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The Booth Juice
Ep21 – Hooked on Adventure: The Story Behind Dust n Tide
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In Episode 21, we sit down with Amy and Abel, the couple behind the newly launched Dust n Tide; a brand and YouTube channel capturing the best of Far North Queensland life through fishing, camping, boating and 4WD adventures.
Growing up in FNQ, Amy and Abel developed a deep appreciation for the outdoors and the laid-back lifestyle the region is known for. We chat about their individual careers, from Amy's work as a hairdresser to Abel's role in marine vessel management and how a shared passion for adventure, storytelling and the outdoors inspired them to create Dust n Tide.
We chat about taking the leap into content creation, the realities of starting a brand from scratch, and their vision for where Dust n Tide is headed. With exciting adventures already underway and merchandise on the horizon, this is just the beginning of their journey.
Whether you're into fishing, camping, exploring the great outdoors or simply love hearing from passionate people chasing a dream, this episode is packed with laughs, local stories and a glimpse into the future of one of FNQ's newest adventure brands.
All the juice straight from the makeup booth. Welcome to the Booth Juice. Welcome back to another episode of The Booth Juice. My guests today have just started a new brand called Dust and Tide, and I'm so excited to hear more about their story. So please welcome Amy and Abel. Thank you so much for coming on today, guys. I, as I said, I'm so excited to hear about your story. I think you guys have been, I think you've been my youngest guest so far, which is very cool. Yeah, I tune in every week. So thank you. So goodie so good. I'm just so grateful to be here. So happy. Thank you. Well, I'd love to start. I'm gonna pan over to you guys. Do you want to tell us a bit more about yourselves and what you get up to every day? So I'm a hairdresser, so I work at a local salon just down the road, DS, hair and makeup. And kind of that's what I do for work, but in my spare time, it's fishing, diving, you know, just going for a walk on the beach, even at the end of the day, just getting outside, that's my thing. I think that you would agree.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, oh 100%. Yeah, same for me. So I do a lot of fishing, camping, that sort of thing. Yeah, um, that's sort of what this whole thing is about, um, dust and tide. But um, when I'm not doing that sort of thing, I'm working down the boats, and I do vessel management with Rick, so that's taking care of boats and a lot of chinas as well. Yeah, so going fishing, that sort of stuff, and it all like my whole life, I reckon, is it probably revolved around fishing. Yeah, that's so good.
SPEAKER_00So I guess like dust and tide is probably just a natural progression of what you guys get up to anyway. Oh, 100%, yeah, definitely. And you both grew up here? Yes, yeah, yes. I grew up in Cape Trib until I was 12, and then I moved to Newell Beach where I live now, um, to start high school because it was just too far on the bus every day. Yeah, but that's like my whole childhood is over there. Every time I go there, it's like so special to me having that connection there is so like I would not change that for anything. Yeah, yeah. And you grew up here too, didn't you?
SPEAKER_02Yeah, yeah. I've been in the same house, yeah, Oak Beach.
SPEAKER_00Oh yeah, so you're on the other side, yeah.
SPEAKER_02On the side end of the world between Mill and Oak Beach, but yeah, um, yeah, been living here my whole life, and family's been here for most of their life as well. So yeah, pretty much born and bred here while I am. Yeah, yeah. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00Awesome, that's so good. So, how long ago did the Dust and Tide idea come about? And can you tell us how?
SPEAKER_02Probably I reckon probably like a year ago, is when we'll actually think about it pretty high for the first time because we're doing like we do hick trips, big trips every New Year's um with all the boys, and uh we tend to take a bit of footage of it, and I I put it on my YouTube and that sort of thing, but like I was always thinking, I was like, we do all these things all the time, and we do like three, four trips with big trips a year. Like, why don't we just start filming it? Because people love what we do, like we do some pretty wild stuff, yeah. And then we did sort of one big video recently, which was probably around Easter, and that was the biggest video I've made, it's about an hour long, and everyone just loved it, just gained traction straight away, and that was just on my accounts back then. Awesome, and then pretty much straight after that, I was like, all right, we'll make YouTube, and we started putting snippets of that video up, making videos since then. Like Amy's done hips over at Cape Trib where she grew up, yeah, and it sort of started from then, and it's yeah, everyone knows about it pretty quickly, especially like a lot of locals back in it, which is good.
