Since Larry was sick and was not been able to send out his regular weekly column, I took it upon myself to find an excerpt from his book, DOGS, DUCKS, AND HATRACK BUCKS and send it to all his newspapers.
Mrs. Wiggins
At
the first hint of dawn, I headed down the long Ozark mountain ridge. It was little more than a trail, made
perhaps a century or more ago by mountain families who traveled by horse and
wagon to and from log cabins which they had built in remote creek bottoms. Off the point of the long ridge, about
a mile from our camp, there were wild gobblers roosting.
It
is the wildest of the Ozark National Forestland in north Arkansas’ Big Piney
watershed, and getting into it is not the problem. Getting out is a problem.
In
the darkness, the walk was a long one. I relaxed in the first gray light of
dawn along the old rock wall at the brink of the ridge. The wilderness valley
below me, where the creek flowed, was shrouded in mist, with green budding
treetops sticking up out of the concealing fog. Down there below, one gobbler
sent forth his salute to the upcoming new day, and another answered nearby.
A
turkey hunter can’t ask for much more than I had that morning. Within 40
minutes of the time the gobbler left the roost, he came over the edge of the
bench 60 or 70 yards away. He
eased forward, shook himself and began to peck around in the small growth of
May apples springing up in the woodland floor. His head was like a red and
white flag. When I called ever so lightly, he raised it high, then bobbed it
low, sending forth a lusty gobble which echoed off the rising hillside beside
me. And then he strutted for a minute or two, broke out of it and gobbled
again. He came toward me at a steady walk, head high and bright, bobbing
through the oaks and hickories and beeches…now 50 yards, now 40,now 30. The
gobbler below gobbled again and my shotgun blast echoed across the valley
before my tom could stop to answer.
An
hour later I rested on the rock wall, trying to catch my breath. It had been a
perfect day, and nothing could have spoiled it, not even the old Jeep sitting
in the trail when I reached it.
I
had walked most of a mile from our camp and he had to have driven past it right
down the narrow, rugged old trail into the best of the woods, probably because he
was some pot-bellied greenhorn who was too lazy to walk.
An
old man stood there beside it, something of a comical figure in his oversized
camouflaged jacket, a short brimmed camp-hat which was also too large, sitting
right down on top of his thick glasses. He clutched an old shotgun, and stood
there, beside the vehicle, looking sort of lost and bewildered.
I
figure he was eighty years old, maybe, and he was lonely. He nearly talked my
leg off, admiring my gobbler and going on about how he use to kill ‘em like
that over in Oklahoma, and so on and so forth. He said he had ridden up there
that morning with his son-in-law from Dardanelle, who had went on down the road
and just left him there ‘cause he was too old to keep up.
He
was proud of his shotgun, told me it was an old Browning, probably worth a
fortune. It was just a beat up old pump Remington, with the words stamped into
the barrel “made on Browning patent”. I bragged on it like I wished I owned one
like it.
The
old timer had a couple of half-squashed bacon and egg sandwiches his daughter
had made for him, and offered me one. While we were standing there by the old
Jeep, I’ll be doggone if I didn’t hear a gobbler well up the valley from where
I had been hunting, back toward camp. The old man said he heard it too, but I
don’t think he had. Anyway, the tom kept gobbling and I thought what the heck,
the old timer might get up close enough to have a little excitement with that
gobbler.
So
we walked up the road aways, and I put him down off behind a small pond
overlooking the first bench above the valley. Then I got behind him and began
to call. That old tom began to move slowly up that hillside and in about 30 or
40 minutes he had finally gained a bench below us where I could see him,
gobbling and strutting, lagging along behind three jakes.
Finally,
the jakes headed up toward us, and got out of view in the underbrush along that
mountainside, and the old gobbler followed them. Before long, I saw them come
over the edge of the bench, and those three jakes were leading the way with the big tom behind.
The
old man didn’t see the big gobbler. But he came awake when he heard that gobble
only 50 or 60 yards below him. He wasn’t exactly stealthy at getting that gun barrel
around where it needed to be, and had a bad case of buck fever. If the old tom
had been close, he would have spooked. But jakes just aren’t as wary. The lead jake
looked as big as a bear when it got 40 yards away and I’ll be darned if he
didn’t blast it.
Excited?!!
You never seen nothing like it. I helped him get back up on that old logging
road with his jake and he went on like it was the high point in his life. I
kinda believe it may have been. He was still shaking 30 minutes later, and I
dug my camera out and took a picture. Then it came to me that if I traded him
my 20-pound ground-raker for that 16- or 17-pound jake, he could really do some
big-time bragging back home. And so I did it, although to this day I can’t
believe I actually traded a mature gobbler for a jake.
Then
I set the camera up on a stump with the timer on and we got a picture of me and
him together with that big tom. I got laughed at a little back in camp, but I
was never prouder of what I had done in the turkey woods.
A
week later I sent him several pictures, and never heard another thing about it
until about November of that year. I got a letter than from his daughter, with
some of the ink blurred with teardrops. She said the old turkey hunter had died
in his sleep back in late September, and it had took her awhile to write.
His
daughter said he had never killed a turkey before, and wrote that he had never
stopped talking about it all summer. She thanked me, and said that he had told
her he wanted to give me his old Browning shotgun, if I could ever get down
that way. Later in the winter, when I was nearby hunting ducks, I went by and
picked it up and met the family.
The
old gun sat in my closet for two years until one fall I met a young boy hunting
squirrels on a neighbor’s place where I was hunting doves. He was about13 years
old, and he showed me his old single-shot shotgun with the stock broke, and
wired back together. He reminded me a lot of me at that age, except he was
quieter and didn’t brag as much about his squirrels as I would have.
After
thinking about it for a week, I drove over to his place with that old Remington
pump gun. I asked his mom if I could give it to him, and she agreed.
Before I
left, the boy told me that he figured the old shotgun was really valuable,
because it said “Browning” on the barrel. I told him it sure enough was, that I
had never seen it fired that there wasn’t a dead turkey resulting from it.
I
don’t figure the old man would mind that I didn’t keep it. It is more
satisfying to give than to receive. If I didn’t know it that day years ago when
I called up a jake for that old timer, I know it now.
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