DELTA MARSH, MANITOBA – Everything is as it always was, here at the Sports Afield Duck Club, founded by Jimmy Robinson.
Framed photos of famous and not-so-famous duck hunters line the club's walls, along with vintage artwork and cabinets full of wooden duck calls, and fading posters of hunters raising their guns in advance of winged fowl banking toward decoys on cold mornings.
And through a narrow, winding hallway, behind the big gathering room with a fireplace … that's where Jimmy's guests played gin rummy after dinner. And told stories.
From Jimmy's "Bull Cans of the Delta":
Wife Clara and Edith were busy closing up the camp for the season and Walt Bush and I were the only hunters left. Outside the clamor of the Arctic wind made us smugly content to be safely inside by a glowing stove and occasionally sampling the aroma of roast canvasback wafted in from the kitchen.
Then, even the wind seemed still by comparison with the human juggernaut that burst through the door of our hunting hack. Walt even dropped his gin rummy hand to stare at the intruder.
"Cheemy, da big bull seelver cans are here!" It was Rod Ducharme, the giant, black-thatched French Canadian from nearby St. Ambroise.
"What's here? I'm sleeping in the morning."