Upland Pie
Transcription
Upland Pie
I W £ Across R A V E L I N G I N GS H 00 I n I mtmmmmmmmtMxmmmi Cletus Bianchi s a self-professed homemade-pie expert, I believe there are two kinds - good and excellent. The difference between them depends largely on the ingredients and the baker's touch. Fresh fruit; an extra pinch of cinnamon; and flaky, slightly browned crusts approach excellence, suitable for everything from appetizer to an entire meal. Leave out an ingredient or skimp on their quality, and you just have pie. Opening a box and sliding a frozen disc into an oven doesn't require love, passion, or experience. True excellence comes from the hands of women with names like Ruth or Mabel who pinch the crust just so, select the best fruits, and then weave a flaky lattice over the top. With enough experience and research, a discriminating glance at a cafe's pie shelf reveals whether you've made the right stop - a neon Homemade Pies sign in the parking lot aids in the decision! As Kali and 1 accumulated years and miles on our American Upland Slam quest, pie became the perfect analogy for our success. Whether the environment is GRP and stubble, high desert sage and windmills, popple and firs, or mesquite and cactus, upland pie requires the right blend of ingredients. Food, cover, water - sounds like a pretty simple recipe if you know what you're looking for. Fortunately, recipes are found in cookbooks and a few of those exist for upland hunters, written by folks like Ben O. Williams and Gene Hill. I've already discussed the importance of research prior to taking a traveling wingshooting trip, but it bears repeating: Do your homework prior to launch; study up on the birds, their preferred habitat and food sources; learn their habits and reactions to different weather conditions. Take notes after each hunt to evaluate your technique. Bird crops, empty or full, offer a wealth of information. So do piles of droppings i n covey areas. You just have to be observant... and curious. Ruth and Mabel may have read a pie recipe once upon a time, but their signature pies come from experimentation and experience! Sometimes your mojo (or preferably your research) leads you to a place with quail crossing the road or chukars calling from a ridge - a neon Upland Pie sign. But usually we roll up to a new area and must make a quick analysis of the habitat potential, especially with limited dog power, party size, or time. A few minutes of careful evaluation may result -^•^ ' Iw-*;^ ^ r s i ' - ' gun dog career. After shooting a number of quail over his Brittanys, 1 was inspired to get my own dog. Now he and Gisco take off on their own traveling wingshooting adventures every year. As we enjoyed our steak in the motel restaurant, talking dogs and hunting, 1 noticed a gentleman glaring at us. (My blaze orange Texas Longhorn hat sometimes has that effect, but usually just in Nebraska.) After his meal, he stomped over to our table and asked what we were doing in town. "Ghukar hunting" was not the answer he wanted, and he snorted and stomped away, muttering about "damn Texans" hunting his birds. While a bit concerned about the hunting rig's tires, 1 felt confident we must be in the right area. The next morning was as frosty as that fellow, but our efforts east of town had only produced one covey of Huns. Along the road, we met a WFG truck with a four-wheeler in back and a Jack Russell terrier straddling the handlebars. The driver was a government predator hunter very familiar with the area, and he said we were hunting too low, that we should get up on Wild Horse Butte. And he was right, because up high is where we finally found cheatgrass, a key ingredient for chukars. As we studied the grass along the edge of the two-track, a chukar sentinel chuckled down at us. Bingo! Loose rocks, steep drops into arroyos, cheatgrass, and sagebrush - chukar pie! We found four coveys that crisp clear morning. Kali's first chukar was also perhaps her longest retrieve ever. 1 marked the bird down at about 50 yards, but she disappeared down the arroyo and over a lower ridge, out of sight. 1 was furious as I stomped around my mark, looking for feathers, whistling and yelling for the dog. A few minutes later, Sam saw her reappear down below, and as she got closer, I saw the bird in her mouth. She dropped it, panting and smiling, while I gave her water The recipe for success begins with lots of research conducted in advance of the trip. Map books, land use maps, state publications, plus a small library of upland research guides are key ingredients to a successful hunt. in a slice of heaven: "Food? Check. Cover? Check. Water? Check. Let's give it a try, but not the entire section, just that edge over there." What A r e You D o i n g H e r e ? My love/hate relationship with chukars fueled my summer 2008 research. Wyoming was the surprise winner for our first destination. Trust me: Wyoming Game & Fish's emphasis on big game hunting makes finding upland information as difficult as finding the actual birds. It was almost like the birds were a big secret, which just whetted my appetite more. After months of research and some truly beautiful travel through the Wind River canyon. Kali and 1 settled in Thermopolis, with Sam Safir