The third week of October found me headed back to a familiar area in search of a population of sharptail grouse. As I've written before this area was one I'd frequented in past year's and always was sure to hold several coveys of grouse most times of the year. But over time land use shifted then winters and cold spring hatching weather took their toll on bird populations. I then found other areas closer to home where I could find birds. With the Setter's aging this season I found myself enjoying going back to these old haunts trying to find the magic we once experienced as we put on mile after mile traversing these beautiful hills over the last decade.
On this run the Setter's and I pulled into a hay field to park south of the old Honey Hole. My plan was to hunt a 2 square mile area of cover featuring hills, sloughs, pot holes and some fields of corn stubble. When land use shifts so does the behavior pattern of the birds making it a daunting task especially with sharptail to determine where they've decided to set up house keeping in this big open country. Just because they no longer are where you used to find them doesn't mean they're gone. They've been in North Dakota for hundreds of year's, are built for the cold winter's, and for the hunter willing to work hard enough they can prove to be a serious challenge for the best of shooters as well as pointing dog's.
The objective today was to locate the population of birds within this large area of diverse cover. I knew they were here and in good numbers no doubt but before I found out exactly where I'd have to do some walking. My boots hit the ground mid afternoon on this day with partly cloudy skies and temperatures in the 40's. I'd spent the morning to the east walking the edges of some soy bean fields with all 3 Setter's on the ground. We'd picked up 2 sharptail on a beautiful point with Beau leading and Molly and Mick honoring in some dark green weedy vegetation on the edge of a bean field. I had missed another opportunity on a point by Molly as we walked a section line road next to a wheat stubble field. So Mick and Molly were played out leaving this run for Beau and myself to close out a beautiful day in the field.
I had a pretty good idea of where the birds I was looking for were feeding which was at the back of this run to the south along the corn stubble at the crest of a hill where the field met the grass. But in order to get there I had to walk around several pot holes not always in the direction I wanted to go as I made my way around this maze of water obstacles. Truth be told they could be anywhere but I was betting on the food source being the key. If we pushed birds out of the stubble we had a pretty good chance of working them within this area on the way back to the Jeep. Beau was really in his element here surfing the cover and casting back and forth at will. He's big, lanky, and loves to open up and cruise the wind making him a perfect dog to hunt sharptail with or any bird for that matter but I always love to see him set a covey of sharptail at a distance with his head held high in the wind. That's why after already putting on a few miles this morning I couldn't go home without looking for these birds on this afternoon.
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Beau head up and nose into the wind. Birds ahead! |
We'd been at it for about an hour and a half. Beau had worked some birds that had been moving in some heavy grass most likely pheasants but we'd yet to get anything to hold. This season I'd watched many times as the Setter's just couldn't get out ahead of running birds to cut off they're advances. It was bittersweet watching knowing they knew what to do but just couldn't get it done anymore. Beau was doing his best casting in circles in one particular area for a while but to no avail. We'd come to the crest of several high points perfect for sharptail but had not seen them either. So we crested another hill about halfway to the corn stubble and descended towards an oblong group of cattails about a 150 yards long and 40 yards wide. It was fairly close to a large pot hole and about a third of a mile from the corn stubble. I then had a feeling of dejavu as we approached. Once working around the cattails I remembered. We had run this area last year around the same time and I had missed a clear shot at a rooster flying across these very cattails. With Beau.
So at attention I watched as Beau worked around the perimeter of this cover. About halfway around he stopped and with nose to the ground began wagging his tail. This means "Hey! There was a bird right here just a couple seconds ago!" When he gets his nose down it also means I had better keep up because the birds running and could fly any second. So with this feeling of dejavu hovering over me I hurried along keeping sight of Beau along the cattails. Then suddenly he pulled up and froze! In the next instant up comes a rooster rising like a 747 above the cattails moving right to left. I shouldered my gun and picked a spot just ahead of the rooster pulling the trigger all in one fluid motion. I was surprised actually to see the bird go down hard in the thick of the cover having squandered the very same shot last year. I stood for a couple moments marking the spot before calling Beau to come around. 35 yards ahead I started to look down around me and there he was in front of me exactly as I had marked the shot. I knelt down to pick him up as Beau stuck his nose in to inspect the bird now in hand as if to give his approval.
We continued on for a quarter mile when I realized there was another water obstacle between us and the corn stubble not visible from the start of our run. I was unable now after all this walking to get to where I wanted to go so logging the route we'd need to take next time as I looked around we started circling back. We'd gone another few hundred yards when I spotted a pair of sharptail flying high back toward the Jeep. When I looked to the west to see where they might have come from my eyes went right to the edge of the corn stubble we couldn't reach as a group of a couple dozen sharptail started flushing and following the same flight path as the birds I had just seen. I just stood there and watched as they floated to the east trying to see where they set down. I lost them as they floated over the highest point in this 2 square mile area. My best guess was that this was not a coincidence but where they commuted back and forth from the food source. My legs were now starting to burn with fatigue every time we'd go uphill or meet resistance in heavy cover. Beau's casts were getting shorter so we stopped for a few minutes to catch our breath and think about how to approach the area I thought might get us on top of those sharptail.
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Taking a break on the prairie with Beau |
Once I picked a line for approach we still had to go up and down a few steep hills to get to where I had in mind. The leeward side of this big hill. This is the side tucked out of the wind offering protection to the birds and probably where they planned to roost for the night. It was going on 5 o'clock now with the sun getting noticeably lower in the sky. With possibly the best opportunity of the day ahead in the grassy slopes of this big hill I was now struggling to put one foot in front of the other! I was finally there and at a point where I had to decide to go around the hill and approach from the south, go straight ahead to the top and down or straight ahead slightly to the north and side of the hill. I had no other choice than to continue on the line I was on because I was simply exhausted. We moved forward at a point 2/3 of the way from the peak of the hill betting the birds were at the spot just where the hill started to flatten. Beau worked the area getting birdy as I noted spots with scat where the birds had spent the night so I was hopeful I had made the right call. However after working the whole area to the south east of that peak we found no birds so I worked Beau back up to higher ground again. We didn't get 50 yards when the whole group started flushing a few at a time from a point 1/3 of the way down from the top of that hill. It was a beautiful sight as they all flew to the east and north. I had missed the spot by just a hundred yards or so and they'd undoubtedly watched us the whole time from their vantage point.
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Beau dreaming of sharptail grouse while napping in the afternoon sun |
I felt good knowing they were still there and I gained a little more respect for these birds and the places they call home. One foot ahead of the other I made my way painfully back to the Jeep with Beau not giving up but working every edge as we moved forward. Mick and Molly spotted us a few hundred yards out and started their welcome by barking and yipping as we approached. We'd accomplished our objective of finding the sharptail again and I'd gotten a second chance at a rooster flying across that slough I'd missed last year owing it of course once again to "Beau's Nose".