Episode Transcript
[0:00:31 – 0:00:39] Erik: Well, we’re starting because the beer that I need to drink is the sponsorship.
[0:00:39 – 0:00:41] Erik: Welcome to Tumble Home.
[0:00:43 – 0:00:44] Erik: My name is Eric.
[0:00:45 – 0:00:46] Erik: Adam’s still finding his mic.
[0:00:48 – 0:00:49] Adam: I got my mic.
[0:00:49 – 0:00:51] Erik: I can’t find my headset.
[0:00:53 – 0:00:53] Erik: All right.
[0:00:54 – 0:00:55] Erik: I think I’m plugged in.
[0:00:55 – 0:00:57] Erik: It’s almost like we’re starting a Tumble Home Cinema Classics episode here.
[0:00:57 – 0:00:59] Erik: What the heck’s going on here, Eric?
[0:00:59 – 0:01:01] Erik: I’m about as burnt out as a man can be.
[0:01:02 – 0:01:04] Erik: I want to be done with everything.
[0:01:04 – 0:01:06] Adam: Your eyes look half dead.
[0:01:06 – 0:01:08] Erik: I just want to be sleepy.
[0:01:08 – 0:01:10] Erik: I just want to go to bed for a week straight.
[0:01:11 – 0:01:14] Adam: You only got a couple more weeks until MEA.
[0:01:14 – 0:01:14] Adam: Don’t worry.
[0:01:15 – 0:01:16] Adam: Hang in there.
[0:01:17 – 0:01:18] Adam: How’s life treating you, Eric?
[0:01:18 – 0:01:19] Erik: I don’t even know.
[0:01:19 – 0:01:27] Erik: It’s probably fine by the onlooker, but in my own estimation, terribly.
[0:01:28 – 0:01:32] Erik: Welcome to Tumble Home, episode 119.
[0:01:32 – 0:01:35] Erik: We’re finishing up Conversations on the Wind.
[0:01:35 – 0:01:37] Adam: Hold on, hold on.
[0:01:40 – 0:01:42] Erik: Was that you closing a chapter in your life?
[0:01:42 – 0:01:45] Adam: Yep, I just closed out the green notebook.
[0:01:46 – 0:01:46] Adam: Hold on.
[0:01:50 – 0:01:51] Adam: And we’re opening up a new one.
[0:01:51 – 0:01:52] Adam: This is the Black Notebook.
[0:01:53 – 0:01:53] Adam: Brand new.
[0:01:54 – 0:01:54] UNKNOWN: Brand new.
[0:01:56 – 0:01:57] Adam: Wide ruled, baby.
[0:01:58 – 0:01:59] Adam: Not just the cheap one, either.
[0:01:59 – 0:02:01] Adam: I went with the composition one.
[0:02:01 – 0:02:02] Adam: Those pages won’t just fall out.
[0:02:02 – 0:02:03] Adam: Hopefully not.
[0:02:03 – 0:02:05] Adam: Yeah, the green one did kind of fall apart at the end there.
[0:02:05 – 0:02:06] Erik: Yeah.
[0:02:07 – 0:02:11] Adam: Episode 119 of Tumble Home is brought to you by our good friends on Patreon.
[0:02:11 – 0:02:13] Adam: Thank you for all your support of the show.
[0:02:14 – 0:02:14] Adam: And…
[0:02:17 – 0:02:18] Adam: Your undying gratitude.
[0:02:18 – 0:02:19] Adam: Is that level still?
[0:02:20 – 0:02:20] Erik: Yeah, sure.
[0:02:21 – 0:02:21] Erik: I don’t know.
[0:02:21 – 0:02:25] Erik: Have we decided what we’re doing this month for Patreon?
[0:02:25 – 0:02:26] Adam: Oh, I had a suggestion.
[0:02:27 – 0:02:31] Erik: Well, I think, I mean, what’s the suggestion that you got?
[0:02:32 – 0:02:33] Adam: Oh, for a TCC episode.
[0:02:33 – 0:02:33] Erik: Right, yeah.
[0:02:33 – 0:02:34] Erik: What was that?
[0:02:34 – 0:02:38] Adam: This was off of TomahomeCast on Instagram.
[0:02:39 – 0:02:43] Adam: Friend of the show, Carrie, sent in, for one…
[0:02:45 – 0:03:11] Adam: For one, before the suggestion, I sent a picture of the 1980s classic Gunplant Trail round sticker, which I’d lost on my RIP old Nalgene that was riddled with BPA, according to some other commenters on my RIP post.
[0:03:11 – 0:03:13] Adam: Apparently, I’m going to have a lot less BPA in my system.
[0:03:15 – 0:03:16] Adam: But I found it.
[0:03:16 – 0:03:22] Adam: It claims to be a 1980s relic of the Gunflint Trail and was selling it on eBay.
[0:03:22 – 0:03:24] Adam: Somebody was, not this person.
[0:03:24 – 0:03:26] Adam: They just found it.
[0:03:26 – 0:03:26] Adam: $14.99.
[0:03:26 – 0:03:27] Adam: Buy it now on eBay.
[0:03:28 – 0:03:28] Adam: Plus shipping.
[0:03:28 – 0:03:29] Erik: $15 for a sticker?
[0:03:29 – 0:03:31] Erik: Plus shipping for a sticker.
[0:03:32 – 0:03:53] Adam: it’s being sold out of arizona for some reason so i didn’t buy one because i did find a second i knew i had two of those stickers and i had another water bottle stashed away with the other one so i’m not gonna use that one i’m just gonna adorn that you can make your own the shelves of studio k yeah and then yeah i should sketch it and uh intricately photograph it anyways uh
[0:03:55 – 0:03:55] Adam: That was Carrie.
[0:03:56 – 0:04:01] Erik: I think he’s got a t-shirt coming his way that I have not had the opportunity to get to a post office.
[0:04:01 – 0:04:02] Erik: It’s coming.
[0:04:02 – 0:04:02] Adam: Anyways.
[0:04:02 – 0:04:03] Adam: It’s coming.
[0:04:03 – 0:04:10] Adam: A request slash suggestion for next Humble Home Cinema Classic was Happy People by Werner Herzog.
[0:04:10 – 0:04:11] Adam: Have you seen it?
[0:04:11 – 0:04:12] Erik: Yeah, I have seen that.
[0:04:12 – 0:04:13] Erik: The People of the Taiga or whatever.
[0:04:13 – 0:04:14] Erik: Yeah, that’s it.
[0:04:14 – 0:04:15] Adam: I’ve seen it as well.
[0:04:15 – 0:04:18] Adam: Brother Andrew had recommended that one to me way back when.
[0:04:19 – 0:04:19] Adam: Really good.
[0:04:20 – 0:04:24] Adam: And it’s been long enough, I think, where we could watch it again and enjoy it and maybe do an episode.
[0:04:25 – 0:04:27] Adam: We have talked about doing just like a documentary, so.
[0:04:27 – 0:04:33] Erik: Yeah, I think the documentary series might be better suited for like December or January.
[0:04:33 – 0:04:34] Adam: Yeah, we’re going to file it away.
[0:04:35 – 0:04:35] Adam: File it away.
[0:04:35 – 0:04:36] Erik: Put that feather in our camp.
[0:04:36 – 0:04:40] Erik: I feel like October still needs to be the spooky, the spooky sort.
[0:04:41 – 0:04:41] Adam: Absolutely.
[0:04:41 – 0:04:43] Adam: What is that monster movie you sent my way?
[0:04:43 – 0:04:45] Erik: Oh, the grizzly maze?
[0:04:45 – 0:04:47] Adam: Yeah, we’re going to keep with bear themes.
[0:04:47 – 0:04:49] Erik: No, I don’t want to do the grizzly maze.
[0:04:49 – 0:04:50] Adam: More Ursa.
[0:04:50 – 0:04:51] Erik: I want to do Deliverance.
[0:04:52 – 0:04:56] Erik: Because it’s got canoes and it’s like kind of scary, right?
[0:04:56 – 0:04:57] Erik: Yeah.
[0:04:57 – 0:04:57] Erik: Have you seen it?
[0:04:57 – 0:04:58] Adam: Yeah, I’ve seen it.
[0:04:58 – 0:04:59] Adam: Okay.
[0:04:59 – 0:05:01] Adam: It’s been years since I’ve seen it.
[0:05:02 – 0:05:03] Erik: I mean, we don’t have to do it.
[0:05:03 – 0:05:12] Erik: It just seems like it’s about as close to the groove of Tumble Home cinema classics that is also a horror movie.
[0:05:13 – 0:05:17] Erik: I guess the only other one is like Blair Witch Project because they’re outside.
[0:05:17 – 0:05:17] Erik: Yeah.
[0:05:18 – 0:05:18] Adam: Yeah, they’re camping.
[0:05:19 – 0:05:19] Erik: Yeah.
[0:05:20 – 0:05:21] Erik: I guess we could do that.
[0:05:21 – 0:05:24] Adam: They eat pizza biters in the first act of Blair Witch Project.
[0:05:24 – 0:05:25] Adam: That’s a fact.
[0:05:25 – 0:05:26] Erik: That’s a rock fact.
[0:05:28 – 0:05:29] Erik: That’s what haunts them.
[0:05:29 – 0:05:32] Adam: I can tell I’m going to have to have 1.5 times the normal energy.
[0:05:33 – 0:05:35] Adam: And it’s a good thing I’m not drinking night coffee.
[0:05:35 – 0:05:36] Adam: I’m drinking night PBRs.
[0:05:36 – 0:05:37] Adam: But we’re also going to drink something else.
[0:05:37 – 0:05:39] Adam: We have a nice package here.
[0:05:39 – 0:05:43] Adam: This episode of Tumble Home is also sponsored by…
[0:05:44 – 0:05:53] Erik: We don’t know what’s in it, but it’s brought to you by Jerry and Indie Scouter.
[0:05:54 – 0:05:56] Erik: Indie Scouter is the BWCA.com name.
[0:05:57 – 0:06:01] Erik: And Jerry’s name on Reddit was Farged.
[0:06:02 – 0:06:06] Erik: I think I remember you pronouncing that on some previous responses.
[0:06:06 – 0:06:06] Adam: That’s how you do it.
[0:06:07 – 0:06:11] Erik: Yeah, and this has been stapled up in a grocery bag since like July.
[0:06:11 – 0:06:13] Erik: Are you supposed to divulge your Reddit name?
[0:06:14 – 0:06:16] Erik: Well, he provided it, so it’s been provided.
[0:06:16 – 0:06:17] Erik: Okay.
[0:06:17 – 0:06:19] Erik: I don’t know if I’ve done a bad thing.
[0:06:20 – 0:06:20] Erik: Let me know, Jerry.
[0:06:20 – 0:06:22] Erik: I can retroactively go back.
[0:06:22 – 0:06:23] Adam: Does it say in here, get your act together?
[0:06:23 – 0:06:25] Adam: Get your act together.
[0:06:25 – 0:06:26] Adam: Get your act together.
[0:06:26 – 0:06:29] Erik: No, it says that they love the podcast and never stop.
[0:06:31 – 0:06:32] Adam: Get it together, guys.
[0:06:35 – 0:06:35] Adam: Jeez.
[0:06:35 – 0:06:38] Adam: This is a well-secured art supplies.
[0:06:38 – 0:06:40] Erik: Stapled together like a bag of dog food.
[0:06:41 – 0:06:42] Adam: There’s going to be markers in there.
[0:06:52 – 0:06:53] Adam: There’s a goalie on it.
[0:06:53 – 0:06:54] Adam: We got two kinds.
[0:06:56 – 0:06:57] Adam: It’s a double.
[0:06:58 – 0:06:59] Adam: It’s a double three-pack.
[0:07:00 – 0:07:03] Adam: That’s what they call those, the old double three-pack, Eric.
[0:07:03 – 0:07:08] Erik: I got the Black Dog Brewing Company Amber Ale District 5.
[0:07:08 – 0:07:13] Erik: I’m assuming that is a reference to Mighty Ducks because there’s a goalie on the front.
[0:07:14 – 0:07:15] Erik: Yeah, you got a goalie.
[0:07:16 – 0:07:18] Erik: And you got a dog with sunglasses on, though.
[0:07:18 – 0:07:19] Adam: Go bolts, Eric.
[0:07:21 – 0:07:22] Adam: Happy for Kucherov?
[0:07:23 – 0:07:24] Erik: Sure.
[0:07:24 – 0:07:24] Erik: Cheers.
[0:07:24 – 0:07:26] Erik: Yeah, I am.
[0:07:30 – 0:07:31] Adam: I’m happy for Yanni Gord, all right?
[0:07:32 – 0:07:33] Adam: Everybody’s happy for Yanni Gord.
[0:07:33 – 0:07:34] Adam: Everybody’s happy for Yanni Gord.
[0:07:35 – 0:07:36] Adam: What did I get here?
[0:07:36 – 0:07:40] Adam: I had the Black Dog Brewing Company Spiced White Ale.
[0:07:41 – 0:07:41] Adam: Spiced white?
