<p class="caption2"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</SPAN></p>
<p class="caption2 pmb2">My Boyhood Among the Pigeons</p>
<div class="dropcap">M</div>
<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">M</span>Y boyhood was made active and wholesome
by a love for outdoor pastimes that had been
bred in me by generations of sport-loving
ancestors. From which side of the genealogical tree
this ardor for field and forest and open sky had come
with stronger influence I cannot say. While my father
was the one to use the fowling-piece and cast the fly
for the glorious speckled trout, my mother was a willing
conspirator, for it was she who packed the lunch basket,
often called us for the start in the gray morning, and
went along to "hold the horse" while we shot pigeons.
And when we were bent on a day in the woods in bracing
October weather she drove old Dolly sedately along the
winding trail, while I hunted one side of the woods and
father hunted the other. On such days we were after
partridges, of course, ruffed grouse, the king of all
game birds. Often mother marked them down and
told us just where they had crossed the road, or whether
the bird was hit, for the cloud of smoke from the
old black powder made seeing guesswork on our part.
She loved the dogs, too, those good old friends and
workers, Sport, Bob, and Ranger.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I remember calling my mother to a window early one
morning and shouting: "See there! a flock of pigeons!
Ah, ha! April fool!" This time I did not deceive her
with the threadbare trick. The joke was "on me" for
once. There was a flight of pigeons that morning, the
first one of the season, and behind the foremost flock
another and another came streaming. Away from the
east side of the river at the north of the town, from near
Crow Island, they swept like a cloud. Crossing the
river to the west they reached the woods near Jerome's
mill and skirted the clearings or passed in waves over
the tree tops, back of John Winter's farm, and then
wheeled to the south. Out of the tongue of woodland,
just back of the Hermansau Church, they poured, thence
over the fields, too high to be shot, and then away to the
evergreens and stately pines of Pine Hill; on, on, on
across the Tittabawassee, to some feeding ground we
knew not how far away.</p>
<p>Now that the pigeons had come they would "fly"
every morning. This we knew from years of observation
in the great migration belt of Michigan. They
would fly lower to-morrow morning, and in a day or two
more sweep low enough for the sixteen-gauge and the
number eight shot to reach them. Sometimes, even now,
forty years after the last of the great passenger pigeon
flights, I fall to day-dreaming and seem to hear myself
saying in the eager, piping tones of those golden boyhood
days:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Mother, I am going for pigeons to-morrow morning!
Do call me if I oversleep. I must be awake by
four o'clock. We'll have pigeon pot-pie to-morrow.
I'm going to bed early so as to be sure to be up by daybreak.
Old Sport is going along to 'fetch' dead birds."</p>
<p>"Hello, dad," cries a voice in my ear, "what are you
up to? What are you hustling around so for with your
old shot pouch and powder-flask? There's nothing to
shoot this time of the year."</p>
<p>The spell is broken; my own boy fetches his daddy out
of his dream, and I am fairly caught in the act of
making an old fool of myself. My youngsters are
counting the days before May first when I have
promised to take them trout-fishing, and the smallest
boy found his first gun in his stocking last Christmas.
But they can know nothing at all about the joys and
excitement of pigeon shooting in the vanished days
when these birds fairly darkened the sky above our old
homestead. But I try to tell them what we used to do
and my story sounds something like this:</p>
<p>"It is early in the spring, so early that a bunch of
snow may yet be found on the north side of the largest
of the fallen trees in the woods. Puddles that the melting
snow left in the hollows of the clearing are fringed
with ice this morning, and we look around and tell each
other, 'There was a frost last night.' The mud in the
road has stiffened, and the rutted cattle tracks are also
streaked and barred with ice. Yet winter has gone and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
spring is here, for the buds are swelling on the twigs of
the elms and the pussy willows show their dainty, silvery
signals to tell us that the vernal equinox has come and
gone.</p>
<p>"If the springtime is still young, so is the day. Light
is breaking in the gray sky of dawn as we hurry along
the slippery, sticky road. We must make haste to the
point of woods, by John Winter's clearing, before full
daybreak or the pigeons will be flying and we will miss
the early flocks which always keep nearest the ground.</p>
<p>"You may be curious to know what we look like as
we trudge along in Indian file, eagerly chatting about
a kind of sport which this later generation knows nothing
about. I am a chunk of a country lad, topped by a
woolen cap with ear-tabs pulled down over my ears, a
tippet around my neck, yarn mittens on my hands, which
are sure to be badly skinned and chapped this time of
year from playing 'knuckle-down-tight.'</p>
<p>"My 'every-day pants' are tucked into a pair of calf-skin
boots with square pieces of red leather for the tops,
an old-fashioned adornment dear to Young America of
my day. My old Irish water spaniel 'Sport' is tagging
behind or charging frantically ahead; my gun is a sixteen-gauge
muzzle loader, stub and twist barrels, with
dogs' heads for the hammers.</p>
<p>"Dangling from one shoulder is a leather shot pouch
that cuts off one ounce of number eights for a load.
