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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Good hunting;, by Theodore Roosevelt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Good hunting;
- in pursuit of big game in the West
-
-Author: Theodore Roosevelt
-
-Release Date: March 15, 2022 [eBook #67632]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOOD HUNTING; ***
-
-
-
-
-
- Good Hunting
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: A WOUNDED BULL ELK]
-
-
-
-
- GOOD HUNTING
- In Pursuit of Big Game in the West
-
-
- BY
- THEODORE ROOSEVELT
-
- Illustrated
-
- “Good hunting all
- That keep the Jungle law.”
- RUDYARD KIPLING.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- New York and London
- Harper & Brothers Publishers
- 1907
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1896, 1897, 1907, by HARPER & BROTHERS.
-
-
- _All rights reserved._
- Published February, 1907.
-
-
-
-
- Publisher’s Note
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This book offers to younger readers a series of pictures of out-door
-life and big-game hunting in the West. More than this, the author makes
-us feel not only the zest of sport and adventure, but also the interest
-attaching to the habits and peculiarities of the remarkable animals
-which he describes. It is a field-book, since it is written by a true
-sportsman out of his own experiences, and its general spirit tends to a
-better appreciation of the value of close observation of animal life.
-The elk, bear, goats, deer, and other animals which are described,
-represent the most remarkable large fauna of our country. These
-descriptions, by one whose acquaintance with them has been so intimate,
-have an added value in view of the diminution in their number.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It is interesting, also, to remember that the influence of the author
-has been constantly exerted in favor of the preservation of big game and
-the maintenance of national parks and forest reserves, which, in
-addition to other advantages, include the protection of these noble
-forms of animal life.
-
-This series of articles upon big-game hunting was written for _Harper’s
-Round Table_, and published therein in 1897. The picture of ranch life
-which forms the closing chapter appeared in _Harper’s Round Table_ in
-1896. These articles are now presented together in book form for the
-first time after consultation with the author. For the title of the book
-and the proof-reading the publishers are responsible.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
- I. THE WAPITI, OR ROUND-HORNED ELK 13
-
- II. A CATTLE-KILLING BEAR 27
-
- III. A CHRISTMAS BUCK 41
-
- IV. THE TIMBER-WOLF 53
-
- V. SHOOTING THE PRONG-BUCK 67
-
- VI. A TAME WHITE GOAT 81
-
- VII. RANCHING 95
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Illustrations
-
-
- A WOUNDED BULL ELK _Frontispiece_
-
- SIX-POINT ELK-ANTLERS _Facing
- p._ 18
-
- FOLLOWING AN ELK-TRAIL IN WINTER „ 20
-
- GREAT WAS THE BULL’S ASTONISHMENT „ 22
-
- THE GRIZZLY AND A VICTIM „ 32
-
- “THE SHAGGY BEAST WAS FOUND LYING DEAD WITHIN A DOZEN „
- YARDS OF HIS LAST VICTIM” 36
-
- “‘I DROPPED ON ONE KNEE AND FIRED’” „ 46
-
- CANADIAN WOLVES AT AN INDIAN GRAVE „ 54
-
- DOGS IN PURSUIT OF AN OLD WOLF „ 60
-
- STALKING BIG GAME „ 68
-
- “‘I LEAPED OFF, AND HELD WELL AHEAD OF THE REARMOST AND „
- LARGEST BUCK’” 74
-
- A WOUNDED ANTELOPE „ 76
-
- FINALLY THE GOAT GOT USED TO THE MOTION OF THE CANOE „ 90
-
- COW-BOY AMUSEMENTS „ 96
-
- TAILING A BULL „ 100
-
- “THERE IS A GREAT DEAL OF EXCITING GALLOPING” „ 102
-
-
-
-
- The Wapiti,
- or Round-horned Elk
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- I
- THE WAPITI, OR ROUND-HORNED ELK
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-No country of the temperate zone can begin to compare with South Asia,
-and, above all, tropical and subtropical Africa, in the number and size
-of those great beasts of the chase which are known to hunters as big
-game; but after the Indian and African hunting-grounds, the best are
-still those of North America. Until a few years before 1897 there were
-large regions, even in the United States, where the teeming myriads of
-wild game, though of far fewer and less varied species, almost equalled
-the multitudes found in South Africa, and much surpassed those found
-anywhere else in point of numbers, though inferior in variety to those
-of India.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This, however, is now a thing of the past. The bison, which was the most
-characteristic animal of the American fauna, has been practically
-exterminated. There remained in 1897, however, a fair abundance of all
-other kinds of game. Perhaps, on the whole, the one affording most sport
-from the stand-point of the hardy and skilful hunter is the big-horn,
-though in size and in magnificence of horn it is surpassed by some of
-the wild sheep of Asia.
-
-There is a spice of danger in the pursuit of the grizzly-bear—the
-largest of all the land bears—especially in Alaska, where it is even
-larger than its Kamtchatkan brother. The moose and the wapiti—ordinarily
-called the elk—are closely related to the Old-World representatives of
-their kind; but the moose is a little larger and the wapiti very much
-larger than any of their European or Asiatic kinsfolk. In particular,
-the elk, or wapiti, is the stateliest of all deer, and the most
-beautiful of American game beasts.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It is a pity we cannot always call the wapiti by its right name, but the
-hunters and settlers never know him as anything but the elk, and I fear
-it would be pedantry to try to establish his rightful title. In former
-days the elk ranged to tide-water on the Atlantic coast. A few lingered
-in Pennsylvania until 1869, and throughout the middle of the century
-they were abundant on the great plains. In 1888 I shot one on the Little
-Missouri, however. In many parts of the Rocky Mountains and of the Coast
-Range the species is still as abundant as ever, and this is especially
-true of northwestern Wyoming, since that great animal-preserve the
-Yellowstone Park swarms with elk, and is their natural nursery and
-breeding-ground.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The elk is the lordliest of his kind throughout the world. The Scotch
-stag is a pygmy but a fourth his size. The stags of eastern Europe are
-larger than those of Scotland, and in Asia larger still, approaching in
-size a small wapiti. They are all substantially alike except in size.
-
-The wapiti is rather easier to kill than the deer, because his size
-makes it easier to see him; and he is slower in his movements, so that
-he is easier to hit. When pressed he can gallop very hard for a few
-hundred yards, but soon becomes tired. The trot is his natural gait, and
-this he can keep up for hours at a time, going at a pace which makes it
-necessary for a horse to gallop smartly to overtake him, and clearing
-great logs in his stride, while he dodges among the thick timber in a
-really marvellous way, when one comes to think of the difficulty he must
-have in handling his great antlers.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Late in September the rut begins, and then the elk gather in huge bands,
-while the great bulls fight vicious battles for leadership. Hunters call
-this the whistling-time, because throughout its continuance the bulls
-are very noisy, continually challenging one another. Their note is
-really not much like a whistle. It consists of two or three bars, rising
-and then falling, ending with a succession of grunts; the tone of voice
-varies greatly in different individuals; but when heard at a little
-distance in the heart of the great wooded wilderness the sound is very
-musical, and to me—and, I suppose, to most hunters—it is one of the most
-attractive sounds in all nature.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-At this season the big bulls are quite easy to approach by any man at
-all skilled in still-hunting, for their incessant challenging betrays
-their whereabouts, and they are so angry and excited as to be less
-watchful than usual. Some of my most pleasurable memories of hunting are
-connected with stalking some great bull elk in frosty weather, when the
-woods rang with his challenges.
