Ed Mathieu pulled the Jeep to the side of the road, the tires rumbling on the icy gravel. He jumped out, walked purposefully around the vehicle and squinted at the crusty snow.
As he bent down for a closer look-see, I recognized his intense expression; it was the one Id seen on the faces of trackers on safaris in the wilds of Canada and Africa. Ed was staring at the past, described in a trail of hoof prints: A moose had been here. Now if only he could predict the future: that I would see the moose that had made those marks
Setting out from Portland, Maine, for the two-hour drive north, I was buoyed by the odds. According to state wildlife biologists, 75,000 moose reside in Maine, with about 1.3 moose per square mile in the Moosehead Lake vicinity. I knew from an earlier conversation with Ed, who runs Moose Country Safaris & Eco Tours, that we were going to canvass a wide swath of wooded land and shoreline near the lake. Since moose typically roam within a 2 1/4 -mile radius, I imagined a veritable petting zoo of Bullwinkles.
If my faith started to falter, I had road signs to restore my hope. Near Waterville Valley, a yellow posting warned drivers to watch for crossing moose over the next six miles. Not a problem: I would certainly brake for moose, because I had a feeling that they wouldnt grant me the same courtesy.
Ed, a wildlife guide for 28 years, was more than just a spotter with an impressive track record. (When asked his lifetime moose count, he answered, Thousands.) He was also driver, educator and, during lulls between clues, entertainer.
Most of the regions moose-viewing operations run in the spring, summer and fall, when the Maine outdoors is reborn and revitalized. Though Ed conceded that winter is not peak season, he did draw an L.L. Bean-esque image of moose grazing beneath boughs of snow-tinged evergreens, their coats thick and gray and snuggly. The states official animal – Maine has the second-largest population after Alaska – is most visible between Mothers and Fathers Day. During this period, the snow has ceded to an all-you-can-eat buffet of young shoots – pure moosenip.
In addition, the five-week summer invasion of demonic black flies forces the moose to flee the forest for less irritating places.
The life of the moose is easy, Ed said. All they do is eat, sleep, drink and mate.
In December, we didnt have to worry about lascivious moose. This time of the year, theyre more interested in dining than dating.
Moose viewing is similar to whale watching and celebrity stalking, in that you always hear about how so-and-so saw this-and-that the day before – but never on the day that youre on critter patrol. Ed, whose record day yielded 28 moose, mentioned, for example, the wife of a couple from New York who came face to face with the lumbering beast while she was using natures toilet. How embarrassing – for the moose. More recently, a man parked on the side of the road shouted through his open window that hed spotted a cow, a calf and a bull ... yesterday. Well, I wanted to retort, I saw a moose the day before, too, in the Manchester, N.H., airport. Moreover, the steel statue was made by a sculptor whod encountered a bull in the woods.
As for a real moose, it was my turn. I knew it. I could read the tea leaves in the snow. As we drove up to Moosehead Lake, into the towns of Greenville and Kokadjo (population not many) and around the Roach Ponds (seven in all), Ed and I found clear evidence of their presence. Despite the signs of a small stampede on the ground, the northern Maine setting was still and naptime quiet. When a critter did make an appearance, I would bounce with excitement, thrilled to see any member of the animal kingdom, even those on the bottom rungs. I pointed crazily at a chipmunk and, when two black birds swooped overhead, Ed emitted a yelp of Yippee, crows.
Although moose dont have a designated lunch hour, Ed did. On an empty road bordered by bushy trees, he pulled out a cooler stocked with ham-and-cheese sandwiches, apples, Christmas cookies and a mug of hot cocoa. He grabbed a sandwich and wandered over to the edge of the woods.
While he followed the hops of a snowshoe hare, I pointed my beagle nose in the other direction, toward two pairs of moose prints. The impressions belonged to a mom and a calf, strolling down the snowy stretch together, big beside little. I pressed my own boot prints into the wintry carpet as I walked down the lane with a moose on either side.