The Hunt

The town defies the laws of physics with it’s street-front porches and barns that lean. It’s country dilapidated; being once a bustling source of gold and lumber in the sixties. Now, due to lack of jobs, it’s a town of biologists mainly studying salmon, or retirees that don’t mind the cold.

In the winter, the roads close, so no one goes in and no one comes out. It’s a hunker down, canned goods, generator operated, hunter and gatherer bitch of a winter, but its the kind of thing that a hearty soul like most that live there can handle. Although some still leave in travel trailers for smoother tides before the everlasting winter rears it’s ugly head.

We went straight through the town and into the mountains. Passing cars on the narrow road is a game of survival of the fittest. One side is a mountain face and the other is a three hundred foot drop to the river below.

There’s three completely different habitats there. In the shadier areas there’s a rain forest, there’s a normal forest where the sun shines, and a desert atop the peaks.

The land is ripe with grapes, blackberries and elderberries, and teeming with game like deer, bear, quail, grouse and dove, or so we thought.

On the left side of the river and across the road from camp, up a mountainside littered with half-burnt pine trees (from a wildfire a few years back), poison oak, loose rock and shale, is the spot I chose from last year. Trudging through is the hardest part because the steepness varies in grades and it only gets worse the higher you climb. Some of the time I had to run on the balls of my feet and catch a pine tree to anchor myself, with my pack and my .270.

Even though its difficult to climb, there’s worn deer trails with week old scat and tracks, and a prominent bear trail with a few days old scat. These trails criss-cross up the whole face of the mountain.

Opening Day at 7:00 AM, I was up and slipping into my Gulch Gear, of which the owner of the company happened to be a friend of Dustin’s dad and was with us on the trip. He gave me the camoflague in the Inceptor style, which has a more desert look to it, but blends well into all terrains, even though it wouldn’t seem that way. It blends into the Oak and Pine habitat surrounding us particularly well.

I went up the mountain, with Dustin, taking four or five steps up and stopping to look around and make sure we weren’t spooking anything.

Halfway up to our spot, I saw something move about a hundred yards ahead of me. It was the brown ass end of something, moving behind the trees. I stopped suddenly and watched a cinnamon colored black bear walk out into the open. There weren’t any cubs trailing it, and it was much bigger than the legal fifty pounds. My heart started pounding adrenaline through my body, and I was excited and terrified at the same time. I dropped to my knees, sliding down the mountain a little, and waited as Dustin raised his rifle, I watched him wait until the bear was in full stride for an open shot at his heart and lungs, with my ears plugged. Then he took it and silence filled the air. The bear dropped and rolled, and almost immediately, Dustin chambered another round that just so happened to jam in his gun.

Our reloads were crimped wrong, since the dies were set for the nickle plated brass ones Dustin’s dad used, and we used the same die on his brass. All of our reloads were crimped wrong, we found that out a few months back when we tested them at a hundred yards. His dad’s gun jammed, and then mine, and Dustin cut his hand opening my bolt to get the round out, and sprayed blood all over my action. We forgot about it of course, and it didn’t get cleaned again until we left for this trip.

While Dustin was struggling to open his bolt, I watched the bear get up and run.

The deal was, if anybody heard a shot they had to turn on their radios to listen to the shooter announce whether it was a miss or not. In a shaky voice, I told Dustin’s dad and brother that he shot a bear.

They came up ten minutes later to begin following the blood trail. We found the initial shot, where there was a spot of dark blood and tissue sprayed across the mountainside, and where the bullet pierced through a leaf. From there we followed the blood drops, down some deer paths, in between pine trees, oak trees, brush and rock. We followed the drops for three hours, losing them for sometimes fifteen minutes, before finding them again and continuing on the path. We followed the blood trail up three hills and down three ravines until we determined that the bear bedded itself down in the last ravine, which was full of chest high blackberry and poison oak. There was no way of getting into it. It was too thick. So we called it a loss.

Dustin’s brother later in the week, shot a bear and lost it in the same kind of situation; in a poison oak infested thicket.

Surprisingly the buck population dropped quite a bit, owing to bear, mountain lion, bobcat and probably genetics. The only buck that was seen was by Dustin was when we were riding around on quads up some back roads. It was a spike, still in velvet.

