Getting the best wildlife attractant is key to great hunts. Brian Sparks of Nelson Creek Outdoors explores his Lucky 7 brand of cover scents and attractants, formulated by experts in attraction. The company’s hunting/fishing scents & attractants is handy for harvesting more fish and game in your all too-limited time outdoors. Brian talks about Doe in Heat Products, both Natural and Synthetic that are guaranteed to bring in even the wariest of big bucks. Their Trace Mineral Attractant not only brings deer in, it makes them healthier and grow maximum rack sizes. They also manufacture the Lucky 7 brand of cover scents and attractants, along with fishing attractants for both game fish and catfish. Whether it is harvesting a big buck or getting deer in front of a trail camera, Nelson Creek Outdoors is here to help.
Expect no less from the EXPERTS in attraction!
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We’re heading out to Wisconsin and we’re going to talk to a good friend, Brian Sparks. Brian owns and operates Nelson Creek Outdoors, the maker of Lucky 7 brand. I’ve used his product in last few years. I had great success. I love his crystals, the buckets, the scrape. He steps on the crystals and they open up and refresh the scrape as many times as he hits it or even a doe hits it. It’s a great attractant, it’s great stuff. Brian works hard. He’s a hardworking guy and this is love and the passion. Listen to Brian Sparks of Lucky 7 brand.
Listen to the podcast here:
Lucky 7 Brand With Brian Sparks
We’re heading to the great State of Wisconsin. We’re going to meet up with Brian Sparks. Brian is the owner of Nelson Creek Outdoors and the formulator of Lucky 7 brands. Brian, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me here, Bruce.
I did mention to you that I hunted at three different farms in Wisconsin last year. I had a lot of bucks come in. I just didn’t have a mature buck come in. That was my hunting season. Every time I use those Lucky 7 crystals, the bucks just went nuts. Let’s start off with that. Why do those crystals work and how should you apply them when you’re hunting?
Lucky 7 Love Potion #7 and you’re talking about the crystal gel formula. That is a fresh year-end product. We only bottle it during the season. We don’t start off with it then January and start to bottle them and save it for later. We just literally started bottling that here. The crystal gel formula is a polymer crystal that will absorb many times its weight in liquid. We start off with a tiny little grain of sand and they expand. What it does is it is it traps that urine inside that crystal. When you first put it out, when you get to your stand, you put it out, it will put out a lot of scent.
Let’s say you leave your stand or out there for quite some time, the scent will start going down and that’s actually what you want a little bit to scent will go down a little bit. That buck will come in and smell that scent and he’ll still smell there’s a doe in heat in there somewhere. The real magic happens when he starts scraping and you then put the crystals in his scrape. He puts his scuff out there and he’ll actually crack those gel crystals open. He’ll disturb that skin that forms on them a little bit and that fresh scent will come out of those crystals and blast them right in the face. What he believes at that point is, “I just mister and that’s what you want them to think.” That doe hadn’t been there just a couple of seconds ago as fresh as that is. That tends to make them come back and check that scrape more and more often.
How many times a day or week do you freshen that?
The way the polymer seals the urine in that crystal after a while, that stuff will hit him good for a week, maybe more when it comes in and then works that scrape. Only give off scent into the normal air for maybe four or five or six hours really strong then it’ll start to weaken off in there. As soon as they step in that scrape or actively work that scrape or a doe walks by and steps through it even, it reactivates it to a much stronger amount. Again, right in their face, right when they’re going through it. It makes them believe it’s all around there. A week or more, it could actually keep doing that.
How much do you recommend putting in a hot scrape? How much of the crystal should you put in there?
What I generally like to do there, depending on the size of the scrape and the location, on average I’d probably put up about half an ounce of the product in there, spread throughout the scrape, more toward the center of and the edges. That’ll usually be a good amount. It’ll have a strong scent. Then again, remain active for quite a few days after initial application.

For everyone, they come in two or four ounces packaging?
Those come in two ounces. Basically, the crystal gel, it’s enough crystals to hold two fluid ounces of urine in it. Then the bottled stuff, the straight liquid, we sell into two-ounce bottles. One of the reasons we do that is fresh urine doesn’t stay fresh forever. Smaller bottles of it to allow to take just enough of what you need with you. Up here in Wisconsin, we’re hunting right now, both seasons open and we’re in the high 70s. When you got to take urine out in that weather it’ll go bad. They usually keep it in two-ounce bottles and keep a couple of bottles in the fridge at home and just carry enough with you.
