The Cabincast

#104 Spirits by Firelight

May 26, 2024 Kristin Lenz and Erik Torgeson Episode 104
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers
Speaker 1:

Hey, Eric.

Speaker 2:

Hello.

Speaker 1:

How are you doing?

Speaker 2:

Good, except my microphone is slid down. There we go.

Speaker 1:

I know there's so many things to think about in just a little podcast recording.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 1:

Like how close we are to the microphone, yeah, or too far away, and if we cough or clank my coffee cup all those things.

Speaker 2:

Some of it is just so you guys know that we're real.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we're not robots. We're real and we hope you feel like you're sitting right here with us.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Annoyed, we used to record at night. Yes, you know, so we could. We could offer you know an old fashioned, but now it's morning, so it's just coffee and tough to have get the day going.

Speaker 2:

I guess we could, but we've got to get through the rest of the day. Day drinking leads to naps is what I found.

Speaker 1:

That's true, so true, oh, my goodness. Speaking of day drinking, we're getting an early spring, it seems like around here. It makes you start really thinking about spending more time outside, time around the campfire, which I enjoy being around a fire fire even if it's cold out. I mean, we've done fires on the lake before in the winter time and it's it's super fun. And I looked up some ideas for campfire cocktails and I found some really great ones from the breckenridge distillery. Have you been to Breckenridge before?

Speaker 2:

Like skiing, I have driven through. I have not actually visited and been there.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, eric and I both have parents that live in Colorado.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

So we'll get around to some more places, I'm sure. But Eric's family business and store Roughing it Style style has a place in fort collins. So if you're, if you're, out in colorado, you got to make sure you get get there. But this is from breckenridge distillery 11 easy cocktail recipes for your next summer backpacking trip, backcountry trip or around that campfire, and we'll link this in the show notes so you guys can look at all of them celestial, old fashioned. So having an old fashion, as we just brought up by the campfire, always a way to warm up a sunrise and one of the things why everybody's going to want to look on this link that I'm sharing the ideas from is the pictures of the drinks so the celestial old-fashioned is that.

Speaker 2:

Can you read the?

Speaker 1:

yeah, the ingredients yeah um breckenridge bourbon or whatever bourbon you enjoy. Uh, honey stick a honey stick a dropper of bitters and a the juice of half a lemon, and then garnish with a cinnamon stick and put it in a camp mug.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

So, yeah, what I was going to say with the pictures on here is some of having a great drink is also all about what you drink it in and how it's served, like what the garnish is. Yeah, what you drink it in and how it's served, like what the garnish is. Yeah, we brian brian and I prefer like not just ice, but we like like an one of the big ice cubes or spheres, because then it melts slower it doesn't water it down yeah, so like what vessel you're drinking out of and what the ice is, what the garnish is, all those things play into it.

Speaker 1:

And so when you're drinking a drink around the campfire, drinking it out of an enamelware camp mug definitely fits the vibe.

Speaker 1:

That's for sure. And you know another thing if you have a getaway property, getting some enamelware mugs with your camp's name on them, your lake's name on them, is a super fun way to brand your trip. Yes, you could let people take them home, you could just have them to use while you're there. It's a really super cute idea. So that old fashioned in a camp mug, cinnamon stick, slice of orange or lemon sticking out of it can really make it special. And then this sunrise drink. I've seen where you can buy this. You know what Capri Suns are, right, you have little kids. So those pouches. So you can buy pouches and put the mixed drinks to put inside of it.

Speaker 1:

So like what a fun thing to have on the boat by the campfire and then grownups can just stick the straw right into the little pouch and enjoy.

Speaker 2:

yeah that's perfect right.

Speaker 1:

So if you're like god, I can kind of picture that. Go to this link and you'll see on the sunrise their little pouch drink and then all the garnishes and it is so pretty. What a fun picnic boat, like I said. Or campfire drink and when you serve something, have you seen like they make popsicles?

Speaker 1:

now that have they're made yeah yeah, and so anytime that you just serve something that's a little bit of a surprise, right, like, oh, here's the popsicle, or here's it in a capri sun bag, then it's just a little more fun. So the sunrise is a gin, which do you like gin?

Speaker 2:

I love gin. I haven't had a ton of experience with gin.