The sides of this pouch are embossed, on the one a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
group of English woodcock, on the other a setter rampant.
Hanging at my left side by a green cord with a
tassel or two is my fluted copper powder flask, ready
to measure out two and three-fourths drams of coarse
Dupont or Curtis & Harvey powder.</p>
<p>"My pockets are full of Ely's black-edged wads, for
I am a young nabob of sportsmen, let me tell you, and
I scorn to use tow or bits of newspaper for wadding.
My vest pocket holds the caps, G. D.'s or Ely's again,
for didn't I tell you that I was a nabob. The <i>pièce de
résistance</i> of this outfit is the game bag, the pride of my
eye, for it was a Christmas present, and this is its maiden
shooting trip. Suspended over the left shoulder so that
it will hang well back of the right hip, the strap that carries
it is broad and with many holes for the wondrous
buckle which can be shifted to hang it in the most comfortable
place, wherever that is, for when it is loaded
with game it will choke me almost to death, no matter
how I adjust it. This noble bag has two pockets, one
of them for luncheon, and on the outside is a netted
pocket, easy to get into and keeping the birds cool. I
nearly forgot to mention its magnificent fringe, which
hangs down from both sides and the bottom like the
war-bags of an Indian chief.</p>
<p>"My companions are rigged out in much the same
fashion. They are grown men, however, for I don't
remember any other boys who shot pigeons with me.
Holabird or khaki hunting suits are as yet unknown, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
even corduroy coats are rare. The powder horn is seen
as often as the copper flask, and one hunter has a shot
belt with two compartments instead of the English
pouch. Of guns the assortment is as varied as the number
of hunters, but the old, hard-kicking army musket
with its iron ramrod is more popular than any other arm.</p>
<p>"We reach the edge of the clearing not a minute too
soon. Now and then a distant shot tells us that we are
not the first hunters out afield this morning. The guns
are cracking everywhere along the road that skirts the
woodland, and back in, close to the 'chopping,' some
better wing-shots are posted by the openings into the
woods where the birds fly lower, but where the shooting
is more difficult. It is largely of the 'pick your bird'
style, for the flight of a pigeon is very swift, and when
they are darting among the tree-tops of a small forest
opening, rare skill is required to bag one's birds.</p>
<p>"I prefer to take the flocks, even though they offer
me more distant targets, and soon my gun-barrels are
as hot as those of the rest of the skirmishers. Sometimes
two or three birds drop from a flock at a single
discharge, and then several shots may not fetch from
on high more than one or two of the long tail-feathers
spinning and twisting to the ground. It is fascinating
to watch the whirling, shining descent of one of these
feathers, and I pick up one and stick it in my cap as a
matter of habit.</p>
<p>"This kind of pigeon shooting takes a good gun and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
ammunition to kill a big bag as we bang away at long
range at the birds on their way to the morning feeding-ground.
The flight is over by half-past six o'clock and
I am home by seven o'clock ready for breakfast and
then to scamper off to school.</p>
<p>"The pigeons in this particular locality have followed
the same routine as long as I have known them. They
only fly in the morning, always going in the same direction,
and I can't recall seeing them coming back again,
or flying later in the day. This habit holds until the
young squabs are in the nests in June, after which we are
likely to find pigeons almost anywhere, for their feeding
grounds become scattered and local.</p>
<p>"One thing that annoys me in these brave days of
youth and sport is the poacher, the low-down fellow who
steals my birds. I am reckoned a pretty good shot, and
I have a first-rate gun, but I am only a boy, so the pigeon
thief thinks I am fair picking, and he saves his ammunition
by claiming every bird that drops anywhere near
him.</p>
<p>"Another smart dodge of his is to fire into a flock
ahead or behind the one I am shooting at and then claim
whatever birds fall as the quarry of both our guns. If
he is not too big I try to lick him, but generally I have to
submit to the rascality unless I can persuade a grown-up
friend to take my part. Sometimes these villains hang
around my shooting ground without any guns at all,
and pick up as many birds as I do. Then I hunt around
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
for a father or an uncle to reinforce my protests and
there is a pretty row which ends in the interloper taking
to his heels to wait for a more propitious occasion.</p>
<p>"When we are ready to carry our birds home we
pull out the four long tail-feathers and knot them
together at the tips. Then the quill ends are stuck
through the soft part of the lower mandible, and the
birds are strung together, eight or ten in a string.
These strings are bunched together by tying the quill
ends of the feathers, and we have our game festooned
in compact shape for the triumphal march homeward
bound."</p>
<p>Alas, the pigeons and the frosty morning hunts and
the delectable pigeon-pie are gone, no more to return.
They are numbered with those recollections which help
to convince me that the boys of to-day don't have as
good times as we youngsters did in the prime of our
busy outdoor world.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p class="pmb4"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />