Right after the election, Saturday Night Live decided to not be funny and instead did a cold opening with comedian Kate McKinnon, portraying Hillary Clinton, playing the piano and singing the recently departed Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah." It was a sappy spectacle that had Democrats around the country dabbing their little eyes. Thankfully our friend Remy is here to parody those who are supposed to be parodists with some spot-on political satire.
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
Friday, October 21, 2016
THE REAL FIREPOWER OF THE RIFLE
We frequently discuss here the power and
performance of the rifle in a variety of esoteric ways that can be measured
precisely with concrete numbers and in technical terms; caliber in hundredths
of an inch, bullet weight in grains, velocity in feet per second, energy in
foot-pounds, trajectory and deflection in inches, and accuracy in Minutes-of-Angle.
The ultimate book on the subject; The Art of the Rifle by Jeff Cooper
However, a good rifle…in good hands…also
represents a different sort of power, difficult if not impossible to quantify
or measure technically. Properly handled, the rifle empowers the individual
with such things as confidence, courage, and strength. The rifle in skilled
hands can make a man master of all he surveys, man or beast, at least out to “the
rifleman’s quarter mile” or the “hale half kilometer.” As Colonel Jeff Cooper
put it in To Ride, Shoot Straight, and
Speak the Truth, “The basic attribute of the rifle is reach. A powerful rifle enables a man to reach ‘way out past Fort Mudge’
and strike a blow that will stop not only a man but a truck or a horse dead in
its tracks.” The combination of a good rifle and rifleman need not fear the
teeth and claws of the natural predator nor the evil intentions of lesser men.
Skill with the rifle brings with it deep
obligations and responsibility, for the power of the rifle, as with any form of
power, can and has been abused. “The only real power comes out of a long rifle,”
said no less authority on the subject than Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, and
he was echoed by Chairman Mao’s adage that, “Political power grows out of the
barrel of a gun.”
Fortunately, a good rifleman tends to
possesses the inner strength and fortitude to negate the temptation of abusing
the rifle’s power. As President Theodore Roosevelt saw it, "A good shot
must necessarily be a good man since the essence of good marksmanship is
self-control and self-control is the essential quality of a good man." British small arms expert W. W. Greener concurred: "Rifle-shooting, in any and every form of competition, calls for the exercise of all the qualities that most ennoble a man--determination, self-possession, faith, self-confidence, admiration for the achievements of others." Neither
sheep nor wolf, the ideal rifleman serves by his very presence to stand guard
over his own and his nation’s liberties.
From the very beginning of the United States of America,
the Founding Fathers understood the unique influence the gun can have upon the
individual who can skillfully yield it. When Thomas Jefferson advised a young
college student as to the importance of daily exercise, he wrote, “As to the
species of exercise, I advise the gun. While this gives a moderate exercise to
the body, it gives boldness, enterprise, and independence to the mind.”
In Colonial New England at the time
of the American Revolution, it was the smoothbore musket that was found in
every home and the rifle remained virtually unknown. When the companies of
volunteer riflemen led by men such as Michael Cresap and Daniel Morgan arrived
from the distant frontiers the capabilities of the rifles and the men who
wielded them made a big impression.
The creation of German and Swiss
gunsmiths who emigrated primarily to what is now Lancaster County,
the weapons in question were then known as Pennsylvania Rifles and would
eventually be called Kentucky Rifles. Both names fall under the catch-all term of
American Long Rifle. Author John Dillon called it, “…a rifle which changed the
whole course of world history; made possible the settlement of a continent; and
ultimately freed our country of foreign domination.”
The American Long Rifle
As for the men behind the rifles, Charles
Lee, a major general in the Continental Army, wrote enthusiastically, “The
frontier riflemen will make fine soldiers…their amazing hardihood, their
methods of living so long in the woods without carrying provisions with them,
the exceeding quickness with which they can march to distant parts, and, above
all, the dexterity to which they have arrived in the use of the rifle gun.
There is not one of these men who wish a distance less than 200 yards or
greater object than an orange. Every shot is fatal.”
After observing a demonstration of
the frontiersmen’s rifle shooting prowess, a correspondent for the Pennsylvania Packet opined, “With their
rifles in their hands they assume a kind of omnipotence over their enemies.”
The Gunner’s
Guru, the late, great Colonel Jeff Cooper understood the magic and the power of
the rifle better than most, noting that, “The rifle is the queen of weapons and
its effective use is one of the greatest satisfactions available to man.”
“A really good
rifleman, with a really good rifle in his hands, is a man of stout heart. He
knows what he can do and he looks down upon those who cannot do the same.”
Theodore Roosevelt also understood
and frequently commented on this. “To my mind there is no comparison between
sport with the rifle and sport with the shotgun. The rifle is the freeman’s
weapon. The man who uses it well in the chase shows that he can at need use it
also in war with human foes.”
“Shooting well with the rifle is the
highest kind of skill, for the rifle is the queen of weapons; and it is a
difficult art to learn.”
Mister Rifleman himself, Colonel
Townsend Whelen, observed in 1932 that, “A good rifleman, plus a good rifle,
will shoot straight, see straight, think straight and will run our country
straight.”
Early outdoorsman Horace Kephart
called the rifle a “noble weapon” which he credited with a mystique that,
“entices its bearer into primeval forests, into mountains and deserts
untenanted by man.”
Jack O’Connor, in The Rifle Book, said, “To me the rifle has
always been the most romantic of all weapons, and of all rifles the one I love
most is the rifle for big game… Because I love rifles and because I love
wilderness country I have carried my rifles all over the North American
continent, from the hot, dry, barren sheep mountains of northwest Sonora to the
glaciers of the Yukon.”
In 1920, Charles Winthrop Sawyer wrote, "Rifles are the average man's Alladin's lamp; they bring elating thoughts of out-of-doors, by their appearance suggesting sunshine and cloud-shadows, wooded hills against the sky and watered verdant valleys, wind against tanned cheek and leaping blood and eager chase in wilderness adventure."
"A rifle is a stimulator, a companion that brings a sense of safety, and a magician that confers wonderful and unlimited power."
In 1920, Charles Winthrop Sawyer wrote, "Rifles are the average man's Alladin's lamp; they bring elating thoughts of out-of-doors, by their appearance suggesting sunshine and cloud-shadows, wooded hills against the sky and watered verdant valleys, wind against tanned cheek and leaping blood and eager chase in wilderness adventure."
"A rifle is a stimulator, a companion that brings a sense of safety, and a magician that confers wonderful and unlimited power."
Although primarily associated with
the British Royal Navy from his Horatio Hornblower series of books, author C.S.
Forester also understood the rifle, the rifleman and their combined capabilities,
espousing upon the theme in excellent novels like Rifleman Dodd and Brown on
Resolution.
“But Brown was only powerful in
consequence of his rifle; the handiest, neatest, most efficient piece of
machinery ever devised by man. Not for the first time was the rifle altering
the course of history. Brown was not a marvelously good shot…but he could
handle his weapon in good workmanlike fashion; and the rifle asks no more.”
