The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader

Nathan James, known online as Sir Drifto, holds the world altitude record for the highest electric paramotor flight and has flown hundreds of miles in a vintage open cockpit biplane with his dad. He's also the kind of guy who once tried to fly a paramotor under a bridge and lost his sponsorship in the process.

In this conversation, we talk about what happens when the risk-to-reward ratio flips, why real adventure can't be bought through a booking agent, the Camel Trophy / Defender Trophy comeback, growing up on dirt bikes and two-strokes, what every young person should experience at least once, AI and predictive surveillance, and why the simplest eras might have produced the most capable people.

Nathan is heading to British Columbia for the Defender Trophy, the successor to the legendary Camel Trophy, and this conversation captures exactly the kind of person they'd want behind the wheel.

Silvercore Podcast 182 Nathan James - Sir Drifto

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sirdrifto/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SirDrifto


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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
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Timestamps:

00:00 Intro and the Sir Drifto origin
01:34 Life is short and the risk-to-reward ratio
03:03 When risk stops falling only on you
05:20 Dirt bikes at eight and the berm that changed everything
08:33 Counting birthdays you didn't expect to reach
10:13 Regret as the real balancing act
11:50 Contrived hardship vs. real challenge
14:23 What every young person should experience once
17:36 The Wall-E problem and the softening of capability
22:01 Technology, instant gratification, and lost patience
24:06 Face-to-face connection as the future commodity
27:21 Photoshopping a report card and the sinking jet boat
30:29 The world record electric paramotor flight
40:42 The altitude and would he do it again
42:12 Why winter was the only option
43:22 Flying a Piper Cub cross-country with his dad
47:15 The broken fuel gauge and cornfield contingencies
52:11 The Defender Trophy (Camel Trophy successor) in BC
57:56 Whether it'll be televised
01:00:23 Safety third
01:01:17 Flying a paramotor under a bridge
01:04:12 The helicopter laser incident and federal consequences
01:12:28 AI, facial recognition, and pre-crime prediction
01:16:54 Favorite movies and books
01:22:06 Write down your bucket list and challenge every excuse


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.

We're living in a time where safety's
become the goal of everything, yet the

sense of real adventures disappearing.

Those are the words of today's guest,
A man who set the world altitude record

for the highest electric para motor
flight who's flown hundreds of miles

in a vintage open cockpit biplane.

And who describes himself as an
old soul living in a modern world.

Welcome to the Silvercore
Podcast, Nathan James.

How's it going, everybody?

So, should I refer to you as
Mr. Drift O or Sir Drift o

You know, I, everybody, uh, recognized
me as Sir Drift o and that name,

I guess, kind of rings a bell,
so I shake my head on that one.

But it works.

I. I'm gonna, I'm gonna have
links in the description here.

Yeah.

And people can check out your social
media feed and what you're up to.

But honestly, out of all the people
on social media that I follow, if

you aren't in the top place for the
coolest Instagram account, you're

definitely up there in the top five.

It's, thank you.

Insane.

The adventures that you're on, the cool
vehicles, the planes, the motorcycles.

I mean, y you're living what most
people would aspire to or dream of as

kids looking in these old magazines
saying, man, one day I'd love to

fly this plane or drive that car.

Thank you.

How'd you get into all

that?

I appreciate those words.

I, um, life is short.

That's the biggest thing I can
take away from anything is just

you gotta keep on pursuing those.

Those ideas that always
resonate in your head.

And for me, I guess that's worked
all, all these years and prevented

a lot of hospital visits somehow.

And I don't know how,

were you close to
hospital visits at times?

Surely with your adventures?

There's been a couple of hospital visits.

There's been, uh, my fair share.

But you know, when you think about the,
I call it the risk to reward ratio.

I, I, it's words that I live by in
every single thing I do that usually at

some point in my twenties, the risk to
reward ratio became inverse, where the

risk was much higher than the reward.

And because of that, a couple incidents
I had hospital visit and, and you

know, the, the times that were behind
it, I'm like, this wasn't a good idea.

I, you know, but I, over the course
of the last few decades, I I, it's

shockingly that there hasn't been more.

You know, one of the things that, uh,
we do Silvercore, we've got a club.

Yeah.

We've got a private podcast that
comes out every week and no members,

they ask questions and stuff.

And I had a question that came up
just, uh, last week and there was an

individual moved to a new province.

He's getting into hunting, but he's
concerned about bears and he's concerned

about, like, he says, I know this
is stupid when I write it down, but

I've got this fear of like, when I'm
hiking I yell out, Hey bear, hey bear.

But when I'm hunting I
gotta be stealthy and quiet.

Yes.

And so we talked about that
relationship, like when you're

young risk, it falls on you.

If I mess up, it's on me.

When you get older, you start got
relationships and families and that

risk falls on everybody else around you.

And there's a different balancing
act that kind of happens.

How do you look at risk and balance it?

So early on I, it was kind of like,
I'm just going for this and seeing

what the results would happen.

And that was a really big, uh, I'd
say an outlook or I guess turn of

events in my twenties, and I would
either reanalyze after the fact.

Like great example is there was so
many incidents when I was flying a

paramo, which is a power paraglider.

Early on, this would've been early 2010,
2011, there was so many moments in that

po timeframe where I would be flying and
I'd see the weather, and I clearly knew

the weather was like very questionable.

Like, this is either gonna put you
in the ground or this is gonna put

you in the stratosphere, right?

I had either one yet, I would still
fre, like launch myself into the sky

knowing that these conditions exist.

Fast forward now, I'm like,
I'm gonna analyze this weather.

It's clearly not flyable, so
I'm therefore not gonna fly.

Unlike in my twenties.

I'm like, just gonna go for
it and hope for the best.

It doesn't work always.

And I think the older you get, you realize
that I really analyze is reward that much

better than the risk involved in this.

And you know, that could be a tall tale
sign of getting older, even though I

still do questionable things at this age.

But in my twenties there
was like no analyzing.

I would just go for it because I
was solely focused on the reward.

At least what I thought was the
grass is greener on the other side.

It was.

Did the idea of the No.

Did the idea of the risk
ever enter your mind?

Because I know when I was younger
growing up, my parents didn't think

I'd live past 10 and they said, well
maybe 17, that's gonna be the number.

You're not gonna live past there.

'cause I would, I wouldn't think
about consequence and I'd just

do things and somehow everything
would just kind of turn out.

Um, yeah.

Does uh, when you were younger, was
that similar or did you actually

have an idea of what the risk could
be and you'd just do it anyways?

When I was younger, you know, a great
example is I, I was in a dirt bikes

when I was younger and at that point,
this was when two strokes, a two

stroke motorcycle was still the new hot
commodity before four strokes took over.

And I had a, Yamaha Wise Z 80, I
was 10 years old, 11 years old.

It was an absolute rocket ship.

There was a berm.

And I, and I looked at that berm
and I knew that there, I didn't

know what the options were on
the other side of that berm.

And I remember this still stays with me.

You know, 30 years later I'm like, I
analyzed that I have carried too much

speed off this berm, midpoint in the air.

I realized that age
eight, this is gonna hurt.

And I literally had a timeframe of
like where I waited for the impact

and it was the first time I had
brought my parents out to watch me hit

this particular area of this track.

And I'm like, the consequences
were high for that one.

I was on crutches for weeks and weeks and
that still sticks with me to this day.

In fact, I'd say that's a big.

Ang Angular point of is this gonna
work or am I gonna regret this?

And it's all because of
that first berm that I hit.

And Mach two, you know,

as one does,

as one does

at eight on a two stroke.

Yeah.

And, and like

fully in the power band, throwing it.

Uh, and I mean, like for you, what,
did you have an early realization as in

your youth, that like, this is going to
have consequences behind the my action?

Uh, no.

You know, I, I kinda, I guess.

I just believed your parents.

Right?

I, I guess I'm gonna be
dead by the time I'm 10.

I guess I'm gonna be
dead by the time I'm 17.

So I don't know.

Like, just, just live life, like, I
guess I've got an uncle who I never met.

He was blown up by a grenade
and he was Royal 22nd regiment

in, over in, in Quebec.

And he, I guess it was a training drill
and oh, later I've learned that they have,

they actually did have faulty grenades.

Um, there was speculation
whether he just held it out to

the side count, 1, 2, 3, throw.

Right.

As opposed to what they're supposed
to do, just pull, pin throw.

Yeah.

Anyways, I guess he lived for
a couple of days with his side,

blown out and then passed.

Never met him, but, uh, I guess that
probably stood in my, in my parents'

mind 'cause it was my dad's best
friend and my, my mom's brother.

And, um, I, uh, I just figured,
well, you know, he lived at 22.

I guess that's about a good age he can
live to, so no, I never, I, I just assumed

that that's the course of things stupidly.

It never really entered.

And as you start getting older,
it was when I had a family, had

kids of my own, I start thinking
like, okay, hold on a second.

Like, I know I can do these
things, but it's usually from my

experience, like running across
train tracks and uh, trains coming.

I know I make it, but there's one
time when Buddy who was trying to keep

up with me, he almost got clipped.

And uh, it's uh, it's usually
the people around you that.

Don't have that narrow focus
of winning that end up.