We captured pictures of doe with fawns, single doe, foxes, squirrels foraging for acorns, decent sized bucks, bobcat, big bear, mama bear with cubs (one had a blond cub), and a rare photo of two mountain lion walking close together on a camera that we’d left up across the river all year, although the camera only took pictures until March. Before leaving, they would wade across and change the SD card and batteries for the next year.

The first few days we were out there it didn’t stop raining.

Cheyenne in her dad’s Gulch Gear camouflage.
Trail to the river.

One of the most interesting places in the area is the old homestead. It was said by the locals that it burned down, but some say the government burned it down. Nobody said what happened to the grouchy old man that lived there, but its been abandoned for a long time.

One of the other most interesting spots was what we called the Bullock’s camp. A group of girls made a summer camp spot down by the river with a sign that said Bullock Girls ’94.

Lastly there was the mining camp. There were a lot of mining claims up there, but I don’t think anyone has done any digging since the sixties. We got as far as we could, past the camp of a man who’d been living there but was currently vacant, and into blackberry bushes. The blackberry bushes had overgrown the trail so much that we couldn’t get any farther to the actual mines.

More random pictures from our adventure:

Gluten Free Blackberry Cobbler

When life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. When life gives you blackberries, you make cobbler.

Ingredients:

Produce:

3 1/2 cups of wild Blackberries (washed)

Condiments:

2 tsp. Lemon Juice

Dairy:

1/2 cup Milk

3 tbsp. Unsalted Butter (softened)

Baking & Spices:

3/4 cup Sugar + 1/2 cup later

1/2 cup Brown Sugar

1 tbsp. Corn Starch

1 tsp. Cinnamon

1 tsp. Baking Powder

1/4 tsp. Salt

1 cup Gluten Free Flour (I use Pillsbury because it substitutes evenly)

1 tbsp. Vanilla

Water:

2/3 cups boiling

This recipe was originally from my boyfriend’s paternal grandmother, but I made some small tweaks when I did it on my own.

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees, or you can use an air fryer (I did). Set a small sauce pan with 2/3 cups of water on the stove top to boil.

The recipe calls for a 9″ x 13″ dish, but I used two square 8″ dishes and doubled my recipe. Grease it with butter. Is there anything better than butter? – Julie Powell.

Yes, butter. Julia Child was a butter lover, so is Paula Deen, who was ever a lover of nonstick spray?

Mix your blackberries in a separate bowl with a little bit of the first half (3/4 cup) of sugar and lemon juice and let the sugar dissolve in the citrus acid of the lemon. Pour into dish(es).

In a mixer mix the rest of the first bit (3/4 cup) of sugar, butter, baking powder, salt and sifted GF flour. Slowly pour in milk and vanilla. Mix well; may be slightly lumpy.

Pour over blackberry mixture.

For the topping: mix together the second half of sugar (1/2 cup), brown sugar, corn starch and cinnamon. Pour the boiling water over the top.

Bake in the oven for forty-five minutes (gluten free cooks faster, so you’ll have to keep checking on it) or in an air fryer for thirty-eight. The top should be golden brown and bubbling.

Pair with ice cream, fresh cream or whipped cream.

Enjoy!

Losing my Best Friend

I had planned on making my next post about an amazing new wine I’d discovered, and I had planned on posting a few days ago but several events in my life prevented that from happening and I’m sorry to anyone who was expecting a new post sooner.

On June 13th, as I was finishing up my last bit of cleaning before leaving work for the night, my mom told me that my one-year-old puppy, Jax was sick.

She said that he was lethargic, he wouldn’t eat, he would barely move, and he was having bloody diarrhea. It was a few hours after the vet in the small town I grew up in closed, and there were no twenty-four hour vets around, so she had to wait until morning. In the meantime, she got him to drink water and eat a treat.

She told me he was having the same symptoms my old dog, Shasta did when she was a puppy, she passed of old age in September of 2017. My mom said that Shasta was foaming at the mouth too, but that was because she was poisoned, but Jax wasn’t.

He stayed outside all night and in the morning my mom took him to the vet as soon as they opened.

As soon as he looked Jax over, the Vet told her that his gums were ice cold, he was dehydrated and that he was already half-dead, but he took him in for twenty-four hour care.

I called the Vet to check in on him while I sat in my car, waiting to go to work. They told me he was still in the same condition.

