PAT NEAL: Autumn harvest frustrations

AUTUMN IS A time of gathering the wild abundance that grows all around us.

There are so many hidden treasures to discover, it’s hard to figure out which one to plunder first.

All you need is four-wheel drive, a tank of gas and a wallet full of permits to enjoy what we used to call the freedom of the hills.

The most important item to gather before winter is a good supply of mountain blueberries.

Some folks call them blue huckleberries. They are both good and good for you. They are the best berries we have.

Thousands of acres of them grow in the foothills of the Olympics.

That’s why it was such a disappointment to see the road leading to the huckleberry patch has been obliterated.

The road had been “decommissioned,” as part of a salmon restoration industry scheme to restore the bull trout or whatever else they could think of.

Causing one to wonder if the network of roads through the forest built at taxpayer expense wouldn’t come in handy for fighting the inevitable forest fires we’re supposed to get from climate change.

With the huckleberries off the table, we went looking for mushrooms in the deep, dark forest only to encounter another disappointment.

Lite beer cans along the road alerted us to the recent passage of other less socially conscious mushroom hunters.

All we found were the cut off stems of the edible mushrooms and the smashed remains of the poison ones.

We talked to another glum mushroom hunter who encountered the same difficulty.

He blamed the invasion of city-slicker mushroom pickers on some do-gooder newspaper columnist who narc’ed off all the good patches.

Bidding farewell to the surly mushroom hunter, we elected to harvest that most secretive of wild fruits, the cranberry.

The little native cranberries do not ripen until after a frost, so our timing was perfect except … there were no berries.

This was a mystery because there were no empty beer cans so we knew people hadn’t gotten to the cranberries first.

An investigation revealed who had.

There was a pile of bear dung full of cranberry parts right in the middle of the bog.

Bears like cranberries, too.

What berries the bears don’t eat are fouled to the point where no one else will want them.

At least bears don’t leave beer cans.

Defeated in the pursuit of berries and mushrooms, we decided it was apple picking time.

The homesteaders that pioneered the Olympics all planted fruit trees.

Their cabins and barns may have collapsed but they left us a heritage of apples in pioneer orchards.

These can ripen at any time between August and December.

The flavor of these apples, particularly after a frost makes the genetically engineered mush balls that pass for apples in the supermarket these days taste like the cardboard box they came in.

Right now is the time to pick the winter apples for storage.

Walking into the orchard was another major disappointment.

Many of the branches on the apple trees were broken off and laying on the ground.

Bears like apples, too, but they are awful hard on the trees.

The only apples left were too small to bother with.

So, we decided to go fishing. Until we saw the river.

It was so crowded you’d have to bring your own rock to stand on and I forgot mine.

Yes, autumn on the Olympic Peninsula offers such a diverse range of outdoor activities from not picking wild berries to not finding mushrooms and not catching fish.

You really owe it to yourself to get out there and experience it all.

_________

Pat Neal is a Hoh River fishing guide and “wilderness gossip columnist” whose column appears here every Wednesday.

He can be reached at 360-683-9867 or by email via patneal wildlife@gmail.com.

More in Opinion

PAT NEAL: A rainforest expedition

IT WAS A dark and stormy night. Inside the cabin, the wood… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: What Thanksgiving means to me

THANK YOU FOR reading this. Writing our nation’s only wilderness gossip column… Continue reading

Carolyn Edge.
First year of Recompete data shows projects gaining momentum

OCTOBER MARKED ONE year since the Recompete initiative started, with the goal… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: You could be spawned out

MAYBE YOU’VE HAD one of those days. You wake up in the… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: This otter work

WHO SAYS THERE’S no good news? Lately, the co-managers of our natural… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: A bad day on the river

THIS TIME OF year brings back a lot of memories. These can… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The Halloween hunt for Bigfoot

I WON’T BORE you, dear reader(s), with the petty details of my… Continue reading

Funding from the Recompete program has helped First Step expand programs and hours at Family Resource Centers in Port Angeles and Forks.
Helping families thrive with support center

WHAT DOES AFFORDING diapers have to do with employment? If you need… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: Singing the birdfeeder blues

THIS IS THE season of one of the greatest migrations on Earth… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The great deer hunt of 2025

OPENING DAY. IT’S a day when anything can happen. I was hoping,… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The great clam hunt of 2025

THIS MUST BE the best autumn weather in years. And just when… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The great mushroom hunt

FALL MUST BE my favorite time of year. Could be because I… Continue reading