November 13, 2009; Day 4, 3rd day of our hunt.The morning broke with enthusiasm for new hunting opportunities. We were going to infiltrate a different area of the woods. Perrennial favorite; Indian Stream; specifically the West Branch above in elevation and to the northeast of
Terrell pond; another Moose sanctuary and fly-fishing honey-hole; in the historic area of:
The Republic of Indian Stream along the Canadian border.
This is the same location where last year Wayne; York Hunting Clan Patriarch’s 2nd son shot his awesome Buck last year. I was expectantly hopeful about today’s hunt as this area has become one of our favorites.
Although it seemed not as remote due to the popularity among hunters, it was even further up the Indian Stream forestry road; away from civilization than our hunting spots along East Inlet road are. It takes some patience to drive out the dirt paper company forestry road, that doubles as a snowmobile trail in the winter’s snow months, past the #14 mile-marker to the cross-over (Indian Stream) road that gives access to West Branch road and our coveted slice of hunting pie between the West Branch and the main run of Indian Stream.
The historically secluded and lacking in electricity or other amenities such as indoor plumbing of the camps and cabins along Indian Stream road make the ride interesting and thought provoking as the generationally grandfathered-in-zoning camps that dotted the forestry road all the way to the West Branch split left imagined histories of trapper’s shacks and cabins of the past running thru one’s mind.
The sheer and utter removal from civilization during the winter months made for such hearty souls as only the most resolute of hunters, trappers, and loggers of the past. With it’s inspiring native name, images of Indian massacres and incursions would run thru one’s imagination on the ride in…
Did Robert’s Rangers pass thru here on their way to clash with the warring Indian tribes in Canada, did reprisal attacks lay waste to those solitary souls that called this ancient water-way home far up in the mountains of The Great North Woods of New Hampshire? It left me with a certain feeling of pride and accomplishment knowing I experience, hunt, and explore these woods as few Americans have the privilege of doing.
Our trucks split us up into two parties once again, Dave York; York Hunting Clan Patriarch, Dave Peich and Wayne York; York Hunting Clan Patriarch’s 2nd son went up around the bent and ascended to the log-landing area at the end of The West Branch spur-road while Joe Jarosz; Jarosz Hunting Clan Patriarch, his son Todd, Billy York; York Hunting Clan Patriarch’s youngest son, and myself; Jim McCullough spread out along the lower section of The West Branch spur-road to ascend the slopes from below.
My position, just as last year was the furthest south leg of this hunt and I could be bringing up the rear and cutting off a means-of-egress for the Deer that would put them out toward Indian Stream where The West Branch joins it by the Terrell Pond and dam.
I eagerly delved into my memory of the area and indulged myself in the happy reacquaintance with the landscape as I recalled it so vividly from last year. The swale-grass was a touch thicker and the saplings were a bit bigger with even more of them making passage along the lower swale-grass belt a little tougher, but I quickly refound my path where I skirted the Spruce cover in order to avoid putting my moving form out in the open of the semi-treeless swale-grass belt.
I stuck to the shadows and crossed the belt at a diagonal angle that pushed me southeast to the base of the almost sheer rocky escarpment where I knew there was a secure path of ascent I can utilize to gain entry to the first plateau. I crossed the swale-grass bottleneck where the Spruce cover passed closest to the southwestern slope-face in a little point that made my open crossing the shortest possible. All the while I kept taking in the spires, knobs, and peaks I would be ascending from the furthest point out of all of my hunt-brothers.
About halfway up the rocky ledged slope I turned and admired the view. I could see the open swale-grass belt and inspected it for tell-tale movement, as I remembered the beauty of Terrell Pond in the distance. Nothing stirred below me so I turned and continued up.
I was once again amazed that the Deer tracks up and thru this lane of a climbing draw and their Billy-Goat abilities to navigate such a steep ascend and descent on 4 sharp hooves. The way was detailed and sharp in my memory and not much had changed other than the leaf-litter that covered the rocks and soil where it lay bedded atop the ledge rock and boulders of this promontory. The patches of scale and loose shale fragments where in exactly the same locations as I remembered with just enough securing soil to have made a path over and around the dangerous footing to allow me to continue on to breach the surface of this plateau from the shadowy Spruce cover of a juvenile Spruce sapling covered knob that stood sentinel over a wide swale-grass bog valley that contained just enough ground cover in patches to invite Deer bedding and movement.
