One Hell Of A Life Outdoor Podcast

Lucas Haygood @ Frogg toggs Booth | Dux Expo!

Tristan Vogel & Tony Vogel Episode 147

Lucas Haygood shares his journey to become a passionate duck hunter and social media presence, highlighting the importance of mentorship in the outdoors. He explains how his uncle Kyle gave him purpose through hunting after losing his father at age three and dealing with his mother's addiction.

• Growing up hunting private land before venturing into Arkansas public land
• Finding his voice on social media after struggling to gain traction initially
• Advocating for sportsmanship and cooperation on crowded public hunting areas
• Emphasizing the need for proper scouting and homework before hunting unfamiliar areas
• Discussing gear preferences including surface drives over outboards, 12 gauge over 20, and Bush Light (not apple) for refreshment

Follow Lucas on Instagram and TikTok @HeyGood84 to keep up with his waterfowl adventures and insights.


Speaker 1:

I've been southbound. I've been hellbound riding on a midnight train going too fast. Now think I'll slow down standing in the pouring rain what's going on, guys?

Speaker 2:

tristan and tony back the one hell of a life outdoor podcast again from the frog talks booth and we got mr lucas haygood on the podcast. What's going on?

Speaker 4:

brother, thank y'all for having me. Man, it's going good. It's been a heck of a day here at the ducks event that they put on, so it's a lot it's been. It's been hectic over here, so that's right, but I'm glad to be here. Man, I'm glad that y'all invited me on thank you.

Speaker 2:

Thank you, man, we're happy that you joined us. Um, it was just funny. Uh, I was talking off air with uh, with kate's cousin riley and he's like you got to ask him why he's got such a hate for bush.

Speaker 4:

Light apple dude it's a women's drink and I see these, these, I say kids. I'm almost 30 and you know. So see these kids on here, dude, and I'm like for one. How did you get the money to afford that? Because they're filling the truck beds up with bush apple and I'm just like dude it's. You know, is it good? It might be good, but it's like it's a trend now right, women drink it.

Speaker 3:

We should have done smearing off if we're gonna do bush apple I remember back in the day whenever they started really marketing bush light. Yeah and you. And if you didn't drink bush, oh, you were a wuss. You know what I mean.

Speaker 4:

And now you drink one of those, you're like yeah, yeah, I mean I'm not for sure, but yeah, whenever I was younger probably like 17, 16, 17 you know I'd go to a party and people would be like you know, I have bush light, natural light and stuff and I just had to force myself to drink it so I didn't look like a little wuss in front of everybody.

Speaker 3:

Oh man, when they came out with the back in the day, they came out with the Keystone oh yeah, Bottle of beer bottle of beer. Bottle of beer. Taste in a can boy.

Speaker 4:

Oh man, they say Keystone's the only thing a bear won't touch at a campsite.

Speaker 3:

I barely even drink Natty Light.

Speaker 2:

That sounds like a Mississippi phrase right there.

Speaker 3:

Oh my gosh dude For sure.

Speaker 2:

Well, dude, tell us a little bit. Man Like, I'm just genuinely curious to know about you. Know what got you into the outdoors and where that passion? Who, like, put that passion in your life?

Speaker 4:

Okay, yeah so I'll go ahead and give the name right now Kyle Rooker, that is, you might as well say, my dad. So when I was it was 2003 um, I think I was I turned seven. They had, um at this time my aunt and uncle.

Speaker 4:

He's my uncle um biologically, but they had a lease in brinkley, arkansas oh yeah and my father had passed away when I was three in a car accident, and um my mom she fought a drug addiction for a long time so they would come and get me on the weekends during duck season and um carry me to brinkley, and they had a blind on a rice field and um, I got to hunt with them and I remember, dude, I was so small I didn't even have waiters. They eventually took me to buck and bass and got me my first set of waiters and um, or they had a hammydown pair.

