I
hunted a place today that I used to hunt every year, but it has been three or
more years since my last visit. Some of
the trees are noticeably bigger and areas of underbrush have disappeared from
the lack of sunlight. Someone has kept the old two-track tote road open and the
streams still cross in the same locations. Every mud hole or puddle in the road
looked exactly like I remember it.
For
ten years or more I hunted that covert once or twice each year. A lone post
used to stand in a soggy meadow where old logging roads converged. That post
disappeared a half dozen or so years ago. Red twig dogwood once grew along the
side of that meadow, but recent logging erased that. It’s embarrassing to think
about how often I flushed grouse from that dogwood only to see them disappear
into spruce across the gully before my gun even fired.
One
year I hunted up to where the forest ended to the east at a clear cut and
started walking back the road I had hunted up. After passing a maple the
diameter of a basketball a grouse rocketed back away from me at an angle that
kept that maple between him and me. Ten minutes before I’d walked by that same
tree, where did he come from?
I
used to walk up the hill from Camp Grouse to get there. It was a long trek, but
usually ruffed grouse could be found along the way, sometimes several and a
woodcock or two among young hardwoods. Those hardwoods are much bigger now and
the woodcock have been absent for years.
Back
when my old girl Chara was still learning her ropes, we had almost reached that
meadow and she locked up on point beneath a low-limbed spruce. Scurrying up I
literally could see a grouse running away from her. The young dog couldn’t take
the insult and bolted after the bird, no shot was offered. In years to come she
would learn about relocating and become an expert at it.
On
opening day about eleven or so years ago I hunted up the hill with Chara and a
pup named Colby. Chara pointed right next to that meadow with Colby backing. I
walked in, flushed the bird, shot as it disappeared into the colorful fall
foliage, and had no idea if I had hit it. About two minutes later the dogs came
back each carrying a wing. Walking toward where they had come from I found the
breast of a ruffed grouse. Fortunately, retrieves since then have been less
contentious.
Today
we didn’t find a single bird, but around every bend I recalled a memory. That
little piece of the planet will always be special.
Sunday, November 22, 2020
Hunts x Years = Memories
Monday, November 2, 2020
The Old Dog
She
is twelve years old this year. She walks with a hobble and her hearing is
almost nonexistent. Eyesight has never her strong suit and sometimes it is just
plain hard to get her attention. But Colby has heart.
For
the last week or two Colby has stayed home while the younger dogs hunted. It is
easy to justify. She falls often when she’s in the woods and sometimes needs
help getting over fallen trees or up steep inclines. It is not easy being an
old dog. Yet the desire to hunt is as strong as ever.
Today
we took her and our two younger dogs out on the logging roads of the big woods,
up near where I logged forty-five years ago. The first hunt followed a nearly
level side road to an abandoned logging yard. Up beyond the weed chocked yard,
Maggie, our four year old, pointed a covey of four or more grouse. On my
approach they exploded in every direction. Somehow Colby found her way up on to
that knoll and bounced around under those treetop grouse with the younger dogs.
Walking back out the grown in road Maggie, our four year old, pointed, with our
pup Mollie and the old girl Colby backing. Pretty neat. No bird was found, but
a few steps further on two flew from a tree.
Colby
doesn’t get far from the roads on her own, but she hunts hard along the edges.
Down the road a piece we hunted around another logging yard and then up another
two-track tote road. The younger dogs worked the woods on either side, while
Coby punched holes into the woods, but mostly followed the easier walking of
the roads.
On
one of the day’s last little hunts, Maggie locked up about fifty feet into the
woods with our pup backing her. Both were in the classic front-foot-up pose. Colby
walked from the grassed over logging road about fifteen feet into the shade of
the softwoods to back too. She certainly has heart.
Now
she’s sleeping on her bed with a whole new set of memories to dream about. Her
muscles twitch and soft sounds come from her throat. I’ll be heading to bed
soon too, hopefully with a full set of new dreams too.