I picked my way along the ridge-back of this knob behind the small Spruce trees that gave me concealment and a position to peer out and inspect the bog for signs of my quarry, or Moose and Bear. I sat on my camouflaged butt-pad cushion that hung from the back of my belt. This year I opted for the 1.5” thick version instead of the 1” thick version I lost here in The Great North Woods of New Hampshire last year on the last day. I was hoping the thicker version wouldn’t allow the Velcro strap to tear thru as easily, and I appreciated the added comfort of the thicker cushion. I found this once to be very comfortable and it absolutely prevented the cold “wet-butt” syndrome from putting an uncomfortable dampener on the days hunting. I took a quick respite to catch my breath and allow my body temp to cool back down from the strenuous climb so I didn’t sweat up my clothing as we expected today to be the warmest of the entire week. The morning seemed a touch crisper and colder, but midday was going to be even warmer possibly rising above the 50 degrees Fahrenheit mark.
This was a very temporary pit-stop as I didn’t expect to catch any majestic Whitetail Bucks cruising the open expanses of the bright swale-grass bog during daylight. This was the exact spot where Billy and I jumped out a Moose during one of last years forays into this West Branch hunt.
I kept eyeing the neighboring knob to my left out in front of me, one that offered great Deer sign last year and I expected would hold the same this year. I had climbed it last year and love revisiting areas out in the wilderness testing my memory for detail and comparison to the changes time makes in all landscapes. I hopped up and dropped down the face of this little knoll that over-looked the swale-grass bog valley flat-iron and crossed at the peak-point where it started to the base of the knob I assumed to climb.
As I worked my way up, I marveled at how quickly the open hardwoods obscured your vision and made the open swale-grass bog disappear behind me even though I was in relatively close proximity to it’s existence. I climbed steadily upward which made my incursion as much up as in until I crested to the plateau of this knob and it was relatively untouched to my memory of it.
Sadly, the Deer sign wasn’t as prominent this season as it had been 1 year ago. There were recent tracks and some scat, but not the plethora of fresh sign I had encountered here last year.
I tried to scan the slowly falling opposite slope as I crossed over to the north face of this knob that fell sheer into an open hardwoods valley that was deep and wide. It gave ranges of out to 250+ yards if you could pick out openings between the hardwood masts of Beech trees and Birches.
Along my crown-edge I could stay nestled in the cover of immature Spruce trees and the towering darkness of their larger brothers above my that topped this knob with a nice shadow covered area. I sat for a bit again to regulate my body temp and respiratory rate right on the edge of the sheer drop that put me in an advantageous sniper-hide that covered the hardwood valley for any egressing Deer.
Before me at he edge of my range of view in the thickening cover I could just see the saddle that I had found last year that was the best means of travel between this knob and the next and even higher one to my left and north. It would be the preferred method of travel across this divide for man or beast. After regaining a normal status on my temp and breathing condition, I stood up and slowly made my way to the saddle. I was having as much fun remembering all of my exploits and experiences from last year as I was pursuing my hunting exploits.
I worked forward and into the very same clump of immature Spruce trees I had utilized as a hide to cover the saddle from this position last year. The trees were a little taller and a little thicker and therefore the space inside them was a little tighter this year, but it was relatively the same. I enjoy such déjà -vu remembrances, especially considering how far out in the wilderness I was; approximately a half mile in and a half mile up or so.
I wanted to get even further in this year so I kept pushing myself to forge ahead and to get myself into the outskirts of the combined hunts being undertaken by our two parties. I crossed the saddle and committed it to memory even further knowing full well the more you detail your memory of something, the more it will change, as nature does, for the next time it’s visited.
I kept to the sporadic installments of Spruce cover as it spread thru the hardwoods and climbed the next peak. The ledge-rock thru this area was prolific and it grew the most twisted, shunted, and strange looking Spruce, Beech, and Birch trees from in between, on, and around such rocky outcroppings as made for almost stair-climbing during the ascent.
