Random thoughts---

Al Hansen

Well-known member


“Hurry up, hurry up, hurry up—the tide is moving out and if we don’t leave now, we’ll never get there.” That was my boss and it seemed to be his favorite thing to say. We always had to have our gear packed and ready to go. It wasn’t until the Grumman Widgeon was in the air and Jim, our pilot, had leveled it off that for a split second in time I realized I was in another world. Just 10 days before I had wished my class of 5th grade students to have a great summer. Now here I was staring out the window of this remarkable WWII amphibious airplane that was taking my partner and me to some remote part of Kodiak Island.

Our pilot had throttled back to a good cruising speed as we headed to the far end of the island. Jim yelled back to us and pointed down when we were flying over Deadman’s Bay. He knew that I wanted to shoot a Kodiak brownie in the worst way. I already knew a little bit about that area because I had the good fortune to meet one of the greatest brown bear guides that ever lived. His name was Morris Talifson. He and his partner, by the name of Bill Pinnell, were legendary brown bear guides on Kodiak Island. My by chance meeting with Morris came one day in the late 1960s when I was working my 2nd job, which was for Denver Jonas Bros. taxidermy shop in Anchorage. My boss, Darrell Farmen, used to work for them as an assistant guide back in the early 50s. Of course, Darrell started out as a packer when he landed that job fresh out of high school from somewhere back in Oregon. Anyway, Morris just wandered into the shop to talk with Darrell for a while and find out how things were going in the “big city”.

My job at the shop was to help prepare big game animals prior to sending them off in a jet for Denver, Colorado so the taxidermists could do what they did best. While working in that small shop for the next several years I worked on about every big game animal that was deemed a trophy by someone. I'm glad that I found out how to flesh and prepare Dall sheep, mountain goats, black bear, glacial bears (the blue phase), grizzly bear, brown bear, polar bear, caribou, elk, Sitka blacktail deer, moose, bison, wolves, fox, coyotes, and wolverines just to name some. When we received a brown bear or grizzly hide from a hunter who had just flown in from the bush some place it was my job to flesh the hide, take all the cartilage out of the pads on the feet, turn the ears, split the lips, boil the skull and on and on goes the list. After it was done, I had to salt the hide down and get most of the moisture out of it prior to being shipped via jet to Denver. Little did I know right then and there as I stared down at this magnificent scenery, that in a few short years, I would be back to this spot—Alpine Cove, to be exact, which is a small inlet just off of Deadman’s Bay, hunting Kodiak Brown Bear.

I was that tall, gangly, 25 year old kid from western Minnesota, who on a whim one day in the Spring of 1966, decided it would be quite the adventure to live in Alaska and hunt ducks and geese. It didn’t take all that much time to find out if Anchorage needed some elementary teachers. My Western Union message told me that I had been hired. Now here I was on another little detour in my life, off the main highway but having fun looking out the side window of the plane as Jim prepared to land in the Pacific Ocean, then taxi up on a sandy beach as far away from the city of Kodiak as you could get. I did notice that there weren’t many trees around as we descended. Little did I know that the small creek we would set up camp at would have 13 brown bears feeding on salmon.
Al
 
Al~

Surely this fine collection of anecdotes rises well above mere "random" thoughts! I'm glad your eyes are letting you read and write. Keep 'em coming!

All the best,

SJS
 
Al you seem to have been there and done that with your travels,,,,do you ever look back and say I should have done this or a regret for not doing something you may have had a chance to?,,,I know I do but I always blame it on my youth for not doing some things when I had the chance and now with 3 kids it seems impossible now,,,,,,Chuck
 
Al~

Surely this fine collection of anecdotes rises well above mere "random" thoughts! I'm glad your eyes are letting you read and write. Keep 'em coming!

All the best,

SJS

Well, I do appreciate that, Steve. As for the random thoughts, for what seems to be filtering through my mind at any one given moment in time, truly seems to random at best---but fun because I have so many good memories of life!

As for my eyes, I need to let you know that when I sit in front of the computer, I need to wear glasses with a patch that blocks out all light on that left eye as it recovers. So, all of this is just from one good right eye at the moment. I'm glad for that, by the way and when early teal season is here even more so.
Al
 
Nice story Al, you should save them all and put them in a binder or on a disk.

One of my favorite reads was just such recollections posted in a local magazine a few years ago. It was entitled "The Memiors of A Duck Hunter" and was one mans collection of his duck hunting (and other) stories from about 1910 until the Late 1950's.
 
Al you seem to have been there and done that with your travels,,,,do you ever look back and say I should have done this or a regret for not doing something you may have had a chance to?,,,I know I do but I always blame it on my youth for not doing some things when I had the chance and now with 3 kids it seems impossible now,,,,,,Chuck

That was a good question, Chuck. Yes, there have been a lot of "coulda, woulda, and shoulda's" in my life however, with that being said, I am still glad I attempted as many things as I did. My father taught me well and made sure I never looked back to regret. Always focus on the future and what you can do with it. Just like the phase that you are going through now, it sometimes seems to be almost impossible to do things with those tremendous responsibilities as a parent and provider however, there are still those "once in a while" moments that you can sneak off for a scouting trip or a hunt and that is when you make the best of it. Remember, it, too, shall pass. One of these days, quicker than you'll want it to happen, your wife and you will be talking about how lonely it is in the house with all the kids gone. Good luck, Chuck.
Al
 
Neat to read this little clip of your adventures Al. You sure have had a lot of fine adventures afield.

Thanks, Todd. It has been fun. I do want you to know that I still get up early every day just because I care not to miss a spectacular sunrise if there happens to be one.
As my father told me all the time, "Life is Too Short"!
Al

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Great read Al, please finish the story! Did you get your bear?

Your comments were appreciated, Joe. To answer your question---I sure did. In the fall of 1973, fours years later I hunted the Alpine Cove sector and shot an 8 1/2 foot sow that at that time was the oldest bear ever shot on Kodiak Island by a hunter. She was born in 1955. You'll notice that I said "by a hunter". There was one bear that was 19 years old but it was put down by Fish and Game personel because it was considered a nuisance bear in the city dump of Kodiak.
Al

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I just took this shot of the skull which is on the wall in my office by the desk.

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Nice story Al, you should save them all and put them in a binder or on a disk.

One of my favorite reads was just such recollections posted in a local magazine a few years ago. It was entitled "The Memiors of A Duck Hunter" and was one mans collection of his duck hunting (and other) stories from about 1910 until the Late 1950's.

Thanks so much, Jode. I agree with what you said, because I lost 5 years worth of writing short stories when I pressed the wrong button one day. Now I back up most everything.
I'll have to look up that book. I appreciated the heads up on it. Most of my mentors hunted that period of time, one was about 10 years earlier.
Al
 
Al, if you send me your email address, I will send you a link where you can read many of the stories online for free..........Jode
 
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