Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Texas Quail: The Northern Bobwhite

Driving over the Llano Estacado this morning the sky is heavy with storm clouds, lighting making landfall to the north.  The approaching grey carries with it a sense of wonder and concomitant danger and as I watch the precipitation fall over the distant plains, the cliffs of the Caprock Escarpment approaching rapidly, the pressures of my day begin to find themselves lost in the serenity of West Texas. It is a land passed over by many, labeled as a territory of desolation and left for the vultures, the scavengers. But beyond the subtle and overwhelming beauty of this place I have come to know, in the hills filled with silver bluestem, mesquite and sunflowers, a small and resilient bird makes it home. It is a species that like so many other upland birds has a siren song all to its own, and to Texans and the hunters that reside here, the call is irresistible. It is the nocturne of a gamebird, the melody of a survivor, it is the serenade of the northern bobwhite quail.

Before settling into my new home my upland pursuits had taken me far and wide, chasing chukar and grouse, pheasants and turkeys, but overlooked for so many years were one of the most agile, explosive, and dynamic birds of them all, the quail. The northern bobwhite, with streaks of white and orange paint dressing their heads, thrive all the way from New England to Texas. They look like mobile grenades as they forage in and about the shrubs and bunchgrasses, stout and rotund on first appearance. But when a covey decides to flush they thrust out like tiny missiles accelerating across the evening horizon, almost as if Houston had just given mission control the go to launch; their jettison is spectacular.

From a distance they appear almost as a muted brown but even a moment’s further inspection reveals shades of chestnut, maroon, mahogany, and slate, all splashed about their wings and bodies. As they lift into the sky a brief interlude of crisscrossing is followed by flights low and hard, straight and narrow. Their feet, concealed in the rolling dust, harken back to a prehistoric era when only the most tenacious of species emerged from Earth’s evolution. Their long claws and scaled feet truly reflect and are the embodiment of a life on the surface. In the spring, when these birds shed their clandestine image and begin calling, they can be heard well into the day, a quick “bob-white” ringing out from the grasses. Who knew so much could come from such a modest package?

And while quail far and wide have claim to their own homes, the forests of northern Florida, the agricultural lands of the Mid-West, Texan quail thrive where many see a landscape devoid of life. But to look closer at the rangeland we have, to dig deeper into its ostensible mirage, those same people might just find something they never expected. Amongst the native seeds produced by this land and eaten by quail the diversity, color, size, and shape are something to marvel at. There are varieties with names such as western ragweed, croton, partridge pea, Illinois bundleflower, black-eyed susan, Maximilan sunflower, and broom snakeweed; all staples of a quail’s diet out here in no-man’s land. They are a survivalist in a sea of brown, a native of West Texas, where all the amenities necessary for life are provided by what is proudly known as the Southern Rolling Plains.

But more than the birds themselves it is the culture that draws you in. Texans are obsessed with their bobwhites and the money and resources put into their conservation and protection is a testament to that fact. From pointing dogs to bumper stickers, local chapters to lone hunters, the atmosphere is thick with quail. When you come here you instantaneously feel the enthusiasm, the energy, the excitement. Men and women, young and old, speak of quail almost as if they were long lost relatives, a relationship that has been built over generations and which is renewed each fall. The folklore has had a most infectious impact on me.

To this end Farley and I, now with enough time in this state to claim residency, have long awaited our chance to push out into the grasslands and try out luck, to wade through the morning shrubs, the morning dew soaking our legs. I have even had the pleasure of working my dog on a few private ranches this past winter and to see the his tail once again go straight and stiff, wagging with determined conviction, was more than this hunter’s heart could desire. He once again had the scent, the smell that is perhaps the only fragrance that can immediately take his mind off of the jacks zigzagging his path and focus him back onto a singular task.

