1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:03,160 Speaker 1: Eleven on the morning show seven hundred w l W 2 00:00:03,520 --> 00:00:07,240 Speaker 1: kind enough to join us almost every Thursday. We've been 3 00:00:07,280 --> 00:00:09,879 Speaker 1: hit or miss here lately on both ends, but it's 4 00:00:09,920 --> 00:00:12,840 Speaker 1: always great to have our buddy Gary Sullivan. You can 5 00:00:12,880 --> 00:00:15,920 Speaker 1: hear them on fifty five KRC Saturdays and Sundays, and 6 00:00:15,960 --> 00:00:19,280 Speaker 1: of course you can hear them all across America. Nearly 7 00:00:19,400 --> 00:00:24,680 Speaker 1: three hundred stations across the country are able to hear 8 00:00:24,720 --> 00:00:29,320 Speaker 1: and carry the dulcet tones of one Gary Sullivan. How 9 00:00:29,400 --> 00:00:30,160 Speaker 1: are you, my friend? 10 00:00:30,520 --> 00:00:32,440 Speaker 2: I am wonderful. How are you, sir? 11 00:00:32,600 --> 00:00:33,240 Speaker 3: I'm doing good. 12 00:00:33,240 --> 00:00:35,159 Speaker 1: It's time for me to feel stupid and they say 13 00:00:35,159 --> 00:00:36,120 Speaker 1: it's good to be humbled. 14 00:00:36,360 --> 00:00:38,160 Speaker 2: No, this one's right down. 15 00:00:38,200 --> 00:00:38,760 Speaker 3: You're okay. 16 00:00:38,880 --> 00:00:42,000 Speaker 2: I know exactly you know exactly where I'm gonna talking. 17 00:00:42,360 --> 00:00:44,360 Speaker 1: Well, I know what you're going to talk about. It 18 00:00:44,400 --> 00:00:47,360 Speaker 1: doesn't mean that I understand what it is you're talking 19 00:00:47,840 --> 00:00:49,879 Speaker 1: have any idea what the hell it is? All right, 20 00:00:49,920 --> 00:00:53,720 Speaker 1: I've never heard of but this is a big deal 21 00:00:53,840 --> 00:00:55,640 Speaker 1: right now. We have a number of things to talk 22 00:00:55,680 --> 00:00:58,520 Speaker 1: about here in the spring and some of the spring 23 00:00:58,640 --> 00:01:03,400 Speaker 1: cleanup in and the house yard, et cetera. But let's 24 00:01:03,480 --> 00:01:08,160 Speaker 1: start with carpenter bees. What are carpenter bees and why 25 00:01:08,160 --> 00:01:09,240 Speaker 1: should I be worried about? 26 00:01:09,360 --> 00:01:12,840 Speaker 4: Well, all right, well they're gonna mess with your unpainted 27 00:01:12,880 --> 00:01:15,800 Speaker 4: and unstained woods, so let me kind of paint the picture. 28 00:01:15,840 --> 00:01:17,880 Speaker 4: You got an old shed out back, or it doesn't 29 00:01:17,880 --> 00:01:19,200 Speaker 4: mean they have to be old. You got a shed 30 00:01:19,240 --> 00:01:22,720 Speaker 4: out back storier tools, or you got a wood deck 31 00:01:22,880 --> 00:01:26,840 Speaker 4: or a wood mailbox post. You certainly have soppets of 32 00:01:26,840 --> 00:01:30,400 Speaker 4: wood underneath gutters and things. And Tom, these are the 33 00:01:30,440 --> 00:01:33,200 Speaker 4: bees that are about the size of a quarter. I 34 00:01:33,200 --> 00:01:34,600 Speaker 4: don't know if you ever see them. They kind of 35 00:01:34,959 --> 00:01:37,480 Speaker 4: just hover around this. 36 00:01:37,600 --> 00:01:39,080 Speaker 3: Yeah, I know what you're talking about. 37 00:01:39,200 --> 00:01:40,160 Speaker 2: Yes, So these. 