Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Public Enemy




Back in 2001 shortly after the terrorist attacks on The World Trade Center and The Pentagon, President George W. Bush gave his infamous Axis Of Evil speech. In the speech he named North Korea, Iran and Iraq as the top three enemies to America. Since then I’ve often wondered whom I would place on my own personal Axis Of Evil list. So one day I decided to put pen to paper and actually make out my “evil-doers” list. Initially I found the task to be pretty difficult, since I could only pick three and there are so many people out there that I just can’t stand, such as Nancy Pelosi, Bill Maher, Michael Moore, Harry Reid, Keith Olbermann, Al Gore, and the Reverend Al Sharpton just to name a few. But after careful consideration and deliberation I would like to present to you Rick Bryson’s Personal Axis Of Evil. Drum-roll please.

1. George Lucas
2. Mike Krzyzewski
3. The Man

Number One with a bullet, at the top of the list would be George Lucas, aka The Beard. He’s an ironic choice since he was one of the chief architects for shaping my childhood. When I was 10 years old, George Lucas was my hero. He’s the man who gave us Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, the Jedi Knights, the Sith Lords and Indiana Jones. But time has not been kind to Mr. Lucas and since his hey-day as a creative genius he’s become a greedy, lazy, egotistical hack. Just look what he did to the Star Wars Universe with those lousy Prequels. Jar Jar Binks? Are you kidding me? And don’t even get me started on Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. My five year-old nephew could have made a better film than that steaming pile of a movie. Lucas has basically become a figure of his own creation: he’s become the evil Emperor Palpatine/Darth Sidious. He doesn’t care about his legion fans that are responsible for his billion-dollar empire; all he cares about these days is making a quick buck. I could rant all day and fill an entire book about my hatred of what Lucas has become but it’s time to move on the next individual on my list.
The number two slot on my Axis of Evil is occupied by a man who needs no introduction to the citizens of The Tarheel Nation; he’s the one and only Mike Krzyzewski, aka Coach K, aka Satan. Krzyzewski is of course the head basketball coach of the despised and hated Dook Blue Devils. The Scriptures tell us, that as Christians, our hearts should not be filled with hate but when it comes to Dook Basketball my heart overflows with white-hot, seething hatred. How much do I hate Dook Basketball you ask? Well lets just say if the Dookies were playing Al-Qaeda coached by Osama Bin Laden himself, I’d show up for the game in a Taliban beard and cheer for the terrorists over Krzyzewski’s bunch any day of the week.
The third and final component of my personal Axis of Evil is an individual simply known as The Man. Now I’m sure some of you are scratching your head and asking, ‘Just who is The Man?’ But for those who spend anytime in the outdoors hunting or fishing, you know exactly who The Man is. The Man is the DNR, aka The Game Warden, and he’s never ever a welcome sight to an outdoorsman in the field, regardless whether or not you’re involved in something illegal.
Personally, I had only a couple of run-ins with The Man in my hunting career and none of them turned out positive; two pricey tickets and one threat to spend a night in jail. Now I know that game wardens, at least on paper anyway, serve an important purpose in enforcing wildlife laws, but personally I’ve never met one worth two cents. Every warden I’ve had the displeasure of running into in the woods have been rude, cocky, arrogant and suffering from a God-complex. Nothing but a bunch of “wanna-be-cops” in my opinion.
But as unpleasant as my experiences with game warden have been, they can’t compare with other individuals that I know. Here are a couple of stories that have been told to me over the years by various friends and family members and their encounters with The Man.
(Also note that since this is one of the more incriminating sections of this book, names have been changed in order to protect the innocent and to keep the author from being slapped with a lawsuit.)

