The Joe Rogan Experience - #2059 - Adam Greentree
Episode Date: November 8, 2023Adam Greentree is an Australian bowhunter, photographer, and outdoorsman.https://www.instagram.com/adam.greentree ...
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the joe rogan experience train by day joe rogan podcast by night all day
hello joe rogan what the fuck's happening everything how you enjoying my country i'm
loving your country yeah it was good um it's good to be back yeah you were here uh you did
another one of those wild backcountry elk hunts,
which you haven't been able to do because of COVID for three years?
Four years.
Four years.
Yep.
Wow.
And five years since the last podcast.
Did you document the whole thing like you did the last time in your internet stories?
I did, yeah.
Yeah, I tried to capture as much as I could.
Sometimes it's hard because you're stuck in the moment.
So the last thing you want is like a phone in your face, it does fuck with it right yeah so i couldn't capture it all but i
tried to at least mention everything that i was going through but there was like
one stage i just felt like i was in the war and i actually slipped between two fallen down trees
and i nearly broke my legs like straight across the front of my shins. Oh, shit. And it's like I didn't capture it and I'm sort of hurting.
So you don't get to see the whole story,
but I reckon I at least give the people 80% of the story, you know.
What happened when you almost broke your legs?
Well, I was fucking rooted for starters, like stuff.
Like this is day 26 or something like that.
What does rooted mean to your people?
You didn't know what it means right
yeah really guessing rooted means really exhausted oh okay like just you're fucked you know right and
uh i was coming back in the dark you know you're trying to you know um conserve everything as you
go on so you're trying to use your headlight as less as possible as well like you're out there for
a month right so a lot of the times your
headlight yeah torches turn right down if it's on at all so it's turned right down and i'm coming
back down the mountain to camp pretty much stepped on one bit of dead fall like a big fallen pine
tree and then slipped off it and then there was another pine tree only like a foot apart
so i went between the two of them and normally body weight come over the top of it and then yeah like i just remember i like least bruise the bones because it was hard
to walk you know oh boy but it's like at that point you feel like the whole world's against
you right really really tough trip like and i i think a lot of the over-the-counter guys went
through that this year it was a really difficult year for elk. Was that because of the heavy snowfall?
So I think because of winter kill for one.
And then a lot of the other states are not doing any over-the-counter anymore,
so that pushed more people into Colorado.
And then Colorado shut down some units and limited units
because of the winter kill.
So there was a lot of hunters jammed in the areas.
I think the bulls didn't come down. So I think a combination was a lot of hunters jammed in the areas i think the bulls didn't come
down so i think a combination of a lot of things colorado's just reintroduced wolves which is just
it's such a shell game because when there's like stipulations to reintroduce wolves like
ranella's talked about this before like they reintroduce wolves and then the idea is when the wolves get to be a certain population, then they will allow hunting.
But then the wildlife protection groups come in and they sue to make sure that you don't open up wolf hunting.
So then they only can issue depredation permits to ranchers.
You know, people don't like the idea of hunting wolves and i get that
but you shouldn't also like the idea of rampant wolf populations that are invading into people's
communities and eating their dogs and threatening children like the reason why big bad wolf and
little red riding hood and all that shit there was a story because they used to eat kids it was
happening yeah yeah they they ate people for a long fucking time until people got wise and said you know we should probably kill
these fucking things and that's what they did for the longest time and then the greenies got in like
we need to bring the wolves back and it's generally people that have zero experience with real wildlife
predators there should be a balance you know there should be grizzly bears there should be
mountain lions it's not like anybody wants to eradicate those things, but reintroducing wolves,
especially what they did with Montana, they took those big ass Canadian wolves and brought them
down. Yeah. Well, like, you know, me, I like, I do think there needs to be a balance. And I think
people, hunters are part of that balance as well, you know? Yeah. And I think a big part of that, you know, is keeping everything in check, you know?
So if the elk population is too big, then there should be more tags.
Like it's a really good system over here in that sense in America.
And then if there's a winner kill, like there just has been this last season, then yeah,
limit the tags and things like that.
So, because I've been on a few hunts now where you don't feel comfortable shooting an elk because you're not seeing any
so it's just like shit i actually i actually don't want to shoot an elk here it doesn't feel right
doesn't seem like there's enough elk here for me to be shooting them right and i experienced that
in a few areas this trip and i remember um the last time i hunted so four years ago and kimmy my wife
actually said it to me we i think we hunted for 14 days and we hadn't seen a bull elk and she
she's like even if one steps up at this point i'm not shooting it because it doesn't feel right
yeah you know and it's true but there could be lots of elk in that area another time of the year
but hunting season starts
hunters go in sort of pushes them out so it's a little bit hard to say but yeah you don't feel
right you know you want to shoot something that's in a good healthy population and now considering
the fact that you are getting these over-the-counter tags how do you know what units to pick you you
don't you're just guessing yeah yeah so are you going online and doing any research? Are you using Hunting Fool?
Lots of research.
Yeah, Hunting Fool is super handy and stuff like that.
Talk to the guys pretty frequently before coming up to a trip.
And then sort of just leaning on the hunting community a little bit, you know,
and you've got guys, and this is what happened this trip,
because I'm starting from fresh again.
It's been four years.
The spots that I used to hunt elk in aren't like that anymore or they're
limited entry now so and i didn't draw so i am starting from the you know from scratch from the
draw board and then so i sort of leaned on the hunting community a little bit and i had a few
guys reach out well i had actually a bunch of people reach out which was really nice and you
know try this spot you know i hunted here last year you're welcome to join me in this camp so i had a lot of that which was really nice um but even those guys don't know you know like you
think you've got an animal figured out like fuck think again you know like and and that's i think
that's why i love bow hunting so much and it's so i've constantly got a passion for it because
you never actually fully work it out like as soon as you start thinking you've got
something worked out you're fucked like they'll change it up on you and that that happens to me
every year and just about every species you know so you can go in there with as much knowledge as
you like and obviously that helps but at the end of the day that's why it's so good so appealing
well you like a crazy hard hunt but these are nuts the ones that you go on are really nuts like the
one that you did last four years ago that you documented where you had that close encounter with a grizzly bear and you had a bad pistol.
Yeah.
Fucking pistol.
Ah, shit.
Yeah.
That was a terrifying encounter.
Yeah.
The video of you with your gun pointed out where you can clearly see that the round's not chambered because it does it literally doesn't fit in there it wasn't a good situation no yeah it's it's i've
sort of fucked myself because i i want to go to a place where there's just elk running around
everywhere and stuff like that but because i've done these hard hunts now it's like i can't go
backwards like and i'm not i'm not lining myself up for a disastrous hunt,
but I want it to be that tough.
I don't want to go in on the first day and kill one.
The trip's done.
Well, what would you do if you walked in
and you saw a 350 bull on the first day?
I'd still shoot it.
Yeah, you'd have to.
I would.
You'd have to, right?
Well, you should never, that's the old saying, right?
You should never pass up on a bull on the first day
that you would kill it.
I don't agree with that.
No?
No, I don't.
Why is that?
Because what are you in it for?
Well, you're in it to kill a bull.
Yeah.
But there's also luck.
Yeah, but I.
You can't spit on luck.
Yeah.
I think like day 27 broke me on this last trip.
When I say broke me, it just, i just got to the point where i was
completely satisfied so i still didn't stop hunting i was still going to hunt to the very
last day of season which was you accepted your feet but i accepted it yeah and that's what i
actually went out there for you know and i started thinking about i'm not really here to kill a bull
like that's what's pushing me and getting me to that point but i'm here for the whole package right and like like your time poor right yeah
like you don't have a lot of time and there's a lot of hunters that don't have a lot of time
whereas i come over from australia and i'm just like i've got 30 days right so you know and that's
why i don't want to kill on day one or day two i would like you said if something stepped up i would
but it's not so much about the kill it's's that whole package, you know, and, and, and a big part of that package is breaking my own self
down and getting past that point, you know, and I did, I put a video up and I was like,
I fucking cried, you know, and it's just like, and that's hard to show the people,
but I do want to show the people that it's just not about the kill and it is hard. And
it's not like all there's an animal. I stalk it i shot it i killed it i got the meat you know
right you're gone you're going on like a vision quest yeah that's it yeah you're trying to find
out something about yourself yeah i've got no interest in climbing mount everest and i've said
this many times before but if there's a fucking animal at the top of it i'll do it i'll i'll do
it you know and i'll push myself to that limit.
Yeah, I don't get the Mount Everest thing.
Yeah.
I've been offered to go with people multiple times.
I'm like, yeah, have a good time up there. Yeah, it doesn't look like a lot of fun.
It's the reason why there's no houses up there.
Yeah, there's like one selfie at the top and then you're coming back down.
Yeah, I mean, I understand it.
People enjoy doing things that are very difficult to do
and i fully support them doing it i just don't have any interest in it yeah yeah yeah it's just
not not my thing yeah it doesn't float your boat no not at all and if i had 28 days to do what you
do i don't know if i'd do that because what but i guess what you're doing is i mean you hunt so
much in australia and australia is so game rich because there's so many invasive species in Australia.
There's deer everywhere.
There's stags everywhere.
You have so many pigs.
It's a great place to get your meat.
Oh, 100%.
Yeah, it's a fantastic place to go.
I think there's 27 huntable species in Australia, and there's like one or two of them that actually need a tag and that's it.
And open season on everything.
So we don't have to wait for September to roll around to go and get some meat or have a hunt or something like that.
Which is nice.
It is.
It's frigging awesome.
But we don't have the system that you have in America either.
And it's crazy that Australia doesn't have it because these animals are a resource.
And they're not treated as a resource at the moment.
We've just fully labelled them as feral animals.
And then it sort of just gives everyone the right just to kill them in any way possible.
And so they're chopper shooting them.
Well, they have been for the last few years years they just go around aerial culling them and they just shoot them and leave them there
and the meat just rots on the ground do they do that just to reduce population to reduce the
possibility of diseases well there's no diseases in any of our red meat animals that can be passed
on the humans so it's not so much for disease. There is a threat of foot rot, which they have in some parts of Asia.
But basically, Australia is just saying, let's eradicate them.
They want zero of these animals.
Oh, God.
Yeah, yeah.
And then so they shoot thousands and thousands of deer.
Thousands of them.
And this is just in a month.
They'll shoot thousands of them and just leave them rot on the ground. Do they do it because they think they're a nuisance they do yeah yeah but
they're delicious they are delicious and they're no more of a nuisance than cattle or sheep right
you know if they're talking about erosion and stuff like that well like or introduce species
cattle and sheep are introduced species yeah shit we're introduced species to some places, you know.
Are they talking about it because of erosion?
Like what are they saying the nuisance is?
A big part of it's erosion.
Yeah.
Then damage to like trees and fences and stuff like that.
And that's true to a certain degree.
But the benefit of the resource.
Oh, 100%.
Yeah.
Especially if you want really healthy meat.
It's just everywhere.
Especially if there's people starving.
Yeah, that doesn't make any sense.
This is just shot and left.
It doesn't make sense.
That's so crazy.
It feels like we're living in the bloody Stone Age when they do that.
Yeah, it's just cutting off your nose to spite your face.
Yeah.
It's so stupid.
I don't understand why people would accept that.
Yeah, and as a hunter, I get to see these animals up close,
and you realize that they are a beautiful animal
and have a lot of respect for them.
And then so when you see that happening, it is pretty upsetting.
Yeah, that's a bummer.
So have you been there when they've helicopter shot them?
Yeah.
So you're out hunting.
Yeah, hunting, you just hear the gunshots going off, yeah.
There's a couple of guys in Australia that just filmed it.
They're hunting
on private property and the helicopter comes over and she's like shooting right behind them and
yeah and they don't care that you're there nope they don't care or they don't know wow yeah that's
a bummer yeah it is a bummer yeah it's pretty sad why why do they have that attitude about it
why don't because they're just labeled and pushed as a feral nuisance animal and that's it.
You know, and it's like, we don't have the same system as you do here where it's like,
all the hunters that I meet here full cherish the animal and the meat.
You know, and they collect it all, you know, and it's not about like, oh, you know, I'll
just, I'll leave that part.
It's like, how much more meat can we get off it?
Can we trim a little bit more off the bone, you know?
Right. And even I'm like that. I can't take the meat home i always donate it whatever
animal that i harvest here but it is it's like how much more can i get off it what else can i take
you know and it's and it's because so much passion and everything goes into it why don't they let you
bring meat back to australia uh customs is really strict in australia and because there's no diseases
in our red meat i think they're really really strict that they don't want that.
Well, how are you going to get a disease from a dead animal with frozen meat?
I don't know.
More stupidity.
Yeah, I don't know.
That's so stupid.
I've heard that they do that with Africa.
If you bring an African animal back to the United States, you can't bring the meat back.
Okay.
Is that true?
Well, because I've never brought meat back into America.
I've only tried to take it into Australia, but i know that it's a no-go so like i said i've just always donated it but i think you
can bring back meat from australia you guys probably can because yeah it's so i know you
can from new zealand yeah so we can bring a certain amount into australia from new zealand
but it has to be commercially processed and packaged so which
isn't a bad thing still but look there's that many people with their hand up to take meat
right it's like nothing goes to waste when we harvest the best meat oh it's amazing yeah once
and once you get a taste for it and like i don't even taste the gaminess to any meat anymore because
that's pretty much all we eat at home but once you've eaten game meat and then you go and buy store meat and eat it,
it's the blandest shit going.
I don't understand that term gamey.
I mean, I think when people say gamey meat and they're thinking about that,
they're thinking about someone who has handled meat incorrectly.
That's spot on.
Yeah, they let it sit out in the sun.
They didn't cool the meat off quickly enough.
They didn't hang it. They did something wrong. Yeah, They let it sit out in the sun. They didn't cool the meat off quickly enough. They didn't hang it.
They did something wrong.
Yeah.
It's not prepared correctly.
Yeah.
There has to be something wrong.
Unless you're eating something like a bear that's been eating a rotten animal.
I've heard people catch, they've eaten bear that have been eating nothing but fish and they're nasty.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
That makes sense. Yeah.. Yeah, okay. Yeah. That makes sense.
Yeah, it does make sense.
Yeah, because everyone's always said, like the tar in New Zealand,
oh, it's a smelly goat, you know, or the pronghorn here in America.
Right.
Because they do have that smell to them.
But once it's prepared correctly, oh, it's delicious.
I think the thing about the pronghorn, too,
is that you hunt them in the summer and it's very hot
and a lot of times people are dragging the carcass across the sage, you know, and they just don't take care of it properly.
No, whereas it's just being quick with it, you know, like field dress it straight away.
Like even before photos, you can knock the stomach out and stuff like that.
And then set it up right, get it as cool as possible.
Because you've only got to cool the temperature of the animal from what it was when you harvested it.
And then I believe it can up or down about 10 degrees and it's still fine.
So it's just keeping it under that range.
Yeah.
And somehow or another just getting it to ice quickly.
Yeah.
Having ice ready, having a cooler ready.
Yeah.
You know.
What do you do in terms of do you bring a cooler with you when you do these 28 day trips?
Because I know you actually cut a fucking toothbrush in half to save weight.
I know you do a lot of radical shit to save weight.
Well, you have to, right?
Every bit counts, including the bow and the accessories on it, you know.
So I'm shooting just carbon bows for the last 10, 15 years now.
Because that bow a lot of the times ends up on your backpack.
So it's like, what's the use of cutting a toothbrush down to a quarter?
You know, and you've got like toothpaste to brush your teeth
like three times in the month.
Like you do all that shit and then you carry a big heavy bow, you know.
Right.
Unless you need a heavy bow to shoot really well.
Like obviously, you know, you don't want to step on your own feet like that.
But once I kill, that's it you're done you're
hiking the animal out because you can't get a cooler back there right you know and if you had
a cooler in your truck at the trailhead and you're back there for 30 days there's no ice back there
anyway or someone's gonna steal it yeah being pretty lucky at trailheads here in america i've
never had anything like that happen but well most Well, most people are respectful. Yeah, they are. But it just takes that one. It takes the one dickhead. Yeah. Yeah. And
there are dickheads out there. There is, yeah. So look, the second I kill, I'm out of there. And if
I'm way back, I usually try and I've carried them out before. I've had a buddy come in and carried
them out. Um, I've had a guy with pack horses ready on, on so you kill he comes in you get it out um or this trip
i had a bunch of friends and guys that sort of were telling me spots to hunt and they were pretty
much on call and then yeah i sent him a photo i dropped that bull had the bull down sent him a
photo they're like we're two and a half hours from the trailhead we're on our way now and then
yeah by the time i field dressed it and prepped it,
they rocked up with backpacks.
And then, yeah, three of us carried it off.
That's nice.
So did you give them the meat?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's nice.
Yeah, I donated to a couple of families that helped me.
That's nice.
Now, this trip, so did you stay in the same place for 28 days?
I end up moving.
So Kimmy and my wife come with me for the first 15 days and it was hell.
Like day one or day two, we seen two nice bulls that were leaving the area.
And then we never seen a bull in there again for 15 days.
And she actually had a bit of elevation sickness.
We're climbing up one morning and she started feeling sick.
And we get all like, we're way out there and we get way back.
And we're climbing up this mountain and a gunshot goes, like, straight off in front of us.
Because Colorado's got muzzleloader at the same time.
And that was about the point that she's like, look, book me a flight.
I'm going to go home.
It was one of the kids' birthdays.
