Eyeballs and Space Fridges

Grouse hunting

I had barely gotten the fifth lure in the water when the long line went tight, line screaming off the reel as a solid bigeye charged away from the boat. I turned around just in time to watch three spreader bars have “space refrigerators** dropped on them” as bigeye tuna wolf packed our spread. It was 8 hours later that we would realize how truly epic a trip we’d had.

2am the night before I had been laying wide awake in bed, hopes of sleeping proving as fruitless as usual when leaving for the canyons in the morning. An eternity later, 3am rolled around and I hopped out of bed to make my ritualistic pre-tuna trip eggs. 

 

. . .

 

A mix of emotions surged through me as 1050 horsepower of outboard engines rocketed us south of Martha’s Vineyard. An average canyons run for us is around 100 miles, but the night before I had made the call to shoot the extra 50 miles, even further from home, in pursuit of what a buddy had called one of the most incredible bites he had ever seen. Now more than 2.5 hours into the trip there, I stepped out from behind the center console to feel the breeze and wake myself up. Running 55 miles an hour, the breeze was more like a brick wall and I lunged for a hand hold while being thrown off balance. There is a reason we joke that the 39 Invincible is a spaceship, not a boat. I was definitely awake after that. 

With 2 hours left in the run I was wondering if there would be any life. With an hour left in the run I was hoping we would see something. As I readied the spread with 30 minutes left I was praying I’d made the right call. 1 mile to go and I was nervous to sip my coffee, hands shaking incessantly. I’d been waiting two weeks to sit where I was. 3+ hours of running, over a thousand dollars in gas and a sleepless night had gone into planning this trip and we were finally there. Pulling back on the throttles, I threw in the first lure of the day with only one other boat in sight. Little did I know it would be the most action-packed day of tuna fishing I’d ever experienced.

 

** “Space refrigerators” references the appearance of a bigeye tuna attacking the baits. The splashes are so huge it looks as if refrigerators were dropped from outer space.

“Guide”

Grouse hunting

Over the years I have been incredibly fortunate to make some of my best friendships on the water and spend time with the guys I consider my brothers while chasing fish. A day that will forever stand out in my memory unfolded in July of 2018. On the ride out of the harbor I had pronounced myself the “guide” that day, not that this friend needs a guide by any means. As we rolled up to an expansive feed of stripers chasing sandeels, Quinn stripped line off his 8 weight flyrod and readied himself on the bow. Before I knew what had happened he was strip setting on a solid 30” fish. He soon claimed his arm was tired (of which I was skeptical) and that I needed to take a few casts, for which I was more than excited. It would surprise me if he remembered this day but it was one I could never forget. 

 

A year earlier, I was slapped awake at 6am after a long night of fishing. Reluctant to leave the comfort of my covers, Graham coaxed me onto my feet and out the door. An hour later we were covered up by 30 to 40 pound stripers, none of which we would end up catching. The ones that get away seem to be implanted in our minds even more firmly than those we catch. 

 

Although seemingly unconnected, these brief anecdotes of two of my favorite days on the water hold one thing in common – the immense gratitude I have for the friends/family that constantly push me on the water, wake me up to chase fish, keep me on my feet at the end of a long school day with a simple text, motivate me and make me smile when everything else fails. There is nothing better than friends like these.

Canyon Chorus

Grouse hunting

I woke to an unfamiliar tumult disrupting the familiar night chorus of the canyons. Groggily lifting myself off the rocking boats stern to peer into the underwater lights, my eyes sought the source. Alone on deck for the night shift, the reels slept silently alongside me waiting to be jolted awake by a hungry pelagic. The noise came again, this time more discernible. Between the feeble light of a waning moon and deck lights, the vague shadow of a sperm whales back loomed ominously in the still night air. Squinting through the darkness, I was distraught to think that just over a century ago our lights would have been burning it’s ancestors spermaceti oil. As quickly as it had risen the graceful leviathan took its fresh breath of air back down to the depths, leaving me alone with my thoughts and the comforting night chorus of the canyons.