[0:07:41 – 0:07:47] Adam: It’s a beautiful dog wearing sunglasses on the front of this beer.
[0:07:47 – 0:07:49] Adam: It says, Life is rough, Eric.
[0:07:50 – 0:08:10] Adam: you’re right it’s okay thank you dog you’re doing good yeah life is rough but you can drink beer good vibrations buddy doing good and the uh the question of the week continues on but before we get there gotta get to our ron share outdoor calendar fact of the day today is october 9th 2020
[0:08:12 – 0:08:14] Adam: It’s a beautiful day to be alive, Eric.
[0:08:14 – 0:08:16] Adam: 64 degrees on the night drive over here.
[0:08:16 – 0:08:17] Adam: What the hell’s going on?
[0:08:17 – 0:08:20] Erik: Yeah, it was 70 up at the Clearwater Lodge.
[0:08:21 – 0:08:21] Adam: I don’t care.
[0:08:21 – 0:08:24] Adam: I’m wearing a hoodie every day for the rest of my life.
[0:08:24 – 0:08:29] Adam: Today’s outdoor fact of the day by Ron Cher is rough grouse are eating dogwood berries.
[0:08:30 – 0:08:31] Adam: Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
[0:08:31 – 0:08:33] Adam: That’s the berry counter.
[0:08:33 – 0:08:35] Adam: That was three berries for each grouse today.
[0:08:35 – 0:08:40] Adam: Sunset’s at 6.38 p.m. Yikes.
[0:08:40 – 0:08:40] Erik: I believe it.
[0:08:41 – 0:08:42] Erik: I believe it.
[0:08:44 – 0:08:45] Adam: How many grouse do you see this week?
[0:08:46 – 0:08:46] Erik: Oh, boy.
[0:08:46 – 0:08:48] Erik: So many grouse.
[0:08:49 – 0:08:49] Erik: All over.
[0:08:50 – 0:08:51] Erik: Packs of them.
[0:08:51 – 0:08:53] Erik: I think I’ve murdered a few on the road.
[0:08:55 – 0:08:57] Adam: What have you hunted up more of this week?
[0:08:57 – 0:08:58] Adam: Grouse or tamarack?
[0:08:59 – 0:08:59] Erik: What does that mean?
[0:09:00 – 0:09:02] Adam: You know, are you tammy hunting?
[0:09:02 – 0:09:03] Adam: Are you grouse hunting?
[0:09:04 – 0:09:05] Erik: I’m definitely not grouse hunting.
[0:09:05 – 0:09:06] Adam: What’s better these days?
[0:09:06 – 0:09:07] Adam: The grouse or the tammy?
[0:09:08 – 0:09:10] Adam: I heard the tamarack up the trail were outstanding.
[0:09:11 – 0:09:11] Adam: Yeah.
[0:09:11 – 0:09:13] Adam: But I’ve also seen a lot of grouse, so…
[0:09:13 – 0:09:15] Erik: I think everything is outstanding this year.
[0:09:15 – 0:09:16] Erik: I don’t know what it is.
[0:09:16 – 0:09:29] Erik: The colors have been simultaneous this year more than any other with the crossover of maples and aspen and birch.
[0:09:30 – 0:09:34] Erik: But that also leads us to a much earlier winter.
[0:09:36 – 0:09:43] Erik: which I feel like not necessarily temperatures or actual snowfall, but just gray trees.
[0:09:44 – 0:09:48] Erik: Like all the leaves are going to be down within like the next week.
[0:09:48 – 0:09:50] Adam: When I was driving here, it’s still quite windy.
[0:09:50 – 0:09:52] Adam: It’s warm wind from the south.
[0:09:52 – 0:09:53] Erik: Crazy south warm wind.
[0:09:54 – 0:09:56] Adam: And the stars are really out nice and crispy.
[0:09:57 – 0:10:00] Adam: And when I was ripping down the road coming over here to Studio K2,
[0:10:02 – 0:10:05] Adam: I had a couple gusts of like leaf flurries.
[0:10:05 – 0:10:13] Adam: You ever run into that where it’s just like a smattering of leaves coming down on your windshield as you drive down the motorway?
[0:10:14 – 0:10:14] Erik: Yeah.
[0:10:14 – 0:10:16] Erik: I don’t know about on the motorway.
[0:10:16 – 0:10:16] Adam: Yeah.
[0:10:17 – 0:10:28] Erik: But on some of the back roads, yeah, you get the fun swirling of leaves or just even when you’re on a walk and you get a gust and then like the leaves and pine needles.
[0:10:28 – 0:10:29] Erik: Yeah.
[0:10:30 – 0:10:36] Erik: The unrepresented factor of fall is the dispersal of pine needles.
[0:10:36 – 0:10:37] Erik: That still does happen.
[0:10:38 – 0:10:38] Adam: Smells great.
[0:10:39 – 0:10:39] Erik: They come down.
[0:10:40 – 0:10:41] Erik: They, like, blow a lot of their needles.
[0:10:41 – 0:10:44] Erik: They don’t blow all of them, but, like, I don’t know, like a third of them.
[0:10:44 – 0:10:45] Erik: They’re more like shedding needles.
[0:10:46 – 0:10:46] Erik: Yeah, they’re just shedding.
[0:10:47 – 0:10:54] Erik: And then, like, yeah, if you get under a big white pine when they’re blowing, it’s like it can feel like it’s snowing needles on you.
[0:10:54 – 0:10:54] Erik: Yeah.
[0:10:54 – 0:10:55] Erik: For sure.
[0:10:55 – 0:10:56] Adam: It was like a flurry.
[0:10:56 – 0:10:58] Adam: I think I drove through a flurry of poplar.
[0:10:59 – 0:11:02] Adam: leaves, but you could have a blizzard of pine needle.
[0:11:02 – 0:11:04] Erik: A blizzard of pine.
[0:11:06 – 0:11:10] Erik: Do you have anything to say about our fine friends on our Tumble Home cast?
[0:11:12 – 0:11:12] Erik: Favorite posts?
[0:11:12 – 0:11:14] Adam: Did you see that sash and tunic?
[0:11:14 – 0:11:15] Erik: I did.
[0:11:15 – 0:11:17] Erik: I did see the sash and tunic.
[0:11:17 – 0:11:19] Adam: You barbed bannock.
[0:11:19 – 0:11:21] Adam: The excellent sash and tunic picture.
[0:11:21 – 0:11:22] Erik: I thought it was excellent.
[0:11:22 – 0:11:26] Erik: I was a little disconcerted by the black scribbling out the face.
[0:11:26 – 0:11:29] Adam: I was just going to say, like, what are you doing?
[0:11:30 – 0:11:31] Adam: Let’s see that beautiful face.
[0:11:31 – 0:11:32] Erik: I mean, I get it.
[0:11:32 – 0:11:33] Erik: That’s fine.
[0:11:33 – 0:11:38] Erik: But just the way it was scribbled out kind of reminded me of, like, what was that other…
[0:11:41 – 0:11:43] Erik: Was it Us, that movie?
[0:11:43 – 0:11:43] Adam: Oh.
[0:11:45 – 0:11:46] Erik: Or The Others or whatever that is?
[0:11:46 – 0:11:47] Adam: The Others, yeah.
[0:11:47 – 0:11:48] Erik: Yeah.
[0:11:48 – 0:11:48] Erik: I don’t know.
[0:11:49 – 0:11:52] Erik: It was a little disconcerting, the way that that black scribble was on there.
[0:11:53 – 0:11:55] Erik: It made it a little bit more creepy than it needed to be.
[0:11:55 – 0:11:57] Adam: It was, yeah.
[0:11:57 – 0:12:01] Adam: No, it wasn’t necessarily a bad thing, but it definitely made the picture a little more creepy.
[0:12:01 – 0:12:02] Adam: Yeah.
[0:12:02 – 0:12:05] Adam: Somebody had commented, I believe, that maybe it was a Voyager ghost.
[0:12:06 – 0:12:07] Adam: Perhaps it was a Spectre.
[0:12:09 – 0:12:12] Adam: I like the, there’s also one about like, yeah, true Voyager.
[0:12:12 – 0:12:15] Adam: And then the, yeah, at least I’m not a pork eater.
[0:12:17 – 0:12:18] Adam: Not a pork eater.
[0:12:18 – 0:12:19] Adam: Yeah.
[0:12:19 – 0:12:22] Adam: Let’s get an extra upvote on that pork eater comment.
[0:12:22 – 0:12:23] Adam: I love that picture.
[0:12:24 – 0:12:26] Adam: I really, I really thoroughly enjoyed that sash.
[0:12:27 – 0:12:31] Adam: So I’m going to have to look into getting a sash for our next trip.
[0:12:33 – 0:12:34] Adam: Or at least a tunic.
[0:12:34 – 0:12:36] Adam: I mean, get it together.
[0:12:36 – 0:12:37] Adam: Eric, we need tunics.
[0:12:38 – 0:12:39] Adam: Sure.
[0:12:39 – 0:12:40] Adam: Yeah, no, I think the…
[0:12:40 – 0:12:41] Adam: Does Coglins make a tunic?
[0:12:43 – 0:12:45] Erik: Oh, hey, Axel.
[0:12:45 – 0:12:47] Erik: Axel, coming over to join the podcast.
[0:12:47 – 0:12:48] Erik: What’s up?
[0:12:48 – 0:12:49] Erik: You should be sleeping.
[0:12:49 – 0:12:50] Erik: It’s been a big day.
[0:12:51 – 0:12:53] Erik: I’m ready to go, guys.
[0:12:53 – 0:12:55] Erik: You need to tune the board.
[0:12:55 – 0:12:57] Erik: I do appreciate the…
[0:12:57 – 0:13:08] Erik: I was just, for whatever reason, vaguely aware of this person, which I appreciated being shared for his…
[0:13:11 – 0:13:37] Erik: earnestness when it comes to all things outdoors especially the way that he describes how to get used to sleeping in a hammock and this was posted by our larkin young and it was a post linking to a youtube channel um by suge and it’s a pretty great video that i feel like
[0:13:39 – 0:14:06] Erik: in a matter of 20 minutes does what we did in three whole hours basically describing like how the learning curve of like getting into a hammock and learning it is like you know the video medium you don’t need as much time to explain it well i know but show it his personality and the way that he describes it was really great and i appreciated it and i’ve seen him off and on i had not seen this video um yeah don’t forget ch lcc man
[0:14:07 – 0:14:15] Erik: I don’t know if those necessarily are highlighted on purpose, but I do like the description of that.
[0:14:15 – 0:14:19] Erik: The fact that getting used to camping in a hammock is a learning curve.
[0:14:19 – 0:14:22] Erik: It’s not something that you’re going to just pick up on day one.
[0:14:22 – 0:14:23] Erik: Not all of us do.
[0:14:23 – 0:14:25] Erik: The way that we described the writhing.
[0:14:25 – 0:14:27] Adam: Some rare talents can pick it up in one night.
[0:14:28 – 0:14:36] Adam: Actually, I had to sleep on the ground the first night, so it took two nights for me, but yeah, everybody’s got that kind of sky wherewithal.
[0:14:36 – 0:14:52] Erik: Yeah, and then the other video that was posted by Cheap underscore Dancer, who was looking for a follow-up to the Sky Sleeping video, he couldn’t find anything about sleeping in the ground, so there was a Coglins video shared.
[0:14:52 – 0:14:53] Erik: Have you seen this?
[0:14:53 – 0:14:55] Adam: Yeah, that one I watched twice.
[0:14:56 – 0:14:56] Adam: Twice?
[0:14:56 – 0:14:59] Adam: Man, I got to get me an OG Camp Toaster.
[0:14:59 – 0:15:01] Adam: Yeah, that was apparently what got him off the ground.
[0:15:01 – 0:15:06] Adam: Yeah, the original Coglins product, the old Camp Toaster video.
[0:15:06 – 0:15:11] Adam: Yeah, and I guess it makes me think I’m not eating nearly enough toast in camp.
[0:15:12 – 0:15:12] Erik: Really?
[0:15:12 – 0:15:13] Adam: Is that what that made you think?
[0:15:13 – 0:15:22] Adam: We should start bringing more preserves out and jams and butters.
[0:15:23 – 0:15:25] Adam: I mean, if there’s anything that… And toast, of course.
[0:15:26 – 0:15:34] Erik: Yeah, when I’m out camping for extended periods of time, the last thing on the list of things, boy, you know what I miss?
[0:15:34 – 0:15:35] Erik: Toast.
[0:15:35 – 0:15:36] Erik: Toast is not one of them.
[0:15:37 – 0:15:37] Erik: Toast.
[0:15:37 – 0:15:38] Adam: I don’t even eat…
[0:15:38 – 0:15:40] Adam: I used to be a big-time toast eater.
[0:15:41 – 0:15:43] Erik: Yeah, I don’t even really eat toast at home.
[0:15:43 – 0:15:44] Adam: You’re not a true voyager.
[0:15:44 – 0:15:45] Adam: You’re just a toast eater.