So then she went home and we're already doing pretty radical stuff, like, back there.
And then I was like, right, fuck it now.
When you say a gunshot went off straight in front of us, like how far in front of you?
A hundred yards.
Was it shooting in your direction?
No, it was shooting to the side.
But still like that shit happens, right?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
People just shoot into like movement.
Yeah.
But it was more to the point of, of actually wasn't about our safety at that
point it was more about oh the hunting's not good let's let's shoot you know and um yeah so she
ended up going home and then i was like oh i'm gonna go pretty radical now and just fucking
on a massive mission the muzzleloader thing to me is so strange at the same time or are you talking
about just shooting a muscle just all all the time i i get at the same time? Or are you talking about just shooting a muzzleloader full time? All the time. I get at the same time it's weird because why would you have a rifle and bow season?
Bow season's quiet.
Yeah, that doesn't make sense.
But the muzzleloader thing in general, all it's going to do is prevent you from getting a good second shot.
Because there's muzzleloaders that you can shoot that are good to hundreds of yards.
Yeah.
that you can shoot that are good to hundreds of yards.
So it's like you're not limiting the effectiveness unless you're saying that you have to shoot iron sights,
and then aren't you limiting the ethical shots that you can take?
You probably are, but how do you argue that
and then traditional bow hunting or even bow hunting?
Oh, yeah.
Because it does take time to get it on.
I'm not saying it should be illegal.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm just saying, like, what are you doing like i would rather use an actual rifle yeah and just like a really sighted in rifle with a great scope and you know a good round like a real rifle
yeah i met a guy with a crossbow this year not while i was hunting it was after the hunt was done
and he said he's he had a scope on his
crossbow and he said it's accurate out to 140 yards wow as in like shooting a golf ball at 140
yards well if you got to rest that's the thing about a crossbow you could sit on a log yeah
that's nuts like how much further can we go with this stuff you know yeah that's a weird thing i
heard someone describe it like like trans men or trans women
competing against biological women.
If you call yourself an archer, someone described it that way.
I think that's pretty accurate.
And then the traditional bow owners are probably saying that
about me and you shooting a compound size.
Sort of, but, you know, the traditional thing is weird too.
Like, I get it.
I get all of it.
But I think if you're going to shoot a traditional bow,
you have to be a guy who's been practicing for a long time,
and you have to put a lot of hours every day doing that.
Yeah.
Because it's essentially like you have to judge just based on how far you know an arrow drops.
It's all in your head.
Like throwing a rock.
Throwing a rock, yeah.
If you throw enough rocks.
It's not even throwing a rock because it's the same.
It's like throwing a baseball.
Yeah.
You have to be really good at it.
Yeah.
I did it for about three or four years, like pretty hard up.
And the best way that I can sum it up is to be regularly successful
with a traditional bow i'd have 50
shots every single day and i'd have 25 shots for form minimum and then i'd have 25 shots as in
aiming to be and and so you had to do that every day so once you get time poor like it's really
hard to keep that up and then and and i was successful in doing it. But the beauty of a compound bow was like, even if I was flat out at work, once a week I could shoot, the bow stays sighted in.
Yeah.
You pick it up and away you go again.
It's still hard.
Like you're still fully handicapped.
Yeah.
You know, so it's like, it's hard enough without being like, okay, I'll go traditional bow hunting now.
So I was just Northern Territory, Australia, like last month. And i had a couple of days with the compound and it was like had a brilliant hunt
like that done really well and i was like ah stuff it i'll go with the trad bow for the next couple
of days and then so i hunted with the trad bow and shot a bunch of pigs and a buffalo and stuff like
that and then when i went back to the compound i felt like i was shooting a sniper rifle yeah
because the recurve is so hard, you know.
Well, I would imagine that it would help your compound bow shooting.
A hundred percent it does.
Yeah.
And so my effective range with a trad bow is like 30 yards.
Ideally, I'm at 10 or 15.
So even having the stalk in that close with traditional gear and then having the compound and being at like 40, 50 being just like oh this thing's done you know right and shooting it so do you bring a lot
of arrows with you when you go on these backcountry hunts on the northern territory one i do yeah
this hunt the colorado one how many you bring five hours in the quiver that's it yeah yeah i think
about for practice i actually practice at all when you're out there? Yeah, I think I took seven or eight. So I had a couple in the backpack this trip.
Because I shot a grouse as well.
So pretty much your arrow's done because usually you're shooting them off a branch.
And then one of the days I stacked it pretty hard, like fell over,
and hit the rest and bent the rest down or the rest shifted.
So I had spare arrows to actually pull it back up and shoot my bow in the place. And luckily it just sort of ripped that grub screw down.
So I could see the position that I had to sit in and I had one shot and it was bullseye straight away.
So, but I still wanted a couple of shots because of it.
So, but like you're going to shoot one bull.
Right.
It wasn't like I had a mule deer tag or another tag with me.
Right, but sometimes you have to take follow-up shots.
Sometimes things hit branches.
About five hours in the quiver you should be around.
Yeah, you should be.
You should be, especially if you're limited to a distance.
Are you still using those two-blade solid broadheads?
What company do you use?
I use Kyogare Broadheads.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So they've got a broadhead called Pilot Cut.
How many Australians use those?
Because they, like, how can you tell if you're not hitting the bone or not, right?
Like, I watch these videos of these white tail dudes shooting white tail and the arrow's hanging out of the white tail this much.
And they still kill it because they've got a broadhead that's fucking like 10 inches wide.
Well, they use
it in a mechanical mechanical it just expands and opens them up but like because we're shooting
buffalo so i do that buffalo hunt once or twice a year and then like some of our bigger deer like
the red deer are pretty solid as well with a two blade broadhead you can still split bone and punch
all the way through the animal you know and it's like if you shoot something in australia using that sort of setup like 70 or 80 pound bow
a good like micro diameter shaft so there's no restriction on the shaft actually passing through
the animal after the broadhead and a decent solid broadhead if you're not picking your arrow up in
the dirt somewhere out the other side you're like shit where did i go wrong you know and it's like
so there's there's hardly any what we'd call like a flag
in an animal where the arrow's hanging out of it.
It's like punched straight through, hole in one side and out the other.
Like, that's what you want.
I just know so many people that have made shots with those little single bevel,
small, tiny broadheads, and they just, you know, the animal will run so far.
Whereas if you hit it with a good two-inch cut rage, that fucker's not going anywhere.
If you get past the bone.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, but if you've got enough horsepower.
If you've shot it in the right place, like double lungs is double lungs.
Yeah.
So if you've actually got double lungs, that animal's dead.
You know, and it's just like, but there's pros and cons to it for sure.
Yeah.
Old lack of blood trail.
Whereas you'll shoot something with your setup.
It's a crime scene.
Yeah.
There's just pain to the ground.
Cam Haynes is shooting a four blade.
Is he?
He's shooting a carnivore.
It's like throwing a grappling hook.
Who can argue with what Cam's doing?
Because it's just shit just dropping everywhere around him.
Well, he wasn't forever.
He would go with a muzzy trocar.
That was his thing.
Yeah, I remember those days. Three blade blade fixed head that's all he ever shot and then uh wayne endicott's like you really
have to try these and he had like a questionable hit on a deer and he's like shit and then he saw
the deer run 30 yards and die instantly he's like whoa yeah and it's just because you're just
opening them up yeah inland isle shooting the rage that trip with you guys and um i made like a pretty average shot like i'd expect the animal to probably run 100 yards
before he pulled up and dropped and it was just like he ran 20 yards and just dropped and i was
like wow and got over there and yeah pretty much already field dressed him and everything you know
yeah yeah it's uh that's the weird debate amongst bow hunters
yeah fixed blade or mechanical when i really got fixed on a fixed blade was called this big red
stag in like he come down through the the mist like couldn't even see him just could hear him
up there raking a tree like in the rut and then started calling and hearing coming down the mountain and he sort
of come come slightly angling on but pretty much facing me and i was like like shit i'll wait for
him to turn and he was pretty much going to come straight over the top of me so i thought i can
slip it in there and as i shot he turned so i hit him right on that bone that front leg bone
and it split the ball joint of the leg bone like straight in half
angled down went in through a rib through his heart out through another rib and into the bottom
joint on the far side leg and like it just dropped you on the spot because it pinned his legs
together obviously died pretty much instantly through the heart and like took all the meat out, deboned it,
thought I'd keep all those bones and boiled them out.
And so it split four lots of bones to go through that stag.
Otherwise, I was just wounding it.
Yeah.
And it was from that point there that I'm like,
I'll never shoot anything else.
And I don't have to change like from shooting, you know, goats or deer,
a small deer, to shooting a massive buffalo, I don't change my setup.
You know, so the arrow's always at around 550 grains.
The broadhead's the same.
I can resharpen them.
So you talk about these long trips and trying to save weight.
I don't carry spare broadheads or anything because those broadheads, like they'll pass through an animal.
They'll hit a rock on the other side.
You pick it up, you file it off.
Then, you know, you get it razor sharp so it's shaving hairs again
and away you go.
That's why I like the setup.
But every now and then I'll have limited blood trail.
I'm like, shit, I should be shooting a big expandable broadhead.
But I don't want to change.
I get it.
Yeah.
Yeah. It's that six in one
half a dozen and it's like that's like nearly american hunting culture and the two blade fixed
broadheads like australian hunting culture that's why i asked because everybody over there uses
those yeah yeah yeah you got we're getting that way there's a lot of people shooting those broadheads
now but like you guys had release aids and sites like 10 years before australia would go to it and if you shot sites in a release aid you're a fucking pussy
like in australia oh shit you're a pussy you know where you're shooting exactly and then i was
hunting with an old friend of mine john and he had a release aid and i'm like what's the big deal
about those release aids dude and he's like i'll have a shot of my bow and like we're just sitting
around camp you were shooting fingers shooting fingers like always shooting fingers with a compound with
a compound yeah and open sights like that's all that's all anyone just instinctive timber arrows
dude it was insane like you had to spine test and check all your arrows and like twist broadheads
to get them right and glue them on and stuff like that and he was one of the first sort of technical
what we'd call a technical bow on her in australia that i knew and i remember him shooting and it was
just like seriously like golf ball size at 20 30 yards like every time i'm like how the fuck
can you do that because you know our arrows sort of had a spread of at least a tennis ball or
slightly bigger you know and then i shot with his release aid like four or five times
and I'm just like, holy shit, what am I doing?
Because it's just like pinpoint, pinpoint, pinpoint, you know.
Just a minimal amount of movement on the back end.
A hundred percent.
And the same release every single time.
That's what's so fascinating about archery.
It's just one little tiny movement one way or the other
as it translates 80 yards ahead, could be a foot and a half.
100%, yeah.
Which is just so nuts.
And it comes down to so much.
The bow tune, your sight, your release, the arrow, how straight the broadhead is.
There's so much to it.
What release are you shooting these days?
So now I'm shooting a Spothog.
I'm not a techie guy, so I don't even know the name of it.
You're shooting the Cam Haynes one?
Yeah, like a Cam Haynes one.
The whippersnapper?
No, the wise guy.
The wise guy, that's it.
The purple one?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a good one.
Because I had a hunt in New Zealand, and I had a release aid that I'd been shooting for 10 or 12 years jam up on me on a big red stag.
I called this big red stag in and, pulled the trigger and it didn't go off and then
and then because i pulled the trigger and it didn't go off i i looked down like what the hell's going
on and then it went off and it shot between this red stag's antlers like i'm lucky i didn't hit
him and wound him and that like i only need to fail me once and i'm like okay i'm not doing that
again you're gritting it or something? They actually changed the metal material that they were using.
This is a Carter we're using?
Yeah, they changed it.
And I've had two since, and they've both done the same thing.
They get jammed up.
And, like, you'd see the amount of hunting I'm doing.
I'm going through water.
I'm going through dirt and grit.
I'm going through crap.
And it's just, like, properly locked up where it's holding on to 80 pounds without letting go
and then so i mucked around up at my farm like i can shoot out to
however distance you like i'm up at the farm and then i was trying like trying to get it to go off
and i still couldn't get it to go off and then so that's why I changed because that Wiseguy's got very limited moving parts in it.
Yeah.
It's the most simple, really.
It is, yeah.
So I bought three because now I keep one in the backpack.
So I've just like cryovaced it so no crap can get in the backpack and it's just in the backpack sitting there waiting as a spare.
Also, if you just breathe on that thing, it goes off.
Oh, yeah.
It's sweet as.
It's so hot.
Yeah.
I love it. And it's either loaded or it's not. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's sweet as. It's so hot. Yeah. I love it.
And it's either loaded or it's not.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I really like that.
It's very simple.
I like the belt buckle though.
Better than the boa?
Yeah.
So I've got the boa one and I don't like that you don't know that it's in the same position
each time.
Right.
Whereas the belt buckle, I've got a mark on mine.
You know, we talk about the littlest things help.
Yeah.
So I've actually got a mark on mine. So I know what one to do it up to each time and yeah it's it's sweet
the only thing that people don't like about the wise guy is that it's so hot that you can't get
a surprise release because you're essentially if you touch it it's going off yeah yeah but i've
always shot like that and i don't want to change like Like I, let's just say a deer bust out of the brush and runs past me.
I want to be able to punch it, what you would call punch it.
It's like I'm on bang, you know,
whether you're leading it by a foot or whether it's going slower and it's a
couple of inches, you're leading it by whatever.
I've always liked shooting that.
I've been thinking a lot about that, you know,
because I've talked to Joel Turner and he brings you through that whole shot IQ process.
I think you can shoot a release and make it go off, but you make it go off while you're in control of all your faculties and you're not panicking and you have a shot process. I mean, if I have a hinge and I pull it back for people
that don't know what a hinge is, a hinge is a release that you don't have a trigger. You're
just rotating the release and eventually it goes off. Well, sort of, because it gets to a click
and the click is saying, hey, we're real close. It goes click, it gives you an audible click.
And what that is, is to let you know that this release is about to go off.
And all you do is pull and it goes off.
How is that any different than keeping your shit together and putting a finger on it?
Yeah, yeah.
What I think it is is a lot of these people, first of all, in the target archery world, that's a different world.
Like you're standing still.
There's all these people watching you. You have a target. It's a different world. Like you're standing still. There's all these people watching you.
You have a target. It's a bullseye. It's a circle and another circle is an X in the center.
And all you're trying to do is make this absolutely perfect shot into the X. And you have all this
time to set up and relax. And that's not the same thing as bow hunting yeah bow hunting is a very different thing and i
i think the anticipation of the moment and the extreme anxiety that comes with the animal being
it's really about managing that anxiety it's not about whether or not you can make a trigger go off
because you can make a trigger go off and still have perfect form and shoot a perfect shot
remy does it cam does it you do it. Cam does it. You do it.
I just think it's experience.
I think because there's some people that are really good on paper, but they're not good hunting.
Right.
And a big part of that is that I try not to think about it because I don't
have a shot process.
But you also shoot animals more than almost anybody alive.
Yeah.
So I think I don't need a shot process and I don't like to think about it
because that's when I think I'll fuck up. Right now'm just doing i'm doing that's it right you're doing
it as simple as that yeah and and that's why i don't want to change either right you know because
i do see heaps of people going the back tension and stuff like that and i tried one years ago and
i missed an animal straight away so i'm just like yeah fuck that it's done yeah so it's one of those
things where they say you have to get worse before you get better yeah so you do you do i don't want to get worse before
i practice with a hinge i've hunted with a hinge but this year i hunted with a thumb button
and uh i just had it set pretty hot and i executed a perfect shot yeah but i went through a thought i
have a process in my head and you know i'd also had the luxury of having one
elk hunt that was just a couple weeks before that where i shot a nice elk and also i shot a pig a
few weeks before that so no monkey on your back right you have experience and i think a lot of
people drawing on an elk in september is the first animal that you shot i don't know how they do it
at least i seriously don't know how they do it. At least to you. I seriously don't know how they do it.
I think that's where target panic comes from.
It comes from the uniqueness and the novelty of the experience.
You're overwhelmed, like, this is the moment you've been preparing for.
Instead of like, oh, I've been here before.
You know, like, have you ever seen Remy shoot an animal?
It's like, he's been there so many times.
He's just rock solid.
Remy just does it.
He puts the pin on it and, you know, hits the trigger,
and it's a perfect shot.
And he knows what he's doing.
He also shoots a two-blade.
A guy said to me, he's like,
oh, only 1% of over-the-counter hunters are successful.
And I'm like, yeah,
but they probably get to hunt three days in the season.
Right.
How often do they even practice?
Yeah, I'm like, I just did 10 years of hunting in a month,
you know?
So,
and it's just like,
and I came from a hunting rich environment.
Right.
Like I,
I just come back from the Northern territory,
Australia and like had like loaded up big time.
And I'm just like,
so all that pressure's off.
But then when an elk bugled,
I went to shit still.
Cause I'm just like,
there's so much,
um, not pressure, but it's just like, I wasn't seeing anything.
So it's like, this is your one opportunity.
You're about to fuck it, you know?
And it's just like, so there's all that pressure.
So I don't know how American hunters do it.
Unless they're coming off the back end of other hunts.
Well, that's the 1%. Yeah.
That's the 1%.
Yeah.
I've thought about this a lot because I'm very attracted to things that are very difficult to do.
And I've always tried to figure out why are they difficult.
Like why are certain things difficult?
And a lot of it boils down to psychology.
A lot of it boils down to the way your mind processes that moment.
