OK, here’s another one.
I love upland game bird hunting, with grouse hunting being at the top of my list. Something about the early fall colors, the fresh woodlands scents, my dog working the cover, the rush of a grouse flushing, and the difficulty of the shot in fairly heavy cover, as well as the wonderful flavor of the bird.
When in new areas it usually takes a while to learn where the grouse are holding up, and it often takes a while to develop relationships with land owner so that I may have access to their land for the hunt.
One of the things I do is drive the rural roads looking for areas that have the right mix of cover and grouse foods. After locating potential spots I make an approach to the house I believe may control the spot; not with intention of hunting that day, but to introduce myself, establish rapport, and to ascertain if indeed the person can and is willing to allow me access at some future date.
When I was stationed at Ft. Devens, MA, I actually lived in Nashua, NH. New Hampshire is well known for its grouse (known as “Pats” or “Partridge” by the locals), but nearly all of the huntable lands are in private hands. New Englanders are also known (rightly or wrongly) to be somewhat suspect of someone who does not come from their area (as my lack of a New England accent would give away), so it can be difficult for an outsider to gain access.
One fine early fall day I was on my usual weekend search for a grouse area when I spied a place that looked like it was made in heaven for grouse. It was a very old farm with grape vines that had gone mostly wild and an old apple orchard that had seen better days. The trees were mostly hardwoods of oak with some maple; each tree spaced just far apart enough to provide secondary growth below for cover, but still open enough to allow a chance to get a shot off.
The farm house, though it had a little peeling paint, appeared that it was still fairly well maintained. I approached.
The gentleman that answered, wearing a white shirt with a red tie under is overalls was in his sixties. His face and hands were heavy and had that work and weather worn look to them. He first looked at me with a “who are you, and why are you bothering me” look on his face, but after my introduction and a few pleasantries he warmed up a bit – seems he had served with Military Intelligence/ASA as a young man during the Korean War and he was glad that another ASAer had dropped by.
I got around to asking if he controlled the neighboring lands and if so if I might in the future have access for some pat hunting. Yes, about 120 acres of the surrounding land was his and he was willing to let me come and he would clear it with his two neighbors so that I could include their lands in my hunts,
if I agreed to his rules.
His rules were generally very acceptable, but there was one that caught me a little off guard at first. It was that I had to hunt with “Old Bill” – as he put it “the best pat finder and retriever in the area, and the neighbors will recognize him”. I couldn’t believe it, not only was I going to be able to hunt his land I was also going to get to use his dog!
The following weekend I arrived at the farm at about 7am with a gift of flowers for his wife and a bottle of fine sipping whiskey for him. After a short pleasant exchange with the farmer he hollered out “Bill, Bill, get over here!”, and what appeared to be the oldest man I had ever seen came around the corner of the house. He was gray, grizzled, wrinkled, bent over, and shuffled.
“This is Old Bill” said the farmer. “He was born on this farm 98 years ago and knows it better than I do. If you hunt my land he has to be with you”.
“Hello, Bill” I said, hardly believing I was going to be saddled with an old man that could hardly look up and moved slower than maple syrup in January; but I put my faith in the farmer and accepted that to hunt here Bill would have to be with me. Maybe in the future the farmer would let me hunt without “Old Bill”.
To this day I’m still ashamed I didn’t immediately trust in Old Bill. He knew the lay of the land, every plant and tree, all of the grouse (he may have been on speaking terms with some of them), and always had me positioned well for every flush he bumped. I limited out by 9 am. On top of that, he was a fine gentleman, with good wit, wisdom, and great stories.
I shared one of my birds with Bill which he accepted, but when I offered him ten bucks for his help he said “No sir! I already get paid, room and board, and paid attention to for my work here”. “You’re a good boy and I’d be glad to take you out and bird for you again” he added. I thanked him, and then I went to spend some time with the farmer and his nice wife – offering to help with some fence repair I noticed needing some attention when I returned in a week for another hunt.
The following weekend I arrived in great anticipation, again at 7 am.
I knocked on the farmhouse door. The farmer answered, but I could immediately tell that something was amiss. The look on his face, the redness of his eyes, that tell-tale moisture surrounding his eyelids all told me this man had been crying.
He said “I’m, I’m, sorry…” He trembled. “Bill died yesterday morning and… it’s my fault and…” He stopped there.
I almost couldn’t believe what I was hearing. “I’m sorry. He was a good man and a fine gentleman, but, what happened?” I asked.
In strained words he added “I went out back yesterday and I couldn’t believe it. There was Bill, tearing up chickens, and I couldn’t have him doing that,
so I put him down like I would with any bird dog that went bad.”

!!!!!
Of course this is just one of those “stories” I tell around the hunt camp fire – it’s just a tale.
Anybody have one?