[0:15:46 – 0:15:56] Erik: I definitely find myself on the teeter-totter of opinions when it comes to utensils, whether they be camp utensils or kitchen utensils.
[0:15:57 – 0:16:02] Erik: I align myself with Alton Brown and I abhor unitaskers.
[0:16:02 – 0:16:07] Erik: And that bread toaster serves one purpose and no other purposes.
[0:16:07 – 0:16:07] Erik: Yeah.
[0:16:08 – 0:16:09] Erik: Whatsoever.
[0:16:09 – 0:16:11] Adam: Maybe you could wear it as a hat.
[0:16:11 – 0:16:13] Adam: You can toast bread in a cast iron skillet.
[0:16:13 – 0:16:15] Adam: You could just lay it on the fire grate.
[0:16:15 – 0:16:18] Adam: Or straight on the old fire grate.
[0:16:18 – 0:16:19] Adam: And just be diligent.
[0:16:20 – 0:16:20] Adam: Toast biters.
[0:16:21 – 0:16:21] Erik: Yeah.
[0:16:22 – 0:16:23] Erik: You could put anything right.
[0:16:23 – 0:16:23] Erik: I mean…
[0:16:23 – 0:16:27] Adam: I was impressed by their 50% margins they’re generating.
[0:16:28 – 0:16:33] Erik: Old Jan in the back room of the office putting together all of the…
[0:16:33 – 0:16:34] Erik: The planograms.
[0:16:34 – 0:16:37] Erik: How they could fill your shelves to perfection.
[0:16:37 – 0:16:39] Erik: So there’s no blank spaces.
[0:16:39 – 0:16:41] Adam: Those are some sick planograms.
[0:16:41 – 0:16:42] Adam: Those are sick.
[0:16:42 – 0:16:43] Adam: And those numbers are pretty sweet.
[0:16:45 – 0:16:46] Adam: If these numbers are right.
[0:16:46 – 0:16:47] Adam: 50% margins?
[0:16:48 – 0:16:48] Adam: Pretty sweet.
[0:16:48 – 0:16:50] Adam: This could be real good for us.
[0:16:53 – 0:16:54] Erik: Yeah, it was pretty great.
[0:16:56 – 0:16:57] Erik: The music especially.
[0:16:57 – 0:16:58] Erik: Gene and Billy never have 20.
[0:17:00 – 0:17:04] Adam: Yeah, I could watch that video another two or three times, no problem.
[0:17:04 – 0:17:07] Adam: And we do have to do a full Coglins episode, Eric.
[0:17:07 – 0:17:08] Erik: Oh, it’s coming.
[0:17:08 – 0:17:08] Erik: Yeah, for sure.
[0:17:08 – 0:17:13] Erik: And we’re definitely going to rip some of the audio from that video into that episode.
[0:17:13 – 0:17:14] Erik: No, no, no.
[0:17:15 – 0:17:15] Erik: Yeah.
[0:17:15 – 0:17:16] Erik: No, there was…
[0:17:17 – 0:17:19] Adam: There was a lot of… Gene and Scotty, they don’t have to worry.
[0:17:20 – 0:17:21] Erik: They don’t have to worry.
[0:17:21 – 0:17:23] Adam: This is pretty sweet.
[0:17:23 – 0:17:23] Adam: Torn.
[0:17:23 – 0:17:24] Adam: Wade.
[0:17:25 – 0:17:29] Adam: If one of the guys named Wade working at Coghlan’s, this would just be perfect.
[0:17:29 – 0:17:31] Erik: There was a lot of torn opinions.
[0:17:31 – 0:17:43] Erik: One of my favorite ones was, hopefully you too can come up with your own toaster idea that spawns memes, fills dumps, and makes all of your employees come across as half-assed characters from Fargo.
[0:17:43 – 0:17:44] Adam: Fargo reference!
[0:17:44 – 0:17:49] Erik: Yeah, which I feel like probably closer to the TV series.
[0:17:49 – 0:17:56] Erik: Anybody that spoke on camera definitely seemed like a Fargo, the TV series character.
[0:17:56 – 0:17:57] Adam: Yeah.
[0:17:58 – 0:17:59] Adam: I still haven’t seen season three.
[0:18:00 – 0:18:00] Erik: Wow.
[0:18:00 – 0:18:02] Erik: And season four is coming out now.
[0:18:02 – 0:18:02] Adam: What?
[0:18:03 – 0:18:03] Erik: Yeah.
[0:18:03 – 0:18:06] Erik: They don’t have anything to do with each other, like really.
[0:18:07 – 0:18:16] Adam: Fam chat was doing like that test where you take 25 questions and then it tells you like just based on what you call things and how you pronounce things, like where you grew up.
[0:18:17 – 0:18:21] Adam: And dead giveaway by calling a water fountain a bubbler every time.
[0:18:22 – 0:18:23] Erik: That’s Wisconsin?
[0:18:23 – 0:18:24] Adam: Yeah, eastern Wisconsin.
[0:18:25 – 0:18:25] Adam: The old bubbler.
[0:18:26 – 0:18:26] Erik: Really?
[0:18:26 – 0:18:27] Adam: Yeah.
[0:18:27 – 0:18:28] Erik: Yeah, I’ve never done that.
[0:18:28 – 0:18:29] Erik: I’ve never done that.
[0:18:29 – 0:18:30] Adam: That’s always fun.
[0:18:30 – 0:18:32] Adam: Always fun to take that thing.
[0:18:32 – 0:18:33] Adam: I don’t know.
[0:18:33 – 0:18:35] Adam: I suppose your accent changes over time.
[0:18:35 – 0:18:36] Erik: Yeah, I guess.
[0:18:36 – 0:18:37] Erik: I don’t know.
[0:18:37 – 0:18:38] Erik: I’ve always wondered about that.
[0:18:38 – 0:18:40] Adam: The Fargo accent’s one of my favorite.
[0:18:40 – 0:18:41] Erik: Yeah.
[0:18:42 – 0:18:43] Adam: Gotta eat your breakfast.
[0:18:45 – 0:18:47] Adam: Yeah, so we’ve got to get a whole episode for Coglins in there.
[0:18:47 – 0:18:49] Adam: I was thrilled to see that video come up.
[0:18:50 – 0:18:51] Erik: Yeah, that’s happening.
[0:18:51 – 0:18:53] Adam: That’s just… That’ll be a winter episode, I hope.
[0:18:53 – 0:18:56] Erik: Yeah, when there’s more time to think.
[0:18:56 – 0:18:58] Erik: I don’t have any time to think right now.
[0:19:00 – 0:19:04] Erik: Somehow, still, almost mid-October… What are you going to be for Halloween?
[0:19:04 – 0:19:05] Erik: A puddle.
[0:19:05 – 0:19:05] Erik: A puddle?
[0:19:07 – 0:19:13] Adam: I can tell you I have a good Tumble Home themed costume lined up.
[0:19:13 – 0:19:13] Adam: Okay.
[0:19:13 – 0:19:16] Adam: And I hope you can figure something out.
[0:19:16 – 0:19:17] Adam: Get it together, Eric.
[0:19:17 – 0:19:19] Erik: I just told you what I was going as.
[0:19:19 – 0:19:19] Erik: A puddle.
[0:19:20 – 0:19:21] Erik: Yeah, a puddle.
[0:19:21 – 0:19:22] Erik: A puddle in camp.
[0:19:22 – 0:19:29] Erik: It’s going to be a puddle with a cigar floating in it, and it’s going to be Joe Pesci from Gone Fishing.
[0:19:29 – 0:19:30] Adam: You should go as the Panama Platter.
[0:19:31 – 0:19:32] Erik: Yeah, yeah, there you go.
[0:19:32 – 0:19:32] Erik: Hey, Joe.
[0:19:37 – 0:19:39] Adam: Anyways, I also got to give a shout out.
[0:19:40 – 0:19:41] Adam: We got cat costumes coming.
[0:19:42 – 0:19:43] Erik: What?
[0:19:43 – 0:19:47] Adam: We’re going to put pictures of the cat costumes on Tumble Home Instagram.
[0:19:47 – 0:19:48] Adam: I don’t know anything about this.
[0:19:48 – 0:19:49] Adam: Get on the Instagram, folks.
[0:19:49 – 0:19:55] Adam: If you want to see Agnes and Lil P dressed up in matching costumes, get it together.
[0:19:55 – 0:19:56] Adam: Get on Instagram.
[0:19:57 – 0:19:58] Adam: Drop Facebook.
[0:19:58 – 0:20:03] Adam: Get on Instagram and you can see the beautiful cat Halloween pictures we got coming up next week.
[0:20:03 – 0:20:04] Adam: You can guarantee it.
[0:20:04 – 0:20:05] Adam: Take that one to the bank, Eric.
[0:20:06 – 0:20:10] Erik: Yeah, I mean, we are reading a bunch of Facebook comments here today.
[0:20:11 – 0:20:14] Adam: Well, it’s still good for something, as we said last week.
[0:20:15 – 0:20:16] Adam: Facebook is still good for a few things.
[0:20:16 – 0:20:17] Erik: Did I say that?
[0:20:17 – 0:20:18] Erik: I’ve never said that.
[0:20:18 – 0:20:19] Adam: I think you said it last week.
[0:20:20 – 0:20:22] Adam: Somebody roll back the tape and check that one.
[0:20:22 – 0:20:26] Adam: I just listened to the episode, so I’m pretty sure you said that on 118.
[0:20:27 – 0:20:29] Adam: It’s good for this and for the selling swap.
[0:20:29 – 0:20:35] Adam: You never know what kind of figurines or fine china or whatnot you’re going to find on the selling swap.
[0:20:36 – 0:20:37] Erik: Or deals.
[0:20:37 – 0:20:38] Adam: Good deals.
[0:20:38 – 0:20:39] Adam: On tires.
[0:20:39 – 0:20:39] Adam: There’s never deals.
[0:20:39 – 0:20:40] Adam: Used tires.
[0:20:42 – 0:20:43] Adam: There’s never deals.
[0:20:43 – 0:20:43] Adam: Folk art.
[0:20:43 – 0:20:45] Adam: You never know what you’re going to see on there.
[0:20:45 – 0:20:46] Adam: Folk art.
[0:20:47 – 0:20:52] Adam: So I think something on wind that we didn’t talk enough about last week was about space wind.
[0:20:52 – 0:20:53] Adam: We kind of breezed right over that one.
[0:20:53 – 0:20:54] Erik: Okay.
[0:20:55 – 0:20:58] Adam: And the wind occurs on planet Earth.
[0:20:58 – 0:20:58] Adam: Yes.
[0:20:58 – 0:20:58] Adam: Yes.
[0:21:00 – 0:21:02] Adam: But also in space, it’s different in space.
[0:21:02 – 0:21:03] Adam: It’s always just an exchange of energy.
[0:21:04 – 0:21:04] Erik: I thought we did talk about space wind.
[0:21:05 – 0:21:07] SPEAKER_00: I don’t know if we really connected it to the Vindleys enough, though.
[0:21:07 – 0:21:08] Erik: No, probably not.
[0:21:08 – 0:21:10] Adam: The Vindleys really are nothing but wind.
[0:21:10 – 0:21:14] Adam: I only said I hate wind, but I do love the Vindleys.
[0:21:15 – 0:21:16] Erik: You like that kind of wind.
[0:21:16 – 0:21:21] Adam: Yeah, so I guess, I don’t know, I’ve got to reevaluate some things maybe by the end of this episode.
[0:21:21 – 0:21:24] Erik: You’re not going to reevaluate anything by the end of this episode.
[0:21:24 – 0:21:24] Adam: No, we might.
[0:21:25 – 0:21:25] Erik: No.
[0:21:26 – 0:21:26] Adam: Think about it.
[0:21:29 – 0:21:33] Adam: And that just, you know, that’s only in our dimension.
[0:21:34 – 0:21:37] Adam: Do you think it’s possible for wind to transfix dimensions?
[0:21:40 – 0:21:42] Adam: Or transverse dimensions?
[0:21:42 – 0:21:44] Erik: I was going to say, I don’t know about transfix.
[0:21:45 – 0:21:47] Adam: Do you think that there is like interdimensional wind?
[0:21:49 – 0:21:53] Adam: I mean, let’s zoom way out on wind before we dive into these comments.
[0:21:53 – 0:21:57] Adam: Because we’ve talked about wind down to the lake level on the previous two episodes.
[0:21:58 – 0:21:58] Adam: What about big wind?
[0:21:59 – 0:22:00] Adam: Like real big wind?
[0:22:01 – 0:22:02] Adam: Space wind.
[0:22:03 – 0:22:09] Adam: And then, like, furthermore, like, we’re just in a hologram of some sort here on this three-dimensional plane.
[0:22:09 – 0:22:12] Adam: What about the, yeah, the fourth-dimensional or fifth-dimensional winds?
[0:22:12 – 0:22:13] Adam: Is this possible?
[0:22:14 – 0:22:15] Erik: No, not at all.
