|
Jackson
Hole Outfitters, Maury Jones, (307)886-3356
Box 117, Grover, Wy 83122
Humorous Excerpts of
Newsletters
A strange thing happened
to me just the other day. On a late hunt I was in pursuit of the wily wapiti.
I was following a fresh set of tracks, which looked like they could have
been made by a bull, but they looked a bit strange. Just.... different,
somehow. Finally I got a glimpse of a greyish-tan hide through the bushes.
Grey? Should be reddish brown, but I've seen odd-colored elk before. There!!
The tip of an antler!! I started to shoot, but my training kicked in; 'Positively
Identify your target'. Don't want to shoot a moose or deer by mistake.
I eased around the tree to get a good look at the rack and the head and
to get a neck shot, as the chest cavity was obscured by bushes. The antlers
had a strange configuration. Great! A non-typical! Say what? Palmated front
tines!? Boy, this will be one for the newspapers. Now, where's the neck...
I carefully raised my trusty .243, slipped the safety off and felt for
the trigger. Suddenly I was rudely interrupted in my quest for a trophy.
A huge hand grabbed me by my coat collar and lifted me off the ground while
another hand relieved me of my rifle. I stared into the face of an old
man with white hair and a white beard. He obviously was another hunter,
as he was dressed all in red. In a booming voice he said, 'Don't do that,
son. That critter belongs to me.' 'What?', I croaked. 'Is that your elk?'
I never heard of anyone owning a pet elk in Wyoming. It's against the law.
The big man laughed, 'Yes, it's mine. Kind of strayed a bit and I had one
devil of a tracking job, but I best take him home now. Got to get him in
shape for the big night. He doesn't have much to do the rest of the year,
but one night a year I work his tail off.' I stood there gawking with my
mouth open as he walked up to the wierd-looking elk, put a halter on it
and started to lead it off through the forest. "Come on, Blitzen," he urged.
"We've got a long way to go to get back to the stable." I shook my head
and decided I'd had one egg nog too many.
I sympathize with those
who can't afford a guided hunt. That's why I got into the outfitting business
and the gun business several years ago; had to support my habit on a limited
budget. Did I say limited? Why, we are so poor we give the kids a nickel
if they will go to bed without their supper. Then when they are asleep
we steal the nickel back to give to them the next night. This Christmas
Santa couldn't even afford reindeer. He had to walk from house to house,
dragging his bag of toys behind him, old newspapers wrapped around his
feet, leaving a bloody trail in the snow. It was uphill all the way. The
kids got a lump of coal in their stockings, which was an improvement. Last
year they just got a stick of firewood. Our Christmas tree was just an
old sagebrush, but we decorated it with elk and deer droppings, painted
to look like Christmas ornaments. This winter my horses are eating pictures
of hay that I cut out of old farm supply magazines. Found a picture of
some grain the other day and Shadow really enjoyed it, although he ate
so much he 'bout foundered. And you thought you had it bad! Whatever happened
to the campaign promises of relief to the poor? I've applied for a government
grant to study homosexuality among mule deer. Will probably get it.
SHADOW RIDES AGAIN
Shadow and I are getting
anxious for another hunting season. He says he can't wait to ride all of
you around the mountain. When I told him that wasn't what was meant by
horseback riding he sort of lost his enthusiasm for the venture. No sense
of humor.
One night at hunting camp
I kept hearing a horse cough. I got out of bed in my white long-johns,
put on my boots, and went out to the corral. I opened the gate and went
in. The horses panicked running all around the edges of the corral. They
had never seen a ghost, I guess. I talked softly to them for a while and
finally my old buddy, Dollar, came carefully toward me with his neck stretched
out, ready to run in an instant. He said, "The voice is familiar, but I
don't recognize the attire. Are you dead?" I assured him that I was alive
and not a ghost, so he finally put his head over my shoulder to get a hug.
Then he turned around to the other horses and said, "It's okay fellas,
it's just Knothead." I left in a huff.
A FILLY HAS NIGHTMARES
Even a good horse like Old
Dollar can cause problems. My lovely daughter, Bekki, and I broke our paint
filly, Candy, a few years ago. Bekki got a black eye and a few bruises
out of the experience, but Candy did real well that first year, packing
deer and elk, and taking the lead on trails. Then she started getting spooky
(jumping at imaginary dangers). I found that Dollar was at the bottom of
it. I was riding Candy one day and all of a sudden she bolted at the sight
of a black stump. "A Bear!" she screamed. When I got her calmed down, I
told her it wasn't a bear, that bears didn't eat horses (I fibbed a little),
and how did she know about bears anyway? It seems Dollar had been telling
bedtime stories in the corral to give the young horsies nightmares, and
he told one about GOLDIE HORSE AND THE THREE BEARS. The next day
Candy spooked at a coyote. She thought it was a wolf. Dollar had told her
about LITTLE RED RIDING HORSE. Then she spooked at a big old dead tree,
with huge limbs sticking out of it. "A Giant!" she panicked. Dollar had
told her some story about a mean old giant who ground some poor burro's
bones to make his bread; called it JACKASS AND THE BEAN STALK. After all
that I could see why Dollar had a guilty conscience and got scared out
of his road apples when I walked out to the corral on a dark night in my
white thermals.