38 00:01:39,959 --> 00:01:44,360 Speaker 4: Things are creepy, creepy big, and they're scary, but they're 39 00:01:44,360 --> 00:01:48,800 Speaker 4: not gonna hurt you. Their job is there's a queen 40 00:01:49,000 --> 00:01:52,720 Speaker 4: in that what wood structure somewhere, okay, and there's larvae 41 00:01:52,840 --> 00:01:56,080 Speaker 4: in there, and they're the centuries, and they bring the 42 00:01:56,160 --> 00:02:01,160 Speaker 4: queen food and they guard the queen is inside the wood, 43 00:02:01,840 --> 00:02:04,680 Speaker 4: all right, And they drill a hole that's a half inch. 44 00:02:04,880 --> 00:02:07,600 Speaker 4: I mean it, a black and Decker tool couldn't do 45 00:02:07,640 --> 00:02:11,280 Speaker 4: a better Holeidding me about the size of your finger, 46 00:02:11,360 --> 00:02:13,080 Speaker 4: you put your finger in that hole. 47 00:02:13,000 --> 00:02:15,560 Speaker 2: Don't do that. But that's the size. 48 00:02:15,200 --> 00:02:20,919 Speaker 4: Of all and it's absolutely perfectly round. And if you're 49 00:02:20,919 --> 00:02:22,960 Speaker 4: not familiar with what a carpenter bee is, you're going 50 00:02:23,040 --> 00:02:26,160 Speaker 4: to look and say, what in the world who drilled 51 00:02:26,160 --> 00:02:28,760 Speaker 4: a hole in my deck or who drilled a hole 52 00:02:29,320 --> 00:02:31,799 Speaker 4: in my shed? So you want to get rid of 53 00:02:31,880 --> 00:02:34,320 Speaker 4: them because they're obviously going to do some damage and 54 00:02:34,360 --> 00:02:36,440 Speaker 4: then the woods going to start rotting and all that 55 00:02:36,480 --> 00:02:40,440 Speaker 4: good stuff. But the large bee is a friend of mine, honestly, goodness. 56 00:02:40,440 --> 00:02:42,280 Speaker 4: To get rid of the large bees. Since they're the guards. 57 00:02:42,280 --> 00:02:44,720 Speaker 4: You got your rid of them first, right, So there's 58 00:02:44,760 --> 00:02:47,960 Speaker 4: different sprays and you can also show them away. 59 00:02:48,080 --> 00:02:52,560 Speaker 2: He takes a tennis racket and wax him. And once 60 00:02:52,639 --> 00:02:54,560 Speaker 2: you start, once you start, you. 61 00:02:54,600 --> 00:02:56,799 Speaker 3: Might hear from the EPA you start doing that kind 62 00:02:56,800 --> 00:02:57,000 Speaker 3: of thing. 63 00:02:57,120 --> 00:02:59,080 Speaker 4: Yeah, I know, well I hear from everybody, you know, 64 00:03:00,120 --> 00:03:03,800 Speaker 4: ware And so we got to get rid of the guards. 65 00:03:03,880 --> 00:03:05,480 Speaker 2: And I'm not saying you get out there with a 66 00:03:05,560 --> 00:03:06,080 Speaker 2: tennis writer. 67 00:03:06,200 --> 00:03:09,040 Speaker 4: What you can do is you can use a dust 68 00:03:09,240 --> 00:03:12,200 Speaker 4: and blow it in that hole. Now they're guarding that hole, 69 00:03:12,280 --> 00:03:15,000 Speaker 4: So sometimes it is better to spray or get them 70 00:03:15,000 --> 00:03:17,800 Speaker 4: out of the way so you can get to the queen. 71 00:03:18,800 --> 00:03:24,360 Speaker 4: The delta methrine, which is a insecticidal dust. You can 72 00:03:24,400 --> 00:03:26,520 Speaker 4: blow it in the hole. So when they drew that hole, 73 00:03:26,840 --> 00:03:28,720 Speaker 4: it goes in. It's a half inch in diameter. It 74 00:03:28,800 --> 00:03:31,160 Speaker 4: goes into the wood, and it's a ninety degree to 75 00:03:31,200 --> 00:03:33,160 Speaker 4: the right or ninety degree to the left, and back 76 00:03:33,200 --> 00:03:36,280 Speaker 4: there is the queen and the larvae. So as these 77 00:03:36,360 --> 00:03:39,360 Speaker 4: guards and these big carpenter bees that you see because 78 00:03:39,360 --> 00:03:42,280 Speaker 4: you've never seen the queen, they go back and parade 79 00:03:42,320 --> 00:03:45,480 Speaker 4: through that insecticidal dust. They'll bring it back to the queen. 