Speaker 4:

Whatever it was, he used to carry me on his shoulder, put me in the blind and um never killed anything that I can recall.

Speaker 4:

But I just loved it. And then fast forward a few years. My mother, finally she passed away and um, they adopted me, so that's why I say he's my dad. And they had a lease and I'll never forget it. It was a farmer named Sammy Meadors. We had a pit in Marion, arkansas, and he bought me my first gun. It was a New England Firearms 410 single shot and you're talking about stoked.

Speaker 4:

As a 9-year-old kid 10-year-old kid, I was absolutely. So all them years leading up, you know I he would let me take my pellet gun or whatever to the blind. And then we got that pit and um started going. He worked on the road so he was off on every weekend. I went every weekend, loved it, never killed a duck, seen a few spoons killed. You know we used to say that place was full of tilling and shovelers. That's all we killed, yeah. And then I was too small.

Speaker 4:

He had a cousin named Brad Seacrest who owned a place called Nichols Lake. Nichols Lake was heaven. When I was a kid. It was unreal. So this is like 07, 08. I was 11. I was finally big enough to go to the lake and he carried me and at this point in time I had a hammy down Mossberg 20-gauge and I remember being with Brad Seacrest and my Uncle Kyle and Brad's son and my brother Dylan Rooker, and we used to sit on the banks of Nichols Lake and it was nothing but cypress and dude. Back then in 06, 07, the amount of mallards in arkansas was unreal and anybody that hunted back then I'll tell you this and um, my, my first, first duck I ever shot. I think I was 10 or 11, it was right at shooting light. We had a single drake come in on my side I was. I was on a cypress tree and it was five yards and I folded it, that dude. It lit a fire under my butt that I, I literally do.

Speaker 4:

If my fiance was here, she would tell you all the same thing. He does not shut up about duck hunting. So I give credit to my uncle, to my dad, really, um, for putting the fire in me that I, I, I can't put out because I just love it so much.

Speaker 3:

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Speaker 4:

Everything about it, you know, and now that I'm doing social media, I'm getting to meet people like you, donnie, and getting to network at these events and meet all these people that have the same passion I do. But that's where it all started. Man Back just a young kid, you know. I started off with a troubled life, young with my parents, and then they pulled me out of it and gave me something that I'll have for a lifetime.

Speaker 3:

That's right, that's right, man.

Speaker 2:

We talk about a lot. Man, like one of the things I've always been really fortunate about, and like I don't take it for granted, is that my dad showed me the outdoors, you know, and like having that mentor, you know, and a lot of people today just don't have a mentor that are trying to get into the outdoors, so like that's what makes it so cool full circle, like what you're doing man is because I'm sure you get messages all the time. I mean, who knows how many people you've helped.

Speaker 2:

Because you became this mentor now and kind of lived full circle and we all fall.

Speaker 4:

You know it sometimes gets stressful but I try to reach out, like today, these young kids that are here. You know I try to reach out. You know if I can give them some words of wisdom or, you know, shake a hand, take a picture, you know, put them in the right direction, be an inspiration. I try to be the best that I can.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you know, I'm big about that. You know, when it comes down to it is, you know, their vision of what the sport's all about is what we are in charge to display, Right? So every single thing that we do that we put off little guys like Charlie.

Speaker 4:

Yeah. They're watching that Dude, he's busy, he's still working.

Speaker 3:

I Guys like Charlie here. Yeah, they're watching that Dude, he's busy, he's still working.

Speaker 2:

I know dude Charlie's still slinging it folks. He ain't got time for the podcast today. He's making money.

Speaker 3:

That's right, that's right, but we create that image right of that, and that's why it's our job to show what the sport is really about.

Speaker 3:

It's not just about shooting ducks. It's actually way more than that, even what we're doing right now. Yeah, you know, I mean you create everybody in the waterfowl industry are cut from the same cloth, you know, and you make friendships that like you make a friendship with somebody and you're like dude, I swear I've known them for 10 years and you've known them for three months right, and what's crazy is, this industry is so small you don't realize that it's so big.

