Bear Grease - Ep. 371: Backwoods University - Life with Grizzlies
Episode Date: September 29, 2025Tom Parker has been guiding in the Bob Marshall Wilderness since the 1970s, and local legend within his community- known for his hunting knowledge, expertise in the backcountry, and all around affinit...y and understanding of bears. Through his decades spent in the wilderness living with and around grizzlies, Tom has developed a unique perspective on how grizzly bears fit into the modern landscape. Come with us as we hear Tom's story from the 70s, to present day and start to piece together this grizzly story. Connect with Lake Pickle and MeatEater Lake Pickle on Instagram MeatEater on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and YouTube Clips MeatEater Podcast Network on YouTubeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Backwoods University, a place where we focus on wildlife, wild places, and the people who dedicate their lives to conserving both.
Big shout out to Onyx Hunt for their support of this podcast.
I'm your host, Lake Pickle.
On this episode, we're going to start piecing together and understanding where grizzly bears fit into the modern landscape and get into some subjects of controversy, like their current placement on the endangered species list.
But we're going to start all of this off by hearing a conversation.
with one of the most interesting human beings I have ever met.
A hunting guide, a local legend, a man who has spent the majority of his life in the wilderness
living around them, and a man who has one of the most harrowing bear charge stories I have
ever heard.
Do you remember the first time you encountered a grizzly bear?
I sure do.
It wasn't a close-range encounter, but I was bear hunting, and it was here in the valley floor,
and it was not all that far from here.
And it was on the edge of a wetland meadow system.
And it was late in the day, early evening.
And I was watching some bears.
They'll graze on forbs and grasses
when they first come out of hibernation,
and that's what was going on there.
And the mosquitoes were just hatching,
which I can tell you on average,
the big hatches on the,
12th, 13th, 14th of May, historically here.
It's earlier now.
But I knew that from guiding, you know, hunters in the spring.
You had it pretty good until about the 12th of May.
And then it was like they opened the hangers and lit all these mosquito clouds.
And with all the wetlands in here, there was really,
unbelievable populations of mosquitoes.
And I'll never forget I was in a cloud of mosquitoes
and watching these black bears feeding was a number of them.
Actually, in this meadow system, it was quite big.
And I saw something move in the timber across the neck of the meadow where I was.
And I looked and I was, I looked and I was,
like, wow, it looked like the moon almost coming through the dark timber.
And it was the face and the rough on this big silver tip.
And it was silver-tipped, head to foot, but it really struck me how that face rough and head-ruff made that head so round appearing.
and you know how the moon is kind of an off-weight to silver.
That's exactly the color it was.
And I got to watch that, I watched that bear until it was dark.
It started to feed towards me.
And I thought, you know, I'm just going to, you know, head out.
How far was he?
You know, that bear was under 100 yards.
Okay.
Yeah.
So he, yeah.
So not like, yeah, because at first I didn't know if you're talking about, you know,
300, 300, 400 yards away, but he's, he's 100 yardsish, okay.
Or less, yeah.
And that was the first one you ever encountered.
Yep.
Okay.
Before we go any further, the stage has to be set.
There's just some information that I think is essential for all of us to have
before we hear more from this guy.
Two years ago, my good friend, Fred Feneasy, asked me to come up and do a day's worth
of Onex Hunt seminars at the Youth Outdoor Education Rendezvous in Condon, Montana.
It's a pretty sweet event that happens during the summer that teaches kids real outdoor
skills like backcountry first aid, flycasting, archery, firearm safety, and a whole lot more.
Throughout the day there, after my class would end, I kept hearing this enthusiastic voice
coming from the class over next to me. It was the wildlife conflict class, where kids were
taught how to handle themselves in a potential bare-charged situation, and the instructor was
captivating to say the least. I couldn't help to watch and listen as he would go over several
different scenarios all paired with examples from his real-life experience. And the class always
concluded with giving the kids the opportunity to try out their newly learned skills with a
simulated bear charge and a training can of bear spray. Kids loved that, as you can imagine.