Some of you that come hunting
are concerned about the horse aspects of the hunt. Three days after we
began hunting Jim Sarno told me that he had never been on a horse before.
I asked if he had been scared that first morning when we rode for an hour
in the dark. He replied that he had been scared stiff, but if everybody
else could do it he could too. He just locked his hands around the saddle
horn of George the Mule and let George do the rest. I told Jim that what
I usually do is put guys who have never ridden on horses that have never
been ridden so they can start equal. And for hunters who don't like to
ride, I put them on horses that don`t like to be ridden. Maybe when you
come hunting with me you can ride Shadow, if he doesn't happen to have
a hangover from a night of drunken debauchery at the Million Dollar Cowboy
Bar in Jackson. He particularly likes the barstool saddles.
Horses are always hungry.
In fact, hungry horse is redundant terminology. Dollar and I were packing
a deer down a mountain and the trail was really slick and muddy. We came
to a super steep place and Dollar just locked all four legs and literally
skied for 30 yards down the hill. In the middle of the slope was a particularly
succulent clump of grass, so he timed it just right and grabbed a mouthfull
as he slid by. By this action he eloquently summed up his philosophy on
life: "No matter how busy you are, there's always time for a good meal."
TERROR ON THE TRAIL
The doe came sneaking down
the trail I was on. I was in full camouflage, from head to toe, and the
breeze was blowing from her to me. I was bowhunting elk at the time, and
my hunting buddy was down below on another trail. The doe kept looking
down the hill, and as she went behind some jackpines I quietly laid down.
She got within 15 yards of me before she noticed me. She stared for the
longest time, trying to figure out that strange object. She nonchalantly
started feeding, then would suddenly jerk her head and look at me to see
if she could catch me moving. Finally she decided she just had to check
this thing out. She stretched her neck way out and advanced toward me one
slow step at a time. When her nose was just a foot from my face (literally
one scant twelve inches) I suddenly screamed and threw my arms out at her,
actually brushing her face with my fingers. Have you ever seen a deer turn
inside out? She fell over backward, got up and promptly ran into a small
jackpine, bounced off it, then hit another small pine which spun her off
her feet, then lined out on the trail going about 90 miles an hour. A little
cloud of dust and a few little greenish-brown pellets lingered in the air
in her wake. I didn't stop laughing for ten minutes.
When I met up with Jim Lunt
he asked, "Did you hear that weird noise a while ago?" "What did it sound
like?" I innocently inquired. "Sounded like some kind of scream and then
a big crashing in the brush and then the noise of something running pell-mell
down the mountain. Could a mountain lion have tried to get a deer?" I started
laughing all over again and then told him of my little joke on the deer.
I wonder if she survived the stress on her heart?
DUCK!
I once went duck hunting
with a game warden in Arizona. We sneaked up over the edge of a desert
pond and found it loaded with ducks. As they rose in a mass of wings and
water spray I fired once, then twice, then was swinging on a brace of mallards
when the warden started yelling "Stop! Don't shoot!" I reluctantly lowered
my Remington 1100 semi-automatic 12 gauge and saw the problem. The surface
of the pond was littered with flopping ducks. Our limit was six each, and
fortunately there were only eleven ducks down from our combined four shots.
I told the warden that I would probably only have killed one of the two
I was aiming at, and if he could count flopping ducks faster we might have
our limit now instead of being one short, and besides, the way he had been
bragging about his shooting he probably killed eight of the ducks himself
and he should write himself a ticket for being two over his limit, as I
didn't want any of his puny little teals. The three mallards were obviously
mine. I think that's the last time he ever took me hunting to one of his
hot spots, not that I minded. The guy would have given a ticket to his
mother for one bird over limit so I figure I barely escaped without a citation
as I might have killed both of those mallards.
CHICKEN OUT
And speaking of killing
too many with one shot, that reminds me of the story my Dad tells about
the guy in our home town of Virden, New Mexico, who raised prize chickens
to exhibit in the fair. One night he heard a ruckus in the chicken coop.
It wasn't unusual to have a skunk or fox get after chickens, so he quickly
grabbed his shotgun and flashlight and went out in his long-handled underwear.
He slowly opened the door of the coop and, holding the flashlight alongside
the barrel of the 12 gauge with his left hand and with finger on the trigger
with the right hand, pointed the gun down the row of roosting chickens.