Maybe they have the losing in their
head and they end up falling and

tripping and, and having an incident.

So that entered my head that my actions
have consequence for the people around me.

I like that perception of things.

I, you know, I think I, there was, it was
heavily involved in my twenties where I

questioned like, okay, you made it to 21.

That's a benchmark.

25 was a benchmark when I hit 30.

Yeah.

I'm like, this is weird.

I should not be here.

Like, there's just so many, there's
so many situations that I was in

that I was like, I shouldn't be
here, and yet I'm still going.

And then at 35 I'm like, oh man, am I
actually gonna make it to my older age?

This isn't a good side.

You know?

And then it, it was, I wasn't
trying to be morbid about it,

but I was just, I was laughing.

I'm like, there's no freaking way.

I'm still here.

And yet it just, the
clock keeps on ticking.

So I just, I've enjoyed the journey
of life and I, and I would say the

biggest thing that I would always
look back at is regret is the worst

feeling, especially in a man's life.

I'm not saying it's not in a woman's
life, but particularly for men, if

there's certain aspects of regret,
those, those feelings never faked.

And especially with the, when the
regret is positioned in a way of past

avenues that you could have taken
in life or events, or actually it's

just simple things that you wish you
had done because you hear about it.

People on their deathbed,
do you have any regrets?

And they list out those things and those
are things that have stuck with them.

The older people that, uh, individuals
that are like 80, 90, they're talking

about regrets that were in the twenties
and that resonated with them a hundred

percent up until their end of lifetime.

And so, like, for me,
that always resonates.

And I, and, and.

I always counted every
birthday that hit me.

I'm like, I'm still here.

This is, this is weird.

I, I think it's one of those things that
doesn't matter what path you choose,

there's always gonna be options, right?

If I go this path, I give up that thing
over here, there's never gonna be this

situation where a person has everything.

Yes.

Um, and so, and so, I, I always look at
regret as, as that balancing act too.

Like, I never wanna live to regret.

I never want to look back and say, man,
I really wish I should have done that.

And you know, there are times I get
into things and halfway through I want

to quit, but I'm like, I don't wanna
look back at myself as a quitter.

I might succeed.

I do the thing and I never do it again.

Because it just, I realized
halfway through it wasn't for me.

But I can't stop halfway.

I have to keep pushing through and
then, I don't know, maybe it's an a DHD

thing, then I'm onto to the next thing.

Right?

Yeah.

But, uh, that, that idea of
contemplating your own mortality, uh.

It, it does a couple things.

It allows you to measure your
day in a way that you can

hopefully live without regrets.

But it also, I find that you never
truly feel quite as alive as when

you're riding that knife's edge
between one wrong decision could change

everything, and those are the core
memories that tend to stick out to me.

Not, not the mundane of
going through and safety.

It's where I pushed myself or that where
there that threat was real or perceived.

Yes,

it was real in my mind and, and
I pushed through anyways, I,

I like that.

That's, that's, it's the pushing through.

That's, that's what makes the.

Everlasting Mark on your life's memory.

You know, I, I watch young people and
they do cold plunges and they, they will

create situations of contrived hardship
so that they can push themselves.

'cause I think in innately deep
down, we as a species need to push

ourselves and need to feel challenged.

And more and more we have all
of these modern conveniences.

If we want food, we can have whatever
flavor of food we want delivered to our

door within half an hour by DoorDash.

If we want a certain item, it's just
a push of a button and Amazon's got

it next door, next day or next hour
depending on what, where you live.

But I see these hardships that people
are willingly putting themselves into.

You

remember from your experience?

Yeah, go on.

You remember like the perfect example
is that remember that device that

you'd put on your stomach and it would
zap your abs so you would do nothing.

Yes.

And they said get eight minute abs.

Like why not do the sit-ups, but
then they would like have right

backpack taser systems, zapping
them while they're working and then,

and I'm like, what direction are
the doctor holding that with life?

If you're doing this for your abs, what
are you doing for your general meals or

getting to like, I wanna like examine what
is in the mindset of I'm gonna zap my abs.

So I get my workout so I don't
actually have to work out.

I'm like,

what?

Well, you know, the whole mental
health industry is booming and

it's, it's doing very, very well
and it's only getting better.

And I think that, you know, some people
realize it, but a lot of people don't.

They, they look at the, the
end result as happiness.

They look at the end
result of having something.

But there is, if people stop
and think about it, like is the

happiness doesn't come from having,
generally it comes from acquiring.

So, man, I'm excited.

I really want to get a new lens
for my camera, blah, blah, blah.

I go on and you get this new lens and
you're like, oh, that's nice lens.

I can use it.

But look at that lens over there, right?

And there's always this.

This perpetual cycle forward in
the same way of zapping your abs?

Man, I'd be really happy if I had a six
pack and I could walk down the beach.

Well, you know, the happiness I think
comes from the pursuit of whatever it is.

That's where it's all found.

And I think that's why people are
slowly starting to push themselves

to do these harder things.

And um, even if it's contrived, even
if you got this expensive plastic tub

that you put in the backyard, that's
marketed as making you a certain way.

Yes.

But I got, I gotta wonder, what,
what sort of hardship do you think

every young man or young person
should experience at least once?

Uh, absolute chaos involved with
high stress and your optionality

to get outta that situation is
very minimal in how you handle and

compose yourself under that pressure.

A lot of times, I think in modern times.

We have something that's the ease of a
push of a button to make our life easier.

Oh, this is difficult.

I'm gonna have somebody
else handle the situation.

And I think every young male, 18
or even 16 till they're 25 at one

point, needs to be put in a situation
that either means life or death.

If I don't bust my butt in this situation
and find an outcome to survive this,

like true survival, not, oh, Denny's
is closed, I'm gonna go to ihop.

I mean like if you don't make
the right decision making under

pressure and this could be it.

And, and even though that seems like,
wow, this seems a little bit drastic.

When you're putting those in those
type of situations, your minds and

how you perceive every situation
you're in completely changes.

And what normally is a very high stress
situation, it gets repeated again,

becomes less stress and less stress.

And before you know it, you have
stuff that normally would send

people over the edge and you're like.

This is a walk in the park.

It's no big deal.

It's minute.

It's literally, I wish I was put in
more stressful situations in my youth.

Not so much to involve PTSD,
but just to really conform how I

handle and strategically dissolve
this situation and make it work.

I, I think that's a dying art.

You think about in the World War II,
18 year olds, people that weren't,

kids that weren't even 18, they're,
they're forging their name that they

were 18, were eager to go fight.

And, and they're put in these
situations and you look at the

byproduct of those ones that did
survive is the greatest generation.

They work hard, they figure out solutions.

They literally make a situation that
would deem unfathomable work, and

they survived and they grew and, and
built these lives that, I don't know.

They're, they're gobys.

I commonly hang out with
a good friend of mine.

He's, he's 102 now.

In fact, uh, not too long ago,
we flew in my plane down south.

He was a World War II fighter
pilot, flew P 30 eights, Papa New

Guinea, the most legendary guy.

And, and I've known some amazing
individuals, but he's 102.

He still flies to Cessna two 10 at
102, still has a current license.

And I'm like, what has driven you to
not only make it to this benchmark that

is unfathomable, but you're with such,
his mental clarity, everything is there.

He survived in a war that if you,
honestly, if I was flying to P

38 and Papua New Guinea and I,
and I got shot down, that's it.

I mean, your survivability even to
be remotely located, but papa new,

any, and, and yet you had all these
layers of stress throughout your life.

You make it to 102, you're still
going, that's, that's like a

staple go by book of what every.

Young adults should have in modern day.

And it's dying.

I mean, it it,

mm-hmm.

It is.

We're, we're becoming, and I hate saying
this, and some, this might offend some

people, but you remember the movie
Wally, where everybody's on that mm-hmm.

Floating cruise ship, going through
space, and they can barely move

because everything is handed to them.

That is literally the
direction we're going.

And some people might
think, oh, that's crazy.

That's not, that's not the direction.

But the world is becoming easier
and making our lives easier,

which is not necessarily a bad
thing, but how we're pursuing it.

Like kids are relying on AI to
write their entire school paperwork.

I, I never had that in my youth.

I struggled.

And yet one button, like
make my paragraph sound good.

'cause that's changing the, how
we produce results in a short

amount of time and so many factors.

And this, we need struggle.

Youth need struggle.

Mm-hmm.

And they, they need.

That's my biggest conveying factor
if I had a kid, is I'm not gonna

make your life necessarily easier.

I'm gonna make it where you understand
how to get outta a situation.

You learn, you adapt, you overcome.

How would you do that for a child

to make them hop on that dirt bike?

You go over that berm, send it and I'm
not gonna come running to you and rub your

head saying, oh, let's, we're done riding.

Like, you're gonna get back on that bike.

You're gonna ride some more.

Mm. It's, it's the helicopter parents and
once again, I have no room to say I'm a, a

parent right now 'cause I'm not a parent.

But my, my parents did a
valuable lesson in my youth and

that was to be outside to go.

Try to jump that creek at whether
I make it or not, to go climb up

in that tree house and frankly
fall outta that tree house.

