Missouri Quail Season 2013

The second day of the Missouri quail season 2013, Robin Barrows and I ran in a field trial at Quail Creek Hunting Preserve at Prescott, Kansas. (Don’t ask.) We finished before noon and ate our lunch on the way to a Missouri Conservation area near Rich Hill, Missouri.


 Most of the public hunting in Missouri is on land owned by Missouri Conservation Department. Some of the lakes also have public hunting around them. Most of the conservation areas are hard hit the first part of the season. The website for the conservation department is MDC.Mo.Gov. You can down load maps to the areas you want to hunt or some areas have notice boards where you may find maps.

Steve Minshall was with us. He shares our passion for hunting and bird dogs but since he still has a job he can only go on week-ends

As we drove around the area we saw a few trucks with dog boxes in the parking lots. At one parking lot 2 men with 2 French Brittanys were getting ready to leave. We visited a few minutes then drove on around the area. After they left we returned.

I turned Lucky and Luke loose. Robin had his setter, Molly. It had warmed a little and we were hunting in shirt sleeves but that is hot for the dogs.

Evidently the spring rains made the cover grow real well. After about 300 yards we finally found an area that quail could move around in.

We watered the dogs at a pond then made a large circle through some good looking cover without finding anything. The dogs were hot and dry so we came back by the same pond we had watered them at earlier. Trying to hunt ground that we hadn’t covered on the way in, we moved over about 100 yards.

As we walked along, talking we saw Luke on point. Molly saw Luke and honored. Earlier in the year he had been flushing his birds before I got to him. When he would flush his birds I would whoa him and he would stop. I would pick him up and carry him back to the spot where he had originally pointed. I would whoa him then kick in front, come back style him, then kick in front again then release him. His last 4 or 5 points he has not moved. He let us walk in front and didn’t move until the birds flushed.

Wanting to reward him for holding I concentrated on killing a bird and promptly missed with both barrels.

Robin dropped 2 on the covey rise but we were only able to find one. I sure miss Lady. When Lady was young we would only lose 2 or 3 quail a year and now I had lost 2 in 2 days.

We went in the direction the covey had flown. Luke was working an edge of some brush and trees. As he moved down the line he whirled and rechecked a spot. He went on point but his tail was slowly moving. As we waited, watching him, his tail straightened and stopped.

I went into the brush to flush the bird and Luke stayed on point until the bird flew. Steve was in the right place and made a good shot. Luke ran to the bird and nosed it around but didn’t pick it up. I got the bird and called Luke to me, then threw it and told him to fetch. He ran out, picked it up and dropped it in my hand. I threw it one more time and he retrieved it to my hand. We have been working on the trained retrieve. He will soon get it.

Lucky

Lucky

Luke

Luke

We worked the area without finding any more singles. When we got back to the truck, the farmer was combining the corn near the parking lot. Usually the hunting is better after the crops are gathered, we have a few hard freezes to get rid of the green grass and the weather cools down.

I keep hoping the quail will make a come back. Maybe this is the year.

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Missouri Quail Season : Opening Day 2013

November first, opening day of quail season should be at least a state holiday if not a national. At one time the opener was November 10th but now it’s the first. I have not missed an opening day of quail season since at least 1968.


On opening day 2013, Don Bowlen and I hunted private land near Carrolton, Missouri. Don was raised in this area and still has friends here.

The first place we hunted I turned out Lucky and Whitey. Don had his Brittany, Ava. We had just started across a bean field, that had been combined, when Lucky went on point. He had rimmed the bean field and was on point in the edge of a CPR field near a clump of trees and brush. Ava and Whitey were still coming around the edge of the bean field, Don and I were still about 100 yards from Lucky when I saw one quail flush about 30 yards from Lucky. He didn’t move and no one else was even close.

The dogs checked the area out, although there seemed to be a lot of bird scent they found nothing. Expecting to find some of the covey we started in the direction the single had flown.

