THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID 1 iff s AMEEICAN ELK. GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. PERSONAL EXPERIENCES. BY UBIQUE o j -foxiJ^ NEW YORK: THE AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY, 39 AND 41 CHAMBERS STREET. Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 186U, BY W. A. TOWNSEND & ADAMS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. ADVERTISEMENT THE fondness the English gentry have for man- ly sports is proverbial, and this national taste has the best possible means of encouragement, in the adventurous life necessarily pursued by officers of. an army which has its outposts in every part of the globe. The author of this little volume in the course of his military service had, consequently, the oppor- tunity and exceeding pleasure of indulging in almost every variety of manly sport, the pursuit of which characterizes the accomplished gentleman. His intellectual tastes led him in early life to the studies of natural history, and his field enjoy- ments opened wide the arcana of nature — so that he combined within himself the double satisfaction of the true sportsman and the intelligent disciple of nature. After many years of absence he returned to London, and in the leisure courted after long ac- ifiifM 4 ADVERTISEMENT. tive service, lie prepared for the press the series of sketches which we present to our readers. They were received with great favor on their appearance by the best English and Continental authorities, and in compliance with a very decidedly expressed desire were gathered into a volume Knowing how constantly increasing is the num- ber of " Sportsmen Naturalists " in the country, this volume is offered as affording refreshing read- ing and pleasing contrast to the constantly pre- sented sensational literature that now prevails — the publishers believing that there are charms thrill- ing and healthful in the wild and manly sports associated with the GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. The most popular and the most useful of living English naturalists was attracted by these sketches, and upon learning that it was proposed to issue a transatlantic edition, he expressed his approval in the following note : " I much approve of Mr. Gilmore's book, and should be glad to hear that it is published in America." FKANK BUCKLAND. NEW YORK, March, 1869. PREFACE. HAVING had the honor of holding Commissions under Her Most Gracious Majesty's Flag in two • Regiments of the Line, as well as appointments in the Military Train, and in the Commissariat Depart- ment, I have, in the course of my professional duties, visited many parts of the world. A natural turn for observation of the habits of wild animals, and a dis- like of a wanton destruction of life, has led me to make the best use of my opportunities, whether in the dense forests of Asia, the prairies of North America, the rivers of Japan, the highlands of Mo- rocco, or the vast expanse of the mid-ocean. 6 PREFACE. On my return to England, I became a contributor to the " Naturalist" and "Fishery" columns of "Land and Water." Permission has been kindly granted to me by the proprietors of that journal to republish my articles. I have, therefore, collected them into one volume, and trust that the now largely increas- ing class of " Sportsmen Naturalists" will derive benefit and amusement from my stories and adven- tures with " Gun, Rod, and Saddle." CONTENTS PAGE "WOLF COURSING 11 SHARKS JUMPING AT FOOD 18 SEAL PRESERVE 21 OYSTER CULTURE 23 AMERICAN PARTRIDGE (Ortex Virginiensis) 27 AQUATIC HARE „ 33 SALMON IN JAPAN (Salmo Solar) &5 WILD-FOWL SHOOTING IN AMERICA 41 8 CONTENTS. PAOI SHOOTING IN BAKBABT 45 THE STRIPED BASS 48 SHOOTING IN CHINA 53 DUCK SHOOTING IN AMERICA 61 KUFFED GROUSE (Tetrao Umbellus) 66 GUN FOR GENERAL FOREIGN SHOOTING 74 CHINESE OYSTERS 76 CUTTLE-FISH 79 THE SNIPE OF AMERICA (Scolopax Wilsonii) 82 A BIG BUCK 89 BLACK BASS 96 HINTS TO YOUNG ANGLERS 102 THE AMERICAN THOROUGH-BRED 104 How TO CAPTURE GRAY MULLET. 115 THE PINNATED GROUSE (Tetrao Cupido) 118 FISHING AT GIBRALTAR , 125 CONTENTS. 9 PAGE SPORTING KEMINISCENSES 129 FISHING OFF THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE 134 A BEAR ADVENTURE 138 FISHING IN MAINE — CHAR OR TROUT 142 ANIMAL LIFE 155 STRANGE FISHES 160 BUCK-SHOT 164 THE AMERICAN TROTTING HORSE 167 HINTS ON SHOOTING 187 A CHINESE MODE OF FISHING 194 AMERICAN RUFFED GROUSE AND PARTRIDGE 196 THE POWER OF A SHARK'S JAW 201 BLACK BASS AND MUSKALLONGE FISHING 205 LIFTING THE TRAPS 213 STRANGE FISH 220 BUFFALO PLAINS 222 10 CONTENTS. PAGE KENCOUNTER WITH A BEAR 225 IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING 232 STRONG SHOOTING 252 IDEAS ON DOG- BREAKING 254 WILDERNESS LIFE 269 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. WOLF c FEW of us have not experienced the excitement of a gallop over a good grass country, with the spotted beauties leading the way, getting over the ground at racing pace, while your mount is nearly hauling you out of the saddle with enthusiasm and inclination to make himself on still more familiar terms with the pack. By Jove, how reckless such excitement makes you feel! Fear is banished for the time being — all sense of danger is dispelled to the winds, and sooner than be thrown out, you would ride at a canal, or charge any height of timber. You may be old — yet for the time feel young : you may be blase — you feel as buoyant as when you made your debut. But it is far from the grass counties, across three thousand miles of water and fifteen hundred of land — far beyond the 12 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. giant Mississippi, to the illimitable prairies of the Far West I wish you to travel, in thought, at least. Imagine an unbounded expanse of undulat- ing land, covered with grass ; here and there a sparse scattering of brush, with, perhaps, one or two lines of timber that mark the margin of some £3 tributaries of some mighty river, and you have the landscape without entering into detail. What a place for a gallop ! what a place for a buffalo run, or any other kind of run that will give your mettlesome nag an opportunity of showing his pluck and endurance. But take care, don't ride with a slack rein, keep your eyes open; all may look plain sailing from the distance, but on closer inspection you may come upon a densely populated dog-town, or collection of cayotte earths, each hole of which is big enough to use a Newfoundland in for a fox-terrier. Two varieties of wolves are found numerous all over this elysium ; game is abundant, and the marauder is always on its track looking out for the feeble or unfortunate. Skulking scoundrels are these members of the canine fraternity, and cunning withal; keen and successful hunters if necessary, but addicted to idleness; for if they can obtain WOLF COUE8JNO. 13 their dinner at others' expense, they are always ready to sacrifice their principle, and sponge upon the first acquaintance. If you go out for pleasure, or with the desire of replenishing your larder, you are certain to be attended ; you can not get away from camp without their watchful eyes detecting you. As you rise one knoll you may observe