"I would like to reserve a day to take my old neighbor, Levi, snow goose hunting," my brother Gary asked me.
"You bet, let's make sure there are some geese around. I'll let you know," I replied.
That day had arrived. I called Gary that evening to hear a "bull frog" sounding brother.
"Oh man, I'm deathly sick, but let's do it anyway. We'll meet you at Wayne's farm at 6:00am.
"I'll give Randy a call see if he wants to come with us as well," I told Gary. Randy, being a good friend who was also wanting to try his hand at snow goose hunting.
Gary and Levi were waiting when I arrived and Randy drove in while we were meeting. Gary was very sick, but was game to give it the old college try.
Snow geese begin dropping in the moment shooting hours rolled in. Big flocks soared overhead squawking in a combine roar.
We would crouch in the blind and watch as white cyclones formed in the sky above us. Down, down, down they would circle slowly narrowing the gap of shooting range.
The first big flock we shot into I heard a yell down the blind and though something had happened to one of the guys. I looked and Levi was just pumping his fist in the air and shouting his excitement. He had nailed the first snow goose of his life.
Flock after flock of snows dropped into the decoys all day. We were shooting and shooting, the barrels of our shotguns so hot we could hardly touch them. Poor Gary was just hanging on with his flu bug, knowing that this was the best shoot of the entire year.
Our boxes of shells were melting like the polar ice cap...
"We might have to make a run to town for more shells," Gary commented as he stuffed the last of a box into his smoking gun. Levi nodded the same.
"I've got a few boxes left here," I commented, "We'll shoot till we all run out. Randy also had some he could loan.
A big flock started building overhead. We all crouched in the blind.
"Look! Two blue geese in this flock!" I whispered to the guys.
"Let's make sure we get the blues," I commented, "Don't worry about shooting your lane, just get the blues!"
We always try to shoot our "lanes", meaning each hunter shoots the birds in front of his position in the blind. The guy on the right, takes the right side of the flock. The guy on the left takes the left side. The guys in the middle take the birds in the middle of the flock. This works great in insuring that we don't double on the one bird that seems closest and easiest.
The big flock of snows dropped into range and looked so good.
"Let them make one more circle," I whispered down the blind. I wanted those blue geese to be well withing range before we jumped up to shoot.
In Idaho there are not many blue geese mixed in the white snow goose flocks so it is very rare that we even have the chance for one, let alone two.
"Ok, get your doors ready..." I whispered, my gaze glued to the big flock of birds dropping into the decoys. The flock was coming from my end of the blind and I wanted to make sure Gary and Randy had birds to shoot on their end.
"Wait, Wait... Now! Get em!" I shouted.
I dropped my door and pulled ahead of one of the blues and fired. It fell instantly. I swung my gun for the second one and saw it was already down. I switched to the white snows and started banging away at the quickly receding flock.
I hear a huge whoop in the blind beside me and no more shots from Levi.
"What's wrong," I quickly asked looking away from the flock of snows to Levi. He was Pumping his fist, a grin from ear to ear on his face.
"We got them! We got both of them!" He shouted.
I watched a snow goose sail into the Snake River just outside the decoys and quickly let Halibut off the leash she was tied to.
"I'll take the four wheeler and the dog and get the bird in the river," I shouted to the guys as I ran for the four wheeler.
Levi raced into the decoys in search of the two blues.
Halibut made two incredible retrieves swimming nearly across the big Snake River on just hand signals to get the two snows out of the river.
Once back at the blind, I found the boys high-fiving each other. We had both blues and several snows in the blind.
Randy and Gary said that they had raised out of the blind looking for the two blue geese only to find that they were not there. Levi and I had made good shots and dropped them instantly. I'm sure Gary and Randy could have gotten more snows if they had not been looking for the blues.
We shot most of our shells this day having the best shoot of the entire season. Gary toughed it out with his sickness but decided to leave at just after noon. As we drove out of the field there were still flocks of snow geese circling overhead.
"I'll get them tomorrow," I told Gary over the phone as we drove away. Little did I know that this was the migration and those new birds just kept pushing on North and that was the end of the big shoots for the season.
What a day of hunting that was.
I live for those great days of skies filled with birds. The taste of Adrenalin from such a noise of hundreds of birds dropping in on top of us.
Each season I hunt it seems I put in an entire year for that one magical day. Gary, Randy, Levi had just shared that day with me.
Levi with the two blue geese
Gary and Levi with the days shoot
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Snow Goose Hunting With The Boys
"Can you save a Saturday for me?" my Nephew Luke asked me, "I want to bring a couple of my hunting friends to shoot Snow Geese."
"You got it," I quickly replied and with that had a Saturday saved for him and his buddies. "There are five doors in the blind so fill it if you want." I said before hanging up.
The Saturday rolled around and I was excited because there seemed to be some new snow geese moving into the area.
I was untarping the four wheeler when Luke rolled into the parking area.
"Ready for the day?" I said as Halibut the dog raced around our feet in pure excitement.
"Oh boy are we," came the quick reply. I met one of Luke's friends I'll call Henry (probably because that is what everyone calls him) and later a friend named Adrian... same deal with his name. I sure Wouldn't want to embarrass anyone here... oh wait, maybe I would.
We loaded decoys and batteries on the four wheeler, stacked guns and lots of shells around batteries and off we drove to the blind. We could hear the roar of hundreds, or maybe it was thousands of snows on their resting area ponds in the distance. It might be a good day.
We quickly set out the decoys and got the vortex machines spinning, cranked up the sound system (I promised the boys music all day, but failed to tell them it was snow goose sound tracks playing on the mp3 players)
Shooting hours found us a little behind. I had planned the morning with four of us setting up decoys and it ended up being three instead. One of the young men's dad insisted his son sleep in order to play baseball later in the day. I am impressed that there are still some great young men who obey their parents in their high school years. we hear so much about the trouble kids, but there are still some very good guys out there.
