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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 11:45:52 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55110 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55110)
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-Project Gutenberg's Vacation Camping for Girls, by Jeannette Augustus Marks
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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/license
-
-
-Title: Vacation Camping for Girls
-
-Author: Jeannette Augustus Marks
-
-Release Date: July 13, 2017 [EBook #55110]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VACATION CAMPING FOR GIRLS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by readbueno, Mary Svela, Harry Lamé and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- Text printed in italics in the source document has been transcribed
- between _underscores_, text in small capitals has been converted to
- ALL CAPITALS.
-
-
-
-
- VACATION CAMPING
- FOR GIRLS
-
-
-
-
- VACATION
- CAMPING FOR
- GIRLS
-
- By
- JEANNETTE MARKS
-
- [Illustration]
-
- ILLUSTRATED
-
- NEW YORK AND LONDON
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- 1913
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
- Copyright, 1912, by DAVID C. COOK PUBLISHING COMPANY
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. CAMPING CHECK LISTS 1
- II. CAMP CLOTHES 13
- III. FOOD 24
- IV. COOK AND COOKEE 37
- V. LOG-CABIN COOKERY 46
- VI. THE PLACE TO CAMP 68
- VII. CAMP FIRES 77
- VIII. OTHER SMOKE 87
- IX. FITTING UP THE CAMP FOR USE 94
- X. THE POCKETBOOK 107
- XI. THE CAMP DOG 118
- XII. THE OUTDOOR TRAINING SCHOOL 127
- XIII. THE CAMP HABIT 139
- XIV. CAMP CLEANLINESS 147
- XV. WOOD CULTURE AND CAMP HEALTH 157
- XVI. WILDERNESS SILENCE 171
- XVII. HOME-MADE CAMPING 181
- XVIII. THE CANOE AND FISHING 193
- XIX. THE TRAIL 209
- XX. CAMP DON’TS 221
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
- Camp Footgear 15
- A Group of Camp Utensils 33
- Nessmuk Range and Small Cook Fire 79
- Sleeping Bags and Camp Cot 99
- A Group of Tents 109
- Bough Lean-to and Frame 113
- Some Game and Water Birds 131
- Birds Every Camper Should Know 135
- Leaves of Familiar Trees 137
- Some Common Fish 199
- Fishing Tackle 201
- Rod Case, Tackle Case, Net and Creel 205
- Angling Knots 207
- The Dipper 213
- Moose, Buck, Doe, Fawn and Caribou 215
- Animals the Camper May Meet 217
-
-
-
-
- VACATION CAMPING
- FOR GIRLS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-CAMPING CHECK LISTS
-
-
-There are some considerations in camping which are staple; that is,
-questions and needs all of us have to meet, just as there are staple
-foods which all of us must have. No one knows better than the old
-camper, who has shaken down his ideas, theories, practices, year after
-year in the experiment of camping how true this is. If one is wise, one
-goes well prepared even into the simple life of the woods or mountains
-or lakes; and it is in a practical way, and under three so-called check
-lists, (1) camp clothes, (2) camp food, and (3) camp equipment, that I
-wish to tell you something about camp life for girls.
-
-From the point of view of clothes there are two kinds of camping: one
-more or less civilized, the other “rough.” In the first perhaps we shall
-be allowed a small box or trunk. In the second we have to depend
-entirely upon a duffle bag or a knapsack. To the camper who plans for a
-good many comforts, there is only one warning to be given: don’t be
-foolish and take finery of any sort with you. Not only will it be in the
-way, but also a girl does not look well in the woods dressed in clothes
-that belong to the home life of town or city.
-
-There is an appropriate garb for the wilderness even as there is the
-right gown for an afternoon tea. Except for this warning, what you will
-put in your trunk will be simply an extension of the comforts which you
-have in duffle bag or knapsack.
-
-As the capacity of duffle bag or knapsack is very limited, the check
-lists for its contents must be made out with rigid economy. The most
-important item is foot gear. A well-made pair of medium weight boots,
-carefully tanned, drenched with mutton tallow, viscol, neat’s-foot oil,
-or some similar waterproof substance, will prove the best for all-round
-usefulness. These boots must be broken in or worn before the camping
-expedition is undertaken. Nothing is so foolish as to start out in a new
-pair. Have in addition to the boots a pair of soft indoor moccasins.
-These are good to loaf around camp in. They are grateful to tired feet,
-and, rolled, take up but little space in the knapsack. To the boots and
-moccasins add from two to four pairs of hole-proof stockings of some
-reliable make. If you can get a really first-class stocking and are
-crowded for space, two pairs will do. One goes on to your feet and the
-other into your knapsack. There should also be several combination
-suits, preferably of two weights, high necked, and with shoulder and
-knee caps.
-
-Now, see that the skirt you wear is of durable material; blue serge or
-tweed (corduroy is often too heavy); that it has been thoroughly shrunk,
-and is six inches off the ground anyway. Twelve would be better. Your
-skirt should be provided with ample pockets; the sweater and jacket
-also. Under the skirt wear a pair of bloomers, the lighter and slimsier
-they are, the better; and the stouter the material, the more practical
-for wear. I have tried many kinds, and believe percaline which is light,
-strong, slimsy and washable, the best. Silk is not suitable at all. A
-flannel shirt waist or blouse, a windsor or string tie, a soft felt hat
-with a sufficiently wide brim, but not too wide, complete your costume.
-
-Into the knapsack put two coarse handkerchiefs, a silk neckerchief to
-tie around your neck, the stockings and combination suit already
-mentioned, a string of safety pins clipped one into another, a
-toothbrush, tubes of cold cream and tooth paste (tubes take up the least
-room and are the easiest to carry), a cotton shirtwaist, a nail file,
-comb, small bottle of the best cascara sagrada tablets, a pair of cotton
-gloves for rough work, a cake of castile soap, a towel, a stiff nail
-brush, _and, if you are wise_, a book for leisure hours, preferably an
-anthology of poems or a collection of essays which will afford food for
-reflection.
-
-In your preparations let it be the rule to strip away every unnecessary
-article. Take pride in getting your kit down to the absolute minimum.
-Keep weeding out what you don’t need, and then after that, weed out
-again.
-
-The same principle of rigid economy in selection will obtain in the
-check list for food. It is the minimum of expense in the woods that will
-bring the maximum of comfort. In arranging for the “duffle” to be taken
-with you there is one thing that can be counted upon with mathematical
-certainty: hunger. You are going to be hungrier than you have been in a
-long time. The problem is, then, how to tote enough food and _get_
-enough food to supply your wants. The carriage, the keeping, the
-nutritive value, all these things have to be taken into consideration in
-wood life. At home we have fresh vegetables, fresh fruits, fresh meats
-in abundance. How can we supply these things for our camp table? We
-can’t! But desiccated potatoes, dried apples, apricots, prunes, peaches,
-white and yellow-eye beans, dried lima beans, peas, whole or split,
-onions, rice, raisins, nuts, white and graham flour, corn meal, pilot
-biscuit, rolled oats, cream of wheat, cocoa (leave coffee and tea at
-home), sweet chocolate, syrup for flapjacks, baking soda, sugar, salt, a
-few candles (helpful for lighting a fire in wet weather, as well as
-good for illumination), matches, molasses, a little olive oil--all
-these things, with careful planning, we may have in abundance. To these
-items you should add good butter--the best salted butter is none too
-good--some cans of condensed milk and evaporated milk and cream, and a
-flitch of bacon. Meat makes a dirty camp, and a dirty camp means skunks
-and hedgehogs prowling around. In a properly thought-out dietary it will
-be entirely unnecessary to tote meat. All that is needed for use you can
-get at the end of your fish rod or through the barrel of your shotgun,
-and upon the freshness of what you catch or shoot you can depend. Dr.
-Breck, in his “Way of the Woods,” says that if he were obliged to choose
-between bacon and dried apples and chocolate, he would always take the
-apples and chocolate. Both portage and health will be served by avoiding
-the carriage of a lot of tin cans. The ration of each article needed you
-can work out with your mother or housekeeper, according to the number
-of people to be in the party, the menus you plan, and the length of your
-stay. For a cooler for your food, you will find a wire bait box, sunk in
-clean running water, excellent. The question of grub, or duffle, as it
-is called in camp life, in proper variety, abundance and freshness, is
-the most difficult question of all. To this problem a seasoned camper
-will give his closest attention.
-
-There are other articles, plus the food stuffs, which we must add to our
-check lists--chiefly articles of equipment. Two or three pails nesting
-into each other, a tin reflector baker for outdoor cooking, enamel-ware
-plates, cups and bowls, pans, dishpans, dishmop, chain pot-cleaner,
-double boiler, broiler, knives, forks, spoons, pepper and salt shakers,
-flour sifter, rotary can opener, long-handled and short-handled fry
-pans, a carving knife and a fish knife. The cost of these things
-carefully bought, will be about six dollars. There should also be in
-your kit some nails and a hatchet, toilet paper, woolen blankets,
-mosquito netting (tarlatan is better), twine, tacks, oilcloth for camp
-table, and some fly dope.
-
-With these articles, plus a little knowledge of woodcraft, there is
-almost no wilderness into which a capable girl cannot go and make an
-attractive home. But a little woodcraft we must know; the rest we can
-learn as we go. There is one fuel in the woods which skillfully used
-will kindle any fire, even a wet fire, and that is birch bark. You can
-always get an inner layer of dry birch bark from a tree. Keep a check
-list of different kinds of wood and have it handy until you learn these
-woods for yourself. Brush tops or slashings will help to start a quick
-blaze. Hickory is fine for a quiet hot fire. The green woods which burn
-readily are white and black birch, ash, oak and hard maple. Look for
-pitch, which you are most likely to find in old trees, and that will
-always help out and start any fire. Woods that snap, such as hemlock,
-spruce, cedar and larch, are not to be recommended for camp fires, as a
-rule. To be careless or stupid about the camp fire may be to endanger
-the lives not only of thousands of wild creatures in the wilderness, but
-also the lives of human beings.
-
-Be careful to have pure water to drink. You cannot be too careful. If
-you are in doubt about the water, don’t drink it, or at least not until
-it has been thoroughly boiled. Take with you, besides those I give, a
-few useful recipes for cooking experiments. They will bring pleasure and
-variety on dull days. Choose a good place for your cabin or shack or
-tent, whichever you use, especially a place where the natural drainage
-is good. Know before you set out whether black flies, mosquitoes and
-midges have to be encountered and go prepared to meet them. They are
-sure to meet you more than halfway. Don’t take any risks on land or
-water. The people who know the way of the woods best are those who are
-least foolhardy. Common sense is the law that reigns in the wilderness,
-and, in having our good time, we cannot do better than to follow that
-law.
-
-So much for skeleton check lists, many of which, in the chapters to
-come, at the cost of repetition, I shall amplify. Among the questions
-which I shall take up are the all-important ones of camp clothes, camp
-food, cooking, the place, camp fires, furnishing the camp, the
-pocketbook, the camp dog, the outdoor training school, the camp habit,
-wood culture, camp health, camp friendship, homemade camping, the canoe,
-fishing, and the trail. This great, big, beautiful country of ours is
-full of girls, real CAMP FIRE GIRLS, who love the keen air of out of
-doors and the smell of wood smoke and the freedom of hill and lake and
-plain, and to them I want my little book to come home and to be a camp
-manual which will go with them on all journeys into the wilderness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-CAMP CLOTHES
-
-
-If you have been camping once, there is no need for any one to help you
-decide what wearing apparel to take the next time. Through the mistakes
-made and the discomforts involved, the girl will have learned her lesson
-too well to forget it. But there is always the girl who has not been
-camping. It is chiefly for her benefit that I am writing these chapters
-on camp life for girls.
-
-In the first place, there are two kinds of camp clothes to be
-considered, for there are two kinds of camping: (1) the expedition which
-permits taking a box or trunk with you, and (2) the rougher camping that
-allows only the carrying of a duffle bag or a knapsack. If you are
-limited to a knapsack or a duffle bag, your kit must be of the most
-concentrated sort and chosen with the greatest care. You will find ten
-or fifteen pounds the most you wish to tote long distances, although at
-the beginning this size of pack may seem like nothing at all to you. As
-I have found personally, even seven pounds, with day after day of
-tramping, may make an unaccustomed shoulder ache under the strap.
-
-[Illustration: MOCCASIN BOOT]
-
-[Illustration: TOBIQUE MOCCASIN]
-
-[Illustration: HURON INDIAN MOCCASINS]
-
-[Illustration: MOCCASIN SHOE]
-
-[Illustration: MECCOMOC OXFORD]
-
-[Illustration: ELKSKIN MOCCASIN]
-
-If you are to be limited to a small duffle bag, or a fairly capacious
-knapsack, what are the articles of clothing without which no girl can
-start? Let us take up the most important item first, and that is
-foot-gear. Wear a well-made pair of medium weight boots, thoroughly
-tanned, soaked with viscol, or rubbed with mutton tallow both on the
-inside and the outside, to make them waterproof. _Never start out with a
-new pair of boots on your feet._ If necessary, get your boots weeks
-beforehand, and wear them from time to time till they are thoroughly
-comfortable. In addition to these boots which you wear, take a soft pair
-of indoor moccasins. These can be worn when you are tired and loafing
-around camp, or while the guide is drying or greasing your boots. If you
-have ever worn moccasins and are going to tramp in a moccasin country,
-that is, a country of forest trails and ponds, then buy a pair of heavy
-outdoor moccasins; larrigans or ankle-moccasins are best. These should
-not be too snug. Worn over a heavy cotton stocking, or a light woolen
-one, or woolen stockings drawn over cotton, the moccasin is the most
-ideal foot-gear the wilderness world can ever know.[1] Neat’s-foot oil
-is also excellent for greasing moccasins. Buy from two to four pairs of
-hole-proof stockings of some reliable make. If these stockings are
-first class and can be depended upon, two pairs will do. One pair you
-will wear, the other goes into your knapsack. Have also several
-combination suits, some for your bag and one for your back. These suits
-should be high-necked and with shoulder and knee caps; of sufficient
-warmth for cold days and nights; in any case porous and of two weights.
-
- [1] If you have room take with you an extra pair of shoes. When you
- have become a real woodswoman you will never be without woolen socks
- and moccasins. The thick, soft sole of sock and moccasin spare tender
- feet which are not accustomed to hard tramping and rough paths.
-
-If you are going to tramp in a skirt, as you must if your route touches
-upon civilization, _see that it is short_. Six inches off the ground is
-none too much, and twelve is a good deal better. In an outing of this
-sort it is as poor form to wear a long skirt as it would be to wear a
-short skirt at an afternoon tea in civilization. The skirt should be of
-some good quality khaki, army preferably, or a tweed; it should be
-thoroughly shrunk, and if it seems desirable, it should be possible to
-put this camp skirt in water and wash it.[2] Have ample pockets on
-either side of the front seams. If I had to choose between the best of
-sweaters and a jacket with a lot of pockets in it, I should always
-choose the latter, and that is not on account of the pockets alone, but
-because it is a more convenient article of clothing. In case of cold
-weather it affords better protection, also better protection against
-rain as well as cold. You can have it made with two outside pockets and
-several inside--the more the merrier. Underneath the skirt wear a pair
-of bloomers. The lighter and stouter these are, the more of a comfort
-they will be. I have found a good quality of percaline to be the best
-investment. Percaline is light, strong, slimsy after a little wearing,
-and washes well. I have never yet found a silk that was practicable in
-the woods. Silk bloomers go well with the comforts of civilization, but
-they are not fit to endure the test of roughing it. A flannel shirtwaist
-or blouse, a Windsor or string tie, a soft felt hat--you may have it as
-pretty as you wish, provided it is not too large or over
-trimmed--complete the outfit which you carry on you, so to speak.
-
- [2] You can buy an ideal hunting suit at any of the big shops in
- Boston, New York or Chicago for from $8 to $10.
-
-Now to return to the outfit you carry in your pack and not on your back.
-A pair of indoor moccasins, an extra pair of hole-proof stockings (these
-you must have, not only on account of a possible wetting, but also
-because the stockings must be changed every day, for you cannot take too
-good care of your feet), two coarse handkerchiefs of ample size, a silk
-neckerchief to tie around your neck, an extra combination suit, a few
-safety pins clipped one into another until you have made a string of
-them, a tooth brush, a little tube of cold cream and a tube of tooth
-paste (the tubes are not breakable and take up the least room, they are
-therefore the best to carry), a cotton or linen shirtwaist of some kind,
-a nail file, a comb, a small vial of cascara sagrada tablets, several
-rolls of film for your camera--the camera itself can be slung on a strap
-from the knapsack--a pair of garden gloves for rough work with sooty
-pots and kettles, a good-sized cake of the best castile soap, a towel, a
-good stiff nail brush, and one or two books.
-
-Personally I feel that the books are as indispensable as anything in the
-knapsack, for in moments of weariness, or when storm-bound, they prove
-the greatest comfort and resource. The volume taken must not be a novel
-which read through once one does not care to read again. Better to take
-some book over which you can or must linger. I have tramped scores of
-miles with the “Oxford Book of English Verse” in my knapsack, and it has
-proved the greatest imaginable pleasure and solace. A small anthology
-or a book of essays, or something that you wish to study, as, for
-example, guides about the birds or the trees or the flowers, are good
-sorts of volumes to tote with you--besides, of course, this camping
-manual.
-
-Your kit for the rougher kind of camping, provided you have guides or
-men folks who will carry the food, or “grub,” as it is called in camp
-parlance, and the blankets, is now complete. But for the one girl who
-goes on this rougher sort of camping expedition, twenty go into the
-woods to be happy in a quite civilized log cabin or shanty. These girls
-will be taking a camp box with them, or a trunk, and can add to their
-wardrobe. There is no excuse, however, for adding the wrong sort of
-thing. There is no excuse for wearing unsuitable, unattractive old rags
-about camp, clothes which have served their civilized purpose and have
-no fitness for the wilderness life. Let me give you one other word,
-from an old timer at camping, about what you should wear. _Don’t be
-foolish and put in any finery._ The finery is as out of place in camp as
-your camp boots would be at a garden party at home. But several middy
-blouses, more shoes, more stockings, another skirt, a number of towels,
-a few more books--all will prove just that much added food for pleasure;
-first, last, and always, be comfortable in camp. There is no reason for
-being uncomfortable unless you enjoy discomfort. Anything, however, over
-and above what you actually need will be only a hindrance. Those who go
-camping, if they go in the right spirit, are looking for the simple
-life; they want to get rid of paraphernalia, not to add to it. To learn
-the happy art of living close to nature, means stripping away
-unnecessary things. There is no place in camp life for fussiness or
-display of any sort. All that is beyond the daily need is so much
-litter and clutter, making of camp life something that is a burden,
-something that is untidy, uncomfortable, confused. Of no thing is this
-more true than of a girl’s camp clothes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-FOOD
-
-
-There are several reasons why the camp food is almost more important
-than any other consideration. To begin with, most girls are leading a
-more active life than they are accustomed to living at home. This makes
-them hungry, and, add to the exercise the natural tonic of invigorating
-air, the camper becomes fairly ravenous at meal time. There are other
-reasons, too, why food is an all-important question. If one is in the
-real wilderness, it will be difficult to get. One is obliged, therefore,
-to consider carefully beforehand the kinds of food necessary for a
-well-provided table and a well-balanced diet. Another reason for taking
-thought about this whole subject is the portage. All the foods must be
-toted in, and not all kinds will prove suitable or economical in the
-long run for this sort of portage. Finally, there is the question of the
-ways and means for keeping the food, after it is once safely in camp, in
-good condition.
-
-As a rule, when we go on our expeditions we leave regions where it is
-easy to get a great variety of foods. The city or its suburb or a
-comfortable country town, is the place we call home. Our tables are
-filled the year long with fresh vegetables, fresh fruits, fresh meats,
-and all kinds of bread. This dietary in all its variety, to which we
-have been accustomed at home, is quite impossible of realization in the
-camp. We might just as well make up our minds to that at once. Yet
-accustomed to vegetables and fruits as we are, we need them both in
-wholesome quantities. How shall we get them? Potatoes of course, if the
-camping expedition is for any length of time, that is ten days or more,
-must be lugged. And lugging potatoes is heavy work over a trail. As for
-the other vegetables and fruits, and even meats, most people buy large
-quantities of tinned articles and so get rid of the whole question.
-Personally I think that this is a great mistake. It was a delight to me
-to find in Doctor Breck’s “Way of the Woods” that he, if obliged to
-choose between bacon and dried apples and chocolate, would always choose
-the chocolate and dried apples. And when the question of portage as well
-as health enters in, it may be said right here that it is quite
-impossible to carry a pack full of tins. But aside from the comfort of
-the guides, a tin-can camp is not likely to be a wholesome one. I am
-convinced that tin-can camping is responsible for whatever ills people
-experience when they go into the woods.
-
-It is quite simple to get different kinds of dried vegetables and
-different kinds of dried fruits--and the best are none too good--in
-bulk. At present there are even evaporated potatoes on the market for
-campers. Such dried foods pack and carry best and are most wholesome.
-Both white and yellow eye beans, dried lima beans, peas, whole and
-split, onions, evaporated apples, dried prunes, dried peaches and
-apricots, rice, raisins, nuts of all kinds, lemons, oranges, and even
-bananas, if they are sufficiently green, can be quite easily taken into
-camp. Various sorts of flour and meal, too, will be needed. Find out how
-much it takes to bake the bread at home and add that to the length of
-your stay plus the number of the campers and plus a little more than you
-actually need, and you will be able to work out the flour problem for
-yourselves. There should be then white and graham flour, or entire
-wheat, corn meal, pilot bread (memories of toasted pilot bread in camp
-can make one smile from recollected joy), some rolled oats, cereals like
-cream of wheat which carries well, cooks easily, and is hearty, and
-various sorts of crackers.
-
-Now the writer does not think meat necessary in camp. Except for the
-fish caught and the birds shot, none need be eaten. All the meat element
-or proteid necessary is provided for in the beans, peas, and nuts. But
-it is well to take a flitch of bacon or a few jars of it to use in
-broiling or frying the fish or game. Pork and lard are entirely
-uncalled-for in a properly thought out dietary.[3] Sufficient good
-fresh butter is very much needed. If campers feel that they must have
-other tinned meats, the best kinds to take are the most expensive, ox
-tongue, and that sort of thing. Several months ago four of us started
-off on a ten days’ camping expedition into a very northern wilderness
-unknown to us. One of the party, needlessly ambitious, took a preserved
-chicken in a glass jar bought from the finest provision house in Boston.
-By the time we reached our destination, the chicken was anything but
-preserved. Indeed, unless all signs failed, it had already embarked upon
-a new incarnation. No arm in the party was long enough to carry it out
-and set it on a distant rock for the skunks to visit. Nor shall I soon
-forget a certain meat ragout which we concocted in a Canadian
-wilderness. We had the ragout, but alas, we had a good deal else, too,
-including a doctor who had to cover half a county to reach us! Aside
-from the fact that people who live in cities and towns eat altogether
-too much meat, in camp there is not only the question of its
-uselessness, but also the fact that there are no ways to care for it
-properly. Meat makes a dirty camp.[4]
-
- [3] A brother camper says that he thinks even the fish would feel
- neglected without pork. On the contrary, trout are very sensitive to
- good bacon--in short, prefer it to salt pork. If you do not believe
- this true fish story, then catch two dozen half pound trout, slice
- your bacon thin and draw off the bacon fat. Take out the bacon, put
- the fat back into the frying pan--don’t burn yourself--and pop in
- one-half dozen trout. After the first mouthful you will find that my
- contention that trout are most sensitive to bacon entirely true. Be
- sure to put a little piece of bacon on that first bite. Following
- that, all you have to do is to keep on biting until your share of the
- two dozen trout is consumed. Remarkable how those two dozen will
- fly--almost as if the little fellows had turned into birds! The reason
- I am opposed to pork and lard camping is that we all know nowadays how
- diseased such meat may be. To go into the woods for health and run any
- avoidable risks is folly. Get a flitch of the best bacon and the best
- bacon is Ferris bacon. From this you will get enough fat for all
- frying purposes; also, in case you use fat as a substitute for butter,
- there will be enough bacon fat for cakes, etc.
-
- [4] I cannot emphasize too often the absolute importance of keeping a
- _clean camp_. Mr. Rutger Jewett, to whom this camping manual and its
- author are indebted for many wise suggestions, thinks that it is not
- always feasible to burn up everything. “Every camp,” he writes, “has
- some empty tin cans. It seems to me that the best plan in this case is
- to have a small trench dug, far enough from the camp to avoid all
- disagreeable results and yet not so far away that it is inaccessible.
- Here cans and unburnable refuse from the kitchen can be thrown and
- kept covered with earth or sand to avoid flies and odors. Everything
- that can be burned, should be.” The only difficulty in my mind is, in
- case the region is hedgehog-infested, that those charming creatures
- will form their usual “bread-line”--this time to the trench--and add
- digging to their accomplishments in gnawing. However! Better rinse out
- your tin cans; Sis Hedgehog is less likely to mistake the can for the
- original delicacy.
-
-All food refuse should be burned up, anyway, never thrown out into the
-brush, and it is difficult to burn meat bones. The girl or woman who
-keeps a dirty camp is beneath contempt. There is likely to be one
-neighbor, if not more, in the vicinity of every camp, who will make
-things uncomfortable for the campers. He should be called the camp pig,
-and he is the hedgehog. Also his cousin, the skunk, will hang around to
-see what is carelessly thrown out or left for him to eat. The hedgehog
-is the greediest, most unwelcome fellow in the woods, and even the fact
-that the poet Robert Browning had one as a pet will not redeem him in
-the eyes of the practical camper. He hangs around any camp that is not
-kept clean, gnaws axe handles which the salty human hand has touched,
-licks out tin cans which have not been rinsed as they should be before
-they are thrown away--in short, he follows up every bit of camp
-slackness. There is only one way to keep off hedgehogs and that is to
-have an absolutely tidy camp.
-
-In addition to the food stuffs already mentioned, there are several
-others which should be taken in the necessary quantities. Salt and
-pepper--better leave tea and coffee at home and take cocoa--soda, sugar,
-a few candles (helpful in lighting a fire in wet weather, as well as for
-illumination), matches, in a rubber box if possible, kerosene if your
-camp outfit will permit such a luxury, olive oil, maple syrup for
-flapjacks, molasses, condensed and evaporated milk or milk powder.
-
-[Illustration: REFLECTOR BAKER.]
-
-[Illustration: HOLD-ALL.]
-
-[Illustration: PATENTED FRY PAN.]
-
-[Illustration: HUNTING KNIFE.]
-
-[Illustration: BIRCH BARK CUP.]
-
-The articles which need to be cooled can be kept fresh in a nearby
-brook. Dead fish, however, should never be allowed to lie in water, but
-should be wrapped up in ferns or large leaves. If you are camping for
-any length of time, by making a little runway out of a trough you can
-have freshly flowing water, cooling butter and other food stuffs, all
-the time. Or a receptacle constructed something like a wire bait box
-will prove as good as the flowing water. This sunk into a cool pond or
-lake, makes an admirable ice chest, into which the finny creatures
-cannot get. In some rotation which you have decided upon, the care of
-the food should receive the especial attention from one girl every day.
-In this way hedgehogs, skunks, mice, rats, ants, will all be kept at a
-distance.
-
-There are in addition to these various food stuffs and their care, as I
-said in the first chapter, many articles necessary for camp life about
-which we must think. If you are going off for a few days with a guide,
-he will attend to these things for you. But if you are setting up a camp
-for yourself, you will need to have them in mind. They are, two or three
-tin pails of convenient sizes nesting or fitting into one another so
-that they can be easily carried, a tin reflector baker for outdoor
-cooking, a coffee pot if you are foolish enough to take coffee,
-enameled ware plates and cups, basins, pans, dishpans, a dishmop, a
-chain pot-cleaner, a double boiler, a broiler, knives and forks, spoons
-big and little, pepper and salt shakers, flour sifter, a rotary can
-opener, a frypan, long-handled and short-handled, a carving knife and a
-fish knife if you intend to do a great deal of fishing. There are many
-kinds of cooking kits. There is a good one for four persons which may be
-obtained at about six dollars from any large hardware dealer. Add to
-these things which have been mentioned fish hooks, a lantern, lantern
-wicks, nails of different sizes, a hammer--don’t forget the
-hammer!--toilet paper, woolen blankets, mosquito netting (if it is a
-mosquito-infested district), fly dope to rub on hands and face, oilcloth
-for camp table, some twine and some tacks.
-
-Equipped with these articles and what you carry in your knapsacks and
-what you wear, there is almost no wilderness in which a girl cannot
-have a good time, improve her health, and be the wiser for having
-entered the wilderness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-COOK AND COOKEE
-
-
-Any of you who have ever seen a lumber camp will remember something of
-how it is constructed. Separate from the main building is the
-superintendent’s office, a little cabin built usually of tar paper and
-light timber; then there is the hovel, as it is called, in which the
-horses and cows are stabled, and finally there is the big main building
-where the crew sleep and eat. But separated from the men’s dormitory by
-a passageway that leads into the outdoors, is the big room used as
-kitchen and dining room. Just beyond this and opening into the kitchen,
-is the room in which the cook and his assistant sleep.
-
-In these two rooms in the wilderness, cook and cookee reign supreme.
-They are the most important persons in the camp. They are the best
-paid. Their word is law. They have a room by themselves, partly for
-cleanliness’ sake, and also because the success of the whole camp
-depends more or less upon them. But it is not alone the lumber cook and
-cookee who make or mar the success of camp life. It is also the cook in
-the hotel camp, and even more, the cook in the hundreds of thousands of
-home camps which make glad our holiday season. The king pin of life,
-physically--and I might say morally, too, for wherever the health is
-excellent the morals are likely to be so--is good, pure, abundant food,
-properly cooked.
-
-Nowhere is the art of cooking put so to the test as in camp. You have
-less to do with; you have bigger appetites to do for and more need
-physically for the food you eat. There is one article which, if you are
-planning to do more cooking out of doors than can be done in a pot of
-water over a fire and a frying pan, you must have, and that is a tin
-reflector baker. One year I was caught in the steadiest downpour which I
-have ever known while camping. We were on the West Branch of the
-Penobscot, in an isolated region at the foot of Mount Katahdin, the
-highest mountain in the state of Maine. We had nothing to sleep under
-except a tent fly, and the rain drove in night and day, keeping us
-thoroughly wet. Our Indian guides managed to make the fire go in front
-of the leaky tar paper shack which we used as a kitchen. There was
-nothing we could do profitably but cook, so I amused myself cooking. I
-managed to bake, in the rain, before an open fire, within that little
-tin reflector baker, some tarts which were very successful. Many other
-articles, too, were cooked and came out thoroughly edible. That was
-indeed a test of the little tin baker which I shall never forget.
-
-There is one sort of kindling fuel unfailingly useful in the woods. Even
-the rain cannot dampen its blaze. The fuel to which I refer is
-birch-bark. It will light when nothing else will light, I suppose
-because of the large amount of oil in it. Even when you take it wet from
-the ground, instead of stripping it from a tree--and you can always get
-an inner layer of dry birch-bark from a tree--it will burn and kindle a
-good fire. A box of matches is a natural possession for a boy, but I am
-not so sure that this is true with a girl. Every camper should have a
-hard rubber box of matches in his possession, should know where it
-is--always in an inside pocket if possible--and should take good care of
-it. But to go back to that wet day and the shining little tin baker on
-the West Branch at the foot of Katahdin. There are some woods which are
-good for rapid, quiet burning and some that are poor, as every
-experienced woodsman will tell you. You must keep, until you know it by
-heart, a check list of different kinds of wood, just as you must keep a
-food check list and other check lists. If it is a big camp fire, which
-for jollity’s sake or the sake of warmth you wish to start, and do not
-care to keep going for a long time, almost any sort of wood will serve.
-Brush tops or slashings will do quite well to start such a blaze.
-Hickory is the best wood for use when you want a deep, quiet hot fire
-for cooking. There is scarcely any better wood for the camp cook to use
-than apple, but that most campers are not likely to be able to get. The
-green woods which burn most readily and are best to start a quick fire
-with are birch, white and black, hard maple, ash, oak, and hickory. The
-older the tree the more pitch there will be in it, and the pitch is an
-effective and noisy kindler of fires. Hemlock, spruce, cedar, and the
-larch, all snap badly. I have been obliged to use a good deal of cedar
-in an open Franklin in my camp study this last summer. It has never
-been safe to leave one of these cedar fires without shutting the doors
-of the Franklin stove. I have known the burning cedar to hurl sparks the
-entire length of the cabin. As the chinking is excelsior, you can
-imagine what one of those cedar sparks would do if it snapped onto a bit
-of the excelsior. Cabins not chinked with excelsior are usually chinked
-with moss, which is almost as inflammable. With woods that snap, the
-camper can never be too careful, and no fire made of snappy wood should
-ever be built near a cabin or a tent. One spark, and it might be too
-late to check the quickly spreading fire.
-
-There is another thing about which the camp cook and all girls camping
-need to be very careful, and that is the drinking water. One cannot be
-too exacting in this matter, too scrupulous, too clean. Provided there
-is spring or lake water about whose purity there can be no doubt, the
-question is settled. In this connection it may be said of drinking:
-when in doubt, don’t. A quarter of a mile, a half a mile, a mile, is
-none too far to go to get the right sort of water. This can be done in
-squads, one set of girls going one day and another the next. This water
-must be used for the cooking, too. If there is any doubt about the water
-supply, it should be filtered or boiled or both. Go into camp ready to
-make pure water one of your chief considerations, and never, under any
-circumstances, drink water or eat anything, even fish, which may have
-been contaminated by sewage. How vigilant one has to be about this an
-experience of my own, some months ago, will show you. The pond to which
-we were going was indeed in the wilderness, inaccessible except by
-canoe. I had walked one long “carry,” paddled across a good-sized
-pond--two miles wide, I think--and had been poling up some quick-water.
-The “rips” were low, and scratching would better describe the efforts
-to which we were put than poling does. My hands became so dry from the
-incessant work with the pole that I had to wet them to get any purchase
-on it at all. A greased pig could not have been harder to hold than that
-pole. When finally we reached the little mountain-surrounded pond for
-which we were making up the quickwater, I was hot, breathless,
-exhausted. I could think of only one thing, and that was a drink of
-water. There were a few camps about the lake, but it did not enter my
-mind that they would empty their sewage into it and take their fish and
-their water out of it. Yet after I had drunk, the first thing I noticed,
-in passing one camp, was that they unmistakably did empty their sewage
-into the pond. No evidence was lacking that it all went into the water
-not far from where I had taken a drink. It is not a pleasant subject,
-but it is one about which it is necessary to speak.
-
-It is well to take in your kit some place, unless you are an
-accomplished cook and have it all in your head, a small, good cook book.
-The first thing which you should recollect about the rougher sort of
-camping is that you will have no fresh eggs or milk with which to do
-your cooking. You should have recipes for making your biscuits,
-johnnycake, bread, corn-pone, cakes, flapjacks, cookies, potato soup,
-bean soup, pea soup, chowder, rice pudding, and for cooking game and
-fish. In that veteran book for campers, “The Way of the Woods,” some
-good recipes for the necessary dishes are given. Whatever dishes you
-plan to make in the wilderness should be simple and few. Anything beyond
-the simplest dietary is not in the spirit of camp life, and will only
-detract from rather than add to the general pleasure. Those recipes
-which seem to me absolutely necessary I will give to you in the next
-chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-LOG-CABIN COOKERY
-
-
-Did you ever get to a camp fire or log-cabin stove at eleven o’clock and
-know that there must be a hearty meal by twelve? I have lots of times.
-The only way to do, if one must meet these emergencies on short notice,
-is to have what I call “stock” on hand. In using this word I do not mean
-soup stock, either. What I mean is that there must be some vegetables or
-cereals or other articles of food at least partially prepared for
-eating.
-
-I remember one summer when I was very busy with my writing. I was chief
-cook and bottle washer, besides being my own secretary, and I had three
-members in my family to look out for--a friend with a hearty appetite, a
-big dog with a no less hearty appetite and a rather greedy little Maine
-cat. The question was how to carry on the work which was properly my
-own and at the same time attend to cooking and other household work. I
-hit upon a plan which served excellently with me. I do not recommend it
-to any one else, especially to girls who will be going into the woods
-for a vacation and will have no duties except those connected with their
-camp life. But this plan of mine demonstrated to me once and for all
-that, even if one is very busy, it is possible to have a bountifully
-supplied table.
-
-The first day I tried the experiment I went into the kitchen at eleven
-o’clock. Never had I been more tired of the everlasting question of what
-to have to eat. It seemed to me that there was never any other question
-except that one, and I determined, with considerable savage feeling, to
-escape from it. At eleven o’clock I chopped my own kindling, started my
-own fire, and began twirling the saucepans, frying pans and baking tins
-which I wanted to use. I was set upon cooking up enough food to last for
-three or four days, and I did. At two o’clock not only was all the food
-cooked and set away for future consumption, but also we had eaten our
-dinner. In that time what had I prepared? There was a big double boiler
-full of _corn meal_. After this had been thoroughly boiled in five times
-its bulk of water and a large tablespoonful of salt, I poured it out
-into baking tins and set it away to cool. Various things can be done
-with this stock; among others, once cool, it slices beautifully, and is
-delicious fried in butter or in bacon fat, and satisfying to the
-hungriest camper. Also a large panful of _rice_ had been cooked. This
-had been set aside to be used in _croquettes_, in _rice puddings_ and to
-be served plain with milk at supper time. So much for the rice and the
-corn meal. I had broken up in two-inch pieces a large panful of
-_macaroni_. This was boiled in salt water, part of it cooled and set
-away for further use, some of it mixed with a canful of tomato and
-stewed for our dinner and the rest baked with tomato and bread crumbs,
-to be heated up for another day. On top of the stove, too, I had a
-mammoth _vegetable stew_. In this stew were potatoes, carrots, parsnips,
-cabbage, beets, turnips, plenty of butter and plenty of salt. The stew
-remained on the stove, carefully covered, during the time that the fire
-was lighted and was put on again the next day to complete the cooking,
-for it takes long boiling to make a really good stew. Inside the oven
-were two big platefuls of _apples_ baking. These had been properly cored
-and the centers filled with butter and sugar and cinnamon; also two or
-three dozen potatoes were baking in the oven, some of which would serve
-for quick frying on another day. In addition to the food mentioned, I
-set a large two-quart bowl full of lemon jelly with vegetable gelatin.
-It took me exactly fifteen minutes to make this jelly and during that
-time I was giving my attention to other things besides. I made also a
-panful of baking powder biscuits which, considering the way they were
-hustled about, behaved themselves in a most long-suffering and
-commendable fashion, turning out to be good biscuits after all.
-
-Now, the import of all this is that, with planning, a little practice
-and some hopping about, a good deal of cooking and preparation of food
-can be done in a short time. Unnecessary “fussing” about the cooking is
-not desirable in camp life. The simpler that life can be made and kept
-the better. The more we can get away from unwholesome condiments, highly
-seasoned foods, too much meat eating and coffee drinking, too many
-sweets and pastries, the better. The girl who goes into the woods with
-the idea of having all the luxuries--many of them wholly unnecessary
-and some of them undesirable--of her home life, is no true “sport.” The
-grand object for which we cook in camp is a good appetite and that needs
-no sauce and sweets.
-
-What are some of the recipes a girl should have with her for log-cabin
-cooking? In the first place, we must take with us a good recipe for
-_bread-making_. There are so many I will give none. The best one to have
-is the one used at home, but let me say here that no flour so answers
-all dietetic needs in the woods as entire wheat. Delicious baking powder
-biscuits can be made from it as well as bread. Also know how to _boil a
-potato_. You think this is a matter of no importance? It would surprise
-you then, wouldn’t it, to know that there are some people devoting all
-of their time teaching the ignorant and the poor the art of boiling a
-potato. You can boil all the good out of it and make it almost worthless
-as food, as well as untempting, or you can cook it properly, making it
-everything it ought to be. Know, too, how to _clean a fish_. Oh, dear,
-you never could do that! It makes you shiver to think of such a thing.
-Very well then, camp is no place for you. Your squeamishness which might
-seem attractive some place else will only be silly there, making you a
-dead weight about somebody else’s neck. Does your brother Boy Scout know
-how to clean a fish? Did you ever know a real boy who did not know how
-to clean a fish? Why not a real girl, then, perhaps a Camp Fire Girl?
-Oh, but the cook--no, you will be the cook in camp or the assistant
-cook. Then get your brother to show you how to cut off its head and to
-scale it, if it is a scaly fish, how to slit it open, taking out the
-entrails, how to wash it thoroughly and dry it, how to dip it in flour
-or meal and to drop it into the sizzling frying pan, how to turn it and
-then finally the moment when, crisp and brown, it should be taken out
-and served. Know, too, how to pluck and clean a partridge.[5] One day
-this last summer I went up the cut behind my camp, intent upon finding a
-partridge for our supper. I hadn’t gone far before I found one and with
-the second shot of my rifle brought the poor fellow down. I took him
-home to the cook whom I had with me then, the daughter of a neighboring
-farmer. I gave her the bird and told her to get him ready for supper.
-She said she couldn’t; she didn’t know how.
-
- [5] If your mother and brother have not taught you how to _clean fish_
- and _pluck partridge_, then it would be best to go to the butcher and
- fishman and take lessons of them. If it is possible to go on your
- first expedition with a good guide, that will settle the whole
- difficulty, for your guide will know the best way and be glad to teach
- you.
-
-“Don’t know how?” I asked. “What do you mean?”
-
-She said that she did not know how to pluck and clean a partridge.
-
-“Well,” I replied, “you know how to clean a chicken, don’t you?”
-
-“Mercy me, no!” she objected, looking pale and silly. “Mother always
-cleans the chickens.”
-
-Mother always cleans the chickens! Mother does a good deal too much of
-the things that are somewhat unpleasant in this American home life of
-ours. This girl had been perfectly willing that her mother should do all
-the work which seemed to her too disagreeable or unpleasant to do
-herself. But I am glad to say, and her mother ought to have been
-grateful to me, she helped in dressing that partridge and I did not care
-a tinker when, after it had been cooked, she seemed to feel too badly to
-eat very much of it. I wonder how her mother had felt after all the
-hundreds of chickens she had killed, plucked, cleaned and cooked for
-that very girl of hers.
-
-You must know, too, how to _boil an egg_, and do not do as I saw that
-same incompetent farmer’s daughter do--I suppose because she had left
-almost everything to her very competent mother--do not boil your eggs in
-the tea kettle. The water in the tea kettle should be kept as clean and
-fresh as possible. There is no excuse for a _dirty tea kettle_. We
-should be able in the woods, too, to know how to scramble eggs, if one
-has them, and to make omelets, and to boil corn meal, and the best ways
-for cooking rice and of baking fruits. Good apple pies, too, if you can
-make pastry without too much trouble, will not go amiss.
-
-There are a few recipes which you must get out of the home cook book,
-besides the few which I will now give you. _Baking powder biscuits_ are
-not easy to make. Even very good cooks sometimes do not have success
-with them. Do not be discouraged if at your first effort you should
-fail. Keep on trying. You must learn, for I think it can be said that
-baking powder biscuits constitute the bread of the woods. I know farming
-families in northern Maine who do not know what it is to make raised
-bread. They have nothing but baking powder or soda and cream of tartar
-bread. Use one quart of sifted flour, one teaspoonful of salt, three
-rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one large tablespoonful of
-butter and enough milk, evaporated or powdered milk, or fresh if you
-have it, to make a soft dough. Mix these things in the order in which
-they are given, and when the dough is stiff enough to be cut with the
-top of a baking powder can or a biscuit cutter, sprinkle your bread and
-also your rolling pin with flour and roll out the dough. It will depend
-upon your oven somewhat, but probably it will take you from ten to
-fifteen minutes to bake these biscuits.
-
-A recipe for corn meal cake, too, should be in one’s camp kit. The
-simpler that recipe the better. Some forms of _corn bread_ take so long
-to prepare that they are not suitable for the woods. The one I shall
-give you will prove practicable. You might take one from your own home
-cook book, too, if you wish. Mix the ingredients in the order in which
-they are set down and bake them in a moderately hot oven. If you haven’t
-anything else to use, bread tins a third full will serve. One cup of
-whole corn meal, a half a teaspoonful of salt and a cup of sugar, a
-whole cup of flour, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder--these should be
-level--one egg, one cup of milk and a tablespoonful of melted butter.
-
-_Pancakes_ you must also know how to make. One can’t very well get along
-in the wilderness without some sort of griddle cake, the simpler the
-better. Sour milk pancakes are the best, particularly as it is not
-necessary to use eggs if one has sour milk, but that is not always
-feasible, as frequently you will have to use evaporated milk. Mix a
-pint of flour, a half a teaspoonful of salt, a teaspoonful of soda, one
-pint of sour milk, and two eggs thoroughly beaten. See that your frying
-pan, for in camp you will cook your cakes in the frying pan, has been on
-the stove some time. Grease it thoroughly with bacon fat or butter;
-never use lard unless you have to. Cook the cakes thoroughly. You will
-find turning your first hot cakes something of an adventure.
-
-There should also be among our log-cabin recipes some directions for
-telling you how to make at least two kinds of _nourishing soup_ without
-stock. Soup with stock in camp life is not practicable. Pea or bean
-soups are the most satisfying and satisfactory. The peas or beans must
-be soaked in cold water over night. Pea or bean soups take a long time
-to make, so that it is not always practicable to have them in camp. I
-will give you a recipe for _split pea soup_. Take with you, if you are
-likely to need it, also, a recipe for black bean soup. After soaking
-over night, pour the water off the split peas and add to the cup of peas
-three pints of cold water. Do not let the liquid catch on the sides of
-the pan in which the peas are simmering. When the peas are soft, rub
-them through a strainer and put them on to boil again, adding one
-tablespoonful of butter, one of flour, one-half teaspoonful of sugar and
-a teaspoonful of salt. You don’t need pepper--better leave pepper at
-home and if you get so that you don’t miss it in camp, then you need
-never use it again. It is wretched stuff, anyway, doing more to harm the
-human stomach than almost any other food poison in use.