***
Two old boys from back in Mills River (we’ll call them Harold and Garry) used to routinely sneak over and poach deer off the Biltmore Estate back in the mid-1980’s. The method of their crime was deviously brilliant- they would float the French Broad River in an old duck boat and shoot big bucks standing on the banks. They would then simply drag the dead deer back into the boat and float away under the cover of night.
One particularly bitter and cold winter evening, just before sunset, the two men were silently floating their boat down the half-frozen river when they spotted several deer feeding in one of the fields on the estate’s property. Harold stood up the boat, raised his big Ruger rifle and shot the biggest buck in the bunch. The buck dropped in its tracks, deader than a doornail. They rowed to shore and while Garry waited with the boat, Harold hustled out into the field to retrieve the deer.
But just as Harold was kneeling down to field dress the buck, several pickup truck headlights clicked on all around him in the darkness. Before Harold knew what was happening a convoy of DNR vehicles were barreling down on him with their blue lights flashing. Harold left the deer lying, leapt to his feet and began high-tailing it as fast as he could go back towards the river. The DNR trucks screeched to a halt and an army of DNR wardens swarmed out in pursuit of Harold.
Garry in the meantime, who was quietly waiting with the get-away-boat, but now seeing the entire North Carolina Division of Wildlife heading in his direction with guns drawn, decided to abandon is partner-in-crime and began rowing frantically for the opposite shore. Harold on the other hand was running for his life. He later told me that he was running as fast as his legs could take him and never once looked back. At one point he recalled, one of the game wardens got so close to catching him that he could actually feel the warden’s fingernails scraping against the back of his hunting coat as the warden reached out to grab him. As Harold neared the edge of river and seeing that Garry had left him to fend for himself against the onslaught of game wardens, Harold simply hurdled his self as far out into the icy waters as he could. He landed with a loud splash in the middle of the French Broad and quickly began swimming to the other side. When he got to the opposite shore, he pulled himself out of the frigid waters and turned to see a dozen DNR agents standing on the far bank cursing and swearing at him. The wardens weren’t about to jump into a sub-zero river in the middle of winter after some old redneck poacher. Harold and Garry lived to poach another day.
But unfortunately for Harold his luck didn’t last. A couple of years later, after shooting yet another buck illegally on the estate, a mob of game wardens caught up to him in the parking lot of the Dogwood Grocery and beat him within an inch of his life with their billy sticks. Harold referred to the incident as “getting a wooden shampoo from The Man.” After that, Harold “unofficially” retired from poaching deer off the Vanderbilt Family, though from time to time he was prone to sneak onto other small tracts of private land that didn’t have DNR warden watching the premises.

***

To this day Dwayne Higgins is still regarded as the toughest and meanest game warden in Mills River history. Throughout the 1950’s Dwayne patrolled the back roads and game trails of the valley in search of lawbreakers, spotlighters and poachers. He was feared and respected all through the county as a strict enforcer of justice.
One night a carload of punk teenagers that happened to include Dwayne’s son Zac, were out spotlighting deer out on Dave Whittaker Road. Suddenly Dwayne and a couple of his deputy wardens came blazing onto the scene with their blue-lights flashing, ready to arrest everyone involved. Zac, fearing that he would be caught not only by the game warden but by his father, panicked and leapt from the car he was in and starting running across the open field in order to escape. Now to this day it’s not entirely known whether Dwayne Higgins initially knew that was his son running across the field that night, but regardless, Dwayne pulled out his .38 service revolver and sent several rounds in Zac’s direction. After the third or fourth bullet kicked up a plume of dust just inches from his feet, Zac decided it was in his best interest to stop running and quickly surrendered to his father.
Dwayne personally drove Zac to jail that night.

***
My cousin Mike Barnett’s grandfather was name Allen Barnett. Allen along with his brother Willie worked at the CC Camp back in the 1940’s. Like a lot of folks in the mountains of western North Carolina during those years, both Allen and Willie were living through some pretty hard financial times. Jobs and money were in short supply and a person had to feed your family the best way they could, even if that meant poaching a few whitetails out of season.
While they worked at the CC Camp, that was located on Vanderbilt property, Allen and Willie would often shoot deer with a small, busted-up .22 that they kept concealed in their britches leg. If a deer were to walk along while they were out working, they would simply pull the rifle out of their pants, shoot the deer, and slip the murder weapon back without anyone aware of what happened. The two brothers would then creep back under the cover of darkness and retrieve the dead deer. Now unlike most of our modern day poachers and outlaws, Allen and Willie didn’t shoot deer out of season just for the sport of it; it was to feed a hungry family. In a lot of cases the venison they would bring home was the only substance that got them through a long, cold North Carolina winter.
Unfortunately the nobility of their crimes meant nothing to the local game wardens and once they caught wind of Allen and Willie’s deeds, they set up a sting operation to catch them in the act. After following Willie back home one evening with a successfully poached whitetail, the wardens staked-out his cabin and waited for Willie’s wife to start cooking the incriminating venison. As soon as smoke and the smell of frying back-strap began wafting out of the kitchen window, the warden moved in for the arrest. Just before they knocked on the door however, Willie saw them coming and instructed his wife to toss the cooking meat, frying pan and all, out of the back window. Unfortunately a warden was waiting just outside the window and caught her in the act.
Willie was dragged into the Hendersonville courthouse to stand trial for his crimes. The judge sentenced him to a year in jail. His brother Allen was in attendance that day and when he heard his brother’s sentence, Allen marched to the head of the courtroom and stood bravely next to Willie.
“Your Honor,” Allen said to the judge. “My bother Willie has a wife and family to take care of. I would like to serve the sentence in his place.”
The judge glared down at the two brothers and said, “Well, if you’re his no-good-for-nothing brother, then you can BOTH serve jail time as far as I’m concerned.” The judge then sentenced both Allen and Willie to prison for a year and a day for their crimes against the Vanderbilt deer population.