We were decoying geese and trying to guide Adrian to our parking area by cell phone, as he drove in Luke raced over on the four wheeler to retrieve him.
At last we had the blind in order and the guys ready for action.
The first bird in was a single the made the fatal mistake of circling right over the blind. A barrage of shotgun fire had our first goose of the morning in the blind.
It wasn't long until another single bird came sailing over wings locked on the decoys.
"Ok boys," I whispered get ready we'll take him on the next pass. The white goose was dropping quickly into the decoy spread and coming right over the blind. I didn't even reach for my gun, as I knew the boys had this one in the bag.
"Take him now!" I shouted watching the boys spring into action.
It sounded like a war broke out. boom, boom, boom... and boom, boom... the crash of gun fire seemed endless.
And the goose? he just kept flying! Right out of the decoys and into the happy distance.
I looked down the blind at the three young men. All stood in disbelief.
"No Way! Impossible! Can't be!" I kept hearing over and over as they reloaded their guns.
I had a good laugh at their expense. I would never tell them how many times I had a sure thing in my hands only to watch it fly away untouched. That is the thrill of the hunt. If you got something every time you pulled the trigger it would become very boring. It is never boring with me shooting!
The boys made up for it on the next goose that came in and had a pair in the blind.
Adrian had to take off just when the best flight time was beginning to make it to his baseball game.
"Hey, we'll think of you while we are shooting!" We teased as he headed to his car.
Luke, Henry, and I did our best to make Adrian feel bad about not being there. We shot as many geese as we could, just for him, of course!
The boys had a good shoot that morning. If I remember right the boxes of shells were looking pretty thin by the time they had to leave. We had shot and shot, missing more than we hit, but sure having fun trying.
We stacked the snows up at the end of our morning hunt and had a good total of ten with us not counting the two Adrian took with him.
I wish I could have taken the boys many more times but the season is so short and the boys had baseball starting so that was our time.
I hope times in a blind will ignite a fire within for the outdoors. It seems like they are starting down that road but there is so many distractions for our youth now days. Most of it is in sports like baseball, football, and then the endless computer games. Hunting and fishing seem to be placed on the back burner in favor of these other interests.
My life has revolved around the outdoors, so much that my entire living is made in the outdoors.
I must say it was a great day with the "Boys".
I feel confident that we have a great group of young men making their way into the real world.
"You got it," I quickly replied and with that had a Saturday saved for him and his buddies. "There are five doors in the blind so fill it if you want." I said before hanging up.
The Saturday rolled around and I was excited because there seemed to be some new snow geese moving into the area.
I was untarping the four wheeler when Luke rolled into the parking area.
"Ready for the day?" I said as Halibut the dog raced around our feet in pure excitement.
"Oh boy are we," came the quick reply. I met one of Luke's friends I'll call Henry (probably because that is what everyone calls him) and later a friend named Adrian... same deal with his name. I sure Wouldn't want to embarrass anyone here... oh wait, maybe I would.
We loaded decoys and batteries on the four wheeler, stacked guns and lots of shells around batteries and off we drove to the blind. We could hear the roar of hundreds, or maybe it was thousands of snows on their resting area ponds in the distance. It might be a good day.
We quickly set out the decoys and got the vortex machines spinning, cranked up the sound system (I promised the boys music all day, but failed to tell them it was snow goose sound tracks playing on the mp3 players)
Shooting hours found us a little behind. I had planned the morning with four of us setting up decoys and it ended up being three instead. One of the young men's dad insisted his son sleep in order to play baseball later in the day. I am impressed that there are still some great young men who obey their parents in their high school years. we hear so much about the trouble kids, but there are still some very good guys out there.
We were decoying geese and trying to guide Adrian to our parking area by cell phone, as he drove in Luke raced over on the four wheeler to retrieve him.
At last we had the blind in order and the guys ready for action.
The first bird in was a single the made the fatal mistake of circling right over the blind. A barrage of shotgun fire had our first goose of the morning in the blind.
It wasn't long until another single bird came sailing over wings locked on the decoys.
"Ok boys," I whispered get ready we'll take him on the next pass. The white goose was dropping quickly into the decoy spread and coming right over the blind. I didn't even reach for my gun, as I knew the boys had this one in the bag.
"Take him now!" I shouted watching the boys spring into action.
It sounded like a war broke out. boom, boom, boom... and boom, boom... the crash of gun fire seemed endless.
And the goose? he just kept flying! Right out of the decoys and into the happy distance.
I looked down the blind at the three young men. All stood in disbelief.
"No Way! Impossible! Can't be!" I kept hearing over and over as they reloaded their guns.
I had a good laugh at their expense. I would never tell them how many times I had a sure thing in my hands only to watch it fly away untouched. That is the thrill of the hunt. If you got something every time you pulled the trigger it would become very boring. It is never boring with me shooting!
The boys made up for it on the next goose that came in and had a pair in the blind.
Adrian had to take off just when the best flight time was beginning to make it to his baseball game.
"Hey, we'll think of you while we are shooting!" We teased as he headed to his car.
Luke, Henry, and I did our best to make Adrian feel bad about not being there. We shot as many geese as we could, just for him, of course!
The boys had a good shoot that morning. If I remember right the boxes of shells were looking pretty thin by the time they had to leave. We had shot and shot, missing more than we hit, but sure having fun trying.
We stacked the snows up at the end of our morning hunt and had a good total of ten with us not counting the two Adrian took with him.
I wish I could have taken the boys many more times but the season is so short and the boys had baseball starting so that was our time.
I hope times in a blind will ignite a fire within for the outdoors. It seems like they are starting down that road but there is so many distractions for our youth now days. Most of it is in sports like baseball, football, and then the endless computer games. Hunting and fishing seem to be placed on the back burner in favor of these other interests.
