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-Project Gutenberg's Boy Scouts at Crater Lake, by Walter Prichard Eaton
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Boy Scouts at Crater Lake
- A Story of Crater Lake National Park and the High Cascades
-
-Author: Walter Prichard Eaton
-
-Release Date: April 10, 2017 [EBook #54536]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOY SCOUTS AT CRATER LAKE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Pack Train Descending to Hunt’s Cove. Mount Jefferson in
-the Distance.]
-
-
-
-
- Boy Scouts at Crater Lake
-
-
- _A STORY OF CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK AND THE HIGH CASCADES_
-
- By
- WALTER PRICHARD EATON
-
- _Illustrated with Photographs_
- FRED H. KISER
-
- [Illustration: W. A. Wilde Company]
-
- W. A. WILDE COMPANY
- BOSTON CHICAGO
-
- _Copyrighted, 1922_,
- By W. A. Wilde Company
- _All rights reserved_
- Made in U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
-
- (_For Parents and Similar People_)
-
-It seems to be generally assumed that a story for boys must be crowded
-full of adventures, and the assumption is doubtless based on experience.
-This would be all right if the adventures were also based on experience.
-Unfortunately, however, such is not always the case, and then the result
-is something that may possibly satisfy an immediate craving of the boy
-for excitement, but in the long run can only confuse his sense of
-reality. It is probably more important, in a boy’s development, to
-clarify his sense of reality than it is to feed his imagination. His
-imagination, normally, needs very little prodding to carry him away from
-reality. That is why tales of actual adventure, such as the records of
-explorers, hunters, and the like, are so worth while for boys. They feed
-the imagination while, at the same time, keeping touch with the real.
-They have the lure of fiction, and the solidity of fact.
-
-It has been my steady purpose, in the Boy Scout series of stories which
-I have written, to bear this in mind. I have not described places with
-which I was unfamiliar, nor created adventures it was impossible for
-boys to experience. In the volume preceding the present one, “Boy Scouts
-in Glacier Park,” I endeavored to give some adequate idea of that
-beautiful National Park, and hence of a section of the Rocky Mountain
-wilderness, and the actual adventures one may now encounter therein. Our
-friend, Bill Hart, of movie fame, may be relied on to supply the other
-sort of Wild West adventure, without any need of help from me. The
-response of my young readers was so pleasantly encouraging that I am
-asking them, in this book, to go still farther West, into another
-National Park, Crater Lake, and into the Cascade wilderness of Oregon.
-Whitman’s ride for Oregon was long ago, and today they are building a
-macadam highway where his horse left a solitary track.
-
-The Cascade Mountains afford numerous opportunities for snow
-climbing—and anyone who has practiced this noble sport does not need to
-be told that it supplies plenty of adventure. Snow mountains have a way
-of withdrawing themselves many miles from human habitation, and a pack
-train is scarcely to be afforded save by those who have reached years of
-comparative discretion, so I have no fear of sending youngsters out
-alone to start up the Roosevelt Glacier. If, however, I can inspire some
-few of them to persuade their fathers to take them into the high places,
-I know that both they and their fathers will ultimately thank me.
-
-But chiefly, in the end, I want young America to know and to love and to
-preserve what is left of the American wilderness.
-
- W. P. E.
-
- _Twin Fires,_
- _Sheffield,_
- _Massachusetts._
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- I. Bennie Visits the Public Library and Gives Spider a Surprise 13
- II. Bennie Takes the Rope Up His First Cliff 19
- III. How Bennie Earned a Trip to Oregon 31
- IV. Bennie and Spider Cross the Continent 39
- V. All Aboard for Crater Lake!—and Dumpling in the Other Car 50
- VI. Bennie and Spider Have to Make After-dinner Speeches, and
- Bennie’s Knees Knock 57
- VII. Held Up by the Snow, with the Thermometer at 86° 68
- VIII. Up the Rim of Crater Lake at Last, Through the Snow-drifts 75
- IX. The Mountain That Fell Into Itself 83
- X. Down the Rim to the Lake—The Boys Ski on a Crater Snow-drift
- in July 88
- XI. Dumplin’ Tests the Strength of a Snow Cornice on Garfield
- Peak 106
- XII. Bennie Climbs the Mast of the Phantom Ship and Knows He Has
- Done Something 113
- XIII. The Scouts Are Driven Ashore by a Storm and Have to Climb
- Llao Rock—and They Learn a Lesson 122
- XIV. Bennie Takes a Day Off to Do a Good Turn—He Washes All the
- Dirty Clothes 137
- XV. The Long Hike—The Scouts Find Packing Grub and Blanket Rolls
- Up and Down Cliffs is Hard Work 144
- XVI. The Climb Up Scott Peak—Bennie Begins Work for a Merit
- Badge for Hiking 154
- XVII. Good-bye to Crater Lake, and a Motor Trip to Bend 167
- XVIII. The Boys Encounter “Pep,” Who Promises Them a Bear Hunt 174
- XIX. The Bear Hunt—In Which the Boys Discover that the Bear
- Doesn’t Do All the Hard Work 178
- XX. Bennie Achieves a Dog, and the Party Puts Out a Forest Fire 206
- XXI. The Pack Train Has to Toboggan Into Hunt’s Cove, and Bennie
- Puts “Action” Into It 221
- XXII. The First Attempt at Jefferson—Dumplin’ Almost Falls to
- Death—The Hardest Work the Boys Ever Did 234
- XXIII. The Summit is Conquered! 262
- XXIV. Back Over the Divide—A Horse Turns Three Somersaults Down
- the Snow Slope 273
- XXV. Bennie Loses Jeff, but Brings Home Something Else to Last
- Him Many Years 280
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
- Pack Train Descending to Hunt’s Cove. Mount Jefferson in the
- Distance. (_Frontispiece_) 222
- Crater Lake—Wizard Island, and Over it Llao Rock 80
- Campers at the Rim of Crater Lake. Mid-July Snow in Foreground 88
- The Boys Sliding Down Wizard Island Crater (Enlarged from a
- Movie) 98
- The Boys Walking on the Snow Cornice of Garfield Peak (Enlarged
- from a Movie) 108
- Looking Across Hunt’s Cove to Jefferson. Dotted Line Shows Route
- of Climb; Arrow Points to Place Where Dumplin’ Slipped 252
- Crossing the Divide Near Mount Jefferson, on July 25th. Three
- Fingered Jack in Distance 274
- Saint Peter’s Dome and Columbia River. Mount Adams in Far
- Distance 286
-
-
-
-
- Boy Scouts at Crater Lake
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- Bennie Visits the Public Library and Gives Spider a Surprise
-
-
-Bennie Capen was sitting in the public library reading a book. Miss
-Lizzie Cox, the librarian, was watching him with some suspicion. Bennie
-was not what you might call one of her regular customers, and she was
-surprised to see him come in, ask for a certain book, and take it off to
-the reading table. She certainly watched him as if she suspected a
-nigger in the wood-pile somewhere. Bennie had a reputation in Southmead,
-but it wasn’t exactly a reputation for bookishness. Some people said he
-was a “bad boy,” some people laughed and said he was “full o’ pep,” and
-some people, including Mr. Rogers, the scout master of Bennie’s troop,
-said the trouble with Bennie was that his engine was too powerful for
-the chassis. Anyway, Miss Lizzie Cox, behind the delivery desk, frowned
-as she watched him through her gold-rimmed glasses, as if she expected
-to see him throw the book at little Bob Walters, across the table, or
-pull the hair of Lucy Smith, who was consulting the encyclopædia
-preparatory to writing a composition on “The Products of the Philippine
-Islands.”
-
-However, Bennie did none of these things. He read steadily in his book,
-after first looking at all the pictures, and emitting several low
-whistles, each one of which brought a sharp, admonitory rap of her
-pencil on the desk from Miss Cox, and a loud “Silence!” Bennie grinned
-cheerfully each time, and went on reading and looking at the pictures.
-His eyes were bright, and every now and then he ran his fingers
-excitedly through his brown hair, till it stood straight up on his
-forehead.
-
-By and by little Bob Walters returned the bound volume of St. Nicholas
-and went out. Lucy Smith exhausted the products of the Philippine
-Islands (or her own patience), and took refuge in “Vogue.” From the
-streets outside came the shouts of a snowball fight. But Bennie kept on
-reading. Finally the door opened, and another scout came in, a tall,
-slender boy with two books under his arm. He saw Bennie as he was
-walking up to the desk, and stopped, surprised. Then he stole over on
-tiptoe, and looked over Bennie’s shoulder at the book.
-
-“Gosh all hemlock, Bennie,” he whispered, “plugging to get a hundred per
-cent in physical geography? You don’t care how much of a shock you give
-your dear teacher, do you?”
-
-Bennie looked up, with his usual grin. “’Lo, Spider,” he said. “Say,
-this old book is some humdinger, I’ll tell the world.”
-
-“Don’t tell the world so loud, or Miss Cox’ll be out over the desk,” Bob
-Chandler whispered back, catching a sight of the librarian’s face out of
-a corner of his eye. “What is the book?”
-
-Bennie turned back to the title page, and Spider read, “On British Crags
-and Alpine Heights.”
-
-“Say, wait a minute—look at this picture,” said Bennie, turning the
-pages to find it. “Here it is. Look at that old cliff! And pipe where
-that guy is climbing. Oh, boy! That’s only one, too. ’Most every
-picture’s like that, or more exciting, and it tells how somebody fell
-off most of ’em, and was killed, and——”
-
-“Silence!” from Miss Lizzie Cox.
-
-“Old crab!” whispered Bennie. “Well, I gotter finish this chapter ’fore
-closing time.”
-
-“Why don’t you take the book out? I’d like to read it, too,” Spider
-whispered.
-
-“Haven’t got a card,” Bennie confessed. “Guess I don’t read as much as I
-ought to.”
-
-“Guess you don’t,” said Spider. “Here, give it to me. I’ll take it out
-for you.”
-
-“How’d you ever know about it, anyhow?” he asked, when they were outside
-the building, on the snowy sidewalk. “Gave me some shock to see you
-sitting in the library!”
-
-“Mr. Rogers told me about it,” Bennie answered. “We got to talking about
-mountains, and climbing, and he said to go ask for this book and see
-what real climbing is like. Oh, boy! I wish we had something like those
-old what d’you call ’ems—spitzes—around these diggings.”
-
-“A spitz being what?” Spider laughed.
-
-“Here, give me the book—I’ll show you. It’s a German word, I guess—means
-spire, maybe—I don’t know. Never studied Dutch—probably wouldn’t know if
-I had—but anyhow they’re tall, sharp rocky peaks, pretty nearly straight
-up, in the Alps somewhere, and you climb ’em with your teeth and your
-toe-nails.”
-
-The two scouts paused in the middle of the sidewalk, while Bennie hunted
-out a picture of several men, roped together, climbing the precipitous
-face of one of the Dolomites, and their faces were over the book,
-looking at the thrilling photograph—when, _blam_, came a snowball,
-crashing into Bennie’s side.
-
-He thrust the book into Spider’s hands for safe-keeping, stooped for a
-handful of snow, and dashed around the corner of the post-office after
-the vanishing pair of heels.
-
-When he came back he was grinning. “Fresh guy, that Tenderfoot,” he
-said. “His ma won’t need to wash his face for supper tonight. Come on,
-let’s go to my house and look at those old pictures some more.”
-
-They were soon curled up on the couch in his father’s library, with the
-book first on one lap and then on the other. After they had looked twice
-at every picture, they read aloud to each other parts of the text,
-especially the most exciting parts they could find, but skipping the
-descriptions of scenery and the long foreign names. The Welsh names were
-worse than the German.
-
-What interested them most, however, were the pictures that showed how
-the rope is used, both in climbing and descending, and the passages
-about it.
-
-“I wish we had a braided rope!” Spider exclaimed.
-
-“Guess we could get some sort of a rope, all right,” said Bennie. “But
-where are we going to get the—the spitzes to use it on? Those old
-mountains make ours look like pimples.”
-
-“Oh, they’re not so bad—they’re _something_, anyway,” Spider answered.
-“I bet you’d need a rope to climb the cliffs on Monument Mountain, and
-maybe, if the snow gets deep, we’d have to cut steps in it to get up to
-those cliffs. Might try it.”
-
-“Sure, we could try it. But you wouldn’t slide far enough to hurt
-yourself if you did slip going up to the cliffs, and I bet _nobody_
-could climb right up the cliffs themselves.”
-
-“I bet the man who wrote this book could,” said Spider. “We never really
-tried it. What do you say if we get a rope and have a go at ’em, next
-Saturday, eh?”
-
-“You’re on!” cried Bennie. “We’ll get the old rope tomorrow, after
-school. Going to take the troop along?”
-
-“Not on your life! We’ll ask Mr. Rogers, though. We don’t want too many.
-Those cliffs aren’t going to be a picnic, I’ll tell the town.”
-
-“You’ve said it,” Bennie assented. “Well, so long till tomorrow. Don’t
-forget to bring some money for that old rope.”
-
-“And don’t you forget that book’s out on my card,” Spider laughed.
-“Won’t do it any good if you throw it at the cat.”
-
-Bennie made as if to throw it at him, and he ducked quickly out of the
-door.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- Bennie Takes the Rope Up His First Cliff
-
-
-The next afternoon the two scouts emerged from Seymour’s store with a
-hundred feet of brand new half-inch rope, and ran directly into a group
-of half a dozen of their fellow scouts.
-
-“Hi! Get on to Spider and Bennie!” someone cried. “What you goin’ to do,
-Bennie, rope a steer?”
-
-“Goin’ to hang yourselves?” somebody else demanded.
-
-“Goin’ to tie up the cat?” came from a third.
-
-“Going to have some spaghetti for supper?” said a fourth.
-
-“Goin’ to fish for minnows through the ice with it?” asked still
-another.
-
-“No, we’re goin’ to tie up a pound of candy for our dear teacher,”
-Bennie replied. “Come on, Spider, these guys are too bright for us.”
-
-“Don’t trip over your skipping rope, dearie,” taunted one of the scouts.
-Bennie hurled a snowball at him and then he and Spider dodged away from
-a shower of pursuing missiles.
-
-“Well, they didn’t learn much that time,” Spider laughed, as they
-entered Bennie’s back yard, went into the barn, and threw an end of the
-rope over a rafter, so that both ends dangled to the floor.
-
-“Now we’ll try coming down the doubled rope,” said Bennie.
-
-He climbed out on the rafter, grasped both strands of the rope, and slid
-down. Spider followed him.
-
-At the bottom they surveyed their bare palms ruefully.
-
-“Feels as if it was full of splinters,” said Bennie.
-
-“It’s too stiff—it’s like a piece o’ wood,” Spider complained. “Guess it
-isn’t much like the braided ropes Alpine climbers use. What are we going
-to do about it?”
-
-“Ask Mr. Rogers,” said Bennie. “We haven’t told him about it yet,
-anyhow. Come on. Wait a minute, though. No use getting any more
-questions fired at us.”
-
-He took one end of the rope and pulled the other end down over the beam.
-Then, while Spider played it out, he spun around and wound it around his
-body. After that, he put on his mackinaw.
-
-“You look ’s if you weighed about two hundred,” Spider laughed.
-
-“I feel like Houdini,” said Bennie.
-
-They found the scout master at home, and told him their plans, and about
-the rope. He laughed, and grabbing the loose end, spun Bennie around
-like a top, while he unwound it.
-
-“The first thing to do is to wrap a piece of twine around both ends, so
-it won’t unravel,” he said, “and then boil it for a day in your mother’s
-wash boiler—if she’ll let you.”
-
-“Will you go with us Saturday?”
-
-“Sure thing. But let’s take a couple more of the troop along. Not a lot.
-It may be dangerous. We’ll take Billy Vance and Tom Shields, eh? They
-are strong and careful.”
-
-“Well, not any more,” said Bennie. “Gee whiz, we don’t want to let ’em
-all in on this right off the bat.”
-
-“What kind of a scout are you?” Mr. Rogers asked. “Want to hog all the
-fun?”
-
-Bennie reddened. “No, it isn’t that,” he said, “but me and Spider sort
-of discovered this, and we want to try it out first. A lot of ’em would
-only laugh. I got it out of a book.”
-
-“Ho, that’s it!” laughed the scout master. “You don’t want to be caught
-reading a book! Well, I’ve a good mind to assemble the whole troop, and
-tell ’em the glad news. Cheer up, though, I won’t. The shock might be
-bad for ’em.”
-
-“He’s got your number,” said Spider, as the two scouts left.
-
-Bennie grinned, but he looked a little sheepish.
-
-It took a lot of explaining before Mrs. Capen would let the boys have
-the wash boiler, but finally they persuaded her, and slipped the coil of
-rope into the water, leaving it there all night to boil.
-
-The next day the water was a dark brown color, but the rope, after they
-took it out and stretched it as hard as they could from the barn around
-a tree and back again, dried out much softer than it had been, so that
-it could be easily handled. And, to complete their happiness, that night
-it began to snow again heavily.
-
-“I hope it don’t stop till Saturday, and there’s six feet on the level!”
-cried Bennie.
-
-There weren’t six feet, but there were more than two, badly drifted,
-when Saturday dawned bright and clear. When Mr. Rogers and the four
-scouts set out for the cliffs, two miles away, they were on snowshoes.
-Bennie carried the rope, carefully coiled, over his shoulder, and he had
-a scout hatchet in his belt, to cut steps with. Each member of the party
-had an alpenstock, also, some of them made by taking the guard off old
-ski poles, some merely by sharpening a five foot length of pole. The
-snow was deep, but it was also fine and powdery, so that even on
-snowshoes they sank well in, and had to take turns breaking trail.
-
-“It doesn’t look to me as if we’d have to cut many steps,” said the
-scout master.
-
-And it turned out that they didn’t, much to Bennie’s disgust. To reach
-the base of the cliffs, it was necessary to climb for 300 yards or more
-up a pile of rocks, of all sizes and shapes, which in ages past had been
-broken off from the precipice above, and now lay in a vast heap at the
-base, making a kind of wild, irregular stairway, and just about as steep
-as a flight of steps. Bennie had hoped that these rocks would be packed
-over hard with snow, so they would need to cut steps up the slope. But,
-alas! it takes far deeper snows, and snows that do not melt in spring,
-to form such a slope.
-
-What they found, instead, was that the snow had filled in between the
-rocks just enough so you couldn’t tell whether your foot was going to
-sink six inches or six feet, and blown off the top of the rocks, making
-them slippery as glass. Of course, they had to leave their snowshoes at
-the base. To get up the pile meant nothing more than hard work and
-scraped shins. Billy and Tom, the two other scouts who had come along,
-began to complain.
-
-“Say, is this your idea of fun?” said Tom. “You don’t need a rope for
-this, you need shin guards.”
-
-“Yeah, where’d you get this Alpine stuff, anyhow?” said Billy, as one
-foot went down between two hidden stones and he half disappeared from
-sight.
-
-“You wait till we get to the old cliff up there!” Bennie answered
-hopefully.
-
-The party paused and took a look at the cliff wall, now towering just
-above them. They had all climbed the mountain many times by the path,
-but none of them, not even Mr. Rogers, had ever tackled the cliff face.
-It was 200 feet high, most of it a sheer precipice, and nobody in town
-had ever dreamed of trying to climb it.
-
-“Gosh!” Tom exclaimed. “We can’t climb _that_!”
-
-“Well, we’re going to try,” Bennie replied. “It’s not a patch on a lot
-in that book, is it, Spider?”
-
-“You’ve said it,” Spider answered.
-
-After a few minutes more of hard scrambling, they stood directly under
-the face of the precipice. Being straight up, it was quite bare of snow,
-except on a few ledges here and there, and at this point nobody could
-have climbed it. There was nothing to get even a finger hold on.
-
-“Well, go on up with your rope, and throw us down an end,” Tom taunted.
-
-“We’ll have to work around till we can find a chimney, won’t we?” Bennie
-asked the scout master.
-
-“Or a ladder,” Billy added.
-
-They moved along under the beetling face of the rock, going in up to
-their waists in the snow which had drifted against the base, until they
-came to a sort of gully which divided the main cliff from an out-thrown
-spur like a bowsprit. This gully was very steep, about sixty-five
-degrees, and was partly filled with snow. A few laurel bushes grew in it
-here and there, and it evidently led up to a ledge, because at the top a
-little pine tree was growing, a hundred feet above their heads.
-
-“If we can get up anywhere, it’s here,” the scout master announced.
-
-Bennie uncoiled the rope and fastened one end around his waist, so his
-hands would be free. Then he started up the gully. There was no question
-of cutting steps—the snow was too soft. All he could do was to tread it
-down under his feet and trust to its holding him without sliding down
-until he could reach up to a laurel bush and pull himself a bit higher.
-Twice he slid back. Once his mittens slipped on a bush, and he came down
-ten feet before he could get a hold on something. Then he took his
-mittens off, and climbed bare handed. Those below heard him give a yell
-of triumph just as the last of the rope was apparently going up after
-him, and then they saw him come out on the ledge and tie his end of the
-rope around the pine tree.
-
-“Come on!” he called. “All fast! Wow, but my hands are cold!”
-
-The others came up easily enough, for they had the rope to pull on, and
-soon they were all standing on the tiny ledge, a hundred feet above the
-base of the cliff.
-
-“Well, Tom, the old rope was some help, eh?” Bennie demanded.
-
-“Where do we go from here?” was Tom’s reply.
-
-“Yes, where do we go?” the scout master laughed.
-
-“Right over to the next ledge,” said Bennie, pointing to another ledge,
-on the same level, about ten feet away, with next to nothing but bare
-cliff between.
-
-“Oh, do we!” said Billy.
-
-“Sure,” Bennie replied. “This is a traverse. That’s what you call ’em,
-isn’t it, Mr. Rogers?”
-
-“Sure, it’s a traverse all right. I don’t like the looks of it, either.”
-
-“Same here,” said Tom. “Gosh, if you slipped getting over there—good
-night!”
-
-He looked down the sheer hundred foot drop, and pulled back quickly.
-
-But Bennie already had the rope pulled up, and one end around his body,
-under his arms, again.
-
-“Here, Mr. Rogers,” he said, giving the scout master the coil. “You take
-a brace and play me out. I’ll get the rope over to the other ledge, and
-tie one end there, and then you can put it ’round the tree, and throw me
-the other end. Then you’ll all have a railing to cross with.”
-
-Mr. Rogers looked worried. “Now, go slow and watch your step, Bennie,”
-he cautioned. “Here, Spider, take hold of this rope behind me, so two of
-us’ll have a grip.”
-
-Bennie took off his mittens again, and beat the snow from the crevices
-of the rock ahead of him till he could get a good grip with his fingers.
-Then he shoved his feet out on the tiny ledge below, hardly six inches
-wide, and slowly, cautiously, made his way toward the other landing. He
-had only ten feet to go, but in the cold, without gloves, and with the
-rocks slippery from snow, it was painful work, and he wasn’t sure if his
-fingers would stand it without letting go, they soon pained him so. Mr.
-Rogers watched him anxiously, as he played out the rope. The others held
-their breaths.
-
-But he got there, and a shout went up from everybody. He blew on his
-fingers and then tied his end of the rope around a tree on the new
-ledge, while the scout master passed the other end around the first
-tree, and then threw the end across. When that end, too, was tied, a
-double rope stretched across the gap between the ledges, and the rest
-could put it under an armpit, hold it fast with one hand while they
-grabbed the cracks of rock with the other, and come over in perfect
-safety. Then they pulled the rope over to them, and started on.
-
-“Some traverse!” Bennie cried. “I thought once I’d have to let go,
-though, my fingers got so cold.”
-
-“Summer’s the time for this sort of work,” said the scout master.
-
-Billy, who had said nothing for several minutes, looked back at the
-traverse, and down into the drop of space below.
-
-“I was scared pink,” he said, “and I don’t care who knows it.”
-
-“I wasn’t scared, ’cause I knew Mr. Rogers and Spider would hold me,”
-said Bennie. “Still, I’d have gone a ways at that, and kind of dangled.”
-
-The new ledge led around a corner, and then upward for twenty feet, and
-brought them to a pile of jagged rocks which could be climbed without a
-rope, by brushing off the snow, till they were only twenty feet below
-the top of the cliff. Here there was only one way up. By grabbing any
-little handholds they could find, it was possible to climb up about a
-dozen feet to a tiny ledge, one at a time, and get into a narrow upright
-crack, about two feet wide. This crack led right to the summit, and you
-could work up it by pushing with your feet and hands on one side and
-your back on the other. At least, that is what Bennie declared.
-
-“It’s a chimney!” he cried.
-
-“Well, I wish there was a fire at the bottom of it,” sighed Tom, hitting
-his hands together.
-
-Bennie started to tie the rope under his arms, but Spider grabbed it.
-
-“Say, whose card did you take that book out on?” he said. “My turn now.”
-
-After considerable feeling around for toe-holds, Spider got to the
-ledge, and into the chimney. When he stood erect, the top was only a few
-feet over his head, so he soon had his fingers above the rim, and pulled
-himself out and vanished. A moment later they heard his “All fast!” and
-with the rope to climb with, the rest were speedily beside him on the
-snow-covered summit of the mountain.
-
-Everybody gave a shout as the prospect burst on them—the 200 foot drop
-at their feet to the bottom of the cliff, and then the long steep slope
-below, and then the valley farms and roads, all lying under a dazzling
-carpet of white, and the far-off village and still farther away more
-blue mountains.
-
-“I was never on a mountain in winter,” said Spider. “Gee, it’s great!”
-
-“You’ve said it!” cried Tom and Billy.
-
-Bennie didn’t speak for a moment.
-
-“Say, it sort of makes a feller feel queer,” he said, finally. “I mean,
-all this bigness!”
-
-“It’s the altitude, Bennie,” Tom remarked. “Goes to people’s heads,
-sometimes.”
-
-“Shut up,” Bennie retorted, good-naturedly. “Just the same, I know now
-why men go bugs on mountain climbing.”
-
-The descent was more rapid, and even more exciting, than the climb. They
-used the doubled rope, pulling it down to them after they had made a
-fifty foot descent (the rope was a hundred feet long), and speedily
-reaching the traverse.
-
-Here Bennie and Spider offered to let either Tom or Billy carry the rope
-across to make the railing, but both of them said, “Not on your life!”
-in one voice, and most decidedly. So Spider took it across, and when
-everybody was over, Bennie tied one end around the tree, tossed the rope
-down the gully the full hundred feet, and told the rest to slide down
-it.
-
-“How you going to get down?” Tom asked.
-
-“You’ll see.”
-
-When the last man was down, Bennie doubled the rope around the tree, and
-slid on the two strands till he reached a laurel bush in the gully.
-There he hung on, pulled his rope down, slipped it around the bush, and
-came the rest of the way, in a shower of snow.
-
-Fifteen minutes later they were down again at their snowshoes, and as
-they put them on and tramped out across the fields away from the
-mountain they looked back up at the cliffs, rising sheer and naked
-toward the blue sky.
-
-“Doesn’t seem as if we could have got up there, does it?” Bennie cried.
-
-“Now it’s all over, seems as if it was great sport,” Billy laughed. “But
-while you’re doing it—say, I wasn’t thinking of much but keeping hold of
-that old rope!”
-
-“That’s a very good thing to think of, too,” said the scout master.
-“Boys, I want you to promise me one thing, on your honor as scouts.
-That’s dangerous work, especially at this time of year. I want you to
-promise me you won’t try to take any of the other, smaller boys up
-there. We don’t want any nasty accident in our troop. Will you?”
-
-“We promise,” they all said, soberly.
-
-“Wow! I’d like to go to the Alps!” Bennie burst out, a moment later.
-“Say, Spider, let’s you an’ me go climb one of those spitzes.”
-
-“All right,” said Spider. “We’ll start tomorrow.”
-
-“Just the same,” Bennie added, seriously, “I’m going to climb a _real_
-mountain some day, if it takes a leg.”
-
-“It’ll take two of ’em, not to mention two hands, a strong back and a
-good head,” Mr. Rogers laughed.
-
-“A good head, did you hear that, Bennie?” said Tom.
-
-Bennie answered with a handful of snow.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- How Bennie Earned a Trip To Oregon
-
-
-At dinner that night Bennie was so full of his adventure on Monument
-that he described it to his father and mother in minute detail.
-
-“Good gracious, Bennie! don’t you ever _dare_ to do such a thing again!”
-his mother cried. “I don’t see what Mr. Rogers is thinking of to take
-the scouts up such a place,” she added to her husband.
-
-“Guess Rogers knows his way around,” Mr. Capen answered. “A boy’s got to
-have a certain amount of excitement to keep him out of mischief.”
-
-“Sure!” said Bennie. “You’ve said a mouthful!”
-
-“Bennie!” his mother cut in sharply. “I won’t have you talking that way
-at my table, and to your own father.”
-
-“Aw, Ma, it’s just slang—what’s the harm?”
-
-“One harm is, that it doesn’t show proper respect for your father,” she
-answered.
-
-“Sorry,” said Bennie. “Gee, I respect Pa all right. And say, Pa, can’t I
-go somewhere this summer vacation where there are _real_ mountains? Gee,
-I want to climb a _real_ mountain! Will you let me go out to Oregon and
-see Uncle Bill?”
-
-Mr. Capen didn’t answer for a moment. Finally he laid down his knife and
-fork, looked sharply at his son, and replied, “Why should I?”
-
-“Well, why shouldn’t you?” was all Bennie could think of at first. Then
-he added, “Uncle Bill said he’d take me on a trip in Oregon some time,
-if we’d come out there, and a feller ought to see his own country.
-Everybody says that—see America first. Guess it’s the best way there is
-to study geography and history and—and things.”
-
-“H’m,” said his father slowly. Then again, “H’m. Well, young man, do you
-know what you are asking? Do you know what it costs to get to Oregon and
-back? It costs a lot of money, I can tell you, and if you went, your
-mother and I would have to stay at home while I earned it, so you’d have
-to travel alone.”
-
-“Let him go across the continent alone?” exclaimed Mrs. Capen. “I guess
-not!”
-
-“Oh, gosh, you’d think I was a baby,” Bennie protested.
-
-“No, we don’t think you are a baby,” his father answered, “but we do
-think you are unreliable, and that you don’t do your school work
-faithfully, and you don’t do the things we ask you to do around the
-place. How about that dead apple tree you were going to cut up this
-week?”
-
-“Oh, gee! I forgot it,” Bennie said.
-
-“Exactly. You forgot it. You evidently forgot to study your history and
-your Latin, this week, too, I gather from what the principal told me
-to-day. Now, when you act this way, all I say is, why should I let you
-go to Oregon, or anywhere else? What have you done to show me that
-you’ll make real use of your opportunities? Your friend Bob Chandler,
-now, I’d trust. He’d keep his eyes open and learn a lot, because he
-learns every day at home.”
-
-Bennie hung his head. Then he looked up at his father.
-
-“Say, Pa, if I get good marks all the rest of the year, and if I come to
-the bank every Saturday morning and help you, and if I prune all the
-apple trees, may I go to Oregon?”
-
-“How do you know your Uncle Billy wants you?” his mother demanded.
-
-“I bet I can fix _that_ all right. Say, Pa, can I?”
-
-“You get the good marks for a month, son, and work on the apple trees,
-and come to the bank—and at the end of the month we’ll see,” his father
-answered.
-
-“Gee, that’s easy!” Bennie shouted.
-
-After dinner he started to call up Spider and suggest going to the
-movies. He got as far as the telephone, in fact, and then hesitated. It
-was a hard fight for a minute, but he won out. Slowly he turned away
-from the ’phone, walked up to his own room, got out his textbooks, and
-began to study.
-
-His father was watching him, from the library. When he had gone
-upstairs, Mr. Capen laughed.
-
-“The boy’s gone to study,” he said to his wife. “It took a mountain to
-make him!”
-
-During the next month Bennie had more than one battle with himself, and
-he didn’t always win out, either. But, on the whole, he did better than
-his father had ever dreamed he would. Spider helped him, too. Bennie had
-told nobody but Spider the reason for his reformation, and he had added
-a hope that maybe his uncle would suggest that he bring Spider along.
-Spider’s father owned the largest store in town, and Spider thought that
-if he promised to work in it spare hours that spring and the next
-winter, his father would let him go.
-
-“’Sides,” Bennie said, “if you should go, Ma and Pa would let me, I bet,
-’cause they think you’re what they call ‘responsible.’ So you just _got_
-to help me stick at these old books.”
-
-Spider was a natural student. He liked to study, and it came easy to
-him. So day after day he made Bennie come over to his house after
-supper, and studied with him. When Bennie tried to talk, he said, “Shut
-up!” After a couple of weeks, Bennie began to make the discovery that
-the only way to get a lesson learned, or any job done, is to go right
-ahead and do it. He set himself a regular hour every day to prune in the
-apple orchard, and he studied hard in the school periods, and in the
-evenings. At the end of the month, his father called him into the
-library.
-
-“Well, son,” he said, “you’ve certainly bucked up. Your report card here
-doesn’t look natural. Neither does the orchard.”
-
-“Can I write to Uncle Bill now?” Bennie grinned.
-
-“Not yet,” said his father. “You’re doing fine, but this is only one
-month. I’ve got to see if you can keep the habit. If you do as well next
-month, you may write.”
-
-“Easy,” said Bennie.
-
-He didn’t really mean that “easy,” but as a matter of fact, it was much
-easier than it had been the first month. He _was_ getting the habit.
-Before the second month was over, Tom had called him “teacher’s pet,”
-and been knocked into a slushy snow-drift and had his neck stuffed with
-snow.
-
-“I’ll teacher’s pet you!” Bennie laughed, finally letting him up.
-
-At the end of the second month Mr. Capen told him he could write to his
-uncle, and if his uncle would let him come to Oregon and take him on one
-of his mountain trips, Bennie could go—“providing, of course, you pass
-all your examinations in June,” his father added. “It’s up to you.”
-
-“I’ll pass all right!” Bennie said, joyfully. “And say, Pa, if Spider’s
-father’ll let him go, do you suppose Uncle Bill would mind if he went
-with me? Gee, it would be great to have old Spider along!”
-
-“I’m sure Uncle Billy wouldn’t mind, and I know your mother would feel a
-lot easier about your going,” Mr. Capen said. “I’ll see Spider’s father
-today.”
-
-“Golly, you’re some dad!” cried Bennie.
-
-“Well, I feel I’ve got more of a son than I had two months ago,” said
-Mr. Capen.
-
-Bennie hadn’t seen his Uncle Bill (a younger brother of his mother’s)
-for three or four years. He lived in Portland, Oregon, where he was a
-very successful doctor, and every summer he took a vacation in the
-mountains, to get himself fit for his winter grind. Bennie remembered
-him as a tall, strong, good-natured man, who always came to see Mrs.
-Capen on his rare trips East, and always talked to Bennie about what fun
-it would be to show him “a real country”—meaning Oregon. Bennie liked
-him, but it was hard, at that, to sit down in cold blood and invite
-yourself for a visit, and, still worse, to invite somebody else to go
-with you! Bennie began, and tore up, two or three letters before he got
-one that he thought would do. This is what he sent:
-
- Dear Uncle Bill:
-
- The last time you were East you pulled a lot of talk about showing me
- “a real country.” I guess you never thought I could get that far to
- see it, so you were safe. But I’ve been plugging hard this winter and
- got such high marks that Pa thought I was sick and Ma sent for the
- doctor, and he says I need a change or I’ll know too much. So I’m all
- ready to be shown that country of yours. And there’s a chum of mine
- here, an awful good scout, Bob Chandler (Spider, we call him), who
- doesn’t believe Oregon is so much, either, and he’d go along, too, if
- you asked him real polite. Besides, if he came, Ma would let me come.
- Ma thinks if I go alone a Pullman porter will think I’m a dress
- suitcase and pull me off the train at Omaha, or something. And I guess
- it’s kind of fresh my suggesting this about Spider’s going, but he’s
- an awful good scout, and he and I have been climbing Monument Mountain
- on a rope. Shall I bring my rope? It is 100 feet long, and we boiled
- it on the stove so it is soft. If we do come what clothes shall we
- bring?
-
- Your loving nephew,
- Bennie.
-
- P.S.—Mother and Father are both well and send their love.
-
- B.
-
-The chances are that before this letter was sent, Bennie’s mother had
-written to her brother. But if she did, Bennie didn’t know it. He mailed
-his letter, and counted the days it would take to reach Portland. In
-twice that time he ought to have an answer. At the end of the week he
-and Spider were haunting the post-office.
-
-Then, one day, the answer came. Bennie tore it open, and this is what he
-read:
-
- Dear Bennie:
-
- I start for Crater Lake and the Sky Line Trail on July 1st, leaving
- Portland by motor. I am a plain, rough man, but I might be improved by
- your learned society, and our scenery would be honored by your
- inspection. By all means bring Spider. Spiders are very useful in
- camp, to cook the bacon in. You’d better come two or three days ahead
- of the start, so I can look over your outfit. Bring your scout axes,
- canteens, flannel shirts, khaki breeches, leggings, and things like
- that. Boots are the most important item—very heavy, and water-proof.
- You can get good ones here. Bring snow goggles if you have them. Save
- your rope. I have one, though it isn’t boiled like yours. I always fry
- my ropes. I’ll write to you later about trains, and more about your
- equipment. Tell your mother that she is going to have a nice, quiet
- summer.
-
- Your humble uncle,
- William Warren.
-
-Bennie read this letter aloud to Spider, and they both emitted a whoop
-of joy.
-
-“Some bird, old Uncle Bill!” cried Bennie. “Always fries his ropes! I
-bet he’s got a real Alpine rope—braided and everything. Gee, I’ll bet we
-climb a real humdinger of a mountain. Maybe Mount Hood! Oh, boy!”
-
-“Say, I’d work every afternoon in the store for the rest of my life, to
-climb old Hood!” said Spider. “Come on, let’s go look up how high Mount
-Hood is.”
-
-“I’ve looked it up—it’s 11,225 feet,” said Bennie.
-
-“And Monument is 1,600,” Spider reflected. “More’n 9,000 feet taller
-than Monument! Wow!”
-
-“It’s going to be a long time till June,” said Bennie.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- Bennie and Spider Cross the Continent
-
-
-It certainly did seem a long while to both the scouts between the time
-of getting Uncle Bill’s letter and the closing of school in June. But it
-was a pretty busy time, too. Bennie had to keep on studying, so he could
-make sure of passing his examinations, and Spider had to put in an hour
-or two every day in his father’s store. Beside that, they had to have
-another go at the Monument Mountain cliffs as soon as the snow was gone
-in the spring, and at about every other rock, big or little, within
-tramping radius of home. They took the rest of the scouts along on these
-expeditions, but as nobody but Bennie and Spider were going to Oregon,
-the others didn’t get so excited about climbing as they did, and soon
-everybody was playing baseball, leaving Bennie and Spider to practice
-rock scaling alone.
-
-June came at last, and so did examinations. Bennie passed them easily,
-for the first time in his life—just because he had got his work from day
-to day. Then the time came to buy their railroad tickets and get their
-berths reserved. Before they knew it, their trunks were packed, and they
-were ready to start on the long journey.
-
-Bennie noticed that his mother didn’t say very much the night before,
-but just sat and looked at him, while he was going over the tickets with
-his father, and folding them into a new pocketbook, with $100 in new
-bills, which Mr. Capen had brought home from the bank. Bennie put the
-purse into an inside pocket, and went over to his mother.
-
-“Gee, Ma,” he said, “you’d think I was going to the North Pole or
-somewhere, instead of just to visit Uncle Bill. Nobody’s going to speak
-cross to your little Bennie, or make him take any wooden money, or hit
-him over the bean. Don’t you worry. I guess me ’n’ Spider can take a
-railroad trip without anybody needing to worry.”
-
-But though he spoke with a laugh, Bennie didn’t feel very much like
-laughing, because when his mother looked at him, and tried to smile, he
-saw the tears behind her eyes, and he knew, somehow, that it wasn’t
-because she was afraid for him, but because he was going to be away from
-her so long. He couldn’t quite understand this, but he loved his mother
-tremendously, and it made him want to weep, too. In about one minute he
-was weeping, and so was his mother, with an arm about his shoulder.
-
-Mr. Capen looked up in surprise.
-
-“Hello!” he said. “Hello! So you don’t want to go, eh?”
-
-Bennie straightened up, and gulped hard, trying to swallow his sob in a
-grin.
-
-“Where—where do you get that stuff?” he demanded.
-
-“Well, you don’t seem very _cheerful_ about going.”
-
-“It was ’cause Ma wasn’t cheerful,” said Bennie.
-
-“I’m cheerful, dear,” said his mother, smiling at him. “I wasn’t crying
-because I was sad, but just because—because—well, you won’t understand,
-but because you’re so big and grown up now, and can go away by
-yourself.”
-
-“Well, I don’t see’s that’s anything to cry about, for a fact,” said
-Bennie.
-
-“Bennie,” his father remarked, “you have never been a mother.”
-
-“You said a mouth——”
-
-“Bennie! slang, to your father!” said his mother.
-
-“You have uttered a truthful remark, sir,” grinned Bennie.
-
-The next day Mr. and Mrs. Capen and Spider’s father and mother came down
-to the depot with the two scouts. Half a dozen of their troop were
-there, too, and the last thing they heard as they waved from the car
-window, was the scout yell. The last thing Bennie saw was his mother’s
-face. She was smiling bravely at him, and keeping the tears back.
-
-In about an hour the boys had to change to a through train, which took
-them to Chicago. At Chicago they would have to spend the afternoon and
-early evening, and then take the Northwest Limited on the Union Pacific,
-which took them right to Portland, Oregon. They had their tickets in
-their pockets, and their berth checks, and about once in fifteen minutes
-they felt of themselves, to see if the precious pocketbooks were still
-there.
-
-Neither Bennie nor Spider had ever been West before, and as long as
-daylight lasted they sat close to the window. But it was dark all too
-soon. When the train entered Syracuse, and traveled, apparently, right
-down the main street, the two scouts looked right into the lighted
-shop-windows, but out in the country they saw nothing. So they went to
-bed, each with his precious pocketbook under his pillow.
-
-They were up at daylight, and dressed long before the other passengers
-began to come into the washroom. Now they saw the Great Lakes beside the
-track, like the ocean, and rolled through the smoke of Gary, where the
-great steel mills are, and saw Lake Michigan, and almost before they
-knew it, were in Chicago.
-
-The boys had careful directions what they were to do in Chicago. They
-were to get right aboard the transfer ’bus and ride over to the
-Northwestern station, checking their suitcases there. Then they could
-walk around the city, if they liked. It is a queer sensation to arrive
-in a great city which you have never seen before. Bennie and Spider,
-after the ’bus had rolled them quickly across the bridge to the other
-station, and they had checked their bags, walked out into the street,
-without any idea where they were, and turned east to see the town. They
-recrossed the bridge, walked a few blocks, and were suddenly in the
-Loop. The streets were none too wide. The elevated railroad roared and
-thundered overhead. The great buildings towered into the air. Trolleys,
-motors, thousands of people crowded the way from wall to wall.
-
-“Some burg!” Bennie exclaimed. “Little old New York hasn’t got much on
-this village. I didn’t know Chicago was so big.”
-
-“Guess we haven’t got everything in the East,” Spider answered.
-
-They walked on till they reached Michigan Boulevard, that splendid great
-avenue which sweeps down by the lake shore, and they wondered how
-Chicago stands for the smoke of the trains between the Boulevard and the
-beach.
-
-“Why don’t they _make_ the old railroad electrify itself?” Spider asked.
-“Gee, it’s turned all the marble sooty black.”
-
-It was a hot day, and getting hotter, so they finally went out on a pier
-and sat in the breeze till it was time to hunt up a place for supper.
-
-After supper they walked around the Loop, which was now filled with
-theatre crowds, and then back to the station, got their bags, and hunted
-out the track their train was to go on. The rear observation platform
-had an illuminated red sign hung out behind, with the name of the
-train—“Northwest Limited.” It gave them a thrill to see those words! And
-that train for three days would be their home. As soon as the gates were
-open, they got aboard and hunted out their berths.
-
-The next morning, when they woke, the train was rushing through Iowa.
-Mile after mile after mile of rolling country, dotted with farmhouses,
-great red barns, little wood lots close beside them, and endless acres
-of sprouting corn, and tall wheat, as far as the eye could see. Mile
-after mile, and never a town, but always the fields of corn and wheat,
-the herds of cattle, the great red barns.
-
-“Golly!” Bennie exclaimed. “We don’t know what a farm is, do we?”
-
-“I never saw so much corn in my life—I didn’t know there _was_ so much,”
-Spider answered.
-
-That day they passed through Omaha, and were still bowling along through
-the endless oceans of corn in Nebraska when night came. It was terribly
-hot now, and dusty and dirty. Spider wiped his face, and when he looked
-at his handkerchief, it was black! Bennie said he felt as if somebody
-had poured cinders down his back.
-
-“Wait till you wake up tomorrow,” said the brakeman, who overheard them,
-“and you’ll see snow.”
-
-“You look sort of honest,” Bennie laughed, “but I don’t believe you.”
-
-“All right,” said the brakeman. “Want to bet?”
-
-“Can’t,” said Bennie. “All my money’s in hundred dollar bills.”
-
-“We cross the height of land in Wyoming before you’re awake,” the
-trainman went on. “We’re up 7,000 feet or more there—in Wyoming.”
-
-“You mean the Rocky Mountains? Do we cross ’em at night?” cried Spider.
-“Gee, what tough luck.”
-
-“Not much mountains where we cross. But you’ll see mountains, all right,
-if you don’t sleep all the morning—and snow, too.”
-
-“Bring me some now, I want to take it to bed with me,” said Bennie.