The radio gave short reports from members of the clans on Deer sign, some warm, some cold, and some even bleak. Nothing to betray the big Buck, even bigger than Wayne’s successful harvest from this area last year that we had been informed about by the Game Warden at the check-in. He simply told us our Deer’s big brother was still up here and that nobody had gotten him last year on our last day of the first week hunt after Wayne got his mature Buck.
Obviously it didn’t mean that Buck was still haunting this area, or that another hunter hadn’t gotten him since, but it still fed our fires of hopeful expectation that this area did and possibly still does hold a big mature Buck for the hunting, so I pressed onward in spite of no shots and no reports of jumping Deer.
I crossed the very top peak and worked my way down toward the peat-bog that resided in a little swamp valley bowl here that opened up and seemed to go on endlessly out it’s southern edge. I walked the ridge overlooking the bog from a distance and worked toward where I had made my entry into it last year, from a different angle but in similar proximity.
Just as I decided to torn downhill to head into it, I heard some crashing. There were definitely two sets of legs pushing thru the leaf-litter and moving across my horizon out of site over the crown of the crest and slightly down the slope to my right and ahead of me at the very southeast corner of this hunt.
As quietly as possible I tried to cross the crunchy crisp with cold, but rising, temperatures; leaf-litter. I angled for a line of intercept and tried to close the distance, but I could hear the evidence of my merger with another living creature in the wilderness moving further away and out away from me.
I got to the edge of the plateau and could see nothing thru the forested cover. In only a relatively short distance my vision was cut off by cover, brush, and trees of the thickening forest. The sound seemed to fade out in the distance and I knew I wasn’t going to catch whatever it was under these semi-noisy conditions. Coupled with the fact that it was going directly out of the hunt in a direction that would take me completely away from the rest of my Clan and party I decided to investigate the peat bog as it contained one of my Deer encounters from last year when I jumped a very big Doe out of the young Spruce saplings that grew along it’s outer bank very nearby.
The radio barked out some info. There were other hunters up here and they were criss-crossing our hunts in a strange fashions. Two hunters moving together, another solitary hunter, and their movement patterns seemed odd and out-of-place. Two of them were even talking out loud as if they were in a bar-room trying to speak to each other over the din of loud noise, which seemed really odd considering the stark stillness and quiet of these deep woods.
Nobody was throwing in the towel on this hunt area yet so I pressed on to investigate the peat bog before that happened. I descended the slowly falling slope and to the edge of the bog. It was just as I remembered it. The surface seemed alive or floating, it was thick green peat moss and clumps of vegetation that were unrecognizable other than to appear as if something that might grow on some far off planet. The tall Spruce trees gave a canopy of darkness and shadow that held out the majority of sunlight that you could see on the outside of the bog to it’s sides as the bright sun shone down in among the hardwoods that banked the bog on the opposite shore.
There was something very calming and tranquil about this bog. As I stepped out onto the carpet of green peat moss it did seem alive and you could hear the trickle of slowly running water coming from below and all around you. With every step you could hear a rush of air and swamp-gas bubbles releasing from their watery shrine below your feet. Every once in a while you could get the aromatic fragrance of the swamp-gas as it found a means of egress from holes carved by Moose hoof tracks; like cookie-cutters, in the live surface of this marsh.
The ever-present contemplation about a bottomless cold soaking pool beneath my feet always kept me alert and full of care, but it always seemed secure enough not to let you fall thru, in fact; I never once sank above the a depth that would allow any water to infiltrate over the top edge of my Rocky Rampage Gortex boots.
I found that the Deer tracks in this bog increased exponentially from the sign I had been finding before this point. The runs were deeply worn ruts and the peat was virtually pin-cushioned with tracks going in every conceivable direction. This peat-bog was obviously one of their highly coveted playgrounds and my enthusiasm grew with my excitement. There was always enough immature Spruce growth that was just tall enough to cover my and my movements yet allow me to look out and view over their tops to inspect my entire surroundings for movements and the edges of the surrounding hardwood banks that made this an ideal hunting spot.