the escort topping the last, and intently keeping all your movements under their observation. Full well do they know that if buffalo or deer fall before your rifle, on the refuse that you reject, they will find a bounteous repast ; or if your hands and eyes for- get their cunning, and a wounded unfortunate goes off, then the chances are that the whole carcass will fall to their share, and a gorgeous feast on tidbits ensue, for master Lupus has wonderful scenting powers, and, with the trail spiced with blood, he grudges no amount of exertion. Again, the wolf is always in disgrace ; he steals your game if deserted for a few hours to procure assistance to transport it to camp ; he eats your lariat ropes, untying your animals, nibbles the flaps of your saddles, and keeps up an unearthly serenade through those hours that the tired sportsman is most disposed to rest in. Is it any wonder that 14 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. lie is unpopular, that he has no friends, and that he is considered a vermin of the first magnitude ? The American wolf, although divided into many families, those we have to do with are the large gray species, and the cayote or prairie variety, the former of whom is a large, ill-looking savage, the latter less repulsive, seldom over twenty-three inches at the shoulder, with more of the dog in his physiognomy, ' and a good deal of the fox in his nature. In all shooting excursions you will have idle days, a lay off for the more serious duties of the morrow, when guns are cleaned, bullets cast, powder flasks re- plenished, and wet or dirty clothes dried or washed. The forenoon having sufficed to perform these labors, a run with a wolf will be found not a bad appetizer for your evening meal, or remover of your little stiffnesses and ailments, in the same way as a little exercise is necessary to the hunter the day after a long or hard run. To enjoy this pleasure to perfec- tion you must be provided with dogs, and there are none so suitable as the strongest stamp of grey- hounds ; more powerful ones that are addicted to grappling with the foe will get fearfully mauled, for the jaws of a wolf are almost as powerful as a hyena's, and consequently your limited establish- WOLF COURSING. 15 ment would be half the time on the sick list ; with the greyhound it is different. As soon as you get a view, at him they go, and although the game is swift, still his adversaries are not long in ranging alongside, when a snap in the hams or loins imme- diately brings him to bay. Determined and numer- ous are his efforts to catch the nimble antagonists, who take precious good care to keep beyond reach. After a few moments of such skirmishing, the closer approach of the sportsman admonishes the wolf to / be moving, and off he goes, best foot foremost ; but his persecutors are in attendance. A hundred or two yards may be traversed, and again he is brought up standing from a similar cause; thus the game is played till the wolf is exhausted, and the sportsman gets sufficiently close to end the episode by a well- directed pistol-bullet through the grizzly marauder's cranium. Spearing the wolf on horseback is also capital sport ; but it takes a great deal out of your nag, for the scoundrel, while fresh, will double almost as sharply as a hare, and from his wonderful lasting powers takes you over an immense distance, he invariably choosing the roughest ground. In this mode, also, you must constantly be on the qui vive, 16 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. for if opportunity offers he will make either your horse or yourself acquainted with his grinders, and a snap from him will be a memento. In the neigh- borhood of Fort Blley an accident of this kind almost occurred to me. A large gray wolf jumped up before me, and as my horse was fresh, and the afternoon cool, I made up my mind for a run. Drawing my revolver, and taking my nag in hand, we were soon skimming the prairie at a slashing pace. After a mile of this work, I ranged along- side, but on several occasions, when about to press the trigger, the wolf wheeled sharply to the right or left, once very nearly throwing my nag on his head. More determined to draw blood from the trick prac- tised on me, I was soon again at his tail ; but the foe tried a new and quite unexpected ruse, viz., sud- denly slackening his pace, and as I overshot him, making a most wicked snap at my off foot, which fortunately was protected by a heavy cowhide boot ; but the indentation showed that a lighter foot cover- ing would have caused me to regret my prowess. If ever you visit the Western Prairies you will not regret the trouble of taking with you some good strong greyhounds ; the rough Scotch dog I should prefer, for you will not only find them great promoters WOLF COURSING. 17 of your sport, wolf-hunting, but useful auxiliaries in pulling down wounded deer, as well as most watch- ful and trustworthy camp guardians and compan- ions. 18 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. SHAEKS JUMPING AT FOOD. IN " Land and Water," a correspondent who has been yachting during the summer, mentions the circumstance of a leg of mutton being lost which was hung over the side, and two blue sharks after- ward making their appearance ; doubtless they were there before the meat disappeared, and had an active part in its disappearance. When cruising in the fore-and-aft schooner " Sunny South," on the Mos- quito Coast, a few years since, the steward hung a roast of beef from one of the stern windows, and to his annoyance it was non est in the morning. The weather at the time was very calm, and it was con- sequently supposed that some forecastle hands had got down in the rudder chains and appropriated it, although how it was to be cooked without discovery was difficult to know. However, a second piece was about being hung out, which doubtless was to be well watched, when, as the piece of line was about to be made fast, a violent pull was felt, and on the SHARKS JUMPING AT FOOD. 19 steward running out his head to find the thief, it O 5 was found to be a shark instead of a man ; the fish had sprung at least three feet from the water to secure his prize. A friend of mine, while fishing with a deep sea-line, was nearly losing his hand through one of these blood-thirsty prowlers of the deep. The fish had not been biting rapidly, and careless from want of success, the hand in which he held the line was outside the gunwale of the boat and close to the surface ; fortunately, he happened to cast his eye at the moment overboard, and just in time, for a shark, seven or eight feet long, was close to the surface, coming straight for it. On examining the head of a shark, it will be seen that from the position of the eyes, they can well see what is taking place above them, and in all instances where I have observed them take a bait, they always got under- neath before seizing, turning on their side at the moment of laying hold. I never previously, till reading Mr. Buckland's remarks, saw it stated that a shark scented his prey ; nevertheless, I have long thought so, and that their olfactory nerves are of the greatest acuteness and use in directing them to