{"id":60474,"date":"2020-05-13T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2020-05-13T18:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/seeing-and-hearing-things-while-isolating-outside\/"},"modified":"2020-05-13T13:02:27","modified_gmt":"2020-05-13T21:02:27","slug":"seeing-and-hearing-things-while-isolating-outside","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/seeing-and-hearing-things-while-isolating-outside\/","title":{"rendered":"Seeing and hearing things while isolating outside"},"content":{"rendered":"
I was 20 yards away when I let out the call. It was horribly flat and unlike any animal that has roamed earth. I doubled down and spit out a quality tone. I waited for a second then heard, “C’mon.”<\/p>\n
I turned and looked through the trees toward the road. There stood a dog, ears perked, while the kid who was walking it urged they move on.<\/p>\n
I returned to my fantasy. I was 20 yards from a Wyoming elk. My arrow would have to pass through a tight window in the branches and bushes. I drew, held and touched the trigger. The arrow was true and the dumb, block target was stuck yet again.<\/p>\n
I decided it’s not every day that a kid walking his dog on the street would encounter a grown male human pretending he’s on a Wyoming elk hunt. As a student of self-awareness, I had to wonder if this was just usual Lund, or if this was COVID Lund. You know, is this the type of thing I would normally do, or is this virus-induced activity? Of course, it is also Southeast Alaska, where earning the title of unique takes a lot.<\/p>\n
I usually practice shooting my bow across the driveway which runs parallel to the road after a sharp hook. I can max out at a 50-yard shot and if something goes wrong and the arrow sails, there is a thick line of trees, then a steep embankment down to a non-recreational creek. The shooting is pretty easy. No distractions, just the opportunity to get repetitions the way I used to shoot free throws or jumpers after school to let go of the day.<\/p>\n