It, it's, it's those small steps of where
there was risk, there was danger, and you

learned how to mitigate that in some ways.

In other ways you didn't, but
it literally built this tunnel

of resilience to your adulthood.

And today you get handed an iPad, you
get handed a cell phone, everything

is doing this, and then when you
get put in an emergency situation,

that's the survivability goes down.

If you've grabbed an 18-year-old out
of 1944, stuck him in the forest,

said, I need you to survive for
five days, there's a pretty high

probability that they would survive.

If you stuck an 18-year-old today
in the same situation, I would

say that probability is very low.

I, you know, I, I tend to agree with you
and I, and I think it has less to do than

with the actual knowledge or skillset of
surviving in the wild than it does with

self-confidence and mental resilience.

Yes.

Because you start gi, start
giving up hope in the wild, and

you'll just, you sink pretty fast.

Your survivability rate goes right
down the tube and you go back a

number of years where risk was a part
of the everyday life and you start

realizing that to quote, fight club.

You're not made outta glass, you're
carved outta wood, whatever it

is, you, you can actually, um.

You can do some things with
yourself and, and make it through.

And I, and I noticed, like in our
society, I noticed, I think people are

clueing into this because this whole
bubble wrapped, um, system that we have,

I'm looking at play areas for youths
being constructed specifically with the

idea of introducing controllable risk.

They're gonna have heights and they're
gonna be falling and they might

hurt themselves and they're gonna
have things that they can climb up.

They're not all in enshrouded.

And I, I think from a, uh, a
larger level, people are realizing

that the, uh, resilience of our
youth has taken a massive blow.

I, I think that, uh, your, your
solution to putting 'em on a dirt bike

or doing something with some level of
controlled risk is, is the solution.

And you've got helicopter parents
who'll fly over top and try

and take care of everything.

They got lawnmower parents who
will like, mow down all the

problems they head to their kids.

So the kids got this nice path to
work down and I've never seen a more

depressed generation Yes, than these
kids who've never felt like they've

actually earned it on their own.

Like their, their decision mattered
that their, uh, consequences of

their actions, uh, were something
that they could feel the relief for

the failure from and learn from.

The biggest issue too is that, you
know, with the ad advancement of

technology, there's a lot of things
that are wonderful because of that.

I'm not dissing on technology,
but everything is instant.

People get instant replies,
instant on social media.

You're, everything is then therefore.

Develop the youth into
everything is instant.

So when that instant process doesn't
come, such as working out and getting in

really good shape, or finding ways that
instead of actually doing it the natural

way, they're going to all these other
methods of, you know, I like fitness

and I'm based off fitness, but I don't
have anything to show for fitness as far

as, I don't need to do all these types
of medical concoctions that a lot of

these 18 year olds are doing just to be
instantly in this great shape rather than

simply working out over a period of time.

The, the whole realm of modern
day in instant gratification

is I think at an all time high.

Everything has to be done faster,
everything has to be instant.

And that's not a, that's
instant is not good necessarily.

It helps in some ways, I
think it hurts in other ways.

You look at like the actual cultivation
of a friendship, a relationship,

any of those prospects back then.

Done in a way that was genuine.

The swipe right, swipe left
aspects is absolutely killing.

The dynamic of human interaction is
absolutely killing actual progressive

friendships that last decades.

And for me, what if it's that bad now?

What are we gonna do 20 years
from now, 30 years from now?

What is it gonna be?

Is this the whole interaction
of humans gonna transverse from

actual human to human interaction?

And people are gonna simply be talking to
a robot that's programmed to show empathy?

It's weird.

And for me, I'm not
looking forward to that.

Hence why I'm gonna hop on my 50-year-old
motorcycle and go ride to a cars and

coffee to actually talk to someone.

I see that being the
commodity of the future.

I can see I'm so past podcast.

Yes.

John Sonai, he's a futurist, and
I saw something pop up recently in

his social feed and he's talking
about how people aren't falling in

love in the way that they used to.

And uh, his reasonable behind that
is that their dopamine system's been

hijacked and they're looking for that
instantaneous, quick, quick, here you go.

Next thing.

And they're so overloaded that they don't
allow themselves the ability to, let's

say, fall in love like people used to.

Um, and you, you talk about
talking to an AI system.

I remember reading an article, I think it
was a year, maybe it was two years ago.

Yeah.

And this is when AI is kind of coming up
and they said, uh, you know, this dating

app, I don't know which one it was,
but you can create your own AI avatar

and then you let it go out and your AI
avatar, you program it with your likes,

your wants, your dislikes, whatever.

Right.

We'll go and date other AI avatars
and then it'll find a match for you

based on those, the AI things dating.

And then you can, if you wish, now
talk with that person behind a screen.

Or maybe meet 'em up person.

I unplugged the

computer that, that the computer's.

Holy crow.

No kidding.

No kidding.

Yeah.

It's, but I, I do see this, um, the
face-to-face, the social interaction.

'cause even like, this
technology is great.

You're where, you're
in Colorado right now?

Yeah.

I go between Colorado and Florida.

Okay.

And I'm in British Columbia and
we're able to have this conversation

like we're in the same room.

More or less we're, we're gonna
be missing out on some of the

nuances and the actual connection.

But, you know, it, it helps
proxy that for a fairway.

Uh, like that's fantastic.

Our, the younger generation, I find
they don't really want to do that.

They're, if they have a video
going out, it'll be a one way feed.

It'll be them talking
about what's going on.

Most of it's gonna be texting and
of the texting, it's gonna be little

emoticons and slang and whatever else.

That level of connection
has drastically changed.

Um,

I, I think, you know, I, I
do believe you're right that,

uh, having these real world.

Interactions is going to be
something that's gonna be the

hot commodity of the future.

Um, I, I don't see that pendulum swinging
completely before it starts coming back.

Something's gonna happen and it's, it's
gonna take people with real traditional

skills like yourself, who know how to
turn a wrench, who can understand how

an engine works, who understands their
relationship with fear, so that they

can do things that might otherwise be
scary and, and, and get through it.

Um, I, I think that sort of, um,
I, I think that sort of archetype

is gonna be coming back into favor.

The idea of toxic masculinity,
I think is well on its way out.

And the idea of, you know, toxic
people is, is better understood.

I, I gotta wonder though, so you talk
about, you talk about being put in a

situation where everything's absolutely
outta your control and you just have

to start reasoning and figuring your
way through it and gritting down.

When was the first time
that happened for you?

Well, I mean, very first time I've
photoshopped my report card in, you know,

the sixth grade and we had parent teacher
conferences and I knew my D-Day time was

coming up because I normally didn't get
B's and A's, and I didn't correlate that.

The parent-teacher conference
was the same week that I had

photoshopped that report card.

So that was a stressful situation.

And that was my first time, I'd say.

Yeah,

as far as, yeah, that

that'll be a good one.

Adulthood.

Well, let's see.

You know one situation that always sticks
with me, and that's actually hilarious.

I had bought an early seventies jet boat.

Typical Craigslist purchase looks fast.

This is a really dumb idea.

But the looks fast part is the most
important aspect out of this ordeal.

Mm-hmm.

Buy this jet boat.

Mm-hmm.

First day out on the lake.

It's got a, uh, 4 55 big lock
board to, I think it was like

a 5 0 2 or something like that.

A beautiful jetboat.

I got it for an absolute steal.

We're out in the water and I was
like, this thing, this thing's fast.

I mean, it's real fast.

And I'm sitting out on the lake and
I'm like, but the angle is concerning.

Why is my angle like this?

Keep in mind I am
completely new to boating.

Never have done it before, but I go buy
the, you know, the dumbest thing you

could buy in a boat, didn't start in a
canoe, just went straight to the jet boat.

Well, apparently at some point there is
the most important thing that is the plug.

And I sat there and I walked, and why
is the angle of this boat increasingly?

And I initially thought
I had bought a bad boat.

This thing is sinking.

Well, normally you
would just abandon ship.

At that point I was analyzing, okay,
the risk is high here, there's the

situation is emergency and dire.

I'm gonna lose this boat.

It's gonna be at the bottom any minute.

And the water temp isn't that great.

Well, I decided that it's still running.

I had decided to go wide open throttle,
and it planned out, it removed the water

even though it was gonna still sink.

Mm-hmm.

And I beached it.

That situation, after I beached
it, I essentially saved the boat.

I realized that my stupidity was still
strong because I forgot the plug.

But it was a situation that
could have been much worse.

And I realized that by just, instead
of giving up, analyze the situation,

figure out a solution, make it happen.

And it doesn't always work.

But

in

this case, early on in my
teens, that that method worked

at that age, you're like, what the hell?

I don't know what's going on.

I got nothing.

I don't know about the tram.

I don't know that.

I guess you learned by putting throttle
on, you'd start draining the boat.

That was, uh, more than once I've been
out on a boat without a plug in it.

It's like, okay, just
gotta let this thing go

every time.

Uh, so I would say that's probably
the, the, the real truly dire, like,

you better do something quick and
act fast and think strategically,

or this is gonna be Titanic.

Episode two.

Well, tell me about this
world record electric paramo

altitude that, that you set.

How did that come about?

Man?

So for like the last, when I
first started flying para motors,

I was always, um, fascinated.

