Life's Greatest Challenges....

Fred McIntire

Active member
It's beginning to look a lot like duck season. The leaves are starting to fall. There's the smell of crops being harvested in the air. The Sandhill cranes have begun to make their way south to their wintering grounds. Deer season opened today here in Indiana for the archery deer hunters. In years past I would have been "sick" and woods therapy would have been the only medicine that the doctor prescribed for my treatment.

Time is a thief though. God willing, I'll be 62 come January. I don't find myself climbing many trees to sit in a deer stand any more. I prefer to keep my feet planted firmly on the ground. Dragging out a 150 pound deer by yourself is not for the faint of heart. Many a men have met their demise attempting such a feet. My rotator cuff can attest to the extreme physical demands that such a feat places on your aging body parts. I find that ducks are much easier to wrangle with.

The problem with that is the fact that I have a better chance of seeing deer in the woods than I do ducks on the water. Unfortunately, the area here in west central Indiana where I live is mostly devoid of ducks during duck season. Goose Pond is about an hour and a half from my house. It's no duck magnet by any means. Some years are better than others at Goose Pond but it's no Stuttgart by any means. It can also be a very long walk and pretty hard to get to the areas that the ducks prefer, especially for us older hunters. I don't enjoy hunting alone as much as I used to, especially in cold, deep waters where one mishap can spell
T H E E N D.

My best friend and I had big plans to be world class hunters after he retired from the military; however, he was only retired for a short while when he was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer. He's still fighting the good fight. We were able to get in a couple of dove hunts this fall, and I'm thankful for that. Unfortunately, he got married a few years ago to a woman who covets his time and attention like a toddler guarding the last French fry. It's not about the fry, it's about making sure nobody else even thinks about touching it. It's like Costco-level bulk affection. She doesn't need all of it, but heaven help you if you try to portion it out anywhere else. Jesus! Let the man enjoy the time he has left.

Speaking about retirement, I think the end is near for me, too. Come March 16, 2026, I will have 34 years completed as a law enforcement officer. I think that's enough. It's a young man's job and I'm not getting any younger. A few days ago, my grandson who lives in Florida told his teacher that he was wearing his camouflage shirt just like his Papaw, and that he misses his Papaw who lives in Indiana very much. Don't worry. I have no plans to marry one of those Costco-level bulk affection needing women.

I've been wanting to find a Barnegat Bay sneakbox boat to hunt out of and I will try to make that happen again this year. I had a MLB sneakbox boat several years ago and, like an idiot, sold it to a guy that hunts Goose Pond. Even though I don't like to hunt alone it's pretty much my only option if I really want to duck hunt so a one-man boat serves the purpose well. I'd love to find a David Clark Estuary boat or a Classic Barnegat boat. I'd really like to do a layout boat hunt for divers. I think that would be the cat's meow. Hunting Greenheads in flooded timber in Arkansas would be the experience of a lifetime too.

I think the Toby Keith song "Don't Let The Old Man In" pretty well sums it up for me. I'm just afraid that it may be too late.

I hope you've enjoyed the ramblings of this old duck hunter. If you'd like to invite me along to hunt this season I'd sure enjoy the time spent in the duck blind. Here's wishing everyone a safe, productive season......

Fred
 
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Fred,
Sounds similar to something I could write except I have 12 years on you. I will be 74 later this month.
I got rid of a MLB Chuck Huff and replaced it with a Devlin BBIII, thinking I would have room for my grandson or another person to accompany me. So far that hasn't happened.
I've had to exchange my vertical bow for a crossbow, my climbing stands to a strap-on ladder. I only hunt within 150 yards of the parking lot because I'm out of wind and stamina beyond that. What happened to those mile and a half and two mile treks?
Duck hunting, I very rarely leave the boat, no longer, is slogging thru muck and mud an option for me.

My cardio and regular doctors, seem to think I'm doing ok. I may be doing as well or better than a lot of guys my age, but not like I used to be able to go. I, just about a month now, have begun to get a bit more proactive about my physical condition. Dug my bicycle out of the garage rafters, where it has resided for the last 35 years. I am now averaging a 5 mile ride every other day or better. My goal is to make that a minimum and shoot for a 10 or 15 mile ride. I can maintain a 10MPH average speed during my 5 mile ride. I like to see that increase to 12 to 14 MPH over a 10 to 15 mile ride. That my be asking too much but that's what I have set as my goal.

Hope you have a good season in whatever you pursue.
 
