Oaks Revisited

Wow! Quite a reaction to last week’s piece about my difficulties identifying by sight the different oaks in our forest.

Criticism, advice and gracious hands-on offers to teach me proper recognition of red, white and chestnut oaks came my way in rapid fashion. The feedback came from hunters and gatherers, hikers and foresters, ladies and men. Clearly, it’s high time I put this confusion behind me. Oh my, look what I got myself into by pillorying my ignorance on the public square.

Oh well, like the old trapper at Punkin’ Hollow used to say: “There’s more than one way to skin a cat,” a lesson I learned long ago and have learned to lived by. And the fact is that I already know more than I did a week ago about oak trees, and I never left my toasty study, flames dancing upward like snakes’ tongues in the Rumford fireplace. Ah, praise the Internet, despite the winter layer of fat this type of surfing can build. But, hey, don’t animals need fat to survive winter? Why should we, animals too, be any different?

But wait. Enough self-deprecation. It’s not like I’m totally clueless about the trees in our forest. Actually, I’m not bad at picking out the basic species as I traipse through the woods, trees like oak, beech, ash, maple, hickory, cherry, walnut, butternut, apple and hemlock. There are many other trees, bushes and plants I recognize, but I am by no means a botanist or dendrologist. In fact, I have never taken a course focused on the study of trees and plants. Or, maybe I did and have forgotten. I hated science; too much memorization. But who says you need a formal classroom to learn anything? Myself, I’ve just poked around over the years and picked things up in my travels, including information about trees and plants related to my favorite woodland pursuits. So I guess you could say I know enough to get by, and have done just that for decades, making exciting new discoveries along the way; likely many more before I check out.

I guess I’m no different than most hunters and woodsmen who patrol the forest for work or play. Remember, it was just such a man, a hunter and cordwood merchant no less, who taught me to misidentify white oaks by their bark’s deep grooves and prominent ridges. That was a bogus identification key, one I bared for all to see last week. Several readers were quick to point out the error, scolding that the deeply grooved bark, dark in color, belongs to red (and chestnut) oaks, not whites, which display smoother, scalier bark, whitish-gray in color. Thanks. I needed that. Forever enlightened. On to nature’s next riddle.

My mistaken bark-identification key was “learned” in the past five years, and I accepted it without delving deeper because I trusted the teacher. Prior to that woodland “lesson,” the white-oak identifier I most often used when inspecting a pawed-up feeding area was round, stubby acorns, which I have even tasted for sweetness to confirm my amateur assessment. I have also sampled red-oak acorns, their tannins producing a bitter taste that I suppose you could ignore if really hungry. A Heath forester I respect wrote to confirm that white acorns do indeed tend to be stubbier than reds, especially at the cap. Of course, Internet photos and “Peterson’s Guide to Trees” then cast doubt by showing some elongated white-oak nuts as well.

So it appears that the safest way to identify white oaks is by their leaves. Red-oak leaves are long and pointy; whites are similarly structured but rounded. Then arises another problem, that of chestnut oaks, which have rounded leaves similar to their white cousins. The difference between those two oak species lies in the bark. Judging from Internet photos I viewed, the chestnut oak’s bark has more prominent ridges and deeper grooves than the red. So, if the grooves are very deep, the leaves rounded, the ridges like the widest of all corduroys, you’re dealing with chestnut oaks, said to produce acorns favored by deer over those of red oaks.

Enough!

Off to a couple of interesting observations that appeared among the many responses to my white/red oak dilemma. One, from a South Deerfield chum who spends a lot of time poking around in the woods, said he knew a white oak by sight and has discovered they’re less likely to bear acorns
for some reason; either that, he speculated, or foraging critters snap them up as soon as they hit the ground, maybe even before. Another more comical remark came from a woman who hunts salubrious wild foods and has been searching for white-oak acorns near her hill-town home. She said that, although she has thus far been unable to find white oaks near her property, she did find a beautiful, mature white oak at Arms Cemetery in Shelburne Falls, a prolific acorn producer, at that.

“But I’m not eating those acorns,” she wrote, for obvious reasons.

Well, chubby, gray, burial-ground squirrels are not so fussy and reap the benefits.

A Hidden Gem

A six-foot snow bank at a dead end marked the beginning of our quarter-mile trek through deep, fluffy, toe-dragging snow. We skirted the pile and followed a convenient foot-wide deer path down the wooded trail into a peaceful hollow before ascending to the crest of a gentle hill long ago cleared by and named after the man who built the center-chimney Cape standing frozen in antiquity there.

Because I don’t like to pinpoint important historic sites, let me just say this tranquil hillock rests somewhere in our western Franklin hills, said by an astute 90-year-old friend to be “honeycombed with interesting places and important people.” He knows. An auctioneer and antiques dealer, the man furnished many a country getaway with Queen Anne tables, Chippendale chests, Hepplewhite stands and Federal portraits, all handsome pieces of Americana with fascinating tales to tell. Our destination on this day was such a place kept by such people, transplants all, the best and brightest. Without these preservationists, all that would likely remain today would be an overgrown, stone-clad depression with many more questions than answers; one of too many buried under the canopy of historic landscapes. This one was spared the indignity.

But that’s it for clues. No more. I have learned my lesson. Once, when writing about woods dear to me, I assumed my intentionally vague references would help only a few harmless natives. I later discovered that a bright, misguided transplant from faraway had deciphered the location. I was surprised, even impressed, also reminded that even a little information can be too much. It won’t happen again. Cellar holes, cemeteries and Native paths are worthy of concealment from thieves, snoops and busy-bodies. Why contribute to the degradation of archaeological sites by giving away location? Not me. Maybe I’m selfish, or judicious. Call it what you may. I’m not budging.

Although I was revisiting this newfound treasure trove of local history to retrieve an essay about the dwelling and its stewards — and to examine a large cellar chamber inside the 10-foot-square stone base of the chimney — I also wanted to check the deer sign, which had been plentiful a week earlier during a walk through the property with a genial guide and caretaker. The woman knew from my prose that I loved, even worshipped, upland hardwood forests, and she had such a place to share, one harboring a 300-year-old oak tree that five men could not get their arms around. There are few oaks like it left in our Franklin hills, and even this one, broad and burly, has seen better days.

Interestingly, near that giant oak lay what was left of a small 6-point buck, likely killed and not found during the most recent deer season. Our dogs, three of them, quickly found the skeletal remains left by coyotes. My Springers returned with jawbones as her Aussie Shepherd proudly paraded the small rack and skull plate. My guide, joy in her gait, love of nature oozing through her pores, lugged those antlers for the remainder of our walk and hung them on a peg at home. A trophy of sorts.

Having bemoaned the scarcity of deer sign in woods I knew well during the season, I was surprised by what I had seen on my first visit to this unfamiliar forest. Many deer runs traversed the open hardwoods, and pawed-up foraging patches were prevalent through the oaks. There seemed to be no shortage of deer or turkeys on this wooded slice of upland paradise, forest in the 40- to 60-year range, beautiful open hardwoods with a few ancient behemoths mixed in, their massive limbs flexing their biceps before reaching to the high heavens.