After watching this unfold a few times, I finally went to Fred and asked him who the instructor
was. And his response was, oh man, that's Tom Parker, a legend in the swan. A legend in the swan
Valley. Now my curiosity was even more peaked. Tom had been a well-known hunting guide that had been
operating since the 70s and was known for his time spent in the Bob Marshall Wilderness and Mission
Mountains, known for his expertise in the backcountry, known for his extensive amount of knowledge
about all sorts of wildlife, particularly bears, which is why Fred asked him to teach that wildlife
conflict class. He was a legitimate local legend. The more I asked around that day, the more
my beliefs got confirmed, and I knew immediately that one day I needed to sit down with Tom
and talked to him. But I didn't know exactly what about. As luck would have it, when the summer
of 2025 rolled around and Backwoods University was now in existence, and we had planned already
to do some episodes on Grizzlies, I immediately thought of Tom Parker. This past July,
when we were back in the Swan Valley, I set up a time to meet with Tom. This conversation
takes place sitting in the living room of Tom's cabin.
My wife Lacey and I wrote over there one morning,
and we had coffee with Tom along with his son and his daughter.
We talked for a bit,
as they shared with us some old photo albums from Tom's early guiding days.
As I flipped through the pages looking at the different photographs,
I saw pictures at the Montana skyline,
mule teams going into the wilderness,
successful hunt photos with moose, mountain goat, mountain lion, black bears, elk, mule deer,
along with several photographs of live grizzlies.
It was clear that this man had a story to tell, probably several stories.
Tom was a houndsman at one point, and the story goes that for several years,
Tom ran his hounds without the use of GPS collars,
and that he would rather just keep up with his dogs on foot and physically track them himself.
This story is not grizzly related, but I still think it's worth sharing,
because you'll get an idea of the caliber of person that we're dealing with
before we get into the bear talk,
which is fully worth sticking around for because I'm telling you,
this bear charge story that he has will make the hair on your neck stand up.
Here's Tom.
I just couldn't see the utility for the way I hunted.
You know, much of the hunting here, if you're guiding hunters, you're hunting on snow.
Even before the tracking collars, what guys were using was a radio receiver.
Yeah.
They had a collar that would put out a radio pulse.
and I had never used those either,
even though they were almost universally used
by most of the guys I knew that ran dogs.
But how did you figure out that you could track your dogs like that?
Did you, did someone teach you how to do that when you were younger?
Did you just figure it out?
No, I just figured it out.
I had some mentors that were houndsmen,
But I guess what it was was, I was in really good shape, and I could largely keep up with my dogs.
And if not, you know, it didn't take me long to close up whatever lead they had on me.
And you're doing this mostly like in the wilderness?
Yeah, in this country here, you know, all around the periphery of the Bob Marshall and missions.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, and I mean, that's impressive.
Yeah, you're going right up the side of a mountain.
I mean, it's, I couldn't do it today in the same way.
No way.
I just don't have the same stamina that I had then, which was, you know, I could go day and night and largely not stop.
If you're unfamiliar with the Bob Marshall Wilderness or the Mission Mountains, it's some serious, rugged country.
And if you've ever seen any modern houndsmen work, most of those folks can cover some.
serious ground. I mean, really, they're typically some in-shaped dudes. The fact that Tom did this for
years, keeping up with his dogs with nothing but his own tracking ability and bootsteps,
is wild to me. This guy is the real deal, and he's been at this for a long time. When did you
start guiding around here? Uh, 1976. I went to work for a local outfitter, and I was packing
and guiding full time.
At that time, you had to have worked three years full time in the Outfitter classifications
you wanted licensed in, which was I was hunting, fishing, and packing, outfitter.
Right.
And I tested in 1978, and I've been licensed continuously as an Outfitter ever since.
I've been doing it my entire adult life.
Did you guide any particular species more than others, or were you doing a pretty good swath of stuff?
You know, I guided all species that tags were available for.
And it's changed substantially over the years, but back in those days, we had a really robust white-tail population, a robust mule deer population, decent elk numbers, even though we're not.
not as Montana elk habitats go, we're not, you know, the best. Black bear, we had really
high black bear numbers in this country. And Mount lions, high numbers. Moose tags were
really tough to come by. And in fact, there's none here now. And there's very few goat tags.
they closed the grizzly hunting in 1975.
Yeah.
And they've been on the endangered species ever since then, correct?
Yep.
Tom's guiding days began back in the 1970s,
and honestly, it's impossible for us to wrap our heads around the full extent of it.
But I thought it was extremely important that we get some understanding
of the vast amount of this man's experience spent in the mountains.
hunting, guiding, tracking, and truly living out there before we get into the bear talk.