where it is to be found. On two occasions, once in the Southern Indian Ocean, on another, off the north 20 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. coast of South America, near Los Rocas, although no sharks had been seen previously, they appeared about the ship soon after some of the most venturous had bathed. Again, I was on board a vessel be- calmed, within sight of the volcanic rocks, St. Paul's and Few Amsterdam. The captain kindly lent his gig to myself and companions to procure some speci- mens of Cape pigeons, Cape hens, and albatross. A great number of birds were killed, and whether it was the scent of blood or not, I can not say, but a white shark about ten feet long joined us, and remained by us till our return to the ship. He was afterward caught by using a Cape hen for bait. On examining the head of a shark, the snout will be found to project a long way over the upper jaw, and although there are no regular nostrils defined, such as will be found in the salmon or trout, there are a great number of minute orifices, doubtless intended for smelling, and which duty I am inclined to believe they most ably perform. SEAL PRESERVE. 21 SEAL PEESEEYE. NOVELTIES are universally run after, but who will try to adopt the following ? True, "it is not in the power of many ; still some have the facilities. "We have deer parks, pheasant covers, grouse moors, and rabbit warrens ; still we have no seal preserve. I can fancy I see Mr. Frank Buckland looking aghast at the proposal, and exclaiming emphatically, " What ! Give a home and protection to the de- stroyers of my darling children Salmo solar? Such a proceeding would be worse than sacrilege, and all the other abominable crimes known, taken col- lectively and jumbled up into one heap." Within easy ride of San Francisco, the capital of California, is situated the Ocean House — a great resort, in warm weather and holidays, of the elite of this prosperous Pacific city, for here at all times a fresh breeze can be inhaled, and, excepting during a calm, the grand- est, largest waves seen, lashing with impetuous fury the precipitous towering cliffs of a wild, iron-bound 22 GKJN, KOD, AND SADDLE. . coast. Close to the Ocean House are some rocks, and on these at all hours can be beheld numbers of seals. The Legislature of the State has, I believe, passed an Act for their protection, and so well does Master Phocse know his safety, that I doubt if he would not dispute possession of his demesne with any representative of genus homo that had the te- merity to intrude. The Californians are very proud of these pets, and well may they be, for they form a strange and most interesting picture, reclining in all attitudes, young and old, big and little, free from fear and happy in their security. Many of them have been named from some fancied resem- blance to persons. One, the king in stature, and most savage and repulsive in physiognomy, bears the sobriquet of Benjamin Butler, of New Orleans notoriety. An old resident informed me that he remembers this veteran seal for years, and that his countenance was a good index of his temper. At night, from the Ocean House, you can constantly hear them bellowing, and old Butler's voice, from its depth and volume, is easily distinguished from the others. I expect that San Francisco for many years to come will be the only city that possesses a pre- serve of pet seals. OYSTER CEXTUBE. 23 OTSTEE OULTUEE. WITH much pleasure, both in the United States and in England since my return, I have read a number of most interesting communications from Mr. Frank Buckland, H. B. M. Commissioner of Fisheries, and others in reference to oyster culture. It has long struck me that not nearly enough attention was paid by my fellow-countrymen to this unbounded field of operations and wealth, and if they still con- tinue to neglect their opportunities after the ability and energy with which the columns of " Land and Water " have pointed out the means of prosecuting the good work, let the onus lay on their own shoulders, for truly they deserve it. It is a well-known adage, " that one man can take a horse to water, but an un- limited number can not make him drink;" the horse might not be thirsty, and there are excuses for his refusal. But dear Old England, with her immense population, is always hungry, and has always mouths to feed, and I feel certain that with the amount of 24 GTTN, KOD, AND SADDLE. admirable coast that our island-home has, this de- scription of food, which is both wholesome and nutri- tious, could with due attention become so cheap that it would be within the reach of both rich and poor. I do not for a moment profess to an excess of knowledge ; but while sojourning in North America, where oyster culture has been studied and practically tested for many years, the experience of some of the most capable persons in various sections of that country I learned, and they unanimously agreed with what I have so lately seen stated in your columns, that a warm summer is the great desideratum for a productive deposit of spat. In fact, I can see no other feasible reasons to be advanced by our trans- atlantic cousins for their well-known success than that the warm waters of the Gulf Stream run along their coast, and that they have intense, almost trop- ical, heat in summer — such, in fact, as we have had during the past season. Your accounts unanimously agree that your de- posits of spat have been most abundant this year; but if the heat should be less the coming one, and should the produce only be one-half, I am still con- vinced that the returns would be far more than sufficient to indemnify the outlay; however, if a OYSTER CULTURE. 25 difference of opinion should e'xist, the experiment is worth trying, which, if successful, forget not to give the praise to whom it is due. Of course a great number of our fellow-countrymen know the United States ; some of those may have taken interest in this subject, and possibly are better informed than I am ; still there must be a great mass that know nothing about the American oyster; to those, then, I will give the benefit of my experience. From Massachu- setts to Florida, with more or less abundance, oyster fisheries have been established, not only for dredging, but for cultivating. The result is, that this delicacy can be obtained at moderate charges even in the in- terior towns and cities, such as St. Louis and Chica- go ; in fact, there is scarcely a respectable table d'hote eastward of the Mississippi, on whose bill of fare they are not to be found. In the Dominion, where the winters are proverbially severe, they are equally abundant ; New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and the estuary of the St. Lawrence, have long proved themselves prolific in this respect ; corroborative of the fact that if you can get heat, such as we annually have, it does not matter how severe the winter may prove, for the abundant repro- duction of these bivalves. 