Speaker 1:

So maybe when you have your sunrise, then you'll get hooked on it. So it's gin water, a packet of raw sugar, a squeezed lemon, sliced lime and sliced strawberries.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that sounds refreshing.

Speaker 1:

Right, so you can put it all in this reusable pouch, seal it and shake it up with the ice cubes. Now they suggest and this is why it's great when you get these ideas from somewhere like out in Breckenridge, because you can just take your carabiner and you can strap this drink right on your backpack it says Of course.

Speaker 2:

That's of course course what you would do.

Speaker 1:

If you have this group that passes you on the trail and they all have a carabiner with their pouches of campfire drinks on it, you'd join that group.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, when we went to Jackson Hole.

Speaker 2:

There is these sulfur springs there and there is a place that you have to pay to get into.

Speaker 2:

That's like a spa that's built in the sulfur springs, right, but there's bootleg sulfur springs that the hot water comes out of the riverside like the sidewall of the river and local people or travelers I'm sure you can take rocks and build your own kind of hot tub and then it takes a while but like the sulfur Springs will like warm up that area. So like there's this glacial river right next to you that's freezing and then there's like hot water coming out of the wild and if you capture that you can kind of create a lukewarm kind of bath type of situation. But there's a gas station that's maybe two miles away that sells boozy slushies and like the thing to do is to go get this gigantic, big gulp size boozy slushy and then go to the bootleg sulfur springs and it's kind of a fun thing that people do yeah, that in tying a food or drink with a memory or with an event is a special way to make it happen too.

Speaker 1:

And for people who aren't into you know the booze part of it. There are so many great ways to make mocktails.

Speaker 2:

Oh my gosh, and that's the mocktail industry has exploded. It's like amazing, it's really kind of cool.

Speaker 1:

It's really fun. So when you hear us suggest some of these things, I mean leave the booze out. When you hear us suggest some of these things, I mean leave the booze out, add one of the new NA liquors that are so flavorful. So there's lots of ways to get ideas out there. Okay, this drink. I like the name of it Source of the River and the photo. The drink's in a mason jar, which I love using mason jars for everything and around the mason jar. I know you've seen these. You might even sell these in your shop, but if people have seen them, they look like little life jackets or little jackets, yes, so it's got that around the mason jar oh fun.

Speaker 1:

So this one is a vodka and then a packet of Honey Stinger Rapid Hydration Packet.

Speaker 2:

Oh, Honey Stinger Okay.

Speaker 1:

And then water and a slice of lemon. So all these are like refreshing little.

Speaker 2:

Mountainous.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Recharge you. Well. Also and that's the thing I love about Colorado they always look at like drinks or cocktails and then they'll have like okay, this is a marathon runners hydration packet that we add to this cocktail, cause all we have is booze in this from you know climbing up a 14 or whatever.

Speaker 1:

I was going to say, yeah, hydration means a little different thing out in Colorado and, like I said to the names, of the drinks are so fun If you are at your cabin doing an event or you know, every summer have a signature drink that you make a name that fits your lake or your family, and yeah, like the uncle tommy or something, it's just exactly yeah this one is an obvious campfire drink.

Speaker 1:

the give me s'mores and it's suggesting that you also make a s'more that you dip into your drink. Oh, okay, and especially I love making s'mores with cookies like chocolate chip cookies.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that makes more sense. I can see the dipping and then dipping that I would imagine a graham cracker doesn't dip real well into a cocktail. No, I picture like toddler cookies. They just dissolve.

Speaker 1:

But they use bourbon in their gimme s'mores, top with hot cocoa and then pair with a campfire s'mores top with hot cocoa and then pair with a campfire s'more, so that the great thing about that one too, is how simple that is. Yeah, you know bourbon and hot cocoa and then a campfire mule. They do it with rum, maple syrup which we've done episodes talking about maple syrup and how great it is to use as your sweetener then top with ginger beer and a squeeze of lime, and this says to garnish your mule with leftover bacon from your campfire breakfast.

Speaker 2:

Oh fun.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know there was such thing as leftover bacon.

