Sunday, November 6, 2011

Perfect Day






Today was one of those picture postcard perfection autumn days in the mountains. Cliche, yes, but true. If I were a half-way decent writer, I would have sat down today and wrote an epic poem or a short story, something along the lines of Hawthorne, Washington Irving, or Thoreau. But I'm not, and instead I was inspired to build deer stands.

When I was in high school, Dad and I built a little permanent stand on top of the mountain on the far side of the property. But the stand has fallen into decay over the last ten years or so. But the frame was still solid and it's in a prime location to catch an old buck running a doe along the ridge lines during the rut. So with the help of Joe, Dad, Ben and Jake, I spent the afternoon, reviving an old hunting spot.

We put a new floor down in the stand, firmed up the framework and strung some fresh camo. In a couple of short hours we had a brand spanking new stand up, ready to pop some whitetails in the coming weeks.

The last few months have been pretty stressful to say the least. The new job has been pretty intense. But spending the afternoon thirty feet up an old red oak, pounding fresh 16 penny nails into pine 2 x 6's and feeling the warm November sun on my back was just what the doctor ordered.

Plan on sitting this stand in about two weeks with my Fred Bear in my hand.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Honest Abe


This is depressing. Kentucky bow season opens next weekend and I won't be there. Instead of sitting 30 feet up a hickory tree with my Fred Bear Stick-n-String, watching a nice 8 point munch on some shell corn, I'll be sitting in the bonus room over a garage at my In-law's house, which serves as my temporary home. The sad fact is that I probably wont be chasing a lot of whitetails this year due to my current situation. The family and I have just moved to Greenville. SC- I've taken a new job, and we've haven't sold out house in The ATL, which has forced us to take up residence with Mr. and Mrs. Danny Crout. "It's not so bad," I keep telling myself. "I could be living in the slums of Calcutta." When I look at it that way, it's not so bad.

But the pathetic part is that I just couldn't afford or take off enough time from my new gig, nor did I have enough cash, to head up to Kentucky deer camp this year. And that folks is absolutely KILLING me. Not being apart of a time honored tradition, spending quality time with my family, sitting around a roaring October campfire, swapping hunting tales, and skinning bucks after dark, is like having Mola Ram rip out my beating heart and lower my screaming body into a pit of molten lava. This stinks.

But in my absence, I'm hoping my favorite nephews step up to the plate and put a buck or two on the ground and bring some meat back for the freezer. And to sweeten their incentive, I've thrown in a Five Spot to whoever pops the biggest buck. (Yeah I know, I'm cheap!)

Good luck Ben and Jake, make Uncle Rick proud.