I was curious to see what kind of deer activity we’d find on my second visit, a few days after our first big storm dropped a new layer of snow. Well, it was impressive, deer and turkey sign everywhere, focused primarily on plentiful acorns buried deep on the forest floor, especially under the muscle-bound oaks bordering the ancient road. The humbling trip reminded me once again that I must better learn to quickly and positively identify white oaks, which are less plentiful in our woods than reds but more important to wildlife. I was taught to identify white oaks by their deeply grooved bark, with more prominent ridges than their red cousins. A woodsman who makes his living selling cordwood taught me that distinguishing characteristic, and I accepted it. Another way to distinguish between red and white oaks is the acorns they produce. White oaks grow rounder, stubbier acorns than reds, and the white-oak meat is sweet and succulent. At least that’s what I’ve been told.

I now have reason to question my identification keys. When I pointed out a large roadside white oak near the secluded dwelling we visited, my guide corrected me, saying she had studied its leaves and they were sharply pointed, not rounded white-oak leaves. Hmmmm? Maybe large, old red oaks also have deeply-grooved bark. Can’t say for sure. Hopefully someone will chime in to straighten me out. Maybe it varies. Perhaps I have been misled. I do know that if there are no white oaks available, then deer and turkeys will eat other acorns. But, still, deer and bears, and probably turkeys and squirrels, prefer the sweeter meat of white oaks, and so did the Natives who gathered them for protein-rich sustenance.

I admit I can be lazy when given an excuse. Over the years as I’ve walked the woods looking for deer sign, passing hundreds of oaks along the way, some trees are pawed-up underneath, many are not, and I have assumed without closer inspection that the most aggressively pawed-up stands contain white oaks. When I investigate further, I have often found stubby acorns, even occasionally bite into them to sample their sweetness. It may be time to dig deeper, hone my identification skills to provide one more edge in putting it all together. Google is of little help.

Are not mysteries and riddles intrinsic forest beauties, even in familiar woods, gun or none, one puzzle today, another tomorrow, often related, sometimes not? To me it’s true. And these mysteries of the wild will continue to lure me back, my mangled left knee and flimsy right ankle willing.

Yes, there’s always something new to ponder in the woods, be it tight streamside stonework, a collapsed cellar hole, kindred spirits, or one of nature’s infinite mysteries, all present to make our cognitive wheels scream, our imagination purr.

Whitetail Feedback

Last week’s “What deer?” column drew reader comments, some written, another phoned, all throwing in their two-cents’ worth about the status of our Franklin County deer herd. Not one painted a rosy picture.

The freshest response came by cell phone Tuesday evening around 5. It was Phil Phillips, an old chum from my hometown of South Deerfield. Phillips, his father, brothers and many Phillipses before them have hunted Franklin County for many generations, eyes and ears in the local woods, fields and streams. So his observations are as worthy of attention as anyone’s. He’s passed 60, has lived here all his life and thus has an extended sample period on which to base his opinions; what I would call a credible source, no ax to grind.

Anyway, the incident Phillips wanted to share involved a coyote, a good-sized fawn and a Bernardston golf outing. He wasn’t sure of the date but guessed it was late July or early August, so the fawn was a couple of months old, by that age presumably capable of fleeing danger. The scene Phillips and his partner witnessed left a lasting impression. He only witnessed a brief segment of the chase and actually played an intentional role favorable to the prey, but in his opinion, the young, stressed deer was dead meat.

The scene unfolded in broad daylight on a fairway that skirts the driveway leading to Bella Notte, a hilltop restaurant overlooking Crumpin-Fox Club. Phillips and his partner had teed off and were headed down the fairway in a cart when they noticed a fleeing deer exit the woods and run straight down Broadway with fear written all over it. The animal passed the cart and Phillips knew from the way it was acting that it was being pursued. Curious, he started scanning the woods line and, sure enough, spotted a single coyote running along the edge. The predator tried several times to dart out across the fairway but Phillips did his best to stay between it and its intended path, giving the deer a chance to get away. The brazen coyote was determined, truing several times to beat Phillips to the pass, but Phillips was able to seal off its path temporarily. Finally, the coyote tired of challenging the cart, looped across the road and likely circled back to pick up the deer’s trail.

“That deer had spots but it wasn’t tiny and I would have thought it was big enough to get away,” Phillips said, “but I don’t believe that deer made it. Just a hunch, but it looked disoriented and tired and worn out. I’ve thought about it often and had to call after reading your piece. After all these years of doe permits and cutbacks, you’d think the herd would be getting bigger but it seems to be going the other way. Coyotes must be a factor.”

Phillips is not alone in this opinion. Conventional wisdom among our most experienced woodsmen, ones who can compare what they see now in their favorite haunts to what they were seeing 40 to 70 years ago, don’t hesitate to opine a deer decline. Question what’s left of our dairy farmers — a dying breed that cuts the hay, plants the corn, picks the fruit and harrows the fields — and they’ll sing a similar tune. Meanwhile, the state’s deer-management team assured us that our local deer herd has never been healthier. So how does a simple pedestrian reconcile such a discrepancy of opinion? Confusing, to say the least; to some, downright annoying.

A couple of other respondents, both e-mailers, had interesting observations to share. One was from Conway, the other an Ashfield farmer, both deer hunters with opinions.

First the logger, who knew and had hunted the woods surrounding a secluded trail I elusively described in last week’s column. He wrote: “I would concur with your article about herd count and deer management here in Massachusetts. Living and hunting in Conway since the mid-70s and seeing where we are today doesn’t even come close to where we were then. At that time I worked as a logger and remember as clear as it was yesterday one cold January morning in 1980, snow on the ground a month after the season, coming across a herd of 14 deer in the area you spoke of. They pretty much stood and watched as the skidder went by, not threatened whatsoever. This was not an uncommon sight here in Conway then. Come this time of year, you could not drive at night without seeing deer standing in the road looking for salt and whatever else they could find. It was not uncommon to see 10 or 12 deer throughout the hunting week, maybe does or ones you couldn’t get a shot at. Today, that is not the case, and it is quite a surprise when you do see a deer any time of year. With the report of fewer hunters in the woods, one would think that the numbers would go the other way, but that does not seem the case. Not sure what the answer is. Hopefully there is someone out there smarter than those of us out in the woods.”

This man isn’t sure why deer seem to be scarcer these days, but he speculated that coyotes and bears were contributing to fawn mortality. Many armchair biologists suspect the same, and now apparently there are some scholarly reports citing spring bear predation of fawns. Perhaps more research is needed.

As for the Ashfield man who chimed in, he no longer farms but does hunt his acreage alongside friends who’ve hunted together for many years. He was recently dismayed after completing his second straight deer season with zero kills by his party, and he thinks he understands why.

“Our crew consists of three to six hunters on different days and we have hunted the same area of Ashfield for 25 years,” he wrote. “Up until two years ago, we would take three to five deer a year. I have a landowner’s doe permit because I grew up here on a dairy farm that is no longer in business. … I could go on about what MassWildlife is doing and saying, but I have a little different theory about what’s going on. I call it the Vermont theory. The last two does I took weighed 140 pounds (2007) and 150 pounds (2008). The Gould’s Sugarhouse biologist estimated the second one at 11½ years old. I had noticed then that the groups of deer had very few fawns with them. Everyone says natural predators are the reason but they’ve been around for years and the deer herd was still good. Between 1992 and 2007, hunting was as good as it gets around here. During those years, other than my landowner’s permit, I think our group might have received two doe permits. Because the herd has been mismanaged, there are too many old does that don’t carry fawns. From what I have researched about this situation, these older does will dominate areas, even chase bucks away. By the way, we have not even seen a buck during hunting season for two years. It appears to me that MassWildlife has ruined our deer herd in some areas of WMass by duplicating what happened in Vermont with our herd.”