While the mushy soft surface of the peat-bog wasn’t solid enough to support Buck-scrapes, it did however hold saplings and immature trees in abundance, which allowed for the ample potential for Buck-rubs, and I found the best one I had seen yet while here in The Great North Woods.
It was fresh as fresh could be and the little shavings of bark were still floating on the nearby breaks in the surface vegetation and hadn’t floated away yet or saturated and sank. I suspected this rub had been made that night or in the wee hours of morning before we had arrived in this locale.
While I was stooped over inspecting the rather large sapling mast rub…
POW!!!One lone rifle shot from maybe 100 yards to the northeast of my location grabbed my attention like a swift kick to the groin. It took me by surprise and made me flinch. I took up a secure position putting the root-base of a blown-down between me and the direction of the shot and picked up my Remington 760 pump .300 Savage to the up-ready position and scoured the horizon of my vision for any signs of movement and Deer racing to escape the shot.
I stayed painfully still for several minutes listening hard, breathing thru my mouth instead of my nose for an even deeper level of my own silence in order to hear possible movements better.
And then a crash…
But it was from behind me coming toward the direction the shot had come from. Then another crash and some loud branch or deadfall breaking sounds. I suspected a Moose was somehow confused by the echo of the shot and was simply trudging thru the peat-bog at a hurried pace.
As the noises grew closer I knew beyond question that it was no Deer, and I lowered my rifle back down to my side in one hand as with this new noise nothing would be coming to me from the direction of the shot any time soon.
The temperature was rising quickly and just before the shot I had removed by woodland-camo Ranger-vest (designed for U. S. Army Rangers and their covert tactical exploits) and removed a couple layers of my could weather thermal underwear shirts and left only my thinnest Rocky moisture wicking under layer shirt beneath my 2X Realtree AP-HD camo long-sleeved pull-over shirt that I use as an outer layer, and stowed the excessive clothing in the pouch integral on the back of the Ranger-vest.
Then coming into view were two guys, one wearing a hunter-orange cap, and another clad in an excessively large hunter-orange down parka with hood up and secured into place with it’s draw-string. I thought that was a little bizarre considering the bright sunlight and the quickly rising temperatures.
These two fellas were almost racing in the direction the single shot had come from making such a racket as to disturb any intention of hunting he area in the near future. I was dumb-founded at the activity and could not figure it for the life of me. They crashed and plowed their way across the peat-bog marsh and up the back across from me into the hardwoods and disappeared in harried fashion in the direction of the lone shot. They had passed by within 40 yards of me in my hunter-orange Team Realtree cap with AP-HD camo brim and apparently never realized I was there.
I think I stood there with my rifle in one hand and I’m pretty sure with my mouth hanging open asking myself if it had just actually happened. I was stunned and had no clue what my next move should be. Finally my radio snapped me out of it and the head-count went up with our entire two parties worth of hunters denying it had been any of them that had shot.
I relayed the information of the deep-woods rally-race by these two jokers that had just passed by me like their hair was on fire and their @$$ was-a-catchin’…
The radio fell silent and then reports came from Todd; Jarosz Hunting Clan Patriarch’s son, that he had bumped into a couple kids that were out hunting with their father, and they were from (of all the small world places – Massachusetts, specifically the) Bridgewater, MA. (of eastern MA area) According to them the father was ill and they were with him to drag out any Deer he might shoot. He (the father) had supposedly shot a Coyote the day before and it ran off into the brush and they couldn’t locate it, and the boys were out beatin’-the-brush lookin’ for a wounded or dead Coyote while the father of one of the boys was Deer huntin’.
That did explain the pell-mell bee-line for the location the sound of the shot came from, I suppose, but there was something that just seemed too bizarre and terribly lacking in common-sense, or any sense for that matter, about that whole kind of rushing around thru the woods. These two fellas were apparently the loud-talkers witnessed, once again without notice, by Dave Peich where he had entered his parties hunt from.