Speaker 1:

It's true, right. And then this one is the Camp Shandy Law it's true, right. And then this one is the Camp Shandy Law. It's a play on the summer shandy, and they paired it with vodka and a refreshing brew from a local brewery, nice. So it's vodka and beer together and they call it the Camp Shandy Law. So that's kind of a fun way too to try the local distilleries, try the local breweries and bring those together, and that's a great place to get ideas for drinks too and support something local. They have one called Sleeping Under the Stars.

Speaker 2:

That must be potent Right.

Speaker 1:

Oh my gosh, I have to see Apple Jack's Snack Pack.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Another one. You got to see the picture, so they said don't knock this before you try it. I don't know what's running through everybody's head, but yes, adding bourbon to your cereal isn't a bad idea, it is genius. It's the small boxes of cereal that was like one of my favorite treats when. I was a kid at my grandma's She'd have the whole thing out of the little boxes. They're easy to pack and they make a bowl right in the box. It's a perfect breakfast or afternoon snack around the campfire.

Speaker 2:

So pour your bourbon over your Apple Jacks? I don't think that's what they're saying, though it is.

Speaker 1:

This is the Apple Jacks snack pack One ounce of Breckenridge bourbon and then a mini box of Apple Jacks. Cut open, add milk. Oh, you don't put it on top, I think, you just sip with it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was envisioning, when they were explaining it to, that you would pour it on your cereal. I'm like that can't be right. So apple. So basically you're creating like apple bourbon flavor and you're like an apple pie kind of situation.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and again you got to see the picture. I'm somebody who the packaging all that stuff. I just love that part of things and how you serve it to people, that hospitality part of it. So seen. I mean it would be hilarious to have a campfire breakfast and serve everybody some apple jacks and this little. They have this little bitty mason jar of bourbon next, to it, it's so, it's so cute that's part of waking up is bourbon in your cup.

Speaker 1:

You know what you're. Just, you are gonna have to make up a lot of bumper stickers yeah, it's so cute.

Speaker 2:

Best part of waking up Is bourbon in your cup.

Speaker 1:

You know what you are going to have to make up a lot of bumper stickers. Yeah right, you've got all the slogans ready. So a really fun find of ideas, and a lot of times it's just a springboard for your own ideas.

Speaker 2:

When you see some of these, yeah, Well, speaking of campfires, the you guys have special campfire songs that you sing all the time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and especially most of mine are the ones that my grandma taught me when I used to drive around in the car with her.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, this is a blog from KOA the best campfire songs for any camping trip. So this is top 40. We won't go through all 40, but we'll link to this.

Speaker 1:

No, I want you to sing me all 40,. Eric, I'm not singing any.

Speaker 2:

I'm not much of a singer of anything, but I do enjoy a good campfire song. Go to this article and it breaks them down into different categories. We'll do the family-friendly songs and then there's one that's labeled adult campfire songs, which sounds a little dangerous, but I don't really think it is. We'll we'll read those off and see if everyone feels like they're. They're too adult.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

And you tell me if you've. You know any of these. Camp Granada, that's the number one song I've never heard of. That one evolved from hello motto or hello foru, a Grammy award-winning parody from 1963. So that's family-friendly Camp Granada. Haven't heard that one? Around the campfire, five Little Speckled Frogs? Oh yeah, I know that one. I'm being Swallowed by a Boa Constrictor, which apparently Shel Silverstein wrote, which Johnny Cash later performed. Bumping Up and Down in my Little Red Wagon. The Campfire Song Song by SpongeBob SquarePants. Have you heard that?

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

That's pretty funny. That's a good one for little kids.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, all these are like little bitty kids songs.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're going on a bear hunt.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 2:

Let's see On Top of Spaghetti. Yeah, bingo, bear hunt. Oh yeah, let's see on top of spaghetti.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, bingo, she'll be coming around the mountain boom, chicka, boom. Oh yeah, I love that one.

Speaker 2:

That one we used to sing at summer camp all the time yeah, with the different voices my bonnie lies over the ocean oh, that's when you want to always stop. It's like, okay, I get it we're done with that, right, let's move on.

Speaker 1:

Right, baby bumblebee oh, I loved that one when I was little so these are just kids song songs.