SPEAKER_00I I agree with it about a year ago, but it's only recently since we've been like, wait, we can actually like make something like out of this, really, like posting the YouTube. Like Able's been posting since he was like 13. And he just like all the stuff that he does, and I didn't really get involved until like we did the crayfish video.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, probably.
SPEAKER_00Like, I wasn't on the YouTube for so long. Like, I would just let Able do his thing, I'd do my thing, because I usually work weekends, so he was just like solo all the a lot of the time. But um, yeah, I think the idea started when we same thing, like the Kate Flattery trip every year. We had so much footage, and we were just like, There's only so many TikToks you can post, there's only so many like Instagram videos and photos, and then it's just all come into like, oh, we can make a YouTube out of this and make a full-length video because we have people ask all the time, what's it like? Yeah, we're just repeating ourselves all the time, like, go watch the YouTube. It's absolutely, I think those like full-length content is just so popular, yeah. Particularly those people that don't know what Far North Queensland is like. You know, for us, it's so normal, and you guys know that my brother is a part of your project. Yeah, well, that's the thing. It matters all of you. And for us, we've grown up feeling like that's really normal, but for your viewers, they're probably like, wow, this is another world. My clo even like my clients at work, they're just like, How is this real? Like, I have so many videos of like crocodiles nearly attacking us, and yeah, just catching me and a barren mundy and drowning a car in the same video, and it's just like, how are you doing this just on a random weekend? Like family overseas who've never seen like anything like this? You're like just hey family, this is my boyfriend. Yeah, and we're just yeah, yeah, it's very much like that, but yeah, they just can't believe that it's something we just do. It's like crocodile John D, but like real life. Absolutely, yeah. So, how does it work for you guys? Do you kind of shoot stuff together and then someone edits it, or how do you kind of sort of figure that out at the moment?
SPEAKER_02She's she does a couple of her own videos, yeah, and she just edits those. Yep, yeah, and then most of the stuff that I do, we sort of edit together. I try to edit most of it, but if I don't know what it's like, I just like yeah, get her to help me with it. But um, yeah, most of the time we sort of help each other. Yeah, but I've been trying to get a lot of videos out because I mean like I literally like I said, I go fish like every afternoon. Yeah, so I was like, I go start videoing and even before all this, when we like in my YouTube, uh like when we were going up to these new New Year's trips and that sort of thing, I had like hours of footage before none posted, just so much footage, and I was like, oh my god, I have to start doing something of this because it's just all going to waste. Like I was just delaying SD cards or getting new SD cards, yeah, and there's all this old footage.
SPEAKER_00I was like, does this yeah, surely there's a story here? Yeah, yeah. And like I kind of found the same with the editing and everything. I go into a video knowing exactly what I need to film, yeah, and like the b-roll that I need to film, and like what footage I'm gonna have to frame in my section if I'm editing it to music. I already have a song in my head, so I'm like, okay, I need like there's a lot of beats in this. I need about 30 one-second clips to like get this to the music. So then I will make sure that even if it's nothing, it's gonna be a one-second clip. Yeah, it's just gotta fill in that time. So I feel like when Abel films, I always find it hard to edit when he does because it's like a bit more candid. It's like it's a bit more candid, like that's the moment, and then like a lot of the time if he's fishing and he's catching a fish, I'm behind the camera. Yeah, it's the opposite, suddenly it's to me, suddenly it's to any of our friends are there.
SPEAKER_01Like, we just kind of do that's the part of it. Like that's part of you doing it.
SPEAKER_00The hard thing is, I think, is when it's like we've got the GoPro out, all of a sudden I can't find the GoPro, need to use my phone, so we switch between a lot of media, which I think is hard. Yeah, but the quality on our phones is so good now. Like, you can't really even tell the difference. I can, but I don't think people would be able to.