The King: A Grouse Hunting Story

Grouse hunting

My alarm blares, it’s 4:00 AM. I sit up and groggily rub the sleepy crust out of my eyes. Boy, is that alarm clock bright. Swinging my legs off the side of my bed, I throw on my sweats and a cotton t-shirt, struggling in my daze to pull it over my head. My eyes widen as I remember what I am doing up at this ungodly hour and a smile breaks out on my face: time for the grouse woods. I hop down the stairs cautiously as to not wake up my mom and sister. My dad is standing in front of his prized possession, the espresso machine. I make fun of him for getting up early just to make a couple caffeinated drinks before I slip out into the car. Sprawling across the back seat and snuggling into my sleeping bag I feel my eyelids getting heavy and my vision goes dark.

What feels like a minute later I wake to the delicious smell of pastries and coffee. I glance up, the scenery and mountains around me are exquisite. Vermont is quite a beautiful place, especially with a view like this from a warm sleeping bag. “Good second morning,” says my dad. I smile and stretch. Boy, do I feel rested now. After gobbling up two of the chocolate croissants, I eagerly anticipate the sight of our exit. Suddenly, we veer to the right, horns blaring behind us, and get off the highway. We make our way down the crumbling paved roads of upstate Vermont. I crack a window and our two dogs in the back begin to whine – they can smell the sweet air of the countryside even better than I can. Miles and miles of road ahead of us, I lean back and get comfortable. After all, we have been driving for two hours, what’s another hour to me now?

I look up from under my hat brim when I am nearly thrown from my seat as the car comes to a sudden halt. Standing in front of us is a giant moose, close enough to see the flies pestering it, buzzing around it’s eyes. With a huff he trots off into the woods. My dad’s knuckles are white and clinging to the steering wheel even as we make eye contact in disbelief. The next time our car comes to a halt I look up, half expecting a bear this time, and I see that we have arrived at our destination.

I open my door and the scent of the grouse woods in the fall permeates my nostrils. The soft, muddy ground sinks an inch underneath me. My breath is visible as the sun illuminates it in the crisp fall air. I close my eyes for the third time this day, not to fall asleep but to reminisce on past times and to take it all in. My trance is broken by the sound of the car door slamming and the dogs whimpering in eager anticipation. I open up the back door and kennel, allowing the dogs to rocket out past me. With a quick bark of their names they come right to my ankles and sit, shaking. They seem even more excited than me, something I thought impossible prior to this moment. Clink! The sound of metal on metal resonates through the small valley as my dad closes his now loaded 12 Gauge Francotte shotgun. He hands me mine as I keep the dogs in close. With one word, OK, the dogs are off to the races. To my right I hear a tiny red squirrel chattering as it sits on it’s favorite stump, surrounded by torn apart pine cones. It shoots back to it’s hole as the dogs breeze past, following their noses.

In front of me lays one of our favorite places to hunt, dubbed a “cover”. It has food aplenty with the wild apple tree’s branches hanging low with apples, worth their weight in gold to many grouse hunters. To my right we have the beautiful high bush cranberry, the few clusters of red berries left are deep in the brush, barely reachable. My now dew-soaked Lowa boots crush the fermenting apples that have fallen to the ground as I duck beneath the laden boughs of apple trees. Suddenly what sounds like a rocket explodes in front of me. The roaring, thunder like beats of the ruffed grouses wings fill the air as I look around without a glance of our quarry. The grouse was concealed by the thick brush but I have confidence in the cover and our dogs, a combo with which you cannot go wrong.

We come to a stream, dividing the thick underbrush of apples and thorns like a border as it meanders through. Elaborately colored brook trout dart out from the deep pools where they are spawning, fleeing from me as I step onto the shallow rocks in the middle of the brook. In what feels like close to a full split, I hear the sound I have been awaiting all along once again. The sputter of wings and a glimpse of the bullet shaped bird moving through the branches with the agility only grouse have. Instinct takes over and I raise my gun stock to my cheek and fire as the grouse passes over the opening of the stream. The smell of gunpowder quickly mingles with the sweet scent of decaying leaves and apples. This is known to many as “aromatherapy”. Calling a dog over, we inspect the area around where I shot. After a minute it becomes clear that once again the bird got the better of me.