You know, I, uh, the record aspect
of pushing the envelope when most

people would say that's crazy.

And honestly the sport of para
motoring when you actually break

it down and if the audience doesn't
know what a para motor is, it's.

A powered paraglider, you essentially have
a paraglider, which is fabric and string.

You have a frame that you strap yourself
into with gasoline under your buttocks.

And an engine spinning a carbon fiber
blade at a high rate of speed sounds

absolutely disastrous, but it's like
the most pure form of flying that I

think I've ever done in my entire life.

So I was doing this sport,
uh, for a good amount of time.

Uh, it was a long time I, I was flying.

And since beginning to the point of the
actual record, I've always wanted to

set a record, whether I was distance,
any type of feasible record that was

sanctioned with the FAI, which is the
federal, uh, ati, um, association.

So they, they essentially is this
massive aeronautic association

that's global and they, they've been
around since the early 19 hundreds.

Every record known to man.

Armstrong's Moonwalk Armstrong's X 15
flight, Chuck Jagers, the Wright Brothers.

Every record that has ever
been attained is in this book.

It's in this record book.

Hmm.

Well, my objective at the time was
to always get a record established

and to be in that book and not only
to break a record, but to set one

that has never been set before.

Well, that's difficult in the
sport Paramo because a lot of the

Europeans have set all these records.

I mean, they're the king of setting
records, especially the Dane French.

They, uh, they're just good.

So many friends over there, paramo
friends out of France, and I'm just

like, you guys make croissants.

Why can't you just focus on those
and let us set some of these records?

And you know, my buddy Pascal said,
well, you gotta figure something out.

So inevitably my fiance right now at
now what my girlfriend at the time.

She wanted to be part of this.

So our goal was to set the
tandem, uh, trike altitude record.

That was the objective 'cause that
was held by the country of Hungary.

Well then it came into the process of
that when we were talking with the, the

sanctioned, the federal a association.

They said, Hey, there are some avenues
that haven't been approached yet,

and that is in the electric realm.

And then this like light bulb turned on.

And I'm like, what do you mean?

I'm like, it's brand new.

We don't have anything down yet.

And we got wind that the British were
originally gonna try to set this.

So, uh, thanks to the amazing,
this isn't just a one man sort

of thing, it's a whole team.

I have friends that are just, I owe
forever gratitude to, because they,

they literally made this happen.

It would never happen without them.

We obtained an electric para motor that
was to spec and to their regulation.

It is brand new.

I mean, it's, it's still very new
and, and the development behind it.

We chose a location that was gonna work.

And you know, the biggest thing
is that one small mistake on this

record, it completely invalidates it.

You have to, there's so many rules.

A rule book is like this thick,
and I think a lot of people

attempt these records, but when
one thing is off, that's it.

And then the process and everything
was just, it was shockingly.

It's not like you can just go up,
do the record and hey, I'm done.

That's it.

There's a lot of pre-planning and that
was the biggest wake up call for me.

But somehow in all that context,
we got the perfect weather window,

which I was shocked at because at the
timeframe where we took off and flew

from is notorious for horrific winds.

It was up in Leadville, Colorado.

I mean, it's smack dab in the middle
of the continental divide between these

mountain ranges that westerly flowing
winds come in and they just, it turns into

a very rough cup of soup for any pilot.

So the perfect conditions happened.

We got everybody gathered, we got all
our sealed altimeters, which record all

this data and I can't touch any of 'em.

You have to have an FAI specialist there.

They have to monitor
everything you're doing.

They put the altimeters on you
and then you have to go and do

your record and come back and they
remove those and if there's any,

mm-hmm.

I mean any discrepancies
in between that process.

That's it.

The record is invalid and I only had
one shot at this, so we got up there,

the winds were behaving at the time.

The biggest issue that for me was
temperature had this US Air Force flight

suit that was, you know, insulated
to the degree that I looked like the

Michelin man and had a heated gloves
and a full mass set up with oxygen.

And um, I look back at that and I'm like,
temperature was a huge factor because

on my initial climb I had wash, just
kept watching that thermometer fall.

And you know, when we talk about this
risk to reward that we were talking about

earlier on, that was always analyzing
through my head because I'd watched that

temperature just drop and drop and drop.

And there's multitude of
reasons why that's concerning.

Battery life diminishes with temperature.

Am I gonna actually get to the altitude
that I had wanted to objectively reach?

The winds picked up, the
turbulence got worse.

You had all these factors, but what made
the most impact was that everything in

the end worked as we hoped, even though
we had all these avenues of struggle to

get to that point, somehow it worked.

And that's, I guess what I
perceived as Don't stop, don't

give up, keep pushing on.

So this record happened, and in
between this record, you know,

the first fiasco that happened was
that I got sent up, temperature was

almost minus 11 with the windshield.

Everything was freezing up.

The winds picked up.

I got blown off course, and I'm
panicking trying to get back.

'cause you have to get
back to your original spot.

You cannot land anywhere else.

It has to be from where you
took off to where you landed.

Well, I somehow glided back pretty
close, but I didn't fully make it.

That would've made that record invalid
if I just said, oh, we're good.

So I had my buddy Jeremy put the
batteries back on full charge.

Get, uh, any power that we can get because
I'm gonna try one more attempt just to

make sure that this record is invalid.

Hmm.

He did an emergency charge.

I warmed up everything that I had.

My hands were frozen.

My, um, get set up again.

I take back off.

Winds are picking up.

This is midday, middle of winter.

I get up to my trajectory altitude.

Originally I was hoping for 18,000 feet
because, uh, that was just our objective.

Regardless, it was gonna
be a benchmark set.

But biggest mistake I made in that was my,
uh, first altimeter that I was reading.

My personal one shut down.

That made me concerned that the
other ones were shutting down.

So I take my glove off and then,
and I'm at four 14,000 feet, almost

15,000 feet wing is collapsing.

I'm getting frontals.

I'm all over the place, and
I'm still focusing on my lz,

which is just this tiny dot.

I can just see these little dots
where the whole flight pre down at

the airport and I take my glove off
and I'm trying to reset my alti.

Well, the mistake made is I had to hold
my brake toggles, which control the wing.

I have my throttle set
at a certain percent.

I can't get my glove back on.

I'm sitting there struggling, and then
all of a sudden my hand starts burning

up because with any temperature drop
in the below zero range, you have this

weird feeling where your hand gets
really cold and it starts burning up.

Frostbites gangrene is like the first
thing that comes through my mind.

I'm like, this is not good.

I'm gonna be a pirate, and I
somehow get my glove back on,

get the heated system back on.

I continue to climb out until
I get total battery shut down.

So the entire unit just powers down and
it did it, it had reached its core, uh,

percentage where it just powers down.

The temperature was a big factor.

And then I had used up my battery.

Both altimeters are running.

We're good now.

The problem is, is I have to get
back to the exact spot I was and

I am a lawn dart at this point.

I am, have no more forward power.

It's just glide.

So all these years of flying, I somehow
remember the glide method and get back to

my actual LZ land perfectly on that dot.

I remember my, my hands were just hurting.

I was just freezing.

And the first thing I asked him like,
can I get something to warm up my hands?

And the FAI guys removing the altimeters.

And we're sitting there.

We're sitting there and he's like, Hey,
I don't think this recorded the data.

These are both showing blank.

They're just showing numbers.

Oh, no,

my heart just sank.

Like, you gotta be kidding me.

I just,

oh, no.

Turned into the Coca-Cola, polar
Bear Popsicle, and nothing recorded.

Well, it actually turns out it did.

We, we double verified, and I
remember I was like, I'm done with

cold weather for a little while, and
we finally got all the numbers back

and everybody's gathered around.

They said, Hey, we're good.

The data's good.

And that was like the biggest weight
off my shoulders when I was sitting

on that tarmac trying to warm up.

And, uh,

no kidding.

That was fun.

I, I, would I do it again?

I mean, probably yes, but the amount
of work and paperwork and timing and

the stress level, and once again, the
risk to reward ratio, you have to ask

yourself, was this worth it in the end?

And it, and to me, putting an American
flag on the record books as a first was

a big objective because, sorry, French,
I just had to boot one of the flags on,

put a first, and it was a really good
feeling because it's like, all right.

We got something over here and
because of my crew and everybody

that was there helping lending a
hand, it happened because of them.

It wasn't me.

What, what was the height you made it to?

Uh, just under 15,000.

It was, uh, 14, so I think it
was, uh, 9 63 is what the year

of the actual attained altitude.

Would you, uh, would you do it again?

Oh, a hundred percent.

In fact, we had a lot of variables
that worked against us that day.

Re theoretically I should have
got up to about 22, 20 3000, but

the winds were so bad that day.

And we have these things
called, um, winds of loft.

And, you know, you're traditional
when you're on the ground,

you're getting hit with winds.

The higher you go based on
where the jet stream is, the

winds could go up considerably.

To that day, they were pretty high.

Uh, in fact, they were alarmingly high.

And if the original wing that I was gonna
fly was significantly bigger, because the

bigger the wing, the more lift you get.

If I had flown that wing right,
I, I would've been in Timbuk two.

I mean, I would've been a
one-way ticket to Cabo, right?