My mom and my boyfriend tried to assure me that he would be okay, that it had happened to Shasta and she was in worse shape, that it could be fixed.

The whole day at work I was a sobbing mess. I don’t know how I managed to piece together a meal.

At 2:00 pm, when I took my lunch break, I called again for an update, and I was told he was doing better, his dehydration was under control but there was still blood in his stool so he wasn’t out of the woods yet, but if he made it through this, he’d be around for a long time.

Mom called again just before closing and left a message, and they didn’t get back to her until the next day.

The whole time I prayed for him to get better and I kept thinking about seeing him for the first time.

We got him on June 2, 2018. He was born April 10, 2018. I remember stopping by my mom’s friends house to find all of them sitting and talking on the patio, and my mom cradling a little black lab.

He was a mix of a Black Lab and an Australian Shepherd, we later found out, and when he got older, it was obvious. He had the body and coloring of a Black Lab and the shortness of an Australian Shepherd.

After two days of having him, I taught him how to sit. A couple more and he could lay down, and after a few weeks he knew how to jump up and fetch. It took a month for us to potty train him.

He imprinted on me because I was around a lot more because I only had a part time job. He was originally my mom’s dog, but he became mine.

My boyfriend and I lived two and a half hours away from each other, which meant I would stay with him for a few days at a time and it was hard leaving Jax for that long.

It was much worse when I moved out. I would visit as often as I could and every time he wouldn’t stop jumping up and down and wagging his whole body when he saw me.

I wanted to skip work so I could go and see him, but the Vet said that it wouldn’t be a good idea for me to get him excited and then leave.

I thought he would be okay, because that’s what everybody kept telling me. I was going to go up on Tuesday and see him.

On Saturday, June 15th, around 7:15 pm, he fell asleep and the technicians couldn’t wake him up.

As soon as I got out of the shower at 7:30, I had a missed call from my mom and a text that said “he didn’t make it”.

The shock didn’t last very long, soon I was sobbing into the pillows on our bed. I texted my boyfriend and begged him to get off work early because I couldn’t handle being in the bedroom alone.

I couldn’t believe it. I still don’t want to. Deep down I still think it was all a mistake and he will be awake and ready for me to take him home, but I know its not true.

I couldn’t stay at work on Sunday because I was a mess and I couldn’t even try to cook, today I called in because I didn’t want to try.

I feel like I lost a child, and a best friend.

Tomorrow, my boyfriend and I will drive up to the vet and pick him up, and bury him in my mom’s backyard under the lilac bushes he used to chew on.

Rest in peace my sweet baby boy, I’ll love you until the day I die. I hope you can play fetch in heaven. I’ll miss you so much, Jax.

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About Kristin

I was born and raised in a tiny town in the great blue mountains of northern California, where cattle outnumber people. My daddy was a ranch hand, as well as a mechanic for tractors and farm equipment, and most summer nights were spent staying up until two a.m. in a baler, watching him weigh the bales and scare coyote and rabbit out of the fields.

In the mornings, just before the break of dawn, my mom, my brother and I would take a quad out to the field by our house and mom would push the wheel lines back while my brother and I wrapped our arms and legs around the steel pipes and rolled with them. After school I’d sit on the hard floorboards of a swather while dad cut the alfalfa round the edge of the field.

Back then I wanted to be an artist, an old-fashioned one. One that would get commissioned to paint a portrait of some higher class subject, or spent hours sitting at a pottery wheel to create some sort of masterpiece.

I wanted to be a writer too. I wrote my first book on hexagonal-shaped pink and purple paper that my mom had bought for me, that I’d stapled together and illustrated myself.

Throughout my childhood I never stopped writing. I scribbled ideas in notebooks and finally progressed to using the old dinosaur computer we had to type out pages of fairytales.

When I was ten, my grandparents bought me a laptop to fuel more of my imagination. Then I started writing pages upon pages of failed novels.  

By the time I was twelve, my parents separated to later divorce, and I stayed with my mom, who was struggling to both raise me and live under a single income.

Shortly after, my older brother graduated high school and left to Oregon to attend Culinary school, which left me to start and finish high school and do the majority of the cooking and cleaning round the house.

(In those days we ate a lot of pizza.)

In a sink or swim way, I learned how to cook eggs, mashed potatoes, rice, etc. I even made my own barbecue sauce once, although I never wrote down the recipe.