-
-One evening in early October I was camped high among the mountains of
-western Montana. We were travelling with a pack-train, and had pitched
-our small tent among some firs by a brook, while the horses grazed in
-the little park or meadow close by. Elk were plentiful round about. We
-had seen their trails everywhere, and late in the afternoon we had
-caught a glimpse of a band of cows as they disappeared among the pines.
-
-[Illustration: SIX-POINT ELK-ANTLERS]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Towards morning I was awakened by hearing a bull challenge not very far
-from camp. The sound of the challenge kept coming nearer and nearer, and
-finally I heard one of the horses snort loudly in response; evidently
-the elk saw them, and, not making out exactly what they were, was coming
-down to join them. Sometimes horses will stampede when thus approached;
-but our ponies were veterans, and were very tired, and evidently had no
-intention of leaving their good pasture.
-
-Sitting up in my blankets, I could tell from the sound that they were
-still in the park, and then the challenge of the bull came pealing up
-not three hundred yards from the tent. This was more than I could stand,
-and I jumped up and put on my shoes and jacket. The moon was bright, but
-shooting by moonlight is very deceptive, and I doubt whether I would
-have hit him even had I got down to the park in time. However, he had
-moved on before I got down, and I heard his challenge in the woods
-beyond.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Looking at my watch, I saw that it was nearly dawn. I returned to the
-tent and laid down as I was under the blankets, and shivered and dozed
-for half an hour, then I came back to the meadow, where the pack-ponies
-stood motionless. In the brightening light the moon paled, and I was
-very soon able to pick out the bull’s trail on the frost-covered ground,
-where it was almost as plain as if he had been walking in snow. I saw
-that he had struck up a long valley, from which a pass led into a wooded
-basin. At the top of the pass I lost the trail entirely, and as it was
-almost impossible to see for any distance through the woods, I came to
-the conclusion that the best thing to do was to sit down and await
-events.
-
-[Illustration: FOLLOWING AN ELK-TRAIL IN WINTER]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-I did not have long to wait. In a couple of minutes the bugle of a bull
-came echoing across the basin through the frosty morning. Evidently my
-friend was still travelling, hunting for some possibly weaker rival.
-Almost immediately I heard far off another answering the challenge, and
-I stood up and meditated what to do. There was very little air, but such
-as there was blew to one side of the spot from which the last challenge
-seemed to come, and I immediately struck off at a trot through the woods
-to get below the wind.
-
-The answer to the challenge had evidently greatly excited the bull whose
-trail I had been following; he called every two or three minutes. The
-other answer was somewhat more irregular, and as I drew nearer I could
-tell from the volume of sound that the second challenge was from some
-big master-bull, who probably had his herd around him, and was roaring
-defiance at his would-be despoiler, for the single bull was doubtless on
-the lookout for some weaker one whom he could supplant as master of a
-herd.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was likely that the second bull, being a herd-master, would have the
-larger antlers, and I therefore preferred to get a shot at him. However,
-I was doomed to disappointment. As I groped towards the herd, and was
-within a couple of hundred yards, as I knew by the volume of sound, I
-almost stumbled upon a small spike-bull, who was evidently loitering
-about the outskirts of the herd, not daring to go too near the
-bad-tempered old chief. This little bull dashed away, giving the alarm,
-and a clash in the bushes soon told that the herd was following him.
-
-[Illustration: GREAT WAS THE BULL’S ASTONISHMENT]
-
-But luck favored me. The master-bull, being absorbed in thoughts of his
-rival, evidently suspected that the cows had some thought of fleeing
-from him, and, as they ran, tried to hold them together. I ran too,
-going at full speed, with the hope of cutting him off; in this I failed,
-but I came almost face to face with the very bull which I had been
-following from camp, and which had evidently followed the herd at full
-speed as soon as they ran.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Great was his astonishment when he saw me. He pulled up so suddenly to
-wheel round that he almost fell on his side; then off he went in a
-plunging gallop of terror; but he was near by, and stepping to one side
-I covered an opening between two trees, firing the minute he appeared. A
-convulsive leap showed that the bullet had struck, and after him I went
-at full speed. In a short time I saw him again, walking along with
-drooping head, and again I fired into his flank; he seemed to pay no
-attention to the shot, but walked forward a few steps, then halted,
-faltered, and fell on his side. In another second I had placed my rifle
-against a tree, and was admiring his shapely form and massive antlers.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- A Cattle-killing Bear
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- II
- A CATTLE-KILLING BEAR
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There were, in 1897, a few grizzlies left here and there along the
-Little Missouri, usually in large bottoms covered with an almost
-impenetrable jungle of timber and thorny brush. In the old days they
-used to be very plentiful in this region, and ventured boldly out on the
-prairie. The Little Missouri region was a famous hunting-ground for both
-the white trappers and the Indian hunters in those old days when the far
-West was still a wilderness, and the men who trapped beaver would wander
-for years over the plains and mountains and see no white faces save
-those of their companions.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Indeed, at that time the Little Missouri was very dangerous country, as
-it was the debatable-ground between many powerful Indian tribes, and was
-only visited by formidable war-parties and hunting-parties. In
-consequence of nobody daring to live there, game swarmed—buffalo, elk,
-deer, antelope, mountain-sheep, and bear. The bears were then very bold,
-and the hunters had little difficulty in getting up to them, for they
-were quite as apt to attack as to run away.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-But when, in 1880, the Northern Pacific Railroad reached the
-neighborhood of the Little Missouri, all this changed forever. The game
-that for untold ages had trodden out their paths over the prairies and
-along the river-bottoms vanished, as the Indians that had hunted it also
-vanished. The bold white hunters also passed away with the bears they
-had chased and the red foes against whom they had warred. In their
-places the ranchman came in with great herds of cattle and horses and
-flocks of sheep, and built their log cabins and tilled their scanty
-garden-patches, and cut down the wild hay for winter fodder. Now bears
-are as shy as they are scarce. No grizzly in such a settled region would
-dream of attacking a man unprovoked, and they pass their days in the
-deepest thickets, so that it is almost impossible to get at them. I
-never killed a bear in the neighborhood of my former ranch, though I
-have shot quite a number some hundreds of miles to the west in the Rocky
-Mountains.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Usually the bears live almost exclusively on roots, berries, insects,
-and the like. In fact, there is always something grotesque and
-incongruous in comparing the bear’s vast size, and his formidable claws
-and teeth, with the uses to which those claws and teeth are normally
-put. At the end of the season the claws, which are very long in spring,
-sometimes become so much blunted as to be tender, because the bear has
-worked on hard ground digging roots and the like.
-
-Bears often graze on the fresh tender spring grass. Berries form their
-especial delight, and they eat them so greedily when in season as to
-become inordinately fat. Indeed, a bear in a berry-patch frequently
-grows so absorbed in his work as to lose his wariness, and as he makes a
-good deal of noise himself in breaking branches and gobbling down the
-fruit, he is exposed to much danger from the hunter.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Besides roots and berries, the bear will feed on any small living thing
-he encounters. If in plundering a squirrel’s _cache_ he comes upon some
-young squirrels, down they go in company with the hoarded nuts. He is
-continually knocking to pieces and overturning old dead logs for the
-sake of devouring the insects living beneath them. If, when such a log
-is overturned, mice, shrews, or chipmunks are found underneath, the bear
-promptly scoops them into his mouth while they are still dazed by the
-sudden inrush of light. All this seems rather ludicrous as the life work
-of an animal of such huge proportions and such vast strength.