-
-Spider, whose turn it was to sleep in the lower berth that night, pulled
-up the curtain as soon as it was daylight, and looked out. He gave a
-jump, reached up and poked Bennie awake, and began to dress. In ten
-minutes the boys were out on the observation platform, staring hard. The
-train was in Wyoming now, on a vast, high plateau, a country that didn’t
-look like anything they had ever seen. It rolled away to the horizon in
-every direction, like a tossing, oily gray sea, without a tree on it,
-apparently without any grass on it worth mentioning, but covered with
-pale green sage bushes in clumps here and there. It was a naked,
-desolate looking land, and yet they saw great droves of cattle wandering
-over it, and now and then a white strip of road, and finally, all of a
-sudden as the train rounded a bend, seemingly right beside the track a
-couple of miles away, a huge blue mountain covered completely on top
-with a cap of white snow, and streaked with snow all down the ravines on
-its northern side.
-
-The scouts gave a yell of joy at the sight. “A snow mountain!” they
-cried.
-
-“Do I win or not?” said the brakeman, appearing behind them. “That’s the
-mountain. Pretty soon, off south, you’ll see some higher ones, down in
-Utah.”
-
-“How far is it to that mountain—about five miles?” Bennie asked.
-
-It looked two, but he thought he’d add a few.
-
-The trainman grinned. “I wouldn’t try to walk it before breakfast,” said
-he. “It’s about twenty or thirty, I reckon.”
-
-That day they rolled along through endless miles of the naked cattle
-country, that in the East would have seemed like a desert. No New
-England cow could have lived on it, Spider declared. Then they began to
-get into the Idaho mountains, on the branch line, and turned and twisted
-down cañons with the naked red hills folding up in front of and behind
-the train. They went to sleep in Idaho and woke up in Oregon—woke up to
-see more mountains, and more snow—long ranges of mountains to left and
-right with snow on the summits, though it was now almost July first, and
-hot as Tophet in the train.
-
-The train presently began to climb an endless grade, up and up and up,
-getting over the pass of the Blue Mountains, and into heavily timbered
-country—real woods at last, after the long ride through the prairie and
-the sage brush. On and on went the train, till at last it reached the
-Columbia River, and the excited boys, braving the cinders that swirled
-in on the observation platform, sat out there and saw at last below them
-the great green river rushing swiftly along, cutting its way through the
-high, rocky banks.
-
-These banks began to get higher and steeper. They were entering the
-gorge of the Columbia, where it cuts through the Cascade range. Soon the
-banks were real precipices, 1,000, 2,000 feet high. At The Dalles, they
-picked up the Columbia Highway, the most wonderful motor road in
-America, and could see where it was cut right out of the sides of the
-cliffs in places. When the train stopped at Hood River, a lot of people
-got off to stretch, the boys with them, and a man took them down the
-platform and said, “Look!”
-
-They looked to the south, and there it was! Shooting up apparently right
-behind the depot, shaped like a cone, dazzling white, tall, stately,
-beautiful against the sky—Mount Hood! These were the eternal snows!
-There was a real climb!
-
-Bennie just gasped for a second. Then he found his tongue. “It—it’s just
-as big as I thought it would be!” he said.
-
-“It’s the finest thing in the world,” said the man. “I live in Portland,
-and every clear day I look at it, sixty miles away, and it’s like a
-friend.”
-
-“Is it hard to climb?” Spider asked.
-
-“No,” said the man. “It’s a cinch. If you’re looking for a climb, go
-down and tackle Jefferson.”
-
-“Never even heard of it,” said Bennie.
-
-“There are a lot of things out here you eastern folks never heard of,”
-the man answered.
-
-The boys wanted to ask him more, but just then the conductor called “All
-aboard,” and they lost him in the rush.
-
-For the next hour they were busy looking at the scenery, at the great
-river on one side, and the great cliff walls on the other, with
-thousand-foot waterfalls leaping down almost on the train, and the
-Columbia Highway running alongside of the track in places, in other
-places disappearing and coming into sight again far up on top of some
-headland.
-
-“Gee, I wish we were in a motor!” Spider sighed.
-
-“Maybe Uncle Bill will take us this way in his,” said Bennie.
-
-Now the cliffs grew lower. The river was through the gorge. Presently
-the river disappeared, and the train ran through level land a little
-way, and the houses began to get thicker and thicker. They crossed
-another river on a drawbridge, and saw tramp ships lying up to the
-docks, and on the other side rolled into the Portland depot.
-
-At the train gate, looming up above the crowd, Bennie spied the head of
-his uncle, and in another minute he had him by the hand, and was
-introducing Spider, and Uncle Billy was putting the dress suitcases into
-his car, and then they were off through the streets of Portland, with
-the lights coming on, the darkness falling.
-
-“I guess you boys are pretty hot and tired, eh?” said Uncle Bill. “Of
-course, you never have any hot weather in the East.”
-
-“It’s about like this Christmas time at home,” Bennie answered. “I was
-just wishing I had an overcoat.”
-
-“You’ll wish you had a couple before I get through with you,” said Uncle
-Bill. “I heard to-day there are seven feet of snow yet on the rim of
-Crater Lake. We’ve got to camp up there. It’ll be pretty slippery, too,
-getting down to the water. Guess we’ll have to fry a couple of ropes.”
-
-“Boil mine—about four minutes,” said Bennie.
-
-His uncle laughed as he put the car up a steep grade out of the business
-section to the heights overlooking the city. The residences look right
-out over the town, and now they could see the checkerboard squares of
-the streets, marked out with electric lights. They stopped at the
-doctor’s house, and he showed them in, his housekeeper meeting them.
-
-“Now beat it and get a bath,” he said, “and then grub! Hurry up, for I’m
-all ready to eat, and if you keep me waiting, I’ll have to begin on one
-of those ropes.”
-
-“Say, he’s a regular scout,” said Spider, as they were cleaning up.
-
-“Boy, I got a hunch we’re going to have some good time!” answered Bennie
-from the tub.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- All Aboard for Crater Lake!—and Dumpling in the Other Car
-
-
-When the boys came downstairs, Uncle Billy, who was a bachelor, led the
-way at once into the dining-room, and they began to eat.
-
-“I’ve got a surprise for you,” he said, as he carved the meat. “How’d
-you boys like to be movie actors?”
-
-“Oh, you Charlie Chaplin!” Bennie grinned. “Sure, I’d like it. Spider,
-though, ain’t beautiful enough.”
-
-“Of course, he hasn’t your classic Greek features,” said Uncle Billy,
-looking hard at Bennie’s snub nose. “But maybe he can ride a horse. Can
-you ride a horse, Bennie?”
-
-“Sure—I guess so. I never tried.”
-
-“Can you, Spider?”
-
-“Not very well, sir. I have ridden our old delivery horse a good bit,
-though, but mostly bareback.”
-
-“You see, Bennie,” the doctor laughed, “he’s going to be a better actor
-than you are, after all, in spite of your fatal beauty.”
-
-“What do you mean, actors, anyhow?” Bennie demanded. “What’s the big
-idea?”
-
-“Well,” the doctor explained, “we’re not going alone on this trip. I
-have a friend, a business man here in Portland, who is a fine amateur
-photographer. He’s got a new movie camera now, that he wants to
-experiment with. He wants to take a sort of scenic picture of the Oregon
-mountains, so he’s coming along, in his car, with his son, Lester. You
-and Spider and Lester and I have got to be the troupe. Whenever he sees
-a nice precipice he wants to shoot, we’ll have to do a Douglas Fairbanks
-up the side of it, or make a Pearl White jump down a thousand-foot
-waterfall. How does that strike you?”
-
-“Uncle Billy,” Bennie said, very solemnly, “you have come to exactly the
-right people. Spider and me—I—are the original human flies. We walk up
-precipices before breakfast every day at home.”
-
-“With a boiled rope?” his uncle laughed. “Well, I’m glad you’re trained
-for the job. Wait till you see Lester Stone, though. He’s the real
-athlete! Slender, wiry, hard as nails!”
-
-“How old is he?” the scouts asked, instantly alert and a little bit
-jealous. They’d show him eastern boys could be hard and athletic, too!
-
-“Just about your age,” the doctor answered carelessly. “He and his
-father will be over to meet you after dinner.”
-
-It wasn’t long after dinner before the door-bell rang, and the scouts
-heard Uncle Billy greeting somebody in the hall. A moment later he
-ushered in a big six-footer of a man, and a boy who was just about as
-wide as he was high.
-
-“My nephew, Bennie Capen, and his old college chum, Spider Chandler,”
-said Uncle Billy. “Boys, this is _my_ college chum, Dick Stone. And this
-is Dick’s willowy and athletic little son, Lester. I’m trying to get
-some flesh on his bones, because the poor little thing has been puny
-since childhood.”
-
-Mr. Stone shook hands so hard that Bennie winced, and then they shook
-hands with Lester, who had a round, pink face like a cherub and eyes
-that danced merrily.
-
-Bennie and Spider couldn’t help bursting out laughing.
-
-“What’s the matter?” Uncle Billy asked solemnly. “Did somebody make a
-joke? I never can see a joke!”
-
-“You can make one, all right,” Bennie laughed. “Gee, you said Lester was
-wiry and hard.”
-
-“What’s the joke in that?” the doctor demanded, looking very stern. “He
-is! Only the wires are insulated. You poke his arm and see if he isn’t
-hard.”
-
-Lester doubled his fist, and tightened the muscles of his arm, and
-Bennie and Spider hit him above the elbow. To their amazement, he _was_
-hard—at that point, anyway. They looked at him with new respect.
-
-“Just the same,” Bennie said, “I hope you fried that rope good and
-plenty.”
-
-(“He looks just like an apple dumpling,” Spider whispered to Bennie, a
-minute later.)
-
-(“Sure, let’s call him Dumpling,” Bennie whispered back.)
-
-(“Guess we’d better not begin right now,” Spider suggested. “That guy’d
-make a great guard on our football team.”)
-
-(“If he fell on the ball, it would explode,” laughed Spider.)
-
-The rest of the evening was spent in going over the maps of Oregon, to
-lay out their trip, and in planning equipment. They were to be gone six
-weeks or more, and expected to camp all the time. As they were going to
-get from place to place in only two motor cars, which between them had
-to carry five passengers and all the equipment, it took close figuring.
-The scouts, of course, didn’t have much to say about all this. They just
-sat and listened, because they were guests, and, besides, they had never
-been off on such an expedition.
-
-But what fun it was only to listen! Have you ever been off on a camping
-trip? Of course you have. So you know the joy of getting together a day
-or two before the start, each person with a list of things he thinks
-ought to be taken, and then going over the lists, checking them off to
-see that nothing is being taken that is not needed, and nothing is
-forgotten that _is_ needed. It’s almost as much fun as the trip itself.
-
-The scouts soon discovered that Mr. Stone was as jolly as Uncle Billy,
-and that “Dumpling” was even fuller of fun than his father. Before an
-hour had passed, the scouts were calling him Dumpling to his face, and
-then his father and the doctor took it up; but Dumpling himself only
-grinned the broader and said, “Ho, I don’t care what you call me, so
-long’s you call me to dinner.”
-
-The next morning the boys were up early, and out of the house, to get a
-glimpse across the city of the white pyramid of Mount Hood against the
-eastern sky. They spent that day hard at work with the doctor getting
-the equipment out and sorted and packed into the car.
-
-They had never seen an automobile rigged like Uncle Billy’s. It was a
-powerful five-passenger car, with extra braces on the running-boards.
-First the doctor screwed a kind of iron fence on one running-board which
-came up as high as the tops of the doors. Then, on the other, he set two
-boxes, also as high as the doors, and as deep as the running-board.
-These boxes opened not at the top, but at the front, with hinged doors.
-Inside of them were shelves. On the shelves of one he stood the
-provisions—the canned fruits, the condensed milk, and all the other
-things they were going to take at the start. The other was filled with
-camp dishes. When the boxes were full, the doors were shut and locked,
-and the boxes strapped firmly to the car.
-
-Then, on the other side, in the space between the fence and the side of
-the car, went the heavy canvas bags containing the tent and the three
-sleeping bags. These bags were wonderful things. They rolled up and went
-into canvas sacks. But when you unrolled them, you found inside a tire
-pump, and you pumped them up with air, making a nice pneumatic mattress
-to sleep on. Inside the canvas flap which strapped over this mattress
-were several warm blankets.
-
-“Say, boy!” cried Bennie. “This beats sleeping on old hemlock boughs,
-the way we have to at home, eh, Spider? Remember the way the boughs used
-to get all full of sticks about one A. M. last summer?”
-
-“I’ll say so. We’re going to sleep so well on these we’ll forget to wake
-up.”
-
-“Oh, no you won’t! Not with me in camp,” the doctor smiled.
-
-After the running-boards were loaded, Uncle Billy got out a wonderful
-camp stove, which collapsed into three pieces, with the funnel also
-shutting up, and put the whole thing into a canvas sack, which lay on
-the floor of the car. Then he put in three folding camp stools and a
-folding table. Finally he handed each boy a stout khaki dunnage bag.
-
-“Now,” said he, “get all your stuff into those two bags! No suitcases
-allowed on this trip! Your two bags and mine, and the canteens and our
-cameras and the alpenstocks and the fried rope, and overcoats and one of
-you boys and anything else we’ve forgotten have all got to go on the
-rear seat.”
-
-“Think I’ll sit in front with you,” said Bennie.
-
-“Think I’ll ride with the Stones,” said Spider.
-
-“Not with Dumpling in the car, you won’t!” Bennie laughed—“unless he
-travels in a trailer on behind.”
-
-The doctor prescribed early bed that evening, because they were to get
-an early start.
-
-“What do you call early, seven o’clock?” asked Bennie.
-
-Uncle Billy looked pained. “Seven o’clock!” he sniffed. “My esteemed
-nephew, at seven o’clock on this trip we will usually have traveled at
-least fifty miles, and you’ll be asking about lunch. I’ll wake you up at
-five.”
-
-“And I thought I was going to have a nice summer!” said Bennie,
-pretending to be very gloomy.
-
-At five o’clock the next morning, he and Spider were sleeping soundly
-when a voice boomed into their dreams, “All aboard for Crater Lake! Last
-call!”
-
-They were out of bed and rushing to get first into the tub before they
-half knew what had happened.
-
-But it was really long after seven before they got started. The dunnage
-bags had to be packed with the clothes they were going to need,
-breakfast eaten, everything gone over again to make sure nothing was
-forgotten, and then followed a wait of an hour before the Stones’ car
-arrived, loaded down like theirs, with the tripod of the movie camera in
-a case on top of the luggage in the rear, and Dumpling and his father
-sitting in front.
-
-“All aboard!” shouted the doctor.
-
-“Well, how do you get aboard?” said Bennie. “You can’t open a single
-door.”
-
-“If you can’t get into a car over the top of the door you’ll never get
-up Mount Jefferson,” said his uncle.
-
-Bennie was in the front seat with exactly two motions. Spider dove into
-the rear, and found a hole to sit in amid the luggage. The doctor and
-Mr. Stone tooted their horns, the housekeeper waved from the door—and
-they were off!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- Bennie and Spider Have to Make After-dinner Speeches, and Bennie’s
- Knees Knock
-
-
-The day before had been cloudy and cold, though the boys had been too
-busy with their packing to notice it much. Now, however, that they were
-off at last, and wanted to see every bit of country there was to be
-seen, they were acutely conscious that it was a heavy day, without a
-single glimpse of Mount Hood through the vapor, and the threat of rain
-at any minute.
-
-“Nice weather you’ve handed us for a start off,” said Bennie to his
-uncle.
-
-“Oh, this won’t last long,” Uncle Billy assured him. “We have the finest
-climate in Oregon of anywhere in the world. It’s never very cold in
-winter, and it’s never very hot in summer, and our tent probably won’t
-get wet on this entire trip.”
-
-“Is that so?” said Bennie. “Some smart tent, I’ll say. Look at your
-wind-shield.”
-
-Indeed, as he spoke, the first drops of the rain began to splash on the
-glass.
-
-“You wait!” Uncle Billy smiled.
-
-On the edge of Portland they stopped for gas, and the Stones’ car pulled
-in behind them. A big, smiling man, covered with axle grease, came out
-to fill them up.
-
-“Hello, Doc,” he said. “Off for a trip? Got a fine day to start. As far
-as I can see, it rains for twelve months of the year in Portland, and it
-ain’t very pleasant the rest of the time.”
-
-Bennie and Spider shouted with joy at this, and the garage man looked a
-little surprised.
-
-“Well, that went big!” he said.
-
-“Uncle Bill didn’t tip you the wink in time,” Bennie answered. “He’s
-just been telling us it never rains in Oregon.”
-
-“Sorry I crabbed your game, Doc,” the man laughed. “Didn’t know these
-scouts weren’t native web-feet.”
-
-“They’ll not see any more rain till they get back to Portland,” the
-doctor said, quite seriously.
-
-The garage man winked solemnly at Bennie, who grinned back.
-
-“Well, Uncle Bill, we sure have got one on you now,” Bennie laughed, as
-they drove on. “Eh, Spider?”
-
-“Kind of looks so,” Spider had to admit.
-
-“The sun will be coming out at Salem, and this is the last rain you’ll
-see, except maybe a thunder shower or two,” Uncle Billy persisted. “And
-now, just for that, I’ll tell you something else. We’ll get to
-Salem—that’s the State capital—in time for lunch. The Boy Scouts of
-Salem are going to give us the luncheon, not on your account, but
-because you are with me. You two boys will have to make speeches. Good,
-long speeches, too, not just ‘Glad to be here.’ Got one on me, have you?
-Take that!”
-
-“Aw, quit your kiddin’,” Bennie cried. “Not really, Uncle Bill?”
-
-“Gosh, I never made a speech in my life!” Spider groaned from the rear
-seat. “I’d just go right down through the floor.”
-
-“Our floors are made of good old Douglas fir—not a chance,” the doctor
-grinned. “You’ll have to stand right up and show ’em how good
-Massachusetts is.”
-
-“Poor old Massachusetts,” said Bennie. “She’s got a bum chance to make a
-hit with us representing her. Oh, golly, what’ll I do?”
-
-“I guess you’d better be thinking of something to say as we go along. I
-was going to stop so we could pick some real Oregon cherries on the way,
-but maybe I’d better not. You’ll need to keep your alleged minds on your
-speeches.”
-
-Bennie and Spider looked at each other and groaned.
-
-“Honest, Uncle Billy, I think this is a real nice climate,” said Bennie.
-
-“Ha! nothing doing! You can’t get around me that way. Besides, they are
-probably cooking the luncheon already. The invitations are all out.”
-
-“Has old Dumplin’ got to make a speech, too?”
-
-“Oh, no,” said the doctor. “He’s a native, not a distinguished visitor
-from the East.”
-
-“We’ll be extinguished visitors by the time it’s over,” Spider said.
-
-“Hi, that’s good! Remember it, and put it in your speech,” Bennie cried.
-“Wish I could think of something funny. Gosh, you never can when you
-want to.” He looked woebegone.
-
-“You get up with a face like that, and you’ll make a hit like Charlie
-Chaplin,” Spider assured him.
-
-The boys cheered up a bit, however, as the rain ceased and the car sped
-on up a good road, through the rich fields of the Willamette valley,
-mile after mile of prune orchards and cherry orchards and hop
-plantations and Loganberry fields where the canes, tied in rows to
-wires, stretched for hundreds of yards on either side of the road.
-
-Presently they came to a “ranch” (as everybody out there calls his farm
-or orchard), where the cherries were being picked, and the doctor
-stopped the car. The Stones, who were right behind, stopped too, and
-everybody got out.
-
-“Sell us some cherries?” asked the doctor.
-
-“Got anything to pick ’em in?” asked the owner of the orchard.
-
-“Sure—the radiator pails.”
-
-“All right, you can pick all you want in that first tree, for fifty
-cents. Hold on, though. Not that cute little feller there. I don’t want
-my tree busted down.”
-
-“I’ll stand below and you can throw ’em into my mouth,” Dumpling
-laughed.
-
-They got the collapsible canvas pails which were carried in the cars to
-fill the radiators with, and began to pick. The cherries were huge
-things, of a deep, wonderful, winey red, and almost melted in your
-mouth. Bennie and Spider had never seen nor tasted such cherries, and
-they ate two for every one they picked. The pails were full in five
-minutes, at that, and still the tree hardly seemed touched.
-
-“What’s the name of these babies?” Bennie asked.
-
-“Bing,” said the doctor.
-
-“No, I didn’t ask you to play soldier. I asked you what’s the name of
-these cherries?”
-
-“Bing, I tell you. Bing, B-i-n-g.”
-
-“Well, it sounds like Bing,” Bennie laughed. “That’s a silly name for a
-cherry, but, oh, boy, some fruit!”
-
-“You won’t be in any condition to eat that lunch when we get to Salem,”
-the doctor laughed.
-
-“Soon’s I get there, and think about that old speech again, I won’t want
-any lunch, anyhow,” Bennie answered. “Might ’s well fill up now.”
-
-The two cars rolled into Salem at noon. Salem is a small city, built
-around a large central park in which the State Capitol building stands.
-This park was now filled with roses, the bushes even growing in long
-rows between the sidewalks and the street. The doctor ran the car around
-this park, and then hunted up the camp where they were to be entertained
-by the Salem Boy Scouts. This was in a grove, just outside the town, and
-about fifty scouts were already there, with three or four fires going.
-As the two cars came up, the scout master gave a sharp command, the
-troops fell into formation, at attention, and there was a loud cheer of
-welcome as Bennie and Spider tried to climb out over the luggage
-gracefully. Poor Dumpling had a hard time getting out of his car, but
-not one of the Salem scouts laughed. In a few minutes, the scout master
-had presented the guests all around, and preparations for the luncheon
-began in earnest.
-
-It was a good lesson in scouting, all right. Different boys had definite
-jobs, and they went at them quickly and efficiently. Sawhorses and
-boards were produced from a wagon, and made into rough tables. More
-boards, on boxes, made the seats. Paper plates, knives, forks, and
-spoons, and tin cups were put in place. The scouts who could cook best
-were busy at the fires. There was the smell of coffee, of broiling
-steak, of frying potatoes, and of flapjacks. Three or four of the scouts
-meanwhile were putting great dishes of fruit—berries and cherries—on the
-tables. In spite of all the cherries they had eaten, the smells made
-Spider and Bennie hungry again. They tried, of course, to help with the
-preparations, but the Salem scouts wouldn’t let them.
-
-“No, you’re guests,” the scout master said.
-
-Finally the scout master clapped his hands, and called in a loud voice,
-“Come and get it!” This was the first time Spider and Bennie had heard
-the western camp call to grub. But they didn’t need to be told what it
-meant.
-
-As soon as the food was eaten, the scout master rose in his place, and
-announced that troop leader Tom Robinson would welcome their guests to
-Oregon. Tom Robinson, a tall, powerful boy of sixteen, got up looking
-extremely scared, and everybody shouted and applauded, whereupon he
-looked scareder still. But he made a nice little speech, in spite of his
-nervousness, telling Spider and Bennie how glad the Salem scouts were
-that they had come so far to see Oregon, which, he said, had the finest
-climate in the world, and hoping they’d have a good time, and inviting
-them to come and visit the Salem scouts in their camp up in the
-mountains in August.
-
-Everybody applauded again, and then looked at Spider and Bennie,
-yelling, “Speech, speech!”
-
-“You do it,” whispered Bennie to Spider.
-
-“Go on—you got to do it,” Spider retorted.
-
-“You’ve both got to do it,” the scout master laughed.
-
-So Bennie got up. He felt queer in his knees, which didn’t seem to half
-hold him up, and his mouth felt dry. When he finally spoke, his voice
-sounded strange to him, as if it belonged to somebody else.
-
-“We’re awfully glad to be here,” he said, “and you scouts are sure good
-to us to give us this grand feed. I ate so many Bing cherries this
-morning I thought all I could do would be to make a noise like a robin,
-but I sure got away with my share of the grub. It’s pretty fine to come
-4,000 miles, all across the U. S. A., and find a bunch of scouts out
-here just the same as at home. Some organization, the Boy Scouts!
-’Course, we came to see the wilderness, and about all the wilderness
-we’ve seen so far is a big city like Portland, and Salem, and about ten
-million fruit trees, and sixteen million automobiles. And we heard it
-was a good climate out here, too, but my uncle’s garage man says it
-rains twelve months in the year and isn’t very pleasant the rest of the
-time. But we sure like Oregon, and you fellows are a great bunch of
-scouts, and—and I guess that’s all I got to say.”
-
-Bennie sat down abruptly, amid much applause.
-
-“Some speech!” Spider whispered.
-
-It was now Spider’s turn.
-
-“Everything Bennie said goes for me,” he began, “except this knock on
-the climate. It was raining when we left Portland, but Dr. Warren told
-us it would be clear when we got to Salem, and here’s the old sun coming
-out now. I want to say the Salem climate’s all right—like the Salem
-scouts. And Bennie forgot something, too. He’s always forgetting things.
-Once he forgot it was vacation, and tried to get into the schoolhouse.
-Now he’s forgotten to say to you fellows that when any of you come East,
-you just show up in Southmead, where we live, and we’ll try to be half
-as decent to you as you’ve been to us. And we hope you’ll all come.”
-
-Loud cheers greeted this speech, and Bennie applauded harder than
-anybody.
-
-“That last part goes, you bet,” he shouted. “I didn’t really forget it,
-though. I just got rattled.”
-
-The meeting broke up with a scout cheer, and the boys heard the shouts
-and good-byes even after the cars had started down the road.
-
-“Some swell feed!” said Bennie. “Pretty nice of ’em, eh, Spider? I guess
-they must like you pretty well, Uncle Bill, or they wouldn’t have done
-this for us.”
-
-“I ran into them in their camp last summer, and got to know ’em,” the
-doctor answered. “Well, how do you like being an after-dinner orator?”
-
-Bennie looked sober. “Tell you one thing,” he replied. “Next year in
-school I’m going in for debating, the way Spider does. I’m not going to
-feel such a boob on my feet again. Gee, I was scared pink.”
-
-“I won’t let you forget that, Bennie,” said Spider. “We’ll make a
-Demosthenes of you yet.”
-
-The cars were now racing southward up the Willamette valley, and
-traveling on the fine Pacific Highway, which stretches all the way from
-Portland to the California boundary.
-
-“I want to make Eugene tonight,” said Uncle Billy. “That’s why I’m
-stepping on her. Eugene is the town where the State University is—the
-college that Harvard came west to play football with a few years ago.
-We’ll find a good camp site just south of Eugene, and spend the night
-there. Tomorrow we’ll push on as far as we can toward Medford.”
-
-“When do we get to Crater Lake?” the boys asked.
-
-“Well, I doubt if we make Medford tomorrow. It’ll take another day. Then
-we’ll stock up with provisions, and try to make the lake the next day,
-which will be the Fourth of July. That’s the day the Park is due to
-open.”
-
-“Can we get some firecrackers in Medford?”
-
-“Sure!” the doctor laughed.
-
-The valley grew narrower as they ran on southward, and the hills on
-either side seemed higher. But still the boys saw no mountains, and none
-of the great forest trees they’d heard about in Oregon. They reached
-Eugene late in the day—a lively little town, with the big, handsome
-buildings of the University dominating it. Still they saw no mountains.
-
-“Well, I suppose there _are_ some, but you got to show me,” Bennie
-declared.
-
-Beyond the town, they ran the cars up a side road to a patch of woods by
-a stream, and hurried to make camp and get supper before it was dark.
-
-“Let’s see how good scouts you really are,” Mr. Stone said to the boys.
-“One of you set up the stove and make a fire, and two of you get up the
-tents and blow up the sleeping bags. Uncle Bill and I will get the grub
-ready.”
-
-Dumplin’ took the stove as his job, because he knew how it worked. As
-soon as it was set up, he hustled around for dead wood. Meanwhile Bennie
-and Spider strung the ropes between trees for the tents, cut pegs, and
-got the tents up. Then they tackled the sleeping bags. It was warm that
-evening, and before they had gone far they were hot.
-
-“Say, how much air do these things hold?” Bennie called. “I been pumping
-an hour.”
-
-“Well, sleep on it flat if you’re tired. But I want mine blown up,” his
-uncle answered.
-
-At last they had all five bags blown up and laid in the tents. By this
-time the fire was roaring in the stove, and Dumplin’ had a neat little
-wood-pile beside it, the two men had set up a folding table and chairs,
-and food and coffee were cooking on the stove. Pretty soon Mr. Stone
-called out, “Come and get it!” and with a lantern hanging from a limb
-over the table, they all sat down.
-
-“Well, this sure beats a hotel!” said Uncle Bill.
-
-“Beats a couple of hotels,” said Dumplin’, wiping his perspiring
-forehead. “You don’t have to wear a coat here.”
-
-“Wait till you get to the lake, and you’ll be hollering for a coat,” his
-father smiled.
-
-After supper, the boys drew lots to see who would wash the dishes.
-Bennie lost, and the rest built a little camp fire between the two tents
-while he was clearing up. They lay around the fire talking for an hour,
-and then Uncle Billy ordered “Bed!”
-
-“Early start tomorrow,” he said. “Everybody out at five.”
-
-The boys undressed and crawled into their sleeping bags. Then they
-bounced up and down to feel how comfortable they were.
-
-“Mine’s too hard,” said Bennie.
-
-“So’s mine,” said Spider.
-
-“You’ve got so much air in mine I’ll have a blowout,” said Uncle Billy.
-
-“Gee, think of all that work for nothing!” Bennie groaned.
-
-If anybody had been outside the tent, he would have heard three little
-hisses as they let some air out of their beds. Then, three minutes
-later, he would have heard three people breathing in sound slumber.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- Held Up by the Snow, With the Thermometer at 86°
-
-
-The next day, sure enough Uncle Billy routed everybody out at five
-o’clock. They had pancakes and syrup, and bacon and coffee and toast for
-breakfast, and then camp had to be struck and the cars packed again. The
-sleeping bags had to be deflated and rolled up by the three boys, and
-put in their canvas cases. The tents had to be rolled up and also put in
-cases. The dunnage bags had to be repacked, the dishes washed and put
-into the boxes on Uncle Billy’s car. It was long after seven before they
-got away.
-
-On this day, at last, they began to get a taste of wild Oregon—but just
-a taste, the doctor told them. They finally came to the head of the
-Willamette valley, and climbed up a long grade, beside a wild, tumbling
-stream, amid huge old fir trees, and then down a long, wooded cañon on
-the farther side. They rolled through more valleys full of fruit
-orchards, and they passed through several towns. In one of them, where
-they stopped to get an ice cream soda—or rather ice cream sodas, for
-both the scouts had two apiece and Dumplin’ had three—a big banner was
-stretched across the street, with the words on it in letters two feet
-high:
-
- IT’S THE CLIMATE.
-
-“Golly, you wouldn’t think they had any climate anywhere else,” said
-Bennie. “Out here, you’ve only got one kind. In little old Massachusetts
-we have every kind.”
-
-“Sure, and on the same day, too,” Uncle Billy laughed.
-
-All that afternoon they climbed up endless grades, where the highway was
-cut out of the sides of the cañons, and the great trees shadowed the
-road, and down again, and up again.
-
-“Are we in the Cascade Mountains now?” the boys asked.
-
-“No, these are just hills,” said the doctor. “You won’t see any
-mountains till we get almost into Medford. Cheer up, they’ll be there
-tomorrow.”
-
-The grades were so numerous, and so long and hard, that it was
-impossible to make as many miles in a day here as it is in the East. As
-the sun began to sink, the doctor began watching for camp sites, and
-presently he pulled into a field beside the road where a brook came down
-from a hill, and they camped for a second night on the road.
-
-An early start again was ordered, and now the grades grew less severe
-again, and after a few hours the cars ran out into a wide plain, and
-suddenly the boys gave a yell.
-
-“The mountains!” they cried.
-
-Sure enough, there they were. To the east lay the blue rampart of the
-Cascade range, and right in the centre, covered white with snow, shot up
-the peaked pyramid of Mount McLaughlin. To the south and west, shutting
-the valley in, rose more mountains, some of them still showing snow on
-their summits. Across the head of the valley ran a tumbling green
-stream, the Rogue River.
-
-“That river comes down from close to Crater Lake,” said Uncle Billy.
-
-“Gee, I’d like to get into it right now,” Bennie remarked.
-
-A dozen miles more, and they were in Medford, a neat, clean little city
-(it would be called a town in the East), surrounded by flourishing fruit
-orchards and grain fields. The boys scouted around for some crackers and
-fireworks, while the men restocked the cars with provisions, got gas and
-oil, and inquired about the road to the lake.
-
-“Well,” said the doctor, as they met at the cars again, “we don’t get to
-Crater Lake tomorrow.”
-
-“Aw, gee, why not?” Bennie demanded.
-
-“Road’s not open yet to the rim. Can’t get much beyond Government Camp.”
-
-“What’s the trouble—snow?” asked Mr. Stone.
-
-The doctor nodded.
-
-“Snow!” said Spider, wiping his hot forehead. “Don’t sound possible.”
-
-“It’s the climate,” said Bennie.
-
-Everybody laughed, and Dumplin’ announced he was going to get another
-ice cream soda while the leaders decided what to do.
-
-When he came back, the doctor and Mr. Stone had decided to go back up
-the road and then up the Rogue River for a few miles, on the way to
-Crater Lake, and camp there over the Fourth and the day following. By
-the third day it was probable, the doctor said, that the government
-rangers would have the snow blasted out of the road.
-
-“_Blasted_ out?” said Spider.
-
-“Sure; they use TNT. It would take forever to shovel those drifts.”
-
-“Oh, let’s go up and watch ’em!” Bennie pleaded.
-
-“And get the cars mired? No, thank you! We’ll camp by the Rogue River
-and wait. You can swim and Spider can study birds, and Dumplin’ can wish
-he was nearer a soda fountain. Come on.”
-
-They turned off the highway at the Rogue River bridge, and the minute
-they were off the macadam the dust began to fly. Spider looked back into
-the cloud.
-
-“Glad I’m not in the Stones’ car,” he said. “What makes it so dusty?”
-
-“This soil is all volcanic ash or pumice,” said the doctor, “and it
-hasn’t rained here, probably, for a month, and won’t for five or six
-more.”
-
-“It’s the climate,” chuckled Bennie.
-
-Two or three miles up this dusty road, and close to a small, dilapidated
-looking house, made of boards and huge, hand-hewn shingles or “shakes,”
-the doctor put the car off the road and into a field which was baked as
-hard as a brick, with the grass dried up and brown. At the edge of this
-field was a grove of trees with shiny copper-colored bark and glossy
-green leaves, called laurel trees, and beyond them the bank plunged
-sharp down for fifty feet to the rushing green river.
-
-“Camp,” said Uncle Billy, stopping the car. “Here’s where we live for
-two days at least.”
-
-As soon as camp was made, and wood cut, the entire party ran down the
-bank to a gravelly beach by the river’s edge, stripped, and plunged into
-the water. Five yells immediately rose in the stillness, and five bodies
-came splashing back to shore.
-
-“That water comes down from the snow-fields, all right,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“That’s why it’s so green,” said the doctor.
-
-“And why Dumplin’s so pink,” laughed Bennie, pointing at Lester, who
-certainly looked like a very plump boiled lobster.
-
-That night they sang and joked around the camp fire till nine o’clock,
-because there was no early start in the morning. When Bennie woke up,
-however, he saw that Spider’s bed was empty. Going down to the river in
-his pyjamas, for a plunge, he found Spider, all dressed, with a
-note-book in his hand, watching birds.
-
-“Gee, this is a great place to see birds,” Spider called. “I’ve got nine
-kinds already, most of ’em that I never saw before. And you want to
-watch for the funny little lizards on the ground.”
-
-Bennie almost immediately heard a rustle in the dead leaves beside him,
-and looking down saw a small lizard-like creature scurry up on to a flat
-stone. He reached down to pick it up—and the lizard wasn’t there! He was
-on a stone two feet away.
-
-“Say!” he called, “this is the quickest thing I ever saw. Beats a
-weasel.”
-
-“Mr. Stone says they call ’em swifts,” Spider answered.
-
-Among the new birds that Spider saw, and added to his bird list, he
-later learned from Mr. Stone and the doctor, were ravens, western
-tanagers (a beautiful, bright yellow bird), valley quail, camp robbers,
-water ousels, which live always by the water and build their nests
-behind the waterfalls, the western catbird, which is much like the
-eastern, only brownish, and blue jays of a much darker color than in the
-East. These jays fought and squawked around the camp all day long. Then
-there were crows and other birds he already knew.
-
-“Well, never mind your old birds now,” Bennie said after breakfast.
-“This is the Glorious Fourth. Let’s fire off some crackers and do
-something to celebrate.”
-
-“We might run down to Medford and see the parade,” the doctor suggested.
-
-This was hailed with delight, so they unpacked the cars, and started off
-for the day. Medford was full of people. There was a parade and a ball
-game and a lively time generally.
-
-“Well, this is what I call wild life in Oregon,” Bennie laughed. “We
-came 4,000 miles to get into the wilderness, and here we are with about
-ten thousand other people watching a parade in a city. Some wilderness!”
-
-“You wait,” his uncle cautioned. “In about a week, you’ll have so much
-wilderness you’ll be crying for home and mother.”
-
-That night, back in camp, they set off their own fireworks, shooting the
-rockets from an improvised chute out over the water, and the next day
-they spent in exploring two or three old gold diggings they found by the
-bank—shafts which some prospector had laboriously dug far into the
-earth, but without getting much gold, apparently, for the diggings had
-all been abandoned. Bennie and Spider spent two or three hours searching
-everywhere for nuggets, but they found nothing. It was hot and sultry,
-too, and everybody was getting impatient.
-
-“I’m going to start tomorrow for the lake,” the doctor said that night.
-“We’ll camp below the rim if we can’t get up. It’s too hot here.”
-
-“It’s the climate,” said Bennie—and the doctor and Dumplin’ fell upon
-him and rolled him on the hard ground till he howled for mercy.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- Up to the Rim of Crater Lake at Last, Through the Snow-drifts
-
-
-Everybody was out at 4:30 the next morning. The hot weather still held.
-In fact, it was hotter than the day before. Bennie waited till he was on
-the extreme edge of camp, with a clear field to run in, and then
-remarked, “It’s the climate.”
-
-But everybody was too busy packing to chase him.
-
-At seven o’clock the cars were ready, and the start was at last made on
-the last lap for Crater Lake.
-
-“It’s only eighty miles—even a bit less from here, I guess. But it’s
-up-hill all the way, and of course we don’t know what kind of roads
-we’re going to get into.”
-
-For many miles they ran along past scattered ranches where the
-irrigation ditches paralleled the road, and the alfalfa scented the air.
-Then the country began to get rougher, the road began to climb, the
-tumbling, foaming green river dropped farther and farther below them
-into a wild ravine, while they climbed along the side.
-
-“This is something like!” Bennie shouted. “Bring on some more of your
-old wilderness!”
-
-“You’ll get some more pretty soon now.”
-
-They passed a little settlement, where both cars stopped for gas and to
-let the engines cool, and then the road ran into a forest, and traveled
-straight as an arrow, making a long aisle as far as the eye could see.
-
-“Government forest,” the doctor said. “This is a government road. Well,
-boys, what do you think of these trees?”
-
-The boys looked on either side of the dusty white road, into stands of
-Douglas fir that almost took their breath away—great giants six and
-eight feet through, and rising without any branches for a hundred feet
-or more, straight as masts, and after the first branches going on up
-another fifty or a hundred feet.
-
-“Some shrubs,” said Bennie.
-
-“You’ll see a lot of bigger ones before we get back to Portland,” said
-the doctor.
-
-After running for ten miles or so through the forest, while the car and
-their faces became covered with the white pumice dust, they came
-suddenly on a beautiful, cold little stream, and beside this stream an
-open camp ground, maintained by the government for anybody who wanted to
-use it. Here they stopped for early lunch, under the cool shadows of the
-great trees.
-
-There were at least a dozen other cars there, and half as many tents
-were pitched in the woods. Fires were going. Some campers had wash hung
-out to dry. The camp was clean and well cared for.
-
-“Well,” said Spider, looking around, “all I can say is that
-Massachusetts has got something to learn from Oregon. If you tried to
-camp anywhere at home, you’d get chased off. And when the State does get
-any land for a forest, it doesn’t make any provisions for camping. They
-won’t let you build a fire. Can’t camp without a fire.”
-
-“Here’s something for you scouts to think about,” Mr. Stone said. “Why
-don’t you talk up State forests and camp sites when you go home? The Boy
-Scouts could do a lot if they all got together.”
-
-“You bet we’ll think about it,” Spider said. “Why, there’s a State
-reservation right near Southmead, and a nice park on it, and the State
-hasn’t even made a path around the pond so you can get to the water.”
-
-“People in the East haven’t learned how to camp yet, anyway,” the doctor
-said. “They think they’ve got to have a hotel every fifty miles.”
-
-“Sure,” said Bennie. “Ma’s idea of roughing it is to have hot and cold
-water and steam heat.”
-
-After lunch they pushed on, and soon began to climb again, up and up,
-while the radiators boiled in the heat, till they came to the entrance
-of the Crater Lake National Park, where they stopped to pay the tolls on
-the cars, and have a tag pasted on the wind-shield. While this was being
-done, the boys crossed the road and looked down into a tremendous gorge
-cut by Castle Creek into the lava rock. It was their first real taste of
-what was ahead. Soon after this, as the road kept on climbing, they
-began to get glimpses through the trees of mountain tops, covered with
-snow, and before long the road began to get muddy in places, as if the
-snow had but recently melted from it.
-
-At last they reached Government Camp, where the Park superintendent and
-the rangers live, at the foot of the last slope to the rim. Here there
-were great patches of snow all about in the woods, and trickles of water
-beside the road.
-
-“Can we get up to the rim?” the doctor called to someone in a doorway.
-
-“Half a dozen cars have gone up, and haven’t come back,” a voice
-answered.
-
-“Maybe they can’t get back,” the doctor laughed.
-
-“Maybe,” said the other man. “But I reckon they got through. Better put
-on your chains, though.”
-
-After the chains were put on both cars, they started out once more, on
-the last pull to the lake.
-
-“Only three or four miles now,” said Uncle Billy, “and a thousand feet
-to climb.”
-
-The road was muddy, but well graded, as it wound up the ravine, through
-heavy timber, with great drifts of snow on either side. Before long they
-came to places where the drifts had been shoveled out to let the road
-through, and in these places the road was so soft that everybody but the
-drivers got out and walked. The boys made snowballs and pelted each
-other. Once or twice the cars stuck, and they had to get boughs to put
-under the wheels. But there was no serious delay till they were almost
-at the top of the climb. Here they found several cars stalled ahead of
-them. Going forward, they found that one big drift was still in the way.
-Part of it was cut through, but the last end was still ten feet of solid
-snow. The rangers were even now laying a train of TNT through it, and
-connecting the fuses. The boys rushed back for their cameras.
-
-When the dozen charges were ready, everybody ran out of the way. A
-ranger connected the wires, and went back behind a tree to the battery.
-A moment later there was a terrific explosion, and a huge geyser of
-black smoke and black water rose from the drift, the blackened water
-settling down in a fine, dirty mist on the snow to leeward.
-
-“Gosh, I hope I snapped that at the right time!” said Bennie. “Made me
-jump so, I couldn’t tell.”
-
-Mr. Stone, who was working with a graflex, said he thought he got a good
-one, anyway. Then they went forward and found the twelve charges had
-blasted out a deep ditch in the snow right through the drift. Men sprang
-in with shovels, and in fifteen minutes the cars could plough through.
-From there on the snow was melted from the road, and flowers were
-already coming up through the soft brown pumice soil.
-
-Right ahead of them the boys saw the hotel, and in front of the hotel
-the land seemed to disappear. It didn’t look at all like a mountain
-here. The road was now quite level, and there were woods all about. Only
-to the right there was a mountain peak, close by, covered with a great
-cap of snow. It looked more as if they were coming to the edge of some
-cañon.
-
-“Where’s the lake?” they demanded.
-
-“Can you stand it for two minutes more?” the doctor asked.
-
-Now the car was close to the hotel. The boys jumped out and ran ahead,
-up a little grade. And then they stopped stone dead, and drew in a long
-breath of astonishment.
-
-Right under their feet the land fell away at so sharp an angle that it
-was practically a precipice, for more than a thousand feet. This great
-precipice stretched out to right and left, rising here and there into
-crags and cliffs a thousand feet above them, and swung around in a vast
-circle six miles in diameter, thus making what looked like a gigantic
-hole in the earth. At the bottom of this hole lay the lake; but it was
-not an ordinary lake. It was not just water. In fact, it didn’t look
-like water. It was a wonderful, a vivid, an unbelievable blue. It was
-bluer than the sky.
-
-“It’s the bluest thing I ever saw!” cried Bennie. “Wow! how do you get
-down to it?”
-
-“There’s just one trail down here,” his uncle answered, “and one around
-on the east side. Those are the only two ways down to the water.”
-
-“And what’s that little peaked island out there?” Spider asked, pointing
-to what looked like a pile of cinders at one side of the lake, cinders
-covered with green weeds.
-
-“That’s Wizard Island. After this old volcano collapsed into the crater,
-and before it filled with water, she started up again to build a new
-volcano. That island is the result. It’s a little volcano all by itself,
-with a crater in the top. That island is 800 feet above the water line,
-and the green you see on it is made by big trees.”
-
-“Gosh!” said Bennie. “It looks about eight feet high, instead of 800.
-Can we get to it?”
-
-“We’ll get to it, all right. But we’ve got to make camp before we do
-anything.”
-
-[Illustration: Crater Lake—Wizard Island, and over it Llao Rock]
-
-“Will you tell us after supper all about this lake, how it got made and
-everything?” Spider asked. “Gee, I wish I’d studied geology.”
