Every once in a while, I think back to days of hunting that stick in my memory. As a kid, I spent many hours hunting along a creek on my Dad's farm, carrying my Cooey 39. I don't recall ever shooting anything, but I loved to walk along on a nice sunny day. I spent hours walking after a huge flock of Prairie Chickens. There probably 100 birds in that bunch. I won't ever see that again.
One nice fall day, I was walking around the end of a small point of small poplars on one of Dad's fields when a Ruffed Grouse flushed! Scared the pants off me! That was the one and only "bush partridge", as we called them, that I ever saw on that farm. More by example than by lecture, my Dad taught me that I didn't have to shoot every bird, that it was just fine to watch them fly away. I watched a good many Hungarians fly away!
Dad also instilled in me a sense of where to find chicken and partridge. I still hunt those areas. My Dad has been gone for 50 years. In my mind, I can conjure up a wonderful mix of the smells of autumn, the sound of him digging in his box of Imperial Special Long Range, and the vision of him dropping two shells in the old Tobin and closing it up. I still have the Tobin.
I remember one afternoon when I was hunting birds in a big pasture right along the top of the Qu'Appelle Valley, and a light mist rolled in from the north, coming up over the crest of the hill. It was such a pleasant thing to see and be part of that I stayed out there for an extra hour.
Many times over the past 50+ years, I have passed up taking an animal, sometimes because it was too late in the day, sometimes because I was just plain too lazy, and other times when I had to concede that I had been fooled. My old dog and I were having a sandwich in my van one afternoon when a huge whitetail buck came out of the trees maybe 40 yards away, stopped and had a long curious look at us, then slowly sauntered away. We were hunting bush partridge that day, so the deer was safe. My poor old dog nearly fell off the seat staring at the deer!
I still like to take my little Savage 24 .22/20ga., put an apple in my pocket and spend a couple of hours on a sunny Fall day wandering along the edge of a stubble field. It doesn't really matter whether I bring a bird home or not. I tramp the same fields I did when I was a young man.
One nice fall day, I was walking around the end of a small point of small poplars on one of Dad's fields when a Ruffed Grouse flushed! Scared the pants off me! That was the one and only "bush partridge", as we called them, that I ever saw on that farm. More by example than by lecture, my Dad taught me that I didn't have to shoot every bird, that it was just fine to watch them fly away. I watched a good many Hungarians fly away!
Dad also instilled in me a sense of where to find chicken and partridge. I still hunt those areas. My Dad has been gone for 50 years. In my mind, I can conjure up a wonderful mix of the smells of autumn, the sound of him digging in his box of Imperial Special Long Range, and the vision of him dropping two shells in the old Tobin and closing it up. I still have the Tobin.
I remember one afternoon when I was hunting birds in a big pasture right along the top of the Qu'Appelle Valley, and a light mist rolled in from the north, coming up over the crest of the hill. It was such a pleasant thing to see and be part of that I stayed out there for an extra hour.
Many times over the past 50+ years, I have passed up taking an animal, sometimes because it was too late in the day, sometimes because I was just plain too lazy, and other times when I had to concede that I had been fooled. My old dog and I were having a sandwich in my van one afternoon when a huge whitetail buck came out of the trees maybe 40 yards away, stopped and had a long curious look at us, then slowly sauntered away. We were hunting bush partridge that day, so the deer was safe. My poor old dog nearly fell off the seat staring at the deer!
I still like to take my little Savage 24 .22/20ga., put an apple in my pocket and spend a couple of hours on a sunny Fall day wandering along the edge of a stubble field. It doesn't really matter whether I bring a bird home or not. I tramp the same fields I did when I was a young man.


















