In the big box stores, they’ve got an array of doing heat, you name it. The marketers have got doe urine and big buck stuff or whatever. Talk to us about the difference that people will find in the big box stores as opposed to what your product offers?
Our products are based around being fresh. We only bottle during the season and through the season. Twice a week we’ll be bottling it. We have a contract with a deer farmer and they continually ship us fresh urine. We’re trying to get urine in your hand that is less than a week old. Ideally, when you get it, it’s probably four or five days old. If you’re going to that box store, they’re a large business and a large volume and that’s what you’re looking for is large volume. They start bottling it early in the year to start making their deliveries. In that time, it’s in that little amber bottle. It’s seen lights.
Basically, the urea in the urine is breaking down into more and more ammonia until you literally have nothing but a bunch of black sludge that is 50% ammonia or more that that point. You might as well just throw it in the garbage. It’s not even useful. The difference between us is we do some volume here, but we were only doing enough that we can supply it fresh. You’re not going to buy a bottle that we bottled last year. If we had some leftover, we’d throw it out. It’s just not useful anymore. That’s the difference between us and the big box store attractants. It’s good stuff.
You mentioned keeping it in the refrigerator. I remember you told me get some of those little ice packs and actually put in a little cooler because I’m gone for 30 days and the mail can’t catch up with me. You said buy the stuff and then keep it in a cooler and keep the light out and keep it cold. How long will that last?
Without any preservative you can expect the urine to be useful for about two months if you take good care of it. That’s the 50% ammonia point where it’s timeless to throw it out. It’s not going to scare a deer off. A deer urinates in the woods, it breaks down and becomes ammonia too. It’s just that they know it’s old. They’re not going to react to it the same way. If a doe in heat urinated in the spot six weeks ago, what does the deer care? I would say if you’ve got that two weeks, with a little bit of preservative, natural preservatives in it, you can get 90 days out of it if you take really good care of it. Leave it in your truck in hot weather. You’re probably looking at less than a week. You do want to take care of it. If you’re serious about this, you might want to bring a cooler with you. Keep a couple of ice packs in there, keep your fresh urine in there or look to a synthetic product.
Do you have synthetic products?
We came out with a new synthetic product here. Here in Wisconsin, the CWD has caused a lot of regulations here. In other states they’ve actually banned real urine. Alaska was the first, I believe Virginia has it. Pennsylvania has a few zones that you can’t use it. We decided to look into providing synthetic urine. When we did that, we pulled out what was on the market. I have to say we were extremely disappointed just by our own sniffer test. Disappointed with what we found when we sent it to the lab and just disappointed with its overall use.
In fact, we barely used any of it because after just the initial smelling it ourselves and then bring it to the lab, a lot of it seems to be using that old internet recipe there, “You can make synthetic urine and put some urea and some water. Scoop it off the path, throw in a couple of cups of ammonia. You got synthetic deer urine.” It should have a couple of ingredients in common with deer urine, sure. There’s urea in deer urine and ammonia in smaller quantities. Saying that that’s a true synthetic deer urine, it’s like saying a gourmet devil’s food cake is soaked in some flour and some water.
You got to have all the ingredients there. There’s a lot more to urine than just those few basic ingredients. Unfortunately, the big box company, the leading company in fact, was the worst of them all. It’s smelled like heavy ammonia smell in a little bit of bubble soap. It was nothing like urine. I’m sitting here smelling deer urine for the next three, four months here and that’s all I do. I know deer urine and what it smells like and none of this stuff that we found really smelled anything even to me, like real urine. If I can tell the difference, I guarantee you a buck out in the woods can tell the difference. That’s why we started with a ground up approach. We took some of our freshest deer urine and we had here in one of our batches and we sent it to the lab to be absolutely cloned as close as possible in a product that didn’t need any special handling, refrigeration, anything like that. That’s when we came up with our product.
What’s that product called?
Ours is called the Lucky 7 Synthescent Doe-In-Heat PLUS. We came with a near perfect replica of a synthetic doe urine at the peak of estrus. Even beyond that, I mean you can make synthetic products and they’re great. They don’t rot and they don’t need special handling. They’re easy to care for and all that stuff. You can just carry a bottle around and see if you have some left over this year, it’s good next year. Everything about it becomes a little bit of a sterile thing. We did beyond that. The plus in our product is we added an additional biological ingredient to it that truly makes it like a living being, truly alive. It’s like real urine that the deer will clamp and he will smell it and then they are absolutely fooled into thinking. This is a doe at the peak estrus really urinated here. When you take it and you smell it, take a whiff of it and compare it to some real urine and you’ll see exactly what we’re talking about. It’s like real urine.