26 It has struck me that the American oyster may be of a different species from the English ; the shape is not the same, and the flavor (possibly many will say this is prejudice) I think, if possible, finer. If they are, could not the home-bred species be bene- fited by introducing the stranger? Experiment would soon elucidate this, for the American, if packed with the hollow side of the shell down, in solid masses, can be kept alive for months ; in fact I have been shown them thus stowed away in cellars, when they had been built in over ten weeks ; what, then, would a voyage of ten days, under such circumstances, sig- nify ? The motion of the vessel might shake out some of their moisture (on which they subsist), but certainly not all. The pinna fisheries of the Mediterranean some years ago used to be most abundant ; from want of culture and the improvements in dredging machinery, it has lately sadly deteriorated, almost to nil. In enlightened England don't let us follow the example of the improvident natives of Southern Europe, who, so long as they can obtain the dinner of the day, care not and think not where to-morrow's is to come from. AHEKICAN PAKTKIDGE. 27 AMEEICAIvT PAETEIDGE. (ORTEX VIRGINIENSIS.) IF all our countrymen who have traveled abroad or sojourned in foreign lands had done so with their eyes shut, or if not keeping their orbits closed had refused to give their countrymen the benefit of their experience, a useless lot they would have been, and England, as far as progression is concerned, would have been far behind her present advanced position. He who first introduced the idea of crossing our native horse with the foreigner, did an immense public service ; he who introduced the old Spanish pointer, deserves the gratitude of every sportsman, for doubtless our present beauties, with all their speed and sagacity, have much of the blear-eyed, bad-tempered, pottering old scoundrels' blood in their veins ; and still further, to foreign climes we trace the pheasant, the turkey, and so many more valuable animals, that to enumerate them would be 28 GUN", ROD, AND SADDLE. tedious. However, I believe that there are quad- rupeds, birds, and fishes, still strangers to our land, who but require to be known to be appreciated ; and by placing the merits of any of them before the public, some one may be found sufficiently patriotic to make the attempt to naturalize them. Without more preamble, and to come at once to the point, let me say that in my humble opinion there is no bird more worthy of attention, and more deserv- ing of the honor of introduction to our preserves, than the Virginian partridge, often misnamed in America quail. His numerous good qualities, together with his description, I will to the best of my knowledge give, hoping it may be the means of yet seeing this little beauty ornamenting our fields, and adding brilliancy and variety to the game-bags of our nu- merous enthusiastic sportsmen. The American par- tridge varies in weight from eight to ten ounces, is erect in his walk, very handsome in plumage, strong upon the wing, feeds principally upon grain, grass-seed, and ants, frequents indifferently brush, timber, or open country, is capable of standing great cold, is not quarrelsome with other game, is very pi-olific, frequently hatching two broods in a season Moreover, an advantage which can not be too highly AMERICAN PARTRIDGE. 29 estimated, is that it never gets so wild as to rise so far from your dogs as to be out of gun-shot, a nui- sance that all are so well aware of in our home-bred bird toward the end of the season. In fact, who that shoots regularly can not remember instances of our partridge disappearing over the far side of a field as soon as the sportsman had entered it ? Now, in years of experience in America, I never saw an instance of this kind ; up to the commencement of the close season they would remain almost as tame as they were at the termination of the previous one. A reason for this may be that they seldom pack ; only once or twice have I seen more than the usual number of a covey together, and then remarked that the weather had been unusually severe and stormy. A peculiarity, however, this bird possesses is that in wet and slushy weather he will frequently, when disturbed, take shelter on the limbs of trees, from where, if flushed, they afford the hardest possible shots. This bird in the open is by no means easy to hit, for his flight is very strong and swift, and fre- quently irregular, but he does not go far, so that a good marker seldom has much trouble to refind him. Some persons are^ under the impression that this partridge is migratory ; however, this is a mistake, 30 GUN, KOD, ANT> SADDLE. for although they may wander from their breeding place, from constant attention, I am convinced that the change of quarters is caused from scarcity of food. On the edges of the dry prairies in south- ern Illinois, in early autumn, this bird abounds ; in winter they disappear into the neighboring thickets and brush, for why? the prairies are constantly burned at the end of the season, and consequently starvation or change of residence is their alterna- tives. In one section of the country that I resided in, a great portion of the prairie land was too wet to burn, and many a heavy bag I obtained late in the season, even when the roots of the grass were sub- merged in ice. My dogs, which I invariably broke upon them, seldom made mistakes, and never do I remember a covey departing (except the pointer or setter had run into them coming down wind) with- out getting at least a barrel into them. I believe these birds are equally adapted for naturalization into either England, Scotland, or Ireland, and with other varieties of game they appear to agree well, for I have on several occasions killed this partridge with one barrel, and the ruffed grouse with the other over the same point. As a table delicacy I know no greater ; for weeks AMERICAN PARTRIDGE. 31 I have constantly had them at both breakfast and dinner, still without becoming satiated, and there are very few varieties of game could stand a more severe test. Their note or call is remarkably melo- dious, and in the spring or pairing time, when they are numerous, you can hear their sweet voice all day long, and in every direction. I have always regret- ted that no one has thought of introducing this little stranger, and nothing could afford me greater pleas- ure than to be the medium, for I feel perfectly con- fident that neither would ever have occasion for regret. 