And there's something about bow hunting that is so unique in that every situation is different you can have similar
situations oh this is in a meadow it's 60 yards i've been here before i know what to do it's
minimal amount of wind i don't have to worry about wind drift i can handle this but then there's you
know like cam shot this elk at two yards this year and he was crouched down on a trail he came to full draw he expected
the animal to go like past him where you get a broadside shot is like right in front of him yeah
so now he has to figure out what pin to use because you know the arrow comes out two yards
with a 50 meter pin you have to that's what you have to use yeah you have to use a 50 meter pin
yeah that's literally what you have to use because the arrow's not coming.
It doesn't hit its apex for quite a while.
So when it comes off the bow, it's coming off low.
So if you shoot a 20-yard pin on an animal that's two yards away,
you're going to hit it crazy low.
Yeah.
Yeah, nuts, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's so counterintuitive.
I love the idea that there's no two the same.
Yeah.
Like, really, there's no two animals the idea that there's no two the same yeah like there's really
there's no two animals the same there's no two situations the same they might be similar like
you just said like same yardage and that there's no two that react the same and it's just i think
that's a big part of the appeal in hunting yeah you know is is a part of that you know yeah you
are you're essentially every time you're doing it, you're getting an education. Yeah. And that's why a guy like Kim or a guy like yourself or Remy is so successful because you have so much education.
Whereas for a new person, the learning curve is so big.
So when they say that 1% are successful, I'm surprised it's even one.
Yeah.
Out of 100 guys, how many of them prepare properly?
Yeah.
How many of them are out there really getting after it?
I definitely know there's more
hardcore guys out there now than ever before ever before because like some of those places are 14
20 miles into the back country and you see i i used to seem to just get to five or six miles
in the back country and i wouldn't see anyone right right unless they're on horses or something
like that you wouldn't see anyone this trip i was further into the back country than ever before and i've seen 10 times as many hunters as ever before wow so maybe we
should stop talking about that country it's too late i know romanticized it and fit dudes yeah
like carrying in proper camps dude there was yeah there was one morning i got up i just had this
massive snowstorm like two days before i'm like this is going to
kick the elk off this is going to be sick and i'm way back there there's no human footprints or
anything like that no friggin elk footprints either at that point and like by the time you
get back to camp cook dinner you're in bed pretty early like two hours you know after dark sort of
thing and you i'll say the word again you're rooted you know so like you're like
you put your head down you're fucking fast asleep two seconds flat and i get up in the morning and
it's like dark still and i climb out of my tent and there's like this light colored blob like
just across from me and i'm like what is that and then i like i start walking closer to it and it's a dude set up a tent like right near me, like 50, 100 yards from me.
So he hiked in in the pitch black of night, dude, and set up his tent there.
And then so I went back in the tent and I'm like, shit, like I've got company.
Like this is, it's competition back then.
Right.
You know, there's no elk around.
So last thing I need is another hunter like pushing in on me.
Did he know you were there?
I don't know.
If he walked in in the dark, I wouldn't think so.
But the other thing was it was blowing a gale and it's like one of the only flats and it's sort of like on a little saddle on the mountain.
So it's a limited amount of places.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And probably slightly out of the wind there compared to where he'd walk from.
Was he cool?
Well, I don't know.
I didn't hang around to talk to him. You know,'re in the zone right and that zone's wild so the last thing
that you want to see is someone from civilization right but occasionally you know you might run into
someone like yourself like hey yeah but they fucking notice me and then they tell their
friends and they think i'm in a bomb spot so then then all their mates come in as well, you know. So he's trying to keep a low profile back there.
And yeah, so then I just made me coffee really quickly
and I was like, I'll go and sit on that.
There's like a rock that I wanted to sit on.
It's a perfect glassing point.
That's why I camped in that spot.
And then, so I made my coffee and looked up
and he's walking up to the rock
and this dude goes and sits on the rock
that I wanted the glass from. So then I just hightailed it like in a completely different direction
you know and it's like that hey well both they're not looking at elk there's stuff all back there
but but those sort of guys uh they're out there now yeah and it's just when did that change
uh when me you and cam and the bow hunters started talking about fucking backcountry hunting.
Was that what it is, this podcast?
I don't know.
Probably.
Was it COVID, dude?
COVID changed it a lot.
Everyone started realizing like,
fuck, I better start looking at defending for myself.
Yes.
I think defending for yourself and being able to gather food,
that's a big deal.
Yeah.
I know during COVID, I just got swamped with messages like
how do i start in bow hunting like how do i get a start in it like i want to go and because like
that like it's one of the most amazing things there is that i think people are missing out on
is going and harvesting your own meat yeah you know and i say it all the time it's like i hate
being labeled as a hunter like i'm just we're just human and like i really do think hunting's a big part of being a human i don't
think everyone can do it you know and i don't want everyone to do it because look what i'm having a
bitch about right now like you get to a trailhead there's 30 other cars at the trailhead and it's
like rough hard country and there's 30 other cars there most of those cars have multiple people in
them so there's that many people you know sort of those cars have multiple people in them. So there's that many people, you know,
sort of walking around in the wilderness.
You just got to go deeper.
You do.
Or find spots that they don't know about.
But that's the thing about you coming over from Australia.
That's not really an option.
It's not, yeah.
There's a lot of guys that spend so much time scouting
and so much time e-scouting.
They're looking on Onyx'd be i'd be better next
year if that makes sense because i already done so much land and walking this year that it's sort
of oh there's no sign there there's no sign there there's no sign even older sign you know like i've
constantly taken note of like the trees that have been nibbled out by the elk in the winter so they
winter there or where there's a shed antler you know you're sort of taking all that sort of thing in and oh there was heaps of hunters there so stay
away from that oh there was bugger all hunters there so as long as i get to follow it up next
year i think i'm better off right so next year you'll try to do the same sort of situation yeah
but it's that whole i'm trying to make it harder i don't want to go backwards so like so you'd
rather have less information and make it harder sort I don't want to go backwards. So you'd rather have less information and make it harder?
Sort of.
Because you want to learn on the spot?
Yeah.
You're just like punishment.
You're a glutton for punishment.
The big thing I want to do next year is walk from the very start of the season to the end of the season.
So just walk one way.
And it's hard to find a mountain range that you can do that.
Because if there's no elk, you keep traveling know and you run you run out of country basically so like this
year i did just short of 500 miles but if there was game right i might have only did 100 miles
or 10 or 10 yeah but because there was no game like literally like no prints on the ground that
it's like there's's no use staying here.
Pack up, camp and move.
Right.
And then I end up walking so far that I walked out to a highway at the end of the unit and called a friend.
And it's like, hey, is there anyone that can pick me up?
Because my truck is like seven days walk away.
And then so, yeah, his dad knocked off work and like absolute legends that's
pretty cool his dad knocked off work drove like three hours to where i walked out pick me up and
then drop me back to my vehicle wow that's a nice guy you owe that dude yeah i do owe that dude send
him a boomerang or some shit i'll take your buffalo hunting yeah there you go yeah I'll do something like that well don't do that you might get them
eaten by crocodiles
you fucking psycho
oh shit
they're bad too
at the moment
are they bad in Australia
yeah they just seem to be
more regularly everywhere
yeah
are you allowed to hunt them there
or are they protected
I think you can get a permit
isn't that funny
you just shoot deer
out of a helicopter
but these fucking monsters
that eat kids
tell me about it
what the fuck
yeah
so about
it was about 12 years ago now
we went into a community
so like an aboriginal community
and they had had kids taken
right
and that's their only water source
and they had had kids taken
out of that water source
pretty sad
that just drives me crazy
yeah
I just don't
understand they kill those fucking things so i'm not saying kill all of them yeah but kill everyone
that's around people management right jim shocky was on the podcast a while back and he was telling
a story about how they had actually hired him to go to africa to hunt crocodiles because there
were so many crocodiles they were taking people in this village and they would set up stakes in
the water so that the crocodiles couldn't go through the stakes to get to them.
But they figured a way around the stakes.
And this woman, while he was there, was washing clothes and she got jacked.
Wow.
Yeah, he said everyone there was like missing a hand, bite taken out of your leg.
He said it was just an epidemic.
And that's like their everyday life.
It's nuts, isn't it?
These are big, big, 18-foot, 19-foot crocs.
Yeah, shared enough.
Everyone's food.
Yeah.
Just giant African crocodiles, which are just the most terrifying animal in the world to me.
Yeah.
Because they lay there underwater and you don't even know they're there.
And then they jump up and get you.
Yeah.
And they're so fast.
Did you ever see the video that I've done in Northern Territory?
Is it online?
It's online.
How would Jamie find it?
I think I pinned it to my Instagram.
And I sort of talk people through it, like after, obviously.
I'm not talking when I'm walking up there.
So I'm going up there and there's all these little water holes as it's drying up.
And there's all these pigs laying on like two or three water holes that way and no pigs laying on
a water hole this way so i'm like oh that's a bit sus already and then i just seen it dude i can
just see its eyes above the water and the back of its tail oh this is it so there's a small water
hole yeah javs out there on the, you can see a big saltwater crocodile.
You can see his snout, his eyes closest to the bank.
And then you can see like the ridge in front of his tail.
Oh, God.
I actually watched him come from the center of that billabong there,
right at the edge when he noticed the line that I was taking to the edge.
Watch this thing sink away.
But, yeah, you can see he's properly hunting me here. Watch this thing sink away
Look how slow he drops away
And he's doing that to try to get you and you're walking close to this mother. Look at his tail prime see the water
So he's ready to go. How far away are you from here?
10 meters, maybe.
Why?
Oh, my God.
Look at it. It's getting ready.
Look at its tail.
I know they're called a saltwater crocodile,
but they should be called an all-water crocodile
because they live in all water.
And I just threw that stick at him.
I'm sure this thing comes up.
I know you're there and a little bit of a fuck you, too.
Jesus Christ, those things are terrifying.
Grabbing you and dragging you into that water and then twisting and tearing your limbs off.
Oh.
Out of nowhere.
Oh.
Bro.
You could take him, Joe.
You could take him.
Fuck all that.
I would take him from a distance with a 300 windmills oh they're
so prehistoric i fuck those but like so that that croc's probably never seen a person before
and there's nothing else getting around there that's walking upright like a human
but i was still food i was still on the menu everything's on the menu completely on the menu
whereas if you see a lot of other animals in nature that have never seen a person you don't
know no you're so foreign that they just want to get the fuck out of there right and he could
have sunk down and turned around and sunk in that water i would never know that it was there
but instead he's like fuck food sweet let's have a crack you know yeah so but that seems more common
at the moment and i don't know why if the population's getting too high,
but you used to get around and see like a salty or two every now and then,
a saltwater crocodile every now and then.
But nearly like hard to find, you know, certain river systems not,
but like tucked away water like that.
Whereas now it's just like every fucking waterhole's got a crock in it.
So we just bought a property up in the Northern Territory of Australia.
And it's got a beautiful big lagoon on it.
And Kimmy's like, oh, fuck, that's going to be sweet for swimming.
And I'm like, that's the wrong state of Australia.
You know, because all the top of Western Australia and all of Northern Territory and the top of Queensland. That's where the crocs are.
Saltwater crocodiles are in that district. And they're deep inland.
Yeah, they can be. Yeah. And this property that we've purchased is inland as well,
but they get pushed in there. The Northern Territory will have a big wet season.
Water will rise over the top of the land and everything like that. Water will rise. And those
big salties can move into a little waterhole where they've never been before so you might have a property and been
like nah this water's sweet and then the next year there's a big salty in there and they can go for a
year without eating they'd be freaking desperate if they did like you're definitely on the menu
if they do that i mean that's just an extraordinary animal. I mean, evolution just has honed those motherfuckers to a razor's edge.
Oh, yeah.
I think I told you about the story where I shoot a big boar pig
and the arrow zips through it and it just dropped over onto the riverbank
and I walked over there with another arrow just to see if I had to follow it up.
And so I walked up and I'm like a meter above it.
Anyway, I was just on the side of the water, like, it was just, just on the side of the water,
like not in the water, just on the side of the water.
And it was just like in the final stages of its life.
And I looked down and put the second arrow away.
Like it doesn't need another arrow.
It's sweet.
And I looked down and put the second arrow away
and just heard the water erupt.
And this big saltwater crocodile come out, grabbed it.
I could still see it in slow-mo.
Grabbed this pig, like threw it over in slow-mo grabbed this pig like threw it
over in the water and then started swimming away of it and actually took and it was a big ball pig
actually took it underwater for like 30 40 yards and then come back up with it and then another
big salty was trying to get it off that saltwater crocodile now that pig was already dead i would
have just jumped straight down the back oh my
the bank and i would have been right in the line of fire oh boy you know it's like two of them
that's how quick it happens dude you know and it's just like they're just sitting there waiting
i had another trip i love these crocodile stories because i hate. They make my skin crawl. Me and Kimmy did like 120 kilometers across like inland Northern Territory.
And it was funny because, you know, when you're in society,
like back at home, you've got all the different things going on,
whether it's bills, kids, you know, just a thousand things going on,
work and stuff like that.
And Kimmy really enjoyed that trip because all you had to worry about every day
was water, food, where you're going to camp.
But with water comes fucking crocodiles because you have to go down
and collect the water.
Like we're walking 120 kilometers.
You can't carry enough water for 120 kilometers.
You literally fill it and it's stinking hot.
So you're filling your water bottle up multiple times a day.
And it's stinking hot.
So you're filling your water bottle up multiple times a day.
And I'm like, you stay back here and I'll race down,
watch the bank where I fill the water up at.
And because you're looking over this water hole,
like even with binoculars, glass in it, you can't see a crock anywhere.
Like during the daylight, like you can't see a crock anywhere.
And I go down and I'm fast.
Like I don't muck around down there.
You go down, you scoop up the water and it's dirty water. You can can't drink it then you take it back up the bank away from the crocs and you filter it up there from one water bottle to another so anyway i race down there i scoop up
the water i'm halfway back up the bank like way away from the water though and kim's like look
behind you and i turn around behind me and big saltwater crocodile eyes come up straight behind
me like that's how quick they are.
I went down, scooped,
the water got away from there.
Right where I filled up the water,
croc eyes come straight up.
Because they had sensed movement.
They're just onto it.
They're probably looking at you the whole time,
you know, but you just can't see them.
Oh, God.
Fuck.
And then, but at nighttime,
like, you'd shine a torch around
and it's just like red eyes everywhere.
So during the day, there's like,
you can't see a croc and then you shine a torch in a water hole at night and there's just eyes everywhere. Do during the day there's like, you can't see a croc and then you're
trying to torch in a water hole at night and there's just eyes everywhere. Do you feel safe
in a tent? Yeah, because they'll only come so far at the bank. So this last mission that I did with
a couple of friends, we had no choice but to camp within like 20 yards of the bank, but it's a high
bank and the saltwater crocodiles were trying to come up that high bank every night um so we end up running fishing line you know like three or four inches
off the ground and like tying tin cans and like whatever we could that would make noise across
there just so you'd hear them coming up overnight oh yeah so that's uncomfortable For some sickening reason, I still sleep fine.
But that's really uncomfortable.
But generally, you're 100 yards up the bank.
They won't come that far unless they're really desperate.
So I had a buddy tell me that he'd had crocs travel 200, 300 yards up a bank
and they took his dogs off a chain.
Like they actually ripped the dogs off the chain where
they're locked up but he was like camp there for weeks and weeks sort of thing so the crocs were
patting and that sort of thing and that's what they do and that's why you don't fill up water
at the same place like twice in a row oh yeah do you know anybody that's ever gotten attacked i
know people that have come bloody close i don't know don't
know of anyone that's been attacked because they're fucking dead they disappear story but no i
great way to get it's not fucking worse than here bears are walking across land at least that danger
there is at the water yeah it's right at the water so if you go down yeah but you need water yeah but yeah and
they could be an inch offshore they can be and then generally i'll try and fill up water behind
a tree so there'll be a tree right on the bank and i'll stay behind the tree and try and fill up water
and then i i had you can dodge yeah i had another one. I tagged you in it, but I know you hate that shit.
But I'm like, fuck, I'm tagging you anyway.
And I'm walking around at night with a torch and, like,
walking through, like, ankle and knee-deep water trying to spot barramundi.
And I was trying to debunk the myth of saltwater crocodiles
and freshwater crocodiles won't live in the same body of water you know
and that's that's so that people are like oh if you see freshwater crocodiles there's no saltwater
crocodiles well i know that's bullshit is the freshwater crocodile smaller they're smaller
they're not aggressive like that they can be territorial they won't eat us for starters so
a freshie might bite you but he'll let you go whereas a salty will bite you and hold
on to you and fucking eat you you know and then so i'm going around this torch and i'm seeing all
these freshies freshwater crocodiles everywhere and then i hear something moving up like there's
sort of rapids below me and i hear something moving through the water and i'm like oh no that's
not a fucking freshie and i turn around start walking down there and shine the torch and yeah, it's a big
salty and he's like coming straight up the water towards me.
And yeah, so if I can, they do live, they do coexist with each other.
So if you see a freshie, don't think you're safe and jump in for a swim.
There could be a bloody salty in there too.
So is that just a lack of people traveling in their area?
And so they've developed this?