Let’s talk about application. I can remember the first buck I ever killed a long time ago with my bow. I had put up cotton balls. I put some Doe-In-Heat drops on the cotton balls and actually put in the corner of a corn field. I was sitting just on the outside between the cornfield and the swamp. The buck came in. He walked right up to it, sniffed it, and I shot him. He was completely clueless. Why do these scents work and how should we do it correctly? How should we not do it so we’re not messing up ourselves?
You’re looking at the buck and his sex drive. To pass his genes on, he needs to breed with as many does as possible. Hopefully, the big buck is still walking around and he does that. That’s what you’re playing at. You’re trying to get him to think, “Somewhere, there is a ready go nearby. I need to hang around this spot until I find her so that I can pass on my genes.” There are various different ways of doing that. Some of my favorites are just the standard felt pad. When I go out in the woods, I’ll use real urine product on some felt pads.
Our products are based around being fresh. We only bottle during the season and through the season. Share on XI like to hang them above scrapes, like to put crystal gel in the scrape. To give it a little bit of time to last there, to blast the scents into that deer’s face. I leave it there. The felt pads, I take with me when I go. I leave the crystal gel in there. I also like scent drippers. Lately with the weather we’ve had here, it’s been warm in the last couple of seasons. I really started using more synthetics and the drippers. I find that because it’s out in the sun and I may be they are week before I get back and hunt it. The real urine is getting iffy by that point. The synthetic and the dripper just avoids that problem altogether.
Let’s talk about a couple of different setups. One, we’re right at funnel. There’s a creek to our right at the cornfields or up a little hill or to our left and we’re just coming off the hill and we’re in a funnel. There are rubs and scrapes. I know they’re traveling through here all the time. When should we start putting out doe in heat scent and then do we put it 360 around the stand? Walk us through the correct application.
What I like to do is to do with the urine product there, first it depends on what time of year I’m hunting. A lot of people don’t realize it, but a lot of the older does will go into estrus before and the younger ones and that can high up in around that October 10th timeframe. Mother Nature giving the older animals a little bit of a head start. I’ve had a lot of success hunting it like a mini rut. One of the things I like to do hunting any other ruts because I like to find the areas the does are. I’m not looking around for secret buck trails at that point. You’re trying to figure out where that lonesome buck is. If there’s does in heat in the area and you know it, he’s trying to find them. You might as well find them too.
If you know where the does are bedding, the travel routes where the does are most frequently, when they’re feeding. If you can find one of those areas, looking for where the buck himself is, he’s going to be where that does are. One thing with all these scent is that don’t get me wrong, you must always control your own scents too. We currently don’t offer any scent-free products, scent elimination products. There are so many good ones on the market now. There’s not much we can offer to you in that area. Pick one. There’s a myriad of them out there that worked very well. Make sure that you do everything you can. Use the new Ozone products that they. Their electronics to keep your clothes scent-free then use the scent-free product to keep your own smell down and still play the wind like you would any other day.
No matter how much you try and no matter you try and cover it, no matter how much you try and eliminate it, there’s always going to be a little scent left on you. Always make sure you play that wind. What to do with those scents, I like to put my scents not directly downwind, out at 45-degree angle from downwind so I catch those deer as they’re passing. There definitely got to be shooting lanes in there too. If they’re going too far, I want to try and attract those deer into me. Have them come in toward my stand before they crossed directly downwind because again. Everybody has had it happen. You had a deer and you thought you were scent free. You might have chewed a chlorophyll gum and you might have charcoal all over and he came in downwind and he busted you anyway.
It happens to all of us. Ozonics does have some great testimonies out there, but it does happen. What you’re saying is the wind’s coming, I’m picking one of my stands, looks to the West. It’s quartering. The winds coming right on Northwest, it’s at a 45-degree-angle. Where do I put the scent to my left and to my right and then behind me?
If I’m facing into the wind ideally, then I’ll have some urine straight in front of me, straight where I’m looking in a ring so that I can shoot. You’re not looking for a deer to approach from that angle because if the wind’s blowing in your face and he’s coming from farther than the scent is out, he’s not going to pick that up. He might pick it up as he passes between you and your stand or on that trail that you’ve got the scent on.