32 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. AQUATIC HAEE. IN one of your late numbers allusion is made to a tailless hare. Of course, any new or but slightly known animals, their habits and modes of life, are subjects of great interest to both the naturalist and the sportsman; permit me, therefore, to call your attention to an aquatic member of the Lepus family, with whom I became acquainted during my sojourn in North America. A little before sunset, on a fine calm evening in March, I took my stand upon a bridge crossing a slough in the southern portion of Illinois, with the hope of killing a few wild ducks. The atmosphere was so clear and still that the birds were very late in visiting their feeding grounds. While impatiently trying to kill time, I saw some- thing swimming in the water, and supposing it to be a common American musk-rat, and being desirous of a new tobacco pouch, I stealthily stole along the margin of the water, well hid in the flags, to endeavor to obtain a closer shot, for the musk-rat AQUATIC HARE. 33 requires a tremendous deal of killing. However, having knocked over my game, in a few minutes my retriever laid it at my feet ; but imagine my surprise when, instead of a rat, I found it to be a hare. I could scarcely believe my senses, but seeing is believing. Of course, I thought that the poor creature had been driven to water to avoid a foe ; but before many days I shot several, and all in similar situations. The habits of this new variety I now made a study, and found that they were amphibious, sleeping in form on the edge of the morass during the heat of the day, and feeding, before sunrise and after sunset, on the different descriptions of water plants. Whether this hare was able to dive or not I did not ascertain, but that he is a most expert swimmer there can be no doubt. His size is the same as that of our common wild rabbit, but from his build being thicker he may possibly be heavier. His legs are short, feet large, ears small, and head very full and round; color dark-grayish brown, with scarcely any white upon the scut, and the fur exceedingly soft and fine. I frequently tested his qualities on the table, and can speak in the highest approval of the delicacy and delicious flavor of his flesh, which is much lighter in 2* 34 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. shade than that of any other of the same family with whom I am acquainted. The skin, which is very thin, is easily removed from the carcase ; but great care must be taken to prevent it getting torn. On inquiring, I found that this hare was well known by the squatters, and from them learned that it bred only once a year, generally producing two at a birth; and that the young at a very early age follow their mother in her sundry aquatic excursions vin search of the delicate water plants that form their staple food. SALMON IN JAPAN. 35 SALMON IN JAPAN. (SALMO SALAR.) No person, I am certain no gentleman, ever disputes the nobility of the salmon; he is an universal favorite with all, whether they be disciples of Isaac Walton or believers in Dr. Johnson's interpretation of the word "fisherman." As this noble fish is so universally popular, it may not be without interest to many of the readers of " Gun, Rod, and Saddle," to know that he is more univer- sally scattered over this world than is generally supposed, and that he is a highly appreciated article of food, and of great commercial value, in countries so far distant from our island home that we may almost with safety call him a cosmopolitan of the northern hemisphere. That the salmon was found in abundance in all rivers in America, from the Hudson River, New York, northward, all probably are aware ; that he 36 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. is extremely numerous in those rivers that flow north through the Hudson Bay territory, into the ice-bound Arctic seas, less are cognizant ; but that he perfectly swarms in the streams and estuaries of the North Pacific Ocean, many, I am certain, are ignorant. Yet he does swarm in those distant waters, until lately only known to whalers and fur traders, in such countless multitudes, that their arrival is looked forward to from season to season as the great event of the year — for with his coming, privations from hunger terminate, and an abundance of nutritious food is not only temporarily secured, but a hoard laid up sufficient to last through the protracted term of a rigorous northern winter. When traveling in Japan, what was my delight to hear that salmon were numerous in these favored islands ! Naturally I looked forward with avidity to the hope that I might be so situated as to obtain a day's fishing on the margin of one of its distant rivers; however, in this I was disappointed, but nevertheless had the fortune to make acquaintance with an intelligent Japanese merchant, who not only showed me numerous specimens of the genuine Salmo solar, but gave me abundant information regarding their habits, and the method there pursued SALMON IN JAPAN. 37 for their capture. From observation, inquiry, and research, I am inclined to believe that the salmon, whether in the Atlantic or Pacific, seldom approaches nearer the Equator than the forty-first or forty- second degree of north latitude. On the Atlantic sea-board of the State of New York, the Hudson River formerly was his southern limit ; but alas, that stream is now totally deserted by these valuable visitors, the result of weirs, or the indiscriminate pollution of the stream with the debris of saw-mills, chemical filth from manufactories, &c. On the eastern shores of the Pacific the same parallel will be found the southern boundary of this fish ; while on the coast of Japan, Tartary, and Siberia, his haunts are marked by the same line of demarkation. From the exclusive laws of the Japanese Govern- ment, I was unable to travel farther to the north than Yeddo, except it were to visit the port of Hakodadi, and consequently was prevented from obtaining a personal knowledge of the homes and resorts of the salmon ; for although they are brought in immense numbers into the latter town for sale, they are not captured in the immediate vicinity. The Japanese salmon that I examined resembled more those on the Tay, in Scotland, from their 38 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. excessive depth and thickness in proportion to their length. Their average weight appeared to be about twelve or fourteen pounds, yet several I saw would have turned the scales at thirty. The color of the skin was in all less brilliant than in our home acquaintances, possibly the result of transportation, the method of curing, or the shade and consistency of the water out of which they had been taken. However, the flesh was undeniably excellent, and brilliant in hue, and in no way inferior to those from our most appreciated rivers. From my informant I found that the habits of their fish were identical with ours, and that so great were their numbers that they formed the staple article of food for the poorer residents of the northern portion of the Japanese archipelago ; that they were captured principally by stake nets, set in the fluvial portion of the rivers ; and that the English method of taking them with a fly (which I explained) was entirely unknown. As I could not have the honor of being the first of my country- men to capture a Japanese salmon in the legitimate sportsman's method, I may have had the honor of tying the first artificial flies that ever were cast on a Japanese river ; for so interested was my listener — SALMON IN JAPAN. 