Military historian John Keegan also understood
the importance of the rifle and its influence upon the individual rifleman as
well. “The musket, like the uniform livery of the dynastic armies that used it,
was a mark of servitude. So short was its range that its effect could be
harnessed to battle-winning purposes only by massing the musketeers in dense
rank, and keeping them ‘closed up’ at pike-point. The rifle, by contrast, was a
weapon of individual skill… as Thomas Carlyle put it, ‘the rifle made all men
tall. A rifleman was as good as any man.’”
Militarily, the United States Marine
Corps has understood this tenant since prior to the First World War. In that
conflict, the prowess of U.S. Marines with their Model 1903 Springfield rifles shattered German attacks at
long range and led the American Expeditionary Force’s commander, General John J.
“Black Jack” Pershing to state, “The deadliest weapon in the world is a Marine
and his rifle.”
"The deadliest weapon in the world is a Marine and his rifle."
Institutionally, every Marine, no
matter his or her technical position, is a rifleman first. Early in the Second
World War, this doctrine was enhanced when Major General William H. Rupertus
penned the Rifleman’s Creed, which is to this day memorized by all US Marines
during recruit training.
“This is my rifle. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
My
rifle is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I must master my
life.
Without me, my rifle is useless. Without my rifle, I am useless. I must
fire my rifle true. I must shoot
straighter than my enemy who is trying to kill me. I must shoot him before he
shoots me. I will...
My
rifle and I know that what counts in war is not the rounds we fire, the noise
of our burst, nor the smoke we make. We know that it is the hits that count. We
will hit...
My
rifle is human, even as I, because it is my life. Thus, I will learn it as a
brother. I will learn its weaknesses, its strength, its parts, its accessories,
its sights and its barrel. I will keep my rifle clean and ready, even as I am
clean and ready. We will become part of each other. We will...
Before God, I swear this creed. My rifle and I are the defenders of my
country. We are the masters of our
enemy. We are the saviors of my life.
So be it, until victory is America's and there is no enemy,
but peace!”
USMC Raider Brigadier General Merritt
Edson explained, “It is the rifle that ultimately takes ground, and it is rifle
fire that holds it after it’s taken, by throwing back enemy counter-attack. The
man with the rifle is the man who wins wars; and accurate rifle fire from
individual riflemen is the most effective factor on any battlefield.”
Another WWII leader, General Joseph
“Lightning Joe” Collins, while serving as US Army Chief of Staff, also
understood this. "The primary job of the rifleman is not to gain fire
superiority over the enemy, but to kill with accurate, aimed fire."
Beginning during the Korean War and
escalating through Vietnam
and Desert Storm, the US Army at times lost its way when it came to individual
rifle marksmanship, a hard-won skill requiring much practice, so the powers
that be sought to replace it with technology and sheer volume of fire. Jeff Cooper termed the effort, “If you can’t shoot
well, shoot a lot.” The practice of swatting
flies with a sledgehammer, and the inevitable collateral damage that goes with such
a concept, became the norm and for a distressingly long time individual small
arms were treated as little more than an afterthought. The Global War on Terror
soon showed that leveling an entire apartment block to silence a single sniper
did more harm than good in the long run and brought back the importance of the
individual soldier’s skill with his rifle, which can be wielded with the
precision of the surgeon’s scalpel against individual enemies, as noted by 11B
Captain Daniel Morgan in Infantry
Magazine.
"Marksmanship is the core of
excellence for an infantry soldier. Their proficiency in killing wins the
battle. The more you suppress a target without killing or wounding the enemy,
the bolder he becomes in attacking you. You need to train your soldiers to aim,
fire, and kill."
Beyond its military, hunting and sporting attributes, the rifle also carries with it a certain moral authority in that it stands as the last line of defense when it comes to insuring freedom and democracy against the clutches of tyranny.
Beyond its military, hunting and sporting attributes, the rifle also carries with it a certain moral authority in that it stands as the last line of defense when it comes to insuring freedom and democracy against the clutches of tyranny.
Understanding only too well the value
of liberty as an escaped slave, the brilliant abolitionist orator Frederick
Douglass noted, "A man's rights rest in three boxes: the ballot box, the
jury box, and the cartridge box."
The great Lakota Sioux warrior and
holy man Sitting Bull said, “I wish it to be remembered that I was the last man
of my tribe to surrender my rifle.”
Mahatma Gandhi went so far as to say,
“Among the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will look upon the
act of depriving a whole nation of arms, as the blackest.”
Famous for penning tales of bleak,
dystopian futures that would come to by synonymous with his name, novelist George
Orwell wrote, "That rifle on the wall of the labourer's cottage or working
class flat is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays
there."
Edward Abbey of The Monkey Wrench Gang fame once wrote, “The rifle is the weapon of
democracy. If guns are outlawed, only the government will have guns. Only the
police, the secret police, the military. The hired servants of our rulers. Only
the government—and a few outlaws. I intend to be among the outlaws.”
John Steinbeck explained, in The Grapes of Wrath, “And the rifle?
Wouldn’t go out naked of a rifle. When shoes and clothes and food, when even
hope is gone, we’ll have the rifle. When Grampa came here—did I tell you?—he had
pepper and salt and a rifle. Nothing else. That goes.”
Once again, Jeff Cooper espoused this
ideal most succinctly. “Pick up a rifle and you change instantly from a subject
to a citizen.”
Sunday, October 02, 2016
ODE TO THE OUGHT SIX
“But there ain't many troubles that a
man caint fix
With seven hundred dollars and a thirty ought six."
With seven hundred dollars and a thirty ought six."
Lindy Cooper Wisdom
Brought rather arbitrarily to life by US Army Ordnance
officers who were seeking a nice round number, the Caliber .30, U.S., Model of
1906 cartridge, more commonly known as the .30-06 Springfield, came into being
over 110 years ago. During all that time it has remained one of the most
popular hunting calibers in the world even long after its demise as a military
round and few people have had anything bad to say about the venerable old “ought
six.”
Townsend Whelen
Colonel Townsend Whelen, of course, told us, “The .30-06 is
never a mistake.” He also wrote, “A properly constructed .30-caliber bullet of
180 grains at M.V. 2,700 f.s. is adequate for any American big game if properly
directed at the chest cavity.” Jeff Cooper made similar observations.
Even Jack O’Connor, who adored the .270 Winchester for deer, antelope, and sheep, admitted
that he owned three .270s and three .30-06s and gave the nod to the ought six
when it came to larger game.
“I doubt that anything that can be put through a .270 would
be quite as effective on the heavier stuff as a good 180-grain bullet in the
.30/06. And when a man is hunting really heavy and potentially dangerous game I
don’t think any .270 load is as effective as a good 220-grain bullet in the
.30/06, as these babies play for keeps and the bullet must drive into the
vitals at all costs.”