My life has revolved around the outdoors, so much that my entire living is made in the outdoors.
I must say it was a great day with the "Boys".
I feel confident that we have a great group of young men making their way into the real world.
Luke, Henry, and Halibut with the days harvest
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Fishing With Dad
"It looks like the wind might drop enough to allow us to fish tomorrow," I said to my parents over the phone. "Dad, would you want to go fishing for perch and crappie tomorrow?"
The pause was not very long. "Sure, I'd be up for that," dad replied.
I had been vacationing in Idaho for nearly a month chasing the fickle snow geese. I had to bump my plane tickets out one more week just to get a day without wind.All the days sitting in the goose blind wishing for wind, and calmness surrounded me. The day the goose season ended the wind decided to blow, and blow, and blow. Go figure.
I had my new puppy riding on the seat beside me when I tuned into the drive way with a lump in my throat. How many times have I picked Dad up for hunting or fishing trips? Hundreds... for sure. We have been fishing and hunting since I was able to hold a gun or a fishing pole. As a child, I strolled behind my dad hunting jack rabbits, ground squirrels and such. We fished bluegills in the ponds around our area, then as I grew and left home, chased bass even taking a stab at the professional circuit. Dad came along to help me pre-fish for those tournaments.
Dad, now pushing 97 years old still up for yet another fishing trip.
I helped him get his warm weather gear out of the closet. Hats, gloves, and coveralls were in order for this chilly trip even though it was to warm up a bit in the day. The boat ride is always cold.
The drive to C.J. Strike Res. seemed longer than usual and we had to slow a couple of times as morning fog banks blanketed the road.
"Man, hope the range cattle stay off the highway in the fog this morning," I commented to dad, peering hard with my one good eye.
So many things have changed through the years. My good vision being one. Loosing your best power eye effects one more than you can know, until it happens to you.
At the lake I help dad into his coveralls and boots. We launch the jet boat. This is also a change. Dad and I went in halves on a jet boat many years ago. We just about wore the bottom out of that craft running lakes and rivers. So many good times were had by so many of us with that boat.
"This will be the first time riding in the new boat," Dad said as I took the tie up line from his wrinkles hands.
I helped him into the boat. It took more time and effort than in all the years gone by. Age is a cruel master to man and animal, taking more than it gives.
I idled the boat through the no wake zone and throttled the boat forward. The big 140 engine caused the boat to leap out of the water. Hali, the puppy was on her first boat ride so I backed the throttle to just a mild speed.
"Wow, this boat is sure solid compared to our old one, isn't it?" Dad shouted into the wind and above the roar of the engine.
"It has tons of power," I shouted back and punched the throttle a bit to show him.
I raced across the quiet lake to our first fishing spot and backed the throttle to an idle. Both of us wiped tears from our eyes, not from crying, but from the cold wind. Both of our noses were running.
"Man, that was a chilly ride," I stated the obvious to dad as I dug out a couple of fishing rods.
I looked at the little man dressed like an Eskimo and again felt a lump in my throat.
I am so aware that this might be out last trip together. I must get back to Alaska and my life up there. One never knows when it will be the last trip with your love ones. Life is so fragile and short.
We fish for a while thawing out a bit, but no fish to be found.
"Let's make a move," I suggest to Dad. I pull the anchor and we race across the lake to another good fishing hole.
"Hey, I've got one!" Dad said more surprised than the fish tugging on the line.
"Alright get it in the boat," I cheer him on.
Dad swings a nice crappie over the side of the boat and I help him get it off the hook and into a bucket of water.
"Good job," I encourage him, "Now if we can just get a half a bucket more of them."
Not another bite for an hour.
"Time to move," I inform Dad again.
We make a long run to the narrows where we have caught perch and crappie for so many years in the past.
I drop the anchor in front of "our" tree. It does not take long before Dad again says, "fish on."
"Ok, now your whipping me badly," I say to Dad, but I'm so proud of him.
I was not sure he would even be able to fish or if he would remember what a fish felt like on the hook. I should not have doubted. I guess it's like a bike, once you learn it you never forget it.
It took me most of the rest of the day to catch up with Dad's lead, but I actually did catch a couple of perch before the day was over.
The fishing was painfully slow, but the great no wind day on the lake was worth it.
Snow geese migrated overhead taunting me that the season was over, I laughed at them and enjoyed the sight of the smokey waves of birds in the clear skies.
I kept asking Dad if he was ready to head for home of if he wanted to continue fishing. Each time he voted in favor of staying longer. I was happy to make the same choice.
A new puppy with all the energy, and an aging Father. The paradox stared me in the face the entire day.
I was thankful for both. For the new puppy, but more for the years that aged both my Dad and myself.
I have little regrets concerning my Dad. We have been such good friends my entire life. Through some very stormy years of my life, I could have been more respectful, more patient, more caring. The turmoil inside carried to the ones I love the most, which is not all that unusual, and through it all Dad was solid as a rock.
On our way back home we see a jack rabbit running beside the road, a memory from childhood. It was like the circle had been completed.
the lump in my throat grew as I watched Dad and Mom's house grow small in my rear view mirror.
I have been blessed by having the best parents I could have had. I am so thankful for them.
Looking back, I have been unbelievable blessed in my life.
Dad with our first fish
Dad fishing dress for the cold
Dad and Hali enjoying the boat ride
The pause was not very long. "Sure, I'd be up for that," dad replied.
I had been vacationing in Idaho for nearly a month chasing the fickle snow geese. I had to bump my plane tickets out one more week just to get a day without wind.All the days sitting in the goose blind wishing for wind, and calmness surrounded me. The day the goose season ended the wind decided to blow, and blow, and blow. Go figure.