-
-Sometimes, however, a bear will take to killing fresh meat for itself.
-Indeed, I think it is only its clumsiness that prevents it from becoming
-an habitual flesh-eater. Deer are so agile that bears can rarely get
-them; yet on occasions not only deer, but moose, buffalo, and elk fall
-victims to them. Wild game, however, are so shy, so agile, and so alert
-that it is only rarely they afford meals to old Ephraim—as the mountain
-hunters call the grizzly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Domestic animals are slower, more timid, more clumsy, and with far
-duller sense. It is on these that the bear by preference preys when he
-needs fresh meat. I have never, myself, known one to kill horses; but I
-have been informed that the feat is sometimes performed, usually in
-spring; and the ranchman who told me insisted that when a bear made his
-rush he went with such astonishing speed that the horse was usually
-overtaken before it got well under way.
-
-[Illustration: THE GRIZZLY AND A VICTIM]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The favorite food of a bear, however, if he really wants fresh meat, is
-a hog or sheep—by preference the former. If a bear once gets into the
-habit of visiting a sheepfold or pigpen, it requires no slight skill and
-watchfulness to keep him out. As for swine, they dread bears more than
-anything else. A drove of half-wild swine will make head against a wolf
-or panther; but the bear scatters them in a panic. This feat is entirely
-justifiable, for a bear has a peculiar knack in knocking down a hog, and
-then literally eating him alive, in spite of his fearful squealing.
-
-Every now and then bears take to killing cattle regularly. Sometimes the
-criminal is a female with cubs; sometimes an old male in spring, when he
-is lean, and has the flesh hunger upon him. But on one occasion a very
-large and cunning bear, some twenty-five miles below my ranch, took to
-cattle-killing early in the summer, and continued it through the fall.
-He made his home in a very densely wooded bottom; but he wandered far
-and wide, and I have myself frequently seen his great, half-human
-footprints leading along some narrow divide, or across some great
-plateau, where there was no cover whatever, and where he must have gone
-at night. During the daytime, when on one of these expeditions, he would
-lie up in some timber _coulée_, and return to the river-bottoms after
-dark, so that no one ever saw him; but his tracks were seen very
-frequently.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He began operations on the bottom where he had his den. He at first took
-to lying in wait for the cattle as they came down to drink, when he
-would seize some animal, usually a fat young steer or heifer, knocking
-it over by sheer force. In his furious rush he sometimes broke the back
-with a terrific blow from his fore-paw; at other times he threw the
-animal over and bit it to death. The rest of the herd never made any
-effort to retaliate, but fled in terror. Very soon the cattle would not
-go down on this bottom at all; then he began to wander over the
-adjoining bottoms, and finally to make excursions far off in the broken
-country. Evidently he would sometimes at night steal along a _coulée_
-until he found cattle lying down on the hill-side, and then approach
-cautiously and seize his prey.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Usually the animals he killed were cows or steers; and noticing this, a
-certain ranchman in the neighborhood used to boast that a favorite bull
-on his ranch, of which he was particularly proud, would surely account
-for the bear if the latter dared to attack him. The boast proved vain.
-One day a cow-boy riding down a lonely _coulée_ came upon the scene of
-what had evidently been a very hard conflict. There were deep marks of
-hoofs and claws in the soft soil, bushes were smashed down where the
-struggling combatants had pressed against and over them, and a little
-farther on lay the remains of the bull.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He must have been seized by surprise; probably the great bear rushed at
-him from behind, or at one side, and fastened upon him so that he had no
-fair chance to use his horns. Nevertheless, he made a gallant struggle
-for his life, staggering to and fro trying to shake off his murderous
-antagonist, and endeavoring in vain to strike back over his shoulder;
-but all was useless. Even his strength could not avail against the might
-of his foe, and the cruel claws and teeth tore out his life. At last the
-gallant bull fell and breathed his last, and the bear feasted on the
-carcass.
-
-[Illustration: “THE SHAGGY BEAST WAS FOUND LYING DEAD WITHIN A DOZEN
-YARDS OF HIS LAST VICTIM”]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The angry ranchman swore vengeance, and set a trap for the bear, hoping
-it would return. The sly old beast, however, doubtless was aware that
-the body had been visited, for he never came back, but returned to the
-river-bottom, and again from time to time was heard of as slaying some
-animal. However, at last his fate overtook him. Early one morning a cow
-was discovered just killed and not yet eaten, the bear having probably
-been scared off. Immediately the ranchman put poison in the bait which
-the bear had thus himself left, and twenty-four hours later the shaggy
-beast was found lying dead within a dozen yards of his last victim.
-
-
-
-
- A Christmas Buck
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- III
- A CHRISTMAS BUCK
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Throughout most of the ranch country there are two kinds of deer, the
-black-tail and the white-tail. The white-tail is the same as the deer of
-the East; it is a beautiful creature, a marvel of lightness and grace in
-all its movements, and it loves to dwell in thick timber, so that in the
-plains country it is almost confined to the heavily wooded river
-bottoms. The black-tail is somewhat larger, with a different and very
-peculiar gait, consisting of a succession of stiff-legged bounds, all
-four feet striking the earth at the same time. Its habits are likewise
-very different, as it is a bolder animal and much fonder of the open
-country. Among the Rockies it is found in the deep forests, but it
-prefers scantily wooded regions, and in the plains country it dwells by
-choice in the rough hills, spending the day in the patches of ash or
-cedar among the ravines. In 1882 the black-tail was very much more
-abundant than the white-tail almost everywhere in the West, but owing to
-the nature of its haunts it is more easily killed out, and in 1897,
-through both species has decreased in numbers, the white-tail was on the
-whole the more common.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-My ranch-house was situated on a heavily wooded bottom, one of the
-places where the white-tail were found. On one occasion I killed one
-from the ranch veranda, and two or three times I shot them within half a
-mile of the house. Nevertheless, they are so cunning and stealthy in
-their ways, and the cover is so dense, that usually, although one may
-know of their existence right in one’s neighborhood, there is more
-chance of getting game by going off eight or ten miles into the broken
-country of the black-tail.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-One Christmas I was to be at the ranch, and I made up my mind that I
-would try to get a good buck for our Christmas dinner; for I had not had
-much time to hunt that fall, and Christmas was almost upon us before we
-started to lay in our stock of winter meat. So I arranged with one of
-the cow-boys to make an all-day’s hunt through some rugged hills on the
-other side of the river, where we knew there were black-tail.
-
-We were up soon after three o’clock, when it was yet as dark as at
-midnight.
