I can hear a big tractor working a field a half mile away as the farmer
takes advantage of the lack of snow cover and warm November
temperatures of 40-45 F. I am deer hunting, enclosed in one hundred
sixty acres of trees, brush and wetland, with several hundreds of
similar acres behind me.
Southwest of our place is an intersection of two roads where on-coming
vehicles often the hit rumble strips preceding the stop sign, or
truckers use their engine-brake for reasons known only to themselves.
This increased vehicle activity, so natural in the spring of the year,
seems quite alien now. I would wear ear plugs to drown out the unnatural
man-made noises, but listening to what’s going on around me during
hunting season is important just as deer and other animals must accept
its presence in their world and gauge what threatens them -- as if their
lives depended on it.
Sometimes, vehicle noise is such that I feel I’m hunting in a city
park, a phenomenon that I never thought, in a million years, I would
experience here. Sometimes it's so prevalent it makes me wish I could
take the whole place and move it, in its entirety, away from where it
sits. Contradictorily, days that are dead calm and seemingly devoid of
any noise, natural or man-made, i.e., no birdsong, no wind, no stirrings
of flora or fauna, no vehicles even faraway, as of late, create a vague
feeling of impending doom for reasons I am yet to fathom.
Deer aren’t afraid of tractors necessarily; a farmer driving a tractor can
often get quite close to deer in a field, who many times just stand and
watch it go by, unless it would stop there. Perhaps they associate its
actions as non-threatening or familiar, and liken it to vehicular
traffic that speeds by, for as many of us know they sometimes like to
play ‘tag’ on occasion although it may cost them their lives, and us,
our vehicle.
Aside from high decibel sounds I cannot hear, there is a lot I must pay
attention to during the hours spent in a raised deer stand or sitting
camouflaged on the ground. For instance, distinguishing between the
noise of a sudden wind through in the woods and a deer walking or
running; or the wind swirling the grass or blowing through dry leaves;
perhaps a magpie scolding something, or a murder of crows overhead
warning others of an owl in the vicinity — or perhaps a deer hunter ...
Distinct animal footsteps through paper-thin thin ice may be a deer —
or disappointingly, sharp tailed or ruffed grouse erratically looking
for seeds or tree buds. What I might think a grunt or bleat of a deer
could just be the friction of two tree branches rubbing together
overhead, or my own wheezing ‘epp’ or ‘huh,’ upon inhalation. It's
possibly the deer stand itself. It could be a loose tarp corner flapping
or unsecured plexiglass window panes flexing against window frames or
tree branches scratching against the stand from a neighboring tree.
Of course eyesight, especially combined with good judgement, is of utmost importance, although https://www.acb.org/content/blind-hunting-tom-lealos offers
blind people an opportunity to deer hunt with the advice of a remote
assistant. But truly, a fully sighted person experiences the chance of
recognizing movement in the woods; a sudden appearance; the explosive
eruption of a frightened bird or animal somewhere very near you that you
can’t explain by sight, only conjecture; and in the same breath,
wonderfully notice loose silky threads of cobwebs among the trees that
reflect sunlight and resemble diagonal dashes of rain.
Sunlight, which had earlier warmed me in the deer stand so much that I
had removed my cap and jacket, has now passed west thinned by the tops
of hundreds of leafless trees sending temperatures plummeting. Although I
can see my breath, I can quickly write observations barehanded as
shorthand notes or single words. "Shadows grow. Perspective changes."
Trees east of me cast shadows; taller, tallest deciduous trees appear
white as sunlight wanes; colors become indistinct.
The sun reappears from behind the islands of hybrid poplar and white
spruce I planted in parallel contour rows — something else I never
embraced in my youth as I thought such plantings were unacceptable/fake;
an attempt to create a falsity resembling nature. But I’ve learned,
just as those sweeping arcs of tree rows at first, appear too orderly,
they age and reproduce offspring by seed, or as suckers in the case of
hybrids.
The
young go their own way and fill in the openings as nature intended with
under story seedlings. An example being the tall conifer trees in Hayes
Lake State Park by the dam and boat landings, and those north of the
lake by the beach and picnic areas that were similarly planted in
furrowed rows, in the late 1960s, to later create a natural forest
setting in 2023.
Colder temperatures stream in through the open windows; my fingers
protest. I light the propane heater with which each deer stand is
equipped. This one ignites and lights up reliably. Its quiet ‘breathing’
fluctuation begins, its warmth arising below my stool, and I dangle my
fingers over it to warm them.
Traffic goes by as hunters from the Hovorka Swamp leave for home
elsewhere. I can make out the noise of the now greatly-illuminated
tractor somewhere in the darkness, as I can a semi-truck heading south
on Hwy 89, two miles east, reminding me of that old John Denver song, “Back Home Again,”
that I used to like although at the time its lyrics didn’t quite fit my
foreseen future life here because of that very line: “There’s a truck
out on the four-lane a mile or so away …" …"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PgSHHziz0LE
But maybe, one day, that’s going to come true as well, alas.
In the meantime, life goes on. It doesn't seem to bother wolves or dogs who pass through on occasion to negatively affect our deer hunting prospects. Yet, when the country becomes devoid of all its predators and their kind, I'll be sadder yet.
Comments
The most total silence that I've ever experienced in nature was during a total solar eclipse - every person fell silent, and even the bird song stopped. The next total solar eclipse will be April 8, 2024, where the closest location to Wannaska will be Illinois, should you and Ula need a road trip...