I had my new puppy riding on the seat beside me when I tuned into the drive way with a lump in my throat. How many times have I picked Dad up for hunting or fishing trips? Hundreds... for sure. We have been fishing and hunting since I was able to hold a gun or a fishing pole. As a child, I strolled behind my dad hunting jack rabbits, ground squirrels and such. We fished bluegills in the ponds around our area, then as I grew and left home, chased bass even taking a stab at the professional circuit. Dad came along to help me pre-fish for those tournaments.
Dad, now pushing 97 years old still up for yet another fishing trip.
I helped him get his warm weather gear out of the closet. Hats, gloves, and coveralls were in order for this chilly trip even though it was to warm up a bit in the day. The boat ride is always cold.
The drive to C.J. Strike Res. seemed longer than usual and we had to slow a couple of times as morning fog banks blanketed the road.
"Man, hope the range cattle stay off the highway in the fog this morning," I commented to dad, peering hard with my one good eye.
So many things have changed through the years. My good vision being one. Loosing your best power eye effects one more than you can know, until it happens to you.
At the lake I help dad into his coveralls and boots. We launch the jet boat. This is also a change. Dad and I went in halves on a jet boat many years ago. We just about wore the bottom out of that craft running lakes and rivers. So many good times were had by so many of us with that boat.
"This will be the first time riding in the new boat," Dad said as I took the tie up line from his wrinkles hands.
I helped him into the boat. It took more time and effort than in all the years gone by. Age is a cruel master to man and animal, taking more than it gives.
I idled the boat through the no wake zone and throttled the boat forward. The big 140 engine caused the boat to leap out of the water. Hali, the puppy was on her first boat ride so I backed the throttle to just a mild speed.
"Wow, this boat is sure solid compared to our old one, isn't it?" Dad shouted into the wind and above the roar of the engine.
"It has tons of power," I shouted back and punched the throttle a bit to show him.
I raced across the quiet lake to our first fishing spot and backed the throttle to an idle. Both of us wiped tears from our eyes, not from crying, but from the cold wind. Both of our noses were running.
"Man, that was a chilly ride," I stated the obvious to dad as I dug out a couple of fishing rods.
I looked at the little man dressed like an Eskimo and again felt a lump in my throat.
I am so aware that this might be out last trip together. I must get back to Alaska and my life up there. One never knows when it will be the last trip with your love ones. Life is so fragile and short.
We fish for a while thawing out a bit, but no fish to be found.
"Let's make a move," I suggest to Dad. I pull the anchor and we race across the lake to another good fishing hole.
"Hey, I've got one!" Dad said more surprised than the fish tugging on the line.
"Alright get it in the boat," I cheer him on.
Dad swings a nice crappie over the side of the boat and I help him get it off the hook and into a bucket of water.
"Good job," I encourage him, "Now if we can just get a half a bucket more of them."
Not another bite for an hour.
"Time to move," I inform Dad again.
We make a long run to the narrows where we have caught perch and crappie for so many years in the past.
I drop the anchor in front of "our" tree. It does not take long before Dad again says, "fish on."
"Ok, now your whipping me badly," I say to Dad, but I'm so proud of him.
I was not sure he would even be able to fish or if he would remember what a fish felt like on the hook. I should not have doubted. I guess it's like a bike, once you learn it you never forget it.
It took me most of the rest of the day to catch up with Dad's lead, but I actually did catch a couple of perch before the day was over.
The fishing was painfully slow, but the great no wind day on the lake was worth it.
Snow geese migrated overhead taunting me that the season was over, I laughed at them and enjoyed the sight of the smokey waves of birds in the clear skies.
I kept asking Dad if he was ready to head for home of if he wanted to continue fishing. Each time he voted in favor of staying longer. I was happy to make the same choice.
A new puppy with all the energy, and an aging Father. The paradox stared me in the face the entire day.
I was thankful for both. For the new puppy, but more for the years that aged both my Dad and myself.
I have little regrets concerning my Dad. We have been such good friends my entire life. Through some very stormy years of my life, I could have been more respectful, more patient, more caring. The turmoil inside carried to the ones I love the most, which is not all that unusual, and through it all Dad was solid as a rock.
On our way back home we see a jack rabbit running beside the road, a memory from childhood. It was like the circle had been completed.
the lump in my throat grew as I watched Dad and Mom's house grow small in my rear view mirror.
I have been blessed by having the best parents I could have had. I am so thankful for them.
Looking back, I have been unbelievable blessed in my life.
Dad with our first fish
Dad fishing dress for the cold
Dad and Hali enjoying the boat ride
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Hooter Hunting Alaska Style
"You up for a hooter hunt next week?" Matt asked me at coffee one morning. I looked at my lovely wife with a question mark. "Go for it," she quickly said. I think she just wanted me out of the house and trying to get the clouded look off my face.
We planned hard the rest of the week but at the last minute decided the quarter inch every twelve hours rain was not appealing for camping out, and cancelled.
"The ferry schedule is the same next week so lets do it then," Matt informed me after the cancelled trip.
We boarded the ferry at noon with Matt's truck, a friend, Richard, and Matt's two little boys. It was a nine hour ferry ride to the Island of Kupernof, a sprawling South East Alaska Island, covered with brush and old growth trees.
Hooters are grouse that are in the mating season. They perch in the high branches of Hemlock, Spruce, or Ceder trees and "Hoot" for a mate. They will hoot endlessly for days perched on the same branch until a hen displays herself as the chosen one.
It sounded so easy while sipping coffee and eating donuts in the bakery next door.
"You listen for them to hoot and then sneak up on them and shoot them out of the tree," Matt had informed me.
"Cool," I replied, not having a clue what I was getting myself into.
We were also taking some fishing poles to try for some steelhead in the streams that meander across the island. A one trip do it all. How simple.
On the ferry ride Richard informed me of his past hooter hunting experiences. This guy is an avid goat and Dall sheep hunter, so when he talked about hiking 12,000 feet up mountains to find the hooters I began to question my judgment.
