Dick Alford is in his 45th year of hunting turkeys, an anniversary he never thought he would see after wiping out a couple of winters back on a slippery step.
On that day in November 2017, Dick was en route to a regular meeting of his beloved Fur, Fin and Feather Club, and the next thing he knew he was upside down, with the femur of his left leg punching a hole in his pelvis.
"Seventy-seven days," he says. "That's how long I was in rehabilitation centers."
A tough break, yes. Still, there he was Wednesday, driving alone across South Dakota, beelining for the Black Hills in quest of his 299th wild tom.
Dick, age 80, had, of course, packed his camouflage clothing, including his timeworn hat, and also toted with him a 12 gauge Benelli with a pistol-grip stock.
His plan was to join his South Dakota pal, Ted Wick, and with him traipse among the Black Hills' ponderosas and scrub cedars on what would be his first out-of-state hunting trek since the accident.
"Calling is what attracted me to turkeys," Dick said. "When I started hunting these birds, I found out that when I talked to them, they talked back to me. Then I found out the more I learned about calling, the more likely they were to come to my call."
One time, Dick called a tom in from just shy of a mile away. His son, Scott, was along, and he sluiced the bird at 12 yards.