-
-_Baked beans_, too, make a prime dish for camp life, partly, I suppose,
-because, like corn meal and pea and bean soups, potatoes and the
-heartier kinds of food, they are so satisfying to the camper’s appetite.
-It isn’t necessary to cook your beans with pork, substitute some kind
-of nut butter, peanut butter or almond butter, or plenty of fresh dairy
-butter. The quart of pea beans should be soaked in cold water over
-night. In the morning these beans must be put into fresh water and
-allowed to cook until they are soft but not broken. Empty them into a
-colander and then put them in the bean pot, or if you haven’t a bean
-pot, a deep baking dish will do. Put in a quarter of a cup of molasses
-and a half cup of butter and pour a little hot water over the beans.
-Keep them all day long in an oven that is not too hot. Don’t put any
-mustard in your beans; mustard is as great an enemy to the human stomach
-as pepper, and that is saying a good deal.
-
-Against a rainy day when you may wish to amuse yourselves with
-additional dishes, or a hungry day when you are cold and ravenous, I
-will add a few more recipes. _Corn pone_ is good. This is just corn
-bread baked on a heated stone propped up before the fire till the
-surface is seared. Then cover with hot ashes and let it bake in them for
-twenty minutes. After that dust your cake and eat it. I have told you
-how to make _corn meal mush_. With butter and sugar (in case you have no
-milk) it is excellent. What do you say to some _buckwheat cakes_ on a
-cold, rainy night? If you say “yes,” all you have to do is to mix the
-self-raising buckwheat flour with a proper amount of water and drop some
-good-sized spoonfuls into a hot, greased frying-pan. The turning of hot
-cakes is the next best fun to eating them. Mash your boiled potatoes,
-season with butter and salt and milk if you have it. After that, call it
-_mashed potato_. It is good to eat and keeps well for paté cakes or a
-scallop. When hungry, _fried potatoes_ can be eaten with impunity by the
-most zealous dietarian. Fried potatoes are naughty but nice. _Mushrooms_
-are nice, too, but dangerous. If you have a trained botanist or someone
-who has _always_ gathered mushrooms for eating, then perhaps it will be
-safe to cook this bounty the woods spread before you. If you must have
-_bacon_ you cannot get bacon that is _too_ good. _Ferris bacon and hams_
-are the finest and most reliable cured pork in this country. And since
-we are speaking of pork and therefore of frying, let me give you one
-caution: _Never use the frying-pan when you can avoid doing so._ No
-amount of care can make fried foods altogether wholesome. Even an
-out-of-door life cannot altogether counteract the bad effects of fried
-food. You can make good _broth_ from small diced bits of game or
-whatever meat you have, when the meat is tender, add vegetables and
-allow the whole to boil for some time. _Chowder_, too, is a standard
-dish for camp life. Take out the bones from the fish and cut up fish
-into small pieces. “Cover the bottom of the kettle with layers in the
-following order: slices of pork, sliced raw potatoes, chopped onions,
-fish, hard biscuit soaked (or bread). Repeat this (leaving out pork)
-until the pot is nearly full. Season each layer. Cover barely with water
-and cook an hour or so over a very slow fire. When thick stir gently.
-Any other ingredients that are at hand may be added.” (Seneca’s “Canoe
-and Camp Cookery” and Breck’s “Way of the Woods.”) A _white sauce_ for
-fish and other purposes will be found useful. Melt tablespoonful of
-butter in saucepan; stir in dessert-spoonful of flour; add ½ teaspoonful
-salt; mix with a cup of milk. Except for the ginger, _gingerbread_ is
-not a bad cake for the woods. One cup of molasses, one cup of sugar, one
-teaspoonful of ginger, one teaspoonful of soda, one cup of hot water,
-flour enough to form a medium batter, ½ cup melted butter, and a little
-cinnamon will make it. You might experiment with _Chinese tea cakes_
-made with ¼ cup butter, one cup brown sugar, ⅛ teaspoonful soda, one
-tablespoonful of cold water, and one cup of flour. Shape this mixture
-into small balls, and put on buttered sheets and bake in a hot oven.
-_Molasses cookies_ are good and substantial, not a bad thing to put in
-the duffle bag on a day’s tramp. Use one cup of molasses, one
-teaspoonful of ginger, one teaspoonful of soda, two teaspoonfuls of warm
-water or milk, ½ cup of butter, enough flour to mix soft. Dissolve the
-soda in milk. Roll dough one-third of an inch thick and cut in small
-rounds. Two well known candy recipes will add to the pleasures of a
-rainy day and a sweet tooth. _Penuche_: Two cups brown sugar, ¾ cup
-milk, butter size of a small nut, pinch of salt, one teaspoonful of
-vanilla, ½ cup walnut meats. Boil the first four ingredients until soft
-ball is formed when dropped in water. Then add vanilla and nuts, and
-beat until cool and creamy. _Fudge_: 2 cups sugar, ¾ cup milk, 3
-tablespoonfuls cocoa, a pinch of salt, butter size of small nut, ½ cup
-walnut meats if desired. Cook same as penuche.
-
-Perhaps, in conclusion, I should advise you to learn something about the
-_boiling of vegetables_ and tell you not to cut the top off a _beet_
-unless you want to see it bleed, and lose the better part of it. Put
-your beet in, top and all. When cooked, it will be time enough to cut it
-and pare it. Be sure if you cook _cabbage_ that it is cooked long
-enough, and has become thoroughly tender. The same is true with
-_parsnips_ and _carrots_. If you are in a hurry slice up your carrots or
-parsnips or cabbage or potatoes and they will cook more rapidly.
-
-Be sure that your camp dietary has plenty of _stewed fruits_ in it. That
-will be so much to the good in the camp health. A bottle of _olive oil_
-also will prove a great resource; in fact, a can of olive oil would be
-even more practical and the oil is always capital food. Although the
-most elaborate recipes are given for making a _mayonnaise dressing_ it
-is really very simple to make, and once made can be kept on hand as
-“stock.” I have been making mayonnaise since I was a little girl, and,
-as I cook something like the proverbial darky, I do not know that I am
-able to give you any hard and fast directions for making the dressing.
-With me it is an affair of impulse; I use either the white of an egg or
-the whole egg, it does not make any difference--the shell you will not
-find palatable--beating it up thoroughly, gradually adding the oil,
-putting in a little lemon juice from time to time and plenty of salt.
-Cayenne pepper is ordinarily used in mayonnaise, but if the dressing is
-properly seasoned with salt and lemon it needs neither cayenne nor
-mustard. What it does need is thorough and long beating, a cool place,
-and a few minutes in which to harden after it is made.
-
-You will learn one thing in the woods which perhaps will be a surprise.
-In that life it is men who are the good cooks. Indeed, it is surprising
-how much cleverness men show in domestic ways when they are left to
-their own devices and how helpless they become as soon as a woman is
-around. If you go astray any woodsman, any guide, almost any “sport” can
-help you out in the mysteries of cooking.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE PLACE TO CAMP
-
-
-For most girls the place in which they are to camp will depend very
-largely on the locality in which they live. But few people want to, or
-feel that they can, travel long distances to secure their ideal camping
-ground. Yet there are some things about the place to camp which most of
-us can demand and get. When one has learned a little of the art of
-camping, it is really surprising how many good camping grounds may be
-found in one’s own immediate neighborhood.
-
-The first question to be decided is the sort of expedition which we
-shall undertake. Are we going to rough it for a few days or a couple of
-weeks, taking things as they come and not expecting any of the comforts
-we ordinarily have? Are we going to sleep in the open, cook and eat in
-the open? If we are to “pack” all that we shall have along with us, is
-it to be a river trip or a lake trip in a canoe? Is it to be a walking
-expedition or with horses? The least expensive item will prove to be the
-one that involves taking the fewest number of guides, and which is
-carried out on shank’s mare. Every expedition which is continually on
-the move through an isolated and rough country should be equipped with
-one guide to each two people. If it is a stationary camp, one guide to
-three or four people will be the minimum. But that _is_ the minimum.
-Registered guides command big pay for their work, usually about three
-dollars a day, and their food and lodging provided for them.
-
-When we cannot make up for our oversight or mistakes or stupidities by
-trotting around the corner to procure what we have forgotten, or taking
-up a telephone and ordering it sent to us, or sending a message to the
-doctor, who must come because we have exhausted ourselves, or got
-indigestion from badly planned and badly cooked food, it behooves us to
-be careful. Only a word to the wise is necessary. To use a slang phrase
-which contains in a nutshell almost all that need be said on the
-subject: _don’t bite off more than you can chew_. If you are starting
-out on a strenuous walking expedition, be sure that all in the party are
-accustomed to hard walking and are properly shod and in fit condition
-for the work. With these requirements attended to, your duffle bags full
-of the right shelter and food stuff, a capable man or capable men in
-charge of the expedition, there is nothing in the world which could be
-better for a group of healthy girls than a walking tour. I have walked
-scores of miles with my own little pack on my back and been all the
-better for the hard work and the hard living. More of us need hard
-living as a corrective for our over-civilized lives than we need
-luxuries. If it is a canoe trip, it is well for several members of the
-party to know how to paddle and even to pole up over the “rips” of
-quickwater. Thank fortune that the girl of to-day has sloughed off some
-of the inane traits supposed to be excusably feminine, such, for
-example, as screaming when frightened. The modern girl doesn’t need to
-be told that screaming and jumping when she goes down her first
-quickwater in a canoe are distinctly out of order. I remember one
-experience in quickwater when I was not sure but that I should have to
-jump literally for my life. In some way the Indian with whom I was had
-got his setting pole caught in the rocks, and we were swung around
-sidewise over a four-foot drop of raging water. If the pole loosened
-before we could get the nose of the canoe pointed down stream, the end
-was inevitable. No one could have lived in those raging waters. The
-canoe would have been rolled over and we pounded to pieces or crushed
-upon the rocks. We clawed the racing water madly with the paddles, which
-seemed, for all the good they could do, more like toothpicks than
-paddles. But slowly, inch by inch, straining every muscle, we managed to
-work around. Needless to say, we escaped unharmed, except for a wetting.
-In this case as always, a miss is as good as a mile--a little “miss”
-which was most cordially received by me. The Indian said nothing, but I
-noticed that there was some expression in his face while this adventure
-was going on, and that is saying a good deal for an Indian.
-
-After some of the questions connected with the kind of expedition are
-thought out, it is just as well to consider the place in which one
-wishes to camp, for that will determine much else. All things being
-equal, it is well to get a sharp contrast in locality, because that
-means the maximum of change and tonic. In my experience there are only
-two kinds of camping grounds to be avoided--no, I will say three. First,
-there is swampy, malarial land, infested by mosquitoes and other
-unpleasant creatures. Second, there is ground on which no water can be
-found. Camp life without access to water is an impossible proposition.
-And thirdly--a possibility fortunately which does not occur in many
-localities--ground that is infested by venomous snakes is unsafe. Even
-in so beautiful and fertile a region as the Connecticut Valley, where I
-live when not at my camp in the Moosehead region, and where I frequently
-go camping, the question of snakes has to be taken into consideration. I
-have encountered both the rattlesnake and the copperhead, two of the
-most deadly reptiles known, in the Connecticut Valley.
-
-If, when you are at home, you live on land that is low, and high land is
-accessible for your expedition, I think you cannot do better than camp
-on the hills or the mountains. On the other hand, if you are ordinarily
-accustomed to living among the hills, a camping ground on low land by
-sea or lake will bring you the greatest change. Some girls might prefer
-to camp deep in the very heart of the woods. Personally I do not. I
-think it is likely to be very damp there, and to be so enclosed on every
-side that the life grows dull. I like a camping ground on the shore of a
-pond, or on a hill side with a big outlook, or at the mouth of a river.
-
-One of the most beautiful camping grounds I have ever known is in a
-deserted apple orchard miles away from civilization. Once upon a time
-there was a farm there, but the buildings were all burned down. Remote,
-perfect, sheltered, I often think the original Garden of Eden could not
-have been more beautiful. And there is the original apple tree, but in
-this case most seductive as apple sauce. You make a mistake if, before
-you get up your camp appetite, you assume that apple sauce need not be
-taken into account. When your camp appetite is up, you will find that
-the original sauce on buttered bread will put you into the original
-paradisaic mood. And there are all sorts of extension of the apple that
-are as good as they are harmless, apple pie, apple dumpling, apple cake,
-and baked apples.
-
-It may not seem romantic to you, but you will find it practical and,
-after all, delightful to camp a mile or so away from a good farmhouse,
-as far out on the edge of the wilderness as you can get, for, the farm
-within walking distance, it is possible to have a great variety of food:
-fresh milk and cream, eggs, an occasional chicken, new potatoes, and
-other vegetables in season. With the farm nearby, you can say, as in the
-“Merry Wives of Windsor”: “Let the sky rain potatoes!” and you have your
-wish fulfilled. It is probable, too, that the farmer in such an
-isolated region will be glad to help in pitching the tents, in lugging
-whatever needs to be lugged from the nearest village or station, in
-making camp generally and, finally, in striking the camp. It is likely
-that for a reasonable sum he will be glad to let you have one of his
-nice big farm Dobbins and an old buggy for cruising around the country.
-In any event, choose ground that affords a good run-off and is dry;
-select a sheltered spot where the winds will not beat heavily upon your
-tents, and never forget that clean drinking water is one of the first
-essentials. Keep away from contaminated wells and all uncertain
-supplies. With these injunctions in mind, you can find only a happy,
-healthful, invigorating home among the “primitive pines” or under the
-original apple tree.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-CAMP FIRES
-
- “The way to prevent big fires is to put them out while they are
- small.”--CHIEF FORESTER GRAVES.
-
-
-Lightly do we go into the woods, bent upon a holiday. There we kindle a
-fire over which we are to cook our camp supper. How good it all smells,
-the wood smoke, the odor of the frying bacon and fish and potatoes; how
-good in the crisp evening air the warmth of the camp fire feels; and
-above all, how beautiful everything is, the deep plumy branches on whose
-lower sides shadows from the firelight dance, the depth of darkness
-beyond the reach of the illuminating flame, the rich strange hue of the
-soft grass and moss on which we are sitting! It is all beautiful with
-not a suggestion of evil or terror about it, and yet, unchecked, there
-is a demon of destruction in that jolly little camp fire before which we
-sit. Now the supper! Nothing ever tasted better, nothing can ever taste
-so good again, the fish and bacon done to a turn, the potatoes lying an
-inviting brown in the frying pan, and the hot cocoa, made with condensed
-milk, steaming up into the cool evening air.
-
-After supper we lie about the fire and sing or dream. Perhaps some one
-tells a story. The hours go so rapidly that we do not know where they
-have gone. And when the evening is over? The fire is still glowing, a
-bed of bright coral coals and gray ash. The fire will just go out if we
-leave it. Besides, we haven’t time to fetch water to put it out with.
-No, nine chances out of ten, if we leave the fire it will not go out,
-but smoulder on, and a breeze coming up in the night or at dawn, the
-fire springs into flame again, catching on the surrounding dry grass
-and pine needles. Soon, incredibly soon, it begins to leap up the
-trunks of trees. Before we know it, it is springing from tree to tree,
-faster than a man can leap or run.
-
-[Illustration: NESSMUK RANGE.]
-
-[Illustration: SMALL COOK FIRE.]
-
-In dry weather you and I could go out into the woods anywhere, and with
-a match not much bigger than a good-sized darning needle, set a blaze
-that would sweep over a whole county, or from county to county, or from
-state to state. Millions of dollars’ worth of damage would be done, and
-the chances are that the careless, wanton act would be the means of
-having us put into prison--which is precisely where, given such
-circumstances, we should be.
-
-Have we ever stopped to think for a moment, we who camp so joyfully,
-what loss and injury such carelessness on our part may mean to a whole
-community? To begin with, there are the forests themselves, and all they
-represent in actual timber, in promise for future growth, and in
-security for rain supply. Then in fighting the fire thousands of
-dollars’ worth of wages will have to be paid and hundreds of men’s lives
-will be in danger. The sweep and fury of such forest fires, unless one
-has lived in the neighborhood of one as I have, is beyond the
-comprehension or the imagination. Burning brands are blown sixty feet
-and more over the tops of the highest trees and the heads of the men who
-are fighting the fire. Before they can check the blaze of the fire
-nearest them, one beyond them has already been started.
-
-Also there are the life aspects, big and small, of such a fire. Not only
-are the lives of the men who fight the blaze endangered, but all the
-homes, camps, farmhouses, villages, and their inmates are in imminent
-risk. What it has taken others years to gather together, to construct,
-may be swept away in a few hours. Helpless old people, equally helpless
-little children--all may be burned.
-
-Beyond this question of human life, which every one will admit is a very
-great one, is still another which, I am sorry to say, will not seem so
-important to some girls. Maybe it is not, but if you have ever heard the
-screams of an animal, terrified by fire, being burned to death, as I
-have; if you have ever heard the blind frenzied terror of the stampede
-which takes place, the beating of hoofs and the screams of creatures
-that are trying to escape, but do not know how, as I have heard
-them--then you will have a new sense of the tragedy which a forest fire
-means to the creatures of the forest. Of a forest fire it may be said,
-as of an evil, that there is absolutely no good in it: it is all bad,
-all devastating, all injurious.
-
-In a forest fire scores, hundreds, thousands of wild creatures are
-killed, those little creatures which, given the chance, are so friendly
-with their human brothers. Think, the little chickadees, tame, gay,
-resourceful, filling even the winter woods with their song, the tiny
-wrens, the beautiful thrushes, the squirrels and chipmunks, who need
-only half an invitation and something on the table to accept your offer
-of a nut cutlet, the rabbit who lets you come within a few feet of him
-while he still nibbles grass, and looks trustingly at you out of his
-round prominent eyes, the bear that thrusts his head out of the edge of
-the woods, full of curiosity to see what you are doing, the deer, even
-the little fawn, who will become your playmate and take sugar from your
-hand--all these trusting, interested, friendly creatures are killed by
-the hundreds of thousands in a forest fire. The smoke stifles them, the
-loud reports of the wood gases escaping from the burning trees terrify
-them, and the light and heat confuse them. It is difficult to find a
-single good thing to say for a forest fire. It spells devastation, loss,
-untold suffering, and in its path there is only desolation. The
-merciful fire-weed springs up after it, trying with its summer flame to
-cover the black ravage, the gutted ground, where the demon has burned
-deep into the peaty subsoil. Everywhere one sees what an awful fight for
-life has taken place: thousands of little birds, suffocated by the
-smoke, have dropped into the flames, thousands of creatures, tortured by
-the heat, have rushed into the fire instead of away from it. Worse than
-the flood is fire, because the suffering is so much the greater. Somehow
-there is something utterly, irredeemably tragic to any one who has gone
-over these great fire-swept stretches of land in our country; the thick
-stagnant water that is left, the charred bones, and the look of waste
-which shall never meet in the space of a human life with repair.
-
-No time to put out the camp fire? That little fire will just go out of
-itself, will it? Yes, probably, when it has accomplished what I have
-described for you, when it has killed happy life, razed the beautiful
-trees, gutted out the earth, and devoured, careless of agony, all that
-it will have. Fire is the dragon of our modern wilderness, and it will
-be glutted and gorged, and not satisfied until it is. That jolly little
-camp fire is worth keeping an eye on, it is worth the trouble, even if
-we have to go half a mile to fetch it, to get a pail of water and ring
-the embers around with the wet so that the fire cannot spread. Never
-leave a camp fire burning; no registered guide would do such a thing,
-and no sportsman. It is only those who don’t know or who are criminally
-careless who would. If the public will not take responsibility in this
-matter, the fire wardens are helpless. Some enemies these men must
-inevitably fight: the lightning which strikes a dead, punky stump in the
-midst of dry woods, which, smouldering a long while, finally bursts into
-flame; the spark from an engine; even spontaneous combustion due to
-imprisoned gases acted upon by sun-heat. But there is one enemy which
-the fire wardens should not need to meet, and that is man: the boy or
-girl camping, the man who drops a cigar stump or match carelessly onto
-dry leaves, the hunter who uses combustible wadding in his shotgun. Let
-us help the fire wardens, those men who live on lonely mountain summits
-or in the midst of the wilderness with eyes ever vigilant to detect the
-starting of a fire--let us help, I say, these fire wardens to get rid of
-one nuisance at least, and let us keep our great, cool, wonderful
-American forests as beautiful as they have ever been and should always
-be for those who are in a holiday humor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-OTHER SMOKE
-
-
-There will not be much opportunity to dwell on all the wealth of
-information that comes to the real camper. The life of the woods is not
-only a lively one, but one teeming with intelligences and the kind of
-information which one can get no place else. My years of camping have
-stored my mind full of pictures and full of memories about which I could
-write indefinitely. In the practical activities of camp life we mustn’t
-forget that the silent wonderful life of the wilderness is ours to study
-if we but bring keen eyes to it, quick hearing and receptive minds.
-
-Let me tell you of one experience which I had some four years ago on the
-edge of a solitary little pond in the forest wilderness. Our way lay
-over a narrow trail, now through birches full of light, then through
-maples, past spruce and other trees, down, down, down toward the little
-pond which lay like a jewel at the bottom of a hollow. It was a favorite
-spot for beavers and we were going to watch them work. Their rising time
-is sundown, so we should be there before they were up. It was growing
-quieter and quieter in the ever-quiet woods, and when we hid ourselves
-behind some bushes near the edge of the pond on the opposite side from
-the beaver houses, there was scarcely a sound, and the drip of the water
-from a heron’s wings as the bird mounted in flight, seemed astonishingly
-loud.
-
-Soon the beavers, unaware of us, came out of their houses and began to
-work, steadily and silently. We knew them for what they were, builders
-of dams, of bridges, of houses, mighty in battle so that a single stroke
-from their broad flat tails kills a dog instantly, wood cutters,
-carriers of mud and stone--animals endowed with almost human
-intelligence and with an industry greater than human. And I never saw
-work done more quietly, efficiently and silently than I did that night
-by the edge of Beaver Pond.
-
-As we sat there peering through the bushes I thought instinctively of
-the silent work which we do within ourselves or which is done for us.
-Deep down within us so much is going on of which “we,” as we speak of
-the conscious outer self, are not aware. Take, for example, the frequent
-and common experience of forgetting a word or a name. Despite the
-greatest effort we cannot recall it, and finding ourselves helpless we
-dismiss the matter from our minds and go on to other things. Suddenly,
-without any seeming effort on our part the word has come to us. Now this
-reveals a great truth about a great silent power: _all we have to do is
-to set the right forces to work and frequently the work is done for us_.
-With this serviceable power within us, why not make use of it
-habitually? It renews itself constantly and waits for us to call upon it
-for protection, for comfort, for correction and strength. It insists
-only that we think as nearly rightly as we can. Beavers of silence are
-busy within us.
-
-Much of the work of this silent power is done in our sleep-time. It is
-important, therefore, that our last thoughts at night and our first in
-the morning should be the best of which we are capable. Prayer is a
-profound acknowledgment of this power within us. We have all heard the
-expression, “the night brings counsel.” And probably most of us have
-said, “Oh, well, we’ll just sleep on that!” Why “sleep on it”? Because
-we have confidence in this silent power whose processes, whether we
-sleep or wake, are constantly at work within us, even as night and day,
-a natural power, directs the growth of tree and flower. Again we have
-counted upon the work of industrious beavers of silence--the silent
-workers within each one of us.
-
-The woods are full of lessons never to be learned any place else.
-Insensibly are we, in this vast big intelligent life of the forest, led
-on to meditate about the things we see. I often wish not only that I
-could place myself at certain times in those solitary places by edge of
-pond, deep in forest, on the hillside, following the trail, but also
-that I might send a friend or two to the healing which can be found in
-the wilderness. For example, the girls who find nothing but troubles and
-vexations in life, who groan if the conversation languishes, are likely
-to have some of their troubles slip away from them and their talk become
-more cheerful. Who can be in the woods, who can live in the great out of
-doors and not feel optimistic, at least hopeful and interested? To
-every girl inclined to be moody, often to suffer from the conviction
-that living is difficult and perhaps not worth while, I commend camp
-life. Activity, distraction are its powerful and wholesome remedies for
-melancholy. In that life one is obliged to work mind and body much as
-the beavers work, one’s attention is held to something every minute. The
-whole current of our thoughts has been changed and for the time being we
-are distracted from the old bruised ways of thinking. The very
-alteration that comes with wood life gives us a chance to think rightly.
-Who can be troubled or bored or bad tempered and follow the trail? Who
-can be indifferent and be conscious of the energy and intelligence of
-beaver and squirrel, of rabbit and bird, of deer and moose? Soon the
-whole misery-breeding brood of cares, of doubts, of perplexities that
-existed before we left our home drop away from us. We can use the
-influence of this vast sane life of the wilderness for ourselves and by
-its strength make good.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-FITTING UP THE CAMP FOR USE
-
-
-Any girl who has crossed the ocean knows how impossible, the first time
-she entered her little white cabin, that bit of space looked as a place
-in which to sleep and to spend part of her time. There seemed to be no
-room in it for anything; it was difficult to turn around in, there were
-so few hooks on which to hang things, and the berth--dear me, that
-berth! So her thoughts ran. Yet gradually, as she learned the ropes, she
-was able to make it homelike. With experience she learned that the more
-bags she had in which to put things, the easier it was to keep this
-little stateroom in order. The next time she took with her every
-conceivable sort of bag for every conceivable sort of object. Also she
-had learned that the more she could do without unnecessary things in her
-cabin and steamer trunk, the more comfort was hers to enjoy. By the time
-she had crossed the ocean often, she had learned the art of having
-little but all that she needed with her--the art of making herself
-comfortable in a stateroom.
-
-Even so is there an art in learning how to camp, a happy art of which
-there is always something left to learn. The oldest campers never get
-beyond the point where they can make a slight improvement in their kit
-or their methods. In the end you will work out your own salvation for
-the kind of camping you wish to do. It is my intention to point out to
-you only what might be called the ground plan of fitting up a camp for
-use. Those little individual adaptations which every one of us makes,
-increasing familiarity with camp life will help you to make for
-yourselves.
-
-First, last, and always, when making out your camp lists, revise them
-carefully with the idea of cutting out everything unnecessary. All
-besides what you actually need will be clutter. The best way to do is to
-make out your lists, putting down everything that comes to you. Then go
-over them by yourselves and a second time with some one else. Your check
-lists for camp are important and should always be conscientiously made
-out, with nothing left to chance, nothing done hit or miss.
-
-If you are to furnish a camp, remember that your packing boxes can do
-great work in helping to set you up in your new home. In rough camping
-such boxes do well for dressers, washstands and, with a little
-carpentry, also for clothes presses. A piece of enameled cloth on the
-top of the one to be used as a washstand, and a towel or white curtain
-strung on a string in front of it, behind which you can put dirty
-clothes, make a thoroughly satisfactory article of furniture. In camp
-there is no need to think about elegance. Fitness and usefulness are all
-the girl need ever consider. It is astonishing how much beauty your
-homely cabin and white tent will acquire--a beauty all their own.
-
-For tent camping the usual camp cot bed is probably most satisfactory,
-for it is light and readily carried. If you are on the march and
-carrying at the most a tent fly for protection, you will, of course,
-sleep on bough beds or browse beds. Small, cut saplings, well trimmed,
-make good springs for beds. Any guide can help you to make the beds, and
-you would better be about it early, for it takes a good three-quarters
-of an hour to make a comfortable bough bed. Perhaps a few suggestions
-will not come amiss. You will, of course, have both good hunting knives,
-worn in a leather sheath on a leather belt, and belt-sheath hatchets.
-With the hatchet cut down a stout little balsam tree. From this break
-the tips from the big branches, having them about one foot in length.
-These foot-length stems make good bed springs and are the only bed
-springs you will have on a balsam couch unless you provide the spring
-yourself because of some green worm who is industriously measuring off
-the length of your nose, no doubt in amazement that there should be
-anything so extraordinarily long in the world. However, he is a harmless
-little chap, and the balsam tree having treated him very kindly, he will
-be greatly surprised at any other kind of entertainment which he may
-receive from you. Now, having got your “feathers,” select a smooth piece
-of ground with a slight slope toward the foot. Press the stems of the
-feathers into the earth, laying them tier after tier as you have seen a
-roof shingled, until your bed is wide enough, long enough, and soft
-enough to give you a good and sweet-scented night of sleep upon it.
-Lay a fair-sized log along each side and across the foot. This balsam
-bough bed can be made up as often as you wish with fresh feathers. Place
-one blanket on top and it is ready for your use. If you have got pitch
-on your hands in doing this, rub them with a little butter or lard and
-it will come off.
-
-[Illustration: DR. CARRINGTON’S SLEEPING BAG.]
-
-[Illustration: “KENWOOD” SLEEPING BAG.]
-
-[Illustration: RUSTIC CAMP COT.]
-
-There is still an easier bed to make. A bag of stout bed ticking, filled
-with leaves and grass, forms an excellent mattress and has the virtue of
-being portable, for the bag can always be emptied, folded up, packed,
-and refilled at the next camp ground. A thin rubber blanket or poncho
-laid over this makes it an absolutely dry bed at all times. If you are
-to camp in a log cabin, probably the most comfortable bed for you to
-plan is a spring, bought at the nearest village, and nailed onto log
-posts a foot and a half high. With your ticking mattress filled with
-straw, your day lived in the great out of doors, no one will need to
-wish you pleasant slumber.
-
-It is well to have a good supply of tarlatan on hand. This is finer than
-mosquito netting and therefore more impervious to stinging insects. If
-you camp in June, or the first week or so in July, you are likely in
-many parts of the country to find black flies, mosquitoes, and midges to
-battle against. There should be enough tarlatan to use over the camp bed
-and also enough to cover completely a hat with a brim and to fall down
-about the neck, where it can be tied under the collar. A more expensive
-head-net of black silk Brussels net can be made. This costs a good deal
-more, but the great advantage of it is, that the black does not alter
-the colors of the world out upon which one looks. Don’t make any mistake
-about the importance of some kind of netting and fly dope, or “bug
-juice,” as the antidotes for insect bites are sometimes called. There
-are various kinds of fly dope, any one of which is likely to prove
-useful. There is an excellent recipe for the making of your own fly dope
-in Breck’s “Way of the Woods,” which I give here.[6] A tiny vial of
-ammonia will also prove useful. One drop on a bite will often stop
-further poisoning from an insect sting. Inquiries should always be made
-beforehand whether one is likely to encounter black flies and midges.
-Those who have met them once are not likely to wish to have a second
-unprotected meeting. They are the pests of the woods and the wilderness.
-
- [6] “Breck’s Dope:
- Pine tar 3 oz.
- Olive oil 2 “
- Oil pennyroyal 1 “
- Citronella 1 “
- Creosote 1 “
- Camphor (pulverized) 1 “
- Large tube carbolated vaseline.
-
-Heat the tar and oil and add the other ingredients; simmer over slow
-fire until well mixed. The tar may be omitted if disliked.”
-
-I will give, just as they occur to me, a few other articles which will
-be useful in the camp life: a small cake of camphor to break over things
-in the knapsack and keep off crawlers; a small emergency box containing
-surgeon’s plaster and the usual things; vaseline, witch hazel; jack
-knife; tool kit; a map of the region in which you are camping and a
-diary in which to take notes. To these might be added sewing articles, a
-sleeping bag if you care to use one, and a folding brown duck waterpail.
-The catalog from any sporting goods place will suggest a thousand other
-articles which you may care to have.
-
-With a few planks to saw up into lengths, and a few white birch
-saplings, a most attractive camp dinner table can be made. Over this a
-piece of white oilcloth should be laid and kept clean by the use of a
-little sapolio. It is best not to buy an expensive stove for the cabin.
-A second-hand kitchen range, which can be purchased for a few dollars,
-will do quite well for the cooking cabin or shack, and an open Franklin
-stove for the living cabin. If one is going to camp in tents and wants a
-stove in one of them, it will be necessary to buy a regular tent stove.
-Anything else would not be safe.
-
-As far as actual furniture is concerned, except for camp stools or
-benches and camp chairs, if you wish to be very elegant, the camp is now
-furnished. But there are still to be considered the necessary utensils
-for cooking and other purposes. I will enumerate them again just as they
-occur to me, and not necessarily in the order of their importance:
-kerosene oil can, molasses jug, pails, a tin baker, a teapot, tin and
-earthen dishes, tin and earthen cups, basins for washing, pans for
-baking and for milk, dishpans, dishmop, double boiler, broiler, knives,
-forks, teaspoons, tablespoons, mixing spoons, pepper box, salt shaker,
-nutmeg grater, flour sifter, can opener, frying pans--one with a long
-handle for use in cooking over open fires--butcher knife, bread knife,
-lantern, bucket, egg beater, potato masher, rolling pin, axe, hatchet,
-nails, hammer, toilet paper, woolen blankets, rubber blankets, crash for
-dish towels, yellow soap, some wire, twine, tacks, and a small fireless
-cooker if you know how to use one. A good fireless cooker can be built
-on the premises.
-
-Possessed of these articles, any one who knows anything about the woods
-can be most comfortable. They can, of course, be added to indefinitely.
-One may make camp life as expensive and complicated as one pleases. But
-to do that seems a pity, for it is against the very good and spirit of
-the wilderness life. The wood life and all its new and invigorating
-experience should take us back to nature. It is for that we go into the
-wilderness and not to bring with us the luxuries of civilization. Part
-of the wholesomeness of camp life lies in learning to do without, in the
-fine simplicity which we are obliged to practice there. Common sense is
-the law of the wilderness life, and let us be sure that we follow that
-law.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE POCKETBOOK
-
-
-One of the objects of some girls on their camping expeditions is to keep
-the trip from becoming too expensive. The maximum of value must be got
-from the minimum of pence. And I think that is as it should be, for,
-with economy, the life is kept nearer a simple ideal, is made more
-active and more wholesome. All sorts and conditions of camping have been
-my lot, the five-dollar-a-day camping in a log cabin (?) equipped with
-running water and a porcelain tub, and the kind of camping one does
-under a fly with the rain and sunshine and wind driving in at their
-pleasure. Although I do not advise the latter as far as health results
-are concerned, given that the party is in fair condition they will be
-none the worse for the experiment.
-
-Camping for a party of four or five should usually cost something
-between eight dollars and eighteen dollars apiece per week. This rate
-includes a guide and a good deal of service, a rowboat, a canoe, and no
-care about food. But the longer I camp the more I am of the opinion that
-the simpler and more independent the life is, the greater health and
-pleasure it will bring. It has been said about camping, “Much for
-little: much health, much good fellowship and good temper, much
-enjoyment of beauty--and all for little money and, rightly judged, for
-no trouble at all.”
-
-[Illustration: “TANALITE” WATERPROOF WALL TENT.]
-
-[Illustration: TOILET TENT.]
-
-[Illustration: KHAKI STANDARD ARMY DUCK WALL TENT.]
-
-[Illustration: TENT STOVE-PIPE HOLE.]
-
-[Illustration: FRAZER CANOE TENT.]
-
-[Illustration: WATERPROOF DINING FLYS FOR WALL TENT.]
-
-The girl who is the right sort gets more fun out of camp life when she
-does at least part of the work herself. Let her economize and use her
-own ingenuity and do the work. Any group of three or four girls can
-provide all the necessary “grub” for themselves at $3 a week per
-capita. This sum does not include rental or purchase of tent. A good
-tent, 7 × 7, big enough for two at a pinch, can be bought complete (this
-does not include fly) for about $7. You can get tents second-hand often
-for a song, or as a loan, or you can rent your tent for 10 cents a day.
-Get at least a few numbers of one or several of the following sporting
-magazines: _Outing_, _Country Life in America_, _Forest and Stream_,
-_Field and Stream_, _Recreation_, _Rod and Gun in Canada_. Look in the
-advertisement pages of these magazines for the names of sporting goods
-houses and send for catalogs. Then choose your style of tent. The
-different kinds of tents are legion. The Kenyon Take-Down House, too, is
-a capital camp home. It is “skeet”-proof and fly-proof. Send to Michigan
-for a catalog, and then go like the classic turtle with your shell on
-your back. In groups of four or more, the $10 laid by for a vacation
-should bring two holiday weeks--possibly a day or so over; $15, three
-weeks and a bit over, and $20 a whole glorious month. Expensive camping
-may be the “style” in certain localities, but it is not necessarily the
-“fun.”
-
-For eight weeks this past summer my family of two members camped with
-two servants. In addition we had the occasional services of a man who
-did all the heavy work. There was not enough for the servants to do in
-the cottage and log cabin of our establishment. They were discontented,
-faultfinding, and wholly out of the spirit of camp life. All of the day
-that their tone of voice reached was helplessly ruined. The only way to
-keep the camp joy and pleasure was to keep out of their way. On our camp
-table we had silver, embroidered linen cloths, the same food, in almost
-the same variety, that we had it at home, and the same amount of
-service. All I can say is that it was a perfect nuisance--as perfectly
-planned and executed a nuisance as one could well conceive. Everywhere
-these servants looked they found things which did not suit them. What I
-think they wished was a modest twenty-thousand-dollar cottage in that
-great and wonderful wilderness.
-
-[Illustration: FRAME FOR BOUGH LEAN-TO.]
-
-[Illustration: BOUGH LEAN-TO.]
-
-In the autumn I camped alone for two weeks in a log cabin. I say alone.
-I was not alone, for I had three friends with me--a collie puppy, a
-blind fawn, and a year-old cat. They were the best of companions--for
-better I could not have asked. I never heard a word of faultfinding, and
-I was witness to a great deal of joy. It is a curious fact about camp
-life that if a girl has weak places in her character, if she is selfish
-or peevish or faultfinding or untidy, these weaknesses will all come
-out. But my four-footed friends were good nature itself, young, growing,
-happy, contented. And they had excellent appetites. I tell you this
-because I want you to see how much of an item their food was in the
-expenses I shall enumerate. This might be called a little intimate
-history of at least one camp pocketbook. The fawn had a quart of milk a
-day and much lettuce, together with the kind of food which deer live
-upon: leaves, grass, clover, ferns. I had to pay for her bedding of hay.
-The puppy and the cat shared another quart of milk between them. The cat
-hunted by night, but the puppy was fed entirely by hand on bread, milk,
-an occasional egg, cereals, and vegetables. My own fare consisted of all
-the bread and butter I wished, cocoa, condensed milk, bananas, apples,
-eggs, potatoes, beans, nuts, raisins, cauliflower, chocolate, and a few
-other articles. And there was, too, the denatured alcohol to be paid
-for--a heavy item, for I used only a chafing dish and a small spirit
-lamp. The milk was eight cents a quart on account of the carriage, the
-butter was thirty-eight cents a pound, the eggs twenty-five cents a
-dozen. Except for cutting up and splitting the wood for my open Franklin
-stove, the wood cost me nothing. But I paid a man a dollar for half a
-day’s work. We weren’t seven, but we were four in that camp community.
-How much do you think the food for all averaged per week in those two
-weeks? Three dollars a week, and we had all that we wanted and more,
-too.
-
-When girls plan carefully and intelligently, when they exercise good
-sense in the cooking and care of food, there is no reason why, with a
-party of four or five girls, from three dollars to four dollars apiece
-per week should not cover all living, exclusive, of course, of the
-traveling expenses. And the camping can be done for less. I commend
-these expense items to all Vacation Bureaus and to Camp Fire Girls.
-
-In the two weeks I camped alone I was very busy with my writing. To this
-I was obliged to give most of the daylight. Besides this, I had much
-business correspondence to attend to. It takes time to care properly for
-animals, and my pets had not only to be fed, but also to be brushed and
-generally cared for. I planned to spend some time every day with the
-blind fawn so that I might amuse her. I did all these things, took care
-of my little cabin, had time for a walk every afternoon, and went to bed
-when the birds did, to get up the next morning at five o’clock. Had I
-been able to give my thought entirely to the food question, I am certain
-that the expense of these items might have been made even less.
-
-Some girls will think this is getting back to the simple life with a
-vengeance. So it was but I can assure you that those two weeks were most
-happy and profitable in every way--far better than the over-served,
-over-fed months which had preceded them. For any girl who needs to
-forget how superficial to the real needs of life the luxuries are; for
-any girl who is lazy in household ways; for any girl who needs character
-building; for any girl who is in need of deep breathing and the pines;
-for any girl who wants more active life than she gets in her own home;
-for any girl who is of an experimental or adventurous turn of mind; for
-any girl who needs to be drawn away from her books; for any girl who
-wants to form new friendships in a big, sane, and beautiful world where
-the greetings are all friendly; for any girl--for every girl--who wants
-much for little; the log cabin, the tent, the shack in the wilderness,
-by pond or lake, upon the hillsides or in the valleys, will prove a “joy
-forever.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE CAMP DOG
-
-
-When I began to go into the wilderness to camp, I was much more
-credulous than I am now. Everywhere I went in the woods I saw an
-implement which looked like a cross between a pickaxe with a long handle
-and the largest pair of tweezers ever seen. This was always lying up
-against something as if just ready for use, much as one sees an axe
-resting against a cabin wall or on a chopping block. I couldn’t make out
-what this could be used for. Finally, curiosity getting the better of me
-and no opportunity for seeing it used offering itself, I asked.
-
-“Oh, that,” answered the guide with a twinkle in his eye, “that is the
-camp dog.”
-
-“How nice!” I thought. “Why is it called camp dog?”
-
-“Well, you see it does most of the work for us and being so faithful and
-handy we’ve just got naturally into the way of calling it a camp dog.”
-
-I was still more impressed when he gave me then and there several
-illustrations of its usefulness. But the end of the tale of the camp dog
-is not yet,--in fact it was a very long tale for me, the end of which
-you shall have in good season.
-
-Generally speaking it may be said that it is the guide and not this
-implement which is the camp dog. It is he who is faithful, always handy,
-always willing. And it is he who is more imposed upon than any other
-member of the camp community. The guide is a responsible person,--_the_
-responsible person. He is usually registered and his pay is always good.
-He needs every dollar he gets and every bit of authority, too, for he
-works hard and often for groups of people who are thorough in only one
-respect and that is in their irresponsibility. The guide has to be sure
-that fires are kindled in the right places and that they are really out
-when they should be; he must keep his party from foolhardy acts of any
-kind; he must be sure that they have a good time and certain that they
-are not overtaxed; if it comes off cold or is cold, he must keep them
-warm; he must see, despite every vicissitude, that they are enjoying
-themselves; he must do the cooking--and he must be a good cook,--boil
-the coffee, wash the dishes, pitch and strike the tents; he must pilot
-the members of the party to the best places for fishing, often bait
-their hooks or teach them how to bait, dig their worms; and give their
-first lessons in casting a fly; must instruct them in all necessary wood
-craft and keep them from shooting wildly; he must see that the game laws
-of the state are observed, also the fire laws; if anything should
-happen to a member of his party, he will, in all likelihood, be held
-responsible for it; and finally, always and all the time, no matter how
-he himself feels, he must be agreeable, obliging, useful.
-
-Now if the man who has all these burdens to bear is not a camp dog, I
-should like to know what he is? To those of us who have been into the
-woods year after year, it is a sort of boundless irritation to see some
-members of the camping party sitting about idle while the guide does the
-work. Part of the value of camp life is its activity, its activities.
-Another part of its good is the skill which comes from learning to be
-useful in the woods. The life out-of-doors should be a constant training
-in manual work,--call it wood work if you wish. I am reminded of a story
-told in “Vanity Fair” about a lazy, indifferent student who was in the
-class of a famous physicist. The freshman sprawled in the rear seat and
-was sleeping or was about to go to sleep.
-
-“Mr. Fraser,” said the physicist sharply, “you may recite.”
-
-Fraser opened his eyes but he did not change his somnolent pose.
-
-“Mr. Fraser, what is work?”
-
-“Everything is work.”
-
-“What, everything is work?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Then I take it you would like the class to believe that this desk is
-work?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” wearily, “wood work.”
-
-From the moment that school of the woods is entered every girl has her
-wood work cut out for her, if she is taking camping in the right spirit.
-It is all team play in the wilderness, or if it is not, it is a rather
-poor game. Helpfulness is one of the first rules and every camper should
-be willing to help the guide. Usually the guides are a fine set of self
-respecting, dignified, resourceful men. And I think it might be said
-with considerable truthfulness that when they are not what they ought to
-be, it is nine times out of ten due to the undesirable influence of the
-parties they have worked for. Your guide is your equal in most respects
-and your superior in others. He should be met on a footing of equality.
-I use this word advisedly and I do _not_ mean familiarity. Well-bred
-girls do not meet anyone, whether in the wilderness or in civilization,
-on this footing immediately. The party should be willing and glad to
-help the guide in every possible way. That does not signify doing his
-work for him but it does indicate helping him.
-
-A routine of some sort should be adopted and is one of the best ways to
-assist him. One girl should be on duty at one time and another at
-another and all in regular rotation. No camp life can go on
-successfully without some law and order of this sort. For it is just as
-necessary for the smooth running of household wheels in the log cabin as
-it is in the city home. Whoever occupies the guide’s position, that is
-the one who is chiefly responsible for everything, should be ably helped
-by the whole party but not by the whole party at the same time. Evolve a
-system for the particular conditions of the camp life in which you find
-yourself and stick to it. Let one girl or one set of girls help one day
-and another the next. Let the girl be detailed to do one kind of work
-one day and another another. This system, with proper rotation, means
-that nobody gets tired of her work. A girl cannot be too self-reliant if
-she is ever to be wise in the way of the woods. There is no need for
-discouragement if everything is not learned at once, for camping is like
-skating and is an art to be learned only through many tumbles and
-mistakes. Be prepared to take it and yourself lightly--in short, to
-laugh readily over the mistakes made in the art of living in the woods.
-
-Now we have come to the very tip of the tail of the camp dog. You will
-be interested to know how an old timer was obliged to laugh at herself.
