INFO: Trad Archery for Bowhunters



Author Topic: The Old Archer - by Charlie Pearsall  (Read 3204 times)

Offline Terry_Green

  • Trad Bowhunter
  • **
  • Posts: 249
The Old Archer - by Charlie Pearsall
« on: June 20, 2003, 06:00:00 PM »
The Old Archer

by Charlie Pearsall

The old archer wasn't keeping up well.  We were walking the mostly abandoned
"Upper Course" on the hill behind his archery club and roving the decaying
straw butts that were returning to nature.  I noticed a grayness about his
complexion and it scared the hell out of me, so we sat down and rested a
bit.  He was working his way back from a bad time with angina, balloon
angioplasty and shunts and insisted he was ready to "get back to shootin."

"I remember when we set this course"  he said after catching his breath.
"We had shots over the gully and down into it.  Good field shots.  Now it's
just like the flat course around the club.  A damn golf course.  The last
time they let me help set the 3-D I had deer half behind trees and at
angles, shots through brush and off the lanes.  Didn't set out any pegs for
yardages, just the target number stakes.  You never heard such wailing.
Bunch of babies."

I met the old archer some fifteen years before that; when he was about my
age as I write this.  He would have nailed my ears to the floor if he ever
heard me call him an "old" anything.  In addition to NFAA and state-level
archery medals and trophies he had dozens of wrestling and Karate awards.
My first introduction was at a boat ramp on one of New York's Finger Lakes.
We each had trailerable sailboats, mine a fiberglass model that looked old
fashioned and his a wooden boat he had built himself.  In talking he
mentioned he sold plans for a small bateau that could be sailed or rowed,
and that he used it when bowhunting.  

"Bowhunting?" says I.  "I bowhunt."

Well I got myself an invite to his house to check out this boat, and of
course I brought along my longbow.  No gnomes in this guy's yard.  After
climbing a driveway that could be featured in  Jeep commercial I found the
house nestled in amongst the trees.  He had a mini 3-D course set so you
could circle the yard and have 20 to 40 yard shots at foam deer, boar,
turkey, and the infamous rabbit on top of a stack of haybales with a half
acre of raspberry bushes behind.  "Added reason not to miss."  The house was
patrolled by an Airedale named "Dudley" who turned out to be the happiest
80lb lap dog I ever met.  "A disgrace to his family" according to his
master, but the two were inseparable.  

I came to think of him as the old archer after that first visit, not because
of his age, but because he was a holdout from the age before compounds.  He
owned one, but it never took hold with him.  The walls of his den were
covered with old selfbows, early Martins (he had been a dealer for them at
one time),  Brownings, Wings, Ben Pearsons.  More traditional bows in one
room that I had seen in my life up until then.  He also had some laminated
recurves of his own manufacture, several showing damage from destructive
testing as he worked on design improvements.

By the time I left that day he had given me plans for one of his "Balsam
Swamp Bateaus" and an invite to join him at an archery club he belonged to
for a trip around the outdoor course.  I ended up joining and shooting in an
indoor winter league, which improved my shooting immensely.  I could never
hold a candle to him.  If the feathers of his fletching weren't touching it
wasn't good shooting.  My family had always enjoyed archery at my grandpa's
"farm" of five acres in the country, but no one was a hunter.  My grandpa
had been before WWI, but after he got back he never hunted for sport.  No
doubt about it, I was a target archer.  The old archer set about to change
that.  Roving with him went out to 45 or 50 yards, sometimes farther.
Always in cover, usually between close trees or over odd terrain, and he
seldom missed.  On the 3-D course we always shot from the farthest stake,
him making effortless super kills and me trying my darnedest to keep them in
the vitals so as not to disgrace us in front of the compound shooters.