"We hunted out of Hanes Alaska and the hooter would be way up in the alpine and on top of the ridges and clear at the top of the tallest trees. Very hard to spot," he casually commented. Hmmm.....
After a 10:00 pm ferry arrival, we hurried off to bed. We awoke at daylight and I took Hali out for her morning potty run. Hoot, hoot, hoot. I could hear all around us in the heavy forest. Hooters!
I came back in all excited. We quickly packed our gear and wedged ourselves in the truck. It was drizzling rain as we drove the back roads in search of Hooters.
Matt stopped the truck and we listened out the rolled down windows. In the far distance we could hear the hoot of several grouse.
"Too far away," Richard informed us. He knew how loud they should be to be close enough to pursue.
We drove up the road to the next place and heard much louder hoots.
"Let's go for that one," we all said.
We grabbed a couple of .22 rifles and Matt's son brought his youth 20 guage shotgun. Hali was beside herself as we headed out into the bush.
Thick brush and heavy laydown logs greeted us once inside the timber. We climbed, bucked brush, and crashed our way for a long time, pausing every so often to listen for the steady hoots of the grouse.
It seemed to be getting no closer even after we busted our way for nearly a quarter mile. "I think that one is across the valley," Richard said. "These hoots carry a long ways."
We bucked our way back to the truck in the sopping wet brush, arriving back soaked and nothing to show for the effort.
Hali was so wet she had to ride in her "dog box" kennel in the back of the truck from then on.
"Need them closer to the road than that one," we all agreed.
The next hooter we heard was right on top of us. We were just inside the tree line when we decided it was above us. We circled tree after tree trying to figure out just which tree it was roosted in. Each time we would decide on a tree, we would move and find it was hooting from a different one.
"These crazy things are ventriloquists," I said to Richard as he glassed the tree tops with his binoculars.
We finally narrowed it to one tree. We Glassed and glassed but could not see the bird. It just hooted and hooted.
I see a big knurle of a tree when I look through the branches of this one," I said to Matt, who was craning his neck looking through his binoculars.
Matt finally came to my location and then announced, "I see it!"
"Where?' I quickly asked. He did his best to describe it to me.
"All I see is that big knaurle up there," I whispered still glued to my binoculars.
Matt pointed to the branch and then said, "You have to look through those pine branches. It is fluffed up and looks as big as a turkey!"
I looked exactly where he was pointing. That was my big huge pine knurle I had been looking at for the past half hour.
"He is facing away from us his tail feathers are all fanned out and wings are kind of drooping past the branch he is sitting on."
It was like magic. The bird came clear in my vision. I had looked at him over and over and had not "Seen" him.
Richard came around to us and made a great shot through the branches and Hali retrieved our first hooter.
That was the one we needed. Now we had a clue of what to look for.
The rain would come in spurts driving us back to the truck where we would wait for it to subside to a drizzle, and we would be off chasing our next hooter.
We had a couple of birds by noon when we passed a steelhead stream and decided to try our luck at fishing.
Hali thought I was throwing fetching sticks each time I would cast so I finally put up my fishing pole and lead her away from the others so they could fish without having a dog swimming around scaring what fish might be there.
Richard was a bit ahead of us when he turned to me and made the sign of an animal walking the river bank.
"What?" I signed back to him
"Bear!" he loudly whispered back to me.
The black bear saunter through a clearing and then disappeared into the woods.
"Sure glad it is black bears here instead of Brownies like around Sitka," Richard said to me later. "I would never trudge around with only a little .22 rifle in brown bear country. I quickly agreed with him.
In the Sitka area, with only brown bears, we always carry a gun large enough to stop a charging bear.
We managed to catch and release some Dolly Vardens but struck out on the steelhead. The little river was very low and that might have set the run back a bit.
We built a fire under a big tree when the rain began pouring again to teach the kids fire building in wet conditions. Matt is good about preparing his little guys for living in Alaska. He constantly was asking them what they would do if they fell into the river, or if a bear would charge, or if they got lost. Good outdoor training. After warming a bit by the fire we stomped it out and headed back to the truck.
We managed five hooters that first day. We opted not to camp out in tents that night as the rain was pouring down by darkness. We drove back to town where we had a trailer a friend let us stay in. We were so thankful for that.
The second day we thought we had the hooters figured out. Piece of cake we told ourselves.
We would drive, stop and listen, then pick the one we thought we could get.
Our first stop we heard a hooter on both side of the road. Matt and his boys took off after one and Richard and I took off after the other bird.
Richard and I closed in on our bird after bucking through a wall of brush and laydown logs. Little Hali was a trooper fighting her way through to keep up with us. She was having the time of her life.
"It should be just over that little rise," I whispered to Richard.
He was ahead of me and stopped suddenly. "Stop! Keep Hali back," he urgently said. We had come on a steep cut to a river flowing below us. One step through the brush and we would have fallen a long distance to the rock strewn river below.
I commanded Hali to stop and stay as we now listened for the hooter.
"That crazy thing is across the river!" Richard exclaimed in almost disbelief. "You've got to be kidding!"
We had to turn around a bust our way back to the truck empty handed again.
Now we were hunting these things for revenge!
The simple "listen for the hoot and go shoot" of the coffee shop had now turned into one tough hunt.
Matt and his boys came back proudly packing a big hooter.
"Did you know there is a river over there?" we asked pointing to the wall of thick trees ranging across the miles.
"These rivers wind all over this island," Matt informed us, making me want to get on Google Earth to see just where these crazy river were flowing. It seemed like they were running in the wrong direction but I guess they just meander around in all direction.
Matt found a road around the river and we parked and headed for the same hooter. We spent hours looking for the bird hooting and hooting above us and never could pick it out. We finally gave up for an easier one.
