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SEASON'S END: A RETROSPECT AND BENEDICTION

The Upland Almanac

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Spring 2023

The close of bird season – no matter where it occurs or what species you consider your favorite game or primary wing shooting obsession – always brings a corresponding period of emotional downturn.

- Bob DeMott

SEASON'S END: A RETROSPECT AND BENEDICTION

Last fall, I had 29 days of woodcock hunting, most of it in my home coverts in southeastern Ohio’s Hocking River Valley, with a couple of bonus road trips thrown in to destinations where grouse were a possibility, too: an early October week in north central Michigan with four old bird camp pals and five days in early November in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts with a group of new upland friends. Considering routine daily commutes to home coverts, long distance out-of-state travel, anxiety produced by unusual weather conditions that fluctuated from drought to sleet and the perpetual nagging suspicion that time afield subtracts from normal domestic and work-a-day duties, that month of pursuit amounts to an intensely compressed physical/emotional experience. It seems natural to feel a letdown when the game is over for the year and equally natural to want to revisit that part of the past to discover what sense can be made of it.

In six decades of uplanding, I have always dreaded the moment at the end of shooting season when the air goes out of the balloon, that inevitable moment when I am faced not only with the question of what to do next to occupy my time but how to explain the sudden onset of relative inactivity to my bird dog, which surely deserves better. Even the finality of necessary end-of-season tasks like cleaning shotguns, sewing torn brush clothes, tending to hunting gear, reorganizing equipment, etc., seemed somehow loathsome and to be avoided at all costs in order to extend the hunt vibe. I confess that’s a form of denial, clear and simple, to which I plead, “Guilty!”

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

The Land Moved

With a snap of his head, our springer spaniel Chip bolted into the underbrush.

time to read

7 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Creating Habitat: Nature's Way

It’s a good bet that warm, cozy and secure in their homes throughout the land, most traveling bird hunters remained blissfully unaware of nature’s rampage in Michigan last spring.

time to read

4 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Day Three: A Hunt Story, Sort Of

Sometimes the story of a day's hunt doesn't say much about shots fired or birds in the bag...

time to read

4 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

NIRVANA OR NOT IN THE NORTH WOODS

If there's one shrub in a favorite ruffed grouse covert that will dampen the excitement of a crisp, fall hunt, it's prickly ash.

time to read

3 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

George Bird Evans: The Artist Before the Author

It doesn’t take long for a person new to the sporting world before they encounter classic book titles such as The Upland Shooting Life, Troubles with Bird Dogs or An Affair with Grouse.

time to read

4 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

SOUTHERN SAFARI

GEORGIA BOBWHITES AT FISHING CREEK FARMS

time to read

7 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Charles and His Remington: A Gentleman's Choice from America's Gun-Makers' Row - Remington Model 1884 EE Grade

A Civil War vet, let's call him Charles (pronounced with a snobbish lilt, of course), was thoroughly smitten by the parade of high-end American-made, side-by-side, hammerless “automatic” (ejector) shotguns emerging from America's esteemed “Gun-Makers Row”— New England, New York and Pennsylvania.

time to read

3 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Profile of an Artist: Cindy Dalton

Art has always played a central role in Cindy Dalton's life.

time to read

2 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Bird Camp Grouse with Mushrooms and Yorkshire Pudding

While visiting my wife's sister Lyndis at her tiny country cottage in Yorkshire, England, a few years ago, we were treated to a spectacular roast beef lunch that ranks as one of the most memorable meals I've ever eaten.

time to read

3 mins

Autumn 2025

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Field Foot Care and Dog Boots

A few years ago, I was chasing chukars in southern Idaho's cheatgrass and rimrock country.

time to read

4 mins

Autumn 2025

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