Z. B. Anderson

© copyright 2004
by Lin Stone

Kiamichi Country is renowned for its hunting and fishing opportunities.  Z. B. (Z. B.) Anderson stands way up there on the list of great hunters and fishermen.  He has been written up many times by some really great writers.  One story of his Small Mouth Bass prowess had his phone ringing off the hook so constantly he had it disconnected; Answering it interfered with his hunting and fishing.  

Z. B. Anderson is 3/4 Choctaw.  He was born in Broken Bow Oklahoma and he has been living in and out of the Kiamichi area for the last 83 years.

Even though he is 83 years old Z. B. looks like he might be in his late sixties, and he still gets around like a teenager.

He followed the construction trade for years, but his mainstay of income was from his handicrafts, and his ability to hunt, trap and fish.  

The buckle you see here is a hand-carved work of art captured from an elk horn.  Z. B. also carves pipes, tomahawks and other artifacts.

Z. B. has served as an unofficial tester for several lure manufacturers.  
His advice has brought many improvements into the field.  When the 
testing was over Z. B. kept all the lures he had tested.  He knows his 
favorites by name and uses them almost constantly to reel in more fish 
than anyone else in the area.

"My favorite fishing lure is one I made out of feathers from a game rooster."  

*

Turkey calling is almost a science with Z. B..  He has a turkey call made from the top half of a small turtle shell and a thin, flat piece of cedar over the bottom.  Taking a reed Z. B. scratches out various sounds from different parts of the wood, one for a turkey hen, one for the rooster, and one for two hens squabbling.  

Why does he want to make so many different sounds?  "Let's say you are competing with a hunter over the hill from you and all he can sound like is one lonely turkey, and here you are sounding like a bunch of turkeys having a good time -- you can count on it, any gobbler in the neighborhood will come trotting to get in on YOUR party."  

When Z. B. is acting as a guide for someone wanting to hunt turkey he will put them between him and where he is going to call the turkey from.  "Especially late in the season, turkeys don't like to come in all the way to the caller without seeing something more tangible than a few sounds.  They are very cautious.  So they pause there out of my shooting range, but right on target for the hunters I am calling for."

Z. B. talks the turkey gobbler down out of the tree using an owl call.  Then he goes no closer than 200 yards from the gobbler.  "Too many times they will stay in the tree and talk, but not come down."

Most hunters have a tendency to call again and again when the turkey pauses to scout the area.  Z. B. moves away from the turkey and that makes it follow him.  "I never let the call notes I give indicate the hens have even heard him.  He can't resist having the hen get away from him. " 

Knowing which way the wind is blowing is crucial in any kind of hunting and Z. B. has a little trick to keep himself constantly posted to changes in the wind.  "I have a small feather attached to my rifle barrel. Even if the wind is only blowing half a mile per hour that feather will show which way the wind is blowing and then I will look in the other direction."  

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You name the game and Z. B. is on to it.  Just last year he and 
another trapper teamed up to trap bob cats for 14 days and they 
captured 11 of them.  In this part of the country there are two kinds 
of bob cats here, one looks very much like a lynx with the tassels 
on his ears, and the other kind that looks kind of like an overgrown 
tabby, but with a bobbed off tail.  Bob cats may remind some 
people of overgrown kitty cats, but they are great predators, being 
able to bring a white tail deer down in the right circumstances.

How do you trap bob cats?  Well, first the cat has to be there, and how many bob cats have you seen?  

"Bob cats are all around us but we don’t see very much of them because they are so cunning.  But in the hands of an expert lures and decoys can fool any animal into revealing itself.  I make this mound of earth with feathers and hair and other natural things that they eat.  I leave just enough showing to make it look like another cat has cached it there on HIS property and will be coming back to eat it.  The bob cat can't pass up that challenge to his territory.  He will try to dig it up and that's where my trap is waiting for him."

Z. B. caught one bob cat using little more than Christmas trimmings.  He hung a few strands up in a tree during the night and the reflections from the moonlight brought the bob cat in to see what was going on.  As the saying goes, Curiosity killed the cat.

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Z. B. tries to shake off the fame he has earned.  "People 
say things like that I know every kind of tree, bush and herb 
in this country.  That's not so.  I only know about half of 
them, but I am trying to learn all of them.  When I find 
something I can't identify I will send it to someone who does, 
like the University of Tennessee."  

There are not many Indian doctors left who know the medicines
and herbs, Z. B. says. He raises herbs near his home and is
always watching for them in his travels.  "The old Indian doctors,
they knew most of them and how to use them.  I only know about
40 to 50% of  them. Unfortunately I don’t know how to use them,
but I do know the herbs."   

His biggest hobby is collecting pictures of all kinds of Indian tribes. Z. B. was invited to display his crafts on the site where the Crazy Horse Museum in Black Hills was rising on U.S. 16/385.  The museum was built by Indians and built for a memorial for Crazy Horse. The United States Government wanted to donate $ 10 million to the project.  The Indians decided to do everything themselves. "The monument will be 563 feet high and almost 641 feet long.   The head alone is 87.5 feet all and Crazy Horse's arm stretches out 263 feet long.  You can put all of Mount Rushmore in the head of this Indian. It will be bigger than Stone Mountain Georgia.  At the same site they are building a college and everything there to help educate the Ogalla Sioux Indian."

They asked Z. B. to come out and set up a stand with his handi crafts.  " I carve peace pipes, belt buckles, and make fishing lures.  They sold well there.  I left here with $1,300 and came back with $1,700 and I took a long trip to Oregon after I left South Dakota." 

He showed me a series of carvings he had done, but held one back.  
Before letting me see it he explained.. "I meant for this pipe to have 
an eagle head.  But when I was finished it looked to me more like a 
sea gull."  

When I saw it, I had to laugh and agree it was not an eagle head.  
"It looks more like a sea gull crossed with a barn owl."  

Z. B. laughed too, wholly and completely.  He is a man at peace 
with himself, and with his world.  "Please don't tell anyone exactly
where I live, I like it here." were his parting words to me.

 

the end

About the author:  Lin Stone maintains a National Directory of the best health insurance companies on the web and a National Directory of the best car insurance companies on the web. Hundreds of his other articles are available for free reading on the Internet. Just Click HERE to see an index to his works.

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