Home > 1995 Presidential Documents > pd09ja95 Letter to Congressional Leaders Transmitting a Report on Haiti...pd09ja95 Letter to Congressional Leaders Transmitting a Report on Haiti...
January 3, 1995
The President. Good morning, everybody.
Q. Was it a fair fight?
The President. Two for two. We only saw two.
Q. You've got two there?
The President. Yep.
Q. Is that the limit?
The President. No, but it was our limit today because it's all we
saw.
Q. And are you responsible for their demise, sir?
The President. Yes, I shot them both. They let me shoot them, so I
shot them.
Q. It's cold and it's wet out there. Where's the fun part?
The President. Well, the most fun part is just being out there when
the light comes up and seeing the ducks come across. We had a lot of
geese, too. You know, the geese fly in these huge V formations; they're
really beautiful.
And we all shot them with weapons, I might add, that were not
affected by the crime bill, except they were protected.
Q. What kind of weapons?
The President. We all had our different shotguns. But I just want to
make that point to all the sports men and women who are watching this.
Contrary to what some of them were told in the last election, we're all
still hunting and nobody has lost their gun. And we did the right thing
to ban the assault weapons.
But I had a great time out there today. The best thing, like I said,
about it today was just watching--on a cloudy day like this the ducks
can see the hunters, so they're less likely to come down in large
numbers, but we saw a huge number of them flying around. It was quite
beautiful.
Q. Are they fooled by the duck calls?
The President. On a clear day, the duck calls help.
Q. Can we hear your technique?
The President. The duck call--no. I got this--this duck call is made
in Stuttgart, Arkansas, which is close to here, where they have the
international duck calling championship every year. And the man that
made this call is now the mayor of the city.
Q. Does it work?
The President. It works fine.
Q. Six dollars at the Wal-Mart.--
[At this point, a reporter blew a duck call.]
The President. Do it, do it. [Laughter]
Q. What do you think?
The President. A little more down here. [Laughter]
Q. I'm from Brooklyn.
The President. For Brooklyn it's good. [Laughter]
Q. Do you feel like you're really on vacation now, sir?
The President. Yes--well, I wish I had a little more time to spend.
But it was won-
[[Page 10]]
derful. We had a great time out there, and I'm here with some old
friends.
Q. The male bonding kind of thing?
The President. Well, the guys I was here with, the ones I was here
with today, we bonded a long time ago. They may be interested in
unbonding. [Laughter]
Q. Do you eat the ducks?
The President. Oh, yes. Yes, we're just trying to figure--I'm
sitting here trying to figure out how I can get them back to the White
House.
Q. Do you clean them?
The President. No, not lately I haven't. When I was younger I did
that. I probably--maybe I'll do it again.
Q. How far off are they when you shoot them?
The President. How far were these away?
Hunter. The white one was a long way.
The President. One of them was--how far were they, Bob?
Bob Robinson. Oh, anywhere from 70 to 80 yards. The President made
two great shots.
The President. I got lucky today.
Q. And who retrieves them?
The President. Actually, Bob went out and--no, you didn't go. They
went out--we had a boat and got them today. Sometimes you have dogs get
them but today we--people retrieved them in a flat-bottom boat. But it
was a wonderful morning.
[At this point, the President left the reporters to speak with his
fellow hunters. He then resumed speaking with reporters.]
The President. We didn't see many today, but we got two shots. There
were a couple more that came in close, but they came in so fast that we
weren't ready. But these were really the only two we could shoot at. And
I had the charity--this crew over there, they all sat there and let me
shoot at it. [Laughter]
Q. Are you glad to be home?
The President. Yes. I really started feeling like a person when I
was about 5 minutes out on the water today.
Note. The President spoke at approximately 9 a.m. at the Robinson farm.
A tape was not available for verification of the content of this
exchange.
<DOC>
[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents]
[frwais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 10-13]
Monday, January 9, 1995
Volume 31--Number 1
Pages 1-30
Week Ending Friday, January 6, 1995
in Scott, Arkansas
January 3, 1995
The President. We have a lot of people who come in who still use it
as a country store, but as you can see, a lot of people come in and eat
every day. We have people drive every day from Little Rock. But it's a
regular pharmacy.