-I am ashamed to tell you how recently this occurred. I was in the
-northernmost wilderness of the state of Maine, and near a big lumber
-camp, when I saw a “camp dog” lying on the ground, its long axe handle
-shining from use, its pickaxe blade a bright steel color, and the tooth
-at the back looking as if it had been often used. I was delighted.
-
-“Oh,” I said to my guide, “look at that camp dog lying there!”
-
-He was particularly attentive to my pronunciation, for he said I
-pronounced some words, such as “girl,” as he had never heard them
-pronounced before. I saw a curious expression pass across his face.
-
-“What did you say that was?” he asked.
-
-“Why, that camp dog lying there.”
-
-“Camp dog!”
-
-Then he began to laugh and he kept right on until the woods echoed with
-his roars.
-
-“Well,” he said finally, wiping away the tears, “if that doesn’t beat
-everything! That isn’t a camp dog, that’s a cant dog,--you know what you
-cant logs and heavy things over with, roll ’em over and pry ’em up with
-when you couldn’t do it any other way. My grief, to think of your
-calling that a camp dog all these years!”
-
-And he went off into another guffaw.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-THE OUTDOOR TRAINING SCHOOL
-
-
-Many girls think of outdoor life as of something to be enjoyed if they
-have plenty of time. As a matter of course they take their daily bath.
-But the outdoor exercise comes as an accessory. It is still
-unfortunately true that boys more than girls take camp life for granted.
-Yet girls, and students particularly, should realize that it is economy
-of time to be out of doors. This they need both for their work and for
-their health. Outdoor exercise, with its bath of fresh air and the
-natural bath of freshly circulating blood it brings with it, its
-training school for the whole girl, is as essential as the tub or sponge
-bath. But how many of us think of it in that way?
-
-To be outdoors is to have the nerves keyed to the proper pitch. If fresh
-air is not a tonic to the nerves, then why is it that moodiness and
-depression fall away as we walk or row or lie under the trees, and we
-become saner and more serene? When one is depressed the best thing to do
-is to go out of doors. Altogether aside from any formal wisdom of book
-or student or teacher, there is wisdom with nature. _If the head is
-tired, go out of doors! If the body is fagged, go out of doors! If the
-heart is troubled, go out of doors!_ The life out there, as no life
-indoors can, will make for health, for charity, for bigness. Petty
-things fall away, and with nature equanimity and poise are found again.
-It isn’t necessary to bother someone about woes real or imaginary. All
-that is necessary is to get out among the trees and flowers, the sky and
-clouds, the joyous birds and little creatures of field and wood, and
-hear what they have to say. There will be no complaining among them,
-even about very real difficulties.
-
-A great deal is heard concerning hygiene in these days, the study of it,
-the practice of it. The biggest university of hygiene in the world is
-not within houses but outside, up that hillside where the trees are
-blowing, in the doorway of our tent, on the lawn in front of the house,
-out on the lake, even on a city house-top, and, last resort if
-necessary, by an open window. One reason why many people are concerned
-about this question of hygiene is because they know that not only are
-human beings happier when they are well and strong, but also because a
-healthy person is, nine times out of ten, more moral than one who is
-sick or sickly. Ill health means offense of some kind, often one’s own,
-against the laws of nature or society. We have, too, to pay for one
-another’s faults. But life lived on sound physical principles, with
-plenty of sunshine, cold water, exercise, wind, rain, simple food and
-sensible clothing, is not likely to be sickly, useless or burdensome.
-
-[Illustration: BITTERN]
-
-[Illustration: LOON]
-
-[Illustration: PARTRIDGE]
-
-[Illustration: RED-BREASTED MERGANSER]
-
-[Illustration: WOODCOCK]
-
-[Illustration: MALLARD]
-
-The body is not a mechanism to be disregarded, but an exquisitely made
-machine to be exquisitely cared for. Nobody would trust an engineer to
-run an engine he knows nothing about. Yet most of us are running our
-engines without any knowledge of the machinery. Why should we excuse
-ourselves for lack of knowledge and care when, for the same reasons a
-chauffeur, for example, would be immediately dismissed? How many of us
-know that the nerves are more or less dependent upon the muscles for
-their tone? How many of us realize how important it is to keep in
-perfect muscular condition? We sit hour after hour in our chairs, all
-our muscles relaxed, bending over books, and begrudge one hour--it ought
-to be three or four!--out of doors. The person who can run furthest
-and swiftest is the one with the strongest heart. The person who can
-work longest and to the greatest advantage is the one who has kept his
-bodily health.... _It may be laid down as an absolute rule that any
-individual can do more and better work when he is well than when he is
-not in good physical condition._ Ceaseless activity is the law of nature
-and the body that is resolutely active does not grow old as rapidly as
-the one that is physically indolent.
-
-Much out-of-door life, much camping, keep one young in heart, too. It
-isn’t possible to grow old or sophisticated among such a wealth of
-joyous, wholesome friendships as may be found in nature, where no
-unclean word is ever heard and where no unfriendliness, no false pride,
-no jealousy can exist. A great English poet, William Wordsworth, has
-told us more of the shaping power of nature, its quickening spirit, its
-power of restoration, than any other poet. It would be well for every
-girl to take that wonderful poem “Tintern Abbey” out of doors and read
-it there. Wordsworth, still a very young man when he wrote it, tells how
-he loved the Welsh landscape and the tranquil restoration it had brought
-him
-
- “’mid the din
- Of towns and cities.”
-
-A higher gift he acknowledges, too, when through the harmony and joy of
-nature he had been led to see deeply “into the life of things.”
-
-There is something the matter with a girl who hasn’t an appetite, as
-sharp as hunger, to escape from her books and camp out of doors. If
-outdoor life cannot engross her wholly at times, banishing all thoughts
-of work, then she should make an effort to forget books and everything
-connected with them for a while. A young girl ought to be skillful in
-all sorts of outdoor accomplishments, rowing, swimming, riding and
-driving if possible, canoeing, skating, sailing a boat, fishing,
-hunting, mountain climbing.
-
-Fortunately there is more of the play-spirit connected with outdoor life
-than there used to be. Both school and college have fostered this
-wholesome attitude. If a girl doesn’t like active sports she should
-cultivate a love for them. You can always trust a person who is
-accomplished in physical ways, for anyone who has led an intelligent
-out-of-door life is more self-reliant. Her faculty for doing things, her
-inventiveness, her poise, her “nerve” are all strengthened. I recall an
-instance of this “faculty” and inventiveness. We were on a wild Maine
-lake when an accident happened to the canoe, a necessity to our return,
-for we were far away from all sources of help. Apparently there was
-nothing with which to mend it. But our Indian guide found there
-everything he needed ready for his use. He scraped gum off a tree, he
-cut a piece of bark, and then he rummaged about until he discovered an
-old wire. With these things he securely mended a big hole. Oftentimes it
-seems as if the very appliances with which city children are provided
-tend to make them incapable.
-
-[Illustration: YELLOWBIRD]
-
-[Illustration: FIELD SPARROW]
-
-[Illustration: SONG SPARROW]
-
-[Illustration: GOLDEN-CROWNED THRUSH]
-
-[Illustration: CHIPPING SPARROW]
-
-[Illustration: WOOD THRUSH]
-
-[Illustration: HERMIT THRUSH]
-
-[Illustration: SWAINSON’S THRUSH]
-
-[Illustration: WILSON’S THRUSH]
-
-[Illustration: PHŒBE BIRD]
-
-[Illustration: SCARLET TANAGER]
-
-[Illustration: MARYLAND YELLOWTHROAT]
-
-[Illustration: BLUEBIRD]
-
-[Illustration: WREN]
-
-[Illustration: BLUE JAY]
-
-[Illustration: CHICKADEE]
-
-[Illustration: RUBYTHROAT]
-
-[Illustration: WHIP-POOR-WILL]
-
-[Illustration: NIGHT HAWK]
-
-[Illustration: SCREECH OWL]
-
-The girl who lives out of doors acquires unlimited resourcefulness.
-Outdoor life quickens and sharpens the perception. And for the girl to
-have her power of observation sharpened is worth a great deal. The
-capacity for accurate and quick observation education from books does
-not always develop. One must go back to nature for that, one must live
-out in the woods and fields all one can, one must be able to tell the
-scent of honeysuckle from the scent of the rose, and know the fragrance
-of milkweed even before that homely weed is seen, and know spruce,
-balsam and white pine even as one knows a friend. Eyes must be able to
-detect the differences not only in colors and shapes of birds, but in
-their flight, and ears know every song of wood and field. Then the
-services of beauty, its music, its color, its form, will be always about
-us and nature’s health and strength and beauty become our own, not only
-her gaiety and “vital feelings of delight,” but also her restraint upon
-weakness, and her kindling to the highest life--the life that is
-spiritual.
-
-[Illustration: BLACK SPRUCE]
-
-[Illustration: BALSAM FIR]
-
-[Illustration: WHITE PINE]
-
-[Illustration: BLACK OAK]
-
-[Illustration: BEECH]
-
-[Illustration: LARCH]
-
-[Illustration: BIRCHES]
-
-[Illustration: CHESTNUT]
-
-[Illustration: HORSE CHESTNUT]
-
-[Illustration: MOUNTAIN MAPLE]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE CAMP HABIT
-
-
-If there were no such thing as habit, life would be nothing but a
-perpetual beginning and recommencing over and over again. All that we do
-or think marks us with its imprint, leaving behind it a tendency--a
-tendency towards repetition is the beginning of habit, and because of it
-we can get the camp habit just as we can get any other habit. The
-instinct to repeat our camping out of doors gradually grows stronger. At
-last, scarcely conscious of the existence of the demand, we have come to
-feel that we cannot pass our holiday in any other way. The first camping
-experience stands out in bold relief because it is new. As we live into
-it, its first impressions are lost. And it is at this moment, if we are
-made of the right stuff and have in us the right longings and needs,
-that we begin to have the camp habit.
-
-Just as with people, maybe we scarcely realize how much it means to us.
-But let us stop to think about it, let us give this good camp habit a
-full opportunity if we can in our lives. Already the camp habit has
-become a need, almost an imperious demand. We feel that once in so often
-it must be satisfied and in the splendid grip of this good habit we make
-way for it. Never let us become dull to any of its values. Never let us
-forget, however shot with black and white it may be, even gray at times,
-the difficulties of camping may make life seem--never let us forget the
-treasures that it pours in upon us and the ways in which the camp habit
-serves us.
-
-It is a sad and a great truth which perhaps women and girls have not yet
-fully realized, that the whole manner of our body, of our souls is
-controlled by the goodness, or the badness of our habits, our moral
-character, our physical temperament. There is a sort of natural
-medicine, raising what is not good inevitably up to what is better. That
-is what the camp habit does for us, raising what is not healthy, not
-strong, not sane, not joyous, not self-reliant up to what is strong,
-healthy, joyous and full of self-control. Is not this alone sufficient
-reason for giving the camp habit once in so often full sway in our
-lives? What better could we do than, in order to re-establish ourselves,
-to claim again the wise big relationships of out-of-doors and a thousand
-and one little and big friends whom we can find there?
-
-Bad habits are thieves, for they take away our energies, our abilities,
-our joys. And the indoor habit is a thief. It shortens life, it takes
-away from health, it saps energies, it dilutes joys, it makes foggy
-heads and punky morals. The sane girl will get out of doors every
-opportunity instead of spending her time in a hot room, playing cards,
-or eating stuff that is not fit to put into the human stomach or
-flirting with boys, who if they are the right sort of boys, would much
-prefer, too, to be out of doors. Good habits, like this camp habit are
-benefactors, great philanthropists; they strengthen us and they give us
-more energy. They increase our ability, they multiply our joys compound
-interest-wise. Good habits are careful accountants and every day or
-every year as it may be, they put the interest of strength, of
-intelligence, of joy, in our hands to be used as we think best. The camp
-habit wisely used, obliges us to open our eyes and see life more truly.
-It obliges us to lift our own weight, take our part in things, that part
-may be washing dishes or it may be turning griddle cakes,--it forces us
-to know ourselves better and it gives us more power to control
-ourselves. The camp habit--get it quickly if you haven’t it
-already--assures us of good health and success where, for example, the
-indoor habit has brought us nothing but ill health and failure. It is a
-habit worth while getting, isn’t it?
-
-A good many of us know ourselves, such as we are, pretty well and we
-feel that we do not want to know ourselves any better. Things are bad
-enough as they are. Yet if we can’t have a more intimate knowledge of
-ourselves, if we don’t arrange our lives better, if we don’t plan for
-the future more carefully, what are our lives likely to be like when the
-curtain goes down? How are we ever going to take the proverbial ounce of
-prevention if we are not certain to a fraction what it is we must
-prevent? Camp is a splendid opportunity to think a little about those
-things of which we have been afraid to think. It is a good opportunity
-to meditate, a friendly world to which to go to know ourselves better.
-It is an old saying that the first step towards the recovery of health
-is to know yourself ill. In that great out-of-door world which our
-American camp life represents it is easier to find ourselves morally
-than it is indoors, we get more help for one thing. It is almost an
-instinct in great trouble or bewilderment or difficulty to escape into
-the out-of-door world, to get back to earth and to ask from the great
-mother those counsels we hear dimly or indifferently indoors.
-
-Wisdom will not be found in one camp holiday or in fifty or in a
-lifetime even. But it is rather strange, isn’t it, that the person whom
-we know least is so frequently ourselves? We know very well that the
-most learned man or woman is not the one whose head is stuffed with
-information, is not necessarily the conspicuous or famous man or woman,
-but is, rather, the human being who knows himself. And this human being
-may be not our teacher, but our janitor or a nurse who takes care of
-the baby or that fellow who seems so simple, the guide who has our
-camping trip in charge. Indeed, there is scarcely a class of men who
-seem in better control of themselves and who have a better working
-knowledge of themselves and others than the highest type of guide. All
-the associations of that great out-of-door life, its demands, its
-privations, its sudden needs, its great silence, its dumb creatures, its
-wonderful beauty, have taught the man of the woods a wisdom no school,
-no university, can offer merely through its curriculum. We can’t realize
-too early how well worth while that wisdom is for every girl to have.
-Not a thing of book learning, but a power that makes one truthful with
-oneself, eager to acknowledge what is bad and to change it. Frank,
-courageous, tried in commonplace wisdom, and with a knowledge of other
-human beings.
-
-There is one kind of idea--and it is worth while meditating in the woods
-on the leverage power of even one very little idea--that can always be
-found out of doors. I mean a healthful idea, the kind of thought that
-makes us stand straighter, that strengthens the muscles of our backbone,
-that makes us act as if we were what we wish to be. There is no other
-force in the world that can so readily straighten out a crooked boy or a
-crooked girl as this same Dr. Dame Nature.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-OTHER CLEANLINESS
-
-
-Clean? Of course, we all know what cleanliness means. It is not possible
-to drive, to ride in a trolley, to go on a train without being impressed
-with at least the advertising energy that is put into trying to get or
-keep the world clean. Dear me, there are the ever-present, cheerful Gold
-Dust Twins, well up with the times, you may believe, and nowadays taking
-to aviation. Their aeroplanes may not be very large, but they are clean
-as gold dust can make them, and the twins, without any of the friction
-that comes from dirt, are flying at last. What’s more, intrepid as some
-old Forty-Niner, they are penetrating the camper’s wilderness. Most of
-us do not want to be twins, and we certainly do not want to be gold
-dusters or any other kind of dusters, yet we should miss these jolly
-little youngsters. And there are Sapolio and Sunny Monday advertisements
-and Pears’ soap--have you used it?--and a dozen other kinds and goodness
-knows what not besides.
-
-Yes, we Americans, and especially American women in the household, know
-what it is to make an effort in the midst of heated, dusty or uncared
-for streets to keep our houses and everything in them clean. In
-Pennsylvania you see the people scrubbing off white marble steps. In New
-England they turn the hose on the outside of their white farm houses. In
-the West they flood the side-walks to keep the dust and heat down. And
-our houses? Well, all houses are being built with bath tubs nowadays,
-even our camps, which is more than can be said for very good houses
-indeed in other countries than America. Some people think that camping
-is an excuse to be dirty. Often they are very nice people, too, but they
-keep a dirty camp. They don’t keep even themselves clean.
-
-But there is another kind of cleanliness, not superficial, not that of
-the skin, or of the clothes or of the cabin, about which we are coming
-to think more and more deeply. It is what might be called vital
-cleanliness, the cleanness of stomachs, of the intestines, of all the
-vital organs. We begin to realize the truth of what those most helpful
-of missionaries, the health culturists, are saying: One may be clean
-superficially, that is one may scrub enough and yet vitally be very far
-from clean. We know, although it is of the greatest assistance to keep
-the skin free and vigorous so that it is able to do its part of the
-house-cleaning work for our systems, that vital cleanliness, clean,
-strong, internal organs performing their work with the vigor of
-well-constructed engines, uninjured by foolish clothing, unharmed by
-impure food, keen for opportunity to grow and be vigorous--we know, I
-say that that cleanliness is more important than skin cleanliness.
-Indeed, without such deep-seated cleanliness it is impossible for the
-skin to be really clean.
-
-But clean how? I wonder whether we are clean in the way I mean. Yes, we
-are clean in our houses, perhaps in our camps, clean on the outsides of
-our bodies, clean probably, on the inside. Yet no one of these kinds of
-cleanliness is what I have in mind. Can any girl by the camp fire guess
-what it is? I will not say it is more important than household
-cleanliness, although it is so,--vastly more so. I will not say that it
-is more important than bodily cleanliness, external and internal, yet it
-is so,--vastly more so. I could almost say that it is more important
-than anything else in the world of human experience. Do you know what
-it is now? _It is cleanness of the mind, cleanness of the soul_, and of
-that kind of purity the great outdoor world is one indivisible whole.
-
-On this cleanliness of mind and soul all the vital activities of the day
-depend, all the growth, the gain, the development. It might be well said
-that the way we take up the sun into our bodies--and we could not live
-any length of time without some sun--depends upon the cleanness or
-uncleanness of this mind and soul of ours. What we shall eat, what we
-shall hear, what we shall see, what we shall look forward to, what we
-shall care for--all these things will be according to laws as inevitable
-as those governing the sun and moon and stars, valuable or worthless,
-vicious or sacred, as we feel them and we make them. We dip our fingers
-in pitch and pick up a book. What is the result? Any child could tell us
-that we ruin the book with our pitch-covered fingers. We dip our minds
-into filth, a nasty story, a perverted way of looking at things which in
-themselves are good and of God’s plan, or we actually commit some ugly
-act ourselves and then we go out into the presence of those things which
-are clean, the sunshine, the hills, the lakes, the woods, the white
-lives of others, the ideals which, it may be, have been ours. Do you
-suppose we feel or see that sunshine, or that we are aware any longer of
-the white lives of others, that our past ideals are evident to us when
-our hearts and minds are no longer clean? Do you suppose that there is
-anything in nature which comes home to us in quite the beautiful way it
-once did, the flowers, the birds, the song of the wind, the little
-creatures of the wood? Can they ever be entirely the same? No, by an
-inevitable law of compensations some of the fullness of our joy in these
-things is gone. If we want to be really happy it does not pay to think
-evil, to touch evil or to commit it.
-
-When our hands are dirty we know it, and if we have been careless about
-them we are ashamed. If people’s bodies or camps are not clean it is
-painfully easy to know that, too. But a dirty mind, who could ever tell
-anyway that we had one? Who could ever tell? I will tell you: _Every one
-knows it_, or perhaps, better, every one feels it. If we are not good,
-if our minds are not clean, our presence in some mysterious way
-proclaims that fact. If we have injured some one, if we have been
-foul-tongued, others will know it with no need for any one to tell them.
-Even the little rabbit we meet in the woods will not greet us in so
-friendly a way. _We need not think that because we are concealing a bad
-thought that it is therefore hidden._ No, indeed, it is screaming away
-like some ugly black crow on a spruce tip, and there is no one within
-hearing distance who, whether he wishes to or not, does not hear what
-it says.
-
-The mind has its plague spots even as the body, and one has to
-work--because of one’s environment or some inheritance which has made us
-not quite wholesome by nature, or because of friends whose feelings one
-would not injure, and yet who are not what they ought to be,--one has
-often to work to keep the mind clean. But as you would flee from the
-plague, run from a dirty story. Don’t let the camp life be spoiled by
-anything to be regretted! Do not let any one touch you with it, even
-with a word of it. Keep a thousand miles away if you can from folk who
-have an impure way of looking at life, and camp is a good place to get
-away from such people. Shut your minds against them. One is never called
-upon on the score of duty to have an unclean mind because others have
-it. And if through some misfortune, something that is unlovely,
-unclean, has been impressed upon you, fight valiantly not to think of
-it, to put it away from you. And never forget that to rule our spirits,
-to be in command of our minds, to have them wholesome and sweet and
-clean as a freshly swept log cabin, is greater than to win such
-victories as have come down in the records of history.
-
-I remember that when I was a child, I thought my heart was white and
-that every time I said or thought anything naughty, I got a black spot
-on its surface. I dare say that in the first place some dear old negro
-woman put this fable into my mind. And, dear me, some days it seemed to
-me that heart of mine was more spotted than any tiger lily that ever
-grew in any neglected garden. Perhaps it was foolish to think such a
-thing. I do not know, I only know that there were times when I was
-mighty careful of that white heart of mine,--wrapping it up in a pocket
-handkerchief would not have satisfied my eagerness to keep it clean.
-And what better could one wish than to go on one’s holiday, and on
-forever, with the white shining heart of a child?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-WOOD CULTURE AND CAMP HEALTH
-
-
-It is far better for the girl to be out in a wilderness world which
-demands all the attention of both heart and mind, than to be leading an
-idle or sedentary life at home. If there is one word which above all
-others expresses the life of the woods, it is the word WHOLESOME. It is
-a normal, active, “hard-pan” life which takes the softness not only out
-of the muscles, but also out of the thoughts and the feelings. It
-tightens up the tendons of our bodies and the even more wonderful
-tendons of the mind.
-
-Often, to paraphrase Guts Muths, a girl is weak because it does not
-occur to her that she can be strong. She fails to lay the foundations of
-health and strength which should be laid; she fails to make the most of
-the energy that she has; she fails to think of the future and how
-important in every way it is that she should be robust and full of an
-abounding vitality. It is a matter of the greatest importance to the
-world spiritually, morally, physically, that its girls should be strong.
-To be out of doors insures abundant well-being as nothing else can.
-The wilderness instinct, the instinct for camping and all its
-out-of-door life and sports, is the healthiest, sanest, and most
-compound-interest-paying investment a girl can make.
-
-But by an intelligent approach to this life, more can be put into it and
-therefore more can be taken out, than by some blindfolded dive into its
-mysteries. To know how to do a thing worth doing and to do it well, is
-both wise and economical. Some of the physical aspects of our life will
-give all the more value because of the payment of an added attention. A
-few simple rules for the physical side of camp life will do quite as
-much for the body as an orderly routine can do for the camp
-housekeeping.
-
-Simply because you are in camp, never do anything by eating or drinking
-or over-strain or folly of any sort, that is against the law of health.
-To break the laws of health is as much a sin in camp as out of it.
-
-Eat an abundance of simple, wholesome foods, using as much cereals,
-fruits, and vegetables as you can get. Don’t neglect the care of your
-teeth merely because you are in camp.
-
-Do not drink tea or coffee. Stimulants are unnatural and unwholesome; no
-girl and no woman should ever touch them. If you have begun to drink tea
-and coffee, camp is the place to give them up once and for all time. The
-sooner the better.
-
-If you can get a cool bath in stream or pond and a rub down with a rough
-towel, so much the better. Exercise both before and after the bath, and
-be sure, by rub down and exercise, to get into a good glow. The rub down
-is of especial importance, for it stimulates all the tiny surface veins,
-is gymnastics to the skin, and frees the pores of any poisonous
-accumulations which they may be holding. Drink a glass or two of pure
-water when you get up and the same between meals.
-
-Never wear anything tight in camp or elsewhere. Within the circle of the
-waist line are vital organs which need every deep breath you can take,
-every ounce of freely flowing blood you can bring to them, every
-particle of room to grow you can give them. The Chinese woman who cramps
-her feet sins less than we who cramp our waists.
-
-Sleep ten or eleven hours every night.
-
-Study to make your body well, strong, and useful.
-
-If you do all these things, you need not worry about beauty; you will
-possess what is of infinitely more value than a pretty face and abundant
-hair, in having a sound, wholesome body, self-controlled, instinct with
-joy, with clean, glowing skin, a pleasure to yourself and to everybody
-else. Clear vital thoughts and a keener spiritual life will both be
-yours. Because of the days in the woods it will be easier to be good,
-easier to be happy, easier to do the brain work of school and college.
-
-Part of the title of this chapter is Wood Culture. I have something in
-mind that is more than physical culture: The wilderness cure, the lesson
-of the woods, a high spiritual as well as physical truth. For the girl
-who keeps her eyes open, here are forces at work, mysterious, inspiring,
-wonderful, that awake in her all the dormant worship and vision of her
-nature. Yet of physical culture in these weeks and days in the woods too
-much cannot be said, for, as the world is beginning to realize, on
-one’s physical health, cleanness, sanity, rests much of that
-close-builded wonderful palace of mind and soul. Every squad of girl
-campers should have its physical culture drill, its definite exercises,
-taken at a definite time, for ten or fifteen minutes. Ten or fifteen
-minutes are probably all that are necessary when practically the
-remainder of the day is spent in camp sports, canoeing, fishing,
-climbing, hunting and so on. The object of these physical exercises
-should be all-around development; the drill should be sharp and light
-with especial attention paid to breathing and to the standing position.
-A steady unflagging effort should be made to correct round shoulders,
-flat chests, drooping necks, and bad positions generally. Many and
-varied are the exercises taught in school and college,--exercises to
-which all girls have access. I make no apologies for suggesting a few of
-the simplest by means of which any squad of girl campers can make a
-beginning in physical culture.
-
-(1) From attention (hands on hips), place the palms of the hands flat on
-the ground, keeping knees straight. Then bring arms up above head. Do
-this eight times.
-
-(2) With hands on the hips and the hips as a socket, rotate the whole
-trunk first five times in one direction, then five times in the
-opposite, being sure that the head follows the line of the rotating
-trunk. The difficulty of this exercise can be increased by placing hands
-clasped behind the head, and then later over the head. But the exercise
-should be undertaken first with the hands on the hips.
-
-(3) In between each exercise take deep breathing for a few seconds,
-rising on the toes as you inhale and lowering as you exhale.
-
-(4) Stand with the feet apart and arms horizontal. Without bending the
-knee place the right fist on the ground next to the instep of your left
-foot. Then raise the body and reverse, placing the left fist on the
-ground next to the right instep.
-
-(5) After this some free exercises with the arms, taken with the head
-well up, chest out, and shoulders back, make a good, sharp light finale.
-
-These exercises repeated several times make an excellent beginning for
-any day, either in or out of camp. You may unfortunately be going
-through a state of mind, when clean skin, good lungs and digestion, seem
-to you negligible factors in life. How tragically important these
-factors are, be sure you do not realize _too_ late, when both body and
-soul, health and morals, have been undermined.
-
-Most girls need to look upon camp life as an incomparably rich
-opportunity to gain in an all-round physical development. The life
-itself, aside from its possible physical culture exercises and its
-sports of rowing, paddling, swimming, climbing and walking, is the big
-architect of a splendid substructure for health. By taking thought,
-refusing to eat greasy, unwholesome food, getting plenty of sleep,
-avoiding over-strain, taking corrective exercises, cool baths and rub
-downs, there is no better health builder than the wilderness life. A
-wise Danish man said that “He who does not take care of his body,
-neglects it, and thereby sins against nature; she knows no forgiveness
-of sin, but revenges herself with mathematical certainty.” In the woods
-nature keeps reminding you of this fact, and you are never allowed to
-forget it for any length of time.
-
-It is only sensible to care for one’s health. It is not necessarily old
-maidish or silly to take precautions that the camp health should be at
-its zenith all the time. No one would think of criticising a man for
-being particularly careful of his horses under new conditions. This is
-precisely what we should be for ourselves. Your thorough-paced sportsman
-is always regardful of his physical condition. I have spoken about the
-drinking of pure water, the care of food, the folly of taking great
-risks, and of other details. There are more factors, as well, which will
-be at work in obtaining and maintaining good health conditions.
-
-The right sort of underclothing--and women seldom wear suitable
-underwear--should be worn. It should be high necked, with shoulder caps
-and knee caps, and should be of linen mesh. Every girl who is in fit
-condition should see that each day has a brief period at least of hard,
-warm, strenuous work in it. A sweat once a day, with a proper rub down
-afterwards, is one of the best health makers on record. In “By the sweat
-of thy brow shalt thou labor” was enunciated one of the greatest of
-natural laws. If it were possible for each one of us to sweat once a
-day, we should scarcely ever know what sickness is. But our over-refined
-civilization makes even the use of the word an offence to certain middle
-class people who care more for the so-called propriety (they are the
-folk who say “soiled” handkerchief instead of dirty, and “stomach” when
-they mean belly, and yet are ready to use such a detestably vulgar word,
-straight out of the mouths of the lowest classes of immigrants, as
-“spiel”) of what is said than for its truth and strength. Lay it down,
-then, that one of the first of the camp health rules is a sweating every
-day. Third among the camp rules is to keep the bowels open. Do you know
-what one of Abraham Lincoln’s mottoes for life was? “Fear God and keep
-your bowels open,” and in this saying there is no irreverence
-whatsoever, nor any sacrilege, but only a profound common sense that is
-a credit both to the Maker and the great man who spoke the words.
-Cascara is the best and safest laxative for a girl to use in camp. It
-should be bought in the purest tablets or liquid form on the market, and
-all patent cascara nostrums should be avoided.[7]
-
- [7] If there is a privy in the camp great care should be taken that,
- for every reason, it is placed at a sufficient distance from cabins
- and tents. It should _not_ be placed on a slope that could possibly
- drain off into any water supply. An abundance of ashes should always
- be kept within the privy and no water of any kind be poured into the
- box. A few cans of chloride of lime should, if possible, be kept on
- hand; and one can opened and in use in the closet. Chambers and slop
- pails should not be emptied in the immediate vicinity of the cabins
- but at some distance and in different localities. There is no greater
- abomination on the face of the earth than a dirty camp, and no place
- which so thoroughly tests one’s love of order, decency and
- cleanliness. If you are following the trail and go into “stocked”
- camps for the night, shake and air the blankets thoroughly, and, out
- of courtesy to those who will follow you in their use, shake and air
- the blankets when you get out of them in the morning.
-
-If a girl is delicate or under the weather in any way, she must take
-more than the ordinary care of herself or she may have a head-on
-collision with out-and-out illness. The new mode of living, the various
-kinds of exposure--especially to wet weather--, the larger quantities of
-food eaten because of an appetite stimulated by the vigorous outdoor
-life, the temptation to overdoing--all these possibilities should be
-kept in mind and avoided as dangers. Don’t be silly about overdoing.
-Harden yourself slowly for the life; avoid competition. It is far better
-to have lived your camp life successfully and to have come out of it
-fresh and vigorous, than it is to have done a few “stunts” and have come
-out of it fagged, overstrained and ill. It is well the first days of
-camp life to try to eat less than you want; by this act of self-control
-you will avoid the plague of constipation which follows so many campers.
-Moderate eating will mean more sleep, too. Abundant water drinking and a
-few grains of cascara should be able to remedy all the ills to which
-camp flesh is heir.
-
-As a girl takes thought about this care and culture of the body, making
-herself clean within and without, higher lessons and perfections, both
-of the mind and of the soul will come to her as inevitably as the earth
-answers to the touch of rain and sun. Do you want to be happy? Very well
-then, learn in the woods to be well, consider the laws of health, and
-remember first, last, and always that good health, not money or position
-or fame or any shallow beauty of feature, is the greatest and soundest
-security for happiness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-WILDERNESS SILENCE
-
-
-Most friendships among girls, and older people, too, suggest that if
-there is one thing which is hated, it is silence. If silence does happen
-to get in among us in camp, how uneasy we are! After an awkward pause we
-all begin to talk at once,--any, every topic will serve to break the
-hush which has fallen upon us. And if we don’t succeed in getting rid of
-this silence--something apparently to be regarded as unfriendly and
-ominous--we make excuse to do something and do it.
-
-But of silence Maurice Maeterlinck, the great Belgian author of “The
-Bluebird” and of many other plays, too, says that we talk only in the
-hours in which we do not live or do not wish to know our friends or feel
-ourselves at a great distance from reality. But where do we live more
-truly than in our camp life? Then he goes on to say what I think is
-equally true: That we are very jealous of silence, for even the most
-imprudent among us will not be silent with the first comer, some
-instinct telling us that it is dangerous to be silent with one whom we
-do not wish to know or for whom we do not care or do not trust.
-
-Let us admit at the very beginning that one does well to be on one’s
-guard with the people with whom one does not care to be silent,--but one
-does not go camping with those people,--or, as the case may be, if we,
-ourselves, have a guilty conscience or an empty head much talking serves
-its ends. And there is another situation in which it seems almost
-impossible to be silent. There is someone for whom we have cared very
-much. Things have changed, there has been a misunderstanding, we have
-altered or someone else has made trouble between us. And the first
-thing we notice is that we no longer dare to be silent together. Speech
-must be made to cover up our common lack of sympathy. We talk, how we
-talk,--anything, everything! Even when we are happy we run to places
-where there is no silence, but now, if only we can be as noisy as
-children and avoid the truth of the sad thing which has happened to us!
-
-Again, let us admit at once that there are different kinds of silence:
-There is a bitter silence which is the silence of hate, and another
-which is that of evil thoughts, and a hostile silence, and a silence
-which may mean the beginning of a storm or a fierce warfare. But the
-only silence worth having is friendly and it is of that we need to
-think, and it is that we can have by the camp fire in our wilderness
-life.
-
-Isn’t it true after all that the question which most of us ought to ask
-ourselves seriously is not how many times we have talked but how many
-times we have been silent. Sometimes one wonders whether we are ever
-still and whether if we are to be silent, it is not a lesson which must
-be learned all over again. How many times have we talked in a single
-day? We can’t tell, for the number of times is so great that we can’t
-count them. And the times we have been silent? And I don’t mean how many
-times we have said nothing. To say nothing is not necessarily to be
-silent. Well, we can’t count the times we have been silent either, but
-that is because we haven’t been still at all. Yet there is a big life in
-which there is no speech and no need of it. Are we never to give
-ourselves a chance to live that?
-
-Do you remember your first great silence? Was it going away from someone
-you loved? Perhaps it was a joyous visit to your grandmother or to an
-aunt or to see a friend, but it meant leaving your mother and you had
-never left her before. Or maybe it was your first year at boarding
-school or your freshman year at college. Do you remember the silence
-that came over you then and all that filled it? And do you remember how
-it wore away but gradually--that grip the stillness had within you and
-upon you? You know now that that first silence will never be forgotten.
-Or was it a return to those you loved and you realized as never before
-how incomparably dear these people were to you and that only silence
-could express that dearness? Or was it the silence of a crowd--awe
-inspiring silence which foretells the acclaim of some great event of
-happiness or a cry of woe? Or the silence of the wilderness as you
-looked down from a mountain side into some great valley of lakes? Or was
-it the death of someone you loved, and the silence that overcame you
-forced you not only to suffer as never before but also to think as you
-have never done about the meaning of life?
-
-In that first great silence how many things that are precious revealed
-themselves to us. There was love; we did not realize how it was woven
-into every fibre of our lives; there was companionship; we did not
-realize how bitterly hard it would be to forego it; there was new
-experience; till it came we could not have known how much a part of our
-lives the old experience was. How many things in us that had been asleep
-were suddenly awakened! How much was that great silence worth to us then
-and now? Perhaps an unhappy or stricken silence we called it then; but
-even if it meant death or separation was it after all completely
-unhappy? Have we taken into account the wealth of conviction, of
-deepened experience, of increased love it brought us? Could anything so
-rich be in any true sense unhappy?
-
-“Silence, the Great Empire of Silence,” cried Carlyle, “higher than the
-stars, deeper than the Kingdom of Death.” The world needs silent men but
-even more, I think, does it need silent women. Carlyle--and you should
-get what you can of his books and read them--calls silent men the salt
-of the earth. Might not silent women or silent girls be called double
-salt? He says that the world without such men is like a tree without
-roots. To such a tree there will be no leaves and no shade; to such a
-tree there will be no growth; a tree without roots cannot hold the
-moisture that is in the earth and it will soon fade, soon dry up and let
-everything else around it dry up, too.
-
-Have you not heard women and girls with an incessant silly giggle or a
-titter or a laugh that meant just nothing at all and yet which was
-heard, like the dry rattle of the locust, morning, noon and night?
-Nervousness partially; empty-headedness maybe, or a mistaken idea of
-what is attractive. Silliness of that kind has no place in camp. Nothing
-is more wearying, more lacking in self-control than such a manner,
-nothing so exhausts other people. Such giggling or laughing or silly
-talking is to the mind what St. Vitus’s dance is to the body--an
-affliction to be endured perhaps but certainly not an attraction and not
-to be cultivated.
-
-Is it not silence that opens the door to our best work? How about that
-work you enjoyed so much and did so well? How did you prepare for that?
-Yes, I know all about the work you bluffed through and even managed to
-get a high record in, but that work you really enjoyed, how was that
-done? Is it not silence, too, that opens the door to our dearest and
-deepest companionships, our profoundest sorrows, our greatest joys?
-Anyway this wilderness silence is all worth while thinking about, is it
-not?
-
-Why should this great silence, this friendly wilderness power be
-considered anti-social? Really, is it not most social? Does it not bring
-us all nearer together, sometimes even when we are afraid to be nearer
-to one another? Does it not make us all equal, making us aware of those
-profound things in life which we all have in common? Silence can say,
-can teach, what speech can never, to the end of the world, learn to
-express. It is safe to say that as soon as most lips are silent, then
-and then only do the thoughts and the soul begin to live, to grow, to
-become something of what they are destined to be, for as Maeterlinck
-says, silence ripens the fruits of the soul. Never think that it is
-unsociable people or people who don’t know how to talk who set such a
-value on silence. No, it is those who are able to talk best and most
-deeply, think best and most deeply, who, following the long trail,
-recognize the fact that words can never after all express those truths
-which are among us--no, neither love, nor death, nor any great joy, nor
-destiny can ever be expressed by word of mouth, by speech.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-HOMEMADE CAMPING
-
-
-It was our second day in camp,--a camp on the edge of the Maine
-wilderness. Around us were many lakes--ponds as the natives call
-them--Moosehead, Upper Wilson, Lower Wilson, Little Wilson, Trout Pond,
-Horse-shoe Pond, and a dozen others. About us on all sides were the
-forest-covered mountains, and burning fiercely, twenty miles distant, a
-large forest fire which filled the horizon with dense, yellow smoke.
-
-From our camp, consisting of a red shanty, a log cabin in which I am now
-sitting, my dog beside me, thinking what I shall say to you about a
-remarkable family I saw, and, looking up at the cabin ceiling, its log
-ridge-pole and supports between which are birch bark cuts of trout and
-salmon caught in the lakes, of which I have spoken--from our camp we
-look out and down on a wonderful view. Immediately in front of the log
-cabin is a meadow, the last on the edge of this wilderness, then the
-serrated line of pointed firs, which marks the edge of the woods at the
-foot of the meadow. Beyond this line miles of tree-tops, pines, birches,
-maples, beeches, after that the shining lakes, and beyond them the
-mountains. There is not a house in sight. For that matter there _is_ no
-house to be seen, not even a log cabin.
-
-As was said, there is a meadow in front of the cabin, and over to the
-right beyond our view are two other meadows. In Maine--as far north as
-this, anyway--the farmers have only one crop of hay, and, when there is
-so much forest, and the winter is long, and cattle are to be fed, every
-meadow has to be counted upon for all it will bear of hay. It was a
-foregone conclusion that somebody would need and use the crop from the
-meadow down upon which my cabin looked.
-
-And, sure enough, the second day we were in camp, along the road bumping
-and thumping over the big stones came a large hay wagon: behind it,
-rattling and jarring, a mowing machine and hay rake. But that hay wagon,
-what didn’t it hold? In the first place, there was the driver, then a
-big packing box, a tent rolled up, sacks of feed for the horses, a
-baby’s perambulator, three children, a woman, a hammock, a long bench,
-some chairs, including a rocking chair, and several small boxes, packed
-to overflowing with articles of various kinds. For an instant it looked
-as if they were house-moving, and then, recollecting that there was no
-house to which to move, I came to the conclusion that they were merely
-haying.
-
-I watched them spread the big tent-fly and make it fast. I saw them take
-out the large packing box, converting that into a table, on which some
-of the children put flowers in an old bottle; I watched them set out the
-bench and chairs, swing the hammock, lay the improvised table with the
-enamel dishes which they took from the little boxes, and, in general,
-make themselves comfortable.
-
-The children had pails for berries, and they began to pick berries in a
-business-like fashion. The woman sat in the hammock and took care of the
-baby--oh, I forgot to mention the baby. The farmer and his lad hitched
-and unhitched the horses, starting within a few minutes to work with the
-mowing machine, and leaving two of the horses tethered to a tree.
-Evidently this was work and a picnic combined--to me a new way of
-getting in your hay crop. But the more I watched it and thought about it
-the more I liked it. And their dinner with the berries as dessert--well,
-I knew just how good, there in the sunshine, with appetites sharpened by
-work, it must taste to them all.
-
-Inside the cottage shanty of our camp, one member of the household, at
-least, had been doing her work in quite a different spirit. It seemed to
-me that there was nothing which this cook, a large, robust woman, with
-an arm with the strength of five, had not found fault with and made the
-worst of. Her first groan was heard in the morning at six o’clock--in
-getting up myself to go to my writing table I had cruelly awakened
-her--and, of course, as she went to bed only half after seven the night
-before, she had been robbed of her necessary sleep. As I say, I heard
-her first groan--the sun was shining gloriously, and I had already had a
-sun bath and a cold sponge and my morning exercises--while she continued
-to lie in bed and to make every subsequent groan until after seven
-o’clock fully audible.
-
-She began that beautiful day and its work in resisting everything. She
-had never been in such a place before, and a very nice convenient camp
-we, ourselves, thought it. She groaned while she pumped water--I do not
-know whether she or the pump made the more noise. She complained loudly
-because of the mice. Oh, no, she could not set a mouse trap: she had
-never done such a thing before! And then, when we got a cat, she
-complained because of the noise the cat made in catching the mice. I do
-not know precisely what kind of a cat she expected, possibly a
-noiseless, rubber-tired cat, that would catch noiseless, rubber-tired
-mice. She would not carry water--even a two-quart pail full--her back
-was not strong enough. She had never seen such dishes as these we were
-using, nice, clean enamel ware dishes, with blue borders. She had never
-heard of such a thing as hanging milk and butter in a well to keep them
-cool. Dear me, she never even thought of going to such a place where
-they did not have ice that would automatically cool everything, and
-which the ice-man kindly handed to her in pieces just the size which
-she preferred. She said the spring--a beautiful spring whose waters are
-renowned for their purity and healthfulness much as the waters of Poland
-Spring are--she said that the spring had pollywogs in it and frogs. She
-could not string a clothes-line, but stood in tears near the big trunk
-of a balsam fir, holding the line helplessly in her hands and looking up
-to the branch not more than two inches above her head. While one of us
-flung the end of the clothes-line over the branch and made it fast to
-another she remarked with contempt, sniffing up her tears, that it was
-not a clothes-line, anyway, which was perfectly true, for it was only a
-boat cord, but it did quite as well. When she walked down from the
-meadow, that glorious golden meadow, where the happy family was
-picnicking and hay-making at the same time, and through which wound a
-little path down to the spring’s edge, she lifted her skirts as if she
-were afraid they might be contaminated by the touch of that clean,
-sweet-smelling, long grass. Still groaning she would fetch about a quart
-of water. And groaning, still groaning, she went to bed at night
-“half-dead,” as she expressed it, as the result of about five hours of
-work, in which she was all the time helped by somebody else.
-
-Of course she was “half-dead.” It is a wonder to me now, as I think of
-it, that she did not die altogether. Instead of taking things as they
-were in the sun-filled day, with its keen, crisp air, its wonderful
-view, instead of feeling something of the beauty and health and sun and
-wind-swept cleanness of it all, she had resisted every detail of the
-day, every part of her work, she had, in short, found fault with
-everything. This day, that would have seemed so joyous to some people,
-had not meant to her an opportunity to make the best of things and to
-be grateful for the long sleep, the sunshine, the invigorating air, the
-beauty, the light work, but merely a chance to make the worst of things,
-to throw herself against every demand made upon her.
-
-Out in front of the cabin the farmer swept round and round with his
-mowing machine, his big, glossy horses glistening in the sunshine, the
-sharp teeth of the machine laying the grass in a wide swath behind him.
-He seemed peaceful and contented, although it was warm out in the direct
-sunlight, and the brakes were heavy and the horses needed constant
-guiding. Down below, nearer the spring, his wife swung in the hammock,
-and the children picked berries, fetched water, and were gleefully busy.
-It was a scene of simple contentment with life.
-
-When the father came back for his dinner, which was eaten under the
-spread of a tent-fly and from the top of a packing box, decorated in the
-center with flowers and around the edges by contented faces, I said to
-him: “You seem to be having a jolly time.”
-
-“Why, yes, so we are,” was his reply. “I offered the folks who own this
-meadow such a small sum of money for the hay crop I didn’t think I’d get
-it. I thought some one else was sure to offer them more, but I guess
-they didn’t, for I got it. You see, it’s pretty far away from my farm to
-come out here haying.”
-
-“And so you make a picnic of it?”
-
-“Yes, we are making a picnic of it. The children like it. It’s great fun
-for them, and it gives my wife, who isn’t very strong, a chance to rest
-and be out of doors. I enjoy it, too. I like to see them have a good
-time.”