Speaker 4:

Like you look here, there was probably 10 000 people here today. Oh, yeah but it's like all of us are connected with them in a in and that we all have the same passion. That's right. You know what I mean, that's right, that's right.

Speaker 3:

No, I just think it. I think that we're it's so super important. You know that we gotta always, while we're out there, having fun. You know, especially like tristan and I are always big about, uh, telling the story right, you know that's we came up with the one hell of a duck season last year. It's what we're focusing more on this year. You look back hindsight and you say, hey, how can I do it better? Be your worst critic or your best critic.

Speaker 4:

Exactly.

Speaker 3:

And you know, at the end of the day, it's about telling the story, yeah. You know, and getting somebody to say I want to be part of that journey.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and you know one thing I'm curious about Lucas, which I'm sure you've been asked. This you know probably on every podcast you've been on. But I'm just curious. You know what was the motivation to? You know, start putting yourself out there on social media, because you know how it is right.

Speaker 4:

Oh dude.

Speaker 2:

When.

Speaker 4:

I tell you that I didn't know a thing about social media. I didn't know. I barely knew how to post on Instagram. So, me and one of my good friends, bailey Ostrander, we went to Dallas, fort Worth, and she had some friends down there and um, we flew down there for a weekend, got to hanging out and Bailey had been doing the social media stuff for a while and um, got to talking to some of her friends and I'm like so what do y'all do for a living? They're like oh, we do. Uh, we're influencers.

Speaker 4:

And I was like influencers. I was like influencers. I was like the only influence I know is under the influence. And you know, I don't think that's what y'all are. I mean, maybe it is right now, but um, so they were like no, you know, we do tiktok and instagram and stuff. And these people are driving around I said this on the last podcast and brand new f-250s paid for cash and stuff, right, right. So I got to talking to Bailey at the room and I was like so what's this Tic Tac, what is this? And she was like, oh well, she was showing me and I was like so you're telling me? All I got to do is pick this up, film myself and post it. She said, yeah, so I had this big dream and stuff, and I'm sitting there and I'm, you know, doing the tiktoks and I was getting nothing yeah I was doing the pretty boy stuff, trying to be like some of these influencers, these western guys yeah I told bailey.

Speaker 4:

I said I'm done, I give up.

Speaker 4:

It's not working yeah and uh, she's like just talk about something you know, something you love. I was like duck hunting, we'll do duck hunting. That's how I was saying. I was like we'll do duck hunting. So I started posting still no traction, not getting nothing. And I was like I made something, talking about a gator tail, I got, you know, talking about the boat or something, and people just started hating.

Speaker 4:

Comments started coming, views started running up and I said okay. So I started to think. I said the only way I can run this up is either one, be relatable, two, start controversy. So from then on, I mean I just started running with it, you know. So I give credit to Bailey, because if it wasn't for her, I probably would have still be like you know, not knowing nothing about the Internet. But I'm glad that I started it and I get a lot of hate from it. I get a lot of love, you know so, and it's opened a lot of doors to a lot of opportunities. Like I've met so many people, dude, I'm so thankful for everything well, you know, I've always said I've said this numerous times.

Speaker 3:

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Speaker 4:

You know what I mean? Oh yeah, 100%.

Speaker 3:

And especially the more of a spotlight you get in. Unfortunately, there's a jealousy factor and things like that that are involved.

Speaker 4:

That is one of the biggest things right there, what you just said. It's a jealousy factor. I've lost some of my best friends over this stuff.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I know, and it's sad, but you know what In a over this stuff?

Speaker 4:

yeah, no, and it's it's sad, but you know what in a good way.

Speaker 3:

It's kind of like a funnel of life, right, 100, you know I mean and, and the ones that you're real good, you know you learn, especially when you're my age. You know you start out with all these friends right, and then you start to learn it the older you get that you know what. I really only got like a couple right and I call them, you're moving. But right, right, when you make that phone call, say I need help moving, they're like absolutely I'll be there.