For, so I had to fly a much smaller wing.

And in fact, the wing that I flew
was like a pylon racing wing.

It was an 18 meter, uh, superiorly
stable, uh, really good in high

winds, but it yields half the
lift that I could have had.

Hmm.

So for us to get to that altitude
with that such a tiny wing, that

was still a benchmark that I
was actually kinda shocked at.

I didn't think I'd even get that high
just given the temperature, the battery

life, the size of the wind with the winds.

And yet somehow it, it worked.

Why did you do it in the wintertime
and not like in warmer weather?

Well, because the variables with weather,
anytime you have heating of the surface

of the earth causes air instability.

Springtime is a super
volatile time of year.

You got questionable weather.

Warming of the surface creates
these conditions that are super

volatile and dangerous for a pilot.

The conditions that I was already
flying in were somewhat unstable

when it came to turbulence, but
as far as rising air, what we call

thermals, uh, wasn't near as violent.

And you know, the traditional paraglider
thrives off violent air in the thermals.

My biggest concern was that if I was to
get caught in a thermal with unstable

air, mix it with JetStream air or laminar
flowing off the mountains, that would've,

and

you're up blown me off
course to my original point.

And once again, rule book says where you
take off, you have to land on as a return.

So winter was my choice, but.

Every choice has a consequence.

And, well, you know, I'm still
not a pirate yet, but I was pretty

close to being old Captain Hook.

There's also an interesting story
about you flying hundreds of miles

in that open cockpit biplane.

I think, uh, I was the,
uh, AC Ducey, the P 70.

I think you corrected me on that
one earlier when we were chatting.

Yeah.

Uh, but you did that, you did
that with your father, right?

I did.

That's interesting.

Did you learn a thing, thing or
two about the old man on that trip?

I, uh, my father's one of my best
friends, and not for the reason

that, you know, they don't buy
you fancy stuff or any of that.

He's my best friend because anytime I
invite him on something, he never says no.

And he dang well knew that this particular
trip, the risk was very high and very

little reward for him in his case.

Hmm.

So I had had the bright idea to
buy an airplane and not just a

traditional, Hey, this is Cessna 1 72.

This is gonna get you anywhere you want.

No, I bought one that is based off 1930s
technology and it's design profile was

literally based off 1930s and decided
to buy it, not locally, but halfway

across the United States, sight unseen,
and then have the bright idea to fly

it home and, and the idea that it's
gonna make it back to my destination.

So that whole idea somehow stemmed
and it happened, and my father joined

me on this, which I was shocked at.

My favorite moment is when we
arrived to where this plane was,

which was in the middle of, right
on the Arkansas, like Midwest or

Southern points, um, what we call the.

With the Bible belt, and sure.

You open up that hanger and
there's like this big air tractor

and he's like, oh, this is nice.

And we're walking around this shiny air
tractor to the back and there's this

airplane that's just covered in dust.

And I watched my dad go from happy,
excited to like a total of ghosts.

And I, and at that moment
I like could read his mind.

He's like, I'm not making it home.

I'm not making it home.

Mm-hmm.

And not once did he say no, but I'll
never forget I was filming and I

caught his face and he just was, he's
just like, you know, like this is it.

This, this, this is the
play this and mm-hmm.

Somehow he still didn't say no.

And I tell you what, you know, there's
a book that if you love aviation,

this was a book that resonated with me
through childhood into my adulthood.

It's called The Flight of Passage.

And it's about these two boys
who essentially build this piper

Cub, rebuild it, and they fly it
across the United States on this.

Adventure that you dream of as,
uh, some of us, as a, a kid, I

felt like I completely relived
that book on this journey.

And I mean, we dealt with
some of the worst wins.

I mean, Kansas, holy cow, I
love the people of Kansas,

but you can keep that wind.

I've never been code brown so
many times trying to get that

Dane plane to set up and land.

And yet, every single time we
made it to our, our checkpoints.

And not only that, but at, at
one point we were just utterly

shocked how good the plane flew.

I, I mean, it always started,
it ran like a sewing machine.

And I think my dad, at our last
leg, he's like, you know, when this

journey started, I couldn't wait to
get home 'cause I didn't wanna die.

But it came to a point where
he is like, I'm actually sad

that we're on our last leg.

We like, we were both looking
at each other, well, not looking

at each 'cause he is sitting in
front of me, but we just like.

We read each other, we're like, we
don't want this adventure to end.

This is quite possibly the greatest
adventure that a father and son

could ever do in their lifetime.

That is cool.

And didn't, didn't you have
like a, uh, a malfunction with

the fuel gauge on that flight?

Oh yeah.

It, uh, the day one, we, we
actually, before I even left the

fuel gauge was just, I was like,
oh, we just gotta add some gas.

So we checked the tanks.

I'm like, there is gas.

We added some more gas.

It's still empty.

And I'm like, well, this is just great.

And we're in the middle of nowhere.

We had realized that there are methods,
so when we talk about earlier, it's find

a solution to, uh, um, predicaments.

The predicament was my fuel
gauge was in fact broken.

The level was not reading anymore,
and it, the timeframe to fix it

would've burned up our entire timeframe
to get this plane home before the

big weather started moving in.

Well, early Piper Cubs.

They didn't have a traditional fuel gauge
like what you and I have in our car.

Theirs was a rod with a cork.

And based on where the tank is fuel
level wise, it would give you where

you'd say, oh, I'm full half empty.

Somehow we found a cork and somehow
we found a perfectly straight

rod that we could bend and we
drilled a hole in the existing cap

and realized this is gonna work.

And hilariously fast forward, you know,
five years later, four years later,

I still have that same fuel gauge.

I still utilize that same gauge.

I, I, um,

that's a good idea.

It

worked.

So are you able to like look
out, so on a piper cub, you

fill up on the wing, do you?

This one, uh, the tank
is you have your engine.

Oh,

sorry.

Prop.

Okay.

And then behind the
engine is the actual tank.

And it is like the smallest
tank for an airplane ever.

It's 14 gallons, like on our speed bird.

I hold, uh, 92 gallons on the fast plane.

This one, it's 14 gallons, so you have
to be really, really mindful of your

legs because you get an hour and a
half tops before you have to fill up.

And so you would look out at the fuel cap
and you'd see a rod that's either sticking

out all the way halfway or not at all.

Is that, am I

understanding that right?

Yeah.

I'd be like, you know, 'cause I fly,
the pilot flies from right here, smart.

And my dad.

Mm-hmm.

Passenger flies from the front where
the co-pilot flies from the front.

So I'm, I'm like flying.

I'm like, all right.

It's like the gas gauge is like
there, I'm like, all right.

I got like 15 minutes before it's
there and I'm like sitting there.

And then, you know, the route that
we took, we tried to find the least

windiest route because honestly
it's the slowest plane ever.

I do 70 knots, whether I'm
full power or I do 70 knots.

If I'm a quarter power.

It's got this huge wing,
it's a, you know, it's.

It was never built for speed.

And at one point coming through, I'm gonna
say this wrong, Olge, Olge, Oklahoma.

Okay,

sorry.

I totally butchered that.

But the headwinds were like 58 knots.

I had a ground speed of like 16
knots, and I'm like, this is wow, bad.

I have to make it to this airport.

And it's showing that my fuel burn is
45 minutes till I'm empty, and it's,

the duration is 54 minutes to get there.

Mm-hmm.

So you have all these things, variables
that are like coming into play that

you're like, is this gonna work?

Are we gonna be in a cornfield,
like digging our way out?

Have

you had those landings

and every, I have had those
landings before and, and to me,

yeah.

This journey in itself, I,
I, uh, I look almost daily.

I visit that whole journey and I just
smile because it's one of those checks

off the box of experiences that.

You cannot buy, uh, you, you just,
you literally cannot put yourself

in that situation by booking it
through like a, an all inclusive.

You have to literally go out and put
yourself in that situation and God

hands you this book and says, you're
gonna deal with these situations

and you either survive or you don't.

And that trip filled with all these
amazing memories also tested my patience,

my stress level, and in a way that I
learned a lot and forever base a lot

of things off in life because of that.

I'm a big fan of those kind of trips.

It's, uh, so many people, they
try and contrive their life

an adventure in it somehow.

And they'll get online, they'll find
a booking agent and they're like,

look at this adventure that I'm doing.

Somebody else is going to, I'm
gonna strap to somebody else and

we're gonna jump out of an airplane.

Someone else is gonna fly me around.

Somebody else is gonna
drive me to this place.

And.

Uh, that's good.

Like, I, I get it.

That's a good step for people to go
out, but I don't think they're truly

experiencing life or getting the
same sort of, uh, rewards that you

get when you do it yourself, when
you put the time in to learn or you

just try and figure it out as you go.

Yes.

So you've got another cool trip coming up.

I think it's, uh, September.

Is it?

Are we allowed to talk about this one?

Yeah.

We, we absolutely can to do with Camel.

All right.

Let's, uh, fill me in on this because,
uh, so I've, I've got a, uh, a couple

friends and past podcast guests.

Uh, they're taking a trip, I
think it's from the UK over to.

Oh, I'm not sure.

I should, I think it's
over to Sydney, Australia.

