PeaEye
The Phantom of the Pipeline
Well fellers, for those
in the know, know that I left out Friday
afternoon, lonesome, ornery and mean.
It was to be my 13 year son Wills
first trip of the season. A broken hand
right before the season had delayed
my anticipated renewal together in the
woods. Itd been almost 11 months
since hed taken his first two
birds near the end of last season. Ive
surely missed his company, you can bet
on that. When he arrived home from school
Friday, he begged off on going. Said
his feet hurt. Crimeinitaly, if they
hurt before you go, you can bet theyll
hurt when we get back, is all I said.
I guess the impending severe thunderstorms
forecast for Saturday may have dissuaded
him, but I didnt push it. Dont
want him to feel he has to go. With
that and the rain due for another weekend,
I wasnt in the best of moods but
I left out knowing Id get drenched
and hoping Id be rewarded with
the blessing of slingin a bird
over my shoulder. At least camp should
be quiet; certainly the four wheelin
deer hunters would not brave the impending
bad weather. Wrong! Every weekend its
been the same deal, they come to rouse
and ramble, never to hunt. Oh well,
Im gittin off the soapbox
and gittin on with the story at
hand.
Saturday was indeed a
day of thunder. I was hunkered in a
covered deer stand for more than two
hours and dont mind sayin,
I said a few prayers for forgiveness
at the crack of lightening and kaboom
of thunder. I can tell you what; it
was a mite bit louder than my SP10 gauge,
thats for sure. It finally eased
enough to get out and I commenced to
slow walk the loggin roads. If
I didnt run into birds, at least
I should be able to find the vicinity
they are in, via muddy three toes. Seven
and half hours passed with only two
hen sightings, shouldve been better.
Surely the three hours of skeet shooting
at camp had nothing to do with my misfortune.
I closed out Saturday drying myself
out by a roaring fire and refused the
invite to the weekly party up a couple
of camps. I needed time to myself and
poke a log or two without somebody throwin
four more on when whats burnin
is plenty.
Sunday had just an auspicious
beginning, to say the least. Rain hampered
my start and I figured the birds would
be hangin on the limb for a few
more hours anyway, so I slept in. Bout
8:45 I wake, ready and head out. Not
more that 50 yards from camp, my spirits
sank to a new low and so did my truck.
Seems our resident road engineer had
decided the ruts in the road were gettin
too deep, so he dumped nice soft dirt
all up and down them. No need to pack
em, nah. Next truck will do that.
Yeah, only about a foot or two, no more.
Needless to say, I was mud stuck and
luckily I got back to camp just as the
engineer was shuttin the door
to his truck. He readily pulled me out
and I went the back way. Guess he meant
well
..good thing
he hadnt left already.
Made it to the woods,
via the back door at about 11 am. Dont
expect to hear any gobblin, so
I go and head for the pipeline. They
usually like to dry out there after
a wet night. Well, Im easin
across the line and I glass a real red
weed top. Surely, everyones seen
those weeds that grow in fields that
have a red top. Many a time have I been
fooled only to find it to be a red weed.
Well, Im studying this one real
hard and it seemed to come closer in
my binoculars. Im already in plain
view even if it is a tom, so I move
about 5 yards more and spy again. Its
still in the same spot. Weed. I continue
across the line giving it one more glance.
Guess what, that weed is walkin
towards the woods. Dang, big headed
weed too, not the juvenile weeds weve
been seein in the line. Dangit,
bumped and busted, now what. I decide
to go about 70 yards inside the wood
line and ease up to about where I think
he went in at. I get there and call
softly for about an hour. I think I
hear drummin, so I stay another
hour. Nothin came and all got
pretty quiet.
I ease on out towards
the pipeline and found I was about 50
yards short of where I saw him go in.
Im just sittin there, contemplating
what to do next, when ol PeaEye
answered that question. Obble, obble
came from just down the way, next holler
over. Sounded like a jake gobble, so
for kicks I shook my Primos gobble tube.
Gobble, gobble, gobble, shot right back.
I eased on down the line huggin
the shadowy tree line real close, offering
up a faint gobble from time to time.
He liked it and replied each time. Hes
just over the down hill side of the
line, maybe at the edge of the hardwoods.
I figure Im eighty yards away,
max. I find a nice stout and young maple
growing on the edge and settle back.
I let things get quiet and a crow lets
me know my friend is still there. Pullin
out a new Reynolds Glass slate I just
got during the week, I sneak out some
soft feeding clucks and purrs. I can
hear him drum and click his wings. Just
as Im in mid cluck out pops a
no beard jake 30 yards directly to my
right. He goes to feedin, looking
for something behind him, yelps softly
a couple of time, then goes back to
bug snatchin and peckin.
Little no beard gets about twenty yards
from me and takes a closer look at the
new bush. I havent moved a spec.
I guess he saw my pupils or I aint
green enough. Whatever the case, he
took a few tall strides towards the
gobblin tom and was out of sight.
I heard him say to PeaEye, Squawk,
yalk, wrack, guess he was trying
to tell his teacher that there was a
square head stump in the bushes and
he has a black stick in his hands. Good
thing PeaEye forgot his jake language.
Things got real quiet
for about a half of an hour. Im
hoping the game aint over. I pick
up the glass again and went back to
soft cluckin and I hear a purr.
Down goes the slate; up goes the gun,
at ready. Next thing I see is two jakes,
one with beard chasin the one
without. Man, I oughta shoot you jakes,
Im thinkin, sorta ticked
but then not really. About that time
a bigger bird takes a run at the two
jakes and when they clear out, I see
swingin beard. Yeah buddie, down
goes his head for a moment, up goes
the gun and with a short cut and cackle
on the mouth diaphragm, up came his
nice wide red head. Boomyall and PeaEye
took every bit of Nitros load
at a mere 25 steps. Yeah man, slingin
turkey over the shoulder makes it all
worth while. As customary, I returned
to my setup, gave a hearty and loud
thank you to the maker of such a fine
bird and eased back in nice relaxed
frame of mine, no more lonesome ornery,
or mean. Yeehi. PeaEye died fine with
a 9.5 inch red beard, 1 inch needles,
and weighed out at 20.07 pounds.