I think so so i think probably
anyone that lives in the nt knows it's a myth you know but maybe tourists and that don't you know
and it's like they're horrible names right saltwater crocodile lives in fresh water as well
right but a freshwater crocodile pretty much just lives in fresh water as far as i know yeah yeah there's a place called car hills crossing up
in um the northern territory heading out towards a part of arnhem land it might be actually the
border of arnhem land and there's so many salt water crocodiles on that crossing and people come
unstuck there all the time because it's tidal right so they'll try and drive across there with a car and get their car will get washed off and they've got to swim
back to the bank with all these crocodiles in the water so it's pretty sketchy but i still feel like
australia is safer than hunting bloody wyoming or somewhere or montana because of the grizzlies
and they're actually on land and can come to your tent anytime they like. Yeah. There's been a lot of discussion about removing them from the endangered list.
Yeah, okay.
And putting tags on them, which they really should do.
There's a lot of places where they're overpopulated.
I know they're talking about that in Wyoming,
and there's places in Montana where they're trying to have that discussion.
But, again, you deal with these wildlife activist groups
that don't want you doing that,
and so there's litigations and lawsuits.
It's a hard push, isn't it?
Because you don't want it the other way
where everything's just getting slaughtered.
Of course.
So there has to be a bit of a fight back,
but there needs to be some sort of middle ground
where it's like, oh shit,
this is actually going to be better
for the elk and deer population and people population.
Yeah.
And probably better for the bears as well.
You know, the grizzlies
just wipe out the black bears the problem is that there's these people that are the wildlife
activists they do not like hunting in any way shape or form and they don't want to give up any
ground you know i'm going to send you this jamie because this is pretty crazy a friend of mine filmed this in um in california a wolf that is near bakersfield oh wow yeah and
he doesn't know how it got there and he suspects that someone released it there but this was uh
you know this is right off of you know a mile or two off of Highway 5, which is just bananas, like, that this thing was there.
Not a husky, is it?
No, it's a fucking wolf.
I'm going to send you this, Jamie.
I'd fucking love one.
Here you go, Jamie.
So this, I'll just send it to you.
So this friend of mine filmed this from the side of the road a couple of years ago.
And they think that it's very possible that someone, you know, some rogue activist group just decided to start releasing wolves.
Oh, I'm sure it's happening.
Look at that.
Multiple of the, oh, smokes.
Yeah.
So this is in.
What a beautiful looking animal.
Amazing animal.
Look at his eyes.
This is in- What a beautiful looking animal. Amazing animal. Look at his eyes. This is in central California.
And you could see he's on cattle land.
They're filming it and the wolf's aware they're filming it and you see a cow.
Oh, the cow's chasing it.
The cow's like, what are you?
The cow has no idea.
No idea what a wolf is.
Never seen one before.
And all of a sudden there's a wolf there.
I'm sure that's happened multiple, multiple times.
I'm sure.
There's a lot of people that think that wolves should be everywhere.
And they don't have cattle.
And they don't have dogs.
They don't live there.
And they're just.
And they look beautiful.
So people are like, you can't shoot them.
You can't hunt them.
We've spoken about that a few times where it's like, oh, if it's a pig or something ugly, it's like, oh, yeah, hunt them as much as you like. And then it's a beautiful or something ugly it's like oh yeah hunt them as much as you like and then it's a beautiful deer and it's like you can't shoot that
i know like come on my own agent said that to me she was like you should shoot pigs because
they're ugly i'm like that's so crazy i got the same feelings towards a pig as a beautiful deer
and they're good feelings you know and it's like you as a hunter you understand this as well that
it's not like you know nah shoot it i want to kill it you know it's not about that at all no they're all cool
they are they are it's cool that they exist we're very fortunate that we get to be around them in
the wild because it's such a unique moment when you're around an animal that you know especially
the places that you go you've probably never seen a person before no yeah yeah i come across that a
fair bit and it i just actually had an accountant
with a dingo wild dog in australia that had never seen people before and he actually arced up at me
like was like barking flat out at me and um didn't know what i was and then and then i was i i
pretended to be prey so i turned and started running away to see what he'd do and he come
flying down the bank and like was like, like coming at me.
And then he hit, hit my scent.
And then it was a completely different story.
As soon as he smelt human, he knew it was danger.
And he spun around and bolted.
And he actually, there was a little water hole there that he just walked out of.
Like there was wet prints coming out of the water hole in the half eaten wallaby.
And they were on a kill and rampage there, theseingoes end up finding three wallabies uh one dead that hadn't even
been eaten it just been killed um that one that i was just talking about that half eaten they'd
half eaten another one in the creek and they'd also killed a wild um cattle calf and and were
eating that as well all in this one area they were just cutting sick
how many dingoes do they travel with like in a pack it depends the first dog that i've seen
um he was a male and he was by himself and he might be just like a traveling male
um but then i've seen packs of 16 to 20 before wow yeah they could do some damage they could
do some damage they generally always run the other way.
And that's why that was a weird encounter.
Like he fully,
like me and Kim were both walking down the bank in the Distri River and he
both were in plain view and just stood his ground on the top of the bank on
the other side,
just going off at us.
How big are they?
The size of,
um,
like a cattle dog, a bit bigger than a cattle dog.
So 40 pounds?
Yeah, 40 pounds or so.
Those dingoes right there?
Yeah, they're dingoes.
So people keep them as pets?
These will be in a zoo.
Those are in a zoo?
Yeah, they'll be some sort of fancy zoo.
God, they look just like a dog.
Yeah.
That's what's crazy.
Beautiful animal.
Oh, look at them go.
They don't seem like if i saw that
i'd be like oh someone left their dog out here oh yeah i've seen one in arnhem land about three
years ago that looked like it was crossed with like a tasmanian tiger really yeah it was had
this cool back end like with faint stripes on it and a tail and i was like and then my buddy isaac butterfield you met him
when i was here last month the big tall comedian dude yeah um we were talking about doing like
basically a search mission for them throughout australia doing a series on it which i think
would be really cool because they haven't been extinct for that long and there's a lot of remote
country in australia that there's still definitely
a possibility that they're out there somewhere there's a lot of sightings yeah and i do you
think that that one with the stripes is that possible that they could be a hybrid i really
don't know i didn't say too much about it at the time so i probably shouldn't have fucking mentioned
it on jre why would you want to keep that a secret because i didn't know and i don't if it is out
there i really don't want the place getting stampeded with people looking for it.
Well, you know, people have been looking for them for quite a while
because there are so many sightings of them, of the Thial scenes.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, there's a lot of people that go looking for them
and there's a lot of people that absolutely believe that they still exist.
Yeah, I've.
There was a Willem Dafoe movie a few years back.
Yes, The Hunter.
Yeah, that was about a guy trying to kill the last style scene.
Yeah.
I set up a lot of trail cameras,
and I haven't seen anything on trail camera like that.
But then I've never seen a wild dog on trail camera,
and there's plenty of wild dogs in Australia.
And then I did another series of Isaac Butterfield
looking for the Black Panther in Australia because they come over as like mascots on the u.s ships and
then when i think when they were told to like put them down as in like don't bring them back
they didn't want to put them down like these these soldiers had these animals near them every day
that they kicked them off on the mainland of australia and then so we did this black panther
one and i set up a couple of trail cameras and obviously we never got any photos of a black
panther and then you know isaac's like do you think they're real then i'm like well there's
koalas here there's deer species here in the mountains there's wild dogs in the mountains
there's possums in the mountains there's all these things that definitely exist right there and
there's no photos of them right so it's like everyone haven't scouted cameras yet it really
doesn't prove that there's no tasmanian tiger no there's so much land you know there's only so many
cameras you'd have to get so fortunate 100 yeah but that's the argument the bigfoot people use too
though they think they think bigfoot knows what a camera
is those people are lost i'm sure there's been other species that we haven't discovered that
probably extinct or maybe not extinct so there's still hope for something like that well especially
when you get to places like uh some some of these intense dense jungle rainforests.
How much of that's been explored?
Yeah, yeah.
I remember watching a documentary about a man who spent his entire career looking for the giant sloth in the Amazon
because it used to exist and there's been a bunch of indigenous people
that have told stories about encountering these giant sloths.
So this guy was absolutely convinced that these sloths were there,
and he was kind of banking his career on it, and it wasn't working out.
And you could see the desperation in him.
He was just realizing, like, what have I done with my life?
I might be looking for something that actually doesn't exist.
Doesn't exist, yeah.
You know, and these people would tell him stories about it.
He's like, this guy could be bullshitting me because I'm some fucking white dork
from the Pacific Northwest or wherever the fuck he's from
yeah you know looking in the amazon for a there's some really interesting aboriginal paintings
that there's so many the same that you're like was that a creature that existed that we haven't
found the bounds the bones for that you know or that's still roaming that we haven't found the bones for that, you know, or that's still roaming that we haven't seen, you know.
Like what?
I don't know.
They're real weird, like tall, tall animals.
And yeah, there's just, it's just like,
why did they paint that over?
And you know, there's like,
there's 700 dialects of the Aboriginal language.
So there's a lot of different mobs of Aboriginal people,
you know.
So it's like, but why did they paint that there
and they painted the same painting there
and maybe they never even got along with each other
or communicated for them both to the same drawing, you know.
And then I watched that Graham Hancock documentary,
which was frigging brilliant to watch.
And I started actually thinking,
because they're starting to really date back some extreme
aboriginal civilizations now in Australia that I don't know if Graham's ever been to Australia to
you know see and witness it and study it but love for him to come out at some point but
there's every chance that those animals existed you you know, but we just haven't found them yet.
And I was talking to Jamie when I first got here about that boneyard in Alaska.
Yeah.
Where they're digging all that.
And it's just like, what's next?
And they just, they keep finding stuff that just seems to date back, date back, date back, date back.
I've seen he's found these ancient bones that have saw marks on them.
Yeah, you haven't seen that yet?
No.
Oh, my God.
Very clear markings.
It sounds like a death pit.
Sawed through where it seems like there was a mass extinction event that happened, and it's documented.
Look at that.
Holy smokes.
Yeah, not just one.
Yeah, it sounds like their death pit pit like their waist pit no not necessarily
no because they've found things that are there that they didn't look he's found multiple holy
smokes and this is very recent now here's what's crazy the saw supposedly was only invented 5 000
years ago oh wow and a lot of these things he's dating they're way older than 5 000 years ago 10
15 20 looks like someone was hunting and hunting sick.
Yeah, not only that, but someone who had access to a saw,
and they were getting the marrow out of these mammoth bones,
which is nuts, man.
And there's carvings on them.
They found short-faced bear skulls.
They found those skulls of cats that weren't even supposed to be in Alaska.
He's found a bunch of species that weren't even supposed to have existed there.
This is so cool.
Oh, man.
John Reeves is the fucking man.
And his place that he's got there is insane.
It's absolutely insane.
It's so filled with animals and a very thick carbon layer.
Look at these bison heads there.
Did you see the one that we have out front?
Yeah, I did.
Yeah, I'll study in it.
Yeah, I have to find a university that I can send that to and get it carbon dated.
Oh, yeah, cool.
Oh, so you don't know exact dates of any of this stuff?
He has some.
Oh, okay.
And he just sent some of those bones that have been sawed.
He sent some of those to be carbon dated.
Yeah.
So he's going to find out within the next few months.
This is going to be really interesting.
Fascinating.
Because if they're older than 5,000 years ago, okay, now we have historical evidence that predates
the invention of the saw, because whatever those things are cut with, that's a saw. I mean, it's a
smooth, clean cut, and it looks like human beings did it to try to get access to the marrow.
Marrow, yeah. It sounds like the original butcher shop. Yeah. Well, the area that he's at, though, because of the thick carbon layer, what he thinks when he's listened to Randall Carlson and Graham Hancock discuss the Younger Dryas impact theory, he thinks he's in an area that got hit.
Right.
And that these things died off instantly, that there was a large area where they existed in.
And he's finding hundreds and hundreds of these animals in a small area.
The area is only like six acres.
Wow.
I thought it was smaller than that even.
Well, one of them is six acres.
And the one that he's currently digging at is four acres.
So there's multiple areas where what they do is they're blasting water into the permafrost.
So they have like a cliffside and they're blasting water into this permafrost and then
they'll see a woolly mammoth tusk.
And if you've ever seen the documentation that he has on his Instagram, he's got warehouses
filled with mammoth bones and skeletons.
This dude must be one of the most exciting people there is.
He's so fucking cool.
Can you imagine just like blasting at a wall and be like, what's that coming?
Sick.
Yeah.
Well, he's so fucking cool.
But the other thing that he's documented is that the Museum of Natural History in Manhattan
dumped these bones in the East River.
So they had these guys go out and he announced it on the podcast.
He told everybody where it would be.
And these guys went out there and they find mammoth bones. They found mammoth bones in the
East River. You know, they found these 15,000, 20,000 year old bones that are at the bottom of
the East River that were dumped there by the museum. How long ago? The twenties, the thirties.
Far out. Yeah. Far out. So that's one that they just found. So they found that in the East River.
He's going to gift it to me.
Yay.
Oh, you've got enough gifts in here walking around.
It'd be dope to have that one.
Oh, yeah.
It'd be dope to have that one.
Because the reason why those guys were there is because he announced it on the podcast.
And so they have it zip-tied because it's cracked.
Yeah, of course.
But that thing is at the bottom of the fucking East River, which is just absolutely amazing. That's cracked. They want to make sure it doesn't fall apart. But that thing is at the bottom of the fucking East River,
which is just absolutely amazing.
But John, because he's a gold miner,
and so his land that he has up there is originally for gold mining.
But along the way, he's found a fucking fortune in mammoth bones,
and it's such an extraordinary area.
So, okay, this gets more interesting.
Here's a picture of one of the straight cut bones,
still frozen beneath the ice wedge and the frozen muck about 50 to 60 feet below the surface.
So who knows how many thousands of years
of ground is covering those things.
And because it's permafrost,
they're able to get these things out completely preserved.
It's so that's amazing so interesting yeah and just the fact that this is very small area that he's finding these things
i'm walking around all the time like look i've never found anything like that but yeah i'm just
constantly looking for something like that that's undiscovered you know it's like without going out
of my way like i'm just doing it while i'm hunting but did the aborigines did they use um bone or uh rock for arrowheads do they have that so they
they didn't need bows and arrows so that was never discovered they didn't have a need for it because
i was so efficient with spears boomerang so boomerangs were basically for hunting flocks
of birds so a big flock of birds would take
off so very situated suited for australian conditions big flocks of birds boomerang
spears were you know your wallabies kangaroos things like that um i believe a lot of the spears
were just a hardened timber head um so like over a fire and hardened up um yeah i'd have to look into it more i don't want to say the
wrong thing but i'm sure there was cases where they did use stones we're gonna come right back
so i gotta take a leak but we're right back sweet and we're back we're back we're back um one of
the things we were talking about last time you were here was that when you you explained that
there's 700 different languages that these Aborigines have,
and that a mob, that's what they call a tribe, a mob of Aborigines,
could be just 10 kilometers away from another mob.
Yeah, so one community to the next.
They don't know what the other people are saying.
Yeah, they wouldn't know their language.
Which is crazy.
It is crazy, yeah.
And then imagine that many different countries inside of America. Right. There'd be so much conflict. Which is crazy. it might have been and have now been pushed into like communities where there's all these other
separate countries essentially dialects that have got to now coexist and like they've been at war
with one another since the dawn of their time you know so it's like it's pretty full-on when you
think about it like that and then the other thing that's really hard is how do they teach that in schools where there's 700 different dialects?
And they're not documented, these dialects, right?
A lot of them aren't.
A lot of them are dying out with the people, unfortunately.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a shame.
This thing that you were saying about these cave paintings that show these animals, can we find those?
You probably could yeah i'm
sure there's something documented on the net more than me just saying they look similar i'm sure
there's something like that um but like whether they're a spiritual person or animal or being
is is hard to say but you know you hear stories about um the hairy people and things like that like
like that ain't people aye yeah what is that
australian yeah it's a really skinny darth vader uh we put the western word on it
what is it yahweh yahweh like your big foot oh they, whoa, what is that image?
That's the Yahweh?
That looks like the bloody devil eating someone there.
The idea of something that, so these, and there's more, wow, there's more than one of these.
Yeah.
Huh.
This thing that they, what are they showing?
Queen can.
Yeah, look at the similarity in them.
Wow.
Isn't that cool?
And what are those things to the left of it?
Like, what is that thing?
I don't know.
Like, what are all those things?
It looks like a giant ball floating with a string attached to it.
But there's so many, scroll back down again, Jamie. a giant ball floating with a string attached to it. Like,
but there's so many,
scroll back down again,
Jamie. There's so many similar images of these long armed creatures with four fingers.
Whoa.
Isn't that amazing?
I do.
They know how old these paintings are.
I'm sure they do know some of them,
but there's,
so there's like, back 70,000 years now.
Whoa.
Six toes, whatever that is.
Yeah, what is that thing?
And there was big events in the last 10,000 years,
as in media strikes and things like that.
So it's quite interesting, isn't it?
Yeah.
There was a big one that's detailed off the coast of Australia
around 5,000 years ago.
Like, look at these things.
How weird.
Look at their heads.
Aliens, Joe?
Yeah, right?
Yeah.
So, like, yeah.
I think there's even some paintings of, like, spaceships.
Really?
Or what you would consider as spaceships.
Wow.
Now, did the Aborigines, do they have a history of the use of psychedelics?
Are there psychedelic drugs?
Take it there.
Yeah.
Well, I guess, because there was a lot of bush medicine that they used.
So, you know, whatever the side effects could have been of that.
Look at those fucking things.
Look how many there is.
