wild so that the wildlife could
then thrive with good management and

understanding all of those programs.

I think we've done a great job of that,
or at least our two generations ago did.

I think we're falling on our
faces a little bit here in

the last generation or two.

Hmm.

Or three where we was
riding on the coattails.

Like I, I grew up in an era
where the Canada geese were

starting to come back until, wow.

Now look at 'em.

They're all practically a nuisance.

Mm-hmm.

Whitetailed deer were never
around when I was a kid.

They started coming back and now look
at how many whitetailed deer there are.

We brought elk back, pronghorn
back on and on It goes until

we just took it for granted.

Isn't this something we
get to go out and hunt?

We get, I, I used to be able to get eight
deer tags in one season in South Dakota.

Wow.

It was in my twenties.

Yeah.

Wow.

So you start to take it for granted and
now you, you look at what's happening

now and you, I like to tell folks we've
gotta do what your great-grandpa did

and your grandpa did, which is get
on the ground and, and build the wood

duck nesting boxes and, and lobby to
save this wetland from being drained

and put into another shopping center.

Because when's the last time you hunted
in a shopping center parking lot?

Yeah.

And then it's really funny, I'll say
that to some young kids that live

in the cities and it's just like
they get this look on their face.

Like, oh gosh, you're right.

I never thought of that because
I've been around long enough

to say I used to hunt there.

Yeah.

Where that center is.

Yeah.

And how long can that continue?

So if my legacy is waking people up to
that reality so that they continue to

do the good conservation work that was
started a hundred years ago by real

conservation hunters, that would be cool.

I really like that.

And you know, I think there's this idea
within people that the conservation work

is hard or it's somebody else's job.

And I think maybe what they overlook
is the opportunity for themselves.

'cause you know, society is often,
what's in it for me if I do this well?

L lots in it for you, for
your kids, for your grandkids.

Oh, that's too far in the future.

I just look right now like
what's in it for me right now.

I mean, we've got a local group, pit
water fellers, and they're building duck

boxes and they love bringing people out.

And you can go up and you can volunteer.

And what do you learn?

Wow, I learned new places I can hunt.

I learn other people in the community who
are like-minded and I'm picking up tips

and tricks and maybe I'm gonna be more
successful on my, on my next season out.

I mean, if it's something that
you're interested in, one of the

biggest things I've heard people
say is like, how do I get into this?

It's so expensive.

And how do I find a mentor?

Well, through the conservation groups is
one way that you put out and infinitely

get back for generations to come.

So right now you get back connections
and people might not tell you their

secret honey hole, but they'll
get you pointed in the right

direction to kind of get you going.

Yeah.

Excellent point.

Yeah.

The conservation group like that,
you don't think of it as, no, I have

to go out in the hot sun and, and
uh, pull weeds or whatever they're

doing and I guess I could sacrifice.

No, you get to be a part of that community
that is improving wildlife areas for

everyone's benefit, including yours.

And you're gonna meet folks who say,
yeah, come on, join the club, take you

under the wing, be a mentor to you.

Or you know how it works.

You get to be friends with
somebody and you go, well, shoot,

I want to take this guy hunting.

Yeah.

I

enjoy him so much.

So suddenly you do have a place to
hunt because you've made a new friend

who's taken you and then you return
the favor with something that you're

doing in your neck of the woods.

Yeah.

I've got a, an old friend that I
bumped into a few years ago and

we just connected and now he comes
out to the ranch to pheasants.

He shot his first pheasant in
something like, what did he say?

It was about 20 or 30 years since
he'd gotten a pheasant really.

Yeah.

And he hunted with Covey and me
on the ranch, and I was tickled

to have him shoot my pheasants.

Totally.

You know, it took him quite a while.

'cause his balance isn't as good
as it used to be, and a few issues.

And when you get into your
seventies, sure these things happen.

But he made this beautiful shot
on a, a big rooster that Covey

pointed and went across his
front and he killed that rooster.

And he was just about crying
because it felt so good.

No kidding.

His puppy made the retrieve,
which made it even more special.

And so I get as much joy out of
that as, as shooting a aluminum

pheasants in three seconds of myself.

Mm-hmm.

You know, the whole
thing just comes around.

So, yeah, it's, it's a great way to do it.

Join Ducks Unlimited or Pheasants
Forever, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation.

All these user groups who are
conservationists, who are striving

for the kind of work that needs to
be done to keep us all in the field,

enjoying open spaces and wildlife.

That alone is a great legacy for anyone.

I love that.

Ron, is there anything that we should
talk about that we haven't talked about?

Where are you gonna take
me moose hunting next?

Come on up.

Yeah, I think what we're
talking last was, uh, I was on

the moose hunt there and yeah,

no, no, this, this has just been great.

I'm happy to visit with you.

I love your insights and
your passion for this.

Um, I didn't really know where
this was going to go, uh, but I

figured, hey, you talked to another
conservationist hunter and it's probably

gonna be some pretty good stuff.

Well, I really enjoy this conversation
Ron, and thank you so much for

being on the Silver Corp podcast.

My pleasure.

I'll be, uh, more than tickled
if you invite me back someday.

I can guarantee it.

Thanks so much, Travis.