-
-“You’ve come to the right place to begin,” said the doctor. “But now for
-a camp site. Come on with me.”
-
-Leaving the cars, they walked westward along the rim, looking for a
-chance to get the cars through the drifts. They could manage, they
-found, to run them a few hundred feet west of the hotel, along what
-looked like a road. There was a considerable open space between the edge
-of the rim and the timber, however, and to get back from the rim to the
-trees they had to get the camp spades out of the cars and dig a ditch
-through two feet of snow. At last the cars were through, and a
-comparatively dry spot found under some big fir trees. Here the tents
-were put up, with the stove between them, the cars unpacked, the beds
-inflated, and Dumplin’ and Bennie went after wood while Spider took the
-pails and went back over the snow toward the hotel for water. All the
-water has to be pumped up to the hotel and the camp grounds from a
-spring back down the road. When he returned, he reported that already a
-dozen more cars had arrived, several tents were going up, and there were
-a lot of people at the hotel.
-
-Meanwhile Bennie and Dumplin’ had discovered that past campers had
-cleaned out so much of the dead wood that it was hard to find enough for
-a fire, especially as the woods were still full of snow and the fallen
-branches buried or else soaking wet. However, they rustled up enough for
-that night and breakfast, and preparations for supper began.
-
-As the sun got lower and lower, the water of the lake seemed to turn a
-darker and darker blue, and the snow cap on Garfield, the peak just to
-the east, turned a lovely rose red—and Bennie put on his coat.
-
-“What you putting that on for?” his uncle asked.
-
-“It’s the climate,” said Bennie, with a grin.
-
-“Well, suppose you and Dump go drain the radiators before we forget it,”
-the doctor laughed.
-
-“What do you mean, drain the radiators? Are you kidding?” the boys
-demanded.
-
-“Kidding? Not on your life. Go do as I tell you.”
-
-“But, gee whiz, they were _boiling_ about three hours ago,” Dumplin’
-said.
-
-“That was three hours ago, and 2,000 feet lower. Go do as I tell you.”
-
-“Some climate, I’ll say!” Bennie laughed. But he was still skeptical, it
-was plain to see. He thought his uncle was trying to play a joke on him.
-However, he and Dumplin’ drained the cars.
-
-A few minutes later they heard the welcome call from the camp, “Come and
-get it!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- The Mountain That Fell Into Itself
-
-
-It was still twilight when dinner was over, and the doctor said, “First
-class in geology will now be held on Victory Rock. Do you scouts have
-merit badges in geology, by the way?”
-
-“No,” said Spider.
-
-“That’s funny. Seems to me you ought to,” Mr. Stone declared. “Scouts
-are hiking around the country all the time, and it’s a mighty good
-chance to see how the earth was made.”
-
-Victory Rock, the boys found, is a kind of bowsprit of lava thrust out
-from the rim, so that when you stand on it you can see almost all the
-circle of the lake, and the water appears to be directly under you.
-
-“Now, take a good look,” Uncle Billy said, “and then try to imagine what
-this place was like before the big explosion. The rim here is 7,000 feet
-above sea level. In other words, we’ve climbed up, to get here, about
-half the height of the original mountain. We are about at snow line.”
-
-“About!” Bennie laughed. “About is good!”
-
-“Now just imagine the line of ascent we took from Government Camp
-carried right on up, all around the lake. When the slopes met, over the
-middle, in the peak of the original mountain, geologists reckon that
-peak was from 14,000 to 15,000 feet high. This was one of the highest
-mountains, if not the highest, in the United States proper. It was an
-active volcano, of course. If you’ll look over there to the northwest,
-you’ll see a big, steep precipice with a rounded top. That’s called Llao
-Rock. Do you see how the bottom of it curves up at either end? Well,
-that curve shows you where the bottom of a ravine was on the original
-mountain. In some eruption, ages ago, a great stream of lava flowed down
-that ravine, filled it up to overflowing, and hardened into rock. If you
-travel around the lake, you can pick out where each ravine was by the
-laval cliffs.”
-
-“How high is that Llao Rock?” asked Spider.
-
-“About 2,000 feet from the water.”
-
-“Gee, then that lava stream was more’n a thousand feet deep!”
-
-“It was,” said the doctor. “Much more.”
-
-“And then what happened?” Bennie asked.
-
-“Well, I wasn’t here at the time,” said Uncle Billy, “but as near as the
-scientists can figure it out, there must have been a tremendous
-eruption, scattering pumice all over Oregon and making a lot of our rich
-soil, and then, at the level where we are now, probably a lot of vent
-holes blew out, making the whole top of the mountain, which was only a
-shell around the great crater hole, so insecure that it just toppled
-inward of its own weight. About seven or eight thousand feet of the
-mountain just collapsed into the crater.”
-
-“Say, I’d like to have been here with the old kodak!” Bennie cried. “And
-then what happened?”
-
-“Well, then the bottom of the crater evidently started to spit again,
-and build up a new mountain. It built up a perfect cone, just the shape
-of the old mountain, almost to the level of the rim. That’s Wizard
-Island out there. Wizard Island is a later kind of lava and volcanic
-stuff than what you find in the rim walls. But the old mountain got
-tired about then, and decided to call it a day, and it’s been resting
-ever since.”
-
-“But how did the water get here?” Dumplin’ asked.
-
-“Out of the sky. There are no springs, so far as anybody knows, in the
-crater. That water has just come from the snow and rain—mostly snow,
-which has been falling into the hole for untold ages. Over on the east
-side of the lake, it is 2,000 feet deep.”
-
-“Say, you could almost dive there without hitting your head on bottom,
-couldn’t you?” Bennie laughed. “What makes it so blue?”
-
-“Nobody seems to know that. Some people think there must be some
-chemical or mineral gets into it. Anyway, there’s no other lake in the
-world which has its color.”
-
-“I’ll bet there isn’t!” Spider declared. “My, it’s a beautiful thing.
-When are we going down to it? Are there boats on it? How do they get the
-boats down there?”
-
-“One at a time!” Mr. Stone laughed. “We’ll go down as soon as the trail
-is opened. They get the boats down the trail on wheels, by man power,
-and keep ’em winters over on Wizard Island. You could see the boat-house
-if it wasn’t so dark.”
-
-“Let’s go over to the hotel and find out if the trail is open yet!” the
-boys cried, and led the way without waiting for an answer.
-
-No, the trail wasn’t open, the hotel manager told them. But the boatmen
-had been down and got some rowboats out, and two men had gone down
-fishing that afternoon.
-
-“But it’s not a safe trip,” the manager added. “We don’t advise anybody
-to try it. The government is going to begin shoveling the snow out of
-the trail tomorrow morning. You’d better wait a day or two.”
-
-They thanked him, bought some souvenir post-cards to send home, and went
-back to camp.
-
-“Have we got to wait?” the boys demanded.
-
-The two men only smiled.
-
-“Better be up early,” they said. “We might have a try at it. Can’t tell.
-Bennie seems to want a bit of real wild stuff. Maybe we can give it to
-him.”
-
-There was not wood enough in camp to make a camp fire, and no chance to
-get any more till daylight. Everybody had put on his sweater, and the
-air was getting colder and colder.
-
-“Nothing for it but to go to bed,” Mr. Stone declared. “And be thankful
-you have those blankets you didn’t need at Rogue River.”
-
-“It’s the climate!” said Bennie, as he shivered in his pyjamas and
-wriggled hastily in between all the blankets he could stuff into his
-sleeping bag. “Oh, you blankets!”
-
-“And down in Medford, eighty miles away, they’re probably kicking off
-the sheets,” laughed Uncle Billy. “What do you think of Crater Lake now,
-eh?”
-
-But Bennie only grunted. He was already half asleep.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- Down the Rim to the Lake—The Boys Ski on a Crater Snow-drift in July
-
-
-The two scouts were first awake the next morning. They took no more time
-getting dressed than the law allowed, for it was shivery cold, and then
-went outside the tent to wash. The sun was just coming up, and the night
-mists still hung around the sides of the rim and over the water of the
-lake, which was so still that it was exactly like a huge bright blue
-mirror, six miles wide, in which everything hung upside down. The water
-in the pails at the side of the tent had a skim of ice over it!
-
-Bennie broke the ice and poured some water in a basin, dousing it on his
-face and spluttering with the cold. They went over the snow-drifts to
-the tap to get more water, and the snow was crusted and held them up so
-that their hobnailed boots crunched and squeaked on it.
-
-“And this is July 7th!” said Spider. “Well, you thought your uncle was
-joshing about the radiator last night, didn’t you?”
-
-“I sure did,” Bennie answered. “Didn’t realize what a difference
-altitude makes.”
-
-[Illustration: Campers at the Rim of Crater Lake. Mid-July Snow in
-Foreground]
-
-After they had brought the water, and made a fire in the stove, the
-scouts went off after a wood supply, while the rest were dressing. They
-wandered a long way back down the slope, through the forest, and tried
-to imagine, as they looked back, that instead of being cut off at the
-rim the mountain went on up another 8,000 feet.
-
-“I guess if it did, we’d be on a glacier here, instead of just snow,”
-said Spider. “Look, Bennie, at those flowers coming up within a foot of
-this drift! I’m going to collect a lot of flowers on this trip, and get
-a merit badge in botany, too. Why don’t you get after some merit
-badges?”
-
-“Aw, gee, what good am I at botany and stuff like that?”
-
-“Well, you could go after one in forestry. We’ll be seeing a lot of real
-forests. And there’s hiking, and camping. Oh, lots of ’em.”
-
-“Got your manual with you?”
-
-“Sure.”
-
-“Well, let’s look ’em up later, and see what chance a dub like me has,”
-Bennie answered. “But this ain’t getting us much fire wood.”
-
-They were so far from the camp ground now that dead wood was plentiful,
-and they returned to camp over the drifts and the bare clearings where
-the wild flowers were just sprouting—spring in July—dragging dead limbs
-enough to last two or three days. The smell of coffee and bacon greeted
-them as they came up the last slope to the camp.
-
-“By the way,” Spider asked at breakfast, “what was the name of this
-mountain before it fell into itself?”
-
-“Who was there to name it, you poor fish?” laughed Bennie.
-
-“I never thought of that!”
-
-“It has a posthumous name, though,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“Come again—come again!” Bennie said. “What kind of a name?”
-
-“Ho, I know what that means!” put in Dumplin’, his mouth full of wheat
-cakes.
-
-“What _what_ means?” the rest demanded.
-
-“P-p”—he swallowed hard, and then got it out—“posthumous.”
-
-“Well, what does it mean?”
-
-“It means something that comes after you’re dead. If a man writes a book
-that ain’t printed till he’s dead, it’s a posthumous book.”
-
-“My son,” said Mr. Stone, “I am proud of you.”
-
-“Not to say surprised at him,” the doctor laughed.
-
-Dumplin’ grinned triumphantly, and reached out for more cakes.
-
-“Well, what was its p-p-posthumous name?” Bennie demanded.
-
-“They call the mountain Mount Mazama. You see, there’s a famous club of
-mountaineers in Portland, who are called the Mazamas, and that’s why the
-name was given to this vanished peak.”
-
-“Mazama—sounds sort of Indian.”
-
-“It is—it’s the Indian word for a mountain goat.”
-
-“That’s us,” said Bennie. “When do we leap lightly down the rim to the
-water?”
-
-“As soon as you’ve washed the dishes,” said his uncle.
-
-The sun was well up when they started, and the chill had gone from the
-air. You could hardly believe water had frozen two hours before. Mr.
-Stone carried his movie camera, which weighed fifty pounds, on his back
-in a knapsack made for it, Dumplin’ carried the tripod, also in a sack,
-Bennie and Spider carried their canteens filled with spring water, their
-cameras, and the lunch in knapsacks. The doctor had two canteens and the
-coil of 125 feet of soft alpine braided rope. Everybody had an
-alpenstock. As the little procession passed the hotel, the people there
-looked at them curiously.
-
-“You evidently mean business,” somebody said.
-
-“We’re going down to the lake,” said the doctor.
-
-“I wouldn’t try it, if I were you,” the other man replied. “Two chaps
-went down yesterday, and they had a pretty bad time. They say it’s
-extremely dangerous.”
-
-“We’ll take a chance,” said Uncle Billy.
-
-The trail starts down just east of the hotel. It is a wide footpath cut
-in the soft lava and the powdery pumice and conglomerate of the slope,
-switchbacking down a sharp ravine. But this ravine was now almost filled
-with snow, so that the path was buried, and the descent had to be made
-over the bare snow slope, at an angle of fifty degrees. If you once
-started slipping, there was nothing to stop you for a thousand feet. The
-park gang of a dozen men or more, with shovels, were just attacking the
-snow at the top, shoveling out the path and tossing the snow chunks on
-to the slope, down which they slid and bounded like a bombardment.
-
-The doctor led the way past the shovelers, so they would be out of the
-range of the falling lumps, uncoiled the rope, tied one end around his
-waist, flung the other end down the slope, drove his alpenstock deep and
-firm, braced his feet, and said:
-
-“Now, you all go down to the end, one at a time. Keep a firm hold on the
-rope. Don’t ever let go with more than one hand. When you get to the
-bottom, brace your stocks, and Stone, you take up the slack on me as I
-come down.”
-
-One by one the boys and Mr. Stone faced half sideways to the slope, kept
-hold of the rope with the right hand, and went down the 125 feet step by
-step. As Bennie started down, he saw that just above them on the rim
-were a dozen people, come from the hotel to watch.
-
-“Gee, this is the life!” he shouted.
-
-The boys watched Uncle Billy come down when everybody else was at the
-rope’s end. He had no rope to help him, of course, but he used his
-alpenstock with one hand, and drove his boots firmly into the snow with
-a sideways motion which made a little step for him.
-
-“Guess old Uncle Bill knows his way about,” thought Bennie.
-
-From this point, the operation was repeated, getting them down 250 feet.
-But by now the shovelers in the path above had worked ahead, and the
-snow chunks were whizzing past uncomfortably close. They saw that the
-ravine narrowed ahead of them into a kind of bottle neck, and all the
-chunks worked into that neck. They would have to pass right through it.
-No use in yelling up to the shovelers to quit, either. Their job was to
-get the trail opened as soon as possible. Besides, they were laughing,
-and the little party down in the ravine knew that meant they were just
-waiting to get them into the narrow place and bombard them.
-
-“Keep half an eye up the slope this next drop,” the doctor said, “and
-watch out for cannon balls. Those fellows up there are going to wing us
-if they can. The chunks won’t break any bones, but they’ll hurt. Once
-we’re through the neck, we can get round behind that rock, and be out of
-range.”
-
-“Let her go!” said Mr. Stone.
-
-Nobody lost any time on that next drop. Mr. Stone went first, and no
-sooner was he out into the narrow groove of the ravine than a perfect
-avalanche of snow chunks came whizzing down. Most of them got broken up
-before they reached him, but every now and then one hung together, as
-big as a shoveler could lift out of the path, and went whizzing by a
-mile a minute. One of them bounced up just before it reached him, and
-landed _ker-blam_ against his camera sack, smashing into a thousand
-pieces, and nearly taking him off his feet.
-
-“The idiots!” Uncle Billy said. “I’d like to throw ’em all down here
-head first. Go ahead, Dump. Your father’s round the bend now.”
-
-“You’re an easy mark, Dumplin’!” yelled the boys, as poor Lester slid
-down the rope into the path of the whirling missiles. “Hi! look out—here
-comes a big one!”
-
-Lester ducked, and a block of snow bounded right over his head. Bennie
-had no such luck when he started, though. He dodged a couple, but a
-third chunk caught him right in the head, smashed wetly around his neck
-and ears, and he felt the water trickling down inside his shirt as he
-hurried, half blinded, around the rock to shelter. Spider and the doctor
-soon joined them, Spider nursing a bump on the leg from a snow chunk
-with a stone in it.
-
-“Great idea of a joke, those guys have,” said Bennie. “Funny thing,
-Dumplin’ never got hit at all, and he’s the easiest mark. Where do we go
-from here?”
-
-The doctor looked around. Straight down below them was a long slope of
-pumice and gravelly looking stuff, at a very steep angle, with a few
-trees and lava blocks breaking it up, and patches of snow.
-
-“Here,” he said, and threw out the rope.
-
-Bennie started first. His feet seemed to hold well in this soft ground,
-and he let his hand just slide along the rope, seeing how fast he could
-walk down. Suddenly the ground just slipped away under him. He sat down,
-and began to slide. His hand, held too loosely on the rope, was yanked
-off. He grasped for the rope again, but it was out of reach. For one
-sickly, awful moment, he saw the lake and the rocks hundreds of feet
-below him, and thought he was going to land down there—or what was left
-of him. Down, down he slid, six feet, eight feet, hit a patch of snow
-and went faster, while he tried vainly to dig in with hands and heels.
-Then, as suddenly as the first slip, he realized that in ten feet more
-he’d hit a tree growing on a tiny flat place by a piece of solid lava. A
-second, and his feet struck the roots with a thump, and he stopped
-abruptly.
-
-When the rest got to him, he was still sitting there, trembling a
-little, and trying to clean off his clothes. His uncle’s face was white,
-but all he said was:
-
-“I thought you knew how to climb, Bennie. I see you’ve got to be taught
-to keep a hold on the rope.”
-
-“It—it came so sudden.”
-
-“It always does come sudden,” his uncle answered. That was all he said.
-That was all he ever said about it the whole trip. But it was all he
-needed to say. Bennie felt deeply ashamed. He had failed on the very
-first climb! He resolved then and there that the next time he’d hang on
-to that rope with a death grip.
-
-“Were you scared?” Spider whispered to him, as they got down to the
-trail where the snow had melted off, and could walk the last few feet of
-the way. “Gee, I was scared blue when I saw you goin’, till I spotted
-the tree, and knew you were goin’ to hit it. Hadn’t been there, though,
-you’d been a goner. Golly!”
-
-“Sure I was scared,” said Bennie. “Didn’t have time to think much about
-it, though, before I hit the good old roots.”
-
-Dumplin’ now dropped alongside.
-
-“If it had been me,” he said, “I’d have knocked the tree down, and gone
-right on.”
-
-“You’d ’a’ made an awful splash in the lake,” Bennie laughed, though his
-voice still trembled a little.
-
-There were only three boats at the landing, and none of the boatmen had
-yet come down that day. They were waiting for the trail to be opened.
-But the hotel manager had told Uncle Billy how to find the oars, and
-loading the cameras and lunch into a couple of the skiffs, they pushed
-off, Bennie insisting on rowing one boat, and Lester the other. The lake
-was very still as they floated out over its blue water.
-
-“It don’t look more’n ten feet deep to me,” said Bennie, glancing over
-the side. “There’s the old bottom.”
-
-“Look up at the cliffs and take ten more strokes, and then look down,”
-said Mr. Stone from the other boat.
-
-Bennie did so.
-
-“Jiminy crickets and little jumping hoptoads!” he exclaimed. “Why, there
-isn’t any bottom!”
-
-Sure enough, the bottom had dropped completely away. They were floating
-on what seemed like a bottomless blue liquid.
-
-“I feel as if we were sort of hanging in a piece of the sky,” said
-Spider. “I never had such a funny sensation.”
-
-The doctor smiled. “You’ve got the Crater Lake blues,” he said. “It
-scares some people.”
-
-“I like it,” said Spider. “Gee, it’s wonderful!”
-
-Bennie glanced over his shoulder at Wizard Island, which looked about a
-quarter of a mile away, headed his bow for it, and started to pull
-again.
-
-“We’ll be there in a jiffy,” he said.
-
-“How far do you think it is?” his uncle asked.
-
-“’Bout a quarter of a mile.”
-
-“It’s almost two, in a straight line.”
-
-“Gee!” said Bennie.
-
-From the level of the water, Crater Lake was quite a different place.
-Instead of looking down from the rim, you looked up, and the cliffs that
-hemmed you in seemed far higher and far steeper. They looked as steep as
-they really are. The high points around the rim—Garfield Peak, Dutton
-Cliffs, Llao Rock, Glacier Peak, the Watchman, were all snow-capped, and
-in many places the snow came down the rim ravines in great white wedges
-like capital V’s, almost to the blue water. The hotel looked like a
-little Noah’s ark.
-
-“Say, if a guy got caught down here and had to go on shore where he
-couldn’t get to the trail, what would he do? Could he climb out?” Bennie
-asked.
-
-“There’s a trail out over there on the east, at that lowest place,” said
-the doctor. “The rim is only 500 feet high there. Those two are the only
-trails. You might be able to climb out at some other points. A
-photographer once climbed up under Llao Rock and worked along the base
-of the lava precipices till he reached the top of the rim. But if I was
-caught down here in most places, I’d sit tight till a boat came for me.”
-
-“You needn’t die of thirst, anyhow,” Spider laughed.
-
-Slowly Wizard Island drew nearer, and at last Bennie pulled into a
-little cove, and they hauled the bow up. Lester pulled his skiff in a
-moment later. Wizard Island, all around the base, seemed to be composed
-entirely of huge blocks of blackish-brown lava, out of which evergreens
-mysteriously grew—big, fine trees, too. They scrambled up over these
-blocks, and soon found a trail winding up the steep slope through the
-woods. The lava blocks ceased now, and the whole little mountain was
-composed of a fine material much like cinders from a locomotive. In
-fact, the baby volcano now resembled nothing so much as a huge cone of
-cinders, covered with trees. Up and up they toiled, Mr. Stone panting
-under the weight of his movie camera, and at last reached the summit.
-Before anybody even looked about, the canteens were unslung and half
-emptied. Then they looked.
-
-The top of Wizard Island was a perfect circle, like Crater Lake itself,
-only a tiny circle, two or three hundred feet across. Inside was a
-crater, about a hundred feet deep, and now filled on the south side,
-where the sun didn’t hit it, with a huge snow-drift pitching steeply
-down to the bottom.
-
-“Ah! I thought so!” cried Mr. Stone. “Boys, get busy. I’m going to take
-a movie of you sliding down a crater on the snow. Try it once standing
-up, and see if you can keep your feet.”
-
-[Illustration: The Boys Sliding down Wizard Island Crater. (Enlarged
-from a Movie)]
-
-The three boys ran out on the drift to the edge, and stepped over. The
-snow was soft enough so that they sank in a little and pushed enough
-snow ahead to bank up after ten or a dozen feet. When it did this, it
-would pitch you head foremost unless you were spry and jumped over the
-bank in time. The first try all three boys went headlong a quarter of
-the way down, and made the rest of the trip on their stomachs. They got
-up and struggled back up the steep incline.
-
-By this time the camera was set up and focussed.
-
-“Good!” said Mr. Stone. “Now get out of the picture a way, and when I
-say ‘Shoot’ come walking in to the edge. Stop there a moment and point,
-as if you were daring each other to go down. Then all slide. Keep your
-feet if you can. At the bottom, get up quickly, and come scrambling
-back. Ready? Get on your marks, shoot!”
-
-The three boys came into the picture as the crank ground and the camera
-clicked. They stopped at the rim, and began to act.
-
-“I dast you to slide down!” said Bennie, forgetting this was a movie,
-and nobody would hear his voice.
-
-“Ho!” said Dumplin’, “that’s nothin’.”
-
-He tossed off his cap. Spider tossed off his. The three of them stepped
-over the rim, and shot down. Dumplin’ got a third of the way and
-spilled, head foremost. A second later Spider followed him. Only Bennie
-got to the bottom on his feet. He yelled and waved his arms in triumph,
-and all three started scrambling and slipping back up the drift, digging
-into the snow with heels and hands. As they came up over the rim again,
-the camera stopped clicking.
-
-“Good,” said Mr. Stone. “That’s a dandy.”
-
-“Some Douglas Fairbanks, eh?” cried Bennie. “Gee, Dumplin’, you sure did
-a comic fall. Bet that would get a laugh on the screen.”
-
-“My hands are cold—and I’m sweating,” said Lester. “That’s going some.”
-
-“It’s the climate!” came from three mouths at once.
-
-They now walked around the little rim, and on the west side of the
-island saw, at the base of the cone, a flat space of a few acres, with a
-tiny little pond in it.
-
-“This is a volcano within a volcano, and that is a lake inside of a
-lake,” the doctor pointed out. “You don’t often find that. Now let’s eat
-some lunch, and go down and see if we can catch a fish or two for
-supper.”
-
-They sat, hatless and coatless, in the shade of a little tree beside a
-snow-drift, and ate their lunch, finishing up the last of the water in
-the canteens, also. Then they descended to the boats. Mr. Stone mounted
-his camera in the bow of one boat, with Lester to row, while Spider
-rowed the other, the doctor sat as passenger, and Bennie got out the
-collapsible rod his uncle had brought, jointed it, and adjusted the
-tackle.
-
-“Don’t seem fair to fish for trout with a spinner, as if they were
-nothing but pickerel,” he declared. “Wish we had some flies.”
-
-“We want the fish to eat,” said the doctor, “and Stone wants a picture.
-We’ll use the surest way to get ’em. Now, Spider, row very slowly and
-just as steadily as you can, just offshore, around the rocks. Keep an
-even pace—that’s the main thing. If the spinner yanks, the fish get
-suspicious.”
-
-Their boat crept softly along, with the Stones’ boat not far behind, Mr.
-Stone sitting by the camera as if it were a machine gun pointed at them.
-
-Suddenly the line, trailing behind, tightened, Bennie gave a cry, there
-was a leap and a silver flash in the water astern, and the fight was on!
-
-“Play him, play him!” the doctor shouted. “Keep on rowing, Spider. Give
-Stone a chance to shoot! Bring him up slowly, Bennie, don’t lose him!”
-
-“I won’t lose him,” Bennie answered grimly. “Gee whiz, what a trout! He
-pulls like a whale!”
-
-Slowly he reeled in, and then had to play out again, as the fish made a
-dash past the boat. But the big spinner hook was too much for him, and
-after three or four minutes he was alongside, giving his last kicks and
-splashes in the water.
-
-“Swing around, swing around, so the camera can get this!” called the
-doctor.
-
-As the boat swung, Lester pulled nearer, the camera kept on clicking,
-and Bennie, reaching over, grabbed the line short and hauled the trout
-into the boat, holding him up to show his size.
-
-“Some baby!” he cried, breathless with excitement. “He weighs about four
-pounds. What kind of a trout is he?”
-
-“They put eastern brook trout into this lake,” said Uncle Billy. “There
-were no fish here till it was stocked.”
-
-“Eastern brook trout!” Bennie exclaimed. “Well, that’s the funniest
-looking eastern brook trout _I_ ever saw. I guess something happened to
-’em.”
-
-“It’s the climate,” Spider chuckled.
-
-“I think it is myself, and no joke,” said the doctor. “They are
-certainly a different fish, both to look at and to eat, than the brook
-trout we used to catch back home. You catch one now, Spider.”
-
-Spider took the line, and caught a trout. Then the doctor got one, and
-the line was passed to Lester, who lost the spinner in a rock on the
-bottom, but, with a new hook, caught still a fourth fish.
-
-“That’s enough to last us; now for home,” came the orders.
-
-“I wonder if they’ve got the trail cleared yet? Don’t much want to face
-that bombardment again,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“They’ll be through digging for the day, anyhow, before we get in,” said
-Uncle Billy.
-
-The long shadows from the western walls were out across the water when
-they reached the landing and tied up the boats. There was no sign of
-shovelers on the trail, but no sign, either, that the gang had got to
-the bottom. They had to make the first half of the climb as best they
-could, scrambling up the treacherous slopes with the aid of the
-alpenstocks and the rope which the doctor dragged up ahead and fastened
-at convenient points. Half-way up, however, they reached the spot where
-the trail breakers had quit work, and they were glad enough of the path
-and the easy grade the rest of the way. Their packs were getting heavier
-and heavier, and the doctor was taking shifts on the camera, before they
-finally dragged themselves over the rim, into the sunlight again.
-
-Bennie was carrying the four trout proudly when they passed the hotel,
-and a crowd came out to see the catch. At least a score more motors had
-arrived during the day, and the hotel bus was arriving with a load of
-people. At their camp, they found two new tents pitched close to theirs,
-the cars bearing California license plates.
-
-“Well, our privacy is gone,” sighed Mr. Stone.
-
-“I don’t care, if they haven’t got a crying child along, to keep us
-awake,” the doctor said.
-
-“Nothing could keep me awake tonight,” said Bennie, flopping down on the
-ground.
-
-“And nothing could wake me tomorrow morning,” puffed Lester, flopping
-down beside him.
-
-“Well, don’t go to sleep till you’ve cleaned those fish for us,” Uncle
-Billy laughed. “And, Dump, you get water, and, Spider, you make the
-fire.”
-
-The smell of boiling coffee and sizzling trout brought new life to
-everybody. And how they ate! The fish meat was reddish in color, more
-like salmon than eastern brook trout, but it certainly tasted good, and
-there was enough for everybody, with potatoes, and bread, and coffee and
-stewed fruit.
-
-When supper was over and cleared away, and they were sitting around the
-little camp fire, in their sweaters again, for the evening chill had
-descended with the sun, a man strolled over from the near-by camp.
-
-“Kind o’ cold up here,” he remarked.
-
-“Drained your radiator?” Mr. Stone asked.
-
-“No. What you giving us?”
-
-“Just as you like,” Mr. Stone replied. “If you like a busted radiator,
-it’s up to you. I don’t care.”
-
-“You mean to tell me it’ll freeze up? Why, it was eighty-eight in the
-shade in Medford this morning.”
-
-“It was probably hotter than that in Los Angeles,” said Uncle Billy,
-with a wink at Mr. Stone.
-
-“No, sir!” the other man retorted. “No siree, Bob. We have the finest
-climate in Southern California there is in the world. Never too hot, and
-never too cold.”
-
-“It’s the climate,” chuckled Bennie.
-
-“You bet your life it’s the climate, kid,” said the man.
-
-“Funny, another man from California once told me the same thing,” Mr.
-Stone smiled. “I’ll have to go down there some day and try it.”
-
-“You’d better. No place like it.”
-
-“What are you doing in Oregon?” Uncle Billy suggested.
-
-“Oh, just taking a look around. Pretty nice little lake here, but you
-ought to see the Yosemite.”
-
-“I’ve been to Coney Island,” Bennie grinned, falling into the game.
-
-“I’ve seen a picture of Venice by moonlight,” said Dumplin’.
-
-“I’ve been up Bunker Hill Monument. It is 224 feet high,” said Spider.
-
-The Californian began to get wise to the fact that he was being guyed,
-and moved off. They watched him. He went past their cars and glanced at
-the ground under the hoods to see if they had really been drained. Then
-he went over and drained his own.
-
-Mr. Stone laughed. “Push any button on a Californian, and you’ll start a
-record about the finest climate in the world.”
-
-“It’s the climate,” said Bennie, solemnly. “Let’s see, where did I see
-that? Oh, yes, on a big banner across the road in a city down in
-California.”
-
-“A hit, son. I admit it,” Mr. Stone answered. “We do a lot of bragging
-ourselves. At that, we’ve got a pretty nice climate.”
-
-“I move that the next man who says ‘climate’ has to wash all the dishes
-for the next three days,” said Dumplin’. “All in favor.”
-
-A great shout of “Aye!” went up, and on that they turned in.
-
-“Praises be to the man who invented the air mattress,” sighed Bennie, as
-he crawled wearily into his sleeping bag. “Oh, you pneumatic kid!”
-
-“Had enough hard work to satisfy you?” his uncle asked.
-
-“Till about eight A. M. tomorrow,” Bennie answered. “Good night,
-friends. Please tell the bellhop to bring me hot water at 7:30.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- Dumplin’ Tests the Strength of a Snow Cornice on Garfield Peak
-
-
-Their friend the California camper and his party were up bright and
-early. At least, they were up early. As Bennie woke up at their noisy
-shouting, and listened to their conversation, he didn’t think they were
-particularly bright.
-
-“Oh, well, Irvin Cobb couldn’t make me laugh at half-past five in the
-morning,” Dumplin’ said at breakfast. “I heard ’em, but I went to sleep
-again. I just stayed awake long enough to hear whether they were talking
-about their cli—ha! you didn’t catch me!—about the atmospheric
-conditions of California.”
-
-“Did they?” his father asked.
-
-“Not’s I heard. One of ’em was pulling a merry jest. His idea of a joke,
-I s’pose. He was throwing cold water on the ones that weren’t up.”
-
-“Gee, I’d have killed him!” the doctor said. “Maybe they’ll be gone by
-night. Well, what shall we do today? I don’t feel like going down to the
-lake again till the trail is open. It will be done by tonight.”
-
-“Let’s climb Garfield!”
-
-“Good,” said Mr. Stone. “I’d like to get a movie of you all up on that
-snow cap against the sky.”
-
-“And I’m going to gather all the kinds of wild flowers I can, and
-identify ’em from those mounted specimens in the hotel,” said Spider.
-“Might’s well do some work for a botany honor medal, too.”
-
-Bennie was looking up in the tree as Spider spoke.
-
-“Look,” he said, “who’s your friend?”
-
-“Who are your friends, you mean,” added Uncle Billy, also looking up.
-
-Two large birds, fat and sleek, with gray and black plumage were hopping
-nearer and nearer to the tents, apparently much excited.
-
-“Hello!” cried Spider. “They are new ones on me. Say, aren’t they tame!”
-
-Mr. Stone laughed. “Tame is the word. Everybody look the other way, and
-pretend to pay no attention.”
-
-They did so, and suddenly there was a flutter close by, a little peep, a
-flap of wings, and one of the birds was right down on the box by the
-stove that served as a kitchen table, and up in the tree again with half
-a slice of bread in his bill.
-
-“Well, I’ll be switched!” Bennie exclaimed. “Can you beat that! What are
-they?”
-
-“Ever heard of camp robbers?”
-
-“Are _those_ camp robbers, eh? Canada jays is another name, isn’t it?
-Well, I thought camp robbers were ugly birds. Those are beautiful.”
-
-“They are beautiful, but now they’ve discovered the camps up here, we’ll
-have to keep everything covered. They can’t take a hint worth a cent.”
-
-“Let’s shoo ’em over to California’s camp,” laughed Bennie.
-
-Presently they started off for Garfield.
-
-“Hey, Uncle Bill, where’s the rope?” Bennie asked.
-
-“Don’t need it today.”
-
-“Aw, can’t we take it along and find a place to use it?”
-
-“Nothing doing. We don’t carry any excess baggage out here, son.”
-
-The climb up Garfield proved to be an easy one. The trail was clear of
-snow for half the distance, and the rest of the short thousand feet was
-over drifts that were neither difficult nor dangerous, till they reached
-a little flat place a hundred feet short of the summit. Here a sheer
-precipice confronted them, with the summit snow cap hanging out over it
-like the cornice of a gigantic house roof.
-
-Mr. Stone set up his camera some distance out from the cliff.
-
-“Now, I want you all to go up there, around on the side, where the trail
-goes, and come out into view on the left end of the top. Then walk in
-single file, slowly, along the cornice to the right, and then move back
-out of sight again. When you get to the top, don’t come into view till I
-yell, ‘Shoot!’”
-
-“You mean you want us to walk out on that snow that hangs over the
-precipice, Pa?” Lester demanded.
-
-“Sure, why not?”
-
-“Well, if it breaks off with our weight, where do we go from there?”
-
-“It won’t break. You don’t have to get right on the edge of it, of
-course. But it would hold up a team of horses.”
-
-“Yes, but will it hold up Dumplin’?” said Bennie.
-
-[Illustration: The Boys Walking on the Snow Cornice of Garfield Peak.
-(Enlarged from a Movie)]
-
-“Come on, boys, let’s get this Pearl White stuff over,” the doctor
-laughed.
-
-They scrambled up around the side to the very peak, and waited till they
-heard the signal. Then one by one they walked forward toward the edge.
-The doctor led the way, and sounded with his alpenstock. He stopped five
-feet short of the extreme edge, however, turned and walked along that
-line, the rest following him holding their breaths, and half expecting
-to go pitching down any instant. But they didn’t. The snow cornice was
-many feet thick, and would probably have held up a far greater weight.
-
-When they were out of the picture again, they looked around. The view
-was tremendous, and the first one they had got from a high summit.
-(Garfield is a shade over 8,000 feet.) To the south they saw the
-glistening white snow cone of Mount McLaughlin, and then far, far away,
-150 miles, floating almost like a cloud on the horizon, the great white
-bulk of Mount Shasta in California, more than 14,000 feet high. To the
-eastward, they looked out over the desert country of southeastern
-Oregon, stretching for endless miles. North of them, they looked right
-down for 2,000 feet into the blue caldera of Crater Lake. North of the
-lake, beyond the farther rim, they could see Mount Thielsen, which
-looked like a huge needle of lava sticking straight up into the air, and
-beyond that the white pyramid of Diamond Peak. Everywhere near by, on
-the outer slopes of the crater, they looked down into dark mysterious
-forests marching up the ravines.
-
-“Well, Bennie, is this big enough and wild enough for you?” the doctor
-demanded.
-
-“I never saw so much land all at once in my life,” said Bennie, “or such
-a big hole in it. And to think I’ve seen old Shasta, way off in
-California! This beats the old geography!”
-
-“You loosed a larynxful then,” came from Dumplin’.
-
-“Not very poetic, Dump, but true,” the doctor smiled.
-
-The boys found the steepest drift on the descent, and tried to ski down
-it on their boot soles, but they hit such a rate of speed that all three
-of them toppled over, and landed at the bottom head over heels. After
-they had reached the open trail once more, Spider cut away from the
-path, and worked down the side slope, through the pumice drifts and the
-tumbled piles of broken lava, gathering specimens of wild flowers. You
-would hardly have supposed anything would grow in such unpromising
-looking soil, but volcanic stuff rapidly breaks up into a soil rich in
-chemical plant foods, especially potash, and soon his hands were full.
-Bennie, who had followed him, began to help, and rapidly got interested
-in the game of finding new varieties. It was a big bunch they finally
-brought into camp, half an hour after the rest had reached home.
-
-That afternoon Spider took his flowers and a note-book over to the
-hotel, where a large case of mounted specimens is exhibited, and spent
-two hours identifying them, and listing the names in his note-book, with
-his specimens pressed between the leaves. Bennie bought some candy, and
-a bunch of post-cards, and scribbled messages to his mother and father
-and friends. Finally he came over to Spider.
-
-“Gee whiz, you’re a studious one,” he said. “Wish I was. How do you get
-that way?”
-
-“I don’t know. I just can’t help being interested in birds and plants
-and things like that. You’ve just got to find something you’re awfully
-interested in, I guess.”
-
-“Well, I’m interested in mountains, but that won’t get me any merit
-badge. I’m gettin’ kind of interested in supper about now, too. What say
-we beat it over to camp?”
-
-They walked back along the rim. The snow cap on Garfield was growing
-pink behind them, and the lake below, ruffled by a little wind, was like
-a wrinkled carpet of vivid ultramarine blue. The trail, they heard, was
-now dug out all the way to the landing. Rested by the quiet afternoon,
-they felt keen for fresh adventures.
-
-“I feel’s if I could walk all the way around this old rim,” Bennie
-declared. “You know, there’s a motor road runs around it, only it’s full
-of snow now. Has to cut down behind Dutton Cliffs and Garfield, way down
-to the road we came up on. But the rest of the way round it’s up on the
-rim. Uncle Bill says it’s about thirty or thirty-five miles around, he
-thinks, by the road. Bet you we could do it in a day, right over the old
-snow. That ought to help toward a merit badge for hiking.”
-
-“I’d rather row around the lake at the base of the cliffs,” said Spider.
-
-“Well, let’s do that tomorrow. Shall we?”
-
-“I guess we’ll do what the rest do. Your uncle will have something good
-on, sure.”
-
-“Hope so, I need the exercise,” Bennie laughed, plunging across the
-snow-drift toward the tents.
-
-“Bennie’s feeling awful good,” Spider told the rest. “Says he’s not
-getting exercise enough.”
-
-“The wood-pile is rather low,” the doctor remarked quietly.
-
-Bennie saluted. “Yes, sir, thank you, sir!” he said, and picked up his
-ax.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- Bennie Climbs the Mast of the Phantom Ship and Knows He Has Done
- Something
-
-
-“Seeing that Bennie is such a glutton for exercise,” said Uncle Billy at
-breakfast the next morning, “what do you say we give him some, Stone?”
-
-“We want to keep him well and happy, surely,” Mr. Stone answered,
-solemnly.
-
-“Yes, we mustn’t let the little darling pine,” put in Dumplin’.
-
-“Or his mighty muscles get flabby,” added Spider.
-
-“You all think you’re having a great time, don’t you?” Bennie retorted.
-“Well, I’m all ready. I guess I’ll keep in the procession as long as the
-band plays.”
-
-“All right,” said his uncle. “Let’s get cleared up here, and we’ll beat
-it down the trail and row out to the Phantom Ship. Bennie can row us out
-and back, and climb the mast between whiles, and then tote your camera,
-Stone, up the trail again home. Maybe that will restore his lost
-appetite.”
-
-Bennie grinned amiably. “What’s the Phantom Ship?” he demanded.
-
-“You’ll see.”
-
-The boys noted with delight that Uncle Billy was taking his alpine rope.
-Lunches and cameras were carried, too. The trail down from the rim was
-now cleared of snow all the way, and the descent was quick and easy.
-But, at the bottom, they found that so many people had gone down ahead
-of them that all the boats were out. They had to wait two hours while
-some of the boatmen, who had gone across to the boat-house on Wizard
-Island, got the launch in commission over there, and towed back more
-boats.
-
-“How did they ever get a launch down here?” asked Bennie.
-
-“Brought it down in pieces and assembled it, I suppose,” Spider said.
-“Didn’t they?”
-
-“Must have,” answered the doctor.
-
-When the fresh supply of boats arrived, they pushed off, rowing in the
-opposite direction from Wizard Island. Now they passed directly under
-the jagged red walls of Eagle Crags, which form the north wall of Mount
-Garfield, and tower 2,000 feet above the water. Rounding Eagle Point,
-they saw Chaski Bay, invisible from the hotel, with a great snow-drift
-hanging over it, and beyond that another 2,000-foot cliff headland, with
-a long, steep talus slope of soft stuff leading up to the precipitous
-lava.
-
-“What do you see right at the base of that cliff, in the water?” the
-doctor asked.
-
-“Nothing,” said the boys. “Just some small rocks at the water’s edge.”
-
-“Some small rocks, eh? Well, row on a bit. Keep in nearer shore,
-Bennie.”
-
-Bennie rowed on another half mile, and again they looked at the rocks at
-the water’s edge below Dutton Cliff.
-
-“Why,” Spider said, “those rocks are out in the water. They’re an
-island.”
-
-“That’s the Phantom Ship. They call it a phantom because it looks like
-part of the cliff from a distance. You’ll see pretty soon why they call
-it a ship.”
-
-Sure enough, they did see, in a very few moments. For, as the boats drew
-nearer, the detached rocks were seen to be much larger than they had
-appeared from a distance, where they had to be measured against the
-whole 2,000 feet of Dutton Cliff; and not only were they large, but they
-were really one solid mass of dark brown lava, much more pointed at the
-end which faced the lake, and with three sharp spires of lava, almost as
-sharp as an obelisk, sticking up exactly like three masts. To add still
-further to the illusion of a ship, they saw, as they drew still nearer,
-that the patches of green on the lava were really pine trees, which now
-began to look like sails.
-
-“It is just like a ship!” Spider exclaimed. “It’s a ship made of lava, a
-three-master, sailing right out from Dutton Cliff!”
-
-“Is it one of those masts we are going to climb?” Bennie suddenly
-demanded, a suspicion striking him.
-
-“_You_ are—for the exercise,” said his uncle.
-
-“Yes, I am! Say, I’m pretty good, but I’m no human fly. Gee, I don’t see
-even a finger-nail hold on ’em.”
-
-“Don’t get impatient. Look down in the water a minute. Row slowly. Now
-let her drift.”
-
-The boys looked down as the boat floated in toward the dark, straight
-sides of the Phantom Ship, down into the deep blue water. No bottom was
-visible, though the sunlight seemed to penetrate a long way down.
-
-Then, suddenly, there was bottom! The bottom seemed to jump up at them,
-when the boat was about a hundred feet away from the ship. They had
-floated right on over the rim of a tremendous sunken precipice. Even
-here the bottom was apparently fifty feet below surface, yet they could
-see it clearly.
-
-“Stop the boat a minute,” Spider said.
-
-Bennie stopped it, and then took his oars out again. Spider, meanwhile,
-had taken a nickel from his pocket, and when the ripples had died down,
-he laid it carefully overboard, flat on the water. They watched it
-wabble and flutter rapidly down, but fast as it went, it was a long time
-reaching bottom, showing the depth. Yet they could see it plainly after
-it landed and lay shining on the rocks fifty feet below. Then they
-watched a big trout swim by, five or six feet under the surface, and
-they could see every detail of his color, his fins—all through water
-that was bluer than the sky!
-
-“Now look up at the ship,” said Uncle Billy.
-
-It towered above them now like a real ship, a ship 200 feet long, with
-masts 175 feet tall. Here, on the south side, the walls rose in an
-almost sheer precipice for many feet, with little clumps of bright
-flowers growing in the cracks and on the tiny ledges, which Spider
-instantly coveted for his collection of specimens that was going to help
-him get a merit badge in botany.
-
-There was one place, however, near the bowsprit, where you could make a
-landing, and Mr. Stone was already getting out there and setting up his
-camera. As soon as it was up, he asked the two boats to row around
-behind the island, and then come into sight again, passing slowly under
-the side of the ship, so he could show both the boats and the lava
-cliff. After that he got Spider ashore, and took a movie of him
-crawling, wherever he could get a finger or toe hold, twenty feet up the
-ship’s side and picking a large clump of pentstemon from a crevice.
-
-“Don’t you want to take me and Dumplin’ diving off into the water?”
-Bennie called.