In the course of two days we found two hooters that we just could not pick out of the tree tops. One was close to the road and we stopped several times thinking we could eventually see him. He had picked out the perfect tree and we finally claimed him a great adversary and left him to his hooting.
It was a great get away from rain soaked Sitka.
We had to get up at 2:20 am to catch the ferry heading back to Sitka. We piled into our sleeping bags with the rest of the ferry passengers at about three in the morning for the nine hour ride back home.
At 7:00 am the ferry gave a car deck call for those owning pets to go and walk your dogs for a potty break. We piled our sleeping bags in the truck and walked Hali for the 15 minutes allowed, then back to the dinging hall for a great cooked breakfast. We played card games with the boys until Sitka came into view.
We spotted deer on the beach, eagles all over the place, seals, sealions, and whales. It is never a dull trip if you enjoy the wilds of nature.
What a fun four days. Oh sure, it was wet and miserable, long boat rides, living one top roman noodles and candy bars, but that is the way of South Eastern Alaska.
Many times during the trip we would discuss how difficult it is to do things in Alaska. Living in the lower 48's is a breeze compared to here. People here are survivors, they are rugged and tough, very independent but also very helpful if you need a hand.
I can now say I'm a seasoned hooter hunter.
Hali with some Hooters (Grouse)
Richard looking for a Hooter
We planned hard the rest of the week but at the last minute decided the quarter inch every twelve hours rain was not appealing for camping out, and cancelled.
"The ferry schedule is the same next week so lets do it then," Matt informed me after the cancelled trip.
We boarded the ferry at noon with Matt's truck, a friend, Richard, and Matt's two little boys. It was a nine hour ferry ride to the Island of Kupernof, a sprawling South East Alaska Island, covered with brush and old growth trees.
Hooters are grouse that are in the mating season. They perch in the high branches of Hemlock, Spruce, or Ceder trees and "Hoot" for a mate. They will hoot endlessly for days perched on the same branch until a hen displays herself as the chosen one.
It sounded so easy while sipping coffee and eating donuts in the bakery next door.
"You listen for them to hoot and then sneak up on them and shoot them out of the tree," Matt had informed me.
"Cool," I replied, not having a clue what I was getting myself into.
We were also taking some fishing poles to try for some steelhead in the streams that meander across the island. A one trip do it all. How simple.
On the ferry ride Richard informed me of his past hooter hunting experiences. This guy is an avid goat and Dall sheep hunter, so when he talked about hiking 12,000 feet up mountains to find the hooters I began to question my judgment.
"We hunted out of Hanes Alaska and the hooter would be way up in the alpine and on top of the ridges and clear at the top of the tallest trees. Very hard to spot," he casually commented. Hmmm.....
After a 10:00 pm ferry arrival, we hurried off to bed. We awoke at daylight and I took Hali out for her morning potty run. Hoot, hoot, hoot. I could hear all around us in the heavy forest. Hooters!
I came back in all excited. We quickly packed our gear and wedged ourselves in the truck. It was drizzling rain as we drove the back roads in search of Hooters.
Matt stopped the truck and we listened out the rolled down windows. In the far distance we could hear the hoot of several grouse.
"Too far away," Richard informed us. He knew how loud they should be to be close enough to pursue.
We drove up the road to the next place and heard much louder hoots.
"Let's go for that one," we all said.
We grabbed a couple of .22 rifles and Matt's son brought his youth 20 guage shotgun. Hali was beside herself as we headed out into the bush.
Thick brush and heavy laydown logs greeted us once inside the timber. We climbed, bucked brush, and crashed our way for a long time, pausing every so often to listen for the steady hoots of the grouse.
It seemed to be getting no closer even after we busted our way for nearly a quarter mile. "I think that one is across the valley," Richard said. "These hoots carry a long ways."
We bucked our way back to the truck in the sopping wet brush, arriving back soaked and nothing to show for the effort.
Hali was so wet she had to ride in her "dog box" kennel in the back of the truck from then on.
"Need them closer to the road than that one," we all agreed.
The next hooter we heard was right on top of us. We were just inside the tree line when we decided it was above us. We circled tree after tree trying to figure out just which tree it was roosted in. Each time we would decide on a tree, we would move and find it was hooting from a different one.
"These crazy things are ventriloquists," I said to Richard as he glassed the tree tops with his binoculars.
We finally narrowed it to one tree. We Glassed and glassed but could not see the bird. It just hooted and hooted.
I see a big knurle of a tree when I look through the branches of this one," I said to Matt, who was craning his neck looking through his binoculars.
Matt finally came to my location and then announced, "I see it!"
"Where?' I quickly asked. He did his best to describe it to me.
"All I see is that big knaurle up there," I whispered still glued to my binoculars.
Matt pointed to the branch and then said, "You have to look through those pine branches. It is fluffed up and looks as big as a turkey!"
I looked exactly where he was pointing. That was my big huge pine knurle I had been looking at for the past half hour.
"He is facing away from us his tail feathers are all fanned out and wings are kind of drooping past the branch he is sitting on."
It was like magic. The bird came clear in my vision. I had looked at him over and over and had not "Seen" him.
Richard came around to us and made a great shot through the branches and Hali retrieved our first hooter.
That was the one we needed. Now we had a clue of what to look for.
The rain would come in spurts driving us back to the truck where we would wait for it to subside to a drizzle, and we would be off chasing our next hooter.
We had a couple of birds by noon when we passed a steelhead stream and decided to try our luck at fishing.
Hali thought I was throwing fetching sticks each time I would cast so I finally put up my fishing pole and lead her away from the others so they could fish without having a dog swimming around scaring what fish might be there.
Richard was a bit ahead of us when he turned to me and made the sign of an animal walking the river bank.
"What?" I signed back to him
"Bear!" he loudly whispered back to me.
The black bear saunter through a clearing and then disappeared into the woods.