Remember, this is the observation of a man familiar with animals, having been raised on a centuries-old dairy farm. I have never before heard this menopausal-doe theory but find it interesting after personally witnessing some huge does dragged out of the woods in recent years. It never really occurred to me that these older females were no longer reproductive, but I suppose it could be the case. I’ll have to look into it further. Maybe someone will chime in. I too have seen far fewer “skipper” tracks in the snow in recent years, a complaint I have heard echoed by many hunters bemoaning spring coyote predation.

Maybe there’s more to it than that. Stay tuned.

What Deer?

What to make of the 2010 deer season? That’s the question that’s been bugging me for the past few weeks. Not a scientific analysis. Just trying to make sense of observations I am not academically trained to interpret.

A deer expert I am not. Far from it, in fact. The only kind of field research I know is hunting familiar territory, talking to other hunters doing the same and gathering observations and opinions, always trying to separate the wheat from the chaff, fact from fiction, seldom easy. I only know what my eyes and trusted sources tell me. No more. No less. We all know what we’ve seen and how it compares to other years in the same areas. But who knows which of our conclusions are valid or invalid? So let me just lay it out there? You be the judge.

The impetus for this piece was an interesting night spent at an old Greenfield farm Saturday in the company of deer hunters eager to throw in their two cents worth. We were brewing and sampling tasty ales, not by any stretch of the imagination getting carried away, in a cozy, wood-heated barn chamber. Four or five of the fellas had hunted together and taken a doe the previous day, the final day of blackpowder; another young man had killed two bucks, one a handsome Shelburne 8-pointer. All the men were more than willing to chat about deer season and their impressions of the local whitetail population, which doesn’t seem to be improving despite draconian herd-building measures during the past decade. Our lively little discussion made it clear that I’m not the only one who’s wondering why, after years of conservative antlerless-permit allotments here, the deer population doesn’t appear to be growing. In fact, it seems there are fewer deer in the woods now than 10 years ago. Of course, I may be wrong. Perhaps everyone in the room that night was sadly mistaken. I don’t know. Not a one of us holds a wildlife-management degree, just years of patrolling the same woods, reading the same sign, observing.

Before we continue, I admit I did little deer hunting this year. A Dec. 2 family tragedy set me back and I never really got back into the swing of things. That doesn’t mean I ever totally ignored my favorite haunts, because I did take several challenging 4-wheel-drive reconnaissance missions searching for promising sign in the snow where experience told me I should find it. Guess what? It wasn’t there. As for actual hunting, I got out the first two days and, in perhaps seven hours in the woods, saw six deer, two of them bucks, one of which I shot at. So who am I to complain? There were indeed deer where I hunted. Not a lot, but enough to make sitting in a reliable stand worthwhile. In other woods where I’ve hunted longer and have several established stands that have produced consistent deer sightings, I had trouble cutting a track on a forest floor littered with nutty feed, high in protein. Yeah, I know the experts will say there was too much feed in the woods, thus the deer could have been anywhere. And maybe they’re right. All I can say is that what I found was unusual. Not long ago, when acorns, beechnuts and wild grapes were everywhere in those same woods, deer sign was widespread, including many frequently traveled runs, worn deep and wide into the snow, crossing the forest trails. All I saw this year was a lonely track here and there, nothing to spring a man out of bed in the wee hours and put him in the woods with daybreak enthusiasm in his soul.

My first hint of the current sad state of western Franklin County deer hunting came toward the end of shotgun season’s first week. A friend with more than 50 years experience called bemoaning the disappearance of deer in Conway woods we had hunted many times together. He said he’d been through the smallish parcel several times and there were no deer. None. Pointless to return.

I asked about the woods across the road, and the ridge to south, across the stream? Any shooting there?

A little the first couple of days. Nothing to get excited about.

Hmmmmmm? Where could they have gone? There are always deer there.

True, but not this year.

Like many local veteran deer hunters, my friend attributes our deer decline to coyote predation of spring fawns. This may or may not be true but you can bet that if it is, state wildlife biologists will be the last to admit it. The experts claim coyotes have a negligible impact on our deer population. Amateur woodsmen disagree. The times they have a changed.

Into blackpowder season, my friend gave me another ring. He’d been everywhere, found nothing enticing, was discouraged. Did I feel like accompanying him to the oaks by the pond atop Catamount to see what was happening up there? His uncle’s friend told him the oaks were all pawed up. Always up for a woodland ramble, I drove and we scouted through the oaks, guns in hand, never cutting a track, not even a coyote or squirrel. Perplexed, we departed and took a roundabout route west to another spot on the mountain, parking near a gate across the trail leading to the famous old schoolhouse. We walked the trail a mile or more through an upland oak forest, classic deer country, many acorns underfoot, and cut one track in snow that had been down for three or four days. One freakin’ track! A small one at that. Befuddling.

Puzzled, I suggested we take a ride to the big woods of Conway, where I wanted to drive three miles up a treacherous mountain trail to what I call “The Beechnuts,” if we could make it. Well, we were able to brave the ice and again found one uninspiring track crossing the ancient trail named after a wild, freathered barnyard pest. Imagine that! One lousy deer track in three- or four-day-old snow. I could not believe it. The deer were definitely not there, and they were not crossing a similar trail maybe three miles south, one I had monitored two or three times that week and been astonished by the lack of sign.

My friend phoned me again a day or two later. He had more news, had spoken to an old hunting buddy we often hunted with in the past. Our mutual friend told of a 20-man party he had joined toward the end of shotgun season, led by a notorious gang that has overpowered the same woods for decades. His tale was not one of success. The only reason they had increased the party to such extreme numbers was a previous lack of success moving deer. Well, on this day with their eager army rarin’ to go, it turned out they had too many bodies, so they split up and hunted adjacent parcels, 10 on each side of the road. Twenty experienced hunters with many notches in their belts pushed woods they knew well and no one saw so much as a flag. Not even a distant flash. They couldn’t believe it. Although I am aware that this crew’s hunting routine probably toes the line of illegality, we all know it happens and is nearly impossible to stop. Still, some will say it’s inappropriate for me to mention such activity in print. I disagree, am only using it to support my contention that deer were scarce locally.

By the time all the numbers are in statewide, it is likely we’ll be looking at a 2010 all-weapon harvest in the neighborhood of last year’s, which was down a bit from 2008. Just this week an inadequate MassWildlife press release reported incomplete preliminary archery and shotgun harvests of 3,644 and 4,435, the former a record, the latter a continuation of a downward trend. Who knows how productive the blackpowder season was? Probably around 2,000. But even that harvest has trended downward recently. And remember, state harvest numbers over the past decade have been skewed heavily eastward, reflecting little about our local situation. A significant majority of the deer killed in this state today are taken from Worcester County east, in the suburbs, where the woods are small and young and easy to hunt, especially for bowhunters set up behind shopping plazas and residential neighborhoods, not to mention shotgun-toting groups hunting in unison. The bigger woods of western Mass. are no longer attractive to most contemporary deer hunters, too difficult.