I did my best to put the whole strange occurrence out of my mind and continue hunting, even though the cardinal rule of being walked-in-on by someone making unreasonable noise had been broken and left me feeling that my chances of a Deer encounter were slim & none, and Slim had just left the building…
I decided to angle back in-between where I had come in and the other end of the line where my party had made their incursion, hoping to make a large circle of the perimeter of our hunt area. I followed the opposite bank/shore of the peat-bog back in the direction I had come from, until I found the very end of it that I had never seen before. This rose to a notch between two knobs, which was a natural draw that the Deer had been utilizing as a major run for their travel lane.
I climbed up the bank a slight sharp incline of about 25 feet and found it was a sharp ridge-back between two small canyon/valley draws and that this location gave me a great position to cover both draws from so I decided to set for a bit.
I settled in on my butt-cushion under the Spruce boughs in the shadow cover of a couple Spruce trees that lined the ridge-back between the two draws. I leaned back against the truck of a Spruce tree while sitting on a stump of it’s twin that had been cut/logged-off many years ago.
It didn’t take long when I heard some steps and crashing coming my way. I took interest and did my best to focus on my hunting at hand and put the previous happening out of my mind. There were definitely two sets of legs coming and I was hoping my luck had changed and I had chosen the best spot for a four-legged bovine to be making it’s escape from the hunting/noise pressure of the people in the forest.
The sound was coming down to the upper rim edge of the end of the valley maybe 30 yards in front of me, and I was certain whatever this creature would be was going to come right down the slope in front of me for a wide open shot opportunity. For some unexplained reason, I never even readied my rifle, I just held onto it where it lay across my lap with my right hand…
Then I saw them…
The hunter-orange cap and over-sized hunter-orange parka, still with hood secured in place by it’s draw-string in the excessively warm midday sun, as they approached the edge of the valley not 30 yards from me where I sat in the wide open for their view. Some odd back-tracking and pacing movements commenced as one or both seemed to pace back-and-forth along the rim edge across from me behind just enough trees and brush that I couldn’t see their activity clearly, yet I was basically in the wide open to their vision thru the branches and cover on their side, and then…
Bang… Bang, bang…The silence was broken by the deafening report of the semi-automatic pistol that the one without the parka was wielding, unbeknownst to me. The bullets whizzed over-head as the shots were nearly directly in line with me as the loud-talking one of the pair of college aged fellas endeavored to dispatch a Red Squirrel from the branches of an old mature Spruce tree that grew up and out of the opposite bank of the valley between us…
I was so shocked I simply sat motionless is disbelief…
Here I am, in the middle of a deep-forest wilderness, less than 1 mile from The Canadian Border and I’m run into by these @$$-clowns that are cappin’ rounds from a 9mm Parabellum (
I surmised from the report of the pistol, but in truth after the first shot my ears were ringing so bad that it could have been a .40 S&W or even a .45 ACP) at a fricken Red Squirrel and almost blowing my head off as they are shooting almost directly at and over me from across this little swale-grass lined rift…
I was beyond disbelief…
Then the shooter in his loud-talking tone, that I could barely hear as my hearing had clogged up from the down-range report reaction in my ears from the pistol shots, cussed and exclaimed in disbelief at the lack of recognizable remains of his target after 3 shots at nearly point blank range from his auto-loading pistol. His partner in crime the parka-clad fella simply responded in nervous stuttering unintelligible words that betrayed no emotional content whatsoever.
Then I heard some comment about a forgotten radio and that they’d have to go back for it and away they went in their hurried excessive noise-producing way…
I was still in shock and long minutes after they’d left I was still sitting there staring at the tree they had shot the Red Squirrel out of wonder what had just happened. There were no words to describe the shock, confusion, and growing anger that was mounting inside of me at what had just transpired…
At one point I do recall having to fight the urge to return fire from my .300 Savage just to wake these @$$-clowns up to my presence and scare the livin’ bejesus out of them, but somehow I refrained as I suspected such inbred boobs might have just mistaken my intent for an assault and actually shot at me on purpose to “defend” themselves.
I made a short report of the incident on our 2-way radios so the others would have some idea of what the rapid succession pistol shots were. I’m sure they could hear the disgust in my voice as I relayed the incident. I was all balled up and trying not to let it ruin my hunt, my day, or even my Great North Woods hunting experience for 2009… It was a chore and it took some serious effort not to let it over-shadow the rest of the pristine goodness of my beloved Great North Woods hunting.