-
-We had a long day’s work before us, and so we ate a substantial
-breakfast, then put on our fur caps, coats, and mittens, and walked out
-into the cold night. The air was still, but it was biting weather, and
-we pulled our caps down over our ears as we walked towards the rough,
-low stable where the two hunting-ponies had been put overnight. In a few
-minutes we were jogging along on our journey.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There was a powder of snow over the ground, and this and the brilliant
-starlight enabled us to see our way without difficulty. The river was
-frozen hard, and the hoofs of the horses rang on the ice as they
-crossed. For a while we followed the wagon road, and then struck off
-into a cattle trail which led up into a long _coulée_. After a while
-this faded out, and we began to work our way along the divide, not
-without caution, for in broken countries it is hard to take a horse
-during darkness. Indeed, we found we had left a little too early, for
-there was hardly a glimmer of dawn when we reached our proposed
-hunting-grounds. We left the horses in a sheltered nook where there was
-abundance of grass, and strode off on foot, numb after the ride.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The dawn brightened rapidly, and there was almost light enough for
-shooting when we reached a spur overlooking a large basin around whose
-edges there were several wooded _coulées_. Here we sat down to wait and
-watch. We did not have to wait long, for just as the sun was coming up
-on our right hand we caught a glimpse of something moving at the mouth
-of one of the little ravines some hundreds of yards distant. Another
-glance showed us that it was a deer feeding, while another behind it was
-walking leisurely in our direction.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There was no time to be lost, and, sliding back over the crest, we
-trotted off around a spur until we were in line with the quarry, and
-then walked rapidly towards them. Our only fear was lest they should
-move into some position where they would see us; and this fear was
-justified. While still one hundred yards from the mouth of the _coulée_
-in which we had seen the feeding deer, the second one, which all the
-time had been walking slowly in our direction, came out on a ridge crest
-to one side of our course. It saw us at once and halted short; it was
-only a spike buck, but there was no time to lose, for we needed meat,
-and in another moment it would have gone off, giving the alarm to its
-companion. So I dropped on one knee, and fired just as it turned.
-
-[Illustration: “‘I DROPPED ON ONE KNEE AND FIRED’”]
-
-From the jump it gave I was sure it was hit, but it disappeared over the
-hill, and at the same time the big buck, its companion, dashed out of
-the _coulée_ in front, across the basin. It was broadside to me, and not
-more than one hundred yards distant; but a running deer is difficult to
-hit, and though I took two shots, both missed, and it disappeared behind
-another spur.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This looked pretty bad, and I felt rather blue as I climbed up to look
-at the trail of the spike. I was cheered to find blood, and as there was
-a good deal of snow here and there it was easy to follow it; nor was it
-long before we saw the buck moving forward slowly, evidently very sick.
-We did not disturb him, but watched him until he turned down into a
-short ravine a quarter of a mile off; he did not come out, and we sat
-down and waited nearly an hour to give him time to get stiff. When we
-reached the valley, one went down each side so as to be sure to get him
-when he jumped up. Our caution was needless, however, for we failed to
-start him; and on hunting through some of the patches of brush we found
-him stretched out already dead.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This was satisfactory; but still it was not the big buck, and we started
-out again after dressing and hanging up the deer. For many hours we saw
-nothing, and we had swung around within a couple of miles of the horses
-before we sat down behind a screen of stunted cedars for a last look.
-After attentively scanning every patch of brush in sight, we were about
-to go on when the attention of both of us was caught at the same moment
-by seeing a big buck deliberately get up, turn round, and then lie down
-again in a grove of small, leafless trees lying opposite to us on a
-hill-side with a southern exposure. He had evidently very nearly
-finished his day’s rest, but was not quite ready to go out to feed; and
-his restlessness cost him his life.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-As we now knew where he was, the work was easy. We marked a place on the
-hill-top a little above and to one side of him; and while the cow-boy
-remained to watch him, I drew back and walked leisurely round to where I
-could get a shot. When nearly up to the crest I crawled into view of the
-patch of brush, rested my elbows on the ground, and gently tapped two
-stones together. The buck rose nimbly to his feet, and at seventy yards
-afforded me a standing shot, which I could not fail to turn to good
-account.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A winter day is short, and twilight had come before we had packed both
-bucks on the horses; but with our game behind our saddles we did not
-feel either fatigue, or hunger or cold, while the horses trotted
-steadily homeward. The moon was a few days old, and it gave us light
-until we reached the top of the bluffs by the river and saw across the
-frozen stream the gleam from the fire-lit windows of the ranch-house.
-
-
-
-
- The Timber-wolf
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- IV
- THE TIMBER-WOLF
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There are two kinds of wolves found in the United States. One is the
-little coyote or prairie-wolf, or barking-wolf, which never was found in
-the Eastern States, being an animal of the open country; the other is
-the big wolf, and sometimes the timber-wolf or gray wolf, which was
-formerly found everywhere from the Atlantic to the Pacific. In some
-districts it runs to color varieties of different kinds—red, black, or
-white.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The coyote is not at all a formidable beast, and holds its own quite
-persistently until civilization is well advanced in a country. Coyotes
-are not dangerous to either man or the larger domestic animals. Lambs,
-young pigs, hens, and cats often become their prey, and if very hungry
-several of them will combine to attack a young calf. In consequence,
-farmers and ranchers kill them whenever the chance offers; but they do
-not do damage which is even appreciable when compared with the ravages
-of their grim big brother, the gray wolf, which in many sections of the
-West is a veritable scourge of the stockmen.
-
-The big wolves shrink back before the growth of the thickly settled
-districts, and in the Eastern States they often tend to disappear even
-from districts that are uninhabited, save by a few wilderness hunters.
-They have thus disappeared almost entirely from Maine, the Adirondacks,
-and the Alleghanies, although here and there they are said to be
-returning to their old haunts.
-
-[Illustration: CANADIAN WOLVES AT AN INDIAN GRAVE]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Their disappearance is rather mysterious in some instances, for they are
-certainly not all killed off. The black bear is much more easily killed,
-yet the black bear holds its own in many parts of the land from which
-the wolf has vanished. No animal is quite so difficult to kill as is the
-wolf, whether by poison or rifle or hound. Yet, after a comparatively
-few have been slain, the entire species will perhaps vanish from certain
-localities.
-
-But with all wild animals it is a noticeable fact that a course of
-conduct with man continuing over many generations of animal life causes
-a species so to adapt itself to its new surroundings that it ceases to
-diminish in numbers. When white men take up a new country, the game, and
-especially the big game, being entirely unused to contend with the new
-foe, succumbs easily, and it is almost completely killed out. If any
-individuals survive at all, however, the succeeding generations are far
-more difficult to exterminate than were their ancestors, and they cling
-much more tenaciously to their old homes.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The game to be found in old and long-settled countries is much more wary
-and able to take care of itself than the game of an untrodden
-wilderness. It is a very difficult matter to kill a Swiss chamois; but
-it is a very easy matter to kill a white goat after a hunter has once
-penetrated among the almost unknown peaks of the mountains of British
-Columbia. When the ranchmen first drove their cattle to the Little
-Missouri they found the deer tame and easy to kill, but the deer of
-Maine and the Adirondacks test to the full the highest skill of the
-hunter.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-In consequence, after a time, game may even increase in certain
-districts where settlements are thin. This has been true of the wolves
-throughout the northern cattle country in Montana, Wyoming, and the
-western ends of the Dakotas. In the old days wolves were very plentiful
-throughout this region, closely following the huge herds of buffaloes.
-The white men who followed these herds as professional buffalo-hunters
-were often accompanied by other men, known as “wolfers,” who poisoned
-these wolves for the sake of their furs. With the disappearance of the
-buffalo the wolves seemed so to diminish in numbers that they also
-seemed to disappear. During the last ten years their numbers have
-steadily increased, and now they seem to be as numerous as they ever
-were in the region in question, and they are infinitely more wary and
-more difficult to kill.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Along the Little Missouri their ravages were so serious from 1893 to
-1897 as to cause heavy damage to the stockmen. Not only colts and
-calves, but young trail stock, and in midwinter even full-grown horses
-and steers, are continually slain; and in some seasons their losses have
-been so serious as to more than eat up all the profits of the ranchman.
