An old pin-on compass. |
Making
a list…matches, lunch, dog biscuits, water, GPS, compass…the list goes on. It’s
going to be an all-day affair, hiking into new bird country far from anywhere.
Images on Google Earth hint of new
coverts. It used to be the dreaming was done over topographic maps and mixed
with a good imagination. Google Earth
works better.
The
two younger shorthairs, Georgia and Juno, will accompany me. Hard hunting the
previous two days will keep the older wirehairs sleeping and content at the camp.
It will just be the three of us, so there will be no worries about boring
someone if there aren’t the birds we’re hoping for.
The
woods seems bigger when I’m there with just the dogs and miles from the
pavement. Damp leaves silence our steps as we follow a straight old logging
road through maples and birch and up a small rise. With the tall straight
maples and hills in the distance it definitely feels like New England.
An
old pasture, abandoned decades ago, opens up in front of us. The empty blue sky
between the rounded hills to the east and west indicates the direction to go.
One sixty-two on the compass, remember that for when the trees hide the hills.
Georgia. |
On
the far side, beyond towering poplars, the land dips down until it enters
softwoods and flattens out. Georgia dashes along where the two forests meet and
then she turns to stone.
Hurrying
over, a grouse flushes far ahead.
Calling
them in, the girls lead into the softwoods. We hunt to the east, finding the
edge where the softwoods and hardwoods meet, and then work toward the south
again. Juno bumps a grouse, and then a second one rumbles away. An almost
imperceptible old logging road angles ahead and to the right, barely kept open by
frequently traveling moose. We follow to another opening.
The
ground is wet and the grass thick, almost waist high. We work back into the
woods to circumnavigate on firmer ground. Where another logging road comes down
the hill a yellow sign with a black arrow marks the turn of a snowmobile trail.
Near a cluster of young firs the dogs get birdy.
Georgia
freezes. Juno copies. Stepping around the trees to the right the bird flushes
to the left.
The
snowmobile trail heads the right direction, so we follow under dark softwood
trees where it feels like a tunnel. Soon a third opening exposes the blue sky. The
ground is firmer, so we step out into the sunshine.
An ancient apple tree. |
A
tall white pine over a small knoll looks familiar. Beneath the tree is a little
stone-lined cellar hole. I’ve been there before, hiking in from a rough logging
road to the south. Two young wild apples stand near high-bush cranberries where
the forest meets the ancient field. It is grouse country.
An ancient stone wall. |
We
follow the old road through hardwoods to a familiar wood bridge that’s maintained
by a snowmobile club. Under us a stream hisses into the valley and it looks
like woodcock country. Georgia and Juno stop in the rushing water to drink.
From there it is only a couple of miles to where I had parked years earlier to walk
in there from the south. Slipping off my gunning vest, I fish a sandwich from a
pocket and settle against a log to share lunch with my girls.
We’ll
follow the stream down to where it meets the softwoods and then hunt the edge
back, but first I’ll let the sun warm my face.
My
adventures used to be ten days long, sometimes even ten months long, but now
aren’t even ten hours long, yet I seem to appreciate them more than ever. And
at the end of the day, a hot shower and ice cubes for the scotch make them seem
so civilized.
Woodcock country.... |