Diversions of the Field
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Diversions of the Field - Donald Culross Peattie
Diversions of the Field
DONALD CULROSS PEATTIE
trinity university press
San Antonio, Texas
Published by Trinity University Press
San Antonio, Texas 78212
Originally published as Sportsman’s Country
Copyright © 2013 by the Estate of Donald Culross Peattie
Copyright © 1949, 1950, 1951, and 1952 by Donald Culross Peattie
Illustrations copyright © 1952 by Henry B. Kane
isbn 978–1–59534–170–9 (paper)
isbn 978–1–59534–171–6 (ebook)
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Trinity University Press strives to produce its books using methods and materials in an environmentally sensitive manner. We favor working with manufacturers that practice sustainable management of all natural resources, produce paper using recycled stock, and manage forests with the best possible practices for people, biodiversity, and sustainability. The press is a member of the Green Press Initiative, a nonprofit program dedicated to supporting publishers in their efforts to reduce their impacts on endangered forests, climate change, and forest-dependent communities.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ansi 39.48–1992.
Cover design by BookMatters, Berkeley
Cover illustration: maikid/istockphoto.com
CIP data on file at the Library of Congress.
17 16 15 14 13 | 5 4 3 2 1
FOREWORD
American Nature, only three centuries ago a continent of wilderness, has become the cherished preserve of our people, under benevolent law. Before the hunter shoulders his gun or the rodsman his creel, he must first betake himself to get a license for his sport. So, too, when the naturalist sets forth into such terrain as is proclaimed in the title for these pages, he may well be asked to stop and show his credentials.
Mine I obtain on the authority of the big dictionary that opens so weightily on its stand at my window to deliver its verdicts. Sport,
it declares, is a diversion of the field.
By this definition, surely, the naturalist is a sportsman of a sort, innocent, perhaps in many ways ignorant. Though I have never shot at anything but tin cans, and am a fisherman scarcely more proficient, yet I venture that even those happiest with rod or rifle are no happier than I in my own diversions of the field.
Nor do I return home at the day’s end empty-handed. This dozen of chapters is my kind of bag.
They are offered to my fellow sportsmen with humble admiration for their own wood-wisdom, their own seasoned knowledge of trout pool or quail covert. A conservationist to the core, I have no quarrel with any law-abiding hunter or fisherman. The best of them are shrewd naturalists themselves, from whom I can learn much. Certainly here I have no thought of teaching them anything of the sports in which I am not even a beginner, yet it is for them these chapters were written, at the invitation of Mr. Ted Kesting, editor of the magazine Sports Afield, whom I thank heartily for his cordial permission to make of them this little volume.
Perhaps their own diversions may gain a little from a glance at mine. That, in these chapters, has been to sport a little with the solemn-sounding subject of ecology, or bionomics. Ecology, pronounces the ponderous fat judge established at my window, is the branch of biology which deals with the mutual relations between organisms and their environment.
That’s to say, of course, that it deals with the jack rabbit and the desert he jumps in, the bobwhite and the weed fields he feeds in, the mule deer and the forest he hides in. So have I done, and if you see sometimes more of the scene than the creature that dwells there, so I meant you to do. The hunter I can trust to keep his eye out for the game, the fisherman his gaze on his line. But in Nature each living thing, cattail or marsh bird, gray squirrel or hickory tree, is as important as any other. Each is interdependent on others, in that grand brotherhood. Only when it is killed can the animal be withdrawn from its environment and exhibited in solitary splendor.
This bag of a dozen still keeps, I hope, some breath of life in each trophy. So you must take them as they are, still free and elusive, still involved with the plants or creatures on which they feed, the woods or waters that are home to them. There, as long as the game laws hold and men obey them, as long as the woods stay green and the fence rows keep their covert, these creatures loved of hunter and naturalist alike will boldly pursue their own best sport — the dangerous game of life in the wild. And we shall both of us go afield to find them, and meet there in fellowship, as in this little book.
Donald Culross Peattie
CONTENTS
Bobwhite Country
Gray Squirrel Country
Trout Country
Jack Rabbit Country
Valley Quail Country
Woodchuck Country
White-Winged Dove Country
Bass Country
Mule Deer Country
Red Fox Country
Hawk Country
Marsh Country
BOBWHITE COUNTRY
You can talk about your booming prairie chickens or your wild turkey (when you can find him!) or those welcome immigrants, the ring-necked pheasant and Hungarian partridge; and admittedly the ruffed grouse is a king of the tall timber. But the sweetest upland game bird in the eastern half of our country — perhaps in all the world — is the common bobwhite. They call him, not too accurately, a quail in New England, and down south he is a partridge, which is, ornithologically, a little closer to the facts. But why not accept the bird’s own name for himself, as he sits on the old snakerail fence in the May dusk, calling and calling?
Bob-WHITE! Bob-bob-WHITE! Ah, Bob-White!
