The other dogs stayed in the truck, much to their
dismay. Chara, celebrating her fourteenth bird season, traipsed eagerly into
the woods ahead of me.
It was her day, and her hunt. We’d been up in that
country for almost two weeks and Chara had hunted several days, but usually
only for an hour or less each time. Often I had one of the younger dogs with
her to cover bigger country while she hunted closer to the road.
New country for us. |
With her in the lead I certainly didn’t have to
walk fast. It was a new piece for me, not big at all, and I’d driven by it for
years, never giving it any mind. Young hardwoods mixed with scattered softwoods
and small grassy openings mixed in. We followed an old grown-in logging road up
a slope. The maples made it look very New Englandy.
Chara sorted out the scents, taking her time. The
road wound up to the right until it reached a low ridge. Her hind end is weak,
which is always a worry, and looked wobbly, so I turned us back down the hill
through open hardwoods and towards the truck.
She looked determined, sniffing and snorting, not
missing a thing, hunting to the left then working back to the right.
Chara started to get birdy, almost plowing the
fallen leaves with her nose. As so many hundreds of times before, with her tail
just a blur, she sifted through the scent, zeroing in on the bird. That grouse
didn’t have a chance.
Down a slope she went, sometimes backtracking, but
then always moving ahead. Her breath came in gulps and grunts, with head
swinging side to side. The setter people might cringe at the way her nose inhaled
foot scent from between the dropped leaves, but I was mighty proud of her.
Crawling under a fallen spruce, she froze.
As I walked around the backside, she became
animated again, backtracking three or four feet, then marching ahead again.
That grouse was doomed.
She zigged, then zagged, went back, then made a
half circle before trotting on. Into a thicket of dogwood she trailed.
Chara pointing her last grouse of the past season. |
Chara became a statue.
On the far side was a tiny knoll where a few
hardwoods stood. I marched around the red-twigged brush and looked back, Chara
hadn’t moved, but there were no grouse beneath those maples. It must have
walked over the little hump’s crest.
And that never works out well for me.
I took pictures of Chara on point, then started
around the side of the mound, hoping to ambush the grouse, but the thunder of
wings told me he was gone.
Coaxing Chara on, we headed back toward the truck
to rest those weary legs.
*
Chara is still with me, right now sleeping in my
office with her legs twitching in a dream. Maybe she’s dreaming of that last
grouse.
And, with luck, she might hunt a bit again next
fall, but I’m afraid the odds are long. Yet with fourteen seasons behind her,
she has had a glorious life.
No comments:
Post a Comment