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Hunts On Outfitting Podcast

Author: Kenneth Marr

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Stories! As hunters and outdoors people that seems to be a common thing we all have lots of.  Join your amateur guide and host on this channel Ken as he gets tales from guys and gals. Chasing that trophy buck for years to an entertaining morning on the duck pond, comedian ones, to interesting that's what you are going to hear. Also along with some general hunting discussions from time to time but making sure to leave political talks out of it. Don't take this too serious as we sure don't! If you enjoy this at all or find it fun to listen to, we really appreciate if you would subscribe and leave a review. Thanks for. checking us out! We are also on fb as Hunts on outfitting, and instagram. We are on YouTube as Hunts on outfitting podcast.

112 Episodes
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Send us Fan Mail A gobbler can make you feel like a hero or an idiot in the same morning, and John and Taylor from Pistol Creek Outdoors have lived both sides of it. We’re talking while they’re in the field, with John hunting Florida Osceolas and Taylor grinding it out on Alabama Easterns, and that real-time context shapes everything: the birds are quiet, the conditions change, and the “perfect sequence” doesn’t exist. We get into the core skill that separates consistent turkey killers...
Send us Fan Mail A spring bear bait run can feel routine… until a sow comes in hard and closes the distance to two feet. We’re joined by New Brunswick hunter, guide, and podcaster Wesley Thebeau for a wide-ranging talk that moves from traditional archery fundamentals to the real workload behind running a bear outfitting camp, plus the bird dog obsession that takes over every fall. Wesley explains how he got hooked on trad bow hunting, why “trad bow close” is a non-negotiable standard for man...
Send us Fan Mail Spring in the North Woods turns into a real-life treasure hunt, and the prize is moose antlers hidden in cuts, fir thickets, and winter feeding areas. We’re joined by Maine hunter and YouTuber Cory Ryder to talk shed hunting the way it actually happens: long miles, wet boots, and learning to read the forest instead of hoping for luck. Cory shares the story behind his Black Lab, Gracie, and how she went from an energetic puppy chewing on an old broken paddle to a focused shed...
Send us Fan Mail Eastern turkeys have a special talent for making you second-guess everything you thought you knew. One minute a gobbler is blowing up on the roost, the next he’s gone quiet behind an invisible line he refuses to cross. I sit down with Anthony, producer and host of Line Of Sight TV and a multi-time Canadian calling champion, to get beyond generic turkey tips and into what actually moves the needle when you’re chasing Eastern wild turkeys under real pressure. We talk woodsmans...
Send us Fan Mail A river can remake its banks overnight—and remake us over decades. We sit down with the Crawford Crew, four friends who’ve spent twenty years chasing Atlantic salmon on New Brunswick’s Crown Reserve, to explore why fly fishing is as much about people and place as it is about fish. From the world-famous Miramichi to the fast water of the Restigouche, this story blends hard-won technique, camp traditions, and a deep respect for a species that still bends hooks and hearts. We g...
Send us Fan Mail Think you know predators? We put that to the test with a tight, high-energy trivia showdown that blends wild facts, fieldcraft, and a lot of laughs. We kick off with why predator control matters between seasons, then dive straight into the good stuff: a record 276-pound cougar from... find out where, how hyenas out-bite lions and steal meals, and why Texas holds the coyote crown while California’s policies complicate management and drive more human-wildlife conflict. From th...
Send us Fan Mail Two country boys hit Atlanta for the Dallas Safari Club Expo and come home with a year’s worth of stories, hard-won tips, and new friends from across the hunting world. We start with a chaotic travel day—dead battery on the plane, a tarmac standoff, and a near-miss at a crosswalk—then step into the Georgia World Congress Center and realize just how big DSC really is. With more than 1,300 booths and outfitters from over 43 countries, it’s a living map of global hunting, conser...
Send us Fan Mail A North Carolina houndsman meets a target-rich Texas and turns a bucket list into a full-blown field course. We kick off before daylight with bodies moving through mesquite and a cold, old buck that tests our patience until legal light. By 7:12 a.m., the tag is punched. That moment opens the gate to everything Texas does loud: thermal glass sweeping wheat fields, boars and sows spilling like ink across the dark, and a sudden realization that red reticles don’t work for colorb...
Send us Fan Mail A hundred‑plus episodes, eight friends, four mics, and two years of hard lessons—this milestone is a field‑dressed look at how a basement idea turned into a Tuesday ritual with listeners in 41 countries. We open the blinds on the origin story, from unopened gear collecting dust to a single road trip that set the format: real hunts from real people, told without polish, because the story beats the score. We trade favorite moments that shaped the show’s voice: a bighorn sheep ...
Send us Fan Mail If you’ve ever wondered why some places enjoy long archery seasons and robust deer herds while others lag behind, this conversation puts the puzzle together. We sit down with bowhunter advocate Tracy Price to unpack how local hunters can turn know-how and passion into real changes—longer seasons, smarter regulations, and stronger herds—by organizing through clubs that actually sit at the decision-making table. We start with the surprising reality in New Brunswick: archery ma...
Send us Fan Mail Four bulls grunting in the dark, a calm breath at legal light, and a 40-yard shot off a knee—that’s how Jen’s moose story begins. What followed was a masterclass in adapting on the fly: a last-minute elk tag surprise, shifting herd behavior after bales moved, and the grind of antlerless-only strategy on public land where every headlight means competition. We walk through how planning and patience paid off on the moose—trail cameras around beaver-dam sloughs, an island of bru...
Send us Fan Mail Cold air, open prairie, and the kind of sound that turns distant specks into charging coyotes—this conversation with Brad Harder dives deep into what makes a predator call truly work. Brad’s the maker behind Trophy Country Calls, a ranch-hand-turned-artisan who went from freezing closed reeds and overused e-caller sounds to crafting tone boards that hold up in brutal weather and fool educated coyotes. If you’ve ever watched a dog light out at the first note of a popular FoxPr...
Send us Fan Mail Smell the musk before you see the antlers. That’s how Ethan knew the bull was close in a New Brunswick hellhole, wind in his face and alders shaking. What followed was a ten-yard window, a steady hold, and the kind of follow-up discipline moose hunters preach: shoot till they’re down. Then we trade thick finger bogs for long Newfoundland vistas, crossing by boat at sunrise, glassing cows stacked across the valley, and listening to a cow bawl so hard she towed a bull into a pe...
Send us Fan Mail Wild stories pair with careful hands as we sit down with Amber Farrall, a houndswoman, mother, and fur craftswoman living outside Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Amber takes us from spring bear bait sites to fast lion trees, explaining how she reads tracks, protects her dogs when wolves prowl, and brings her kids into the work with patience and care. The field notes are vivid—an ancient, toothless lion ethically tagged, a sow bear seen injured in spring and healed by fall—and they anch...
Two Giants, One Season

