There is this place
that I hunt because it is close to home, not because it is the best hunting.
It’s state owned land, complete with stocked pheasants and feeble pen-raised quail
and lots of hunters, but the memories go way back, well over forty years, to my
earliest days with a dog and a gun.
Colby in the early morning haze |
That particular blow
down is near the corner of a field where my first bird dog, a young Brittany
male, who at that time knew more about bird hunting than me, located his first
covey of quail. I can still see his eyeballs doing circles in their sockets as
about two dozen quail huddled together six feet from his trembling pink nose.
There's a quail hiding in there |
All three of my wirehairs
have hunted there. My youngest retrieved the first bird shot over her only
three seasons ago. It happened in a logged-over area and I can still see her
prancing back with that bird in her mouth, looking ever so very proud.
There have been a few
golden moments too, like the occasional woodcock twisting up from under my feet,
and even points that produced exploding ruffed grouse, although I never would
shoot one there with their numbers so low in that neck of the woods.
Chara pointing and Colby honoring |
Around every turn and
over every knoll are places that remind me of good times. I guess forty plus years
multiplied times a couple of times a year adds up to a whole lot of…pretty good
fun.