Distinctly Montana Magazine

2024 // Fall

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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78 D I S T I N C T LY M O N TA N A M A G A Z I N E • FA L L 2 0 2 4 "W ELL, THAT'LL BE JUST FINE." John's voice is bright but gruff, the way you imagine it would sound when a Western outlaw finally be- friended you. It begins with a raspy lowness that lilts up into friendship. Looking at him, it would be difficult to imagine any other sound attached to his words. A long ponytail belies his decades spent ranching and tracking around west- ern Montana. But his whiskered face sets the record straight: he's from the West. His long, white mustache, reminiscent of the gunslingers a century ago, cov- ers a smile just as broad. In an instant, you move from suspi- cious to befriended, ever glad you met the "bird-man" of the Mission Valley. John eagerly granted a request to visit with him amongst the ponds and aviaries of the Montana Waterfowl Foundation, the place that has been his home for over four de- cades. It becomes immediately ap- parent when first meeting John that laughter is his life-breath. One-liners, deadpan wit, and puns to make dads proud everywhere are followed by belly laughs, if they are only sometimes his. Understand- ing the joke isn't required to know he wants everyone to have a good time. John's father was a horseman who brought his son into the business. Ear- ly memories include rounding up colts in Canada to be brought back to Butte, broken, and then sold. When fall set in, they led string packs into the Bob Marshall Wilderness for outfitters, sometimes guiding themselves. The work was hard, but being close to the For the Birds article and photos by EVERETT HEADLEY Passion and Happiness in the Mission Valley

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