***
Riding out to Colorado one year back in the mid-1980’s with Dad, Ray and the rest of the usual elk bunch was a fellow by the name of Richard Bronson, a retired Alabama game warden. He was good friend of our horse trainer, Elwin Heatherly, who was also a participant on this particular hunt.
Anyway, one night while driving through the desolate wastelands of Nebraska, the hunters got to swapping stories in the tuck in order to keep each other awake. Harold Nash, (the same Harold from the infamous Wooden Shampoo Incident) got to telling a story about the meanest game warden he’d ever met.
“That sorry S.O.B was so low-down that he’d turn-in his own son,” said Harold, obviously referring to Dwayne Higgins.
There was an awkward silence in the truck; apparently everyone but Harold was aware that Richard was a former game warden. After a few uncomfortable seconds of non-conversation, Richard turned to Harold and said proudly, “Well hell, that’s not so bad. I once turned in my own wife for fishing out of season.”



***
There are other tales of course, such as the time Ken Calhoun was ticketed and almost drug off the Moffat County jail for shooting gray jays in elk camp, or the time Uncle Walt punched a particularly mouthy warden in the face for calling him a liar. (Nobody and I mean NOBODY called my Uncle Walt a liar.) But for now I think it’s best that I wrap up this section of the book that pertains to game wardens-talking about the DNR just simply gets my blood pressure boiling.
Hey, we took out Saddam, I wonder if I can convince Congress to approve a military Shock And Awe assault on the local DNR regime?

Thursday, May 6, 2010

A Weekend To Remember




Due to fatherhood responsibilities at home and the fact the Danielle and I where feeling the affects of the economic recession, I decided not to participate in the 2009 Kentucky Deer Season. And that decision, unfortunately, is probably going to haunt me for some time, since some really big whitetails were harvested off of our property that year. The following story was written by my younger brother Joe Bryson, which chronicles his and Dad’s adventures that season in the Deer Woods.)

A Weekend To Remember By Joe Bryson

(November 14-15, 2009)

Dad and I left about 4:00 A.M. On Friday morning to come check out our new lease in Western Kentucky, and hopefully get in a few days of hunting. We have a brand new 350-acre lease in Livingston, County Kentucky. After a long seven-hour drive we met up with the landowner's caretaker, a friendly chain-smoking fellow named Keith about 11:00. We followed him down the road about two miles where he showed us the property along with a few maps of the area. We were taking a risk when we signed the deal to lease the land, because we had not really looked the place over at all. We knew however, that there were big deer in the area. The property is adjacent to the track of land that our cousin Ray currently is leasing from another local farmer. Ray has told us numerous stories about monster bucks that live in this part of the county.

Hunting this part of the country is nothing new to us as we have been leasing land in Western Kentucky for several years now. Its a shame we have to go this far to hunt, but all the local idiots back in Mills River have no concept of quality deer management. As the old saying back home goes “If its brown, its down.” Dad and had brought several bags of shell corn to put out in few spots we thought looked pretty good. We have discovered it doesn't take deer long in Kentucky to find an easy meal in the woods. After emptying our sacks we drove over to where we were going to camp for the night. We were going to share camp with Ray tonight, as his property is just a stone's throw away from ours. Dad and I would share camp that night with Ray, Matt, Serena (Matt's daughter), Chris and Randy Ballenger, Jr. and Wyatt. Everyone slept in their campers that night except for dad and I. We slept on a mattress in the back of dad's covered pickup. This is nothing knew, as Rick and I had done this many times over the years. After a restless night of listening to coyotes and dreaming of big bucks, we were up again at 5:00 AM, ready to hit the woods.

We had a feeling it was going to a good day when a huge buck crossed the road on our short drive to our stands. Dad decided he was going to sit on a little wooded point that stuck out on the corner of the lower pasture. It was looking out over the pasture and a creek bed that was covered in tracks. Dad had put out some corn about 50 yards behind him on the ridge. I was just a short distance around the bend on the creek flat up on a hard wood ridge. About 8:30 I saw a doe come down the ridge in front of me. She crossed the creek and milled around for about five minutes before feeding off up the ridge where she came from. About 9:45 a small five point came in from my left and ate some corn for a few minutes before heading up the hill where the doe came from. Saw only a few does and a fawn the rest of the morning. At 11:00 I began climbing down to go meet dad, who I as pretty sure had shot about 30 minutes earlier. As I was getting down I saw dad coming down the hill. He told me that he had shot a nice 8pt, and we needed to get him loaded up before it got too warm. On the way to the buck he told me how at about 7:30 a nice white-horned 8-point had walked right under his stand and looked at him. Deciding to hold off for something bigger, he had let him walk. As the young buck ran up the ridge he said he saw another nice buck feeding in the corn pile. Not knowing what else he would see, he decided to put some meat in the freezer and dropped the buck in his tracks. This put a little smile on my face as this was the first deer he had taken with the new 7mm Rick and I had bought for him on his birthday.