Yep, there’s no denying times have changed, and not for the better here in traditional deer country, where dairy farms and habitats conducive to healthy, burgeoning deer populations have gone the way of the stoneware churn. Whether it gets better or worse is anyone’s guess. But it’ll be interesting to watch, and listen to the professorial excuses.

A Eulogy For My Son

Note: This is the eulogy I read at my son’s Dec. 11 funeral service in Montpelier, Vt. I read it through wet, blurry vision, my voice weak with emotion, and thought I’d share it verbatim.

A dim, waning crescent moon slumped right in the cold southern sky, casting a crooked grin downward as I fed the dogs, stream beating a soothing rattle in the predawn dark. A startling call from the hospital had awakened us. Gary had taken a turn for the worse, was himself waning, and we were scrambling to leave for Burlington, Vt., to be there for our son’s passing. For 76 tortuous days, he had lain in a breathless chamber of hell. It was not for Gary. Tubes and bags and needles and monitors, doctors and nurses, could not defeat the forces of nature. The young man had run his course, was checking out far too young. We never dreamed it would end this way.

So here I stand today, in a place where I am never comfortable, never will be, to thank you for coming and to salute Gary for 28 interesting, at times difficult, years. You don’t know how grateful I feel to have daughter-in-law Debbie and grandsons Jordie and Arie to carry on my son’s legacy. But what is that legacy? I guess that’s why I’m here, to share my conception of who Gary was and what he stood for. I witnessed his birth and his death, was always there to defend him against teachers and administrators, police and prosecutors and judges, doubters all, and I will forever be there for his wife and children, trying to instill in his boys the values most important to their dad. I will listen for his whispers in the wind, the streams, calm, clear, moonlit nights. He will come. I am sure of it. And when he does, I will find him. Where, one can never predict. It could be walking a tidy stonewall along the spine of a hardwood ridge, at the restaurant, on the highway, busting through a thorny alder swamp, or sitting straight and silent in a secluded stand. Yes, Gary will appear suddenly and unannounced, as he often did, and I will be there for him, whenever, wherever it may be. I owe it to my namesake. For years there were two of us, now one: me.

But this is not about me and the terrible loss I feel. It’s about my son and those who meant most to him. There was no better advocate for Gary than his mom, Joanne, my wife, a professional helper of those who need it most. She ardently defended him, stood by him through good times and bad, sat by his side and displayed incredible strength at his deathbed; for months, every weekend, every chance she got, watching her son face long odds while deteriorating in a place he only wanted to flee. I could not have sat there, could not have endured his pleas to go home, his constant suffering. I would have been enraged, could not have coped. But Joey did; Debbie, too. What they did may be more difficult than dying. Yes, more difficult. I believe it. So maybe I am a coward. I was incapable, didn’t want to breathe the viral air in that dreadful, beeping, flashing chamber of hell; would rather be dead than trapped there.

I have many times wished in retrospect that Gary had succumbed to the sudden and tragic death of a ruptured aorta, saving him the indignity of his hospital stay, his destiny controlled by others, cotton restraints tied to his wrists. I guess it was his cross to bear. He lugged it with dignity and grace, must have known from his medical training that it could be the end. Through it all, he fought valiantly, complained little. A man. Amen.

Gary never had it easy, beginning with a difficult birth, annual ultrasound probes, teenage open-heart surgery. He returned to school about a week after that painful surgery. He lived with adolescent insecurity about a scar down the middle of his chest, then adult anxiety that his insidious disorder, Marfan syndrome, would take another bad turn, one that came out of nowhere at the supper table on the night of Sept. 17, the new moon halfway there. A week later, with a large, orange, Full Harvest Moon reflecting off the Connecticut River, emergency surgery was scheduled. The doctors were confident. Gary was scared. We now know his fears were justified. The urgent surgery went bad, proved fatal, too many unpredictable complications.

It’s not fair that Gary left us so young, was robbed of a promising future, ripped from the wife and sons he so dearly loved. He was a loving husband, father and brother, a loyal son and friend, generous to a fault, a provider, bought a home where he thought the schools would best serve his boys. Those who know him best adored him, respected his energy, his honesty. Not long ago, he discovered his voice and started writing songs, performing them at open mikes to wide acclaim. His boys helped him find that voice. He was comfortable singing to them, and they helped him overcome insecurity we have all grappled with. He was just beginning, had inner turmoil and pain buried deep within to lyrically process. We can now only imagine where his singing and songwriting would have taken him. I told my wife before he took ill that it wouldn’t surprise me if he never worked full-time as a nurse. I was convinced he was on his way to becoming a performer, free as a mayfly dancing over whitewater foam, a lifestyle compatible with his unbridled spirit as he found his identity, learned who he was. Now, we can only imagine how he would have grown as a musician given five years, 10 years and beyond. I think it was his destiny — this, the man who couldn’t cope with public school, left at the eleventh hour and cut an alternative path to Landmark College. He lasted there only briefly, just long enough to acquire the academic skills needed to succeed. Then, with encouragement from his mother, he entered a competitive nursing program and earned his degree, excelled while raising a family. That was Gary: independent, defiant and bright, sometimes too intuitive for his own good, definitely too independent. But really, can we ever be too independent?

Maybe it was my fault. Perhaps I should have supported the teachers who complained he was restless, difficult, predisposed to negotiation. But we never backed down when they identified these qualities as weaknesses and problems. We viewed it differently, did not want to kill his spirit, knew he would need it to fight his demons, prevail. So we stubbornly defended our son, said we were proud to raise an individual willing to question authority, challenge trivial rules and regs, state his case. I defiantly told his detractors that no higher compliment could be paid him than to say he was independent. It told me he was no candidate for time clocks, punch cards, assembly lines, piece work and genuflection. It was clear from an early age that Gary needed to be his own boss. I think his music would have taken him there, away from tedious, conventional routine. Of that, I am confident. He had found his voice, had a lot to say. Sadly, it will not be said.

As we gather here today to celebrate a short life, a waxing quarter-noon winks from the sky above, 10 days till December’s Full Cold Moon illuminates the New England sky. That bright moon will not be cold. Not to me. It’ll burst with warm, radiant energy, hopefully ricochet a random stiletto of Gary’s thoughts through my consciousness. Many years ago at an Ivy League school not far from here, I learned a theory of everlasting life that stuck with me. A young professor explained that human thoughts are akin to radio waves our skulls cannot contain. These thought-waves are released into the universe and forever bounce freely about, sometimes infiltrating our personal spheres and reminding us of those who’ve passed. I have grown to believe this, have many times felt it. My antennae are alert, awaiting Gary’s impulses.

I know he’s out there with, still, plenty to say. So speak to me, Son. I’m listening, will try to deliver.

Heaven Sent

This is a tale of perseverance and Thanksgiving, that of octogenarian Richard Phelps, known to his family as “Ritt,” Vermonter to the core, a throwback from way back.