-
-“Sure, if you’ll do it,” Mr. Stone laughed. “Put your arm down as far in
-as you can get it first.”
-
-Bennie pushed up his sleeve and did so. He pulled his arm out again
-quickly.
-
-“Thanks, not today,” he said.
-
-“The temperature when you get a ways below the surface remains at 39°
-winter and summer, the scientists have found,” the doctor smiled.
-
-“It doesn’t feel more’n 29° on top,” said Bennie.
-
-When the pictures were taken, they went around to the north side of the
-island, where the sides were not so steep, and taking the alpine rope,
-they all landed and scrambled up into the high saddle between the rear
-and the central mast—“the deck, this ought to be called,” they said.
-
-When they got up in here, they found it was possible to climb still
-higher up the tallest mast (the rear mast), till they reached a sharp,
-complete crack which separated it into two parts. This crack had not
-been visible from the water.
-
-“It’s a regular chimney,” Bennie exclaimed. “A chimney open at both
-sides. Do we go up that?”
-
-“I don’t,” Dumplin’ answered. “I couldn’t get into it.”
-
-“I don’t,” said his father. “I wouldn’t get into it.”
-
-“It’s about forty feet from here to the top,” said Uncle Billy. “I know
-a man who climbed it. It took him an hour and fifteen minutes.”
-
-Bennie wasn’t joking any more. He pulled himself up from the little
-platform where they were resting till he stood in the crack, and then he
-felt of the walls of smooth lava, and looked up for hand and foot holds.
-
-“But there aren’t any holds,” he said. “Hanged if I see how _anybody_
-can climb up here.”
-
-“Oh, you’ll find a few holds, if I remember right, places where you can
-get a sort of apology for a rest,” his uncle said, casually.
-
-“Say, are you joshing me or not? Did somebody really climb up here?”
-
-For answer his uncle stepped into the chimney with him.
-
-“This is the way,” he said.
-
-He braced his back against one side of the crack by pressing hard with
-his hands against the other side. Then he raised both his feet free of
-the ground, while he held himself wedged by sheer muscle, and set his
-feet against the wall a little way up. Then he pressed so hard with his
-legs that they wedged him in, and raised his hands, hunching up his
-shoulders a few inches at the same time. Again bracing with his arms and
-shoulders, he got his feet up a few more inches. Then his hands and
-shoulders again. Progressing in this way, almost crawling, in fact, he
-was before long so far up in the chimney that Bennie could walk under
-him. Then, almost as slowly as he went up, he came down.
-
-“You see, it can be done,” he said. “I don’t say it isn’t hard work. But
-you wanted exercise.”
-
-“Give me the rope!” said Bennie, shortly.
-
-“What’s the idea of the rope?” asked Lester.
-
-“So the rest of you can get up,” Bennie answered.
-
-He tied the rope under his arms, while his uncle held the coil, to play
-it out. Then he tried his shoes on the wall to see if the nails held,
-and found they would hold in the lava, where they slipped on granite or
-other hard rock, and began to work his way up. He worked in silence.
-Spider and Lester shouted joshing advice at him, advising him to use his
-teeth, to sit down a while where he was and take a rest, and anything
-else they could think of, but he was wasting no breath on replies. In
-fact, he needed all the breath, all the strength and all the attention
-he had to keep on going. A dozen times he thought he would have to give
-it up. Once he thought his strength was going to fail him and he would
-fall. That was when he was about twenty feet from the bottom. But each
-time he grit his teeth and either seemed to get a kind of second wind,
-or else found just the faintest hint of a foothold, or a handhold, so he
-could relieve for a moment the awful tension on his arms and back.
-
-Toward the top, he was literally moving inch by inch, his strength was
-so far gone. He was just able to get his hands over the rim at last,
-take a good grip, and hold himself there while his strength came back
-enough to enable him to pull himself up over the top, and get his weight
-on to his stomach, where he hung for a full minute, with his legs
-dangling back into the crack.
-
-Finally he pulled them up, too, and found himself on a tiny little
-space, hardly large enough to sit on, with the rocks and the lake 175
-feet below him. It was like sitting on top of a church spire. Trembling
-with muscular exhaustion as he was, he didn’t care to sit there long. In
-fact, he took one good look down, had a feeling as if his stomach turned
-a flipflop, drew up half of the rope and turned it around the top of the
-spire, and then grasping both strands of the doubled rope, came sliding
-down the chimney.
-
-His uncle gave him a pat on the shoulder.
-
-“Good work,” was all he said, but Bennie knew then that he had really
-done something.
-
-“Why didn’t you wait for us?” Spider demanded.
-
-“Isn’t room on top for more’n one at a time,” Bennie replied. “Go on up
-and see what it’s like. Keep hold of both strands of the rope, though.
-How long did it take me?”
-
-“About an hour and twenty minutes,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“Is that all?” said Bennie. “I felt as if it was day after tomorrow
-before I got there.”
-
-And he sat down wearily.
-
-Meanwhile Spider was hauling himself up on the doubled rope. He didn’t
-stay up much longer than Bennie, though.
-
-“Kind o’ ticklish up here,” he called back. “Glad the wind doesn’t
-blow.”
-
-Then he slid down. Nobody else wanted to go up, so the rope was pulled
-down, and the party descended to the boats again, to eat luncheon, which
-had been long delayed. Afterwards, they fished for an hour, and got
-enough trout for a meal.
-
-“Want to row us home, Bennie?” his uncle asked.
-
-“Spider hasn’t had a chance to row all day,” Bennie answered.
-
-The mile of zigzag trail up from the lake to the rim seemed endless to
-Bennie that evening, and when the rest went over to the hotel after
-dinner to hear the music and watch the dancing, he felt like refusing.
-But he didn’t. He went, too, rubbing his eyes to keep them open.
-
-“I guess you’ll sleep tonight, eh?” Uncle Billy said, when they finally
-got back to camp.
-
-“I’m going to sleep so hard I’ll puncture the mattress,” Bennie
-answered.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-The Scouts Are Driven Ashore by a Storm and Have To Climb Llao Rock—and
- They Learn a Lesson
-
-
-The next morning the doctor and Spider woke up before Bennie did, and
-they let him sleep till breakfast was almost ready. When he did get up,
-he stretched himself and discovered that his muscles were a bit stiff,
-but otherwise he felt, he said, “like a fighting cock.”
-
-“Well, don’t feel so good you eat up all the pancakes before I get one!”
-Dumplin’ laughed, snatching for the plate.
-
-“I guess what I need to take the kinks out of my back is exercise,”
-Bennie remarked, with a grin.
-
-“We’d better get hold of Jack Dempsey, and let Bennie box with him every
-day,” Mr. Stone put in.
-
-“Aw, I wouldn’t want to hurt him,” Bennie answered. “What we going to do
-today, Uncle Bill?”
-
-“We’ll have to think it over,” his uncle replied.
-
-But before anything was decided, a bell-boy came from the hotel with the
-news that someone had been taken sick there, and asking the doctor to
-come right over. It turned out that a man who had arrived the night
-before had eaten something on the road that poisoned him, and he was so
-sick that the doctor didn’t dare go far from camp that day. Mr. Stone
-wanted to stay near camp also, to make motion pictures of parties
-climbing up and down the rim, and he needed Lester to help him. So
-Bennie and Spider asked if they might go down to the water, get a boat,
-and row across the lake, taking their lunch with them.
-
-“I don’t know,” the doctor said, frowning. “You can both swim, and you
-know how to row, but that lake can get pretty rough, and if you’re
-forced to land, there’s no way of getting back till somebody can come
-after you.”
-
-“Oh, but look at the old lake! It’s calm as a mirror,” Bennie pleaded,
-“and there’s not a cloud in the sky.”
-
-“We want to see what Llao Rock looks like when you’re right under it,”
-Spider added. “We’ll be awful careful.”
-
-“Will you promise to keep fairly near shore, and if the water gets rough
-to beat it for home?” the doctor asked.
-
-“Sure we will.”
-
-“Well, I oughtn’t to let you go. I’m responsible to your parents for you
-chaps. But, after all, you’re big enough to take care of yourselves. All
-right, but be back at the landing before the sun gets off the middle of
-the lake. Promise me that?”
-
-The boys promised, and set off down the trail in high spirits, some
-sandwiches, hastily made, and some sweet chocolate in their pockets for
-lunch. There were a dozen or more other parties starting down the trail,
-too, or getting ready to start, so the scouts made the descent in record
-time, in order to be sure of getting a boat.
-
-Once out on the water, they decided it would be too much of a pull to
-try to circle the entire lake, under the cliffs—a matter of about twenty
-miles or more. But they could pull straight for the grotto on the east
-side of the lake, beyond the Phantom Ship, a matter of five miles, then
-cut across to Llao Rock, about four and a half miles, and then four
-miles home.
-
-“Sure we can row that,” said Bennie. “That’s only thirteen and a half
-miles. Call it thirteen, ’cause we won’t land, probably, at Llao.”
-
-“Sure,” answered Spider. “Easy.”
-
-Well, it was easy to the grotto, which they finally found by rowing
-along the edge of the cliffs. The grotto is simply a shallow cave, only
-a few feet up from the water, but once you are in it you look out on the
-blue lake, through the opening, as if you were looking through a big
-window. The boys ate their lunch in here, and then started directly
-across for Llao Rock.
-
-But the very first thing that they noticed was that the wind had come
-up, blowing directly against them, and with the wind a chop of water,
-which went slap, slap, slap under their bow. They pulled hard, and made
-slow progress.
-
-About half-way across, Bennie, who was rowing, said, “You pull a while,
-Spider. I’m through for a bit.”
-
-Spider took the oars and tugged. The wind and waves were certainly
-rising. They were slapping the how hard now, and swinging around so that
-the rower was half the time tugging at one oar or the other to keep his
-course.
-
-“You know what your uncle said,” Spider panted. “Strikes me we’re a long
-way from shore, and this old lake is kicking up a sea. I think we better
-turn with the wind, and beat it back to the other shore, and then make
-for home.”
-
-“We got to make for home, all right,” Bennie answered, his face getting
-white as he looked first at the waves and then up at what were
-unmistakably gathering clouds over the rim. “But if we go back to that
-east shore we get the full force of the sea, ’cause the wind is west. If
-we get in under the west side, we’ll be out of the wind, in shelter.
-Then we can run for home that way.”
-
-“There’s something in that,” Spider assented. “If we can get there.”
-
-“We _got_ to get there,” Bennie cried. “Look at that old black cloud up
-there.”
-
-Spider took one look, and began to pull for all he was worth.
-
-It was dangerous business changing places in that sea, but finally he
-had to give up to Bennie again.
-
-“Look out for those oars!” Bennie shouted. “We’d be goners if we lost
-one of them. We got to make shore, and wait till this is over. Oh gee!”
-
-This last exclamation was caused by a wave that hit the boat almost
-broadside, drenching both boys to the knees and putting an inch of water
-on the bottom.
-
-Bennie got hold of the oars, headed the boat into the sea again, and
-Spider began to bail with his cap. Wave after wave now hit their bow,
-and came spraying over, soaking them. There were whitecaps all around.
-The sun had disappeared behind the dark cloud, and the wind seemed
-rising steadily. Bennie pulled with every ounce of strength he had, and
-Spider bailed madly. Slowly, very slowly, almost as if they were
-standing still, Llao Rock drew near. They had to make the dangerous
-change once more, when Bennie’s strength gave out, and once more the
-boat swung broadside, and shipped a dangerous quantity of water.
-
-“If she’ll only stay afloat till we make the shore!” Bennie cried. “Gee,
-it don’t seem to be a bit calmer over here.”
-
-“If it is, I’m glad we ain’t out there,” Spider panted as he tugged at
-the oars.
-
-In spite of all he could do, with only his cap to bail with, the boat
-was perilously full of water before the great lava precipices of Llao
-Rock finally towered right above them, and they saw and heard the waves
-on the stony shore.
-
-“How are we going to land without smashing the boat?” Spider puffed.
-
-“Hang the boat! How are we going to land without smashing our heads?”
-Bennie answered. “Hold her right inshore, and when I see a place pull
-for all you’ve got left!”
-
-“Pull!” he yelled a moment later.
-
-Spider drove the boat in. A wave caught it and threw it forward, but the
-bow drove between two lava fragments which rested half in water, half on
-shore, and while Bennie grabbed one oar and pushed at the stern, Spider
-jumped from the bow with the painter in his hand. He landed on a stone
-at the water’s edge, slipped back above his waist, scrambled out
-dripping wet, hauled on the painter, and got the bow in close. Bennie
-got out, and between them they hauled the boat up where the waves
-couldn’t knock it free, and tipped her over to let the water run out.
-
-Then they both sat down and panted.
-
-“Well, I’d rather be here than out there,” Bennie finally said.
-
-“I don’t mind saying I didn’t know whether we’d ever get here,” Spider
-answered. “I guess that was a close call, all right. Gee, but my arms
-ache!”
-
-“Mine don’t—they haven’t any feeling left in ’em,” said Bennie. “Well,
-what are we going to do now? We can’t stay here all night and freeze to
-death.”
-
-“I sure am wet and cold,” Spider answered. “And you can’t make a fire
-out of lava and pumice. Funny thing, not a drop of rain has fallen.
-Look, there’s the sun again over on the top of Scott.”
-
-“No more sun here, though,” Bennie said, looking up the 800 foot sharp
-slope of pumice above them, that ended at the 1,200 foot absolutely
-precipitous and terrifying leap of Llao Rock. “We’re under the shadow of
-that old rock.”
-
-“Well, we’ll just have to hop round and keep as warm as we can, till the
-old lake quiets down and we can row home.”
-
-“She don’t show any signs of quieting down,” said Bennie. “Hear the old
-wind. ’Sides, it’ll take a long while for those waves to quit. And I
-don’t want to go out on that water again! Gee, I couldn’t row a hundred
-feet.”
-
-“We could if we had to,” said Spider, bravely. “Anyhow, probably your
-uncle will send the launch out after us.”
-
-“They don’t know where we are, and we can’t make a fire to signal.”
-
-“They’ll have field-glasses,” Spider suggested. “We can wave our
-handkerchiefs.”
-
-“’Sides,” Bennie went on, “maybe the launch is out, too, and it’ll be
-dark before they can get here, and maybe they won’t come across in this
-sea. I’ll be frozen stiff by that time. I move we climb up to the rim
-road and walk home. It’s only eight miles from Llao Rock to camp,
-according to the map.”
-
-“Climb up!” exclaimed Spider, looking aloft at the terrific precipice.
-“This has gone to your head, Bennie.”
-
-“You poor fish, we wouldn’t climb the rock itself,” Bennie answered.
-“Don’t you remember, Uncle Billy said somebody worked up to the base,
-and then along on top of the pumice slope to the rim? If somebody else
-did it, we can do it. If we see the launch coming after we get up a ways
-we can come down. Anyhow, it’s better’n freezing to death here. It’ll
-keep us warm.”
-
-“Looks to me like an awful job,” Spider objected.
-
-“Well, you can stay here then, _I’m_ going,” Bennie declared. His voice
-was shrill, and Spider realized that he wasn’t quite himself. Besides,
-he was shivering with cold. Spider was shivering, too, here in the
-gloomy shadow of Llao Rock, with the wind beating upon them.
-
-“All right,” he decided, “if you go, I go. Come on. We got to hit the
-rim road before dark. But take it easy, Bennie, for Pete’s sake. We got
-to save our strength, and this old stuff’s awful treacherous, too. Test
-your footing.”
-
-“I’ll test my footing, all right,” Bennie answered, starting up the
-long, steep incline of powdered pumice and loose conglomerate, out of
-which here and there thrust up jagged lumps and spikes and little cliffs
-of harder lava.
-
-It was hard work, all the harder because they were so wet and tired. And
-they soon found it was dangerous work. Drive your foot down into the
-soft stuff too hard to get a brace, and you start a little landslide
-right under your own feet. That releases a lot of stuff above you, which
-starts down, too, and it is only too easy to get carried down with the
-rush. The boys found this out, fortunately, before they had climbed very
-far, so that they didn’t slide far enough to hurt them. After that, they
-climbed side by side, ten feet apart, instead of one behind the other,
-and zigzagged across the slopes, instead of going directly up.
-
-It seemed ages before they reached the top of the loose stuff, at the
-very base of the mighty precipice. From here they could see the whole
-lake, and scanned the water for any sign of the launch, but no launch
-was to be seen. So they kept on.
-
-Their troubles, which they thought would be over when they reached the
-base of the cliff, were not over. They still had a long, soft slope to
-climb at the foot of the lava, which was impeded by huge broken
-fragments fallen from the cliff above. Often they couldn’t go around
-these, because if they did they got too near the edge of the slope, and
-were in danger of starting down on a landslide. They had to work over
-them. However, they toiled on, getting warm, at least, with the
-exertion, until they reached the long and almost level stretch that led
-rapidly to the rim.
-
-Here, for the first time in ten minutes, Bennie spoke. “We’re going to
-make it!” he cried.
-
-“And we’re going to make it before dark!” Spider answered.
-
-They hurried on now, with renewed courage, and gained the rim at last,
-coming up out of the cold shadows into the sharp mountain gale and the
-last low rays of sunset.
-
-Both boys flopped for a minute on the dry pumice back from the rim, and
-lay there getting back some of their strength.
-
-Spider was the first up. “Come,” he said, “we got to find the rim road
-before it’s dark.”
-
-“Eight miles!” Bennie sighed. “Oh, you automobile!”
-
-“Come on—no use crying for automobiles. We got to find that road and
-hoof it. We can’t stay out all night in these wet clothes, without any
-blankets.”
-
-Bennie got up wearily. “All right. The old road’ll be pretty close. All
-we got to do is walk down the back slope, away from the rim.”
-
-“But it’s all snow,” said Spider. “How’ll we know the road when we see
-it?”
-
-“If we can’t tell a road when we come to it, snow or no snow, we’re bum
-scouts and deserve to stay here and freeze to death,” Bennie retorted.
-
-As a matter of fact, in spite of the snow, they did find the road, by
-catching at a distance a cut through trees, and then by picking up a
-long open space bare of snow, which the road crossed, showing plainly.
-Once on it, the chance of missing it again was not great unless the
-night got very dark. With bright starlight, even without a moon, the
-tired scouts, as they plodded along, now for brief welcome stretches on
-the bare ground, but mostly on the soft drifts where every step was an
-effort, reckoned they could keep the trail.
-
-“Besides,” Bennie said, “if we lost it, we could always sort of follow
-the rim.”
-
-“Yes, and have to climb up over the top of the Watchman and Glacier
-Peak. No, thanks. I’ve climbed enough today. It’ll be in woods a lot of
-the way, and we can always feel the opening. You know how we can follow
-a wood road at home in the dark.”
-
-“Oh, you home!” sighed Bennie. “Think of bacon, and coffee, and baked
-potatoes! Oh, boy, I’m going to cry in a minute, I’m so empty.”
-
-“Take up a hole in your belt, like the Indians,” Spider suggested.
-
-It was getting dark now rapidly, and they were plodding wearily across a
-long opening on the heavy snow, which was like walking on a pile of rock
-salt, and wondering where the road was on the other side, when suddenly
-Spider stopped.
-
-“Look!” he cried.
-
-“What is it? I don’t see anything.”
-
-“Look, in the trees. I saw a light!”
-
-“How do you get that way?” Bennie demanded. “Light! We’re about six
-miles from nowhere here. Haven’t any campers been around the rim road.
-Can’t get around. Buck up, Spider. Don’t cave now!”
-
-“Oh, quit,” said Spider crossly. “There! There it is again!”
-
-This time Bennie saw it. There _was_ a light in the woods ahead of them.
-Moreover, it wasn’t a camp fire. It was moving.
-
-“Somebody with a lantern!” Bennie exclaimed. He stuck two fingers into
-his mouth and blew a long, shrill blast.
-
-The answer was a “Hoo-oo!” in Uncle Billy’s voice!
-
-“How’d they know we were here?” said Bennie, as they both shouted back,
-and stumbled on more rapidly toward the light.
-
-A moment later they were beside Uncle Billy and Mr. Stone, and out of
-his pack Uncle Billy was taking a thermos bottle of hot tea, and the
-boys were drinking it. Around his shoulder, they saw, the doctor had his
-alpine rope.
-
-“I guess that doesn’t go to the spot!” Bennie exclaimed.
-
-“Never knew tea was so good,” said Spider.
-
-And now followed rapid questions and answers, as the tramp to camp was
-resumed. No trouble about finding the road now! They had a lantern, and
-the back tracks of Uncle Billy and Mr. Stone.
-
-“How’d you know where we were?” the boys demanded.
-
-“Watched you with a glass,” said the doctor. “I saw the lake getting
-rough, after you started across, and I saw that cloud coming. Stone went
-down the trail to send the launch for you, but the launch was out with a
-party. Finally it got in under the lee of Wizard Island, and everybody
-tried to signal it to come across, but it didn’t come, and finally
-somebody rowed over from it and reported the engine had gone dead and
-they couldn’t start it. They’re bringing the passengers back now, when
-the lake’s got quieter.
-
-“By that time, we’d seen you land at Llao Rock, so we planned to row
-over and get you just as soon as we could, if they didn’t get the launch
-started up. But then you began to climb.”
-
-The doctor paused.
-
-“Well,” he finally went on, “I had a bad five minutes then, I can tell
-you. But there was nothing to do about it, so we watched to make sure
-you were really going to try to make the rim, and then we beat it over
-here. You made better time up than I thought you could. We expected to
-get to the rock before you got up. I brought the rope to—to help you.”
-
-“Why did you keep on into the wind?” Mr. Stone asked. “Why didn’t you
-turn back and run with it to the east shore where you came from?”
-
-The boys explained how they thought they were going to get out of the
-wind under the protection of Llao Rock.
-
-“There’s no protection on that lake in a storm,” the doctor said.
-“Fortunately, there aren’t many storms. I told you to keep near shore,
-though, and you crossed right over. Well, never mind that now. Guess
-you’ve had your lesson.”
-
-“Guess we have,” said Bennie, as he stumbled wearily along, hardly able
-to drag one foot after the other. “But we thought we were pretty near
-the north shore when we crossed. Only to get there, we’d have to go
-broadside, and besides, it was taking us away from camp.”
-
-“Still,” said his uncle, quietly, “you didn’t quite live up to your
-promise, did you?”
-
-“No, sir,” Bennie admitted. “It won’t happen again, Uncle Billy.”
-
-The six miles back to camp turned out to be seven. It seemed to the boys
-that they would never get there. But at last they did. Dumplin’ had a
-roaring fire going, both in the stove and the camp fire ring of stones.
-Coffee was ready to boil, and bacon to fry. He had eggs, too, bought
-from the hotel.
-
-The scouts fell into their tent and ripped off their clothes, getting a
-rub-down before putting on dry ones. By the time they were ready, their
-dinner was cooked, and they came out to the table, dragging their feet
-wearily, and slumped down on the camp chairs.
-
-“Good old Dumplin’!” said Bennie, as he waded into the food, “I never
-loved you so much as I do at this minute.”
-
-“P’r’aps you’d like to kiss him,” Spider suggested, also cheering up as
-he felt the warmth of the food.
-
-“No, I’m not strong enough yet to do that,” Bennie laughed.
-
-“You never will be!” Dumplin’ retorted, filling his plate again.
-
-After their supper the boys hung their wet clothes by the camp fire, and
-huddled by it themselves for a while, but Uncle Billy soon ordered them
-to bed, and they didn’t need to be told twice.
-
-The doctor came into the tent after they had crawled into the grateful,
-warm blankets on the comfortable air cushions of their sleeping bags.
-
-“All right?” he asked.
-
-“Uncle Bill,” said Bennie, “it was my fault we crossed the lake. Spider
-didn’t have a thing to do with planning the trip.”
-
-“No, we were both to blame,” put in Spider. “We knew we couldn’t row all
-around the lake, and we wanted to see the grotto and Llao Rock both, so
-we cut across. I—I guess we didn’t really think.”
-
-“We won’t say anything more about it,” the doctor answered. “It’s come
-out all right. But maybe next time you’ll believe that I know more about
-this country than you do, and when I ask for a promise, it isn’t just an
-old maid’s fancy.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” they both answered.
-
-When he had gone out, Spider whispered across the tent, “He’s a peach,
-your uncle. Gee, he didn’t bawl us out a bit.”
-
-“Made me more ashamed than if he had,” Bennie replied.
-
-“Me, too.”
-
-“I guess we gave him a bad time of it, worrying about us. I guess we
-deserved to get ours.”
-
-“Well, we got it, all right.”
-
-“Kid, you’ve enunciated a history full!” Bennie answered. “We’re bum
-scouts. Never again.”
-
-“Never again,” echoed Spider.
-
-They were sound asleep when Uncle Billy returned from a last call on his
-patient at the hotel and went to bed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-Bennie Takes a Day Off to Do a Good Turn—He Washes All the Dirty Clothes
-
-
-The next day neither of the scouts felt much like strenuous exertion.
-Their arms ached from pulling the boat, and they both had blisters on
-their hands, and the excitement had left them rather tired.
-
-Mr. Stone looked at them while they were eating breakfast.
-
-“Well, Bennie,” he said, “what are you and Spider going to do today? I
-can’t seem to think of anything left around here that will give you as
-much exercise as you want. Of course, you haven’t yet run all the way
-down the trail and run all the way back again. You might try that. Or
-you might row to Llao Rock and tow your other boat home, before the
-launch has to go for it.”
-
-“Naw, that’s too easy,” Bennie grinned. “I kind of thought we might hike
-around the rim road. How far is it—forty miles? We’d be back in time for
-dinner.”
-
-“A good idea!” Uncle Billy exclaimed.
-
-“What’s a good idea?” asked Bennie, beginning to be sorry he’d made the
-joke.
-
-“A hike,” said the doctor.
-
-Spider and Bennie groaned.
-
-“Not today!” the doctor laughed. “Tomorrow, maybe. We haven’t had a real
-hike yet, and I heard you talking the other day, didn’t I, Bennie, about
-wanting to work for a merit badge in hiking?”
-
-“Where’ll we hike to—how far?” put in Dumplin’. “Look at those two
-lovely automobiles, just doing nothing. Don’t seem right to me to let
-’em loaf so.”
-
-“Well, you can stay back in camp, and have the wood all cut and the
-dinner cooked for us when we get back,” said his father.
-
-“Yes, I will!” Dumplin’ retorted. “I may be fat——”
-
-“It’s just possible,” put in Bennie.
-
-“I may be fat, but I can keep goin’ as long as any of you, I guess!”
-
-“You may not be so fat when we get back,” Uncle Billy went on. “I think
-it would be a great idea to give Bennie some regular exercise, about
-tomorrow, also the day after, and the day after that. We’ll hike over to
-the base of Mount Scott, because that’s the highest point around here,
-packing our blankets and grub. Then the second day we’ll climb Scott,
-and the third day we’ll hike back again.”
-
-“Ho, that’s no hike at all, if you take three days for it!” Bennie said.
-“I been looking on the map. It’s less ’n ten miles from here to the top
-of the mountain, and the top is only 8,938 feet high, so it’s only a
-2,000-foot climb.”
-
-“How much better you know this country than I do,” said his uncle,
-quietly, “and how skilfully you can read the contour intervals on a map.
-Well, you may go over and back the same day, if you want to. The rest of
-us will take three, however.”
-
-Bennie turned red. “I—I guess I’m a dumb-bell,” he stammered.
-
-“It’s just possible,” Dumplin’ put in, while the rest shouted with mirth
-at the hit.
-
-Spider, meanwhile, had gone to his pack and got out the government
-topographical survey map of Crater Lake Park.
-
-“Do we go along the rim?” he asked.
-
-“More or less. We’ll have to climb part way up Garfield, and then find a
-way down on the other side, and work along back of Dutton Cliff to Kerr
-Valley.”
-
-Spider was studying the contour interval lines of the map closely now.
-
-“Let’s see, we go up at least 500 feet for a start, and then we go along
-a mile or two, and then we—holy mackerel!—then we drop right down ’most
-a thousand! And then——”
-
-“Yes?” said Bennie.
-
-“And then we go up again ’most a thousand, and then we walk a mile, and
-then—jumping bullfrogs and little fish hooks!—then we just fall down,
-let’s see, about a thousand feet into Kerr Valley. That’s less than
-6,500 feet above the sea. Scott is almost 9,000. We’ve still got a climb
-of 2,500 feet ahead of us.”
-
-“Aw, go on, you’re making that up,” Bennie insisted. “You can’t tell all
-that from the map. Let me look.”
-
-“Maybe _you_ can’t tell,” Spider retorted. “I always told you you didn’t
-half read a map. Go on—look for yourself.”
-
-And he passed the map over.
-
-Bennie studied it carefully. “I guess maybe you’re right,” he finally
-confessed. “Well, exercise is just what I need! How’s the path, Uncle
-Bill?”
-
-“Path!” the doctor laughed. “You’ll cross the rim road at the bottom of
-Kerr Valley, where it comes down from the rim to get around the cliffs
-back to the hotel here. But that’s the only path you’ll see. This is
-going to be a hike, not a Sunday School picnic or a young ladies’
-seminary out for a walk.”
-
-“Suits me fine.”
-
-“Good!” said his uncle. “I advise you to rest up for it today, though.”
-
-“I know what I’m going to do today, all right. Anybody got any dirty
-clothes?”
-
-“I haven’t got much else,” said Dumplin’.
-
-“Fine. Bring ’em out, all of you. Mrs. Murphy’s on the job this morning.
-I’m going to wash things up.”
-
-“Want me to help?” Dumplin’ asked.
-
-“No, you go off with Spider and collect pretty little flowers. Don’t let
-’em bite you, though. They’re wild flowers, remember.”
-
-Everybody groaned at this pun.
-
-“Mrs. Noah threw a belaying pin at her husband for making that one on
-the ark,” said Uncle Billy.
-
-“What’s the difference,” Bennie began, “between Noah’s ark and Joan of
-Arc?”
-
-But everybody dove, with another groan, into the tents, to get their
-dirty clothes.
-
-When everybody but Bennie had gone from camp, he heated a big pail of
-water, got out a cake of soap, and washed all the dirty clothes, hanging
-them on a tent rope in the sun to dry. Then he picked up camp as neat as
-he could, aired all the bedding and remade the sleeping bags, and
-finally went off and hunted up dead branches for fuel, dragging them
-back to camp. After lunch, while the rest were loafing, he took the
-fishing rod and sneaked away unseen, went rapidly down the trail, and
-working around on the rocks by the shore, managed to hook three trout.
-He was just coming up over the rim with them when Spider and Lester,
-wondering at his long absence, had started out to look for him.
-
-“I sure hate a man who pins roses on himself,” Bennie remarked, as he
-was cleaning the fish for dinner, “but I just can’t help admitting that
-I’ve been mamma’s little white-haired boy today. I’ve washed all your
-dirty shirts and socks, and I’ve got wood, and I’ve cleaned up camp, and
-now I’ve dragged my poor old aching bones down a thousand feet and back
-again to catch you three sweet little fishie-wishies for supper. Won’t
-somebody please say ‘Thank you, Bennie, you are a good boy’?”
-
-“Bennie doesn’t like himself a bit, does he?” remarked Dumplin’,
-addressing a camp robber in a tree overhead.
-
-“Can’t you prescribe something for his poor old aching bones, Doc?”
-asked Mr. Stone.
-
-“Try rubbing ’em with a little fish oil, Bennie,” Spider put in.
-
-“I think I shall prescribe exercise,” Uncle Billy laughed.
-
-“Well, of all the ungrateful bunches, you sure get the loving cup!”
-Bennie exclaimed. “I hope you all choke on a fish bone.”
-
-“The Bible says virtue is its own reward, Bennie,” remarked Mr. Stone.
-
-“Pretty skinny pickings for some of you guys, then,” Bennie grinned.
-
-But after supper Uncle Billy strolled out with Bennie to the point of
-Victory Rock, to see the lake like a great blue mirror in the twilight,
-and he said, quietly:
-
-“We were all much obliged to you for what you did today. Never mind the
-joshing.”
-
-Bennie laughed. “Ho! I didn’t mind. Can’t get my goat so easy as that!
-Besides, the old Bible is right, I guess. You don’t do a good turn
-because you’re going to be thanked for it. You do it ’cause it makes you
-feel better inside.”
-
-“That’s the idea, exactly,” Uncle Billy answered. “Bennie, you’re a good
-scout. Your heart is just where it ought to be every time. The only
-trouble with you is that you haven’t quite got your head working yet. If
-you are going to amount to anything as a mountaineer or
-explorer—anywhere in the wilderness—you’ve got to learn to use your
-head, and never bite off more than you can chew. Will you try to
-remember that?”
-
-“I sure will, Uncle Bill,” Bennie answered. “I’m awful fresh, I guess,
-and I talk a lot, but I’m learning right now, every day. You just sit on
-me hard when I need it.”
-
-“You needn’t worry about my doing _that_,” the doctor grinned.
-
-“No, you’re some sitter,” said Bennie.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- The Long Hike—The Scouts Find Packing Grub and Blanket Rolls Up and
- Down Cliffs is Hard Work
-
-
-Bright and early the next morning preparations for the hike began. This
-was to be no ordinary jaunt. They were going out for three days and two
-nights into a wilderness, where they would have to make long, severe
-climbs up and down treacherous lava ledges; where they would have to
-sleep out in the open, tentless, in a climate where water freezes at
-night; where they couldn’t get a mouthful of food except what they could
-carry with them.
-
-“You see, boys,” said the doctor, “it’s going to be quite a problem how
-to take along enough stuff to keep us warm, and keep us fed, and yet be
-able to travel with it on our backs.”
-
-Each member of the party put in his shoulder pack his own food ration,
-consisting of tea (because it is lighter than coffee), some bacon,
-powdered egg, a little dehydrated vegetables, a small bag of flour, a
-small bag of sugar, a package of bouillon cubes, a can of preserved
-fruit, a small can of condensed milk, two pounds of raisins, two boiled
-potatoes, and several cakes of sweet chocolate. In addition, each person
-put in two extra pairs of wool socks, and a set of underclothes. Then,
-out of their sleeping bags, they each took a double blanket, and made a
-blanket roll, fastening the ends with straps from the motors. Bennie and
-Spider each had a boy scout individual cook-kit, in a khaki case with a
-shoulder strap. These two kits, with a tin cup and plate and spoon for
-the others, and one, larger frying-pan and kettle carried by Uncle
-Billy, was all the cooking outfit they carried. However, the doctor made
-everybody carry a canteen, and Bennie, Spider and Mr. Stone each carried
-a camera. Everybody had a sweater, also, and two belt axes were taken.
-The doctor had his rope.
-
-When the shoulder packs were on, and the blanket rolls, and the
-canteens, and the cameras and camp kits, everybody was glad enough of
-the alpenstocks which the doctor handed around.
-
-“Say, I need this stock to help me stand up,” said Dumplin’. “I feel
-like a walking department store.”
-
-“I’ll bet we aren’t toting any more than a soldier has to carry on a
-march, at that,” said Spider. “Are we, doctor?”
-
-“No, I don’t believe we’re packing so much,” Uncle Billy answered. “A
-gun’s heavier than a stock, too. But it’s enough. Going to be hot
-today.”
-
-As the little procession filed past the hotel (which by now was full of
-tourists), a crowd came out to watch them go past.
-
-“Going on a hike, boys?” somebody called out.
-
-“No,” Bennie answered, “we’re going over to Wizard Island to play
-tennis.”
-
-“Wonder what makes people ask foolish questions?” Dumplin’ mused.
-
-“It’s the——” Bennie began. Then he caught himself. “Ha! thought you had
-me, didn’t you?—it’s the altitude!”
-
-“You chaps won’t talk so much at three o’clock,” remarked Mr. Stone.
-
-For the first half mile, they had a trail, the trail they had already
-taken up Garfield Peak. But half-way up, they left the trail, and struck
-right out, without any path at all, around the tumbled crags of broken
-lava, and over the snow-fields and patches of soft pumice soil that
-crown this part of the rim on the southeastern side of the lake. The
-going was very slow and difficult, up hill and down, in and out among
-the rises and dips, with the sun beating down upon them till their packs
-and hot blankets seemed almost unbearable. At first, they could see the
-blue lake almost 2,000 feet below them, while they worked along the
-crest of Eagle Crags, but after a while they had to drop down behind the
-rim to avoid a climb up Dyar Rock, and lost all sight of it.
-
-After about two miles, they came out on the crest of a slope that led
-down to Sun Creek, and saw the Sun meadows below them. They would have
-rejoiced at this sight if they hadn’t also seen the wall of the deep
-ravine rising up on the other side, steeper and higher than under their
-feet.
-
-“Oh, for the wings of a dove!” sighed Dumplin’.
-
-“Lot o’ good a dove’s wings would do _you_,” said Bennie. “Take a
-dirigible to lift you.”
-
-“A bridge across would do me,” said Spider.
-
-“Meanwhile, we’ll get a little exercise crossing on our own feet,” Uncle
-Billy smiled. “Come on, now, and watch your step. Sound your footing
-with your alpenstocks, and keep out of line, so if anybody starts a
-slide, it won’t spill all the rest.”
-
-They made the descent slowly and painfully over the first steep pitches,
-and then more rapidly till they sank at last on the ground by the water
-of Sun Creek, which came down from a snow-bank up on the rim at the head
-of the ravine, threw off packs and blankets, and plunged their mouths
-in.
-
-“Do we lunch here? I’m hungry——” from Dumplin’.
-
-“We do,” the doctor answered. “And it’s a brief lunch, too. Everybody
-take one handful of raisins, and half a cake of chocolate.”
-
-“Oh, gee, is _that_ all?” cried Dumplin’.
-
-“That’s all. John Muir used to climb for two or three days in the high
-Sierras on a pocketful of raisins, and didn’t even carry a blanket. Come
-on, get busy.”
-
-Everybody obeyed, and the doctor saw to it that they didn’t take too
-many of their raisin supply, either.
-
-“I consider this a Lucullan feast,” remarked Mr. Stone.
-
-“Whatever that is,” said Bennie. “If you mean some banquet, I’m right
-along with you. Always did like these seven-course dinners.”
-
-“Anyhow, it won’t take long to wash the dishes,” Spider reflected.
-
-As soon as the raisins and chocolate were eaten, and the canteens
-refilled, they picked up their packs and blankets again and put them on.
-
-“Gosh! mine weighs more’n it did,” said Bennie. “Somebody’s put
-something into it.”
-
-“Mine, too.”
-
-“Mine, too.”
-
-“Mine, too.”
-
-“Wait till they get really heavy before you kick,” said Uncle Billy.
-“Forward, march!”
-
-The thousand-foot wall of the Sun Creek ravine which faced them was just
-about the height from the lake to the rim at the hotel, but it was not
-so steep, except for a little distance at the start. On the other hand,
-there was no trail at all, no sign that any other human being had ever
-been up it, and when the going was not amid treacherous lava fragments
-which broke if you put your weight on them, it was over soft pumice into
-which your feet sank deep, and then began to slide backwards. Finally
-Bennie took his uncle’s rope and scrambled up ahead with it, till he
-could find anchorage, so the rest could have its help. When he was
-fagged, somebody else took a turn. It took them more than an hour to
-make the half mile up the wall, and at the top they pitched off their
-packs and blankets, their shoulders and backs dripping wet with
-perspiration, and everybody set his mouth to his canteen and drank.
-
-After a rest, they crossed Dutton ridge, a mile of broken going, and
-then began to descend into the next ravine, called Kerr Valley, which is
-the deepest ravine on the slopes of old Mount Mazama, and lies right at
-the foot of Scott Peak. The descent was not dangerously steep till the
-last three hundred feet, and there they used the rope again to help
-them.
-
-As they came out at last into the mile wide ravine of Kerr Valley, out
-of which the snow had pretty well melted except under the trees, and in
-which the wild flowers were springing up, they saw where the rim road
-came down from the rim and descended the valley to get around the mass
-of ledges and ravines they had been crossing. It was now three o’clock,
-and, as Mr. Stone had predicted, nobody was saying much.
-
-They could see the round, dome-like pile of Scott’s Peak, directly
-across the valley, and Bennie did ask how far it was from there to the
-top.
-
-“Thinking of keeping on up today?” his uncle asked.
-
-“Aw, don’t rub it in,” said Bennie. “I couldn’t climb an ant-hill now.”
-
-“Well, a mile more will take us across the valley to water,” his uncle
-laughed. “Guess we can all stick that out.”
-
-On the other side of the valley, across the still deserted and useless
-rim road, they found a stream, called Sand Creek, which came down, the
-doctor said, from a spring on the cliffs of Scott, just above them.
-
-Here they dumped their packs again, stripped off their clothes, and the
-three boys were only restrained by main force from falling in.
-
-“You’re too hot to go in that ice water,” the doctor said, grabbing
-Bennie. “Wash your feet all you want to, and splash yourselves.”
-
-After the wash, they put on their dry underclothes, and spread the other
-set in the sun (which was fast dropping down the west), and then set
-about making camp.
-
-“I say we find a straight-faced rock to build the fire against,” Bennie
-suggested, “so it will throw the heat all one way, and we can sleep
-around it in a half circle, out of the wind.”
-
-“I move we find a place where the ground is dry and a snow-drift hasn’t
-just melted off it,” added Spider.
-
-“And where it’s nice and soft,” added Dumplin’.
-
-“And where it’s near wood,” added Mr. Stone.
-
-“Maybe you’d like a room with a bath, and have your breakfast brought up
-to you,” Uncle Billy laughed. “Well, go to it. Find your rock, Bennie.
-Whoever’s got the axes, cut wood, and lots of it.”
-
-A smooth place was finally found in the lee of a block of lava, some
-little way from the stream, but near a patch of firs and hemlocks, where
-there was plenty of dead wood. Dumplin’ started stoning up a big
-fireplace, while the two scouts chopped wood and Mr. Stone brought water
-in the big kettle and two little kettles of the camp kits and in the
-canteens, and the doctor mixed a pancake batter, and made the bacon and
-egg powder ready to cook, and peeled one of the two potatoes in each
-pack.
-
-As the sun dropped down behind the high ridge to the west, a chill
-almost immediately came into the air. In less than an hour everybody,
-who had been so hot all day, was thinking about putting on his sweater.
-But the fire burned brightly, the potatoes smelled delicious in the
-frying-pan, and as soon as they were done, the smell of bacon and eggs
-rose from the same pan. Water for bouillon tablets and tea boiled in the
-kettles. The food disappeared down hungry mouths, and every plate was
-scraped clean, ready for the pancakes to follow. They had no syrup to
-eat on the cakes, but nobody seemed to mind that. After the cakes, they
-drew lots to see whose can of fruit should be opened, because the lucky
-one would have so much less to carry in his pack. Dumplin’ won, to his
-delight. His can was peaches, and how good they tasted—after the can was
-finally pried open, with the aid of a scout ax, a stone and a broken
-jack-knife blade!
-
-Then the dishes were washed, more wood heaped on the fire, sweaters
-donned, and in the gathering darkness, and the utter silence of the
-wilderness, the five hikers sat in a close ring before the fire, and
-relaxed their weary muscles.
-
-“Well, I’m glad I lugged that grub,” said Bennie. “’Bout three o’clock,
-though, I would have dumped the whole pack over the rim for two cents.”
-
-“Me, too,” said Dumplin’. “Gosh, this hiking is hard work! Don’t see
-much adventure in it. Here we’ve come about eight or nine miles, and
-took us all day, and nothin’ happened.”
-
-“What did you expect to happen?” his father asked. “Expect to meet an
-elephant, or have the mountain erupt?”
-
-“Gee, _I_ think it’s a wonderful adventure!” Spider exclaimed. “It’s
-been a kind of _battle_. I—I can’t say what I mean, but it was just the
-same when Bennie and I were getting up Llao Rock. We were sort of
-_fighting_ up. Only instead of fighting another man, who tries to hit
-you back, you are fighting just—just—well, just the wilderness.”
-
-“And it’s against you all the time,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-Bennie had grown very thoughtful. “No, it’s _not_ against you all the
-time,” he said. “Excuse me for contradicting, Mr. Stone. I don’t mean to
-be fresh. But the way I feel is that it’s against you if you don’t know
-how to meet it, but if you do know, it is always kind of putting out
-things to help you.”
-
-“Such as——?” asked his uncle.
-
-“Well, such as dead wood for a fire, and a chimney to crawl up in, if
-you know how, when you strike a precipice, and maybe food to eat. I bet
-we could find food in the roots of some of these wild flowers, if we had
-to.”
-
-“Give me bacon,” said Dumplin’.
-
-“Gee, Dump, you go to church behind your belt buckle,” said Bennie
-scornfully. “But I’m with Spider, though, that a hike like this is a
-regular adventure, ’cause it’s a sort of fight all the way, and it’s all
-up to you whether you get through or not. Gee, I wish I was an
-explorer!”
-
-Uncle Billy smiled. “We may get a little exploring yet, before we get
-back to Portland. You never can tell. Well, who’s going to sleep
-tonight?”
-
-“I guess we all are.”
-
-“Till the cold wakes us up,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“And a rock grows up through our shoulder blades,” said Spider.
-
-“Whenever that happens, put some more wood on the fire,” said Uncle
-Billy.
-
-Then everybody rolled up in his blanket, feet to the fire, with his pack
-for a pillow, and in spite of the bare ground, in place of a nice air
-mattress, was soon asleep.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-The Climb Up Scott Peak—Bennie Begins Work for a Merit Badge for Hiking
-
-
-But the night wasn’t very old before everybody had discovered that there
-is a big difference between sleeping on an air mattress, inside four or
-five blankets in a sleeping bag, under a tent, and sleeping on the bare
-ground, in one blanket. Bennie and Spider had slept on the bare ground,
-to be sure, many a time on their scout hikes at home, but that was
-always in summer, when it was warm. To be sure, it was summer now, but
-they were more than 6,000 feet up, on the crest of the Cascades, with
-snow all around them.