[0:22:15 – 0:22:15] Erik: It is.
[0:22:16 – 0:22:17] Erik: No.
[0:22:17 – 0:22:21] Erik: I’ve told you the story about the time when I was on the beaches of Fort Myers Beach.
[0:22:22 – 0:22:38] Erik: And I was walking down the beach and a family was depositing the remains of a, I’m assuming, a loved one of their family that had been cremated.
[0:22:39 – 0:22:43] Erik: And they had gone out 10, 20, 30 feet into the waters and
[0:22:45 – 0:22:48] Erik: And I don’t know how legal this is looking back on it now.
[0:22:49 – 0:22:50] Adam: Totally legal.
[0:22:50 – 0:22:51] Erik: Totally cool.
[0:22:51 – 0:22:53] Erik: Kind of just dumped them out into the water.
[0:22:54 – 0:23:00] Erik: And I was out on a sandbar beyond where they had dumped the remains.
[0:23:01 – 0:23:14] Erik: And then as soon as they did that, three sets of rollers that had a beginning and an end just kind of came crashing onto the beach.
[0:23:15 – 0:23:16] Erik: It was like a calm night.
[0:23:17 – 0:23:18] Erik: And they did this, and then it was just like…
[0:23:22 – 0:23:23] Erik: And then that was it.
[0:23:23 – 0:23:25] Adam: So it was like a spiritual wind?
[0:23:25 – 0:23:25] Erik: Yeah.
[0:23:26 – 0:23:29] Erik: And there was nothing on either side of it and there was nothing behind it.
[0:23:29 – 0:23:33] Erik: And I was on the side where like waves would be coming from.
[0:23:33 – 0:23:37] Erik: Like I said, I was out on like the sandbar.
[0:23:37 – 0:23:37] Adam: Hmm.
[0:23:37 – 0:23:39] Adam: And you didn’t feel anything?
[0:23:41 – 0:23:41] Erik: No, no.
[0:23:42 – 0:23:42] Erik: I felt nothing.
[0:23:42 – 0:23:43] Adam: On your shins or anything?
[0:23:44 – 0:23:44] Erik: No.
[0:23:44 – 0:23:46] Erik: And they were like pretty good size, like crashing waves.
[0:23:47 – 0:23:52] Erik: Not like nobody was surfing them, but they were noticeable considering it was like pretty much dead calms.
[0:23:52 – 0:23:56] Adam: Yeah, you hear about that, like a strange bird comes up and lands on somebody.
[0:23:56 – 0:24:00] Adam: It’s like, it was so-and-so.
[0:24:00 – 0:24:02] Erik: Yeah, Uncle Jerry’s favorite bird was.
[0:24:03 – 0:24:07] Adam: So waves are still pretty much wind, but what are like a current?
[0:24:08 – 0:24:09] Adam: This is like a spiritual wave.
[0:24:10 – 0:24:10] Erik: Maybe.
[0:24:11 – 0:24:14] Adam: But like current in the water is more of a liquid wind.
[0:24:15 – 0:24:16] Erik: Liquid wind.
[0:24:17 – 0:24:17] Erik: Yeah.
[0:24:17 – 0:24:18] Adam: That’s what I’m…
[0:24:19 – 0:24:20] Erik: Yeah, write that down.
[0:24:20 – 0:24:20] Erik: That’s going to be useful.
[0:24:20 – 0:24:23] Adam: Liquid wind or spiritual wind.
[0:24:25 – 0:24:27] Adam: We got some ideas going here.
[0:24:29 – 0:24:29] Adam: Huh.
[0:24:30 – 0:24:33] Adam: Well, I like that.
[0:24:34 – 0:24:38] Adam: I guess we’re going to go ahead and play the drop, I guess.
[0:24:42 – 0:24:44] Adam: Digital Reddit.
[0:24:44 – 0:24:45] Adam: Facebook.
[0:24:45 – 0:24:46] Adam: Cut that.
[0:24:47 – 0:24:48] Adam: Strike it and reverse it.
[0:24:50 – 0:24:51] Adam: Digital Facebook.
[0:24:52 – 0:24:53] Adam: Yeah, right.
[0:24:53 – 0:24:55] Adam: Let’s get to their good friends on Facebook.
[0:24:55 – 0:24:56] Adam: Still good for something.
[0:24:57 – 0:24:57] Adam: Quote Eric.
[0:24:58 – 0:24:59] Adam: Quote me.
[0:24:59 – 0:25:00] Adam: Quote Eric.
[0:25:00 – 0:25:01] Adam: Still good for something.
[0:25:01 – 0:25:02] Adam: For now.
[0:25:02 – 0:25:04] Adam: Well, it’s a good way to reach out and connect, you know.
[0:25:05 – 0:25:05] Adam: Yeah.
[0:25:05 – 0:25:08] Adam: And, you know, a lot of people are on there and it’s easy peasy.
[0:25:09 – 0:25:10] Adam: Thank you, Paul.
[0:25:11 – 0:25:12] Adam: It’s a reasonable font.
[0:25:13 – 0:25:14] Adam: On Facebook, at least.
[0:25:15 – 0:25:15] Erik: This one’s from Paul.
[0:25:17 – 0:25:18] Erik: Oh, boy.
[0:25:18 – 0:25:19] Erik: Do I have a doozy?
[0:25:20 – 0:25:22] Erik: This might need a little backstory.
[0:25:22 – 0:25:23] Erik: Settle in, my friend.
[0:25:23 – 0:25:24] Erik: I’m settled.
[0:25:24 – 0:25:24] Erik: Settle in.
[0:25:25 – 0:25:31] Erik: I was an Eagle Scout and was on an annual Eagle Scout buddy trip.
[0:25:32 – 0:25:34] Erik: This is parentheses, along with spouses.
[0:25:36 – 0:25:43] Erik: And we happened to have an incident where a lightweight grumman got wrapped around a rock in some rapids.
[0:25:44 – 0:25:46] Erik: First of all, there’s no such thing as a lightweight grumman.
[0:25:47 – 0:25:48] Erik: I second this notion.
[0:25:48 – 0:25:49] Erik: What the hell are they talking about?
[0:25:49 – 0:25:52] Adam: The grumman’s coming at a minimum at 150 pounds.
[0:25:53 – 0:25:55] Adam: They may have them from the F4 Wildcat skins.
[0:25:56 – 0:25:57] Adam: You kidding me?
[0:25:57 – 0:25:57] Adam: Yeah.
[0:25:58 – 0:26:08] Erik: Long story short, on that one, we were able to get the canoe freed, pounded it back into shape, and then proceeded to use plastic bags and duct tape to make it work.
[0:26:08 – 0:26:14] Erik: Needless to say, we could not have two people in that canoe for the rest of the trip.
[0:26:15 – 0:26:19] Erik: But it did float, and we did use it for the rest of the trip.
[0:26:19 – 0:26:21] Erik: So just one person was in the canoe for the rest of the trip?
[0:26:22 – 0:26:22] Erik: Wow.
[0:26:23 – 0:26:24] Erik: Fast forward to the wind part.
[0:26:25 – 0:26:31] Erik: We were coming out of the North Branch Kawishawi and headed into Fall Lake, then Garden Lake, where my mom’s house is.
[0:26:32 – 0:26:37] Erik: There was a fierce wind coming from the west that was creating giant white caps.
[0:26:38 – 0:26:40] Erik: We were tired and just wanted to go home.
[0:26:41 – 0:26:49] Erik: All we needed to do was get out of farm and into the warm arms of that channel adjacent to farm and out of the wind.
[0:26:50 – 0:27:02] Erik: When we started getting blasted by the wind, it was obvious that the lone stern paddler in our crippled canoe could not keep the front of the canoe straight and was just getting whipped around.
[0:27:04 – 0:27:13] Erik: So we tied a rope from the strongest canoe to the front of his to keep it straight and hoped to jebus that it wouldn’t rip his canoe in half.
[0:27:14 – 0:27:15] Adam: Wow.
[0:27:17 – 0:27:23] Erik: As mentioned, this wind was fierce, and every stroke got us about one millimeter forward.
[0:27:23 – 0:27:30] Erik: The white caps were so high that water curled over the bow, deck, and gunnels of each canoe.
[0:27:31 – 0:27:38] Erik: At one point we got on our knees, but too much power was lost in that position, so we resumed in a seated position.
[0:27:38 – 0:27:46] Erik: We all started singing the theme song to Gilligan’s Island and tried to make light of it, but we were actually not in a good spot.
[0:27:47 – 0:27:57] Erik: We were all pretty seasoned paddlers and eventually got to a better spot, but we took on a lot of water and got rain and wind soaked at the same time.
[0:27:58 – 0:28:14] Erik: Interestingly enough, the only canoe that didn’t have waves curling over the gunwales was the poor crippled Grumman because the front wasn’t weighted down and was not low enough to get whitecap oversplash.
[0:28:15 – 0:28:21] Erik: In hindsight, we probably should have tried wading it out, but we all thought, it isn’t that far, we can muscle through it.
[0:28:22 – 0:28:28] Erik: Had we been on a larger body of water, like Brule, I think we would have been in trouble.
[0:28:29 – 0:28:36] Erik: To this day, I have been in some pretty gnarly wind and waves, but nothing like that, and nothing like the canoe situation we had.
[0:28:37 – 0:28:40] Erik: Did I mention that out of the three canoes we had…
[0:28:41 – 0:28:52] Erik: To have one canoe with three people, one canoe loaded down with gear, and the crippled canoe with one person, some light gear, and a six-month puppy!
[0:28:52 – 0:28:53] Adam: Oh, you’re kidding me.
[0:28:53 – 0:28:54] Adam: There’s a puppy involved?
[0:28:55 – 0:28:56] Adam: No, there’s a puppy involved.
[0:28:56 – 0:28:58] Adam: Jesus, this is a real wild one.
[0:28:58 – 0:29:05] Erik: I can still hear the volume of noise that wind made against my ears, but I chuckle at the song we chose to sing.
[0:29:05 – 0:29:06] Erik: Phew!
[0:29:07 – 0:29:09] Erik: Now my pulse and blood pressure are up just thinking about it.
[0:29:09 – 0:29:11] Erik: Lesson here?
[0:29:11 – 0:29:15] Erik: Don’t take chances that might wrap your canoe around a rock.
[0:29:15 – 0:29:17] Erik: And second, be careful in wind.
[0:29:17 – 0:29:22] Erik: Lastly, even Eagle Scouts make really stupid decisions.
[0:29:23 – 0:29:26] Erik: So don’t ever be fooled by, I know what I’m doing.
[0:29:26 – 0:29:27] Erik: I’m an Eagle Scout.
[0:29:28 – 0:29:30] Erik: That is, except when I say it.
[0:29:30 – 0:29:31] Adam: Yeah, well then you mean it.
[0:29:32 – 0:29:32] Adam: That’s true.
[0:29:32 – 0:30:00] Erik: yeah well i mean you salvaged the grumman which is what’s nice about grumman’s you can hammer them sons of guns back into shape no problem yeah that was nice i never had a story read like that where it was a yeah it was a wind situation but it was also like a a battered canoe in a situation that maybe was taking a little bit more heat because of its condition i also like the move of towing canoes have you ever towed a canoe with another canoe
[0:30:01 – 0:30:10] Erik: I’ve towed a canoe behind a V-hull with somebody in it steering it, but I’ve never gone paddle.
[0:30:10 – 0:30:12] Erik: I’ve never paddled with a canoe tied to it.
[0:30:12 – 0:30:14] Adam: You ever jumpstart a canoe with another canoe, Eric?
[0:30:14 – 0:30:15] Erik: Yeah, that’s what it is.
[0:30:15 – 0:30:17] Adam: Next up on the show is our good friend Rick.
[0:30:19 – 0:30:20] Adam: Welcome to Tumble Home.
[0:30:20 – 0:30:28] Adam: Two years ago on a loop, mudro, horse, crooked, foretown, we had wind on crooked that had me looking to shore to see if we were going forward or backward.
[0:30:29 – 0:30:37] Adam: Halfway down Friday Bay, we had a conclave last of our two canoe party because one thought we were in the wrong bay.
[0:30:37 – 0:30:38] Adam: Halfway.
[0:30:39 – 0:30:43] Adam: After bouncing the waves and knowing it was correct, I forced us to correctly push on.
[0:30:44 – 0:30:50] Adam: Can’t imagine if we’d reversed course and paddled two hours back out only to find out we were in the right place.
[0:30:51 – 0:30:59] Adam: Finally, last morning, heading out, came out of the four-town bay from Boot and thought there was hay growing at the south end of the lake.
[0:31:01 – 0:31:26] Adam: turned out to be white caps is our final big push was straight into the wind ready to do it again way to go rick what is that uh hey you have to be wearing like overalls or something just be like what the heck’s going on over there hey growing sam handle looks like hey growing over there down south no no boy that’s him’s white caps
[0:31:26 – 0:31:28] Adam: I’ve never heard wind described like that before.
[0:31:29 – 0:31:29] Adam: It was amazing.