Q. It reminds me of the stores along that one street in Plains,
Georgia, where Jimmy Carter lived. They had stores like this.
The President. They've even got a little museum here that I helped
them put together, Plantation Museum. You saw that land coming back, all
that farm land you saw, this is the heart of our rice country. We grow
about 40 percent of America's rice on the land that we came across
today.
Q. Forty percent?
The President. Yes.
Q. Wow.
The President. Arkansas is the number one rice-producing State in
the country, more than California or anyplace. And you can see why,
because of all the little--you see all the little rivers and creeks and
everything.
Q. You've got the paddies.
The President. Yes. Good topsoil, and it's also a lot of high-tech
stuff. They literally flood those rice fields. They have a little laser
beam that they go down and throw that laser beam across that rice field
to make sure the water level is just right, not too low so that the
crop--not too high so it rots. Just right. It's amazing.
Anyway--and we also went through--did you see the cotton field we
went through?
Q. Sure did.
The President. And the name of the nearest town to where we were
hunting today was Cotton Plant.
Q. Right. In fact, that's the dateline on all our stories.
The President. And cotton was a big crop here, but closer to the
river, going back before the Civil War, but back here all the way up to
the point. But that land, most of that land we saw today, we drove
across was hardwood forest until the twenties. The timber
[[Page 11]]
companies came in and tore all the hardwood down. But because the
topsoil was so thick, because the water was so great, it became great
agriculturally. Fifty-three percent of this State is still covered with
timberland. You couldn't tell that from today. It's a very different
place. But anyway, that's----
Q. You sound homesick for----
The President. This was all a big part of my political base, all
these places we've been through here today. I never lost--this State.
Q. [Inaudible]--county?
The President. Woodruff County. Benton County is the next----
Q. Woodruff County is where we were this morning.
The President. Woodruff County.
Q. Do you have a recommendation for us for lunch?
The President. All of our counties here have big sportsmen, like
Tom's sponsor of Ducks Unlimited. With all these ducks, the sky is full
of ducks and geese, and they come down from Canada down what's called
the Mississippi Flyway, right down the river. And the reason that
they're now here is that it's gotten colder up north. The colder the
weather is, the more birds fly south.
Q. Will they winter here or move on? They'll winter here?
Q. The President. No, they'll go further.
Q. Do you do any other kind of hunting here?
The President. Yeah. I usually go hunting--when I was living here--
my ears are bad so I don't hunt very much. But I'd usually go hunting--
I'd usually go duck hunting once a year and usually do something else
once a year.
Q. Do you have pheasant hunting here?
The President. No. Turkey hunting, a lot of turkeys, a lot of deer,
quail--lot of quail.
Q. Good fishing around here, too, isn't there?
The President. Wonderful, wonderful. Bass, trout. I don't know if
you guys saw the--when we were coming up, there were hundreds of ducks
just like that. That's illegal to stop along the side of the road and
shoot them.
Q. Because it's not fair or----
The President. Because it's not fair and because you can't just stop
on the road and shoot them. And of course, there's a limit. You can only
shoot two mallards a day.
Q. Do you ever feel like a sitting duck resting on the water
sometime? [Laughter]
The President. Yes, I do----
Q. I think that's a political----
The President. [Inaudible.]
Q. What is the deal with--our driver said if you shot the female
first, that was it; you don't get to shoot anymore. How can you tell
what you shoot first?
The President. You can tell when you go pick them up. [Laughter]
There are different rules for different kinds of ducks, too. It changes
every year. But one of the things that--one of the best organized things
in America is the wildlife preservation. The hunters and fishermen are,
in a way, the best conservationists in the country. They worked hard on
this whole way of replenishing the duck species. You can see it--
primarily, in America you see it here on the Mississippi Flyway. And
then where we are, over on the Eastern Shore of Maryland you see a lot
where the ducks fly down that way, along the coast, you see a lot of
that. But there's been an enormous amount of money invested, some
through public funds, largely through private funds, for things like
that to replenish the species. And the length of the season, the timing
of the season, and the daily limits are carefully calibrated to allow
maximum enjoyment of the sport while keeping the supplies replenished.
