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I Remember Papa Bear - Chapter 5-Pt 3
By Dick Lattimer
Dec 12, 2005, 06:19
To buy this book: I Remember Papa Bear
Save the Niobrara
I can’t leave this chapter without recalling an event that
happened one fall when Kelly, “Knick,” Gordon Ford, Doc Strider, Dick Mauch and
I were on our annual bowhunt together. Fred couldn’t make it for some reason
that year. It involved the beautiful and scenic Niobrara River
we often bowhunted alongside, and where I shot my first bow and arrow turkey
one day while hunting with Fred on an earlier hunt. I’ll leave that story for
another time, but my comic misadventures downing that turkey that day became
one of Fred’s favorite after-dinner stories the last couple of years of his
life as he spoke at various bowhunting functions around the country. Needless
to say, it was a memorable first wild turkey for both Fred and me.
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There were plans afoot by the government to build a $385
million irrigation project along the Niobrara
that would include the building of something called the Norden Dam. It would
cost almost $1 million per farm to build, an average of $5,000 per acre! It
would have included a 19-mile, 6,300-acre reservoir and 362 miles of canals and
laterals just to irrigate 77,000 acres, only 12 percent that was Class 1 land.
It would have taken 10 years to build this 180-foot-high dam.
Michigan State and Nebraska
scientists studying the 14 million-year-old Niobrara
River fossils said that it was one of
the least polluted rivers in North America,
and they were working right near the ghost town of Norden where the dam was to
have been located. The president of the Sierra Club in Nebraska, originally a supporter of the dam
until he found out what would happen to the environment if it were to have been
built, later said, “It’s a financial disaster to the taxpayers and
environmental disaster for the river.” It would have had devastating effects on
all of the wildlife in the area, both resident and migratory. This included
species that overlap in the area such as mule deer and whitetails. Dr. Keith
Harmon, a wildlife biologist from Nebraska
said, “The area constitutes a unique ecological area. Among plants, animals and
birds, the habitat of a number of species overlap in this area and nowhere
else! In other words, this is the
western extreme of the range of certain species and the eastern extreme of the
range of other species. Furthermore, the same condition exists with respect to
north and south.”
The Niobrara was Nebraska’s
last wild river and had just been made legendary in James Michener’s bestseller
“CENTENNIAL.” Later, after this controversy was over, Mr. Michener
serendipitously and kindly provided the Foreword for my book on the U.S. space program—“All
We Did Was Fly To The Moon.”
The minute Dick told us of the Niobrara
battle, Fred immediately offered to help in any way we could. You’ve got to
remember, Fred grew up as a boy in Pennsylvania
trapping along its clean streams, and his favorite activity, other than
bowhunting, was flyfishing in our pristine Au Sable and Manistee Rivers
in the Grayling area and elsewhere on his travels. With Dick’s help we gathered
the information, and I wrote an entire issue of our Fred Bear Sports Club
publication, “The Big Sky,” on the subject with the headline: HELP SAVE THE
NIOBRARA RIVER! Our circulation list nationally included all the members of
U.S. Congress, members of the Outdoor Writers Association of America (of which
both Fred and I were members at the time), all state and federal fish and
wildlife agencies and many others. Many wrote letters of support for the effort
to save the river from this unnecessary destruction. That was the positive side
of our effort. Now to the comic and not-so-successful side.
One day I received a call from Knick’s son-in-law, Gordon
Ford. He and I were t One day I received a call from Knick’s son-in-law, Gordon
Ford. He and I were the “youngsters” of Fred’s Bassett bowhunting gang in those
years. Gordon said he had a great idea to help raise money for the “Save The
Niobrara River” campaign. He said he could get hold of a 16mm copy of a
well-known film, and we could invite the people of Bassett, where there was no
movie theatre, to come see it and make a donation to the river fund in order to
do so. That sounded great to Fred and me, so we told Gordon to go ahead and
bring the film out with him. Dick Mauch offered us the use of the basement of
the Cornhusker Archery bowstring plant for the showing. Work tables were
cleared out, rows of folding chairs set up, and we were ready to go to town.