"Sure glad it is black bears here instead of Brownies like around Sitka," Richard said to me later. "I would never trudge around with only a little .22 rifle in brown bear country. I quickly agreed with him.
In the Sitka area, with only brown bears, we always carry a gun large enough to stop a charging bear.
We managed to catch and release some Dolly Vardens but struck out on the steelhead. The little river was very low and that might have set the run back a bit.
We built a fire under a big tree when the rain began pouring again to teach the kids fire building in wet conditions. Matt is good about preparing his little guys for living in Alaska. He constantly was asking them what they would do if they fell into the river, or if a bear would charge, or if they got lost. Good outdoor training. After warming a bit by the fire we stomped it out and headed back to the truck.
We managed five hooters that first day. We opted not to camp out in tents that night as the rain was pouring down by darkness. We drove back to town where we had a trailer a friend let us stay in. We were so thankful for that.
The second day we thought we had the hooters figured out. Piece of cake we told ourselves.
We would drive, stop and listen, then pick the one we thought we could get.
Our first stop we heard a hooter on both side of the road. Matt and his boys took off after one and Richard and I took off after the other bird.
Richard and I closed in on our bird after bucking through a wall of brush and laydown logs. Little Hali was a trooper fighting her way through to keep up with us. She was having the time of her life.
"It should be just over that little rise," I whispered to Richard.
He was ahead of me and stopped suddenly. "Stop! Keep Hali back," he urgently said. We had come on a steep cut to a river flowing below us. One step through the brush and we would have fallen a long distance to the rock strewn river below.
I commanded Hali to stop and stay as we now listened for the hooter.
"That crazy thing is across the river!" Richard exclaimed in almost disbelief. "You've got to be kidding!"
We had to turn around a bust our way back to the truck empty handed again.
Now we were hunting these things for revenge!
The simple "listen for the hoot and go shoot" of the coffee shop had now turned into one tough hunt.
Matt and his boys came back proudly packing a big hooter.
"Did you know there is a river over there?" we asked pointing to the wall of thick trees ranging across the miles.
"These rivers wind all over this island," Matt informed us, making me want to get on Google Earth to see just where these crazy river were flowing. It seemed like they were running in the wrong direction but I guess they just meander around in all direction.
Matt found a road around the river and we parked and headed for the same hooter. We spent hours looking for the bird hooting and hooting above us and never could pick it out. We finally gave up for an easier one.
In the course of two days we found two hooters that we just could not pick out of the tree tops. One was close to the road and we stopped several times thinking we could eventually see him. He had picked out the perfect tree and we finally claimed him a great adversary and left him to his hooting.
It was a great get away from rain soaked Sitka.
We had to get up at 2:20 am to catch the ferry heading back to Sitka. We piled into our sleeping bags with the rest of the ferry passengers at about three in the morning for the nine hour ride back home.
At 7:00 am the ferry gave a car deck call for those owning pets to go and walk your dogs for a potty break. We piled our sleeping bags in the truck and walked Hali for the 15 minutes allowed, then back to the dinging hall for a great cooked breakfast. We played card games with the boys until Sitka came into view.
We spotted deer on the beach, eagles all over the place, seals, sealions, and whales. It is never a dull trip if you enjoy the wilds of nature.
What a fun four days. Oh sure, it was wet and miserable, long boat rides, living one top roman noodles and candy bars, but that is the way of South Eastern Alaska.
Many times during the trip we would discuss how difficult it is to do things in Alaska. Living in the lower 48's is a breeze compared to here. People here are survivors, they are rugged and tough, very independent but also very helpful if you need a hand.
I can now say I'm a seasoned hooter hunter.
Hali with some Hooters (Grouse)
Richard looking for a Hooter
Friday, April 1, 2016
Opening Day Snow Goose Hunt
Snow goose season in Idaho kicked off with a bang... well, lots of bangs.
Some of the boys helped me set up for opening day and it appeared like it was going to be a good one as we shot 5 snows while setting out the decoys the night before. We were legal to shoot snows just could not use unplugged guns or electronic calls. That made the next day our official opening day.
Larell, Terry, Luke, and myself packed batteries, sound systems, and decoys from pitch black to the brightening of the morning skies. We were still racing around with last minute set up when legal shooting time sprang upon us.
"Hey guys, get some shells in your guns," I said while connecting battery terminals to the vortex machines. "Any bird in now can be shot at."
I crouched in a tulie (cattail) patch near the blind with my new hunting puppy, Halibut (Hali). I had been working for a month in Alaska trying to get her comfortable with gun shots, but she was still a little too nervous for me to stand in the blind and start banging away over her head. I wanted the first day to be a break in for the pup.
"Peep." The morning stillness was broken by a single peep of a snow goose.
"Single! Coming right in," I whispered to the guys in the blind. "Get this one."
I watched holding Hali as the grey colored goose dropped down to just above the decoys and swooped right over the blind..
Not a shot.
What the...?
"You guys need to shoot the goose," I said above a whisper with a little frustration in my voice.
"It's a speckelbelly," one of the guys whispered from the blind.
"No, it can't be. It is peeping like a snow goose," I whispered back, "Its coming around again. Shoot it!"
The little goose once again swooped right over the blind and not a shot fired. I really wanted it to happen as Hali was glued to the bird peeping and soaring right above us.
The little goose made a circle out past the pond and dropped right into the decoys just a stone's toss away from myself and Hali. Hali was glued to the bird. I did not move as we were right in the open to the goose now.
"Someone bring a gun over here and shoot this goose," I whispered in desperation as loud as I could without spooking the now very wary bird.
It wasn't long until I heard shuffling in the tulie patch behind me. Luke came sneaking to me with his gun.
"Are you going to shoot that goose?" I asked, still holding Hali tightly.
"It is a speck. Can't shoot those now," He replied.
Larell came sneaking through the tulies as well. With him was his trusty pair of binoculars. He handed them to me.