I didn't know what to expect when I arrived here but finding a love for quail was certainly unexpected. Finding a love for West Texas was as well. Public lands are scarce in this part of the country, making hunting that much more difficult but I have never been one to shy away from a visit with a landowner. More often than not you meet a rancher who has stories to tell, quail hunts to reminisce about, and a warm handshake if you are willing to spend the time. And in the end, there is really no way to better learn about a species you want to hunt or a culture you wish to know than to get it straight from the horse’s mouth. With quail loved by so many, there are stories and anecdotes to keep you smiling for days. This fall, I’m ready to make a few of my own.

West Texas:







Early season quail nest:



The northern bobwhite:





The ubiquitous Texas windmill...and Farley:




Monday, February 24, 2014

One Hunter's Struggle to Adapt to City Life

I know that I have not written in a while but tonight my pen needs paper. I have found that the hunting adventures and wilderness trips that were slowly becoming a mainstay of my life have now become distant memories barely visible through a foggy landscape. It’s not that I am not enjoying the years, this one has especially been good to me, but more and more I feel like something is missing, like something has taken a part of my soul and hidden it in a far off land. I feel like I am searching for that soul, searching for freedom, searching for a life away from the chaos, away from the pavement and steel that define so many lives. I'm searching for the hunt.

In the past two years I have left Oregon, moved back to New England, my original home, moved out to Minnesota and now settled down in West Texas. This is the eleventh state I have lived in in my short 30 years and I am now explicitly conscious of my invariably changing surroundings. I feel I am constantly searching for something new and virgin and as I age I believe more and more that I know what I want out of life but struggle increasingly to find it. Perhaps that’s the curse, the more you know, the more you struggle.

I want to get lost in the desert chasing bighorn sheep. I want to disappear in Idaho’s forest where the only sounds are the echoes of ghosts past letting me know the path is unknown. I want to watch my dog stretch his little dog legs on a western ranch and flush up birds in the setting sun. I want to learn to ride a horse, one that in the future may help me pack out my first bull elk. I want to shoot my first deer, man, I want to shoot my first deer. I want to stretch out my arms and not feel the weight of civilization pressing back down on me. Is that possible? Am I asking too much?

As a hunter you find yourself in landscapes near and distant, in lands aphotic and glistening, in mornings stunning and crisp. There are evenings where your legs feel so tired you smile as you turn and remember the miles traveled. As I walked by a pine tree dotting a city street today the look, smell, and feel all immediately transported me to a far off land where all was quiet; where the sounds of ambulances, car radios, overhead planes, and cell phones disappeared as if they never existed, as if the world had conspired to make that one moment all that was good and simple.

We travel into the woods seeking something unique, something personal. I feel more and more that I cannot explain that to anyone; that the call of the wilderness is dying in the hearts of many and it reminds me of a story from a bear hunt James and I partook in some years back…

As we sat, resting in the shade of such a fine pine tree, a songbird swooped in and began to whistle a simple tune. In return James whistled back, receiving the response we so desired, and the dance, or song, went on for several minutes.  It was a moment in the woods so insignificant as to be meaningless to millions of people on this planet but not to an outdoorsmen, not to a hunter. Only those who have an intimate association with the wilderness, only those with a rare glimpse into the soul of our forests could have such fun with a small bird in the midst of our calm afternoon, black bears wandering about.

I recently finished a book about the first western explorers to the vast southern Rolling Plains and their pioneering spirit harkened back to the days of James Fenimore Cooper’s young adventurer, Natty Bumppo. Those men and woman, knowing the risks, knowing that what was in front of them was in fact, the unknown, they still took their chances, knowing in fact, that adventures and a new way of life were ahead of them. What I wouldn’t give for such an adventure.

I want to get lost in the desert, in the forests. I want to get lost in the rolling plains. I want to get lost on Earth. I want to throw on my leather pack, sling my rifle over my shoulder and head out the door in search of an animal deep in the wilderness. Is there anything else worth searching for? Life and a connection with the world? Is there anything so worthwhile as to sustain yourself in a way that dates back to the dawn of man? I don’t believe I could possibly come up with a better way to spend my fall days than out hidden in the trees or lost amongst a sea of sagebrush. I can smell it now.

The little dog taking in a West Texas sunset.