-The county authorities put a bounty on wolf scalps of three dollars
-each, and in my own neighborhood the ranchmen of their own accord put on
-a further bounty of five dollars. This made eight dollars for every
-wolf, and as the skin is also worth something, the business of killing
-wolves was quite profitable.
-
-Wolves are very shy, and show extraordinary cunning both in hiding
-themselves and in slinking out of the way of the hunter. They are rarely
-killed with the rifle. I have never shot but one myself. They are
-occasionally trapped, but after a very few have been procured in this
-way the survivors become so wary that it is almost impossible even for a
-master of the art to do much with them, while an ordinary man can never
-get one into a trap except by accident.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-More can be done with poison, but even in this case the animal speedily
-learns caution by experience. When poison is first used in a district
-wolves are very easily killed, and perhaps almost all of them will be
-slain, but nowadays it is difficult to catch any but young ones in this
-way. Occasionally an old one will succumb, but there are always some who
-cannot be persuaded to touch a bait. The old she-wolves teach their
-cubs, as soon as they are able to walk, to avoid man’s trace in every
-way, and to look out for traps and poison.
-
-In consequence, though most cow-punchers carry poison with them, and are
-continually laying out baits, and though some men devote most of their
-time to poisoning for the sake of the bounty and the fur, the results
-are not very remunerative.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The most successful wolf-hunter on the Little Missouri in 1896 was a man
-who did not rely on poison at all, but on dogs. He was a hunter named
-Massingale, and he always had a pack of at least twenty hounds. The
-number varied, for a wolf at bay is a terrible fighter, with jaws like
-those of a steel trap and teeth that cut like knives, so that the dogs
-were continually disabled and sometimes killed, and the hunter had
-always to be on the watch to add animals to his pack.
-
-It was not a pack that would appeal, as far as looks go, to an old
-huntsman, but it was thoroughly fitted for its own work. Most of the
-dogs were greyhounds, either rough or smooth haired, but many of them
-were big mongrels, and part some other breed, such as bull-dog, mastiff,
-Newfoundland, blood-hound, or collie.
-
-[Illustration: DOGS IN PURSUIT OF AN OLD WOLF]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The only two necessary requisites were that the dogs should run fast and
-fight gamely; and in consequence they formed as wicked, hard-biting a
-crew as ever ran down and throttled a wolf. They were usually taken out
-ten at a time, and by their aid Massingale killed two hundred wolves in
-the course of the year.
-
-Of course there were no pretence of giving the game fair play. The
-wolves were killed as vermin, not for sport. The greatest havoc was in
-the spring-time, when the she-wolves were followed to their dens, which
-were sometimes holes in the earth and sometimes natural caves. There
-were from three to nine whelps in each litter. Some of the hounds were
-very fast, and they could usually overtake a young or weak wolf; but an
-old wolf-dog, with a good start, unless run into at once, would surely
-get away if he were in a running trim. Frequently, however, he was
-caught when he was not in running trim, for the hunter was apt to find
-him when he had killed a calf or taken part in dragging down a horse or
-steer. Under these circumstances he could not run long before the pack.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-If possible, as with all such packs, the hunter himself would get up in
-time to end the worry by a stab of his hunting-knife; but unless he was
-quick he would have nothing to do, for the pack was thoroughly competent
-to do its own killing. Grim fighter though a great wolf-dog is, he
-stands no show before the onslaught, who rush on their antagonist in a
-body. They possessed great power in their jaws, and unless Massingale
-was up within two or three minutes after the wolf was taken, the dogs
-literally tore him to pieces, though one or more of their number might
-be killed or crippled in the fight.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Other hunters were striving to get together packs thoroughly organized,
-and the wolves may be thinned out; they were certainly altogether too
-plentiful. During the fall of 1896 I saw a number myself, although I was
-not looking for them. I frequently came upon the remains of sheep and
-young stock which they had killed, and once, on the top of a small
-plateau, I found the body of a large steer, while the torn and trodden
-ground showed that he had fought hard for his life before succumbing.
-There were apparently two wolves engaged in the work, and the cunning
-beasts had evidently acted in concert. While one attracted the steer’s
-attention, the other, according to the invariable wolf habit, attacked
-him from behind, hamstringing him and tearing out his flanks. His body
-was still warm when I came up, but his murderers had slunk off, either
-seeing or smelling me. Their handiwork was unmistakable, however, for,
-unlike bears and cougars, wolves invariably attack their victim at the
-hind-quarters, and begin their feast on the hams or flanks if the animal
-is of any size.
-
-
-
-
- Shooting the Prong-buck
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- V
- SHOOTING THE PRONG-BUCK
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-For a few years before 1897, when I visited my cattle range I spent most
-of my time out on the great plains, where almost the only game that can
-be found is the prong-horned antelope; and as on such trips the party
-depends for fresh meat upon the rifle, I have on each occasion done a
-certain amount of antelope-shooting.
-
-In the old days, when antelope were far more plentiful than they are
-now, they could often be procured by luring them with a red flag—for
-they are very inquisitive beasts—but now they have grown wary, and must
-usually be either stalked, which is very difficult, owing to their
-extreme keenness of vision and the absence of cover on the prairies, or
-else must be ridden into.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-With first-class greyhounds and good horses they can often be run down
-in fair chase; but ordinarily the rider can hope for nothing more than
-to get within fair shooting-range, and this only by taking advantage of
-their peculiarity of running straight ahead in the direction in which
-they are pointed when once they have settled to their pace. Usually
-antelope, as soon as they see a hunter, run straight away from him; but
-sometimes they make their flight at an angle, and as they do not like to
-change their course when once started, it is occasionally possible to
-cut them off from the point towards which they are headed, and get a
-reasonably close shot.
-
-[Illustration: STALKING BIG GAME]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-In the fall of 1896 I spent a fortnight on the range with the ranch
-wagon. I was using for the first time one of the then new small-caliber,
-smokeless-powder rifles, a 30–30–160 Winchester. I had a half-jacketed
-bullet, the butt being cased in hard-metal, while the nose was of pure
-lead.
-
-While travelling to and fro across the range we usually broke camp each
-day, not putting up the tent at all during the trip; but at one spot we
-spent three nights. It was in a creek bottom, bounded on either side by
-rows of grassy hills, beyond which stretched the rolling prairie. The
-creek bed, which at this season was of course dry in most places, wound
-in S-shaped curves, with here and there a pool and here and there a
-fringe of stunted, wind-beaten timber. We were camped near a little
-grove of ash, box-alder, and willow, which gave us shade at noonday; and
-there were two or three pools of good water in the creek bed—one so deep
-that I made it my swimming-bath.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The first day that I was able to make a hunt I rode out with my foreman,
-Sylvane Ferris. I was mounted on Muley. Twelve years before, when Muley
-was my favorite cutting-pony on the round-up, he never seemed to tire or
-to lose his dash, but Muley was now sixteen years old, and on ordinary
-occasions he liked to go as soberly as possible; yet the good old pony
-still had the fire latent in his blood, and at the sight of game—or,
-indeed, of cattle or horses—he seemed to regain for the time being all
-the headlong courage of his vigorous and supple youth.
-
-On the morning in question it was two or three hours before Sylvane and
-I saw any game. Our two ponies went steadily forward at a single foot or
-shack, as the cow-punchers term what Easterners call “a fox trot.” Most
-of the time we were passing over immense grassy flats, where the mats of
-short curled blades lay brown and parched under the bright sunlight.