Bush medicine.
Like, what does that mean?
Like just natural herbs, you know, natural things that, you know, might be the sap of a tree.
It might be leaves boiled up.
It might be some sort of nut.
Australian rock art might be the oldest in the world.
Wow.
Does it actually say how old?
Look how-
60,000 years.
Fucking-
Yeah, I know.
60,000 years ago and they look like aliens.
I mean, those look exact-
Isn't that incredible?
Giant black eyes, huge heads.
That looks exactly like the classic gray alien.
Some paintings might also mean something else.
So like I know we're looking at those as faces.
Right.
So one of my company's logos is, it's a bunch of dots.
of my company's logos is it's a bunch of dots and the words nalia which is in the nalamar language which is like the community where that i'm there in the nalamar language it means like people come
together to create a community and then so those those drawings that we just looked at could also
be similar to that like there's two communities that are coming together.
The line in the middle might mean this is their land,
which could be a ridgeline, you know, so your land's there, our land's here.
And then the circle, the whole circle around it could actually mean the world
or community, everything together.
So even though it looks like a face, it could actually mean something a lot different.
Right.
And that's one of the difficulties in Australia with teaching the traditional people's past is there's so much to it.
And there's so much that's not understood from one community to the other.
So it does make it very difficult.
But it's sad that it is getting lost.
Well, when you're dealing with 700 different languages and people that have lived in this area for 60 plus thousand years,
I mean, that is crazy.
I mean, how much work is being done to document all this stuff?
I don't really know.
A lot of these communities are very remote,
so I don't know how much help there actually is for them.
I don't know how many people can go to a place like that to document it.
I don't know how many people are actually qualified to document it either.
So, yeah, it is very difficult.
And do they have a written language when it comes to this?
Yeah, I believe so.
Yeah.
So there's 700 written languages.
I don't know about written language, really.
Because it's one thing to speak a language
because that's what you know,
but what reason do they have to write it down?
Right.
Do they have an alphabet like we do,
or do they share the alphabet?
I don't believe so.
Whoa.
Yeah, I don't know enough to say too much,
but I don't want to offend these people, you know.
Right.
And I'm definitely no expert on it.
I can only give you, you know, what I do know and what I've heard and learnt myself.
But I think a part of the struggle in Australia with Aboriginal culture is that it's not a written language.
So, like, how can it be passed on to someone else?
You're either in the family and you grew up listening to the language
and understand it.
Right.
Or you don't.
Or you don't, yeah.
And then we might lose it forever.
Yeah.
I'm sure when you're talking about 60,000 years old
and over 700 different dialects.
Whoa, that's a fucking dinosaur.
Yeah.
Wow.
Whoa. That's a fucking dinosaur. Yeah. Wow. Whoa.
It's apparently called a yarrow,
or it's a very close representation of a plesiosaur,
I think is what I was just reading.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Wow.
Isn't it fascinating?
And how old is that supposed to be?
Paintings and tradition.
I didn't see that.
Whoa.
Yeah, they're just showing what it would have looked like.
Yeah.
That's fucking crazy
Getting an adrenaline rush
Wow
They have drawings
Of fucking dinosaurs
Amazing eye
This is where I was getting there
I don't know how I get here
There's a lot of versions of that
I was trying to track
A lot of different versions
Of a plesiosaur
Just a like
Different Yeah I don't know Which was the original Picture from this But it's in color In some places There's a lot of versions of that. I was trying to track that. A lot of different versions of a plesiosaur? Just a different one?
Yeah, I don't know which was the original picture from this,
but it's in color in some places,
and it's being talked about in other different parts of the Internet.
I'll just leave it.
Look at that one that says the ancient history of UFOs,
the one over here.
Yeah, look at that fucking...
What is that?
That looks like a person or some thing in a spaceship.
Oh, it doesn't, whatever.
Yeah.
Very similar to what we're looking at.
Yeah.
But you just got to wonder, like, were these people tripping balls?
Maybe.
They had a dream time, which sounds like it would have been like their traditional religion.
Have you seen these up close?
These?
Not those.
But some of these?
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's a place in western australia
where there's over 70 this is just on a peninsula on the coast there's over 70 000
000 rock art pieces just on that part of the coast 70 000 and the story is that there was
people that lived on the mainland on the coast.
This is the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
And then there was people that lived on the islands.
So the Dampier Archipelago is 40-odd islands, I think, just off the coast.
And there was another community of people that lived on the islands.
I think they called them like the boat people or the canoe people or something like that because they traveled from island to island in canoes and they looked and talked and acted so much different than the people on the mainland that when these canoe people used to come towards the mainland the people on the mainland would
clear out of there like would leave that's how freaky these other people were to them
it's like so fascinating to think about hey what does that mean like what do these
people look like no idea but the fact that there was 70 over 70 000 rock arts on the mainland that
says that there was a lot of people on the mainland and they would clear out of there when
these canoe people would come it's insane wow yeah what was canoe people like i don't know i just
i wish there was a video.
I wish there was something of it.
It sucks not to go back, but it's cool that we can't go back because it's ancient.
Yeah, but it is so interesting that they were so different that these people would be like,
what the fuck?
We got to get out of here.
These things are different than us.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It must have been so foreign to us.
Oh, look, they have images of the things in the canoes.
I'm guessing this is the same thing he's talking about.
These could be 50,000 to 70,000 years old.
Wow.
Kimberly Rockhart.
50,000 to 70,000.
Imagine getting in a fucking canoe 50,000 to 70,000 years ago
and making your way across the ocean in some hollowed out log.
Why?
Where's that from?
Kimberly Rock Arch.
So what?
Kimberly's Australia.
So that's Northern Australia and it shows deer.
Yeah, that's what I'm curious about.
Because deer obviously introduced species to Australia.
So that is super interesting.
What was there that was deer like?
That's what's crazy is if they're introduced.
What was deer like in Australia if it wasn't them?
That is insane.
That's so cool to look at.
So are there any deer that are native to Australia?
No deer at all.
No deer at all.
So what the fuck is that?
If Australia didn't have introduced species, it would be the most fucking boring countryside in the universe.
Is it possible that there was something like that 50, 60,000 years ago and they just wiped them out or something?
100%.
Asteroid wiped them out?
There's no, like the fact that no bones have been discovered from it.
Right.
You really don't know.
But like.
We need a John Reeves over there with a hose.
Yeah, we do.
But you don't have permafrost.
No, we don't.
No.
Yeah.
So.
You have to start digging.
How would you even find it?
I don't know.
And has it perished over that time?
Right.
Considering the interior of Australia is all desert.
Right.
You know.
Yeah.
So yeah, quite interesting.
No, it's an amazing place and it's it is amazing
that it's one of the few places that doesn't have a native deer species yeah yeah it's got all weird
species like imagine never seen a kangaroo and seen it for the first time right like this thing
hopping around like joey in its pouch standing up right like what the fuck what the fuck and even
an emu you know like it's got all
the weird species yeah and all the weird species that have got no appeal to be hunted and then
we've introduced deer and pigs and goats and bloody camels and donkeys and everything else
that's just thrived and gone but kangaroo you can eat i've had kangaroo you can eat kangaroo it's
very lean yeah it's delicious so there's a market for kangaroo in australia now yeah yeah which is
like odd that we're eating our bloody emblem, you know.
It is odd.
Yeah.
It's like we were cooking eagles.
Like shit.
Yeah.
Well, in certain places, eagles are like pigeons.
Like if you go to Alaska, eagles are everywhere up there.
And New Zealand's the same.
Is it?
Yeah.
And so New Zealand's really got no predators.
I think they've got like a stout, like a little ferret,
which picks on a lot of ground-nesting birds and stuff like that.
That's it.
But they don't have, you know, there's no bloody bears running around
or, you know, anything like that.
Well, the Europeans brought over animals to New Zealand
to turn New Zealand into a hunting paradise, right?
Yeah.
That was like, was it the 1800s or 1700s?
That must have been like a filthy, filthy rich dream.
Like, let's just
turn this whole island into a hunting mecca that sounds like what a really rich person would do
way back then you know they just had the ability to do like get a boat yeah fit up a stag i've seen
the images of like the tar getting taken up to i I think it might've been the top of Mount Cook in like a trolley system on wires, you know,
like they went all out to get them
to where they wanted them, you know.
So crazy.
And it started with bugger all of them
and just, they've just thrived.
Yeah.
So New Zealand is doing the same thing as Australia
where they just, you know,
they're helicopter culling them and, you know,
trying to eradicate them.
Are they trying to eradicate all of them?
Yeah, which is a shame because New Zealand's got a really good hunting culture as well.
Yeah, that's why it's shocking.
Yeah, like obviously if numbers get too far out of control, for sure,
but trying to eradicate the whole species is just ridiculous.
I was telling someone about just, I think it might have been just yesterday,
about I was actually in New Zealand, I was climbing someone about just, I think it might have been just yesterday, about I was actually in New Zealand.
I was climbing a mountain.
I don't know if I told this story here or not.
Like I had to like, I had ice spikes on and ice axe to get up there
and I shot a bull tar.
And as I was up there, I heard something and looked up
and could see all this snow and ice flicking up in the air.
And then I seen a frigging tar, like full doing cartwheels through the air falling off the mountain and i
had to grapple to the mountain to make sure it wasn't going to hit me um and this tar fell down
the bottom i ended up getting down the bottom she was dead already like she'd splattered on the rocks
but i ended up putting another two out of their miseries that had broken they had broken legs
and it's just like you hardly ever see nature slip up like that right
you know and it's just but this day the sun come out melted that top layer of snow then it come
over freezing cold so it was just like slick ice up on the mountain and then so they were falling
off and quite a few of them in the end so yeah pretty new zealand's like you know you people
always ask me like what's the most scariest place to hunt? You know, and it's like fucking New Zealand. It doesn't even have scary animals.
Didn't you break your leg up there and have to get helicoptered out or something?
I actually fractured my spine. I haven't told that story. That's how long it's been. It's been bloody five years since I did a podcast. I think that was year four, four years ago.
since I did a podcast. I think that was year four, four years ago. Um, yeah, I was on a hunt.
I climbed in over a couple of days up the mountain, like started from the bottom,
climbed up the top. I was chasing, um, chamois, you know, chamois. Yeah. I was chasing chamois,
which is like regarded as one of the hardest animals to harvest with a bow. And they're not necessarily a hard animal to stalk. They're just to get to but really cool hunt good really good eating you know great experience and I think I end up killing
a shemmy on day four and the weather was rolling in right really bad and I actually climbed into a
you know pretty horrible spot but I was confident in doing it because I was always going to get a
helicopter out you know like get an animal on the ground, process it, pack up camp,
call in a helicopter and get the helicopter back off the mountain
because going down can be pretty risky.
It always feels safer going up than actually coming down with a bunch of weight on your backpack.
And I looked at the weather, had a GPS on me, which could tell me the weather,
and I looked at the weather and it was coming in really bad for like the next four or five days was forecast so i called the
helicopter in a little bit early but they're like hey there's a there's a gap in the weather we can
come and pick you up right now and i'm like yeah look look let's get it done i was pretty keen to
get off the mountain i was only like camped on this tiny little spot like a tiny little flat spot
that just sort of fit the tent and like me coming out the front of it and the back of it was just
like sheer cliff for like 200 yards straight down yeah it was pretty pretty sketchy spot but
the weather was still good i felt comfortable there i can hear the helicopter coming in and
as the helicopter's coming in these fucking horrible clouds just start rolling in like
at my height and i hear the helicopter coming coming in but it sounds like it's freaking below
me and i've just got me sleeping uh not me sleeping bag out me um mattress because it's
bright orange to flag them down in like the clouds so i've walked onto the far side of the tent and i
can just every now and then see these lights
flashing and they're like a hundred yards below me flying in the clouds and i hear this chopper
like coming in i'm like it's gonna it's i thought it was gonna smash straight into the mountain
and you see him coming in coming in like i mean it's like sheer rock straight below me
and the helicopters below me and then they seen that they were about to fly into the rock wall
and then they pulled back and then i to fly into the rock wall and then they
pulled back and then i just heard them leave and i'm like fuck i'm here now for the next four or
five days what sucked was in the panic of them saying yeah we're coming to pick you up now i
packed up and got super wet like packing up in the snow was starting to drizzle out of them clouds
so i was already wet my sleeping bag was wet everything was wet from
packing up I'm like shit there's I probably should start hiking out and then so I looked at my GPS
and it looked at the time like it was a pretty gradual climb all the way down into this creek
like so there's a glacier up above me and it's been melting for however many years and it's carved out like a bit of a creek
and so it looks safe and then i started climbing down and the first i don't know two hours wasn't
too bad like it was pretty gradual like a bit of rock hopping and slippery stuff
and i had one little leap to do it was like two and a half meters or a meter down on onto a rock to go out to this next rock and it
was like there was a big glacier pool below me and it sounds weird but you're calculating everything
as you're going you know so it's like this is the best place to jump down because if i did fall at
least i'm landing in water and and that's just a two second process in your head you know and
that that's happening all day like there's never a
point that you can switch off in that country like you're constantly on the ball otherwise that's
when you're gonna come unstuck anyway what i didn't realize was the rock that i was jumping
down onto had actually quite a bit of a slope to it and it had like clear ice a layer of clear ice
on it oh you gotta remember i've got this chamois in my backpack and friggin a wet wet
everything because i packed up in the wet so the pack weighs a lot and it weighs a lot anyway
because you're going back for like 14 days man i hit this rock and my feet come on out from under
me that fast it like it was just like full chest weight on the rock bang started sliding off the
rock backwards so i'm on my stomach sliding backwards legs going first and i sliding off the rock backwards. So I'm on my stomach, sliding backwards, legs going first.
And I slide off the back of that rock and I've got a heavy backpack on.
So it just pulled me.
I just started plumbing and down to this ice cold water and like back neck first,
straight into the water.
And I just remember hitting the water.
It pulled me all the way under like it was a good enough fall,
probably six, seven meters down into it from where the rocks lit off. And it pulled me all the way under like like it was a good enough fall probably six seven meters down into it from the where the rocks lit off and it pulled me under i just remember my
breath getting sucked out of me like like i mean like it's crystal clear like that blue water
straight off a glacier and it ripped me down and then sort of i struggled to come back up get to
the surface and by the time i got to the surface because it's flowing pretty hard it was pushing me into one of the drainage chutes from it and then so i hit
this drainage chute sort of scramble and trying to grab on and then it pulled me down legs first
as well like down into the chute in the next slot of water then by the time i got to that point
there was no like there was no going back up there was no chance i could go back up because
it's dropped me into a spot where i wasn't on the sides of the bank anymore i was stuck in this
glacier um milk and then i end up getting out of there and i got to the next point there was like
a big tree like falling down in the water there's no trees on the side it's just whatever's been
washed down over the years like a big stump and I ended up wrapping my hand around that, my arm around that, get to my legs and then like weighed twice as much again.
Cause now everything's, you know, full of water and soaked.
You still have the pack on.
Yeah, I still got the pack on.
And then, and then I got like, got up on the rock then.
And it's just like one rock in all this water.
And then it's a fucking long story.
So I'll probably skip a few bits but i end up
like fighting with it for the rest of the day and then i end up falling over another two times
one time i actually had to volunteer to jump i had nowhere to go i was just like stuck in this
little canyon in the water and i literally had to come up with the guts to be like jump into the
next water shoot which is just like a slide cut out of the rocks from the water running down there
for fucking millions of years and i've still got my backpack on i can't leave nothing because that
could be what saves me at the end of the day i've got a sleeping bag i've got other clothes in there
i've got um meat from the chamois i still i had the skin from the chamois i still had everything in
there and um i like have you ever done anything where you fucking like properly got to convince
yourself to do it because like i was i didn't know if that was going to kill me going to the
next step or if that was going to save my life and then so you're calculating all that and then
having to have the guts to actually jump into the next shoot of water and go down man i fucking i just remember just fucking doing it and i jumped
perfect i landed on the backpack i put all the weight on the backpack slid into the next bit
just like pump with adrenaline right so i'm not even feeling the cold at this point because
adrenaline's just going sick and i end up going down a bit further and then i could just hear this like deafening sound
of water and i'm like fuck me dead like what next because constantly it seemed to be like what next
what next what's next and i hear this deafening sound of water and i get to the fucking edge and
it's like three four hundred yards straight straight down oh my god and it's just like
like then it was like no there's no going
any further you're like to go further is definitely deaf you need to work something out here you know
and it got to the point it takes a lot of courage to even be like i need someone to save me like at
least for me because i've all like i've always you know like it's it's the way that you're brought up,
the way that I was brought up because, you know,
I never had the father figure in my life.
I didn't have any of that.
So it was always everything I do, I do for myself.
That's why I never usually ask people for help.
This is the biggest ask for help there fucking is.
Right.
And it's pressing the SOS button on the emergency device, you know,
and it's like, and i sat there for 20
minutes and still pumped with adrenaline over that time i fucking like getting adrenaline talking
about it now and then realizing there's fucking definitely no way off here it's time to hit the
button like this is where you don't get to see your family again or you don't get to do any of
this again or live life you need to hit the button and just fucking like still hitting the button hurt and you got to hold it in for like 10 or 20 seconds
it was fucking the longest 10 seconds of my life and like at this point i've taken the backpack off
i took a jacket off because it was just so fucking heavy and wet and it's sitting there and i'm
holding the button in for like 10 seconds and it's like then it's like SOS, and it's like, oh, shit.