Then I have behind me on my shoulders and to other shooting lanes at 45-degree angles. That’s where I like to put the other scents. Just try and intercept them before they get directly downwind to me because there’s no way I can ever hope to hide from there. That’s usually my setup. It’s usually a triangle like that. Again, it is very hard to learn to do all these different setups. You have to know the prevailing winds, and you have to know each individual stand, you add other obstacles and sometimes things aren’t perfect, but you’ve got to do the best you can.
You mentioned a dripper and synthetic. With your drippers, is that directly in front of you or where do you set up your dripper?
Usually my dripper the one that I have straight in front of me. I like to keep that one going and I also used the crystal gel there more than any place else. Usually, because I’m trying to keep a deer from getting downwind and maybe trying to confuse his nose as best I can and he is anywhere in that range down into me, that’s where I like to use especially a lot of fresh scent down there just to keep it going while I’m there and then I take it out when I’m not there.
You’re using felt wicks that you just hang from whatever trees are available.
There are a lot of them. Any of the felt wicks they have out there, for a $1 for 4,000. I liked the ones that have a little twist tie on so you can twist, tie them, to a branch or something like that. I also liked the ones where I can actually take them. They’re small enough to dip into the bottle. It’s usually pea-shaped in that little stem. You can actually dip it into the bottle and let it soak up a little urine. I actually hang them on the tree first. Take the bottles, soak them. Push it up onto that end, let it soak in, and pull the bottle off and move on to the next one.
Get yourself a sharp pair of scissors. If the wick you got don’t fit into the bottleneck, just make them fit in. Clip them at an angle until you get the right angle. How much scent do we want to put on that wick?
Usually, what I do is dip it right in the bottle and then pull it back out. Just enough that it soaks it out. I’m not pouring it on there because in those areas I don’t want a lot of it on the ground. I do want it up in the air a little bit, catching the wind, to try and make it a little bit more of scent crowd, not only to attract deer but to cover my own scent behind me and stuff. I think if you go beyond the dripping point and it’s dripping on the ground all over that, that’s probably too much. At that point, it is on the ground in an area that you don’t want it.

How often do I have to change off the wicks?
You can keep them for quite some time as long as you treat them like your urine. Anything you put on that wick is going to spoil as well. I like to do is I carry a sandwich bag with me at the end of the day’s hunt, I’ll pull them down and put them in a sandwich bag and then throw them into the cooler and the refrigerator with my urine there and save it the next time I hunt. Usually I can get a couple of weeks out of a scent pad if I treat it right. Then again, they are also cheap enough. If you’re worried about it, you throw them away and get some more, whatever feels best. Being busy a lot of times, when I’m going out let’s say the weekend, I’m not using anything used or anything like. I’m going to use the freshest stuff. I can get brand new wicks and all that stuff. If I’m hunting in October 10th, the early rut, where it’s not always as hot as it is the other times, I might reuse that stuff.
What about have you ever used drags? How would you apply your attractant scents to drags?
I have used drags. You put them on a stick or something and drag scent around to, bring it. There are a lot of theories to that. I am not big on dragging. I’m trying to get out there mostly scent-free. I’m trying to get out of there quickly and quietly. I don’t want to hang around in my hunting spot. I don’t go out a dragging personally. If you get a line, there are a lot of guys that do it and have great success with it. Spoke out like a wheel from their stand and things like that. Personally, my land that I own up North is very thick cover. It’s marshy with bushes so thick sometimes it takes ten minutes to go ten feet. In most cases, it’s just not practical for me to drag a lot anymore. Occasionally, I hunt the farm or something like that, dragging along a break between the woods and a cornfield actually is very successful.
I started my walking trail and I just had to drag out. I just dragged it right up my trail, right to my stand and then I hung it on branch to my left. I just hung it to dissipate in the air. Lo and behold, he just came like a dog with his nose down. I was just amazed. I said, “Where is your big brother?” Folks, you got to try stuff. You got to change it up and try things depending on the situation and that situation on that stand, it was a perfect setup. It did work for a young buck coming in.
I usually do something like that. Again, eliminating your own scents is good for that. It’s good to have a pair of scent-free rubber boots on if you’re going to lay trails stuff like that. Try not to get you touching the brush and all that other things too. You’re trying to make sure as you drag a scent line along, that you’re not leaving any of your scent behind as you’re doing it.