Speaker 4:

I've got one, brett Schnabel. I'll tell you right now, he was here today. You couldn't have said it any better, right then? Yeah.

Speaker 3:

That's it, it is, it is, it is. You know, and you know what I think I got a lot of last two days yeah that I'd probably help move more than some people I've known all my life.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean for real, because I know they'd be right there they'd be right there behind me well, you can tell, I mean, I think, a lot of what, uh, what to be successful at this stuff and like to. I mean there's a level of hard work that goes into it and I think we all kind of recognize like, especially after you meet somebody, you can tell pretty quick who's like a genuine person.

Speaker 2:

So I think you kind of just have that commonality and you can trust, but you know, lucas, one thing I want to talk about is I saw you post a video the other day. You were talking about, um, just the truth of hunting publicly in arkansas and, uh, obviously a huge can of worms.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot of shit you talk about a lot you know, we um a couple years ago we always trying to show the reality of hunting. We put a video on YouTube called the Reality of Hunting. Arkansas Public Tent Shot three birds that day but showed the boat race and shit and the run into the hole the video you were talking about in particular, how these guys are blocking holes and doing all this stuff.

Speaker 4:

It's messed up, but we got a lot of hate on that video for posting that. But like it's the reality of what it is. Yeah, I mean it's like and and anytime you use the word. I'm not even gonna say the state.

Speaker 4:

Use the word arkansas, yeah it's a tender subject right, especially with everything that's going on now. Um, you know you, like you said, you're opening a can of worms anytime you talk about that stuff, but it is the reality of what's going on in that state and excuse me, um, coming up, you know I hunted a lot of private as a kid and then, once I got a little older, I started, you know, venturing out on my own. I wanted to start hunting public and to watch the ramps grow and to watch the people grow and and and the woods fill up with people. And you know it's, it's crazy how what's happened over there and I'm, I'm one and, like I talked about it the other day, the draw, I'm 100 for the end staters having first priority I'm 100% for that.

Speaker 4:

But something's got to break over there and it's all just going to go downhill for everybody.

Speaker 3:

Well and again, that's our job, right, we're out there to weed out that badness, right? Like I've always said this no matter where you're hunting, no matter what you're hunting, if you're in a deer stand and you see somebody set up 50 yards from you, right, bow hunting, if you're in the woods and somebody sets up 50 yards, I will bet my life every time that nine times out of ten, they don't know what they're doing oh, 100, you know what I?

Speaker 3:

mean it's not because you're gonna find that one percent, that is a jackass for sure. Yeah, you're going to get that. Oh, this is mine. I always say you can't pee on public land and own it yeah you know what I mean and uh, but fact of the matter is is that, again, our job is to get the real message out right say no. Look that morning.

Speaker 4:

Hey man, come over here hunt with us and listen I'm going to give you some advice a hundred percent, and and we, we do that same thing, and that's how it's got to be, and I've had my faults, trust me, I've been madder than a hornet.

Speaker 4:

I've been madder than a hornet out there, you know, but a lot of times, like when we were hunting up north last year in arkansas, it's more like, you know, we, we get there first and people are coming piling up behind me and it's like you go from from boat to boat. Hey, how many people you got? Okay, you got two people. Good, we got six. So now we're up to eight. Then you go to the next boat. How many people you got? You got two. You want to hunt with us? Yeah, okay, let's do it. Then you know, we got room.

Speaker 3:

There's no reason for that's right. And then you may end up getting hurt, hurting somebody you know or whatever you know the case may be. I've told this story before and you might not know about this, but you know, one of the things that you know was probably I don't know if we'll ever have a better opportunity for a video like this, but we were hunting early teal down in southeast Georgia, not a big teal area for early teal, went out there, busted our ass.