-
-“Well,” I said, before I realized I was taking him into my confidence,
-“I wish you could make our camp cook see your point of view.”
-
-“Why, don’t she like it?” he asked innocently.
-
-“Like it? I am afraid she doesn’t. The other day it rained and leaked in
-through the kitchen roof onto her ironing board, and when we found her
-she had her head on the board and was crying.”
-
-“Well, that’s too bad,” he said. “Why didn’t she take that board out of
-the way of the leak? We don’t mind a little thing like a leak around
-here, especially when folks are camping. Having her feel that way must
-make a difference in your pleasure. Well, there is ways of taking work.
-Now, probably, she’s throwing herself against her work, and making it
-harder all the time.”
-
-“That’s exactly what she is doing,” I commented dryly.
-
-“It’s a pity.” There was sympathy in his voice. “For it’s such a lot
-easier to make a picnic out of what you are doing--homemade camping, we
-call this. My folks always feel that way about it. Even the hardest
-work is easier for taking it the right end to. My children are growing
-up to think, what it doesn’t hurt any man to think, that work is the
-best fun, after all. It’s the only thing you never get tired of, for
-there is always something more to do.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE CANOE AND FISHING
-
-
-It was my somewhat tempered good fortune, several years ago, to spend
-two or three weeks in an exceedingly bleak place on a far northern
-coast. The only genial element about this barren spot was its sea
-captains, and whence they drew their geniality heaven only knows. They
-made me think of nothing so much as of the warm lichen which sometimes
-flourishes upon cold rocks. There strayed into this neighborhood a
-couple of canoes. “Waal,” exclaimed one of the old salts, viewing this
-water craft skeptically, “it’s the nearest next to nothing of anything I
-have ever heard tell on.”
-
-And that is precisely what the canoe is: the nearest next to nothing in
-water craft which you can imagine. It is in precisely this nothingness
-that its charm lies, its lightness, its grace, its friskiness, its
-strength, its motion, its adaptability to circumstances. There are times
-when it acts like a demon, and there are other times when its
-intelligence is almost uncanny. The canoe is always high spirited, and,
-with high-spirited things, whether they be horseflesh or canoe, it does
-not do to trifle. The girl who expects to take liberties with the canoe
-has some dreadful, if not fatal, experiences ahead of her. Several years
-ago I was out in a motor boat with some friends. Two of them had been,
-or were, connected with the United States Navy; another was my sister,
-and a fourth was a college friend. My friend happened to see a pistol
-lying on a seat near her. She had never had anything to do with pistols,
-and, on some insane impulse of the moment, she picked it up and leveled
-it at me. I was stunned, but not so the men on the boat. Such a shout
-of rage and indignation, such a leap to seize the pistol, and such a
-rebuke, I have never been witness to before. These men were navy men,
-and they knew how criminally foolish it is to fool with what may bring
-disaster. It is those who know the canoe best and are best able to
-handle it, who are most cautious in its use. Those of you who expect to
-treat it as you might the family horse would do well to look out.
-
-The canvas-covered cedar canoe is the best. If you are going to take a
-lot of duffle with you, the canoes will have to be longer than you need
-otherwise have them: about eighteen feet, and only two people to a
-canoe. The canoe will cost you from twenty-five dollars up, and this
-item does not include the paddle. The paddle should be bought exactly
-your own height; it will then be an ideal length for paddling. Its cost
-will be a little more or a little less than a dollar and a half. You
-should have a large sponge, tied to a string, on one of the thwarts.
-This you will use for bailing when necessary.
-
-If you have had any experience with a canoe, you will not abuse it, and
-will not need to be told not to abuse it. If it is a light one, and you
-are a strong girl, you should learn to carry it Micmac fashion on the
-paddle blades, a sweater over your shoulders to serve as cushion. Watch
-a woodsman and see the way he handles a canoe. One of the very first
-things you will observe is that he never drags it about, but lifts it
-clean off the ground by the thwarts, holding the concave side toward
-him. Also, you should observe his soft-footed movements when he is
-stepping into a canoe. If a canoe is not in use it should be turned
-upside down. Never neglect your canoe, for a small puncture in it is
-like the proverbial small hole in a dike. If you let it go, you will
-have a heavy, water-soaked craft or a swamped one. Water soaking turns
-a seemingly intelligent, high-spirited canoe, capable of answering to
-your least wish or touch, into the most lunk-headed thing imaginable, a
-thing so stupid and so dead and so obstinate, that life with it becomes
-a burden. Remember that the wounds in your canoe need quite as much
-attention as your own would.
-
-The balance of a canoe is a ticklish thing. To the novice, the day when
-she can paddle through stiff water while she trolls with a rod under her
-knee and lands a two- or three-pound salmon unaided, seems far off. I am
-by no means a past-master in the art of canoeing, yet I have often done
-this, and am no longer troubled by the question of balance in a canoe.
-So much for encouragement! Most of an art lies, granting the initial
-gift for it, in custom or habit. Make yourself familiar with the traits
-of your canoe, work hard to learn everything you should know about it,
-and your lesson will soon be learned.
-
-When you are going to get into it, have your canoe securely beside a
-landing, and then step carefully into the center and middle. Bring the
-second foot after the first only when you are sure that you have your
-balance. The next thing is to sit down. Be certain that it is not in the
-water. The only satisfactory recipe for this delicate act is to do it.
-No girl should step into a canoe for the first time without some one at
-the bow to steady it. Very quickly you will learn clever ways of using
-your paddle to help in keeping the balance. Until you do, you can’t be
-too careful, or too careful that others should be careful. Take no
-chances in a canoe. If any are taken for you, hang on to your paddle. It
-is well to have an inflatable life-preserver, but, best of all, is it to
-know how to swim. Never move around in a canoe, or turn quickly to look
-over your shoulder. A canoe is a long-suffering thing, but once
-“riled” and its mind made up to capsize, heaven and earth cannot prevent
-that consummation and your ducking or even drowning.
-
-[Illustration: BROOK TROUT]
-
-[Illustration: RAINBOW TROUT]
-
-[Illustration: SMALL-MOUTH BASS]
-
-[Illustration: BROWN TROUT]
-
-[Illustration: ROCK-BASS]
-
-[Illustration: WHITE BASS]
-
-[Illustration: SHEEPSHEAD]
-
-[Illustration: YELLOW PERCH]
-
-[Illustration: PIKE]
-
-[Illustration: PIKE PERCH]
-
-[Illustration: PICKEREL]
-
-[Illustration: CATFISH]
-
-Become skillful in the use of the paddle, and the best way to learn is
-through some one who knows how. Paddling is an art and a very delightful
-one, requiring much skill of touch and strength. Although as a girl I
-cared most for rowing, I have in the last ten years become so devoted to
-the paddle stroke, to its motion and touch and efficiency, that rowing
-only bores me. Get some one, a brother, a father, a friend, a guide, to
-teach you the rudiments of paddling. These once learned, canoeing is as
-safe as bicycling and not more difficult. It is all in learning how.
-
-[Illustration: ROD.]
-
-[Illustration: HOOKS.]
-
-[Illustration: SIMPLE WINCH REEL.]
-
-[Illustration: TROUT FLY.]
-
-[Illustration: TROLLING SPOONS.]
-
-The writer is an old-fashioned fisherwoman and goes light with tackle.
-However, I have noticed that the simplicity of fishing tackle does not
-in the least interfere with luck. If you are going to fish with worm,
-hook, and sinker, you will need no advice. Perch, pickerel, black bass,
-cat-fish, and others to be caught in still fishing, will be your quarry.
-As a rule you will troll for pickerel and pike, and there is no sport
-more pleasant in the world than that which is to be had at the end of a
-trolling spoon: the motion of the boat, the vibration of the line, the
-spinning of the spoon, and then the sudden strike, with all its
-possibilities for taking in big fish. I defy anyone to have a more
-exciting time than netting a salmon from a trolling line and landing it
-successfully in a canoe. But this is not a thing to be attempted by the
-novice. Much better let the salmon go and save yourself a ducking.
-
-The finest art of all fishing is fly-fishing. One either does or does
-not take to it naturally, after one has been taught something of the art
-by brother, father, or guide. Alas, that the fish greediness of campers
-is making good fly-fishing, even in the wilderness, more and more
-difficult to get! Personally, if I am after trout or salmon, “plugging”
-or “bating,” as it is called, seems to me an unpardonably coarse and
-stupid sport. Yet our lakes have been so abused by this process that
-fly-fishing is frequently impossible. To sit or stand in a canoe,
-casting your line, the canoe taking every flex of your wrist; to see the
-bright flies, Parmachenee Belle or Silver Doctor--or whatever fly suits
-that part of the country in which you are camping--alight on the surface
-as if gifted with veritable life, and then to be conscious of the rush,
-the strike, and to see a rainbow trout whirling off with your silken
-line, is to experience an incomparable pleasure. To have a strike while
-the twilight is coming on, a big fellow, with the line spinning off your
-reel as if it would never stop, to see your salmon leap into the air and
-strike the water, to reel him in, then plunge! and down, down he goes;
-to feel the twilight deepening as you try to get him in closer to the
-canoe again; to know suddenly that it is dark and that the hours are
-going by; to feel your wrist aching, your body tense with excitement; to
-think that you are just tiring him out, that you have almost got
-him--almost, then a rush, a plunge, the line slackens in your hand, and
-he is gone. That is fisherman’s luck, and great luck it is, even when
-the fish is lost.
-
-[Illustration: ROD CASE.]
-
-[Illustration: FELT-LINED LEADER BOX.]
-
-[Illustration: CASE FOR TACKLE.]
-
-[Illustration: LANDING NET.]
-
-[Illustration: CREEL.]
-
-Only a few words about fishing tackle. Have a good rod or two, but don’t
-begin your experience at fishing with expensive tackle. The cheaper rod
-will do quite as well until you learn what you want. For trolling the
-best rod is a short steel one. For fly-fishing you will always use split
-bamboo or some similar wood. You will have accidents, so have reserve
-tackle to fall back upon. In any event do not buy a heavy rod, and
-never buy anything with a steel core in it. If you can afford it, get a
-first-class reel, one that works easily and is of simple mechanism. A
-simple winch reel is the best. Avoid patented contraptions. While you
-are using them hang your rods up by the tips. In any event keep them dry
-and in as good condition as possible. Enameled silk line you must have
-for all trout fishing. For other kinds of fishing it does not so much
-matter what you do use, provided the line is strong and durable. Be sure
-to have extra lines to fall back on.
-
-[Illustration: ANGLING KNOTS.]
-
-Leaders, the details about flies to be used, their color, angling knots
-made in fastening leaders or line or fly, methods for keeping your flies
-in good order and condition, the use of the landing net, necessary
-repairs to be made, the skill of the wrist in casting, the best sort of
-trolling, the care of fish, all these things will come to you through
-experience, and all suggest how much, how delightfully much, there is
-to be learned in the best of all sports.
-
-Go to some first-rate sporting goods’ house for your flies; they will
-tell you what kinds you need, as well as answer other questions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-THE TRAIL
-
-
-A girl who has learned to camp will not only have her own pleasures
-greatly increased, but she will also add to those of her friends,
-becoming a better companion for her chums, her father, her brother; for
-camping, if it is anything, is a social art. It is far better for a girl
-to be out in the world which demands all of one’s attention, one’s eyes
-and ears and nose and feet and hands and every muscle of the entire
-body, than to be leading a sedentary life at home, or analyzing emotions
-or sentimentalizing about things not worth while. The big moose which
-unexpectedly plunges by provides enough emotions to last a long time;
-the land-locked salmon that threatens to snap the silken line, enough
-excitement.
-
-You can’t learn all that there is to be learned in the school of the
-woods through one camping expedition. It would be rather poor sport if
-you could. Don’t be afraid to ask questions about what you don’t know.
-Keep on asking them until you are wood-cultivated. The wilderness is
-your opportunity to make up for those vitally interesting facts about
-life which are not taught in schools. Above all, have a map of the
-country in which you are, and study it. Keep that map by you as if it
-were Fidus Achates himself, and refer to it whenever there is need. The
-girl or woman in camp who never knows where she is is a bore, sponging
-upon the good-nature and intelligence of others who have taken the
-trouble to familiarize themselves with the lie of the land. Such a girl
-never makes any plans, never takes the initiative, never gives anyone a
-sense of rest from responsibility. There are girls and older women who
-think it rather clever to be unable to tell east from west, north from
-south. I may say here that in camp they belong to the same class of
-foolish incompetents who in college boast that they cannot
-spell--presumably because they are devoting themselves to a much higher
-call upon their intelligence than anything so superficial as spelling!
-If camping means anything in the world, it means coöperation, and this
-coöperation should be all along the line.
-
-[Illustration: THE DIPPER.]
-
-If you have an innate sense of direction, train it. If you have none, do
-not venture out into the wilderness except with someone who has. Always
-tell people where you are going. If you are not familiar with the use of
-a rifle you would better have a shrill whistle or a tin horn to use in
-case you want to summon anyone. Sun and wind should be part of your
-compass; the trees, too. You will, of course, learn how to blaze a
-trail, and the sooner you do this the better, for it is good training in
-following out a point of the compass. The wilderness is full of signs
-of direction for your use, some of which are certain to be serviceable
-at different times, and some of which will not prove dependable. The sun
-rises in the east and sets in the west. At high noon of a September day,
-if you turn your back squarely to the sun, you will be looking directly
-north. The wind is a helper, too. When the sun rises, notice the
-direction of the wind, and, while it does not shift, it will prove a
-good compass or guide. If it is very light, wet the finger and hold it
-up. By doing this the wind will serve you as a compass. Remember, also,
-that the two lowest stars of the Big Dipper point toward the North Star,
-which is always a guide to be used in charting a wilderness way. Also on
-the north sides of trees there is greater thickness to the bark and more
-moss. This is, I suppose, because the trees, being unexposed to the
-sunlight on the north side, retain the moisture longer there. Some
-say, too, that the very topmost finger of an evergreen points toward the
-north. Even in civilization they usually do. To become familiar with a
-compass is a very simple matter. Every boy learns this lesson, and there
-is no reason why girls should not do the same. Never buy a cheap
-compass; it is not to be relied upon. To the amateur in the woods a good
-one is not a friend at which to scoff. A few expeditions out behind the
-cabin will teach you all you need to know about its use. If by some
-miscalculation a girl should get lost, let her realize then that the
-great demand is that she shall keep her head on her shoulders, where it
-has been placed, and where she will need to make use of it. Let her sit
-down and think, reviewing all that has happened, and trying to solve the
-problem of what she is to do. A panic is the last and worst thing in
-which she can afford to indulge. To most people at some time or other
-comes the conviction that they are lost--a conviction happily
-dispelled in nine hundred and ninety-nine cases out of a thousand. In
-this, as in everything, a miss is as good as a mile, and one does well
-to make light of unavoidable mistakes.
-
-[Illustration: FAWN]
-
-[Illustration: DOE]
-
-[Illustration: BUCK]
-
-[Illustration: CARIBOU]
-
-[Illustration: MOOSE]
-
-If, by any chance, you should be lost, don’t run around. If you have no
-compass or if darkness is coming on, settle down where you are. Devote
-your energies to occasional periods of shouting and to building a camp
-fire, keep your body warm and dry and your head cool. _You will be
-found._ And remember that there are no wild creatures to be feared in
-our camping wilderness. You have nothing of which to be afraid except
-your own lack of common sense. Here is a chance for your “nerve” to show
-itself.
-
-[Illustration: RED SQUIRREL]
-
-[Illustration: FLYING SQUIRREL]
-
-[Illustration: GRAY SQUIRREL]
-
-[Illustration: RABBIT]
-
-[Illustration: AMERICAN SABLE]
-
-[Illustration: CHIPMUNK]
-
-[Illustration: WEASEL]
-
-[Illustration: MINK]
-
-[Illustration: RACCOON]
-
-[Illustration: BLACK BEAR]
-
-[Illustration: PORCUPINE]
-
-[Illustration: SKUNK]
-
-[Illustration: WOODCHUCK]
-
-[Illustration: RED FOX]
-
-As you go through the woods, cross the ponds and lakes, climb mountains,
-your luncheon in your pocket, compass and knife and cup and match-box
-all ready and friendly to your hand; as you feel the wilderness
-becoming more and more your empire, be sure that you do not abuse the
-privileges which are revealed to you. The more gentle and considerate
-you are in this life which has opened itself up to you, the more it will
-tell you its secrets. That you should leave disfiguration and
-destruction and bloodshed behind you does not prove that you are in any
-sense a true sport. The camera is one of the best guns for the
-wilderness. It is better to be film-thirsty than bloodthirsty. A girl
-who is in earnest about camera shooting can test her “nerves” quite
-sufficiently for all practical purposes. How about facing, or chasing, a
-six- or seven-hundred-pound moose, plunging down through a cut or a
-trail, and having the nerve to press the bulb at just the right moment?
-Or a big buck? Or a little bear? Or a porcupine? A good kodak and some
-rolls of film are all that is needed to begin the work of photography. A
-fine way to do, if you intend to go into the matter seriously, is to
-get some book on nature photography and make a thorough study of it.
-Other books, too, there are, which will be full of profit for you as you
-come to know the wilderness life. Begin with Thoreau, John Burroughs,
-John Muir, Stewart White, Ernest Seton Thompson, and these will lead you
-on and out through a host of nature books and finally into a more
-technical literature on hunting, camping, and the wilderness life in
-general.
-
-I believe that in the end an intelligent study of the woods made with
-eyes and ears, heart and mind, notebook and book, will bring down more
-game than any shotgun or rifle ever manufactured. I have seen
-guide-books of northern wildernesses whose collective illustration
-suggested only the interior of some local slaughter house. No tenderfoot
-myself, for, when the first shotgun was placed against my shoulder, I
-was so little that its kick knocked me over, I do not write this way
-because I am unfamiliar with the pleasures of well-earned or necessary
-game, but because I have tried both ways and I prefer a friendly life in
-the wilderness. To kill what you see, just because you do see it, to set
-big fires, to be wasteful, to take risks in your adventures, are no
-signs that you know the woods--and they are most certainly no guarantee
-of your love.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-CAMP DON’TS
-
-
-Don’t forget your check list.
-
-Do make your plans early for the camping expedition.
-
-Don’t be dowdy in the woods. Dress appropriately.
-
-Do keep a clean camp. Otherwise you will go in for hedgehogs, skunks,
-flies, and other disease-breeding pests.
-
-If in doubt about drinking water, don’t drink it--at least, not till it
-is thoroughly boiled.
-
-Do be independent. Camp is no place for necklaces, however beautiful.
-
-Don’t start out camping with a new pair of shoes on your feet.
-
-Do keep from adding to the things you want to take with you, or you
-won’t be able to reach the “jumping off” place.
-
-Don’t forget your fly “dope.”
-
-If your appetite is good, be polite to the cook.
-
-Don’t forget the box of matches.
-
-Don’t be foolhardy. It might take too long to find you. If you feel that
-way, have somebody attach a tump line to you.
-
-If you have an open stove, when you go off for the day, be sure to close
-it.
-
-Don’t be afraid to ask questions--everybody does.
-
-Do help others with the work.
-
-Don’t cut your foot with the axe. It will not add to the pleasures of
-camp life.
-
-Dish-washing is not pleasant work. Do your share just the same.
-
-Don’t step on the gunwale of the canoe, and upset it, or trip over a
-thwart. The canoe is a ticklish craft.
-
-Do conform to the camp routine. Don’t keep the dinner waiting, delay
-the fishing expedition, or call out a search party.
-
-Don’t be ignorant of the topography of the region in which you camp. By
-not studying the map for yourself, you will give others a lot of
-trouble.
-
-Listen to what your guide says.
-
-Remember, I shall be glad to answer brief, pointed questions, addressed
-to me at
-
- CAMP RUNWAY,
- Moosehead Lake, Greenville, Maine.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Beavers, 88-89
- Beds:
- bough beds, 97-100
- browse bed, 100, 101
- sleeping bags, 103
- Birch bark, 9, 40
- Black flies, 10-11
- Blankets, 21
- Bloomers, 4, 18-19. _See_ Clothing
- Blouse, 4, 19, 22. _See_ Clothing
- Books, 20-21, 219
- Breck’s fly “dope,” 102
- Breck’s “Way of the Woods,” 7, 26, 45, 63
-
- Camera film, 20, 218-219
- Camp Fire Girls, 11, 115
- Camp habit, 139-146
- Camping grounds, 68-76
- sites to be avoided for, 73
- sites to be chosen for, 73-76, 181-192
- Can opener, 8. _See_ Cooking utensils
- Canoes, 193-208
- care in handling, 193-200
- cost of, 196
- length of paddle, 195
- paddling, 200
- Cascara sagrada, 5
- Check lists, 1, 96
- Cleanliness, 147-156, 168
- Clothing, 1-5, 13-20, 21-23, 165-166
- gloves, 5
- hunting suit, cost of, 18
- jacket, 18
- Cold cream, 5
- Combination suits, 3-4, 17, 165-166
- Cook, 37-45
- Cooking utensils, 8, 34-35, 62, 104-105
- Cooler, 8, 32-34
-
- Dishes, 8, 35
- Duffle bag, 2, 14
-
- Economy, 5, 107-117
- Equipment, 2, 8-9
- cost of, 8
- poncho, 100
- tents, 110-111
- tools, 9, 35
- Expenses, 107-117
- for food, 114
- for party of four or five, 108-111
- for tents, 110
-
- Feet, care of, 19
- Fires, 11, 77-86
- Fishing, 193-208
- fly, 202-204
- Fishing tackle, 200, 204-208
- Fly “dope,” 9, 35, 101-102
- Food, 1, 6-8, 24-36
- bacon, 28
- butter, 29
- cleanliness of, 30-31
- dried vegetables, 26-27
- flour, 27
- meat, 28-30
- milk, 32, 37, 114-116
- portage of, 24
- Footgear, 2, 3, 14-16
- Fry pans, 8, 62. _See_ Cooking utensils
- Fuel, 9-10, 40-42
- Furnishings, 11, 94-106
-
- Gloves, 5. _See_ Clothing
- Guides, 69, 85, 118-126
- assistance to, 123-125, 145
- character of, 122-123
- duties of, 119-121
-
- Hat, 4, 19
- Head net, 101
- Health:
- clean-working digestion and, 166-168
- eating and, 169
- hygiene and, 127-138
- physical culture drill and, 161-165
- rules for, 159-161
- water and, 10, 42-44, 76, 157-170
- Hunting suit, 18. _See_ Clothing
- Hygiene, 127-138. _See_ Health
-
- Jacket, 18. _See_ Clothing
-
- Knives, 8. _See_ Cooking utensils
-
- Matches, 40
- Moccasins, 2, 16. _See_ Footgear
- Mosquitoes, 10-11
- headnet and, 101. _See_ Hat
- netting for, 35
- tarlatan for, 101
-
- Neat’s-foot oil. _See_ Waterproofing
- Nesting pails, 8, 34
-
- Pockets, 4. _See_ Clothing
- Poncho, 100
- Privy, care of, 168. _See_ Sanitation
-
- Recipes, 45
- apples, 49
- bacon, 62
- baked beans, 59-60
- baking powder biscuits, 55-56
- boiling vegetables, 65-66
- bread-making, 51
- broth, 62
- buckwheat cakes, 61
- Chinese tea-cakes, 63
- chowder, 62-63
- corn bread, 56-57
- corn meal, 48
- corn pone, 60-61
- eggs, 54-55
- fish, 52-53
- fudge, 64-65
- gingerbread, 63
- macaroni, 48
- mashed potatoes, 61-62
- mayonnaise dressing, 66
- molasses cookies, 64
- mushrooms, 61-62
- olive oil, 65
- pancakes, 57-58
- partridge, 53-54
- penuche, 64
- rice, 48
- soups, 58, 59
- stewed fruits, 65
- stock, 46
- vegetable stew, 49
- white sauce, 63
- Reflector baker, 8, 39. _See_ Cooking utensils
-
- Safety pins, 5. _See_ Clothing
- Sanitation, camp health and, 157-170
- water and, 10, 30-31, 42-44, 76
- Skirt, 4, 17-19
- extra. _See_ Clothing
- khaki, 17
- tweed, 17, 22
- Soap, 5, 20
- Sporting catalogs, 103
- Sporting magazines, _Outing_, _Country Life in America_, _Forest and
- Stream_, _Field and Stream_, _Recreation_, _Rod and Gun in Canada_,
- 110
- Stockings, 3. _See_ Clothing
- holeproof, 16, 17, 19
- woolen, 16
- Sweater, 18. _See_ Clothing
-
- Tents, 110-111. _See_ Equipment and also Expenses
- Tin can camping, 26
- Tools, 9, 35. _See_ Equipment
- Tooth brush, 5
- Tooth paste, 5
- Trail, 209-220
- following the, 211-214
- independence on, 209-211
- lost on, 214-216
- walking, 70
-
- Vacation Bureaus, 115
- Viscol. _See_ Waterproofing
-
- Water, 10, 42-44, 76. _See_ Health and also Sanitation
- Waterproofing, 3, 14, 16. _See_ Footgear
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
- Depending on the hard- and software used to read this text, not all
- elements may display as intended.
-
- Inconsistent and unusual spelling and hyphenation have been retained;
- spelling and hyphenation differences between the body text and the
- index have not been standardised.
-
- Page 203: bating: as printed, possibly an error for baiting.
-
-
- Changes made:
-
- Footnotes and illustrations have been moved out of text paragraphs.
-
- Some missing punctuation has been added, some unnecessary punctuation
- has been deleted silently.
-
- Page 163: Item (2) has been moved to a new line.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Vacation Camping for Girls, by Jeannette Augustus Marks
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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/license
-
-
-Title: Vacation Camping for Girls
-
-Author: Jeannette Augustus Marks
-
-Release Date: July 13, 2017 [EBook #55110]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VACATION CAMPING FOR GIRLS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by readbueno, Mary Svela, Harry Lam and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="tnbox">
-
-<p class="center">Please see the <a href="#TN">Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</a> at the end of this text.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cover_sm.jpg" alt="cover" width="400" height="579" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h1>VACATION CAMPING<br />
-FOR GIRLS</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="titpage">
-
-<div class="boxin">
-
-<p class="center fsize250 blankbefore15"><b>VACATION<br />
-CAMPING FOR<br />
-GIRLS</b></p>
-
-<p class="center highline2 blankbefore15">By<br />
-<span class="fsize150">JEANNETTE MARKS</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/logofish.jpg" alt="fish" width="175" height="131" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center fsize80 highline2 gesp1">ILLUSTRATED</p>
-
-<p class="center blankbefore2">NEW YORK AND LONDON<br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-1913</p>
-
-</div><!--boxin-->
-
-</div><!--titpage-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center blankbefore2 fsize80"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1913, by</span><br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</p>
-
-<p class="center blankbefore2 fsize80">Copyright, 1912, by <span class="smcap">David C. Cook Publishing Company</span></p>
-
-<p class="center blankbefore2">Printed in the United States of America</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="toc">
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="left fsize80">CHAPTER</th>
-<th class="right fsize80 padr2">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">I.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Camping Check Lists</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">II.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Camp Clothes</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page13">13</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">III.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Food</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page24">24</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">IV.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Cook and Cookee</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page37">37</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">V.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Log-Cabin Cookery</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page46">46</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">VI.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">The Place to Camp</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page68">68</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">VII.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Camp Fires</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page77">77</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">VIII.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Other Smoke</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page87">87</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">IX.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Fitting Up the Camp for Use</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page94">94</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">X.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">The Pocketbook</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page107">107</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XI.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">The Camp Dog</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page118">118</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XII.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">The Outdoor Training School</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page127">127</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XIII.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">The Camp Habit</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page139">139</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XIV.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Camp Cleanliness</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page147">147</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XV.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Wood Culture and Camp Health</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page157">157</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XVI.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Wilderness Silence</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page171">171</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XVII.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Home-made Camping</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page181">181</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XVIII.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">The Canoe and Fishing</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page193">193</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XIX.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">The Trail</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page209">209</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chapno">XX.</td>
-<td class="chapname"><span class="smcap">Camp Don&#8217;ts</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page221">221</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="loi">
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="right padr2 fsize80">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig1">Camp Footgear</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig2">A Group of Camp Utensils</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig3">Nessmuk Range and Small Cook Fire</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">79</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig4">Sleeping Bags and Camp Cot</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">99</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig5">A Group of Tents</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">109</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig6">Bough Lean-to and Frame</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">113</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig7">Some Game and Water Birds</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">131</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig8">Birds Every Camper Should Know</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">135</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig9">Leaves of Familiar Trees</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">137</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig10">Some Common Fish</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">199</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig11">Fishing Tackle</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">201</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig12">Rod Case, Tackle Case, Net and Creel</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">205</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig13">Angling Knots</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">207</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig14">The Dipper</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">213</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig15">Moose, Buck, Doe, Fawn and Caribou</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">215</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="illoname"><a href="#Fig16">Animals the Camper May Meet</a></td>
-<td class="pageno">217</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center fsize200 highline2"><b>VACATION CAMPING<br />
-FOR GIRLS</b></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
-<span class="fsize80">CAMPING CHECK LISTS</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">T</span><span class="startword0">here</span> are some considerations in
-camping which are staple; that
-is, questions and needs all of us
-have to meet, just as there are staple foods
-which all of us must have. No one knows
-better than the old camper, who has shaken
-down his ideas, theories, practices, year after
-year in the experiment of camping how true
-this is. If one is wise, one goes well prepared
-even into the simple life of the woods
-or mountains or lakes; and it is in a practical
-way, and under three so-called check
-lists, (1) camp clothes, (2) camp food, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page2">[2]</a></span>
-(3) camp equipment, that I wish to tell you
-something about camp life for girls.</p>
-
-<p>From the point of view of clothes there
-are two kinds of camping: one more or less
-civilized, the other &#8220;rough.&#8221; In the first
-perhaps we shall be allowed a small
-box or trunk. In the second we have to
-depend entirely upon a duffle bag or a knapsack.
-To the camper who plans for a good
-many comforts, there is only one warning
-to be given: don&#8217;t be foolish and take finery
-of any sort with you. Not only will it be
-in the way, but also a girl does not look well
-in the woods dressed in clothes that belong
-to the home life of town or city.</p>
-
-<p>There is an appropriate garb for the wilderness
-even as there is the right gown for
-an afternoon tea. Except for this warning,
-what you will put in your trunk will be simply
-an extension of the comforts which you
-have in duffle bag or knapsack.</p>
-
-<p>As the capacity of duffle bag or knapsack<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page3">[3]</a></span>
-is very limited, the check lists for its contents
-must be made out with rigid economy.
-The most important item is foot gear. A
-well-made pair of medium weight boots,
-carefully tanned, drenched with mutton tallow,
-viscol, neat&#8217;s-foot oil, or some similar
-waterproof substance, will prove the best for
-all-round usefulness. These boots must be
-broken in or worn before the camping expedition
-is undertaken. Nothing is so foolish
-as to start out in a new pair. Have in
-addition to the boots a pair of soft indoor
-moccasins. These are good to loaf around
-camp in. They are grateful to tired feet,
-and, rolled, take up but little space in the
-knapsack. To the boots and moccasins add
-from two to four pairs of hole-proof stockings
-of some reliable make. If you can get
-a really first-class stocking and are crowded
-for space, two pairs will do. One goes on
-to your feet and the other into your knapsack.
-There should also be several combination<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page4">[4]</a></span>
-suits, preferably of two weights, high
-necked, and with shoulder and knee caps.</p>
-
-<p>Now, see that the skirt you wear is of
-durable material; blue serge or tweed (corduroy
-is often too heavy); that it has been
-thoroughly shrunk, and is six inches off the
-ground anyway. Twelve would be better.
-Your skirt should be provided with ample
-pockets; the sweater and jacket also. Under
-the skirt wear a pair of bloomers, the
-lighter and slimsier they are, the better; and
-the stouter the material, the more practical
-for wear. I have tried many kinds, and believe
-percaline which is light, strong, slimsy
-and washable, the best. Silk is not suitable
-at all. A flannel shirt waist or blouse, a
-windsor or string tie, a soft felt hat with a
-sufficiently wide brim, but not too wide, complete
-your costume.</p>
-
-<p>Into the knapsack put two coarse handkerchiefs,
-a silk neckerchief to tie around your
-neck, the stockings and combination suit already<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page5">[5]</a></span>
-mentioned, a string of safety pins
-clipped one into another, a toothbrush, tubes
-of cold cream and tooth paste (tubes take
-up the least room and are the easiest to
-carry), a cotton shirtwaist, a nail file, comb,
-small bottle of the best cascara sagrada tablets,
-a pair of cotton gloves for rough work,
-a cake of castile soap, a towel, a stiff nail
-brush, <i>and, if you are wise</i>, a book for
-leisure hours, preferably an anthology of
-poems or a collection of essays which will
-afford food for reflection.</p>
-
-<p>In your preparations let it be the rule to
-strip away every unnecessary article. Take
-pride in getting your kit down to the absolute
-minimum. Keep weeding out what you
-don&#8217;t need, and then after that, weed out
-again.</p>
-
-<p>The same principle of rigid economy in
-selection will obtain in the check list for
-food. It is the minimum of expense in the
-woods that will bring the maximum of comfort.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page6">[6]</a></span>
-In arranging for the &#8220;duffle&#8221; to be
-taken with you there is one thing that can be
-counted upon with mathematical certainty:
-hunger. You are going to be hungrier than
-you have been in a long time. The problem
-is, then, how to tote enough food and <i>get</i>
-enough food to supply your wants. The
-carriage, the keeping, the nutritive value, all
-these things have to be taken into consideration
-in wood life. At home we have fresh
-vegetables, fresh fruits, fresh meats in
-abundance. How can we supply these things
-for our camp table? We can&#8217;t! But desiccated
-potatoes, dried apples, apricots,
-prunes, peaches, white and yellow-eye beans,
-dried lima beans, peas, whole or split, onions,
-rice, raisins, nuts, white and graham flour,
-corn meal, pilot biscuit, rolled oats, cream of
-wheat, cocoa (leave coffee and tea at home),
-sweet chocolate, syrup for flapjacks, baking
-soda, sugar, salt, a few candles (helpful for
-lighting a fire in wet weather, as well as good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page7">[7]</a></span>
-for illumination), matches, molasses, a little
-olive oil&mdash;all these things, with careful planning,
-we may have in abundance. To these
-items you should add good butter&mdash;the best
-salted butter is none too good&mdash;some cans of
-condensed milk and evaporated milk and
-cream, and a flitch of bacon. Meat makes
-a dirty camp, and a dirty camp means
-skunks and hedgehogs prowling around. In
-a properly thought-out dietary it will be entirely
-unnecessary to tote meat. All that is
-needed for use you can get at the end of
-your fish rod or through the barrel of your
-shotgun, and upon the freshness of what you
-catch or shoot you can depend. Dr. Breck,
-in his &#8220;Way of the Woods,&#8221; says that if he
-were obliged to choose between bacon and
-dried apples and chocolate, he would always
-take the apples and chocolate. Both portage
-and health will be served by avoiding the
-carriage of a lot of tin cans. The ration of
-each article needed you can work out with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page8">[8]</a></span>
-your mother or housekeeper, according to
-the number of people to be in the party,
-the menus you plan, and the length of your
-stay. For a cooler for your food, you will
-find a wire bait box, sunk in clean running
-water, excellent. The question of grub, or
-duffle, as it is called in camp life, in proper
-variety, abundance and freshness, is the most
-difficult question of all. To this problem a
-seasoned camper will give his closest attention.</p>
-
-<p>There are other articles, plus the food
-stuffs, which we must add to our check lists&mdash;chiefly
-articles of equipment. Two or
-three pails nesting into each other, a tin reflector
-baker for outdoor cooking, enamel-ware
-plates, cups and bowls, pans, dishpans,
-dishmop, chain pot-cleaner, double boiler,
-broiler, knives, forks, spoons, pepper and salt
-shakers, flour sifter, rotary can opener, long-handled
-and short-handled fry pans, a carving
-knife and a fish knife. The cost of these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page9">[9]</a></span>
-things carefully bought, will be about six
-dollars. There should also be in your kit
-some nails and a hatchet, toilet paper,
-woolen blankets, mosquito netting (tarlatan
-is better), twine, tacks, oilcloth for camp
-table, and some fly dope.</p>
-
-<p>With these articles, plus a little knowledge
-of woodcraft, there is almost no wilderness
-into which a capable girl cannot go and make
-an attractive home. But a little woodcraft
-we must know; the rest we can learn as we
-go. There is one fuel in the woods which
-skillfully used will kindle any fire, even a
-wet fire, and that is birch bark. You can
-always get an inner layer of dry birch bark
-from a tree. Keep a check list of different
-kinds of wood and have it handy until you
-learn these woods for yourself. Brush tops
-or slashings will help to start a quick blaze.
-Hickory is fine for a quiet hot fire. The
-green woods which burn readily are white
-and black birch, ash, oak and hard maple.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page10">[10]</a></span>
-Look for pitch, which you are most likely
-to find in old trees, and that will always help
-out and start any fire. Woods that snap,
-such as hemlock, spruce, cedar and larch, are
-not to be recommended for camp fires, as a
-rule. To be careless or stupid about the
-camp fire may be to endanger the lives not
-only of thousands of wild creatures in the
-wilderness, but also the lives of human beings.</p>
-
-<p>Be careful to have pure water to drink.
-You cannot be too careful. If you are in
-doubt about the water, don&#8217;t drink it, or at
-least not until it has been thoroughly boiled.
-Take with you, besides those I give, a few
-useful recipes for cooking experiments. They
-will bring pleasure and variety on dull days.
-Choose a good place for your cabin or shack
-or tent, whichever you use, especially a place
-where the natural drainage is good. Know
-before you set out whether black flies, mosquitoes
-and midges have to be encountered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page11">[11]</a></span>
-and go prepared to meet them. They are
-sure to meet you more than halfway. Don&#8217;t
-take any risks on land or water. The people
-who know the way of the woods best are
-those who are least foolhardy. Common
-sense is the law that reigns in the wilderness,
-and, in having our good time, we cannot
-do better than to follow that law.</p>
-
-<p>So much for skeleton check lists, many of
-which, in the chapters to come, at the cost
-of repetition, I shall amplify. Among the
-questions which I shall take up are the all-important
-ones of camp clothes, camp food,
-cooking, the place, camp fires, furnishing the
-camp, the pocketbook, the camp dog, the outdoor
-training school, the camp habit, wood
-culture, camp health, camp friendship, homemade
-camping, the canoe, fishing, and the
-trail. This great, big, beautiful country of
-ours is full of girls, real <span class="smcap">Camp Fire Girls</span>,
-who love the keen air of out of doors and
-the smell of wood smoke and the freedom of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page12">[12]</a></span>
-hill and lake and plain, and to them I want
-my little book to come home and to be a
-camp manual which will go with them on all
-journeys into the wilderness.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
-<span class="fsize80">CAMP CLOTHES</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">I</span><span class="startword0">f</span> you have been camping once, there is
-no need for any one to help you decide
-what wearing apparel to take
-the next time. Through the mistakes made
-and the discomforts involved, the girl will
-have learned her lesson too well to forget it.
-But there is always the girl who has not been
-camping. It is chiefly for her benefit that I
-am writing these chapters on camp life for
-girls.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, there are two kinds of
-camp clothes to be considered, for there are
-two kinds of camping: (1) the expedition
-which permits taking a box or trunk with
-you, and (2) the rougher camping that allows
-only the carrying of a duffle bag or a
-knapsack. If you are limited to a knapsack<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page14">[14]</a></span>
-or a duffle bag, your kit must be of the most
-concentrated sort and chosen with the greatest
-care. You will find ten or fifteen pounds
-the most you wish to tote long distances, although
-at the beginning this size of pack may
-seem like nothing at all to you. As I have
-found personally, even seven pounds, with
-day after day of tramping, may make an unaccustomed
-shoulder ache under the strap.</p>
-
-<div class="plate w450" id="Fig1">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo015a.png" alt="shoe" width="118" height="268" />
-<p class="caption">MOCCASIN<br />BOOT</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo015b.png" alt="shoe" width="137" height="119" class="padtop30p" />
-<p class="caption">TOBIQUE MOCCASIN</p>
-<img src="images/illo015d.png" alt="shoe" width="143" height="57" class="padtop30p" />
-<p class="caption">HURON INDIAN<br />MOCCASINS</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<div class="figcenter allclear">
-<img src="images/illo015c.png" alt="shoe" width="185" height="181" />
-<p class="caption">MOCCASIN SHOE</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="split5050 allclear">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo015e.png" alt="shoe" width="222" height="133" />
-<p class="caption">MECCOMOC OXFORD</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo015f.png" alt="shoe" width="190" height="161" />
-<p class="caption">ELKSKIN MOCCASIN</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>If you are to be limited to a small duffle
-bag, or a fairly capacious knapsack, what
-are the articles of clothing without which no
-girl can start? Let us take up the most important
-item first, and that is foot-gear.
-Wear a well-made pair of medium weight
-boots, thoroughly tanned, soaked with viscol,
-or rubbed with mutton tallow both on
-the inside and the outside, to make them
-waterproof. <i>Never start out with a new
-pair of boots on your feet.</i> If necessary, get
-your boots weeks beforehand, and wear them
-from time to time till they are thoroughly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page15">[15]</a><br /><a id="Page16">[16]</a></span>
-comfortable. In addition to these boots
-which you wear, take a soft pair of indoor
-moccasins. These can be worn when you
-are tired and loafing around camp, or while
-the guide is drying or greasing your boots.
-If you have ever worn moccasins and are
-going to tramp in a moccasin country, that is,
-a country of forest trails and ponds, then
-buy a pair of heavy outdoor moccasins; larrigans
-or ankle-moccasins are best. These
-should not be too snug. Worn over a heavy
-cotton stocking, or a light woolen one, or
-woolen stockings drawn over cotton, the
-moccasin is the most ideal foot-gear the wilderness
-world can ever know.<a id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Neat&#8217;s-foot
-oil is also excellent for greasing moccasins.
-Buy from two to four pairs of hole-proof<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page17">[17]</a></span>
-stockings of some reliable make. If these
-stockings are first class and can be depended
-upon, two pairs will do. One pair you will
-wear, the other goes into your knapsack.
-Have also several combination suits, some
-for your bag and one for your back. These
-suits should be high-necked and with shoulder
-and knee caps; of sufficient warmth for
-cold days and nights; in any case porous and
-of two weights.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> If you have room take with you an extra pair of
-shoes. When you have become a real woodswoman you
-will never be without woolen socks and moccasins. The
-thick, soft sole of sock and moccasin spare tender feet
-which are not accustomed to hard tramping and rough
-paths.</p></div>
-
-<p>If you are going to tramp in a skirt, as
-you must if your route touches upon civilization,
-<i>see that it is short</i>. Six inches off the
-ground is none too much, and twelve is a
-good deal better. In an outing of this sort
-it is as poor form to wear a long skirt as it
-would be to wear a short skirt at an afternoon
-tea in civilization. The skirt should
-be of some good quality khaki, army preferably,
-or a tweed; it should be thoroughly
-shrunk, and if it seems desirable, it should
-be possible to put this camp skirt in water<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page18">[18]</a></span>
-and wash it.<a id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> Have ample pockets on either
-side of the front seams. If I had to choose
-between the best of sweaters and a jacket
-with a lot of pockets in it, I should always
-choose the latter, and that is not on account
-of the pockets alone, but because it is a more
-convenient article of clothing. In case of
-cold weather it affords better protection, also
-better protection against rain as well as cold.
-You can have it made with two outside
-pockets and several inside&mdash;the more the
-merrier. Underneath the skirt wear a pair
-of bloomers. The lighter and stouter these
-are, the more of a comfort they will be. I
-have found a good quality of percaline to be
-the best investment. Percaline is light,
-strong, slimsy after a little wearing, and
-washes well. I have never yet found a silk
-that was practicable in the woods. Silk<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page19">[19]</a></span>
-bloomers go well with the comforts of civilization,
-but they are not fit to endure the test
-of roughing it. A flannel shirtwaist or
-blouse, a Windsor or string tie, a soft felt
-hat&mdash;you may have it as pretty as you wish,
-provided it is not too large or over trimmed&mdash;complete
-the outfit which you carry on you,
-so to speak.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> You can buy an ideal hunting suit at any of the big
-shops in Boston, New York or Chicago for from $8 to
-$10.</p></div>
-
-<p>Now to return to the outfit you carry in
-your pack and not on your back. A pair of
-indoor moccasins, an extra pair of hole-proof
-stockings (these you must have, not
-only on account of a possible wetting, but
-also because the stockings must be changed
-every day, for you cannot take too good
-care of your feet), two coarse handkerchiefs
-of ample size, a silk neckerchief to tie
-around your neck, an extra combination suit,
-a few safety pins clipped one into another
-until you have made a string of them, a tooth
-brush, a little tube of cold cream and a tube
-of tooth paste (the tubes are not breakable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page20">[20]</a></span>
-and take up the least room, they are therefore
-the best to carry), a cotton or linen
-shirtwaist of some kind, a nail file, a comb,
-a small vial of cascara sagrada tablets, several
-rolls of film for your camera&mdash;the
-camera itself can be slung on a strap from
-the knapsack&mdash;a pair of garden gloves for
-rough work with sooty pots and kettles, a
-good-sized cake of the best castile soap, a
-towel, a good stiff nail brush, and one or two
-books.</p>
-
-<p>Personally I feel that the books are as indispensable
-as anything in the knapsack, for
-in moments of weariness, or when storm-bound,
-they prove the greatest comfort and
-resource. The volume taken must not be a
-novel which read through once one does not
-care to read again. Better to take some
-book over which you can or must linger. I
-have tramped scores of miles with the &#8220;Oxford
-Book of English Verse&#8221; in my knapsack,
-and it has proved the greatest imaginable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page21">[21]</a></span>
-pleasure and solace. A small anthology
-or a book of essays, or something
-that you wish to study, as, for example,
-guides about the birds or the trees or the
-flowers, are good sorts of volumes to tote
-with you&mdash;besides, of course, this camping
-manual.</p>
-
-<p>Your kit for the rougher kind of camping,
-provided you have guides or men folks
-who will carry the food, or &#8220;grub,&#8221; as it is
-called in camp parlance, and the blankets, is
-now complete. But for the one girl who
-goes on this rougher sort of camping expedition,
-twenty go into the woods to be happy
-in a quite civilized log cabin or shanty.