Everyone, if you’re hunting anything, a hunt rubber boots, there’s a lot of great brands out there. If you’re hunting whitetails, you need to wear rubber boots. That’s all I’ll say because there’s no way in any other product or how they’re put together components that will help you more than a good pair of rubber boots. Your thoughts on that, Brian?
I’ve hunted in three years, just a cheap old pair of rubber boots, you know your feet are going to cross some water. The best thing to hold it in is a pair of rubber boots. If you’re slogging, if you’re watering and all that, because as soon as you get your boots water logged or something like that, that scent is coming out with that water too. I just haven’t found anything that works as good as a pair of rubber boots that gives you somebody wearing at the dairy farm. They’re just perfect. They’re easy to get odor off of. A few spray those down with no-scent product, they’re going to have no scent on them. One piece of warning on some of those rubber boots, if you’re using some ozone machines there, watch out. Your ozone will eat away the rubber and some other materials there. Then again you shouldn’t need it. Clean them up, wash them with water and then put some little scent down before you go out there and they’re great for being scent-free.
All you dairy farmer out there or anybody has been around the farms, chicken or hogs or it doesn’t matter. It’s the same boots you buy at Big R, Fleet Farm or any place like that. You don’t have to spend X hundreds of dollars on boots. There are some manufacturers who make great boots. I get some other product. Rubber boots work and barn boots are a perfect fit.
Save your money on the boots, but spend it on some good socks.
Talk to me about why you started Lucky 7 brand and give our listeners some background on your hunting experiences with your products?
I’ve been hunting since I was a kid. I started out bow hunting. Back in here, it was legal when you turn twelve years old. I used to go out earlier with my father and the neighbor guys. I’d go out and sit with them. As soon as I was old enough to hunt, I had a bow and I was out there. A lot of the products over the years, I’ve seen them and I liked playing with them but I always felt I could do something better. I’m a math guy by nature. I’m an engineer. I love numbers. Anything with numbers that has to do with it, math, genetics, chemistry, all of it is a hobby of mine in some fashion. I started playing with some of these scents and the chemistry that goes with them.
I just knew I could do better than that was out there. It started with our mineral product, Lucky 7 Trace Mineral Attractants. They like it for the salt, but there’s also other things you can do with that. There are other attractants you can add to it to make salt better. There are other things you can put in there, the trace minerals and stuff to make the deer healthier and not take away from it the attraction. Little chemical reactions you can create that put the scents into the air and they could travel long distance in a mineral product and that’s what we do with ours. All those things are just ideas I had. I had a family farm to play on. I do it all year round.
In middles of hunting season, your mineral sites are great in the spring. I played with those different things and I saw what natural things worked. Playing with apples and finding out they make better turkey bait than they do deer bait. Playing with back then what they called deer cocaine. Seeing how they like that, but we could improve on that. That’s why I wanted to start it. The secondary thing was that I had my own daughter. Before I started the company, I’m still playing with the stuff and I thought, what better way to kill a couple birds with one stone there.
I got to show my daughter how to start a business, to run a business, how to have better customer service. How to have great products, how to care about what you’re doing. I have a little money to go in her college fund as we did this. There were quite a few reasons, but in the end, we found that as I got older and stuff, I’ve had more things to do. I had less time in the woods. I thought I can help other people and their kids get the most out of the time they could put it in the woods. It seemed like a good idea to me and that’s what we did.
One thing with all these scent is you must always control your own scents too. Share on XHow many years have you been doing this, Brian?
It started about when I was twelve. I started hunting and I started playing with that stuff. I’m a real Math geek. Chess club, math team, that guy there. I was very good at school, very good at numbers. I started right away. I’m always thinking how I can do something better. It began with those simple deer attractants when I was a kid. Once I got older and had my education behind me and stuff and more background, I wanted to protect it at that point. It’s a good way to make money. Who doesn’t want to make money in their hobby? Everything comes together right there. It’s great to help other people. As a side, I work with Heroes Hunt for Veterans. I donated scents to them every year and being able to help them and seeing the smiles and it puts on their faces when they get those big deer and then help them out. It’s just worth it.
How do people get a hold of you? Please give us your website, your email address. I recommend people not giving their phone out unless it’s an 800 number, but tell people how to get a hold of you?