And they're taking a, uh, a
def, it's called Defender X or

the Defender X, uh, challenge.

Megan Heinz over there with, uh,
Doug Patterson, X-C-A-A-C-I-A fellow.

And it looks like a pretty cool
little, little trip that they're on.

They got these big rubber pontoons they
put on, uh, that they have on the top,

and they put it underneath and inflate
them, and they're taking it down the Tames

River and across the English Channel.

And like, like, it's pretty cool,
but it sounds like you're doing

something pretty fricking cool.

That's along the same lines.

It's these, uh, what I always say,
you're handed a deck of cards in life,

and this is one of those cards that I
never expected or ever, ever anticipated

I'd even get the opportunity to.

But if you're ever bored or you
got some time to kill and you wanna

watch something that, and some of
you might have, the audience might

have heard of this, it's called the
Camel Trophy back in the eighties.

Through the nineties, they put on this
event where they had to go through

these crazy routes through the most
remote areas, Siberia, the Amazon,

Africa, Tanzania, like all these
places that man rarely survives or does

well in these type of environments.

And they take these Land Rovers
and it was like the Olympics,

but in off-roading and adventure.

This whole series lasted from the early
eighties and I believe the last one was

in 96, and then it just, it stopped.

The nineties were a super special era
because you, you had this, you danger

in these events, Paris to Car rally,
the Camel Trophy, like all these events

that were going on where safety was a
second thought and that really, really

projected adventure in a way that I don't
think we'll ever see in our lifetime

again, because I mean, he watched some
of these series, like we just watched

the one where they were going through
South America and I mean these guys are.

Through this river crossing and
the rover is clearly underwater.

And you see the guy, he is like
poking his head out, like you

should probably exit the vehicle.

But he didn't.

And, and he, and all of a sudden
he is pulling through the water

and you see him, he's like, like
sucking the air out of the headliner.

And, and then he is like coming through
with the winch system and pulling him out.

And I'm like, what the heck?

And I watched this series, like as
a kid, I, it was just, it was my

dream and I thought it would never
actually ever come back again.

Well go figure.

A year and a half ago, a friend
of mine sends me this link.

He is like, Hey, they're bringing
the, the Defender Trophy, which is

the predecessor to the Camel Trophy
back this year for the first time.

And I'm like, wait, what?

Land Rover had just released a defender
a few years back and they somehow the

media team said, we're gonna bring back
something just like the Camel Trophy.

And I'm like, there's no way.

So they had an application process and
thousands of people applied to this.

And I applied, I did the video interview
and all this, and I'm like, Hey, I tried.

This would be amazing, but what are
the probability of this actually

getting me getting selected?

It's just, it's, it's slim,
but you always have to try.

Well, fast forward again, email at
the beginning of this year and, and

I'm about like, fell outta my chair
and it's like, Hey, we've selected

you to be part of the Defender Trophy.

And I'm like, you've got to be kidding me.

Like what?

So I have no idea what to expect.

Uh, from what I've read is based off
the original to some degree and a lot

of the tasks at hand with navigation,
building these bridges to cross certain

rivers and, and all these things that
truly took a situation where we talked

about being put in stressful situations
and finding an outcome that works.

That's essentially what this is
all based upon is handling stress,

teamwork, leadership, and all this
stuff encompass into an adventurer.

You're covered in a lot of mud
and questionable directions of

routes, and it's gonna happen.

So in April, we're going up to
Canada, uh, for the first, I guess

what they call the part of this.

And I literally have no, I, the amount of
waivers that I had to sign, I was like,

they, they're pretty serious about this.

Uh, and I'm really excited.

I, I, I hope that it's every bit or at
least close to what the original was, so I

can at least live that moment in reality.

That is so cool.

So you're starting off
in British Columbia, you

I am, yeah.

And they have a whole
task of things to do.

I, as far as, uh, you know, they just
sent the go by sheet of navigational.

Expectations and how, and the
type of knots that I need to know

and the type of how to utilize
the winch on the new defender.

And they sent me the go by sheet
of the systems on the defender.

So I need to get up to snuff
because I don't have a new defender

and I need to get access to one.

Uh, and it's just, it's truly what
I'm excited about is to meet all

these other people that are, if they
apply to this, they have to have

the same mentality of adventure.

And I think it's gonna totally refreshing
to meet other individuals that are like,

uh, maybe they're just as enthusiastic
if not more about this type of adventure.

And I'm like, I need to meet more people
like this 'cause I thrive off this stuff.

I agree.

And so this will be a
televised thing, will it?

Or they'll have a, a show behind it.

I, I believe they're, that's
what they're working on.

I have not been told of how it is
gonna be captured cinematically,

because we got, Japan just did
theirs, uh, not too long ago.

And I saw part of the video to that
and it was incredibly well shot.

And, uh, I'm looking
forward to what to expect.

I'm kind of hoping that.

At least I get to
possibly roll a defender.

'cause they roll to the, the
discoveries in the nineties, half

the time they're upside down.

You just like, there's Yeah,

yeah,

they're great.

And I'm like, I wanna be in that scenario.

I want to re roll one of these and have
no repercussions because it's not mine.

Uh, life goals, I tell you.

Yeah.

Yeah.

That, that would be a, that'd be a
show I could definitely get behind.

You know, I was, um, my wife and I
were asked to, to help and consult on

a show that was filmed up here a year
ago, I think it was, um, uh, Stallone's

Company, and it was called Extracted.

And they whoa, get these contestants and
they have to go out into the wild and

they have a home base with family members.

And the family members will vote on what
food they get or what they don't get.

And you know, like a lot of these shows,
it's, it's just, it's highly contrived.

And we go through, we met all
the different contestants and

had to provide some training
for them and, and testing and.

And you get a good sense of these people.

They're like, oh, this, this person
here, this gal here, and this guy over

here, they're gonna do really well.

Yeah.

But when the show actually runs, there's
all these, uh, internal politics and

maneuvering that happens, and it's
got, it's got very little to do with

who's capable and who's got the right
mindset and who's who can do something.

And it comes down to more of this
production value of, um, it's

like survivor part two type thing.

Whereas a show like this, I don't
think they're gonna have any of those

sort of games involved with all of it.

And it's, uh, it, it's a good test.

Old school man and machine and
ingenuity, that is something

I can definitely get behind.

And, and that's for me is when we
originally got the wind of this,

I'm like, okay, this, this could
be a good thing because there's,

I don't like safety and I get it.

Their PR team is probably focused
on safety, but at some point in

this adventure, there is gonna
be something unsafe because the

amount of waivers, like I said.

They, there's something in this
route that is, has something

of questionable activities and
I'm really excited about that.

You know, I was always raised in
a safety third environment and

yeah,

it's, it's done okay for me.

It's, uh, led some pretty
interesting stories.

You know, you make mistakes along the way.

You kinda learn from them and you have,
you course correct, but, um, that's life.

You don't go through life without picking
up a few bumps and scrapes along the way.

Exactly.

That's, that's the
whole, the whole journey.

What was that quote?

It's, uh, you don't wanna
arrive perfectly preserved.

You wanna be withered and, and completely
wrecked and say, wow, what a ride.

That's,

that's how I, so, have there ever been
any times in your life when you maybe, uh,

went in a direction a little too far that
later hindsight would, uh, provide you?

The insight that hindsight tends
to do and say, well, maybe that

wasn't the best idea at the time.

I should have gone, gone
in a different direction,

uh, early on.

Yeah.

I um, I had a great idea to try to
fly under a bridge on my para motor.

What?

Really?

Yeah.

Oh, I got these great photos.

We, uh, and it wasn't a bridge
with a lot of clearance.

The clearance was, the margins
were, and somehow in my conscious,

I was like, this is gonna work.

So I set up, well, you

don't do it 'cause you
think it won't work.

There was like very, like, if the,
the thought process was 95%, this is

gonna work 5%, you're not gonna fit.

The 5% never became a factor.

And so I took off on the para motor,
had a whole bunch of friends on the

ground filming and videoing and.

I, uh, I flew through the first
bridge, which was a little bit higher

cleared that everything was good.

And I'm approached on the second bridge
and there's a river below and with some

rocks come through the second bridge.

And I remember I was looking, I was
like, Ooh, this is gonna be tight.

And you're at the point
where I can't abort either.

I just go straight in
or I try to get under.

Well, it, I made it under,
but the top half of my wing

completely snagged the bridge.

And I remember flying, and I remember
this like, felt like an ejection seat.

And I'm like, uhoh.

And I had swung up and I could see
my wing stuck up on the bridge there.

And then I swung back down and
then the wing became detached and I

came crashing down into the ground.

And I got this iconic shot where
they were, you see these cement

pillars and you see me first
shot, I'm here, everything's good.

The second shot, you see me
up here and my wing is like

stuck on the top of the bridge.

I'm like, mid swing.

Oh man

is the best shot.

Oh man.

I was like,

what was going through your mind then?

I should have stayed home.

And were you at least wearing a life
jacket if you're going over water?

I had a granola bar and my water
bottle and um, I remember laying

on the ground with this, like
practically disintegrated para motor.

I was completely fine, but,
uh, it was, it was costly.

It was one of those things.

