I need to tell a story about JC. On the ride out, he told me about one of the Moderator Melt hunts he'd been on in Texas. There were javies everywhere on that hunt. Everyone had five and six stalks each day. People darn near got tired of seeing one javie after another.
I told him that I'd be pretty tickled just to get a good look at one. After moving to Texas 18 months ago, I'd had one glimpse: as soon as I realized it was a javelina, it was gone. One of my biggest goals for this hunt was to see some, but if I could stalk one, that'd be even better. And if I could put an arrow in one, well that'd be better than gravy on ice cream!
Thursday morning, JC and I corned a few choice spots for hogs and then decided to look for javies. A couple guys had generously shared some info with us and invited us to look at their areas. They'd seen dozens of javies and had multiple stalks. So to the south end of the ranch we went.
We came around a little curve in the road and there stood Steve Tottingham. He said it was a primo area and had several close calls already. He suggested we drive down the road a bit and have a look.
Sure enough, we topped the next little rise and there stood a big boar javie in the middle of the road! We glassed him for a minute before backing the truck over the rise out of sight. JC turned to me and said, "There's your javie. Go get him. But that shirt of yours won't work. It's too close to white and he'll nail you at thirty yards. Take mine." And with that, he peeled off his camo Sitka shirt and handed it to me.
Now there are lots of generous souls who enjoy seeing their friends' success. But it's another big step from that to literally giving the shirt off your back to help your partner succeed.
I didn't get that boar. Never saw him again after he stepped off the road into the cactus thickets, so after returning the borrowed shirt, JC and I drove a couple other roads that were bordered by flats of prickly pear. It wasn't long before we spotted dark shapes moving in the road at a distance: four, perhaps five, javies.
Once again, JC pushed his shirt at me and encouraged me to have at them. As soon as I stepped away from the truck, I realized the wind was completely wrong -- it was blowing directly to them. The stalk would be over before it even started.
We quickly decided to try something that had worked on Monday with hogs: I would stand on the truck's running board while JC drove past the animals. Then with the wind in my favor, I'd step off and slip-hunt back to where they'd been on the road.
Nice plan, but the javies weren't having it. They never came back to the road even after a thirty minute wait. So it goes with hunts. Some are momentary sizzles of hot hope while others are burned in our memory like lightning strikes. This little hunt, such as it was, was memorable in that it gave me a couple minutes to watch javelina do their javelina things. But the most valuable thing I took away from it was the selfless gesture of a friend.
And that pisses me off. Now I'm gonna have to be nice to the bugger next time we hunt together.