The easiest way to go to www.NelsonCreekOutdoors.com. Our link to our store is there. We have links to our Facebook page, links to Twitter, links to YouTube videos that we make to help people use our products better and reviews of other people’s products as well. Trail cameras and stuff. Then I’m starting to combine the two together. How do to use the scent with a trail camera and stuff like that. Basically, from that main site NelsonCreekOutdoors.com, you can pretty much find everything we do online.
You’re in Central Wisconsin, you got a hunting land up north, what’s the prime rut dates that you’ve seen? Now, you said October 10th is the beginning that you’ve seen some activity where some older does come into heat, then there’s the major rut and then there’s the second rut where some young yearlings that are sexually mature, going to estrus and they get bred late in the year. Let’s talk about those three specific dates that you found in your career.
The main rut here in Wisconsin, it had some difference a little bit between the way up North and way down here by a couple of days. I always go by the weekend the closest to November 7. That works out pretty good for us in Wisconsin. That’s when the ruts going to be. It is triggered by phases of the moon. When they go into peak estrus and stuff. If you get yourself a moon face calendar, look at the weekend of the 7th and you can find the absolute peak if you want to.
You use just the moon phases, if it’s up or under or full or waning or waxing and all that. You put that into the process and then work out the factors?
You can find out pretty well within a day or so when the peak rut is going to happen. The other way to do it is just the figure out when you get some time off work. That’s probably more important than the moon or anything else. It’s not that difficult. The weekend of the 7th tends to be the peak of the right here. It’s usually within three to four days of that every year. Then those other alternative ruts just backup or go forward about 28 to 29 days and you’re going to find that those extra ruts are going to happen at those times too.
We’re coming up to the time that you can give shout outs to your Pro Staff or any other people you want to or people that support you. You did mention the Heroes Hunts.
Heroes’ Hunt for Veterans, they take out disabled veterans. It started as a small group and it’s grown. They’re out almost all the time at this point, taking out veterans hunting. We’re lucky enough to be able to have gotten far enough where we can donate scent to them every year and help them out with other events. They’re a great organization. Definitely look them up on the internet there and visit their site and if you can, you can make a donation because it’s worth it. We started the recording here. He’s almost unofficial Pro Staff here because you don’t see them on a lot of videos or anything, Jim Schmitt. He just had a triple bypass surgery here this past week. He is home and doing well thankfully.
I’ll give a shout out to him. Without him, there’s a lot of stuff that wouldn’t exist. In fact, one of our hottest products right now, a Whitetail Miracle is a lot due to him. He has a farm not far from here on the eastern border of Wisconsin in a suburby area. We tested a lot of the food base scents out on his property there and doctoring up different things. To work on to see if it was there. Luckily, you could bait over there in Fond du Lac county. He was a good one to have because they slowly closed the state up. It’s getting harder and harder to find spots to do it.
He shot some deer over our products there in fact last year. I think it was a ten-pointer he got with the crossbow hunting with at least one of the recipes of what became Whitetail Miracle. Without his invaluable testing and comparing, he is our blind study guy., We don’t tell him what we’re giving him. He gets a couple of different samples and stuff. What do you like A/B and he’s done a good job for us. Hopefully, he’s back out here hunting pretty soon.
Brian Sparks, thank you so much. Wishing you at Nelson Creek Outdoors and the Lucky 7 Brand all the success. Folks, to use it, go to Brian’s web page and get his email address. What is your email address anyway?
My name is [email protected]. You could also use on our store site and our regular website. We have contact forms to reach me. You can use one of those as well.
I’m thinking of putting out the products that work so you can put it up on your website as testimonials, the success of it and I look forward to harvesting a mature buck over those crystals because I’m enamored with them. I still can see that buck just lighting up 00:38:10 those things and he’s just going, “What is going on?” He couldn’t figure it out.
They have been successful and oddly enough, there’s nothing else on the market like them. It’s a unique product we’ve got there. I thought they’d be cloned but they’ve been out for a couple of years but no. We are still the only ones with them.
Brian, thank you on behalf of all my audience.
Thank you so much, Bruce.
Important Links:
- Nelson Creek Outdoors
- Lucky 7 Love Potion #7
- Lucky 7 Synthescent Doe-In-Heat PLUS
- Ozonics
- Lucky 7 Trace Mineral Attractants
- www.NelsonCreekOutdoors.com
- Nelson Creek Outdoors’ Facebook page
- Nelson Creek Outdoors’ Twitter
- Nelson Creek Outdoors’ YouTube
- Heroes’ Hunt for Veterans
- [email protected]