Only Elmer Keith, with his affinity for “punkin’ chunkin’” big
hunks of lead so heavy that gravity alone would render them lethal, felt the
.30-06 was a bit of a pipsqueak and inadequate for elk.
Militarily, the Caliber .30 U.S. gave yeoman service through
two World Wars, the Korean Conflict, and even soldiered on in the early days of
the Vietnam War. It was fired from some of the most famous US military small
arms; the Model 1903 Springfield, the Model 1917 Enfield, the Browning
Automatic Rifle, the Browning water and air-cooled medium machine guns, and George
Patton’s “finest battle implement ever devised”, the M1 Garand.
In
WWI, doughboys like Sergeant Alvin York
and Captain Samuel Woodfill showed that a single expert rifleman with a .30-06
could change the tide of battle. Likewise, the US Marines stunned and staggered
the Germans with accurate long-range rifle fire when they arrived “Over There.”
My favorite description of this comes from the book Fix Bayonets! “The Boche wanted Hill 142; he came, and the rifles
broke him, and he came again. All his batteries were in action, and always his machine
guns scourged the place, but he could not make head against the rifle. Guns he
could understand; he knew all about bombs and auto-rifles and machine guns and
trench-mortars, but aimed, sustained rifle fire, that comes from nowhere in
particular and picks off men—it brought the war home to the individual and
demoralized him.”
The
ought six could indeed reach way out there “past Fort Mudge” and still deliver
a decisive blow; at 600 yards the 150-grain ball round fired from a Springfield
or Garand still retains considerably
more foot-pounds of striking energy than the M16A1 rifle of my day could
deliver at the muzzle!
The
Caliber .30, U.S.
would serve as the American military’s standard cartridge from 1906 until 1957.
This lengthy military service also led to some pretty cool ammunition being developed
for the .30-06, such as the black-tipped Armor Piercing, the silver-tipped
Armor Piercing Incendiary and the orange-tipped tracer bullets. GIs in WWII
found the M2 AP sufficiently powerful to penetrate the side armor of German
halftracks, and even the ball (FMJ) projectile was able to turn good-sized tree
trunks an enemy might shelter behind from cover into mere concealment. When John
Moses Browning was designing the world’s best heavy machine gun, the Browning
.50-caliber Ma Deuce, he simply multiplied the dimensions of the standard .30-06
cartridge to create the .50 BMG round. From the standpoint of a United States
Marine Corps officer in WWII, the late, great Colonel Jeff Cooper noted,
“Bushido is all very well in its way, but it is no match for a .30-06.”
In the hunting field, the .30-06 went to Africa
with Theodore Roosevelt in 1909. Ernest Hemingway used a .30-06 on safari in 1934
and Robert Ruark pronounced it “enough gun” in 1952. The lever-action Winchester in calibers like the venerable .30-30 had
reigned supreme in America
for decades, but returning veterans of the First World War brought the .30-06 cartridge
and the bolt-action rifle into the hunting mainstream to stay. In Alaska,
against their giant brown bears, one study conducted in the 1980’s concluded
that the .30-06 with 220-grain bullets was the minimum acceptable defensible caliber,
and the same load works well for moose, North America’s largest game animal. As
Jeff Cooper succinctly put it, “I have satisfied myself completely over the
years that the .30-06 will do anything that needs doing in North
America.”
The .30-06 has also been touted at one time or another for
its sheer versatility; it can be used for anything from “mouse to moose.” Factory
ammunition has run the gamut from 100-grain to 220-grain bullets, and reloaders
have taken things all the way up to 250 grains.
Back in the old days, wilderness hunting trips could last
for weeks or even months and “pothunting” for wild game helped to keep the
larders full hundreds of miles from the nearest store. For more than forty
years, Townsend Whelen used his .30-06 with a light load consisting of a
150-grain FMJ military bullet propelled by only 18 grains of 4759 powder to
harvest small game and upland birds without blowing them to bits.
Decades later, Remington made an attempt to turn the .30-06
into a varmint rifle with the introduction of their special Accelerator
ammunition. This fired a 55-grain .224-caliber Pointed Soft Point bullet
encased in a plastic sabot to fit a .30-caliber bore at an impressive muzzle
velocity of 4,080 feet per second. Expense and, in some rifles, indifferent-at-best
accuracy kept the idea from becoming very successful.
But
when push comes to shove the .30-06 is really a big game cartridge and at that
job it is superb. In the old days, the standard recipe called for 150-grain
bullets with a muzzle velocity of 2,900 fps for deer, 180-grain bullets at
2,700 fps for elk, and the big 220-grain round nose slugs for dangerous game
like grizzly and Alaskan brown bear. Today, the choices can be narrowed down if
desired. For many, the 165-grain bullet seems the best all-round compromise
when it comes to hunting since it shoots flatter than the 180-grain yet packs
more punch than the 150s. While none of the numbers produced by these loads are
very sexy or spectacular when compared to the various .30-caliber Magnums, they
have still been simply getting the job done for more than a century.
The 180/2,700 mentioned by Whelen is still a very viable
and fairly long range load perfect for deer and elk. With a 270 yard zero,
you’re still shooting flat to 330 yards before you even need to start worrying
about trajectory. The vast majority of hunters really don’t possess the
marksmanship skills to take game much beyond 300 yards anyway, but the .30-06
is certainly capable of reaching out there to make 400 and even 500 yards shots
in really good hands.
My wife “adopted” my Model 1903A3 Springfield. It was originally a WWII-vintage
Remington-made 03A3 that had been sporterized long before I bought it. I turned
it into a Cooper-style Scout Rifle with a 19-inch barrel, lightweight synthetic
Choate Mauser stock, and a home-made scout scope mount which now wears a
Leatherwood Hi-Lux 2-7x32mm long eye relief scope. Most importantly, an old
retired USMC gunnery sergeant turned gunsmith did an amazing trigger job on the
Springfield.
That alone was enough for my wife to choose that particular rifle as her own
hunting arm.
I’ve hunted a great deal with the .308 Winchester, sometimes for no better reason
than to prove that a semi-automatic military-style “evil black rifle” does
indeed have a “legitimate sporting purpose.” For pronghorn antelope and deer, I
had a fling with the 6.5x55mm Swede for a couple of years. Yet I always wound
up coming back to the .30-06 in the end. Now I generally hunt with an FN-made
Model ’98 Mauser action with a 24-inch military contour barrel, Timney trigger,
and Model 70-style wing safety wearing a Leupold Rifleman 3-9x40mm scope.
Both of us also reload our own ammunition. After playing
around with various loads, bullet weights and powders, we both settled on
180-grain bullets as standard. The older rifles just seemed to greatly prefer
heavier as opposed to lighter bullets. Olivia’s Springfield, in particular, was
basically indifferent to 150-grain loads and tossed 125-grain bullets all over
the paper, but she found that a combination for the 180-grain that yields
3-shot groups that can be covered with a dime at 100 yards. My Mauser never
shot quite so well but I was finally able to at least achieve the magical 1 MOA
with 180-grain loads.
