NEAR BUFFALO, MINN. – Armed with binoculars and cameras, as well as shotguns, the brothers Hautman — Joe, Jim and Bob — settled in Saturday morning, bulrushes concealing their location.
Among the three, they've won the federal duck stamp contest 10 times, a feat unequaled among family members elsewhere, and as light gathered across the eastern treetops, casting willy-nilly a shadowy panoply of subtle colors, each could have imagined the scene someday being rendered on canvas.
Minnesota's most famous wildlife artists were now comfortably in residence on this opening morning of the state's waterfowl season, with their eyes to the sky, on the lookout not only for birds but for inspiration.
"Out front,'' Bob said, and he and Jim crouched low in the dank marsh foliage.
A short distance away, on a small, shallow lake, a dozen or so decoys bobbed; attractants, the brothers hoped, for a first-morning flight mix that would include blue-winged teal, wood ducks and mallards.
Distinctive by their large size and methodical wing beat, the birds approaching now were mallards.
The Hautmans needed no one to advise them when to shoot; they've spent a lifetime of autumn mornings together, and each is well-practiced in the fine art of distance assessment.
Rising as the birds appeared overhead and touching the triggers of their 12 gauges, Jim and Bob targeted the bird whose flight path angled nearest them.