39 and the Japanese are wonderfully intelligent, totally the reverse of the self-conceited, pig-headed China- man— that I dressed a couple of what I considered the most killing specimens, and which he promised to use, as instructed, on the first available oppor- tunity. An intelligent Russian officer whom I some months afterward met at Tien-tsing, in Northern China, and who had been for years stationed on the Pacific, gave me the most glowing account of the immense quantities of salmon that frequented the Amoor River and its tributaries, and his information perfectly tallied with that obtained from my Japanese friend. Now the mouth of this river, and the north- ern portion of the Japan group of islands, are in about the same latitude, and are only separated by about three or four hundred miles of sea, showing that most perfect credence might be given to both informants. Fifty years ago, who would have thought of Englishmen going to Norway to fish ? Possibly, as the world grows older, with the rapid strides of improvement in machinery and transportation, we may hear of fishing parties being organized for Japan and Siberia, and, in addition to the numerous 4:0 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. splendid specimens of tfalmo solar that now decorate Mr. Buckland's museum, we will see numerous beauties that once parted with their silver sides the blue waters of the Pacific. WILD-FOWL SHOOTING 41 WILD-FOWL SHOOTING. IN my protracted rambles about the world, I know no portion where this sport can be more thoroughly enjoyed than in America. I have always been passionately fond of wild-fowl shooting, and the bags that I have made in the United States and Canada have far exceeded those obtained elsewhere. As wild fowl are nearly all migratory by inclination, or are compelled to be so from the changes of the seasons, it is of great importance that you should visit the various haunts at the proper periods of the year. However, the rule is, for successfully carrying on war against the web-footedf families, go north in summer and south in winter. In June, July, and Ausrust, the wild-rice fields of the numerous o " labyrinth of lakes of Minnesota and the north- west territory, perfectly swarm with wild fowl, while in December and January they will be found equally numerous on the large bayous and lagoons that surround the mouth of the Mississippi. Of course, 42 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. in the intermediate portion of country between Minnesota and the Gulf of Mexico, during the seasons of migration, splendid days' shooting can be obtained ; but the stay of the birds is so short that it would not compensate for a special visit. Where thousands are to be seen to-day, not a dozen will be met to-morrow ; but if you should happen in the spring and autumn to be in either of the States of Illinois, Iowa, or Indiana, when the frost and ice are breaking up in spring, or when winter makes its first appearance, you may with safety calculate on having some of the finest sport. A year or two since, when in Illinois in November, a sudden change took place in the weather, and although the morning was ushered in mild and warm, by noon it was snowing, with a gale of wind blowing from the north. From experience I knew that such a day was not to be wasted over the fire. I got on my shooting-ground with a very large supply of ammunition, and in two or three hours had to cease, as my stock was exhausted. My stand was in a field of Indian corn that had been gathered into shocks, from the back of one of which I took shelter from the blast as well as concealment. Never shall I forget the scene. The ducks came *n thousands, WILD-FOWL SHOOTIXG. 43 all flying before the wind, and if a dozen guns had been there instead of one, abundant work would have been found for all. On another occasion, in the same locality, two friends of mine killed, in two or three hours in the evening, and in an hour and a half the succeeding morning, eighty-four wild geese and thirty brace of mallard duck. In the spring of 1866, when in Iowa, the first day of thaw, I went for a stroll, scarcely expecting to find game ; but when I got on the prairie land, I was perfectly astonished at the clouds of wild-fowl arriving from the South, some of the ponds being so densely covered with duck that the surface could scarcely be seen. These birds were all coming from the South, where they had passed the winter. If any of my readers intend to go in for work, and not object to roughing it, I should most decidedly say that the wild-fowl shooting is good enough to justify a Western visit ; but let him not be induced to keep in the vicinity of settlements; but let him and his attendants commence housekeeping on the margin of one of the northern Minnesota lakes, if in summer (remem- ber one that produces an abundance of wild rice) ; but if the reverse season should be selected, the southern tributaries of the Mississippi will afford 44 him abundant sport, and any of the hospitable Southern planters will deem it a favor if you will do them the honor of making their home yours. SHOOTING IN BARBARY. 45 SHOOTING IN BAEBAET. THERE are a great number of gentlemen in England who can spare the time but not the money to rent, at the present fabulous prices, shooting at home. For the benefit of such I will state that capi- tal shooting can be obtained at Tangiers, and that the expense of going and returning, including a stay of a month, need not exceed forty pounds. Gibral- tar, your first stopping-place, can be reached by one of the Peninsular and Oriental steamships from Southampton, or by one of the numerous Mediterra- nean steamships sailing from Liverpool. The pas- sage money by the former, to go and return, would be about twenty pounds, by the latter fifteen. From Gibraltar, feluccas almost daily cross to Tangiers — twice a week formerly, and probably still a steam- boat with cattle does the same. The fare for this portion of the journey should not exceed a couple of dollars, and a good hotel will be found on arrival, where I have resided, at the rate of one dollar per 46 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. diem. Safely established under the guardianship of the hostess, you can obtain all desirable information, and a guide if such you deem necessary. An hour's ride from the town, going inland, will bring you upon splendid ground, either scrubby brushwood, covered slopes, or open grass and palmetto plains. The game principally found is red-legged partridge, which, contrary to our home experience of the same gentleman, here lays well to a dog. Hares are also plentiful, snipe, plover, and the lesser bustard not uncommon. Just beyond Cape Spartel there is a small river on which I have killed a great number of duck, and a mile or two farther on an immense swamp, known by the name of " the Lagoona," where snipe and wild-fowl may be killed in abund- ance, as well as woodcock and wild-boar. As the gates of Tangier are always locked at sunset, you have to hurry home at an inconveniently early hour, but if you do not object to roughing it, and prefer a long day and large bag to the luxury of a well-aired bed and comfortable apartment, you can easily arrange so as to sleep at one of the numerous Arab villages or doiiars. Of course, to do this, you will require an interpreter, who should also perform both functions of cook and major-domo. But to one in- SHOOTING LBT BAEBARY. 