-These girls will be taking a camp box with
-them, or a trunk, and can add to their wardrobe.
-There is no excuse, however, for adding
-the wrong sort of thing. There is no
-excuse for wearing unsuitable, unattractive
-old rags about camp, clothes which have
-served their civilized purpose and have no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page22">[22]</a></span>
-fitness for the wilderness life. Let me give
-you one other word, from an old timer at
-camping, about what you should wear.
-<i>Don&#8217;t be foolish and put in any finery.</i> The
-finery is as out of place in camp as your
-camp boots would be at a garden party at
-home. But several middy blouses, more
-shoes, more stockings, another skirt, a number
-of towels, a few more books&mdash;all will
-prove just that much added food for pleasure;
-first, last, and always, be comfortable in
-camp. There is no reason for being uncomfortable
-unless you enjoy discomfort. Anything,
-however, over and above what you
-actually need will be only a hindrance.
-Those who go camping, if they go in the
-right spirit, are looking for the simple life;
-they want to get rid of paraphernalia, not to
-add to it. To learn the happy art of living
-close to nature, means stripping away unnecessary
-things. There is no place in camp
-life for fussiness or display of any sort. All<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page23">[23]</a></span>
-that is beyond the daily need is so much litter
-and clutter, making of camp life something
-that is a burden, something that is untidy,
-uncomfortable, confused. Of no thing
-is this more true than of a girl&#8217;s camp
-clothes.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
-<span class="fsize80">FOOD</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">T</span><span class="startword0">here</span> are several reasons why the
-camp food is almost more important
-than any other consideration.
-To begin with, most girls are leading a more
-active life than they are accustomed to living
-at home. This makes them hungry, and, add
-to the exercise the natural tonic of invigorating
-air, the camper becomes fairly ravenous
-at meal time. There are other reasons,
-too, why food is an all-important question.
-If one is in the real wilderness, it will
-be difficult to get. One is obliged, therefore,
-to consider carefully beforehand the kinds
-of food necessary for a well-provided table
-and a well-balanced diet. Another reason
-for taking thought about this whole subject
-is the portage. All the foods must be toted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page25">[25]</a></span>
-in, and not all kinds will prove suitable or
-economical in the long run for this sort of
-portage. Finally, there is the question of the
-ways and means for keeping the food, after
-it is once safely in camp, in good condition.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule, when we go on our expeditions
-we leave regions where it is easy to get a
-great variety of foods. The city or its suburb
-or a comfortable country town, is the
-place we call home. Our tables are filled
-the year long with fresh vegetables, fresh
-fruits, fresh meats, and all kinds of bread.
-This dietary in all its variety, to which we
-have been accustomed at home, is quite impossible
-of realization in the camp. We
-might just as well make up our minds to
-that at once. Yet accustomed to vegetables
-and fruits as we are, we need them both in
-wholesome quantities. How shall we get
-them? Potatoes of course, if the camping
-expedition is for any length of time, that is
-ten days or more, must be lugged. And lugging<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page26">[26]</a></span>
-potatoes is heavy work over a trail. As
-for the other vegetables and fruits, and even
-meats, most people buy large quantities of
-tinned articles and so get rid of the whole
-question. Personally I think that this is a
-great mistake. It was a delight to me to
-find in Doctor Breck&#8217;s &#8220;Way of the Woods&#8221;
-that he, if obliged to choose between bacon
-and dried apples and chocolate, would always
-choose the chocolate and dried apples.
-And when the question of portage as well
-as health enters in, it may be said right here
-that it is quite impossible to carry a pack
-full of tins. But aside from the comfort of
-the guides, a tin-can camp is not likely to be
-a wholesome one. I am convinced that tin-can
-camping is responsible for whatever ills
-people experience when they go into the
-woods.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite simple to get different kinds of
-dried vegetables and different kinds of dried
-fruits&mdash;and the best are none too good&mdash;in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page27">[27]</a></span>
-bulk. At present there are even evaporated
-potatoes on the market for campers. Such
-dried foods pack and carry best and are most
-wholesome. Both white and yellow eye
-beans, dried lima beans, peas, whole and
-split, onions, evaporated apples, dried
-prunes, dried peaches and apricots, rice,
-raisins, nuts of all kinds, lemons, oranges,
-and even bananas, if they are sufficiently
-green, can be quite easily taken into camp.
-Various sorts of flour and meal, too, will be
-needed. Find out how much it takes to
-bake the bread at home and add that to the
-length of your stay plus the number of the
-campers and plus a little more than you actually
-need, and you will be able to work out
-the flour problem for yourselves. There
-should be then white and graham flour, or
-entire wheat, corn meal, pilot bread (memories
-of toasted pilot bread in camp can
-make one smile from recollected joy), some
-rolled oats, cereals like cream of wheat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page28">[28]</a></span>
-which carries well, cooks easily, and is
-hearty, and various sorts of crackers.</p>
-
-<p>Now the writer does not think meat necessary
-in camp. Except for the fish caught and
-the birds shot, none need be eaten. All the
-meat element or proteid necessary is provided
-for in the beans, peas, and nuts. But
-it is well to take a flitch of bacon or a few
-jars of it to use in broiling or frying the fish
-or game. Pork and lard are entirely uncalled-for
-in a properly thought out dietary.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page29">[29]</a></span><a
-id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-Sufficient good fresh butter is very much
-needed. If campers feel that they must have
-other tinned meats, the best kinds to take are
-the most expensive, ox tongue, and that sort
-of thing. Several months ago four of us
-started off on a ten days&#8217; camping expedition
-into a very northern wilderness unknown to
-us. One of the party, needlessly ambitious,
-took a preserved chicken in a glass jar
-bought from the finest provision house in
-Boston. By the time we reached our destination,
-the chicken was anything but preserved.
-Indeed, unless all signs failed, it had
-already embarked upon a new incarnation.
-No arm in the party was long enough to
-carry it out and set it on a distant rock for
-the skunks to visit. Nor shall I soon forget<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page30">[30]</a></span>
-a certain meat ragout which we concocted in
-a Canadian wilderness. We had the ragout,
-but alas, we had a good deal else, too, including
-a doctor who had to cover half a
-county to reach us! Aside from the fact
-that people who live in cities and towns eat
-altogether too much meat, in camp there is
-not only the question of its uselessness, but
-also the fact that there are no ways to care
-for it properly. Meat makes a dirty camp.<a id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> A brother camper says that he thinks even the fish
-would feel neglected without pork. On the contrary,
-trout are very sensitive to good bacon&mdash;in short, prefer
-it to salt pork. If you do not believe this true fish
-story, then catch two dozen half pound trout, slice your
-bacon thin and draw off the bacon fat. Take out the
-bacon, put the fat back into the frying pan&mdash;don&#8217;t burn
-yourself&mdash;and pop in one-half dozen trout. After the
-first mouthful you will find that my contention that
-trout are most sensitive to bacon entirely true. Be sure
-to put a little piece of bacon on that first bite. Following
-that, all you have to do is to keep on biting
-until your share of the two dozen trout is consumed.
-Remarkable how those two dozen will fly&mdash;almost as if
-the little fellows had turned into birds! The reason I
-am opposed to pork and lard camping is that we all
-know nowadays how diseased such meat may be. To
-go into the woods for health and run any avoidable
-risks is folly. Get a flitch of the best bacon and the
-best bacon is Ferris bacon. From this you will get
-enough fat for all frying purposes; also, in case you
-use fat as a substitute for butter, there will be enough
-bacon fat for cakes, etc.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> I cannot emphasize too often the absolute importance
-of keeping a <i>clean camp</i>. Mr. Rutger Jewett, to whom
-this camping manual and its author are indebted for
-many wise suggestions, thinks that it is not always
-feasible to burn up everything. &#8220;Every camp,&#8221; he
-writes, &#8220;has some empty tin cans. It seems to me that
-the best plan in this case is to have a small trench dug,
-far enough from the camp to avoid all disagreeable results
-and yet not so far away that it is inaccessible.
-Here cans and unburnable refuse from the kitchen can
-be thrown and kept covered with earth or sand to avoid
-flies and odors. Everything that can be burned, should
-be.&#8221; The only difficulty in my mind is, in case the
-region is hedgehog-infested, that those charming creatures
-will form their usual &#8220;bread-line&#8221;&mdash;this time to the
-trench&mdash;and add digging to their accomplishments in
-gnawing. However! Better rinse out your tin cans;
-Sis Hedgehog is less likely to mistake the can for the
-original delicacy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page31">[31]</a></span></p></div>
-
-<p>All food refuse should be burned up, anyway,
-never thrown out into the brush, and it
-is difficult to burn meat bones. The girl or
-woman who keeps a dirty camp is beneath
-contempt. There is likely to be one neighbor,
-if not more, in the vicinity of every
-camp, who will make things uncomfortable
-for the campers. He should be called the
-camp pig, and he is the hedgehog. Also his
-cousin, the skunk, will hang around to see
-what is carelessly thrown out or left for him
-to eat. The hedgehog is the greediest, most
-unwelcome fellow in the woods, and even the
-fact that the poet Robert Browning had one
-as a pet will not redeem him in the eyes of
-the practical camper. He hangs around any
-camp that is not kept clean, gnaws axe
-handles which the salty human hand has
-touched, licks out tin cans which have not
-been rinsed as they should be before they
-are thrown away&mdash;in short, he follows up
-every bit of camp slackness. There is only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page32">[32]</a></span>
-one way to keep off hedgehogs and that is
-to have an absolutely tidy camp.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the food stuffs already mentioned,
-there are several others which should
-be taken in the necessary quantities. Salt
-and pepper&mdash;better leave tea and coffee at
-home and take cocoa&mdash;soda, sugar, a few
-candles (helpful in lighting a fire in wet
-weather, as well as for illumination),
-matches, in a rubber box if possible, kerosene
-if your camp outfit will permit such a
-luxury, olive oil, maple syrup for flapjacks,
-molasses, condensed and evaporated milk or
-milk powder.</p>
-
-<div class="plate w400" id="Fig2">
-
-<div class="figcenter nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo033a.png" alt="" width="313" height="185" />
-<p class="caption">REFLECTOR BAKER.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="split3367">
-
-<div class="leftsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo033b.png" alt="" width="137" height="273" />
-<p class="caption">HOLD-ALL.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit3367-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo033c.png" alt="" width="242" height="68" class="padtop50p" />
-<p class="caption">PATENTED FRY PAN.</p>
-<img src="images/illo033d.png" alt="" width="242" height="42" class="padtop30p" />
-<p class="caption">HUNTING KNIFE.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit3367-->
-
-</div><!--split3367-->
-
-<div class="figcenter allclear nomargin">
-<img src="images/illo033e.png" alt="" width="233" height="201" />
-<p class="caption">BIRCH BARK CUP.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p class="allclear">The articles which need to be cooled can
-be kept fresh in a nearby brook. Dead fish,
-however, should never be allowed to lie in
-water, but should be wrapped up in ferns or
-large leaves. If you are camping for any
-length of time, by making a little runway out
-of a trough you can have freshly flowing
-water, cooling butter and other food stuffs,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page33">[33]</a><br /><a id="Page34">[34]</a></span>
-all the time. Or a receptacle constructed
-something like a wire bait box will prove as
-good as the flowing water. This sunk into
-a cool pond or lake, makes an admirable ice
-chest, into which the finny creatures cannot
-get. In some rotation which you have decided
-upon, the care of the food should receive
-the especial attention from one girl
-every day. In this way hedgehogs, skunks,
-mice, rats, ants, will all be kept at a distance.</p>
-
-<p>There are in addition to these various food
-stuffs and their care, as I said in the
-first chapter, many articles necessary for
-camp life about which we must think.
-If you are going off for a few days with a
-guide, he will attend to these things for you.
-But if you are setting up a camp for yourself,
-you will need to have them in mind.
-They are, two or three tin pails of convenient
-sizes nesting or fitting into one another
-so that they can be easily carried, a
-tin reflector baker for outdoor cooking, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page35">[35]</a></span>
-coffee pot if you are foolish enough to take
-coffee, enameled ware plates and cups, basins,
-pans, dishpans, a dishmop, a chain pot-cleaner,
-a double boiler, a broiler, knives
-and forks, spoons big and little, pepper and
-salt shakers, flour sifter, a rotary can opener,
-a frypan, long-handled and short-handled, a
-carving knife and a fish knife if you intend
-to do a great deal of fishing. There are
-many kinds of cooking kits. There is
-a good one for four persons which may be
-obtained at about six dollars from any large
-hardware dealer. Add to these things
-which have been mentioned fish hooks, a lantern,
-lantern wicks, nails of different sizes, a
-hammer&mdash;don&#8217;t forget the hammer!&mdash;toilet
-paper, woolen blankets, mosquito netting (if
-it is a mosquito-infested district), fly dope to
-rub on hands and face, oilcloth for camp
-table, some twine and some tacks.</p>
-
-<p>Equipped with these articles and what you
-carry in your knapsacks and what you wear,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page36">[36]</a></span>
-there is almost no wilderness in which a girl
-cannot have a good time, improve her health,
-and be the wiser for having entered the wilderness.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
-<span class="fsize80">COOK AND COOKEE</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">A</span><span class="startword0">ny</span> of you who have ever seen a
-lumber camp will remember something
-of how it is constructed.
-Separate from the main building is the superintendent&#8217;s
-office, a little cabin built usually
-of tar paper and light timber; then there
-is the hovel, as it is called, in which the
-horses and cows are stabled, and finally there
-is the big main building where the crew sleep
-and eat. But separated from the men&#8217;s dormitory
-by a passageway that leads into the
-outdoors, is the big room used as kitchen and
-dining room. Just beyond this and opening
-into the kitchen, is the room in which the
-cook and his assistant sleep.</p>
-
-<p>In these two rooms in the wilderness, cook
-and cookee reign supreme. They are the
-most important persons in the camp. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page38">[38]</a></span>
-are the best paid. Their word is law. They
-have a room by themselves, partly for cleanliness&#8217;
-sake, and also because the success of
-the whole camp depends more or less upon
-them. But it is not alone the lumber cook
-and cookee who make or mar the success of
-camp life. It is also the cook in the hotel
-camp, and even more, the cook in the hundreds
-of thousands of home camps which
-make glad our holiday season. The king
-pin of life, physically&mdash;and I might say morally,
-too, for wherever the health is excellent
-the morals are likely to be so&mdash;is good,
-pure, abundant food, properly cooked.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere is the art of cooking put so to
-the test as in camp. You have less to do
-with; you have bigger appetites to do for
-and more need physically for the food you
-eat. There is one article which, if you are
-planning to do more cooking out of doors
-than can be done in a pot of water over a
-fire and a frying pan, you must have, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page39">[39]</a></span>
-that is a tin reflector baker. One year I
-was caught in the steadiest downpour which
-I have ever known while camping. We were
-on the West Branch of the Penobscot, in an
-isolated region at the foot of Mount Katahdin,
-the highest mountain in the state of
-Maine. We had nothing to sleep under except
-a tent fly, and the rain drove in night
-and day, keeping us thoroughly wet. Our
-Indian guides managed to make the fire go
-in front of the leaky tar paper shack which
-we used as a kitchen. There was nothing
-we could do profitably but cook, so I amused
-myself cooking. I managed to bake, in the
-rain, before an open fire, within that little
-tin reflector baker, some tarts which were
-very successful. Many other articles, too,
-were cooked and came out thoroughly edible.
-That was indeed a test of the little
-tin baker which I shall never forget.</p>
-
-<p>There is one sort of kindling fuel unfailingly
-useful in the woods. Even the rain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page40">[40]</a></span>
-cannot dampen its blaze. The fuel to which
-I refer is birch-bark. It will light when
-nothing else will light, I suppose because of
-the large amount of oil in it. Even when
-you take it wet from the ground, instead of
-stripping it from a tree&mdash;and you can always
-get an inner layer of dry birch-bark
-from a tree&mdash;it will burn and kindle a good
-fire. A box of matches is a natural possession
-for a boy, but I am not so sure that
-this is true with a girl. Every camper
-should have a hard rubber box of matches
-in his possession, should know where it is&mdash;always
-in an inside pocket if possible&mdash;and
-should take good care of it. But to go back
-to that wet day and the shining little tin
-baker on the West Branch at the foot of
-Katahdin. There are some woods which
-are good for rapid, quiet burning and some
-that are poor, as every experienced woodsman
-will tell you. You must keep, until you
-know it by heart, a check list of different<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page41">[41]</a></span>
-kinds of wood, just as you must keep a food
-check list and other check lists. If it is a big
-camp fire, which for jollity&#8217;s sake or the sake
-of warmth you wish to start, and do not care
-to keep going for a long time, almost any
-sort of wood will serve. Brush tops or
-slashings will do quite well to start such a
-blaze. Hickory is the best wood for use
-when you want a deep, quiet hot fire for
-cooking. There is scarcely any better wood
-for the camp cook to use than apple, but that
-most campers are not likely to be able to
-get. The green woods which burn most
-readily and are best to start a quick fire with
-are birch, white and black, hard maple, ash,
-oak, and hickory. The older the tree the
-more pitch there will be in it, and the pitch
-is an effective and noisy kindler of fires.
-Hemlock, spruce, cedar, and the larch, all
-snap badly. I have been obliged to use a
-good deal of cedar in an open Franklin in
-my camp study this last summer. It has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page42">[42]</a></span>
-never been safe to leave one of these cedar
-fires without shutting the doors of the Franklin
-stove. I have known the burning cedar
-to hurl sparks the entire length of the cabin.
-As the chinking is excelsior, you can imagine
-what one of those cedar sparks would
-do if it snapped onto a bit of the excelsior.
-Cabins not chinked with excelsior are usually
-chinked with moss, which is almost as
-inflammable. With woods that snap, the
-camper can never be too careful, and no fire
-made of snappy wood should ever be built
-near a cabin or a tent. One spark, and it
-might be too late to check the quickly spreading
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>There is another thing about which the
-camp cook and all girls camping need to be
-very careful, and that is the drinking water.
-One cannot be too exacting in this matter, too
-scrupulous, too clean. Provided there is
-spring or lake water about whose purity
-there can be no doubt, the question is settled.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page43">[43]</a></span>
-In this connection it may be said of drinking:
-when in doubt, don&#8217;t. A quarter of a
-mile, a half a mile, a mile, is none too far
-to go to get the right sort of water. This
-can be done in squads, one set of girls going
-one day and another the next. This water
-must be used for the cooking, too. If there
-is any doubt about the water supply, it should
-be filtered or boiled or both. Go into camp
-ready to make pure water one of your chief
-considerations, and never, under any circumstances,
-drink water or eat anything, even
-fish, which may have been contaminated by
-sewage. How vigilant one has to be about
-this an experience of my own, some months
-ago, will show you. The pond to which we
-were going was indeed in the wilderness, inaccessible
-except by canoe. I had walked
-one long &#8220;carry,&#8221; paddled across a good-sized
-pond&mdash;two miles wide, I think&mdash;and
-had been poling up some quick-water. The
-&#8220;rips&#8221; were low, and scratching would better<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page44">[44]</a></span>
-describe the efforts to which we were put
-than poling does. My hands became so dry
-from the incessant work with the pole that
-I had to wet them to get any purchase on it
-at all. A greased pig could not have been
-harder to hold than that pole. When finally
-we reached the little mountain-surrounded
-pond for which we were making up the
-quickwater, I was hot, breathless, exhausted.
-I could think of only one thing, and that was
-a drink of water. There were a few camps
-about the lake, but it did not enter my mind
-that they would empty their sewage into it
-and take their fish and their water out of it.
-Yet after I had drunk, the first thing I noticed,
-in passing one camp, was that they unmistakably
-did empty their sewage into the
-pond. No evidence was lacking that it all
-went into the water not far from where I
-had taken a drink. It is not a pleasant subject,
-but it is one about which it is necessary
-to speak.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It is well to take in your kit some place,
-unless you are an accomplished cook and
-have it all in your head, a small, good cook
-book. The first thing which you should recollect
-about the rougher sort of camping is
-that you will have no fresh eggs or milk with
-which to do your cooking. You should have
-recipes for making your biscuits, johnnycake,
-bread, corn-pone, cakes, flapjacks, cookies,
-potato soup, bean soup, pea soup, chowder,
-rice pudding, and for cooking game and
-fish. In that veteran book for campers,
-&#8220;The Way of the Woods,&#8221; some good
-recipes for the necessary dishes are given.
-Whatever dishes you plan to make in the
-wilderness should be simple and few. Anything
-beyond the simplest dietary is not in
-the spirit of camp life, and will only detract
-from rather than add to the general
-pleasure. Those recipes which seem to me
-absolutely necessary I will give to you in the
-next chapter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
-<span class="fsize80">LOG-CABIN COOKERY</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">D</span><span class="startword0">id</span> you ever get to a camp fire or
-log-cabin stove at eleven o&#8217;clock
-and know that there must be a
-hearty meal by twelve? I have lots of
-times. The only way to do, if one must
-meet these emergencies on short notice, is to
-have what I call &#8220;stock&#8221; on hand. In using
-this word I do not mean soup stock, either.
-What I mean is that there must be some
-vegetables or cereals or other articles of food
-at least partially prepared for eating.</p>
-
-<p>I remember one summer when I was very
-busy with my writing. I was chief cook and
-bottle washer, besides being my own secretary,
-and I had three members in my family
-to look out for&mdash;a friend with a hearty appetite,
-a big dog with a no less hearty appetite
-and a rather greedy little Maine cat.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page47">[47]</a></span>
-The question was how to carry on the work
-which was properly my own and at the same
-time attend to cooking and other household
-work. I hit upon a plan which served excellently
-with me. I do not recommend it to
-any one else, especially to girls who will be
-going into the woods for a vacation and will
-have no duties except those connected with
-their camp life. But this plan of mine demonstrated
-to me once and for all that, even
-if one is very busy, it is possible to have a
-bountifully supplied table.</p>
-
-<p>The first day I tried the experiment I
-went into the kitchen at eleven o&#8217;clock.
-Never had I been more tired of the everlasting
-question of what to have to eat. It
-seemed to me that there was never any other
-question except that one, and I determined,
-with considerable savage feeling, to escape
-from it. At eleven o&#8217;clock I chopped my
-own kindling, started my own fire, and began
-twirling the saucepans, frying pans and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page48">[48]</a></span>
-baking tins which I wanted to use. I was
-set upon cooking up enough food to last for
-three or four days, and I did. At two
-o&#8217;clock not only was all the food cooked and
-set away for future consumption, but also
-we had eaten our dinner. In that time what
-had I prepared? There was a big double
-boiler full of <i>corn meal</i>. After this had been
-thoroughly boiled in five times its bulk of
-water and a large tablespoonful of salt, I
-poured it out into baking tins and set it
-away to cool. Various things can be done
-with this stock; among others, once cool, it
-slices beautifully, and is delicious fried in
-butter or in bacon fat, and satisfying to the
-hungriest camper. Also a large panful of
-<i>rice</i> had been cooked. This had been set
-aside to be used in <i>croquettes</i>, in <i>rice puddings</i>
-and to be served plain with milk at
-supper time. So much for the rice and the
-corn meal. I had broken up in two-inch
-pieces a large panful of <i>macaroni</i>. This was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page49">[49]</a></span>
-boiled in salt water, part of it cooled and set
-away for further use, some of it mixed with
-a canful of tomato and stewed for our dinner
-and the rest baked with tomato and
-bread crumbs, to be heated up for another
-day. On top of the stove, too, I had a mammoth
-<i>vegetable stew</i>. In this stew were potatoes,
-carrots, parsnips, cabbage, beets,
-turnips, plenty of butter and plenty of salt.
-The stew remained on the stove, carefully
-covered, during the time that the fire was
-lighted and was put on again the next day
-to complete the cooking, for it takes long
-boiling to make a really good stew. Inside
-the oven were two big platefuls of <i>apples</i>
-baking. These had been properly cored and
-the centers filled with butter and sugar and
-cinnamon; also two or three dozen potatoes
-were baking in the oven, some of which
-would serve for quick frying on another day.
-In addition to the food mentioned, I set a
-large two-quart bowl full of lemon jelly with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page50">[50]</a></span>
-vegetable gelatin. It took me exactly fifteen
-minutes to make this jelly and during that
-time I was giving my attention to other
-things besides. I made also a panful of
-baking powder biscuits which, considering
-the way they were hustled about, behaved
-themselves in a most long-suffering and commendable
-fashion, turning out to be good
-biscuits after all.</p>
-
-<p>Now, the import of all this is that, with
-planning, a little practice and some hopping
-about, a good deal of cooking and preparation
-of food can be done in a short time.
-Unnecessary &#8220;fussing&#8221; about the cooking is
-not desirable in camp life. The simpler that
-life can be made and kept the better. The
-more we can get away from unwholesome
-condiments, highly seasoned foods, too much
-meat eating and coffee drinking, too many
-sweets and pastries, the better. The girl
-who goes into the woods with the idea of
-having all the luxuries&mdash;many of them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page51">[51]</a></span>
-wholly unnecessary and some of them undesirable&mdash;of
-her home life, is no true &#8220;sport.&#8221;
-The grand object for which we cook in camp
-is a good appetite and that needs no sauce
-and sweets.</p>
-
-<p>What are some of the recipes a girl should
-have with her for log-cabin cooking? In
-the first place, we must take with us a good
-recipe for <i>bread-making</i>. There are so many
-I will give none. The best one to have is
-the one used at home, but let me say here
-that no flour so answers all dietetic needs in
-the woods as entire wheat. Delicious baking
-powder biscuits can be made from it as
-well as bread. Also know how to <i>boil a potato</i>.
-You think this is a matter of no importance?
-It would surprise you then,
-wouldn&#8217;t it, to know that there are some people
-devoting all of their time teaching the
-ignorant and the poor the art of boiling a
-potato. You can boil all the good out of it
-and make it almost worthless as food, as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page52">[52]</a></span>
-well as untempting, or you can cook it properly,
-making it everything it ought to be.
-Know, too, how to <i>clean a fish</i>. Oh, dear,
-you never could do that! It makes you
-shiver to think of such a thing. Very well
-then, camp is no place for you. Your
-squeamishness which might seem attractive
-some place else will only be silly there,
-making you a dead weight about somebody
-else&#8217;s neck. Does your brother Boy Scout
-know how to clean a fish? Did you ever
-know a real boy who did not know how to
-clean a fish? Why not a real girl, then, perhaps
-a Camp Fire Girl? Oh, but the cook&mdash;no,
-you will be the cook in camp or the
-assistant cook. Then get your brother to
-show you how to cut off its head and to
-scale it, if it is a scaly fish, how to slit it
-open, taking out the entrails, how to wash
-it thoroughly and dry it, how to dip it in
-flour or meal and to drop it into the sizzling
-frying pan, how to turn it and then finally<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page53">[53]</a></span>
-the moment when, crisp and brown, it should
-be taken out and served. Know, too, how to
-pluck and clean a partridge.<a id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> One day this
-last summer I went up the cut behind my
-camp, intent upon finding a partridge for
-our supper. I hadn&#8217;t gone far before I
-found one and with the second shot of my
-rifle brought the poor fellow down. I took
-him home to the cook whom I had with me
-then, the daughter of a neighboring farmer.
-I gave her the bird and told her to get him
-ready for supper. She said she couldn&#8217;t;
-she didn&#8217;t know how.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> If your mother and brother have not taught you
-how to <i>clean fish</i> and <i>pluck partridge</i>, then it would be
-best to go to the butcher and fishman and take lessons
-of them. If it is possible to go on your first expedition
-with a good guide, that will settle the whole difficulty,
-for your guide will know the best way and be
-glad to teach you.</p></div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know how?&#8221; I asked. &#8220;What do
-you mean?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She said that she did not know how to
-pluck and clean a partridge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; I replied, &#8220;you know how to
-clean a chicken, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mercy me, no!&#8221; she objected, looking
-pale and silly. &#8220;Mother always cleans the
-chickens.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mother always cleans the chickens!
-Mother does a good deal too much of the
-things that are somewhat unpleasant in this
-American home life of ours. This girl had
-been perfectly willing that her mother
-should do all the work which seemed to her
-too disagreeable or unpleasant to do herself.
-But I am glad to say, and her mother ought
-to have been grateful to me, she helped in
-dressing that partridge and I did not care a
-tinker when, after it had been cooked, she
-seemed to feel too badly to eat very much of
-it. I wonder how her mother had felt after
-all the hundreds of chickens she had killed,
-plucked, cleaned and cooked for that very
-girl of hers.</p>
-
-<p>You must know, too, how to <i>boil an egg</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page55">[55]</a></span>
-and do not do as I saw that same incompetent
-farmer&#8217;s daughter do&mdash;I suppose because
-she had left almost everything to her
-very competent mother&mdash;do not boil your
-eggs in the tea kettle. The water in the
-tea kettle should be kept as clean and fresh
-as possible. There is no excuse for a <i>dirty
-tea kettle</i>. We should be able in the woods,
-too, to know how to scramble eggs, if one
-has them, and to make omelets, and to boil
-corn meal, and the best ways for cooking
-rice and of baking fruits. Good apple pies,
-too, if you can make pastry without too
-much trouble, will not go amiss.</p>
-
-<p>There are a few recipes which you must
-get out of the home cook book, besides the
-few which I will now give you. <i>Baking powder
-biscuits</i> are not easy to make. Even
-very good cooks sometimes do not have success
-with them. Do not be discouraged if at
-your first effort you should fail. Keep on
-trying. You must learn, for I think it can<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page56">[56]</a></span>
-be said that baking powder biscuits constitute
-the bread of the woods. I know farming
-families in northern Maine who do not
-know what it is to make raised bread. They
-have nothing but baking powder or soda and
-cream of tartar bread. Use one quart of
-sifted flour, one teaspoonful of salt, three
-rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder,
-one large tablespoonful of butter and enough
-milk, evaporated or powdered milk, or fresh
-if you have it, to make a soft dough. Mix
-these things in the order in which they are
-given, and when the dough is stiff enough to
-be cut with the top of a baking powder can
-or a biscuit cutter, sprinkle your bread and
-also your rolling pin with flour and roll out
-the dough. It will depend upon your oven
-somewhat, but probably it will take you from
-ten to fifteen minutes to bake these biscuits.</p>
-
-<p>A recipe for corn meal cake, too, should
-be in one&#8217;s camp kit. The simpler that recipe
-the better. Some forms of <i>corn bread</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page57">[57]</a></span>
-take so long to prepare that they are not
-suitable for the woods. The one I shall give
-you will prove practicable. You might take
-one from your own home cook book, too, if
-you wish. Mix the ingredients in the order
-in which they are set down and bake them in
-a moderately hot oven. If you haven&#8217;t anything
-else to use, bread tins a third full will
-serve. One cup of whole corn meal, a half
-a teaspoonful of salt and a cup of sugar, a
-whole cup of flour, three teaspoonfuls of
-baking powder&mdash;these should be level&mdash;one
-egg, one cup of milk and a tablespoonful of
-melted butter.</p>
-
-<p><i>Pancakes</i> you must also know how to
-make. One can&#8217;t very well get along in the
-wilderness without some sort of griddle
-cake, the simpler the better. Sour milk pancakes
-are the best, particularly as it is not
-necessary to use eggs if one has sour milk,
-but that is not always feasible, as frequently
-you will have to use evaporated milk. Mix<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page58">[58]</a></span>
-a pint of flour, a half a teaspoonful of salt,
-a teaspoonful of soda, one pint of sour
-milk, and two eggs thoroughly beaten. See
-that your frying pan, for in camp you will
-cook your cakes in the frying pan, has been
-on the stove some time. Grease it thoroughly
-with bacon fat or butter; never use
-lard unless you have to. Cook the cakes
-thoroughly. You will find turning your first
-hot cakes something of an adventure.</p>
-
-<p>There should also be among our log-cabin
-recipes some directions for telling you how
-to make at least two kinds of <i>nourishing
-soup</i> without stock. Soup with stock in camp
-life is not practicable. Pea or bean soups
-are the most satisfying and satisfactory.
-The peas or beans must be soaked in cold
-water over night. Pea or bean soups take a
-long time to make, so that it is not always
-practicable to have them in camp. I will
-give you a recipe for <i>split pea soup</i>. Take
-with you, if you are likely to need it, also, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page59">[59]</a></span>
-recipe for black bean soup. After soaking
-over night, pour the water off the split
-peas and add to the cup of peas three pints
-of cold water. Do not let the liquid catch
-on the sides of the pan in which the peas are
-simmering. When the peas are soft, rub
-them through a strainer and put them on to
-boil again, adding one tablespoonful of butter,
-one of flour, one-half teaspoonful of
-sugar and a teaspoonful of salt. You don&#8217;t
-need pepper&mdash;better leave pepper at home
-and if you get so that you don&#8217;t miss it in
-camp, then you need never use it again. It
-is wretched stuff, anyway, doing more to
-harm the human stomach than almost any
-other food poison in use.</p>
-
-<p><i>Baked beans</i>, too, make a prime dish for
-camp life, partly, I suppose, because, like
-corn meal and pea and bean soups, potatoes
-and the heartier kinds of food, they are so
-satisfying to the camper&#8217;s appetite. It isn&#8217;t
-necessary to cook your beans with pork, substitute<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page60">[60]</a></span>
-some kind of nut butter, peanut butter
-or almond butter, or plenty of fresh dairy
-butter. The quart of pea beans should be
-soaked in cold water over night. In the
-morning these beans must be put into fresh
-water and allowed to cook until they are soft
-but not broken. Empty them into a colander
-and then put them in the bean pot, or if
-you haven&#8217;t a bean pot, a deep baking dish
-will do. Put in a quarter of a cup of molasses
-and a half cup of butter and pour a
-little hot water over the beans. Keep them
-all day long in an oven that is not too hot.
-Don&#8217;t put any mustard in your beans; mustard
-is as great an enemy to the human
-stomach as pepper, and that is saying a good
-deal.</p>
-
-<p>Against a rainy day when you may wish to
-amuse yourselves with additional dishes, or
-a hungry day when you are cold and ravenous,
-I will add a few more recipes. <i>Corn
-pone</i> is good. This is just corn bread baked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page61">[61]</a></span>
-on a heated stone propped up before the fire
-till the surface is seared. Then cover with
-hot ashes and let it bake in them for twenty
-minutes. After that dust your cake and eat
-it. I have told you how to make <i>corn meal
-mush</i>. With butter and sugar (in case you
-have no milk) it is excellent. What do you
-say to some <i>buckwheat cakes</i> on a cold,
-rainy night? If you say &#8220;yes,&#8221; all you have
-to do is to mix the self-raising buckwheat
-flour with a proper amount of water and
-drop some good-sized spoonfuls into a hot,
-greased frying-pan. The turning of hot
-cakes is the next best fun to eating them.
-Mash your boiled potatoes, season with butter
-and salt and milk if you have it. After
-that, call it <i>mashed potato</i>. It is good to eat
-and keeps well for pat&eacute; cakes or a scallop.
-When hungry, <i>fried potatoes</i> can be eaten
-with impunity by the most zealous dietarian.
-Fried potatoes are naughty but nice. <i>Mushrooms</i>
-are nice, too, but dangerous. If you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page62">[62]</a></span>
-have a trained botanist or someone who has
-<i>always</i> gathered mushrooms for eating, then
-perhaps it will be safe to cook this bounty
-the woods spread before you. If you must
-have <i>bacon</i> you cannot get bacon that is <i>too</i>
-good. <i>Ferris bacon and hams</i> are the finest
-and most reliable cured pork in this country.
-And since we are speaking of pork and therefore
-of frying, let me give you one caution:
-<i>Never use the frying-pan when you can avoid
-doing so.</i> No amount of care can make fried
-foods altogether wholesome. Even an out-of-door
-life cannot altogether counteract the
-bad effects of fried food. You can make
-good <i>broth</i> from small diced bits of game or
-whatever meat you have, when the meat is
-tender, add vegetables and allow the whole
-to boil for some time. <i>Chowder</i>, too, is a
-standard dish for camp life. Take out the
-bones from the fish and cut up fish into small
-pieces. &#8220;Cover the bottom of the kettle with
-layers in the following order: slices of pork,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page63">[63]</a></span>
-sliced raw potatoes, chopped onions, fish,
-hard biscuit soaked (or bread). Repeat this
-(leaving out pork) until the pot is nearly
-full. Season each layer. Cover barely with
-water and cook an hour or so over a very
-slow fire. When thick stir gently. Any
-other ingredients that are at hand may be
-added.&#8221; (Seneca&#8217;s &#8220;Canoe and Camp Cookery&#8221;
-and Breck&#8217;s &#8220;Way of the Woods.&#8221;) A
-<i>white sauce</i> for fish and other purposes will
-be found useful. Melt tablespoonful of butter
-in saucepan; stir in dessert-spoonful of
-flour; add <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> teaspoonful salt; mix with a
-cup of milk. Except for the ginger, <i>gingerbread</i>
-is not a bad cake for the woods. One
-cup of molasses, one cup of sugar, one teaspoonful
-of ginger, one teaspoonful of soda,
-one cup of hot water, flour enough to form a
-medium batter, <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> cup melted butter, and a
-little cinnamon will make it. You might
-experiment with <i>Chinese tea cakes</i> made with
-<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>4</sub> cup butter, one cup brown sugar, <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>8</sub>
-teaspoonful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page64">[64]</a></span>
-soda, one tablespoonful of cold
-water, and one cup of flour. Shape this mixture
-into small balls, and put on buttered
-sheets and bake in a hot oven. <i>Molasses
-cookies</i> are good and substantial, not a bad
-thing to put in the duffle bag on a day&#8217;s
-tramp. Use one cup of molasses, one teaspoonful
-of ginger, one teaspoonful of soda,
-two teaspoonfuls of warm water or milk, <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub>
-cup of butter, enough flour to mix soft. Dissolve
-the soda in milk. Roll dough one-third
-of an inch thick and cut in small rounds.
-Two well known candy recipes will add
-to the pleasures of a rainy day and a
-sweet tooth. <i>Penuche</i>: Two cups brown
-sugar, <sup>3</sup>&#8260;<sub>4</sub> cup milk, butter size of a small nut,
-pinch of salt, one teaspoonful of vanilla, <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub>
-cup walnut meats. Boil the first four ingredients
-until soft ball is formed when dropped
-in water. Then add vanilla and nuts, and
-beat until cool and creamy. <i>Fudge</i>: 2 cups
-sugar, <sup>3</sup>&#8260;<sub>4</sub> cup milk, 3 tablespoonfuls cocoa, a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page65">[65]</a></span>
-pinch of salt, butter size of small nut, <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> cup
-walnut meats if desired. Cook same as
-penuche.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps, in conclusion, I should advise
-you to learn something about the <i>boiling of
-vegetables</i> and tell you not to cut the top off
-a <i>beet</i> unless you want to see it bleed, and
-lose the better part of it. Put your beet in,
-top and all. When cooked, it will be time
-enough to cut it and pare it. Be sure if you
-cook <i>cabbage</i> that it is cooked long enough,
-and has become thoroughly tender. The
-same is true with <i>parsnips</i> and <i>carrots</i>. If
-you are in a hurry slice up your carrots or
-parsnips or cabbage or potatoes and they
-will cook more rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>Be sure that your camp dietary has plenty
-of <i>stewed fruits</i> in it. That will be so much
-to the good in the camp health. A bottle of
-<i>olive oil</i> also will prove a great resource; in
-fact, a can of olive oil would be even more
-practical and the oil is always capital food.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page66">[66]</a></span>
-Although the most elaborate recipes are
-given for making a <i>mayonnaise dressing</i> it
-is really very simple to make, and once made
-can be kept on hand as &#8220;stock.&#8221; I have
-been making mayonnaise since I was a little
-girl, and, as I cook something like the proverbial
-darky, I do not know that I am able
-to give you any hard and fast directions for
-making the dressing. With me it is an affair
-of impulse; I use either the white of an
-egg or the whole egg, it does not make any
-difference&mdash;the shell you will not find palatable&mdash;beating
-it up thoroughly, gradually
-adding the oil, putting in a little lemon juice
-from time to time and plenty of salt. Cayenne
-pepper is ordinarily used in mayonnaise,
-but if the dressing is properly seasoned
-with salt and lemon it needs neither
-cayenne nor mustard. What it does need is
-thorough and long beating, a cool place, and
-a few minutes in which to harden after it is
-made.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>You will learn one thing in the woods
-which perhaps will be a surprise. In that
-life it is men who are the good cooks. Indeed,
-it is surprising how much cleverness
-men show in domestic ways when they are
-left to their own devices and how helpless
-they become as soon as a woman is around.
-If you go astray any woodsman, any guide,
-almost any &#8220;sport&#8221; can help you out in the
-mysteries of cooking.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI<br />
-<span class="fsize80">THE PLACE TO CAMP</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">F</span><span class="startword0">or</span> most girls the place in which they
-are to camp will depend very largely
-on the locality in which they live.
-But few people want to, or feel that they
-can, travel long distances to secure their
-ideal camping ground. Yet there are some
-things about the place to camp which most
-of us can demand and get. When one has
-learned a little of the art of camping, it is
-really surprising how many good camping
-grounds may be found in one&#8217;s own immediate
-neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p>The first question to be decided is the sort
-of expedition which we shall undertake. Are
-we going to rough it for a few days or a
-couple of weeks, taking things as they come
-and not expecting any of the comforts we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page69">[69]</a></span>
-ordinarily have? Are we going to sleep in
-the open, cook and eat in the open? If we
-are to &#8220;pack&#8221; all that we shall have along
-with us, is it to be a river trip or a lake
-trip in a canoe? Is it to be a walking expedition
-or with horses? The least expensive
-item will prove to be the one that involves
-taking the fewest number of guides, and
-which is carried out on shank&#8217;s mare. Every
-expedition which is continually on the move
-through an isolated and rough country
-should be equipped with one guide to each
-two people. If it is a stationary camp, one
-guide to three or four people will be the
-minimum. But that <i>is</i> the minimum. Registered
-guides command big pay for their
-work, usually about three dollars a day, and
-their food and lodging provided for them.</p>
-
-<p>When we cannot make up for our oversight
-or mistakes or stupidities by trotting
-around the corner to procure what we have
-forgotten, or taking up a telephone and ordering<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page70">[70]</a></span>
-it sent to us, or sending a message to
-the doctor, who must come because we have
-exhausted ourselves, or got indigestion from
-badly planned and badly cooked food, it behooves
-us to be careful. Only a word to the
-wise is necessary. To use a slang phrase
-which contains in a nutshell almost all that
-need be said on the subject: <i>don&#8217;t bite off
-more than you can chew</i>. If you are starting
-out on a strenuous walking expedition,
-be sure that all in the party are accustomed
-to hard walking and are properly shod and
-in fit condition for the work. With these
-requirements attended to, your duffle bags
-full of the right shelter and food stuff, a
-capable man or capable men in charge of
-the expedition, there is nothing in the world
-which could be better for a group of healthy
-girls than a walking tour. I have walked
-scores of miles with my own little pack on
-my back and been all the better for the hard
-work and the hard living. More of us need<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page71">[71]</a></span>
-hard living as a corrective for our over-civilized
-lives than we need luxuries. If it is
-a canoe trip, it is well for several members
-of the party to know how to paddle and even
-to pole up over the &#8220;rips&#8221; of quickwater.
-Thank fortune that the girl of to-day has
-sloughed off some of the inane traits supposed
-to be excusably feminine, such, for example,
-as screaming when frightened. The
-modern girl doesn&#8217;t need to be told that
-screaming and jumping when she goes down
-her first quickwater in a canoe are distinctly
-out of order. I remember one experience in
-quickwater when I was not sure but that I
-should have to jump literally for my life. In
-some way the Indian with whom I was had
-got his setting pole caught in the rocks, and
-we were swung around sidewise over a four-foot
-drop of raging water. If the pole
-loosened before we could get the nose of the
-canoe pointed down stream, the end was inevitable.
-No one could have lived in those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page72">[72]</a></span>
-raging waters. The canoe would have been
-rolled over and we pounded to pieces or
-crushed upon the rocks. We clawed the
-racing water madly with the paddles, which
-seemed, for all the good they could do, more
-like toothpicks than paddles. But slowly,
-inch by inch, straining every muscle, we managed
-to work around. Needless to say, we
-escaped unharmed, except for a wetting. In
-this case as always, a miss is as good as a
-mile&mdash;a little &#8220;miss&#8221; which was most cordially
-received by me. The Indian said
-nothing, but I noticed that there was some
-expression in his face while this adventure
-was going on, and that is saying a good deal
-for an Indian.</p>
-
-<p>After some of the questions connected
-with the kind of expedition are thought out,
-it is just as well to consider the place in
-which one wishes to camp, for that will determine
-much else. All things being equal,
-it is well to get a sharp contrast in locality,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page73">[73]</a></span>
-because that means the maximum of change
-and tonic. In my experience there are only
-two kinds of camping grounds to be avoided&mdash;no,
-I will say three. First, there is
-swampy, malarial land, infested by mosquitoes
-and other unpleasant creatures.
-Second, there is ground on which no water
-can be found. Camp life without access to
-water is an impossible proposition. And
-thirdly&mdash;a possibility fortunately which does
-not occur in many localities&mdash;ground that is
-infested by venomous snakes is unsafe. Even
-in so beautiful and fertile a region as the
-Connecticut Valley, where I live when not at
-my camp in the Moosehead region, and
-where I frequently go camping, the question
-of snakes has to be taken into consideration.