As we waded through waist high CRP I walked up a single. On my second shot it folded. It dropped into a low spot of green grass that was real tall and thick. The grass had fallen over creating a mass that was hard for the dogs and me to get around in. Ava, Lucky and Whitey worked back and forth to find the dead bird. After about ten minutes of searching we gave up without finding the bird.

Don and Ava started through the CRP and I moved over about 100 yards with my dogs. The CRP slowed Don and me down but it didn’t seem to bother the dogs. Just a few yards away from us and the dogs disappeared in the CRP.

A few minutes later the Garmin GPS showed Lucky on point about 200 yards away. As I moved towards him I looked for Don but could not see him to alert him to Lucky’s point. When I got to Lucky, with Whitey backing, Don was still over a little rise from us.

When I walked in front of Lucky the quail flushed up the hedge row they were in. One bird came out my side of the hedge row and I dropped it. My second shot missed a quail flying down the hedge row.

Whitey found my dead bird but she didn’t retrieve it. We’ve been working on the trained retrieve, but we aren’t there yet.

I waited on Don to come up before chasing the singles. I thought I knew where the covey landed but we never found them.

On the way back to the truck Lucky and I went back to the area where we had lost the first bird. After searching the area for another five minutes we gave up.

On the second place we hunted Don dropped me off on the north east corner then drove around to the south west corner. I had turned out Luke and Dolly to hunt west on a hedge row then south down another hedge row to meet Don and Ava.

About 100 yards down the hedge row I was hunting, another hedge row ran south for a short distance. Luke and Dolly ran down one side then back toward me on the other side. As I continued west I heard a covey flush deep in the hedge row. I didn’t see a bird but I thought they flew west.

Dolly went on point just in front of me. Thinking maybe all of them had not flushed I crawled into the hedge row. But they had all flown.

Going on west on the hedge row Dolly would point with Luke backing, I would try to get into the hedge row and hear a bird flush, then Luke would point with Dolly backing. I had four points with birds flushing at each, not counting Dolly pointing where they originally got up and never saw a bird. I did get some nice pictures after I remembered I had my camera with me.

Luke

Luke

Dolly backing Luke

Dolly backing Luke

Luke backing Dolly

Luke backing Dolly

After lunch I turned Lucky and Blaze loose in another area. This area had soy beans that had not been combined yet. We hunted some good looking draws and hedge rows but we didn’t find anything. After about an hour we gave up.

We had probably moved 3 coveys and killed only one bird but we were finding birds. When the farmers get most of the crops out and it cools down more it will be better hunting. And we put another opening day behind us. I hope we have many more.

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Lady And The Mule Deer Buck

“He’s trying to kill her!” Vince yelled. The wind was blowing really hard even for Kansas and his shout was just an unintelligible sound to me but it got my attention.

Vince Dye and Dolly

Vince Dye and Dolly

Vince Dye and I were hunting walk-in properties in the Greensburg, Kansas area on the opening weekend of the 2012-2013 quail and pheasant season. On opening day we had not been very successful. The wind was 30 plus miles per hour from the south, with a temperature above 80 degrees according to the thermometer on my truck. When we walked south we had to lean into wind to make any progress.


Opening morning started off too warm and got hotter. The first place we hunted we only saw 3 quail, without getting a shot, and no pheasant. By 11:00 am it was too hot to hunt so we drove around checking out some of the walk-in properties.

Late that afternoon we decided to let the dogs out since they had been in the box for a while. I had 3 English setters with me and Vince had Roxey his German short haired pointer. I turned out my 2 males Lucky and Luke. I left Lady in the box because at 13 1/2 she had earned more rest. Vince started on the south east corner and I started at the north east corner. We both were hunting to the south west corner where we thought we might trap a pheasant.

As I got close to the south west corner filled with plum thickets and tall weeds I saw Vince coming over the hill from the east. Between us a hen got up, then a couple of roosters. But like everything that day they were too far to shoot at.