By the next spring I had completed my bateau and we took it to the lake it
was named for that fall: Balsam Swamp.  The lake is remote enough in the
foothills of the Adirondacks, and the back side is further isolated by a
swamp on either end of the lake, cutting access from the single dirt road
that approaches the lake.  We filled the boat with gear and I rowed us
across the lake and into the past.  Pleasure boating happens at 80º in the
summer when the water temperature is 70º or so.  Looking into the slate gray
water, the same color as the sky, just four inches below the gunnels in
October when the air is 45º and the water close to that is a different
sensation.  I've boated long enough to know that in heavy clothes and boots
we'd be gone in 15 minutes in that lake, which is seldom visited between the
bass fishermen of summer and the pike fishermen of winter.  It made the
adventure greater and I loved every moment of it.

Neither of us got a deer that trip, but it hardly mattered.  He hadn't been
to this spot in years and I was excited at being there for the first time.
We would use the boat to move from camp to our hunting spots and then
rendezvous at mid-day for lunch and some roving.  This we had promised the
wives we would do.  He had retired early on a partial disability ticket for
heart ailments and I was under strict orders to keep a close eye on him.  I
was in the groove that day and my arrows were steering themselves.  I made
an 80 yard field-archery style kill on a fire-hydrant sized stump and we
were both impressed - which of course he hid well and discounted to sheer
luck; but he did honor the bet and the supper dishes were his.  "Come on,
Stumpkiller, lets go find something live to shoot at."

That summer I got a call from his wife that he had had a heart attack while
working on his sailboat.  This time the doctors went in and did
multiple-bypass surgery.  The old archer had been dreading this because,
having been a male nurse, he knew the costs of slicing through the muscles
on his chest.  Although he felt better overall, his 55# bow was now a wall
ornament and would be for some time.  Undeterred, he pulled out an old 35#
target bow long before he was supposed to and started on the road back.  But
it proved to be a pretty long one.  Never inactive, he did have a fondness
for beer and rich food.  He dropped about 80 pounds and continued to regain
strength and stamina.  It was during this time he started fiddling around
with an old Honda motorcycle from the 60's that a mutual friend sold him
before moving south.  He got that one reconditioned and sold it, picking up
a much larger Moto Guzzi of about the same vintage.  In his younger days he
had raced Fiats at Watkins Glen and found the old need for speed still
smoldering on some internal back burner.  He also spent a lot of time
working on his 30 foot wooden schooner.  He loved to relate how he had been
working in a compartment off to the side of the cockpit where there was some
engine access while tied in the slip.  It was a hot summer day and he was
wearing a red bandanna to keep the sweat out of his eyes and the sun off of
his head (what hair he did have on his head had settled on being a beard and
the top was pretty open).  He heard a little girl's voice nearby saying:
"Look!  A pirate!"  Another girl with her said "No, It's just an old man who
loves his boat."  He popped his head out of the hatch and growled "I am too
a pirate, Arrrrr."  

All was going well.  He had worked back to 50# bows and was under 200 pounds
for the first time in 20 years and maintained that he had never felt better.
On a warm sunny day in early May the old archer left us with his boots on.
Not with a bow in hand, but astride the vintage Moto Guzzi motorcycle.  A
heart attack that resulted in loss of control at speed, either of which
would have been enough.  At his viewing his favorite recurve bow, of his own
make and design, was laid on the table along with the chest containing his
ashes, a custom hunting knife which he cherished, an archery gold medal and
a picture of him and his Airedale sitting on the deck of his 30 ft wooden
schooner. That's how I always hope to remember him.  A big, jolly pirate who
enjoyed people that didn't take themselves seriously.

I've only known a few who enjoyed life near as much.  He had three lifetimes
worth of stories compared to most of us, and loved to share them around a
fire or over a beer.  There weren't ever many like him.   Certainly not
enough at any time, and the world is a lesser place at his loss.  Next time
I share a campfire with him I hope it is where the beer is better, the
venison tastier and the shafts grow straighter.

Users currently browsing this topic:

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
 

Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement

Copyright 2003 thru 2024 ~ Trad Gang.com ©