The
ankle-deep snow muffles the sound, our feet fall silently. Up the hill the dog’s
muted bells ring. Everything looks different, blanketed by six inches of white,
and the usual way is lost among the softwoods. Steeper terrain over dozens of
deadfalls finally leads to the old tote road cut into to hill.
To
the left leads to favorite country where memories have accumulated over the
last decade. Who would have dreamed that Chara, my older wirehair, would still
be
hunting the last day of her fifteenth bird season? Colby, younger and with
longer legs, is unfazed by the snow. Chara works harder, in a rocking horse
motion, but appears to be having the time of her life. How many years have I
wondered on the last hunt of the season if it might be the last hunt of her
life? What a life she has had.
The
trail leads past softwoods and a small cutting to a gurgling brook, which is a
likely place to turn around and head back, but the softwoods beyond beckon.
Beneath them the snow is less deep and covered with rabbit tracks. Colby hunts further
toward the edges while Chara scours the sides of the old way. A deer walked
that way earlier and dozens of tiny tracks create a puzzle. Beside the lane a moose has
scarred up dozens of maples, probably the same moose that Colby startled in the
driveway a couple of months ago. Further up, where the old road forks, the top
of a giant wild apple tree had been broken up by a bear. Not a partridge track
had been found.
Chara
seems fine, but I worry about her. After I clear the snow from her bell, we
head back. Downhill is always easier. The dogs hunt just as hard as they did on
the way up.
A
different path leads back the final stretch to Camp Grouse. Still not a grouse
track to be found. The dogs don’t seem to mind, they love the sound of the bells
and the rituals of the hunt as much as the kill I think.
I
do too.
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