4:7 convenience you will have to submit, viz., fleas. They may not be the largest in the world, but for numbers and bloodthirsty proclivities I will back them against any others. The Moors are a fine, manly, handsome race, and invariably sportsmen. To a proficient with the gun they soon attach them- selves. Sometimes I have been followed for hours by some of them, and a clever double shot would always elicit their admiration. However, there are some ugly stories in circulation of shipwrecked sailors and adventurous Europeans having received any thing but a hearty welcome ; but this is directly in contradiction to my experience, for day after day, alone, I shot amongst them, and frequently slept in their villages with no other attendant than a youth from the hotel at Tangiers, and their conduct was uniformly kind and courteous. The weather also is delightful in autumn, and the country extremely pretty, while all around the town are abundant ob- jects worthy of a visit on your idle days. In fact, I have little hesitation in predicting that the first visit will most probably not be the last. 4:8 THE GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. THE STEIPED BASS. THIS fish is known the entire length of the sea- board of the United States, and is almost as popular as the salmon. There are many reasons for this ; he is game in the highest sense of the word, fighting with the most determined obstinacy as long as his strength will permit, frequents alike the ocean tide- way or river, taking generally with avidity the greatest varieties of natural and artificial baits, and ultimately being fit food for the most fastidious epicure. By naturalists he is placed among the perch, and has been named PerJca Labrax, an indig- nity which he is in no way deserving, for he is built on the beautiful lines of the salmon, possibly with a little more depth and beam, and his coloring has a nearer approach to that of the lordly Salmo solar , save that horizontally along his sides are placed several lines (generally seven) from the gills to the tail, and from which he doubtless derives his familiar name. Early in April, if the weather be favorable, this fish THE STEEPED BASS. 49 makes his appearance in the rivers en route to their spawning beds (from this date he becomes the ob- ject of attention to the pot-hunter, for I can not call the man who tries to capture fish in that state by the name of fisherman), where he remains for some time, probably over a couple of months. This duty performed, they return again to the coast, affording sport for a short period, then disappear to return in September and October in immense numbers, glad- dening with their advent the heart of every sports- man. Their size is so varied that they may be taken from the weight of a few ounces up to sixty and even more pounds, the heavier fish generally being captured late in the season; and woe betide the angler if unprepared he should strike his hook into one of the leviathans, for all his fishing parapher- nalia will certainly receive so severe a shock as to render it for after use completely worthless, that is, the portion that is left with him. After spawning this fish does not lose its condition like the salmon, therefore his capture immediately subsequent is not nearly so reprehensible, the propagation of his species not injuring him to a noticeable extent, therefore, if he be fished for in the rivers after that 50 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. duty is performed, nothing is so attractive for his capture as a gaudy sea-trout fly ; but the striped bass is not dainty, and many persons of experience persistently use with the greatest success a piece of white or scarlet rag tied over their hook instead of the more complicated and expensive invention. Fishing in the sea, however, the shrimp is the most popular and gentlemanly bait, trolled along the surface after the manner of the fly, at which the fish break, similar to trout or salmon ; still there are days when you can not thus allure them ; and soft-shell crab, spearing (a small transparent fish about the size of a minnow), or squid, have to be resorted to ; even the spoon bait has been known to be successful when all other attractions have failed. Although this fish annually chooses a change from salt to fresh water, still it is not necessary for his existence, numbers having been experimented on by detaining them for years in fresh, where instead of losing flesh, they were pronounced to have improved much both in size and condition. So exceedingly popular is the striped bass in America, that those watering-places in whose vicinity he is known to abound, receive annually an immense influx of visitors attracted chiefly by the prospect of enjoy- THE STRIPED BASS. 51 ing this fishing. Even a club-house has been built, and a very large association formed of the principal gentlemen in and about New York, who spend a great portion of their summer vacation at this retreat, and as I have been informed by many of the members (some of them salmon fishermen of experience), that the sport they there have is only second to what they could obtain on Labra.dor or Canadian salmon-rivers. I believe that this fish could be most easily intro- duced to our waters, and that he is well deserving of the effort, for he is very hardy, and I do not think so likely to be affected by the pollution that so many of our streams suffer from ; they also appear to be immensely prolific, for traffic, netting, drain- age, &c., may have reduced their numbers, still they are to be found in great abundance even in such crowded water-thoroughfares as the Bay of New York, Hudson and East rivers, that any person duly initiated in the necessary mysteries can, at the proper seasons, confidently expect a heavy basket as a reward for his trouble, and that within sight of the numerous spires, store-houses, and busy thorough- fares of their handsome western metropolis. Great and unprecedented trouble has been lately 52 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. taken successfully to introduce salmon and trout to the southern hemisphere; with how much less dif- ficulty could this fish be transported here ; no tropic to cross, only one fourth or fifth the distance to traverse, and steamships to be found sailing almost every day of the week. Certainly this matter is worthy of consideration, for not only would thousands find amusement and health in their capture, but a wholesome and excellent article of food be provided for our immense population. SHOOTING IN CHINA. 