Phelps claims he’s applied for a Vermont moose permit every year since they became available “and they finally gave me one at prit’near 90.” Or, at least, that’s how he put it to me on the phone this week. He described his good fortune a little differently to daughter Patricia Knight of Jamaica, Vt., telling her, “They waited till I was prit’near dead before givin’ me one.” Phelps is 88.

Well, the permit may indeed have come a bit too late for the average Joe. Problem is there’s nothing average about ole “Ritt,” who daughter affectionately describes as “quite a character.” No sir. Ole Ritt knew exactly what to do with his long-awaited opportunity. He capitalized, put healthy, lean, wild meat in his freezer. Yes, less than an hour into that opening-day hunt, he jumped a 4-point, 412-pound bull and took it down with his .308 caliber rifle. Now it’s all cut up and packaged, providing tasty, salubrious fall and winter fare, high in protein, low in cholesterol. Just what the doctor ordered for an old codger, one with centuries-old Massachusetts Bay Colony blood flowing through his streams.

Phelps admits moose “aren’t as hard to hunt as deer,” but said he was happy to get one on his first try. “This one’s very good eatin’, too,” he said. “The big ones are tough. This one’s tender, very good eatin’.”

No stranger to hunting, Phelps has been quite the deerslayer over a long and storied southern Vermont career. The 10-point buck he shot 20 years ago in his hometown of Readsboro, Vt., scored 146.7 Boone & Crockett points, good for No. 52 on the all-time Vermont Big Game Trophy Award Program record book. Asked what that animal weighed, he couldn’t recall, but he thought it went over 200 pounds. “I’ve shot so many I really can’t remember what that one weighed,” he said. “It was the nicest deer I ever shot,” is mounted on his wall. He was 68 at the time of that kill, no spring chicken.

Phelps spent most of his life in Readsboro before moving to his current address in a neighboring Deerfield Valley hilltown called West Dover. Although he didn’t know the Northeast Kingdom territory where he shot his moose, oldest son Gordon did, because he owns a hunting camp in nearby Sheffield, Vt., where they bunked for their extended-family hunt. “An old fella told us there was moose in there,” said Phelps, “so that’s where we went. He didn’t steer us wrong.” Phelps described the site of the kill as “just above Concord, Vt.,” which means he was hunting in or along the periphery of Victory Bog, a veritable moose haven where the density of the Cervidae beasts may be greater than anywhere else in the Green Mountain State.

Once the animal was dressed out and ready to remove from the heavily logged-off wood lot, Phelps’ grandson drove his pickup truck to within 100 feet of the carcass and his tribe dragged it to the truck and hoisted it onto the bed. “Four of ’em put it right up on the truck,” Phelps proudly recalled. “Didn’t seem to bother ’em much, just got it right up there.”

Phelps had ridden a rocky road this year leading up to his eventful day. First his beloved wife of 65 years, Myrtle A. (Ellis) Phelps, passed away on July 2 at the age of 86. Then he suffered what his daughter called “a mild stroke” about a month later, on Aug. 4, to further complicate matters. Determined to get back on his feet and participate in his first moose hunt, Phelps diligently rehabbed at Physical Therapy Plus in Wilmington, Vt., and took the time to target practice with son Howard of Colrain every Sunday leading up to opening day.

The Phelps descendants accompanying the patriarch on his memorable hunt included son Gordon, grandson Douglas, and great-grandsons Stephen, Brian, Nicholas and Ryan. That’s something most can only dream of: four generations of a family sharing hunting camp. A fifth-generation male is due soon. Stephen Phelps’ wife is expecting a baby boy in February. So maybe ole “Ritt” will have a chance to imprint his love of hunting in his great-great-grandson’s soul, too.

Phelps credits the departed member of his family for delivering him his moose. Yes, he will go his grave convinced that late wife Myrtle “was looking after me” in the woods and at the annual lottery, maybe even guided the hand that pulled his card.

I dare anyone to prove him wrong.

Swamp Bucks

An expert deer hunter I am not, do not profess to be, never had the benefit of a venerable mentor to hunt beside, teach me. Yes, I have taken deer over the years, mostly does when holding a rare permit during shotgun or blackpowder. But, still, I always keep my eyes open and try to understand deer by evaluating surprise close encounters, one recent.

Many of those chance encounters occur during pheasant season, while noisily brush-busting through dense alder swamps. That’s when I seem to jump deer, often nice bucks making the rounds during the November rut. It never ceases to amaze me where I find them, what I’m doing at the time of the sighting, and how I am moving compared to the way I slither through the woods when actually hunting deer. It leaves me thinking that perhaps I do it all wrong during deer season, slowly stalking, still-hunting, sitting on stand for hours waiting for one to appear. Some of the best deerslayers I have known, especially trappers, learn fast that you’re just as apt to bump a deer and have a good shot at it while moving like I do while bird hunting through dense, tangled cover. These men have the trophies to prove it.

My recent deer sighting occurred an hour into a pheasant hunt while angling across a gnarly open field toward a corner of dense young alders fronting cattails, a deep ditch filled with water, and taller, mature alders behind it. I was handling the dogs, often giving them two short bursts on my whistle to turn them, also giving them the whistle and vocal command to “come around,” my way of keeping them within range. It was after such a command that Lily appeared from my right and sprinted down a manmade path through dried golden rod and other weeds, tail furiously wagging. As I watched her, I caught a subtle flash of white in the young, head-high alders ahead of her, then noticed movement; yes, a big deer, head low, furtively trotting. When it broke briefly into a partial 10- or 12-foot opening, I could see large antlers, then its hind quarters as it moved away from me. When it reached the ditch, it jumped the water and circled back toward a dense, impenetrable alder swamp. Imagine that, I thought: all this activity and racket by me and the dogs, and a big buck passes within 80 yards; the third straight year I had seen a nice buck in that field at midday.

I jumped my first buck in that piece three years ago, maybe 100 yards east of this recent sighting. The big animal came out of the same type of young alder cover. It stood up, froze broadside for a moment to look at me and the dogs, then bound off through eight-foot, thorny cover, across a wide meadow brook, through a brown swamp and into a faraway hardwood stand. Then, last year, this time in taller alders nearer the road, maybe 10 a.m., the dogs jumped a big buck that bound off across the road and up a steep hill of mature oaks. It too wore a handsome rack, which, upon further inspection, had been used to tear up the alders it had been flushed from while making a large, aggressive rutting scrape on the ground. The dogs got to within 20 feet of that animal before it bailed out, and I was no more than 20 yards away, not trying to conceal my presence.

Another similar sighting that occurred in the past three or four years in the same area involved four does. A friend and I were hunting the back, secluded, L-shaped field with three dogs, Ringo, Lily and Bessie. We were working between the woods on the long leg of the L when the dogs broke into the trees on the west side of the field. Out came the four does, tails high, bounding across the open field no more than 25 to 30 yards in front of us. My friend claimed he could have killed all four with his buckshot gun, a long-barreled, full-choked, Belgian-Browning, Auto-5. I had no reason to doubt him.