But there's no reply to it or anything like that at that point.
It sort of just says the signal's successful, as in sent, and that's about it.
And it's getting late, and I'm like, I need to set up some sort of camp.
I need to go for my pack, what i can use like what's going to
work out here and i pull my pack out and then like i've only got a spot that's like the size of one
body laying down to even stand on in this area and it's barely flat the only thing that's kept
it flat is the trees falling off from up at the alpine tops at some point in its life falling
down there.
And then all the shale and rock that's fallen off,
these big washouts with the water,
has like leaned up against that big stump.
So it's like laid out a flat bit.
And I could fit about three quarters of a little one person tent on there.
And so I set the tent up there.
I set the mattress that I was telling you that i was
trying to flag down the helicopter whiff i'd set that just on there that just sat on there
and then i pulled the sleeping bag out and it was fucking soaked like the sleeping bag was drenched
and i'm like it's still gonna be something and went for the rest of me pack i pulled the chamois
skin out and sort of laid that there hoping hoping it would give me some warmth as well.
I've stripped down then all the bigger layers to try and get that off me.
I climbed in this wet, cold sleeping bag,
which is the worst feeling fucking ever in that situation.
You do.
You're starting to think this is the end.
This might be death.
I climbed in there.
I was trying to get warm.
And then I kept looking at that signal, but my phone, like it's through my phone.
It's usually through my phone, sorry.
My phone had already died.
So it's just through the little device.
And remember the old phones, how you had to go for the fucking alphabet on them to type a message?
I'm trying to type a message to
my buddy that was keeping tabs on me as all this was happening and and the message just went out
as in i need help and he like like i've been around this dude for forever he's one of my best
friends so he knows what i'm like he he knows if i'm like i fucking need help that it's not good
you know and that message i didn't know if it went out or not.
I had to turn it off because I had like 4%, 5% in it.
So I shut it down.
Anyway, I'm laying in there.
And then obviously the adrenaline's calming off.
And I think I dozed off for a little while.
It might have been 40 minutes or so. It's like a power nap.
And I woke up and my body was just
quivering flat out like like from fucking deep in it was just quivering flat out and that feels
like death that probably that that actually it scared me because like i couldn't stop i was just
fucking quivering flat out like hyper like my core is trying to warm back up yeah and it took me to took me a little while to think about that because i i shut i end
up shutting myself down i stopped myself shaking and then i was like you fucking idiot that's
exactly what your body's supposed to do it's trying to warm up and then i sort of loosened
up again and it started shaking and then i went to move this arm and this leg and they wouldn't move
like i couldn't move them and
then I was like oh shit like as in the adrenaline it was from that first fall I think or it was from
the jump that I did um I don't know if I'd bruised it I don't know if it's about nearly hypothermic
I don't know what really happened there just I just couldn't move that leg and I couldn't move
this arm so then that scared me a bit too and i started thinking about kim and the kids and like
like shook me up and then and i got teary as well which was weird because then i fucking warmed up
like when all that happened i was starting to warm up anyway i tried to sleep you can't sleep here
in a wet sleeping bag it's free like everything's fucking frozen around you there's fucking rocks rolling from the top of the fucking mountain down into the
river that what the creek that's now turned into a river there's rocks rolling down there you
listen to that all night there's like smaller debris and rocks hitting the tent and it's just
like and you can't move because i'm on a pad this big anyway i don't even know how but the morning came at some point i got up turn the gps back on
no there was no message no nothing so i hit the sos one last time and i held it in
nothing nothing i think i sat around for the first couple of hours of morning like just holding my
chest and stuff like that trying to get warm again and i got to the point and it's like
no one's coming for you like it's fucking on you and that was the best thing that happened to me
because it was almost like i hit the button and it was almost like a give up as in like oh someone's
coming for me it's fine you know and then it wasn't until i realized and said to myself no
one's fucking coming just fucking get up and do something.
And I was like, I'm fucking going to start a fire.
Even if it takes me half a day, at least this is turning.
Let's try and start a fire.
Let's do something, you know, like fucking stay in it.
And then, so I started pulling all the different rubbish out of my bag
that I'd carried from the trip.
I started piling that up.
There's like no branches or anything
around so then i'm back at that tree where my tent was and i'm trying to carve into that tree
like to try and get into the middle of it try and find some dry because it's you know it's been
raining for you know a day and a half now maybe even longer down low because i descended so far
down and then i'm trying to get in there and I'm
like I'll burn the tent I'll burn what else can I burn you know I started thinking about all the
things that I can burn I'm like yeah if you're here for another night you can't you can't burn
any of that right so I left the tent set up left the chamois skin in there and then I just got it
to the point where I was like I could probably probably start a fire now. It's not going to last long because there's no wood on it.
It's just all, you know, trash that I had in my bag.
And then I started thinking, what else can I do?
I'm like, you know, I'm going to build a fucking helicopter pad because there was no, you know, it was all sheer.
Like no commercial helicopter could land there.
Only a rescue helicopter at that point could pick me up from where I was because they, you know, they could drop down a rope and lift me up.
But if I build an actual pad, I knew once the weather cleared, I could just call in the commercial helicopter to pick me up.
So I was like, fuck it.
And so I start grabbing like rocks.
There's just rocks everywhere.
And I was going to build basically a retaining wall and then start filling it.
It would have taken days to do but i was just keen
to keep busy and then i was fully trapped i could not go back up i couldn't go up the creek i
couldn't go up the sides i definitely couldn't go down low and that roars the whole time right
beside me just screaming that water pumping down there anyway so i start collecting rocks
and then i thought i heard a fucking helicopter and i was like fuck and this is like this is five
or six hours now after morning and i'm listening and it's getting louder i just see this fucking
big helicopter bank up this like it's a fucking you're in a draw system in between these massive
mountains and it just comes cruising straight around and i was like holy fuck like i was like
so fucking pumped and then this arm still wasn't working i got this leg to start working in the
morning this arm still wasn't working properly and i was so fucking pumped and the dude comes around
and he gives me the thumbs up oh fuck man my thumb must have been so straight. I was, fuck, I was like this, you know, I was so excited.
And then at the same time, I was like, I don't want to leave anything.
I'm fucking rescued now.
I don't want to leave anything behind.
I don't want to leave this beautiful place like it's been touched.
So I fucking packed up the tent, jammed the chamois skin back in my backpack.
I picked up the rubbish.
I stuck that back in my backpack.
The dude sort of had to look around to make sure it was good to come down he just come down on this winch dude i fucking gave him a big hug wow and he's like how the fuck did
you get here wow and i was i was like i came from the top and he's like hold because they seen this
fucking rock face that was straight below me.
And I was thinking they wouldn't even take my backpack, to tell you the truth.
And I'm like, just leave the backpack here.
And he's like, yeah, but I'll bring it up on the next run.
And then fucking he lift me up.
I got into this big bird.
Rope went back down.
Fucking come back up with the fucking backpack and everything.
And I'm like, how did you know that i was here and my buddy actually rallied the locals and they come out as a training exercise
because they didn't actually even get the fucking sos that i was down there oh my god so they come
out there as a training exercise and pick me up knowing that i was probably there but that's how
they had to hope i'm not getting them in trouble by saying this i doubt it anyway they probably saved my
life so they shouldn't be in trouble but they come out as a training exercise and come and pick me up
what would you have done i don't know i couldn't i i don't think i could have physically went
anywhere without greatly in danger in my life more than what it already was.
Like there I had a chance to survive for so long.
But walking anywhere from there, there was such a great chance of fucking dying within the first couple of minutes.
Down was 100% death.
100% death going down.
All these rocks of ice all over them.
Sheer fucking drop down there.
And then when I flew out of there in the helicopter,
I just kept looking to see if I had done that somehow,
if I could have went.
Because you couldn't jump off the waterfall
because it just hits massive big rocks down the bottom.
It's not hitting a big waterfall.
Big rocks down the bottom.
Past that point was fucking dozens of spots as bad as that going along the way that there was no way i was
going further anyway so even if i risked limb and limb to go further i was still fucked and you
couldn't get back up couldn't get back up i was i was in such a shit spot and but that shit spot
it's probably the only thing that saved you is probably the only thing that saved you.
It is the only thing that saved me.
But the thing that saved myself,
because I'm like, you're fucked if you go beyond here.
This is where you stay.
This is as far as you go.
So that SOS message that I sent out,
the International Rescue Center got that message.
One guy got that message.
Then they tried to call me on my mobile phone number.
I'm fucking hitting the GPS, fucking SOS, because your phone don't work.
Otherwise, I would have called authorities off my phone
and sent me an email to be like, we didn't get the message correctly.
We're not sure exactly where you are.
And it's just like, well, at least send one.
And then the dude went on a fucking two-hour lunch break.
Isn't that insane?
I was reassured afterwards that they put all their stuff through training again.
So that wouldn't happen again.
So hopefully I've saved someone else along the line.
That sounds like a terrible place to visit.
They said, do you want to go to the hospital or do you feel okay?
And I said, I feel okay.
And they dropped me back at my vehicle, which was parked at like sort of like a trailhead and i got out of the flight
and then i and my bag was on the ground so i hadn't even lifted the bag up yet
and i leant down to get the bag and i just fucking crippled like my back was like fucked
fucked up and i got back to australia and i went into the hospital because
i'm like like it feels like my bladder's about the burst my back's all fucked up i can't move
i was all hunched over they did x-rays and they're like yeah you got lines fractures through your
spine you're very lucky that it wasn't any worse and it probably i'd know a month later i was fully picking up
dumb heavy things again felt all right but yeah so if anyone's like what's what's the scariest
place to hunt it's fucking new zealand no predators no nothing no grizzlies no saltwater
crocodiles it's still the scariest place to hunt like i've nearly come unstuck there twice now
you know and every year i hear about stories guys, just a small slip on the mountain,
but they just keep going and they're gone.
So yeah, skip NZ.
Fuck.
Damn.
Four years ago, that story still works now.
Did you ever think about going back there?
You know, it's funny because like i've done that real sketchy stuff in new zealand four or five times now and i've shot
tar and i've shot shimmy and i've done them in beautiful ways like the bow walking from the
bottom to the top and days in and getting them and it's like and i want to do it again but like how your fucking time comes up
at some point you know and it's like and i'm i don't think i'm any more sensible than ever but
well maybe i'm a bit more sensible that would make sense because i'm a little i don't have to do that
again i will do new zealand again but i won't do that sketchy country and it's like i'll do that
because there's probably no one back there.
Like that's what puts you there to start with.
You're fully off the grid.
You don't see any other hunters.
Cause that's all public land in New Zealand,
but you're back far enough and doing the dumb enough stuff that people don't do it.
And it's,
it is.
And you had no backup batteries.
Do you keep backup batteries?
I do.
Yeah.
But they all froze and died.
That night in the tent where I told you I was in a shitty spot
and I wanted to get the helicopter back in,
that was a super cold night.
And, like, I have spare batteries in my sleeping bag
to keep them warm with me.
They still all died.
I got up in the morning, the phone was dead.
My main camera battery was dead.
Then a battery bank was dead as well.
Yeah.
But that's generally what I do.
I've always got a spare battery, and you just sort of lean on your phone for GPS,
for, you know, these new phones, at least in Australia now,
they've been trialing it.
There's an SOS on your phone now.
Yeah, that's iPhones too. Yeah yeah and it's and it's really handy
because you get to pick your situation you know car broken down in the middle of nowhere
your immediate help there's there's different things because i tested that out not long ago
in remote western australia as well did you have to use that yeah i did um four car tires
did you use that yeah i did um four car tires stuck in the middle of nowhere and then so i used that got to tell them the problem and it's like like proper communications
got to tell the authorities the problem they notified police i told them of two people that
i knew of that could rescue me one of them was my eldest son and then yeah he'd come out with
spare tires and then rescued
us like the next day so we had a cold sleep in the car that night me and a buddy Campbell
and said like a single cab tour and I'm like cunt I'm in the front he slept in the back
yeah and then he got the punches so I got the best spot and then yeah my son come out but if
it wasn't for that like no vehicles came we're broken down on the road in australia and no vehicles drove past us
in a day and a half like it's remote and it's hot like what do you get you've only got so much water
that you can drink you can't drink the radiator water it's got fucking shit in it right so yeah
it's another quick and easy way to die and you're on a road in australia you
know yeah well you do so many of those trips it's remarkable that this has only happened a couple of
times i i prepare you know and it's like it mightn't sound like i was prepared that time in
new zealand and you know and and on a couple other things it's like you're not prepared you're not
prepared and it's like well i am prepared otherwise i would have fucking died ages ago
you know and it's like you've always sort of got that back up and yeah i think you've just got to
be good in those situations i've been in those situations with other people and they panic
and they make more decisions that are bad you know yeah and it's so it's like and it's realizing before you
go in that this could be a part of this adventure you know but everyone's time comes up you do you
do stupid stuff enough and fucking yeah you can only handle poisonous snakes for so long before
one bites you yeah so you're rolling the dice so often yeah So it's like I'm not going to roll the dice in New Zealand like that again.
I'll roll the dice in grizzly country here.
I know you have a truck that you have completely outfitted and set up, right?
Yeah.
Toyota Land Cruiser 79 series.
You just can't get them here, eh?
I was actually thinking about, because one of the next projects I want to do is buy land in America, build an off-grid cabin, have a nice big truck here and RV and live that American dream.
And so I was like, oh, I might freight my 79 series over here.
It's fully decked out how I want it.
It's like a freaking weapon.
Right.
And I looked it up and got the price back and I was like, no i'll just buy an american truck when i get there well you can you can't buy
a 79 here but you could buy an 80 an 80 series that's yours yeah so that's the old one yeah but
oh you got another one yeah the new one's the same but i've like extended the chassis 300 mil it's
got um coil springs the whole way around it it's like the new one's like
twice as decked out as that thing again it just needs a tray and a canopy do you have a video of
that thing well i haven't posted much because it's not finished but yeah but of that one of that one
yeah probably yeah and so how long does it take to figure out like what to put in there and how
to set it up and like like how do you outfit something like that?
I've spent more time and money on that truck than I have time driving it and money buying it from original.
So it's like, that's at least a year in the making, you know?
And it's just like, it goes to one place, gets one thing done.
And it's like, and you're trying to figure it out as you go too, right?
Well, some of the best off-road stuff comes from Australia.
Yeah.
Like Old Man Emu, Sharks.
Yeah, there's fanatics there, and these fanatics have started their own business, you know.
Yeah.
It's just like, like ARB's huge back home.
Do you have ARB here?
What is it?
ARB, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
They're huge back home.
Yeah, I have my Land Cruiser here.
Yeah, I spied it. I was like, oh, yeah. Yeah, that thing's're huge back home. Yeah, I have my Land Cruiser here. My 80 series.
I spied it.
I was like, oh, yeah.
Yeah, the thing's decked out.
That's my apocalypse vehicle.
Is it?
Ready to go.
Well, that's what mine is.
Yeah.
The back seat comes out.
Yeah.
It's removable.
So the whole bed in the back behind the two front seats is flat.
So when I take it hunting, I take the back seat out.
It's so good.
I can store all my stuff.
And if I have to sleep in it, I can sleep in it.
And it's got
heated seats and leave it rigged up ready to go it's got a big ass gas tank yeah no that's the same one yeah no i i really haven't posted much on this it's just like i've just been building it and
just it's yeah it's going to be the ultimate at least for me in australia i've been driving a tesla around here in austin it's just like what is this thing that's the opposite oh it's the so opposite
but it suits people here in the city right well it's bizarre how fast it is oh yeah yeah and just
dead quiet and just while you go yeah yeah it just goes yeah do you have the cyber truck yet
no i drove one i mean, I saw one last week.
Elon, I shot it with an arrow.
That's the one you shot.
Yeah.
So, like, obviously, he's the owner, so he's not choked up about it.
No, he wanted me to shoot it.
Yeah, yeah, it sounded like it.
He wanted to see it.
Well, he knew that it wasn't going to go through.
Yeah.
I wish I had a single bevel.
That's all.
As soon as I seen it, I'm like, dude.
Wrong arrow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I could have got in there with like an iron will.
I did.
We did all these tests on that arrow, the Nexus arrows that we made with a solid broadhead on it.
Shooting all sorts of dumb things, you know.
But like I had like a gas, like a solid gas can there and it would pierce that.
And that's the two blade broadhead there, and it would pierce that. And that's the two-blade broadhead.
Field point wouldn't pierce it.
Just about every other broad that I shot at it just snapped and crumbled or bent over.
But what they actually struggled with was just pool glass.
Like the glass, like the arrow wouldn't break the glass from a pool,
you know, like the pool fencing glass.
And so it's not as strong as like
armor glass or anything like that the arrow would bounce off it and survive but it took like four
shots to break that glass huh it would punch through any metal you shot of that but it wouldn't
go for that glass wow i don't know why i don't know how it handles that shock but yeah it was
it was quite incredible but yeah as soon as i seen it seen it, I'm like, oh, damn. I know. That's all I had here.
I was thinking if I had an iron will and if I had my 90-pound bow and I had a collar on the front of the arrow, I had all these thoughts in my head.
Punch it.
But I used a three-blade and it just bounced right off.
How cool is that?
Pretty cool.
Because if that was a normal car, it would have ended up in the door on the other side.
100%. It went right through. Yeah. Cool's that. Pretty cool. Because if that was a normal car, it would have ended up in the door on the other side. A hundred percent.
It would have went right through.