SPEAKER_02If you have it both cropped the same way, it's not a good idea. Yeah, it's pretty similar nowadays.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, definitely. I just took my phone to Japan for the same reason. I was like, I'm not even gonna pack my camera because just lugging around more weight, and that looked unreal. Like you didn't even I would be able to tell that was a phone. Like it's crazy, it's sort of great. Yeah, and you just bought a drone too. Oh, that's amazing. How are you going with the drone? Is it easier or harder than you thought it was gonna be to use? Because I got a drone a few like back when I don't know, it was a long time ago now. Yeah, and I used it the first time. I almost crashed it into tourists on in Rexmill Park, and I've been scarred ever since and not been able to use it. So I hope you've had more luck. I thought it was as hard as it was like going to be. I knew it was gonna be hard. You're expecting it now, like I was expecting it, and I never grew. My dad was like, just pretend you're playing a PlayStation. Yeah, I never had a PlayStation Xbox growing up, so I was like, what do you mean? Yeah. So I quite literally like took me probably like two weeks to learn, and it would just be flying around my backyard filming nothing, just flying. Yeah, and I found it easier flying looking down than looking up. So many people said fly when you're looking up, so you can see that. But I just get my thumbs mixed. Yeah. That's what I was doing. That's my crash into the tree. Yes, yes. So I yeah, I was I've learned pretty quick and I love it. If it if I crashed it tomorrow, I'd be buying a new one straight away. And I've got DJI um Mini Pro 3. Cool. Like, if you're starting, there's definitely drones that are like lower, like in price. I think ours was like one and a half grand. Yeah, um, but I was happy spending that money. I've always wanted a drone, and I've just never been able to like commit to buying it because I didn't have a reason to have one. Absolutely. And now I do. Now you do. Sorry, that's yeah, it was really cool. Nice. So, like, for anyone that's thinking of buying a drone, the moral there is practice, practice, practice. Yeah, and buy it. Just buy it and practice. Yeah, like and look at your screen if you get disorientated looking up. Yeah. Well, it's unreal, like you don't realize. Like, I just took photos of my friends off the rocks like the other morning from Port Douglas, like just like where that little hill walk is. Yeah. And it looks like Greece. Yeah. Like the water could literally be European summer. I was also on crocodile. I was not swimming, I was making sure my friends didn't get snapped up. There you go. Look, there's safety in a month. Yeah, so I'm watching for that, and I would love my dream shot is to get a crocodile off Cape Trip. Amazing. I think that would be like I went and had a look like recently on my last YouTube video, and I couldn't see anything, but I was running out of battery and I was like, I'm gonna come here, three full batteries, and I'm gonna find one. Like, I'm just gonna manifest that. I think can't wait. That's so cool. Now, Abel, you've been like creating obviously since you were young because your YouTube's been around for a while. But like Amy, did you ever did you ever see yourself being like a creator? Like, or were you because obviously hairdressing's a bit different too? So different. Yeah. I or did you kind of like because you got you guys have been together for a few years now? So probably kind of a natural progression there too, I suppose. Yeah. I thought I did film and television at school because I was really interested in that. Um, but not to the point where I thought it was gonna ever gonna be my job. I always knew hairdressing was like number one, that was gonna be what I did. Um, but with like filming and things, it sounds like it's so nerdy. But I would literally sit on the bus, and if I was listening to a song, I could picture like either a music video or like an edit or something in my head. That's me. Yeah, and I would literally sit on the bus and like just earphones in, and my bus like ride was not long enough for how long I wanted to sit there with my eyes closed and just like imagine it's so nerdy, but like that's how I felt, and I would sometimes like listen to one song 20 times because I could see it so like I could see it in front of me. And I thought one day I'm just gonna like this is when I thought maybe I could have something in it because I was so I just loved it. Like I looked forward to getting on the bus and listening to my music, and it would be the most random songs too, yeah like the most random songs, and I would just see