Speaker 2:

Do your Ears Hang Low the. Wheels on the Bus right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so now we're going to adult campfire songs. Okay, oh, are these inappropriate jokey songs or something? No, they're just songs sung by adults. Take Me Home Country Roads, sweet Caroline Brown-Eyed Girl Wagon Wheel, which is a good song by. Old Crow Medicine Show. Ring of Fire. You Are my Sunshine Idol Weiss from the Sound of Music.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Idol Weiss, Idol Weiss. Oh yeah, I love that song.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, American Pie, Chicken Fried, Stand by Me. So those are all adult songs. If the children are away, you can then break out those very adult songs.

Speaker 1:

The kids are going to like those better?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I would agree. Classic campfire songs for scouts. So this is if you're going with a Boy Scout troop, campfire's Burning, I don't know, oh, that's Campfire Burning was written specifically to be performed around a glowing fire. Okay, as heard in the lyrics, troop leaders can use Campfire's Burning as a way to let everyone know that it is time to gather on the fire. Hail, hail the gangs all here. Apparently there's a scout song called a song that gets on everybody's nerves. Oh, this is. This is really funny. I've never heard this before. I didn't make it too far on boy scouts, scout campers love this song. A song that gets on everybody's nerves just repeats one line. I know a song that gets on everybody's nerves and it goes oh, and this is how it goes, and that's all you just repeat over and over again.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that would get on my nerves.

Speaker 2:

We are the Boy Scouts of America. Brownie Smile song I'm a Girl Scout, Daisy. Oh. So this is for Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts. I Met a Bear. So those are the 40 campfire songs.

Speaker 1:

Well, I know when I would go to summer camp in the summers the whole way home like two hour drive home all we would do is sing the camp songs. Oh, we loved, loved that. And yeah, the campfire songs became more of our like driving around singing in the car songs all the time, singing in the car songs all the time. One of my favorite I mentioned before favorite movies to watch at the lake is Deeper by the Dozen 2, and it's Steve Martin. And there's two families that are kind of competing in a way, and one of them is like the fancy, fancy house on the lake.

Speaker 1:

And then one of them is just like falling down. And they're sitting around the campfire and Steve Martin's family they have 12 kids, and that's what's called Cheaper by the Dozen, and he's trying to make them have this wonderful time at the lake and so they start singing. There once was a man named Michael Finnegan. He grew whiskers on his chin again, so they start singing that.

Speaker 1:

And man named Michael Finnegan. He grew whiskers on his chin again, so they start singing that and they're having so much fun. Then, all of a sudden, across the lake at the fancy house, they start hearing Kumbaya and it's coming like they're a choir and then they, both families, start singing louder and louder and louder and trying to see who can be the loudest. And oh my gosh, because this is one tip for people who come to visit at the lake. I don't think vacationers know how sound travels across the lake.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you can hear and let me know you can hear every word, oh that carries, yeah, not a good place across the lake. Yes, you can hear everything around somebody's campfire, so just be courteous to your neighbors if you do have music on or you are singing loudly later at night or you can hear everything, which I love, falling asleep to the sound of laughter around the campfire and all that. But it is funny how it travels. So those are some good ones, I'll have to pull it up and make my list.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and we always sing one song, strawberry Roan, which we shared in one of Strawberry Roan.

Speaker 1:

Okay, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Which we shared in one of the previous, I don't know which episode.

Speaker 1:

It was yeah, Marty.

Speaker 2:

Robbins. So my grandpa used to sing Strawberry Roan and we always sing that around the fire and the kids really get a kick out of that because we're just terrible singers, Just not. So it just makes it that much funnier because we're just, you know, one of those.

Speaker 1:

Right, so we want you to be quieter on the lake? Oh gosh, yeah, we're not.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're not entertaining anyone, we're just entertaining ourselves.

Speaker 1:

Yeah Well, pass on to us, everybody out there, what your favorite campfire cocktails are and campfire songs to sing, If you want to send us a recording you know, we could always play it on a future episode.

Speaker 2:

For sure, for sure. Yeah, if you're just a beautiful family choir.

Speaker 1:

Right, yeah, and speaking of a, you know a spring is happening and we're getting ready to spend more time around the campfire. There's also work to be done. There is a lot of spring maintenance that comes up. We shared in an episode recently about articles you find written by AI. Yeah, and as you search articles for spring cabin maintenance, oh, gosh, they got to be just the most obvious things. Most things are Clean your house. Yes, exactly, it be just the most obvious things, most things are Clean your house.