Yeah.
Windows up, obviously, so you're not hitting glass through the window, but it just would
have punched straight through.
Yeah.
No, those things are extraordinary.
It's a crazy car.
I mean, the fact that he's decided to make it bulletproof for no reason other than it's
cool.
And then Dorian sent me this link to this company that's making the campers for the back of them now.
Oh, yes.
Oh, it looks epic.
It looks so cool.
But you only have a certain amount of mileage, and that mileage dwindles substantially when it gets cold.
Yeah.
That's why it wouldn't suit me in Australia, not because of the cold.
No solar.
You can't really charge it with solar.
You need much more electricity than solar.
You have to lay out a giant grid of solar and leave it there for a few days.
more electricity than solar you have to lay out a giant grid of solar and leave it there for a few days yeah i i feel like it makes sense if you're got solar on your house then you're plugging in
at your house to recharge it yeah you know that that makes a lot of sense and so i looked into
electric vehicles in this house that we're living in now because i decked the roof out with solar
and i was like i'll put a smart charger and everything in there we'll just get an electric
vehicle for just doing the town stuff or the kids are growing up so they're getting their driver's
license and you know a nice safe car like that but by the time i looked into it i'm like it's just
not practical for me and and the rest of the family too because they're always going and doing
things far away places as well so yeah that's the thing about the kind of stuff that you do. Like you could never take a cyber truck into the northern country.
Northern territories would not make it.
Just sitting there on my phone, like waiting for it to recharge.
You get 300 miles away and it would die.
Done.
There's nothing you can do.
Whereas all my cars have long-range fuel tanks on them.
So you're good for 1,000 kilometers.
And it's a long time between fuel stations in some of that remote country as
well.
And do you have to make sure that you drive a certain speed so that you don't burn up
too much gas? Are you cognizant of that?
No, not really. I've usually got plenty of spare that.
How much, how big is the gallon? I mean, how many liters is your tank?
What's liters?
How many liters is your tank? What's liters? How many liters is that gallon?
So I've got 130, which is the main tank.
So 130 liters for the main tank and then 90 liters for the auxiliary tank.
And it's just on a switch.
What is that, like 60 gallons?
130 liters is how many gallons, Jamie?
60, 50.
34, 35. Oh, 35. that's it oh mine's bigger than that yeah is it yeah i got a 40 40 gallon nice yeah so you bought that like when the shit was going down in la i was starting to think the
shit was going to go down in la before i was thinking about earthquakes and things like that
if you get trapped and you have to drive off-road I wanted something that was lifted something that a real off-road vehicle
suspension yeah yeah real power it's got a supercharged corvette engine in it like I had
ready for COVID 2.0 well it was before COVID that I had it built it's all I've always been worried
oh yes you should especially like you're better off being
worried and prepared yes they're not at all right i want to say worried like i don't yeah what i
worry about like a legit worry at night when i'm alone and i've been doing this a lot lately it's
global war i'm really worried about that that that gives me real legitimate anxiety sometimes
when i'm alone well i'm alone late at night. That's out of our hands.
I know.
That's part of the reason why I think I worry about it.
The world has never seemed more haywire than right now to me.
Yeah.
Never seemed more vulnerable, and there's so much tension,
and there's so much between this Palestine-Israel thing
and the Ukraine-Russia thing thing and then China and Taiwan.
There's so much potential for chaos.
There's so much potential for horrors.
And sometimes I just really freak out.
I think about it a lot, but more for my kids' sake.
Yeah, that too.
If you have to provide for your kids, how?
What do you do? How long that too. Well, if you have to provide for your kids, like how, what do you do?
How long, you know, how long before you're out of water?
How long before you're out of food?
You know, how many bullets do you have?
Like, what do you, what do you do?
Yeah, I'm like, I'm fortunate enough to be very prepared in that situation.
Like I own a farm and it's got water on it
and water tanks are full and providing for ourselves
and things like that. Well, if you could get to your farm also, there's so much game out there.
You would be so long as these assholes don't keep fucking gunning them down from helicopters.
Yeah. But for the people that live in towns and cities, it's just like, what's your option? You
know, not much. Yeah. Not much. It's such a precarious scenario because so many people have had things provided for them for
so long. They have no skills, no understanding, no knowledge, no ability. They would have to learn
from scratch while starving. And that's terrifying. And that's just assuming you're not getting
attacked. That's assuming, you know, you haven't been invaded. It's assuming that you haven't been
hit with a nuclear bomb and everything's gone. It's assuming the power't been invaded. It's assuming that you haven't been hit with a nuclear bomb and everything's gone.
It's assuming the power grid's up.
It's assuming, you know, there's gas to pump.
You know, there's so many variables that are completely out of your hands.
And, you know, because of what's going on in the world right now, I've never felt more like things could fall apart at any moment.
Yeah.
Like now, again, it's always late at night when I'm by myself.
I just think, cause you know, as a father, you know,
and a husband and a provider, you,
you think like you have to figure out a way to take care of everybody.
Like how do you take care of everybody? And then, you know,
there's the walking dead scenario, right?
Like you got to really worry about people when resources get scarce people get sketchy as soon as people get desperate yeah
it's very very very scary some of these streets look like the walking dead already man
right like la like uh four years out of the country and then coming into some of the cities
that i've like i've always said like salt lake, Austin's the most beautiful cities that I've ever been to.
And then, so it was really in my face when I come back here.
I'm like, is this COVID?
Is the current government?
Like, what is this?
And how do you battle this now?
You know, like.
It's fentanyl.
It's COVID.
It's the current government.
It's, I mean, one of the things we found out about Los Angeles is the people that are working on the homeless situation are being paid exorbitant amounts of money.
There's people that work on the COVID situation or, excuse me, the homeless situation in Los Angeles that are making $240,000 plus a year.
And there's no incentive whatsoever to fix it.
And there's so much bureaucracy. Cash cow now. They probably don't want to fix it. Yeah. And there's so much bureaucracy.
Cash cow now.
They probably don't want to fix it.
Right.
Well, they have no incentive.
The incentive is to keep the problem going so that they keep getting these cushy jobs.
That's what they have.
That's a sad statement.
And there's no performance benefit.
They're not paid based on the amount of homeless people that are moved into shelters and reintegrated into society.
No, they're just paid because there's a homeless problem and there's a budget.
We need to raise the budget for the homeless problem.
We need to fix the unhoused situation.
Sure you do.
But what you really need to do is keep getting paid.
And that's what a lot of them are doing.
And there's no hope in sight.
Yeah. of them are doing and there's no no hope in sight yeah and it's it seems to me
that it's reached a tipping point that once things get so sideways that people
are just camping out in the streets when you go to Los Angeles like there's parts
of Los Angeles you're like what the fuck is going on like this is not sustainable
I have a friend who had a house in Venice and in front of his house 30 feet
from his house there's people camping 30 feet like right
outside his house yeah you've got crackheads people are they're openly doing drugs and fentanyl
and they're they're tapping into the power lines and shit and they're they're putting generators
in these tents like they have no plans on leaving and there's no no one to force them out no one to
try to say hey you can't
do this you can't litter on the street but you can pile all your bullshit on the street yeah all
your garbage human shit you know and then you have places like skid row which uh mike glover who uh
runs uh he runs um i forget the name of his organization, but it's a preparedness organization where he teaches people how to, you know, prepare around the world in terms of just the sheer amount of homeless people,
the open-air drug use, no hope, no law enforcement, no nothing.
It's just fucking chaos.
I've noticed the last two trips,
it seems to be a lack of law enforcement out there.
Yeah.
Well, it almost seems like it's engineered.
I mean, if you were a real conspiracy theorist,
you would think it's engineered to collapse society.
And I'm sure there's some very legitimate people that can't help being on the streets at the moment, whether it's from job loss through COVID, whether it's from mental illness.
It's mostly mental illness and drug abuse.
People want to label it as job loss, but it seems like if you talk to the people that actually understand the situation, it's very little of it.
Because there's resources for those people, but there's not resources for people that are severely mentally ill.
And also, there's many cities that incentivize people.
They actually give people money to stay homeless.
They pay them.
They give them a monthly stipend, and they live on the the street and they get like 600 bucks a month.
Something needs a change in the system, mate.
And the thing is, these fucking people keep voting the same way.
They want things to go the same.
I just don't know what they think.
They think that voting any other way is racist, sexist, transphobic, Islamophobic, xenophobic.
It's like they have this fucking ideology in their head,
like they're in a cult.
And they think their way is the only way to do it.
And as long as they're safe in their home,
they don't take into consideration
what the overall effect on society,
all these laws and lack of enforcement of laws.
I mean, there's so many cities that all these businesses,
like San Francisco,
businesses are just pulling out left and right because they're just constantly getting robbed.
They're constantly getting looted. You go to a drug store in San Francisco, everything's locked
up, everything. It's all behind locks and cabinets and people just go in there and steal whatever
they can. They can't stop them. They're not allowed to stop them.
You're allowed to steal $900 worth of stuff.
Oh, my God. I've seen those videos.
Fucking insane.
It's insane.
It's a complete collapse of society.
And, again, it happens so quickly that you have to kind of extrapolate and go from here in 2023 and say, well, what does it look like in 2033?
Because in 2013, you saw none of this.
Yeah, yeah.
Do you remember any camping on the streets?
Nope.
Jamie, do you remember any camping on the streets in 2013?
I don't remember any.
Some of it?
In LA, yeah, sure.
Maybe in Skid Row.
Not a lot.
There was homelessness in Skid Row.
It definitely wasn't like it is here.
Nothing like this.
And not what I've seen in Salt Lake like last month.
No, you see it in Salt Lake.
You see it in Minnesota. It's really bad in Minneapolis. It's really bad
in Detroit. It's really bad right now in New York because they made it a sanctuary
city. So then you have all these people. And so the way the New York State works,
Coleman Hughes, who was on the podcast before, explained it, that it's actually a New York
State law where you have to provide housing
to homeless people. But that was supposed to be for
people that lived there. So these people have come here from South America, Mexico, and they've made
it a sanctuary city. And so now you have entire hotels that are no longer hotels. They're just
loaded up with these migrants. So the next president, if he's up to it, is going to have
a hell of a job in front of him. Good fucking luck. And how do you get past the next president if he's up to it's gonna have a hell of a job in front of you good fucking look and how do you get past the New York
state law that says that you have to have housing for these people you have
to change the law and New York is they don't want to hire Republicans
everybody's a Democrat there's no I there's no one person that can do this
job like like seriously like there's not no there's but then the problem is even with a whole party
involved they get fought against so hard that how can they make up any ground to really change
well that's a giant problem with our system this two-party system it's just so crazy
you know and it's a it's also a problem when people get into power and they want you to
listen to them and do i mean you saw that in australia with the covid thing yeah they just decided i mean i thought of australia as this rugged
individualist place that's all about freedom and then covid came and it was just like you have to
take this really down to state the state so i tell this story all the time so because we're
governed by the minds because that's where all of our work is.
And then the government pushed onto the mines that to work on the mines,
you had to be vaccinated, right?
And the community that we're in is like all mine-based.
It's a mining community.
So they all got vaccinated.
I didn't have to go to the site.
I just stayed in the office and my home and did my own thing.
So I didn't have to get vaccinated.
But all my workers had to get vaccinated or they didn't have a job
because I couldn't send them to a job site.
So that was even pushed down the mean.
We did a few things around that.
But anyone that had to go to the mine sites went and got vaccinated.
They still all got COVID. They still all spread it. They still all had to have time off work
because they were sick. And a decent amount of them got really sick after having the COVID
vaccination and some of them long-term. So it did nothing. That was proof that the vaccination did
nothing because I lived in a community where everyone had to get vaccinated. Like I said, they still got sick.
They still spread it.
They still had to have time off work.
Yeah, they were lied to.
They were told that it was going to stop transmission.
I mean, there's that famous Rachel Maddow clip where she was like, if you get vaccinated, the virus stops with you.
It's bullshit.
It was never even tested to do that.
It was tested to provide these antibodies.
Does it give you antibodies?
They never tested it to stop transmission
And they had to admit that over time, but this has just been the story of
pharmaceutical drugs in America the massive amount of profit that they can make by forcing people to do that just
That amount of money just went really far to enforcing this because there's so many people were on the take whether
they were on the take voluntarily whether they're on the take psychologically because they this was
set up as the one way to get out of this and everybody believed them i felt like australia
was like oh what's that country doing we better do that yeah and it made me realize how badly the
government's actually run it's like the worst run business there is. And it should be the best run business model there is.
And it's the worst.
Because I would just scramble.
No, you need to do this.
Oh, COVID stays in the air for three hours.
You know, you need to wear a mask.
But if you're eating or drinking, you can have it off.
And it's like people sit.
So what's the fucking difference?
It doesn't make any sense.
You're on a plane ride for like six hours to wa western australia
and like everyone's got their mask on and then when the food gets served everyone's got their
mask down it's nonsense this is dumb shit this is so dumb you know and it's just like what was
the death toll from people committing suicide because they couldn't do what kept them mentally
healthy anymore yeah like what they they weren't comparing apples to apples.
Also, how many people turned to alcoholism?
Oh, a hundred percent.
And family breakups and stuff like that.
It was just, it was ridiculous.
So they, they, they weren't, they were just.
Well, they destroyed the economy in so many cities too.
I mean, Los Angeles, especially the restaurant economy.
Los Angeles lost like 70% of their restaurants at one point,
which is just madness.
Yeah, it is.
And it's just poor policymaking because that didn't happen in Florida.
No.
Actually, me and Kimmy were in New Zealand in the back country
when it really properly broke out.
Like we'd heard about it on the news, don't really follow it,
don't really follow the news.
But, you know, you were hearing about it in China and things like that.
And we're in New Zealand, me, me kimmy and a good friend tyler in the back country and there's one
rise that you come up and you just get a little bit of phone reception there and we'd touch base
with the kids um you know each afternoon each night there and we come up to this rise and um
i start getting messages flat out you know it's my son noah
and it's he's like you need to come home you need to get home now they're shutting down
the world basically and so i get that message i'm like shit and i turn around kim and tyler behind
me and the sun's gone down so the ground dark, but the sky's slightly lit up still.
And I just see these 14 bright as fuck lights in a row,
like leaving the atmosphere, like cruising across the horizon.
And the first thing that jumps into my head after getting that message and COVID's gone mad is like all the fucking rich and famous,
like Joe Rogan's on one of them ships.
And I seriously thought that.
I was like, there's ships leaving the earth.
It's gone to shit.
And I was like, and I said to Kim, I'm like, holy fuck, what's that?
And they both looked up and were like, holy shit.
Straight away, I'm on my phone, 14 lights in a straight line.
And it's fucking the launch of Starlink.
Oh, that's hilarious.
And so the sun was still hitting them and, you know, making them glow, obviously.
Well, you thought people were leaving Earth because Earth was going to blow up.
Yeah, it was fucked.
COVID's real.
Well, that's the real scenario.
That's the real scary scenario.
Because COVID, you know, all the people did lose their lives
and the economy got destroyed and it was a catastrophe and a pandemic,
it's fairly minor compared to something that could happen
if we got hit by a meteor.
Oh, 100%.
If there was a nuclear war.
Yeah, so you do have to be prepared to go for yourself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't think they can pull the wool over our eyes like that well,
but it's a little bit like the boy that's cried wolf, though.
Like, what if there is something legit next time?
And it is a legit vaccination.
Like, most of us are going to be like, nah, fuck that.
I'm not doing that shit again.
But what if it is legit, you know?
That's a long discussion, too.
It is.
It's bad in both ways.
Now there's talk of, at least in Australia,
and I haven't read too much on it because it's been hard to find since,
that there's a vaccination that cattle are going to get.
And for anything to go to the stockyards, like the sale yards for cattle,
they have to have this vaccination.
That vaccination gets passed on the people
yeah through food through food and and and like right now i'm trying to buy acreage because i
want to run unvaccinated cattle like pure blood cattle you could call it and sell direct to
consumer because i believe there's going to be a big market in that and you don't take your cattle
to the market to be sold they get sold for you direct because if that's something that comes out i'm not going to want that meat either because i'm
eating meat now and i'm fine i'm happy why am i going to change anything why am i going to get
the vaccination i've had something that they can profit off of they're going to do and if they can
profit off of forcing cattle to get vaccinated And these pharmaceutical drug companies can force these cattle ranchers to make sure they vaccinate their cattle.
It's fucking mad.
It's really crazy.
And it just shows what happens
when absolute power corrupts absolutely.
When money gets involved and, you know,
there's just so much money was made.
And now they're scrambling to figure out
how to try to make that kind of money again.
Do it again.
It's like they made
hundreds of billions of dollars in profit and then it went off like nobody's wants the covet
vaccine now the the compliance for the new boosters and the bivalent boosters is like
far far far lower because everybody got covet anyway yeah that's right so many people were
like well fuck this yeah yeah and look it was shit like Like the first time I got it, it was shit.
You know, it didn't feel great.
But I've had the flu before and I've had colds before.
And then the next time I got it, I had it for a day and a half.
Right.
But nobody ever told you how to get a flu vaccine.
Nobody said you have to do this.
There was such a lack of information.
I don't know if it was the same here, but there was such a lack of information.
Like what are the home remedies?
You know what?
Well, that was the thing.
There was a lot of misinformation on purpose.
And that's why I got caught up in that,
where they were accusing me of taking veterinary medicine.
You guys are out of your fucking mind.