the vision of what I thought, like if I do a music video, it should be what's in my head, yeah. Like because I'm obviously a genius right now, yeah, and still sort of am, but don't get to do it as much. But even to the point of like choreographing like dance as well in in amongst the yeah, I'm like, yeah, I can see that. Yes, yeah. Well, I used to think about like songs and like obviously going to BIM, like yeah new, I would see the dance in my head, and I'm not have nothing like I'm not a dancer or anything, but like I just saw it in my head, and I was just like, I should give these ideas to Sasuke. I'm like, this is so good, but yeah, it was not like I could just see it in my brain, which is cool. I I'm really interested, I'm fascinated by the way people's brains work, and particularly with music and stuff as well. I think it's a really cool way to think, I think, or to view the world too. So, like obviously, creating content, you start to see the world differently too when you're when you've got a purpose and you're like, I've got to capture something, oh do this or do that or whatever, and it it does piece together, even if it is a music clip, you're still telling a story, yeah, exactly. You know, even if there's no, and I think Abel kind of just like susses the vibe of the video first, yeah, and then you kind of decide the music around that. Yeah, like that's more your vibe. Like decide the music later. What will like what's the vibe of the clip? Is it fishing? Is it spear diving? Like is it spear fishing or diving or anything like that? And then he kind of like puts that to the music, like the music to the video, not the video to the music, I guess. Cool, yeah. I like it. I like the different processes, yeah. Yeah, awesome. So, what's next for Dustin Ty? You know, have you I know you probably just continually have weekend adventures, but do you see other things with the brand? Are you gonna bring on merch or anything else? We do have merch coming. Ooh! Yeah, yeah, yay. We have some hats which are printed and on their way to me in like three to four weeks, I want to say. I did want them ready for Laura Rodeo so I could get them out there. Yeah, but it didn't, yeah, it's it takes a while. Like you would know stuff. Yeah, so we've got our design, we've got our hats. It's through um TS Print, which is the anchor line of locals. I want to do everything through like local business. Yeah, I honestly like am so excited for that. And we've got more, I've inquired about stubby coolers. Awesome. Hopefully, if we have online orders, I know we're gonna be sending some away for free to our friends. Um but I want a stubby cooler in there, I want a hat, and I want to like thank you for your purchase. Thanks for supporting us, like things like that. But I think we're we're looking into like a couple more things. We'd love like our dream would be fishing shirts. I was just about to say, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_02That'll be the go.
SPEAKER_00Even the idea guys to be wearing in your videos, it'd be awesome. Yeah, because that's that's like our main goal, like wearing the hats. Like as soon as they come, we'll be they'll they'll be around, you'll see them.
SPEAKER_02So yeah, get the merch out. I do have plans, like I reckon the next couple trips I want to do. We do have a big one planned for New Year's, and that's gonna be up in the bay in Prince Charlotte. Yeah, um, and other than that, I think I sort of want to get like a bigger boat and do longer overnight trips. Like we've done a couple overnighters on the tinny, yeah, and it's it's pushing it. Yeah, like you can do it, but if you want to do like bigger long trips, which I want to do, I want to like explore more of Cat York by a vessel. Like we've done a lot of it by car now, but yeah, doing it by boat is so much better, you can fish so much more rear systems, that sort of thing.
SPEAKER_00Uh getting bogged. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Or bruising tires or whatever else has happened in the last few trips. Yeah, that's it. But um, yeah. I mean, like we like all of us as a group, especially for the boys, like as you know, with your brother and that sort of stuff, we spend a lot of money and get all our cars and boats ready every it's actually quite impressive for a couple of dumb fellas to get their things ready to go, but um, yeah, it's always good to have a couple big trips coming up, especially like the New Year's one. I think everyone's already getting frothed up about that. This is about the time of the year where everyone starts this thinking about that. Yeah, getting stuff ready.
SPEAKER_00For those listing, how long do you guys normally go on that trip?