But as you heard in the last few sentences, we're about to dive off into it.
But before we start talking biology, ecology, endangered species, delisting, and all that stuff,
I want you to hear the closest call with the grizzly that Tom has ever had.
I had one grizzly that, you know, it could have gone very wrong.
If you know what I said, and I surprised one at really close range, and, you know, they can't help but believe that you came there purposely for them. And they're going to be defensive about that.
See, you think that they're responding out of like self-defense.
Oh, it's defensive.
How long ago was this?
This would have been late 70s, early 80s.
Were you on a hunt when this happened?
I was actually scouting. I had a hunter coming that day.
And I thought, I'm going to go in and scout this area before he gets here and just see what's there.
I learned a valuable lesson.
It was May, mid to late May, and we kind of, we don't have a lot of thunderstorms, at least in those days we didn't.
They're more common now.
But there was a little thunder cell.
It wasn't a big one that come over the missions and was coming my way.
And so there was a lot of swirling air.
Well, I just, you know, go into high-density bear habitat with swirling air.
I just don't do that.
To this day.
To this day.
It's just dumb.
Being cognizant of wind drift, I have my whole career basically make a mental map as I'm out,
which way my wind is drifting so that I know what I'll call is fouled or I'm probably
recognized by my scent stream or not.
And that goes for deer hunting, elk hunting,
you know, you name it, that it's particularly important for bears,
especially if you're going to be around Grizzan because their nose is so good.
What happened was I was walking on a really fairly tight,
it was an old logging trail that was really grown in
and in a really high-quality habitat.
and it had been logged, you know, I'm going to say probably 15 or 20 years before,
so there's lots of spruce and fur thick that gets quite thick.
And I'm walking largely into the wind and into where this thunderstorm is going,
but the wind is doing this.
It's going in circles.
And I had walked by this thicket, and the winds swirled my scent into that thicket.
And I was, you know, wanting to go in and see if I could find much sign.
But I was like, you know, I want to get out of here.
And I had no more than told myself that this probably isn't smart.
And there was an explosion out of this thicket that I had just walked by.
It was a very terrifying roar of this big, I mean, he just roared at like nothing I'd ever heard.
And at first I wasn't even sure what it was because I'd never heard a bear quite sound like that.
Like I say, the cover is thick enough that.
I was partially obscured by a spruce tree.
When he came out of the brush, he roared brushing timber broke as he come out of there,
and his jaws are literally biting at the air.
Oh, gracious.
Oh, yeah.
He is not happy.
He's mad.
He is really mad, and I'm not that far.
I'm about to the back into the woodshed.
I mean, that's sub ten yards.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, that's like eight feet.
Like ten to twelve feet.
And I froze behind this tree.
But what I realized, he is reacting to my sense, the scent stream, and with this swirling,
and he's literally fighting at the only thing he can get a hold of at that point, which is my scent.
So I knew better than to move.
And this is before bear spray, and I did have a pistol on me, and I know how to shoot it.
Well, this bear turned and faced away from me.
Well, it took me a split second, and I was young, agile, and strong.
There was a big, down, large tree that had blown down against a fir tree that had some limbs just up from where I was.
And when I saw that bear go behind a little spruce tree, from where I was standing in, but behind my tree,
I jumped up on there and jumped up into that as hard and fast as I could go.
and I started to climb and I broke a limb.
But the thing I had going for me, everything was moving because of the wind.
Everything was moving.
So that was kind of covered me right there.
So the bear first, he backtracked me a little ways,
and then he realized that he's on the backtrack.
And then he starts to come my way.
I'm like, man, I'm not high enough.
He can probably pluck me right out of here,
which I could tell he would have if he could have got to hold me.
And so every time his head went behind, I'd make another, you know, pull myself up a couple more feet.
So he came my way and I thought, oh boy, here, he's going to just track me to right here.
And he was all bristled up and he's still going, he's really huffing and unhappy.
So then he went behind the tree and he just stopped.
Like he was just, he's just going to see what's going on here.
and he didn't track me to where I jumped up there.
You know, I'm still not sure that I'm quite high enough
and I crack a couple of branches
and he come around the corner of that tree,
I mean, ready to charge something.
So I'm like, I'm going to be quiet
and not do anything.
So he wandered actually away from me
towards a big alderswamp there.
And at that point,
anytime the wind would blow harder
to give me some cover on the noise.