80 00:03:45,840 --> 00:03:49,040 Speaker 4: Ye can't get to the queen unless you get rid 81 00:03:49,600 --> 00:03:54,760 Speaker 4: of the guards. So the insecticidal dust is the you know, 82 00:03:54,920 --> 00:04:00,240 Speaker 4: that's the key. Now, once you quit see an activity 83 00:04:00,280 --> 00:04:04,720 Speaker 4: around there, you got to sanitize that hole. And you 84 00:04:04,720 --> 00:04:07,480 Speaker 4: can do it with a little cotton balls soaked and 85 00:04:07,560 --> 00:04:10,480 Speaker 4: rubbing alcohol. You just push it back there with a 86 00:04:10,640 --> 00:04:15,120 Speaker 4: dial or your finger or whatever. You sanitize the hole 87 00:04:15,200 --> 00:04:16,400 Speaker 4: and then go ahead and patch it. 88 00:04:17,279 --> 00:04:18,560 Speaker 2: You can use a dial. 89 00:04:18,600 --> 00:04:23,680 Speaker 4: Tap that in there, sand it paint it, and that's 90 00:04:23,920 --> 00:04:25,080 Speaker 4: kind of how you would do it. 91 00:04:25,080 --> 00:04:25,920 Speaker 2: A little work there. 92 00:04:26,160 --> 00:04:28,200 Speaker 4: So you want me to give it to Tom Brenneman, Well. 93 00:04:28,720 --> 00:04:31,440 Speaker 3: Well yeah, yeah, please yes, yes. 94 00:04:31,320 --> 00:04:36,479 Speaker 4: All right, their natural predator is a wasp. Okay, so, 95 00:04:36,839 --> 00:04:40,400 Speaker 4: and this works fairly well. I'd say seventy percent of 96 00:04:40,400 --> 00:04:44,440 Speaker 4: the time. You go to the store and you get 97 00:04:44,480 --> 00:04:47,239 Speaker 4: a little like lunch bag, you know, it's brown lunch perkes, 98 00:04:47,839 --> 00:04:51,360 Speaker 4: and you just knead it up into a ball. Okay, 99 00:04:51,400 --> 00:04:53,360 Speaker 4: wrink it all up, make a ball out of it, 100 00:04:53,839 --> 00:04:57,120 Speaker 4: tie some fishing line on it, and hang it where 101 00:04:57,160 --> 00:05:01,760 Speaker 4: the activity is. And those boys are gonna scot doodle 102 00:05:02,240 --> 00:05:02,880 Speaker 4: because they. 103 00:05:02,760 --> 00:05:05,040 Speaker 3: Think it's a wast nest, no kidding. 104 00:05:05,160 --> 00:05:07,200 Speaker 2: Yeah, yeah, So how cool was that? 105 00:05:07,360 --> 00:05:09,120 Speaker 3: I mean, you know, really in a lot of ways. 106 00:05:09,120 --> 00:05:10,560 Speaker 1: I know we're talking about how to get rid of them, 107 00:05:10,600 --> 00:05:12,960 Speaker 1: but i mean nature is pretty incredible, isn't it. 108 00:05:13,080 --> 00:05:14,640 Speaker 3: Oh absolutely, it's incredible. 109 00:05:14,960 --> 00:05:18,039 Speaker 4: It is, it is. And the next one you're more incredible. 110 00:05:18,120 --> 00:05:21,159 Speaker 4: But anyway, you put that fake wast nest on there, 111 00:05:21,279 --> 00:05:23,280 Speaker 4: I'd say you got a real good chance of eliminating 112 00:05:23,320 --> 00:05:28,120 Speaker 4: your problem again, no more activity, Sanitize the whole patchet, 113 00:05:28,600 --> 00:05:29,560 Speaker 4: and you're on your way. 114 00:05:29,640 --> 00:05:30,560 Speaker 2: Now here's another one. 115 00:05:30,600 --> 00:05:33,839 Speaker 4: If you want to spend ten bucks, they make a 116 00:05:34,000 --> 00:05:38,320 Speaker 4: carpenter be trap. This is so cool. This is about 117 00:05:38,520 --> 00:05:42,280 Speaker 4: ten inches long. It's got a bright green cage around it, 118 00:05:42,760 --> 00:05:46,880 Speaker 4: and then on the inside there's glue and it's got 119 00:05:47,160 --> 00:05:52,039 Speaker 4: green and yellow pixels. This company does a study on 120 00:05:52,080 --> 00:05:55,599 Speaker 4: the optic eyes of a carpenter bee, and they're attracted 121 00:05:55,880 --> 00:05:57,680 Speaker 4: to that pixel design. 