[0:31:29 – 0:31:32] Erik: You can tell when the whitecaps are bad when it looks like hay.
[0:31:34 – 0:31:38] Erik: Ethan, two years ago we had some strong winds on knife.
[0:31:40 – 0:31:40] Erik: Thanks, Ethan.
[0:31:41 – 0:31:41] Erik: No, sorry.
[0:31:42 – 0:31:44] Adam: True words were ne’er spoke.
[0:31:44 – 0:31:48] Erik: We had empty canoes as we were just fishing on a lay every day.
[0:31:49 – 0:31:52] Erik: The other tandem canoe had a much lighter person in the bow.
[0:31:54 – 0:31:58] Erik: They were getting blown around badly, and I could see daylight under the bow paddler.
[0:31:59 – 0:32:00] Erik: Whoa.
[0:32:02 – 0:32:05] Erik: We ducked behind an island, and I had them add rocks to the bow.
[0:32:06 – 0:32:10] Erik: Made all the difference in the world, and both canoes got back to camp safely.
[0:32:10 – 0:32:11] Erik: I have done that.
[0:32:11 – 0:32:12] Adam: I’ve put the rocks in the bow.
[0:32:12 – 0:32:16] Erik: Yeah, yeah, that definitely helps, especially when there’s no gear in canoes.
[0:32:17 – 0:32:18] Erik: Get those rocks in the canoe.
[0:32:18 – 0:32:19] Erik: Get them in there.
[0:32:19 – 0:32:19] Erik: Pack them in.
[0:32:19 – 0:32:23] Adam: I don’t know where you’re going to find any rocks, but you just got to find some and get them in the canoe.
[0:32:25 – 0:32:26] Adam: One thing they say about the Boundary Waters.
[0:32:26 – 0:32:27] Adam: Not enough rocks.
[0:32:27 – 0:32:28] Adam: Not enough rocks.
[0:32:29 – 0:32:30] Adam: I’m going to have a sip to that.
[0:32:31 – 0:32:32] Adam: Life is rough.
[0:32:33 – 0:32:34] Adam: There’s not enough rocks.
[0:32:35 – 0:32:37] Adam: That’s what they say at Black Dog Brewing Company.
[0:32:44 – 0:32:45] Adam: That’s a tasty beer.
[0:32:46 – 0:32:48] Adam: Next up on Tumble Home is John.
[0:32:49 – 0:32:54] Adam: June of 2013, I was on a day paddle to Horse Portage and back from Moose Lake.
[0:32:55 – 0:33:02] Adam: On the way back, we turned south at U.S. Point on Basswood and found ourselves fighting three-foot rollers and a monster headwind.
[0:33:03 – 0:33:07] Adam: I stand about 5’9″, and my boots weigh 170-ish then.
[0:33:08 – 0:33:13] Adam: I was in the bow in an aluminum craft with a 6’5″, 300-pound rugby player in the stern.
[0:33:14 – 0:33:15] Adam: We’ve got to pause the story right here.
[0:33:15 – 0:33:19] Adam: That’s two weeks in a row we’ve had somebody described as a rugby paddler.
[0:33:20 – 0:33:29] Erik: Yeah, but even going farther back than that, I do also love the fact that you add an extra Illumina Craft.
[0:33:29 – 0:33:32] Erik: Anytime you read Illumicraft, you always add Illumina Craft.
[0:33:33 – 0:33:33] Adam: Do I?
[0:33:33 – 0:33:34] Adam: Yes.
[0:33:34 – 0:33:37] Adam: Oh, it is just Illumicraft.
[0:33:37 – 0:33:39] Erik: Yeah, you always say Illuminacraft.
[0:33:39 – 0:33:42] Adam: Well, I told you about that dialect quiz.
[0:33:42 – 0:33:44] Adam: Yeah, well, I’m from eastern Wisconsin.
[0:33:44 – 0:33:45] Adam: That’s how you say it there.
[0:33:45 – 0:33:46] Adam: Illuminacraft.
[0:33:46 – 0:33:47] Adam: All right, unpause.
[0:33:47 – 0:33:55] Adam: Waves were so big that there were times I’d be so high above the waterline of my, the bow, my paddle strokes would miss entirely.
[0:33:55 – 0:33:56] SPEAKER_00: Yeah.
[0:33:56 – 0:34:03] Adam: As water would come into the boat, it would immediately go to the stern where the weight was so the bow would ride higher and higher with every stroke.
[0:34:04 – 0:34:07] Adam: Had to stop at each of the islands in the channel to empty the boat of water.
[0:34:08 – 0:34:11] Adam: We had no choice but to keep going without an overnight permit.
[0:34:11 – 0:34:16] Adam: Took us nine hours to get from U.S. Point to N. Tier.
[0:34:16 – 0:34:16] Adam: What’s that?
[0:34:16 – 0:34:18] Adam: I think it’s probably Northern Tier.
[0:34:19 – 0:34:21] Adam: Yeah, Northern Tier on Moose through the wind portages.
[0:34:23 – 0:34:25] Adam: One of my favorite days ever out there.
[0:34:25 – 0:34:26] Adam: What a wonderful way to end that story.
[0:34:26 – 0:34:27] Adam: Yeah.
[0:34:27 – 0:34:27] Adam: Thank you.
[0:34:29 – 0:34:30] Erik: That’s usually how it goes.
[0:34:31 – 0:34:33] Erik: We’ve talked about that at length in the past.
[0:34:33 – 0:34:36] Erik: The most memorable days are the most challenging.
[0:34:37 – 0:34:40] Adam: Plus you went through the wind portages even better.
[0:34:43 – 0:34:43] Erik: Tyler.
[0:34:45 – 0:34:48] Erik: I think I’m glad I don’t have any stories worth posting on here.
[0:34:49 – 0:34:54] Erik: I have had bad wind, but nothing like what some people have had, I’m sure, in the B-Dub.
[0:34:56 – 0:35:05] Erik: Well, let’s almost question as to whether or not a response was necessary.
[0:35:06 – 0:35:06] SPEAKER_00: Sorry.
[0:35:07 – 0:35:08] SPEAKER_00: Thanks, Tyler.
[0:35:08 – 0:35:10] SPEAKER_00: Every response is necessary.
[0:35:10 – 0:35:10] SPEAKER_00: All right.
[0:35:13 – 0:35:15] Adam: Next up on the show is Matthew.
[0:35:16 – 0:35:16] Adam: One thumbs up.
[0:35:17 – 0:35:18] Adam: Hold on a second.
[0:35:18 – 0:35:20] Adam: That doesn’t, I mean, we’ll see.
[0:35:21 – 0:35:26] Adam: Oddly enough, in over a dozen trips to the Boundary Waters, I’ve never really felt in danger from the wind.
[0:35:27 – 0:35:28] Adam: Just lucky, I guess.
[0:35:28 – 0:35:36] Adam: There was one day it was so windy that my hammock was swaying side to side so much it was hard to take a nap, but that probably doesn’t count as dangerous.
[0:35:36 – 0:35:41] Adam: And some days we may have been windbound, but I’ve learned to just embrace the suck.
[0:35:41 – 0:35:43] Adam: Spend a day in camp and read a book.
[0:35:43 – 0:35:45] Adam: Try and find a calm spot to do a little fishing.
[0:35:46 – 0:35:47] Adam: Just be glad I’m not at work.
[0:35:48 – 0:35:49] SPEAKER_00: Yeah, yeah.
[0:35:49 – 0:35:49] Erik: Yeah, for sure.
[0:35:49 – 0:35:54] Erik: I love the idea that the hardest day you had out there was one where you weren’t able to nap in a hammock.
[0:35:54 – 0:35:55] Adam: Yeah, my nap was disturbing.
[0:35:56 – 0:35:57] Adam: That’s great.
[0:35:57 – 0:35:58] Adam: Unbelievable.
[0:35:58 – 0:35:59] Adam: I almost cursed.
[0:35:59 – 0:36:01] Adam: I was a little heated.
[0:36:01 – 0:36:05] Erik: Frowny McFrownface, I’m sure, probably was on his list of things on that trip.
[0:36:05 – 0:36:12] Erik: I wasn’t able to nap one afternoon because my hammock was blowing sideways.
[0:36:12 – 0:36:13] Erik: Just twisting his hat in his hand.
[0:36:14 – 0:36:15] Adam: Do some doodling, Matthew.
[0:36:15 – 0:36:16] Adam: That’s my suggestion.
[0:36:17 – 0:36:18] Adam: Just get up and do a doodle.
[0:36:19 – 0:36:19] Adam: Tony.
[0:36:19 – 0:36:19] Adam: Lol.
[0:36:21 – 0:36:27] Erik: I just experienced crazy tailwinds on Gunflint during the border route that I did last week.
[0:36:28 – 0:36:35] Erik: I was riding the troughs of waves, and the bow was almost plowing down into the wave in front of me.
[0:36:36 – 0:36:40] Erik: I looked down at my GPS at one point, and it said I was doing 10 miles per hour.
[0:36:41 – 0:36:43] Erik: Yay, yay, yay.
[0:36:43 – 0:36:47] Erik: I was an hour of white-knuckle paddling to get across the lake.
[0:36:48 – 0:36:49] Erik: 10 miles per hour…
[0:36:50 – 0:37:13] Adam: yeah it’s a pretty good clip that’s that’s schooner that’s schooner stuff tony yeah that’s uh i don’t know there’s a i wish i knew right at the top of my head that i feel like that’s uh when you get the bone in your teeth is that what they call it that’s a sailing term oh i i don’t have any sailing terminology i won’t even try an imposter
[0:37:13 – 0:37:14] Erik: Yeah, I think it’s something about…
[0:37:14 – 0:37:15] Adam: The old bone in the teeth.
[0:37:16 – 0:37:18] Erik: Yeah, we’ll look it up later and we’ll get back to you.
[0:37:18 – 0:37:20] Erik: Eric, aren’t teeth bones?
[0:37:21 – 0:37:23] Erik: No, teeth are not bones.
[0:37:26 – 0:37:27] Adam: Next up on Tumble Home…
[0:37:28 – 0:37:31] Adam: John, we got a picture and a message from John.
[0:37:31 – 0:37:33] Adam: Best experience with wind.
[0:37:33 – 0:37:36] Adam: Day on a six-night trip.
[0:37:36 – 0:37:40] Adam: Takumuch to pick a point on Snow Bay with a significant tailwind.
[0:37:41 – 0:37:45] Adam: Other boat rigged up a sail with his sleeping pad and a fishing rod.
[0:37:45 – 0:37:46] Adam: We have a picture.
[0:37:46 – 0:37:46] Adam: We do have evidence.
[0:37:48 – 0:37:48] Erik: Yeah.
[0:37:49 – 0:37:49] Erik: I don’t know.
[0:37:50 – 0:37:51] Erik: A piece of cardboard.
[0:37:51 – 0:37:52] Erik: Set the jib.
[0:37:53 – 0:37:54] Erik: Set up straight up and down.
[0:37:54 – 0:38:01] Erik: I don’t really know how much wind you’re gathering with a… You can’t see your paddle mate either.
[0:38:01 – 0:38:02] Erik: Just a sleeping pad.
[0:38:02 – 0:38:04] Adam: Isn’t that a kayak paddle too?
[0:38:04 – 0:38:04] Adam: It is.
[0:38:05 – 0:38:07] Adam: Kayak paddle plus a sleeping pad.
[0:38:08 – 0:38:10] Adam: I don’t know if that’s legal, but I’ll allow it.
[0:38:10 – 0:38:11] Adam: I think it’s legal.
[0:38:12 – 0:38:12] Adam: I’ll allow it.
[0:38:13 – 0:38:14] Erik: We’re allowing it.
[0:38:17 – 0:38:44] Adam: on the picture thank you yeah there was a reply oh wow oh rafting this is the first mention of rafting up yeah the injury says the uh first brule trip that wind and rainstorm i don’t necessarily remember i don’t remember that that was when uh arrow was a pup i don’t remember anything about that it was fine where we were on brule localized wind yeah
[0:38:47 – 0:38:47] Erik: Do you want to read Bob?
[0:38:49 – 0:38:50] Erik: Or should I read Bob?
[0:38:50 – 0:38:53] Adam: No, that was… Yandere is always short.
[0:38:53 – 0:38:56] Adam: You can do Bob, and then I’ll take the next short one and the next one.
[0:38:57 – 0:38:58] Erik: All right.
[0:38:58 – 0:39:02] Erik: Bob, this pic looks like my day on Saginaw.
[0:39:03 – 0:39:09] Erik: Reminder, this pic is of somebody surfing a 40-meter wave.
[0:39:09 – 0:39:10] Adam: Is that the world record that…
[0:39:13 – 0:39:18] Adam: There’s some woman in like Peru or something that surfed a record wave.
[0:39:18 – 0:39:19] Adam: Did you see this?
[0:39:19 – 0:39:20] Adam: Is that the picture?
[0:39:20 – 0:39:21] Erik: Did you hear about this?