More years ago than I care to recount, a friend of mine who
was small of stature had hunted with the same .30-06 his entire life, but one
year he decided to upgrade to a .300 Winchester Magnum in a lightweight “Mountain
Rifle”. He came out to our place to sight it in at 100 yards. His first 3-shot
group you could have covered with a dime. By the time he was “zeroed”, his
fourth group had opened up to damn near as big as a dinner plate as he flinched
in anticipation of the recoil. He hunted just one year with the .300 Win Mag
and then went right back to the good old ought six ever since.
I myself once fell prey to the siren’s song of the .300 Win
Mag even though I knew deep in my heart that all it really did was push the
exact same .308-inch bullets that the ought six spits out to higher velocities.
That .300 on a P-17 Enfield action was the first rifle to ever give me a case
of half moon disease as the rim of the scope cut a semi-circle into my eyebrow.
I felt the most pain, however, at the reloading bench, where I had to use a
scoop shovel instead of powder measure. To get the same 180-grain .308 Sierra GameKing
moving 200 feet per second faster than the .30-06 required around 75 grains of
powder versus the ought six’s more reasonable appetite of roughly 50 grains. I
never did hunt with the .300, mainly because, despite the tonnage of powder
devoted to finding the best “cherry” load, I never could get a 3-shot group to
squeeze into even 2 inches at 100 yards. And all this to achieve a maximum
point blank range 20 yards more than the .30-06 delivered.
As
for the bullets themselves, we also experimented with not only different
weights but various types to include the “new & improved” premium
technology such as the Nosler Partition and Hornady InterBond. In the end,
however, we worked our way right back to our starting point: the good old cup-and-core
Sierra GameKing soft points. Like the .30-06 cartridge itself, they just plain
get the job done.
If it ain't broke....30-06, '98 Mauser, Sierra GameKing.
Another
old Marine, Guns & Ammo’s Craig
Boddington once wrote, “…if you are going to own just one centerfire hunting
rifle, make it a .30-06.”
On
the ought six’s 100th birthday, Outdoor
Life’s Jim Carmichel noted, “In terms of popularity and widespread
appreciation, no other caliber comes close…The .30/06 is the American hunter’s
sweetheart, apple pie and first kiss all in one. It does it all.”
Wednesday, September 07, 2016
MY FIRST PEEK AT AN UNLIMITED BIGHORN SHEEP DISTRICT
For
about a quarter of a century I have been attempting to draw a Montana Fish,
Wildlife & Parks “Special Tag” for hunting moose, mountain goat or bighorn
sheep. Now I’ve added bison to the unobtainable list. Thus far, even with the
“benefits” of the Bonus Point system, I haven’t drawn shit. As I tally up the
years, mileage and injuries I’ve acquired, I’m getting a little nervous. I
don’t know how many years I have left in which I will still be physically able
to hunt the high country for sheep and goats.
Montana
does have some “Unlimited” bighorn sheep hunting districts where a person can
simply buy an over-the-counter tag. These represent the only opportunity in the
Lower 48 States for a hunter to actually purchase,
a bighorn sheep tag, as opposed to attempt to draw one tag via a lottery
system.
The major reason why the state can have these five
unlimited districts is that the country in question is steeper than a cow’s
face and rougher than a cob; rocky, isolated, and hard to access. The units are
in the National Forests and Wilderness areas just north of Yellowstone National Park.
Some of this terrain, like the Boulder
River and Beartooth Mountain
units, consists almost entirely of loose rocks piled just a few degrees shy of
vertical. It kicked my ass twenty-odd years ago when I was still in my prime.
Now, I have to take a three ibuprofen just to look at a topo map of the area.
Jack Atcheson, the premiere sheep hunting guide who used to work the unlimited
districts around Yellowstone told Duncan Gilchrist, author of the Land of Giant Rams
books, “Some hunters arrive, look at the immense size of the country, become
depressed and leave immediately.”
One must also factor mountain weather into the mix. It can
and does snow every month of the year in the northern Rockies.
I once found myself plodding through three inches of snow in a genuine blizzard
atop a high, barren ridge in the Big Belt Mountains, and in Idaho I awoke one
fine morning to find ice rattling around in my canteens…both these events
occurred during the balmy old month of August.
The areas in question are also very thick
with grizzly bears which, after forty years of Federal protection, have come to
believe that they are officially at the top of the food chain. Rather than
fearing man, they have come to regard us as delightfully fat, slow and rather
defenseless (no horns, claws, or teeth to speak of) sources of protein. A rifle
shot is actually a “dinner bell” to some bears who’ve discovered the report
means, at the very least, a yummy gut pile, if not an entire elk, that they can
confiscate from the plump orange two-legged critters who waddle hastily out of
the way.
Merely traveling into these areas is hard; you can get
horses and mules into the approaches to the mountains that hold sheep, but to
hunt the high country itself you have to do a lot of arduous walking. Finding a
legal ram is even harder. Due to the high elevation and tough winters, the
unlimited district rams have a reputation for slow horn growth. From 2000 to
2013, only one ram measuring over 40 inches has been harvested from the Yellowstone area units.
Since
it appears that my odds of drawing a bighorn tag for a limited hunting district
are significantly less than my odds of being elected president, I decided it’s
time to hunt the unlimited districts while I still can. So I’ve been
researching the two “easiest” to get to unlimited bighorn districts, Unit 300
(Gallatin-Yellowstone) and Unit 303 (South Absaroka).
They’re in the same county that I reside in but, Montana counties being what they are, still
require a 90-plus mile drive one-way for me to get there.
The
Gallatin-Yellowstone has about the smallest geographic area, although it still
covers a wide swath of tough country, and an early ten-day season starting September 1st. Mountain
weather being what it is, I like the idea of the early September hunt. Despite
the fact that 40-odd hunters scoured the place each season, for the past two
years Unit 300’s two-ram quota has gone unfilled, and many years only one ram
is bagged.
South Absaroka covers a much larger area, but has a little “easy”
access in the southwest corner, where you can drive to pretty high elevations
above Gardiner and Jardine. There are pockets of resident sheep throughout the
area, if you can find their haunts, but many people gamble on waiting for the
really big rams to migrate out of Yellowstone
Park to their winter
range on the National Forest in mid to late October. There’s always a chance
that the quota will be filled and season closed before the big boys leave the
park. The 303 quota usually gets filled and, if you hunt above Gardiner, there’s
the very nice benefit of being able to camp in a vehicle or camper, always a
plus in grizzly country.
Since I haven’t hunted the country around Gardiner for
almost two decades and need to do a lot of scouting, the timing seemed
fortuitous when my neighbor down the road, whom I’ll call “Uncle Si”, asked if
I wanted to go with him on a sheep hunt in Unit 300. I agreed to tag along because
he’s in his late 60’s and missing half a lung. He wanted me to go along because,
as an artilleryman in Vietnam,
he’s deaf as a post and worries that a grizzly could walk right up to him
without him ever knowing it. Having served in armor, I’m only half deaf and I
wore my hearing aids.
