Kyle Admundson is a dog trainer and loves to specialize in griffons. But he is also an avid bird hunter. It turns out that he came by this passion via his father who was also a hunter and just as importantly was a conservationist. Listen to KYLE's story. Speaker2: Pops was a BLM range conservationist, worked with ranchers, always trying to improve the ground. But he also understood that without the ranchers in our country, there's not half the water that's out there. When he passed away, I got his map book, which he passed away the day he retired. He had a blood clot in his leg that we think went to his heart and he drifted on the way home on his very last day working for the BLM and went head on with a semi. I got hold of his map book and I started looking through his map book and it just had a lot of these marks that I didn't understand. And this was early 90 seconds, so it's been a while. I went out and I started riding to these spots and it was cattle watering troughs, but all of them had bird walks on them so that the birds could walk up, pick up water. I got a feeling I'm almost positive he was out there as he went through them all. He was one, putting these bird walks on so that the chuckers and the Huns and the quail could get to water. Dad was a bird hunting nut. He loved it. I come by this naturally. It's an inherited trait for sure. Speaker1: Yet another example of how farmers and ranchers and sportsman's lives intertwine in a positive way.