I went from the top of this fir tree,
which wasn't tall enough,
into a bare trunk lodge pole,
and I shinnied up that thing.
And I made some noise while I was shinnying,
and he'd come right back and stood kind of by that spruce tree
and looked all around,
but he never could see me,
and I couldn't believe he didn't track me down,
right to that tree, which he could have.
But I think it was all because of the way that my scent had been dispersed all through that area.
From the wind to swirl around.
Yep.
So I got up in the lodge pole and I hadn't seen him for about, I don't know, 30 minutes.
I'm just hugging the tree.
You know, and it got tiring.
And the thunderstorm had kind of gone through.
And I had started sliding down that bark.
Out he comes.
Oh, no.
Out of the alders.
And he ran up there, and he just kept watching.
Because at that point, I'm not even drawing a breath, if you know what I'm saying.
I'm not going to wrinkle any bark anymore.
So, well, I just hung on.
I'm going to say double that time again.
And he had wondered back.
And I thought, you know, he's got a bed sight or something down in those alders.
And he's just waiting to see if I'm going to show up again.
Because what this bear's thinking, he came for me,
once he'll come for me again and I'm going to be ready for him.
Yeah.
So when I finally got too tired, I just super quietly, as quietly as I could, I got myself
into the fir tree, which was a lot quieter on the bark and stuff, and I had limbs and got
down and I made a big bee line out of there, made a big, like, multi-mile hike to get out of
there without going backtracking to where, which is largely where he was on my, uh, what had been
my forward track going in there. Once you got on the ground, did you ever see him again? And you just
make it out of there. Nope. I made it out of there. That's a pretty harrowing one. It was pretty
harrowing. If I would have done anything wrong, made a sound, not had the cover of that wind.
It was, it was largely luck of a lot of circumstances. And knowing enough,
not to move, you know, when he was actively looking for me.
Right.
And only move when he was behind another tree.
Not to go take off running.
Yeah.
I wouldn't have gone well.
Wouldn't have gone well.
Not at all.
And I have inadvertently bumped bears off a kills, you know, grizzlies,
where they had every good reason to be defensive and feel threatened.
Where there was no ravens to indicate and no turrets.
track sign until I just, there I am, I'm right on it. I didn't linger, if you know, as soon as I saw
what was going on, and got a bear, you know, this is a grizzly buried carcass, and that noise we heard
was him basically moving off the other side of this thing. And I've jumped other grizzlies out of
beds, literally from here to the table in alder thickets that the bear just broke as soon as they saw,
and as soon as we saw them, they just broke and run. And, you know,
I'll knock on wood.
I've been fortunate to have the right bears on the right days.
On Blood Trails, the stories don't end when the hunt is over.
They just get darker.
I've seen something in the road.
I instantly thought it was a sleeping bed.
And there was a full of blood.
Oh, my God, he doesn't have a hit.
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bear on the right day.
I told you all wasn't exaggerating
about that bear charge story. It's something.
But it's also a testament to
how staying calm and thinking through
a situation can work out in your
benefit, as well as shining a light
on Tom's unique perspective,
on bears. Most outdoor people I know find tremendous, I'll call it, enjoyment, satisfaction,
personal reward in seeing and interacting with nature of all kinds. And I don't see if you have a
healthy understanding of the relative danger of that animal, which you go to Yellowstone,
I think most people would say they enjoy seeing those bison and would enjoy seeing a grizzly
bear if they saw one. And it's no different anywhere else in the habitat they exist.
I would, you know, see that as an enjoyable experience for most people.
Yeah.
Rather than an unpleasant one, if you know what I'm saying.
It's that if our understanding of interacting with these animals is based on knowledge
and what I'm going to call a reality-based understanding of their behavior,
which really changes the perception, if you will,
for the, I think, the average person about the relative danger
versus ability to enjoy the experience.
One of the things that we tell folks in the instruction,
every encounter is different.
When you have a surprise encounter, even with a grizzly bear,
you know, Fred Fenezi had asked me when we were on a pack trip, you know, what do you do in that situation, a surprise encounter?
I said, you know, largely enjoy the opportunity to get to see that animal because you don't get to see many of them.
You and that animal just happened to cross paths on the landscape.
And they're not typically, unless you do something really wrong,
a dangerous situation.
But I can, you know, state from my own experience that if you stay calm and you back up,
give them space that they will realize that you're not a threat.
