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It was one of those,"Do you see what you're looking at?" episodes. |
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David said, "I'll be darned! That's a Palmville Rust Grouse there! Pretty rare!" |
I had texted my wife that I was going for a stroll, meaning a meandering walk of no real destination or direction. I had thought to take the four-wheeler, but it was a nice evening and I didn't want to spoil its ambience driving something noisy. Besides, I wanted to move slowly, as well as look for fresh bear tracks along a firebreak where I saw bear sign last year.
I was thinking about an old friend of mine in California who used to send me some of the wildlife photos he took along the American River at Sacramento. He had a Canon digital camera and a gigantic telephoto lens. I was impressed how crisp and detailed his images appeared as though the birds were a mere arm length away when they were far distant.
Where I walked on the bare soil firebreak was a water-filled depression with trees on either side, when my eyes refocused on an unusual object ahead of me, which at first I was unsure about, and then decidedly unsure about. It looked sort of like a grouse -- but it's orange?
It didn't fly away in a panic, not to say all grouse do. In fact many of them, up here in NW Minnesota, just step aside and let you pass, acting rather confident that you don't see them; or at the very most they fly into a tree's lowest branches and sit still as stone holding their breath hoping you do that very thing.
We had a staring contest; our toes fairly clinched to our soft earth locations, hearts beating wildly -- well, I could only imagine his was because, obviously, he was all gussied up for love in a large flowing Rust Orange Victorian ball gown with a feathered bustle and ruffled collar.
His love object clucked and chittered away in the tree beside me trying to coax him to her. Standing my ground, stock-still, I watched as he literally inched his way toward me, one one-inch long foot at a time, one then the other. . . ever so cautiously . . . then past me. Yes, only three-inches away from my boots . . . and when he determined he was safe, disappeared in a brush pile presumably to relieve himself of twenty long minutes of tension; I know I had to.
It was like facing down a grizzly... I knew I couldn't let him sense my fear.



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