122 00:05:59,520 --> 00:05:59,839 Speaker 2: Wow. 123 00:06:00,200 --> 00:06:03,640 Speaker 4: And so the queen can't see it, but all the 124 00:06:03,680 --> 00:06:07,080 Speaker 4: carpenter bees outside of go huh, look at that, And 125 00:06:07,160 --> 00:06:10,479 Speaker 4: of course that ends their guard duty for the day. Yeah, 126 00:06:10,520 --> 00:06:13,520 Speaker 4: and that little trap can hold a whole bunch of them. 127 00:06:13,560 --> 00:06:16,960 Speaker 4: You can put that up for the season and I'd 128 00:06:16,960 --> 00:06:20,520 Speaker 4: say close to ninety eight percent effective. I mean, I've 129 00:06:20,600 --> 00:06:22,080 Speaker 4: never heard anybody. 130 00:06:21,600 --> 00:06:22,200 Speaker 2: Fail with it. 131 00:06:22,640 --> 00:06:26,120 Speaker 4: And quite honestly, there's not much failure with rolling up 132 00:06:26,160 --> 00:06:27,479 Speaker 4: the brown paper bag either. 133 00:06:28,120 --> 00:06:30,240 Speaker 2: So you know, same thing. You want to get rid 134 00:06:30,279 --> 00:06:30,600 Speaker 2: of them. 135 00:06:30,600 --> 00:06:33,080 Speaker 4: Why because if it's a facie on your house, they're 136 00:06:33,240 --> 00:06:36,400 Speaker 4: destroying the looks of it. It can draw woodpeckers because 137 00:06:36,440 --> 00:06:38,159 Speaker 4: they're trying to get to the larvae. 138 00:06:38,279 --> 00:06:38,960 Speaker 2: I mean you can. 139 00:06:39,200 --> 00:06:41,479 Speaker 4: You can eliminate a lot of damage by getting rid 140 00:06:41,520 --> 00:06:41,680 Speaker 4: of them. 141 00:06:41,760 --> 00:06:46,000 Speaker 1: Yeah, no kidding, no kidding, Okay, let's shift gear spring cleaning. 142 00:06:47,720 --> 00:06:49,760 Speaker 1: You did that well, I mean, I know that's what 143 00:06:49,839 --> 00:06:53,440 Speaker 1: I'm gonna do because I use the fireplace a lot. 144 00:06:54,000 --> 00:06:57,680 Speaker 3: I mean almost every night. I love it. 145 00:06:57,720 --> 00:07:01,400 Speaker 1: My wife and I love it, and we fire practically 146 00:07:01,520 --> 00:07:05,919 Speaker 1: every night during the winter. So you're suggesting there are 147 00:07:05,920 --> 00:07:07,799 Speaker 1: a few things we ought to keep an eye out 148 00:07:08,160 --> 00:07:10,960 Speaker 1: in our spring cleaning because we're probably not going to 149 00:07:11,000 --> 00:07:12,239 Speaker 1: be building fires in the summer. 150 00:07:12,280 --> 00:07:14,200 Speaker 3: We know all hotty guns, all right, what should we 151 00:07:14,280 --> 00:07:14,920 Speaker 3: think about doing? 152 00:07:15,480 --> 00:07:20,240 Speaker 4: Well, this is a common problem around woodstoves in a fireplace, 153 00:07:20,360 --> 00:07:23,920 Speaker 4: maybe with just some glass stores on it. If you 154 00:07:23,960 --> 00:07:26,800 Speaker 4: have brick around it, or if you have ceramic tile 155 00:07:26,840 --> 00:07:29,120 Speaker 4: around it, you start having creosote stains. 156 00:07:30,160 --> 00:07:31,960 Speaker 2: You start having smoke stains. 157 00:07:32,840 --> 00:07:34,800 Speaker 4: And you say, you build a fire every night, so 158 00:07:34,840 --> 00:07:38,080 Speaker 4: you're not going to clean that middle of January, Well, 159 00:07:38,120 --> 00:07:38,760 Speaker 4: that's for sure. 160 00:07:38,880 --> 00:07:40,040 Speaker 2: Yeah, So between. 