I look back, I'm like, why'd I do that?

This company had just sent me this
new wing, this was prototype one, and

I was like, that's five hours on it.

It was brand new and I just
completely shredded it.

It looked like a confetti party, and I'm
like, you did not think this through.

Like, what, what, what, at what point
did you, was the reward to get through

this bridge gonna grant you nothing?

Yeah.

That's awesome.

Well, did they give you
a new wing after that?

No.

I, in fact, I lost that sponsor.

They did because I forwarded,
I sent them photos.

I like, Hey, any chance we
could get a replacement?

And they're like, we needed you
to send us back for evaluation.

I'm like.

I can send it back.

And that was it of that one.

So, um, I, one of those scenarios,
you know, just like I look back, oh,

they're missing the mark on that one.

Hey, I'll

send you that

photo sometime.

You'll crack up.

You see me like midway?

Yeah, a hundred percent.

I wanna see that one.

Um, I read something about a helicopter
and a laser pointer in your youth.

Is that something that, uh, you know,
I've done a lot of silly things,

which I never thought about, uh,
consequences when I was, uh, younger.

I still kind of do some silly
things, but, um, it looked like

the, uh, the state tried to make
an example out of you on this one.

Yeah.

That one was, that was a, a era of
youth where once again you're like,

I didn't think this one through.

So, Indian buddy of mine, remarkably
smart software developer, he is working

on a flur system, which is a heat
sensitive type of digital imagery.

And these laser system that was,
we were using HVAC units on the

top of buildings as a range.

It's a fairly powerful laser.

Somehow the mix of that system and
tracking sources of heat with this

laser system and having it on a follow
setup that would follow the highest

points of heat in the program that
he had mixed with a few shots of

tequila and hanging out on a rooftop

as result, yes, as one does.

We talk about code Brown
is one of those scenarios.

Uh, turns out the heat source of
the exhaust of a Belgian ranger is

significantly hotter than the exhaust
of an HVAC unit on a building.

And I'll vividly remember, I was like,
why is the beam following that way?

On that moving target
versus the HVAC unit.

And I remember he had pulled the, the,
like, it wasn't like this power pack

plug set up and the system was big.

It was just on this, I
got a photo of the system.

It was, it was remarkable
what he is doing.

He was trying to sell this system to,
to a company that would, he was hope in

hopes to make a lot of money off of it.

Mm-hmm.

It didn't go as plants and nothing
actually came of it originally, you

know what, it happened, it tracked
onto it and we're like, that wasn't

good because remember we like
illuminated the it, the aircraft.

And I was like, we, we thought about
it a little bit and then we didn't

and we're like, okay, that was it.

There's only a few seconds.

Well fast forward we get a knock.

And I'll never forget I got that knock
on the door and I was like, these three

guys, and they weren't even in like suits.

They were just in
regular civilian clothes.

And I opened the door and they,
and, and they show their ID and it's

the FBI and I'm like, what is this?

I, I know I paid that parking ticket.

I was like, absolutely confused.

And this is not like next
week or the week after.

We're talking a y almost a year.

And he says, okay, do any of these images.

And he, he is like, can we
sit down and talk with you?

And I'm like, sure.

Okay.

And he pulls out this, this stack
of paper and you see this beam

from the top of this building.

And, and at first it's, you see a beam
and then it's just this total whiteout.

And he's like, does this
look familiar to you?

And at the time it didn't register me.

I'm like, I'm, I'm still
confused, but okay.

He is like, this came from your
residence and we need to talk.

And so at the time I talked with him
and I gave him all the details and

I showed him the part of the system.

'cause the other he had at, at
time, that time my friend had

already left, he was on a visa and.

He was back into his, his country
and, and working on another project.

'cause this was a year and something
later and I explained the whole situation

and, and at the time it didn't rest or
the severity of it and, and I was in

aviation and just don't think about that.

And the severity was very high.

Let's just put it that way because
it followed through with like, Hey,

we're gonna make an example outta you.

And, and I'm like, guys, I,
I'm not like, uh, like this.

I fly air shows and this
was, this was a mistake.

But they don't see it that way.

They want to nail and, and
portray it as like to others,

which I completely understand.

Don't do this.

We'll make an example out of you by some.

That's, that's the impression I got.

This was that it was a
new law in the books and

they were trying

to make an example,

cleanest record.

I, I have like a few speeding
tickets and that was it.

And, and they were gonna,
the, the outcome of this.

Comparative to like other crimes.

You could, you could essentially
rob a bank and get off with less.

That's how simple they're taking this
and everything, every avenue that

we were trying to portray, I'm like,
look, there was alcohol involved.

I will say that that was, that was

my first mistake.

Number two is we didn't
think this through.

We didn't think this
through with the system.

That was number mistake, number two.

Number three is my buddy
was not there with me.

It was all on me.

And because it happened.

So there, there's a lot of variables
like, why didn't we do this in, in a part?

Why didn't we do this
at your place, not mine.

Right, right.

Well, for sure.

We, I, by the grace of God, they,
they finally came to their senses and

realized, why, why are we gonna ruin?

At the time I was pretty young, this
kid's life, there's no malicious

intent.

No.

Yeah, like that.

It was a truly an honest mistake.

And I, I was like, I am never touching
something like this ever again.

Ever.

I, I won't even, like, I I, that
was like a month and a half of

Code Brown every day is what

I, but wasn't that the, wasn't
that the first time in that state

that they actually followed through
with trying to do something?

So I, and if so, wouldn't that
be another record that you hold?

Well, it, it wasn't even
what the state it was.

It was actually, it went
like, it was federal,

federally Federal,

of course.

Yeah.

The F fbi.

Yeah.

I'm like, this is, this is not good.

So by the week of God, and I don't know
how it, what happened or what unfolded,

uh, what changed the perception.

They dropped the initial, um,
what they wanted to pursue,

the charge they wanna pursue.

Mm. And then on top of that, I got fined.

20 bucks, which I still don't understand.

Of all the, I mean, when you
talk about the severity and

the actual percussions of Okay.

And the timeframe that would've set
me back, I, I don't know what happened

in that realm because the outcome
should have not happened that way.

Even though I didn't mean
to, it was a mistake.

It still happened, and they still
had the full authority mm-hmm.

To pursue this and they didn't

mm-hmm.

Freaks me out to this day, I, I look
back at it and I'm like, maybe there was

another reason why this went the way it
did, because it's like maybe you have

a, a, a, a journey ahead of you that.

It needs to be pursued.

I'm a very strong believer
of that, not, not only that.

Maybe there's a journey ahead of you
that needs to be pursued, but also

in that journey, something's gonna
come up and you're gonna remember

this moment and you're going to make
maybe a little bit different decision

as to how you proceed forward.

And it comes down.

I've always been told even before this
happened, you'll have a moment in your

life that completely reshapes how you
perceive everything, how you pursue

everything, how you formulate your life
in the direction that you want it to go.

Those were one of those moments
where I'm like, okay, you need

to really analyze you actions.

You need to really analyze the environment
that you're putting yourself in.

Alcohol rarely mixes well
with this type of equipment.

Alcohol rarely mixes well
with this type of pursuant.

Kind of like you have a gun in
your hand and you're doing shots.

Is that a smart idea to play widely?

Coyote And no, same thing with this.

And it really made me analyze like.

Risk to reward.

There is zero reward for this,
but the risk is ridiculously high.

I found it interesting that it took
a year for them to kind of come back

and figure this out and I, you know, I
gotta wonder if the risk adverse youth

that we have nowadays might also be a
byproduct of the technology we have.

'cause everyone's got a
phone, everyone can film this.

There's cameras on most street
corners it seems, in major cities.

Yes.

Uh, AI.

Holy crow, they're,
they're already looking

recogni If they, if

they haven't done it all,

kidding me, that freaks me out.

Like, and I worry that there's gonna be
errors in that system where like, one

guy's face matches up to the guy that,
you know, did the heist at the bank, but

he was at the King Soupers grocery store.

You, you, you know,

they don't even really need
facial recognition anymore.

I mean, if with digital wallets and
digital IDs, it's like, oh, this

person's been buying a lot of fertilizer
from stores and think maybe they're

gonna be doing something with that.

Or

Yes,

they have, uh, ai, large learning
model, um, programs for pre-crime

prediction, kinda like minority report.

Well, you know, they're looking at a
lot of this kind of stuff on social

media and they think their politics
are leaning to this side and they're in

this sort of a, uh, geopolitical area
and this sort of, uh, environment and

freaks me out it to some degree.

I know it's good for other
things, but like the flock camera.

System that they talk about where it takes
a photo of your face and your car, and

it's like, why were you at this corner?

And it sends all that data out to these
other companies that acquire that data.

I'm like, do you know?

So now they like, they know if you
wipe with your right hand or your

left hand with your butt, you know?

Mm-hmm.

Mm-hmm.

That freaks me out.

Like

yeah,

it's,

yeah.

I mean, because maybe it's not being built
with malicious intent, but those with

ill intent will use it for their gain.

Yeah.

And whether that's, I can market to
you better, I can specifically have

something tailored right to you that
I know you're gonna want to buy.

Because I know exactly what your,
what your habits and hobbies are

Yes.

