Refuge Notebook
Article
Dated
December 19, 2003
Commentaries of a Game Warden
By Chris Johnson
I have worked on the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge for the past 14 years
ss a Law Enforcement Officer. My actual title is Refuge Officer but I prefer to
call myself a "Game Warden." Over the years I have gathered all sorts
of tales from my adventures and have heard all kinds of excuses and reasons from
people about why they had to do it. I will share a few of my stories with you.
As I sit down to write this article I have to laugh and shake my head as I recall
some of these incidents, and this in turn reminds me of other incidents. I will
try to keep this article to just a few stories and if readers enjoy the topic,
I am sure that I can find a few more to tell in a future article.
Part
of my patrol area is Hidden Lake. Hidden Lake is a popular camping location in
the spring and summer for families but in the winter I would say Hidden Lake is
the most popular location for ice fisherman, after Lake Trout on the Peninsula.
There was a core group of ice fisherman that was there almost every day. I don
= t know if they were just getting board or wanted to spice up their ice fishing
experience. I realized this group was fishing with live bait, which is illegal.
This became a game of cat and mouse. I would try and sneak up on them to catch
them with their live bait on their lines. They would post A look outs @ with spotting
scopes to keep an eye out for the game warden. If a game warden was spotted they
would send a A chase vehicle @ out to warn the fisherman. With receiving that
information the fisherman would quickly cut their lines. When the game warden
would finally reach their destination he would discover only A dangling @ lines
in empty holes. This game became a challenge for me. I would devise different
strategies to approach the lake undetected. Eventually, I caught these anglers
with live bait several times and several times I found only A dangling @ lines
in an empty hole.
It was late fall on the Kenai River just below Skilak
Lake. It was spitting snow and about 20 degrees. I was hiding in the bushes and
I observed a man land a large Rainbow trout. I watched him kill the fish and put
it in his boat. I decided to contact the man at Lower Skilak boat ramp. The season
for Rainbows was open and the only requirement was that if you retained a rainbow
over 20 inches, it had to be recorded on the back of your fishing license. Well,
I contacted the man at the boat ramp and he told me he had not caught any fish.
I searched his boat high and low because I knew he had kept the fish. While I
was searching the boat, the man was quirming around a lot. I thought he was really
nervous about something or real cold. Well, after about 15 minutes the guy couldn't
handle it anymore and told me the fish I was looking for was down his pants. The
man opened up his pants and pulled a 24-inch Rainbow trout out of his pant leg.
He had failed to record the fish on his license and was afraid that I was going
to take the fish from him. I gave him a pen.
In this next story the moose
gets its revenge and shoots back. I responded to a call about a sub-legal moose
found dead off of Marathon Road. I hiked into the kill area with a State Protection
Officer and the reporting parties. The Protection Officer and I proceeded to start
quartering and skinning the moose in the hopes of recovering a bullet. As we finished
with each quarter of the moose, we moved it out of our way. We finished skinning
and examining a hindquarter with the hoof attached and moved it over to our pile
of already examined meat. About three feet from that location, one of the reporting
parties had set his rifle down against a tree stump. We set the examined quarter
down and then started working on another quarter.
About two minutes later
a shot rang out and tree bark plattered all around us. One of the reporting parties
dropped to the ground like he had been shot. My first thought was that one of
the men with us had shot. My next thought was that we were under fire from somebody
claiming the moose. After several minutes we were able to sort out that the rifle
leaning against the tree stump had gone off, after the hoof of the moose quarter
we had just moved fell and hit the safety and the trigger. The man that dropped
like he had been shot actually had been hit by tree bark and was OK. After that
we got down on our knees and prayed and thanked god no one had been hurt..
I
was working in the Kenai Russian River Ferry area, and I was in uniform standing
right behind this guy that had a snagged fish on his line. The man landed the
fish and then clubbed it. He took the hook out of its tail and put the hook in
its mouth. He then unhooked the fish and turned around to put the fish in his
backpack. Well, when he turned around and saw me standing there in uniform, his
eyes got as big as saucers and that fish went about twenty feet in the air and
came right back down on top of the surprised snagger.
To combat the illegal
and dangerous practice of hunters shooting from their vehicle or on or across
a road, we use a decoy = s set up just off the road. We have had a number of close
calls from people shooting at animals from on or across the road . In one occasion
a hunter was shooting at a spruce grouse that was on the road near the peak of
a small hill. The hunter missed his shot and hit the mirror of a vehicle coming
up the hill. In another occasion there was a father and son parked in there camper
along the side of the road sleeping. Somebody took a few shots at a couple grouse
in the road approximately 100 yards down the road. Two shots entered the camper
just inches away from the father and son sleeping in the camper. There also have
been several occasions when hunters have shot there own vehicle when trying to
shoot at game from there vehicle. When a hunter comes along and shoots at our
decoy = s, we pop out of the trees and have a little meeting with the hunter and
we discuss the merits of shooting from their vehicle or from or across the road.
One afternoon I set my decoy up on Swanson River Road; along comes a car and out
pops a guy with a .22 rifle. He stands right in the center of the road and opens
fire on the decoy. I come out of the trees yelling, "Game Warden, put your
gun down!" The guy does not hear me. He's got tunnel vision and audio exclusion
an effect to the human body when its under stress commonnly called the fight or
flight syndrom. Any way he keeps shooting at this bird like it was coming to eat
him. He fires 14 rounds and then starts to reload before I can get him convinced
that the bird was not going to get him.
The grouse decoy doesn' t just
get wayward hunters I have had my decoy stolen by a hungry coyote. The coyote
looked at me looked at my decoy grouse then back at me then figured he could beat
me to the bird and grabbed the decoy. I tracked him for about a quarter mile where
he must of topped to take a bite out of his stolen meal and left the decoy. I
have also had the decoy attacked by a hawk. The hawk just flew down and knocked
over the decoy and another time a raven flew down and started picking at the decoy
until I shoed it away.
It has been fun reminiscing about old times. Retelling
these stories has jogged my memory of other incidents. Other officers have reminded
me of other stories and similar situations, in which they have been involved.
Until next time, remember to bring a child hunting or fishing. Share the
experience. They are our future. Chris Johnson is Supervisory Law Enforcement
Officer at the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. He is also a Police Defensive Tactics
Instructor and a Firearms Instructor for the US Fish & Wildlife Service. He
lives with his wife Pam and there three kids Chelsye, Tyler and Torrey in Sterling.
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