Residents of Panther Creek..
The
trails are cleaned off and well marked, the cabins neatly arranged, and the
food plots so green and full of crops that deer and turkey are easy to
see. Rabbits are everywhere and there
are dozens of species of birds, nesting throughout.
The
gravel swimming beach is shaded and the swimming-hole inviting. Kayaks and canoes rest there on the
creek where kids can learn to paddle and actually kayak up the creek to view an
1880’s iron bridge from below.
There are big thickets of ripening blackberries that I have mowed around, and snipped away the berryless branches so the ones with the berries are easy to get to. I think they are going to pick a bucketful and go down to the gravel bar next to the swimming hole some evening and make blackberry cobbler in a Dutch oven.
I
want to see kids enjoy themselves here, but I also hope they will learn a
little about conservation, and nature and a world rapidly becoming foreign to
those who live where television and computers rule.
Considering
the fact that we just began working on this project last September I am awfully
pleased that so much has been done, and there is so much there for kids that
want to come. There is so much
they can learn here that contradicts what this awful world teaches them in a
land of concrete, pavement and a lust for money.
This
project for kids without fathers and underprivileged kids is free to any group
or church that wants to bring them.
We even help with the groceries.
On this land along Panther Creek, and
the ridges above it, our wildlife management does not include making any money
whatsoever. No one is ever going to profit from this place in dollars and
cents. But oh what rewards can be
found there, for those who long for quality above quantity.
I
have big timber all right, but it will be here long after I am gone. There will be no contracts with logging
companies which butcher the forests as is being done today on much of our
public conservation areas. And we will not clear the rich creek bottom fields
and thickets to create acres and acres of lifeless ground, so that some tenant
farmer can take a bundle to the bank and give us a cut of it.
It
is hard to explain how happy I am when I am there all by myself, working on
wildlife food plots or nature trails or a new photographers platform I am
trying to make. Just me and an old
Farmall Cub tractor made the same year I was born.
It
gets me a long way from the television newscasts which tell us that the future
is bleak for this country. The news at this secluded and remote little spot is
that the blackberries aren’t quite ripe, and that a new fawn is visiting the
mineral lick at dusk. The news
is…three turkeys roosted last night in the big white oak beside one of the
cabins and there are fresh bobcat tracks in the sand down by the boat launch.
I
have a covey of quail on the hillside that numbered 18 in February and I
believe I can triple that number this fall. The secret is what old-time biologists called ‘edge and
interspersion’; smaller sections of diverse crops and native plant life, brush
piles and nesting cover, escape cover, winter food and summer travel lanes. To
me, wildlife management should include all wildlife, not just deer and
turkey. That means flying
squirrels and pileated woodpeckers and foxes are valuable too.
Only
a couple of miles from this little wildlife management area of mine is a state
owned Conservation area they call “Birdsong”. There are no ‘bird songs’ to be
heard there—no birds. It is big fields
of uninterrupted cropland to be harvested this fall. Last year four of us
hunted it for two hours with several beagles and didn’t jump one rabbit. A
former manager of the area said recently that his main responsibility was
widening all the gates so that the tenant farmer could move larger tractors and
equipment. Recently a row of small
trees there were poisoned to make more room for crops to be harvested this
fall, leaving barren ground where nothing can live.
There’s
not much edge or interspersion in such a place, nor birds and rabbits! I’d love to have you come and visit the
two places to see how little wildlife there is at one, and how much there is at
the other.
We
are hoping to complete two projects at Panther Creek before this year ends. First
there’s a trout pool 20 feet by 10 feet, four feet deep, fed by the constant
flow of cold artesian spring water which will flow in and flow out. I can do much of the rock-work and
cement work myself but would welcome any help from a few professionals and
would gladly pay them for their expertise.
Secondly,
we have an old pond that will not hold water and if I can find the right
bull-dozer operator we want to level it and make a flat sports field for
softball, soccer etc. Kids will
love such a field. Trouble is, it
is too small a project for most heavy equipment operators who don’t want to get
involved in half-day projects. We
have the money to pay for this, if there is someone with an old dozer who can get
it here and level out the ground with it.
Be
sure and check my website next week to see photos of the kids visit this week. It
is found on the computer at larrydablemontoutdoors.blogspot.com. The youth retreat project is free to
disadvantaged or underprivileged children brought for a day or several days. Remember
that its purpose is to teach and create an appreciation for a natural and
secluded world.
Any
church or organization that works with such kids can arrange a visit by calling
me, and I and some other naturalists who work with me will come to help if
desired. I think we have enough
bunk-beds in our lodge and two cabins to take care of 20 kids or more.
For
all those who have helped us in any fashion, or for those who want to see this
project, we are planning another fish fry there on the third Saturday of
October. We have a new big dining hall and plenty of room. If you can come and
join us you are going to get to see what we have accomplished and enjoy a great
fish fry at the same time. But
please let me know if you are coming.
I need to know how many fish to catch in September. Call 417 777 5227 and put your name on
the list with my executive secretary Ms Wiggins.
We
have increased her pay to more than three dollars an hour and Ms. Wiggins has
tried valiantly to be nicer to folks. But I have said before that callers need
to realize she isn’t the sharpest needle in the pine tree, so to speak. Her carbuncle is healing nicely though (therefore
her disposition improving nicely as well). But please don’t ask her where it was!
You
might ought to just ask for me. Or you can write to me at Box 22, Bolivar, Mo
65613 or email me at lightninridge@windstream.net.
And
if you are a writer with a good fall story, you should type it and send it to
me for my Lightnin’ Ridge Outdoor Magazine’s fall edition because we still have
room for a good story or two.
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