“Why doesn’t that seem to happen during deer season?” he quipped, shaking his head. Probably because he never hunts deer that way, likely never will.When I told the landowner this week of the handsome buck I had seen in the alders, he knew of it. His brother had seen it, called it among the largest bucks he had ever seen, and the man has killed many nice rackers in his day. When I got to talking about all the nice deer I had seen in that dense covert in recent years, the landowner wasn’t a bit surprised. He said bucks live in that swamp and are nearly impossible to hunt. In the last year or two when he, his father and brother weren’t having any luck in the highlands, he remembered well a memorable swamp maneuver he put on for for the boys. He pulled on a pair of hip boots and thrashed through the alders and bull briars, trying to move deer toward the back lip overlooking the swamp, where his father and brother were “posted up.” The strategy didn’t work, no matter how hard he tried.

“I kept hearing those deer in front of me, to my side, in back of me, not far away at all, splashing through water, running around, making a lot of noise,” the swamp-buster recalled. “But I was helpless, could barely see flags, never pushed one anywhere near my father or brother. Once they’re in that swamp, you might as well leave them there because they’re almost impossible to get.”

Either that or maybe just sit patiently along the swamp’s edge near a frequently traveled run and wait for the deer to enter or exit the habitat early and late. It’s about the only chance you have when you can’t use use Springer Spaniels to help you.

Eventful

The air was gray, leaves piled in massive, narrow mounds, front yard and back, as the rain let up and a strong, blustery, north wind rattled the dining-room window like a ghost begging for coffee. I took it as a call from the wild, 9:05 a.m. on old Eli Terry, pride of Plymouth, Conn., circa 1824. It looked like a great day to hunt, run the dogs and get some exercise. Off to a covert saturated with free ancestral spirits, happy ghosts that lift me during every visit, help me understand the habitat and how game birds utilize it.

With my mind fixed on hunting, I promptly went to the carriage shed to retrieve my hunting clothes and warm them on chairs in front of the woodstove before gathering three armloads of cordwood to fill the iron cradle next to it. When done, I opened the stove, heaped the red-hot embers over the grate, went back into the woodshed and selected two hefty pieces of black locust to burn during my absence, dampered down for a slow, soothing burn. I next sat on a wing chair and put on my athletic shorts, tube socks and sleeve that overlaps them both to cover my knee under a brace. That done, I was ready to strap on my brace and put on my T-shirt, cotton shooting shirt, whistle lanyard and Filson Tincloth bibs, fastening a belt tightly at the waist before lacing up my boots, grabbing the side-by-side leaning against the door jamb and heading out for my shooting vest, orange hat and dogs. The stormy nor’easter wind promised to make the hunt challenging, scattering scent and giving any pheasants that flushed a strong, quick tailwind to safety.

I arrived at the covert before 10 and was pleased to see a neighboring hunter’s vehicle parked in his yard. He hunts the field plenty but objects to other hunting there, thinks he owns the place despite holding title to not a square inch. He had probably already hunted there earlier, but that didn’t concern me. I’ve been getting mine behind him for 30 years, seems to always be enough for everyone. Apparently he doesn’t think so, believes they’re all his. After passing a decaying barnyard and making a sharp left turn, I could see from afar that the covert was vacant. Perfect. Even if people had already been through, I felt confident Lily and Buddy would make things happen. They didn’t disappoint.

The first flush, a hen about five minutes into my walk, caught me totally by surprise as I jumped a ditch swollen with water from the heavy overnight rain. I found a narrow crossing, looked down, pushed off with my bad left leg and, before I landed, Lily had the bird flying with the wind. By the time I mounted my weapon and found the flying bird, it was too late, out of range, never even squeezed off a shot. The bird totally left the cover, flying all of a quarter mile into the other side of a dense alder swamp. No problem. Things were looking up. But Lily wasn’t pleased. She prefers her flushes to be followed by a deafening roar and a retrieve. Not this time. My god, the disgusted looks I get from that dog and others over the years when a bird escapes. It’s priceless. Truly priceless.

Anyway, I continued along an old fence row dense with high, thorny cover and, judging from Lily’s energy, suspected another bird was about to flush, which didn’t happen immediately. No, I followed that fence row all the way to the end, dropped into a depression and back up the other side before following a tree line and ditch back in the direction from which I had come, crosswind perfect, blowing right to left. Lily lit up and sprinted down a manmade path into some seven-foot cover. There, she stopped on a dime and headed directly into the wind for the ditch, a hidden pheasant runway. I positioned myself for a clear shot and soon heard a cackle, caught a flash on the other side of two or three tall white pines, then saw a ringed-neck rooster pop into the open 45 yards away, angling quickly away from me with the wind at its back. I dropped my forefinger onto the back trigger and reluctantly fired to no avail. Birds 2, me 0. Oh well. It wasn’t over yet.

With my interest piqued, there was still lots of acreage to hunt, albeit under difficult conditions, wind whipping the goldenrod and other high, brown weeds in all directions, making it difficult to hear and follow the dogs’ movement. I don’t use a bell on my dogs because I believe the noise sets a smart bird fleeing; in fact, am convinced of it. But that’s just me. Many prefer a bell. To each his own.

I followed the hedgerow west to another water-filled ditch and thin row of alders running south toward a large house on a knoll overlooking the covert. Lily soon picked up scent on the other side of the ditch and started running fast, bouncing, nose high, dark brown ears flopping above the underbrush in the wind. I knew there was a bird nearby, was careful to point my feet in the right direction for a flush. Lily followed the scent trail into a thick hillside alder stand 25 to 30 yards to my right and I quickly heard a hen pheasant whistle into flight, then caught her headed right toward the house. I had a good shot but it would have been right at the house so I didn’t fire, not worth angering abutters to a good covert, even if you are 500 feet away. The bird soon changed direction, swinging left and riding the wind for the deep, dense, overgrown alder swamp, finally presenting a safe, difficult, 40- to 50-yard shot I attempted with my back trigger and missed. Birds 3, me 0. One of those days, conditions in the birds’ favor. Not a problem. Fun.

I continued south along the gnarly ditch, sun in my face but high enough to be a non-factor, and arrived at a familiar stand of cattails backed up by alders and marsh from which I have flushed many birds over the years. Lily and Buddy aggressively searched for scent on my side of the water-filled ditch first, then swam maybe 10 feet to the other side, searching furiously for pheasant scent. Buddy stayed close and I told Lily to “go back,” which she happily did, determined to kick something up. As she splashed through alders and cattails, a faraway rooster cackled and caught my attention. When I looked in the direction of the sound, I caught a wild flush 150 yards out, flying out of the covert and into the dense alder swamp, out of reach. Then, when I refocused on Lily, maybe 40 yards out and animated, up came a whistling hen at angled away from me quickly with the help of a wind gust. It wasn’t much of a shot but I’ve seen similar ones connect, so I squeezed off another back-trigger prayer and didn’t alter the bird’s flight a bit. Oh well, four flushes, three back-trigger heybangers and not so much as a feather on the ground. One of those days, I guess, but good column fodder. I decided to go home and record the events, put another column in the rear-view to clear up precious hunting-season time.

I hunted back to my truck, flushed nothing, boxed up the dogs, unloaded my gun, put in snap-caps and pulled the triggers to relieve the spring tension before closing old Jean Breuil back in his hard plastic case. As I pulled out of my spot listening to WEEI know-it-alls Dale and Holley evaluating the Patriots’ lopsided loss to Cleveland, I saw a pheasant-stocking truck approaching from a half-mile up the road. We eventually passed each other on my way out and I stopped along the side of the road to watch MassWildlife’s finest fly 12 birds into the covert I had just left. Nice! I wasn’t interested in going back; hate hunting a freshly stocked field; too chaotic, birds disoriented and easy. Plus, I had another agenda: this column.