161 00:07:39,680 --> 00:07:42,480 Speaker 4: Now and October is a really good time to get 162 00:07:42,520 --> 00:07:45,360 Speaker 4: rid of those smoke stains. There's creosote stains, and there's 163 00:07:45,960 --> 00:07:49,360 Speaker 4: I guess two ways that I found, one being the 164 00:07:49,360 --> 00:07:51,680 Speaker 4: old fashioned way and one kind of being a new 165 00:07:51,720 --> 00:07:55,320 Speaker 4: age way. Okay, is get a good drop cloth in 166 00:07:55,360 --> 00:07:55,880 Speaker 4: front of it. 167 00:07:56,520 --> 00:07:57,160 Speaker 2: This is work. 168 00:07:57,200 --> 00:08:00,520 Speaker 4: You got to have a good scrub brush, a good scent, humor, 169 00:08:01,080 --> 00:08:04,280 Speaker 4: and a product called tri sodium phosphate, which is older 170 00:08:04,280 --> 00:08:08,040 Speaker 4: than me, which is old. It's a powder you mix 171 00:08:08,120 --> 00:08:10,280 Speaker 4: with water, tom and then you put it on the surface. 172 00:08:10,320 --> 00:08:13,360 Speaker 4: It's fine on tile, it's fine on brick. Let it 173 00:08:13,440 --> 00:08:15,800 Speaker 4: sit about ten minutes, and then with your scrub brush 174 00:08:16,440 --> 00:08:19,160 Speaker 4: you scrub, scrub, scrub, and then get a little spritzer 175 00:08:19,240 --> 00:08:21,840 Speaker 4: bottle and you can rinse it. 176 00:08:21,800 --> 00:08:24,400 Speaker 2: Away and get rid of that stain. 177 00:08:24,920 --> 00:08:26,720 Speaker 4: It is a lot of work, but it will do 178 00:08:26,880 --> 00:08:30,640 Speaker 4: the job relatively inexpensive. Okay, All right, there's a newer 179 00:08:30,720 --> 00:08:33,400 Speaker 4: product which is down your alley. You ready for this, Yeah, 180 00:08:34,080 --> 00:08:37,319 Speaker 4: if it's all your alley, I'm looking. I'm getting I'm 181 00:08:37,320 --> 00:08:39,440 Speaker 4: getting the whole flow of this thing. 182 00:08:39,600 --> 00:08:39,800 Speaker 3: Yeah. 183 00:08:39,840 --> 00:08:42,080 Speaker 4: We have the wite and then we have the tom Way. Yes, 184 00:08:42,440 --> 00:08:46,640 Speaker 4: there's a product. It's called peel Away. I've heard of it, Okay. 185 00:08:46,800 --> 00:08:49,560 Speaker 4: It's made by Chimney RX. It's really designed for a 186 00:08:49,600 --> 00:08:54,080 Speaker 4: lot of chimney repair, for chimney sweeps and things like this. 187 00:08:54,559 --> 00:08:58,280 Speaker 4: It's a very thick liquid. You take a paint roller 188 00:08:58,440 --> 00:09:02,160 Speaker 4: or a paint brush and you paint right over all 189 00:09:02,200 --> 00:09:03,680 Speaker 4: those smoking creososies. 190 00:09:03,760 --> 00:09:04,440 Speaker 3: There we go. 191 00:09:04,920 --> 00:09:06,360 Speaker 2: You let it dry at. 192 00:09:06,320 --> 00:09:09,600 Speaker 4: Night, you get up in the morning and with your 193 00:09:09,600 --> 00:09:12,800 Speaker 4: little fingernail you pick the corner of this film that 194 00:09:12,840 --> 00:09:16,760 Speaker 4: you put on there and you pull away that film. Yeah, 195 00:09:16,800 --> 00:09:19,680 Speaker 4: and it pulls away all the time. Now we're talking 196 00:09:20,440 --> 00:09:20,840 Speaker 4: brand new. 197 00:09:20,920 --> 00:09:23,480 Speaker 1: See, I'm working for it. I mean, you have got 198 00:09:23,520 --> 00:09:28,160 Speaker 1: it down now, I'm working for you. Hey, I'm not 199 00:09:28,280 --> 00:09:30,600 Speaker 1: the only one, my friend, I'm not the only one 200 00:09:30,640 --> 00:09:32,280 Speaker 1: that's right up a lot of alleys. 