In a few of my stories, I have mentioned my friend Mark. He is like a brother to me, and I thought I would tell you a little about him.
I started hanging out with Mark on a fishing trip to Mexico. His father had invited me to go along, as I had never been on a trip like this before. There were 18 of us, all fishing in the Sea of Cortez from pangas, a kind of Mexican skiff. We slept and ate on a mother ship. In this case, an 85 foot converted shrimper. All the bunks were located in the open on the top of the ship.
I was partnered up with a nice, but really dull guy. Mark was with a larger group of guys that I would come to know well. On the first day out, I caught a fish like I had never even seen before. It was an 85 pound grouper. What a fish! I dumb lucked into it, but it was mine, and I wanted to celebrate.
We returned to the mother ship, and after cleaning up, I was ready to party. I was soon to be disappointed. I had just caught the biggest fish of my life, and all that my partner wanted to do was sit in the dark, smoke cigarettes and drink beer. Shoot me.
I noticed a party was starting up on the far end of the bunk area, so I suggested to my friend we join them. He gave me some bullshit about them being too rowdy then went back to sucking on his cigarette. “Screw this” I said, and I walked away from him, heading toward the action.
I walked up to Mark and his friends and said I wanted to celebrate. They congratulated me on my fish, and Mark offered to make me a drink. What a drink it was. He took a 20 ounce plastic cup from his bunk, and threw in some ice he chipped of a block with a screw driver. He filled the cup to the rim with tequila, vodka, and some crap called Rompopei. To finish it, he squeezed a couple limes in it and stirred the concoction with a filet knife.
I have been with Mark ever since. We have been on many adventures together. Some were good, and some not so good, but always fun. Mark is a good shot and a great fisherman, but sometimes he can run a little late.
There was one time in particular that affected every duck club in the valley. Our club was in a long valley with a lake running down the middle. There were clubs all around it, and at the west end of the valley, there was a large state wildlife unit that had hunting as well. On Saturday morning there were several hundred guys hunting in this valley.
Our club was located on the south side of the lake. The quickest route to our club was from the north side of the lake, exiting the freeway you take a dirt road around the wildlife unit at the west end. The road going around the unit was at a slightly higher elevation than we were at our club. During the day, you could see the dust from vehicles traveling on the road.
This one particular morning I awoke and noticed Mark wasn’t here. He didn’t always spend Friday night out at the club. Most of us did so we could get in an extra hour sleep. Coming from home, Mark had a 70 mile drive, and we drew for blinds 1 hour before shooting time.
Mark missed the draw. I knew he had overslept, but he still had time; we had to be in our blinds a minimum 30 minutes before shooting time. If he missed that, he had to wait for the first pickup time. Pick up time was 1 hour after shooting time, and every hour after that.
Pick up time was when you went to look for lost birds, or just got out of the blind to take a leak. My boys always thought it was funny watching several hundred pairs of guys all climb out of holes in the ground at the same time, standing up, and relieving themselves in harmony.
Mark missed the 30 minute limit. I was beginning to think he wouldn’t make it. That is when I heard the roar in the distant. The sound was unmistakable. It was Mark’s brown truck.
The brown truck, as Mark called it, was a standard cab Ford F-250. Powered with a 460 cubic inch V8, and a 4-speed transmission, it was a monster. He and I had been all over in that truck. From frozen cold Idaho to sizzling hot Baja California, this truck went everywhere, usually really fast. This morning was no exception.
It was not quite light enough to see, but you could hear Mark tearing down the dirt road. The big V8 roaring as he shifted. It is usually very quiet just before shooting time. The serene moment just before the sun comes up. Ducks and shore birds making quiet sounds, and the occasional cough from a hunter, or dog bark. This morning all you could hear was Mark going through gears, and the rattling of gear in the bed of the truck as he flew down the road.
It was fifteen minutes before shooting time. I had just remarked to my blind partner for the day, that it sounded like Mark was running a bit late. We both laughed a little imagining Mark at the wheel, jamming gears and cussing his alarm clock. That is when it happened.
As Mark neared one of the many turns in the road, he down shifted, and the big brown truck backfired. The huge explosion ripped through what was left of the morning silence. Instantly every shotgun on the unit started firing. Then moving to the east, the rest of clubs began firing as the chain reaction quickly moved like a wave through the entire valley.
I looked at my blind partner in amazement. Everyone was shooting. My partner was looking at his watch with his mouth open. We had never heard anyone shoot this early before, let alone the whole valley. I didn’t think it possible. No longer could I hear Marks truck, just the sound of ducks getting up and the gunfire bringing them down.
Shooting early is not a good thing. Not only is it illegal, but it is not cool. Anyone shooting early is often scorned for the day even if only a minute early. The idea is that everyone shoots on time. Mark had set them off this morning, and really early.
I would have loved to see the game wardens faces. They often wait for that one person who shoots early, then running out to the offender and reading them the riot act. This morning, Mark had set off something they could only sit there and witness. Leaving them all wondering what the hell happened.
CJ Cupp