and his French Brittany, Gisco, as companions. Sam is an old friend from San Antonio and was one of my mentors during my early I H [ Research Tools/Websifes Wyoming asea its empnasis on upland nunting ;t trip in 2008. This link has season and public access information - gf.state.wy.us/web20iy tiunting-1001277.aspx BLM maps for all of Wyoming - plicmapcenter.org/ Thermopolis - Days Inn (dog-friendly) by the Hot Springs includes Safari Club restaurant with huge taxidermy display, plus mule deer outside the window. Thermopolis - Roundtop Mountain Motel (dogfriendly), comfortable cabins. Thermopolis Cafe and Pumpernicks have great food. BLM maps and numerous national forest maps ; plicmapcenter.org/ General public access informationfwpiis.mt.gov/content/getltem.aspx?id=293T9 Block Management information for all regions changes annually - fwp.mt.gov/hunting/hunterAccess/ blockman/ Travel Note - the Bakken Shale area of MT/ND makes it nearly impossible to find lodging, so reservations are recommended. Web portal for public access, including PLOT S acreage - gf.nd.gov/maps Belfield, North Dakota, is now covered up by oil-shale development, so lodging may only be found in Dickinson. The area between Belfield and Bowman and north of Beach still holds good populations of pheasant and sharptails. favorite motel is the Edge of Town - highly ended. Every hunting/fishing shop has licenses and maps for the Chequamegon Nicolet National Forest. Other public land access options - dnr.wi.gov/topic/lands/ M A V E n R COME TRAIN WITH US! and apologized profusely. Best guess is nearly a half-mile and 200 feet of elevation to get that bird. Kali also had her first encounter with sage grouse that day. She'd never seen a bird as big as her, but it smelled right. The season was closed, but I don't think she minded watching those birds fly away. All of the ingredients had come together for a great chukar hunt i n Wyoming, including that critical tip from the WFG guy we took time to visit. Our new friend wasn't at the restaurant, so we couldn't share our success story with h i m and tell him how many of his birds we harvested before we moved on to Montana. Rodents Couldn't tell a gun dog story without some reference to rodent encounters, and Kali had several across the Montana plains. Her first prairie dog town was relatively small, tucked into the corner of a GRP field by a creek. As she quartered her way into the wind, she tried to ignore the scent; she'd learned Dad didn't shoot the rodents she'd pointed i n the past. One brash fellow popped out of his burrow 10 yards from Kali and began barking at her. Kali skid to a stop and stared in amazement. The mental image of those two dogs, nearly nose-to-nose, one barking angrily, the other in stunned silence, wouldn't be a very good magazine cover, but it still makes me chuckle. When he ducked back into his hole. Kali bounded after him, and as I yelled at her, a rooster pheasant flushed 50 yards away! Oh well... Kali found numerous pheasants on PLOTS land north of Gulbertson, but she also met her first porcupine. 1 could tell it probably wasn't a bird by the way she worked, and when the quills flared up out of the knee-deep grass, Kali nearly jumped into my game bag. No damage done; just a valuable teaching moment. The upland pie i n the area was perfect for pheasants and Huns, but we still hadn't gotten close enough to sharptails, our real target. Lodging was an issue due to the Bakken Shale workers, so we moved from eastern Montana to southwest North Dakota for a new flag and some new ingredients. Dawn Patrol While South Dakota rightfully receives the most acclaim for pheasant concentrations, the bird numbers around Belfield, North Dakota, were overwhelming. All of the scent made the dogs frantic, and I stopped counting points for my journal. Roosters on round bales everywhere we looked! But still no sharptails, and I suspected the grass fields we hunted were too small. The next morning as we headed south from Belfield with just a salmon-colored glow on the horizon, I watched a covey of sharpies fly across the highway and land on a grassy knoll. Sam was driving, so I quickly marked the hill on my map and determined it was a Walk-In area. When we During a brief visit to the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument, this resident sharpie at the Custer National Cemetery was the only one that hadn't flushed wild. Kali held a beautiful point through the windshield. 