A few minutes later I heard Vince shoot. He had walked into a covey of quail. One quail came within about 40 yards and I shot but thought I had missed. I watched to see where it would land. It started to fly straight up, then it dropped about 75 yards from me. I tried to mark the spot.

After getting all of the dogs in to hunt dead Lucky finally pointed. The bird was sitting there, wounded but still alive, just in front of his nose. As hot, dry and windy as it was we were lucky, Lucky could find it.

On the way back to the truck Roxey pointed some singles. Three birds got up and flew where Vince couldn’t get a shot. One came my way and I got it.

It was getting late when we got back to the truck. As we were feeding our dogs it started thundering. Before we finished it started raining. It started getting cooler immediately. We were thinking tomorrow will be cooler and wet. It will be a better day.

The next morning when we got where we were going to hunt the truck had ice on the sides from the puddles in the road. That’s more like bird hunting weather. The wind was still blowing but now it’s about 30+ miles per hour out of the north with a temperature in the twenties.

Even with the rain the night before it was still dry for the dogs. We turned out all 4 dogs. We were both carrying water for the dogs as well as getting them into any available ponds or puddles.

I saw Roxey on point and I was closer than Vince so I waited for Vince. Luke saw Roxey and honored. I was still about 40 yards from Roxey and Vince about 75 yards when the covey lifted. Neither Roxey or Luke had moved.

We followed in the direction the covey had flown although we had not seen them go down. A single flushed right in front of me and I knocked it down. Lady retrieved it to hand and waited for the head. We’ve been through this ritual a lot of times in her 13+ years. (As she got older it became a fee she charged for her presence. Even if another dog retrieved the bird she wanted the head. And she usually got it.)

Lucky pointed and two birds flushed and Vince got one and I got the other. Lucky retrieved mine and Roxey got Vince’s.

We found a pond. All of the dogs came in for water. Vince and I were taking a break to let the dogs cool down and rehydrate when I noticed Lucky was gone. I checked my Garmin GPS and it showed him on point about 150 yards away. We found him in a little ditch with brush growing in it. Vince went down one side and I took the other. Vince saw a large covey running on the ground. They finally flushed and he made good on the one shot he had. I never saw a bird.

As we were searching for the singles 2 hunters and 4 dogs came over the hill headed for the pond. (This does not happen often on walk-in but this was a big farm and these two guys came in from the opposite side.) We pulled our dogs out of the way so we wouldn’t get into a dog fight or have one of our dogs follow them. We heard them shoot so they found some singles.

Those 2 hunters went north west so we went north east. We had not gone very far when Vince noticed Lady raise her head and spin around. As she headed directly into the wind a huge mule deer buck that was bedded down jumped up right beside her. He just lowered his head and slammed her to the ground.

That’s when Vince yelled, “he’s trying to kill her!” When I looked the deer was literally vertical with his rear end up, his front legs against his chest and his rear legs straight up, using all of his weight to grind Lady into the ground. At the time I looked the only thing the deer had touching the ground was his antlers.

Lady's neck wound

Lady’s neck wound

Lady's wounds

Lady’s wounds

Lady's wounds

Lady’s wounds

Lady pointing Wendy backing on a better day

Lady pointing Wendy backing on a better day

Vince started running toward them. He was between me and them. I was moving forward trying to get Vince out of line so I could shoot the deer.

When the deer stood up Lady was impaled on his antlers. The excitement caused the other dogs to run toward the deer. As one of the other dogs got close the buck lowered his head to attack and Lady slid off his antlers. When she came off the deer started moving away with one of the dogs following. He left but he was not running real fast. It was like he knew he was the toughest thing out there. (As a firefighter for almost 30 years I saw the aftermath of some vicious things. This was the most vicious thing I have ever witnessed.)

When we checked Lady we saw a deep puncture wound in her left hip and one just behind her ribs. She was not bleeding at all. It was less painful for her to walk than be carried.