Fred

I know I enjoyed your ramblings. This week I went to my boss's retirement party, and then I read your post. I'm 59 and I can feel it coming on. I want to work another five and with my daughter in college I must work 2-3 more, but I still feel it coming on. I mean really strong. I have frequent thoughts of finally being able to catch up on projects and other things that I've kicked down the road. Maybe buy some hunting land. I don't want to waste the "youth" of my retirement years working. Health issues can steal those years and more. I want to continue to hunt, as long as my son does.

I think you should find that Barnegat and buy it. Even it means driving a couple days to get it home. When you are done with it gift it to your grandson in Florida. Make that layout boat hunt happen. Maybe through a guide service. Layout hunting takes a crew and it sounds like your crew has a possessive wife. Same for the green timber hunt. Book one. Seems like you have your health and you've made it to the career finish line. Congratulations. Much to be excited about.
 
Same boat here. When our daughter is done with undergrad, I’ll be 62. Seriously considering at least going part time then. Gotta travel and have fun while we can.
 
You still thinking about coming to Huntsville after retiring?
Its one option.
Depends on where the kids end up.
Definitely getting out of south Tampa as soon as we can.
Also spending significant time (up to 5 months/year) in Japan. Or if I can get a job with a military contractor, full time for a while.
 
I can certainly relate Fred, sounds like a younger version of myself. I'm still on the younger end of old at 68 this november. I tried to retire at 62, The finances were in good standing for that, however covid crushed my son's business and it's primarily been helping him stay afloat since then. So I guess it's more or less working for fun at this point and fortunately I love what I do and as long as I can afford to keep supplies in the shop I'm pretty much a happy camper. I've been a self employed wildlife artist since 1981, I understand the peaks and valleys of that type of life trying to make ends meet. One blessing among many besides that I love what I do is I was able to be home with my family every day. Our boys never spent a minute in day care. One negative of turning a hobby into a product line is the occasional time pressure, I'm a little too free spirited for that and this past summer was pretty tough with several hundred decoys on order.

The down side of aging at least in my case is the isolation. Not only do I work in a windowless shop, I only have interaction with one person most of the time, my wife, and we get along pretty well for a couple of old folks who've been married for 45 years. My wife did go back to work a year and a half ago as a part time seamstress at Scheels, apparently I'm not all that entertaining. That's kind of increased the isolation problem for me, but lets her be around people more which make her happy. We also have only one car which leaves me homebound other than walking the trail behind the house.

We moved out of the city to the small town we live in now, partly because a few friends who lived here encouraged me because it would be a great jumping off place for hunting. I have gone duck hunting every time I've been invited in the past 5 years and that has been exactly zero times. I do go fishing by myself on a small stream within 30 minutes of the house, but it's becoming more of a challenge the older I get. I can't go unless my son takes me or my wife is home with the car and then she really would rather I be home with her, so I keep my trips short. I've been fishing 5 times in the past 12 months. Part of my wife's issue is just worrying about me being by myself. I told her if something went wrong they could find my body with my phone signal, she didn't think that was all that comforting.

I've always got more goals to accomplish that keep me getting up at 4am excited about the what's next project. I've designed hundreds of things for commercial production, most of them decoys. Now I'm on a mission to leave my son and his kids with originals and molds for everything we hunt.
 
I'm rereading Robert Ruark - THE OLD MAN'S BOY GROWS OLDER. Lot of good reading there as we grow older. As a child all I wanted to do was be a artist, and hunt and fish. I'm living my dream still doing what I like to do at age 75. Many modifications had to take place to continue doing what I like as "a man gotta know his limitations" in Geezerhood. At age 60 1/2 I retired from my job and moved to a place that is more like camp than a residence cuz all the outdoor things that keep me going are very close by plus mighty fine art and culture community.

Growing up my WWII veteran mentor told me. "Don't wait to do what you like to do. Do it NOW when your young". I heeded his advice, it wasn't easy and the road was bumpy & costly but my goodness am I glad I did as he advised. I'm still doing it Thank God.

There is a line in Ruark's story - If You Don't Care Where You Are You Are Not Lost. "Rich is having the time to do what you want to do." In that regard I'm a billionaire...
 
Fred, after a short adjustment period, you're going to love retirement. Took me a few months to realize I didn't have to face the grind anymore (hospital RN) and I haven't looked back as I retired when I was 62. I still get calls almost daily from agencies that have a great "travel nurse" job. But there is no way, I don't care what the money is, I'm ever putting on scrubs again. Enjoy every day, because the time goes fast. I retired in 2017 and I can't believe it will be 9 years since I last worked. Have a good season and get out as often as you can.
 
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