I figured I’d give other fellas the rest of the day to kill birds and shack others around before I returned the next morning, not particularly early. There always seems to be enough birds to go around if you’re not selfish; if you don’t think you own the place, have exclusive rights to it. I have no time or respect for such people; hypocrites, pigs. I’ve had many fine days hunting behind them, and it drives them crazy. They’ve probably had success behind me, too. Don’t know or care.

To be honest, it never bothers me one bit when I have a day like I had Monday in a November nor’easter. I got my exercise, the dogs had fun and a powerful north wind scattered pheasants into an impenetrable bog. They’ll be back, and so will I, whether my buddy likes it or not.

Four flushes, including a wild one, three back-trigger heybangers and a stocking truck on the way out to freshen the place up for another day. A good day in my book, even though my game bag was empty.

Mutual Reliance

Breaking in a new gun dog is a chore that’s only as unpleasant as you choose to make it. You can be demanding — screaming, hollering and getting physical — or, then again, just try to make it fun by taking the pressure off and letting the animal’s instincts rule. I prefer the latter. But that’s just me. Some prefer to play drill sergeant.

Buddy came to me in May at 11 months old. Friend Cooker — a breeder, field trialer and hunting buddy — owned him until then, had introduced him to limited field work, and was not happy with his retrieves. Seems my friend thought Buddy was clamping down too tightly on the birds, tried to quickly correct the flaw and built an immediate conflict that made the animal uncomfortable. So Cooker approached me before Memorial Day about taking on Buddy, figuring I could overcome the retrieving issue with my nonthreatening approach. He said the dog came from a royal pedigree, many national champions behind him, and would be an excellent stud for my bitch, Lily, a 7-year-old dynamo, also of aristocratic blood.

As I watch Buddy develop this fall, free and easy, I clearly remember Lily tagging along with Ringo six and seven years ago, then Bessie tagging along with Ringo and Lily two and three years back. Now Ringy and Bessie are dead, Lily’s the finished gun dog and Buddy’s the tagalong, as compatible a duo as I’ve owned. Buddy aggressively attacks a covert, investigating every scent that enters his alert nostrils, observing everything going on around him, totally deferring to Lily. He watches Lily pursue a scent, pick up the pace, flush the bird and retrieve it. He never challenges her for a retrieve, just moves gingerly into her space, watches, listens to my commands and will soon mimic the routine when I hunt him alone. I have absolutely no doubt about that, have seen it before, and, yes, have had to defend my laid-back teaching method to detractors who doubted my approach but soon witnessed positive results. I do not train to the field-trial standard. My dogs are flush-and-retrieve hunters, not field-trail dogs. They pound a covert searching for scent. I read them and follow them wherever they take me, a system that has always worked for me. Yes, I have a plan upon entering a covert. But when the dogs find a hot scent, I follow them, even in the opposite of my intended direction.

Buddy is not past the point where he searches for and chases anything, be it rabbits or squirrels, ground birds or field mice, burying his nose deep into thick, ground-hugging cover, pawing at the turf and coming up with a mouthful of frost-brown grass, maybe even a little  rabbit hair. He flushes pheasants and woodcock, will undoubtedly flush the first partridge he bumps, but isn’t yet focused exclusively on game birds, ignoring all else. That is not to say that even an experienced gun dog won’t chase a rabbit when crossing a fresh scent-trail where bird scent is scarce. But even during such an uneventful hunt, an experienced gun dog will leave rabbit scent immediately upon crossing the scent of a game bird. Buddy will soon display this trait, too, maybe this year, definitely next year and many to follow. Trust me. Depends how much one-on-one I give him this year.

Buddy’s best attribute is his proclivity to stay close, run tight quarters and keep track of where I am. I cannot take credit for developing these desirable tendencies. In fact, I am shocked, given the demeanor he displayed on walks throughout the summer. I’d exercise him through open fields and he’d pin back his ears and sprint the perimeter like a racehorse, the athleticism impressive to watch, and worrisome. Was he going to run like that in the hunting field? Well, the answer to that question, a pleasant surprise, was no. Put him in dense cover and he stays tight naturally. It has a lot to do with the covert, which holds him back, offers thorny resistance and is full or fresh scents to keep a dog’s interest. Were I running him through a cornfield or along the edge of corn stubble bordering a swamp, it’s unlikely that he’d stay as tight. The same goes for Lily, and Ringo before her. Put an athletic dog in a dense, thorny covert, and they’re a joy to hunt over. Put them in an open, shin-high rye field, or low, sparse brown cover, or along an edge, and they’re too fast for an enjoyable hunt.

When a crosswind is coming out of the covert, a good dog will sprint the periphery and quickly figure out if there’s anything within 30 yards, maybe more, depending on the barometric pressure, the lower the better. I avoid easy, open coverts like the bird flu, have many times watched in frustration from dense cover when the dog bursts out into a mowing or freshly tilled cornfield, runs 50 to 80 yards along the perimeter, comes to a screeching halt and bursts 10 yards into cattails, alders, multiflora rose or other dense cover. Within seconds you hear the “cuck-cuck-cuck-cuck” and watch a long-tailed rooster fly deep into the swamp. I have a chance when hunting with another gunner who’s walking the edge while I’m busting the brush. But even then, it’s never easy, because my dogs pay little attention to others’ commands, if my partners would even attempt to give one.

Like I have always told my hunting buddies after a wild flush or missed shot: If you killed them all, it wouldn’t be fun anymore, sort of like a fastball down the middle, even a hanging curveball. Sometimes you foul the cookies back, sometimes you swing and miss, sometimes you hit it sweet and foul. To me, wing-shooting is a lot like hitting a baseball. That’s why I love it, am driven to the coverts daily; rain or shine, hot or cold, limping or pain free, which, these days, is never, even with my knee tightly braced, ibuprofen circulating to inhibit swelling.

Those lingering knee issues bring me back to buddy Cooker, Buddy’s breeder. More than 20 years ago while hunting woodcock with a Northampton orthopedic surgeon who had recently scoped my chronic left knee, the doctor informed him that, if I didn’t promptly give up softball, my bird-hunting days were numbered. “In fact,” the doctor warned, “it may already be too late for him to be bird-hunting into his 50s.” Cooker just squeezed out a wry grin, shook his head and said, “You don’t know Bags.”

Well, I didn’t quit softball; kept playing until the leagues fizzled. Now 57 and stubborn as ever, I’m still chasing birds with a passion, a little mind over matter, a lot of ignoring pain.

I can thank the dogs. They keep me going, me them. Call it mutual reliance.

Fishing Royalty

The noontime sky had cleared Friday after heavy overnight rains, and the sun was bright in an endless, blue sky, white clouds wafting east like lumpy cotton swabs. I was out by the mailbox picking up a gray Rubbermaid barrel and four recycling bins, tidying up for an important overnight guest due anytime. Never know what’ll greet you by the side of the road, maybe even news to fill this space.