We were about 3/4 mile from the truck. Lady followed right behind me. As we walked along a couple of times she passed me and acted as if she was going to go hunting. She would get about 30 yards ahead of me, then she would come in and follow. She walked all of the way to the truck.

When I picked her up, to put her on the tail gate, she yelped. I had some anti-bacterial wash, so I cleaned both wounds, the puncture in the hip and the one near the ribs. Again we checked her for other wounds and found none. She still had bled very little.

When we got her to the vets office she still did not want to be carried. Carrying her hurt worse than walking. She was walking slow but her tail was up and wagging.

Dr. Wingert examined her and listened to my story about how she was injured. He said, “Leave her with me. I’ll check her over and stich up these wounds. Call about 4:00 pm and you can probably pick her up.”

I called about 3:45 and he said, “You better leave her with me overnight. The worst cut was on her neck.”

“I didn’t even know she was cut on the neck,” I said with surprise.

Her long hair had hid the other cuts. Dr. Wingert said they had sewn up 5 cuts on her. The one on her neck went all the way around except for about 2 inches on the bottom. Besides the one on her neck, her hip and by her ribs there was a cut on the shoulder and one on her leg. The only one that showed any blood was the puncture wound in her hip. Even that one did not have blood running out.

I brought her home the next day and for the next 4 weeks every time I took a dog from the kennel she would whine and want to go.

Finally after she healed I took her hunting. She could still point birds and retrieve. She was not as fast as she once was but neither am I.

I have often wondered if that had been Vince or me would that deer have attacked us as he did Lady? If he had would we be able to walk to the truck. I might be able to carry Lady but I know I couldn’t carry Vince or he carry me. Did she take one for the team?

For the rest of my life the toughness of a dog will be measured by Lady.

I wrote the above shortly after we got home from the opening weekend of 2012-2013 season. I have been thinking of doing a blog for some time.

In December 2012 and January 2013 Lady hunted. She still was the best retriever I have ever owned. She didn’t run as fast as she did when she was younger but if the other dogs missed some birds she would point them.

In April when I turned all of the dogs out in the big pen to clean kennels, Lady did not act right. She was not in pain, just confused.

She always liked to jump on her house and while I petted her she would groom my arms. About the middle of April I put her on her house and as I petted her I told her if she was ready to go, to go ahead.

Two mornings later I went out to clean pens and she was lying in her house dead. One more month and she would have been fourteen years old. All of my dogs love me, but she loved me more than all of my dogs. I’m going to miss her.

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Browning A-5 20 Gauge

In 1965 0r 1966 I bought a used Browning A-5 20 gauge.  It had 26 inch vent rib barrel, the stock and fore end were walnut with a lot of contrast and a high gloss finish.  To me it was beautiful.

Over the next 25 years I used it for nearly all of my hunting.  I usually hunted  quail but I also used it for deer, pheasants, doves, and rabbits.

Browning A-5

The Browning

The cracked rib.

Some time over the years the rib cracked where the center sight was and the bead was lost.  My daughter Dana’s dog chewed on the stock.  The bluing was wearing thin and you could see where my thumb rested on one side and my trigger finger  on the other.

My son Ryan would watch me clean the Browning.  He knew from a young age that one day it would become his.  He would hold it and we would talk about guns and gun safety.

About 1991 I bought a 20 gauge Benelli.  It was not as pretty as the Browning but it was lighter.  I took the Browning along on most trips for a back-up gun in case the Benelli or someone else’s gun broke.

Ryan and I had hunted the Friday and Saturday of the last week end of the deer season in 1996.  We got home late Saturday evening.  After sitting around for a while I thought about getting the guns out of the truck.  I had the Benelli, a 7mm Mauser and the Browning behind the seat.  I was tired and thought I would get them out the next morning and clean them.

On the morning of November 27, 1996 when I went to get my guns from the truck I found they had already been removed.  Whoever stole them made a hole in the door just above the lock and popped it out.