And that is best, for Bob is not quite a true partridge nor a true quail; he is just himself, the best-known member of the White family, loved by sportsman and ornithologist alike, by the man of eighty autumns and the child learning his first birds. He is loved for what, uniquely, he is — for his confiding ways, for the thrilling explosion of the quail bomb
and the matchless sport it provides. But, like most birds, like our deer and bears and foxes, like the very wild flowers, he is loved, too, for the kind of country he inhabits, for his natural setting.
That setting is so familiar to Americans living east of the Appalachians, or in them, that many of them accept as natural all that actually makes it unique — and makes it good for bobwhites. For this species, which is rightly the most all-around popular game bird of the uplands, is not an inhabitant of inaccessible peaks, like ptarmigan, or far off plains, like the sage hen, or demanding of virgin environment, like the prairie chicken. Bobwhite delights in — indeed he depends on for his increase — simple familiar features of the American landscape, farm and field, wood lot and fence row. The old-fashioned element in our American scene is actually essential to quail maintenance. I mean the one-mule farms, the small abandoned fields coming up to broomsedge grass. I mean the old snakerail fences and the fence-row thickets of sassafras and sumac. I mean a land where clean agriculture is not practised, where the wild is never far off and always ready to press softly back.
That’s bobwhite country. It is log cabin country too, and whippoorwill and firefly country, sunbonnet and barefoot country, and the country of the ’possum and the ’simmon tree, of butternuts and bee-gums and buttermilk in crocks on rock shelves in the old cold spring-houses. I spent much of my childhood in bobwhite country, then left it for more illustrious places, more crowded years — New England college years, New York City and Riviera years, and now I live in southern California. But I get hungry for that first, that simple country America, and I want my sons to know it, as part of their birthright.
That’s why I have brought each of them all the way across the continent, as soon as he reached fifteen, to let them know for themselves the soft country roads that squirm like angleworms, the autumns blazing with the colors of huckleberry leaves and blackberries, poison ivy and Virginia creeper. I let them find for themselves the trout pools at the foot of old beeches, and feel on their skins the languor of Indian summer noons, and learn how to drink spring water — on the belly, with face in the crystal and the cress.
And sooner or later some old bachelor bobwhite, still hopeful in his single unblessedness, would mount a fence post, and flinging up his head and tail together, would set the sky to ringing with his bob-bob-white! And the boy would turn to me with a smile of pure delight, as if an old legend, only half believed back in California, had come true.
If we were lucky, the boy and I, we might hear the whisper call
of our friend Bob, given when danger is nigh, but not so near as to dictate retreat; it’s like the cheery bob-bob-white! but so soft it carries only a few yards. Sooner or later, if we listened long enough and knew what to listen for, we detected the caterwauling note that Negroes transliterate as walks dis way, walks dis way.
Ornithologists say it is used for bluffing other males. Some of the scientists believe no other creature save man has so vast a vocabulary — that is, a meaningful vocabulary; I exclude the imitative powers of catbirds, parrots and mynas, and the gobbledygook of crows. Students of the bobwhite list such phrases as the following: the food call given by the cock bird when bringing home the bacon; the screaming battle cry of the cock when another male takes too much interest in his mate; the flicker-like cackle of the male in pursuit of his love affairs; the note of the hen that invites the male; and a great deal of baby talk. That is to say, the various notes of the chicks — the metallic piping of the lost chick, the childish chatter of youngsters keeping in touch with each other while feeding in the grass, and the curlew-like wail of the captured chick, a sound that brings down upon your head, your face, your very eyes, a demon in feathers — the parent bird.
All this is but a fraction of bobwhite language, yet the sweetest note of the lot I have not mentioned. It is that liquid, far-ringing ka-lo-ee-hee that sounds like some Polynesian song of welcome. Ornithologists call it the scatter call, meaning that it calls the scattered flock together. I would rather call it the all-clear signal, given when danger is past. It is also the bobwhites’ version of Oh, what a beautiful morning!
For with it they salute the dawn. Covey answering covey on a spring dawn, the sound goes on to the auditory horizon and presumably beyond it, and beyond the beyond, to the dewy rim of morning.
If the terrain is ideal for bobwhite, it has three or four features in combination, and in each of these environments the quail may spend a part of his life and a part of his day. First of all, there is the beloved fence-row thicket or the edge of the wood lot. These furnish him with sanctuary, but not less importantly, this is the best year-around dining room of the covey. Blackberries, dewberries, huckleberries, mulberries, and strawberries are spread here by the generous hand of Nature. And here the holly, cherry, wild rose, wax myrtle, sassafras, sumac, juniper and dogwood drop their succulent fruits. Pine seeds are an even greater favorite with all ages of bobwhite, and acorns too, though quail don’t take to a dense thicket of scrub oak any more than they do to wet swampy woods, or deep tall timber where the dew lasts too long.
Yet dew is their favorite drink, and they get it abundantly in the fields of broomsedge grass. Broomsedge, known also as bluestem and Indian beard grass, is the second most important habitat of bobwhite, and probably every hunter knows it well by sight if not by name. Knee high to hip high, invading abandoned fields in about their third or