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The Rocket
Scientist
by David Robert
Crews
One of the most powerful examples of my experiences as a
bear hunting guide was the time that a Washington, D.C.
Rocket Scientist darn near shot my head off. It happened
in the summer of 1969, when I was a nineteen-year-old
kid from the suburbs of Baltimore, Md. working at my
uncle's hunting lodge in northern Maine. Although I had
only been working there at the lodge for eight months, I
was a Registered Maine Hunting and Fishing Guide, and I
was handling my assigned responsibilities well.
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The rocket scientist looked like the classic Hollywood
version of a rocket scientist. He was a tall, thin
gentleman past sixty years of age with white hair and a
well-trimmed white mustache. He spoke in a kind,
friendly manner with endearing dignity leaving no doubt
as to his high education and life achievements.
His hobby was building high performance hotrod cars and
boats. He would order an engine block from Detroit and
create an awesomely powerful motor from scratch. He said
he owned a station wagon that only got six miles to the
gallon of gas, which was a point of pride in the world
of hotrods. Some of the young hotrodders living around
D.C. hung out in his garage with him learning the
"tricks of the trade" which the rocket scientist often
invented on the spot. |
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He was a great guy to hang out with.
The hunt was a seven-day package, Sunday to Saturday,
with all guide services, room and family style meals
included. The bears were hunted over baits: piles of
slaughterhouse leftovers, mostly cow’s guts and heads,
placed in strategic locations throughout the woods. Then
a tree stand was built near the bait, or a good spot was
picked out on the ground close to it where a person
could gain maximum hunting advantage over the bears.
Bear hunting was done from early afternoon till a
half-hour after sunset. Legal hunting time was from a
half-hour before sunrise to a half-hour after sunset.
Possession of a loaded firearm during non-hunting times
is a violation of the law and can be extremely
dangerous. Also, humans with loaded weapons have an
unfair advantage over wild animals during the hours of
darkness.
On Wednesday of the rocket scientist's hunt, he was part
of the group of hunters whom I was responsible for that
day. On Wednesday night, I passed a serious test of my
ability to guide bear hunters. It happened that night
when I was doing part of my job: picking up hunters from
near their baits.
That night, the rocket scientist happened to be the
first hunter who I was to pick up. I had been instructed
by my Uncle Finley to wait for Mr. Rocket Scientist on a
smooth, dirt logging road that ran up through the woods
about sixty yards from the bait that Mr. R. S. was on.
From that road ran an old washed out, rocky, rough,
nearly overgrown unused logging road that the bait was
placed beside. That little section of old rough road had
a lot of large, exposed rocks sticking up out of it that
were a hazard to the undercarriage of the lodge’s pick
up trucks, so we only drove up it when we had to haul
fresh bear bait into there.
In one of the lodge’s pickup trucks, I drove to the
prearranged spot for picking up Mr. R. S. and waited
there for him until about fifteen or twenty minutes past
legal hunting time. At first, I was thinking that maybe
Mr. R. S. had seen a bear circling warily around the
bait and he was squeezing out every last chance to kill
it, or maybe he was just taking his time walking down
that rocky road in the dark. But then thoughts of heart
attacks and hunting accidents filled my mind.
I couldn’t wait any longer, I had to walk in and find
out what was happening.
To avoid being mistakenly shot for a bear, I walked up
the rough, rocky road with a flashlight shining up the
road, and I was alternately whistling and making other
human sounds with my mouth that sounded like the
background vocals of Doo Wop songs.
I couldn’t hardly believe what I saw when I got to Mr.
R. S..
He stood there in the dark woods holding his bolt action
rifle across his chest like a military man standing at
attention and waiting to be inspected by his commanding
officer. His tall legs were as stiff as tree trunks, his
knees were locked tight in standing position, his entire
body was as rigid as a day old corpse and it bowed so
far backwards in an arch that his nose was pointing up
into the treetops. His wildly wobbling eyes completed
the picture of a man deep in trouble.
It was obvious that he had flipped out from the fear of
being out in the woods alone.
"What are you doing?" I asked.
He responded, "You don't think I'm walking down this
road at night do you? I could fall on the rocks."
My reply, "Yeah, well look, I have a flashlight and you
have a flashlight--it's not that bad. Come on, I'll help
you walk down to the truck."
He would not budge an inch, literally.
I walked back to the truck alone then drove it up that
rocky road to where Mr. R. S. was standing. The
headlights showed him to be in the exact same position
as before.
I stopped the truck with the passenger side door right
next to Mr. R. S., which allowed him to open the door
and get in without moving very far. He slid onto the
seat with his rifle pointing towards me. The truck’s
dome light was on, and I got much too good of a look
down the rifle’s barrel.
You know the rule--never point a gun at anyone, not even
unloaded ones.
But before I could react to this infraction of proper
firearm handling and tell him to point that gun away
from me, Mr. R. S. started frantically yanking as hard
as he could on the bolt handle of his rifle. I instantly
realized that the damn fool still had the rifle loaded
and a bullet was jammed in the chamber and the way that
he was yankin’ on it could cause it to discharge and
shoot me dead.
A split-second later, Mr. R. S. was furiously grunting
and grumbling and spraying spit all over himself as he
tried to dislodge the jammed bullet. The end of that
rifle barrel kept pointing directly at my head, and as I
ducked and dodged back and forth in the driver's seat
trying to avoid being shot, I must have looked like a
ruffed grouse doing the winning dance at a jitterbug
contest. In the dome light, the opening at the end of
that rifle barrel appeared to grow to the size of a
Civil War cannon barrel. The barrel’s rifling grooves
were very, very distinctly visible to me and each one of
them seemed to be very wide and deep.
After what seemed like a lifetime of terror, I got
control of the rifle by pushing it against the rear
window of the truck. My chest was almost squeezed
through the open spaces in the steering wheel; I was
leaning as far forward as I could.
"Stop! Stop! What are you doing!" I blasted at him.
"Trying to unload this thing, it's jammed!" he spurted
out.
I returned with a hot under the collar, "You should have
had it unloaded a half an hour ago! It's past huntin'
time."
"You don't think I'm going to stand around here with an
unloaded rifle where a bear can get me do you?" He
defensively replied.
"Yeah I do; we go in the woods at night without a gun
all the time. If the game warden caught us here I'd be
fined too because I'm your guide. The lodge could lose
its license and you're not supposed to have a loaded gun
in a vehicle. That's another charge against us! Gimme
the rifle!"
With that I took the gun from him, exited the truck and
unjammed and unloaded that dangerous firearm.
Mr. R. S. regained his composure somewhat during the
ride back to the lodge. He acted like he hadn’t done
anything wrong or that anything out of the ordinary had
happened, and I let it go at that.
I never mentioned a word of this incident to anyone at
the lodge. It would have devastated Mr. R. S. if I had,
especially since his wife was staying there at the lodge
that week too.
David Robert Crews
2727 Liberty Pkwy.
Dundalk, Md.
21222
ursusdave@yahoo.com
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