-Occasionally we came to ranges of low, barren hills, which sent off
-gently rounding spurs into the plain.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was on one of these ranges that we first saw our game. As we were
-travelling along the divide we spied eight antelope far ahead of us.
-They saw us as soon as we saw them, and the chance of getting to them
-seemed small; but it was worth an effort, for by humoring them when they
-start to run, and galloping towards them at an oblique angle to their
-line of flight, there is always some little chance of getting a shot.
-Sylvane was on a light buckskin horse, and I left him on the ridge crest
-to occupy their time while I cantered off to one side.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The prong-horns became uneasy as I galloped off, and ran off the ridge
-crest in a line nearly parallel to mine. They did not go very fast, and
-I held Muley in, who was all on fire at the sight of the game. After
-crossing two or three spurs, the antelope going at half speed, they
-found I had come closer to them, and, turning, they ran up one of the
-valleys between two spurs.
-
-Now was my chance, and, wheeling at right angles to my former course, I
-galloped Muley as hard as I knew how up the valley nearest and parallel
-to where the antelope had gone. The good old fellow ran like a
-quarter-horse, and when we were almost at the main ridge crest I leaped
-off, and ran ahead with my rifle at the ready, crouching down as I came
-to the sky-line. Usually on such occasions I find that the antelope have
-gone on, and merely catch a glimpse of them half a mile distant, but on
-this occasion everything went right. The band had just reached the ridge
-crest about two hundred and twenty yards from me across the head of the
-valley, and I halted for a moment to look around. They were starting as
-I raised my rifle, but the trajectory is very flat with these small-bore
-smokeless-powder weapons, and taking a coarse front sight I fired at a
-young buck which stood broadside to me. There was no smoke, and as the
-band raced away I saw him sink backward, the ball having broken his hip.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-We packed him bodily behind Sylvane on the buckskin and continued our
-ride, as there was no fresh meat in camp, and we wished to bring in a
-couple of bucks if possible. For two or three hours we saw nothing. The
-unshod feet of the horses made hardly any noise on the stretches of
-sun-cured grass, but now and then we passed through patches of thin
-weeds, their dry stalks rattling curiously, making a sound like that of
-a rattlesnake. At last, coming over a gentle rise of ground, we spied
-two more antelopes, half a mile ahead of us and to our right.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Again there seemed small chance of bagging our quarry, but again fortune
-favored us. I at once cantered Muley ahead, not towards them, so as to
-pass them well on one side. After some hesitation they started, not
-straightaway, but at an angle to my own course. For some moments I kept
-at a hand-gallop, until they got thoroughly settled in their line of
-flight; then I touched Muley, and he went as hard as he knew how.
-
-[Illustration: “‘I LEAPED OFF, AND HELD WELL AHEAD OF THE REARMOST AND
-LARGEST BUCK’”]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Immediately the two panic-stricken and foolish beasts seemed to feel
-that I was cutting off their line of retreat, and raced forward at mad
-speed. They went much faster than I did, but I had the shorter course,
-and when they crossed me they were not fifty yards ahead—by which time I
-had come nearly a mile. Muley stopped short, like the trained cow-pony
-he was; I leaped off, and held well ahead of the rearmost and largest
-buck. At the crack of the little rifle down he went with his neck
-broken. In a minute or two he was packed behind me on Muley, and we bent
-our steps towards camp.
-
-During the remainder of my trip we were never out of fresh meat, for I
-shot three other bucks—one after a smart chase on horseback, and the
-other two after careful stalks.
-
-The game being both scarce and shy, I had to exercise much care, and
-after sighting a band I would sometimes have to wait and crawl round for
-two or three hours before they would get into a position where I had any
-chance of approaching. Even then they were more apt to see me and go off
-than I was to get near them.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Antelope are the only game that can be hunted as well at noonday as in
-the morning or evening, for their times for sleeping and feeding are
-irregular. They never seek shelter from the sun, and when they lie down
-for a noonday nap they are apt to choose a hollow, so as to be out of
-the wind; in consequence, if the band is seen at all at this time, it is
-easier to approach them than when they are up and feeding.
-
-They sometimes come down to water in the middle of the day, sometimes in
-the morning or evening. On this trip I came across bands feeding and
-resting at almost every time of the day. They seemed usually to feed for
-a couple of hours, then rest for a couple of hours, then begin feeding
-again.
-
-[Illustration: A WOUNDED ANTELOPE]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The last shot I got was when I was out with Joe Ferris, in whose company
-I had killed my first buffalo, just thirteen years before, and not very
-far from the spot I then was at. We had seen two or three bands that
-morning, and in each case, after a couple of hours of useless effort, I
-failed to get near enough. At last, towards mid-day, we got within range
-of a small band lying down in a little cup-shaped hollow in the middle
-of a great flat. I did not have a close shot, for they were running
-about one hundred and eighty yards off. The buck was rear-most, and at
-him I aimed; the bullet struck him in the flank, coming out of the
-opposite shoulder, and he fell in his next bound. As we stood over him,
-Joe shook his head, and said, “I guess that little 30–30 is the ace”;
-and I told him I guessed so too.
-
-
-
-
- A Tame White Goat
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VI
- A TAME WHITE GOAT
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-One of the queerest wild beasts in North America is the so-called white
-goat. It is found all along the highest peaks of the Rocky Mountains
-from Alaska into Montana, Idaho, and Washington. Really it is not a goat
-at all, but a kind of mountain-antelope, whose nearest kinsfolk are
-certain Asiatic antelopes found in the Himalayas. It is a squat,
-powerfully built, and rather clumsy-looking animal, about as heavy as a
-good-sized deer, but not as tall. It is pure white in color, except that
-its hoofs, horns, and muzzle are jet black. In winter its fleece is very
-long, and at that time it wears a long beard, which makes it look still
-more like a goat. It has a very distinct hump on the shoulders, and the
-head is usually carried low.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-White goats are quite as queer in their habits as in their looks. They
-delight in cold, and, except in the northernmost portion of their range,
-they keep to the very tops of the mountains; and at mid-day, if the sun
-is at all powerful, retire to caves to rest themselves. They have the
-very curious habit of sitting up on their haunches, in the attitude of a
-dog begging, when looking about for any foe whose presence they suspect.
-They are wonderful climbers, although they have no liveliness or agility
-of movement; their surefootedness and remarkable strength enable them to
-go up or down seemingly impossible places. Their great round hoofs, with
-sharp-cut edges, can grip the slightest projection in the rocks, and no
-precipice or ice-wall has any terror for them. At times they come quite
-low towards the foot-hills, usually to visit some mineral lick, but
-generally they are found only in the very high broken ground, among
-stupendous crags and precipices. They are self-confident, rather stupid
-beasts, and as they are accustomed to look for danger only from below,
-it is an easy matter to approach them if once the hunter is able to get
-above them; but they live in such inaccessible places that their pursuit
-entails great labor and hardship.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Their sharp black horns are eight or ten inches long, with points like
-needles, and their necks are thick and muscular, so that they are
-dangerous enemies for any foe to handle at close quarters; and they know
-their capacities very well, and are confident in their prowess, often
-preferring to stand and fight a dog or wolf rather than to try to run.