I reach up to pick an apple as I hear the shout by my dad, “BIRD UP!” The clap of his shotgun makes my ears ring, but the unmistakable thud of a grouse hitting the ground distracts me from it. I walk over to the trunk of a magnificent old apple tree stand in the ferns. Sooke, one of my dogs, comes trotting over with the bird held gingerly in her mouth. Reaching down for what we came all this way for, a three pound bird, I am once again in awe of it’s beauty. She drops it into my palm. Thanking and congratulating Sooke, I turn it over in my hands with nothing but utter appreciation and thankfulness in my mind. The smell of apples and earth once again is present, this bird surely has been in the cover for a while. I smooth out it’s golden copper feathers and look at the wonderful patterns nature has produced. The chocolate bands on it’s tail contrast wonderfully with the rest of the bird.

We begin our trek back, over the stream, under the apple trees, through the thorns. The shining of the car between the trees marks our destination. I sling my gun over my shoulder and check my watch, it’s only 9:00 AM. There’s a lot more daylight left and a lot more ground to cover. I lay the bird in the cooler, throw my shotgun in the back seat, let the dogs into the kennel and hop in. I’m already fantasizing about the next cover, the next flush. With many more covers to hit, we’re off to the next spot, weaving through the beautiful countryside.

 

 

A Morning in the Bow Stand

Grouse hunting

A story I forgot to post from November! With the deer season over in MA I found this story in my Google Drive almost two and a half months later and reflected fondly upon my time in the woods this year. It was a very successful trip according to what I define as successful!

 

So far, Thanksgiving break is off to a great start. I woke up before dawn this frigid November morning in order to be in the stand by 5:45 AM. An hour or so sped by as I was able to pass the time doing my favorite form of meditation, bow hunting.  Without warning, a gray line streaked across my vision and stopped abruptly. A Cooper’s hawk had swooped by me only feet from my face, then alighted on the tree directly in front of me. The hawk appeared orange and yellow in the morning light. It’s black barred tail and speckled breast hit directly by the sun’s rays made me hold my breath in awe of the scene’s beauty. As soon as I let my breath out, the hawk immediately spotted the steam coming from my face mask covered mouth. It’s beady eyes seemed to penetrate my soul in a way only a bird of prey can do. With a few powerful strokes of it’s wings, the hawk left its perch and returned to the frightfully cold air.

Minutes later a doe came by behaving like I’ve never seen a deer behave. She was smelling some sort of scent trail, and would constantly flee ten yards or so and then return to investigate as though she was a child who knew she was doing the wrong thing, yet gave into her temptation. After a couple minutes she continued on her daily trek to the her next destination, wherever that may be.

Wanting to incite the bucks, I decided to rattle with a pair of sheds I found. With the rut in full swing I thought I may have a chance of bringing one in. My sheds seemed brighter than ever in this low morning light as I bashed them together, simulating the sound of two bucks fighting. A minute later, two spike horns trotted into view, eager to get in on the action. I watched as they got within ten yards of me, the whites of their eyes and breaths clearly visible. One made a scrape right there in front of me, much to my delight. While rubbing the scent glands on his head all across a spruce tree’s branch, he pulled the leaves and dirt beneath his back and urinated in the exposed earth, marking his territory. They trotted along soon after, but not before I snapped a few awful quality iPhone photos. By then it was around 8 o’clock and I decided to call it quits. I slowly waddled back to the car with a numb body and a smile on my face. What a great start to break!

Take Care: A Reminder

Grouse hunting

Recently a friend of mine was hunting geese when he had a shell missfire. As there were other guys in the blind shooting, he didn’t realize it and jacked another shell into the chamber and fired again. On that next shot this is what happened.  