When I was Governor, I used to have a picture on my wall of a place
in this country about 20 miles from here, back in the thirties, one of
those open ponds with all the stumps like you saw today. Literally a
hundred thousand ducks covered it, blanketed, as far as you could see.
And the population went way down. Not it's all been--I don't think it
will ever be able to--we do the same thing with the deer population,
very carefully managed. And it's a big deal.
We still have factories that close----
Q. [Inaudible]--selection of the duck stamp each year now?
The President. No, I know that--my role in all this when I was
Governor was to stay up--[inaudible]--fish commission. In a State like
ours, it's an enormously important thing.
[[Page 12]]
Over half the adults in the State have a hunting or a fishing license.
Q. And you do, too, sir?
The President. I have a lifetime license. After I served as Governor
for 10 years--you still have to buy the stamps every year, which we did.
We're legal today. You still have to buy the stamps every year. But I've
got a--they gave me a lifetime hunting and fishing license. Sort of like
a gold watch--get to use it.
Q. Really. That's quite a perk.
Q. When is the last time you had this much fun?
The President. Oh, I don't know.
Q. Never. [Laughter]
The President. It's been a while. I had a good time. And the people
I was hunting with today, they've been my friends for 20 years. That
makes a difference. They're good people, farmers, people I've known for
a long, long time.
Q. You said you felt like a real person.
The President. Yes, I liked it there. Old Bobby Robinson, he came
out and talked to you----
Q. He was great.
Q. Yes, he was great.
The President. He's the salt of the Earth.
Q. He was bragging up his wife's breakfast. Was that pretty good?
The President. Unbelievable. I told Bobby, when I come over to see
her I don't--it doesn't matter to me what happens, as long as she feeds
me. [Laughter]
Q. Is it a combined license in Arkansas?
The President. You can. You can buy combined; you can buy separate.
You can buy licenses--in the hunting season you can buy a hunting
license, or you can buy a license to hunt separate things by season if
you want. And also, you can buy different fishing licenses. We have a
lot of people coming in on weekend fishing trips, tourists and all that,
so there is a whole--the Game and Fish Commission has a whole different
menu of things depending on what it is you want to hunt, whether you
want to hunt or fish, what you want.
Q. [Inaudible]
The President. That's ``American Gothic.'' Have you ever seen it?
Q. Oh, yes, the original. I hadn't seen this version of it.
The President. That's just sort of a tongue-in-cheek thing that an
Arkansas artist did.
Q. Your favorite?
The President. Yes, yes. We've got one. We've got the original back
at the White House. And they've got an old Governor's picture of me, and
another one about 10 years old, unsigned.
Q. When you only hunt once a year, how do you keep your timing to be
able to lead a duck?
The President. I hit the one. It was on the fly. And the other one I
hit at a very long distance. It was almost--but it was a very long
distance. I just--it was a good gun. I had a good gun. It was a little
Remington with a shorter barrel, three-shot limit.
That's another interesting thing about this assault weapons deal.
Some of these people that were opposing the 10--magazine limit on the
assault weapons overlooked the fact that they were very happy to have a
three-shot limit on the semiautomatic for shooting ducks. That's the law
today. And when I was in Maryland last year, I was laughing--some of the
folks up there----
Q. You can only put in three cartridges?
The President. Yes. You put in three, and you've got to--if they
hold four, you put in three instead of four.
Q. Are you tickled about the school dedication tomorrow?
The President. Oh, yes. Yes, I'm real happy about that.
[At this point, the President finished his lunch and then went outside,
where he again spoke with reporters.]
Q. You're ducking us. [Laughter]
Q. Thanks, Mark [Mark Knoller, CBS Radio]. Now you've wrecked his
mood. [Laughter]
The President. I'll tell you what--I heard you on that duck call, it
was like a magnet--[laughter]--come flying into the pond. [Laughter]
Q. We went out shopping last night. We had to go to three stores to
get them. We went to Montgomery Ward, and they were sold out of duck
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