Speaker 3:

We're out there scouting. For two days we haven't seen a bird. And we're about to give up and we're glassing 3 o'clock in the afternoon and I look through my binoculars. I'm like there's no way that I just saw a bunch of blue wings I'm talking like 500. And I'm like no way did I just see that? I give no way did I just see that? I get a knock and it's Tristan. He's like dude, those are teal.

Speaker 3:

Well, we're like it's out in like a desert marsh. No way anybody could find that unless they had a drone or something. Right, yeah, right, well, anyway, this would have to be a thousand yard marsh walk through mud this deep to get out there. You have to bust your ass. Anyway, I said we're going to come out here, sleep on the dike, not that we own it, but we're going to be there first, right? And I said I want to protect. There's only one way into it. I said I want to. If anybody shows up, I want to tell them, say, look, we're not going in there and disturbing them birds until we have to.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 3:

Go get set up. Anyway, sure enough, about midnight we had six guys yeah, I hear mud motors coming and I'm like maybe this is going by, you know. And then they all stopped Two of them, ten guys, get out.

Speaker 4:

No kidding.

Speaker 3:

And all these guys are like what are we going to do? And I don't know if it came from God or where it came from. Honestly, I just instantly snapped into something and said we're going to hunt together. I said they did their work. The only reason why they're here right now is they went out and did what we did yeah, you know and found those birds.

Speaker 4:

So we ended up putting them together. We went in there quiet got everything set up.

Speaker 3:

They had 10 guys, we had six, 16 guys, 16 guys, we shot 78, it was so we were. Our six was four short of a limit.

Speaker 2:

They shot, they shot, yeah, yeah. And so the next day, most of those guys a lot of them were with the coast guard and stuff like that couldn't show.

Speaker 3:

so the next day most of those guys a lot of them were with the Coast Guard and stuff like that couldn't show up the next day. They got their fill, you know. And we go out there the next day and a couple guys and we're still best friends with them today oh, willie, willie, or we call him the Foshee, no, but we nickname him, we call him the Absolutely.

Speaker 2:

I don't know, but they used to call Willie.

Speaker 3:

Nelson and the Highwaymen the.

Speaker 4:

Highwaymen, yeah, the.

Speaker 3:

Highwayboys. Yeah, but still to this day. You know they showed up. We're like, hey, come on in, we're going to show you where it's set up. But we're like we're setting up with those 10 guys Right Because they were working. I said we'll show you exactly where it's set up. We look over and every bird that goes by there is just not stopping and I'm like, dude, they don't have a mojo. So I told one of our guys to go take a mojo over that too give it to them.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, they limited it out, yeah, yeah, that's what it's all about. That's awesome.

Speaker 3:

I'll never. I'll never have another opportunity.

Speaker 4:

You are very few and far between that will. That will help somebody out like that.

Speaker 3:

Oh dude and so I thought we were blessed with that opportunity to put that message out. Yeah, that if one person sees that, they'll go. Hey, man, come on over here. Yeah, you know what I mean.

Speaker 4:

So and you forever instilled that in them. That hey, like there's no telling what they felt. When y'all come over they were probably thinking you know why are they coming over here? But you know, to bring them a mojo, a piece of your equipment that you paid for, that you put the time in and give it to them to help them fulfill what they were there to do. There's no telling what, what measures that that did for them.

Speaker 3:

We're like I said, we're great friends with the day. But I'll tell you the best part of it.

Speaker 2:

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Speaker 3:

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Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 3:

Because we were we would already limit it out, and we were waiting for them to limit it out and not disturb anything. And boy, you'd see them come.

Speaker 4:

And then we like here it goes.

Speaker 3:

And we just we're over there, yeah. But my favorite part about that, though, really is when we got done, we all go into town and we pull in this little gas station, a little bit of small town. We pull in the gas station and this real old gentleman comes up up. We're all in waiters. He goes was you part of that world war three over there?