-
-It seemed to Bennie as if he had been asleep only fifteen minutes, when
-he was waked up by cold. He didn’t fully wake up at first, but only just
-enough to feel the wind getting down around his neck, and to feel his
-whole body stiff and uncomfortable. He yanked the blanket tighter around
-him, and tried to go to sleep again. But, instead, he woke up still
-more.
-
-At last he was awake enough to prop himself up on one elbow, and look at
-the fire. It had burned down to a few glowing embers in the stone pit
-against the lava block. Overhead the stars were extremely bright, but
-the night itself seemed dark. There wasn’t a sound in the world. Yes!
-Hark! Bennie’s ears grew alert in the darkness. Far off he heard a roar,
-starting low, then growing louder, then dying away. At first he couldn’t
-understand it; then he realized it was a landslide somewhere on a steep
-slope, perhaps over on the rim of the lake a mile and a half away. He
-listened again, but there was no further sound—only a whisper of wind in
-the fir trees close by, and the gentle run of the water in the creek.
-Suddenly Bennie realized that he was in the very heart of the
-wilderness, that except for his four companions asleep beside him, there
-wasn’t a human being within a day’s hike. He also realized that if he
-didn’t put some wood on the fire pretty quick, it would be out entirely.
-
-So he crawled out of his blanket as gently as he could, and tried to
-make no noise as he put on more fuel. He blew on the coals till the new
-wood caught, and then turned his cold back to the flames. As he did so,
-he saw Spider’s eyes open in the sudden light. Spider blinked a second,
-and then sat up.
-
-“Hello,” he whispered. “You cold?”
-
-“Gosh, I was most frozen,” Bennie whispered back.
-
-“Me, too. Been sleeping on a rock, right in the middle of my hip. Ow,
-it’s sore!”
-
-Spider now got up also, and came close to the fire.
-
-When they were warmed up again, they lay down once more, and managed to
-doze off. But long before morning, Bennie woke to see first Mr. Stone
-and then his uncle putting more wood on the fire. It wasn’t yet
-dawn—just the first hint of lightness in the sky—when Bennie finally
-woke up so cold and so stiff and uncomfortable from the hard ground,
-that further sleep seemed impossible. He was just rousing himself to put
-on more wood when he heard Spider stir, and then sit up.
-
-“I’m going to stay up,” he whispered. “Let’s take a trot around to get
-warm.”
-
-Spider rose, and after building up the fire and huddling over it a few
-minutes, they walked away from camp.
-
-“Let’s go up the valley to the rim,” Spider said. “We can go on the rim
-road, and have easy walking. Gee, I’d like to run all the way, and get
-up some circulation.”
-
-They set out rapidly, and reached the rim in fifteen minutes. It was
-lighter now, and they could see plainly. The lake at this point was only
-500 feet below them, for they had come out on the lowest point on the
-entire rim. But, even so, they seemed to be looking down into the
-clouds. They looked up into clouds, too, whole masses of clouds around
-the peak of Scott, of Dutton Cliff, of Garfield. Then the daylight
-increased rapidly, the clouds began mysteriously to disappear, holes
-came in them showing the blue water—and suddenly Spider grabbed Bennie’s
-arm and pointed half-way down the side.
-
-Bennie looked, and saw a small deer—a mule deer, as it is called—coming
-rapidly up the steep incline, directly toward them! He could not get
-their scent from so far below, and he quite evidently hadn’t seen them.
-On he came, bounding easily up the incline, where a man would have
-toiled breathlessly.
-
-“Wow! I’d like to be able to go up a mountain like that!” Bennie
-exclaimed.
-
-Almost at his first word, they saw the deer’s big ears prick up. He
-landed stock still and rigid, and raised his eyes. Then he saw the two
-boys above him, and with a single bound, so quick the scouts couldn’t
-detect how he made the turn, he was off at right angles, along the
-slope. Working upward as he leapt along, he reached the rim three
-hundred yards away from them, and disappeared like smoke into a stand of
-fir.
-
-“What a shot!” breathed Bennie.
-
-“Aw, you couldn’t have hit him in a year,” Spider laughed.
-
-“Why couldn’t I?”
-
-“First place, you can’t shoot well enough, and second place I’d have
-knocked up your gun,” said Spider. “I wouldn’t shoot a deer as long as I
-had anything else to eat.”
-
-“He was kind o’ pretty,” Bennie agreed.
-
-“’Tisn’t that so much. But he’s _wild_. He’s part of the wilderness. He
-belongs to it. Killing a deer is just as bad as knocking off the top of
-a mountain, or spoiling all the forest trees.”
-
-“Maybe you’re right,” Bennie admitted. “But how about going back and
-getting grub?”
-
-The sun was up when they reached camp again, and so were the other three
-campers.
-
-“’Smatter, boys?” asked Mr. Stone. “Getting an appetite before
-breakfast?”
-
-“So cold we couldn’t sleep,” they answered.
-
-“I was none too warm myself.”
-
-“And I was none too comfortable,” the doctor added.
-
-“Ho!” cried Dumplin’, who was starting the breakfast over the fire, “I
-never woke up once. Just as warm as anything, and never felt a stone in
-me all night.”
-
-“Well, who wouldn’t be warm if he was covered with a blubber
-bed-spread!” Bennie retorted.
-
-“And who wouldn’t sleep soft if he carried his own upholstery?” said
-Spider.
-
-“All right, kid,” Dumplin’ grinned. “But there are times when it pays.”
-
-The sun was not far up when they finished breakfast, cached the grub and
-blankets and the packs, and armed only with the alpenstocks, a pocketful
-of raisins and chocolate, the canteens and cameras, set out for the
-summit of Scott’s Peak, which rose directly above them, and seemed to be
-reached, after the first pull up the steep side of the ravine, by a
-fairly easy incline. The map showed, too, that the distance was less
-than three miles.
-
-“Three miles—three hours,” said Bennie. “A mile an hour is what the
-Appalachian Club allows. We’ll be there at half-past nine.”
-
-“Getting sure again, are you?” said his uncle. “This isn’t Mount
-Washington, where the Appalachian Club climbs. This is Scott’s Peak. It
-isn’t made of granite, but it’s a spur volcano spit up out of the side
-of old Mazama, and it’s about 2,500 feet of nice, soft pumice dust from
-here on.”
-
-It was.
-
-Once over the first scramble up the side of the ravine, they settled
-down to a steady plod in the soft, volcanic stuff. Their feet sank deep
-into it. The pitch was greater than it looked, too, and every time they
-threw their weight on to the forward foot, it sank back a way. Sometimes
-there were patches of snow they could get on, for partial relief. But
-mostly this side of the mountain had melted off, and it was just a long,
-weary, back-breaking grind up the pumice. Did you ever climb a steep
-pile of sand? Anyhow, you have walked in the deep, dry, soft sand above
-the tide mark on a beach. You know what hard work it is. The climb up
-Scott was just like that, only more so. One hour, two hours, three
-hours, four hours, and part of five, with many a rest, and the sun
-getting hotter and hotter, before they reached the summit.
-
-“Well, boys, this is the highest you’ve been yet,” said Mr. Stone.
-“Eight thousand nine hundred and thirty-two feet.”
-
-“Wish there was a tree we could shin to make it an even 9,000,” said
-Bennie.
-
-Dumplin’ wiped the sweat from his face, and collapsed on the ground,
-panting. “I wouldn’t climb a barber’s pole,” he announced.
-
-“Well, you can see most of eastern Oregon without sitting up,” his
-father laughed.
-
-This was certainly true. From the top of Scott, they could look eastward
-for a hundred miles, over a great plain almost as flat and bare as the
-sea, a sage brush desert. North and south they could look mile after
-mile in either direction along the tumbled, snowy world of the Cascade
-range. And just below them, to the west, they looked down 3,000 feet
-into the blue hole of Crater Lake.
-
-“There’s most room enough for a feller to breathe, out here,” Bennie
-remarked. Then he started to drink from his canteen, and discovered it
-was empty.
-
-“Fill it with snow,” said his uncle.
-
-Dumplin’ had drunk up all his supply, too, so both of them hunted out a
-snow-bank, dug down to clean snow, and began to stuff it into their
-canteens. “Gosh! where does it all go to!” Dumplin’ remarked, after
-three or four minutes.
-
-“Takes a lot of snow to make a little water,” Bennie answered. “Mine’s
-full—full o’ snow. Now let her melt!”
-
-Presently, after he had eaten his raisins, he took a pull at the
-canteen, and got about one good swig of water.
-
-“Let’s be going down,” said he.
-
-“Just so you can get a drink?” asked Spider.
-
-“Marvelous, Watson, marvelous,” Bennie laughed. “Why haven’t they given
-you a job on the detective force?”
-
-But the rest, by now, had emptied their canteens, too, and everybody was
-thirsty, so down they started. It was easy going down. When the slope
-was smooth, they set in their stocks as far ahead as they could reach,
-and then took a long vault, down past them, pulled them out, and
-repeated. In one hour they had covered the ground it took them five on
-the ascent.
-
-It was only a shade after two o’clock when they reached their cache, so
-they shouldered their luggage and hiked on down the valley, away from
-the lake, for nearly five miles, till they reached a region of grass and
-flowers and heavy timber, where the Sand Creek had cut down a deep cañon
-in the volcanic soil and lava, but the strangest cañon you ever saw,
-because some of the lava was harder than the rest, and the water hadn’t
-cut this, but left it sticking up all through the gorge, in great,
-round, water-worn pinnacles. Imagine hundreds of Bunker Hill monuments,
-round instead of square-cornered, erected helter-skelter at the bottom
-of a wild cañon, and you have a picture of the pinnacles. Here, near the
-brink, in sheltered woods, they made their second night’s bivouac.
-
-And this time Bennie woke up only once in the night, and had to be
-shaken awake in the morning.
-
-“I must be getting fat, like Dump,” he said. “I wasn’t very cold, and
-I’m not very sore.”
-
-“You’re getting harder,” said his uncle. “If we did this a couple of
-weeks, we could all sleep out like tops.”
-
-The third day they hiked back to their camp on the rim, using the rim
-road to get around the cliffs and ridges—a long grind with the heavy
-packs, but quite uneventful.
-
-And when they got to camp, the doctor announced, “We leave to-morrow, at
-six o’clock. Everybody out at four-thirty. Won’t need any grub except
-for tomorrow’s breakfast and lunch, so we can clean up the larder for
-dinner. Bennie, go over and smile sweetly at the hotel cook, and see if
-you can coax him to sell you a big beefsteak, and a loaf of bread, and a
-head of lettuce.”
-
-“Get a lemon meringue pie if he’s got one,” Dumplin’ added.
-
-“The cook’s an awful grouch,” the doctor laughed, when Bennie had gone.
-“He’ll throw him out of the kitchen.”
-
-Everybody was busy about camp, getting dinner ready, when Bennie
-returned with a large package. He opened it with a grin. It contained
-two steaks, a head of lettuce, a loaf of bread—and a lemon pie!
-
-“The cook’s an awful old grouch,” Mr. Stone remarked to Uncle Billy,
-winking at the boys.
-
-“_How_ did you do it?” demanded the astonished doctor.
-
-“It’s my fatal beauty,” said Bennie airily. And that’s all he would
-tell.
-
-But to Spider, later, he said, “Remember that fat old guy that used to
-cook at the White Doe Inn, back home? The one that used to come to all
-our ball games? Well, he’s the cook at the hotel here now. I knew Uncle
-Bill was trying to put one over on me, and I didn’t have a notion how I
-was going to beat him, till I saw who the cook was. He came at me mad as
-anything, ’cause campers are always trying to buy stuff off him. Looked
-as if he was going to throw me out. And then I said, ‘Hello, Mr. Leary,
-coming down to the field to see us play Lenox tomorrow?’—and he
-recognized me—and, say! I was so glad I gave him all the change from
-Uncle Billy’s bill.”
-
-“Some luck!” Spider laughed.
-
-“Don’t you tell, now.”
-
-“Not a word. But, boy, I’m going to eat my share of that steak!”
-
-It was a glorious meal, and Dumplin’ kissed the pie plate when it was
-all over.
-
-After Bennie had carried the pie plate back to the cook, while the rest
-washed up the dishes, Uncle Billy asked for the Scout Manual, and read
-what a scout has to do to get a merit badge for hiking.
-
- “To obtain a merit badge for hiking, a scout must:
-
- 1. Show a thorough knowledge of the care of the feet on a hike.
-
- 2. Walk five miles per day, six days in the week, for a period of
- three months. This may include walking to and from school or work. He
- shall keep a record of his hikes daily, preferably in his diary, a
- transcript to be made an exhibit before the court of honor.
-
- 3. Walk ten miles on each of two days in each month for a period of
- three months; in other words, six walks of ten miles each during the
- three months.
-
- 4. Walk twenty miles in one day.
-
- 5. Locate and describe interesting trails, and walk to some place
- marked by some patriotic or historical event.
-
- 6. Write his experiences in these several walking trips with reference
- to fatigue or distress experienced, and indicate what he had learned
- in the way of caring for himself as regards equipment such as camping
- and cooking outfit, food, footwear, clothing and hygiene.
-
- 7. Review his ability to read a road map (preferably a Government
- topographical map), to use a compass, and shall be required to make a
- written plan for a hike from the map.”
-
-“Number one,” Uncle Billy said. “What have you learned about the care of
-the feet, Bennie?”
-
-“Wash ’em in cold water when you can, and dry ’em thoroughly. Wear wool
-socks, and carry two extra pairs. At home we carry adhesive tape, to put
-over a place that may start chafing, so’s to stop a blister.”
-
-“That’s all right. The best care of the feet, though, is to have stout,
-easy boots, that _fit_. Well, number two—we haven’t walked five miles a
-day for six weeks, have we? You’ll have to do that at home. Number
-three—‘Walk ten miles on each of two days, in each month for a period of
-three months.’ You can count this hike as ten miles, or its equivalent,
-on each of three days, for July, all right. We hardly made ten miles the
-first day, but it was equal to fifteen or twenty of ordinary walking.
-You did two miles and a half before breakfast the second day, then six
-up and down the mountain, and six more before camp at night. That’s
-fourteen and a half, with three of ’em up Scott’s Peak in the pumice.”
-
-“That ought to count for twenty, I’ll say,” Bennie declared. “And how
-much the last day?”
-
-“Well, with our getting wood for breakfast, and taking a last look at
-the pinnacles, and your two trips to the hotel, I guess we can call
-today twenty miles.”
-
-“I’ll take a trot around now, if I need to,” Bennie laughed.
-
-“No, you can sit still. Well, that qualifies you on number four, anyhow,
-and gives you a good start on number three. Number five you’ll have to
-do at home. Number six you can attend to some day in camp, and let me
-see what you’ve written about these three days. Number seven—h’m—you’ve
-got a lot to learn yet about using maps, I suspect. Go get your map of
-Crater Lake, and let me see you lay out, with a pencil, what looks like
-the best way to hike from here to Crater Peak, five miles south of us.”
-
-Bennie worked over this for some time, and then showed the line he had
-drawn.
-
-“Good!” said his uncle. “I’m glad to see you haven’t drawn an air-line
-path that plunges you down any 500-foot precipices, or takes you up any
-600-foot walls.”
-
-“I learned something on this trip,” said Bennie. “I learned that when
-they put contour lines close together on a map, it means steep, and if
-there are a lot of ’em, and they are very close, it means, ‘Detour to
-the right.’”
-
-“That’s the idea. Well, boy, are you going to stick? Will you write out
-for me an account of this trip, and the next one we take, too, and try
-to work for this merit badge?”
-
-“You bet I will!”
-
-“May I, too?” asked Spider.
-
-“Gee, he’s got so many badges now he looks like Marshal Foch,” said
-Bennie.
-
-“The more the better,” laughed the doctor. “Now, boys, bed! Big Ben is
-set for 4:30.”
-
-“It’ll take a Big Bertha to wake _me_ at 4:30,” said Dumplin’.
-
-“Oh, you air mattress!” sighed Bennie, as he crawled into his sleeping
-bag.
-
-Spider answered never a word. He was fast asleep.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- Good-bye to Crater Lake, and a Motor Trip to Bend
-
-
-Uncle Billy was as good as his word the next morning. At half-past four
-he shook Bennie and Spider, and he had to shake them hard, too. Then all
-three of them went into the other tent, and rolled Mr. Stone and
-Dumplin’ upside down in their sleeping bags. It was still cold, and the
-sun was not yet up over the snowy crags of Garfield. In the still,
-crystal-clear air, the water of the lake was without a ripple, and every
-rock and tree on the rim was perfectly reflected in the blue mirror.
-
-“Take a good long look, boys,” said the doctor. “It’s good-bye to Crater
-Lake as soon as we can load the cars.”
-
-“I hate to leave it,” Spider said. “I don’t believe I’ll ever see
-anything so grand again, or have such a good time.”
-
-“I hate to leave it, too,” said Bennie. “But I bet we’ll have a lot more
-good times. I guess old Oregon is full of ’em.”
-
-“I am satisfied with Oregon,” Dumplin’ began to sing, in a high falsetto
-voice to the tune of “Glory, glory, hallelujah.”
-
-“Shut up, do you want to wake everybody else on the rim, just because
-you’re up?” his father cautioned.
-
-“Time they got up,” Dumplin’ laughed. “Early to bed and early to rise,
-makes a man dopy with sleep in his eyes.”
-
-“Gosh, if he can’t sing, he makes up poetry,” Bennie groaned. “Give him
-a flapjack, quick.”
-
-As soon as breakfast was over, Mr. Stone and the doctor tinkered the
-cars for the trip, while the boys struck the tents, deflated and rolled
-up the sleeping bags, packed their dunnage sacks, and then began to stow
-the luggage in the cars. It was after seven when everything was at last
-packed aboard, and Uncle Billy gave the order to start. The engines
-turned over, reluctant to start after their long idleness, but at last
-the explosions came, the exhausts spit smoke, and the cars moved out
-over dry ground, where a week ago had been a snow-drift, headed toward
-the road.
-
-“Good-bye, old lake!” cried Bennie.
-
-“Au revoir, for me. _I’m_ coming back some day,” said Spider.
-
-“And now where, Uncle Billy?” Bennie added.
-
-“Bend,” said his uncle. “I wish we could go back home on the Sky Line
-Trail that some day Oregon is going to build into a highway right up
-along the spine of the Cascades. But at present it is only a ranger’s
-trail, and it takes weeks to travel it, with an expensive pack train. So
-we are going by motor up the east side of the range to the town of Bend,
-and we’ll get a pack train there and go in and sample a bit of the Sky
-Line Trail, to say we’ve ridden it, and maybe climb a snow mountain.”
-
-“Are we going in on horseback?” Bennie demanded.
-
-“We are, if we go at all,” said his uncle.
-
-“Hooray! I never rode horseback!”
-
-“You’ll have plenty of chance to learn, then,” Uncle Billy smiled.
-“About the first night, you’ll wish you hadn’t tried to learn, too.”
-
-“Bet I won’t!” Bennie retorted. “How far is it to Bend?”
-
-“Oh, a hundred miles, I guess. Maybe more.”
-
-“Seven-thirty now—twenty-five miles an hour, that means we get there at
-noon.”
-
-“You are my idea of an optimist, Bennie,” said the doctor. “This is an
-eastern Oregon road we are going to travel on. If we should travel
-twenty-five miles an hour, we wouldn’t get there at all.”
-
-For many miles, the road out of the park took them in a southerly
-direction, down the Anna Creek valley, through a noble forest of yellow
-pines, a tree the boys had never seen before, which has great flat
-scales of bark which looks almost like copper, and past the deep cañon
-the creek has cut in the lava, with sides fantastically carved into
-giant columns. Finally, they reached the gate of the park, were checked
-up by the gateman, and went on, swinging eastward now.
-
-Bennie, as soon as they were off the government road, very soon realized
-why they wouldn’t make Bend at noon. In eastern Oregon, a country “dirt”
-road, which in the East is usually quite decent in summer isn’t a dirt
-road at all, really, because there isn’t any dirt. All the soil is
-powdered volcanic ash and pumice, no doubt deposited there by Mount
-Mazama ages ago. This volcanic soil looks almost gray-white in color,
-and a road made on it, without any macadam, is very quickly pounded, in
-dry weather, into a layer of dust inches thick, which rises like a smoke
-screen behind the car, and gets kicked out of holes in the road by the
-passing tires till the holes deepen more and more, making the road one
-endless series of bumps.
-
-Instead of traveling at twenty-five miles an hour, the doctor held the
-car down to fifteen, and very often had to go slower than that.
-
-And it was hot down here below the range, hot and close. The yellow
-pines, and then endless acres of ugly lodge-pole pines, lined the road
-on both sides, shutting out wind and view. Only now and then did they
-catch a glimpse of Scott’s Peak, and later of Thielsen. They were in the
-dry country, too, for almost no rain ever falls on the east side of the
-Cascades. So they passed no brooks, after leaving Anna Creek. Choked
-with dust, the boys sampled the canteens frequently, and rejoiced that
-they weren’t in the second car, which was following far behind, to keep
-out of the dust as much as possible.
-
-It was almost noon when they reached a stream at last, coming down from
-the snow-fields—and they were only half-way on their journey! Here they
-stopped for lunch. The doctor had insisted on saving out two cans of
-peaches for this occasion, and now they understood why. It was a job to
-worry the dry bread and the bacon down their parched throats, but how
-those cool peaches, and the juice they were canned in, did go to the
-spot!
-
-The trip was resumed, and they went on and on northward, through endless
-forests of yellow pines, one of the few trees that will flourish in this
-dry region, till at last they came into the tiny little town of
-Crescent.
-
-It was Bennie who spied a sign, “Soda” over the one store. He gave a
-yell, and hoisted his feet over the car door, ready to jump.
-
-The soda turned out to be the bottled variety, and it hadn’t been kept
-on ice. In fact, there was no ice in the place. But even that didn’t
-prevent the five tourists from leaving behind ten empty bottles when
-they departed again.
-
-The road through the endless yellow pine forest began to get better now.
-It had been straightened out and rock ballasted in places, and Uncle
-Billy stepped on the gas. He was traveling along at twenty-five miles or
-more, leaving a cloud of dust behind, when Bennie suddenly cried, “Say,
-I believe we just went through a town. Golly, I wonder if there was a
-soda there. Let’s go back.”
-
-“This car doesn’t know how to turn around,” said Uncle Billy. “That was
-the town of La Pine. I know the man who used to own most of it.”
-
-“What happened? Did he lose it out of his pocket?” said Bennie.
-
-“I guess it crawled under a pine needle and hid from him,” said Spider.
-
-It wasn’t long now before the car rolled out of the yellow pine forests
-into a great clearing, where every tree had been cut down as far as the
-eye could see, and a fire had followed, burning up all young stuff and
-making the ground dry, naked ashes.
-
-“That’s what the lumbermen do to us!” Uncle Billy cried. “It’s worse
-than what they do to you in the East, because the fire does so much more
-damage in this dry country. I wonder how long it will be before we wake
-up and make them lumber properly? I hope you Boy Scouts will always work
-for conservation and proper forest laws.”
-
-“If they’d left one old tree to the acre for cone bearers, and kept the
-fire out, I should think the forest would almost start itself again,”
-said Spider. “But they haven’t left a single tree.”
-
-“They are hogs,” Uncle Billy exclaimed, angrily. “It makes my blood boil
-every time I go through country like this, and think that the voters of
-the State let ’em do it.”
-
-The road was hard now, the car went faster, and in a short time they
-began to see the houses of a town. They swung under a railroad, rolled
-on to asphalt pavement, and found themselves in the middle of Bend, a
-brisk, clean little city of 5,000 people.
-
-“Well, what do you know about this!” Bennie laughed. “It just pops right
-up here in the desert, like a toadstool. And, oh, boy, there’s a soda
-fountain—and a movie theatre!”
-
-Spider and Uncle Billy laughed. “He’s a great wilderness scout, he is,”
-said the doctor. “He’s gladder to see a movie theatre than he was to see
-Crater Lake.”
-
-Bennie grinned a little sheepishly. “No, it isn’t that,” he said, “but
-as long as we got to be in a town, might as well have something to do.”
-
-“The first thing I’ll do is to get a bath,” the doctor laughed, as he
-drove right past the drug store, and stopped in front of the hotel.
-
-The other car rolled up behind them, Mr. Stone’s and Dumplin’s clothes
-and faces covered thick with dust, and the car looking gray-white all
-over. The boys got out the dunnage bags and carried them into the lobby,
-while the cars were taken to a garage. As soon as the doctor and Mr.
-Stone came back, they got three rooms, one for Bennie and Spider, one
-for Dumplin’ and his father, and one for the doctor. Off came their
-clothes, and from three bathtubs came the sounds of splashing.
-
-They were a much cleaner and more civilized looking outfit when they
-came down to dinner.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- The Boys Encounter “Pep,” Who Promises Them a Bear Hunt
-
-
-They were just coming out of the dining-room when a tall, very thin man
-came hurrying in from the street, saw them, and with a loud, “Hello,
-Doc!” rushed over to shake Uncle Billy’s hand.
-
-“Just heard you were in,” he cried.
-
-The doctor introduced him as the “biggest booster in Bend.” His name,
-the boys gathered, was Peters, though the doctor called him “Pep,” which
-was evidently his popular title.
-
-“Well, boys, what do you think of Oregon?” he demanded as soon as he
-knew they were from the East. “Some State, eh? I’ll say it is. Wait till
-you see the Jefferson country. Say, want to go on a bear hunt?”
-
-Of course, he had started by asking them what they thought of Oregon,
-and the boys were all set to make a polite answer, but he never gave
-them a chance to reply, and ended up instead by asking if they wanted to
-go on a bear hunt!
-
-“Sure we do!” the boys chorused.
-
-(“He’s a queer one,” Bennie whispered to Spider. “Answers his own
-questions half the time.”)
-
-“Pep” was now talking again. “I can fix it up, Doc. Maybe your friend
-would like to get a movie of a bear. There’s a crowd in camp over at Elk
-Lake now who want a bear hunt. Some of ’em do, anyhow. We can go over
-there and pick ’em up, and run over to Newberry Crater and pick up a
-bear all right. You know old Vreeland, who lives on the big ranch south
-of La Pine? He’s got a pack of hounds, and plenty of horses, and he’d
-rather go on a bear hunt than go to Heaven. What do you say?”
-
-“Well, boys, what do _you_ say?” the doctor asked, turning to the scouts
-and Dumplin’.
-
-Bennie sighed with comical exaggeration. “Oh, of course, I’ll go if you
-want to,” he answered. “I strive to please.”
-
-Everybody laughed except Spider. “Are you going to kill the bear?” he
-questioned.
-
-“No, indeed,” said Pep. “We catch ’em by the tail out here in Oregon,
-and then tie a blue ribbon round their necks, so they’ll look prettier
-as they gambol through the woods.”
-
-Spider bit his lip as if he was angry, and was trying not to make a rude
-reply.
-
-“That’s all right, too,” he finally said, “but some folks like to kill
-wild animals and some folks don’t. I’m one of the ones who doesn’t.
-Bears don’t do any harm. I’d like to see one, and see Mr. Stone get a
-picture of it. Hunting with a camera is harder, and better sport, I
-think.”
-
-“I’ll say it’ll be hard, all right,” said Pep. “Wait till you see the
-stuff you’ll have to carry your camera through! As for the shooting,
-Newberry Crater is a State bird and game refuge, and you have to get
-permission to hunt bears on it; but I’ve got that O. K., because they
-want the bears killed off. All they ask is that you report the stomach
-contents.”
-
-“I’ve just got something new I’ve not shown any of you yet,” Mr. Stone
-now put in. “It was waiting for me here, in my mail. It’s a movie camera
-no bigger than a kodak, which works with a spring instead of a crank,
-and takes twenty-five feet at a time. I can carry it in the pocket of a
-hunting coat. It’s for just such a time as this, when the big camera
-couldn’t be taken along. I’d like to try it—that is, if you can
-guarantee the bear.”
-
-“What’ll happen to me if I don’t produce the bear?” Pep demanded.
-
-“We’ll take your horse, and make you walk home,” the doctor said.
-
-“Easy! It’s only thirty miles! Shall we start tomorrow morning?”
-
-“Sure. I guess we can stow you into our cars somewhere.”
-
-“Stow me nothing! I got a car of my own. It’s a dandy, too—a genuine
-antique, built in 1909. They made regular cars in those days. Well, you
-be ready at eight o’clock. I’ll be around for you, and lead the way.”
-
-“But we haven’t any guns,” said Bennie, suddenly.
-
-“Don’t matter. Vreeland has plenty. Don’t need more’n one, anyhow, to
-kill a bear. So long.”
-
-Pep departed, striding with his long legs out of the lobby.
-
-“He’s a queer one,” said Mr. Stone. “What does he do for a living?”
-
-“Real estate, I guess,” the doctor answered. “He’s a great booster for
-Bend, and spends half his time fixing up parties for visitors who come
-here. He’s a great card. Well, boys, I suppose you’re going to the
-movies now?”
-
-“I can see the movies without coming 4,000 miles,” Bennie answered. “Me
-for a look around this burg.”
-
-“Me, too,” said Spider. “Doug Fairbanks won’t seem such a wonder after
-we’ve climbed old Llao Rock.”
-
-“Boys,” cried Uncle Billy, “you have not come to Oregon in vain!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- The Bear Hunt—In Which the Boys Discover that the Bear Doesn’t Do All
- the Hard Work
-
-
-Right after breakfast the next morning they got the cars out and left
-behind at the hotel all the luggage they wouldn’t need on the
-bear-hunting trip. Mr. Stone was exhibiting his new camera, an
-astonishing invention which he held in his hand like a kodak, while it
-took twenty-five feet of film (he could carry as much as two hundred
-feet of extra reels in one side pocket, too), when Pep appeared in his
-“antique.” They heard him before they saw him, in fact. The car was a
-runabout. The paint apparently had vanished about 1918. The muffler was
-broken so that she roared and spit like a motorcycle. One mud-guard was
-so cracked that it half hung from the car and flapped and rattled. The
-other three were bent and dented. The wind-shield was cracked, and the
-radiator was covered with iron rust where the water had boiled over and
-run down the sides. When Pep put his foot on the brake to stop, she
-shrieked and wailed like a sick cat.
-
-Bennie walked over to this car and stared intently.
-
-“Some boat!” he said. “Some boat! Say, Spider, a scout is always
-respectful and kind to the aged and infirm. Remember that. What’s its
-name, Mr. Peters?”
-
-“Its mother never named it,” said Pep. “I’ve called it a lot of things,
-but they aren’t very polite.”
-
-Dumplin’ laughed. “I know what its name is, all right.”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“Its name is Methuselah.”
-
-“I thought Methuselah died when he was only nine hundred,” said Bennie.
-
-“Say, if you boys make fun of my car, I won’t let you ride in it,” Pep
-threatened.
-
-“Would it hold up two passengers?” asked Bennie.
-
-“All aboard!” called the doctor. “Stop insulting Pep’s chariot, and
-climb into your own. Lead the way, Pep.”
-
-Pep spun his crank around, Methuselah grunted, spit, coughed, and then
-roared, the doctor and Mr. Stone stepped on their starters, and the
-procession moved down the main street of Bend, Methuselah leading, and
-swung south on the same road they had come up the day before. Once out
-in the open, Pep began to travel. Through the cloud of dust he kicked
-up, those behind could see the rear wheels of the old runabout go
-bobbing up and down, and from side to side. The doctor’s speedometer
-crept up to thirty, to thirty-five, to forty miles, as he followed.
-
-“Gosh, he doesn’t care what happens to him!” Bennie said. “Think of
-hitting forty on this road in Methuselah!”
-
-“Think of hitting forty on _any_ road in Methuselah,” Uncle Billy
-laughed. “He’ll stop pretty soon, to cool her off—and tell us it was for
-something else.”
-
-Before long he did stop. When the other cars drew up, Pep was standing
-beside Methuselah, at a place where a side road led off to the west,
-toward the white-capped mountains.
-
-“Thought you might miss the turn if I didn’t wait,” he explained.
-
-The doctor winked at the boys, and Bennie got out and started to put his
-hand on Methuselah’s radiator. But he speedily removed it.
-
-“Will you have your eggs three minutes or four this morning, gents?” he
-asked. Then he listened with his ear near the hood. “Uncle Billy, I
-think you ought to come here,” he added. “I’m afraid poor old Methuselah
-has got blood pressure.”
-
-Even Pep laughed at this. “Maybe I give him too much meat,” he said.
-
-The cars now turned up the side road, which was little more than a
-couple of wheel ruts through the endless yellow pine forest, and began
-to wind their way southwestward. Even Methuselah didn’t hurry through
-here. The road was too rough and too winding.
-
-“Say, I expect to meet myself coming back on this road,” Bennie
-declared. “The feller who laid it out must have had the blind staggers.”
-
-“If it was straightened it wouldn’t be more than half as long,” said the
-practical Spider.
-
-Presently, coming around a sharp turn, they found Methuselah silent and
-stalled, with Pep, the hood lifted, poking into the engine.
-
-Everybody climbed out, and went over to him.
-
-“What’s wrong?” they asked.
-
-“I just stopped to tell you about a man who was drawing a load of hay
-over this road once,” said he. “He never got it out, because the horses
-ate it all up behind his back from the tail of the wagon.”
-
-“That’s a good story. Now let’s go on,” winked the doctor.
-
-“Wait just a minute,” Pep said. “Methuselah’s foot slipped, and he
-sprained his carburetor. I think it’s his carburetor. Maybe he pulled a
-tendon in his ignition.”
-
-“Quick, doctor, the arnica!” called Bennie.
-
-But Spider, who knew something about cars, was poking into the engine.
-
-“I don’t think it’s the carburetor,” he said. “You’ve flooded that
-trying to start her. Let me have a screw-driver, and you turn her over
-slowly.”
-
-He traced the ignition around till he found a spot where there was no
-spark, and behind that found a loose connection, into which had settled
-an insulating film of dust and grit. When this was cleaned and
-tightened, Methuselah coughed and spit and roared again, and once more
-they started on their way.
-
-Methuselah had no more mishaps, though they expected to find him stalled
-around every bend, and after a couple of hours they came out of the
-yellow pine forest into open country, right under the big mountains, and
-presently before them lay Elk Lake, with the white reflection of South
-Sister, 10,000 feet high and snow covered, mirrored in the dark water.
-The road ran along beside the lake to the upper end, and there, in a
-grove of pines and fir trees, was a big camp, and men and women just
-sitting down to luncheon at long board tables. Methuselah had been
-parked beside the road, and Pep was bobbing about talking and laughing
-with the crowd.
-
-“What’s the big idea?” Bennie asked. “Gee whiz, a whole bunch of strange
-people, and no chance for a swim!”
-
-“I guess they don’t own the whole lake,” the doctor laughed. “Anyhow,
-they’ll give us some grub.”
-
-The crowd, they found, was a convention of Oregon editors, with their
-wives. They were having a fine time, no doubt, but the newcomers didn’t
-seem exactly to fit.
-
-“Spider was one of the editors of our high school paper last winter,”
-said Bennie, “but all I did was get an advertisement for it from Dad. I
-thought we were going to hunt bears, not editors.”
-
-As soon as lunch was over somebody got up and began to make a speech.
-The crowd sat back and got ready to listen. Whereupon Uncle Billy
-beckoned to the boys and Mr. Stone, and they silently sneaked away from
-the tables.
-
-“I didn’t go on a vacation to listen to speeches,” the doctor said. “It
-will be too late to get into camp at Newberry Crater tonight if we hang
-around here till that bunch gets through telling each other what’s wrong
-with the newspaper business. You wait here while I have a heart-to-heart
-talk with Pep.”
-
-After ten minutes the doctor came back with the long, lank Peters.
-
-“Sorry, boys,” Pep said. “I thought there were a couple of good sports
-in this outfit who really wanted a bear hunt. But when I told ’em they’d
-have to sleep out, and get up at three A. M., they decided they’d rather
-listen to the speeches. Some folks would do anything rather than get up
-in the morning. Well, come on, we’ll get our bear even if there isn’t
-anybody to write it for the papers.”
-
-“Oh, ho!” cried Uncle Billy, “so that was it! Well, I am a dumb-bell, as
-Bennie would so elegantly put it. I didn’t realize before why you were
-so set on having some editors along. You want to be boosting Bend all
-the while, don’t you? Maybe Spider will write it up for his school
-paper. That’s something. Cheer up, Pep, and see if Methuselah is still
-alive.”
-
-Pep spun the crank till the drops of sweat fell from his forehead before
-she coughed and started.
-
-“I get a fine lot of exercise with this car,” he panted, wiping his face
-before he climbed aboard.
-
-They cut south from the winding road after a little way, and presently
-arrived in the hamlet of La Pine, the town which Bennie said one of
-Uncle Billy’s friends once lost out of his pocket. Not far from this
-town, in an extraordinarily green meadow beside the Deschutes River, a
-long meadow like a rich oasis in the dry desert soil, they came to the
-Vreeland ranch, where the house sat beneath great poplar trees, and the
-barns were full of fresh-cut alfalfa and the cattle were browsing as
-they do in the East, along the river bank.
-
-“Give this soil some water,” said Spider, “and instead of a desert, it’s
-like our richest farms at home.”
-
-“Yes, sir. Irrigation is all we need in Oregon to grow anything,” said
-Uncle Billy, as the three cars pulled up in the yard.
-
-Pep found Mr. Vreeland out in a field, and brought him in. He was a big,
-bronzed man, who looked hard and wiry for all his gray hair and beard,
-and at the suggestion of a bear hunt his eyes lit up and he smiled. A
-long, low whistle brought an answering joyous yelp from a near-by barn,
-and four hounds, with thin bodies and long ears and sad faces, came
-jumping and wriggling up to him.
-
-“Them pups’ll get you a bear, if there is a bear,” said their master
-proudly. “I guess we can rustle up the horses. Let’s see, we’ll need six
-for you, and one for me, and one for the rustler, and a pack
-animal—that’s nine. We’ll start in an hour. Hi—Tom!” he shouted to a man
-out in the paddock.
-
-“He doesn’t lose any time,” whispered Mr. Stone.
-
-“Not when he smells a bear,” Pep replied. “He can see a bear track in
-the dark. And he’s got some regular dogs.”
-
-While the horses were being saddled the boys made up six blanket rolls
-for their party, and one for Pep, and packed up enough provisions for a
-couple of days. The provisions, a few “eating irons” and cooking
-utensils, and the blankets were put on the pack horse. Mr. Vreeland
-brought out two rifles, one for himself and one for somebody else.
-
-“Who gets it?” he asked.
-
-“Not I,” said Spider.
-
-“Nor I,” said Mr. Stone. “Here’s my gun.” He patted the case of his tiny
-movie camera, which was slung from his shoulder.
-
-“I’ll take it,” said Bennie.
-
-“Know how to use it?” the man asked.
-
-“N-not very well,” Bennie admitted.
-
-“Well, it isn’t loaded,” Mr. Vreeland laughed. “Suppose you carry it
-today, and learn how much it weighs. Are we all set?”
-
-Tom, the horse rustler, brought the saddled horses into the yard, and
-each rider was assigned a mount.
-
-“Pick out a good strong one for that half starved little chap there,”
-said Mr. Vreeland, pointing to Dumplin’. “All you boys are good riders,
-I suppose?”
-
-“Oh, sure,” said Bennie. “We gallop all the time over the wide prairies
-of Massachusetts. Got a nice mantelpiece for me to eat off of tonight?”
-
-“It’s tomorrow night you’ll need that,” the man laughed. “All aboard!”
-
-In spite of his weight and his gray hair, Mr. Vreeland swung into his
-saddle with the ease and grace of a cowboy. The doctor and Mr. Stone and
-Pep were not quite so easy, but they knew how to ride. Dumplin’,
-however, was as green as the two eastern scouts, and the three of them
-made a mess of mounting, and after they were mounted and their horses
-had started on a slow trot out of the yard, they bobbed around and
-jounced up and down like three apples in a dump-cart.
-
-“Say, how do you manage this stunt?” Bennie called to his uncle. “If I
-keep on this way, I’ll all fall apart.”
-
-“Stand in your stirrups as naturally and easily as you can, and then
-lean forward a little from your waist,” the doctor called back. “Don’t
-try to do anything but just relax from your waist up, and stand on your
-stirrups.”
-
-The boys tried this, and gradually, very gradually, they began to get on
-to the trick, so that their bodies rode a little better with the motions
-of the horses’ backs. It was hard work, though, and they were glad
-enough when they had crossed the highway, headed east up a road through
-the yellow pines, and finally dropped down to a walk as the road began
-to climb. When the horses stopped trotting, the three boys sat back in
-their saddles and took the weight off their tired legs. Of course, they
-bounced a bit, but that didn’t matter when the horse wasn’t trotting.
-
-They were on the lower slopes of Newberry Crater now, which is an
-8,000-foot mountain standing fifty miles or more east of the Cascade
-range, all alone in the desert pines, and was once a volcano. On the
-top, Uncle Billy told them, is a big crater, almost as large as Crater
-Lake, but only a few hundred feet deep, and instead of being filled with
-water, it contains two ponds and a lot of summer camps. The whole
-mountain is a State game reserve, for the slopes are covered with pine
-woods, and the water attracts both birds and animals.
-
-The party climbed slowly up the dusty road for two hours, while the boys
-wriggled and shifted in their saddles to find easy positions (which they
-couldn’t find), and the rifle Bennie was carrying either banged his back
-or had to be held across his saddle, growing heavier and heavier.
-
-At last, as the sun was setting in the west, they came out of the yellow
-pines into a big open meadow, through which Paulina Creek flowed on its
-way down the mountain, making the grass rich and green. Here Mr.
-Vreeland turned in. The horses were watered at the stream and then
-hobbled (hobbles are just leather bands like handcuffs put around their
-forelegs, so they can move around to feed, but cannot wander far away).
-On the edge of the meadow, near the brook but under the pines, camp was
-made, by the simple process of building a fire and spreading the
-blankets on level spots of dry ground. While Mr. Vreeland and Tom, the
-horse rustler, were cooking supper, the rest went to the creek for a
-bath. The water was icy cold, but, as Bennie said, it was softer to sit
-on than a saddle.
-
-After supper they gathered around the fire for a while, in the cold
-mountain air of night, while Mr. Vreeland told bear stories. The four
-dogs lay sleeping close to them, one of them, old Ben, Mr. Vreeland’s
-pet, with a muzzle snuggled against his side.
-
-But before long he ordered them to bed.
-
-“I’ll get you up before the sun,” he said. “That’s the only time to
-start after bears. Their tracks are fresh then, and the dogs can follow
-’em.”
-
-In spite of their saddle soreness, and the bare ground they were
-sleeping on, the boys rolled up in their blankets, without undressing,
-and were soon fast asleep. There is nothing like riding a horse in the
-mountains to make you slumber!
-
-“Golly, doesn’t seem as if I’d more’n dropped off,” said Bennie, sitting
-up and rubbing his eyes when he was awakened by the voice of Mr.
-Vreeland.
-
-“I don’t care what becomes of ol’ bear. I’m goin’ sleep some more,”
-mumbled Dumplin’, drawing his blankets tighter about his neck and
-rolling over on the other side.
-
-“Yes, you are!” yelled Spider and Bennie, grabbing the blankets and
-rolling him suddenly out of them.
-
-It was still dark in the woods, with a dim, gray light over the open
-meadow. They could scarcely see the horses, which they heard feeding and
-thumping about on hobbled feet. Tom had the fire going, and soon there
-was the welcome smell of coffee. After the coffee, everybody felt more
-awake, the light increased, the trunks of the trees began to emerge from
-the gloom, and Tom and Mr. Vreeland rounded up the horses and began to
-saddle.
-
-“Well, son,” said Mr. Vreeland to Bennie, “how about that gun today?
-You’re going to ride some pretty rough country, and she’ll get heavy.”
-
-“I don’t think he’d better carry a gun through this going,” the doctor
-said. “Especially as it is somebody else’s gun, and he’s somebody else’s
-boy, whom I’m responsible for.”
-
-“Well, of course, I don’t want to worry my uncle,” Bennie assented, with
-surprising cheerfulness.
-
-“You mean you need both hands to hang on to your horse,” said Spider.
-
-“Marvelous, Sherlock, simply marvelous!” Bennie laughed. “When we get to
-the old bear, I’ll take the gun from my bearer, and put a well-directed
-bullet through his brain.”
-
-Now, in the fast increasing daylight, they were off, Mr. Vreeland
-leading the way and sitting his horse as straight as a ramrod. The boys
-were stiff and sore, but once on the saddle they felt easier than the
-day before.
-
-The leader crossed the meadow to the upper side, and put his horse up on
-a long sloping ridge covered with an open stand of yellow pine. As they
-climbed this ridge, the boys could see a long distance between the
-trees, and discovered that the side of the mountain was composed of a
-series of long ridges, like this one, with deep erosion gullies between
-them. The sides of these gullies were very steep, and at the bottom grew
-thick stands of lodge-pole pines. After climbing a way on the first
-ridge, and evidently seeing nothing which appealed to him, Mr. Vreeland
-suddenly turned his horse right down the side, into the gully. As the
-boys followed they found their horses’ heads almost underneath them, and
-they had to lean far back in the saddles to keep their balance. At the
-bottom, Mr. Vreeland simply rode right into the dense stand of little
-lodge-pole pines and disappeared. The doctor, Mr. Stone and Tom and Pep
-followed. And after them went the three horses that carried the three
-boys. There was nothing to do about it. The horses were trained to
-follow in file, and it was their job to go through where the others
-went. But the boys made an interesting, not to say painful discovery.