-Nevertheless, though they are such wicked and resolute fighters, they
-have not a few enemies. The young kids are frequently carried off by
-eagles, and mountain-lions, wolves, and occasionally even wolverenes
-prey on the grown animals whenever they venture down out of their
-inaccessible resting-places to prowl along the upper edges of the timber
-or on the open terraces of grass and shrubby mountain plants. If a goat
-is on its guard, and can get its back to a rock, both wolf and panther
-will fight shy of facing the thrust of the dagger-like horns; but the
-beasts of prey are so much more agile and stealthy that if they can get
-a goat in the open or take it by surprise, they can readily pull it
-down.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-I have several times shot white goats for the sake of the trophies
-afforded by the horns and skins, but I have never gone after them much,
-as the work is very severe, and the flesh usually affords poor eating,
-being musky, as there is a big musk-pod situated between the ear and the
-horn. Only a few of the old-time hunters knew anything about white
-goats; and even nowadays there are not very many men who go into their
-haunts as a steady thing; but the settlers who live high up in the
-mountains do come across them now and then, and they occasionally have
-odd stories to relate about them.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-One was told to me by an old fellow who had a cabin on one of the
-tributaries that ran into Flathead Lake. He had been off prospecting for
-gold in the mountains early one spring. The life of a prospector is very
-hard. He goes alone, and in these northern mountains he cannot take with
-him the donkey which towards the south is his almost invariable
-companion and beast of burden; the tangled forests of the northern
-ranges make it necessary for him to trust only to his own power as a
-pack-bearer, and he carries merely what he takes on his own shoulders.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The old fellow in question had been out for a month before the snow was
-all gone, and his dog, a large and rather vicious hound, to which he was
-greatly attached, accompanied him. When his food gave out he was working
-his way back towards Flathead Lake, and struck a stream, on which he
-found an old dugout canoe, deserted the previous fall by some other
-prospector or prospectors. Into this he got, with his traps and his dog,
-and started down-stream.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-On the morning of the second day, while rounding a point of land, he
-suddenly came upon two white goats, a female and a little kid, evidently
-but a few weeks old, standing right by the stream. As soon as they saw
-him they turned and galloped clumsily off towards the foot of the
-precipice. As he was in need of meat, he shoved ashore and ran after the
-fleeing animals with his rifle, while the dog galloped in front. Just
-before reaching the precipice the dog overtook the goats. When he was
-almost up, however, the mother goat turned suddenly around, while the
-kid stopped short behind her, and she threatened the dog with lowered
-head. After a second’s hesitation the dog once more resumed his gallop,
-and flung himself full on the quarry. It was a fatal move. As he gave
-his last leap, the goat, bending her head down sideways, struck
-viciously, so that one horn slipped right up to the root into the dog’s
-chest. The blow was mortal, and the dog barely had time to give one yelp
-before his life passed.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It was, however, several seconds before the goat could disengage its
-head from its adversary, and by that time the enraged hunter was close
-at hand, and with a single bullet avenged the loss of his dog. When the
-goat fell, however, he began to feel a little ashamed, thinking of the
-gallant fight she had made for herself and kid, and he did not wish to
-harm the latter. So he walked forward, trying to scare it away; but the
-little thing stood obstinately near its dead mother, and butted angrily
-at him as he came up. It was far too young to hurt him in any way, and
-he was bound not to hurt it, so he sat down beside it and smoked a pipe.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-When he got up it seemed to have become used to his presence, and no
-longer showed any hostility. For some seconds he debated what to do,
-fearing lest it might die if left alone; then he came to the conclusion
-that it was probably old enough to do without its mother’s milk, and
-would have at least a chance for its life if left to itself.
-Accordingly, he walked towards the boat; but he soon found it was
-following him. He tried to frighten it back, but it belonged to much too
-stout-hearted a race to yield to pretence, and on it came after him.
-When he reached the boat, after some hesitation he put the little thing
-in and started down-stream. At first the motion of the boat startled it,
-and it jumped right out into the water. When he got it back, it again
-jumped out, on to a bowlder. On being replaced the second time, it made
-no further effort to escape; but it puzzled him now and then by suddenly
-standing up with its fore-feet on the very rim of the ticklish dugout,
-so that he had to be very careful how he balanced. Finally, however, it
-got used to the motion of the canoe, and it was then a very contented
-and amusing passenger.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The last part of the journey, after its owner abandoned the canoe, was
-performed with the kid slung on his back. Of course it again at first
-objected strenuously to this new mode of progress, but in time it became
-quite reconciled, and accepted the situation philosophically. When the
-prospector reached his cabin his difficulties were at an end. The little
-goat had fallen off very much in flesh; for though it would browse of
-its own accord around the camp at night, it was evidently too young to
-take to the change kindly.
-
-[Illustration: FINALLY THE GOAT GOT USED TO THE MOTION OF THE CANOE]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Before reaching the cabin, however, it began to pick up again, and it
-soon became thoroughly at home amid its new surroundings. It was very
-familiar, not only with the prospector, but with strangers, and
-evidently regarded the cabin as a kind of safety spot. Though it would
-stray off into the surrounding woods, it never ventured farther than two
-or three hundred yards, and after an absence of half an hour or so at
-the longest, it would grow alarmed, and come back at full speed,
-bounding along like a wild buck through the woods, until it reached what
-it evidently deemed its haven of refuge.
-
-Its favorite abode was the roof of the cabin, at one corner of which,
-where the projecting ends of the logs were uneven, it speedily found a
-kind of ladder, up which it would climb until the roof was reached.
-Sometimes it would promenade along the ridge, and at other times mount
-the chimney, which it would hastily abandon, however, when a fire was
-lit. The presence of a dog always resulted in immediate flight, first to
-the roof, and then to the chimney; and when it came inside the cabin it
-was fond of jumping on a big wooden shelf above the fireplace, which
-served as a mantel-piece.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-If teased it was decidedly truculent; but its tameness and confidence,
-and the quickness with which it recognized any friend, made it a great
-favorite, not only with the prospector, but with his few neighbors.
-However, the little thing did not live very long. Whether it was the
-change of climate or something wrong with its food, when the hot weather
-came on it pined gradually away, and one morning it was found dead,
-lying on its beloved roof-tree. The prospector had grown so fond of it
-that, as he told me, he gave it a burial “just as if it were a
-Christian.”
-
-
-
-
- Ranching
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- VII
- RANCHING
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There are in every community young men to whom life at the desk or
-behind the counter is unutterably dreary and unattractive, and who long
-for some out-of-door occupation which shall, if possible, contain a
-spice of excitement. These young men can be divided into two
-classes—first, those who, if they get a chance to try the life for which
-they long, will speedily betray their utter inability to lead it; and,
-secondly, those who possess the physical capacity and the peculiar
-mental make-up necessary for success in an employment far out of the
-usual paths of civilized occupations. A great many of these young men
-think of ranching as a business which they might possibly take up, and
-what I am about to say[1] is meant as much for a warning to one class as
-for advice to the other.
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Written in 1896.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Ranching is a rather indefinite term. In a good many parts of the West a
-ranch simply means a farm; but I shall not use it in this sense, since
-the advantages and disadvantages of a farmer’s life, whether it be led
-in New Jersey or Iowa, have often been dwelt upon by men infinitely more
-competent than I am to pass judgment. Accordingly, when I speak of
-ranching I shall mean some form of stock-raising or sheep-farming as
-practised now in the wilder parts of the United States, where there is
-still plenty of land which, because of the lack of rainfall, is not very
-productive for agricultural purposes.