Speaker 1:

and I said, yes, sir, he goes. You guys shut up the shit out of him.

Speaker 3:

I said, yes, sir, we sure did that's good everybody in the whole town heard those guns going off man.

Speaker 2:

But I want to. Um, I want to, before we get too far down the road. I want to circle back on the uh quota topic, or you? Know the lottery topic with arkansas. You know I think I've always like so. We hunt florida a lot and you know they have some good opportunities where incredible you don't pull it every year, but when you do, you have a really good chance they post the bird numbers and, like you know, it's average like four, four birds a hunter, like right, yeah, they literally log every bird so that they get their data on it and they publish it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, right so, and I understand it's a slippery, especially for someone like you that's spent years hunting public land out there.

Speaker 2:

Like to see it go to this, but like playing devil's advocate at least a portion of it like if you had like for from us, for example, coming from georgia, like if we were going to go out there and let's say it's once every two, three years for somebody from georgia to pull it. I don't, you know. Whatever they do, I mean if you had a chance having a good hunt and like not having any drama and all that it's. It's kind of like I get why that's attractive. You know what?

Speaker 3:

I mean in the current climate.

Speaker 2:

But I mean, what are your thoughts on that whole?

Speaker 4:

thing, man, it's really, um, it's tough. You know, I kind of get what you're, what you're saying here. Um, a lot of people come from out of town in hopes of. This is one of the biggest things with Arkansas. It is the patriarch of duck hunting. It is a staple of the Mallard duck. The Mallard duck is the state of Arkansas. So when you have people that are coming from Alabama, georgia, the Carolinas, florida, they're coming in to Arkansas in very high hopes of shooting the mallard duck in a a numerous amount and having success every day, and that is one of the biggest things. I would say. That starts with the issue and the problem of what the instaters would say is we're overcrowded with outer staters is because a lot of these people come over there in hopes of shooting a bunch of mallards and they get over there and they realize that it isn't what they thought. Are the mallards there A thousand percent? Is it just putting your boat in the ramp and running up into the woods and shooting the hell out of them? Hell?

Speaker 4:

no I promise you it takes a lot of time, a lot of work, a lot of you know running the roads to figure out. And that's what a lot of people don't get. That come from Georgia and Alabama and the Carolinas and Florida, and that's where a lot of the instaters, I think, have an issue is that once they get over there, you know, and then they're just like, oh well, we're gonna hunt anyway, you know. So it takes a lot of time and I know it's. I get it coming from, you know, eight hours away, because we hunt, you know, even past arkansas out west, and it gets tricky sometimes, you know, and it's like damn, we put all this time in these miles.

Speaker 4:

You know we want to kill right but we understand the fact that it's more than just showing up, throwing the decoys out into a reservoir and shooting the piss out of them.

Speaker 3:

That's right.

Speaker 4:

So if you're going to go to Arkansas, you're going to have to put up with it and you've got to put in a lot, a lot of work and have sportsmanship while you're at it.

Speaker 3:

Well, a lot of that work comes into meeting people and shaking hands.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, 100%, I mean.

Speaker 3:

I think one of the best messages that Dennis, uh that uh, dennis and billy put off over there is about just doing your homework and you got to scout. You know he's always says you're gonna spend half of your trip, no matter where you go. Yeah, I don't spend half of it just scouting it and talking to people no I mean we still in debt. To a guy today that you know met us on the boat ramp, said hey right versus us going out and messing up somebody else's house.

Speaker 3:

He said come on right, I'll take you guys out. There's a story.

Speaker 4:

One of my good friends, seth miles some people known as Mallard miles he, um, he got to hunt with Dennis and Billy's actually in that video, what, what me and my friends called the mother load where they found out he was broke down at a ramp. And this is a prime example. I tell people about Dennis and Billy, what kind of people they are. He had an old mud buddy and he was broke down At a W and billy what kind of people they are. He had an old mud buddy and he was broke down, um, at a wma.