58 N (, S II 0 0 ff\\'vv,poiiiriiisidofiiiHn'naLe(*m THE POINTING DOG JOURNAL North A m e r i c a n Versatile Hunting Dog Association members are hunters, breeders and trainers dedicated to helping yaii get the most out of your versatile hunting companion. We maintain die only registry in North America specializing in versatile pointing dog breeds. HUNTING DOG •A Full Year NAVHDA Membershj • Informative Monthly Magazine •60 Minute Training DVD •In-Depth Training Book •Testing Rules Booklet • Member Decal Learn more about us at mP U R I N A Don't tell the guy at the cafe in Thermopolis I told you, but Wild Horse Butte still held chukar during a later trip with my friend Emil Crow. The upland pie holds up through bitter winters and blistering summers, supporting a strong resident population of birds. itn-tronics ] Mafcn /gfteasier State/Prov. Breed of Dog(s)^ Phone Ma/ce checks payable to NAVHDA or use your credit card: MasterCard returned a few hours later after more pheasant points, we faced a iy2-mile hike to that hill, but I was determined. Kali was gassed and just trotting along with me, not really hunting when we finally reached the hilltop and headed for a swale to the west into the prairie wind. Then Kali got birdy. I paused a moment to watch her quartering, calling upon her genetics and her experience as she worked the scent cone i n that ocean of grass, ignoring her exhaustion. Then I realized she was slowing and trailing - and nearly one hundred yards away! I ran as fast as grass, fatigue, and safety would allow, watching her creep slower and then lock into her panthercrouch point. I stopped a few yards short and hadn't gulped a second breath before the sharpie launched, darting and woka-woka-woka-ing away. The rest of the covey flushed at the report, but I didn't care - the first bird had dropped, and Kali and I collapsed i n the grass to drink water and celebrate. As we lay panting i n the grass, I got a close-up view of the sharptail pie ingredients. Little grasshoppers were jumping around, there were some seeds left on the stalks, and even some green shoots under the blanket of prairie grass. We were over a mile from any road, but even i n the little swale, we had a commanding view of the entire area. All parts of the sharptail recipe and another sweet slice of success. At breakfast that morningv, we met some fellow traveling wingshooters from Kentucky. If their hunting rig wasn't a dead giveaway, their blaze orange caps and conversation were. Our adjoining tables were soon combined over eggs, bacon, and coffee as we gave up details of dogs, travels, and goals. They were on their way to Oregon for chukars, and we were headed to Minnesota next for ruffed grouse. Both plans changed before the bill was paid. 2013 Card* Visa - Other - - Exp.Date - Signature Date Mail to: NAVHDA • PO Box 520 • Arlington Heiglits, IL 60006 E L H E W K E •THE T R A D I T I O N N N E T R U L Y L S C O N T I N U E S * Over 60 veais of line breeding, pioduciiig supeilative confoimation, intelligence, perfoimdnce, stamina and stvie - to satisfy the discrininating Following the Mojo for 7 0 0 Miles No-vember / December Postal Code sportsman Puppies and started dogs generally available Brian T Hays : PHONE ; 503,393 9238 303 Ciiurch Street : FAX : 508.393,3630 elhewkennels.org Morthborough, MA 01532 : bhays@chokeDorekennels-Com www.pointlnfido^journal.cDra 59 £ 1 T R A V £[ I . • .'J' n i l . ' : mill Ji'O'•<( back for the dings and scratches on my old side-by-side, plus bandages, we might be even. Out of laziness, or perhaps inspiration. Kali and I followed an ATV trail that wandered back to the hunting rig. She locked up at the base of a huge fir, and a covey of five grouse beat out of there. Fortunately, I have two barrels, and Kali was finally able to put her first forest grouse in her mouth. She hates posing for photo ops, but it provided the opportunity to study the ingredients for a ruffed grouse pie. There were still little berries under that ancient old fir, and I imagine it provided shelter in bad weather as well. The popple - aspen - nearby would be on the birds' winter "budding menu." It was all there. Sam and Cisco had also scored that morning, so we were happy to head for home with four new state flags on the rig's bumper and three new species in Kali's nose. Kali adjusted seamlessly from high desert to plains to forest and was getting better at honoring the various scent cones. I had mastered the travel part and was getting a better handle on the habitat ingredients. We had slices of the quail, prairie grouse, and forest grouse upland pies, but we hadn't completed a slam on any of them. Our appetite was whetted, but it was time to focus on one genus, and Ben -^^JJ O. Williams' Hunting the Quails of North America would be our cookbook. ; Kali pauses to evaluate one of Montana's Region 3 Block Management Areas. Had she seen birds in the canyon, she would have jumped right in; but three days of chukar hunting in Wyoming had her hankering for level ground. Even though they hunted with Enghsh setters, I saved them several hundred miles by sending them to Thermopolis for chukars. "Wyoming?" they said. "Yes, but don't tell them the Texans sent you!" In return, they recommended Parks Falls, Wisconsin, for "easy" grouse shooting. That was better than any lead I had in Minnesota, so we spent a day on the road, resting tired legs and dogs. When a town of 2,500 proclaims itself the Ruffed Grouse Capital of the World, you feel like you've made the right decision. The Chequamegon Nicolet National Forest is northwest of Park Falls and just as the Kentucky hunters had indicated, any of the areas around forest roads 161-168 were prime habitat and full of grouse and woodcock. They stretched the truth a bit on the "easy" part, however. Thick, tangled, boggy, and full of ticks, it was a grouse hunter's dream. I may owe the Forest Service some money for the trees that ate my patterns that day, but taking credit 60
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