-
-They discovered that when a horse goes through a thicket of lodge-pole
-pines, he picks out a place that is wide enough for him to squeeze
-through, and high enough so his head doesn’t hit a limb. But he doesn’t
-pay any attention to the fact that his rider’s feet and legs stick out
-on either side and his rider’s head is considerably higher than his own.
-He’s looking out only for himself, and it’s up to the rider to take the
-consequences for getting on his back.
-
-When they emerged on the farther side of the gully, Bennie didn’t have
-any cap, Dumplin’ had a hole torn in the right knee of his trousers, and
-Spider had a rent in the left shoulder of his shirt and a long scratch
-on his face.
-
-But there was no stopping for repairs. Already the other horses were up
-on the next ridge, and with a heave and snort the boys’ horses suddenly
-stood on their hind legs and scrambled up also, the boys leaning far
-forward and hanging on to the horns of their saddles to keep aboard.
-
-“Some sport!” panted Bennie. “Gee, that was a good cap, too.”
-
-“My face feels as if the cat had sharpened her claws on me,” said
-Spider.
-
-“My knee’s bleeding,” puffed Dumplin’.
-
-Mr. Vreeland kept on up through the open woods of the ridge, and
-suddenly pulled his horse to a sharp halt, in a little patch of light
-made by the rising sun. Here he spoke softly to the dogs, who had been
-padding along at his horse’s heels with a bored air, as if a bear were
-the very last thing they were thinking about. As the dogs trotted
-sharply forward under the horse’s nose and began to sniff where he
-pointed, Mr. Stone got his camera out of the case and made ready.
-Suddenly all four dogs began to utter little moaning sounds, like barks
-just beginning in their throats, and with a loud bay the two younger
-ones started off down the mountain, while Mr. Stone’s camera whirred.
-Ben, however, didn’t go. He kept on moaning and sniffing around.
-
-“They are back tracking. You watch Ben and Cap, the wise old boys!” Mr.
-Vreeland cried, his eyes dancing with excitement.
-
-Then Ben and Cap, too, suddenly uttered deep, silvery, triumphant bays,
-and sprang down the farther side of the ridge into a second ravine. An
-instant later the other two dogs came crying back and followed them,
-just in time to get into the last foot of the film. Then Mr. Vreeland
-put his horse down after them at a gallop, and vanished into the pines,
-followed by Tom and the doctor and Pep. Mr. Stone had a hard time
-holding his horse while he got his camera back into the case. Then he,
-too, went down the side of the ravine and into the lodge-poles.
-
-“Now, darling, _please_ take it easy! Whoa! Whoa!” yelled Bennie at his
-horse, as that animal cascaded down the soft soil of the bank and made
-for the wall of tearing little trees.
-
-Holding their legs as close to the horses’ sides as they could, ducking
-to protect their faces, wriggling and squirming in their saddles to
-avoid having their legs torn and bruised by trees between which the
-horses squeezed, the boys got through, and followed the hunt. They could
-hear the dogs baying in the next ravine, and over the ridge they went,
-in time to see the tail of Mr. Stone’s horse vanishing into another
-thicket of scrub.
-
-This kept on for an hour or more—it seemed ages to the three boys. In
-their efforts to get through the ravines without any more injury to
-their clothes or their persons than was necessary, they had to slow
-their horses down, and the hunt, which was working steadily up the
-mountain, got farther and farther ahead of them. They had long since
-lost all sight even of Mr. Stone, and the deep, bell-like baying of the
-hounds grew fainter and fainter. At last it ceased altogether.
-
-When that happened Bennie pulled up his horse and waited for Spider and
-Dumplin’ to catch up.
-
-“Say, fellers,” he asked, “what are we going to do? We’ve lost the hunt,
-all right. I can’t hear a sound now, and we’ve been off the tracks for
-twenty minutes, I guess. Those last two ravines we came through hadn’t
-been broken before, and I haven’t seen a hoof-print for a long while.”
-
-“We’re a swell lot of bear hunters, we are,” Dumplin’ panted. “Gee,
-Spider, look at your face!”
-
-“Well, if it looks anything the way it feels, I’m some beauty, I can
-tell you that. Look at your own face—and your pants, too.”
-
-“I don’t feel as if I had any pants left,” said Bennie. “Gee, I’m sore
-all over, and my hands are all torn. What are we going to do?”
-
-“I guess it’s up to us to go back to camp,” Spider suggested.
-
-“How are we ever going to find camp?” Dumplin’ demanded. “As far as I’m
-concerned, we’re lost.”
-
-“‘Lost on Newberry Crater, or The Young Bear Hunters from Bend’—sounds
-like a dime novel,” Bennie grinned. “Maybe we could follow our trail
-back by the blood on the ground. But I got a better idea than that.
-Let’s go on up this ridge a ways till we come to an open place, and then
-sit there and wait. We can always follow the ridge down westward till we
-come to the road. Guess we can’t starve. Maybe the old bear will trot
-around past us. They don’t travel in a straight line, I guess. Anyhow,
-it’s a chance, and I guess it’s our only chance to get back in the
-game.”
-
-“That’s a swell idea!” said Dumplin’, scornfully. “What you going to do
-if he does come around? You wouldn’t carry the old gun. Use your
-pocket-knife?”
-
-“No, I’ll look at him between my legs,” Bennie answered. “The old bear
-won’t trouble us. All he’s thinking about is getting away from the
-hounds. Anyhow, I don’t see any use in trying to follow any longer,
-’cause we’ve sure lost the hunt, and I hate to go back this early in the
-day. We may find a place where we can look out and see something.”
-
-“Sounds good to me. You’re the captain. Lead on,” said Spider.
-
-So Bennie led the way up the open woods of the spine, which were growing
-lower now, and presently they found themselves in a little clearing on a
-sort of peak of lava. From here they could look out on one side for
-miles and miles, over the wilderness of the mountain side, to the white
-summits of the Cascades. But not a sight nor a sound of the hunt did
-they have.
-
-They dismounted stiffly, aching in every joint, and tied the horses in
-the shade. Dumplin’ flopped to the ground with a groan. “My knee’s all
-stiff,” he complained, “and the blood’s all clotted on my leg. Gee, I’ve
-got six tears in my pants!”
-
-The boys looked themselves over. Their clothes were torn, their hands
-and faces scratched and covered with blood, and their thighs and knees
-sore with the bruising trees. They were, in fact, a woe-begone looking
-lot.
-
-“And I could drink a barrel of water, and eat a ton of food,” sighed
-Bennie.
-
-“If you talk about water, I shall cry!” Dumplin’ exclaimed. “My mouth’s
-full of cotton.”
-
-“Go to sleep, and forget it,” said Spider.
-
-“If the bear comes, wake me up,” Dumplin’ answered, closing his eyes at
-once.
-
-While Dumplin’ was slumbering Bennie and Spider debated what they should
-do. It seemed pretty stupid to sit there all the morning doing nothing,
-when they had come 3,000 miles to Oregon for a taste of the real
-wilderness. But, as Spider pointed out, if they tried to follow the hunt
-again they would only get more hopelessly lost. Finally they decided the
-only thing to do was to wait till they heard some sound of it again and
-then make toward the sound. Unless the bear went clear around the
-mountain, sooner or later he ought to come within sound of them again,
-they reasoned. He would try to get back to his familiar hunting ground.
-They waited one hour, two hours, getting more and more thirsty, when
-Spider suddenly cried “Hark!”
-
-Far off, somewhere, he and Bennie couldn’t yet tell where, they heard
-the deep, silvery bugle of one dog, apparently old Ben, who had the
-deepest voice. The hunt was coming their way again! Quickly they roused
-Dumplin’, and all three listened. Yes, there was no mistake! It was the
-bay of a hound, and it was coming nearer!
-
-“There’s only one dog, though,” said Bennie. “What’s the matter with the
-others?”
-
-“Probably old Ben has got ahead of the others, or they’ve got off on
-another track,” said Spider. “Let’s wait and see if it stops in one
-place. That’ll mean Ben’s treed the bear, I guess. Then we can go there
-and not get lost again.”
-
-“Maybe _you_ can,” said Dumplin’. “I couldn’t go anywhere now, ’cept on
-a stretcher.”
-
-“We’ll leave you here then—the air’s fine,” said Bennie.
-
-The baying didn’t stop in one place, however, for ten or fifteen
-minutes. It seemed to be moving up and down the mountain. Finally,
-however, it came from a single direction, seemingly only a quarter of a
-mile to the right, and down the mountain a bit, and the boys thought
-they detected a change in the sound. They also could now hear a second
-dog.
-
-“I bet old Ben has treed him!” Bennie cried, “and one of the other pups
-has caught up! Come on, let’s go see!”
-
-“Just us, a couple of dogs, and no gun, against a bear? No, thank you!”
-exclaimed Dumplin’.
-
-“Well, I don’t live in Oregon,” Bennie replied, “but I know that when a
-bear is treed by a dog, he stays up the tree. Anyhow, I’m going to take
-a chance. You can stay here alone, if you want to. I’m going to see that
-old bear. That’s what we came here for.”
-
-He got up and untethered his horse, climbing stiffly and with a groan
-into the saddle. Spider followed him.
-
-“Oh, well, if you go, I’m going—if I can ever get aboard that beast,”
-said Dumplin’. “Gee, he’s about a thousand feet high!”
-
-Bennie led the way toward the sound of the barking, which was still in
-one place, but not so loud now, and very hoarse. They had three ravines
-to cross, but in their excitement they didn’t think about the fresh
-tears and scratches. In fifteen minutes they came very near the sound of
-the barking. A moment later they broke up out of a lodge-pole thicket to
-find old Ben running ’round and ’round the trunk of a huge yellow pine,
-his bark almost gone, like the voice of a man who has been making too
-many speeches, nothing much left but a hoarse whisper, while Cap was
-standing with his front paws up the trunk as high as he could reach.
-
-The boys looked up the tree and gave a wild yell, while old Ben, seeing
-them there, sprang at the tree with renewed life, as if he were trying
-to climb it, too, to show them he really wasn’t winded after all. Far
-up, sixty or seventy-five feet from the ground, in the crotch of the
-first big limb, lay a black bear. His forepaws were hugging the limb,
-his head was poked over, his tongue kept hanging out, and they could see
-his little eyes looking at them. Since they had no gun, he was perfectly
-safe as long as he cared to sit there, and he appeared to know it.
-
-“There’s nothing for us to do but wait for the rest,” said Bennie.
-“Golly, he’s a big bear! I wonder what he weighs?”
-
-“I hope he stays where he is,” Dumplin’ put in.
-
-“Come on, let’s tie our horses and sit down and wait. Oh, boy, we beat
-the others to the bear!”
-
-“No, sir, I sit here. My horse can go faster’n I can. Two dogs aren’t
-big enough, all alone, to tackle that bear if he starts coming down.”
-
-“Maybe you’re right at that,” Bennie admitted. “But, say, we’ve sure got
-one on the rest when they show up! We’ll tell ’em we kept right on old
-Ben’s heels, and beat ’em to it!”
-
-“We’ll tell ’em so,” Spider grinned. “But if you think you can put it
-over on Mr. Vreeland you’ve got another guess coming.”
-
-So they attempted to sit on their horses near the tree, but the horses
-had something to say about that. Some downward current of air brought a
-sudden bear scent to them, and they began to rear and back and wheel, so
-that all three boys jumped off as quickly as they could, and led the
-twitching animals a long way down the slope and tied them. They hadn’t
-realized before how much a horse fears the smell of bear.
-
-“I nearly got spilled before I could get my foot out of the stirrup,”
-Bennie said. “Thought I was a goner for a minute.”
-
-“Me too,” said Dumplin’. “This isn’t so much fun as it’s cracked up to
-be. Gee, I wish I knew how to ride the way Mr. Vreeland does! He’d just
-have _made_ his horse stand still.”
-
-As they were walking back they heard at last the bay of the other two
-dogs, and then the far-off sound of a horse crashing through
-lodge-poles. In two minutes the other dogs joined Ben in a dance below
-the big tree, and in two minutes more Mr. Vreeland and Tom rode up.
-Behind them, down the mountain, could be heard Pep’s and Mr. Stone’s and
-the doctor’s horses.
-
-Mr. Vreeland didn’t see the boys at first, because they hid behind some
-bushes.
-
-“Are the doctor and the camera man behind?” they heard him ask Tom. “Too
-bad the kids had to drop out. We’ll have to go hunting for them after
-Mr. Bear’s disposed of. They’re wandering around lost, I suppose.”
-
-“Is that so?” cried the boys, jumping up from behind the bush.
-
-“Well, I’m darned!” Mr. Vreeland exclaimed. “How did you get here?
-Where’s your horses?”
-
-“Down the slope—tied,” said Bennie. “We kept right on old Ben’s heels.
-How’d you lose the trail? Get off on a false scent? Too bad!”
-
-Mr. Vreeland fixed Bennie with a cool look, which had a twinkle behind
-it.
-
-“Were you huntin’ the bear, or was he huntin’ you?” said he. “I used to
-know a nigger down South, where I was once, who always went out behind a
-fox hunt, and sat down after a bit, and waited for the fox to come
-trottin’ back. He’d get the fox, and the rest would get the exercise.
-They had to do somethin’ kind o’ drastic to that nigger.”
-
-(“I told you so!” Spider laughed at Bennie. “Can’t fool him.”)
-
-“You look as if the bear caught you, too,” Mr. Vreeland went on. “Did he
-make those scratches with his claws? He’s got nice claws.” (This last as
-he cast a contemplative glance up into the tree.)
-
-“Just the same, we beat you to the old bear, however we did it,” Bennie
-grinned. “Who’s going to shoot him?”
-
-“Well, if you got here first, you can take a crack,” Mr. Vreeland said.
-“Wait till the camera man comes. I hear ’em now.”
-
-A minute later the doctor and then Mr. Stone and Pep came into the
-clearing. They were not torn and scratched so much as the boys, but much
-more than Mr. Vreeland and Tom. And they were even more surprised to
-find the boys there. However, there was no time for talk. The horses
-were dancing with nervousness, the dogs were jumping against the tree,
-and the hear was moving on the limb as if he contemplated climbing
-higher. Mr. Stone unlimbered his camera, Spider walked off into the
-woods because, he declared, he refused to see a fine animal shot in cold
-blood, and Bennie, armed with a rifle, was told to fire, aiming at the
-base of the brain.
-
-He sighted and pulled the trigger, trembling with nervousness for fear
-he wouldn’t make a good shot. The kick of the gun staggered him for an
-instant, but as soon as he caught himself he stared into the tree, to
-see the bear snarling with pain and rage, but still crouched, alive, on
-the limb.
-
-Bennie handed the rifle hastily to his uncle. “You do it!” he cried.
-“Gosh, all I’ve done is hurt him. I don’t want to mess the poor thing up
-any more.”
-
-“Well, of all the——” Mr. Vreeland began.
-
-“Shoot him, Vreeland,” said the doctor, sharply. “I’m no hunter.”
-
-The old man raised his rifle, sighted it so quickly that it seemed part
-of the same motion, and there was a sharp crack. The bear seemed to
-spring right off the limb and fell, a black ball of fur, seventy feet to
-the ground.
-
-The dogs were on it in a second, as its paws gave one or two feeble and
-undirected swipes. Then it lay dead. The dogs were called off, and
-promptly lay down, panting and exhausted. Bennie wanted to go away
-somewhere and lie down, too. He felt sick. He had thought it would be
-wonderful sport to kill a big bear, but now that he had pumped a bullet
-into it, and then seen the creature, helpless and defenseless, come
-crashing down dead out of the tree, the fun was gone. If the bear had
-been attacking him, or even attacking anybody, it would be different.
-But just to shoot it in cold blood, for the sake of killing something,
-suddenly struck Bennie as a low down, cruel trick. He felt the way
-Spider always felt. He’d never been able to understand Spider’s point of
-view before, but now that he had pumped a bullet into the bear, he
-understood. He thought of their talk about the deer that morning by the
-rim of Crater Lake.
-
-But Mr. Stone was calling. He’d got a fresh roll of film into his
-camera, and wanted to take the whole party around the dead bear. Tom and
-Mr. Vreeland propped the big brownish-black body up into a sitting
-posture, Bennie stood beside it, with a gun in his hand, and Dumplin’,
-with a grin on his face, walked up, grasped the bear by the paw, and
-shook hands with a great show of friendliness.
-
-“You weren’t planning to do that about twenty minutes ago,” came the
-voice of Spider, returning to the scene.
-
-“Neither was the bear,” Dumplin’ answered.
-
-Tom, Mr. Vreeland and the doctor now set about skinning the carcase,
-which weighed, the hunter estimated, about three hundred pounds. After
-that the doctor opened the stomach.
-
-Bennie watched this operation for a moment, and then turned quickly
-away.
-
-“What’s the matter?” his uncle asked.
-
-“It—it isn’t what you’d call real sweet and pretty,” said Bennie.
-
-“You’ll never make a doctor, then,” said his uncle.
-
-“Not a bear doctor, anyhow,” Bennie laughed.
-
-But Spider stood right by. He was intensely interested to see what the
-doctor found.
-
-“Any evidences of a predatory diet?” he demanded.
-
-“Of a _what_?” said Dumplin’ and Bennie. “Say, Mr. Peters, did you bring
-a dictionary?”
-
-The doctor was looking carefully into the opened stomach.
-
-“As far as I can see,” he answered, “this bear was living on vegetable
-food, for the past day or two. No trace of bones, feathers or meat. I
-should say he’d been feeding on berries.”
-
-“Why does the government want ’em killed, then?” cried Spider.
-
-“Why not? What good do they do?” Mr. Vreeland cut in. “Seems to me you
-boys are about the most tender-hearted people I ever stacked up against.
-What do you want to do, spoil all sport?”
-
-“It’s just as much sport hunting with a camera,” Spider replied, “and a
-lot more dangerous, if you aren’t armed, and takes a heap more patience
-and skill.”
-
-“Yes, and what do you get?”
-
-“You get a picture—if you’re lucky—and you leave the animal alive for
-the next man to see.”
-
-Mr. Vreeland grunted in disgust, scraped all the fat he could off the
-big, heavy skin, folded it up, put it over his saddle, and called his
-dogs. The boys got their horses, and the tired, hungry party rode down
-the mountain, following an open ridge to the meadows, and then trotted,
-lame and sore, to their camp. After a hasty meal, they rode back to the
-ranch. The doctor paid Mr. Vreeland for the trip, and insisted on giving
-him something for the bearskin beside, because it was his shot which
-brought down the bear. Then they all stood by while Pep struggled to get
-Methuselah started, and presently were out on the road again, headed for
-Bend.
-
-Bennie sank back into the deep cushions of the motor with a huge sigh.
-
-“Oh, boy!” he said, “p’r’aps these cushions don’t feel good! The last
-five miles, my saddle was made of cast iron. I’m dead to the world.”
-
-“How far did that bear travel before he was treed?” asked Spider.
-
-“I’d say he probably ran fifteen miles,” said the doctor. “It was
-enough, and lucky for you boys he doubled around, or you wouldn’t have
-seen him. I’m pretty sore and tired myself.”
-
-“What I don’t get,” said Bennie, “is how Mr. Vreeland and Tom rode right
-through those pine thickets without getting torn to pieces. Gee, I’ve
-got to buy a new cap and a pair of trousers and a shirt in Bend before I
-can gladden the public eye.”
-
-“They know how,” the doctor laughed. “After a while, you learn to
-estimate how much room there is, as well as the horse does, and protect
-yourself in advance.”
-
-“It was an awful lot of fun,” Spider continued—“all but shooting the
-bear. I think it is wicked to kill off all the wild animals, when they
-are harmless. Pretty soon we won’t have any wild life left. The bears
-_must_ be harmless, because they don’t shoot ’em in the national parks,
-and nobody gets hurt, and the other game is thick. Mr. Vreeland thinks
-I’m chicken-hearted, I could see that. But I can’t help it. It’s not
-because I’m chicken-hearted. It’s because I love the woods and the wild
-animals in ’em, and hunting with a gun strikes me as kind of silly and
-wicked.”
-
-The doctor drove in silence for a minute. Then he said, “I feel more or
-less as you do. But you must remember this: Vreeland is an old man who
-was brought up on the frontier. When he was a boy he had to hunt to get
-fresh meat. Game was as thick as huckleberries then. There were even
-grizzlies here in Oregon. It seems perfectly natural to him, and he
-can’t understand why eastern people, or any people, shouldn’t want to
-hunt. He can’t understand the word _conservation_ at all. But you young
-fellows, who are born later, into a world where most of the game has
-been killed off, and most of the forest cut down, don’t want to see less
-wild animals and less woods—you want to see more. Your point of view is
-just the opposite of his. Conservation has got to be preached and
-practised by the young chaps. The old fellows don’t understand it. They
-think a man is afraid, or chicken-hearted, if he won’t shoot a wild
-animal. That’s why I want to see the Boy Scouts learn all about
-conservation, and help in the good work.”
-
-“You bet!” said Bennie. “When that old bear kind of looked at me and
-groaned, when I hit him, something turned over in the pit of my tummie.
-I guess he had as good a right to live as I have. But I’ll sure need his
-old skin to cover me, if the stores are closed when we get to Bend. I
-got to have some new pants.”
-
-“It’s Saturday. They’ll be open all the evening,” Uncle Billy laughed.
-
-All three of the boys had to buy new khaki breeches when they reached
-Bend, and new flannel shirts, and Bennie had to get a cap. The doctor
-gave them some salve and plaster for their cuts and scratches, and after
-a bath they were ready to eat everything the waitress brought to the
-table.
-
-“And now,” said Mr. Stone, after dinner, “shall we all go to the
-movies?”
-
-Dumplin’ gave his father one look of scorn.
-
-“Bed!” he groaned.
-
-“Bed!” said Bennie.
-
-“Bed!” said Spider.
-
-But Pep, who had stayed to dinner with them, said, “I’ve got to hunt up
-the editor of the _Star_, and tell him about this hunt—good story—more
-advertising for Bend.”
-
-“Don’t forget to tell him how the three brave boys, alone and unarmed,
-got to the bear long before the skilled hunters,” said Bennie.
-
-“I’ll tell him _exactly_ how they did it,” Pep laughed, as he said good
-night.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- Bennie Achieves a Dog, and the Party Puts Out a Forest Fire
-
-
-The next day, Sunday, they stayed in Bend, and, to tell the truth, the
-boys were just as well pleased. They were all three sore and stiff.
-Dumplin’ had a cut on his knee, Spider’s shoulder ached where a dead
-pine limb had torn both his shirt and his skin, and Bennie had three big
-black and blue bruises on his legs. The two scouts spent most of the day
-writing letters home, and also writing up the account of their long hike
-at Crater Lake, to Mount Scott, as part of the examination for a merit
-badge in hiking. Spider also studied his government pamphlet on Oregon
-trees, which he had bought at the Crater Lake Inn. Uncle Billy said that
-when they got into the heart of the Cascades they would encounter a
-great number of different kinds of trees, and Spider was determined to
-identify them.
-
-While they were busy with this, Uncle Billy was busy at the telephone,
-arranging with a man who lived at Sisters, a little town nearer the
-mountains, to meet them Monday morning with a pack train, and take them
-in to Mount Jefferson.
-
-“I don’t know whether we are going to get to Mount Jefferson or not,”
-the doctor said at luncheon. “Norman tells me the snow up here was even
-heavier last winter than it was at Crater Lake. He says he tried to get
-over the Divide to Jefferson yesterday, by the short way, and the snow
-blocked him. We’ll have to go in past Marion Lake. That’ll take three
-days, and maybe we won’t get there that way. I certainly never knew so
-much snow at this time of year.”
-
-He was wiping the perspiration off his forehead as he spoke, which made
-everybody laugh. But they could look out of the big plate glass window
-at the west end of the dining-room and see, fifty miles away, the
-white-clad summits of the Three Sisters, three big mountains side by
-side, shining in the sun.
-
-“Are we going to be on horseback all this trip to Jefferson?” Dumplin’
-asked plaintively.
-
-“You can walk if you want to,” his father smiled.
-
-“I feel now as if I’d have to,” Dumplin’ sighed. “Wish they made
-pneumatic saddles.”
-
-That afternoon, between trips to the garage to pack the cars, and trips
-to the drug store to buy Spider a note-book for his tree observations,
-and to get ice cream sodas, Bennie acquired a dog. Maybe it would be
-more truthful to say that the dog acquired Bennie. He was a young dog,
-hardly more than a puppy, one of those very small collies which the
-western sheep men use in herding their flocks. Dumplin’ called him a
-half portion dog. The poor little chap had evidently lost his master, or
-else he had wandered away from home. He didn’t seem to worry much,
-however. What he was plainly looking for was somebody, anybody, who
-would be kind to him. He trotted up and down the street, following
-different people and trying to attract their attention.
-
-The second time Bennie saw him, he said, “I don’t believe that dog’s got
-a master. He’s looking for a kind home. Come here, Towser.”
-
-He whistled to the pup, and the dog came bounding up to him, tail
-wagging madly, and crouched puppy fashion at his feet. When Bennie
-stooped to pat him, he sprang up, put his forepaws on the scout’s chest,
-and tried to lick his face.
-
-“Gosh, you nice little mutt!” Bennie exclaimed. “I sure like dogs, and
-you’re a regular dog.”
-
-To this the dog replied with a whine of joy, and from that moment he
-clung to Bennie like a brother.
-
-“Now you got him, what you going to do with him?” Spider asked, as the
-pup bounded along beside them, fairly shaking with delight, as his tail
-switched back and forth.
-
-“Dunno. Get him some grub first, I guess. He looks awful thin.”
-
-Bennie went around to the hotel kitchen and begged some meat scraps,
-which the pup devoured greedily. After that, he tried to follow Bennie
-into the hotel. No dogs were allowed inside, however.
-
-“I guess he’ll go away now,” Bennie said, shutting the door in the poor
-dog’s face.
-
-But when they came out from dinner the dog was still lying in front of
-the door, and as Bennie went out to the sidewalk he leaped upon him,
-trying to lick his face. He settled down on the door-mat when the boys
-went in for the night, and the last thing they saw was his face looking
-in at them through the screen, his eyes reproachful and sad at being
-left out.
-
-And when they came down at six in the morning, he was still there! At
-sight of Bennie, he emitted a glad yelp and began scratching at the
-door.
-
-“Say, that pup is certainly fond of me,” Bennie said, going out and
-petting it. “Can’t I take him along, Uncle Billy?”
-
-“Not a chance,” the doctor answered. “We’ve got troubles enough.
-Besides, he probably belongs to somebody here in Bend. He’ll go home
-when we’ve gone.”
-
-When they were putting the last of the baggage into the cars in front of
-the hotel the dog leaped into the doctor’s car and sat on the driver’s
-seat, wagging his tail furiously, as much as to say, “Well, well, I’m
-all ready to start; hurry up!”
-
-He had to be put out three times before the cars were ready. When the
-order came to start, Bennie hugged him hard, while the pup licked at his
-face.
-
-“Good-bye, you little mutt, you,” said he. “If my uncle wasn’t a
-flinty-hearted old thing, we’d take you along.”
-
-Then Bennie climbed over into the car, and they were off for Mount
-Jefferson. They ran north out of Bend, and then turned west, toward the
-distant mountains. In the early morning light, clear as a bell, they
-could see the snow-clad peaks rising against the sky, all the way from
-the Three Sisters in front of them to Mount Hood, a hundred miles to the
-north. More than fifty miles away, northwestward, rose the sharp,
-glittering white pyramid of Mount Jefferson, their objective. It was
-their first sight of it, and the doctor slowed down the car so they
-could have a good look.
-
-And as he did so, they heard a little yip beside the car—and there was
-the pup, his tongue hanging out, his chest heaving, but his eyes fixed
-on Bennie in triumph!
-
-“Oh, Uncle Billy, the poor little mutt!” Bennie cried. “Some speed, I’ll
-say. He’s going to follow us till he runs his head off. Can’t I take him
-in?”
-
-The words were hardly out of his mouth, and the doctor had no time to
-reply, before the pup, with one spring, landed in Bennie’s lap.
-
-“Looks as if you _had_ taken him in,” the doctor grinned. “Well, let him
-stay now. But you’ll have to feed him out of your own rations. We can’t
-pack food for a dog.”
-
-The dog, with wiggles of his tail and body that expressed his joy as
-plainly as any words could, snuggled down in Bennie’s lap and tried to
-lick him.
-
-“What are you going to name him?” Dumplin’ called out from the other
-car.
-
-“I guess his name is Mutt,” Bennie laughed.
-
-“Seeing’s how we are going to Jefferson, better call him Jeff,” Dumplin’
-retorted.
-
-“Jeff it is,” Bennie answered, grinning at the joke. “Good old Jeff! I
-bet he’s a good dog. I bet he can round up a flock of sheep. I’m going
-to take him home when we go.”
-
-“How pleased your mother will be,” said his uncle.
-
-The cars started up again now, and they rode for almost fifty miles
-northwestward, getting presently into the yellow pine forests and then
-the foot-hills, so that Jefferson disappeared entirely from view. At
-last the doctor turned his car down a side road, and stopped in front of
-a small house, all by itself in a forest clearing beside a lovely little
-river. Opposite this house was a barn, and in the barnyard was a herd of
-horses.
-
-“Allingham Ranger Station! All out! Far as we go!” cried the doctor.
-“Hello, Norman!”
-
-This last he shouted to a stocky young man, in khaki riding breeches and
-leather leggings, who was standing by the barn.
-
-Norman was to be their guide. The horses were his. With him he had two
-more men, one to take care of the horses and one to cook. That made
-eight saddle horses needed for the party. There were eight more pack
-horses to carry the luggage. Although it was only 9:30 o’clock, it took
-them till almost one to get the cars unloaded, and the tents, dunnage
-bags, sleeping bags, provisions, cameras, alpenstocks, and so on, packed
-on the eight horses. Bennie and Spider were of little use in this
-packing process, because they knew nothing about it. They brought the
-stuff to be packed to Norman and his two helpers, and watched them stow
-it across the pack saddles, stretch a canvas over, and then throw a long
-rope over the heap and under the horse’s belly, back and forth several
-times, till, when it was finally hauled taut and tied, it made a large
-diamond-shaped design of the load, and held it firmly on.
-
-“Say, that’s a complicated process,” said Spider. “I can tie most knots
-after I’ve seen somebody do it, but I couldn’t do that.”
-
-“It takes some practice to throw a diamond hitch,” Norman laughed.
-“Well, let’s saddle our old cayuses now.”
-
-The eight riding horses were saddled, the boys each attending to his own
-nag. But Norman inspected the saddles before they mounted, and tightened
-the girths.
-
-“Now, adjust your stirrups,” he said. “Don’t have them too short. Two
-fingers between you and the saddle when you stand up is enough. We’re
-not going to ride in Central Park this afternoon.”
-
-“Where are we going to ride, by the way?” the doctor asked. “Any chance
-of getting into Jefferson Park?”
-
-“Not a chance,” said Norman. “We can’t even get in to Hunt’s Cove
-direct, as I ’phoned you. We’ve got to detour around by Marion Lake. Too
-much snow.”
-
-“Hope he knows where all those places are,” whispered Bennie.
-
-“But can we climb Jefferson from Hunt’s Cove?” the doctor asked. “Has
-anybody ever done it?”
-
-“Never heard of anybody. But we can have a look.”
-
-“Why can’t you climb it from Hunt’s Cove—wherever that is?” Bennie
-asked.
-
-“Maybe you can,” Norman replied. “But it’s no picnic. Wait till you
-see.”
-
-“Well, I’ve been hearing about all this snow,” Bennie grinned, wiping
-the sweat from his forehead, “for two days. I’d like to see some right
-now.”
-
-“Give us time,” Norman smiled. “And now we’re off. We’ve got fifteen
-miles to make before dark.”
-
-“But how about lunch?” Dumplin’ suddenly demanded.
-
-“Marion Lake before dark!” Norman answered. “No lunch.”
-
-Dumplin’ groaned.
-
-“It’ll help you reduce, Dump,” Bennie taunted. “Gidup, Dobbin! Oh, gee,
-where’s poor little Jeff?” And he began to whistle.
-
-Jeff appeared with a loud yelp from the side of the stream, where he had
-evidently been cooling himself. Shaking off the water, he dashed ahead
-of the procession of sixteen horses, barking madly, and the march for
-Jefferson began.
-
-The trail lay through a thick yellow pine forest. This was a United
-States government forest, so that the fire had been kept out and the
-little pines were everywhere coming up under the old ones, much to
-Spider’s delight. But the trail itself was dry and dusty, and their
-noses soon smarted, their throats were dry. With the loaded pack horses,
-they could not trot, but plodded on in single file, the dust rising in
-clouds behind them.
-
-They had been traveling perhaps an hour when Norman, riding ahead,
-suddenly pulled up his horse, and Bennie, just behind him, saw him
-sniff.
-
-“What’s the matter?” the scout asked.
-
-“I smell smoke,” Norman answered. Then he looked at the dust cloud
-behind to see which way it was moving.
-
-“We are going into the wind. Must be ahead,” he said. “You come on with
-me. Let your uncle lead the train.”
-
-He kicked his horse and dashed up the trail. Bennie kicked his horse,
-and dashed after him, not at all sure that he could keep his saddle.
-Strangely enough, though, he found it easier to gallop than to trot, and
-found himself falling into the motion of the horse.
-
-A quarter of a mile up the trail the smell of smoke was plain. Over a
-knoll they dashed, and they saw smoke in the forest ahead. A moment
-later they heard the crackle, and then they were on the fire. It was a
-small one as yet, evidently just under way, but it was licking savagely
-into the small trees and the dead stuff, all dry as tinder or else full
-of inflammable pitch. And the flames were moving toward them!
-
-Norman wheeled. “Go back!” he yelled. “Stop the train where it is, and
-tell Joe to stay with the horses while the rest bring up all the axes,
-and that camp spade in my pack. Then you go back as fast as you can to
-the Ranger Station and tell the ranger. If he isn’t there, find him!”
-
-Bennie wheeled his horse, and dashed back. He gave the message to the
-rest, and kept on. Both he and his horse were panting, drenched with
-sweat and thick with dust, when he reached the Ranger Station again. The
-ranger was there, as good luck would have it. While Bennie watered his
-horse, he telephoned for help; then he saddled and galloped up the
-trail, with Bennie behind him, but some way behind, for Bennie’s horse
-was getting weary.
-
-When Bennie reached the pack train, Joe, the cook, had all the horses
-lined up facing back toward the station, ready to retreat if the fire
-came nearer. Everybody else had gone to fight the flames. So Bennie left
-his horse, too, and with stiff, aching legs, ran up the trail. As he
-drew near the scene, he could see, between him and the flames that were
-still confined to the smaller trees and the stuff on the forest floor,
-five men and two boys working like mad. Norman was digging a little
-ditch, while the rest, with axes and scout hatchets, were chopping down
-the small trees to make an open lane several feet wide. They had this
-lane and ditch cut across the direct path of the fire, and were swinging
-it around on each end, as if they were going to enclose the flames in a
-big ring. Bennie grabbed a hatchet, and went madly to work with the
-rest.
-
-Nobody was wasting any breath talking. The fire was coming nearer all
-the time, and the nearer it came the hotter they grew. But when, in the
-centre, it reached the lane and ditch—and stopped, they gave a loud
-cheer, and worked all the harder to get around the two sides before it
-could spread out.
-
-“If only the wind won’t change!” the ranger did say, breathlessly, and
-then stooped to his work.
-
-It is doubtful if they could have outflanked the fire, however, with
-only eight pairs of hands, if help had not arrived. Half a dozen men
-came galloping up, their horses rearing and snorting at sight of the
-flames, and leaped off with spades and axes. With this new, fresh help,
-the fire was outflanked on the two sides, and as it moved more slowly
-back against the slight wind, they were able to get it under control.
-
-When the danger was over, they paused, wiped their hot, dripping, dirty
-faces, and looked at the burned area.
-
-It was hardly more than an acre in extent, but an acre, as Bennie said,
-is quite enough to dig a ditch around in a hurry, without proper tools.
-
-“Thank the Lord it’s no more,” the ranger declared. “If you hadn’t
-spotted it when you did, it would have worked down into those thicker
-pines over the knoll, and then we’d have been in for a real overhead
-fire, and no mistake. Once in there it would jump up into the big
-fellows.”
-
-“What I want to know is, what started it?” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“Party went in ahead of you this morning, to fish at Marion Lake,” said
-the ranger. “Cigarette, probably. Idiots! Snoop around there, Norman,
-and see what you can discover tonight. I’ll be over in the morning
-myself. I want to stick by here tonight and make sure this doesn’t blow
-up again. Well, boys, Uncle Sam is grateful to you, all right!”
-
-They went back to the pack train, and then resumed their journey,
-crossing the black, smoking patch of the fire, and waving good-bye to
-the ranger and his helpers.
-
-“Well, there are two precious hours gone,” Norman growled. “We’ll have
-to make camp in the dark.”
-
-“But we stopped a bad fire,” said Bennie. “Aren’t you glad?”
-
-“Sure, I’m glad. But I hate to camp in the dark. Get up!”
-
-He kicked his horse, and all the train behind picked up to a faster
-pace. They didn’t hold it long, though, for the trail began to go
-up-hill presently, and the character of the forest to change. Instead of
-the big yellow pines, the path rose into a forest of smaller trees of
-many kinds, and shrubs, too. Spider did his best to pull off specimens
-of the foliage or needles as he rode past, so he could identify them.
-The guide would not let them stop.
-
-Even at the top of the pass they were still in the forest, and could get
-no outlook. But as the trail grew level again, on the pass, they ran
-into snow-drifts and pools of water just melted. It was the first sign
-of anything cool that day. Over the pass the trail began to descend into
-a wild forest of big evergreens, and for the next few weary miles
-Bennie, for one, had little idea of where they went. He was dizzy from
-lack of food and his exertions in the heat, and he was so saddle sore
-that he had to keep shifting his weight to try to ease the stiffness.
-His bones and his head both ached. It was getting dark in the forest,
-too, whenever they had to go down into the bottom of a ravine. Nobody
-was saying a word, except, the horse rustler, who kept yelling at the
-pack horses to make them hurry.
-
-At last, when it seemed as if he couldn’t stand his saddle another
-minute, and when it was so dark in the deep, damp woods that Norman was
-almost invisible at the head of the train, they heard him call, “Turn
-left,” and followed him down a side trail, so dim they would never have
-detected it in the dark.
-
-A moment later there was light ahead, and they were on the shore of
-Marion Lake! The woods went right down to the water. There was no beach.
-The lake itself was a good-sized pond, perhaps a mile long, and across
-it rose up the snow-draped, needle-pointed spires of Three Fingered
-Jack, nearly 8,000 feet high. Nobody looked at the view, however; there
-was no time. The boys got out the tents and sleeping bags, the cook set
-up the stove and prepared food by lantern light. The doctor and Mr.
-Stone rustled wood. Norman and the helper took the horses off in the
-darkness to find a bit of open pasturage if they could. For half an
-hour, weary as they were, everybody worked like mad. And then, dirty as
-they were, they all rushed to the stove at the cry of “Come and get it!”
-
-“I was never so hungry in my life,” Bennie said.
-
-“I ain’t hungry any more,” Dumplin’ replied. “I was three hours ago, but
-now I’m past caring. I’m just a vacuum.”
-
-“Stomach or head?” his father asked.
-
-The food had been cooked in a hurry, but nobody cared. Eating by lantern
-light and the glow from the stove door, they gobbled the bacon and
-swallowed the coffee in eager gulps.
-
-“Glad Ma can’t see my table manners now!” Spider remarked, his mouth
-full.
-
-When the meal was over Norman went off again through the trees to see if
-he could find the camp of the fishermen who possibly set the fire, and
-the rest lay on their backs by the water, discussing the exciting day.
-Norman came back to report that three men were camping around a
-headland, and he suspected one of them must have thrown away a
-cigarette, though they denied it.
-
-“And to think,” said the doctor, “that if we hadn’t come along, the fire
-might have got a headway and burned thousands of acres, just because one
-man didn’t have sense enough not to throw a cigarette butt into the
-brush! Some folks ought not to be allowed in the woods.”
-
-“Well, me for a bath and bed,” said Mr. Stone. “I don’t know which I
-need more.”
-
-The full moon was rising behind Three Fingered Jack when they all jumped
-into the lake, which was surprisingly shallow near shore, and had a good
-bath. Then they climbed wearily into their tents, and in two minutes
-they were in bed. But no sooner had they got snuggled down in the dark
-than there came a yell from the doctor.
-
-“Here, get up, Bennie, and take that pup out of here! He’s licking my
-face!”
-
-“Oh, gee, he’s all wet, and he’s shaking himself on me,” from Spider.
-
-“Aw, let him sleep at my feet, Uncle Billy,” from Bennie.
-
-“No, sir; he’ll hunt fleas in the night. I want a good sleep. You get up
-and take him outside!”
-
-So poor Bennie got stiffly up again, and led Jeff out of the tent,
-making him a little bed out of a canvas pack cover by the flap. Jeff
-curled up contentedly, with a good-night lick and whimper, and Bennie
-went back.
-
-Already he could hear Spider breathing hard, and in one minute he, too,
-had dropped off like a soldier after a battle.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- The Pack Train Has to Toboggan Into Hunt’s Cove, and Bennie Puts
- “Action” Into It
-
-
-The next morning Bennie expected to be sore and stiff, but somehow he
-wasn’t. He felt fine. The day began at sun-up with a plunge in the lake,
-and then an early start, because the horses hadn’t had enough to eat,
-and Norman wanted to get to pasturage. It was a wonderful day for
-Spider. They were now on the western side of the Cascade Divide, the
-side on which the rain and snow falls all winter, so that the woods,
-instead of being dry, were as rich and dark and damp as an Adirondack
-forest. The yellow pines had vanished, but in their place were great
-cedars, and stands of Douglas fir trees bigger even than those on the
-way to Crater Lake. About the middle of the morning they picked their
-way down a steep, broken, rocky trail into a cañon, and at the bottom
-they rode for a long way through a forest of fir trees so big that when
-anybody rode around one, both horse and rider vanished from sight! These
-trees rose 150 feet without a limb, straight as masts, and they were
-over 200 feet tall.
-
-“Some shrubs!” cried Bennie. “My neck’s nearly broken trying to see the
-tops of ’em.”
-
-“How’d you like to shin up one, Bennie?” Mr. Stone called.
-
-“I’d rather shin up it than saw it into wood for the stove,” Bennie
-answered.
-
-“Who owns these trees?” asked Spider.
-
-“Your Uncle Sam,” Norman called back.
-
-“I’m glad of that. I hope they’re never cut down. I wish everybody in
-America could see them, and know what trees are!”
-
-“A lot of people in America would think they were dead before they could
-get here,” Uncle Billy laughed. “We are some ways from civilization,
-Spider.”
-
-At noon they came to a natural meadow, and pastured the horses for two
-hours, while they themselves ate lunch. Then they pushed on. Late in the
-afternoon, when the boys were getting saddle sore and weary again, and
-everybody was hot and sweaty, Norman suddenly turned up the side of the
-cañon, by a dim trail through the bushes (there were few trees on this
-slope, due to an old fire). The trail was very steep, the horses sweated
-and panted, the pack horses had to be tugged and driven. For an hour
-they climbed, with frequent rests for breath, until the forests lay
-below them and the tumbled cañons, and they came into an open pasture
-near sunset time, a pasture full of glorious red and blue wild flowers
-and rich grass. They crossed this toward the east, still climbing, and
-suddenly came up over a crest into a second pasture, which was even
-fuller of flowers, and was the top of the mountain they had been
-climbing. But that wasn’t what made them pull up their horses and shout.
-
-What made them do that was what they saw apparently only two or three
-miles eastward—the great white pyramid of Mount Jefferson, covered with
-cold, glittering snow, rising up and up against the sky, its summit
-needle flushed pink with sunset! It was a beautiful sight, but it was a
-tremendous sight, too. The mountain looked immense, terrific.
-
-Bennie sobered after his first shout.
-
-“Do you mean to say we are going to climb _that_?” he demanded.
-
-“Surely,” his uncle smiled.
-
-Bennie, for once, made no reply whatever.
-
-They went into camp immediately, above a big, fine spring on a slope of
-the meadow, which is called Minto Pasture. The horses were unsaddled and
-unloaded, hobbled, and sent out to graze their fill. Tents were strung
-between some trees on the edge of the big natural clearing. Dry wood was
-gathered, and supper got under way. They were more than 5,000 feet up
-here, and the minute the sun set it grew very cold, with a strong,
-bitter wind blowing down from the snow-draped mountain. There were
-snow-drifts in the woods beyond the spring. Everybody got into sweaters,
-and huddled around the boiling coffee-pot. Even Jeff snuggled up close
-to Bennie—but that might have been because he was hungry and was looking
-for food.
-
-He got the scrapings from all the dishes, and the last batch of
-pancakes, which nobody else had room for, and then went bounding off
-again, barking and wheeling amid the grass and flowers.
-
-“Great dog, that!” Bennie declared.
-
-“Well, here come some cattle. Let’s see how good a dog he is,” Norman
-grinned, pointing up the pasture.
-
-Sure enough, a herd of cattle, turned out to range wild during the
-summer, was breaking out of the woods.
-
-“They’ll be around all night, and walk all over camp, and get into the
-spring, if we don’t chase ’em off,” Norman went on. “Sic your sheep dog
-on ’em, Bennie.”
-
-Bennie whistled to Jeff, and then pointed to the cattle.
-
-“Sic ’em, Jeff! Drive ’em away!” he said.
-
-Jeff gave a yelp, jumped madly around in a circle—and then ran barking
-loudly directly toward a bird sitting in a low tree, singing its evening
-song!
-
-“Yes, that’s a great dog,” remarked Uncle Billy.