-I have encountered both the rattlesnake and
-the copperhead, two of the most deadly reptiles
-known, in the Connecticut Valley.</p>
-
-<p>If, when you are at home, you live on land
-that is low, and high land is accessible for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page74">[74]</a></span>
-your expedition, I think you cannot do better
-than camp on the hills or the mountains.
-On the other hand, if you are ordinarily accustomed
-to living among the hills, a camping
-ground on low land by sea or lake will
-bring you the greatest change. Some girls
-might prefer to camp deep in the very heart
-of the woods. Personally I do not. I think
-it is likely to be very damp there, and to be
-so enclosed on every side that the life grows
-dull. I like a camping ground on the shore
-of a pond, or on a hill side with a big outlook,
-or at the mouth of a river.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most beautiful camping
-grounds I have ever known is in a deserted
-apple orchard miles away from civilization.
-Once upon a time there was a farm there,
-but the buildings were all burned down. Remote,
-perfect, sheltered, I often think the
-original Garden of Eden could not have been
-more beautiful. And there is the original
-apple tree, but in this case most seductive as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page75">[75]</a></span>
-apple sauce. You make a mistake if, before
-you get up your camp appetite, you assume
-that apple sauce need not be taken into account.
-When your camp appetite is up, you
-will find that the original sauce on buttered
-bread will put you into the original paradisaic
-mood. And there are all sorts of extension
-of the apple that are as good as they
-are harmless, apple pie, apple dumpling, apple
-cake, and baked apples.</p>
-
-<p>It may not seem romantic to you, but you
-will find it practical and, after all, delightful
-to camp a mile or so away from a good
-farmhouse, as far out on the edge of the
-wilderness as you can get, for, the farm
-within walking distance, it is possible to have
-a great variety of food: fresh milk and
-cream, eggs, an occasional chicken, new potatoes,
-and other vegetables in season. With
-the farm nearby, you can say, as in the
-&#8220;Merry Wives of Windsor&#8221;: &#8220;Let the sky
-rain potatoes!&#8221; and you have your wish fulfilled.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page76">[76]</a></span>
-It is probable, too, that the farmer
-in such an isolated region will be glad to
-help in pitching the tents, in lugging whatever
-needs to be lugged from the nearest
-village or station, in making camp generally
-and, finally, in striking the camp. It is likely
-that for a reasonable sum he will be glad to
-let you have one of his nice big farm Dobbins
-and an old buggy for cruising around
-the country. In any event, choose ground
-that affords a good run-off and is dry; select
-a sheltered spot where the winds will not
-beat heavily upon your tents, and never forget
-that clean drinking water is one of the
-first essentials. Keep away from contaminated
-wells and all uncertain supplies. With
-these injunctions in mind, you can find only
-a happy, healthful, invigorating home among
-the &#8220;primitive pines&#8221; or under the original
-apple tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
-<span class="fsize80">CAMP FIRES</span></h2>
-
-<p class="fsize90">&#8220;The way to prevent big fires is to put them out while
-they are small.&#8221;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Chief Forester Graves.</span></p>
-
-<p class="chapstart blankbefore2"><span class="firstletter">L</span><span class="startword0">ightly</span> do we go into the woods,
-bent upon a holiday. There we
-kindle a fire over which we are
-to cook our camp supper. How good it all
-smells, the wood smoke, the odor of the
-frying bacon and fish and potatoes; how
-good in the crisp evening air the warmth of
-the camp fire feels; and above all, how beautiful
-everything is, the deep plumy branches
-on whose lower sides shadows from the firelight
-dance, the depth of darkness beyond
-the reach of the illuminating flame, the rich
-strange hue of the soft grass and moss on
-which we are sitting! It is all beautiful with
-not a suggestion of evil or terror about it,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page78">[78]</a></span>
-and yet, unchecked, there is a demon of destruction
-in that jolly little camp fire before
-which we sit. Now the supper! Nothing
-ever tasted better, nothing can ever taste so
-good again, the fish and bacon done to a
-turn, the potatoes lying an inviting brown
-in the frying pan, and the hot cocoa, made
-with condensed milk, steaming up into the
-cool evening air.</p>
-
-<p>After supper we lie about the fire and
-sing or dream. Perhaps some one tells a
-story. The hours go so rapidly that we do
-not know where they have gone. And when
-the evening is over? The fire is still glowing,
-a bed of bright coral coals and gray ash.
-The fire will just go out if we leave it. Besides,
-we haven&#8217;t time to fetch water to put
-it out with. No, nine chances out of ten, if
-we leave the fire it will not go out, but smoulder
-on, and a breeze coming up in the night
-or at dawn, the fire springs into flame again,
-catching on the surrounding dry grass and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page79">[79]</a><br /><a id="Page80">[80]</a></span>
-pine needles. Soon, incredibly soon, it begins
-to leap up the trunks of trees. Before
-we know it, it is springing from tree to tree,
-faster than a man can leap or run.</p>
-
-<div class="plate w450" id="Fig3">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo079a.png" alt="" width="408" height="147" />
-<p class="caption">NESSMUK RANGE.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo079b.png" alt="" width="445" height="237" />
-<p class="caption">SMALL COOK FIRE.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>In dry weather you and I could go out into
-the woods anywhere, and with a match not
-much bigger than a good-sized darning
-needle, set a blaze that would sweep over a
-whole county, or from county to county, or
-from state to state. Millions of dollars&#8217;
-worth of damage would be done, and the
-chances are that the careless, wanton act
-would be the means of having us put into
-prison&mdash;which is precisely where, given such
-circumstances, we should be.</p>
-
-<p>Have we ever stopped to think for a moment,
-we who camp so joyfully, what loss
-and injury such carelessness on our part may
-mean to a whole community? To begin
-with, there are the forests themselves, and
-all they represent in actual timber, in promise
-for future growth, and in security for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page81">[81]</a></span>
-rain supply. Then in fighting the fire thousands
-of dollars&#8217; worth of wages will have
-to be paid and hundreds of men&#8217;s lives will
-be in danger. The sweep and fury of such
-forest fires, unless one has lived in the neighborhood
-of one as I have, is beyond the comprehension
-or the imagination. Burning
-brands are blown sixty feet and more over
-the tops of the highest trees and the heads
-of the men who are fighting the fire. Before
-they can check the blaze of the fire
-nearest them, one beyond them has already
-been started.</p>
-
-<p>Also there are the life aspects, big and
-small, of such a fire. Not only are the lives
-of the men who fight the blaze endangered,
-but all the homes, camps, farmhouses, villages,
-and their inmates are in imminent risk.
-What it has taken others years to gather together,
-to construct, may be swept away in
-a few hours. Helpless old people, equally
-helpless little children&mdash;all may be burned.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page82">[82]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Beyond this question of human life, which
-every one will admit is a very great one, is
-still another which, I am sorry to say, will
-not seem so important to some girls. Maybe
-it is not, but if you have ever heard the
-screams of an animal, terrified by fire, being
-burned to death, as I have; if you have ever
-heard the blind frenzied terror of the stampede
-which takes place, the beating of hoofs
-and the screams of creatures that are trying
-to escape, but do not know how, as I have
-heard them&mdash;then you will have a new sense
-of the tragedy which a forest fire means to
-the creatures of the forest. Of a forest fire
-it may be said, as of an evil, that there is
-absolutely no good in it: it is all bad, all devastating,
-all injurious.</p>
-
-<p>In a forest fire scores, hundreds, thousands
-of wild creatures are killed, those little
-creatures which, given the chance, are so
-friendly with their human brothers. Think,
-the little chickadees, tame, gay, resourceful,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page83">[83]</a></span>
-filling even the winter woods with their
-song, the tiny wrens, the beautiful thrushes,
-the squirrels and chipmunks, who need only
-half an invitation and something on the table
-to accept your offer of a nut cutlet, the rabbit
-who lets you come within a few feet of him
-while he still nibbles grass, and looks trustingly
-at you out of his round prominent eyes,
-the bear that thrusts his head out of the edge
-of the woods, full of curiosity to see what
-you are doing, the deer, even the little fawn,
-who will become your playmate and take
-sugar from your hand&mdash;all these trusting,
-interested, friendly creatures are killed by
-the hundreds of thousands in a forest fire.
-The smoke stifles them, the loud reports of
-the wood gases escaping from the burning
-trees terrify them, and the light and heat
-confuse them. It is difficult to find a single
-good thing to say for a forest fire. It spells
-devastation, loss, untold suffering, and in its
-path there is only desolation. The merciful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page84">[84]</a></span>
-fire-weed springs up after it, trying with its
-summer flame to cover the black ravage,
-the gutted ground, where the demon has
-burned deep into the peaty subsoil. Everywhere
-one sees what an awful fight for life
-has taken place: thousands of little birds,
-suffocated by the smoke, have dropped into
-the flames, thousands of creatures, tortured
-by the heat, have rushed into the fire instead
-of away from it. Worse than the flood is
-fire, because the suffering is so much the
-greater. Somehow there is something utterly,
-irredeemably tragic to any one who
-has gone over these great fire-swept stretches
-of land in our country; the thick stagnant
-water that is left, the charred bones, and
-the look of waste which shall never meet in
-the space of a human life with repair.</p>
-
-<p>No time to put out the camp fire? That
-little fire will just go out of itself, will it?
-Yes, probably, when it has accomplished
-what I have described for you, when it has<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page85">[85]</a></span>
-killed happy life, razed the beautiful trees,
-gutted out the earth, and devoured, careless
-of agony, all that it will have. Fire is the
-dragon of our modern wilderness, and it will
-be glutted and gorged, and not satisfied until
-it is. That jolly little camp fire is worth
-keeping an eye on, it is worth the trouble,
-even if we have to go half a mile to fetch it,
-to get a pail of water and ring the embers
-around with the wet so that the fire cannot
-spread. Never leave a camp fire burning;
-no registered guide would do such a thing,
-and no sportsman. It is only those who
-don&#8217;t know or who are criminally careless
-who would. If the public will not take responsibility
-in this matter, the fire wardens
-are helpless. Some enemies these men must
-inevitably fight: the lightning which strikes a
-dead, punky stump in the midst of dry
-woods, which, smouldering a long while, finally
-bursts into flame; the spark from an
-engine; even spontaneous combustion due to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page86">[86]</a></span>
-imprisoned gases acted upon by sun-heat.
-But there is one enemy which the fire wardens
-should not need to meet, and that is
-man: the boy or girl camping, the man who
-drops a cigar stump or match carelessly onto
-dry leaves, the hunter who uses combustible
-wadding in his shotgun. Let us help the fire
-wardens, those men who live on lonely mountain
-summits or in the midst of the wilderness
-with eyes ever vigilant to detect the
-starting of a fire&mdash;let us help, I say, these
-fire wardens to get rid of one nuisance at
-least, and let us keep our great, cool, wonderful
-American forests as beautiful as they
-have ever been and should always be for
-those who are in a holiday humor.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<span class="fsize80">OTHER SMOKE</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">T</span><span class="startword0">here</span> will not be much opportunity
-to dwell on all the wealth of
-information that comes to the
-real camper. The life of the woods is not
-only a lively one, but one teeming with intelligences
-and the kind of information which
-one can get no place else. My years of
-camping have stored my mind full of pictures
-and full of memories about which I
-could write indefinitely. In the practical activities
-of camp life we mustn&#8217;t forget that
-the silent wonderful life of the wilderness
-is ours to study if we but bring keen eyes to
-it, quick hearing and receptive minds.</p>
-
-<p>Let me tell you of one experience which
-I had some four years ago on the edge of a
-solitary little pond in the forest wilderness.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page88">[88]</a></span>
-Our way lay over a narrow trail, now
-through birches full of light, then through
-maples, past spruce and other trees, down,
-down, down toward the little pond which lay
-like a jewel at the bottom of a hollow. It
-was a favorite spot for beavers and we were
-going to watch them work. Their rising
-time is sundown, so we should be there before
-they were up. It was growing quieter
-and quieter in the ever-quiet woods, and when
-we hid ourselves behind some bushes near
-the edge of the pond on the opposite side
-from the beaver houses, there was scarcely
-a sound, and the drip of the water from a
-heron&#8217;s wings as the bird mounted in flight,
-seemed astonishingly loud.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the beavers, unaware of us, came
-out of their houses and began to work,
-steadily and silently. We knew them for
-what they were, builders of dams, of
-bridges, of houses, mighty in battle so that
-a single stroke from their broad flat tails<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page89">[89]</a></span>
-kills a dog instantly, wood cutters, carriers
-of mud and stone&mdash;animals endowed with
-almost human intelligence and with an industry
-greater than human. And I never
-saw work done more quietly, efficiently and
-silently than I did that night by the edge of
-Beaver Pond.</p>
-
-<p>As we sat there peering through the
-bushes I thought instinctively of the silent
-work which we do within ourselves or which
-is done for us. Deep down within us so
-much is going on of which &#8220;we,&#8221; as we
-speak of the conscious outer self, are not
-aware. Take, for example, the frequent
-and common experience of forgetting a word
-or a name. Despite the greatest effort we
-cannot recall it, and finding ourselves helpless
-we dismiss the matter from our minds
-and go on to other things. Suddenly, without
-any seeming effort on our part the word
-has come to us. Now this reveals a great
-truth about a great silent power: <i>all we have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page90">[90]</a></span>
-to do is to set the right forces to work and
-frequently the work is done for us</i>. With
-this serviceable power within us, why not
-make use of it habitually? It renews itself
-constantly and waits for us to call upon it
-for protection, for comfort, for correction
-and strength. It insists only that we think
-as nearly rightly as we can. Beavers of silence
-are busy within us.</p>
-
-<p>Much of the work of this silent power is
-done in our sleep-time. It is important,
-therefore, that our last thoughts at night and
-our first in the morning should be the best of
-which we are capable. Prayer is a profound
-acknowledgment of this power within us.
-We have all heard the expression, &#8220;the night
-brings counsel.&#8221; And probably most of us
-have said, &#8220;Oh, well, we&#8217;ll just sleep on
-that!&#8221; Why &#8220;sleep on it&#8221;? Because we
-have confidence in this silent power whose
-processes, whether we sleep or wake, are
-constantly at work within us, even as night<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page91">[91]</a></span>
-and day, a natural power, directs the growth
-of tree and flower. Again we have counted
-upon the work of industrious beavers of silence&mdash;the
-silent workers within each one of
-us.</p>
-
-<p>The woods are full of lessons never to be
-learned any place else. Insensibly are we,
-in this vast big intelligent life of the forest,
-led on to meditate about the things we see.
-I often wish not only that I could place myself
-at certain times in those solitary places
-by edge of pond, deep in forest, on the hillside,
-following the trail, but also that I
-might send a friend or two to the healing
-which can be found in the wilderness. For
-example, the girls who find nothing but
-troubles and vexations in life, who groan if
-the conversation languishes, are likely to
-have some of their troubles slip away from
-them and their talk become more cheerful.
-Who can be in the woods, who can live in
-the great out of doors and not feel optimistic,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page92">[92]</a></span>
-at least hopeful and interested? To
-every girl inclined to be moody, often to
-suffer from the conviction that living is difficult
-and perhaps not worth while, I commend
-camp life. Activity, distraction are its
-powerful and wholesome remedies for melancholy.
-In that life one is obliged to work
-mind and body much as the beavers work,
-one&#8217;s attention is held to something every
-minute. The whole current of our thoughts
-has been changed and for the time being we
-are distracted from the old bruised ways of
-thinking. The very alteration that comes
-with wood life gives us a chance to think
-rightly. Who can be troubled or bored or
-bad tempered and follow the trail? Who
-can be indifferent and be conscious of the
-energy and intelligence of beaver and squirrel,
-of rabbit and bird, of deer and moose?
-Soon the whole misery-breeding brood of
-cares, of doubts, of perplexities that existed
-before we left our home drop away from us.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page93">[93]</a></span>
-We can use the influence of this vast sane
-life of the wilderness for ourselves and by
-its strength make good.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX<br />
-<span class="fsize80">FITTING UP THE CAMP FOR USE</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">A</span><span class="startword0">ny</span> girl who has crossed the ocean
-knows how impossible, the first
-time she entered her little white
-cabin, that bit of space looked as a place
-in which to sleep and to spend part of her
-time. There seemed to be no room in it
-for anything; it was difficult to turn
-around in, there were so few hooks on which
-to hang things, and the berth&mdash;dear me, that
-berth! So her thoughts ran. Yet gradually,
-as she learned the ropes, she was able to
-make it homelike. With experience she
-learned that the more bags she had in which
-to put things, the easier it was to keep this
-little stateroom in order. The next time she
-took with her every conceivable sort of bag
-for every conceivable sort of object. Also<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page95">[95]</a></span>
-she had learned that the more she could do
-without unnecessary things in her cabin and
-steamer trunk, the more comfort was hers
-to enjoy. By the time she had crossed the
-ocean often, she had learned the art of having
-little but all that she needed with her&mdash;the
-art of making herself comfortable in a
-stateroom.</p>
-
-<p>Even so is there an art in learning how to
-camp, a happy art of which there is always
-something left to learn. The oldest campers
-never get beyond the point where they
-can make a slight improvement in their kit
-or their methods. In the end you will work
-out your own salvation for the kind of camping
-you wish to do. It is my intention to
-point out to you only what might be called
-the ground plan of fitting up a camp for use.
-Those little individual adaptations which
-every one of us makes, increasing familiarity
-with camp life will help you to make for
-yourselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>First, last, and always, when making out
-your camp lists, revise them carefully with
-the idea of cutting out everything unnecessary.
-All besides what you actually need
-will be clutter. The best way to do is to
-make out your lists, putting down everything
-that comes to you. Then go over them
-by yourselves and a second time with some
-one else. Your check lists for camp are important
-and should always be conscientiously
-made out, with nothing left to chance, nothing
-done hit or miss.</p>
-
-<p>If you are to furnish a camp, remember
-that your packing boxes can do great work
-in helping to set you up in your new home.
-In rough camping such boxes do well for
-dressers, washstands and, with a little carpentry,
-also for clothes presses. A piece of
-enameled cloth on the top of the one to be
-used as a washstand, and a towel or white
-curtain strung on a string in front of it, behind
-which you can put dirty clothes, make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page97">[97]</a></span>
-a thoroughly satisfactory article of furniture.
-In camp there is no need to think
-about elegance. Fitness and usefulness are
-all the girl need ever consider. It is astonishing
-how much beauty your homely cabin
-and white tent will acquire&mdash;a beauty all
-their own.</p>
-
-<p>For tent camping the usual camp cot bed
-is probably most satisfactory, for it is light
-and readily carried. If you are on the march
-and carrying at the most a tent fly for protection,
-you will, of course, sleep on bough
-beds or browse beds. Small, cut saplings,
-well trimmed, make good springs for beds.
-Any guide can help you to make the beds,
-and you would better be about it early, for
-it takes a good three-quarters of an hour to
-make a comfortable bough bed. Perhaps a
-few suggestions will not come amiss. You
-will, of course, have both good hunting
-knives, worn in a leather sheath on a leather
-belt, and belt-sheath hatchets. With the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page98">[98]</a></span>
-hatchet cut down a stout little balsam tree.
-From this break the tips from the big
-branches, having them about one foot in
-length. These foot-length stems make
-good bed springs and are the only bed
-springs you will have on a balsam couch unless
-you provide the spring yourself because
-of some green worm who is industriously
-measuring off the length of your nose, no
-doubt in amazement that there should be
-anything so extraordinarily long in the
-world. However, he is a harmless little
-chap, and the balsam tree having treated
-him very kindly, he will be greatly surprised
-at any other kind of entertainment which he
-may receive from you. Now, having got your
-&#8220;feathers,&#8221; select a smooth piece of ground
-with a slight slope toward the foot. Press
-the stems of the feathers into the earth, laying
-them tier after tier as you have seen a
-roof shingled, until your bed is wide enough,
-long enough, and soft enough to give you a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page99">[99]</a><br /><a id="Page100">[100]</a></span>
-good and sweet-scented night of sleep upon
-it. Lay a fair-sized log along each side and
-across the foot. This balsam bough bed can
-be made up as often as you wish with fresh
-feathers. Place one blanket on top and it is
-ready for your use. If you have got pitch
-on your hands in doing this, rub them with
-a little butter or lard and it will come off.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig4">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo099a.jpg" alt="" width="531" height="321" />
-<p class="caption">DR. CARRINGTON&#8217;S SLEEPING BAG.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo099b.jpg" alt="" width="448" height="232" />
-<p class="caption">&#8220;KENWOOD&#8221; SLEEPING BAG.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo099c.png" alt="" width="587" height="282" />
-<p class="caption">RUSTIC CAMP COT.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p class="allclear">There is still an easier bed to make. A
-bag of stout bed ticking, filled with leaves
-and grass, forms an excellent mattress and
-has the virtue of being portable, for the bag
-can always be emptied, folded up, packed,
-and refilled at the next camp ground. A thin
-rubber blanket or poncho laid over this
-makes it an absolutely dry bed at all times.
-If you are to camp in a log cabin, probably
-the most comfortable bed for you to plan is
-a spring, bought at the nearest village, and
-nailed onto log posts a foot and a half high.
-With your ticking mattress filled with straw,
-your day lived in the great out of doors, no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page101">[101]</a></span>
-one will need to wish you pleasant slumber.</p>
-
-<p>It is well to have a good supply of tarlatan
-on hand. This is finer than mosquito
-netting and therefore more impervious to
-stinging insects. If you camp in June, or
-the first week or so in July, you are likely
-in many parts of the country to find black
-flies, mosquitoes, and midges to battle
-against. There should be enough tarlatan
-to use over the camp bed and also enough to
-cover completely a hat with a brim and to
-fall down about the neck, where it can be
-tied under the collar. A more expensive
-head-net of black silk Brussels net can be
-made. This costs a good deal more, but
-the great advantage of it is, that the black
-does not alter the colors of the world out
-upon which one looks. Don&#8217;t make any
-mistake about the importance of some kind
-of netting and fly dope, or &#8220;bug juice,&#8221; as
-the antidotes for insect bites are sometimes
-called. There are various kinds of fly dope,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page102">[102]</a></span>
-any one of which is likely to prove useful.
-There is an excellent recipe for the making
-of your own fly dope in Breck&#8217;s &#8220;Way of the
-Woods,&#8221; which I give here.<a id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> A tiny vial of
-ammonia will also prove useful. One drop
-on a bite will often stop further poisoning
-from an insect sting. Inquiries should always
-be made beforehand whether one is
-likely to encounter black flies and midges.
-Those who have met them once are not
-likely to wish to have a second unprotected
-meeting. They are the pests of the woods
-and the wilderness.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> &#8220;Breck&#8217;s Dope:</p>
-
-<table class="breck" summary="repellent">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">Pine tar</td>
-<td class="right padl1 padr1">3</td>
-<td class="center">oz.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">Olive oil</td>
-<td class="right padl1 padr1">2</td>
-<td class="center">&#8220;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">Oil pennyroyal</td>
-<td class="right padl1 padr1">1</td>
-<td class="center">&#8220;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">Citronella</td>
-<td class="right padl1 padr1">1</td>
-<td class="center">&#8220;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">Creosote</td>
-<td class="right padl1 padr1">1</td>
-<td class="center">&#8220;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">Camphor (pulverized)</td>
-<td class="right padl1 padr1">1</td>
-<td class="center">&#8220;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="left">Large tube carbolated vaseline.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Heat the tar and oil and add the other ingredients;
-simmer over slow fire until well mixed. The tar may be
-omitted if disliked.&#8221;</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I will give, just as they occur to me, a few<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page103">[103]</a></span>
-other articles which will be useful in the camp
-life: a small cake of camphor to break over
-things in the knapsack and keep off crawlers;
-a small emergency box containing surgeon&#8217;s
-plaster and the usual things; vaseline,
-witch hazel; jack knife; tool kit; a map of
-the region in which you are camping and a
-diary in which to take notes. To these might
-be added sewing articles, a sleeping bag if
-you care to use one, and a folding brown
-duck waterpail. The catalog from any
-sporting goods place will suggest a thousand
-other articles which you may care to have.</p>
-
-<p>With a few planks to saw up into lengths,
-and a few white birch saplings, a most attractive
-camp dinner table can be made.
-Over this a piece of white oilcloth should
-be laid and kept clean by the use of a little
-sapolio. It is best not to buy an expensive
-stove for the cabin. A second-hand kitchen
-range, which can be purchased for a few
-dollars, will do quite well for the cooking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page104">[104]</a></span>
-cabin or shack, and an open Franklin stove
-for the living cabin. If one is going to camp
-in tents and wants a stove in one of them,
-it will be necessary to buy a regular tent
-stove. Anything else would not be safe.</p>
-
-<p>As far as actual furniture is concerned,
-except for camp stools or benches and camp
-chairs, if you wish to be very elegant, the
-camp is now furnished. But there are still
-to be considered the necessary utensils for
-cooking and other purposes. I will enumerate
-them again just as they occur to me,
-and not necessarily in the order of their importance:
-kerosene oil can, molasses jug,
-pails, a tin baker, a teapot, tin and earthen
-dishes, tin and earthen cups, basins for
-washing, pans for baking and for milk, dishpans,
-dishmop, double boiler, broiler, knives,
-forks, teaspoons, tablespoons, mixing spoons,
-pepper box, salt shaker, nutmeg grater, flour
-sifter, can opener, frying pans&mdash;one with a
-long handle for use in cooking over open<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page105">[105]</a></span>
-fires&mdash;butcher knife, bread knife, lantern,
-bucket, egg beater, potato masher, rolling
-pin, axe, hatchet, nails, hammer, toilet paper,
-woolen blankets, rubber blankets, crash for
-dish towels, yellow soap, some wire, twine,
-tacks, and a small fireless cooker if you know
-how to use one. A good fireless cooker can
-be built on the premises.</p>
-
-<p>Possessed of these articles, any one who
-knows anything about the woods can be most
-comfortable. They can, of course, be added
-to indefinitely. One may make camp life as
-expensive and complicated as one pleases.
-But to do that seems a pity, for it is against
-the very good and spirit of the wilderness
-life. The wood life and all its new and invigorating
-experience should take us back to
-nature. It is for that we go into the wilderness
-and not to bring with us the luxuries of
-civilization. Part of the wholesomeness of
-camp life lies in learning to do without, in
-the fine simplicity which we are obliged to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page106">[106]</a></span>
-practice there. Common sense is the law of
-the wilderness life, and let us be sure that
-we follow that law.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X<br />
-<span class="fsize80">THE POCKETBOOK</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">O</span><span class="startword0">ne</span> of the objects of some girls
-on their camping expeditions is
-to keep the trip from becoming
-too expensive. The maximum of value
-must be got from the minimum of pence.
-And I think that is as it should be, for,
-with economy, the life is kept nearer a
-simple ideal, is made more active and more
-wholesome. All sorts and conditions of
-camping have been my lot, the five-dollar-a-day
-camping in a log cabin (?) equipped
-with running water and a porcelain tub, and
-the kind of camping one does under a fly
-with the rain and sunshine and wind driving
-in at their pleasure. Although I do not advise
-the latter as far as health results are
-concerned, given that the party is in fair<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page108">[108]</a></span>
-condition they will be none the worse for the
-experiment.</p>
-
-<p>Camping for a party of four or five should
-usually cost something between eight dollars
-and eighteen dollars apiece per week. This
-rate includes a guide and a good deal of
-service, a rowboat, a canoe, and no care
-about food. But the longer I camp the more
-I am of the opinion that the simpler and
-more independent the life is, the greater
-health and pleasure it will bring. It has
-been said about camping, &#8220;Much for little:
-much health, much good fellowship and good
-temper, much enjoyment of beauty&mdash;and all
-for little money and, rightly judged, for no
-trouble at all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig5">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo109a.png" alt="" width="239" height="226" />
-<p class="caption">&#8220;TANALITE&#8221; WATERPROOF<br />WALL TENT.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo109b.png" alt="" width="275" height="226" />
-<p class="caption">TOILET TENT.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split6733">
-
-<div class="leftsplit6733">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo109c.png" alt="" width="348" height="260" />
-<p class="caption">KHAKI STANDARD ARMY DUCK WALL TENT.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit6733-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit6733">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo109d.png" alt="" width="140" height="260" />
-<p class="caption">TENT STOVE-PIPE<br />HOLE.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit6733-->
-
-</div><!--split6733-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split4060">
-
-<div class="leftsplit4060">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo109e.png" alt="" width="251" height="246" />
-<p class="caption">FRAZER CANOE TENT.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit4060-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit4060">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo109f.png" alt="" width="321" height="246" />
-<p class="caption">WATERPROOF DINING FLYS FOR<br />WALL TENT.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit4060-->
-
-</div><!--split4060-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p class="allclear">The girl who is the right sort gets more
-fun out of camp life when she does at least
-part of the work herself. Let her economize
-and use her own ingenuity and do the work.
-Any group of three or four girls can provide
-all the necessary &#8220;grub&#8221; for themselves at
-$3<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page109">[109]</a><br /><a id="Page110">[110]</a></span>
-a week per capita. This sum does not include
-rental or purchase of tent. A good
-tent, 7 &times; 7, big enough for two at a pinch,
-can be bought complete (this does not include
-fly) for about $7. You can get tents second-hand
-often for a song, or as a loan, or you
-can rent your tent for 10 cents a day. Get
-at least a few numbers of one or several of
-the following sporting magazines: <i>Outing</i>,
-<i>Country Life in America</i>, <i>Forest and Stream</i>,
-<i>Field and Stream</i>, <i>Recreation</i>, <i>Rod and Gun
-in Canada</i>. Look in the advertisement pages
-of these magazines for the names of sporting
-goods houses and send for catalogs. Then
-choose your style of tent. The different kinds
-of tents are legion. The Kenyon Take-Down
-House, too, is a capital camp home.
-It is &#8220;skeet&#8221;-proof and fly-proof. Send to
-Michigan for a catalog, and then go like
-the classic turtle with your shell on your back.
-In groups of four or more, the $10 laid by
-for a vacation should bring two holiday<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page111">[111]</a></span>
-weeks&mdash;possibly a day or so over; $15, three
-weeks and a bit over, and $20 a whole glorious
-month. Expensive camping may be the
-&#8220;style&#8221; in certain localities, but it is not necessarily
-the &#8220;fun.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For eight weeks this past summer my
-family of two members camped with two
-servants. In addition we had the occasional
-services of a man who did all the heavy
-work. There was not enough for the servants
-to do in the cottage and log cabin of
-our establishment. They were discontented,
-faultfinding, and wholly out of the spirit of
-camp life. All of the day that their tone of
-voice reached was helplessly ruined. The
-only way to keep the camp joy and pleasure
-was to keep out of their way. On our camp
-table we had silver, embroidered linen
-cloths, the same food, in almost the same
-variety, that we had it at home, and the
-same amount of service. All I can say is
-that it was a perfect nuisance&mdash;as perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page112">[112]</a></span>
-planned and executed a nuisance as one could
-well conceive. Everywhere these servants
-looked they found things which did not suit
-them. What I think they wished was a modest
-twenty-thousand-dollar cottage in that
-great and wonderful wilderness.</p>
-
-<div class="plate w500" id="Fig6">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo113a.png" alt="" width="441" height="260" />
-<p class="caption">FRAME FOR BOUGH LEAN-TO.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo113b.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="308" />
-<p class="caption">BOUGH LEAN-TO.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>In the autumn I camped alone for two
-weeks in a log cabin. I say alone. I was not
-alone, for I had three friends with me&mdash;a
-collie puppy, a blind fawn, and a year-old
-cat. They were the best of companions&mdash;for
-better I could not have asked. I never
-heard a word of faultfinding, and I was witness
-to a great deal of joy. It is a curious
-fact about camp life that if a girl has weak
-places in her character, if she is selfish or
-peevish or faultfinding or untidy, these
-weaknesses will all come out. But my four-footed
-friends were good nature itself,
-young, growing, happy, contented. And
-they had excellent appetites. I tell you this
-because I want you to see how much of an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page113">[113]</a><br /><a id="Page114">[114]</a></span>
-item their food was in the expenses I shall
-enumerate. This might be called a little intimate
-history of at least one camp pocketbook.
-The fawn had a quart of milk a day
-and much lettuce, together with the kind of
-food which deer live upon: leaves, grass,
-clover, ferns. I had to pay for her bedding
-of hay. The puppy and the cat shared another
-quart of milk between them. The cat
-hunted by night, but the puppy was fed entirely
-by hand on bread, milk, an occasional
-egg, cereals, and vegetables. My own fare
-consisted of all the bread and butter I
-wished, cocoa, condensed milk, bananas, apples,
-eggs, potatoes, beans, nuts, raisins,
-cauliflower, chocolate, and a few other articles.
-And there was, too, the denatured
-alcohol to be paid for&mdash;a heavy item, for I
-used only a chafing dish and a small spirit
-lamp. The milk was eight cents a quart on
-account of the carriage, the butter was
-thirty-eight cents a pound, the eggs twenty-five<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page115">[115]</a></span>
-cents a dozen. Except for cutting up
-and splitting the wood for my open Franklin
-stove, the wood cost me nothing. But I
-paid a man a dollar for half a day&#8217;s work.
-We weren&#8217;t seven, but we were four in that
-camp community. How much do you think
-the food for all averaged per week in those
-two weeks? Three dollars a week, and we
-had all that we wanted and more, too.</p>
-
-<p>When girls plan carefully and intelligently,
-when they exercise good sense in the
-cooking and care of food, there is no reason
-why, with a party of four or five girls, from
-three dollars to four dollars apiece per week
-should not cover all living, exclusive, of
-course, of the traveling expenses. And the
-camping can be done for less. I commend
-these expense items to all Vacation Bureaus
-and to Camp Fire Girls.</p>
-
-<p>In the two weeks I camped alone I was
-very busy with my writing. To this I was
-obliged to give most of the daylight. Besides<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page116">[116]</a></span>
-this, I had much business correspondence
-to attend to. It takes time to care properly
-for animals, and my pets had not only
-to be fed, but also to be brushed and generally
-cared for. I planned to spend some
-time every day with the blind fawn so that
-I might amuse her. I did all these things,
-took care of my little cabin, had time for a
-walk every afternoon, and went to bed when
-the birds did, to get up the next morning at
-five o&#8217;clock. Had I been able to give my
-thought entirely to the food question, I am
-certain that the expense of these items might
-have been made even less.</p>
-
-<p>Some girls will think this is getting back
-to the simple life with a vengeance. So it was
-but I can assure you that those two weeks
-were most happy and profitable in every
-way&mdash;far better than the over-served, over-fed
-months which had preceded them. For
-any girl who needs to forget how superficial
-to the real needs of life the luxuries are;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page117">[117]</a></span>
-for any girl who is lazy in household ways;
-for any girl who needs character building;
-for any girl who is in need of deep breathing
-and the pines; for any girl who wants
-more active life than she gets in her own
-home; for any girl who is of an experimental
-or adventurous turn of mind; for
-any girl who needs to be drawn away from
-her books; for any girl who wants to form
-new friendships in a big, sane, and beautiful
-world where the greetings are all friendly;
-for any girl&mdash;for every girl&mdash;who wants
-much for little; the log cabin, the tent, the
-shack in the wilderness, by pond or lake,
-upon the hillsides or in the valleys, will
-prove a &#8220;joy forever.&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI<br />
-<span class="fsize80">THE CAMP DOG</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">W</span><span class="startword0">hen</span> I began to go into the wilderness
-to camp, I was much
-more credulous than I am now.
-Everywhere I went in the woods I saw an
-implement which looked like a cross between
-a pickaxe with a long handle and the largest
-pair of tweezers ever seen. This was always
-lying up against something as if just
-ready for use, much as one sees an axe resting
-against a cabin wall or on a chopping
-block. I couldn&#8217;t make out what this could
-be used for. Finally, curiosity getting the
-better of me and no opportunity for seeing
-it used offering itself, I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that,&#8221; answered the guide with a
-twinkle in his eye, &#8220;that is the camp dog.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How nice!&#8221; I thought. &#8220;Why is it
-called camp dog?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you see it does most of the work
-for us and being so faithful and handy
-we&#8217;ve just got naturally into the way of calling
-it a camp dog.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was still more impressed when he gave
-me then and there several illustrations of
-its usefulness. But the end of the tale of
-the camp dog is not yet,&mdash;in fact it was a
-very long tale for me, the end of which you
-shall have in good season.</p>
-
-<p>Generally speaking it may be said that it
-is the guide and not this implement which is
-the camp dog. It is he who is faithful, always
-handy, always willing. And it is he
-who is more imposed upon than any other
-member of the camp community. The guide
-is a responsible person,&mdash;<i>the</i> responsible
-person. He is usually registered and his
-pay is always good. He needs every dollar
-he gets and every bit of authority, too, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page120">[120]</a></span>
-he works hard and often for groups of
-people who are thorough in only one respect
-and that is in their irresponsibility.
-The guide has to be sure that fires are kindled
-in the right places and that they are
-really out when they should be; he must
-keep his party from foolhardy acts of any
-kind; he must be sure that they have a good
-time and certain that they are not overtaxed;
-if it comes off cold or is cold, he must keep
-them warm; he must see, despite every vicissitude,
-that they are enjoying themselves; he
-must do the cooking&mdash;and he must be a
-good cook,&mdash;boil the coffee, wash the
-dishes, pitch and strike the tents; he must
-pilot the members of the party to the best
-places for fishing, often bait their hooks or
-teach them how to bait, dig their worms;
-and give their first lessons in casting a fly;
-must instruct them in all necessary wood
-craft and keep them from shooting wildly;
-he must see that the game laws of the state<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page121">[121]</a></span>
-are observed, also the fire laws; if anything
-should happen to a member of his party,
-he will, in all likelihood, be held responsible
-for it; and finally, always and all the time,
-no matter how he himself feels, he must be
-agreeable, obliging, useful.</p>
-
-<p>Now if the man who has all these burdens
-to bear is not a camp dog, I should
-like to know what he is? To those of us
-who have been into the woods year after
-year, it is a sort of boundless irritation to
-see some members of the camping party
-sitting about idle while the guide does the
-work. Part of the value of camp life is its
-activity, its activities. Another part of its
-good is the skill which comes from learning
-to be useful in the woods. The life out-of-doors
-should be a constant training in
-manual work,&mdash;call it wood work if you
-wish. I am reminded of a story told in
-&#8220;Vanity Fair&#8221; about a lazy, indifferent student
-who was in the class of a famous physicist.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page122">[122]</a></span>
-The freshman sprawled in the rear
-seat and was sleeping or was about to go
-to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Fraser,&#8221; said the physicist sharply,
-&#8220;you may recite.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Fraser opened his eyes but he did not
-change his somnolent pose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Fraser, what is work?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Everything is work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What, everything is work?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I take it you would like the class
-to believe that this desk is work?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, sir,&#8221; wearily, &#8220;wood work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>From the moment that school of the
-woods is entered every girl has her wood
-work cut out for her, if she is taking camping
-in the right spirit. It is all team play
-in the wilderness, or if it is not, it is a rather
-poor game. Helpfulness is one of the first
-rules and every camper should be willing
-to help the guide. Usually the guides are a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page123">[123]</a></span>
-fine set of self respecting, dignified, resourceful
-men. And I think it might be said with
-considerable truthfulness that when they are
-not what they ought to be, it is nine times
-out of ten due to the undesirable influence
-of the parties they have worked for. Your
-guide is your equal in most respects and
-your superior in others. He should be met
-on a footing of equality. I use this word
-advisedly and I do <i>not</i> mean familiarity.
-Well-bred girls do not meet anyone, whether
-in the wilderness or in civilization, on
-this footing immediately. The party should
-be willing and glad to help the guide in
-every possible way. That does not signify
-doing his work for him but it does indicate
-helping him.</p>
-
-<p>A routine of some sort should be adopted
-and is one of the best ways to assist him.
-One girl should be on duty at one time and
-another at another and all in regular rotation.
-No camp life can go on successfully<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page124">[124]</a></span>
-without some law and order of this sort. For
-it is just as necessary for the smooth running
-of household wheels in the log cabin as it
-is in the city home. Whoever occupies the
-guide&#8217;s position, that is the one who is chiefly
-responsible for everything, should be ably
-helped by the whole party but not by the
-whole party at the same time. Evolve a
-system for the particular conditions of the
-camp life in which you find yourself and
-stick to it. Let one girl or one set of girls
-help one day and another the next. Let the
-girl be detailed to do one kind of work one
-day and another another. This system,
-with proper rotation, means that nobody
-gets tired of her work. A girl cannot be
-too self-reliant if she is ever to be wise in
-the way of the woods. There is no need
-for discouragement if everything is not
-learned at once, for camping is like skating
-and is an art to be learned only through
-many tumbles and mistakes. Be prepared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page125">[125]</a></span>
-to take it and yourself lightly&mdash;in short, to
-laugh readily over the mistakes made in the
-art of living in the woods.</p>
-
-<p>Now we have come to the very tip of the
-tail of the camp dog. You will be interested
-to know how an old timer was obliged to
-laugh at herself. I am ashamed to tell you
-how recently this occurred. I was in the
-northernmost wilderness of the state of
-Maine, and near a big lumber camp, when
-I saw a &#8220;camp dog&#8221; lying on the ground,
-its long axe handle shining from use, its
-pickaxe blade a bright steel color, and the
-tooth at the back looking as if it had been
-often used. I was delighted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; I said to my guide, &#8220;look at that
-camp dog lying there!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was particularly attentive to my pronunciation,
-for he said I pronounced some
-words, such as &#8220;girl,&#8221; as he had never heard
-them pronounced before. I saw a curious
-expression pass across his face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you say that was?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, that camp dog lying there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Camp dog!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then he began to laugh and he kept right
-on until the woods echoed with his roars.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said finally, wiping away the
-tears, &#8220;if that doesn&#8217;t beat everything! That
-isn&#8217;t a camp dog, that&#8217;s a cant dog,&mdash;you
-know what you cant logs and heavy things
-over with, roll &#8217;em over and pry &#8217;em up with
-when you couldn&#8217;t do it any other way. My
-grief, to think of your calling that a camp
-dog all these years!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And he went off into another guffaw.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page127">[127]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII<br />
-<span class="fsize80">THE OUTDOOR TRAINING SCHOOL</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">M</span><span class="startword0">any</span> girls think of outdoor life
-as of something to be enjoyed
-if they have plenty of time. As
-a matter of course they take their daily
-bath. But the outdoor exercise comes as
-an accessory. It is still unfortunately true
-that boys more than girls take camp life
-for granted. Yet girls, and students particularly,
-should realize that it is economy of
-time to be out of doors. This they need
-both for their work and for their health.
-Outdoor exercise, with its bath of fresh air
-and the natural bath of freshly circulating
-blood it brings with it, its training school
-for the whole girl, is as essential as the tub
-or sponge bath. But how many of us think
-of it in that way?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To be outdoors is to have the nerves
-keyed to the proper pitch. If fresh air is
-not a tonic to the nerves, then why is it
-that moodiness and depression fall away as
-we walk or row or lie under the trees, and
-we become saner and more serene? When
-one is depressed the best thing to do is to
-go out of doors. Altogether aside from
-any formal wisdom of book or student or
-teacher, there is wisdom with nature. <i>If
-the head is tired, go out of doors! If the
-body is fagged, go out of doors! If the
-heart is troubled, go out of doors!</i> The life
-out there, as no life indoors can, will make
-for health, for charity, for bigness. Petty
-things fall away, and with nature equanimity
-and poise are found again. It isn&#8217;t necessary
-to bother someone about woes real or
-imaginary. All that is necessary is to get out
-among the trees and flowers, the sky and
-clouds, the joyous birds and little creatures
-of field and wood, and hear what they have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page129">[129]</a></span>
-to say. There will be no complaining
-among them, even about very real difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>A great deal is heard concerning hygiene
-in these days, the study of it, the practice of
-it. The biggest university of hygiene in the
-world is not within houses but outside, up
-that hillside where the trees are blowing, in
-the doorway of our tent, on the lawn in
-front of the house, out on the lake, even on
-a city house-top, and, last resort if necessary,
-by an open window. One reason why many
-people are concerned about this question of
-hygiene is because they know that not only
-are human beings happier when they are
-well and strong, but also because a healthy
-person is, nine times out of ten, more moral
-than one who is sick or sickly. Ill health
-means offense of some kind, often one&#8217;s own,
-against the laws of nature or society. We
-have, too, to pay for one another&#8217;s faults.