I was mired in my confusion as to what hunting direction or method to employ next. I was rather befuddled and just couldn’t concentrate or decide on what to do next. I decided to simply work my way out lest the next encounter with these pinheads becomes a fatal tragedy for any of us.
I pushed myself up and over the slight saddle that connected the knob to my left and curled down and back up to the ridge-back I had been perched on before all hell had broken loose. My direction should take me down and out toward the very corner of this hunt before the West Branch spur-road turned up to ascent the back side of these promontories.
I picked the easiest to traverse path I could find wanting to put as much distance between myself and the ignoramuses that had offended my hunting sensibilities so with their flagrant violations of common-sensuality and rational behavior. I kept peeking over my shoulder to make sure I wasn’t going to her banjo music and see a hooded down parka following me as I descended. I told myself that if such were to happen I would possibly put a quick end to that insanity with suppressing fire from my .300 Savage; Remington pump rifle. I grinned at my own cavalier machismo and continued down.
I came upon an old over-grown skidder path that lead straight down the slope at an impossible angle that left me with visions of such a machine tumbling end-over-end as it tried to negotiate the nearly sheer descent. The footing was somewhat loose and a little bit treacherous, but I wanted out of that area in the worst way so I endeavored to safely make my way down the roller-coaster like hill drop.
Down, down, down I trudged carefully picking my steps and leaning back almost against the slope to maintain my balance as not to pitch forward and over which would most likely result in a never ending bouncing roll and slide-for-life.
When I reached a slightly less angled stretch of the skidder path I turned to look at the hill I had just descended. It was the epitome of a Billy-Goatish straight up affront that I was left in disbelief that I had somehow negotiated under control when it looked as if looking up a flat wall that I had just come down.
The warm early afternoon sun gave me the indicating shadows from the spires and peaks now above me that allowed me to angle around the base of the sky-reaching precipice back toward where the vehicle I was riding in was parked with my gear and possibles within.
I kept descending and hiking down and out and it took nearly 20 minutes of non-stop hoofing to see the faint beige shape of the road-bed far off below me. The slashing and whippets were a little thick in this locale and began to open up into the far northern end of the swale-grass belt that this incursion began at. In another 10 minutes of trudging I broke out exactly where I had entered the hunt off the same old abandoned log landing on a plateau about 40 feet above the West Branch spur-road below. I walked down the entrance drive and turned right on the forestry road and hiked the quarter mile to Todd’s Ford Expedition.
I let myself in and hastily changed out of my green Northwoods Wools, shed a couple layers of thermal long-johns and left on only my thinnest layer of Thermaxx and Rocky lightweight moisture wicking under-layer. I donned my BDU style Realtree AP-HD camo cargo pants and my spare Realtree HD over-shirt. I took a position in the back of the truck on my butt-cushion and awaited the arrival of my hunt-brothers.
Billy was the first to appear and I went into a dismayed recollection of the events that unfolded just previously in the woods. I was trying to wrap my head around the brazenly preposterous behavior that led me to suspect the presence of an extra chromosome in possession by my two miscreant encounter fellas. Todd then showed up and relayed that he had bumped into two “kids” that seemed really nice and were hanging out with their ill father who was Deer hunting so that they could drag out the Deer for him…
I spit out some vitriol of my own about how they weren’t nice and probably were deserving of a bullet in the head, to which Todd’s cooler head prevailed and he wasn’t even taken aback by my retort for his enthusiastic optimism for all things outdoors and hunting. I admired his ability to blow-off my own struggles with something seemingly ruinous of my own hunt and took the bitter pill of a forced admission that my own perception of the events may have been less than righteous in my own portrayal of their exploits, which may have been far more innocent than they had seemed to me.
Todd also mentioned that he thought the 2nd of the two fellas possibly did suffer from some mental illness or at least neurosis as he wouldn’t make eye contact with Todd who was a stranger to him and was hooded-up in his hunter-orange parka and seemed nervous and anti-social.