[0:39:21 – 0:39:22] Erik: No, I don’t think that was the same picture.
[0:39:22 – 0:39:23] Erik: Current events.
[0:39:23 – 0:39:30] Erik: No, I think it was just a random picture that looked like the most intense one that I could attach to a question about wind.
[0:39:33 – 0:39:37] Erik: Had my worst wind white knuckle experience ever this summer.
[0:39:37 – 0:39:46] Erik: We got caught with 25 mile an hour winds slash gusts and waves that felt as high as the Empire State Building.
[0:39:46 – 0:39:51] Erik: At one point, I looked up and my buddy in the bow was elevated at a 45 degree angle.
[0:39:52 – 0:39:54] Adam: This is like some perfect storm stuff.
[0:39:55 – 0:39:56] Erik: You paddling with Clooney?
[0:39:56 – 0:39:57] Erik: Out there with Clooney, Bob?
[0:39:58 – 0:39:58] Erik: A few feet.
[0:39:59 – 0:40:05] Erik: In hindsight, it was extremely stupid to press on, even if we survived without incident.
[0:40:05 – 0:40:06] Erik: And you didn’t even catch any tuna.
[0:40:07 – 0:40:09] Erik: Yeah, and there was a response which I would echo.
[0:40:10 – 0:40:12] Erik: Saginaw has a reputation.
[0:40:12 – 0:40:15] Erik: That lake is also where I had my worst experience with winds.
[0:40:15 – 0:40:19] Erik: I think many people have had horrible days out on Sag.
[0:40:20 – 0:40:21] Erik: Many of which…
[0:40:23 – 0:40:24] Erik: No longer can tell about it.
[0:40:26 – 0:40:27] Erik: Let us never speak of it again.
[0:40:29 – 0:40:34] Adam: Next up on the show, friend of the show, and friend to all.
[0:40:34 – 0:40:35] Adam: It’s good.
[0:40:36 – 0:40:37] Adam: Good, sweet Paige.
[0:40:37 – 0:40:38] Adam: Hello, Paige.
[0:40:38 – 0:40:38] Adam: Welcome back.
[0:40:40 – 0:40:43] Adam: This is just a lake and some ellipsis.
[0:40:45 – 0:40:48] Adam: Mysterious Kasakakwag Lake.
[0:40:50 – 0:40:51] Adam: Yep.
[0:40:51 – 0:40:52] Adam: We shall never forget, Paige.
[0:40:54 – 0:40:56] Adam: Anybody that’s ever listened knows.
[0:40:56 – 0:40:57] Adam: They know the story, yeah.
[0:40:57 – 0:40:58] Adam: We’ll never forget.
[0:40:58 – 0:41:00] Adam: William is up next on the show.
[0:41:02 – 0:41:05] Adam: Just got back from my windiest PWCA trip ever.
[0:41:06 – 0:41:08] Adam: Windbound on Basswood at the beginning of September.
[0:41:09 – 0:41:15] Adam: Three and a half days stuck in camp watching whitecaps and dodging a pine tree that fell and landed three feet from a hammock.
[0:41:17 – 0:41:21] Adam: Second day, not even one motorboat went by compared to last summer.
[0:41:21 – 0:41:26] Adam: On a 32-day solo, I paddled into the wind with a total of about five hours.
[0:41:27 – 0:41:29] Adam: This trip was a real character builder.
[0:41:32 – 0:41:32] Erik: Yikes, yeah.
[0:41:32 – 0:41:33] Adam: I mean, the wind’s scary.
[0:41:33 – 0:41:37] Adam: The big tree coming down, that really got me clenching the butt.
[0:41:38 – 0:41:40] Adam: Bring a book as a solo paddler.
[0:41:40 – 0:41:41] Adam: Heart supplies, yeah.
[0:41:42 – 0:41:43] Adam: Everybody should take up doodling.
[0:41:43 – 0:41:43] Adam: Come on, guys.
[0:41:45 – 0:41:54] Erik: I’m a couple of weeks away from plunging into the woods on a solo trip for days, the length of which remains to be seen.
[0:41:54 – 0:41:59] Adam: I want to see Davis Lake through the eye of your beholder.
[0:42:00 – 0:42:00] Erik: I may never come back.
[0:42:02 – 0:42:03] Adam: He’s still out there, some say.
[0:42:04 – 0:42:05] Erik: No, not yet.
[0:42:06 – 0:42:10] Erik: I’ll leave you with the mic, and you can say that if I’m not back by the end of the month.
[0:42:13 – 0:42:14] Erik: I wish I might not be.
[0:42:14 – 0:42:18] Erik: And we avoided a bad wind story.
[0:42:19 – 0:42:28] Erik: I don’t remember the lake, but we just got paddling with a group of inexperienced high school guys when our guide suddenly says we need to get to shore.
[0:42:30 – 0:42:31] Erik: All right.
[0:42:32 – 0:42:37] Erik: We saw a yellow haze at the end, at the other end of the lake.
[0:42:38 – 0:42:41] Erik: Turned out to be pollen blowing out of the trees.
[0:42:41 – 0:42:42] Adam: It wasn’t hay.
[0:42:44 – 0:42:44] Adam: It wasn’t hay.
[0:42:46 – 0:42:49] Erik: That wind made its way across the lake just as we got to shore.
[0:42:50 – 0:42:57] Erik: It made waves that if we hadn’t gotten off the water, it would have tipped multiple boats probably.
[0:42:58 – 0:43:03] Erik: We waited out the front, and an hour later, we had some of the nicest weather of the trip.
[0:43:03 – 0:43:05] Adam: So is a pollen indicator?
[0:43:05 – 0:43:09] Erik: Yeah, look out for the pollen blowing out of the leaves and trees.
[0:43:09 – 0:43:10] Adam: Mindful of the pollen.
[0:43:12 – 0:43:18] Adam: Hold on, I can do better than that.
[0:43:18 – 0:43:19] Adam: The pollen.
[0:43:20 – 0:43:21] Erik: Look out for that pollen.
[0:43:21 – 0:43:21] Erik: The hell?
[0:43:24 – 0:43:29] Erik: Corey says that I know that it definitely makes for horrible fishing weather.
[0:43:30 – 0:43:30] Adam: Yeah.
[0:43:32 – 0:43:33] Adam: Stay on the windy side.
[0:43:33 – 0:43:34] Adam: That’s what Grandpa always said.
[0:43:34 – 0:43:36] Adam: Stay on the windy side of life.
[0:43:36 – 0:43:39] Erik: Stay on the windy side of everything.
[0:43:39 – 0:43:39] Adam: Yeah.
[0:43:39 – 0:43:43] Adam: For fishing, for loving, and for living.
[0:43:44 – 0:43:46] Erik: I don’t know about loving.
[0:43:46 – 0:43:46] Erik: Oh, yeah.
[0:43:46 – 0:43:47] Erik: All right.
[0:43:49 – 0:43:53] Erik: Well, we got a couple of correspondences to get to here before we get out.
[0:43:55 – 0:43:57] Erik: Because if you can’t tell, I’m tired.
[0:44:02 – 0:44:04] Erik: Correspondence.
[0:44:05 – 0:44:09] Erik: Adam’s carrying the shoulders on his back.
[0:44:10 – 0:44:11] Adam: I’m feeling strong.
[0:44:11 – 0:44:12] Adam: Read Graham.
[0:44:12 – 0:44:13] Adam: I’m feeling real strong.
[0:44:13 – 0:44:15] Adam: Graham’s up on the show with some correspondence.
[0:44:16 – 0:44:18] Adam: Thank you for writing the old way.
[0:44:21 – 0:44:28] Adam: This reminds me of that scene in Halloween Town 3, Return to Halloween Town High, Eric.
[0:44:28 – 0:44:28] Adam: No.
[0:44:28 – 0:44:29] Adam: Yeah.
[0:44:29 – 0:44:31] Adam: You coming over to watch it later?
[0:44:31 – 0:44:34] Adam: No.
[0:44:34 – 0:44:34] Adam: Howdy.
[0:44:35 – 0:44:45] Adam: When I think of wind and canoe country, two physically brutal experiences come to mind, both of them paddling north on a large lake with a big steady wind blowing almost straight against me.
[0:44:46 – 0:44:50] Adam: The first was a 13-year-old Ouija camper and Agnes on the queue.
[0:44:51 – 0:44:55] Adam: I was paddling the cedar boat with another kid and I don’t think we moved for about an hour.
[0:44:56 – 0:45:00] Adam: Wasn’t white-cappy enough to pull off, but it was certainly demoralizing.
[0:45:01 – 0:45:08] Adam: Once we got off Agnes Harbor, we pretty much had oil slick calm for the rest of our 10-day trip of a fellow group.
[0:45:08 – 0:45:09] Adam: What?
[0:45:09 – 0:45:09] Adam: Hold on.
[0:45:09 – 0:45:10] Adam: Now there’s a medevac?
[0:45:10 – 0:45:12] Adam: What is this style guide here, Eric?
[0:45:12 – 0:45:13] Adam: Have you seen this?
[0:45:14 – 0:45:17] Adam: Anyways, we’re just going to go back a few words.
[0:45:17 – 0:45:23] Adam: We had oil slick on for the rest of our 10-day trip slash medevac of a fellow group member’s sprained ankle.
[0:45:24 – 0:45:25] Adam: Okay, I think I see what’s going on here.
[0:45:25 – 0:45:27] Adam: That’s quite the juxtaposition.
[0:45:28 – 0:45:29] Adam: Yeah, that’s a real 180.
[0:45:30 – 0:45:36] Adam: I remember the wind more than I remember carrying his extra crap across Canadian portages, though.
[0:45:37 – 0:45:49] Adam: The other was a couple weeks ago emerging from the Little Indian Sioux into Loon and getting blasted for an hour plus all the way through Loon and Little Loon until we got to the portage to Slim, which is no reward itself.
[0:45:49 – 0:45:53] Adam: On a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being windbound, I’d say it was a steady 8.
[0:45:54 – 0:45:55] Adam: Not comfortable.
[0:45:55 – 0:46:02] Adam: We stuck to the southern shore, fighting to stay off the rocks until it got narrow enough on the eastern arm to make a run for the north side of the lake.
[0:46:03 – 0:46:05] Adam: Twas hairy, but looking back I’d do it again.
[0:46:06 – 0:46:11] Adam: Like the trip mentioned above, the rest of our trip was super calm, cold, and quiet.
[0:46:11 – 0:46:27] Adam: I’m sure there are going to be terrifying windstorm stories from a lot of other people, and while I’ve definitely spent some time pulled over and sitting on my life jacket and spent a number of five days of steady rain trips, I’m lucky to have never been in any truly scary wind situations.
[0:46:28 – 0:46:28] Adam: G out.
[0:46:30 – 0:46:31] Adam: Thanks for the email.
[0:46:31 – 0:46:33] Adam: That was some lovely correspondence.
[0:46:36 – 0:46:41] Adam: I wasn’t really following your poetry there, and I’m sorry I butchered that sentence, but I think we smoothed it out.
[0:46:42 – 0:46:50] Erik: Yeah, I think it’s kind of a harsh juxtaposition to go from slick calm slash medivac.
[0:46:51 – 0:46:54] Adam: That’s some jazz right there, and I wasn’t ready for the tempo change.
[0:46:54 – 0:46:54] Adam: At all.
[0:46:55 – 0:46:58] Adam: Changed up the jazz tempo.
[0:46:58 – 0:46:58] Adam: We do our best.
[0:46:59 – 0:46:59] Adam: We’re reading these.
[0:46:59 – 0:47:04] Adam: I don’t know if people know this, but we haven’t read these ahead of time.
[0:47:04 – 0:47:07] Adam: We are going into it fresh, so we aren’t spoiled either.
[0:47:07 – 0:47:10] Adam: This is the magic and work.
[0:47:10 – 0:47:12] Adam: So sometimes it doesn’t work great, but usually it does.
[0:47:13 – 0:47:15] Adam: Yeah, the magic sometimes doesn’t work.
[0:47:15 – 0:47:16] Adam: That’s jazz, baby.
[0:47:16 – 0:47:18] Adam: Sometimes it doesn’t work.
[0:47:18 – 0:47:19] Erik: Are we jazz?
[0:47:20 – 0:47:20] Erik: No.
[0:47:20 – 0:47:21] Erik: Are we the blues?
[0:47:21 – 0:47:22] Erik: No.
[0:47:22 – 0:47:23] Erik: We’re none of those things.
[0:47:24 – 0:47:25] Adam: We’re chiptunes, Eric.
[0:47:25 – 0:47:26] Adam: Don’t worry.
[0:47:27 – 0:47:28] Adam: This is the long one.
[0:47:28 – 0:47:29] Adam: It’s kind of long.
[0:47:29 – 0:47:32] Adam: You need to take a break and step outside and maybe play some chiptunes and then come back?
[0:47:33 – 0:47:34] Erik: No, I think we can get through this.
[0:47:35 – 0:47:36] Erik: There’s not all of this that needs to be read.