We got his buck loaded in the truck and drove back to camp where we strung him up on an old wood shed. We decided dad would stay there and quarter the buck while I went back out to hopefully catch a rutting buck cruising for does in the middle of the day. Dad dropped me off at the top field where I was going to explore some new woods down on the east side of the property. I walked the edge of the field for about ¼ of mile when I spotted and old metal ladder stand in a small clearing just across the creek. I remember Keith saying we could hunt that stand if we found it. I decided to climb up and sit out the rest of the afternoon. What an awesome spot! Brier thickets and a small draw around the bend of the creek surrounded the clearing. It looked like a real honey hole to see an old buck cruising for does.

About 1:15, I decided to eat my lunch while listening to the sounds of the Kentucky deer woods. About 1:30 as I was chowing down on a Little Debbie (Zebra cakes are my personal favorite), I looked to my right and saw a huge yellow tine moving through the thicket. I tried to get a look at him with my binoculars, but he vanished as quickly as he appeared. After mumbling a few choice words under my breath, I sat there for the next two hours seeing and hearing absolutely noting. The great thing about the deer woods is that one's luck can turn at the blink of an eye. At 3:45 I noticed movement across the creek. I got my Wind River binos up and saw a huge rack moving through the brush. I deduced quickly this was a “shooter.” As my heart started pounding through my jacket I steadily prepared for a shot. The gun I was carrying today is my Marlin Guide Gun chambered in 45-70. I bought his gun two years ago in Chatsworth, GA, but had yet to kill anything with it. Rick and dad jokingly have told me that it was a great gun...........if I was hunting Grizzlies in the Yukon!

The buck was heading directly at me when he dropped down into a gully. My heart sank as he seemingly disappeared. I scanned the brush frantically with my Nikon scope and finally saw him about 30 yards to my left in a brier thicket. Knowing the power of this gun (405 grains), I knew shooting into the brush would not be a problem. When my cross hairs found his shoulder, I fired! The old boy only took a few steps and I heard him crash. I literally jumped out of my stand and made my through the honeysuckle and biers where I found him laying across a log. He was a big long tined 8-point! One of my biggest bucks ever. After a few pictures, I did the dirty work of gutting him and proceeded to make the one-mile walk to get dad to help drag him out. We drove the truck down to within about 75 yards of the creek where we loaded the big 200 lb+ buck up and headed back to camp. What a good day. Dad and I had both killed nice deer and had shared some great time together.

DAD'S MONSTER

Sunday, Nov. 15, 2009

Having an exhausting day, we decided to drive a few miles down the road to the interstate and stay in the hotel. After a long day of dragging and skinning deer, we wanted to treat ourselves to a hot shower and meal. We agreed that we would hunt in the morning until about 11:00 with the agreement to shoot nothing but a “monster.” Having plenty of meat for the freezer there was really no reason to hunt except for the fact that we had drove seven hours for a one-day hunt AND we knew what possibly could walk through the woods in this part of Kentucky at any moment.

We parked the truck at the top field the next morning about 6:00. I was going to hunt the pasture stand with Dad's 7mm and he was going back to the creek stand where I took my buck yesterday afternoon. I told dad to take the Marlin because of how thick it was where he was going. The morning was very slow. I saw nothing, except some cows passing by about 7:30. It was unusually warm this morning. The deer just were not moving. About 7:45 I heard one shot followed by another in the direction of where dad was sitting. About a half hour later I saw dad's old red shirt coming down the hill. I remember praying to myself that I hope dad had killed a good buck. It has been a long time since he had killed a real trophy. As he got closer I could see he was smiling. “Did you get 'em”, I hollered. Dad put both hands over his head to indicate he had indeed shot a “monster.” I was bursting with excitement inside for dad. He does so much for Rick and me, and I was literally overjoyed to hear the good news. He walked to the base of my tree and simply said, “He's a nice one.” As we took the long walk over the ridge, across the field, and down to the creek I listened to dad tell the story. These stories never get old. Even now at 32 years of age, I love to hear dad tell his stories. As we crossed the creek I saw, lying not 30 yards from where my buck fell, the biggest deer I have ever seen. It honestly looked like a horse with antlers! It was dad's buck of a lifetime. What a great memory-two big deer from the same tree, using the same gun.

(Dad's huge 8 pt. buck would later score 146 inches Boone and Crockett)