Two Giants, One Season

2025-12-3044:24

Send us Fan Mail Two mature bucks in the province with Canada’s lowest deer density isn’t luck—it’s a system. We sit down with Mike Mason to unpack how careful scouting, patient all-day sits, and a smart camera strategy can turn scarce deer woods into repeatable success. Mike hunts three different areas in Guysborough County, logs every mature buck’s daytime appearance, and focuses on transition lines where habitat types meet. That structure—plus the humility to pivot when a bear wrecks a set...
Send us Fan Mail A specklebelly mount that looks like it fought a dinosaur kicked off a duck camp conversation that turned into a "masterclass" on waterfowl. We swap real hunt stories from cornfields and windy marshes, pulling apart what actually works: scouting over guessing, honest spreads over clutter, and calling that persuades instead of screams. You’ll hear how we adapt when birds fly late, when nearby groups keep flocks in the air, and when an A-frame’s shadow ruins the show. We compar...
Send us Fan Mail Think you’ve hunted remote? Try flying 90 minutes past the last road into a world where the only planes you see are coming for you, the ice is six feet thick, and the silence makes your ears ring. We sat down with Kevin from Blue Sky Outfitting to unpack what it takes to guide both baited timber wolf hunts in Alberta and spot-and-stalk Arctic wolf hunts on the tundra, plus the grit behind running a fly-in lodge network that’s hundreds of air kilometers from the nearest town. ...
Send us Fan Mail A buck fight that turned hand-finish into a hospital-worthy lesson. Dawn gobble can change everything. One electric morning led us from turkey woods to elk canyons and, eventually, to roaring Yukon moose that snap trees like twigs. Along the way we hit flooded rice fields, public land gate drags, and lots more! It’s a raw, fast-moving tour of real hunting—where timing, terrain, and judgment matter more than highlight reels. We dig into why turkey hunting is the perfect train...
Send us Fan Mail The prairie doesn’t whisper when cranes are around—it rings. That rolling trumpet carries over wheat and barley, and suddenly you’re staring at a bird that looks prehistoric and eats like steak. We sat down with Manitoba guide Tyson to unpack the truth about sandhill cranes: how to find them, how to hunt them, and why they’ve earned the “ribeye of the sky” reputation. We start with what actually moves the needle. Decoys matter, but not as much as location. Cranes return to t...
Send us Fan Mail A valley can make or break a buck’s future. Ours is long, narrow, and guarded by marsh and pasture—difficult to access, perfect for letting deer get old. That’s where Logan’s story unfolds: years of shared neighbor intel, a “let it grow” culture, and a chessboard of food plots, pinch points, and big old trees that set the stage for one of the largest New Brunswick giants we’ve ever laid eyes on. We walk through the real work behind a “once-in-a-lifetime” tag. Logan bre...
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Comments (1)

Darrell Blackmore

I think you guys missed the reason why lead was banned. Not because it was contaminating the water but because the birds were eating it. They would get it in their crop and it would enter their bloodstream.

Jun 26th
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