You may never have stood and looked down the sight At the tommy buck out in the breeze With the barrel on the side of the truck As your father says, "Gently now, squeeze."
You may never have felt the kick of the ****, Then heard the report with a crack, Or seen the buck just scatter away, Leaping this way and that.
You may never have smelt the smell of the air After a fire on the plain When fresh grass shoots are pushing through With mushrooms, after the rain.
You may never have heard the kru kroo of a dove When at dusk to its mate it is calling, As shadows are lengthening out to the east And the African night is falling.
You may never have felt the pump of your heart As you slam the truck cab door Then lurch on the seat as you cross the plain To the prey when you're only four.
You may never have ridden with game in the back As rain clouds blacken the sky, Or heard the clank of the tail-gate chains And, never again shall I!
My father used to take me shooting. We would go once a week or so. We had no refrigeration and no electricity. We would listen to the radio by lifting the battery out of the car and hooking it up . I shot my first buck when I was four. This poem appears in "One For The ***" available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/One-***-Poems-Stewart-McLeod/dp/1489575103/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1494434822&sr=8-2&keywords=Neil+Stewart+McLeod+Poetry