-But life lived on sound physical principles,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page130">[130]</a></span>
-with plenty of sunshine, cold water, exercise,
-wind, rain, simple food and sensible clothing,
-is not likely to be sickly, useless or burdensome.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig7">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo131a.jpg" alt="" width="241" height="350" />
-<p class="caption">BITTERN</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo131b.jpg" alt="" width="298" height="350" />
-<p class="caption">LOON</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo131c.jpg" alt="" width="278" height="205" />
-<p class="caption">PARTRIDGE</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo131d.jpg" alt="" width="255" height="205" />
-<p class="caption">RED-BREASTED MERGANSER</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo131e.jpg" alt="" width="235" height="177" />
-<p class="caption">WOODCOCK</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo131f.jpg" alt="" width="295" height="173" class="padtop4p" />
-<p class="caption">MALLARD</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>The body is not a mechanism to be disregarded,
-but an exquisitely made machine to
-be exquisitely cared for. Nobody would
-trust an engineer to run an engine he knows
-nothing about. Yet most of us are running
-our engines without any knowledge of the
-machinery. Why should we excuse ourselves
-for lack of knowledge and care when, for
-the same reasons a chauffeur, for example,
-would be immediately dismissed? How
-many of us know that the nerves are more
-or less dependent upon the muscles for their
-tone? How many of us realize how important
-it is to keep in perfect muscular
-condition? We sit hour after hour in our
-chairs, all our muscles relaxed, bending over
-books, and begrudge one hour&mdash;it ought to
-be three or four!&mdash;out of doors. The person<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page131">[131]</a><br /><a id="Page132">[132]</a></span>
-who can run furthest and swiftest is the
-one with the strongest heart. The person
-who can work longest and to the greatest advantage
-is the one who has kept his bodily
-health.<span class="nowrap">... <i>It</i></span> <i>may be laid down as an absolute
-rule that any individual can do more and
-better work when he is well than when he is
-not in good physical condition.</i> Ceaseless activity
-is the law of nature and the body that
-is resolutely active does not grow old as
-rapidly as the one that is physically indolent.</p>
-
-<p>Much out-of-door life, much camping,
-keep one young in heart, too. It isn&#8217;t possible
-to grow old or sophisticated among
-such a wealth of joyous, wholesome friendships
-as may be found in nature, where no
-unclean word is ever heard and where no
-unfriendliness, no false pride, no jealousy
-can exist. A great English poet, William
-Wordsworth, has told us more of the shaping
-power of nature, its quickening spirit,
-its power of restoration, than any other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page133">[133]</a></span>
-poet. It would be well for every girl to take
-that wonderful poem &#8220;Tintern Abbey&#8221; out
-of doors and read it there. Wordsworth,
-still a very young man when he wrote it,
-tells how he loved the Welsh landscape and
-the tranquil restoration it had brought him</p>
-
-<div class="poemcenter">
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i3">&#8220;&#8217;mid the din<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Of towns and cities.&#8221;<br /></span>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A higher gift he acknowledges, too, when
-through the harmony and joy of nature he
-had been led to see deeply &#8220;into the life of
-things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There is something the matter with a girl
-who hasn&#8217;t an appetite, as sharp as hunger,
-to escape from her books and camp out of
-doors. If outdoor life cannot engross her
-wholly at times, banishing all thoughts of
-work, then she should make an effort to
-forget books and everything connected with
-them for a while. A young girl ought to be
-skillful in all sorts of outdoor accomplishments,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page134">[134]</a></span>
-rowing, swimming, riding and driving
-if possible, canoeing, skating, sailing a
-boat, fishing, hunting, mountain climbing.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately there is more of the play-spirit
-connected with outdoor life than there
-used to be. Both school and college have
-fostered this wholesome attitude. If a girl
-doesn&#8217;t like active sports she should cultivate
-a love for them. You can always trust
-a person who is accomplished in physical
-ways, for anyone who has led an intelligent
-out-of-door life is more self-reliant. Her
-faculty for doing things, her inventiveness,
-her poise, her &#8220;nerve&#8221; are all strengthened.
-I recall an instance of this &#8220;faculty&#8221; and inventiveness.
-We were on a wild Maine lake
-when an accident happened to the canoe, a
-necessity to our return, for we were far
-away from all sources of help. Apparently
-there was nothing with which to mend it.
-But our Indian guide found there everything
-he needed ready for his use. He scraped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page135">[135]</a><br /><a id="Page136">[136]</a></span>
-gum off a tree, he cut a piece of bark, and
-then he rummaged about until he discovered
-an old wire. With these things he securely
-mended a big hole. Oftentimes it seems as
-if the very appliances with which city children
-are provided tend to make them incapable.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig8">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<img src="images/illo135a.jpg" alt="" width="526" height="250" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl6">YELLOWBIRD</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">FIELD SPARROW</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-<p class="caption padl3">GOLDEN-CROWNED THRUSH</p>
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr4">SONG SPARROW</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr8">CHIPPING SPARROW</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-<p class="caption">YELLOWBIRD, FIELD SPARROW, SONG SPARROW, CHIPPING SPARROW, GOLDEN CROWNED THRUSH</p>
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo135b.jpg" alt="" width="524" height="164" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl8">WOOD THRUSH</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<p class="caption padl4">HERMIT THRUSH</p>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr6">SWAINSON&#8217;S THRUSH</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr8">WILSON&#8217;S THRUSH</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">WOOD THRUSH, HERMIT THRUSH, SWAINSON&#8217;S THRUSH, WILSON&#8217;S THRUSH</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo136c.jpg" alt="" width="509" height="151" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl8">PH&#338;BE BIRD</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr4">SCARLET TANAGER</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr6">MARYLAND YELLOWTHROAT</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr8">BLUEBIRD</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">PH&#338;BE BIRD, SCARLET TANAGER, MARYLAND YELLOWTHROAT, BLUEBIRD</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo136d.jpg" alt="" width="509" height="134" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl8">WREN</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl4">BLUE JAY</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr6">CHICKADEE</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr8">RUBYTHROAT</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">WREN, BLUE JAY, CHICKADEE, RUBYTHROAT</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo136e.jpg" alt="" width="483" height="154" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl8">WHIP-POOR-WILL</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr4">NIGHT HAWK</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr8">SCREECH OWL</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">WHIP-POOR-WILL, NIGHT HAWK, SCREECH OWL</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>The girl who lives out of doors acquires
-unlimited resourcefulness. Outdoor life
-quickens and sharpens the perception. And
-for the girl to have her power of observation
-sharpened is worth a great deal. The
-capacity for accurate and quick observation
-education from books does not always develop.
-One must go back to nature for
-that, one must live out in the woods and
-fields all one can, one must be able
-to tell the scent of honeysuckle from
-the scent of the rose, and know the
-fragrance of milkweed even before that
-homely weed is seen, and know spruce, balsam
-and white pine even as one knows a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page137">[137]</a><br /><a id="Page138">[138]</a></span>
-friend. Eyes must be able to detect the differences
-not only in colors and shapes of
-birds, but in their flight, and ears know
-every song of wood and field. Then the
-services of beauty, its music, its color, its
-form, will be always about us and nature&#8217;s
-health and strength and beauty become our
-own, not only her gaiety and &#8220;vital feelings
-of delight,&#8221; but also her restraint upon
-weakness, and her kindling to the highest
-life&mdash;the life that is spiritual.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig9">
-
-<div class="split3367">
-
-<div class="leftsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo137a.jpg" alt="" width="161" height="99" />
-<p class="caption">BLACK SPRUCE</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo137c.jpg" alt="" width="204" height="193" />
-<p class="caption">BLACK OAK</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo137e.jpg" alt="" width="190" height="150" />
-<p class="caption">BIRCHES</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo137g.jpg" alt="" width="204" height="275" />
-<p class="caption">CHESTNUT</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit3367-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<img src="images/illo137b.jpg" alt="" width="359" height="188" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl6">BALSAM FIR</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr4">WHITE PINE</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">BALSAM FIR, WHITE PINE</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<img src="images/illo137d.jpg" alt="" width="331" height="224" class="padtop50p" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">BEECH</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padr6">LARCH</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">BEECH, LARCH</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-
-<img src="images/illo137f.jpg" alt="" width="337" height="293" class="padtop30p" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">HORSE CHESTNUT</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">MOUNTAIN MAPLE</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">HORDE CHESTNUT, MOUNTAIN MAPLE</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit3367-->
-
-</div><!--split3367-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-<span class="fsize80">THE CAMP HABIT</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">I</span><span class="startword0">f</span> there were no such thing as habit,
-life would be nothing but a perpetual
-beginning and recommencing over
-and over again. All that we do or think
-marks us with its imprint, leaving behind it a
-tendency&mdash;a tendency towards repetition is
-the beginning of habit, and because of it we
-can get the camp habit just as we can get any
-other habit. The instinct to repeat our
-camping out of doors gradually grows
-stronger. At last, scarcely conscious of the
-existence of the demand, we have come to
-feel that we cannot pass our holiday in any
-other way. The first camping experience
-stands out in bold relief because it is new.
-As we live into it, its first impressions are
-lost. And it is at this moment, if we are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page140">[140]</a></span>
-made of the right stuff and have in us the
-right longings and needs, that we begin to
-have the camp habit.</p>
-
-<p>Just as with people, maybe we scarcely
-realize how much it means to us. But let
-us stop to think about it, let us give this
-good camp habit a full opportunity if we can
-in our lives. Already the camp habit has
-become a need, almost an imperious demand.
-We feel that once in so often it must
-be satisfied and in the splendid grip of this
-good habit we make way for it. Never let
-us become dull to any of its values. Never
-let us forget, however shot with black and
-white it may be, even gray at times, the difficulties
-of camping may make life seem&mdash;never
-let us forget the treasures that it pours
-in upon us and the ways in which the camp
-habit serves us.</p>
-
-<p>It is a sad and a great truth which perhaps
-women and girls have not yet fully
-realized, that the whole manner of our body,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page141">[141]</a></span>
-of our souls is controlled by the goodness, or
-the badness of our habits, our moral character,
-our physical temperament. There is
-a sort of natural medicine, raising what is
-not good inevitably up to what is better.
-That is what the camp habit does for us,
-raising what is not healthy, not strong, not
-sane, not joyous, not self-reliant up to what
-is strong, healthy, joyous and full of self-control.
-Is not this alone sufficient reason
-for giving the camp habit once in so
-often full sway in our lives? What better
-could we do than, in order to re-establish
-ourselves, to claim again the wise big relationships
-of out-of-doors and a thousand
-and one little and big friends whom we can
-find there?</p>
-
-<p>Bad habits are thieves, for they take away
-our energies, our abilities, our joys. And the
-indoor habit is a thief. It shortens life, it
-takes away from health, it saps energies, it
-dilutes joys, it makes foggy heads and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page142">[142]</a></span>
-punky morals. The sane girl will get out
-of doors every opportunity instead of spending
-her time in a hot room, playing cards,
-or eating stuff that is not fit to put into the
-human stomach or flirting with boys, who if
-they are the right sort of boys, would much
-prefer, too, to be out of doors. Good habits,
-like this camp habit are benefactors,
-great philanthropists; they strengthen us
-and they give us more energy. They increase
-our ability, they multiply our joys
-compound interest-wise. Good habits are
-careful accountants and every day or every
-year as it may be, they put the interest of
-strength, of intelligence, of joy, in our hands
-to be used as we think best. The camp habit
-wisely used, obliges us to open our eyes and
-see life more truly. It obliges us to lift our
-own weight, take our part in things, that part
-may be washing dishes or it may be turning
-griddle cakes,&mdash;it forces us to know ourselves
-better and it gives us more power to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page143">[143]</a></span>
-control ourselves. The camp habit&mdash;get it
-quickly if you haven&#8217;t it already&mdash;assures us
-of good health and success where, for example,
-the indoor habit has brought us nothing
-but ill health and failure. It is a habit
-worth while getting, isn&#8217;t it?</p>
-
-<p>A good many of us know ourselves, such
-as we are, pretty well and we feel that we
-do not want to know ourselves any better.
-Things are bad enough as they are. Yet if
-we can&#8217;t have a more intimate knowledge of
-ourselves, if we don&#8217;t arrange our lives better,
-if we don&#8217;t plan for the future more
-carefully, what are our lives likely to be like
-when the curtain goes down? How are we
-ever going to take the proverbial ounce of
-prevention if we are not certain to a fraction
-what it is we must prevent? Camp is
-a splendid opportunity to think a little about
-those things of which we have been afraid
-to think. It is a good opportunity to meditate,
-a friendly world to which to go to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page144">[144]</a></span>
-know ourselves better. It is an old saying
-that the first step towards the recovery of
-health is to know yourself ill. In that great
-out-of-door world which our American camp
-life represents it is easier to find ourselves
-morally than it is indoors, we get more
-help for one thing. It is almost an instinct
-in great trouble or bewilderment or difficulty
-to escape into the out-of-door world, to get
-back to earth and to ask from the great
-mother those counsels we hear dimly or indifferently
-indoors.</p>
-
-<p>Wisdom will not be found in one camp
-holiday or in fifty or in a lifetime even. But
-it is rather strange, isn&#8217;t it, that the person
-whom we know least is so frequently ourselves?
-We know very well that the most
-learned man or woman is not the one whose
-head is stuffed with information, is not necessarily
-the conspicuous or famous man or
-woman, but is, rather, the human being who
-knows himself. And this human being may<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page145">[145]</a></span>
-be not our teacher, but our janitor or a
-nurse who takes care of the baby or that
-fellow who seems so simple, the guide who
-has our camping trip in charge. Indeed,
-there is scarcely a class of men who seem
-in better control of themselves and who have
-a better working knowledge of themselves
-and others than the highest type of guide.
-All the associations of that great out-of-door
-life, its demands, its privations, its sudden
-needs, its great silence, its dumb creatures,
-its wonderful beauty, have taught the man of
-the woods a wisdom no school, no university,
-can offer merely through its curriculum. We
-can&#8217;t realize too early how well worth while
-that wisdom is for every girl to have. Not
-a thing of book learning, but a power that
-makes one truthful with oneself, eager to
-acknowledge what is bad and to change it.
-Frank, courageous, tried in commonplace
-wisdom, and with a knowledge of other human
-beings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page146">[146]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There is one kind of idea&mdash;and it is worth
-while meditating in the woods on the leverage
-power of even one very little idea&mdash;that
-can always be found out of doors. I mean
-a healthful idea, the kind of thought that
-makes us stand straighter, that strengthens
-the muscles of our backbone, that makes us
-act as if we were what we wish to be. There
-is no other force in the world that can so
-readily straighten out a crooked boy or
-a crooked girl as this same Dr. Dame Nature.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-<span class="fsize80">OTHER CLEANLINESS</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">C</span><span class="startword0">lean?</span> Of course, we all know
-what cleanliness means. It is
-not possible to drive, to ride in
-a trolley, to go on a train without
-being impressed with at least the advertising
-energy that is put into trying to get or
-keep the world clean. Dear me, there are
-the ever-present, cheerful Gold Dust Twins,
-well up with the times, you may believe,
-and nowadays taking to aviation. Their
-aeroplanes may not be very large, but
-they are clean as gold dust can make them,
-and the twins, without any of the friction
-that comes from dirt, are flying at last.
-What&#8217;s more, intrepid as some old Forty-Niner,
-they are penetrating the camper&#8217;s
-wilderness. Most of us do not want to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page148">[148]</a></span>
-twins, and we certainly do not want to be
-gold dusters or any other kind of dusters,
-yet we should miss these jolly little youngsters.
-And there are Sapolio and Sunny
-Monday advertisements and Pears&#8217; soap&mdash;have
-you used it?&mdash;and a dozen other kinds
-and goodness knows what not besides.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, we Americans, and especially American
-women in the household, know what it
-is to make an effort in the midst of heated,
-dusty or uncared for streets to keep our
-houses and everything in them clean. In
-Pennsylvania you see the people scrubbing
-off white marble steps. In New England
-they turn the hose on the outside of their
-white farm houses. In the West they flood
-the side-walks to keep the dust and heat
-down. And our houses? Well, all houses
-are being built with bath tubs nowadays,
-even our camps, which is more than can be
-said for very good houses indeed in other
-countries than America. Some people think<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page149">[149]</a></span>
-that camping is an excuse to be dirty. Often
-they are very nice people, too, but they keep
-a dirty camp. They don&#8217;t keep even themselves
-clean.</p>
-
-<p>But there is another kind of cleanliness,
-not superficial, not that of the skin, or of the
-clothes or of the cabin, about which we are
-coming to think more and more deeply. It
-is what might be called vital cleanliness, the
-cleanness of stomachs, of the intestines, of
-all the vital organs. We begin to realize
-the truth of what those most helpful of missionaries,
-the health culturists, are saying:
-One may be clean superficially, that is one
-may scrub enough and yet vitally be very
-far from clean. We know, although it is of
-the greatest assistance to keep the skin free
-and vigorous so that it is able to do its part
-of the house-cleaning work for our systems,
-that vital cleanliness, clean, strong, internal
-organs performing their work with
-the vigor of well-constructed engines, uninjured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page150">[150]</a></span>
-by foolish clothing, unharmed by impure
-food, keen for opportunity to grow
-and be vigorous&mdash;we know, I say that that
-cleanliness is more important than skin cleanliness.
-Indeed, without such deep-seated
-cleanliness it is impossible for the skin to be
-really clean.</p>
-
-<p>But clean how? I wonder whether we
-are clean in the way I mean. Yes, we
-are clean in our houses, perhaps in our
-camps, clean on the outsides of our bodies,
-clean probably, on the inside. Yet no one
-of these kinds of cleanliness is what I have
-in mind. Can any girl by the camp fire
-guess what it is? I will not say it is more
-important than household cleanliness, although
-it is so,&mdash;vastly more so. I will not
-say that it is more important than bodily
-cleanliness, external and internal, yet it is so,&mdash;vastly
-more so. I could almost say that
-it is more important than anything else in
-the world of human experience. Do you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page151">[151]</a></span>
-know what it is now? <i>It is cleanness of the
-mind, cleanness of the soul</i>, and of that kind
-of purity the great outdoor world is one indivisible
-whole.</p>
-
-<p>On this cleanliness of mind and soul all
-the vital activities of the day depend, all the
-growth, the gain, the development. It might
-be well said that the way we take up the
-sun into our bodies&mdash;and we could not live
-any length of time without some sun&mdash;depends
-upon the cleanness or uncleanness of
-this mind and soul of ours. What we shall
-eat, what we shall hear, what we shall see,
-what we shall look forward to, what we
-shall care for&mdash;all these things will be according
-to laws as inevitable as those governing
-the sun and moon and stars, valuable
-or worthless, vicious or sacred, as we feel
-them and we make them. We dip our fingers
-in pitch and pick up a book. What is
-the result? Any child could tell us that we
-ruin the book with our pitch-covered fingers.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page152">[152]</a></span>
-We dip our minds into filth, a nasty
-story, a perverted way of looking at things
-which in themselves are good and of God&#8217;s
-plan, or we actually commit some ugly act
-ourselves and then we go out into the presence
-of those things which are clean, the
-sunshine, the hills, the lakes, the woods, the
-white lives of others, the ideals which, it
-may be, have been ours. Do you suppose
-we feel or see that sunshine, or that we are
-aware any longer of the white lives of
-others, that our past ideals are evident to
-us when our hearts and minds are no longer
-clean? Do you suppose that there is anything
-in nature which comes home to us in
-quite the beautiful way it once did, the
-flowers, the birds, the song of the wind, the
-little creatures of the wood? Can they ever
-be entirely the same? No, by an inevitable
-law of compensations some of the fullness
-of our joy in these things is gone. If we
-want to be really happy it does not pay<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page153">[153]</a></span>
-to think evil, to touch evil or to commit
-it.</p>
-
-<p>When our hands are dirty we know it,
-and if we have been careless about them we
-are ashamed. If people&#8217;s bodies or camps
-are not clean it is painfully easy to know
-that, too. But a dirty mind, who could ever
-tell anyway that we had one? Who could
-ever tell? I will tell you: <i>Every one knows
-it</i>, or perhaps, better, every one feels it. If
-we are not good, if our minds are not clean,
-our presence in some mysterious way proclaims
-that fact. If we have injured some
-one, if we have been foul-tongued, others
-will know it with no need for any one to
-tell them. Even the little rabbit we meet in
-the woods will not greet us in so friendly a
-way. <i>We need not think that because we
-are concealing a bad thought that it is therefore
-hidden.</i> No, indeed, it is screaming
-away like some ugly black crow on a spruce
-tip, and there is no one within hearing distance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page154">[154]</a></span>
-who, whether he wishes to or not,
-does not hear what it says.</p>
-
-<p>The mind has its plague spots even as the
-body, and one has to work&mdash;because of
-one&#8217;s environment or some inheritance which
-has made us not quite wholesome by nature,
-or because of friends whose feelings
-one would not injure, and yet who are not
-what they ought to be,&mdash;one has often to
-work to keep the mind clean. But as you
-would flee from the plague, run from a dirty
-story. Don&#8217;t let the camp life be spoiled
-by anything to be regretted! Do not let
-any one touch you with it, even with a word
-of it. Keep a thousand miles away if you
-can from folk who have an impure way of
-looking at life, and camp is a good place to
-get away from such people. Shut your
-minds against them. One is never called
-upon on the score of duty to have an unclean
-mind because others have it. And if through
-some misfortune, something that is unlovely,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page155">[155]</a></span>
-unclean, has been impressed upon you, fight
-valiantly not to think of it, to put it away
-from you. And never forget that to rule
-our spirits, to be in command of our minds,
-to have them wholesome and sweet and
-clean as a freshly swept log cabin, is greater
-than to win such victories as have come down
-in the records of history.</p>
-
-<p>I remember that when I was a child, I
-thought my heart was white and that every
-time I said or thought anything naughty, I
-got a black spot on its surface. I dare say
-that in the first place some dear old negro
-woman put this fable into my mind. And,
-dear me, some days it seemed to me that
-heart of mine was more spotted than any
-tiger lily that ever grew in any neglected
-garden. Perhaps it was foolish to think such
-a thing. I do not know, I only know that
-there were times when I was mighty careful
-of that white heart of mine,&mdash;wrapping it
-up in a pocket handkerchief would not have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page156">[156]</a></span>
-satisfied my eagerness to keep it clean. And
-what better could one wish than to go on
-one&#8217;s holiday, and on forever, with the white
-shining heart of a child?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV<br />
-<span class="fsize80">WOOD CULTURE AND CAMP HEALTH</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">I</span><span class="startword0">t</span> is far better for the girl to be out in a
-wilderness world which demands all
-the attention of both heart and mind,
-than to be leading an idle or sedentary life
-at home. If there is one word which above
-all others expresses the life of the woods, it
-is the word <span class="smcapall">WHOLESOME</span>. It is a normal,
-active, &#8220;hard-pan&#8221; life which takes the softness
-not only out of the muscles, but also
-out of the thoughts and the feelings. It
-tightens up the tendons of our bodies and
-the even more wonderful tendons of the
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>Often, to paraphrase Guts Muths, a girl
-is weak because it does not occur to her that
-she can be strong. She fails to lay the
-foundations of health and strength which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page158">[158]</a></span>
-should be laid; she fails to make the most of
-the energy that she has; she fails to think
-of the future and how important in every
-way it is that she should be robust and full
-of an abounding vitality. It is a matter of
-the greatest importance to the world spiritually,
-morally, physically, that its girls
-should be strong. To be out of doors insures
-abundant well-being as nothing else
-can. The wilderness instinct, the instinct
-for camping and all its out-of-door life and
-sports, is the healthiest, sanest, and most
-compound-interest-paying investment a girl
-can make.</p>
-
-<p>But by an intelligent approach to this life,
-more can be put into it and therefore more
-can be taken out, than by some blindfolded
-dive into its mysteries. To know how to
-do a thing worth doing and to do it well, is
-both wise and economical. Some of the
-physical aspects of our life will give all the
-more value because of the payment of an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page159">[159]</a></span>
-added attention. A few simple rules for
-the physical side of camp life will do quite
-as much for the body as an orderly routine
-can do for the camp housekeeping.</p>
-
-<p>Simply because you are in camp, never do
-anything by eating or drinking or over-strain
-or folly of any sort, that is against the law
-of health. To break the laws of health is
-as much a sin in camp as out of it.</p>
-
-<p>Eat an abundance of simple, wholesome
-foods, using as much cereals, fruits, and
-vegetables as you can get. Don&#8217;t neglect
-the care of your teeth merely because you
-are in camp.</p>
-
-<p>Do not drink tea or coffee. Stimulants
-are unnatural and unwholesome; no girl and
-no woman should ever touch them. If you
-have begun to drink tea and coffee, camp is
-the place to give them up once and for all
-time. The sooner the better.</p>
-
-<p>If you can get a cool bath in stream or
-pond and a rub down with a rough towel,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page160">[160]</a></span>
-so much the better. Exercise both before
-and after the bath, and be sure, by rub down
-and exercise, to get into a good glow. The
-rub down is of especial importance, for it
-stimulates all the tiny surface veins, is gymnastics
-to the skin, and frees the pores of any
-poisonous accumulations which they may be
-holding. Drink a glass or two of pure
-water when you get up and the same between
-meals.</p>
-
-<p>Never wear anything tight in camp or
-elsewhere. Within the circle of the waist
-line are vital organs which need every deep
-breath you can take, every ounce of freely
-flowing blood you can bring to them, every
-particle of room to grow you can give them.
-The Chinese woman who cramps her feet
-sins less than we who cramp our waists.</p>
-
-<p>Sleep ten or eleven hours every night.</p>
-
-<p>Study to make your body well, strong,
-and useful.</p>
-
-<p>If you do all these things, you need not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page161">[161]</a></span>
-worry about beauty; you will possess what
-is of infinitely more value than a pretty face
-and abundant hair, in having a sound, wholesome
-body, self-controlled, instinct with joy,
-with clean, glowing skin, a pleasure to yourself
-and to everybody else. Clear vital
-thoughts and a keener spiritual life will both
-be yours. Because of the days in the woods
-it will be easier to be good, easier to be
-happy, easier to do the brain work of school
-and college.</p>
-
-<p>Part of the title of this chapter is Wood
-Culture. I have something in mind that is
-more than physical culture: The wilderness
-cure, the lesson of the woods, a high spiritual
-as well as physical truth. For the girl
-who keeps her eyes open, here are forces at
-work, mysterious, inspiring, wonderful, that
-awake in her all the dormant worship and
-vision of her nature. Yet of physical culture
-in these weeks and days in the woods
-too much cannot be said, for, as the world<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page162">[162]</a></span>
-is beginning to realize, on one&#8217;s physical
-health, cleanness, sanity, rests much of that
-close-builded wonderful palace of mind and
-soul. Every squad of girl campers should
-have its physical culture drill, its definite exercises,
-taken at a definite time, for ten or
-fifteen minutes. Ten or fifteen minutes are
-probably all that are necessary when practically
-the remainder of the day is spent in
-camp sports, canoeing, fishing, climbing,
-hunting and so on. The object of these
-physical exercises should be all-around development;
-the drill should be sharp and
-light with especial attention paid to breathing
-and to the standing position. A steady
-unflagging effort should be made to correct
-round shoulders, flat chests, drooping necks,
-and bad positions generally. Many and
-varied are the exercises taught in school and
-college,&mdash;exercises to which all girls have access.
-I make no apologies for suggesting
-a few of the simplest by means of which any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page163">[163]</a></span>
-squad of girl campers can make a beginning
-in physical culture.</p>
-
-<p>(1) From attention (hands on hips),
-place the palms of the hands flat on the
-ground, keeping knees straight. Then
-bring arms up above head. Do this eight
-times.</p>
-
-<p>(2) With hands on the hips and the
-hips as a socket, rotate the whole trunk first
-five times in one direction, then five times
-in the opposite, being sure that the head follows
-the line of the rotating trunk. The
-difficulty of this exercise can be increased by
-placing hands clasped behind the head, and
-then later over the head. But the exercise
-should be undertaken first with the hands on
-the hips.</p>
-
-<p>(3) In between each exercise take deep
-breathing for a few seconds, rising on the
-toes as you inhale and lowering as you exhale.</p>
-
-<p>(4) Stand with the feet apart and arms
-horizontal. Without bending the knee<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page164">[164]</a></span>
-place the right fist on the ground next to
-the instep of your left foot. Then raise
-the body and reverse, placing the left fist
-on the ground next to the right instep.</p>
-
-<p>(5) After this some free exercises with
-the arms, taken with the head well up, chest
-out, and shoulders back, make a good, sharp
-light finale.</p>
-
-<p>These exercises repeated several times
-make an excellent beginning for any day,
-either in or out of camp. You may unfortunately
-be going through a state of mind,
-when clean skin, good lungs and digestion,
-seem to you negligible factors in life. How
-tragically important these factors are, be
-sure you do not realize <i>too</i> late, when both
-body and soul, health and morals, have
-been undermined.</p>
-
-<p>Most girls need to look upon camp life
-as an incomparably rich opportunity to gain
-in an all-round physical development. The
-life itself, aside from its possible physical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page165">[165]</a></span>
-culture exercises and its sports of rowing,
-paddling, swimming, climbing and walking,
-is the big architect of a splendid substructure
-for health. By taking thought, refusing
-to eat greasy, unwholesome food, getting
-plenty of sleep, avoiding over-strain,
-taking corrective exercises, cool baths and
-rub downs, there is no better health builder
-than the wilderness life. A wise Danish
-man said that &#8220;He who does not take care
-of his body, neglects it, and thereby sins
-against nature; she knows no forgiveness of
-sin, but revenges herself with mathematical
-certainty.&#8221; In the woods nature keeps reminding
-you of this fact, and you are never
-allowed to forget it for any length of time.</p>
-
-<p>It is only sensible to care for one&#8217;s health.
-It is not necessarily old maidish or silly to
-take precautions that the camp health
-should be at its zenith all the time. No
-one would think of criticising a man for being
-particularly careful of his horses under<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page166">[166]</a></span>
-new conditions. This is precisely what we
-should be for ourselves. Your thorough-paced
-sportsman is always regardful of his
-physical condition. I have spoken about the
-drinking of pure water, the care of food,
-the folly of taking great risks, and of other
-details. There are more factors, as well,
-which will be at work in obtaining and maintaining
-good health conditions.</p>
-
-<p>The right sort of underclothing&mdash;and
-women seldom wear suitable underwear&mdash;should
-be worn. It should be high necked,
-with shoulder caps and knee caps, and should
-be of linen mesh. Every girl who is in fit
-condition should see that each day has a
-brief period at least of hard, warm, strenuous
-work in it. A sweat once a day, with
-a proper rub down afterwards, is one of the
-best health makers on record. In &#8220;By the
-sweat of thy brow shalt thou labor&#8221; was
-enunciated one of the greatest of natural
-laws. If it were possible for each one of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page167">[167]</a></span>
-us to sweat once a day, we should scarcely
-ever know what sickness is. But our over-refined
-civilization makes even the use of the
-word an offence to certain middle class
-people who care more for the so-called propriety
-(they are the folk who say &#8220;soiled&#8221;
-handkerchief instead of dirty, and &#8220;stomach&#8221;
-when they mean belly, and yet are
-ready to use such a detestably vulgar word,
-straight out of the mouths of the lowest
-classes of immigrants, as &#8220;spiel&#8221;) of what
-is said than for its truth and strength. Lay
-it down, then, that one of the first of the
-camp health rules is a sweating every day.
-Third among the camp rules is to keep the
-bowels open. Do you know what one of
-Abraham Lincoln&#8217;s mottoes for life was?
-&#8220;Fear God and keep your bowels open,&#8221;
-and in this saying there is no irreverence
-whatsoever, nor any sacrilege, but only a
-profound common sense that is a credit both
-to the Maker and the great man who spoke<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page168">[168]</a></span>
-the words. Cascara is the best and safest
-laxative for a girl to use in camp. It
-should be bought in the purest tablets or
-liquid form on the market, and all patent
-cascara nostrums should be avoided.<a id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> If there is a privy in the camp great care should be
-taken that, for every reason, it is placed at a sufficient
-distance from cabins and tents. It should <i>not</i> be placed
-on a slope that could possibly drain off into any water
-supply. An abundance of ashes should always be kept
-within the privy and no water of any kind be poured
-into the box. A few cans of chloride of lime should, if
-possible, be kept on hand; and one can opened and in
-use in the closet. Chambers and slop pails should not
-be emptied in the immediate vicinity of the cabins but
-at some distance and in different localities. There is
-no greater abomination on the face of the earth than a
-dirty camp, and no place which so thoroughly tests
-one&#8217;s love of order, decency and cleanliness. If you
-are following the trail and go into &#8220;stocked&#8221; camps for
-the night, shake and air the blankets thoroughly, and,
-out of courtesy to those who will follow you in their
-use, shake and air the blankets when you get out of
-them in the morning.</p></div>
-
-<p>If a girl is delicate or under the weather
-in any way, she must take more than the
-ordinary care of herself or she may have a
-head-on collision with out-and-out illness.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page169">[169]</a></span>
-The new mode of living, the various kinds of
-exposure&mdash;especially to wet weather&mdash;, the
-larger quantities of food eaten because of an
-appetite stimulated by the vigorous outdoor
-life, the temptation to overdoing&mdash;all these
-possibilities should be kept in mind and
-avoided as dangers. Don&#8217;t be silly about
-overdoing. Harden yourself slowly for
-the life; avoid competition. It is far better
-to have lived your camp life successfully
-and to have come out of it fresh and vigorous,
-than it is to have done a few &#8220;stunts&#8221;
-and have come out of it fagged, overstrained
-and ill. It is well the first days of camp
-life to try to eat less than you want; by this
-act of self-control you will avoid the plague
-of constipation which follows so many campers.
-Moderate eating will mean more
-sleep, too. Abundant water drinking and
-a few grains of cascara should be able to
-remedy all the ills to which camp flesh is
-heir.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page170">[170]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As a girl takes thought about this care
-and culture of the body, making herself
-clean within and without, higher lessons and
-perfections, both of the mind and of the soul
-will come to her as inevitably as the earth
-answers to the touch of rain and sun. Do
-you want to be happy? Very well then,
-learn in the woods to be well, consider the
-laws of health, and remember first, last,
-and always that good health, not money or
-position or fame or any shallow beauty of
-feature, is the greatest and soundest security
-for happiness.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page171">[171]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI<br />
-<span class="fsize80">WILDERNESS SILENCE</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">M</span><span class="startword0">ost</span> friendships among girls,
-and older people, too, suggest
-that if there is one thing which is
-hated, it is silence. If silence does happen
-to get in among us in camp, how uneasy we
-are! After an awkward pause we all begin
-to talk at once,&mdash;any, every topic will serve
-to break the hush which has fallen upon us.
-And if we don&#8217;t succeed in getting rid of this
-silence&mdash;something apparently to be regarded
-as unfriendly and ominous&mdash;we make
-excuse to do something and do it.</p>
-
-<p>But of silence Maurice Maeterlinck, the
-great Belgian author of &#8220;The Bluebird&#8221; and
-of many other plays, too, says that we talk
-only in the hours in which we do not live or
-do not wish to know our friends or feel ourselves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page172">[172]</a></span>
-at a great distance from reality.
-But where do we live more truly than in our
-camp life? Then he goes on to say what I
-think is equally true: That we are very jealous
-of silence, for even the most imprudent
-among us will not be silent with the first
-comer, some instinct telling us that it is dangerous
-to be silent with one whom we do not
-wish to know or for whom we do not care
-or do not trust.</p>
-
-<p>Let us admit at the very beginning that
-one does well to be on one&#8217;s guard with the
-people with whom one does not care to be
-silent,&mdash;but one does not go camping with
-those people,&mdash;or, as the case may be, if
-we, ourselves, have a guilty conscience or an
-empty head much talking serves its ends.
-And there is another situation in which it
-seems almost impossible to be silent. There
-is someone for whom we have cared very
-much. Things have changed, there has
-been a misunderstanding, we have altered or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page173">[173]</a></span>
-someone else has made trouble between us.
-And the first thing we notice is that we no
-longer dare to be silent together. Speech
-must be made to cover up our common lack
-of sympathy. We talk, how we talk,&mdash;anything,
-everything! Even when we are
-happy we run to places where there is no
-silence, but now, if only we can be as noisy
-as children and avoid the truth of the sad
-thing which has happened to us!</p>
-
-<p>Again, let us admit at once that there are
-different kinds of silence: There is a bitter
-silence which is the silence of hate, and another
-which is that of evil thoughts, and a
-hostile silence, and a silence which may
-mean the beginning of a storm or a fierce
-warfare. But the only silence worth having
-is friendly and it is of that we need to
-think, and it is that we can have by the
-camp fire in our wilderness life.</p>
-
-<p>Isn&#8217;t it true after all that the question
-which most of us ought to ask ourselves seriously<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page174">[174]</a></span>
-is not how many times we have talked
-but how many times we have been silent.
-Sometimes one wonders whether we are ever
-still and whether if we are to be silent, it is
-not a lesson which must be learned all over
-again. How many times have we talked
-in a single day? We can&#8217;t tell, for the number
-of times is so great that we can&#8217;t count
-them. And the times we have been silent?
-And I don&#8217;t mean how many times we have
-said nothing. To say nothing is not necessarily
-to be silent. Well, we can&#8217;t count
-the times we have been silent either, but
-that is because we haven&#8217;t been still at all.
-Yet there is a big life in which there is no
-speech and no need of it. Are we never to
-give ourselves a chance to live that?</p>
-
-<p>Do you remember your first great silence?
-Was it going away from someone you
-loved? Perhaps it was a joyous visit to
-your grandmother or to an aunt or to see a
-friend, but it meant leaving your mother and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page175">[175]</a></span>
-you had never left her before. Or maybe
-it was your first year at boarding school or
-your freshman year at college. Do you remember
-the silence that came over you then
-and all that filled it? And do you remember
-how it wore away but gradually&mdash;that
-grip the stillness had within you and
-upon you? You know now that that first
-silence will never be forgotten. Or was it
-a return to those you loved and you realized
-as never before how incomparably dear
-these people were to you and that only silence
-could express that dearness? Or was
-it the silence of a crowd&mdash;awe inspiring silence
-which foretells the acclaim of some
-great event of happiness or a cry of woe?
-Or the silence of the wilderness as you
-looked down from a mountain side into
-some great valley of lakes? Or was it the
-death of someone you loved, and the silence
-that overcame you forced you not only to
-suffer as never before but also to think as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page176">[176]</a></span>
-you have never done about the meaning of
-life?</p>
-
-<p>In that first great silence how many things
-that are precious revealed themselves to us.
-There was love; we did not realize how it
-was woven into every fibre of our lives;
-there was companionship; we did not realize
-how bitterly hard it would be to forego it;
-there was new experience; till it came we
-could not have known how much a part of
-our lives the old experience was. How
-many things in us that had been asleep were
-suddenly awakened! How much was that
-great silence worth to us then and now?
-Perhaps an unhappy or stricken silence we
-called it then; but even if it meant death or
-separation was it after all completely unhappy?
-Have we taken into account the
-wealth of conviction, of deepened experience,
-of increased love it brought us? Could
-anything so rich be in any true sense unhappy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Silence, the Great Empire of Silence,&#8221;
-cried Carlyle, &#8220;higher than the stars, deeper
-than the Kingdom of Death.&#8221; The world
-needs silent men but even more, I think, does
-it need silent women. Carlyle&mdash;and you
-should get what you can of his books and
-read them&mdash;calls silent men the salt of the
-earth. Might not silent women or silent
-girls be called double salt? He says
-that the world without such men is like a
-tree without roots. To such a tree there
-will be no leaves and no shade; to such a
-tree there will be no growth; a tree without
-roots cannot hold the moisture that is in
-the earth and it will soon fade, soon dry up
-and let everything else around it dry up,
-too.</p>
-
-<p>Have you not heard women and girls
-with an incessant silly giggle or a titter or
-a laugh that meant just nothing at all and
-yet which was heard, like the dry rattle of
-the locust, morning, noon and night? Nervousness<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page178">[178]</a></span>
-partially; empty-headedness maybe,
-or a mistaken idea of what is attractive.
-Silliness of that kind has no place in camp.
-Nothing is more wearying, more lacking in
-self-control than such a manner, nothing so
-exhausts other people. Such giggling or
-laughing or silly talking is to the mind what
-St. Vitus&#8217;s dance is to the body&mdash;an affliction
-to be endured perhaps but certainly not
-an attraction and not to be cultivated.</p>
-
-<p>Is it not silence that opens the door to our
-best work? How about that work you enjoyed
-so much and did so well? How did
-you prepare for that? Yes, I know all
-about the work you bluffed through and even
-managed to get a high record in, but that
-work you really enjoyed, how was that
-done? Is it not silence, too, that opens the
-door to our dearest and deepest companionships,
-our profoundest sorrows, our greatest
-joys? Anyway this wilderness silence is all
-worth while thinking about, is it not?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page179">[179]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Why should this great silence, this friendly
-wilderness power be considered anti-social?
-Really, is it not most social? Does
-it not bring us all nearer together, sometimes
-even when we are afraid to be nearer to one
-another? Does it not make us all equal,
-making us aware of those profound things
-in life which we all have in common? Silence
-can say, can teach, what speech can
-never, to the end of the world, learn to express.
-It is safe to say that as soon as most
-lips are silent, then and then only do the
-thoughts and the soul begin to live, to grow,
-to become something of what they are destined
-to be, for as Maeterlinck says, silence
-ripens the fruits of the soul. Never think
-that it is unsociable people or people who
-don&#8217;t know how to talk who set such a value
-on silence. No, it is those who are able to
-talk best and most deeply, think best and
-most deeply, who, following the long trail,
-recognize the fact that words can never after<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page180">[180]</a></span>
-all express those truths which are among
-us&mdash;no, neither love, nor death, nor any
-great joy, nor destiny can ever be expressed
-by word of mouth, by speech.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page181">[181]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII<br />
-<span class="fsize80">HOMEMADE CAMPING</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">I</span><span class="startword0">t</span> was our second day in camp,&mdash;a
-camp on the edge of the Maine wilderness.
-Around us were many
-lakes&mdash;ponds as the natives call them&mdash;Moosehead,
-Upper Wilson, Lower Wilson,
-Little Wilson, Trout Pond, Horse-shoe
-Pond, and a dozen others. About us on
-all sides were the forest-covered mountains,
-and burning fiercely, twenty miles distant, a
-large forest fire which filled the horizon
-with dense, yellow smoke.</p>
-
-<p>From our camp, consisting of a red
-shanty, a log cabin in which I am now sitting,
-my dog beside me, thinking what I shall
-say to you about a remarkable family I saw,
-and, looking up at the cabin ceiling, its log
-ridge-pole and supports between which are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page182">[182]</a></span>
-birch bark cuts of trout and salmon caught
-in the lakes, of which I have spoken&mdash;from
-our camp we look out and down on a wonderful
-view. Immediately in front of the
-log cabin is a meadow, the last on the edge
-of this wilderness, then the serrated line of
-pointed firs, which marks the edge of the
-woods at the foot of the meadow. Beyond
-this line miles of tree-tops, pines, birches,
-maples, beeches, after that the shining lakes,
-and beyond them the mountains. There is
-not a house in sight. For that matter there
-<i>is</i> no house to be seen, not even a log cabin.</p>
-
-<p>As was said, there is a meadow in front
-of the cabin, and over to the right beyond
-our view are two other meadows. In Maine&mdash;as
-far north as this, anyway&mdash;the farmers
-have only one crop of hay, and, when there
-is so much forest, and the winter is long, and
-cattle are to be fed, every meadow has to
-be counted upon for all it will bear of hay.
-It was a foregone conclusion that somebody<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page183">[183]</a></span>
-would need and use the crop from the meadow
-down upon which my cabin looked.</p>
-
-<p>And, sure enough, the second day we were
-in camp, along the road bumping and thumping
-over the big stones came a large hay
-wagon: behind it, rattling and jarring, a
-mowing machine and hay rake. But that
-hay wagon, what didn&#8217;t it hold? In the first
-place, there was the driver, then a big packing
-box, a tent rolled up, sacks of feed for
-the horses, a baby&#8217;s perambulator, three children,
-a woman, a hammock, a long bench,
-some chairs, including a rocking chair, and
-several small boxes, packed to overflowing
-with articles of various kinds. For an instant
-it looked as if they were house-moving,
-and then, recollecting that there was no
-house to which to move, I came to the conclusion
-that they were merely haying.</p>
-
-<p>I watched them spread the big tent-fly and
-make it fast. I saw them take out the large
-packing box, converting that into a table, on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page184">[184]</a></span>
-which some of the children put flowers in an
-old bottle; I watched them set out the bench
-and chairs, swing the hammock, lay the improvised
-table with the enamel dishes which
-they took from the little boxes, and, in general,
-make themselves comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>The children had pails for berries, and
-they began to pick berries in a business-like
-fashion. The woman sat in the hammock
-and took care of the baby&mdash;oh, I forgot to
-mention the baby. The farmer and his lad
-hitched and unhitched the horses, starting
-within a few minutes to work with the mowing
-machine, and leaving two of the horses
-tethered to a tree. Evidently this was work
-and a picnic combined&mdash;to me a new way of
-getting in your hay crop. But the more I
-watched it and thought about it the more I
-liked it. And their dinner with the berries
-as dessert&mdash;well, I knew just how good,
-there in the sunshine, with appetites sharpened
-by work, it must taste to them all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Inside the cottage shanty of our camp, one
-member of the household, at least, had been
-doing her work in quite a different spirit. It
-seemed to me that there was nothing which
-this cook, a large, robust woman, with an
-arm with the strength of five, had not found
-fault with and made the worst of. Her
-first groan was heard in the morning at six
-o&#8217;clock&mdash;in getting up myself to go to my
-writing table I had cruelly awakened her&mdash;and,
-of course, as she went to bed only half
-after seven the night before, she had been
-robbed of her necessary sleep. As I say, I
-heard her first groan&mdash;the sun was shining
-gloriously, and I had already had a sun bath
-and a cold sponge and my morning exercises&mdash;while
-she continued to lie in bed and to
-make every subsequent groan until after
-seven o&#8217;clock fully audible.</p>
-
-<p>She began that beautiful day and its work
-in resisting everything. She had never been
-in such a place before, and a very nice convenient<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page186">[186]</a></span>
-camp we, ourselves, thought it. She
-groaned while she pumped water&mdash;I do not
-know whether she or the pump made the
-more noise. She complained loudly because
-of the mice. Oh, no, she could not set a
-mouse trap: she had never done such a thing
-before! And then, when we got a cat, she
-complained because of the noise the cat made
-in catching the mice. I do not know precisely
-what kind of a cat she expected, possibly
-a noiseless, rubber-tired cat, that would
-catch noiseless, rubber-tired mice. She would
-not carry water&mdash;even a two-quart pail full&mdash;her
-back was not strong enough. She had
-never seen such dishes as these we were
-using, nice, clean enamel ware dishes, with
-blue borders. She had never heard of such
-a thing as hanging milk and butter in a well
-to keep them cool. Dear me, she never even
-thought of going to such a place where they
-did not have ice that would automatically
-cool everything, and which the ice-man kindly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page187">[187]</a></span>
-handed to her in pieces just the size
-which she preferred. She said the spring&mdash;a
-beautiful spring whose waters are renowned
-for their purity and healthfulness
-much as the waters of Poland Spring are&mdash;she
-said that the spring had pollywogs in it
-and frogs. She could not string a clothes-line,
-but stood in tears near the big trunk of
-a balsam fir, holding the line helplessly in
-her hands and looking up to the branch not
-more than two inches above her head.