Speaker 4:

And dennis and billy just happened you know, they'll be at the boat ramp just talking to people hanging out or whatever and dennis walked up to him and was like, hey, you know, um, he was having troubles, couldn't get his motor to start. He was like, well, how about this? You take your boat back to our camp, just get in a boat with us, you know, hunt with us, you know what? And I promise you, if you took 100 people out of this convention right now, 90 of them wouldn't do that right that takes a lot.

Speaker 4:

A random person just say, okay, take your. Take your boat back to my house that I live at right and come get in a boat with us exactly no, it's incredible so they're incredible folks over there and they've done such a good job of promoting the sport in the right way.

Speaker 3:

You know the same team has been their big thing, you know, enjoying the journey that kind of stuff, man. Big shout-out to those guys 100%. You know one of the things, because we're a little bit out of time, we don't usually no-transcript this or that yeah and so we're just going to hit you with a bunch of this or this or that and okay, let's do it and we'll give you a chance to pick one when you're done and explain explain why he said that okay

Speaker 2:

all right so 12 gauge or 20 gauge uh 12 gauge all right surface drive or sideboard surface drive we'll keep it, we'll, we'll, we'll run it up on that one public versus private uh public all right face paint versus no face paint no face paint. What the heck oh man, monster or red bull monster okay, uh, breakfast pizza versus breakfast sandwich oh, breakfast pizza from the yeah come on from casey's right.

Speaker 4:

You ever eat there shell station in my hometown make you slap your mama, your wife and your grandmother all right, single read versus double read. Uh, depends on that man. I've got some double reads and a nice single read. We'll go with a single read all right, uh, ford or chevy ford. What kind of question is that?

Speaker 2:

uh, all right. So last one, all right, bush light or miller light?

Speaker 4:

I know the answer to that bush light 100, not the apple, but bush light 100. Let's go.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's awesome, man well lucas uh, so which one?

Speaker 3:

do you want to be able to explain why you picked it? Yeah? Pick one for me and I'll tell you all right, service drivers, yeah, yeah, that would sound like a dude that's so controversial donnie went with uh outboard yeah you know service drive people want to say you know they are loud.

Speaker 4:

We get it. But you can run a surface drive anywhere you can run an outboard. You cannot run an outboard anywhere you can run a surface drive, that's true. So, if it comes down to it, what can I get more out of? And I can get more out of a surface drive, and I might disturb the neighbors while I'm at it, but you know what that's?

Speaker 2:

it is what it is that's right, that's right, that's right man well, man, I'm sure, uh, I mean 99 of the people listening this probably already follow you. But bigger cool, okay, yeah, sounds good. Um, but uh, you know where? If anybody's listening to us that you know isn't following you, where can they get connected with you?

Speaker 4:

Man, you can find me, uh, on Instagram at HeyGood84. I'll spell it out one time H-A-Y-G-O-O-D-84. Same on TikTok, it's same on. You know, that's really it, tiktok and Instagram. So if you want to follow me, just hit the link and hold on tight. That's right that's right, man. I appreciate y'all having me out today. Dude, y'all are some good.

Speaker 4:

I'm glad we met, yes y'all got a good thing going dude coming out and networking and you know, questioning people like me that I don't feel like I should be on a podcast, but I'm glad that y'all give me the opportunity oh, we love it.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot we can learn, you know, honestly, man, from everybody we have on, so yeah, man, absolutely we'd love to have y'all on another time and yeah, and just spend a little bit more time.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, maybe maybe next show, if y'all are at, or we can get up this season and y'all can you know we can do another one and yeah man just whatever sounds great man.

Speaker 3:

Well, you know what? As we always say, at the end of everything we do, it's one hell of a life.

Speaker 4:

That's right. Thank y'all.

Speaker 1:

I've been southbound. I've been hellbound Riding on a midnight train Going too fast. Now Think I'll slow down Standing in the pouring rain.