For reasons I’ll detail in a post of is own, neither one of
us carries pepper spray. Since I didn’t have a sheep tag and no other big game
seasons were open, it was my intention to just pack my 4-inch Smith &
Wesson Model 629 .44 Magnum in case we ran into a bear. Uncle Si, who was
hunting with a single-shot Thompson-Center rifle in 7mm Remington Magnum,
wanted me to bring a rifle too. This didn’t quite seem right to me, so I phoned
the Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks office to ask about this. It isn’t
technically illegal to carry a rifle for protection under such circumstances,
but they really preferred I didn’t.
I
compromised between the two by bringing my smoothbore slug-barreled Model 870
Remington 12-gauge pump shotgun, with a single one-ounce deer slug in the tube
and the extended magazine filled with double-ought buckshot. Plenty of
firepower but decidedly short-ranged and defensive in nature, nothing a normal
human would be able to poach a sheep with. In hind sight it was simply a whole
lot of extra, unnecessary weight to carry. Thankfully, I had at least installed
a sling some time back, which made it much easier to tote around.
Uncle Si had supposedly hunted the country in question his
whole life, bagged plenty of nice elk up in Tom Miner Basin, and knew the area like the back
of his hand. So, I foolishly left my topo map folded up in my belt pouch and
trustingly fell in behind ye olde mountain man, assuming he knew right where he
was going. I completely forget about another mountain man maxim expressed by
Brian Keith as Henry Frapp in the old 1980 movie The Mountain Men. “Naw, I ain’t never been lost. Powerful confused
for a month or two, but I ain’t never been lost.”
Our goal, Sheep Mountain, as seen from Specimen Ridge, the closest we got to it.
We started hiking through the timber, which featured plenty
of blow-down, at first light. Around noon, we emerged some 2,500 feet higher
atop a nameless 9,321-foot peak that turned out to be two drainages and well
over four air miles, and about twice that in trail distance, from our intended
target of Sheep Mountain. We were too far away to even
glass for sheep with the spotting scope.
So we wound up spending the rest of the day hiking as well,
taking the most direct route possible back down to the truck. The most direct
route possible turned out to be Specimen Ridge. It was not a route I would have
chosen considering the age and shakiness of our knees at the moment, but we
just took it nice and slow with the aid of our walking sticks. In places, the
ridge narrows down to a few yards or even feet in width, with craggy vertical
cliffs dropping dizzily away on either side. Footsore, soaked with sweat, and
dog-tired, we stumbled back down an old logging road to the truck as darkness
was falling. We’d covered somewhere around seven plus miles, of which distance
approximately six inches consisted of flat ground.
We hiked back down Specimen Ridge for about 2 miles to get past the cliffs to descend to our starting point.
Of
course, it wasn’t all bad. As they say, the worst day of hunting still trumps
the best day of work. A couple of brief morning rain showers greeted us and
these had cleared out the thick gray pall of drift smoke from a big forest fire
near West Yellowstone that had been obscuring the valleys. This opened up the
achingly beautiful long distance vistas of the mountains in all directions.
Twenty miles to the west we could see the barren reddish
rock of isolated, flat-topped Sphinx Mountain in the Madison Range
rising 10,840 feet against the silver blue sky and through the binos we could
make out the ski runs around Big Sky. To the northwest, beyond a series of
smooth, yellow grass covered ridges and darkly timbered draws, were prominent
features of the Gallatin Range like Ramshorn
Peak and Fortress and Steamboat Mountain. To the northeast, across the
flat patchwork of irrigated alfalfa fields in Paradise
Valley, the peaks of the Absarokas
pushed against the sky, the northern-most some forty odd miles away near Livingston. To the south, we could see far into to heart
of Yellowstone National
Park, Quadrant Mountain and Antler Peak
dropping away through stands of timber to the open green grasslands of Swan
Lake Flats where the sun occasionally glinted on steel and glass as vehicles
passed along the silver thread of the park road.
And, of course, to the east we could see our currently
unobtainable goal, 10,095-foot Sheep
Mountain, the
communication site on the east summit gleaming white in the sunshine. Long,
smooth grassy ridges stretched out towards us like fingers, the draws between
them dark green with thick stands of timber. Between us lay a helluva lot of
steep, rocky, tough ground.
Of the last nine rams harvested in Unit 300, five were
taken on Sheep Mountain, so it got hit pretty hard. We
saw five other sheep hunters and/or their partners, two pairs like use and one
lone-wolf. We also ran into two mounted YNP Rangers patrolling the pack trail
that roughly parallels the park boundary.
In
many places, on the way in, the dwarf huckleberry was turning scarlet and the
tiny leaves of the grouse whortleberry were golden. There weren’t many berries
on the more open hillsides, where the leaves were already beginning to get dry
and crunchy, but where there was a little more moisture at the bottoms of the
draws we found a nice crop. We paused briefly a few times to pick sweet juicy
fat purple huckleberries, glossy black wild currants that made our faces
pucker, and some coarse red thimbleberries whose broad leaves were also turning
yellow.
Although the area is in the heart of grizzly bear country,
and in spite of the fact that a well-known local bullshitter claimed to have
seen no less than thirteen grizzly bears up there the previous day, we saw very
little sign. None of the berry bushes had been worked over by bears and we came
across only one rather old pile of scat and a solitary lodgepole pine trunk
that bore grizzly claw marks. There wasn’t much deer or elk sign, either, and
the few moose doots we saw were very old and dry. It wasn’t until we got up
atop the high ridges that we found any sheep tracks and droppings.
We
kicked up a couple of mountain grouse. The first was a long way from the ridge
yet so, when he landed in a nearby tree, I slipped a #6 birdshot shell into the
shotgun and nailed him. Such was the nature of the terrain that I had to follow
a trail of feathers for twenty plus yards to find the grouse. He had fallen
lifelessly from the tree, hit the ground, and bounced and rolled like a soccer
ball down the steep slope for quite a ways before lodging against a fallen tree
trunk.
The
trees at the beginning of our journey were a mix of rough-barked Douglas fir
and arrow-straight lodgepole pine stands. These gave way to smooth trunked
subalpine or “piss” fir on the slopes and some dark spruce in the draws.
Finally, getting closer to timberline, the tops of the ridges were decorated
with gnarled, twisted, wind-battered whitebark pine. Occasional black-and-gray Clark’s nutcrackers flew from tree to tree giving
metallic squawks; nutcracker and pine squirrel caches of whitebark pine cones
and nuts are a favorite staple of the grizzly bear. A great many of these pines were now only
dead gray skeletons, the victims of white pine blister rust, a fungal disease
introduced from Europe. The tiny spores are
borne easily on the wind, so that even isolated “island” mountain ranges like
the Crazies have been affected.