SPEAKER_02Or I think this one we're thinking of going for probably two, but usually it's around yes, seven days. Yeah, either way. Or obviously depending on the weather.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, weather very, very weather dependent. Like, I think last year we got completely rained out. Yeah, last year was loose. Yeah, it was not like I won't say miserable, but every day it rained, which made it hard to just sit, like, even though we're sitting, we literally just sat and drank underneath it a top. Because we didn't we couldn't get out there. The wet weather was way too rough for any of our tinnies. We don't have boats, like we have tinnies that get full of water and milge breaks, and then you're drowning 3k offshore. Yeah, it's not something that you want, like especially if it's pouring down with rain. The wind, one stage we all went up the creek for like a little fresh water swim. We came back, and our camp was absolutely destroyed, like all of the everything was wet.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, we had big rain schools coming through, but that was that was sort of like the end of the year, like you get so I get those big North Queensland, like big storms rolling through.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, do you ever think of changing to a different part of the year? Yeah, yeah. Yeah, that's the thing, yeah. I mean, that we always go obviously just hard to coordinate, maybe. Yeah. At Christmas time, everyone usually has that time off. So it's a bit harder to do it any other time.
SPEAKER_02I mean, it wouldn't be bad those next couple of months after the wet because when when it's usually calm and like like Easter, that was borderline pushing it for the cake, that trip, like it was wet. Yeah, and uh when we're doing those um Christmas trips, that's like the start of it. So it's it's kind of fun because you have to get out of there. Yeah, because if you're not your stuff, yeah, but um yeah, I I don't know. New Year's is good, it's like a good time that years um year for everyone to get the work off and that sort of thing, but yeah, it can be hairy, I think, sometimes. I mean, we're always pushing it, I think.
SPEAKER_00But also in the same sense, probably brings out some more adventures, yeah. That's it. Unexpected things that probably just make you laugh. Good content anyway. Yeah, we had some situations last year.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, I wish I wish we filmed more. It was feeling more.
SPEAKER_00But your phone broke, like I couldn't get my drone up in the air. There's so much rain. I didn't even bring it on the boat because it was like everything gets wet. At one stage, our build broke, we had water. Abel was like, couldn't see there was so much rain. I was baling out the back, and then our mate just got like a treble in his left.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, because we do big fish in banging. Big fishing for um giant chevallies. So we're using these big poppers like this big, and they got like 12-inch or 12-0 hooks, which are like an inch long. And um, we were coming through this big school, punching back to where we were camping, and it was just jacked up, it was like 20 knot winds, and like I said, we couldn't see. I think it was wearing a mask at one stage, like a spearing mask, couldn't see that much. And then one of my mates, yeah, he got this hook through his calf while while the boat was sinking.
SPEAKER_00It was it's my biggest fear. Hate it, I say it's so much. I'm bailing out, and then Abe was trying to drive, and our friend just screamed out and looked down just a huge hook in the back of his leg, can't see the can't see it at all. And we're just like, right, drink your rum, brick it out, and then just kept going because we were far away from the land. We had to just get out of there, really. And he he braved it. He's really good. Yeah, yeah. I would have been like, get me a helicopter. Yeah, yeah, no way. Oh my goodness, that was like so much fun though. It is the best, like, yeah, you think about those stories, and in the moment's like, oh my god, like this is terrible, and then you think about it the day after, and you're like, that was the best time I've ever had. Exactly. It is so fun, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_02And you're so remote as well, like we all rely on each other, like with supplies, that sort of thing. That fuels a big one with vote trips.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, that would be tricky in the last year or so. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02Is this expensive? Just pop it, yeah, start saving. But um, yeah, yeah, like we try to bring as much as we can and fit into our cars, that sort of thing. But even you're going for seven days, and especially where we go is one spot, you're probably three, four hours away from the nearest sort of like it's not even a town, so just like a village sort of thing, and then um from there you can get fuel from there, but so far away. So you want to bring all your fuel with you in like when you're there for seven days and you're doing reef trips every day. You probably got like five days of fuel, so someone has to do a fuel run in between. Wow, and it that's another big thing, like yeah, being so remote, you've got to definitely rely on everyone else around you, especially when you're idling around all day as well.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, like being out that far and just yeah, constantly going, usually, yeah, like especially if you're diving, like I just follow them around in the boat, that's all day, yeah. Big days, yeah, it's really hard. Yeah, how do you go with like packing like food supplies and stuff too? Like, do you all kind of just do like a big shop together and you'll or do you all sort yourselves out individually?