201 00:09:32,720 --> 00:09:35,600 Speaker 4: I started using the phrase I'm all about easy probably 202 00:09:35,640 --> 00:09:38,800 Speaker 4: thirty years ago doing the show because on the weekend, 203 00:09:39,280 --> 00:09:43,360 Speaker 4: we'd rather be walking, being with our kids, grandkids, playing golf. 204 00:09:43,400 --> 00:09:46,120 Speaker 4: We don't really want to work on our house, but 205 00:09:46,200 --> 00:09:47,240 Speaker 4: we really have to. 206 00:09:47,480 --> 00:09:49,200 Speaker 1: That's right, And we talk about it all the time. 207 00:09:49,240 --> 00:09:52,760 Speaker 1: You've said it hundreds of thousands of times. Our homes 208 00:09:52,800 --> 00:09:55,840 Speaker 1: are our largest investment most of the time. So you 209 00:09:55,880 --> 00:09:58,199 Speaker 1: want to the upkeep. Okay, last thing before we get 210 00:09:58,200 --> 00:10:00,839 Speaker 1: out of here. Draining pipe important. 211 00:10:01,280 --> 00:10:02,200 Speaker 2: Yeah, I'll tell you what. 212 00:10:02,240 --> 00:10:04,240 Speaker 4: I've had a lot of friends call and I've seen 213 00:10:04,280 --> 00:10:06,320 Speaker 4: a lot of damage this year where the down spout 214 00:10:06,400 --> 00:10:08,520 Speaker 4: goes into a pipe that's underground. 215 00:10:09,760 --> 00:10:12,640 Speaker 2: They during the winter, during the last. 216 00:10:12,480 --> 00:10:16,800 Speaker 4: Summer's drought, they became misaligned and all that water that's 217 00:10:16,840 --> 00:10:18,560 Speaker 4: coming down the roof to the gutter to the down 218 00:10:18,640 --> 00:10:23,600 Speaker 4: spout is missing or fifty percent missing the underground pipe 219 00:10:23,600 --> 00:10:24,760 Speaker 4: either the fitting's broken. 220 00:10:25,120 --> 00:10:26,240 Speaker 3: It doesn't sound good. 221 00:10:26,440 --> 00:10:28,880 Speaker 4: And I'll tell you what I've seen a lot of 222 00:10:28,880 --> 00:10:30,319 Speaker 4: people have called me to go over and take a 223 00:10:30,360 --> 00:10:34,200 Speaker 4: look at the erosion around the house. It's significant and 224 00:10:34,240 --> 00:10:39,440 Speaker 4: that is a precursor to a leaky base. So really, 225 00:10:39,559 --> 00:10:43,960 Speaker 4: just you know, there's probably six to eight ten down spouts, 226 00:10:44,440 --> 00:10:46,800 Speaker 4: maybe years of empties a little bit of far away 227 00:10:46,800 --> 00:10:49,880 Speaker 4: from the foundation. But if it goes underground, make sure 228 00:10:49,960 --> 00:10:52,440 Speaker 4: that connection is solid. I think you're gonna be surprised 229 00:10:52,440 --> 00:10:53,040 Speaker 4: what you find. 230 00:10:53,280 --> 00:10:56,000 Speaker 1: That's great, great, great advice, as it always is with 231 00:10:56,040 --> 00:10:58,440 Speaker 1: Gary Sullivan. Sir, it's nice to have you back, great 232 00:10:58,480 --> 00:11:00,319 Speaker 1: to hear your voice, and you'll be on over the 233 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:03,560 Speaker 1: weekend on fifty five KRC Saturday and Sunday. I hope 234 00:11:03,559 --> 00:11:06,880 Speaker 1: you and your family have a wonderful good Friday and 235 00:11:06,960 --> 00:11:07,600 Speaker 1: happy Easter. 236 00:11:07,840 --> 00:11:09,720 Speaker 4: Happy Easter, you Tom, thanks for having me. 237 00:11:09,720 --> 00:11:11,760 Speaker 1: Thank you my friend Gary Sullivan. You can hear him 238 00:11:11,760 --> 00:11:17,280 Speaker 1: on nearly three hundred, three hundred stations across America at 239 00:11:17,360 --> 00:11:22,120 Speaker 1: base right here out of the great city of Cincinnata, 240 00:11:22,400 --> 00:11:24,240 Speaker 1: Oh High, Oh