His dog quietly came up behind him and poked its cold nose in the crack
at the back of his underwear, "checking him out" as dogs do. The resulting
explosion caused him to spend the rest of the night cleaning chickens.
RUN FOR YOUR LIFE!
Another reason some gave
for a guide carrying a rifle was for safety reasons. If a Wyoming Rearwolf
should unexpectedly attack a client and bite him in the cheek while said
cheek was squatting behind a bush communing with nature, then the guide
is supposed to brandish his weapon and dispatch said Rearwolf. In reality,
however, said guide would probably laugh his head off, which would not
only fail to protect the life of said hunter but which would probably endanger
the life of said guide, and not necessarily from the aforementioned enraged
Wyoming Rearwolf. (I've been hunting with too many lawyers lately. Their
lingo is starting to rub off.)
Wyoming is as beautiful
as ever. The deer are fat and sassy and the elk are beginning to rub their
velvet, getting ready for the rut. Which reminds me of something a sweet
young lady asked me one time.
She said she had heard her
new husband and one of his hunting cronies discussing elk and deer hunting
and they kept referring to the rut. Asking her husband about it, she was
miffed when he blushed and evaded her question. Doubting that she would
ever get an intelligent answer from her husband (she had, after all, been
married for a few weeks), she asked me to clarify what they meant by rut
and why was her husband being so evasive about it. I cleared my throat,
loosened my collar and told her she had done right by coming to me, as
I was somewhat of an authority on colloquial phrases used by the hunting
fraternity, and I would expound upon the subject as only I could. I answered
her query by explaining that when elk or deer or other big game animals
get used to eating in the same thickets, drinking from the same water source,
and sleeping in the same patch of timber, they get "in a rut", and it is
referred to so often that the article "a" is eliminated in the interest
of brevity and thus they are said to be "in rut" instead of "in a rut".
The sweet young thing was so impressed with my knowledge of the inner nuances
of hunting lore and its expression that she asked me another question that
had been perplexing her; namely, what is a muzzle-loader to which her husband
keeps referring, and could it have anything to do with his excessive drinking?
Once again I came to the rescue to properly educate the poor naive wench.
I explained, somewhat condescendingly, that she had misinterpreted the
word, as it was not of the hyphenated variety, but was in reality two words.
These words were said casually in the course of conversation and slurred
together by these uneducated oafs so as to cause her to misunderstand.
(She seemed not to mind in the least my characterization of her young husband
as an uneducated oaf. On the contrary, she gave a small giggle of approval,
which encouraged me to continue.) The fellows were undoubtedly referring
to "muzzle odor", which, of course, is the peculiar smell given off by
the business end of a firearm after having disgorged its projectile following
the detonation of various and sundry chemicals which comprise the ingredients
of gun powder. Aficionados of the shooting sports often sniff the aperture
at the end of the firearm (the muzzle) to determine by the odor if the
powder had properly ignited and burned and to try and determine just which
kind of powder it was. True experts in the art of "muzzle odoring", I explained,
can tell not only the type and brand of powder, but even the number of
grains of powder and whether it had been meticulously loaded and weighed
by the trickle method, or whether the hand-loader was somewhat careless
in his attitude toward perfect accuracy, throwing each charge of powder
directly from the powder measure into the brass cartridge as the ammunition
was manufactured by the hand-loader. At this point she interrupted to ask
if there were also experts who could analyze the "handle odor". I replied
that there were indeed such experts. She could find one under "Psychiatrist"
in the Yellow Pages.
BUCK FEVER CURED!
The other day this young lady came up to me and said that her husband claimed
he had a bad case of buck fever. Being married for only a couple of months,
she was, of course, concerned about his health and well being, and knowing
that I was somewhat of an expert on the outdoors, among other things, she
wondered if the condition was fatal and what help I could offer. 'You poor
dear,' I consoled. 'It is a hard thing for you to bear. I am afraid it
is a most loathsome disease, incurable, and almost always fatal, but,'
I hastened to add as she burst into tears, 'there are treatments that,
although they may not cure the malady, at least they can provide the person
so afflicted a great deal of comfort as he struggles with the ravages of
this dreaded disease.' She took heart at this and said she would do anything,
try anything, to help her husband with treatments, and what would I prescribe?
I replied that the best treatment was to buy him a brand new deer rifle,
lovingly pack him a three day supply of food and warm clothing, give him
a big passionate kiss, and send him off into the hills with the promise
to be waiting for him in a black filmy negligee when he returned. She was
so grateful for the suggestion she quickly scurried off to implement the
treatment. She reports that it definitely controlled her husband's buck
fever, may have even cured it as he has yet to leave the house for that
three day hunting trip, but that he seems to have contracted some other
kind of fever. When I inquired as to the nature of the new fever, she got
flustered and said she had to go now as she was in a hurry to shop for
that negligee for she hardly ever got out of the house anymore.
How about some More Humor?
Return to Newsletters
page.
|
|