Update:
As I post the past few catchup seasons in order, I will use a posting date that corresponds with that hunt or fishing trip. A few new ones are already appearing below. This way, the chronological sequencing of the journal will remain intact by hunt, not by writing date. It also means posts will begin to fill the space between Nov. 7, 2009 and today. You'll need to scroll back to catch the latest ones. A little different, I know...but it made sense to me when I devised the plan. My blog, my rules...
jts
Labor Day Weekend, 2011
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Time to Start Anew
It's been almost two years since hunting partner Cris passed and my enthusiasm for posting here waned. The good news is I've kept a running journal of hunting and fishing events since. Leafing through it indicates not nearly enough hunts. Dad's got pains in his hips and Cris is gone...many of my hunts have been solo.
We had a pretty big earthquake here last week. Not a biggie by New Zealand or Left Coast standards maybe, but 5.9 centered 5 miles from the school I was standing in at the time, and shallow. I've been through many quakes in my time, mostly on the West Coast, but nothing that felt like this one. A fellow teacher, coincidentally from Anchorage, said the same. Lots of structural damage to homes, and two schools in the county perhaps beyond repair...it's the kind of thing that makes one take stock of what's important. I left church today (one of the few in the county that can still have services in the sanctuary after the quake) feeling revived and ready to begin anew on this project.
Here's what I propose: I'm going to review my notes and photos from hunts and fishing trips to catch us up to today. I'll pull together some stories from the best ones and post them up in the next few weeks. Subscribe to the RSS feed or check back to see what's new. My goal is to have everything current by the beginning of early duck season. Hope you'll stick around.
jts
We had a pretty big earthquake here last week. Not a biggie by New Zealand or Left Coast standards maybe, but 5.9 centered 5 miles from the school I was standing in at the time, and shallow. I've been through many quakes in my time, mostly on the West Coast, but nothing that felt like this one. A fellow teacher, coincidentally from Anchorage, said the same. Lots of structural damage to homes, and two schools in the county perhaps beyond repair...it's the kind of thing that makes one take stock of what's important. I left church today (one of the few in the county that can still have services in the sanctuary after the quake) feeling revived and ready to begin anew on this project.
Here's what I propose: I'm going to review my notes and photos from hunts and fishing trips to catch us up to today. I'll pull together some stories from the best ones and post them up in the next few weeks. Subscribe to the RSS feed or check back to see what's new. My goal is to have everything current by the beginning of early duck season. Hope you'll stick around.
jts
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Fishing the Bay with Builder Bob--Day One
There's a Thanksgiving tradition 'round these parts. A group of men with places in Kilmarnock head down for the weekend to fish and drink something stronger than their wives' insipid iced tea. Sometimes they stay at home for the holiday dinner, and sometimes not, depending on how relations are going with the missus. This year, Dad and I were invited by Builder Bob to join his crew. We initially thought it was owing to our sunny dispositions...turns out we just add more rockfish to the boat's limit...
Thursday and Friday brought bad weather on the Bay, so we postponed departure until Friday evening. Saturday, we were on the water early enough and cleared Indian Creek in plenty of time to watch the sunrise over Windmill Point. A day of trolling never got the skunk out of the boat, so it was back early for dinner in Kilmarnock and some passing of George (Dickel) and lies around the table. Then off to bed, hoping for better luck in the morning.....
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Captain Bob |
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Sunup Over Windmill Point |
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Lines Out West of the Ship Channel |
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Thanksgiving Day--2009
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Pre-dawn in the Beaver Swamp |
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First Light |
Sometimes we sit together; other times a few yards apart. Until first light, the only way I know Dad's there is the glow of his cigarette in the dark. When light comes, he appears in the shadows. Then we wait, first for the birds, then for the sun as it rises in our faces.
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Dad in the shadows |
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Sunrise Over the Decoys |
Friday, November 20, 2009
November 20, 2009
As if the events of the first few weeks of November weren't enough, I lost my job of sixteen years on the 12th. There are no excuses, however, for ditching the outdoors. I spent many hours quietly still hunting our woods Beyond Bibbs Store. The leaves were still crisp, and rustled all around in the breeze and underfoot making the woods pretty noisy until late afternoon when the wind died and nap time called. I took this shot with my phone camera as I lay down to doze in a leaf pile by an old log in the late afternoon November 20.
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Naptime by an old log--Benelli Nova |
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Needed Some Time Outdoors--November 7, 2009
This is the first of a series of posts recreated from photos, memories, and my written journals. On this day, I had just left Cris and Christiane's side and Cris was having a pretty rough day. We knew the end was near, and I just needed to get off by myself. I drove home, hastily gathered some gear and the dog, and drove over to the Bibb place for a hour before sunset. It was a surreal afternoon. My hunting pal lay dying as I sat in the field with one hand on the warm back of my dog, the other on the cold steel of my shotgun. I tried to maintain my composure as I carried on a one way conversation with a Labrador.
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Every Day's a Good Day to Flip |
At first I couldn't think of taking a life while Cris was fighting for breath in a dark room thirty miles north, but things came naturally as birds began to fly, and I knew Cris would want me to quit sulking and shoot. We took a few birds; Flip, as always, was on his game and made picture perfect retrieves.
As the sun set, the temperature plummeted, and I walked back to the truck shivering and wiping a few tears as I put the gear up with the dog.
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Sunset in Louisa |
Monday, November 9, 2009
Cris

Cris passed away yesterday evening while at home with Christiane and sleeping quietly. He drew one final breath and simply stopped. The cancer he'd held at bay for a year and a half finally took him. His final weeks had been tough ones for Cris and his family, although he rallied somewhat last week and was able to smile and carry on conversations, giving everyone around him a final memory of the old Cris. During those moments he chided Christiane, kidded Dad, spoke to Harry, and groused with his nurses. For a few days his blue eyes sparkled, then in his final few days he lapsed into a peaceful sleep.
In a fashion typical of Cris, he directed that there be no memorial service or funeral. The man who didn’t want people singing in restaurants on his birthday for fear of drawing unnecessary attention to himself wished to go out of this world without fanfare. Cris is being cremated, and his ashes will be spread in a favorite trout stream high up in the Blue Ridge, from where all of us that loved him can look West and see him. It's a favorite, secret fishing spot of his and his father's...a fitting spot to rest.
We had years of great times together..hunts long remembered, Harry growing up, state skeet tournaments so hot you could fry eggs on the gun barrel, and just plain shooting the bull over a taste of whiskey. Last year's final duck hunt proved his last...so glad it was a good hunt. Even after he got sick, Cris never gave up living, loving, hunting, laughing. They gave him a couple of months and he took a year and a half...some of the best living of his life.
Raise your glass and toast Cris. So long buddy. We'll sorely miss you.
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