-
-“He certainly knows how to herd up cattle,” Norman added.
-
-“Maybe he’s a bird dog, Bennie,” said Spider.
-
-“I know what he is,” Dumplin’ grinned. “He’s a Chickadee hound!”
-
-“Aw, you make me sick,” Bennie retorted. “Just ’cause he’s a pup, and
-hasn’t been trained yet. Come here, Jeff. Bite ’em!”
-
-Jeff came back, as proudly as if he had herded the cattle instead of
-scaring one small bird, and once more he had to be put out of the tent,
-after everybody had got nicely to sleep.
-
-The next morning the thermometer, which the doctor carried in a case
-with his aneroid barometer, registered only 38° at five o’clock.
-Everybody was glad to pile out and hustle around striking camp, to get
-warmed up for breakfast.
-
-“Now, gentlemen, we’ve got our work cut out for us,” said Norman, when
-they were ready to start. “Everything has been a picnic so far, but now
-we are going to run into the snow. I don’t know whether we can make
-Hunt’s Cove or not. It will depend on how good sports you are.”
-
-“If the last two days have been a picnic, I don’t know whether I want to
-see your idea of working,” said Bennie.
-
-“Afraid?”
-
-“Afraid, your grandmother. But I sure am sorry for poor old Dobbin,”
-Bennie retorted.
-
-Old Jefferson, which looked so near, wasn’t so near as it looked, of
-course. Mountains never are. They descended gradually from Minto
-Pasture, through a “ghost forest” for two or three miles. A ghost forest
-is a forest which has been burned, without consuming the standing
-trunks. There the trees stood, thousands of them, but ghostly gray and
-dead—not a live branch, not a needle. Beyond this forest, they came out
-on a great plateau three miles wide, which was bare of everything except
-low bushes, wild flowers, a few snow-drifts and lava heaps, and a tiny
-brown tarn of water. The fire had done its work thoroughly here.
-
-“Grizzly Flats, they call this,” Norman said. “But I guess it’s been a
-long time since any grizzlies were seen here.”
-
-“What a fire this must have been!” Spider was saying, when Bennie
-suddenly cried, “Sh!”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“Somebody’s following us over the trail on a motorcycle,” he answered.
-“Don’t you hear?”
-
-It certainly sounded that way. Far off they heard the roaring buzz of an
-unmuffled engine.
-
-“An aeroplane!” Spider exclaimed.
-
-They halted, listening and watching. A moment later, flying fairly low,
-the plane came over Minto Mountain behind them, and swept toward Grizzly
-Flats. As if he saw them, and wanted to tell them so, the aviator
-swooped a bit over their heads, then rose again, banked against the
-white wall of Jefferson, and swung off to the north.
-
-“_What_ is he doing here?” the boys exclaimed.
-
-“It’s one of the new aeroplane forest patrol,” Norman said. “They go out
-every day now, in the dry season, to spot fires. We haven’t had a bad
-fire—not one of the old-fashioned big blazes, since they started in.
-They can get up and see into all the cañons, everywhere, every day, and
-get back with the tip in no time.”
-
-“But what would they do if they had to land?” asked Spider.
-
-“I guess it’s up to them not to have to land,” Norman answered. “I don’t
-want the job—but it’s a great work, just the same.”
-
-“Well, I’ll say war isn’t the only risky thing,” put in Bennie. “That
-guy ought to have a medal for flying over this country every day.”
-
-The plane had disappeared. They pushed on, and soon found themselves at
-the edge of Grizzly Flats. Right below them the land dropped at an angle
-of fifty or sixty degrees for a thousand feet, into a deep hole.
-Directly across this hole it went up again, and up and up and up, for
-the other side was Mount Jefferson. They were only a mile from the wall
-of the mountain, but for all they could see, they might as well have
-been a hundred miles. It looked quite impossible to take horses down
-that slope. To the right and left were dense woods which the fire hadn’t
-burned, and these woods were full of snow. The hole below them, called
-Hunt’s Cove, was carpeted with snow. The great pyramid of Jefferson
-opposite them was blinding white with snow.
-
-“You wait here,” said Norman, “while I prospect.”
-
-He went off to the south, into the woods, and they saw his horse
-climbing up over the drifts. Uncle Billy got out his field-glasses, lay
-on his stomach with his elbows firmly on the ground at the rim of the
-precipice, and began a long, careful study of the slopes of Mount
-Jefferson. He was very grave about it, and didn’t say a word, except now
-and then in a low voice to Dumplin’s father. The three boys wandered
-along the rim, wondering how Norman was going to find a way down. They
-couldn’t see any trace of a trail. Wherever the slope was enough off the
-perpendicular to hold a trail, it was covered with snow.
-
-Norman didn’t return for nearly an hour. When he finally came back, he
-said, “Well, I think I’ve found a way, if you care to risk it. I’ll risk
-the horses.”
-
-“As bad as that, eh?” the doctor replied. “Well, if you’ll try it, we
-will. I think I’ve found a way up the mountain, too, though I don’t like
-the looks of certain rock slides down that big west snow-field.”
-
-“But why do we go on the big west snow-field?” the boys asked. “Looks as
-if we could just go right up the southwest shoulder.”
-
-“Look sharp at the summit pinnacle, Bennie,” the doctor said, handing
-him the glasses.
-
-Bennie looked. All he said was “Wow!” and passed them to Dumplin’.
-
-“Do we climb _that_?” Dumplin’ demanded.
-
-“We do, if we get to the top of Jefferson,” the doctor answered. “You
-see, that top peak, or pinnacle, is absolutely straight up and down.
-It’s just a slab of lava set up on edge and covered with snow and ice.
-The only place it can possibly be climbed is on the northern end, so
-we’ve got to get around to the northern end. My plan is to go up from
-Hunt’s Cove by the southwest spur to the 7,000-foot level, where the
-permanent snow begins, then traverse the big west snow-field and get up
-on that first northwest shoulder, which apparently leads us right up to
-the north end of the pinnacle. It looks possible. Well, Norman, we’re
-ready.”
-
-Norman led the way southward into the woods at the rim of the Cove. As
-soon as they were in the deep shadows of the evergreens, they were on
-snow, and deep snow. Some drifts were still as much as ten feet deep,
-and so hard that the horses barely sank over their hoofs.
-
-“The trail is somewhere underneath us,” Norman called back.
-
-He traveled for almost a mile above the rim, and then led the way over.
-By zigzagging through the woods, on the steeply pitched snow, they were
-able to ride about half the way down. Then he called for them all to
-dismount.
-
-“Want to get a good motion picture, Mr. Stone?” he asked.
-
-“Sure.”
-
-The big camera was unpacked, and Norman and Mr. Stone disappeared with
-it, down the steep pitch ahead. Ten minutes later Norman came back.
-
-“Now,” said he, “each man lead his horse. Keep as far away from him as
-you can, and jump fast, or he’ll step on you. Go in single file, and Joe
-and Bill you go last and drive the pack horses ahead of you. Come
-on—follow me.”
-
-They pitched down a few feet through the evergreens, and came to the top
-of a long, straight, open chute, like a ski run cut in the woods,
-covered deep with snow, and descending 500 feet to the very bottom of
-Hunt’s Cove. It was evidently the path of an old landslide. Part way
-down, at one side, Mr. Stone had set up his camera, and was ready to
-shoot them as they went past him.
-
-“Ready? Go!” cried Norman, and over the edge he went, dragging his
-horse.
-
-Bennie followed, and Spider and Dumplin’ and the doctor, and the pack
-horses, and the rest, in single file. Two jumps, and you were speeding
-up. Three jumps, and the horses were going ten feet at a plunge,
-snorting and slipping and sometimes going through the snow to their
-bellies, and the boys, ahead of them, were leaping from side to side
-madly to keep out of the way of their iron-shod, plunging hoofs.
-
-As he passed the camera, Bennie heard the crank grinding, and the
-laughing voice of Mr. Stone crying, “More action, Bennie!”
-
-Bennie was about to make some reply, when his foot slipped, and he
-turned a superb somersault, and only was stopped from rolling the rest
-of the way to the bottom because he kept hold of his horse’s bridle.
-
-It was all over in two minutes, but it was certainly lively while it
-lasted. Then all the horses, their legs wet, shivering and trembling
-with nervousness, stood huddled at the foot of the chute, and Mr. Stone
-was seen descending with his camera. Bennie sprang back up the slope to
-get the tripod.
-
-“Say, that beats skiing!” he cried, “and I sure got some more action for
-you, Mr. Stone.”
-
-“You did,” the man laughed. “You did! That was the best action picture I
-ever took.”
-
-They found at the bottom of Hunt’s Cove a small open meadow, boggy now
-with melted snow and full of white cowslips and running brooks, but
-full, also, of fresh grass for the horses, and all around the meadow
-deep forests of fir trees and deep drifts. Among the trees, beside a
-rushing stream of ice cold water, and in a dry place between drifts,
-they pitched their tents.
-
-There was no danger of a fire spreading here, with the snow all around,
-so they built a roaring camp fire between the tents, and while the
-dinner was being cooked the doctor got from his pack a box of spikes,
-and they began to fix their shoes for the climb.
-
-Uncle Billy fixed his first, to show them how. As the heavy soles of his
-boots were already studded thick with sharp hobs, he didn’t have to put
-in any short spikes. But into each sole, with the help of a key wrench,
-he screwed eight sharp steel spikes more than an inch long, and four
-more into each heel.
-
-“I’d hate to be catching when you tried to slide for home,” Bennie said.
-“Those are wicked looking hoofs!”
-
-“Now make yours just as wicked. And be sure you get the spikes in
-straight and firm,” his uncle answered. “Everything on this trip so far
-has been a mere picnic to what we are going to get tomorrow. It’s not
-only going to be the hardest work you ever did in your life, but the
-most dangerous. We can’t have anything wrong with our equipment.”
-
-Everybody who didn’t already have plenty of sharp hobs in his boots also
-screwed in a large number of short steel spikes, in addition to the long
-ones. Then all the shoes were freshly oiled, to make them as nearly
-water-proof as possible, and Uncle Billy got out the amber goggles, to
-see if they were unbroken. He also produced a stick of grease paint.
-
-“What’s that for? Are we going to act in a play?” Dumplin’ asked.
-
-“No, but we are going to paint our faces, just the same. You’ll be glad
-enough of this stick before the sun sets tomorrow.”
-
-After supper the cook made ready six small packages of lunch, for Norman
-was going to make the climb, too, and the doctor wound up his alarm
-clock.
-
-“Bed, boys!” he ordered.
-
-“Oh, no, not yet!”
-
-“Who’s captain here? Bed, I said! We get up at three o’clock sharp
-tomorrow morning.”
-
-“Say, it’s worse than a bear hunt,” Dumplin’ groaned.
-
-“You’ll think it is, by the time we get back to camp tomorrow night,”
-the doctor smiled. “I have a hunch that even Bennie is going to get
-enough exercise, for once.”
-
-“Ho,” said Bennie, “Uncle Billy’s trying to scare us! Can I take Jeff
-along, Uncle, up his own mountain?”
-
-“It might be a good way to get rid of him,” the doctor answered. “But if
-you _don’t_ want to get rid of him, I advise you to tie him up in camp.”
-
-“I wonder if Uncle Billy is trying to scare us?” Bennie whispered to
-Spider as they got ready for bed. “Don’t seem as if the old mountain was
-so bad as all that.”
-
-Spider was very sober. “I had a good look at it through the glasses
-yesterday,” he replied. “I don’t mind saying right now that it’s got me
-scared. Remember those pictures in the book at home?”
-
-“You mean the old Spitzes, and things? Sure!”
-
-“Well, we’re going to get some of that stuff ourselves tomorrow.”
-
-“Hooray!” said Bennie. “The real thing beats a book.”
-
-But he began to think of the pictures as he was going to sleep, pictures
-of men clinging to precipices with awful depths below them, and in his
-dreams he was falling, falling, falling——
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- The First Attempt at Jefferson—Dumplin’ Almost Falls to Death—the
- Hardest Work the Boys Ever Did
-
-
-He was falling into a terrible black cañon where there was a loud noise
-of whirling water—and he woke to hear the alarm clock buzzing. The grip
-of the bad dream was still on him, and he was shivering a little, as
-Uncle Billy got up and lit the lantern in the tent. It was pitch dark in
-the woods outside, and still as death. But as they dressed, the three
-could hear Mr. Stone and Dumplin’ dressing in their tent, and then the
-sound of the cook starting the breakfast fire. Those who were to make
-the climb put on light shoes, for they were going to use the horses as
-far as timber line. They came out of the tents wearing their heavy
-sweaters, for it was bitterly cold, and washing by the brook was a very
-sketchy job. Nobody even suggested a bath.
-
-While breakfast was cooking, they huddled around the stove. Meanwhile
-the horse rustler had gone up into the open meadow to round up six
-saddle horses. He was bringing them back as they ate their bacon and
-drank their coffee by lantern light, still huddled around the stove. As
-soon as the horses were saddled, each member of the party put his lunch
-into his pack, slung a canteen over his shoulder, tied his climbing
-boots over the saddle horn, took his alpenstock in his hand, like a
-lance, made sure he also had his colored goggles, and mounted.
-
-“I feel like Sir Launcelot,” cried Dumplin’, tipping his alpenstock
-forward, like a knight about to tilt.
-
-“I’d hate to tell you what you _look_ like,” Bennie laughed. “Did Sir
-Launcelot carry his boots on his saddle?”
-
-Bennie was the last one into the saddle, because he had to catch Jeff
-and tie him up. “Don’t let him loose till we’ve been gone a couple of
-hours,” he called back to the cook. “Don’t want him to follow us and
-break his neck.”
-
-The sleepy cook grunted, and Jeff whined and moaned and tugged at his
-improvised rope collar, as Bennie patted him good-bye and climbed into
-the saddle.
-
-It was still dark in the woods as they moved out of camp, but out in the
-open meadow of the cove there was a kind of gray daylight. Norman and
-the doctor led the way, putting the horses across the creek, and heading
-them for the steep side wall opposite the chute they had descended the
-day before.
-
-This wall, when they came to it, was not so steep, however, as the
-chute. It had once been burned over, too, so that there was no timber
-except some dead, fallen stuff, and no snow. They zigzagged up it
-quickly, and at the top, looking over a two-mile gentler slope of low
-forest, they saw again the snow-white cone of the mountain rising up
-against the sky—or, rather, they half saw it, for the white clouds were
-swirling around it.
-
-“They’ll lift with the sun,” said Norman. “Don’t worry.”
-
-For the next hour, the horses plodded upward, over deep, hard snow,
-packed in huge drifts under the evergreen trees, which got smaller and
-smaller as they approached timber line. What had looked like an easy
-slope from below turned out to be full of short but steep pitches, over
-lava ledges, and if it had not been for the snow they could hardly have
-taken the horses up without endless zigzagging.
-
-It was bright morning when they reached timber line, on the southwestern
-shoulder of the mountain, but as yet the sun had not reached them, of
-course, being cut off by the great bulk of the cone. They tied the
-horses to the last little trees, where the poor creatures would have to
-stay, without food or water, till night. Then they put on their heavy,
-spiked boots, shouldered their packs, canteens and cameras, the doctor
-with his coil of alpine rope, and set out for the summit above them,
-around which the clouds were scudding at a tremendous pace, driven by a
-strong west wind.
-
-“How high up are we now?” Spider asked.
-
-“About 7,000 feet, I should guess,” the doctor answered.
-
-“Then we’ve got about 3,500 feet to climb,” Spider reckoned. “That’s not
-as much as Mount Washington from Bretton Woods or the Crawford House.
-You climb 4,200 there.”
-
-“It’s 700 feet less,” said Bennie. “Gee, I’m good at arithmetic.”
-
-“The only difference being that this is the second hardest snow climb in
-the United States (excluding Alaska, of course), and we are tackling it
-by a route which, so far as I know, nobody has ever tried before,” the
-doctor smiled.
-
-“What’s the hardest?” Bennie asked.
-
-“The north side of Mount Baker in Washington, up the Roosevelt Glacier,”
-his uncle answered.
-
-“You been up there?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Gee, I’d like to!”
-
-“Suppose you do this one first,” said his uncle, “and suppose you follow
-me, instead of racing ahead.”
-
-Bennie fell back into line.
-
-They had reached a long, upward-stretching snow-field now, which the
-doctor said was the foot of permanent snow. It never melted entirely
-away. It was frozen now so hard that it held them up, and the long
-spikes were needed, or they would have slipped. They had to jam their
-alpenstocks hard down to set them into it. It led upward for a quarter
-of a mile or so, to a spine of broken, naked lava. As they climbed this
-slope, they could look back into the hole of Hunt’s Cove—or they could
-look where the cove was. They could only see it by flashes, as it were,
-because whole seas of billowing white clouds were driving in over Minto
-Mountain, crossing above the cove, and hitting Jefferson just below
-them. As these clouds hit, they seemed to get thinner, slid right up the
-snow slope past the climbers, like white snow, and blew off into blue
-space over the peak.
-
-Spider, who was watching them slide up the snow-fields, suddenly cried,
-“Look! Look at the summit!”
-
-Everybody looked upward. The sun had evidently risen now, and as the
-clouds reached the top of the mountain they ran into its rays. The angle
-was just right to refract the rays down to the climbers, and the result
-was that the summit peak of the mountain was haloed with a beautiful
-rainbow. This rainbow lasted for ten minutes or more, and then the sun
-got too high, and it disappeared.
-
-By the time they reached the lava spine, the clouds were thinner, and
-the wind had died down. They were warmed up with climbing, too, and took
-off their sweaters. The doctor got out the rope, and proceeded to make
-six loops in it, tied with knots which couldn’t slip. The loops were
-about fifteen or twenty feet apart. He put the first loop under his own
-arms; then came Bennie, then Dumplin’, then Mr. Stone, then Spider, and
-last of all, Norman. Everybody then covered his face with grease paint,
-putting it especially thick on noses and lips, and donned colored
-goggles.
-
-Then the doctor spoke. “Now, boys,” he said, “from this point on you
-must obey orders quickly and without question. You must do exactly what
-I tell you to, and nothing else. There are two things to remember, above
-everything. Number one is this,—every second man on the rope must have
-his stock driven in deep and firm, with a good grip on it, when the man
-in front takes his stock out to make a step, and he mustn’t pull his
-stock out of the snow till the man ahead has made the step and driven
-_his_ stock in again. If you do that, you see, fifty per cent of us will
-always be anchored, if anybody slips. If I find you cannot or will not
-obey this rule, I’ll stop the climb at once. The second thing is:—never
-let the rope get taut between you and the next man, so it can yank
-either of you, and never let it get slack enough to trip anybody. Keep
-it sagging, but not dragging. Now, all set!”
-
-Uncle Billy spoke sternly. The boys knew he meant what he said, and that
-it was serious business ahead. They followed him carefully down the
-north side of the lava spine, and found themselves on a steep slope of
-pumice and fine conglomerate, like a mixture of gravel and wood ashes,
-hung at such a sharp angle that it just did stay there, and that was
-all. It hung at what is called the angle of repose. As Uncle Billy
-started out across it, to get to the snow slope beyond, Bennie noticed
-that every time he put his foot down, the stuff below him started
-slipping a little. Bennie looked down the mountain to see what would
-happen if they started a slide and all slipped. A hundred feet below the
-snow began again, and ran down for a thousand feet or more, smooth as
-glass, and ended at the top of a precipice! Below that, all he could see
-was a hole! Something went flipflop in the pit of his stomach at the
-sight, and he looked quickly away, just in time to see that if he didn’t
-step out, the rope between his uncle and himself would be pulled taut.
-So he had to walk ahead, on to the treacherous slope. It was exactly
-like running tiddly-benders on thin ice, only instead of the danger of
-going through into water was the danger of starting a landslide and
-going down with it. You could feel with every step the sickening start
-of the slide.
-
-However, everybody got across to the snow.
-
-“Well, I’m glad _that’s_ over!” exclaimed Mr. Stone. “That conglomerate
-is hung exactly at the angle of repose. One degree more tilt, and she’d
-slide off into the cañon. Where do we go from here?”
-
-The doctor pointed to the great west snow-field that lay between them
-and a high shoulder, which extended toward the northwest.
-
-“We have to traverse that snow-field,” he said.
-
-Everybody looked at it. Between them and it were four or five little
-snow slopes, each about a hundred yards wide, and separated by ridges of
-broken lava fragments. The great west snow-field itself looked to be a
-quarter of a mile wide, or even more. It was practically unbroken,
-except for one island of lava near the middle, looked smooth as glass,
-was tilted at an angle of more than forty-five degrees, and stretched
-right up to the precipice of the summit pinnacle, and right down to the
-top of the precipice which dropped to the cañon. If you slipped when you
-were out on it, and started down, it was certain death. Bennie didn’t
-need to be told a second time why fifty per cent of the climbers must
-have their alpenstocks driven in at every step!
-
-The doctor now took his scout ax out of the sheath at his belt, and
-stepped out on the first snow-field. Being on the western side of the
-mountain the sun had not yet touched it, of course, and even when he
-drove his boot down hard, he could not make enough of an impression for
-a good footing. So, holding his stock in his right hand and driving it
-deep into the snow at each stride, he leaned down and with the ax in his
-left hand cut out a chunk of snow—one blow inward against the slope, and
-a second downward. This took out the chunk in such a way that a very
-small but level step was made. He reached as far ahead as he could, and
-the steps were three feet apart.
-
-Bennie watched him carefully, glad not to look either up or down the
-terrifying slope. While his uncle was cutting, with his stock driven in,
-Bennie took a step behind him and drove his stock deep. Then he waited,
-clinging to it, while the doctor pulled his stock out and moved one step
-ahead. As the doctor cut and moved, cut and moved, Bennie discovered
-that there was a regular rhythm to it, and the only way to keep this
-rhythm unbroken was to pull your stock up at the right instant—that is,
-when you saw the man ahead drive his in. If you delayed doing it, you
-broke the rhythm. But to pull your stock up at the right instant wasn’t
-so easy as it sounds. Once driven two feet deep into the packed snow,
-the sharp point wedged there almost like a nail in wood. You had to pull
-it out with one hand, and pull it out quickly, without stopping your
-stride and above all without upsetting your balance on the tiny, icy
-steps. It took muscle. It took a lot of muscle, and it strained your
-back and shoulder.
-
-When they all were across the first snow slope, and were resting a
-moment on the lava spine, Uncle Billy said, “Well, Bennie, how do you
-like it so far? Getting any exercise yet?”
-
-“I always thought you climbed mountains with your legs,” Bennie
-answered. “But I feel as if I was climbing with my back and shoulder.
-Gosh, it’s hard work pulling that old alpenstock out!”
-
-“They say a good mountain climber is a combination of a weak head and a
-strong back,” his uncle laughed.
-
-“Too bad, Bennie, your back isn’t very strong,” said Dumplin’.
-
-“Well, if your back is strong, you’ll be able to scale Mount Everest,”
-Bennie retorted.
-
-They moved out now across the second small snow-field, and then the
-third and fourth. They were working upward a little, as well as across,
-and the summit precipices grew nearer. Bennie looked up once at those
-cliffs towering almost over his head, absolutely precipitous and hung
-with ice—and looked quickly down again. Jefferson hadn’t seemed very
-hard to climb from a distance, but now that summit looked absolutely
-impossible, and sure death if you tried it. He preferred to keep his
-eyes on his uncle, who was methodically cutting steps across the frozen
-snow.
-
-They rested a moment, and took a drink from the canteens, on the last
-lava spine before they tackled the big snow-field. Uncle Billy looked
-out across it with troubled eyes.
-
-“I don’t like those two chutes down the centre,” he said, pointing to a
-couple of deep scars, like ditches, which started far up at the base of
-the pinnacle cliffs, swept down the middle of the field, and only ended
-at the top of the cañon wall far below.
-
-“Nothing coming down ’em now,” Norman said. “I don’t believe there will
-be till the sun gets around this side. It’s coming down tonight that
-we’ll be in danger.”
-
-“What has made them?” Spider asked. “They look like toboggan slides.”
-
-“That’s about what they are. They are made by big hunks of lava and ice
-breaking off the pinnacle and sliding down, digging a chute as they go.”
-
-“How fast do the hunks travel?” asked Dumplin’.
-
-“Fast enough!” Norman laughed.
-
-But Dumplin’ didn’t laugh. He looked up that terrific incline to the
-ice-capped summit precipices, and said, “Do we have to cross those
-chutes?”
-
-“We do if we want to climb Jefferson,” the doctor answered.
-
-“Tell Mama I was a good boy,” Dumplin’ groaned.
-
-“Shut up!” said his father, sharply. “Uncle Billy knows what he’s
-about.”
-
-Without further words, the doctor started out on to the big snow-field,
-cutting steps as he went. Bennie followed, his arm and shoulder aching
-now, his heart thumping a little in his chest as he thought of those
-chutes ahead. When they reached the first one, it turned out to be about
-six feet deep and eight feet wide. The sides were almost straight, and
-the snow on the bottom was packed hard and smooth.
-
-His uncle beckoned Bennie up to him.
-
-“Drive in your stock,” he said, “and play me out on the rope. If we hear
-anything coming, take up the slack, and haul me back to you.”
-
-He started cutting steps down the side, across the bottom, and up the
-farther side. Nothing happened, and once across, he cut a good firm step
-to brace his foot on, faced back toward the chute, told Dumplin’ to come
-up to Bennie, and then he took up the slack of rope between himself and
-Bennie, while Dumplin’ played out the rope behind. In this way,
-everybody got across.
-
-“Well, that’s that,” said the doctor, with a sigh of relief. “Now for
-the next one.”
-
-The next chute turned out to be just about the same size, and they
-crossed it slowly and cautiously, by the same method. Again nothing
-happened, and soon they were at the lava island, which turned out to be
-much nearer the northwest shoulder than it had looked. Here they sank
-down on some firm rock to rest, and while they rested, the sun peeped
-over the shoulder of the mountain south of them, and almost instantly
-the snow all around leaped into a blinding dazzle. The boys, who had
-taken their colored glasses off, put them hurriedly on again.
-
-The doctor laughed. “Not much dust up here—the snow stays clean and
-reflects the light,” he said.
-
-“Pretty soon you’ll be yelling for more grease paint, too.”
-
-When they started on again, it was boiling hot. In spite of the glasses,
-their eyes began to smart, for the dazzle got in around the edges, and
-their faces and necks to burn.
-
-“And now the real business is beginning,” the doctor said, heading
-directly from the lava island to the base of the northwest shoulder.
-
-Bennie took one look at that shoulder, and cried, “Do we climb that?”
-
-“Sure thing.”
-
-“Well, if you say so, I suppose we do. But I’m no human fly.”
-
-Ahead of them was an unbroken wall of snow, the side of a vast drift
-which had blown over the shoulder. It was about three hundred feet high,
-and the angle couldn’t have been less than sixty-five degrees. If you
-will tip a board or a ruler up to an angle of sixty-five degrees, and
-then imagine that slope to be hard, icy snow crust, with a drop of two
-or three thousand feet to the bottom of a cañon below you, you’ve got
-some idea of what the climbers were up against.
-
-But the doctor went right ahead, cutting steps. He was chopping almost
-opposite his face, the slope was so steep. Bennie, watching him, had to
-tip his head way back, as you would to watch a man ahead of you on a
-ladder. He kept his head tipped back, too. He tried one look
-downward—and no more. All he saw was the top of Dumplin’s cap—and then
-the white snow slope sliding away to the hole of the cañon. He swallowed
-hard and bit his lips, which had already begun to swell and crack.
-
-“I will _not_ get scared,” he whispered to himself. “I will _not_ get
-scared!”
-
-The dazzle of the snow was now right in their faces, because the slope
-was so steep, and they could actually feel the reflected rays blister
-their noses. Their eyes smarted, their lips were cracking. But nobody
-had any time or chance to do anything about it. There was enough to do
-without that. Every second man had to be absolutely sure his stock was
-driven deep when the man above him took an upward step, and he had to
-pull out his own stock and drive it in firmly on a level with his face
-(no small muscular task) when it was his turn to take an upward step.
-The doctor was cutting good, high steps, too, a couple of feet to a
-rise. Bennie ached in every joint, and felt as if he were balancing on
-the edge of eternity—as, indeed, he was! But he climbed grimly,
-steadily, keeping the alternate rhythm with the doctor.
-
-There was no chance to rest here. For half an hour they crawled up. Mr.
-Stone said he’d like a movie of it, but there didn’t seem to be any way
-to take a movie of it. It wasn’t safe for anybody to get off the rope;
-in fact, it would have been sheer recklessness. Bennie was never so glad
-of anything in his life as he was of his uncle’s call, “The top!” He
-scrambled up over the edge of a great drift, and found himself on a
-narrow spine of snow and lava blocks, a spine leading straight up to the
-northern end of the summit pinnacle.
-
-When the rest were over the rim, they took off the rope, and sat down to
-rest on a lava platform. The wind had died down. It was calm and
-cloudless now, and there wasn’t a sound in the world—not a whisper of
-wind, not a bird song—nothing but the stillness of the everlasting
-snows, and their own voices, which sounded strange up here, almost
-startling.
-
-The doctor took out his instrument for measuring altitude, called an
-aneroid barometer. It showed that they were over 9,000 feet. Their
-watches told them it was one o’clock.
-
-“Wow, we’ve been climbing more’n nine hours since breakfast!” said
-Bennie. “I wouldn’t have guessed it.”
-
-“Funny, I don’t feel very hungry,” said Dumplin’.
-
-“That is funny,” his father laughed.
-
-“It’s the funniest thing he ever said,” Bennie added. “Didn’t hear you
-making many jokes coming up that old drift just now, Dump.”
-
-“You won’t hear me making _any_ jokes till we get down this mountain
-again,” Dump replied. “Gee, my lips are all cracked, and my nose feels
-as big as a house, and my back aches, and my eyes smart, and I haven’t
-got any wind and—and——”
-
-He paused for breath.
-
-“But except for that you’re feeling fine, eh?” Uncle Billy smiled.
-“Well, out with the lunches, everybody. We’ve got to eat and be on our
-way. We ought to have got here by eleven o’clock. But maybe we can go
-faster now. The snow is getting soft, and I won’t have to cut steps, and
-the shoulder won’t be very steep.”
-
-They ate their lunches, huddled on the shady side of the lava block, to
-keep out of the sun glare, put more grease paint on their lips, noses,
-cheeks and necks, and set out again up the shoulder. The sun had been
-shining up here for several hours, and the snow was softened. Their feet
-sank ankle deep into it, in fact, and in a short distance it had soaked
-through their boots so that their feet were wet and cold, while their
-faces were burning. The pitch of the shoulder, too, turned out to be
-much steeper than they had reckoned. Even the doctor and Norman were
-fooled, old hands that they were at mountain climbing. It was so steep
-that the doctor kept them roped, and it grew steeper as they toiled
-slowly upward, like tiny black ants on the vast white expanse of the
-mountain. It was almost three o’clock when they reached a big jagged
-pyramid of lava which stuck up above the snow, just below the summit
-pinnacle, and found a level spot in its lee. Here the doctor gathered
-them together into a group, and pointed to the pinnacle, without at
-first saying a word.
-
-Bennie looked up a forty-five degree slope of dazzling snow, frozen into
-little wind ripples like desert sand, for two or three hundred feet, and
-saw that slope end at the base of the pinnacle itself. The pinnacle, as
-he could see only too plainly now, was a sheer precipice at every place
-except the edge just above them. That edge—the north end, which the
-shoulder they were climbing on led to, was just enough off the
-perpendicular to make it a daring and desperate hazard. Even it, in some
-places, looked perfectly straight up. And those places were not snow
-covered, as Bennie could now see. They were just green, glistening ice!
-The pinnacle rose thus for a full 300 feet, into the naked blue sky.
-
-Dumplin’ groaned. “I can’t do it,” he said. “Honest, Dad, I can’t do it!
-I didn’t say anything, but I got dizzy back on the shoulder, and my
-head’s aching now. Gosh, I don’t want to look at it!”
-
-He turned quickly away. Bennie started to laugh, but stopped himself
-when he saw his uncle’s face.
-
-“Sit down, Dumplin’,” the doctor said kindly. “You won’t have to climb
-it. Rest a bit, and don’t think about it. None of us is going to climb
-it.”
-
-“Oh, why not?” Bennie exclaimed. “It doesn’t look to me as if anybody
-_could_ climb it, but if they have, I guess we can, with you to lead us.
-Gee, think of getting this far, and stopping!”
-
-“How long do you think it would take us to go from here to the top?” his
-uncle asked.
-
-“Half an hour.”
-
-“An hour,” Spider amended.
-
-Norman laughed, and said nothing.
-
-“It would take nearly two hours up, from this point, and two hours
-down,” said the doctor. “If you boys were all skilled climbers, and one
-of you could cut the steps, we might do it in an hour and a half each
-way. But I wouldn’t let even Norman cut the steps on that pinnacle—he’s
-not done enough ice climbing. And I’m pretty well fagged already.
-Besides, it’s three o’clock. If we didn’t get back to this spot till
-seven, where do you think we’d spend the night? Want to spend it up on
-these snow-fields, with soaked shoes, and no food, no fire and no
-blankets?”
-
-“No, and I don’t particularly want to go down that shoulder wall and
-cross those chutes after dark, either,” Norman said. “It’ll be dark
-before we get to the horses if we start back now.”
-
-“Give me one shot at the pinnacle, and I’m with you,” Mr. Stone said,
-pointing his camera.
-
-Bennie and Spider turned reluctantly away. It seemed tough to get up
-10,000 feet, almost to the very base of the summit pinnacle, and then
-have to turn back.
-
-“It’s like being licked, when you still have a punch left,” Bennie said.
-
-“We were licked by daylight, not by the mountain,” his uncle answered.
-
-The descent of the shoulder to the lava block where they had eaten
-lunch, which Bennie and Spider had expected to make in rapid time, was
-just as slow as the ascent. The pitch was so steep that they did not
-dare to come down facing forward. They had to face up the slope, and
-sink their feet into their old tracks, as you come down a ladder.
-
-At the lava block, Mr. Stone shifted to number one on the rope, so he
-could be the first down the wall of the drift, and get a movie of the
-rest. Bennie stayed at number two, Dumplin’ at three, Uncle Billy took
-number four place, then Spider, and finally Norman. The doctor told
-them, before they started down, how to make the descent, using the steps
-cut that morning. You faced sideways to the wall of snow, drove in your
-stock firmly, and then sank your left foot to the lower step, got a good
-footing, sank your right foot also, and then pulled out your stock and
-drove it home again lower down. Everybody was cautioned to keep the
-rhythm, and not to pull out his stock till the man above had made his
-step and anchored again.
-
-When they were ready, Mr. Stone slipped over the edge, and Bennie had a
-sickening feeling as he saw him disappear. When the rope was played
-nearly out, Bennie started. That first step took his nerve more than
-anything all day. With his stock driven into the snow at the very edge,
-he had to look down to see where to place his foot, and in doing so, he
-had to see past the step, fifteen feet down to the top of Mr. Stone’s
-hat, and then 300 feet to the bottom of the drift, and then the long,
-white shoot of the snow-field to the cañon hole! For one instant,
-Bennie’s knees shook. Then he got a brace on himself, and began slowly,
-cautiously, to creep down, testing each footing before he pulled out his
-stock.
-
-As soon as Dumplin’ appeared above him, he kept an eye upward, to make
-sure that his stock was always driven in when Dumplin’ changed position.
-And he soon found, too, that Dumplin’ was coming very slowly.
-
-“Poor old Dump,” Bennie thought, “I bet he’s too fat for this kind of
-work. I must be careful not to go fast, and yank the rope. Might pull
-him off.”
-
-They were about half-way down, and Bennie had just driven his stock hard
-in, waiting for Dumplin’ to shift, when he saw the snow under Dump’s
-foot beginning to cave. The step had melted since morning, and grown
-weak, and the boy, besides, had got his weight too much on the very
-edge. Dumplin’ felt it give, too, and with a little cry tried to get his
-alpenstock driven in again.
-
-“Dumplin’s slipping! Hold him, Uncle Billy!” Bennie called.
-
-Even as he spoke, the step gave way, and Dumplin’s alpenstock, which he
-hadn’t been braced to drive deep enough, gave way also. Dumplin’ began
-to drop! Bennie saw him coming directly down. If he kept on, he would
-hit him, and both of them would go! It was a sickening instant, while
-Bennie leaned in against the snow, braced both feet, and clung with both
-hands to his stock.
-
-But Dumplin’ dropped only four or five feet, and hung there, against the
-slope, while Uncle Billy’s voice came down, cool and steady, “Don’t drop
-your stock! Get your foot back on a step, Dumplin’. Keep your head!”
-
-It was all over so quickly that Bennie could hardly realize for a second
-just what had happened. Of course, Uncle Billy had been anchored, and
-when Dump slipped, he could only go the length of the slack between him
-and the doctor! Bennie really knew that when he called up to his uncle.
-But he had forgotten everything but his instinct to cling to his stock
-when Dumplin’ had actually begun to fall. He felt suddenly sick and
-faint.
-
-Then he said to himself, “This is no place to be sick on! Get on to your
-job!”
-
-[Illustration: Looking Across Hunt’s Cove to Jefferson. Dotted Line
-Shows Route of Climb. Arrow Points to Place Where Dumplin’ Slipped.]
-
-He heard the doctor above and Mr. Stone below encouraging Dumplin’, too,
-and he knew it was up to him.
-
-“Some old rope, Dumplin’, if it can hold you that way,” he shouted.
-“Come on, now, steady. I’ll kick the steps out bigger so’s they won’t
-break again.”
-
-He kicked and packed them vigorously as he descended, and soon Mr. Stone
-was at the bottom, and he was within fifteen feet of it. Mr. Stone asked
-them to stop for a minute while he got out of the rope and went fifty
-feet out on the traverse, and took a movie of the final stages of the
-descent.
-
-When he got back, Dumplin’ was sitting on the snow, very pale, but
-grinning as cheerfully as he could.
-
-“Rope kind of yanked me under the arms,” he said. “But I’m all right. I
-won’t be so dizzy now we’re down. I couldn’t see very well, and I guess
-I didn’t get my foot far enough in on the step. It was looking down got
-my goat.”
-
-The doctor and his father patted his back, and once more shifted
-positions on the rope.
-
-“Once we get across those chutes, and it’s plain sailing,” Uncle Billy
-said, as he prepared to start out across the big snow-field, on the
-little path of steps he had cut that morning. Bennie noticed that there
-was a red ring around his left hand, and realized that he had seized the
-rope with a lightning twist when Dumplin’ slipped, and caught the weight
-that way, before the yank came on his body, and before Dumplin’ could
-get up speed.
-
-“He’s some quick thinker,” Bennie reflected. “Gee, I guess you have to
-be, in this game.”
-
-They were now out on the big traverse. Their morning steps were melted
-out deeper and larger, and they made fairly rapid progress toward the
-first chute. Nothing had come down it while they were approaching, and
-nothing came as the doctor crossed. But, once on the other side, he took
-his large jack-knife from his pocket, opened it, and held it ready to
-cut the rope as the others crossed, for if something should come down
-large enough to stick up above the sides while the rope was stretched
-across the chute, it might pull them all down with it. Nothing at all
-happened, however, either here or in the second big chute. Once across
-the latter, Uncle Billy gave a sigh of relief.
-
-“Well, _that’s_ over!” he said. “Now we have plain sailing.”
-
-Hardly were the words out of his mouth when they heard a crackle and
-roar far up on the pinnacle precipice. Looking quickly upward, they saw
-snow powder, like white smoke, rising from the base of the cliff, and
-something descending toward them, not in the chute at all, but on top of
-the smooth snow!
-
-“Run for it!” Bennie instinctively cried, taking a step forward that
-nearly yanked Dumplin’ off his feet again.
-
-“Stop!” the doctor cried, in a sharp command. “Don’t you dare give
-orders again! Don’t try to run! You’ll have us all down. Watch it, till
-we see just where it is coming, and how big it is. Let it come between
-us if we have to, and if it’s too big to pass under the rope, I’ll cut.
-Stand ready to hold the rope up, or move as I tell you to!”
-
-The thing was coming toward them, piling up snow in front of it. This
-piling up of the snow impeded its progress and diminished its speed. It
-had to push its way. Instead of coming a mile a minute, as the boys
-expected it would, it came slowly enough to give them time to estimate
-where it would pass.
-
-“Move ahead!” the doctor snapped. “Easy, now—don’t try to run. Don’t
-forget your stocks—don’t pull on the rope. Steady!”
-
-They moved forward several steps, and just as Norman, the last one on
-the rope, took a long, quick stride of two steps instead of one, the
-great hunk of lava, as big as a molasses hogshead, went slowly but
-inexorably downward, over the very spot where, a few seconds before,
-they had stood! Slowly as it moved, pushing the snow ahead, and piling
-it out on the sides, nothing could have stood in its path. They watched
-it go on down, leaving a track two feet deep behind it.
-
-“There’s chute number three just started,” Norman said.
-
-They heard another crack and roar on the pinnacle as he spoke, and
-looking up again saw something starting down one of the big chutes
-behind them.
-
-“Say, let’s get out of here!” Dumplin’ cried. “I don’t like this.”
-
-“I’m not stuck on it myself,” Uncle Billy answered. “Forward, march!”
-
-They plugged ahead to the first lava spine, and rested a minute, looking
-back over the traverse. The sun was sinking, and its rays hit the slope
-almost level, making dark shadows of their steps, like a long row of
-dots out across the great field of white. These dots crossed the
-traverse, and then went straight up the shoulder, and in that light the
-shoulder looked as perpendicular as the side of a house.
-
-“Did we go up there?” Spider exclaimed.
-
-Dumplin’ took one look, and remarked, with such a heartfelt expression
-that everybody laughed, “Gosh, I don’t believe it!”
-
-But there was no time for a long rest. Tired as they were, they had to
-keep on going, for they were still a long way from camp.
-
-As they started across the first of the five smaller snow traverses, it
-seemed to Bennie as if his back and shoulders were one big ache every
-time he had to pull out his stock from the sticky snow. Yet Uncle Billy
-was moving ahead with a regular stride, and he _had_ to get his stock in
-and then out with one firm motion, or else lose the step, fall behind,
-and make the rope yank his uncle. He gritted his teeth and told himself
-that he _would not_ let that happen.
-
-As they stepped up on the second lava spine, Bennie cried, “Hello, old
-lava!”
-
-As they reached the third spine, Dumplin’ cried, “Hello, old lava!”
-
-As they reached the fourth, Spider cried, “Hello, old lava!”
-
-“You boys seem to be glad you’re getting down,” the doctor called back.
-
-“We’re glad we’re getting where we don’t have to pull these stocks out
-of the snow in time to your steps,” Bennie replied.
-
-“Sorry to go so fast—but we must get to the horses before dark,” his
-uncle answered.
-
-At last they were creeping over the treacherous slope of pumice, they
-were up the southwest shoulder—they were on the lower snow-field which
-sloped more gradually to timber line and the horses!
-
-“Rope off!” the doctor called.
-
-He coiled it up and hung it over his shoulder.
-
-“Now, each man for himself,” said he, starting down with huge strides,
-his boots sinking into the soft snow, which had been frozen crust that
-morning, and keeping him from sliding. The rest followed. It was such a
-relief to be free of the rope and the danger that they took a new lease
-of life, and almost ran down the quarter mile to timber.
-
-When they reached the poor hungry, thirsty, impatient horses, however,
-the sun had sunk behind the western mountains, and the hole of Hunt’s
-Cove was already dusky.
-
-“Don’t change your boots. We can’t ride down as quickly as we can lead
-the horses,” the doctor commanded. “Saddle them quickly, and come on.”
-
-In the timber, too, the snow had softened, and the horses sank knee
-deep. Bennie soon discovered that a horse, which scrambles rapidly up a
-steep slope, goes very slowly down it, especially when the footing is
-soft snow and he doesn’t know whether he is going to break through a
-long way or not. The doctor and Norman, more used to the ways of horses,
-and knowing how to manage them, were soon far ahead. Mr. Stone was
-somewhere in between. The three boys were before long so far in the rear
-that the leaders had vanished. Bennie and Spider could have gone a
-little faster than they did, but Dumplin’ was about all in with
-weariness, and they stuck with him. By the time they reached bare ground
-at the head wall of Hunt’s Cove, it was so dusky they could just make
-out the tracks. Below them, somewhere on the slope, they could hear the
-leaders crashing down through the fire scar.
-
-“Come on,” Bennie urged. “We got to hurry. Can’t see the track at all on
-the bare ground. It’s dark down in the cove already.”
-
-“I could hurry, but I can’t make this darn horse go any faster. Nearly
-pulled my arm out dragging him,” Spider answered.
-
-The three of them started over the rim, tugging at the reluctant horses,
-who wanted to pick their way gingerly over the dead, fallen timber. The
-long spikes in their boots, which had been so necessary up on the snow,
-were a hindrance now. They kept catching in the dead sticks, and half
-turning the boys’ ankles when they stepped on a hard piece of lava in
-the dark. Several times they tripped and fell, scratching themselves.
-Once Spider’s horse slipped, knocking Spider over and bruising his leg.
-At the bottom, now, they heard the doctor calling to them.
-
-“Coming as fast as we can!” Bennie yelled.
-
-It was pitch black night at the bottom of the cove, in the heavy woods.
-They could just see the doctor waiting for them. The minute they were
-down, he led the way, after Norman and Mr. Stone, who had kept on to
-camp. In the dark they couldn’t see the swampy places, or the little
-brooks, and soon their boots, soaked all the afternoon by snow, were
-full of water, and they were wet almost to their waists. They came to
-the main stream at last, and mounted the horses, spikes or no spikes.
-The horses reared and balked, and had to be kicked and driven into the
-dark water, and nearly spilled their riders as they scrambled snorting
-out on the farther bank.