The area is also part of the Gallatin Petrified Forest and
we enjoyed seeing the petrified wood nearly everywhere we went. The trees were
supposedly buried upright and standing 50 million years ago by lava, mud flows
and volcanic ash, then petrified via silica and quartz seeping into their
cells. In some places, the white petrified trees were embedded within the rock
of the cliff faces, which are often composed of volcanic conglomerates. Water
and wind have sculpted these conglomerates via erosion into strange shapes,
pillars and balanced rocks.
"Uncle Si" and the petrified tree.
Traipsing
down Specimen Ridge, we came across the still-standing petrified trunk of a
giant old tree that must have been ten or twelve feet across at the base. Its
sheer size made us wonder how high the actual tree must have reached when
living. The Eocene Age when these trees were alive must have been much warmer,
for such species as sycamores, magnolias, chestnuts and oaks have been
identified in the petrified forest.
On our initial way down Specimen Ridge, we also surprised a
nice mountain goat billy who was bedded down in the shade of the stunted piss
firs that adorned the top of the ridge. Having domestic goats of my own, I
could just about read the comically distraught expression on his bearded face
and in his coal black eyes. Of course he was long gone by the time I got my camera out. The sleek-haired, snow white goat trotted past us
within 25 yards or so and then disappeared over the edge of the nearest cliff.
For the rest of the hike, whenever we could look back and see the east-facing
aspects of the ridge we glassed for him, but it was as if he had disappeared
into thin air.
By the time we hiked all the way down Specimen Ridge to
where the slope moderated enough for us to dive off the west side, I was weary,
footsore, and getting dehydrated even though I’d packed in three quarts…or six
pounds…of water. Thankfully, we had a cooler with Gatorade and bottled water in
the back of the truck. As I sat on the tailgate and guzzled my first Gatorade,
I checked my watch and noted that it took three full minutes for my ass to come
dragging in behind us.
Driving back down Tom
Miner Road, within a mile of the aptly named
Grizzly Creek, there were a couple of vehicles stopped along the side of the
road so we stopped to take a gander as well. About 300 yards off the road, two
grizzly bears were making their way across a wide open yellow grassy meadow
against a backdrop of brilliant green white-barked quaking aspen.
Da Bears...viewed from a nice, safe distance.
They looked like they had been eating well, and their sleek
brown pelts were obviously frosted with the traditional “grizzled” white-tipped
guard hairs. Their shoulder humps were clearly apparent and despite the fat they
carried on their well-rounded rumps you could still plainly see the grace and
power of their massive muscles rippling beneath their hides as they walked, dug
at the ground, briefly tussled together a couple of times, and occasionally ran
a short distance. One stood up on its hind legs a time or two to survey the
terrain around them, revealing a white patch on its chest.
Going by their nearly identical appearance and size, maybe
300 pounds or so, and their familiar behavior towards each other, we speculated
that they were siblings and probably three-year-olds who’d been given the boot
by Mama Bear so she could have more cubs.
So, after all was said and done, it was a pretty good day
even though we didn’t even get to see a bighorn. The only thing that really
upset us was seeing a billboard advertising camel
rides along Highway 89 in Paradise
Valley. If the quota remains unfilled, we plan to go back for the last 2-3 days of season.
Saturday, August 13, 2016
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Help Us Caption The Barking Hillary Video
Watch this 20 second video of "the smartest women of the world" and probable future commander-in-chief barking like a dog. Then help us come up with a suitable caption for the video.
My ideas for captions:
My ideas for captions:
- This is what happens when Hillary sees Bernie Sanders' campaign bus go by.
- "What's that girl? Bill's trapped in a well?!"
- I misunderstood when I heard people say she was a real bitch.
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
THE DOG ATE MY SCOPE
My wife needed a new scope
with more magnification on her hunting rifle; she’s been getting by for ten
years with a 2.5x pistol scope on an 03A3 Springfield
configured as a scout rifle. She’s collected a pile of mule deer and whitetails
with it, but the long-range shooting required for antelope hunting really does
call for greater magnification.
So,
for her birthday in early January, I ordered a Leatherwood 2-7x32mm Long Eye
Relief scope from Natchez
on 12/28. I had waited until the last minute, as usual, so I wasn’t going to
get my panties in a wad if it didn’t make it here in time for her birthday. I
was, however, pretty sure I’d have it before February.
Therein
lay my mistake, for I was dealing with a big-name private shipper who is apparently
vying with the US Postal Service for the coveted Lame & Incompetent Sloth
Delivery Service Award. I won’t “say da name”, but I’ll give you a hint; their
trucks are not brown.
After
several days, I checked the tracking number on my order. To my surprise, I
found out it had been delivered to my residence two days prior. This was news
to me, as I had been home that day, and no little white truck had been here.
Since
we live in a rural area and were trying to be nice, we’ve given both big name
shippers permission to drop our packages off at the neighbor’s house on the
main road when and if our road is too muddy or snowy. Since we got our tractor
and I’ve been plowing snow all winter and laying down gravel all summer for a
couple of years now, the road is seldom if ever actually “bad” these days. The
guy in the little brown truck never has any problem driving up here and
delivering packages. Nor did the guy in the propane delivery truck, or the
neighbor who stopped by in a Chevy Caprice. The little white truck, which
happens to be, IIRC, an F-250 4x4 with a cargo box, hasn’t been seen at our
house in months. The driver immediately interpreted “when the road is bad” to
mean 365 days out of the year and took to just automatically dumping our stuff off
at the neighbors every single time to save himself a half mile up and down our
road.
Still,
we could live with that since either the wife or I will drive past the neighbor’s
place and pick it up on a normal day.
This
time, however, the package didn’t get delivered to us or the neighbor’s house.
Nor did two other packages, from different companies, supposedly delivered by
the same carrier. First, I went around to all the neighbors asking if any of
our packages had been delivered to them by mistake. As I said, we are rural,
but there’s only two named roads, both perfectly straight, and a grand total of
five houses in a mile section. You can see them all from the main road, it’s
wide-open sagebrush country. There are only two houses on Arrowhead Road, and we’re one of them.
There’s only ONE house on West Arrowhead, and we’re it. You can’t go past our driveway, since the
road turns into a two-track through a cow pasture that is at the moment covered
with two feet of snow.
So,
since no packages had been delivered to us or to any of the neighbors, we
started calling the shipper. We got a big fat dog and pony show and had to wait
on hold for long periods of time in order to speak to different clueless morons
who, in turn, each gave us completely different answers. Finally we had to file
claims for the lost packages. Eventually, these claims ground their way through
the shipper’s Federalesque bureaucracy, where the claims were of course denied because
the driver said he had delivered the packages to us.
After
about a week of phone tag, we finally got to talk to someone from the shipper’s
local office in Bozeman instead of one of the 1-800
Helpline people in New York or New Delhi or wherever the
hell they were. The shipper insisted the driver had delivered the packages but,
he said, and I quote, “There was this big German shepherd hanging around and it
could have carried the packages off.”