SPEAKER_02Oh, we sort of do a couple groups, we sort of split up. We mainly do ours on our own, and we try to bring as much like cooked meals as possible.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, but obviously we try to eat stuff that we get out there, like we just we always feel like we want to rely on catching fish and eating it fresh, but on the odd occasion, you don't catch anything. I'm not going hungry. Like I need to I we need to eat something, so and like water is the hardest thing for us. Like we fill up Abel's car because it's got a water tank, we fill it up to the brim, but that's still sometimes not enough when you need to be drinking. Like it is summer in the middle of like the ocean, constant heat. We don't have a bimni or anything, like we're just like out there. Yeah, I've been begging Abel so long. I'm like, please, I need some shades. Like tougher it out, puff it out, don't bim me. No, yeah. So we just like water is our most important thing, and I get stressed about getting hurt. Yes, like when I see any of the boys doing something like dumb, I'm just like, hey, where's that helicopter coming to get you? Yeah, like that's three hours away. That's also in like an hour back. You just have to please be careful. Like, we have do you have any nurses in your group? We have one nurse. Right. Yeah, Alyssa, she's gonna go to the house. So she had. The um EpiPen and the what is that called? That pill that you take and miss me? Yes, that one she had that. She's I don't think she's quite stitched anyone, but she's definitely glued some people together. That's my piece of advice. I'm like, just take one nurse with you. Yeah, she's out here. Alyssa, I would love you. Awesome. Oh, it's just even more of your lives. It's so cool. And I just think you guys have just got so many cool new adventures ahead. So back to the name Dust and Tide. Where did that come about? We honestly like because we do so much ocean fishing, plus like rivers land-based, as well as like camping like in the dirt. Yeah. Like, we just it's always kind of like the polar opposite. We wanted to really get through that we are like land-based and ocean-based, and we just thought dust and tide had like a good bring to it, basically. Like we didn't want to say dirt and ocean. Like that sounds good. You've probably got a million things that say fishing and camping. Yeah. So I feel like that's good. It covers all the sort of things that you guys do. Yeah, I feel like Dust and Tide Co. sounds good as well, like and company or whatever it is. I just felt like that was a good representation. Yeah. Instead of being like barrels and whatever. Yeah. Absolutely. Like so that that was kind of where that came from. Yeah. Which um I think it sounds great. Everyone said it's pretty good, like a good name. So I'm pretty pretty proud of that. Yeah. Yeah. Dung well. I loved it. The second you pitched it to me, I was like, yep, go for it. Yeah. So good. So exciting. Rolls off the tongue. Yeah. Yeah. So our Instagram is dust n, like the letter N underscore tied. Yeah. Same with um YouTube, should be very similar as well.
SPEAKER_02TikTok.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, and TikTok is the same. Yeah, cool. Um, but yeah, you'll find our YouTube videos on there. And how regularly do you sort of post for those like that haven't heard of you before?
SPEAKER_02Or try to get one a week.
SPEAKER_00Yep.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. On on TikTok and Instagram at the moment, I'm pulling like two or three of like old clips and that sort of thing. And then every now and then we'll put a new clip like of I got one that's gone out for you tomorrow.
SPEAKER_01Yep.