To the idea of predictive, um, crimes.

That's, and it's, yeah, it's scary.

Oh, we're just gonna come by
your house because we have a

high likelihood that you're gonna
be doing something silly here.

You said something to somebody and

Yeah, there was a movie, I don't know, I
don't, don't know what it was called or

who was in it, but it would had a software
system or anything that predicted.

A crime before it actually happened.

And

Minority Report with

Tom

Cruise.

Thank, uh, I should know that.

Yeah.

Uh, I always say movies as
ridiculous as some of them are,

are usually a common tall tale of
what the future's gonna be like.

And one of those would be
as Terminator mark my words.

Mm. We'll have this conversation.

This podcast will be put in the vault, you
know, 50 years, a hundred years from now.

It's gonna be a real thing.

And Boston Dynamics, you look them
up, which seems to be, seems to begin

with as a harmless, noisy walking
for legged dog now has a 50 cal and

small rocket pods mounted to it.

Hello.

But it'll, my my opinion, have you
ever had the conversation with AI

about what that'll actually look like?

I'm just there to find out.

We we're way easier than that.

They don't need to be
coming at us with guns.

They don't need to be coming at us with
flame throwers and the T 1000, they

can just psychologically manipulate
people into being a bunch of sheep into

fighting each other into like, right.

Scares

me.

I mean, it, it, yeah, it can control
traffic flows and dams and water sources.

And I mean, if you play that scenario
out with ai, there's a much, uh,

more probable and a much easier
way forward if technology wanted

to do what happened in Terminator
than fighting each other with guns.

And thing is most people wouldn't
even know what's happening.

I, uh, if there's one aspect that I wish
I had, would that be a time machine?

'cause I would, the technology part
scares me and the simplicity of life

in some aspects back in the day.

I think really made the quality
of life and the predictability.

You know, we, I think we're,
we're ge starting to guarantee

predictability of certain aspects
of how we conduct our lives.

And that's, that's terrifying.

Mm-hmm.

To me.

I don't like that.

Do do you have any favorite books?

Your favorite movies?

Yes.

Favorite movies?

Uh, probably one of my, uh, I love the
Great Waldo Pepper, if you ever seen that.

It's with Robert Redford.

It's shot, it's, no, it's
placed in the twenties.

Phenomenal.

It's, uh, it's about a guy that is
given a lot of things thrown in his

lap from a pilot perspective, and
they don't go the way that he hoped.

Hmm.

And he comes to a point in his life
where he's hit his pinnacle and

it, it just resonated on a lot of
ways of trials and tribulations.

I think that's, those are, that's a
movie that I, I really appreciate.

Uh.

Obviously PLO 13 is childhood for me,
but my fiance gets so mad 'cause we'll

be, you know, watching a movie and
she'll go make dinner, I'll be starting

to play PLO 13 and she'll be like,
you just watched this two days ago.

You know, all the words,

everything.

Uh, I think that was a movie that really
resonated with me because it in a time

of where your outlook is, looks very
grim when it comes to survivability.

Somehow you make things work and it's
not just once, but multiple avenues

of desperation and things thrown
against you and yet you make it work.

Well, I'm gonna have to watch the,
you call it the Great Waldo Pepper,

great Waldo Pepper.

It's phenomenal.

I, uh,

okay, I'm gonna watch

it.

I like weird movies, you know,
and I'm not, I don't have any new

movies that I'm really nuts about.

Um, you know, one, it's old
and people probably find this

as cheesy and it's boring.

It's called Strategic Air Command.

Uh, it's with Jimmy Stewart
who was shot in 1955.

Some of the best flying scenes
of this particular aircraft that

it's called the B 36 Peacemaker.

And it's this giant airplane.

Absolutely.

Like a time when engineers were
given something in their coffee

and it wasn't coffee, and they
came out with these aircraft that

just completely blew the mind.

And it was really well shot.

It was dynamic behind the actual script.

Resonate resonated with me because it's
a guy that has his life figured out.

He's a pro ball player and was
formerly Air Force, and he gets

pulled back in to the Air Force and
has flying all these admission, all

these missions that nearly killed him.

And he is just having, like, he just
got married and he just had a baby.

And where he thinks it's his
dreams are falling apart soon.

Actually, I'm not gonna
give the movie away, but

Okay.

Okay.

Watches sometime it's, it's, uh.

I think it's well shot.

Like I said, it's it's fifties
type monologue or criteria,

so it could be cheesy to some
people, but if you actually,

Hey,

invest into it, it's a good,

I'm all for that.

I'm all for that.

What about you?

I don't know.

I've always liked the
Man Who Would Be King.

I like the old Kipling book and then,
uh, the movie with Michael Kane and,

and Sean Connery and yeah, because
they're just a couple guys out in

an adventure doing their thing.

They want to be Kings of Kastan.

Oh,

love that.

That's that.

Yeah.

You, oh, so you've, you've
read it or you seen that one?

Have you

I have not seen that.

I've heard the name and I kind
of have an idea if I saw a cover

that I would, I would recognize
the one that you're talking about.

It's kind of cheesy by today's standards,
but you know, they just, they figured

that, uh, they're in India and India's
too, there are a couple of British

officers, and India's too small for
big men of their character, and they're

just off to the next adventure there.

Heading over to a fictitious
place of kastan, I think it was.

And, um, they teach the different
tribes how to, uh, to fight and

win over their enemies and, uh,
um, end up becoming rulers of this,

uh, one large tribe over there.

So I just, the adventure of going
off and doing something, I, I've

always liked that sort of thing.

Um, and as a kid, the book that I
always liked was, um, uh, my Side of

the Mountain, just a kid who, uh, oh, my

side of the mountain.

That was, what was that
part of the hatchet series?

I don't think it was, uh, but it was
just similar along the same lines.

Right.

You know, Sam Gribble going off
and, uh, running away from home

and living in the woods and then
like that, always that spoke to me.

Yes.

My side of the mountain.

I read that as a kid.

Yeah, I actually, I ended up,
uh, stealing that book from my

school 'cause I loved it so much.

And, uh, I got caught by my teacher
in the process of stealing it.

And, uh, I, I thought it was grade four,
I think it was, um, whatever it was.

Anyways, he and the teacher
catches me and What are you doing?

Oh, this is my book.

This is your book.

I mean, like, this is the same class
copy book that we all got here, right?

And, oh, no, no, no, this one's mine.

I'm just lying my face off.

And teacher looks it open,
opens it up, and it said, uh,

the school's name in the front.

And so he rips that page off
and it says, well, I guess it

is your book Hands it to me.

I'm like, oh, teacher's pretty cool.

But, uh, teacher realized I just,
I really liked it and I, um,

um, ended up giving it to me.

So that was, uh, still have that one.

I'm kicking her out here somewhere.

That's amazing.

Is there anything that we haven't
talked about that we should talk about?

You know, I think, uh, it's
based on, you know, who your

audience is and, and whatnot.

I'd say the number one thing is,
you know, we're often, we have

these great ideas that formulate
in our heads and we actually get

to so far as like, you know what?

I think I can make this happen.

Whether it's a trip, whether it's that
hike you wanted to do or the mountain you

wanted to climb, or for some, like, you've
always wanted to get your pilot's license.

And I think a big factor that
plays in a role for a lot of people

obviously is age is one factor.

Like, oh, I'm too old for that.

Mm-hmm.

I hear that so many times that a lot
of the activities that we do, um, I,

that, that kind of saddens me because
I think the capabilities of us as we

get older, they say, oh, you slow down.

And, and that, that is a mindset.

And I, and I think, you know, for
anyone listening to this is like, if

that, if there is truly an adventure
that you are, have always wanted

to do, lay out the reasons as to
why you think you can't do that.

Really focus on those and ask yourself,
are these actually realistic reasons

or is those reasons that I'm just
telling myself so I don't do this?

Mm-hmm.

Because you'd be shocked.

Now, I don't know anybody's circumstances
could be health or any of that,

but I, I would say majority of the
individuals, they'd probably be

surprised that they are still capable
and still that dream can happen and

that adventure still can be acquired.

And there's a lot of woo woo of like,
you know, believe in your spirituality

and it'll come to you in due time.

That's not true.

Like the time is now.

You can't keep, we
constantly put stuff off.

Procrastination is the worst habit
of the human race, and I am myself.

I do that daily still, and I
try to correct and catch myself.

But when it comes to true adventure
and the removal of regret,

write down your bucket list.

This could be a, a date, a week, a
month, a year, a decade bucket list,

and write down what you want to do
that would make you happy and things

that you've always wanted to do, and
find a way to make that bucket list

box checked off every single time.

Nathan, a I really
enjoyed this conversation.

I really enjoyed that message at the end.

I'm sure we're gonna make
a clip out of that one.

Thank you so much for being
on the Silvercore Podcast.

Thanks for having me on here.

It was great talking with
you and, uh, I, it was.

I love environments like this and
just to meet other great creative

people that have that same mindset.

I just, we need more of it.

Likewise, brother, and I'm looking
forward to seeing you and your fiance

when you're up here in bc. That's,
uh, the next big adventure there.

I will be sure to call you.

Excellent.

Great talk with you.