Bears charge, and most charges are false charges.
I've never had a bear touch me, but I've been charged by many, but they always stopped.
And I never shot one of them.
Let's face it.
Today, there's a lot of opinions around Grizzlies.
They're an animal that just tends to pull out all kind of emotions across the board.
I was particularly interested in hearing Tom's, however, because his thoughts on them were
built off of countless years of firsthand experience.
And like I said, this episode is just kicking off this subject.
And now that we have a grasp on Tom's knowledge around the subject, I want to point the
conversation towards what is going on with them currently, such as their current status on the
endangered species list.
This valley here, you know, back in the day when I first started guiding here, the density
of black bears was hard to believe.
And on average, you know, people would ask me, you know, how many grizzlies would you see
to black bears.
And I would generally, on a hunt,
I could show somebody, and this is all hiking,
about 20 bears on an average hunt,
and one, about 20 to one,
we'd see a grizzly.
You know, one of the things that's very different
is the habitat use.
and selection by these bears.
When I first started guiding,
one of the things you couldn't help
that understand and realize
in this backcountry
was the importance of high-elevation white bark pine
to not only grizzly bears and black bears,
but many other species,
you know, bird species, mammal species.
And these pines produce, you know,
the cone,
produces a large number of really high fat contents seeds.
I learned early on in the 70s
because it was some of the last great big pine nut years
that were super abundant production
is that's where all the bears in the country were.
They go and these trees occur from 6,200 feet on up
towards tree line and they grow in in fairly, you know, big stands where you're in really good
habitat for them. And they are fire resistant. They're very long lived on the landscape. Some of them
are a thousand years old these trees. Early in my guiding career, I had been in some what were
extensive stands of whitebark pines in these high elevation basins and seeing,
and up to seven grizzlies and a number of black bears exploiting these caches.
And, you know, flocks of Clark's nutcrackers, you know, coming and they're extracting the seeds,
flying them to their, you know, individual food caches and returning and they're making quite the ruckus.
It was one of the most amazing...
ecological relationships that I have ever observed to this day, it just teeming with life,
these pine stands are gone. This is the biggest ecological change in this part of the world
in my experience here. Do you know what happened to them?
Yes, it is a combination of an exotic fungus, which was brought here from Europe in pine,
five needle pine seedlings, and fire suppression at the landscape level.
You know, we effectively put out fires for a century.
And that fire suppression worked against the pines.
In other words, created more competition and crowding for those trees,
and they became stressed from that,
which is kind of the story of the larger.
forest here, and it's at one level.
And then the other issue is with climate change,
the amplification of the bark beetle insects
that are specific to various tree species,
and that would be mountain pine beetle
and western pine beetle for the ones that take out the white bark pine.
Some multiple things working against it then.
All right, we got a lot of information there, so let's quickly break it down before we go any further forward.
Grizzly bears were listed on the endangered species list in 1975 to prevent their extinction.
If you remember from earlier, Tom started guiding in 1976, so he started right after their listing.
And he saw, from his perspective, a key ecological shift in the large-scale loss of high-elevation white bark pine habitat.
And from this fact, once again, we've found our recovery.
thing without really looking for it. How do humans influence grizzly bears today, you may ask?
Well, one way is the loss of those white bark pines through a fungal disease called blister rust that
resulted from an exotic fungus being brought in from Europe, unintentionally, but we still brought it
here. But I'm curious how that affects grizzly bears today, as well as Tom's thoughts on
grizzly still being listed as endangered. Where do you think the overall health of Grizzly?
the bare populations are right now.
You know, today there's a lot of discussion to de-list them.
And I would support that on the basis of numbers and proven, you know, population growth, which is low, but there, if you will.
Sure.
And the evidence is, you know, that they're growing, I think it's 3% a year.
And mortality is up because of the fact that these bears are utilizing low elevation and what I'm going.
all habitats that have lots of human activities and residents and roads in them.
That was the first thing, you know, with the big pine die-off here that was most amplified
in the mid and late 90s, mainly from Pine Beetle, but also Blister Us, was that the bare habitat
that use, you know, shifted from those places and high elevation habitats to low elevation
and the periphery of these wildernesses and mountain complexes.
A lot more time spent down here trying to make up those lost calories.
So you have basically a potential for more interactions with humans and conflicts because they
don't have that higher elevation habitat anymore. Interesting.