While I waited for the Jackson County Sherriff’s Patrol to come out to make a report, I had a lot of emotions raging.  I regretted not going out the night before, someone had violated my space and a great deal of anger at a thief.  As I waited I was drinking a cup of coffee and not realizing I was tensed up I pulled the handle off the coffee cup.

Over the next few weeks Ryan and I checked almost all of the  pawn shops in the area.  Over the years when we went to gun shows we looked for all of the guns but mainly the Browning.

In September, on Friday the thirteenth, 2013 I decided to shoot some skeet.  One of the guys I shoot with still has a job and another was having some health issues but most of the time there is someone there to shoot with, but not this day.

Missouri Conservation Department has a trap/skeet and rifle range only about 2 miles from my home.  Most of the people who work there are volunteers.

When I arrived, Al Dobyns, a retired firefighter from Kansas City, Missouri, a friend of mine and a volunteer for the Conservation Department was there.  No one was shooting so Al and I were sitting in the shade talking when 2 men came to shoot.

Al went out to see if they wanted to shoot skeet or trap.  When he came back he said they were going to shoot some skeet but not a regular round.  They had taken a class at the range but they had not shot before.  They were only going to shoot 1 round each.  I decided to wait for someone I knew to show up.

Al and I were solving the worlds problems as the two men were shooting.  One of the guys shot while the other used the control to throw the targets.  After the first guy shot the second man picked up his gun to shoot.  Al said, “is that a Browning or an old Remington?”  I said, “I believe that’s a Browning.”

We often try to figure out what kind of gun someone is shooting but we usually don’t even go see if we are right.  For some reason Al and I walked out and I asked if I could see his gun.

He said sure and handed it to me.  It was a Browning.  As I was looking at it I noticed the rib was broken where a center sight had been.  I blurted out, “this is a stolen gun and it belongs to me.”

Normally this is not a statement that will endear you to total strangers but these two men were real gentlemen.  I wrote the serial number down and told them I was going home to check my records.  The man in possession of the gun gave me his name and phone number in case I didn’t return soon.

When I checked the list the number was there.  That was my gun that had been stolen 17 years earlier.  I may have driven faster than the law allows returning to the range.

Chuck Taylor (not his real name) and his brother were still shooting.  I showed them the list with that gun and serial number on it.  They could tell that the list was an old one, not one I just made up.

 DSCN2861

Al Dobyns with the Browning

Al Dobyns with the Browning

Chuck said that his brother-in-law, that lived in Warsaw, Missouri had had a stroke and was in the North Kansas City Hospital.    Chuck was afraid that he would harm himself when he returned home.  He had gone to his home and picked up several guns.  They were rusty so he had cleaned them.  He wanted to see if the Browning worked.

Judy Farnsworth who works for the Missouri Conservation Department at the range called the Jackson County Sherriff’s Department. While we waited Chuck asked if I would like to shoot it.  Of course.  I broke a high house and a low house from station four.  It still shot good. I thought Ryan was at work so I sent him a text to tell him I found the Browning.  My phone rang immediately.  He said he was not working and he would be there in ten minutes.  He was there before the deputy. Deputy Kevin Souder took our information.  As we were waiting, we heard his radio say, “the gun was reported stolen from Robert Jones.” Chuck’s brother said, “that answers all of our questions.” The Sheriff’s Patrol took the gun and I had to reimburse the insurance company what they had paid me in 1996.  One month and one day later I got my gun back.

Someone had refinished the stock and fore end.  They had sanded out the dogs teeth marks in the stock, the checkering on the fore end was almost sanded away, and the finish was now dull.  But I had my Browning back.

DSCN2860     As a father and grandfather I know how happy I am when I make either one of my children or grandchildren (or all) happy.  I can not help but think that on September 13,2013, God was looking down with a big smile on his face.

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Posted in It happened to me. | 4 Comments