The basement filled up with youngsters and some adults,
among them some of the church leaders of the community. It wasn’t quite the
adult male audience we had expected. The lights dimmed, Gordon turned on the
projector, and the film that neither Fred nor I had ever seen started to play.
It was “Blazing Saddles!” If you’ve ever seen it, you know there is a scene in
the film when there is a great deal of loud passing of gas and other things
church ladies bristle at in mixed company. Whew! Were we in trouble! A voice
rang out in the darkness, “Please turn off the movie!” Gordon complied. One of
the matrons of the church, a most beloved member of the community, and a
prominent rancher’s wife, stood up and primly informed the audience that this
was not the kind of entertainment that she felt “the youngsters of our town
should be seeing, and that everyone’s money would be refunded.”
The audience quietly filed out amidst much scraping of
chairs, the only sound to be heard in the Cornhusker basement. When I looked
over, Gordon had already disappeared and
he spent the rest of that night and part of the next morning sequestered in his
room at the Bassett Lodge. Talk about embarrassed! Luckily Fred never said a
word to us about it when he later heard the story, but I know he laughed his
belly off on the inside. It was his kind of moment. And he loved the fact that
Gordon and I had been “had.”
“At any rate,” as Dick Mauch recently recalled, “The Fred
Bear Sports Club was very helpful in the cause to ‘Save the Niobrara River.’
Fred gave us the 16mm film put out by Jeep on Scenic Rivers. It was turned over
to the group for showings around the state. It was very beneficial in getting
support for Scenic status. And the Niobrara
River is now a part of
the National Scenic River System.”
Carol Newmark, a local Bassett art teacher created a comic
Western sculpture to help raise funds for the “Save the Niobrara River”
campaign. Dick donated the costs of casting the sculpture, and the two started
a friendship, fell in love and were later married in Fred Bear’s office in Gainesville.
Home Away from Home
Not only was Bassett special to Fred, Kelly and me due to
our friendship with Dick Mauch, but it also became the home of what had been
our Bear Archery bowstring operation as I’ve just mentioned. When we decided to
divest ourselves of both our leather and bowstring operations in the 1970s,
Kelly and Fred turned to two people they trusted to carry them on the way they
would have done. The leather line was sold to George Cavanaugh, who owns the
Allen Company out in the Denver
area, and the bowstring operation to Dick Mauch and some local investors from
Bassett. George is a Notre Dame graduate and a fine fellow both Fred and Kelly
immediately took a liking to. He, too, was their kind of people. The bowstring
operation started up in Bassett in 1976.
On a later hunt out there, Kelly and I visited what by then
was called Cornhusker Archery to see the fine bowstring operation Dick had set
up with the help of some very nice local people in the Bassett area in his
father’s old International Harvester implement dealership building. The
occasion was the production of Cornhusker’s 1 millionth bowstring! Needless to
say, we didn’t worry about a shortage of bowstrings on our many trips to Bassett, Nebraska
to hunt.
In 1989, the year after Fred died, I made a melancholy trip
back out to the cabin to hunt with Dick, Glenn St. Charles, and some friends
from Florida, Roger Hatfield and his son, Harold, Gene Hannah, Neil Rouse and a
couple of others. Roger was Bob Kelly’s son-in-law, Harold his step-grandson,
and Neil his stepson. Unfortunately, Kelly’s health was going downhill by then,
and he couldn’t make the hunt with us. Margaret St. Charles and Carol Mauch
were also in camp with us.
One quiet afternoon Dick, Glenn and I sat around the small
kitchen table in the cabin and reminisced about Fred and all of our years with
him. Fred’s usual chair remained empty, and I’ll swear ’til my dying day that I
felt his presence in the room with us. It was eerie, but very comforting. I
think our old friend had joined us that day at the cabin for one last
bowhunting bull session with us until we all meet again in the happy hunting
grounds.
Stay tuned for Chapter 6.
To buy this book: I Remember Papa Bear
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