I
shit you not. What is this, third grade? “The dog ate my homework.” Really?
I
doggedly hung on the line and noted the fact that neither we nor any of the
neighbors even have a German shepherd and after some hemming and hawing, the
driver finally admitted he hadn’t actually delivered to our place. But he had,
as per instructions, delivered to the neighbors mentioned earlier. We’ll say
SMITH at 2 WIGWAM Lane.
So both the wife and I checked in with them again. Nothing, nada, zip, zero,
zilch.
I
went the rounds of the entire neighborhood again
and finally found one of the three MIA packages, which the driver continued to
insist had been delivered to Smith at 2
Wigwam Lane. It had actually been left with Jones
at 15 Wigwam. There are only TWO houses on Wigwam Lane. Smith’s is kind of hard to
miss as they’re on the intersection with the main road and have three big
100-foot greenhouses and the business name and address on a header gate. Jones
is another quarter mile up Wigwam and
at the end of a quarter mile long private lane.
So
we called the shipper again with proof that at least one of the packages the
driver insisted had gone to Smith actually went to Jones and that nobody had
seen the other two MIAs. They basically said, “Our driver says he delivered it
and a signature wasn’t required so tough shit.”
Fortunately,
thus far two of the sellers, Natchez
and Macy’s, made good on the shipper’s
screw-ups and re-sent our purchases, and this time we made sure they were sent via
the guys in the little brown trucks and not the buffoons in the little white
trucks. The status of the 3rd MIA package remains in limbo for the
moment.
Some
might say I’m being too hard on a new delivery driver. He is, after all, apparently freshly
escaped from the monkey house at the Seattle Zoo and the price of bananas is going up lately. But, as I pointed out, the
guy in the little brown truck and his occasional substitute drivers have never
once had a problem delivering to us.
By
the way, yes I have indeed walked a mile in this guy’s moccasins, as it were. I
drove truck on delivery routes in rural Iowa
and rural Montana,
back in the days before GPS and cell phones, and never had any such problems.
It’s not rocket science. I figured anyone with opposable thumbs and a third
grade literacy level could handle it.
I
was wrong. Plus our driver didn’t pass the third grade. Turns out the dog ate
his homework.
Saturday, January 23, 2016
HOME SECURITY UPDATE
Just one of those endlessly forwarded email jokes, but worth a chuckle...
Now
the local police, sheriff, FBI, CIA, NSA, Homeland Security, Secret
Service and other agencies are all watching the house 24/7.
I've never felt safer..... and I'm saving $69.95 a month.
Home Security--Safe and SecureI took down my Rebel flag (which you can't buy on e-bay any more) and peeled the NRA sticker off the front door;
I disconnected my home alarm system and quit the candy-ass Neighborhood Watch;
I bought two Pakistani flags and put one at each corner of the front yard.
Then I purchased the black flag of ISIS (which you can buy on e-bay) and put it in the center of the yard....
I've never felt safer..... and I'm saving $69.95 a month.
Thursday, January 21, 2016
DAS GOAT
I acquired goats, as you know, in hopes of someday using
them as back-country pack animals so that I might actually get to at least hunt
bighorn sheep for a year or two before any more of my body parts run out of
warranty.
Why goats, aka Taliban War Brides? I’ve ridden and packed
horses in the past and found them to be really expensive and about as smart as
a fencepost. Plus I’m too busted up already to be able to afford a horse wreck.
I looked into llamas and alpacas and was amazed at how much people want for
them critters these days, too. I wanted cheap and low maintenance.
Someone suggested pack goats and I began to look into the
subject. I was surprised to find out that when fully mature the bigger dairy
breeds can comfortably carry fifty pounds. Removing my shoes and socks to do
the math, I realized that came to 100 pounds for two of them, or 200 pounds for
four. Not too shabby. Even when I was young and dumb and full of come I learned
to limit my pack to no more than 50 pounds, so four times that much without me
having to schlep any of it might translate into a pretty comfortable camp.
Plus goats are supposedly able to pack on game trails, scree
slopes, cliff faces, and otherwise inaccessible rugged country where other
stock dares not tread. Our nearby Crazy
Mountains are a steep and
rocky island range where some of the high country trails are signed with
warnings of “Not Suitable for Stock Use.” Trails too rough for horses and mules
remain just fine for smaller, more sure-footed goats and, from what I’ve read,
they can even out-do a llama or alpaca.
Goats as teen-aged boys...just like real kids!
Hence, back in May, we became the
proud owners of four 5-week old goats. A nearby dairy has no need for the extra
males born during lambing (calving? goating?) season, the male of the species
being exceedingly difficult to get milk from, and was actually giving them away.
So we wound up with four free whethers (castrated males).
Driving them home in the back of the pickup was the last
inexpensive and low maintenance part of the whole deal. There are times when I
wonder if it might be cheaper to just feed them greenbacks. They would eat
dollar bills, no problem there.
The first difficult goat-related task I
had to face was one I hadn’t counted on. My wife insisted we had to name them all. I immediately thought of
my friend Doug’s spastic Brittany
bird dog. He claimed its name was “Bear.” After witnessing the two of them working
a field in search of pheasants one morning, another friend and I immediately
concluded that the dog’s full name was actually “Bear Goddamn It!” Although with hindsight I now know that “Goddamn
It!” is actually a very appropriate goat name, that idea was vetoed by my wife
when originally suggested. Later, she also turned down my idea of calling one
of the goats, “Bleeping Little Bleep of a
Bleep!”
The goat with LaMancha blood turned out to be easy enough to
name. He’d recently been de-horned and sported the little tiny LaMancha “gopher
ears”, so he looked kind of nubby, and I just started calling him that. Nubby. Later
on, I began to notice his tiny ears make his eyes look really big compared to
the other goats. Looking into those big yellow eyes with the tiny black slit pupils
reminded me of Kermit the Frog, so we sometimes call him “Kermie” now as well.
My wife got collars for the goats and
called me “intellectually lazy” (not the first time I’ve heard that phrase…no,
wait, the term Doug and I proudly earned in high school was “academically lazy”) when I christened
the Saanen with the blue collar Blue and the Alpine mix with the red collar
Red.
Simply not true. “Blue” and “Red” are great, traditional
American critter names. For instance, there’s a Chris LeDoux song about a
bucking horse called Old Red and
Grandpa Jones of Hee-Haw fame had a song about his ‘possum hunting dog Blue. And in the Ringling Five classic Sheep Dog Rap, an under-appreciated
musical masterpiece often mentioned in the same breath as Mozart’s final piano
concerto or at least Weird Al Yankovic’s Angry
White Boy Polka, the dog in the song is named Ol’ Blue.
Which left me with one last goat to
name. The collar theme had already played out and besides, his collar was
brown. “Ol’ Brown” just doesn’t have any kind of ring to it.