Speaker 1:

Yes, exactly, it's just those kinds of things, like just those basic things that we all kind of already know Wipe down your logs for dust you know, but there are some really some things to think about that you need to kind of check annually or seasonally.

Speaker 1:

This is an article from p dutch structurescom and there are lots of articles from you know, trusted places like um, log cabin living and cabin lifecom and some other places that we always love to go to Um. This one is log cabin maintenance issues and ways to solve them. So one of the things I like about this article is it tells you the issue that you might be having when you check things in the spring and then how to fix it. But things you need to check for are moisture damage. I know when we were first looking at our cabin with realtors and we were like, yep, this is the cabin we want. We had an inspector come that was just knew about log homes and he went around and he had a little knife and there were spots that his knife would go right into the logs like they were butter because the moisture had gotten in and it was just rotting them. So we had to do a lot of repairs on the house. So if you can check, you know at the end, the end of winter, as the snow has melted, if you're somewhere where your cabin gets a lot of snow, a lot of rain in the spring check every year for moisture damage. So it says it's a well-known fact that wood doesn't handle moisture very well. If it's exposed for a long time, wood absorbs the surrounding moisture and if left untreated, it can grow mold or mildew and eventually rot.

Speaker 1:

Your log home is designed to handle rain. However, if you don't keep up with certain maintenance practices, you may unknowingly allow moisture to start collecting on parts of your home's exterior. So, whether you have a stain on it that helps keep the moisture out, there's places we have copper on our logs where the rain would maybe sit. So there are ways to help prevent it. And this article is also suggesting that you need to look at the vegetation around your house, because how your landscaping is can make the water settle in certain places too. And if you have a garden and flowers and shrubs, you need to make sure that that stays away from the sides, because the plants retain moisture, which is good for them, but it's not good for it to be next to the side of your wooden home. So, like our cabin, we have stone on the bottom, where it would be by the landscaping, but a lot of older homes, older cabins, won't have those things, so you have to kind of think about where you plant your gardens.

Speaker 1:

You need to look for insect and animal issues. So we shared on an episode I think it was this fall about woodpeckers. So there's lots of animal issues that you could have. I mean, we've had porcupines chewing on our house, we've had squirrels, and so you need to check into the carpenter bees, the termites, the ants, the beetles you know all the different things that could happen and then find solutions to either make repairs or try to prevent it from happening in the future, because that rotting wood is definitely not something that you want to have. There's even things like sunlight damage that you want to have, right, there's even things like sun-like damage. So you need to check for how the discoloration on your wood and what you might need to fix or put things might start to warp with the wood. So check on that too. Um, you can. Also there's the screw jacks on a log home sure, keep it yep from settling too much so you can have that checked.

Speaker 1:

We've had called long home builders and maintenance people and had them come do a check of our house, like walk through, because it's very obvious for us to see where things have settled by where the stain was originally and then where we can see where it's not now. So having an expert walk through and give you advice on what to do is a great idea. This article is saying you should stain your cabin about every three to four years. So, following along with some of these articles, magazines, they're going to keep you up to date on the newest products and what the recommendations are. Because you know it might the years might extend as new things are coming into place. But just keeping a good eye on it, walking around, not just assuming that everything's going to be okay. That needs to be sealed. Make sure the gutters are cleaned out and repair things as quickly as you possible so it doesn't become a bigger problem.

Speaker 2:

No, that's great.

Speaker 1:

Do you have anything you try to do, for sure in the spring?

Speaker 2:

No, I mean just just the general spring cleaning, like we talked about. And then main, you know, the walk around, maintenance. Uh, the trees are always an issue. Up here you'll notice some of the trees start over a couple years, grow and we're like, oh, they were fine before and now they're getting a little closer to the house and if it's a pine tree it can cause sap or issues. So just keeping up with your trees and taking care of them before they become, you know, if a tree starts to die close to your place, is getting that taken down and taken care of. I think is is really nice. And then the staining and upkeep. Like we have a Cedarside at home and it it's holding up pretty well, but you know where there's the sunlight's hitting more often. Um, and it depends on the type of winter, if there's ice dams and things that you have to deal with. There's just all things, just touch-ups needed.

