It was a few years back, I had been thinking about it since the previous year, when I drove by the gate and noticed a partridge in the road about a hundred yards away. We were miles from anywhere on logging roads that day, so I pulled over, let out the dogs, and grabbed my gun to see if the dogs might point that bird.
That road went on
around a long bend to the left, apparently following the edge of softwoods
growing in a boggy area. On the other
side of the road was a cutting, probably ten years old, maybe younger, gently
sloping uphill. It was late in the day,
the last day of our week-long hunting trip, so we didn’t go far, but I knew
there was country to explore.
Often during the next
summer I studied the area on Google Earth, looking for softwoods, streams, and
fitting the topography into the cuttings.
Frequently I would measure distances to get everything in prospective,
trying to plan hunts that would explore the most productive looking country. Finally, fall arrived.
I parked in an
abandoned logging yard not far up that road and let the two wirehairs and the
young shorthair out. Three dogs? I love pandemonium. Light rain fell and the temperature wasn’t
much over freezing. Wherever the ground
appeared flat, water puddled from the almost steady rain of the previous
week. But it was the first day of my
annual hunting week and life couldn’t have been better.
We worked the
edges of the softwoods and mixed cover, working the high side of the logging
road and heading up further into the forest.
No birds. A couple of miles or so
from the truck, and starting to get quite wet, I convinced my girls to hunt the
low side of the road back toward the truck.
Well down the
slope and far from the road, Chara, the older wirehair, started to get birdy
among a mixed stand of mature fir and red maples. A woodcock bolted up the hill.
We followed, hoping to find that
woodcock again, and soon Chara’s tail started to blur as she sorted out the
scents. Colby, the younger wire, picked
up the scent too, while Georgia, the young shorthair, dashed about further down
the hill, unaware what the other two dogs were up to.
Chara at her best. |
Chara froze. It didn’t look like partridge country, not on
a rainy day anyway, with tall maples and yellow birch trees, so I thought she must
be marking the woodcock we had flushed before.
I did my best to hurry over the squishy ground. Colby noticed Chara and stopped in her
tracks. You got to love that dog.
A partridge rocketed into the air and
flew diagonally up the hill, gaining altitude all the way, launching far ahead
of the dog and well out of range.
By that time water had found its way
into various inner parts of my clothing and my legs ached from trying to find footing
on the lumpy water-logged ground. We
hunted back up toward the road, with its easier walking, and headed toward the
truck.
It certainly was rugged country and we
would be back.
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