Yep. And there, you know, I still get up there quite a bit. And it isn't that there are
not food resources there. I mean, there are glacier lilies that they dig and eat and all kinds
of other plants and forbs and berries on good berry years. But the whitebark pine component
was a really big impact.
I mean, these bears were, you know, places I'd never seen them before.
Yeah.
You know, both Grizzlies and Black Bears, and we had really high black bear mortality.
In, you know, in both of those food failure years, mainly from, you know, bears just desperate
coming into people's places and getting into trouble.
Hit on the highway, hit on...
other roads.
And the bear population has never really recovered since then.
It's never really come back.
It's starting to show signs that it will.
But the grizzly use also at that time changed dramatically.
And, you know, you saw bears all the way around the periphery of the Bob Marshall complex that
were out in the habitats.
where previously they were just rarely seen.
And now that's become quite common.
There for quite a while,
it wasn't so much a population growth expansion
as it was an expansion of the landscape and habitats
in which they were willing to move to exploit
and make up those lost food resources.
Because they had to.
They had to.
Quick ecology lesson here.
Remember this because it applies to virtually all elements of wildlife and wildlife management.
You can never just do one thing, meaning every single action within an ecosystem has multiple, interconnected, and sometimes unpredictable consequences.
The story Tom just shared with us is a perfect example.
We know that the wilderness and the mountains where he spent most of his time lost the majority of its high elevation,
white bark pine habitat. But what does that mean? Well, it means we lost those trees, of course,
but it also led to a lost food source for black bears and grizzly bears, which resulted in them
having to venture out to areas and places where they had often not been before, if they had even
been there at all. Places at lower elevations, places where they cross paths with humans more,
more highways, more homesites, and so on. Actions have consequences, and that's important to know.
It really is an amazing story of how small unintended actions by humans that had, you know, good and different intentions.
So is that, I mean, is there any, you know, white pine left? Do you find it scattered in the more? Is it just pretty much gone?
I've been up in some of these burns in the white bark stands, and there's actually an encouraging
amount of white bark pine regeneration that is bird planted that, you know, they're finding some
rush-resistant trees on the landscape, and they're planting those.
So there's a chance that some of that habitat could return?
Yep.
It's going to be a long time because they...
They're usually at least 50 years old before they produce a cone.
Oh, wow.
You know, you've got to take the long view on this.
Yeah.
But I'm more encouraged and hopeful than I was after the big pine beetle attack on these remnant trees.
I'm based on the regeneration that I'm seeing.
Encouraged and hopeful to future for the bear population.
going forward?
Yeah, in terms of
it's going to be a few generations
out, if you know what I'm saying,
generations of people.
But, you know, my children
will live to see, hopefully,
some cone production on these
trees regenerating in some of these
high elevation stands.
I think all of us would be better off in life
if we learned a thing or two from Tom Parker.
And I don't just mean,
learn how to behave if you ever encounter a bear in the wild, although that would be some good stuff
to know. But rather, his big picture view on wildlife in the places that they call home, and
his hopefulness that we could see a return of better black bear and grizzly bear populations,
as well as a delisting of them from the endangered species list. Speaking of the endangered species
list, what do y'all think? Should grizzlies be delisted or not? In fact, that's your homework
for the time being because next time we're diving further into the grizzly topic and how they fit
into today's world. I want to thank all of you for listening to Backwoods University as well as
bear grease in this country life. If you like this episode, share it with a friend this week that
you think would get a real good kick out of that bear charge story and stick around because there's a
whole lot more on the way. Last spring, Clay Newcomb and I collaborated with Jason Phelps at
Phelps game calls and building each of our own favorite turkey diaphragms called prime cuts.
Now, I'm going to tell you, I love mine because it's easy to use.
I'm not going to go, I'm not going to win a turkey calling contest.
It's just not going to happen.
But when I run this call, I get the sounds that goblers are looking for.
I have a great turkey hunting track record.
If you go listen to real turkeys out in the woods, they're not going to win calling
contests, right?
That's who I listen to.
I can make those sounds on my cut.
I also hunt with Phelps's cut,
and I hunt with Clay's cut because they're all three great cuts.
Check out Prime Cuts at Phelpsgamecauls.com.
I think you'll be glad you did,
and you'll find out that the Steve Rinella cut
is an easy-to-use cut for beginning callers
who just want to start making good turkey noises
and getting action.