You're literally talking about ivermectin,
which is a drug that's on the World Health Organization list
of essential medications.
People have been taking,
there's fucking billions of prescriptions
have been handed out to humans.
To call that a veterinary medication,
that's like saying penicillin is a veterinary medication because they use it on animals too.
It's fucking mad.
And the media was involved in it.
Big business tactics.
Big business tactics that show you that our media is bought and paid for, which is really scary.
At least in Australia, you don't have advertisement for pharmaceutical drugs on television. Whereas they have that here in America. Flat out. Yeah. Flat out. Yeah. And
it's everywhere. And at the end, they have to list all the side effects. May include rectal
bleeding. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Suicidal thoughts. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey. I think it
was like- You did my follow-up. Faith in the government. Oh no. Yeah. It might've been
a Chris rock joke. And he's, you know, he's like, do you wake up tired? You need this pill. And it's
like, who the fuck doesn't wake up feeling tired? Well, that's the thing is if you can advertise
for things, you could always come up with a reason why people need that. That's the Sackler family.
That's what they did with that. If you've seen that, uh, Netflix documentary, um,'s the Sackler family. That's what they did with that. If you've seen that Netflix documentary
on
the Sackler family.
Oh my God. The people that pushed
opioids on Americans.
They got the entire fucking country
hooked on heroin.
And they did it by telling you,
you know, pain. What about breakthrough pain?
You just need a little bit more.
Isn't it your body telling you something else?
And this is how I've been my whole life.
I try not to take anything unless I absolutely have to.
Yes.
And even at that point, I'm like, it's just a headache.
It's going to go away.
Do I really need to take something for it?
Everything has a side effect.
Yeah, it does.
It's like I'll take that to fix that, but then it's going to feel like it's going to burn a hole in my gut, you know, or something along those lines, you know. Um, the one thing I have been trying to take in Australia, which is so frigging difficult to get is like a plasma injection. I've had this fucked heel for like 12 years.
Oh, like PRP you mean? Yeah. I've been to multiple doctors and this last one sort of heard
me out. I struggled with it for the last 10 years. What is it? What's wrong? I split my heel
in three places. The bone? Yeah, in the bone. And then there's a scar tissue or a fragment of bone
above it. Now to do keyhole surgery could make it actually worse. So they don't want to do that.
And I don't want to do that because I'm putting up with it but it takes the edge off a lot of my nicer thoughts when i'm hiking and
hunting i can't run anymore because of it because the next day it blows up and my heels all twisted
and everything like that so they've been giving me cortisone i've had two cortisone injections it
wears off after two days and i'm pretty sure it only works for the first two days
because they put a numbing injection in there first,
so I don't feel it.
Right.
Lidocaine.
It's really hard to get in Australia,
or they just don't want to give it.
And the last doctor's like, oh, it's really expensive.
I'm like, I don't care.
Like, I want this fixed.
It's my life, you know.
I want this fixed.
And I said, and it actually could kill me
because it stopped me from having the right
balance on that foot. And if I'm in sketchy country, that's the difference between falling
and not. So I want it good, you know? And the last doctor has heard me out about that,
but he keeps giving me this cortisone that keeps wearing off.
You shouldn't get too many cortisone shots either. They're very bad for your joints.
Yeah. I thought so. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Have you looked into stem cells?
Have you looked into like there's some places? I haven't.
I only like listening to you and you sort of being a promoter of it.
Yeah.
I mean, you've had MRIs on this heel.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's places you can go specifically outside of the country that can really do some stuff.
Right.
They can do some things in America as well.
You're talking about plasma.
You're talking about platelet-rich plasma.
Yeah.
PRP injections.
Yeah.
Is that supposed to be helping it or possible to help it yes possible to help it but i've heard
there's no side effects it even works or it doesn't yeah platelet-rich plasma doesn't seem
to have any significant side effects it's your own blood they take your own blood they spin it
spin it back in your body yeah man so like mexico yeah tijuana is a really good spot the cpi yeah okay cellular performance
institute i think i've seen shane there lately yeah he just went there yeah he went there and
got a bunch of stuff uh injected into his back yeah okay back and shoulders he's got pretty
significant injuries yep yep yeah it's uh sketchy yeah i've I've had stem cells. Yeah, I've had it in America.
They cured my shoulder.
I had a shoulder issue that my doctor was telling me,
you're going to have to have surgery.
And then I had a full-length rotator cuff tear.
And six months later, I went back, got an MRI.
It's like it's gone.
The tear is gone.
And I don't have any problems with that shoulder anymore.
I mean, zero.
I lift weights with it.
I do all kinds of things with it.
It's very strong.
Yeah.
So that's the nice side of modern medicine, right?
Yeah.
Oh, listen, I'm not anti-modern medicine.
Yeah.
No.
I've had multiple surgeries.
Modern medicine is amazing.
The problem is money.
Yeah.
The problem is not these people that are innovating and trying to figure out new ways to help people and heal people.
The problem is that you have your scientists,
you have your innovators,
and then you have the people that are selling it.
They're completely different human beings.
And those people don't give a fuck.
They might as well be selling cigarettes.
They might as well be selling nuclear waste.
They don't give a shit.
But it's fully promoted as good for our health,
like we're helping you.
Yeah.
I mean, they have antidepressants that
make you suicidal so they provide you with another drug that you take with the antidepressant
that is supposed to stop the suicidal thoughts but those side effects for that also include
suicidal thoughts like it's like it's just wild shit it It's wild shit. And no one are saying that one of the main
ways to stop depression is exercise. And exercise is actually 1.25 times more effective than SSRIs.
But they're not prescribing exercise. They're not telling people, hey, I want you to hike an
hour a day. I want you to jump rope. I want you to do sit-ups. I want you to elevate your heart rate for 20 minutes four times a week,
and let's see if that helps you.
Yeah.
Come back in a month.
Feel good about yourself.
Yeah, feel good about yourself.
Change your diet.
I get bored super easy.
And I think boredom is the other thing that sort of leads to mental health issues
and stuff like that.
People that don't have their thing.
Like, I'm very lucky.
You're very lucky.
We've found something that we're really passionate about and and so you chase it yes and and originally that's the only reason i promoted bow hunting because i was like who doesn't know this
exists like if it makes me feel that healthy because of everything that goes with outdoors
exercise everything like that yes who doesn't know this exists well and they're all in the
back country now unfortunately but you know that's just a part of it i still prefer to promote it and everyone know
about it yeah me too you know and and someone's thing might be bowing it might be collecting
cards i don't know anything anything but hopefully something that's difficult yes having that thing
you know where you and that's what i keep talking about like i'm constantly looking what's the next
way to test myself i like those tests you, you know, like I, I had that rough childhood, whatever, no excuses,
who gives a shit, you know, what else is difficult? You know, I'll beat that now.
What else can I try and beat? You know, and I think that's helped me with other things in life.
I would 100% have some serious mental issues and maybe suicidal if I didn't have my thing.
And your thing can't be constantly work.
That does keep you busy, but I always find that wears off over a certain period.
Right, you need a passion.
Yeah, have a passion.
Find something.
And if you don't have a passion.
If that passion keeps you healthy.
Yes.
And if you don't have that passion, then yeah, the whole exercise,
like going out of your way to exercise, yeah, it feels shit at the time.
But then afterwards you're like, oh fuck, I got that done.
You know, I feel great.
You know, I'm looking forward to, you got to look forward to life.
But then you got to do it all over again the next day.
That's where people have a hard time.
Hey, I'm not saying shit.
I don't exercise.
I just hunt and work and keep busy like that.
Well, that is exercise though.
You're doing it so often yeah
if i didn't do it then i would exercise you know um and i always feel fit like i'm in my 40s now
i'm just like this last trip i'm like this is gonna kill me like i haven't been in the fucking
rocky mountains for four years like but it's like you hit day four day five and it's just like
you're used to it oh you're loving it you know and it's just it is it's but i
think people don't find that thing you know and it can't be just going out getting getting drunk
all the time right i think that wears off and the next day you feel like shit it's got to i don't
think people have the knowledge they don't know what it is that they're interested in and they
don't have the time to find a thing yeah that's that's what's unfortunate i've seen people come
in the bow hunting and drop straight out of it,
but it's because they're looking for their thing and it's not bow hunting.
Right.
You know, it's not hunting.
And then I've seen guys like that.
I follow them on social media, obviously, after meeting them.
And I see them move through different things, you know, and some people mightn't be able to stick to one thing too,
so they do a lot of things.
Yeah.
I've always thought if I never discovered bow hunting,
would I be, like, mad in the surfing instead?
Probably.
And you get to go to all these different places, you know,
and see different places.
Like there's more to it than just catching a wave.
Right.
Like catching a wave is your bull elk on the ground.
Yeah.
But there's all the rest of it in between, you know, that you get to do.
Like find something that takes you places.
And find something that's complex that makes you concentrate on getting better at it.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
100%.
Like how hard is bow hunting?
It's fucking hard as shit.
Like you'd never fucking master it.
No.
You don't.
You'd never master it.
No.
You just get better at it.
Yeah.
And it's constant.
It's never ending.
And you always have to practice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You have to practice constantly.
Yeah.
And so like I build a lot of things, you know, and I i just and it's the same because you never actually master it there's so
much to building something what are you building a table a house right like there's so much in
between so it keeps me busy it keeps my mind ticking yeah keeps me muscles going blood flowing
things like that so i think that's the other reason why i like that not just that it's a
manly thing to do well i think human beings are designed to do things, and we're designed to have puzzles and complex things, whether it's playing chess or whatever it is.
Like human beings need things that are complex.
It helps fuel you.
It helps keep you going.
And it gives your mind something that it can focus on, which is what we need.
And it used to be survival.
mind something that it can focus on, which is what we need. And it used to be survival. It used to be just, I mean, your mind is designed to try to hunt, gather, find food and fend off enemies.
That's what it used to be. Fend off predators. And now you're stuck in a cubicle all day and
you're slowly going mad because your body does not get any of the things that it needs.
Your mind does not get any. I couldn't do it either.
I know people have to do it because that is their survival right now right the society we live in and i always say it
it's not my design like this is not how i'd have society i don't think it's how anybody it's not
yeah it's not anyone's design but it's like fuck if you want to do that you need a vehicle to travel
i need fuel.
I need time off work.
So I have to work.
I have to make money.
Yeah.
So then people get stuck in that. So their survival is, because they're paying bills and everything, is working in that cubicle, which fucking seems disastrous for the mind.
Oh, terrible.
Fucking traffic's disastrous for my mind.
Oh, it's terrible.
Unnatural environment.
It's such a weird, it is such a weird setup and system, but we're all in it.
Yeah.
And we're just got to adapt and fucking get on with it.
So, but it's like, what are you going to do?
Or what do you aim towards?
You know, my, originally when I went in the business is because I was like, I want to
hunt, but when I go away hunting for a couple of weeks, there's no
money coming in. How do I, how am I able to go hunting and still be financial? And it's like,
well, I'll start a business. I'll have other people working for me. I'll set that up and,
you know, put the years in to do that, to get to a point where I'm like, I can hunt,
money does keep coming in. So it's like, people need to find what, what like what's their vision and aim towards it you
know whether you're successful unsuccessful at least you're aiming towards something you know
but it is hard and i feel for these people that are stuck in a cubicle or in a situation they
don't want to be in you know and it's just like where's the light at the end of it for them you
know not everybody's going to make it out but enough people that are listening to this
are realizing they have to do something.
And conversations like this are important because they hear that and they go, God damn it, this resonates with me.
I got to figure a way.
Yeah.
I got to find something that I do that's different.
Yeah.
And I think a big thing is it doesn't happen overnight.
Even me, and I'm nowhere near famous as bloody anyone you have on here, you know, but, and I'm sure you get a lot too, whereas people think they can just jump into that situation.
But it would have taken you years and years to get to the point that you're at now.
Would it take you years and years to get to the point of even when you first had a podcast?
Yeah.
And they don't see that background story, know because it's a it's if you go
through my instagram you just see all the glory bits generally i try and show everything but
and anyone's instagram you just see all the glory bits and you don't see that big gap in between
that was fucking hell you know and it was like you know i've fucking i've been broke i've had
no fucking money starting the business and then i've had all those struggles i've had no fucking money starting the business. And then I've had all those struggles. I've had all those stresses that you don't see.
Yeah.
You just see Adam Green tree out hunting or fucking living life.
And it's just like,
yeah,
it took so much to get to here.
So everyone today wants something to happen very quickly.
They do a short attention span and they want results instantly.
They want six minute abs.
Yeah.
You know,
they want to lose weight in 30 days.
They want all that.
Yeah.
That's me.
That's me.
Losing weight bit.
That's everybody.
I'm just like, I'll just eat clean for the next week and blah, blah.
That doesn't do shit.
But if you look at things, have like little goals, like tiny little goals.
Yeah.
Even if it's like, oh, today I'm going to research this.
And have a real goal.
That's what's also important.
Write down that goal. Write down a checklist of things you're going to do that day and do those
things yep that's a hundred percent a giant factor in my life yeah and you just keep eating a little
bit of it off and the next minute you got the whole pie yes next thing you know like oh my god
i've done this for 480 days now and look how much different i feel. Yes. I love, um, it was, it was just a little
real or something. And it was about if you spend this much time a day doing something that in so
many years, you're a professional at it. I can't remember exactly how it went, but all it is,
is just saying what you said, you know, you've got this big goal, you know, and you've got the
picture and it's written down and it's like every day or each week or each month you keep tapping a bit of that away
yeah knowing that at some point you're going to be there where you want to be and it's like the
once you've done it it's easy to think back on because you've already done it i'm even talking
about multiple things because you've already been at that point you've already gone through that shit and you know what's on the
other side of it you know and that's like i sum up hunting like that a little bit you know i've
done enough of those horrible backcountry elk hunts that you know at some point even if you're
not successful you still succeed in yourself you still grow and that's the end end goal and result for me but
because i've done it before i already know it's coming yeah so it's easier to keep going through
that shit yeah kim's never been through that she's she hasn't killed a bull she hasn't had an
opportunity to shoot a bull so she's not enjoying those weeks in the mountains but i know it's on
the back end of it right and i And I'll say it every time.
I've always been successful.
I'm waiting to not be successful because that'll be even better for me.
Like in here, what I'm chasing and mental health,
not being successful will even be better.
Because it'll drive you even further.
Exactly.
What's the next year like?
Or what's the year after that?
Give me a couple of unsuccessful ones.
You have to have some success to get to that point of wanting to fail.
Kim hasn't had that.
My first elk hunt was on a big ranch in New Mexico.
And I was seeing bulls every day.
It was sweet.
And it was still a hard hunt.
You hunt with the bow.
And then I killed one.
It's like, oh, sweet.
And the next year, I'm like, I'll do this over the counter thing fucking cam haynes you know like that you know that's what all cam used to do so
it's like i want to experience that and a bit more like australia where you're just out on your own
doing your thing and i went through hell on that first back country hunt and i killed one on the
last day like day 30 or something like that but i'd, then I'd done that and I had all the feelings
and I'm like, I want that feeling again.
And you have to go back to doing it that way.
Yeah.
And it's the same with a business, you know.
I've had seven or eight businesses now and I know what the end result is
if you keep putting in.
So it's easy to start another business and keep going forward.
Yeah.
Someone that hasn't done that, just this isn't successful,
this is too hard, you know, and it's just like.
But that's also what
separates the men from the boys yeah yes it does i've been unsuccessful in business too before
once you get past that point it's actually not a bad feeling because you know what not to do
right you've got that experience you know right and we're not all the same and not everyone can
have a business not everyone will have a business because i know people that just like their nine
to five job and they get paid every week they don't have to stress about chasing clients bills
any of that stuff so there is there's different people too you know but those people also need
something that interests them they do and hopefully it's not sitting on the fucking couch
eating shit food watching tv and drinking beer yeah you know and it's like and you see so many people stuck in that cycle you know
yeah but if they're happy fuck it good on them yeah maybe maybe hey we need someone
no we don't i don't buy are they all the people that lined up for covid injections straight away
i just think i just think humans are inherently tribal hunter-gatherers.
And I think there's certain human reward systems that are deeply ingrained in our DNA.
And you can either accept those and find some way to satisfy those needs,
or you can live a life of misery.
Or with Thoreau called, we said that most men live lives of quiet desperation.
Yeah, yeah.
You don't want to be one of them.
No, hell no. That's most men. Yeah. That's most people. But it's not you, Adam Country. I can Yeah. Yeah. You don't want to be one of them. No, hell no.
That's most men.
Yeah.
It's most people, but it's not you, Adam Country.
I can't do it.
I can't either.
I can't do it.
And it does upset me when I do see people doing it, you know, but they're of a different
make and a different model, you know, but it's-
That's true too.
But it is.
It's sort of like, fuck, do this or do that.
You can't speak to everybody.
You can't.
But what you're saying is speaking to a lot of people.
That's what's important.
My brother, it's always good to see you.
You too, my friend.
Thanks for coming out here.
How long are you in town for?
How many more days?
I've got about another week and a half or so.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Okay, you know what?
I'm going to get you into Waste Well
and see if they can do something with your heel.
Really?
That would be sick.
Yeah, yeah.
Now that I know that you're here.
Okay. Legend. Thank you, brother. Good to see you, your heel. Really? That would be sick. Yeah. Yeah. Now that I know that you're here. Okay.
Legend.
Thank you, brother.
Good to see you, my brother.
All right.
Bye, everybody.