Contrary to what your spouse may have told you, there’s no
such thing as watching a Clint Eastwood movie too many times. So I named the
last goat Clyde, after Clint’s orangutan
co-star in Every Which Way But Loose.
Even now I am eagerly anticipating that glorious future day when the goats and
I will find ourselves at a trail junction somewhere high in the Crazy Mountains
and I can say, “Right turn, Clyde.”
With the goats named, I went on to
learn new information about the species. Yeah, sure, we got a couple of books on
goats and there is some good information on-line if you’re willing to dig for
it. The most valuable information garnered, however, was stuff I’d picked up
years ago from old Warner Brothers cartoons and an episode of The Andy Griffith Show where Jimmy the
Goat ate a case of dynamite.
Old cartoons: a much more accurate source of information on goats...or any other subject, for that matter...than the MSM.
Oh, sure, scoff if you will, but the info
you can get from Bugs and Daffy and Andy and Barney is a great deal more
factual and reality-based than anything we’ve gotten from all the MSM TV
newscasters combined for the past eight years. Old cartoons, on the other hand,
depict goats as creatures with cast iron stomachs who delight in eating the
most inappropriate items, ranging from the odd tin can to entire Model T Fords,
which turns out to be fairly accurate.
Goats are browsers rather than
grazers, and their tastes can be quite eclectic. I’ll never forget when, more
years ago than I care to think about, my daughter got two Nubian goats. Turned
out into a pasture of tall, lush creek bottom grasses, they immediately sought
out and gobbled down every species of thistle they could find to the exclusion
of all else. Mmmmm. Nummy. Herds of
goats are in fact seeing considerable use in Montana,
Idaho and Wyoming as biological weapons in the battle
against invasive noxious weeds like leady spurge and knapweed.
Our goats lean more towards the eating
of Model Ts, or at least petroleum-based automotive products. It was for this
reason, even more so than the fact that I found myself tripping over one of
them every three to five seconds, that the goats were confined to quarters
while I was building fence around their pen.
First I turned around and caught Ol’
Blue attempting to lick the yummy mixture of creosote-treated fencepost sawdust
and bar oil off of the recently sharpened teeth of my chainsaw. Once the
chainsaw was safely put out of reach in the back of the pickup, it only took
him a few moments to find another automotive goat delicacy; he began sampling
the grease on the tractor’s drawbar roller. Hey, if you can’t find a convenient
tit, I guess a grease zerk is the next best thing.
As I attempted to herd the varmints back through the main
area of our pole building “barn” and into their corner pen, Ol’ Blue
sidestepped me in an attempt to suckle one of the terminal posts on of an old
6V tractor battery. I grabbed him and carried him to the pen and turned around only
to find his brother Clyde wagging his tail
vigorously while attempting to sample the sweet-smelling delicacy of fresh
WD-40 on a bicycle chain. Nubby appeared to be licking his lips as he
eye-balled and headed straight for a Dolamr full of two-cycle mix.
Even though the price of gas isn’t
that bad these days, it was time to lock the goats up in their indoor pen until
I finished.
Goats can certainly bring strong
emotion into your life. Sometimes they can be cute and cuddly and amusing.
Other times, you find yourself secretly wondering if you could actually beat
one to death with a pair of fencing pliers. It usually depends on just how
inappropriate the item is that they are trying to consume at the moment,
especially if it’s physically attached to you or your clothing.
However, goats cannot just randomly
ingest any old thing they come across with complete safety. One common farm
item in particular is apparently highly disagreeable, even toxic, and possibly
even radioactive to goats. That item is store-bought $75-per-bag goat/sheep
milk replacer.
Feeding our bottle babies milk
replacer mixed as per the directions (see why men don’t read them?) was not a
winner. Over the first few feedings it caused three out of four to bloat up
like ticks.
So I spent a couple of long mornings
and evenings trying to get a mixture of vegetable oil and baking soda down the
gullets of various young goats who were quite expressive about how much they
hated the procedure. OTOH, they did really seem to enjoy me massaging their
tummies for fifteen or twenty minutes afterwards. Goats apparently express
gratitude by unleashing a concert of burping and farting that puts the
eating-beans-around-the-campfire scene in Blazing
Saddles to shame.
Fortunately my wife found something called Probios at the
local farm & ranch store, Hooter’s Hardware. Its addition to the morning
feed finally cured what ailed ‘em.
We gradually weaned them on schedule and they took to hay
and COB and mineral with gusto. As they grew they were given the run of our
twenty acres and eventually put a big dent in the thistle crop, although a
great deal of electric fencing was still required to keep them off and out from
under the tractor and cars. When I take them for hikes up in the mountains,
sub-alpine fir, commonly called “piss fir” or “pitch pine” for its copious
amounts of sticky Krazy Glue sap, becomes the Holy Grail of goat culinary
delight. Lately, we’ve been raiding the Christmas tree dump in Bozeman and “recycling” Douglas fir into goat
poop.
I was going to point out here that goats think only of
eating and pooping, but that’s not true. No thought whatsoever goes into
pooping. They just go ahead and let fly no matter where they are or what they’re
doing…at a dead run, halfway up a cliff face, when their butt is over the water
bucket. The only time they can control pooping is if they suspect they might be
able to get on the porch in the next few minutes, in which case they can save
it for at least that long.
They love to climb on stuff, too, which is why I constructed
“Baby Goat Mountain” out of some slabs of limestone we had laying around the
property and later half-buried an old tractor tire standing up in the backyard.
This playground equipment kept them entertained for a good five minutes before
they decided it was more fun to climb on the Jeep, pickup truck and tractor.
Sure, you get 'em all kinds of nice toys, but they just want to play with Dad's shit.
Which is why getting goats reintroduced me to the joys of
electric fencing. Having grown up on a hog farm, I didn’t think mere goats
could show me anything new since hogs are pretty good at opening gates and
making holes in fences themselves. Ha! Hogs are rank (pun intended) amateurs! Silly
me! Goats are the Houdinis of domestic stock fencing and with electric fences
you have to use considerably more juice than you’d expect just to get their
attention. Here’s a quick and handy guide I made up which should be of use for
prospective goat owners. Now I know when the goats are trying to get on the
porch because three nearby communities suffer electrical brown-outs.
I also learned plenty more about regular fencing, which isn’t
as big a pain as some people claim. I’ve found that any fence that is strong
enough to stop a charging rhino and tight enough to keep out mosquitoes will
also work…most of the time, anyway…for goats.
Is this fence goat-proof? Don't be silly! It can't even hold a lousy T. Rex. Goats would through it in five seconds flat.
I do have to admit the four boys have already put a serious
crimp on our formerly abundant thistle crop. When I figure up the cost of feed,
fencing and accessories for the past eight months, however, I reckon I could
have sprayed them with something costing about five thousand dollars per gallon
and still have come out ahead cost-wise.
Just think. In only three more years I can actually start to
do some serious packing with them. That should get me back in shape and back up
in the high country, if nothing else just so I can get some of my money’s worth
out ‘em.
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