Chicago Sun-Times

He’s quick on the draw

Uptown cartoonist shares his quirky outdoors humor

- DALE BOWMAN dbowman@suntimes.com | @BowmanOuts­ide

Tim “Spike” Davis may be the only guy who came to Uptown and learned to hunt and fish. “That’s God’s sense of humor,” Davis said. “Move to inner city Chicago and get introduced to hunting and fishing.”

There’s Davis: God and humor mixed with hunting and fishing. Throw in cartoons, too.

“Draw a cartoon and make someone laugh, that is an open door,” he said.

Davis released his first book of outdoors cartoons, “Scattered Thoughts,” last week. The first printing sold out in half a day. The second printing arrived and back orders are being filled as fast as he and wife Amy can.

We talked Friday in a garden, yards from Wilson Avenue in Uptown. Sirens dotted our conversati­on. Davis wore a red, white and blue gaiter for a mask.

The pandemic matters.

When the lockdown came, they went through his cartoons with the idea of a book. They pulled out boxes and started with 900 cartoons. They winnowed them to 388.

You can’t get to Davis without going through God.

Davis came to Chicago at 16 from Boulder, Colorado, to work for a church and his life changed. “Spike” came from his hair in younger days.

The church had land Downstate, outside of Macomb, where an annual Christian music festival drew thousands. There two pastors helped Davis hone his outdoors skills.

His cartoons come from understand­ing hunting.

“‘Hey dude, I have had that happen to me,’ ” Davis said. “So many have told me that. You can only do that if you’ve been down in the trenches.”

That Everyman humility helps.

“I don’t claim to be a good hunter, but there is the old saying that good art comes from pain,” Davis said. “They come from a lot of pain: Missed shots and broken hooks.”

But he’s experience­d like nobody I’ve met. He’s killed a wild hog with a knife, he’s known as “Rat Man” (I promised not to write it), his first deer came from an Osage bow he made. It took him six years to kill his first coyote.

His outdoors cartoons have been in Predator Xtreme, ARG&H, Heartland Outdoors, Xtreme Hog Hunter, Primitive Archer and Bear Hunting. His faith-based cartoons appeared in magazines as prestigiou­s as Christiani­ty Today.

He sold his first outdoors cartoons in April of 2011 to Mark Olis for Predator Xtreme.

Olis asked if Davis could do them regularly.

“I said, ‘Sure,’ ” said Davis, who had no clue if he could. “Now I do six cartoons a week.”

As to where he fits in the cartoon world, he said, “New Yorker is MLB, I’m Little League. But I connect to my audience. Most hunting cartoons are not done by hunters.”

More broadly, he’s different.

“Most cartoonist­s I’ve meet are whitecolla­r who don’t have much dirt under their nails,” said Davis, whose has been an auto tech for 35 years. “I have to bleed and get bruised for my living. I understand what a lot of [readers] are doing.”

Jesus consoles a coyote hunter who missed. The Grim Reaper is parodied in “Death in the Long Grass.” An educated coyote works on Einstein’s e=mc2 and other formulas.

“People who get it are belly laughing and others are like, ‘Hunh?’ ” Davis said.

Order at scatteredt­houghtscar­toons.com. His faith-based cartoons are at redjawcart­oons.com.

Wild things

Don Soucek was the first reader to note the Wild of the Week on Saturday was a black swallowtai­l, not a dark tiger swallowtai­l. Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum’s Doug Taron confirmed that, “The unambiguou­s giveaway here is the orange spot with the black center. Nothing else in Illinois has this.”

Stray cast

Listening to Steve Stone and Jason Benetti sling words on the Sox broadcast is like watching bass corral and bust shad at Monster Lake.

Luka Doncic punctuated a historic tripledoub­le by making the tie-breaking shot with 1:57 left in overtime Tuesday night and leading the Mavericks past the Kings 114-110.

Doncic was sensationa­l, finishing with 34 points, a career-high 20 rebounds and 12 assists. At 21 years, 158 days, he became the youngest player to finish a game with 30 or more points, 20 or more rebounds and 10 or more assists, shattering Oscar Robertson’s previous mark of 23 years, 12 days.

“We needed that,” Doncic said. “We played, I think, one of the worst games ever and we won . . . . I’m proud of the win.”

Kristaps Porzingis added 22 points and seven rebounds before fouling out late in regulation.

It was the Mavs’ first victory since arriving at Walt Disney World and allowed them to remain the only NBA team to avoid three straight losses this season.

De’Aaron Fox scored 28 points and Buddy Hield had 21, but the Kings could not close out a game they controlled almost from the opening tip until the end of regulation.

The Mavericks scored the final six points in regulation to force overtime, then tied the score again at 102 when Tim Hardaway Jr. made three free throws with 3:10 to play. Doncic broke the tie and the Mavs scored the next five points and never trailed again.

“I believe we had seven stops in a row to end regulation, which was huge,” Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle said. “It was a guts win.”

† The Pacers’ T.J. Warren scored 32 points, tying Jermaine O’Neal’s franchise record for most in a three-game span, in a 120-109 win over the Magic. Warren has topped the 30-point mark in each game at Walt Disney World, starting with his 53-point outburst in the opener. He’s averaging 39.7 points per game in the restart.

† Devin Booker made a turnaround jumper over Paul George as time expired, capping a 35-point performanc­e and giving the Suns a 117-115 victory over the Clippers. to improve their record to 3-0 in the bubble.

† Timothe Luwawu-Cabarrot hit backto-back three-pointers to put the Nets ahead to stay in a 119-116 win over the Bucks that kept the Bucks from clinching the top seed in the Eastern Conference.

† The Grizzlies will be without forwardcen­ter Jaren Jackson Jr. for the remainder of the season after he tore the meniscus in his left knee against the Pelicans on Monday.

 ?? DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES ?? Tim “Spike” Davis shows his just-released book of cartoons, “Scattered Thoughts,” during an interview in a street-side garden in Uptown.
DALE BOWMAN/SUN-TIMES Tim “Spike” Davis shows his just-released book of cartoons, “Scattered Thoughts,” during an interview in a street-side garden in Uptown.
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 ?? KIM KLEMENT-POOL/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Mavericks’ Luka Doncic drives against the Kings’ Cory Joseph and De’Aaron Fox.
KIM KLEMENT-POOL/GETTY IMAGES The Mavericks’ Luka Doncic drives against the Kings’ Cory Joseph and De’Aaron Fox.

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