[0:47:37 – 0:47:39] Erik: I did do a little bit of a scan on this one.
[0:47:39 – 0:47:40] Erik: Okay.
[0:47:40 – 0:47:44] Erik: This one’s from Eric, and it was just a little bit to follow up on, if you do recall.
[0:47:44 – 0:47:52] Erik: Eric with a C. From a couple of weeks ago, we did hear from Andy on his elocutions regarding the 99 blowdown.
[0:47:53 – 0:47:57] Erik: That was a heck of a… That was a harrowing 15 minutes.
[0:47:58 – 0:48:00] Erik: And this one’s from Eric, who says…
[0:48:02 – 0:48:10] Erik: After hearing about Andy’s recollection of the blowdown, he checked out the YouTube video and it was wild.
[0:48:11 – 0:48:13] Erik: Couldn’t imagine being there in person.
[0:48:14 – 0:48:24] Erik: He remembers seeing video footage of the storm, damage on TV after it hit, but of course nothing showed the Clearwater area, so it was quite worrying what might have happened to our cabin.
[0:48:25 – 0:48:32] Erik: This is again, not again, but if you didn’t know, this person has a cabin in the Clearwater area.
[0:48:32 – 0:48:38] Erik: And his folks and a friend were headed up there later that week to inspect the damage.
[0:48:39 – 0:48:45] Erik: I remember there was a roadblock with a sheriff deputy on the Gunflint Trail at about the George Washington Pines.
[0:48:46 – 0:48:51] Erik: They wanted to verify we were property owners before letting us continue.
[0:48:51 – 0:48:54] Erik: When we reached Clearwater Road, the destruction was incredible.
[0:48:55 – 0:48:57] Erik: Before the storm, Clearwater Road between Golden Eagle Lodge…
[0:48:59 – 0:49:08] Erik: Before the storm, Clearwater Road between Clearwater Lodge and the Big Hill before West Bearskin was a shady stretch surrounded by a thick, mature aspen forest.
[0:49:09 – 0:49:13] Erik: It’s hard to put into words just how disconcerting it was driving through there after the storm.
[0:49:13 – 0:49:15] Erik: The forest was simply flattened.
[0:49:16 – 0:49:17] Erik: It’s crazy to think about that now.
[0:49:17 – 0:49:24] Erik: This is me talking because the section he’s describing is essentially still almost looking like
[0:49:27 – 0:49:29] Erik: Like a tree farm.
[0:49:29 – 0:49:35] Erik: It’s over 20 years old and still looks like young… Like the trees were planted to be farmed.
[0:49:37 – 0:49:42] Erik: And this section was like a big, shady, thick, mature aspen forest.
[0:49:43 – 0:49:47] Erik: The forest was simply flattened except for a few splintered tree trunks.
[0:49:47 – 0:49:50] Erik: And there was suddenly a view across the hills towards…
[0:49:51 – 0:49:52] Erik: Hungryjack-like.
[0:49:52 – 0:49:57] Erik: Fortunately, only one tree landed on our cabin, a big birch, and it was a glancing blow.
[0:49:58 – 0:49:58] Erik: We were lucky.
[0:49:59 – 0:50:11] Erik: A mature pine came down through the little guest house on the hill near the intersection of South Clearwater Road and Bostrom Way, slicing it like a loaf of bread.
[0:50:13 – 0:50:13] Erik: That’s a good description.
[0:50:14 – 0:50:16] Erik: You know, is there more?
[0:50:16 – 0:50:18] Erik: One more little section.
[0:50:18 – 0:50:26] Erik: A couple of days later, my friend Matt and I headed down Clearwater to walk the Mountain Lake Portage to see if there was storm damage there.
[0:50:27 – 0:50:29] Erik: Amazingly, the portage had already been cleared.
[0:50:30 – 0:50:31] Erik: Although debris was everywhere.
[0:50:32 – 0:50:37] Erik: Once we turned onto the BRT, border rut trail, and headed west, though, it was another story.
[0:50:37 – 0:50:48] Erik: We quickly lost the trail under fallen trees and traversed the small valley west of the portage, walking from tree trunk to tree trunk several feet off the ground.
[0:50:48 – 0:50:53] Erik: We tried to hike to the mountain lake overlook, but eventually gave up because of the numerous downed trees.
[0:50:54 – 0:50:57] Erik: Not an experience soon forgotten.
[0:50:59 – 0:50:59] SPEAKER_00: Yeah.
[0:50:59 – 0:50:59] SPEAKER_00: Yeah.
[0:51:02 – 0:51:08] Erik: The blowdown of 99, not enough responses from that.
[0:51:08 – 0:51:12] Erik: I’m sure there’s people out there that have experiences with it.
[0:51:12 – 0:51:19] Erik: It’s great to have had the few that we did receive, but when it comes to wind, I don’t know if there’s much that tops that.
[0:51:21 – 0:51:28] Erik: Even if you were just one that drove up afterwards, the amount of work that went into cleaning up,
[0:51:29 – 0:51:36] Erik: A couple of blowdowns slash storms Clearwater has experienced in my time in the last 10 years.
[0:51:38 – 0:51:39] Erik: Just a tree coming down.
[0:51:39 – 0:51:40] Erik: It’s kind of a pain.
[0:51:41 – 0:51:41] Adam: Yeah.
[0:51:41 – 0:51:49] Adam: I mean, just in 01 when I worked there, there was like one windstorm that knocked a couple of big ones down and like power was out for a good long while.
[0:51:49 – 0:51:49] Erik: Yeah.
[0:51:50 – 0:51:52] Adam: And there’s some significant damage just from that.
[0:51:52 – 0:51:53] Adam: And that was like considered.
[0:51:53 – 0:51:59] Adam: And I was, you know, soon just a year or two, two years after this big storm.
[0:51:59 – 0:52:01] Adam: And that was just like, oh, this is nothing.
[0:52:01 – 0:52:02] Adam: Yeah.
[0:52:02 – 0:52:03] Adam: Nothing to see here.
[0:52:03 – 0:52:03] Adam: Sure.
[0:52:03 – 0:52:05] Adam: Compared to me, it was like, this is nuts.
[0:52:06 – 0:52:07] Adam: But I hadn’t been there for ninety nine.
[0:52:09 – 0:52:14] Adam: Can you imagine just like a Revenant-style movie, just the first scene of a movie?
[0:52:14 – 0:52:21] Adam: Somebody camping and like a real CGI-ed up, Twister-style Bill Paxton, like 99 Windstorm.
[0:52:21 – 0:52:22] Erik: I’ve never seen The Revenant.
[0:52:24 – 0:52:25] Adam: There’s a bear movie for you.
[0:52:26 – 0:52:28] Adam: It’s not Bart, is it?
[0:52:28 – 0:52:30] Adam: No, no, it’s not Bart.
[0:52:30 – 0:52:31] Adam: Is it a real bear movie?
[0:52:33 – 0:52:33] Adam: Who’s to say?
[0:52:34 – 0:52:34] SPEAKER_00: No.
[0:52:35 – 0:52:37] Erik: I mean, the credits probably would say.
[0:52:37 – 0:52:37] Adam: Feels real.
[0:52:37 – 0:52:38] SPEAKER_00: Feels real.
[0:52:38 – 0:52:39] Erik: Feels real.
[0:52:39 – 0:52:40] Erik: That’s all that counts.
[0:52:40 – 0:52:41] Erik: If it feels real.
[0:52:41 – 0:52:43] Adam: The magic right here in your heart, Eric.
[0:52:45 – 0:52:47] Adam: Yeah, I don’t know.
[0:52:47 – 0:52:51] Adam: Just the power you feel watching Twister.
[0:52:51 – 0:53:00] Adam: To see the derecho kind of event done up on the big screen like that would really touch something in you.
[0:53:01 – 0:53:03] Adam: It would get the bonier jib or whatever you said earlier.
[0:53:04 – 0:53:06] Adam: Ye olde sailor.
[0:53:06 – 0:53:08] Adam: Eric, don’t harm the seabirds.
[0:53:08 – 0:53:13] Erik: Yeah, what was I saying before about the… Tooth of your bone.
[0:53:13 – 0:53:15] Erik: That’s a sailor term.
[0:53:22 – 0:53:36] Erik: With the, you know, Twister, I feel like anybody that’s been involved in an actual tornado, do you think they can relate to the movie Twister?
[0:53:37 – 0:53:44] Adam: I’ve never seen an actual Twister, but man, you watch Twister, even to this day, that movie stands the test of time.
[0:53:44 – 0:53:47] Adam: It makes you, you know, feel things you didn’t know you could feel.
[0:53:49 – 0:53:52] Erik: Yeah, so the term is a bone in her teeth.
[0:53:52 – 0:53:58] Erik: It’s a nautical term for a vessel with prominent white waves at her bow as she’s well underway.
[0:53:58 – 0:54:00] Erik: Hey, she’s bone in her teeth.
[0:54:00 – 0:54:02] Erik: She’s got a bone in her teeth.
[0:54:02 – 0:54:04] Adam: That’s how sailors sound.
[0:54:05 – 0:54:06] Adam: You’ve got to watch the lighthouse again.
[0:54:06 – 0:54:09] Adam: You’ve got to work on your lighthouse jib.
[0:54:11 – 0:54:13] Erik: Here’s a bone in your teeth, Eric.
[0:54:13 – 0:54:18] Erik: I need to talk through much more clenched teeth and hairs growing over the opening of my mouth.
[0:54:20 – 0:54:21] Adam: Oh, wicked.
[0:54:21 – 0:54:24] Adam: All right, give me some more correspondence.
[0:54:24 – 0:54:25] Adam: I’m jazzed up now.
[0:54:26 – 0:54:27] Adam: I got the bone in my teeth.
[0:54:27 – 0:54:30] Erik: Looking at this picture of Anthony Hopkins.
[0:54:30 – 0:54:31] Erik: There is much more correspondence.
[0:54:31 – 0:54:32] Erik: There’s not?
[0:54:32 – 0:54:34] Erik: Not unless you want to read this book.
[0:54:35 – 0:54:37] Adam: Just give me the first paragraph.
[0:54:37 – 0:54:38] Adam: You’ve read this one, right?
[0:54:38 – 0:54:38] Adam: I have.
[0:54:38 – 0:54:41] Adam: Somebody wrote us the entire novella here.
[0:54:42 – 0:54:44] Adam: Seriously, there’s a picture of a nice walleye at the end of it.
[0:54:47 – 0:54:53] Adam: You’ve got to give a shout-out to the big wall, and I’ll read the first couple paragraphs, and you can give us the synopsis.
[0:54:53 – 0:54:54] Adam: All right.
[0:54:54 – 0:54:55] Adam: We can’t read the whole thing.
[0:54:55 – 0:54:56] Adam: Yeah, just start.
[0:54:56 – 0:54:56] Adam: Go.
[0:54:56 – 0:54:58] Adam: I seriously can’t read that much.
[0:54:58 – 0:54:58] Erik: Oh, it is.
[0:54:59 – 0:54:59] Erik: I am not allowed.
[0:54:59 – 0:55:00] Erik: I never.
[0:55:00 – 0:55:01] Erik: Preamble to.
[0:55:03 – 0:55:04] Adam: This is from Mike.
[0:55:05 – 0:55:05] Adam: All right.
[0:55:05 – 0:55:08] Adam: Mike is in with a wind story from Alpine Lake, 2006.
[0:55:11 – 0:55:15] Adam: In the spring of 2006, we made our annual walleye fishing trip to Alpine Lake.
[0:55:15 – 0:55:17] Adam: I’ve been doing this since I was a kid.
[0:55:17 – 0:55:20] Adam: Long drive from our house outside of Miliwake.
[0:55:20 – 0:55:23] Erik: What does Miliwake mean?
[0:55:24 – 0:55:24] Erik: I can’t remember.
[0:55:24 – 0:55:26] Erik: It means lots of coconuts.
[0:55:26 – 0:55:27] Adam: The good land.
[0:55:28 – 0:55:30] Adam: Took some time off during high school.
[0:55:30 – 0:55:34] Adam: First trip I was 12, again at 13, and then went to SAG at age 14.
[0:55:34 – 0:55:36] Adam: Took a break until I was in grad school.
[0:55:37 – 0:55:40] Adam: At any rate, this trip was a bit different, though, as I had to paddle my own canoe.
[0:55:41 – 0:55:45] Adam: My younger brother could not go on this one while my dad and his friend…
[0:55:48 – 0:56:18] Adam: paddled the other sorry there was a bit of a preamble we rented aluminum canoes including three men they paddled in and took a regular alumina craft eric and uh two week trip to our favorite fishing spot and base camped at our fair our fairly regular site the trip started well but we soon got in to the wind and storms i’ll just do this last paragraph and we’re gonna have to leave people on the edge of their seats
[0:56:18 – 0:56:20] Erik: There’s a whole week’s worth of wind and storms.
[0:56:20 – 0:56:21] Adam: There’s 24 more stanzas.
