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Showing posts with label archery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label archery. Show all posts

Sunday, October 19, 2014

A word...

...about google plus.  J'adore...milujem...kocham...mi piace!  I love it... I have never had a facebook page and  just spent a lot of time on several flyfishing websites.  And, my local friends don't want to read or see from me what they know and live.  But, what I've always suspected...the driftless area being world class, has come to pass.  Many Americans are now recognizing that also and I hope they are seeing a driftless life from a view outside the magazines and websites.  Well, other websites.  But, all I've done is show pictures of the kickapoo valley and have been welcomed into some of the best communities.  They seem to like what I share...I am truly overwhelmed.  I now have friends from all across the planet...for the price of my backyard.  No...for free.  I've been shown so much more than I've posted.  My debt is large to many...Ivan for welcoming me, Tom for showing me around and my grandmothers homeland.  JC and Gilou...Didier Luy...mes amis francais, have shown me graciousness that I knew from my high school French teacher...she would be proud.  And, three years have finally paid off.  Et Mervete...elle m'a montre la beaute et l'elegance a nouveau .  In detail and a larger picture...with style.  Je suis amazed.  Merci mes amis!  Pardon me for only knowing one other language...well somewhat knowing.  But, thank you to all.  Thank you google plus...

For some that may not know...you can traverse quite a journey through my looking glass that is google plus.  My own pictures scare me some...a life in photos.  But, thats what this blog was supposed to be...'A driftless life'.  That looking glass of mine can become yours by simply clicking your way to the Alps or south America or Russia or Japan and Europe...and, here are some photos you missed by waiting for them on this blog.  Although I promise to keep Bosstownbob going.  Just so I can ramble on like this...















Friday, October 10, 2014

October...

...is moving right along.  One of my favorite months, its almost half over.  My daughters birthday was the first and my fathers is the thirty first.  Halloween...it was always a big day and not for all the saints.  Funny...but, I see so much of my mother in my daughter and my wife and my sons and I have  turned into my dad.  I see him in the mirror...when I'm brave enough to look.  I'm in the october of my life...a wonderful time for the knowledge gained along the way.  Knowledge of the future, too.  But, why fear the winter when its october...a lifetime of living in the now has taught me nothing if not to enjoy the Octobers...

The days are beautiful...each morning taking kids to school has clouds hanging on the hillsides and a deep fog over the kickapoo.  I have to remember to turn my lights on before I get there.  Sometimes it is as thick as soup...another good thing about October,  Soup...yesterday it was cabbage soup from our garden.  It was good to enjoy our labors over the summer especially since the racoons got most of our sweet corn.  In just two nights...and I shot five of them and one skunk.  October.  Wyley and I went up to our treestands.  I saw three and he drew his new PSE bow on a big doe but it didn't give him a good enough shot.  That made me proud.  I've taught my kids that hunting was a part of life.  We respect the deer and last year didn't take any.  We could of...after hunting big bucks all season we had fat does in our sights but for one reason or another we just didn't.  Not the least reason was they had made it that far.  We missed the venison all year...

This year new bows have us fired up...and there is a youth gun hunt this weekend.  Wyley can shoot a buck with his rifle.  It would be his first deer but he kind of wants to get his first with his bow...like his big brother two years ago.  That was a big deal...I was in the woods when HW took his nice 8 pt buck.  I saw the buck walk over to him, heard the arrow hit and the deer crash.  Five minutes later he walked over to me and tried to act like nothing but he was walking too quickly for the deer woods and when we made eye contact it only took a second for him to give me a pumped fist.  It was the best buck.  October...

Trout season went out with fireworks, too.  I always knew it would come back...even when others thought I had lost it.  Its been back for a number of years now...only I prefer to go alone.  Flyfishing for trout has been with me for fifty years and will never leave.  Its just that I've done it with different perspectives.  Losing two sons will change that perspective.  They fish with me every time I go out... as my two young sons and daughter do.  Its good again...but, a perspective without fear.  Other than the death of another child.  The same perspective that allows me to hunt deer and eat the occasional trout and feel right with the world.  Its the October thing...






















Friday, September 5, 2014

Transitions...

...are a part of life.  Kind of like traditions...but, the opposite.  Traditions are locked.  Transitions are change...seasons, flow...a river.  The ability to change and grow is the secret of life.  At least a life well lived...something I learned from my father.  My father started this life in Hohenkurchen Germany in 1904.  A villager son of a master carpenter he was a remnant of another age.  Growing up as a young man during world war I, while his father was fighting on both fronts, molded his desire for peace.