-
-[Illustration: COW-BOY AMUSEMENTS]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The first thing to be remembered by any boy or young man who wishes to
-go West and start life on a cattle ranch, horse ranch, or sheep ranch is
-that he must know the business thoroughly before he can earn any salary
-to speak of, still less start out on his own accord. A great many young
-fellows apparently think that a cow-boy is born and not made, and that
-in order to become one all they have to do is to wish very hard to be
-one. Now, as a matter of fact, a young fellow trained as a book-keeper
-would take quite as long to learn the trade of a cow-boy as the average
-cow-boy would take to learn the trade of book-keeper. The first thing
-that the beginner anywhere in the wilder parts of the West has to learn
-is the capacity to stand monotony, fatigue, and hardship; the next thing
-is to learn the nature of the country.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A young fellow from the East who has been brought up on a farm, or who
-has done hard manual labor as a machinist, need not go through a
-novitiate of manual labor in order to get accustomed to the roughness
-that such labor implies; but a boy just out of a high-school, or a young
-clerk, will have to go through just such a novitiate before he will be
-able to command a dollar’s pay. Both alike will have to learn the nature
-of the country, and this can only be learned by actual experience on the
-ground.
-
-Again, the beginner must remember that though there is occasional
-excitement and danger in a ranchman’s life, it is only occasional, while
-the monotony of hard and regular toil is not often broken. Except in the
-matter of fresh air and freedom from crowding, a small ranchman often
-leads a life of as grinding hardness as the average dweller in a New
-York tenement-house. His shelter is a small log hut, or possibly a
-dugout in the side of a bank, or in summer a shabby tent. For food he
-will have to depend mainly on the bread of his own baking, on fried fat
-pork, and on coffee or tea with sugar and no milk. Of course he will
-occasionally have some canned stuff or potatoes. The furniture of the
-hut is of the roughest description—a roll of blankets for bedding, a
-bucket, a tin wash-basin, and a tin mug, with perhaps a cracked
-looking-glass four inches square.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-He will not have much society of any kind, and the society he does have
-is not apt to be over-refined. If he is a lad of a delicate, shrinking
-nature and fastidious habits, he will find much that is uncomfortable,
-and will need to show no small amount of pluck and fortitude if he is to
-hold his own. The work, too, is often hard and often wearisome from mere
-sameness. It is generally done on horseback even on a sheep ranch, and
-always on a cow ranch. The beginner must learn to ride with indifference
-all kinds of rough and dangerous horses before he will be worth his
-keep.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-With all this before him, the beginner will speedily find out that life
-on a Western ranch is very far from being a mere holiday. A young man
-who desires to start in the life ought, if possible, to have with him a
-little money—just enough to keep body and soul together—until he can
-gain a foothold somewhere.
-
-No specific directions can be given him as to where to start. Wyoming,
-most of Montana, the western edge of the Dakotas, western Texas, and
-some portions of the Rocky Mountain States still offer chances for a man
-to go into the ranch business. In different seasons in the different
-localities business may be good or bad, and it would be impossible to
-tell where was the best place to start.
-
-[Illustration: TAILING A BULL]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Wherever the beginner goes, he ought to make up his mind at the outset
-to start by doing any kind of work he can. Let him chop wood, hoe, do
-any chore that will bring him in twenty-five cents. If he is once able
-to start by showing that he is willing to work hard and do something, he
-can probably get employment of some kind, although this employment will
-almost certainly be very ill paid and not attractive. Perhaps it will be
-to dig in a garden, or to help one of the men drive oxen, or to do the
-heavy work around camp for some party of cow-punchers or lumberers.
-Whatever it is, let the boy go at it with all his might, and at the same
-time take every opportunity to get acquainted with the kind of life
-which he intends ultimately to lead. If he wishes to try to ride a
-horse, he will have every chance, if for no other reason than that he
-will continually meet men whose ideas of fun are met by the spectacle of
-a tenderfoot on a bucking bronco.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-By degrees he will learn a good deal of the ways of the life and of the
-country. Then he must snatch the first chance that offers itself to take
-a position in connection with the regular work of a ranch. He may be
-employed as a regular hand to help cook on the ranch wagon, or taken by
-a shepherd to do the hard and dirty work which the shepherd would like
-to put off on somebody else. When he has once got as far as this his
-rise is certain, if he is not afraid of labor, and keeps a lookout for
-the opportunities that offer. After a while he will have a horse
-himself, and he will be employed as a second-rate man to do the ordinary
-ranch work.
-
-[Illustration: “THERE IS A GREAT DEAL OF EXCITING GALLOPING”]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Work on a sheep ranch is less attractive, but more profitable than on
-any other. A good deal of skill must be shown by the shepherd in
-managing his flock and in handling the sheep dogs; but ordinarily it is
-appallingly dreary to sit all day long in the sun, or loll about in the
-saddle, watching the flocks of fleecy idiots. In time of storm he must
-work like a demon and know exactly what to do, or his whole flock will
-die before his eyes, sheep being as tender as horses and cattle are
-tough.
-
-With the work of a cow ranch or horse ranch there comes more excitement.
-Every man on such a ranch has a string of eight or ten horses for his
-own riding, and there is a great deal of exciting galloping and hot
-riding across the plains; and the work in a stampede at night, or in
-line-riding during the winter, or in breaking the fierce little horses
-to the saddle, is as exciting as it is hard and dangerous.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The wilder phases of the life, however, are steadily passing away.
-Almost everywhere great wire fences are being put up, and no small part
-of the cow-boy’s duty nowadays is to ride along the line of a fence and
-repair it wherever broken. Moreover, at present [1896] the business of
-cattle or horse raising on the plains does not pay well, and, except in
-peculiar cases, can hardly be recommended to a boy ambitious for his
-future.
-
-So much for the unattractive reality of ranch life. It would be unfair
-not to point out that it has a very attractive side also. If the boy is
-fond of open-air exercise, and willing to risk tumbles that may break an
-occasional bone, and to endure at need heat and cold, hunger and thirst,
-he will find much that is pleasant in the early mornings on the great
-plains, particularly on the rare days when he is able to take a few
-hours’ holiday to go with his shot-gun after prairie-chickens or ducks,
-or, perchance, to ride out with a Winchester rifle to a locality where
-on one of his working days he has seen a small band of antelope standing
-in the open, or caught a glimpse of a deer bounding through the brush.
-There is little temptation to spend money, unless he is addicted to the
-coarsest kind of dissipation, and after a few years the young fellow
-ought to have some hundreds of dollars laid aside. By this time he
-should know all about the business and the locality, and should be able
-to gauge just what he can accomplish.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-For a year or two perhaps he can try to run a little outfit of his own
-in connection with his work on a big ranch. Then he will abandon the
-latter and start out entirely on his own account. Disaster may overtake
-him, as it may overtake any business man; but if he wins success, even
-though of a moderate kind, he has a pleasant life before him, riding
-about over the prairie among his own horses or cattle or sheep,
-occasionally taking a day off to go after game, and, while working hard,
-not having to face the mere drudgery which he had to encounter as a
-tyro.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The chances are very small that he will ever gain great wealth; and when
-he marries and has children of his own there are many uncomfortable
-problems to face, the chief being that of schools; but for a young man
-in good health and of adventurous temper the life is certainly
-pleasanter than that of one cooped up in the counting-room, and while it
-is not one to be sought save by the very few who have natural liking for
-it, and a natural capacity to enjoy it and profit by it, still for these
-few people it remains one of the most attractive forms of existence in
-America.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE END
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in
- spelling.
- 2. Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
- 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
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