Speaker 1:

I think one of the things I love are the people that come up. They make it a weekend to come up and do their spring cleaning, whether it's the cleaning, the maintenance, the opening of the cabin if it's not a four-season cabin and they make it a fun weekend. They turn it into an event and they look forward to it.

Speaker 2:

It's a tradition, for sure.

Speaker 1:

Yes, they turn it into an event and they look forward to it For sure. So a good way to make something that can feel like a problem fun.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

So, again, we'll link that article that I was referring to, and then there's several more online to look through.

Speaker 2:

Okay, we have some more music for you guys. I know everybody loves that part of every episode. We have some more music for you guys. I know everybody loves that part of every episode. And we were talking a couple weeks ago just about how some of the women singer songwriters it's been a little bit hard to find, like cabin cast vibey songs, Cause we try not to go down too dark of a path to to I don't know.

Speaker 1:

We don't want to be too contemplative.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, too contemplative and sad. We don't need you guys coming up to the cabin sobbing in the car about lost love and all the things.

Speaker 1:

Wrong turns Wrong turns in life.

Speaker 2:

We try to keep things upbeat and a little bit fun, and this song caught my attention because it's just got a great beat. It's super fun, she's not taking herself too seriously and this is a new artist. I think this is one of those like played a song somewhere, the video went viral, type of situations, and now she just seems to be blowing up really well. So this is an artist named Chloe Kimes. Kimes was born and raised on the lakeshores of northern Michigan. As a rural Midwest native. Her music is built on folk festivals, family harmony and the barefoot back roads always taken. Chloe has built a strong Michigan following touring every small mitten town since she was 14 years old, but just relocated Nashville, Tennessee, in 2016, to continue her work as a professional singer, songwriter, band leader and recording artist. This is a song called Coors Light and this is the one that went viral for her, and it'll be really fun to see what Chloe has in store in the morning.

Speaker 3:

I kiss you in the morning. Make love at night Loving.

Speaker 3:

Anytime the time feels right, hold me on the couch when the stars shine bright and we'll start all over in the morning. I ran a hundred miles. I never lost a pound Cause I'd rather be all filled up when they put me in the ground. Well, the best advice I ever ate was keep it forward, never straight. And I like Coors Light on draft. I like Coors Light on draft. Ain't never seen a picker who can pick like that. Yeah well, do it all over in the morning.

Speaker 1:

I dare you not to smile.

Speaker 2:

I know the whole song Right.

Speaker 1:

Oh my goodness, Talk about a fun campfire song too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, if you can keep up that speed and beat with your family. This is kind of a cool note about Coors Light. Kime shared her performance of Coors Light live at the Blue Plate special in Knoxville, Tennessee. She didn't expect the viral whirlwind that followed. Within a week, Coors Light had totaled 4 million views across her social media platform. Talk about good marketing for Coors Light too.

Speaker 1:

Oh, my goodness.

Speaker 2:

It's like the Red Solo Cup thing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Thousands of requests poured in for new listeners. They wanted the studio single. In a mere three days time, kimes jumped on a call and took her band to rca studio with producer phil smith. Within just three weeks of its internet debut, coors light was available for all to enjoy. And then coors light has clearly sparked a universal joy among its listeners, as new fans have come together.

Speaker 1:

With a frequent comment I never liked country music until I heard this uh, yeah, I love it, and my favorite part of it was when the backup guys came in the draft of Coors Light. And then when she did the pickers, yeah the pick. I love that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's great. It's just a good song. It puts a smile on your face and I think that's you know. I appreciate and love music that leads you out on all kinds of emotional paths. But when it's the cabin cast and we're talking about sharing things with friends and family, I think Coors Light's a great one.

Speaker 1:

Right and I think that one I mean I would play that one around my kids even.

Speaker 2:

Oh, for sure.

Speaker 1:

You know it's. It's really fun, yeah, so thanks for bringing that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, thank you. Everyone. Have a wonderful weekend.

Campfire Cocktails and Outdoor Adventures
Campfire Songs and Bourbon Cereal
Campfire Songs and Cabin Maintenance