The journey to Madison started in January 1922.  A sleigh ride to Leipzig and the train station for a ride to the north sea.  The winter cruise to America and another train to Chicago for another train to Madison was most certainly a transition.  But, the whole family survived...something amazing considering a loaf of bread was a million marks when they left.  They burned their money the night they left their house and most everything they owned.  His stories of growing up during WWI and its hardships, or his school teacher owning the fishing rights in his village and never being able to hunt...stuck with me as I took advantage of public lands and waters and the safety of Madisons west side.  My father watched the age of the car and airplane and going to the moon.  All from a start in another age.  I was always most amazed my father ended up on the west side of Madison...one of the most liberal and educated places on the planet.

Old school European, my fathers family helped build that city where I grew up and still call home.  Literally...my older brother was a master carpenter building the alter of Frank Lloyd Wrights Unitarian Church when I was young.  I remember my father saying, "there's Mr. Wright."  when we saw his black limousine on our family trips to my mothers family farm in Richland county.  I also remember him talking to Gaylord Nelson at the neighborhood grocery store, and speaking of Aldo Leopold who worked at U.S. Forest Products Lab just a couple blocks from Madisons largest greenhouse where my father worked.  Transitions all...this is what molded me and everyone on Madisons west side.  An ethic of the land...of hunting and fishing.  Not just for sport or tradition...though, both are valid to me.  But, for purpose, too.  Aldo Leopold hunted deer to manage his land, FLW's works grew from the land, and Gaylord Nelson balanced the earth with that ethic of Madisons west side.  A natural, organic, balanced view of life that included hunting and fishing with landscapes and building.  A progressive view...

I was indeed, fortunate...sinks full of perch from lake Mendota were common, along with the occasional northern pike.  My older brothers 8 pt buck hanging from the swing set was a neighborhood legend...and our sunday 'chicken' dinners were just as often rabbit and pheasant as they were real chicken.  The garden was large and our root cellar was full.  Cherry, apple, plum, and pear trees were part of our yard on Madisons west side...as were grapes, currents, and raspberries.  That back yard was the very edge of Madison.  And, the beginning of the driftless...A few miles west you can see the hills of ruble and boulders like pebbles, pushed in front of the glaciers edge.  Our house was high on the hill of Merrill Crest with a view of Lake Mendota...another remnant of the glacial push to the south and its retreat.

My love affair with the driftless started with my mothers farm in Richland county...we could drive there in less than an hour and often we left after church in Middleton and were there by noon.  My grandmother had fishing rods in a bucket in one corner and rifles in another.  Necessary, for the rattlesnakes and critters that nuisance a farm...a problem I now know, myself.  But, the fishing poles were what bonded my grandmother and I.  She loved to fish and often it was just her and I on the Wisconsin river that was a boundary to her farm along hwy 60 between Gotham and Muscoda.  Still, one of the most scenic views in the entire driftless...I do remember asking about trout and her telling me of the Blue river but, I later learned Ash creek had brook trout just over the ridge.  My mothers family had survived much transition on their way from the Rhine river and Silesia to the driftless area.  I may not have known it at the time but all were preparing me for my own.  Those other lives I keep talking about...

Those lives are like the transitions of a trout angler...first, just catching one.  Then, more and larger trout...and, finally our own restrictions and values applied to how we pursue our quarry.  All valid...As, in deer hunting.  Some hunt for food, some for trophies, and others for the over all experience.  Again, all valid...part of life and death.  Sustenance and discovery all at once.  Discovery of self...I have often told anglers fishing the driftless it is the joy of discovery when fishing here.  Discovering new water, techniques, and sights and history, are the true joy of driftless angling.  Any fool can catch a trout given everthing...it takes transitions and discovery to make an angler or hunter.

Where am I going...?  It is approaching fall...trout will move up to spawn, baetis will hatch...and, deer will change their coats from red to grey.  Transitions...My 18 yr old son is starting college at UW Richland.  My 14 yr old son is quarterbacking the middle school football team...and, my 10 yr old daughter is growing up too fast.  I only hope she still wants to hunt when she's old enough.  But, trees are turning, the garden withers, and I'm looking to my treestands...the long rods hanging between the deer antlers will soon be back in tubes and new bows will replace them on the porch.  Otis will listen for the pheasants crow...The tradition of transition will run strong.  Its our heritage, our culture, and, our reason for living...