As I stacked the four plastic bins one inside the other, a mini-van, I think white but can’t recall, approached slowly from the west, obviously wanting to talk. I figured the driver was lost. I was mistaken. He knew exactly where he was and broke the ice by asking what I knew about my neighbor’s motorcycle he’d seen parked along Brook Road for several weeks. Was it for sale? I told the man, older than me, accompanied by his wife, that I had no clue about the motorcycle, had never even seen my neighbor ride it. But it soon became clear it was not the bike he was interested in. No, the man was a picker, buyer of antiques and collectibles, curious what I had lying around my home and barn. He asked how long I’d owned the place and what had been left behind by the previous owners, well known collectors. That’s when the fun began.

I must admit I love rattling pickers’ cages, flash ing a wry grin, telling them I they’re barking up the wrong tree, that I was indeed born in the dark but it wasn’t yesterday. An old pro will have a reply for anything you can throw at them, though. Their steadfast goal is to at least get in the barn. Then, once there, all eyes, they try to find their way inside your home. Something like, hey, is it true there’s a ballroom with a spring-loaded floor upstairs? I’ve heard it often — hint-hint — and it’s a hoot to hold them at bay, give them the business, all friendly banter. I’ve been through it many times, be it walking the flea-market at 5 a.m., perusing a roadside antiques shop or an on-site country auction. The chit-chat is at least half the fun, meeting lots of interesting characters along the way, all with their own rehearsed, idiosyncratic spiels and yarns and pitches. This guy was one of them, right up my alley. Before long, he reaches into his wallet and hands me a business card identifying him self as a buyer of antiques and collectibles. When I notice he’s from Gill, I tell him jokingly that there’s not a “Gillbilly” alive I’d let into my place. When he asks why, I tell him I’ve learned over the years not to trust Gillbillies, they’re shaky, dishonest, can’t be trusted. He laughs, says he’s no Gillbilly. He lives in Riverside. Then he informs me that he’s made a lot of money off of shaky, dishonest fellas over the years. I reiterate that he’s barking up the wrong tree, an image any Gillbilly can understand.

Anyway, at about this point of our mischievous discussion, a silver SUV with Pennsylvania plates pulls up from the east and stops in front of my mailbox, facing us. Still talking to the wheeler-dealer and unable to see through the tinted SUV windows, I tell him to hold on for a second, I have to see who it is. So I walk over to the vehicle, the power window drops and it’s John Randolph from up the hill in East Colrain. We get talking and he hands me a program from the Oct. 9 Fly Fishing Hall of Fame induction ceremony at The Catskill Fly Fishing Center and Museum in Livingston Manor, N.Y. Randolph was as one of four 2010 inductees, quite an honor for a country boy from Colrain, son of a namesake New York Times outdoor writer.

Young John was an Arms Academy boy, then off to Mount Hermon School and Williams College; quite a ballplayer in his day, fierce and competitive, now a world-class fly fisherman, and author. I met Randolph through my late friend Tommy Valiton, Randolph’s high school teammate and friend who suggested I meet him and get permission to hunt his posted property. We have been friends and sometimes neighbors ever since. His second home, the one he grew up in, rests three miles up the road on a scenic slice of Franklin County paradise; deer, bears, moose, turkeys, you name it, they’re there. Who knows, maybe even a disoriented big cat passing through now and again.

As I speak to Randolph and wife Mary — his high school sweetheart from Shelburne Falls, daughter of Dr. Galbo, who practiced nearly 60 years on Main Street, Shelburne Falls — my picker friend grows indignant. He pulls up slowly and gruffly scolds Randolph for cutting into a potentially productive conversation. I reiterate that he has nothing to worry about: he wasn’t getting anything out of me, anyway. He shoots back that he’s heard that before, and then Randolph cuts in with a line or two of his own playful banter, creating a triangular verbal harpoon fight. No foreigner to history and antiques, Randolph knows the lingo, can talk the talk, even sent son John to auctioneer school, one of the best, in New York.

The picker seems humored as he pulls away, promising to someday return. I’ll welcome round two if he catches me in the right mood, which is most anytime. As he pulls around the corner and out of sight, I ask Randolph how long he’ll be in the neighborhood. He tells me through the weekend. I promise to stop by and talk when I get a chance.

The next morning I travel to his upland Federal home and catch him leaving for errands with Mary. He’s standing outside of his SUV talking to an old Arms Academy chum in a white pickup, a hunter who tells me about Savage Arms’ muzzleloaders, the best money can buy, in his opinion, better than the more popular ones most hunters are using these days. Randolph informs me that I arrived at a bad time. Come back Sunday morning. No problem. The brilliant sugarbush and flaming landscape between his home and Mt. Monadnock was well worth the trip.

I catch the Randolphs at the Sunday breakfast table, looking north through a large, multi-paned window across their pasture and old orchard to a ridge I have hunted many times. He leaves the room to dig out a photo album of snapshots from the 1940s, wants to show me what the forested ridge looked like when he was a kid, open fields and narrow tree lines following stonewalls. Among the photos is a shot of his grandfather, bowtie and suspenders, surrounded by sheep. We talk about how much the landscape has changed and move on to his glory days at Arms, war stories about making the All-Western Mass. Football Team, winning the Intercounty League title, punishing Deerfield High School on Veterans day, when Bunker Mazanec scored five touchdowns.

Randolph went on to play football and baseball as a Mount Hermon post-grad, then graduated from Williams (1959-62), where he also played football. He began his journalism career in 1967 as a reporter for the Brattleboro Reformer, then moved on to a brief stint at the Bennington Banner (1968-69) before founding the Vermont Sportsmen. That monthly hunting and fishing tabloid grew in circulation to more than 12,000 before he sold it in the early 1980s and took a job as Fly Fisherman magazine editor/publisher in 1982. Now 71 and retired, he’s living in Pennsylvania and spends his time fishing and freelance writing. When not globetrotting to the finest trout streams in the world, he often returns to his native turf to shoot the breeze with the cast of characters he grew up with, waking daily to a stunning view of faraway Monadnock on the eastern horizon.

Because we share overlapping eclectic  interests, our breakfast conversation jumped willy-nilly from squaretails and salmon to Shays’ Rebellion to Bradstreet to Kendall Mills to Pennell Hill and Pennell’s Tavern, then to the late Joe Jurek, a Colrain hunter who shot many trophy bucks on Randolph’s land. Randolph says no one ever gets the big one’s now that Jurek’s gone. He once took me on a walk to a swamp below his home, told me Jurek hunted it often because the big bucks were born there and returned when the shooting started. I made a mental note.

And to think Randolph’s love of fishing for trout, especially squaretails, all began on tiny Workman Brook, a mountain stream that traverses his
property and empties into the Green River a mile or two below, near the intersection of Green River and Nelson roads. Randolph learned to fish on that stream as a boy before honing his skills on the Green River, where he watched his first fly casters. It’s all chronicled in his 2002 book, “Becoming a Fly Fisher,” now the tale of a Franklin County legend, one whose name is included among American angling aristocrats, such men as Lefty Kreh, Ray Bergman, Zane Grey, “Catskill Bill Kelly,” “Sparse Gray Hackle” Miller, Ernest Schwiebert, Dave Whitlock and Lee Wulff.

John Randolph: Franklin County original, Hall-of-Famer.

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