SPEAKER_02Um, but yeah, we'll try to get one out a week at least. Yeah, and then there'll be the bigger ones coming up later in the year.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, yeah. I think the biggest thing about our us is we're not trying to be like young bloods or Brody Moss or anyone like that. We love their stuff. We've been watching them for so many years. But our thing is like not everyone is gonna have that equipment, not everyone is gonna catch the biggest like Mahi Mahi or GT or Cray that's like the size of this couch, you know? Yeah, like that's not what it's about for us. For us, it's like what we have done on the weekend, what we have the time to do. You might not be able to do an overnighter, but you can go for a really light, like late night life bait session and catch a huge bar, or even if it's a barrel like this big, it doesn't matter. Just getting out there is like that's what we're being authentic and just showing people what your life is. That's that's the main thing about it. But like Abel like works, I work. We sometimes don't have time to go away for three weeks. Yeah, our favorite. We watch Strick and Fran back to basics every single week. I love them so much, so and um, but like we would that would be our dream, like just filming constantly living like that. That is just like you see Arnhem Land all the time. Like that was gonna be one of my questions, actually. Was like, what is like the ultimate dream for that? Yeah, like that that strick and friend live our dream.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, I'd like to have a big long boat and then go up the Cape and just live out of it.
SPEAKER_00Live there, maybe they go see, yeah, just for like a mic or something, sustainably, like just trying to you know, almost live off the land. I don't think I'd quite be able to do a survival like strick can, but I would I just love that kind of stuff, and that would be like our biggest dream. To like, you know, maybe not fully unemployed. I'd love hairdressing, I wouldn't be able to give it up, but yeah, I think something like that would just be like huge for us. Yeah, that'd be like amazing. Yeah, keep going, guys. You might get there. Yeah, hope so exciting. Yeah, so good. Now, thank you so much for being on today. It's been so much. Thank you for having us, you both. I would love to end this episode. I always end it with a piece of advice from you guys, but I'm gonna give you a two-part one today. I would love to A, know what your best piece of advice is, whether that's something someone's told you, something you live by, something for you know, people that want to maybe get into what you guys are doing. And B, can you tell me what is bringing you the most joy this week? Okay.
SPEAKER_02I reckon biggest piece of advice out there, just go out there and have a go. Yeah, just do whatever makes you happy, have a go. Whatever it is. Um, and something that made me happy this week. Caught a lot of barrel.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, unreal.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, I caught four barrels yesterday afternoon. I'm pretty whipped up about it. Unreal, I'm still laughing about it.
SPEAKER_00Um my piece of advice would just um be no one like mean in life got anywhere. Always be kind. Like, don't do I love like do not be rude to people, even if it's complimenting someone like a stranger or someone on the street. If someone complimented me, I'd think about it for the rest of the day, and I've got to pepper my step after. So if you can say something to a even an elderly lady or a little girl on the street that you see, just compliment her shoes. You might not even like them, but they're gonna think about that for the rest of the day, and I think that is so nice. So always be kind. That's that's my thing. So nice. And something that brought you joy this week? Um, I I have so many things. Oh. But I'm gonna pick probably the wedding we did yesterday at the salon. We did a beautiful, like, not even a bridal party. It was just the nunas, the aunties, the flower girls, all of them. There was seven of them, and I got to do makeup and hair, and that every single one was lovely. And they did not mind, they didn't even they didn't have their makeup and hair done ever, and they were just happy with whatever I did, and I was so they like made me and like Danielle almost feel like a part of it, like they knew us by name, they just felt so welcoming, like, and we were the ones who were like trying to be welcoming to them. So that was like my happy moment for the week, and that was yesterday. So that's beautiful. That'll be my favourite this week. Ah, guys, you guys are just unreal. Thank you. That was awesome. And thank you guys for listening, I suppose. If you want to tune in to these guys, just search Dust and Tide. Um, they're on TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram at the moment. And you'll be able to find us through Amy Davidson and April Terry as well. That's our personal accounts, but Dust and Tide, preferably. Yeah. And I'll put them all in the show notes so if you want to click on them, and of course, in the next few months, keep your eye out for some merch. Yes, definitely.
SPEAKER_01But we'll see.
SPEAKER_00Alright, guys, have a wonderful day. Bye. Bye.