I supposed maybe the loud-talker of the two did that to maintain an audible contact with his buddy so as not to loose him in the wilderness in a way doting on both his father and his buddy. I suppose not all folks conduct themselves the same in the woods and I ought to at least leave the benefit of the doubt open for it’s potentiality. I still thought the behaviors were rather dubious, but may well have simply been those of staving off boredom in the long hours awaiting a Deer harvest that might never come for his father. I still wasn’t impressed, but was now open to letting the hostility that had built up in me to vent off and dissipate into a simple shrug which allowed me to put the whole thing behind me so I could go on to enjoy my precious Great North Woods hunt.
We ate our lunch in the warm sun after Dave Peich pulled up in his truck with our other party on-board. Some good, a really tasty apple, which Wayne had bit into without removing the little plastic label from, finding it floating around in his mouth he went to spit it out just as a small gust of a breeze came along and blew the spray side-ways and into Todd’s face… His embarrassment and the look on Todd’s face sent us into laughter which broke the hold over my mood and washed away the last of my discontent as Wayne apologized profusely while we all laughed, including Todd.
* * *
We moved on and for the afternoon hunt we retreated back down Indian Stream toward mile-marker 12 or 11 and The East Branch. We ventured up that spur-road to come to just about the Red cabin with a sign that read “East Branch Camp” on it’s front wall. There was a logging outfit with trucks moving equipment in to the landing directly across from this camp. Just as we were pulling up and big Dodge Ram pick-up came roaring up our tail out of nowhere and passed us by off in the ditch in a fury of throaty horsepower and hell-bent speed that seemed out of place in this still wilderness.
He came to a skidding halt at the low-boy truck carrying a processing excavator like machine that was being off-loaded. We had started to back out when our preceding party in Dave Peich’s truck notified us over the 2-way radio that the truck had moved and we could now pass by.
We drove up and the loggers had spread out all their equipment and vehicles all over the front and side lawns of this East Branch Camp. I presumed they must have been there at the behest of the owner or some such account. We threaded around trucks and machines thru the front yard of the camp feeling funny about driving on that front lawn even though the loggers had guided us to do so.
We proceeded onward past the little gravel bank on the right and up to the spur-road that cut back east south-east off of Indian Stream East Branch forestry road. We proceeded up a short distance and our vehicles had switched positions since Wayne had driven past the spur-road at first and I recognized it as where we wanted to go as Todd had driven up on it. The Peich mobile had stopped behind us where we had parked on the last day last year and we continued up ahead for another half mile to an old grown-in log landing.
We exited the vehicles and spread out on the southern side of the spur-road to head in toward the swale-grass swamp where Dave; York Hunting Clan Patriarch’s eldest son and perennial successful harvest camp-mouse had gotten his fork-horn Buck last year.
I took up position the farthest west from our party on the outskirts of the outer edge of where our partner party was making their incursion. Almost immediately I bumped Dave Peich. We had inadvertently taken an almost identical path of entry and the thickness of the cover made it imperative to utilize the same lane for movement. I wished him luck and backed out to reposition myself along the road. I was afraid of bumping the rest of the party members so I continued on west down the spur-road past the Peich-mobile and past where everyone else had gone in to a position that was almost identical to where I had entered last year believing to have gone almost a full mile back down the spur-road beyond where all others had gone-in.
I really liked this area where we went in. The Spruce thicket had the trees close enough together to create a canopy of darkness that was carpeted with a soft silent layer of Spruce needles and moss. Some damp swale-grass from the moisture laden earth added to the silence you could achieve stalking thru the shadows.
I could vaguely see the open light of the swale-grass swamp ahead and too my left. I took a step and heard a snap…
Suddenly brown hind-quarter and the tell-tale flag of a Whitetail Deer erupted out of the thick brush and cover along the very edge of the swale-grass swamp. Instantly my Remington 760 pump came up to my shoulder as I strained to see antlers. After a few bounds I could no longer see the Deer and never did get a look at it’s head. I never even clicked off the safety because I never could get a positive ID on my quarry as a legal Buck for harvest.