We are all very thankful that neither my friend nor anyone in the blind was hurt. Remember, life can change in an instant it is crucial to always be alert and careful while using firearms. 
 

Around the Rock: Spearfishing and More

bluefish, Bow hunting, deer hunting, Fishing, Grouse hunting, Hunting, mahi mahi, marlin, moosehunting, Outdoors, redfish, sailfish, snook, Striped bass, tuna, upland game hunting, wahoo

Adam and I made our way down the shoreline, enjoying the beautiful day and warm summer water. It was the middle of July and the ocean was about as nice as it ever gets. The visibility was also around 10 feet, a perfect day to shoot some long range tog with my AB Biller 48 special. Since Adam was diving for his first time and was very positively buoyant because he didn’t have a weight belt, I decided to stay in the shallow end (4-12ft deep). 
We jumped in the water and Adam got cold almost immediately, so he hopped back on the boat and just drove around behind me as I dove. I hadn’t been in the water for 3 minutes when I saw my first tautog. The big ones are extremely spooky in clear, shallow water and this one shot off into the depths. Disappointed but not discouraged, I swam on. 
Another minute or two passed and I was continuously seeing 13-15 inch tog, just under the legal limit of 16 inches. I dove down to the bottom to peek under a beautiful barnacle encrusted rock that was coated with seaweed swaying in the tide like leaves in the wind. Coming around the corner I spied a beautiful white chinned tautog munching muscles off of the rock. I flipped off the safety, aimed and squeezed the trigger. Thunk! The sound shot through the water as the tog slowly drifted to the bottom, spinning along the shaft of my spear. Hurriedly I swam over and put one hand on each side of the tog to insure that it wouldn’t slide off during my short assent. Within a minute, Adam had brought the boat along side me, took the tog off the shaft and I was once again on the hunt. 
I shot two more tautog in rapid succession. My limit reached, I hopped in the boat and we made our way back down the shoreline to the harbor. Ten minutes into the trip I begin to see white dots on the horizon with a gorgeous backdrop of sandy dunes and eel grass. Soon, I could make out the splashes of birds and fish entering the water simultaneously. As Adam picked up a rod and began to cast, I couldn’t help myself and grabbed my Gatku 6ft pole spear and jumped in. As soon as I hit the water I was engulfed in terns, gulls, cormorants and to my dismay, striped bass. Since it is illegal to shoot stripers in MA, I casually swam around admiring the natural beauty. The terns diving around me left bubble trails as they fought their ways back to the surface with beaks full of sand eels. The black backs and bellies of cormorants shooting around alongside me like torpedoes left me in awe. I dove to the bottom (only 6 feet of water!) and lay there as schools of bass parted around me whilst stuffing themselves with sand eels, busting on the surface only a few feet from me. 
Before long it was over and the birds, bass and I went our separate ways, leaving Adam and I the only ones hungry. We hightailed it in to a boat-cooked meal of steak and broccoli before heading to the lights to catch some squid for mahi fishing. 
(Mahi fishing story coming soon!)

In a Rut

bluefish, Bow hunting, deer hunting, Fishing, Grouse hunting, Hunting, mahi mahi, marlin, moosehunting, Outdoors, redfish, sailfish, snook, Striped bass, tuna, upland game hunting, wahoo

  After weeks of no bucks showing themselves, yesterday they lit up. Around 4, I saw one in a field and immediately knew where it was headed. The deer would make a trip around the property across the street and come out the other side, where I have permission. I got settled in my stand and within an hour and a half that deer came walking along, head to the ground, following a doe track. Drawing silently, I gave a quick blatt and he stopped broadside at a mere ten feet. I let the arrow fly and it hit it’s mark with a thud. The buck ran like the wind before falling 30 yards away, but not before blowing right through a metal gate into a pasture.  I guess I owe the farmer a few hours labor to repair the gate, but man was it worth it. What a hunt! I feel very fortunate to have been able to have harvested this animal and look forward to sharing this meat with family and friends.