-
-Nobody had said a word for ten minutes, but now, through the black
-forest ahead, they saw suddenly the red glow of a big fire, and Bennie
-emitted a whoop.
-
-“Hello, fire!” he yelled.
-
-“Hello, food!” yelled Dumplin’.
-
-“Dumplin’ has recovered,” said the doctor.
-
-The boys dropped off their horses at camp—literally dropped off. The
-rustler, who had stayed in camp, took the horses back to pasture, and
-the doctor and the three boys joined Norman and Mr. Stone in front of a
-huge camp fire, flopped wearily on the ground, and began to peel off
-their boots and stockings. They took off their trousers, also, and got
-dry clothes from their dunnage bags. Then, without even attempting to
-wash the grease paint off their faces, they flopped on the ground again
-beside the roaring fire, and let the cook bring them food.
-
-“If anybody speaks to me before I’ve had a cup of coffee, I’ll bite
-him,” said Bennie. “I was never so tired and cross in my life.”
-
-“Nobody wants to speak to you,” Dumplin’ retorted. “Don’t worry.”
-
-“And yet,” said Uncle Billy, “if we’d really got to the top, we’d be so
-set up now that we wouldn’t mind the weariness. It’s like a crew race.
-You’ll notice it’s always the losing crew which collapses at the finish
-line.”
-
-“I’d like to try it again, from a base camp at timber line,” Norman
-said. “That would give us two hours more of daylight at each end. We
-could do it easily with that.”
-
-“If anybody talks about climbing Jefferson again, he’s in danger of his
-life,” Bennie retorted.
-
-“Well, well, Bennie has had enough exercise for once!” Mr. Stone smiled.
-“He must have had—he hasn’t even spoken to poor Jeff.”
-
-“Oh, gee, I was so tired I forgot him!” Bennie cried, jumping up with
-sudden energy. “Where is he, cook? What you done with him?”
-
-“Whined so I tied him up down the creek a bit,” the cook answered. He,
-too, was cross, because he had to get supper so late.
-
-Bennie grabbed a lantern, and went off into the woods, calling, “Jeff,
-Jeff!” Those in camp heard a far-off yelp of greeting, and a few minutes
-later Bennie returned, with Jeff at his heels, and lay down by the fire
-again with the dog’s head snuggled up to him.
-
-It was after ten o’clock when supper was finished. The six climbers took
-enough water from the stove to wash the worst of the grease paint from
-their faces, and without any further preparation for bed pulled off
-their clothes, got into their pyjamas, crawled, stiff and lame and
-aching in every joint, with cracked and bleeding lips, and red, smarting
-eyes, into their sleeping bags, and almost before their heads touched
-the little air pillows were fast asleep.
-
-Bennie had started to remark to Spider, as he got into bed, that real
-mountain climbing was the hardest work there was, but he forgot what he
-was going to say before he could open his mouth. And, if he had said it,
-nobody would have been awake enough to listen.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- The Summit is Conquered!
-
-
-The doctor and Mr. Stone let the boys sleep late the next morning. The
-sun was high when they finally arose, and tumbled out into the ice-cold
-water of the creek for a good scrub with soap. After the bath, and a hot
-breakfast, they all felt cheerful and fairly fit again. The aches of the
-night before had somehow vanished, though their lips were still cracked
-and their noses were peeling.
-
-“By Jiminy,” said Bennie, as he scraped the breakfast plates to feed
-Jeff, “I believe I’d like to climb the old mountain again, after all. I
-sure do hate to go away from here and admit it beat us.”
-
-“Me, too,” said Spider.
-
-“Well, I know when I’m licked,” Dumplin’ put in. “I guess if you’d been
-dizzy and if you’d slipped the way I did, you wouldn’t be so keen to go
-back.”
-
-“You’ve got more weight to cart up than we have,” Spider laughed.
-
-“That’s no joke, either,” said the doctor. “Dumplin’ needs a lot of
-training down before he tackles a climb like Jefferson. It isn’t his
-fault he was dizzy, or that he got so tired. Some people are always
-dizzy at high altitudes, anyhow. I wouldn’t let him try it again in his
-present shape. But if you other boys are game, and Stone is game, I’d
-like to tackle the mountain from a base camp where we tethered the
-horses. That will keep us here two days longer, so we won’t have time to
-get in to see Mount Hood close to. You’ll have to decide whether you’d
-rather reach the top of Jefferson, or see Hood. Those in favor say
-‘Aye.’”
-
-“Aye!”
-
-“Aye!”
-
-“Aye!”
-
-“Aye!”
-
-“The ‘ayes’ have it,” the doctor laughed. “Well, Norman, we’ll take up a
-tent and bedding right after lunch. We’ll sleep at timber line tonight,
-and again tomorrow night. Have two horses sent up day after tomorrow
-morning, at daybreak, to get the stuff, and have the rest of the train
-packed and waiting at the head of the cove. We’ll make our getaway over
-the head wall by seven or eight o’clock. I’m going to try to get out by
-the short trail, day after tomorrow, snow or no snow.”
-
-Everybody lay around all that morning, in the shade of the woods,
-resting. After lunch, the largest tent, some grub, the sleeping bags,
-and a few cooking utensils were packed on two horses, while the climbers
-toted their climbing boots (now dried and oiled again), and a change of
-clothes in their packs. Nothing else was taken except the necessary
-climbing equipment—not even cameras. Dumplin’ went along to spend the
-night with them, and have supper ready for them when they got down the
-next evening. He was pretty blue at the idea of being left behind, and
-kept saying, “I bet I could do it this time, and not get dizzy.” But his
-father and the doctor wouldn’t say he could go.
-
-They got the tent pitched as near timber line as they could find a
-level, dry spot, and spent the latter part of the afternoon gathering
-fuel and melting snow for water. The two horses, of course, had been
-taken back down the slope by the guide. The six of them were alone, in
-the chill silence at the edge of the eternal snows, with the mountain
-rising right above them, white and naked, to the glittering pinnacle.
-While supper was cooking, Bennie and Spider walked up a few hundred feet
-on the lower snow-field, glanced back at the tumbled wilderness of
-forest and mountain and cañon, stretching south to the white pyramids of
-the Three Sisters, and then looked long upward at the pinnacle, pink
-with sunset.
-
-“Gosh!” Bennie exclaimed, “what a lot of wild country! Do you realize,
-Spider, that we haven’t met a human being since we left Marion Lake?”
-
-“You forget the chap in the aeroplane,” Spider laughed. “Well, we came
-out here to see the wilderness, didn’t we?”
-
-“You bet we did! And tomorrow we’re going to tackle old Jefferson again.
-You know, I feel just as if it was a kind of fight. I bet other
-mountaineers feel that way, too. That’s why it’s such fun.”
-
-“_Other_ mountaineers is good,” Spider replied. “You talk as if you were
-a Swiss Guide.”
-
-“Well, I feel as if I could be one, when we get through with this old
-ant-hill,” Bennie laughed. “I bet that pinnacle is going to be a
-sockdologer!”
-
-Spider’s face was sober. “I’m kind of scared of it, I don’t mind
-admitting. I don’t blame poor old Dump a bit for getting dizzy. I don’t
-get dizzy, but when I think how easy it would be to slip, I kind of get
-hollow in the pit of my stomach.”
-
-Bennie was about to answer, when he heard a bark down the slope, and
-looking back saw Jeff bounding up the snow! The pup had broken loose
-back at the camp (or the cook had let him loose), and he had followed
-the tracks up here. He fell upon Bennie with yelps of joy.
-
-“Well, that pup loves you, if nobody else does,” Spider laughed.
-“Dumplin’ will have to sit on him all day tomorrow.”
-
-With the setting of the sun, it grew very cold up here under the
-snow-fields. They all huddled around the fire to eat, and soon after
-supper took off nothing but their boots and crawled into bed with even
-their sweaters on. The six sleeping bags had been packed into the one
-tent, so there was no free floor space at all. The first man in couldn’t
-get out without stepping on all the rest. Poor Jeff, driven outside,
-snuggled down against the tent on the lee side, out of the wind, and so
-the night was passed, none too comfortably by anybody.
-
-They were up with the first daylight, built the fire, and cooked
-breakfast. Then Jeff was tied with a piece of the tent guy ropes, and
-Dumplin’ came with them as far as the southwest shoulder, where they
-roped.
-
-“Don’t let Jeff get away and follow us!” was Bennie’s parting word.
-
-“He might use my alpenstock, and make it all right,” said Dumplin’,
-trying to seem cheerful as he saw the rest leaving him. “I’ll watch for
-you, and have hot supper ready,” he added, waving his hand.
-
-“Good old Dump!” Bennie said, as they moved out on the pumice. “Too bad
-he can’t come along.”
-
-“He’ll be all right in a year or two, after we get the fat off him, and
-get him hardened up. He’s grown too fast,” said Uncle Billy.
-
-Whether it was because they were now more used to the trick, or because
-Dumplin’ was not on the rope to hold them back, or because the steps had
-not entirely melted away since the day before yesterday, making the
-doctor’s work easier, or because of all three reasons, they made faster
-time than before, and didn’t need to rest so long or so often. But they
-had four rock chutes to cross instead of two. The one which had been
-started by the big lava chunk which nearly hit them was now four feet
-deep, and a fourth one had been ploughed, also. But nothing was coming
-down them yet, for they reached the traverse long before the sun’s rays
-got in on that side. They were up on the northwest shoulder at 10:30,
-and at the base of the pinnacle at noon.
-
-Once at the foot of that terrific incline, both the scouts felt suddenly
-weak in the knees.
-
-“Like the looks of it?” the doctor asked.
-
-“I do not!” Bennie answered. “I’d about as soon try to climb the outside
-of the Washington Monument. But if you say people have done it, I guess
-we can. It’s a fight, and I ain’t licked yet!”
-
-The doctor let them rest before they tackled the pinnacle, and gave his
-orders. “I’ll go ahead and cut the steps. You, Bennie, will anchor, and
-play me out the rope, and don’t you come on a step till I tell you. Then
-Stone will play you out till you get to the platform I’ve made for you.
-Then Spider plays him out, then Norman plays Spider out. We won’t have
-more than one of the five of us moving at any one time, in other words.”
-
-The doctor rose, and began to hack steps into the snow, in front of his
-face, on the precipitous incline. He had to cut them deep, to get a firm
-footing, and it was slow work. Before he was quite played out on his
-twenty feet of rope, he cut an extra large step, like a little platform,
-and then moved up a couple of steps, and told Bennie to climb to the
-platform. Bennie did so, while Mr. Stone played him out. Then Bennie
-anchored firmly on the platform, and let his uncle cut his way up
-fifteen or twenty feet farther. Bennie then stepped up two steps, and
-let Mr. Stone climb to the first platform. Once on it, Mr. Stone played
-Bennie up, till he was on a second little platform, just behind the
-doctor. Then the doctor moved ahead twenty feet higher, Bennie moved,
-Mr. Stone climbed to platform number two, and they all anchored hard,
-and waited till Spider reached platform number one. In this way, only
-one man ever climbing at a time, with the rest anchored, they crept
-slowly up the wall of icy snow. In two places, it was, in fact, not snow
-but actual ice, and the doctor had to hack out the steps and could not
-use his stock as he climbed. He had to depend on the spikes in his boots
-entirely, because he carried no ice ax. Bennie, below him, watched with
-terror in his heart, and clung to his alpenstock with a rigid grip. If
-his uncle slipped, nothing would save him but that stock! If Bennie’s
-grip gave way, they would both go, and maybe pull down all the rest!
-Here was a battle indeed, here was a fight with the mountain where every
-single step you took had to be just right, or you were gone! Bennie
-didn’t dare look down. He kept his eyes fixed on his uncle’s boot soles
-above him, and refused even to look off to right and left. He didn’t
-dare.
-
-They climbed steadily, and in silence, except for the orders to each man
-when he was to advance. Their faces were set and grim. Bennie felt the
-strain. He was getting tired rapidly, not from the physical effort,
-which wasn’t really great except for the doctor, but from the mental
-effort, the incessant concentration on every step he took. At last,
-after an hour and a half, the doctor went over the top, and shouted back
-a loud “Hurrah!” Bennie followed him over, and one by one the rest came
-on, to fall at once down on the snow.
-
-After a long moment, Bennie sat up and looked around him. At first he
-felt as if he were riding in an airship in the sky. The summit cap of
-snow was small, and on every side ended in a sharp edge—the edge of a
-precipice!
-
-“Look at old Hood up there!” his uncle cried, pointing north. “Seems
-near enough to touch today, and it’s fifty miles off.”
-
-“I don’t want to look at it,” Bennie answered. “I don’t want to look at
-anything. Gosh, I don’t like this place!”
-
-“I don’t care for it much myself,” Mr. Stone confessed. “You could roll
-over twice here, and commit suicide with the greatest ease.”
-
-“But we got here!” Spider exclaimed. “I’m glad we got here! We’ve beat
-the old mountain!”
-
-“Now you’re talking,” said Uncle Billy. “You’ll all like it better when
-we are down again. Well, come on, let’s start then, if you don’t care
-for my view.”
-
-They now reversed positions on the rope, Norman going first, and facing
-in against the cliff almost as you descend a ladder, crawled down as
-slowly as they had crawled up. But it was even more trying to Bennie,
-because he had to look down for each step, and he had to watch the man
-descending below him, when he was anchored, in order to brace extra
-firmly in case of a slip. He didn’t get dizzy, but at every step he had
-to fight a kind of nausea, as if he was going to be sick, especially
-when he was obliged to lower himself over the two ice walls, with only
-his spikes to hold him, and the rope, played out by the man above. When
-they were all at the bottom again, he felt faint, and sat down on the
-snow a moment, to get back the strength in his legs.
-
-“Well, boys,” he heard his uncle say, “you’ve done what mighty few
-people do any one season. But we’re not through yet. We’ve got to get
-home, you know.”
-
-Bennie got up quickly. “I’m all right,” he said. “Lead the way!”
-
-At half-past four o’clock they were back again at the point on the
-shoulder where they lunched two days before, and here they rested
-fifteen minutes, and ate the small portions of food they had brought.
-Nobody was really hungry, however, and soon they were starting down the
-drift where Dumplin’ slipped. Out across the traverse they went, got
-over the chutes without accident, though twice they were barely over
-when great toboggans of ice came whizzing down, and at seven o’clock
-reached the southwest shoulder. Far below, at timber line, they saw
-Dumplin’ building up the fire, and they saw, too, his tracks up here in
-the snow.
-
-“He was up here watching us crossing the traverse,” Bennie said. “He
-beat it down to cook supper. Good old Dump—wish he could have been with
-us.”
-
-Off came the rope now, and with wet boots and cracked faces and aching
-backs and smarting eyes, they half ran, half tumbled, down the last
-snow-field to the camp, and walked into the odor of boiling coffee and
-sizzling bacon, while Jeff, released from his tether, came yelping to
-meet them.
-
-“I saw you on top!” Dumplin’ said. “I spent half the day up on the
-shoulder. I couldn’t see you climb the pinnacle, but I saw you on top.
-You didn’t stay there long.”
-
-“Bennie didn’t like it,” his uncle laughed.
-
-“I’ll say I didn’t!” Bennie cried. “Gee, Dump, I’m not fat like you, and
-I guess I’m in pretty good condition, but I kept feeling all the way up
-and down that old pinnacle as if I was going to be dizzy the next
-minute.”
-
-“That’s not a matter of condition with you—it’s a matter of nerves,”
-said his uncle.
-
-“I felt so, too,” Spider put in. “Whenever I looked down, and couldn’t
-help thinking what would happen if I fell, then I got kind of sick
-inside. But when I was just thinking about my next step, I was all
-right.”
-
-“And nothing happened,” the doctor added. “Climbing is safe enough if
-you know how to climb, if you are in good physical condition, and if you
-can control your nerves. But you can no more tackle a climb like this
-safely without a guide who knows the technique than you can fly an
-aeroplane without practice. The accidents happen either to people who
-try to climb without knowing the tricks, or to people who aren’t in good
-shape for the hard work, or to people who can’t keep their nerves under
-control and take each step slowly, carefully and firmly.”
-
-“What made me so tired at the top?” Bennie asked. “I was twice as tired
-then as I am now. Was it the altitude?”
-
-“No,” said his uncle. “Ten thousand five hundred feet wouldn’t bother
-you a bit. It was because you are still a green climber and you were
-fighting your nerves all the way up the pinnacle. Nothing is such hard
-work as fighting your own nerves.”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell the world my old nerves put up a good scrap, then!”
-Bennie laughed. “Anyhow, Spider and I aren’t so green as we were three
-days ago. I wish the Boy Scouts gave merit badges for mountain climbing.
-I bet we could get one.”
-
-“Why don’t they give badges for that, I wonder?” Mr. Stone said.
-
-The doctor shook his head. “Too dangerous,” was his comment. “How many
-scout masters could you find who are really skilled mountain climbers?
-Think what would probably happen if a green climber tried to take a
-bunch of scouts up Jefferson. They’d all land down in the cañon. And
-rock climbing is just as dangerous.”
-
-“How would you get up the pinnacle if it was all ice, the way it was in
-a couple of places?” Spider asked. “I mean, so hard, you couldn’t drive
-your stock in, and the man below you couldn’t either?”
-
-“You’d have to use ice axes,” the doctor replied. “An ice ax has a long
-handle, and on the back of the blade is a long, sharp, slightly curved
-point, like a railroad spike. You cut your steps with the blade, and
-then you use this point, driven in above you, to anchor with. That’s
-what they use in the Alps, where so much of the climbing is on glacier
-ice.”
-
-“Well, Spider, we’ll have to go to Switzerland next, and climb some old
-glaciers,” Bennie grinned.
-
-“And a few spitzes,” Spider answered.
-
-It was bitter cold again that night, and soon after supper they all
-crawled into their sleeping bags. They were so weary, however, that even
-the cold could not keep them awake.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-Back Over the Divide—A Horse Turns Three Somersaults Down the Snow Slope
-
-
-The doctor, as usual, was first up. He rose at dawn, got the fire and
-the breakfast started, and then routed out the rest. The peak of
-Jefferson above them was hidden in mist, and Hunt’s Cove below was
-filled with white cloud, also. In fact, they looked out over a billowing
-sea of white, with the sharp lava spires of Three Fingered Jack to the
-south, rising up like an island.
-
-“Looks like a phantom ship,” said Bennie.
-
-They were scarcely through breakfast, when they heard horses coming up
-through the timber, and soon the guide appeared, leading a couple of
-pack animals to take the luggage down. An hour later they were once more
-in Hunt’s Cove. The luggage was repacked, the boys unscrewed the spikes
-from their boots and mounted into the saddle again, and Norman led the
-way almost due south, following a trail up the head wall, instead of
-trying to get back as they had entered across Grizzly Flats.
-
-“We can get back to the cars this afternoon this way—if we can cross at
-all,” he said. “But I won’t promise we can cross, doctor. A week ago you
-couldn’t get up on the other side.”
-
-“Just the same, we’ll try it,” the doctor replied. “Bennie needs some
-exercise.”
-
-For the next few miles they traveled through woods and across open
-upland meadows, riding on deep snow. In the hot glare of the sun, they
-had to put on their glasses again, and repaint their faces. Their lips
-once more cracked open, and their noses were burnt a still brighter
-brick red. Then they came to the crest of the Divide, below the long
-south shoulder of Jefferson, and started down. They realized at once why
-Norman said it was impossible a week ago to climb up here. There was a
-drop of a couple of hundred feet where the trail was completely buried
-in a huge drift, which, Norman said, a week before had an overhang at
-the top, completely preventing any horse getting over. But this cornice
-had now melted and collapsed. They dismounted, grasped their horses by
-the bridles, and started down, taking the slope at an angle to lessen
-the pitch. The saddle horses got down well enough, but the pack horses,
-with the top-heavy loads on their backs, could not keep their footing so
-well, and half-way down one of them fell. He turned three complete
-somersaults as he pitched headlong. At first the load held, but at the
-second somersault the hitch slipped, and out burst the load, scattering
-and tobogganing in all directions—two rolled-up sleeping bags, a tent,
-alpenstocks, a dunnage bag, a coffee-pot, and what canned goods were
-still left in their provision supply.
-
-[Illustration: Crossing the Divide near Mount Jefferson on July 25th.
-Three Fingered Jack in the Distance.]
-
-The terrified animal landed in a small fir tree at the bottom, scrambled
-to his feet apparently unhurt—and made a dash right back up the slope!
-His fall, his snorts, his sudden dash, threw a scare into the other
-horses. The saddle horses, of course, were being led, and couldn’t get
-away, but the pack horses dashed after him.
-
-“Quick!” shouted Norman, “give all the saddle horses’ bridles to one
-man, and then head ’em off!”
-
-Everybody led his horse quickly to the cook, who tied the bridles to a
-tree, and then the men and boys ran up the slope as fast as they could,
-some going to the right, some to the left, in order to surround and get
-ahead of the runaways, and drive them back.
-
-It was hard work. The snow was deep and soft and wet, the slope very
-steep, and a frightened horse, with four legs, can climb faster than a
-man with two. Jeff didn’t help any. He merely dashed wildly around,
-barking loudly, without sense to head the horses back.
-
-“Call off that chickadee hound!” panted the doctor to Bennie.
-
-The first horse, minus his load, actually got back to the top, and
-scrambled over, before he could be headed. Norman and Bennie followed
-him, sneaking on either side through the trees, for a quarter of a mile
-before he stopped abruptly at a spot where the snow was melted, and
-began to eat grass. Then they crept up on him, got hold of his rope
-bridle, and led him back.
-
-By the time the train was rounded up again, everybody was reeking wet
-with perspiration from their knees up, and soaking wet with snow water
-from their knees down.
-
-“My head is burning, and my feet freezing, and oh, boy, for a drink!”
-Bennie exclaimed.
-
-The scattered luggage was collected, the horse repacked, and they moved
-on. In less than a mile of rapidly dropping trail the snow ceased
-entirely. The trail grew dry and dusty. The yellow pines began to appear
-again, and they came to a little lake at the head of a cañon—and
-everybody, horses and men and boys, drank and drank and drank.
-
-After that there was no more snow, and before long the trail was in a
-forest of yellow pines, and wide as a country road, and all except the
-rustler and the cook, who had to look after the pack horses, broke into
-a trot.
-
-In a couple of hours they reached a fine, clear, racing brook, and a
-Forest Service camp ground. Across the brook was a real road. The doctor
-and Mr. Stone trotted on three or four miles to get the cars, while the
-rest waited for the pack horses, and when they arrived got the packs off
-and sorted.
-
-When the cars came back, the baggage was transferred to them, the boys
-said good-bye to Norman, Bennie made the cook shake hands with Jeff, and
-sinking back into the cushions of the motor cars, the boys sighed with
-the sudden sense of luxury.
-
-“Beats the saddle of an old cayuse, when you’re tired,” Dumplin’ called
-from his father’s car.
-
-“Just the same, I’m awful sorry it’s all over,” said Bennie. “I never
-have worked so hard in all my life—and I never had such a wonderful
-time.”
-
-“Me, too,” said Spider.
-
-“You’ve got a good time coming, and in about one hour, or less,” said
-Uncle Billy. “I don’t know whether you’ve noticed that lunch was pretty
-sketchy today.”
-
-“Sketchy is the word,” Bennie answered. “Gee, it’s three o’clock, and we
-haven’t had a thing since five A. M.”
-
-“You wait,” laughed the doctor. “I’ve got a surprise for you.”
-
-In a short time he stopped the car at a ranch house beside the great
-springs of the Metolius River, which gush right up out of the open
-ground of a green meadow in the heart of the forest, irrigating the
-whole meadow and making a rich oasis of grass and crops in the arid
-soil.
-
-“Dinner ready?” he called to a woman on the porch.
-
-“All ready,” she answered.
-
-“How did you order dinner here?” demanded Bennie.
-
-“Radio,” the doctor grinned.
-
-“He telephoned from the Ranger Station when he went for the car, you
-poor fish,” Spider said.
-
-The two men and three boys washed up and went into the dining-room.
-There, on a table with a real cloth, was a huge dinner—steak, fried
-potatoes, green vegetables, hot biscuit, berries. They ate and ate, and
-when the food was gone the woman of the house reappeared bearing a huge
-lemon pie, with browned meringue three-quarters of an inch thick, all
-covered with little golden drops like honey.
-
-“Wow!” yelled Dumplin’. “Lemon pie!”
-
-“Oh,” sighed Bennie, “why did I eat so much steak!”
-
-“I’ll take Bennie’s piece, then,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“I’d like to see you try!” Bennie answered.
-
-When the pie was gone, everybody sat back and sighed with content.
-
-“That pie was almost as wonderful as Mount Jefferson,” Bennie declared.
-
-“And it didn’t make me dizzy,” said Dumplin’.
-
-“It’s the kind Mother made,” said Mr. Stone.
-
-“Gosh, I wish _my_ mother could!” Spider exclaimed.
-
-“It was a good pie,” said the doctor, “but don’t forget you’ve lived on
-camp fare for a week. It would have seemed pretty good if it hadn’t been
-as good as it was.”
-
-“Don’t try to run that pie down, Billy,” Mr. Stone declared. “I will
-defend that pie with my last breath.”
-
-“All I can say is this——” Bennie began impressively.
-
-“Yes?” the rest prompted.
-
-“I am satisfied with Oregon,” he finished.
-
-“It’s the lemon pie!” laughed Dumplin’.
-
-They rolled into Bend at nine that evening, Jeff was left to sleep in
-the car at the garage, and for the next hour there was a grand splashing
-in bathtubs, a washing of clothes, a shaving by the two men, who hadn’t
-shaved for a week, a patching of burnt noses and cracked lips with
-salve, and a general clean-up and overhauling.
-
-“Oh, dear!” sighed Bennie, “it’s almost over! I wish we hadn’t been able
-to get over the Divide today, so’s we’d been forced to go back over
-Grizzly Flats. That would have kept us out three days more. I don’t want
-to sleep in an old bed, with sheets!”
-
-“I guess it won’t keep you awake,” laughed Spider. “If it does, I’ll set
-up the sodas tomorrow.”
-
-But he didn’t have to.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-Bennie Loses Jeff, but Brings Home Something Else to Last Him Many Years
-
-
-The doctor routed everybody out at five the next morning.
-
-“It’s the last time, boys,” he said. “But we’ve got to get an early
-start today. I must make The Dalles tonight, and Portland tomorrow
-night. My vacation is over then.”
-
-“Don’t go back on _my_ account,” said Bennie. “I’ll stick around the
-mountains another week or two with you, if you really want me to.”
-
-“Yes, and I’ll stick, too,” Spider laughed.
-
-“I wish we could,” Uncle Billy answered. “But while we’re getting hard
-and healthy, a lot of folks up in Portland are getting sick, so you see
-I have to be back. Hustle along, boys. No time to lose!”
-
-It was so early that they had to get breakfast at an all-night lunch
-room, where Bennie bought some meat scraps for Jeff, who was still on
-the job. He had slept in the car that night.
-
-“Good gracious, are you really going to take that mutt back with you?”
-his uncle demanded. “All the way East?”
-
-“You’ve said it. Why, I bet he’d follow the train, if I didn’t take him.
-He appreciates me at my true value, this blooded collie does, don’t you,
-Jeff, old thing?”
-
-Jeff responded by leaping up and licking his face.
-
-They were off at six, and rode all day northward through the “desert”
-country, sometimes down in the bottom of bare, desolate looking cañons,
-sometimes up on the plateau where nothing but endless miles of sage
-brush lay between them and the Cascades. In the morning Jefferson was
-the nearest mountain, and they could see the whole eastern face,
-snow-white and precipitous, with the summit pinnacle looking from this
-distance like a tiny little white button on top. Later they had to
-descend by a long, winding road cut out of the bank, without any guard
-rails, into the Deschutes Cañon, across the river on a bridge, and climb
-out on the other side. As afternoon came on, Jefferson dropped behind
-them, and Mount Hood grew nearer, 11,225 feet of snow, shaped like an
-almost perfect pyramid.
-
-Again they descended into a cañon, and climbed out of it for six miles
-by a road so steep that they had to keep in low speed all the way, so
-narrow Bennie prayed they wouldn’t meet anybody, and without any sign of
-a guard rail, or fence, or wall, to keep a car from skidding off into
-the hole below.
-
-“Say, if I drove a car out here much, I’d have nervous prostration,”
-Spider said, as Uncle Billy crawled past a descending Ford, with his
-right wheels about eight inches from the rim of the cañon.
-
-“And if I had to drive down Fifth Avenue, I’d probably have it,” the
-doctor laughed.
-
-The sun was setting as they finally came into a region of orchards and
-endless grain fields, hit a good road, and whizzed rapidly down hill,
-steeper and steeper, into the gorge of the Columbia River, and ran right
-into a thriving, lively town called The Dalles.
-
-While the cars were being looked after in a garage, Bennie went to a
-butcher’s shop to get some more food for Jeff, fed him, and put him up
-in the car again, for the night. Then they all went to the hotel,
-registered, got the dust off their faces and clothes, and went in to
-dinner.
-
-The next morning Jeff was not in the car. The garage man said he stayed
-there a while the night before, and then, when nobody was looking,
-evidently jumped out and ran away.
-
-“Oh, gee, he was looking for me!” Bennie cried. “I ought to have tied
-him. Poor old Jeff, he’s just hunting for me, all over this town!”
-
-“Too bad,” said Uncle Billy. “But he’ll find a home somewhere—he seems
-to make friends easily, and your mother’ll be awful glad.”
-
-“Well, I got to find him. Please drive around town while I look for
-him!”
-
-“But I have to be back in Portland, Bennie. I’ve got to be at the
-hospital tomorrow morning.”
-
-“Aw, just ten minutes! Please!”
-
-“Well, we’ll take a look. Get in.”
-
-They started slowly down a residential street, Bennie hanging out of the
-car and whistling. One block, two blocks, three blocks they went, turned
-a corner, and began on another street.
-
-Suddenly Spider gave a yell. “Hi, Bennie, there’s your pup!”
-
-The doctor stopped. Sure enough, in a yard beside a small house, playing
-with a boy of ten, was Jeff!
-
-Bennie jumped out, ran to the gate, and whistled.
-
-Jeff cocked his ears, looked toward Bennie, wagged his tail, took three
-jumps toward the fence—and then turned around and went back to the small
-boy!
-
-“Sure, Bennie, that dog would follow your train all the way to Chicago,”
-laughed Spider.
-
-“He appreciates you at your true worth,” called Uncle Billy.
-
-“Just the same, he’s my dog, and I’m going to have him!” Bennie said,
-angrily, laying his hand on the gate.
-
-“Hold on,” said his uncle. “Is he your dog? Where did you get him? Seems
-to me _he_ has most to say about whose dog he is. He chose you, so’s he
-could get a trip to the mountains, and now you’ve quit camping, he’s
-chosen this kid.”
-
-“Well, he chose me first.”
-
-“Come here, son,” the doctor called to the small boy, who came to the
-gate, Jeff at his heels. “Where did you get this dog?”
-
-“He followed me home from the store last night,” said the boy. “He’s a
-fine dog. Is he yours?”
-
-“He’s mine,” said Bennie, sternly. “Come here, Jeff!”
-
-At the sound of his angry voice, Jeff got behind the small boy’s legs.
-
-“I didn’t do nothin’ to make him follow me,” the little fellow said.
-“Honest, I didn’t. He just came. Ma said I could keep him. I—I never had
-a dog.”
-
-He was almost in tears, both because he thought he was being accused of
-stealing Jeff, and because he feared they were going to take his new pet
-away.
-
-“Have a heart, Bennie,” Spider said. “He wants the pup worse than you
-do.”
-
-Bennie hesitated, but his fondness for Jeff was too much. “No, sir, he’s
-my dog,” he declared.
-
-“Let Jeff decide it,” said Uncle Billy. “He doesn’t really belong to
-either one of you. That’s fair, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes, I guess so,” Bennie confessed.
-
-“Now, you go ten feet up the sidewalk. Son, you walk down as far as that
-tree. Spider, hold Jeff till they are set. Now, both of you, call him!”
-
-“Here, Jeff! Here, Jeff!” called Bennie.
-
-“Come here, Buster, Buster!” called the little boy.
-
-Spider released Jeff as they called—and the pup jumped up and licked
-Spider’s face!
-
-“Gee whiz, he’s _my_ dog!” Spider shouted, while the doctor sat in the
-car and roared with laughter.
-
-“Try again,” he said, after a second.
-
-The two boys called once more, and Jeff, without hesitating longer,
-sprang to the little fellow, nearly knocking him down.
-
-“All right, you keep him,” Bennie declared. “He’s a fool pup. I won’t
-guarantee he’ll not run away from you tomorrow.”
-
-“I bet he _won’t_!” the little chap declared, throwing his arms around
-Jeff’s neck.
-
-Bennie didn’t look back.
-
-“Yes,” Uncle Billy mused, “Jeff certainly regarded you at your true
-worth, Bennie. He was certainly a one-man dog, too, true to his master
-till death.”
-
-“Aw, quit it,” Bennie pleaded. “I always really knew he was a mutt, but
-I—I was kind o’ fond of him, just the same.”
-
-“Never mind,” said Spider, “you’ve done your good turn for today. You’ve
-given him to that kid.”
-
-“Yes, I have!” said the honest Bennie. “He did the good turn, I’ll say.
-He gave _himself_ to the kid. A lot I had to do with it!”
-
-They picked up the Stone car at the garage again, and set off at last
-for Portland, down the Columbia Highway, which is one of the finest
-motor roads in the world. It is laid out beside the great green river,
-sometimes down on the bank, beside the railroad, sometimes climbing up a
-thousand feet to the top of the cliffs, sometimes cut out of the sides
-of the cliffs, sometimes having to go right through a headland of lava
-by a tunnel. All the way through the Columbia gorge, from The Dalles
-nearly to Portland, the car rolled along the wide macadam highway, with
-the green river on one side, and the towering cliffs and waterfalls on
-the other, or else climbed up and down these cliffs by cleverly
-engineered grades.
-
-The highest waterfall they passed was Multnomah, which dropped hundreds
-and hundreds of feet over the cliff, almost on the very road. And near
-it were several superb basaltic lava pinnacles, towering 2,000 feet
-above the car.
-
-“Oh, Uncle Billy, haven’t we time to stop and have a try at that one?”
-Bennie cried, pointing to a great dome-like pinnacle which jutted out
-from the cliff like the tower at the front of a church.
-
-“That’s St. Peter’s Dome,” his uncle said. “We wouldn’t have time to
-climb that if we had a year. Nobody has ever succeeded in getting up
-it.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Because a couple of hundred feet or so below the top, it is not only
-perpendicular all around, but the wall overhangs a shade. Nobody can
-climb an overhung precipice. I suppose we could carry up a coast guard
-mortar, and shoot a rope over the top, and then hoist you up in a
-breeches buoy, maybe. But I’m afraid there won’t be time to do that
-today.”
-
-“You folks out here have it pretty soft, I’ll say,” Bennie commented.
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“Why, all you have to do is get in a car and drive out a few miles on a
-macadam road, and there you are right at the foot of rock climbs so hard
-nobody has ever climbed ’em! Out East, we either have to sail to Europe
-and tackle the—the Spitzes, or else ride 3,000 miles across the U. S. A.
-when we want a climb. I’m going to get a job in Oregon when I get
-through school.”
-
-“So you’re satisfied with Oregon?” his uncle laughed.
-
-“I’ll tell the world I am!” Bennie answered.
-
-[Illustration: Saint Peter’s Dome and Columbia River. Mount Adams in Far
-Distance.]
-
-They rolled into Portland in time for dinner, which they all ate at
-Dumplin’s house. The next day the scouts spent in packing their trunks,
-and seeing the city with Dumplin’ for a guide. They took the evening
-limited for home. The doctor took them to the depot, and Mr. Stone and
-Dumplin’ came down to see them off. The depot was full of men and women,
-in khaki clothes, with packs and alpenstocks. They were members of the
-Mazamas, going to take another train to get them to Diamond Peak, for a
-week’s climbing.
-
-“If one of them spoke a kind word to me, I’d swap my ticket East in
-three and four-fifths seconds, and go with ’em,” Bennie declared. “I
-don’t want to go home, Uncle Billy.”
-
-“Don’t you want to see your father and mother?” the doctor asked.
-
-“And get your little old Algebra out and nicely dusted?” added Dumplin’.
-
-“’Course I want to see the folks, but I don’t want to leave these old
-mountains,” Bennie answered. “I guess Spider and I will never forget old
-Jefferson. And say, Mr. Stone, don’t you forget you’re going to send us
-the movie films when they’re printed. We’ll have ’em at the Town Hall,
-for the benefit of the Boy Scouts.”
-
-“I won’t forget. And don’t you forget you’re coming back some day.”
-
-“A swell chance of forgetting that!” laughed Bennie. “And don’t forget,
-Dump, that you’re coming East to college, with Spider and me.”
-
-The train was made up now. The boys shook hands and shouted a dozen more
-messages of farewell as they went through the gates and climbed aboard.
-
-It was dark when the train got up into the Columbia gorge. They saw no
-more of the Cascade Mountains. The next ones they saw were the Rockies.
-There was little snow left now, in mid-August, on the Rockies.
-
-“Give me the old Cascades,” said Bennie.
-
-“Just the same, I’d like to stop off a few days and climb the Rockies,
-and see Glacier Park, and Yellowstone Park, and the Grand Canyon, and——”
-
-“Did you say a few days?” Bennie laughed. “Spider, you and I have got to
-get busy the next few years, and make a bunch of money, so’s we can
-really see America.”
-
-“We’ve done pretty well for one summer, at that,” Spider answered. “And
-I’ll tell you one thing, it’s up to us to do something to pay for it.
-I’ve got a scheme, too.”
-
-As they traveled homeward, Spider developed his scheme. It was to raise
-some money for the scouts by showing Mr. Stone’s movies, and with the
-money have a lot of signs made, to mark trails with. Then Spider and
-Bennie and the scout master, maybe, would lead the scouts in opening up
-footpaths for trampers over the highest hills and cliffs around
-Southmead. Some of these trails used to exist, but they had long since
-grown over, and the summer boarders were always getting lost trying to
-find them. But many of the wildest places, the spots where there were
-the best views, had no trails at all.
-
-“We’ll make trails,” Spider declared.
-
-“Yes, and we’ll build some shelter lean-tos where we can go and spend
-the night,” Bennie offered.
-
-“Sure, and we’ll make some easy trails, and some hard ones, with cliff
-climbs in ’em.”
-
-“Sure, and put warning signs on the bad ones—‘Dangerous—only for
-experienced climbers.’”
-
-“Like us,” Spider laughed. “Seriously, though, I bet we can do a lot to
-help the scouts and the town, and everybody, and have a lot of fun, and
-you and I can survey and map out the trails first, and get our merit
-badges in hiking that way, at the same time!”
-
-“Great!” cried Bennie.
-
-They continued to lay their plans all the way home, but they forgot them
-for a day or two in the excitement of greetings, and seeing their
-parents, and the old town, and all their fellow scouts. Bennie spent
-half his time for the next few days trying to cut up wood and weed the
-drive, while half a dozen boys stood around, making him tell them about
-Crater Lake, and the climb up Llao Rock, and how Dumplin’ fell on
-Jefferson.
-
-But after the first week was over, and they had settled back into the
-life of Southmead, Spider and Bennie got together with Mr. Rogers, the
-scout master, and outlined their trail plans. He was enthusiastic about
-them, and they set to work at once, with the help of his suggestions.
-They went out every afternoon till school opened, hiking through the
-woods and up the small 2,000-foot mountains around Southmead, surveying
-practical routes for paths, and making sketch maps. After school opened,
-they had to abandon the daily trips, but got in long ones on Saturdays.
-By October they had enough work planned out to keep the scout troop busy
-for months, and the task of opening the trails with scout axes, brush
-hooks, and pruning shears began.
-
-The first trail opened was an old, steep path, long since overgrown by
-laurel and other bushes and small trees, up the mountain to the top of
-the cliffs the boys had climbed the previous winter. It took them five
-Saturdays, working with a gang of ten scouts, to get this trail, two
-miles long, cleaned out. By that time, Mr. Stone’s pictures had come,
-and the scouts made twenty-five dollars by exhibiting them at the Town
-Hall, so that everybody could see what the Oregon mountains were like.
-Mr. Rogers kept the money, and the first use made of it was to have
-three or four white signs made, to mark the newly-cut trail. Every sign
-carried, in black letters, the name of the trail—“Cliff Path to Monument
-Mountain,” and, below, the name of the organization erecting
-it—“Southmead Boy Scouts.”
-
-As soon as these signs were ready, the troop took them out and put them
-at the proper places—at each end, and at the points where old wood roads
-crossed, to make confusion.
-
-During the winter, Spider and Bennie hiked on snowshoes many miles, over
-all the surrounding hills, trail planning, and visited the scouts in the
-next town, planning with them a foot-trail over the long, rocky ridge of
-wooded hills between the two villages. When spring came, this work, too,
-was started, the two troops working from their respective ends. They
-finally met at the town boundary, erected a shelter there, and had a big
-camp fire and celebration.
-
-By the end of the summer, Bennie and Spider saw real results—not so many
-as they had planned, but yet enough to cause the local Board of Trade to
-get out a little trail map for summer visitors, which Spider was asked
-to draw, and to cause the summer visitors to hike in larger numbers than
-ever before. And wherever they hiked, on the new trails, they saw the
-neat signs to guide them, posted by the Boy Scouts.
-
-“It’s fine work, boys,” said Mr. Rogers, after the two scouts had passed
-their examinations for merit badges in hiking. “We’ve got a long trail
-to the next town, we’ve got one up Monument, we’ve cleaned the old path
-to Eagle Rock, and we’ve built one to the Cave. If we keep these cleared
-out, and add one new one a year, we’ll soon have Southmead the best town
-for tramping in the United States!”
-
-“Just the same,” said Bennie, a little wistfully, “I wish I was going to
-climb old Jefferson tomorrow, where there isn’t any trail at all!”
-
-“If you hadn’t climbed him, though, you wouldn’t have been so keen for
-this work we’ve been doing,” Spider said. “It’s because we got into the
-real wilderness that made us want to help folks around here to get out
-and hike.”
-
-“Right—as usual,” Bennie laughed. “I’m not kicking. It’s great stuff,
-making trails. I like it. But some day!—Oh, you Crater Lake, I’m going
-back to you!”
-
-“We might get in shape for it by taking a crack at the Monument cliffs
-tomorrow,” Spider laughed. “We haven’t climbed them since spring.”
-
-“You’re on,” said Bennie. “Let’s carry packs and blanket rolls, and hike
-on down the other side, and spend the night at Wilson Pond.”
-
-“That’s only fourteen miles—I’m your man,” cried Spider.
-
-“’Course, it isn’t much, but it’ll keep us in condition,” Bennie
-declared, with great pretended airiness of manner. “We’ll hike back home
-in time for breakfast.”
-
-Mrs. Rogers, who overheard this conversation, came out on the porch when
-the boys had gone.
-
-“Bennie’s a great joker,” she laughed.
-
-“He is—and he isn’t,” the scout master answered. “As a matter of fact,
-it _is_ fourteen miles to Wilson Pond, over the mountain, and as a
-matter of fact, those two boys _will_ get up tomorrow at four, have a
-swim, and be home for breakfast at half-past seven or eight.”
-
-“Now you’re the joker,” his wife laughed.
-
-“You take a climb with them once, and see how much of a joke it is,”
-said he.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
- _Every boy will want_
- FRANK H. CHELEY’S
- The Boys’ Book of Camp Fires
-
-This is the most complete book of boys’ camp activities ever written. It
-contains suggestions for camp cooking and for stunts of all kinds,
-handicraft work, camp songs and stories which help toward the fullest
-enjoyment of out-of-door life. The author stands among the highest
-authorities on camp life.
-
-
- _By the same author_
-
- Camp Fire Yarns
- The Mystery of Chimney Rock
- The Job of Being a Dad
-
-
- The Boys’ Bookshelf
-
- _Which have you read?_
-
- By Walter P. Eaton
- _Scouting_
- The Boy Scouts of Berkshire
- The Boy Scouts in the Dismal Swamp
- Boy Scouts in the White Mountains
- Boy Scouts of the Wildcat Patrol
- Peanut—Cub Reporter
- Boy Scouts in Glacier Park
- Boy Scouts at Crater Lake
- Boy Scouts on Katahdin
-
- By Lewis E. Theiss
- _Radio Series_
- The Wireless Patrol at Camp Brady
- The Secret Wireless
- The Hidden Aerial
- The Young Wireless Operator Afloat
- The Young Wireless Operator—as a Fire Patrol
- The Young Wireless Operator with the Oyster Fleet
- The Young Wireless Operator with the U. S. Secret Service
- The Young Wireless Operator with the U. S. Coast Guard
-
-“_The finest radio stories ever written—interesting and informational_”
-
- The Flume in the Mountains
- Aloft in the Shenandoah II
-
- “_Every red-blooded boy will devour such splendid books_”
-
- By Capt. Edward L. Beach, U. S. N.
- _Stories of the American Navy_
- Ralph Osborn—Midshipman at Annapolis
- Midshipman Ralph Osborn at Sea
- Ensign Ralph Osborn
- Lieutenant Ralph Osborn Aboard a Torpedo Boat Destroyer
-
- “_The best set of American Naval Stories ever written for boys_”
-
- By Frank H. Cheley
- The Job of Being a Dad
- Camp Fire Yarns
- The Mystery of Chimney Rock
- The Boys’ Book of Camp Fires
-
- “_Boys and fathers, too, will revel in these_”
-
-
- W. A. WILDE COMPANY
- BOSTON CHICAGO
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original—this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
---In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the
- HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)
-
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-
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