When I was 19, a college dropout and back to living with my mom, I started my first job at a Taco Bell, where I first truly dabbled in a cooking experience, of some sort. I stayed at that job for five months, until I had enough money to comfortably buy a used car and move back to the college town I abandoned months prior.

That time I couldn’t find a job or pay my rent, so I moved back home again, and got the first job I could get my hands on – the California Conservation Corps. Working there made an adult out of me; it made me gain muscle and sweat and ache, and it hurt me in more ways than just that. It slightly crippled my knee, and that’s what woke me up and scared me into quitting. I thought my knee would never be the same because that’s what I’d been told about those kind of injuries, and for months afterwards, it wasn’t.

In February, I started talking to a guy I’d talked to off and on since I was a Junior in high school, and it took me three years to realize he was perfect for me, and he was everything I wanted all along. On his birthday, the twenty-seventh, he told me his friends were all working and he was drinking by himself, so I got in my car at 7:30 at night and drove the two hour distance between us to say ‘happy birthday’ in person, and less than an hour after I got to his house, I became his girlfriend. I’d spend the next year and a few months driving the distance on my days off to see him.

After the Conservation Corps., it was my brother that got me my next job in a new restaurant and distillery (where he worked as a pizza chef), as a hostess and later a prep cook. There, I wore the chef coat and worked in a busy kitchen with constant yells of “sharp, coming through, sharp!” or “hot, hot, right behind you!”

In that kitchen, I learned what seasonings go best with calamari (Old Bay and lemon), how to properly hold a knife, that diced potatoes will turn black if they aren’t kept in water and bacon will hold beef patties together if they are too lean. I learned how to make buttermilk pie and lemon cake, how to prepare a traditional Caesar salad, and I watched the Head Chef (at the time) fillet an Alaskan Halibut.

Shortly after I started cooking (for real), the hostess that replaced me had to quit due to unforeseen circumstances, and I resumed my position at the front counter.

Then it was April, and the burger joint in town that had been remodeling all winter re-opened and needed people to work in the kitchen, and a former coworker contacted me to see if I wanted the job. Knowing it was my only opportunity to get back into it, I accepted, put in two weeks notice and started to memorize the menu, but then the time came for me to start, and I was never told what time I needed to come in, it was continuously stalled and put off until I told them I’d find something else.

My boyfriend’s dad came to the rescue with that one, landing me a job in a department store, because he had worked with the manager there before. Little did I know, that would be the worst job I’d ever have. The amount of stress I endured made my chest hurt and left me with a tension headache everyday, up until I decided I didn’t care. It wasn’t worth sixteen hours a week at minimum wage, so for months I looked for something else, anything else, but I’d reel in my line and find moss.

For ten months, June to March, I endured it and kept going in every morning with a cheerful attitude, insisting to myself that today would be better; I wouldn’t get stressed out, I’d get everything done before we opened, there would be no problems that would set me back, I wouldn’t get any rude comments from coworkers about not doing enough or not doing it good enough and somebody would actually help me get the job done. Every day my insistence of ‘today will be better’ was always crushed.

In March a few days after my twenty-first birthday, I snapped. I missed a prep day due to snow, and I knew I’d have to do twice the work in a 1/4 of the time it would take, plus train somebody to help me do my job and deal with rejection from upper management if I tried to ask for help. That put me into a restless sleep and made me get out of bed at one a.m., three and a half hours before I would have had to leave for work, and it was then that I decided to quit, so I texted my boss and went back to bed. When I woke up it felt like a weight had been lifted, and I never felt more at peace in my entire life.

By May, I moved in to my boyfriend’s house with his parents, his younger brother, his brother’s girlfriend, the five dogs, the four cats, the five (or so) snakes, the three (or so) lizards, two tarantulas, two fish, a snail, a gecko and a coop full of hens; and I’d started a new full-time job at a senior center as – you guessed it – a solo cook for a group of sixty.

It really surprised me, how much I didn’t know.

I didn’t know safe meat temperature, how to make tiramisu, meatloaf, mousse, what ‘braised’ or ‘Julienne’ meant, I still can’t find a happy medium when it comes to cooking rice, but here I am. 

So thanks for reading my first post, I hope that you like it and will follow this amateur blog for updates on life and good food.