Then, almost immediately, more crashing from behind the first Deer. I quickly knelt down into a crouch so not to give away my position if the 2nd Deer hadn’t yet seen me as the first surely must have. Closer and closer it came, but in the thickest brush and cover you could possibly imagine giving me a depth of view of probably no more than 10 – 20 yards at best and then only in windows…
Suddenly, nothing…
The noise stopped dead and nothing but silence filled the air under a graying sky. Whatever was coming, which I suspected was another Deer, but could well have been a Moose or even a Bear had simply ceased to make any more noise a mere 30 yards from my position.
I waited crouched until the pain was searing in my muscles and the cramping began to get the best of me. I slowly with trembling musculature stood up and stretched out my coiled up body. I never lowered my rifle, finger on the safety hoping for a chance to click it off and get a shot at a good Buck. I kept the rifle pointed up into the fat trunk of a large Spruce ahead of me hoping for the chance to lower it level and shoot…
20 minutes passed and nothing. I never heard whatever it was move off or make another noise. It simply seemed to dematerialize into the air. Nothing new there, we’ve seen this before…
I finally advanced in and found as I suspected, that whatever had been there had found a way to skulk-of undetected leaving me only to suspect what it may have been. There was enough Deer sign and tracks criss-crossing thru the area to make tracking whatever it was without snow to be a chore-and-a-half. I simply chose to still-hunt in a general direction of where it had come from.
I worked my way along thru the silent grove and past the swale-grass swamp until I came across a thicket of Spruce so tight and solid as to be almost black with darkness on the inside that would not permit my incursion. I back-tracked and went around the ticket and found a good strong Deer run that angled between it and the swale-grass swamp parallel to the slowly flowing waters of the swamp. I endeavored around and found an end to the open waters where I could cross. I worked my way out the back-side of the swale-grass swamp and up into a hardwoods slope that was much brighter and more traversable.
I kept making a slow looping arc and eventually worked my way in a big circle all the way around the swale-grass bowl marsh area of swamps and water never jumping another Deer. I popped back out onto the spur-road and chose another lane of entry near my original point of entry. I worked back out into a spot that went out further in the darkened cover of Spruce to a point that stuck out into the swale-grass swamp that appeared to be a natural cover bottle-neck lane of crossing the swamp by the Deer run/tracks that converged here.
I sat for a few moments and Dave Peich came up on me again. I waved to him expecting him to come over and share his observations of this hunt, but he turned and retreated out of sight to find a spot to hunt out the last remaining daylight.
I got a case of “the grass is greener” and decided another spot down at the edge of my view might be better for my posting until dark. I eased down a bit and located a position that overlooked where I had jumped the deer and the run that came thru and settled in for the evening.
The light waned and faded as it always does and I revisited my day in my head. All in all my afternoon hunting did completely engross my mind and focus and I was able to successfully put the bizarre happenings of the morning out of my mind. That; I was thankful for.
As final darkness came I could here my hunt-brothers conversing back at the Peich-mobile and I retreated from my spot to the spur-road and joined them at the truck. I made sure to tell Dave Peich never to be afraid to come up to me in the woods and commune/converse, he is now a member of our Hunting Clan and I am always happy to run into one of them in the woods. Todd’s Ford Expedition came down the road to join us all up and we all climbed in and took the journey back to camp with the creeping tired that comes with days of hunting hard.
The lights were on as we got back to the log cabin camp up the old Dairy Mill road. It was a warm and inviting place. Gear stowed back in it’s relegated positions and a cold beer in hand. I sat and rested a much needed rest at the end of a long but rewarding day. Joe; Jarosz Hunting Clan Patriarch, and his son Todd set about preparing his home-made chicken soup and baked chicken. I prepared the salad works I had been delegated to provide and found that the refrigerator had worked so well the cucumbers were partially frozen. I cut and prepared and found that they tasted just fine and mixed a big bowl of salad to go with the Chicken dishes. The backed chicken parts were fantastic and the soup was as hearty and fulfilling as ever.More Benoit DVD’s played on the wide-screen TV as I nodded off sitting in a chair. I eventually forced myself up to settle into bed for the night and off to sleep I went in an instant.
To be continued...