[0:56:22 – 0:56:26] Adam: A few days later, I’m sorry, the first weird thing that happened was hail.
[0:56:27 – 0:56:29] Adam: I never had seen that in the BWCA.
[0:56:30 – 0:56:33] Adam: Sure, snow, wind, and storms, but no hail.
[0:56:33 – 0:56:37] Adam: That lasted about 20 minutes one evening, one of our first days on the trip.
[0:56:38 – 0:56:41] Adam: We thought, well, that is strange, but no big deal.
[0:56:43 – 0:57:03] Adam: oh that’s kind of one of those like it’s a writing prompt hmm how’s this one gonna end yeah i can’t possibly i’ll fill in the blanks on that one so what happened keep going i can’t there’s a little one paragraph starts the tent disappeared in the rain i’m not gonna should i just one more
[0:57:06 – 0:57:26] Adam: A few days later Out fishing with dad We were near a small island Fishing for smallmouth during the day Clear blue skies A great day as I remember It was windy But not enough to keep us off the water We just stayed near the shorelines Our fishing spot had the west side of Alpine Lake To our west And the small island to the east
[0:57:28 – 0:57:33] Adam: Out of nowhere, the wind whipped up, and I thought I saw a small water spout from near the shore.
[0:57:33 – 0:57:35] Adam: Sure enough, Dad saw the same.
[0:57:36 – 0:57:40] Adam: I attempted to get it on video, but Dad said, I’ll grab your life jacket.
[0:57:40 – 0:57:41] Adam: It’s coming right at us.
[0:57:42 – 0:57:43] Adam: That was not a very good Dad.
[0:57:43 – 0:57:44] Adam: Can I try that one again?
[0:57:44 – 0:57:45] Erik: Go for it.
[0:57:45 – 0:57:49] Adam: I attempted to get it on video, but Dad said, I’ll grab your life jacket.
[0:57:49 – 0:57:50] Adam: It’s coming right at us.
[0:57:51 – 0:57:56] Adam: At that point, I dropped the camera, grabbed my life jacket from behind my bow seat, threw that on, and grabbed the sides of the canoe.
[0:57:57 – 0:58:08] Adam: The water spout, which at this point probably was stirring up an area of the lake about 15 feet in diameter and pulling water up 20 to 30 feet, ran us right over, spinning the canoe from side to side.
[0:58:08 – 0:58:15] Adam: It lasted about 10 seconds, and we watched as the spout danced across the alpine to the east and then finally dissipated near the east shore.
[0:58:17 – 0:58:21] Adam: We both were shocked and thought, okay, that was really weird.
[0:58:22 – 0:58:26] Adam: Oh, Jesus.
[0:58:26 – 0:58:28] Adam: I got the goosey bumps, Eric.
[0:58:28 – 0:58:33] Erik: Yeah, we’ll read a paragraph from this story every week for the next seven weeks.
[0:58:36 – 0:58:37] Adam: Stay tuned.
[0:58:37 – 0:58:38] Adam: Mike and Dodd, episode 10.
[0:58:40 – 0:58:41] Erik: Mike and Dodd.
[0:58:42 – 0:58:44] Adam: The Hottest Spot of Alpine, episode 7.
[0:58:46 – 0:58:48] Erik: Yeah, a little mini episode series.
[0:58:48 – 0:58:49] Erik: Just Mike and Dodd.
[0:58:49 – 0:58:52] Adam: I cannot find some of the pictures from the aftermath of the storm.
[0:58:55 – 0:58:55] Adam: I miss you dearly.
[0:58:56 – 0:58:58] Erik: Send my love and respect, Daniel.
[0:58:59 – 0:59:06] Adam: I think I played like a Shoken Farewell from the Civil War documentary.
[0:59:07 – 0:59:07] Adam: Jay Unger.
[0:59:08 – 0:59:09] Adam: Is that right?
[0:59:09 – 0:59:10] Adam: I don’t think that’s right.
[0:59:11 – 0:59:11] Adam: Anyways.
[0:59:12 – 0:59:12] Adam: I don’t know.
[0:59:12 – 0:59:13] Erik: I don’t know anything about anything.
[0:59:14 – 0:59:15] Adam: Cue the strings music.
[0:59:15 – 0:59:16] Adam: That was intense.
[0:59:16 – 0:59:18] Erik: That was very intense.
[0:59:19 – 0:59:27] Erik: The only thing that I can speak of in terms of documentaries is the World War I documentary that I just watched the other day.
[0:59:28 – 0:59:31] Erik: The one where it takes all the old footage and converts it into new.
[0:59:32 – 0:59:34] Erik: Like, They Shall Not Be Forgotten.
[0:59:34 – 0:59:36] Adam: What the heck’s that called?
[0:59:36 – 0:59:36] Adam: I don’t know.
[0:59:37 – 0:59:38] Adam: I haven’t seen that one.
[0:59:38 – 0:59:40] Adam: You really haven’t seen Ken Burns’ Civil War?
[0:59:40 – 0:59:43] Erik: Yeah, I’ve seen the Civil War documentary by Ken Burns.
[0:59:43 – 0:59:44] Erik: It’s old news.
[0:59:44 – 0:59:45] Erik: It’s from 1996.
[0:59:45 – 0:59:49] Erik: I remember listening to that soundtrack on tape.
[0:59:49 – 0:59:51] Adam: There’s a lot of important lessons from 1860.
[0:59:51 – 0:59:53] Adam: Just think about that.
[0:59:53 – 1:00:04] Erik: Just think about how much more video documentation and documentaries and video transcriptions have improved since then.
[1:00:06 – 1:00:10] Adam: I really can’t leave the Shoken Farewell hanging like that
[1:00:11 – 1:00:12] Erik: Well, I don’t know.
[1:00:12 – 1:00:14] Erik: All I know is she’s got a bone in her teeth.
[1:00:18 – 1:00:19] Erik: My internet’s not even on.
[1:00:20 – 1:00:22] Adam: How have they done this whole show without internet?
[1:00:22 – 1:00:27] Erik: It’s They Shall Not Grow Old, which is highly recommended.
[1:00:28 – 1:00:29] Adam: Oh.
[1:00:29 – 1:00:45] Erik: Yeah, it takes World War I footage and converts it into like basically what you would assume was like at the very oldest, like 80s footage.
[1:00:46 – 1:00:51] Erik: And the way that it introduces it slowly over the course, you just have to watch it.
[1:00:51 – 1:00:52] Erik: It’s almost like a spoiler thing.
[1:00:52 – 1:00:53] Erik: I don’t want to spoil it.
[1:00:54 – 1:00:54] Adam: Don’t say anymore.
[1:00:54 – 1:00:55] Adam: Where did you watch it on?
[1:00:56 – 1:00:57] Erik: You read it?
[1:00:57 – 1:00:58] Erik: It’s on Hulu.
[1:01:02 – 1:01:03] Erik: All right, we’re over.
[1:01:03 – 1:01:04] Adam: Is your Wi-Fi not working?
[1:01:05 – 1:01:06] Erik: I don’t know.
[1:01:06 – 1:01:07] Erik: I’m cruising, baby.
[1:01:07 – 1:01:09] Erik: I’m cruising all over this Wi-Fi.
[1:01:09 – 1:01:10] Erik: What do you want me to do?
[1:01:10 – 1:01:11] Erik: You want me to search?
[1:01:11 – 1:01:14] Adam: Yeah, search for Ashokan Farewell.
[1:01:14 – 1:01:16] Erik: I don’t even know what that is.
[1:01:16 – 1:01:17] Erik: How do I even spell that?
[1:01:17 – 1:01:23] Adam: A-S-H-O-K-A-N. Farewell.
[1:01:24 – 1:01:25] Adam: The song?
[1:01:26 – 1:01:26] Adam: Yeah.
[1:01:28 – 1:01:30] Erik: This is riveting podcasting here.
[1:01:30 – 1:01:32] Adam: I just need the name of the composer.
[1:01:33 – 1:01:34] Adam: Well, we can listen to it, I guess.
[1:01:34 – 1:01:39] Adam: I don’t know why.
[1:01:39 – 1:01:41] Adam: What, do you got a new password on your Wi-Fi over here at K2?
[1:01:42 – 1:01:44] Erik: No, I’ve never reset it.
[1:01:44 – 1:01:45] Erik: I don’t even know what you’re talking about.
[1:01:45 – 1:01:49] Adam: This is it.
[1:01:49 – 1:01:50] Adam: What’s the name of the guy?
[1:01:51 – 1:01:53] Adam: That’s all I really wanted.
[1:01:53 – 1:01:54] Adam: I mean, I’m glad to hear it, but…
[1:01:55 – 1:01:56] Adam: Jay Unger?
[1:01:56 – 1:01:57] Adam: Jay Unger, I was right.
[1:01:57 – 1:01:58] Adam: Yeah, Jay Unger.
[1:01:58 – 1:01:58] Adam: I got it.
[1:01:59 – 1:01:59] Adam: I just wanted to make sure.
[1:02:00 – 1:02:02] Adam: It’s been a while since I listened to this beautiful piece of music.
[1:02:04 – 1:02:09] Adam: I think it was this while sitting around looking at the spiritual wind.
[1:02:16 – 1:02:17] Adam: Yep.
[1:02:18 – 1:02:20] Adam: And then in 2001, I’m working at Clearwater.
[1:02:20 – 1:02:24] Adam: I found a whole copy of the Civil War on VHS.
[1:02:25 – 1:02:28] Adam: I’m watching it in the staff room every night after work.
[1:02:28 – 1:02:34] Adam: And then no effing, no essen either.
[1:02:34 – 1:02:40] Adam: Around the campfire, like later that summer, this guy showed up with a fiddle and played Ashokan Farewell.
[1:02:41 – 1:02:45] Adam: It was one of those moments where you just think, huh, what are the chances of that?
[1:02:46 – 1:02:46] Adam: Hmm.
[1:02:47 – 1:02:47] Adam: I don’t know.
[1:02:48 – 1:02:49] Adam: Always been one of my favorite tunes ever since.
[1:02:51 – 1:02:51] Adam: Sad story, though.
[1:02:52 – 1:02:54] Adam: But it ended up being a happy story.
[1:02:56 – 1:02:58] Adam: Oh, you got one with the actual fiddle action here.
[1:02:58 – 1:02:59] Adam: I like that.
[1:02:59 – 1:03:05] Erik: Maybe we’ll finish the show with… All right.
[1:03:05 – 1:03:09] Adam: Are we going to get on out then to a little fiddle?
[1:03:10 – 1:03:10] Erik: Yeah, I’m done.
[1:03:12 – 1:03:13] Erik: Clearly I started done.
[1:03:15 – 1:03:15] Erik: Sorry.
[1:03:15 – 1:03:18] Erik: There’s got to be one of these every year.
[1:03:18 – 1:03:20] Adam: Oh, we’re fine.
[1:03:21 – 1:03:26] Adam: Episode 119 of Tumble Home has been sponsored by Black Dog Brewing Company.
[1:03:26 – 1:03:28] Adam: What was the name of the beer sponsors?
[1:03:28 – 1:03:29] Erik: I don’t know.
[1:03:29 – 1:03:31] Adam: Where’s the bag you ripped up?
[1:03:33 – 1:03:34] Adam: Thank you for the beer.
[1:03:34 – 1:03:35] Erik: Big Red One Liquors.
[1:03:36 – 1:03:37] Adam: What was the name of the person?
[1:03:40 – 1:03:41] Erik: Big red one liquors.
[1:03:41 – 1:03:43] Adam: I don’t know the note, Eric.
[1:03:44 – 1:03:44] Adam: Oh, yeah.
[1:03:45 – 1:03:46] Adam: It’s Jerry.
[1:03:47 – 1:03:48] Erik: Thanks, Jerry.
[1:03:48 – 1:03:48] Adam: Thanks, Jerry.
[1:03:50 – 1:03:51] Adam: This one’s for you.
[1:03:51 – 1:03:52] Erik: Probably from, like, early June.
[1:03:53 – 1:03:53] Adam: Well…
[1:03:55 – 1:03:57] Adam: That was in the early June of our lives.
[1:03:57 – 1:03:58] Adam: Now we’re into the mid-October.
[1:03:58 – 1:04:02] Adam: And remember, the rough grouse are eating the dogwood berries.
[1:04:03 – 1:04:06] Adam: And I can see the sun coming up across the sycamore trees.
[1:04:07 – 1:04:10] Adam: And remember, life is precious, friend.
[1:04:12 – 1:04:13] Adam: And every day is a miracle.
[1:04:13 – 1:04:16] Adam: For Tumble Home, my name has been Adam.
[1:04:16 – 1:04:21] Adam: I’m joined here by my sweetest pal, Eric, here in Studio K2.
[1:04:22 – 1:04:29] Adam: Eric, and forevermore, forevermore, may we go on into that beautiful valley.
[1:04:29 – 1:04:29] Adam: Good night.
[1:04:35 – 1:04:35] UNKNOWN: æ æ
[1:05:04 – 1:05:05] UNKNOWN: Thank you.