I cranked the focus on the goose. It sure did look somewhat like a speckelbelly goose. But... it totally peeped like a snow goose.
"Ok, I see what you guys mean. It does look a lot like a speck," I whispered to Larell, handing back his binoculars. "Maybe it is a cross?" Meaning one parent a snow goose one parent a speckelbelly. We had never heard of such a thing, but in nature you just never know,
Luke and Larell crawled back into the blind and it was not long before a flock of snow geese dropped out of the brightening sky and into the decoy spread. I held Hali tight and was happy to see the doors drop open and guns come out blazing. The boys even managed to shoot a goose for Hali.
I was a little dismayed to see the grey goose jump out of the decoys and fly right past the blind as the boys blasted away at the snows.
Hali was not sure of the bird on the ground. She sniffed it and nibbled at the wing feathers but would not try to pick it up. That would come in the next few days.
We had a good snow goose shoot the rest of the day, but that first bird still bothered all of us.
I was in bed later that night when my phone chirped that a text had come in. I rolled over to see Larell's name.
It was a picture of the little goose that had landed in the decoys... I mean it looked like the very bird.
"This is a juvenile blue goose," Larell texted to me. "I think we passed up the only juvy blue goose in the history of Idaho!"
A blue goose is classified in the snow goose family and is legal to shoot during any snow goose season.
I laughed to myself as I forwarded the text to Luke. I knew he would get a kick out of that as well, as he has the only mounted blue goose from our group hanging on his wall.
"At least I was not loosing my mind hearing a snow goose sound out of that goose," I texted back to the guys, "I told you to shoot!"
I was just ribbing them. I'm thankful to hunt with a group of guys who would rather pass up the first shot of the season to stay within the law then to jump quickly at a maybe situation.
The season was officially under way. I would hunt for the next 17 days straight and the little brown dog would amaze all of us with her quick learnning skills.
Some of the boys helped me set up for opening day and it appeared like it was going to be a good one as we shot 5 snows while setting out the decoys the night before. We were legal to shoot snows just could not use unplugged guns or electronic calls. That made the next day our official opening day.
Larell, Terry, Luke, and myself packed batteries, sound systems, and decoys from pitch black to the brightening of the morning skies. We were still racing around with last minute set up when legal shooting time sprang upon us.
"Hey guys, get some shells in your guns," I said while connecting battery terminals to the vortex machines. "Any bird in now can be shot at."
I crouched in a tulie (cattail) patch near the blind with my new hunting puppy, Halibut (Hali). I had been working for a month in Alaska trying to get her comfortable with gun shots, but she was still a little too nervous for me to stand in the blind and start banging away over her head. I wanted the first day to be a break in for the pup.
"Peep." The morning stillness was broken by a single peep of a snow goose.
"Single! Coming right in," I whispered to the guys in the blind. "Get this one."
I watched holding Hali as the grey colored goose dropped down to just above the decoys and swooped right over the blind..
Not a shot.
What the...?
"You guys need to shoot the goose," I said above a whisper with a little frustration in my voice.
"It's a speckelbelly," one of the guys whispered from the blind.
"No, it can't be. It is peeping like a snow goose," I whispered back, "Its coming around again. Shoot it!"
The little goose once again swooped right over the blind and not a shot fired. I really wanted it to happen as Hali was glued to the bird peeping and soaring right above us.
The little goose made a circle out past the pond and dropped right into the decoys just a stone's toss away from myself and Hali. Hali was glued to the bird. I did not move as we were right in the open to the goose now.
"Someone bring a gun over here and shoot this goose," I whispered in desperation as loud as I could without spooking the now very wary bird.
It wasn't long until I heard shuffling in the tulie patch behind me. Luke came sneaking to me with his gun.
"Are you going to shoot that goose?" I asked, still holding Hali tightly.
"It is a speck. Can't shoot those now," He replied.
Larell came sneaking through the tulies as well. With him was his trusty pair of binoculars. He handed them to me.
I cranked the focus on the goose. It sure did look somewhat like a speckelbelly goose. But... it totally peeped like a snow goose.
"Ok, I see what you guys mean. It does look a lot like a speck," I whispered to Larell, handing back his binoculars. "Maybe it is a cross?" Meaning one parent a snow goose one parent a speckelbelly. We had never heard of such a thing, but in nature you just never know,
Luke and Larell crawled back into the blind and it was not long before a flock of snow geese dropped out of the brightening sky and into the decoy spread. I held Hali tight and was happy to see the doors drop open and guns come out blazing. The boys even managed to shoot a goose for Hali.
I was a little dismayed to see the grey goose jump out of the decoys and fly right past the blind as the boys blasted away at the snows.
Hali was not sure of the bird on the ground. She sniffed it and nibbled at the wing feathers but would not try to pick it up. That would come in the next few days.
We had a good snow goose shoot the rest of the day, but that first bird still bothered all of us.
I was in bed later that night when my phone chirped that a text had come in. I rolled over to see Larell's name.
It was a picture of the little goose that had landed in the decoys... I mean it looked like the very bird.
"This is a juvenile blue goose," Larell texted to me. "I think we passed up the only juvy blue goose in the history of Idaho!"
A blue goose is classified in the snow goose family and is legal to shoot during any snow goose season.
I laughed to myself as I forwarded the text to Luke. I knew he would get a kick out of that as well, as he has the only mounted blue goose from our group hanging on his wall.
"At least I was not loosing my mind hearing a snow goose sound out of that goose," I texted back to the guys, "I told you to shoot!"
I was just ribbing them. I'm thankful to hunt with a group of guys who would rather pass up the first shot of the season to stay within the law then to jump quickly at a maybe situation.
The season was officially under way. I would hunt for the next 17 days straight and the little brown dog would amaze all of us with her quick learnning skills.
the juvy blue goose
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