-While one of us flung the end of the clothes-line
-over the branch and made it fast to another
-she remarked with contempt, sniffing
-up her tears, that it was not a clothes-line,
-anyway, which was perfectly true, for it was
-only a boat cord, but it did quite as well.
-When she walked down from the meadow,
-that glorious golden meadow, where the happy
-family was picnicking and hay-making at
-the same time, and through which wound a
-little path down to the spring&#8217;s edge, she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page188">[188]</a></span>
-lifted her skirts as if she were afraid they
-might be contaminated by the touch of that
-clean, sweet-smelling, long grass. Still
-groaning she would fetch about a quart of
-water. And groaning, still groaning, she
-went to bed at night &#8220;half-dead,&#8221; as she expressed
-it, as the result of about five hours
-of work, in which she was all the time helped
-by somebody else.</p>
-
-<p>Of course she was &#8220;half-dead.&#8221; It is a
-wonder to me now, as I think of it, that she
-did not die altogether. Instead of taking
-things as they were in the sun-filled day, with
-its keen, crisp air, its wonderful view, instead
-of feeling something of the beauty and
-health and sun and wind-swept cleanness of
-it all, she had resisted every detail of the
-day, every part of her work, she had, in
-short, found fault with everything. This
-day, that would have seemed so joyous to
-some people, had not meant to her an opportunity
-to make the best of things and to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page189">[189]</a></span>
-be grateful for the long sleep, the sunshine,
-the invigorating air, the beauty, the light
-work, but merely a chance to make the worst
-of things, to throw herself against every
-demand made upon her.</p>
-
-<p>Out in front of the cabin the farmer swept
-round and round with his mowing machine,
-his big, glossy horses glistening in the sunshine,
-the sharp teeth of the machine laying
-the grass in a wide swath behind him. He
-seemed peaceful and contented, although it
-was warm out in the direct sunlight, and the
-brakes were heavy and the horses needed
-constant guiding. Down below, nearer the
-spring, his wife swung in the hammock, and
-the children picked berries, fetched water,
-and were gleefully busy. It was a scene of
-simple contentment with life.</p>
-
-<p>When the father came back for his dinner,
-which was eaten under the spread of a
-tent-fly and from the top of a packing box,
-decorated in the center with flowers and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page190">[190]</a></span>
-around the edges by contented faces, I said
-to him: &#8220;You seem to be having a jolly
-time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, yes, so we are,&#8221; was his reply. &#8220;I
-offered the folks who own this meadow such
-a small sum of money for the hay crop
-I didn&#8217;t think I&#8217;d get it. I thought some
-one else was sure to offer them more, but I
-guess they didn&#8217;t, for I got it. You see, it&#8217;s
-pretty far away from my farm to come out
-here haying.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And so you make a picnic of it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, we are making a picnic of it. The
-children like it. It&#8217;s great fun for them, and
-it gives my wife, who isn&#8217;t very strong, a
-chance to rest and be out of doors. I enjoy
-it, too. I like to see them have a good
-time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; I said, before I realized I was
-taking him into my confidence, &#8220;I wish you
-could make our camp cook see your point of
-view.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, don&#8217;t she like it?&#8221; he asked innocently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Like it? I am afraid she doesn&#8217;t. The
-other day it rained and leaked in through
-the kitchen roof onto her ironing board, and
-when we found her she had her head on the
-board and was crying.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, that&#8217;s too bad,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Why
-didn&#8217;t she take that board out of the way of
-the leak? We don&#8217;t mind a little thing like
-a leak around here, especially when folks are
-camping. Having her feel that way must
-make a difference in your pleasure. Well,
-there is ways of taking work. Now, probably,
-she&#8217;s throwing herself against her
-work, and making it harder all the time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s exactly what she is doing,&#8221; I commented
-dryly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a pity.&#8221; There was sympathy in his
-voice. &#8220;For it&#8217;s such a lot easier to make a
-picnic out of what you are doing&mdash;homemade
-camping, we call this. My folks always<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page192">[192]</a></span>
-feel that way about it. Even the hardest
-work is easier for taking it the right end
-to. My children are growing up to think,
-what it doesn&#8217;t hurt any man to think, that
-work is the best fun, after all. It&#8217;s the only
-thing you never get tired of, for there is always
-something more to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-<span class="fsize80">THE CANOE AND FISHING</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">I</span><span class="startword0">t</span> was my somewhat tempered good
-fortune, several years ago, to spend
-two or three weeks in an exceedingly
-bleak place on a far northern coast. The
-only genial element about this barren spot
-was its sea captains, and whence they drew
-their geniality heaven only knows. They
-made me think of nothing so much as of the
-warm lichen which sometimes flourishes upon
-cold rocks. There strayed into this neighborhood
-a couple of canoes. &#8220;Waal,&#8221; exclaimed
-one of the old salts, viewing this
-water craft skeptically, &#8220;it&#8217;s the nearest next
-to nothing of anything I have ever heard
-tell on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And that is precisely what the canoe is:
-the nearest next to nothing in water craft<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page194">[194]</a></span>
-which you can imagine. It is in precisely
-this nothingness that its charm lies, its lightness,
-its grace, its friskiness, its strength, its
-motion, its adaptability to circumstances.
-There are times when it acts like a demon,
-and there are other times when its intelligence
-is almost uncanny. The canoe is always
-high spirited, and, with high-spirited
-things, whether they be horseflesh or canoe,
-it does not do to trifle. The girl who expects
-to take liberties with the canoe has some
-dreadful, if not fatal, experiences ahead of
-her. Several years ago I was out in a motor
-boat with some friends. Two of them had
-been, or were, connected with the United
-States Navy; another was my sister, and a
-fourth was a college friend. My friend
-happened to see a pistol lying on a seat
-near her. She had never had anything
-to do with pistols, and, on some insane
-impulse of the moment, she picked it up and
-leveled it at me. I was stunned, but not so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page195">[195]</a></span>
-the men on the boat. Such a shout of rage
-and indignation, such a leap to seize the pistol,
-and such a rebuke, I have never been
-witness to before. These men were navy
-men, and they knew how criminally foolish
-it is to fool with what may bring disaster.
-It is those who know the canoe best and are
-best able to handle it, who are most cautious
-in its use. Those of you who expect to treat
-it as you might the family horse would do
-well to look out.</p>
-
-<p>The canvas-covered cedar canoe is the
-best. If you are going to take a lot of duffle
-with you, the canoes will have to be longer
-than you need otherwise have them: about
-eighteen feet, and only two people to a
-canoe. The canoe will cost you from twenty-five
-dollars up, and this item does not include
-the paddle. The paddle should be
-bought exactly your own height; it will
-then be an ideal length for paddling. Its
-cost will be a little more or a little less than<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page196">[196]</a></span>
-a dollar and a half. You should have a
-large sponge, tied to a string, on one of the
-thwarts. This you will use for bailing when
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>If you have had any experience with a
-canoe, you will not abuse it, and will not
-need to be told not to abuse it. If it is a
-light one, and you are a strong girl, you
-should learn to carry it Micmac fashion on
-the paddle blades, a sweater over your shoulders
-to serve as cushion. Watch a woodsman
-and see the way he handles a canoe.
-One of the very first things you will observe
-is that he never drags it about, but lifts it
-clean off the ground by the thwarts, holding
-the concave side toward him. Also, you
-should observe his soft-footed movements
-when he is stepping into a canoe. If a canoe
-is not in use it should be turned upside down.
-Never neglect your canoe, for a small puncture
-in it is like the proverbial small hole in
-a dike. If you let it go, you will have a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page197">[197]</a></span>
-heavy, water-soaked craft or a swamped one.
-Water soaking turns a seemingly intelligent,
-high-spirited canoe, capable of answering to
-your least wish or touch, into the most lunk-headed
-thing imaginable, a thing so stupid
-and so dead and so obstinate, that life with
-it becomes a burden. Remember that the
-wounds in your canoe need quite as much
-attention as your own would.</p>
-
-<p>The balance of a canoe is a ticklish thing.
-To the novice, the day when she can paddle
-through stiff water while she trolls with a
-rod under her knee and lands a two- or
-three-pound salmon unaided, seems far off.
-I am by no means a past-master in the art of
-canoeing, yet I have often done this, and am
-no longer troubled by the question of balance
-in a canoe. So much for encouragement!
-Most of an art lies, granting the
-initial gift for it, in custom or habit. Make
-yourself familiar with the traits of your
-canoe, work hard to learn everything you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page198">[198]</a></span>
-should know about it, and your lesson will
-soon be learned.</p>
-
-<p>When you are going to get into it, have
-your canoe securely beside a landing, and
-then step carefully into the center and middle.
-Bring the second foot after the first
-only when you are sure that you have your
-balance. The next thing is to sit down. Be
-certain that it is not in the water. The
-only satisfactory recipe for this delicate act
-is to do it. No girl should step into a canoe
-for the first time without some one at the
-bow to steady it. Very quickly you will
-learn clever ways of using your paddle to
-help in keeping the balance. Until you do,
-you can&#8217;t be too careful, or too careful that
-others should be careful. Take no chances
-in a canoe. If any are taken for you, hang
-on to your paddle. It is well to have an inflatable
-life-preserver, but, best of all, is it
-to know how to swim. Never move around
-in a canoe, or turn quickly to look over your<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page199">[199]</a><br /><a id="Page200">[200]</a></span>
-shoulder. A canoe is a long-suffering thing,
-but once &#8220;riled&#8221; and its mind made up to
-capsize, heaven and earth cannot prevent
-that consummation and your ducking or even
-drowning.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig10">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199a.jpg" alt="" width="295" height="136" />
-<p class="caption">BROOK TROUT</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199b.jpg" alt="" width="291" height="136" />
-<p class="caption">RAINBOW TROUT</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199c.jpg" alt="" width="294" height="140" />
-<p class="caption">SMALL-MOUTH BASS</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199d.jpg" alt="" width="287" height="140" />
-<p class="caption">BROWN TROUT</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199e.jpg" alt="" width="287" height="166" />
-<p class="caption">ROCK-BASS</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199f.jpg" alt="" width="290" height="166" />
-<p class="caption">WHITE BASS</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199g.jpg" alt="" width="292" height="170" />
-<p class="caption">SHEEPSHEAD</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199h.jpg" alt="" width="291" height="170" />
-<p class="caption">YELLOW PERCH</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199i.jpg" alt="" width="293" height="110" />
-<p class="caption">PIKE</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199j.jpg" alt="" width="291" height="110" />
-<p class="caption">PIKE PERCH</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199k.jpg" alt="" width="290" height="120" />
-<p class="caption">PICKEREL</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo199l.jpg" alt="" width="290" height="120" />
-<p class="caption">CATFISH</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>Become skillful in the use of the paddle,
-and the best way to learn is through some
-one who knows how. Paddling is an art
-and a very delightful one, requiring much
-skill of touch and strength. Although as a
-girl I cared most for rowing, I have in the
-last ten years become so devoted to the paddle
-stroke, to its motion and touch and efficiency,
-that rowing only bores me. Get
-some one, a brother, a father, a friend, a
-guide, to teach you the rudiments of paddling.
-These once learned, canoeing is as
-safe as bicycling and not more difficult. It is
-all in learning how.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig11">
-
-<div class="figleft padl6">
-<img src="images/illo201a.jpg" alt="" width="72" height="501" />
-<p class="caption">ROD.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figright padr6">
-<img src="images/illo201b.jpg" alt="" width="343" height="400" />
-<p class="caption">HOOKS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split6733">
-
-<div class="leftsplit6733">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo201c.jpg" alt="" width="159" height="153" class="margtop37" />
-<p class="caption">SIMPLE WINCH REEL.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo201d.jpg" alt="" width="163" height="223" class="margtopmin33" />
-<p class="caption">TROUT FLY.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit6733-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit6733">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo201e.jpg" alt="" width="147" height="340" class="margtopmin150" />
-<p class="caption">TROLLING SPOONS.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit6733-->
-
-</div><!--split6733-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p class="allclear">The writer is an old-fashioned fisherwoman
-and goes light with tackle. However,
-I have noticed that the simplicity of fishing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page201">[201]</a><br /><a id="Page202">[202]</a></span>
-tackle does not in the least interfere with
-luck. If you are going to fish with worm,
-hook, and sinker, you will need no advice.
-Perch, pickerel, black bass, cat-fish, and
-others to be caught in still fishing, will be
-your quarry. As a rule you will troll for
-pickerel and pike, and there is no sport more
-pleasant in the world than that which is to
-be had at the end of a trolling spoon: the
-motion of the boat, the vibration of the line,
-the spinning of the spoon, and then the sudden
-strike, with all its possibilities for taking
-in big fish. I defy anyone to have a
-more exciting time than netting a salmon
-from a trolling line and landing it successfully
-in a canoe. But this is not a thing to
-be attempted by the novice. Much better let
-the salmon go and save yourself a ducking.</p>
-
-<p>The finest art of all fishing is fly-fishing.
-One either does or does not take to it naturally,
-after one has been taught something of
-the art by brother, father, or guide. Alas,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page203">[203]</a></span>
-that the fish greediness of campers is making
-good fly-fishing, even in the wilderness,
-more and more difficult to get! Personally,
-if I am after trout or salmon, &#8220;plugging&#8221; or
-&#8220;bating,&#8221; as it is called, seems to me an unpardonably
-coarse and stupid sport. Yet our
-lakes have been so abused by this process
-that fly-fishing is frequently impossible. To
-sit or stand in a canoe, casting your line, the
-canoe taking every flex of your wrist; to see
-the bright flies, Parmachenee Belle or Silver
-Doctor&mdash;or whatever fly suits that part of
-the country in which you are camping&mdash;alight
-on the surface as if gifted with veritable life,
-and then to be conscious of the rush, the
-strike, and to see a rainbow trout whirling
-off with your silken line, is to experience an
-incomparable pleasure. To have a strike
-while the twilight is coming on, a big fellow,
-with the line spinning off your reel as if
-it would never stop, to see your salmon leap
-into the air and strike the water, to reel him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page204">[204]</a></span>
-in, then plunge! and down, down he goes;
-to feel the twilight deepening as you try
-to get him in closer to the canoe again; to
-know suddenly that it is dark and that the
-hours are going by; to feel your wrist aching,
-your body tense with excitement; to
-think that you are just tiring him out, that
-you have almost got him&mdash;almost, then a
-rush, a plunge, the line slackens in your hand,
-and he is gone. That is fisherman&#8217;s luck,
-and great luck it is, even when the fish is
-lost.</p>
-
-<div class="plate w450" id="Fig12">
-
-<div class="split3367">
-
-<div class="leftsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo205a.jpg" alt="" width="80" height="505" />
-<p class="caption">ROD CASE.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit3367-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo205b.jpg" alt="" width="237" height="210" />
-<p class="caption">FELT-LINED LEADER BOX.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter padtop30p">
-<img src="images/illo205c.jpg" alt="" width="223" height="181" />
-<p class="caption">CASE FOR TACKLE.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit3367-->
-
-</div><!--split3367-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter margtopmin25">
-<img src="images/illo205d.jpg" alt="" width="256" height="299" />
-<p class="caption">LANDING NET.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo205e.jpg" alt="" width="168" height="178" />
-<p class="caption">CREEL.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>Only a few words about fishing tackle.
-Have a good rod or two, but don&#8217;t begin
-your experience at fishing with expensive
-tackle. The cheaper rod will do quite as
-well until you learn what you want. For
-trolling the best rod is a short steel one.
-For fly-fishing you will always use split bamboo
-or some similar wood. You will have
-accidents, so have reserve tackle to fall back
-upon. In any event do not buy a heavy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page205">[205]</a><br /><a id="Page206">[206]</a></span>
-rod, and never buy anything with a steel
-core in it. If you can afford it, get a first-class
-reel, one that works easily and is of
-simple mechanism. A simple winch reel is
-the best. Avoid patented contraptions.
-While you are using them hang your rods up
-by the tips. In any event keep them dry and
-in as good condition as possible. Enameled
-silk line you must have for all trout fishing.
-For other kinds of fishing it does not so
-much matter what you do use, provided the
-line is strong and durable. Be sure to have
-extra lines to fall back on.</p>
-
-<div class="plate w275" id="Fig13">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo207.png" alt="" width="250" height="488" />
-<p class="caption">ANGLING KNOTS.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>Leaders, the details about flies to be used,
-their color, angling knots made in fastening
-leaders or line or fly, methods for keeping
-your flies in good order and condition, the
-use of the landing net, necessary repairs to
-be made, the skill of the wrist in casting, the
-best sort of trolling, the care of fish, all these
-things will come to you through experience,
-and all suggest how much, how delightfully<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page207">[207]</a><br /><a id="Page208">[208]</a></span>
-much, there is to be learned in the best of all
-sports.</p>
-
-<p>Go to some first-rate sporting goods&#8217; house
-for your flies; they will tell you what kinds
-you need, as well as answer other questions.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page209">[209]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX<br />
-<span class="fsize80">THE TRAIL</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">A</span> <span class="startword1">girl</span> who has learned to camp
-will not only have her own pleasures
-greatly increased, but she will
-also add to those of her friends, becoming a
-better companion for her chums, her father,
-her brother; for camping, if it is anything,
-is a social art. It is far better for a girl
-to be out in the world which demands all of
-one&#8217;s attention, one&#8217;s eyes and ears and nose
-and feet and hands and every muscle of the
-entire body, than to be leading a sedentary
-life at home, or analyzing emotions or sentimentalizing
-about things not worth while.
-The big moose which unexpectedly plunges
-by provides enough emotions to last a long
-time; the land-locked salmon that threatens
-to snap the silken line, enough excitement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page210">[210]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>You can&#8217;t learn all that there is to be
-learned in the school of the woods through
-one camping expedition. It would be rather
-poor sport if you could. Don&#8217;t be afraid to
-ask questions about what you don&#8217;t know.
-Keep on asking them until you are wood-cultivated.
-The wilderness is your opportunity
-to make up for those vitally interesting facts
-about life which are not taught in schools.
-Above all, have a map of the country in
-which you are, and study it. Keep that map
-by you as if it were Fidus Achates himself,
-and refer to it whenever there is need. The
-girl or woman in camp who never knows
-where she is is a bore, sponging upon the
-good-nature and intelligence of others who
-have taken the trouble to familiarize themselves
-with the lie of the land. Such a
-girl never makes any plans, never takes the
-initiative, never gives anyone a sense of rest
-from responsibility. There are girls and
-older women who think it rather clever to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page211">[211]</a></span>
-be unable to tell east from west, north from
-south. I may say here that in camp they
-belong to the same class of foolish incompetents
-who in college boast that they cannot
-spell&mdash;presumably because they are devoting
-themselves to a much higher call upon their
-intelligence than anything so superficial as
-spelling! If camping means anything in the
-world, it means co&ouml;peration, and this co&ouml;peration
-should be all along the line.</p>
-
-<div class="plate w450" id="Fig14">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo213.png" alt="" width="425" height="507" />
-<p class="caption">THE DIPPER.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>If you have an innate sense of direction,
-train it. If you have none, do not venture
-out into the wilderness except with someone
-who has. Always tell people where you are
-going. If you are not familiar with the use
-of a rifle you would better have a shrill whistle
-or a tin horn to use in case you want to
-summon anyone. Sun and wind should be
-part of your compass; the trees, too. You
-will, of course, learn how to blaze a trail,
-and the sooner you do this the better, for it
-is good training in following out a point of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page212">[212]</a></span>
-the compass. The wilderness is full of signs
-of direction for your use, some of which are
-certain to be serviceable at different times,
-and some of which will not prove dependable.
-The sun rises in the east and sets in
-the west. At high noon of a September day,
-if you turn your back squarely to the sun,
-you will be looking directly north. The
-wind is a helper, too. When the sun rises,
-notice the direction of the wind, and, while
-it does not shift, it will prove a good compass
-or guide. If it is very light, wet the
-finger and hold it up. By doing this the wind
-will serve you as a compass. Remember,
-also, that the two lowest stars of the Big
-Dipper point toward the North Star, which
-is always a guide to be used in charting a
-wilderness way. Also on the north sides of
-trees there is greater thickness to the bark
-and more moss. This is, I suppose, because
-the trees, being unexposed to the sunlight on
-the north side, retain the moisture longer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page213">[213]</a><br /><a id="Page214">[214]</a></span>
-there. Some say, too, that the very topmost
-finger of an evergreen points toward the
-north. Even in civilization they usually do.
-To become familiar with a compass is a very
-simple matter. Every boy learns this lesson,
-and there is no reason why girls should not
-do the same. Never buy a cheap compass;
-it is not to be relied upon. To the amateur
-in the woods a good one is not a friend at
-which to scoff. A few expeditions out behind
-the cabin will teach you all you need
-to know about its use. If by some miscalculation
-a girl should get lost, let her realize
-then that the great demand is that she shall
-keep her head on her shoulders, where it has
-been placed, and where she will need to make
-use of it. Let her sit down and think, reviewing
-all that has happened, and trying to
-solve the problem of what she is to do. A
-panic is the last and worst thing in which
-she can afford to indulge. To most people
-at some time or other comes the conviction<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page215">[215]</a><br /><a id="Page216">[216]</a></span>
-that they are lost&mdash;a conviction happily dispelled
-in nine hundred and ninety-nine cases
-out of a thousand. In this, as in everything,
-a miss is as good as a mile, and one does
-well to make light of unavoidable mistakes.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig15">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo215a.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="249" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split6733">
-
-<div class="leftsplit6733">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl6">FAWN</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">DOE</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit6733-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit6733">
-<p class="caption padr6">BUCK</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit6733-->
-
-</div><!--split6733-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">FAWN, DOE, BUCK</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo215b.jpg" alt="" width="255" height="245" />
-<p class="caption">CARIBOU</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo215c.jpg" alt="" width="258" height="245" />
-<p class="caption">MOOSE</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>If, by any chance, you should be lost, don&#8217;t
-run around. If you have no compass or if
-darkness is coming on, settle down where you
-are. Devote your energies to occasional
-periods of shouting and to building a camp
-fire, keep your body warm and dry and your
-head cool. <i>You will be found.</i> And remember
-that there are no wild creatures to be
-feared in our camping wilderness. You have
-nothing of which to be afraid except your
-own lack of common sense. Here is a chance
-for your &#8220;nerve&#8221; to show itself.</p>
-
-<div class="plate" id="Fig16">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo217a.jpg" alt="" width="545" height="168" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split6733">
-
-<div class="leftsplit6733">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">RED SQUIRREL</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">FLYING SQUIRREL</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit6733-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit6733">
-<p class="caption">GRAY SQUIRREL</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit6733-->
-
-</div><!--split6733-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">RED SQUIRREL, FLYING SQUIRREL, GRAY SQUIRREL</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo217b.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="120" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split6733">
-
-<div class="leftsplit6733">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption">RABBIT</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl8">AMERICAN SABLE</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit6733-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit6733">
-<p class="caption padl6">CHIPMUNK</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit6733-->
-
-</div><!--split6733-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">RABBIT, AMERICAN SABLE, CHIPMUNK</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="split3367">
-
-<div class="leftsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo217c.jpg" alt="" width="208" height="109" />
-<p class="caption">WEASEL</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo217d.jpg" alt="" width="164" height="149" />
-<p class="caption">BLACK BEAR</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit3367-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit3367">
-
-<div class="split3367">
-
-<div class="leftsplit3367">
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="margin-top: 125px;">
-<img src="images/illo217f.jpg" alt="" width="143" height="117" />
-<p class="caption">RACCOON</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--leftsplit3367-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit3367">
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo217e.jpg" alt="" width="252" height="109" />
-<p class="caption">MINK</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter margtop70">
-<img src="images/illo217g.jpg" alt="" width="263" height="103" />
-<p class="caption">PORCUPINE</p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--rightsplit3367-->
-
-</div><!--split3367-->
-
-</div><!--rightsplit3367-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--split3367-->
-
-<div class="figcenter margtopmin150">
-<img src="images/illo217h.jpg" alt="" width="585" height="188" />
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<div class="split6733">
-
-<div class="leftsplit6733">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl4">SKUNK</p>
-</div><!--leftsplit5050-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit5050">
-<p class="caption padl4">WOODCHUCK</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit5050-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-</div><!--leftsplit6733-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit6733">
-<p class="caption">RED FOX</p>
-</div><!--rightsplit6733-->
-
-</div><!--split6733-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<p class="caption">SKUNK, WOODCHUCK, RED FOX</p>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-</div><!--figcenter-->
-
-</div><!--plate-->
-
-<p>As you go through the woods, cross the
-ponds and lakes, climb mountains, your
-luncheon in your pocket, compass and knife
-and cup and match-box all ready and friendly
-to your hand; as you feel the wilderness becoming<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page217">[217]</a><br /><a id="Page218">[218]</a></span>
-more and more your empire, be sure
-that you do not abuse the privileges which
-are revealed to you. The more gentle and
-considerate you are in this life which has
-opened itself up to you, the more it will tell
-you its secrets. That you should leave disfiguration
-and destruction and bloodshed behind
-you does not prove that you are in any
-sense a true sport. The camera is one
-of the best guns for the wilderness. It is
-better to be film-thirsty than bloodthirsty. A
-girl who is in earnest about camera shooting
-can test her &#8220;nerves&#8221; quite sufficiently for all
-practical purposes. How about facing, or
-chasing, a six- or seven-hundred-pound
-moose, plunging down through a cut or a
-trail, and having the nerve to press the bulb
-at just the right moment? Or a big buck?
-Or a little bear? Or a porcupine? A good
-kodak and some rolls of film are all that is
-needed to begin the work of photography.
-A fine way to do, if you intend to go into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page219">[219]</a></span>
-the matter seriously, is to get some book on
-nature photography and make a thorough
-study of it. Other books, too, there are,
-which will be full of profit for you as you
-come to know the wilderness life. Begin
-with Thoreau, John Burroughs, John Muir,
-Stewart White, Ernest Seton Thompson, and
-these will lead you on and out through a
-host of nature books and finally into a more
-technical literature on hunting, camping, and
-the wilderness life in general.</p>
-
-<p>I believe that in the end an intelligent
-study of the woods made with eyes and ears,
-heart and mind, notebook and book, will
-bring down more game than any shotgun or
-rifle ever manufactured. I have seen guide-books
-of northern wildernesses whose collective
-illustration suggested only the interior
-of some local slaughter house. No tenderfoot
-myself, for, when the first shotgun was
-placed against my shoulder, I was so little
-that its kick knocked me over, I do not write<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page220">[220]</a></span>
-this way because I am unfamiliar with the
-pleasures of well-earned or necessary game,
-but because I have tried both ways and I prefer
-a friendly life in the wilderness. To kill
-what you see, just because you do see it, to
-set big fires, to be wasteful, to take risks in
-your adventures, are no signs that you know
-the woods&mdash;and they are most certainly no
-guarantee of your love.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page221">[221]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX<br />
-<span class="fsize80">CAMP DON&#8217;TS</span></h2>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="firstletter">D</span><span class="startword0">on&#8217;t</span> forget your check list.</p>
-
-<p>Do make your plans early
-for the camping expedition.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t be dowdy in the woods. Dress appropriately.</p>
-
-<p>Do keep a clean camp. Otherwise you
-will go in for hedgehogs, skunks, flies, and
-other disease-breeding pests.</p>
-
-<p>If in doubt about drinking water, don&#8217;t
-drink it&mdash;at least, not till it is thoroughly
-boiled.</p>
-
-<p>Do be independent. Camp is no place for
-necklaces, however beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t start out camping with a new pair
-of shoes on your feet.</p>
-
-<p>Do keep from adding to the things you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page222">[222]</a></span>
-want to take with you, or you won&#8217;t be able
-to reach the &#8220;jumping off&#8221; place.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t forget your fly &#8220;dope.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If your appetite is good, be polite to the
-cook.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t forget the box of matches.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t be foolhardy. It might take too
-long to find you. If you feel that way, have
-somebody attach a tump line to you.</p>
-
-<p>If you have an open stove, when you go
-off for the day, be sure to close it.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t be afraid to ask questions&mdash;everybody
-does.</p>
-
-<p>Do help others with the work.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t cut your foot with the axe. It will
-not add to the pleasures of camp life.</p>
-
-<p>Dish-washing is not pleasant work. Do
-your share just the same.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t step on the gunwale of the canoe,
-and upset it, or trip over a thwart. The
-canoe is a ticklish craft.</p>
-
-<p>Do conform to the camp routine. Don&#8217;t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page223">[223]</a></span>
-keep the dinner waiting, delay the fishing
-expedition, or call out a search party.</p>
-
-<p>Don&#8217;t be ignorant of the topography of
-the region in which you camp. By not studying
-the map for yourself, you will give others
-a lot of trouble.</p>
-
-<p>Listen to what your guide says.</p>
-
-<p>Remember, I shall be glad to answer brief,
-pointed questions, addressed to me at</p>
-
-<p class="center blankbefore2 fsize80">CAMP RUNWAY,<br />
-Moosehead Lake, Greenville, Maine.</p>
-
-<p class="center highline5">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page224">[224]</a><br /><a id="Page225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>INDEX</h2>
-
-<ul class="index">
-
-<li class="first">Beavers, <a href="#Page88">88</a>-<a href="#Page89">89</a></li>
-<li>Beds:</li>
-<li class="level2">bough beds, <a href="#Page97">97</a>-<a href="#Page100">100</a></li>
-<li class="level2">browse bed, <a href="#Page100">100</a>, <a href="#Page101">101</a></li>
-<li class="level2">sleeping bags, <a href="#Page103">103</a></li>
-<li>Birch bark, <a href="#Page9">9</a>, <a href="#Page40">40</a></li>
-<li>Black flies, <a href="#Page10">10</a>-<a href="#Page11">11</a></li>
-<li>Blankets, <a href="#Page21">21</a></li>
-<li>Bloomers, <a href="#Page4">4</a>, <a href="#Page18">18</a>-<a href="#Page19">19</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li>Blouse, <a href="#Page4">4</a>, <a href="#Page19">19</a>, <a href="#Page22">22</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li>Books, <a href="#Page20">20</a>-<a href="#Page21">21</a>, <a href="#Page219">219</a></li>
-<li>Breck&#8217;s fly &#8220;dope,&#8221; 102</li>
-<li>Breck&#8217;s &#8220;Way of the Woods,&#8221; <a href="#Page7">7</a>,
-<a href="#Page26">26</a>, <a href="#Page45">45</a>, <a href="#Page63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Camera film, <a href="#Page20">20</a>, <a href="#Page218">218</a>-<a href="#Page219">219</a></li>
-<li>Camp Fire Girls, <a href="#Page11">11</a>, <a href="#Page115">115</a></li>
-<li>Camp habit, <a href="#Page139">139</a>-<a href="#Page146">146</a></li>
-<li>Camping grounds, <a href="#Page68">68</a>-<a href="#Page76">76</a></li>
-<li class="level2">sites to be avoided for, <a href="#Page73">73</a></li>
-<li class="level2">sites to be chosen for, <a href="#Page73">73</a>-<a href="#Page76">76</a>,
-<a href="#Page181">181</a>-<a href="#Page192">192</a></li>
-<li>Can opener, <a href="#Page8">8</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind02">Cooking utensils</a></li>
-<li>Canoes, <a href="#Page193">193</a>-<a href="#Page208">208</a></li>
-<li class="level2">care in handling, <a href="#Page193">193</a>-<a href="#Page200">200</a></li>
-<li class="level2">cost of, <a href="#Page196">196</a></li>
-<li class="level2">length of paddle, <a href="#Page195">195</a></li>
-<li class="level2">paddling, <a href="#Page200">200</a></li>
-<li>Cascara sagrada, <a href="#Page5">5</a></li>
-<li>Check lists, <a href="#Page1">1</a>, <a href="#Page96">96</a></li>
-<li>Cleanliness, <a href="#Page147">147</a>-<a href="#Page156">156</a>, <a href="#Page168">168</a></li>
-<li id="Ind01">Clothing, <a href="#Page1">1</a>-<a href="#Page5">5</a>, <a href="#Page13">13</a>-<a href="#Page20">20</a>,
-<a href="#Page21">21</a>-<a href="#Page23">23</a>, <a href="#Page165">165</a>-<a href="#Page166">166</a></li>
-<li class="level2">gloves, <a href="#Page5">5</a></li>
-<li class="level2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page226">[226]</a></span>hunting suit, cost of, <a href="#Page18">18</a></li>
-<li class="level2">jacket, <a href="#Page18">18</a></li>
-<li>Cold cream, <a href="#Page5">5</a></li>
-<li>Combination suits, <a href="#Page3">3</a>-<a href="#Page4">4</a>, <a href="#Page17">17</a>,
-<a href="#Page165">165</a>-<a href="#Page166">166</a></li>
-<li>Cook, <a href="#Page37">37</a>-<a href="#Page45">45</a></li>
-<li id="Ind02">Cooking utensils, <a href="#Page8">8</a>, <a href="#Page34">34</a>-<a href="#Page35">35</a>,
-<a href="#Page62">62</a>, <a href="#Page104">104</a>-<a href="#Page105">105</a></li>
-<li>Cooler, <a href="#Page8">8</a>, <a href="#Page32">32</a>-<a href="#Page34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Dishes, <a href="#Page8">8</a>, <a href="#Page35">35</a></li>
-<li>Duffle bag, <a href="#Page2">2</a>, <a href="#Page14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Economy, <a href="#Page5">5</a>, <a href="#Page107">107</a>-<a href="#Page117">117</a></li>
-<li id="Ind08">Equipment, <a href="#Page2">2</a>, <a href="#Page8">8</a>-<a href="#Page9">9</a></li>
-<li class="level2">cost of, <a href="#Page8">8</a></li>
-<li class="level2">poncho, <a href="#Page100">100</a></li>
-<li class="level2">tents, <a href="#Page110">110</a>-<a href="#Page111">111</a></li>
-<li class="level2">tools, <a href="#Page9">9</a>, <a href="#Page35">35</a></li>
-<li id="Ind09">Expenses, <a href="#Page107">107</a>-<a href="#Page117">117</a></li>
-<li class="level2">for food, <a href="#Page114">114</a></li>
-<li class="level2">for party of four or five, <a href="#Page108">108</a>-<a href="#Page111">111</a></li>
-<li class="level2">for tents, <a href="#Page110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Feet, care of, <a href="#Page19">19</a></li>
-<li>Fires, <a href="#Page11">11</a>, <a href="#Page77">77</a>-<a href="#Page86">86</a></li>
-<li>Fishing, <a href="#Page193">193</a>-<a href="#Page208">208</a></li>
-<li class="level2">fly, <a href="#Page202">202</a>-<a href="#Page204">204</a></li>
-<li>Fishing tackle, <a href="#Page200">200</a>, <a href="#Page204">204</a>-<a href="#Page208">208</a></li>
-<li>Fly &#8220;dope,&#8221; <a href="#Page9">9</a>, <a href="#Page35">35</a>, <a href="#Page101">101</a>-<a href="#Page102">102</a></li>
-<li>Food, <a href="#Page1">1</a>, <a href="#Page6">6</a>-<a href="#Page8">8</a>, <a href="#Page24">24</a>-<a href="#Page36">36</a></li>
-<li class="level2">bacon, <a href="#Page28">28</a></li>
-<li class="level2">butter, <a href="#Page29">29</a></li>
-<li class="level2">cleanliness of, <a href="#Page30">30</a>-<a href="#Page31">31</a></li>
-<li class="level2">dried vegetables, <a href="#Page26">26</a>-<a href="#Page27">27</a></li>
-<li class="level2">flour, <a href="#Page27">27</a></li>
-<li class="level2">meat, <a href="#Page28">28</a>-<a href="#Page30">30</a></li>
-<li class="level2">milk, <a href="#Page32">32</a>, <a href="#Page37">37</a>, <a href="#Page114">114</a>-<a href="#Page116">116</a></li>
-<li class="level2">portage of, <a href="#Page24">24</a></li>
-<li id="Ind04">Footgear, <a href="#Page2">2</a>, <a href="#Page3">3</a>, <a href="#Page14">14</a>-<a href="#Page16">16</a></li>
-<li>Fry pans, <a href="#Page8">8</a>, <a href="#Page62">62</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind02">Cooking utensils</a></li>
-<li>Fuel, <a href="#Page9">9</a>-<a href="#Page10">10</a>, <a href="#Page40">40</a>-<a href="#Page42">42</a></li>
-<li>Furnishings, <a href="#Page11">11</a>, <a href="#Page94">94</a>-<a href="#Page106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Gloves, <a href="#Page5">5</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li>Guides, <a href="#Page69">69</a>, <a href="#Page85">85</a>, <a href="#Page118">118</a>-<a href="#Page126">126</a></li>
-<li class="level2">assistance to, <a href="#Page123">123</a>-<a href="#Page125">125</a>, <a href="#Page145">145</a></li>
-<li class="level2">character of, <a href="#Page122">122</a>-<a href="#Page123">123</a></li>
-<li class="level2">duties of, <a href="#Page119">119</a>-<a href="#Page121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="first" id="Ind05">Hat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page227">[227]</a></span>, <a href="#Page4">4</a>,
-<a href="#Page19">19</a></li>
-<li>Head net, <a href="#Page101">101</a></li>
-<li id="Ind03">Health:</li>
-<li class="level2">clean-working digestion and, <a href="#Page166">166</a>-<a href="#Page168">168</a></li>
-<li class="level2">eating and, <a href="#Page169">169</a></li>
-<li class="level2">hygiene and, <a href="#Page127">127</a>-<a href="#Page138">138</a></li>
-<li class="level2">physical culture drill and, <a href="#Page161">161</a>-<a href="#Page165">165</a></li>
-<li class="level2">rules for, <a href="#Page159">159</a>-<a href="#Page161">161</a></li>
-<li class="level2">water and, <a href="#Page10">10</a>, <a href="#Page42">42</a>-<a href="#Page44">44</a>,
-<a href="#Page76">76</a>, <a href="#Page157">157</a>-<a href="#Page170">170</a></li>
-<li>Hunting suit, <a href="#Page18">18</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li>Hygiene, <a href="#Page127">127</a>-<a href="#Page138">138</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind03">Health</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Jacket, <a href="#Page18">18</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Knives, <a href="#Page8">8</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind02">Cooking utensils</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Matches, <a href="#Page40">40</a></li>
-<li>Moccasins, <a href="#Page2">2</a>, <a href="#Page16">16</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind04">Footgear</a></li>
-<li>Mosquitoes, <a href="#Page10">10</a>-<a href="#Page11">11</a></li>
-<li class="level2">headnet and, <a href="#Page101">101</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind05">Hat</a></li>
-<li class="level2">netting for, <a href="#Page35">35</a></li>
-<li class="level2">tarlatan for, <a href="#Page101">101</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Neat&#8217;s-foot oil. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind06">Waterproofing</a></li>
-<li>Nesting pails, <a href="#Page8">8</a>, <a href="#Page34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Pockets, <a href="#Page4">4</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li>Poncho, <a href="#Page100">100</a></li>
-<li>Privy, care of, <a href="#Page168">168</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind07">Sanitation</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Recipes, <a href="#Page45">45</a></li>
-<li class="level2">apples, <a href="#Page49">49</a></li>
-<li class="level2">bacon, <a href="#Page62">62</a></li>
-<li class="level2">baked beans, <a href="#Page59">59</a>-<a href="#Page60">60</a></li>
-<li class="level2">baking powder biscuits, <a href="#Page55">55</a>-<a href="#Page56">56</a></li>
-<li class="level2">boiling vegetables, <a href="#Page65">65</a>-<a href="#Page66">66</a></li>
-<li class="level2">bread-making, <a href="#Page51">51</a></li>
-<li class="level2">broth, <a href="#Page62">62</a></li>
-<li class="level2">buckwheat cakes, <a href="#Page61">61</a></li>
-<li class="level2">Chinese tea-cakes, <a href="#Page63">63</a></li>
-<li class="level2">chowder, <a href="#Page62">62</a>-<a href="#Page63">63</a></li>
-<li class="level2">corn bread<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page228">[228]</a></span>,
-<a href="#Page56">56</a>-<a href="#Page57">57</a></li>
-<li class="level2">corn meal, <a href="#Page48">48</a></li>
-<li class="level2">corn pone, <a href="#Page60">60</a>-<a href="#Page61">61</a></li>
-<li class="level2">eggs, <a href="#Page54">54</a>-<a href="#Page55">55</a></li>
-<li class="level2">fish, <a href="#Page52">52</a>-<a href="#Page53">53</a></li>
-<li class="level2">fudge, <a href="#Page64">64</a>-<a href="#Page65">65</a></li>
-<li class="level2">gingerbread, <a href="#Page63">63</a></li>
-<li class="level2">macaroni, <a href="#Page48">48</a></li>
-<li class="level2">mashed potatoes, <a href="#Page61">61</a>-<a href="#Page62">62</a></li>
-<li class="level2">mayonnaise dressing, <a href="#Page66">66</a></li>
-<li class="level2">molasses cookies, <a href="#Page64">64</a></li>
-<li class="level2">mushrooms, <a href="#Page61">61</a>-<a href="#Page62">62</a></li>
-<li class="level2">olive oil, <a href="#Page65">65</a></li>
-<li class="level2">pancakes, <a href="#Page57">57</a>-<a href="#Page58">58</a></li>
-<li class="level2">partridge, <a href="#Page53">53</a>-<a href="#Page54">54</a></li>
-<li class="level2">penuche, <a href="#Page64">64</a></li>
-<li class="level2">rice, <a href="#Page48">48</a></li>
-<li class="level2">soups, <a href="#Page58">58</a>, <a href="#Page59">59</a></li>
-<li class="level2">stewed fruits, <a href="#Page65">65</a></li>
-<li class="level2">stock, <a href="#Page46">46</a></li>
-<li class="level2">vegetable stew, <a href="#Page49">49</a></li>
-<li class="level2">white sauce, <a href="#Page63">63</a></li>
-<li>Reflector baker, <a href="#Page8">8</a>, <a href="#Page39">39</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind02">Cooking utensils</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Safety pins, <a href="#Page5">5</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li id="Ind07">Sanitation, camp health and, <a href="#Page157">157</a>-<a href="#Page170">170</a></li>
-<li class="level2">water and, <a href="#Page10">10</a>, <a href="#Page30">30</a>-<a href="#Page31">31</a>,
-<a href="#Page42">42</a>-<a href="#Page44">44</a>, <a href="#Page76">76</a></li>
-<li>Skirt, <a href="#Page4">4</a>, <a href="#Page17">17</a>-<a href="#Page19">19</a></li>
-<li class="level2">extra. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li class="level2">khaki, <a href="#Page17">17</a></li>
-<li class="level2">tweed, <a href="#Page17">17</a>, <a href="#Page22">22</a></li>
-<li>Soap, <a href="#Page5">5</a>, <a href="#Page20">20</a></li>
-<li>Sporting catalogs, <a href="#Page103">103</a></li>
-<li>Sporting magazines, <i>Outing</i>, <i>Country Life in America</i>, <i>Forest and Stream</i>, <i>Field and Stream</i>,
-<i>Recreation</i>, <i>Rod and Gun in Canada</i>, <a href="#Page110">110</a></li>
-<li>Stockings, <a href="#Page3">3</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-<li class="level2">holeproof, <a href="#Page16">16</a>, <a href="#Page17">17</a>, <a href="#Page19">19</a></li>
-<li class="level2">woolen, <a href="#Page16">16</a></li>
-<li>Sweater, <a href="#Page18">18</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind01">Clothing</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Tents<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page229">[229]</a></span>,
-<a href="#Page110">110</a>-<a href="#Page111">111</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind08">Equipment</a> and also
-<a href="#Ind09">Expenses</a></li>
-<li>Tin can camping, <a href="#Page26">26</a></li>
-<li>Tools, <a href="#Page9">9</a>, <a href="#Page35">35</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind08">Equipment</a></li>
-<li>Tooth brush, <a href="#Page5">5</a></li>
-<li>Tooth paste, <a href="#Page5">5</a></li>
-<li>Trail, <a href="#Page209">209</a>-<a href="#Page220">220</a></li>
-<li class="level2">following the, <a href="#Page211">211</a>-<a href="#Page214">214</a></li>
-<li class="level2">independence on, <a href="#Page209">209</a>-<a href="#Page211">211</a></li>
-<li class="level2">lost on, <a href="#Page214">214</a>-<a href="#Page216">216</a></li>
-<li class="level2">walking, <a href="#Page70">70</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Vacation Bureaus, <a href="#Page115">115</a></li>
-<li>Viscol. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind06">Waterproofing</a></li>
-
-<li class="first">Water, <a href="#Page10">10</a>, <a href="#Page42">42</a>-<a href="#Page44">44</a>,
-<a href="#Page76">76</a>. <i>See</i> <a href="#Ind03">Health</a> and also <a href="#Ind07">Sanitation</a></li>
-<li id="Ind06">Waterproofing, <a href="#Page3">3</a>, <a href="#Page14">14</a>, <a href="#Page16">16</a>. <i>See</i>
-<a href="#Ind04">Footgear</a></li>
-
-</ul><!--index-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="tnbot" id="TN">
-
-<h2>Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Depending on the hard- and software used to read this text, not all elements may display as intended.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistent and unusual spelling and hyphenation have been retained; spelling and hyphenation differences between
-the body text and the index have not been standardised.</p>
-
-<p>Page 203: bating: as printed, possibly an error for baiting.</p>
-
-<p><b>Changes made:</b></p>
-
-<p>Footnotes and illustrations have been moved out of text paragraphs.</p>
-
-<p>Some missing punctuation has been added, some unnecessary punctuation has been deleted silently.</p>
-
-<p>Page 163: Item (2) has been moved to a new line.</p>
-
-</div><!--tnbot-->
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
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-
-
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