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In trying times, nature provides for hunters, anglers


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I don’t mean to sound alarmist, but lately, I get more and more freaked out every time I need to go to the grocery store. It’s a strange, uneasy feeling seeing customers in masks, wearing latex gloves, not knowing who has touched your food, and what contagions you might bring back into your household and pass onto your family. The whole process stresses me out.

That’s why I’m so grateful I only need to go out once every few weeks to restock perishables such as milk, cheese and fruits  — and hope some toilet paper still remains. It makes me doubly thankful for a successful hunting season, with a freezer full of venison, pheasants and geese to last us through these troubling months under lockdown.

We still have a few frozen wineberries and wax beans too, canned tomato sauce and pickles, homemade maple syrup and daily eggs from our chickens — all perks of living on a small hobby farmette. I got the garden back up and running for this year, although in a new layout — raised beds, herb containers and potato bags, for ease of maintenance and added yard space.

Recently, we polished off our final rockfish fillet from a writer’s outing to the Chesapeake last spring and supplemented our diet with four rainbow trout caught during the surprise opener. I brined them in water, brown sugar and salt, then smoked them with applewood. They turned out great, and I saved the leftovers to make a chowder in the crockpot a few days later.

Another evening, we enjoyed a stew made of potatoes, smoked deer sausage, ramps and dandelion greens, salvaged from a weed-pulling exercise in the strawberry patch. After mowing down an overgrown tangle of vines, I realized I had fiddlehead ferns growing on a section of my property, and I snipped off the tender coils to blanch and sauté with butter and garlic. Maybe,  if I’m lucky, I’ll even happen upon some morels while out scouting for turkeys.

There are other useful things to be harvested from nature besides food. Dried broomcorn has been bound into a makeshift hearth brush. A tree brought down in a windstorm was converted to firewood for next winter. A shed antler plucked from the ground now adorns my den, and a night of worm-picking supplied me with fresh fishing bait for the weekend.

As a virus continues to spread and strike fear in the hearts and minds of people around the world, nature is overflowing with bounty. But one of the greatest things it provides is a distraction from the day-to-day worries and anxieties of living amid this horrible disease.

Getting outside, letting the sun and the wind kiss your face, listening to the birds in song, and seeing the trees and flowers come to life after a long winter is so therapeutic, and it makes me appreciate the outdoors even more. Being stuck in front of a computer all day while working from home is draining, but I always find relief after escaping to a stream, the woods or even my own backyard. In these trying times, nature certainly provides.

Categories: Blog Content, Bloggers on Hunting, Pennsylvania – Tyler Frantz
Tags: COVID-19, Fishing, Hunting, Wild Game

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BIFF Provides Vicarious Thrills for a Troubled World

Above: Notable BIFF celebrity interviewer Ron Bostwick (L) introduces music icon Robbie Robertson (R) from the film Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson and The Band during an in-person Q&A on the Opening Night of the Boulder International Film Festival, March 6, 2020. Photo credit: Randall Malone / Photomalone.com


It was certainly a case of flop sweat. My heart was racing and beads of perspiration formed on my brow. Yet I was hardly moving. Instead I spent last weekend watching a procession of outstanding films at the 16th annual Boulder International Film Festival (BIFF), enjoying pulse quickening scenes of “superpower dogs” lowered onto avalanche victims by helicopter; blind athlete Lonnie Bedwell paddling the Colorado river through the Grand Canyon; superfit Faroe Islands pastor Sverri Steinholm running along knife- edge ridges; storm chasers playing tag with tornados; and the late U.K. piano restorer Desmond O’Keeffe, delivering an upright to 14,000-ft. Lingshed in the Indian Himalayas.

Funniest moment was when actor Ryan Gaul, during a talkback for the film Jack, featuring a cat about to be euthanized (it’s funnier than it sounds), yelled “run!” and mockingly fell to the floor when the moderator sneezed. It was a moment of comic relief we all needed along with another shpritz of hand sanitizer.

BIFF attracted 25,000 films, filmmakers, and movie buffs from around the world to Boulder for a four-day celebration of the art of cinema. This year, the festival debuted the Adventure Film Pavilion at eTown Hall to celebrate the most exciting new adventure films of the year.

Adventure Pavilion moderator Isaac Savitz said his selection committee viewed 400 adventure films in three months to select 35 for the BIFF audience. If you didn’t like one, just wait a few minutes and another film was screened that would drop your jaw to the floor.

The 2020 line-up included four shorts programs and three features, including Home, about UK Adventurer Sarah Outen who traversed the globe by bike, kayak, and rowboat; Climbing Blind, about Jesse Dufton who attempts to be the first blind person to make a gripping “non-sight” lead of the iconic Old Man of Hoy seat stack in Scotland; and Lost Temple of the Inca, about Boulder scientist Preston Sowell’s journey to Peru where he discovers a lost temple of the Inca Empire. It was a behind-the-scenes look inside a cutting edge expedition at the headwaters of the Amazon river, a race against time as mining companies seek to ruin the Peruvian Andes Lake Sibinacocha region.

Legendary grizzly expert, Green Beret medic, and eco-warrior Doug Peacock, the real-life inspiration for the character George Hayduke in Edward Abbey’s novel The Monkey Wrench Gang, said in Grizzly Country, “Saving habitat is the most satisfying expression of joy I know. If you’re down and depressed get outside. It’s the best cure I know for the metaphysical icky-poos.”


Boulder resident Jeff Blumenfeld, a frequent contributor to Elevation Outdoors, is author of Travel With Purpose: A Field Guide to Voluntourism (Rowman & Littlefield), travelwithpurposebook.com


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