53 SHOOTING IN CHINA. " You may go to Hong Kong." This name is frequently substituted for another place currently supposed to be warmer, but at the same time in close proximity, for the soldiers used to say, on whose authority I know not, that there was only a sheet of brown paper between the two. However this may be, Hong Kong is a very warm residence during the southern monsoon, for the high hills that protect the back of the garrison at that season shut out every breath of air. For all this I never saw the thermometer over 98 deg. Fah. in the shade, so that according to statements of some of the late residents at Wimbledon, England in tropical heat can successfully compete with the world. But if the weather should be warm in this distant portion of Her Majesty's dominions during one portion of the year, the temperature is delightful when the northern monsoon sets in, and out-door amusements can by change be the more appreciated. The 54: GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. characteristic features of this island are a succession of mountain peaks, in parts very rocky and barren, the balance of the hill-sides being covered with stunted brush. However, there are two valleys tolerably well covered with timber, viz., the Happy Valley and Taytan Valley ; in the former is the race-course, where annually is held a meeting, also the grave-yard, where worn-out man is deposited. A pretty spot is the Happy Valley. The name, I think, not inappropriate, when we remember that it is the place of assembly, where crowds meet to enjoy the equine contests, or w^here man is laid to rest from all the troubles and annoyances of this life when he has run his worldly course. The quantity of game to be found in the island is very limited, and consists of a few hog-deer, a few pheasants, some partridge (much resembling the black partridge of India), and at certain seasons quail and snipe ; but the results are most uncertain, and half-a-dozen birds, all told, will be deemed a successful day's work. But if Hong Kong does not afford many inducements for the lover of the double-barrel, the adjacent mainland, when you are acquainted with the localities, does; and if the reader will have patience, I will endeavor to give SHOOTING IN CHINA. 55 a sketch of an expedition, and the ground visited. Fancy yourself on a rattan-built wharf running into the harbor from the godowns at the back of the Danish consulate, a handsome lorcha of about sixty tons, taut-hauled up to her anchor, waiting impa- tiently a hundred yards from the shore for the moment of departure, while two or three sampans are incessantly plying back and forth, loaded with guns, dogs, portmanteaus, and good things for the inward man, ranging over the interval that exists between pate, de foie gras and Madame Cliquot. At last the finishing load is delivered, time is up, the blue-peter is hoisted at the fore, and at the instructions of our kind-hearted host, we descend into his gig, and are rapidly on board the larger craft. The wind, which is fresh, just suits; a few turns on the somewhat primitive capstan trips the anchor, and shaking out the immense mainsail, her head is pointed for the Cap-shee-moon Pass, the great high-road of traffic between Hong Kong and Canton. As we leave the labyrinth of shipping and junks of every nationality and shape, and draw farther clear of the land, our speed increases to eight knots. The pass reached, two or three tacks have to be 56 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. made, when we stand direct for Castle Peak Bay, our destination; and what a pretty spot it is, sheltered from the cold winds : both grass and shrubs grow in luxuriance down to the edge of the water, while at the head of the bay is situated one of those quaint joss-houses, of architecture pe- culiarly Chinese, imbedded in a grove of banyans. The country around is a succession of rolling hills, gradually gaining height as they recede from the bay till they reach an elevated rocky ridge of most irregular outline, one portion resembling an old castellated ruin, from which, doubtless, this placid bay gains its name. When within a hundred yards of shore, "let go the anchor" was given, and we swung round and surveyed our shooting-ground with satisfaction expressed on every countenance. The day before our party started, information had been brought by a cooly that the quail, in their regular autumnal migratory flight, had arrived ; and scarcely had we progressed inland a hundred paces before the dogs were standing, and from that moment, till dark, the time for loading was even grudged ; the quantity that we brought to bag I forget, and consequently fear to make a statement ; but this I know, it far exceeded our most sanguine SHOOTING IN CHINA. 57 expectations. The country around here appears at no late date to have been cultivated ; but whether the peaceful tillers of the soil had desisted on account of the neighborhood having obtained a very bad reputation for piracy I know not, but our experience in England tells us how fond these little migratory beauties are of haunts that the plow has ceased to turn up. Next morning our range took us farther inland, the quail still were abundant ; but as we got to the upper ranges, where a dwarf palmetto flourishes, the Chinese partridge was found. This bird has a very strong resemblance to the black partridge of India in plumage, but exceeds it in size; never is found in coveys, and lies extremely close to a dog. Time after time I have walked up to a point, quartered my ground, or headed my dog ; still no bird was visible ; believing it to be a false alarm, I have been on the point of giving up the search, when whirr, the wily bird would rise, and go off like a thunderbolt. In all my experience, I know no other whose flushing makes such a com- motion, or whose flight is so rapid. This bird is not very abundant, and is called by the Chinese Cha-coo, doubtless from its note, which much resembles these two syllables when whistled. 8* 58 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. Four or five brace of them in a mixed bag is considered extra luck; still I have killed within the space of two hundred yards three couple, each bird flushing singly and apart. About midday we reached a Chinese village, imbedded in trees, with a considerable cover lying backward from it. After lunch we beat it, and three splendid pheasants were our reward. The pheasant of southern China is truly a regal bird in comparison with our home-bred introduction. They weigh one-half more, and their flight is so rapid, that if the sportsman, in a cross shot, does not shoot well ahead, his game bag will long be kept ignorant of their weight and dimen- sions. Two or three times during the day I was frightfully fooled. The dogs were standing stiff as a fence-rail, and, of course, something extra was justly expected, when, what do you think? a bird that feeds on snakes and lizards, lumbering in flight, and of gross plumage, was flushed. In the south of China, this species is known as the crow pheasant, his size and long tail having doubtlessly gained the latter portion of the appellation ; but on inspection, no one can help wondering at the indig- nity the bird of Colchis has suffered in having such a brute bear his patronymic. For my own part, I SHOOTING IN CHINA. 59 think this filthy-feeding bird is of the jay family. During this day's work, several painted quails were bagged — a truly beautiful little bird, smaller than his namesake, but swift on the wing, and more delicate, if possible, on the table. Still they are so small, and the brilliant feathers so delicately pencil- ed, that I never cease to consider their death as an unnecessary slaughter. Time flies on rapid wing ; I had only three days' leave of absence, so that one day more was only left; duck and snipe shooting I have always had a passion for, so when we arose in the morning, not much refreshed with sleep (for the cowardly Chinese coolies kept constantly sounding the alarm of Lally-lunes — anglice, pirates — which kept turning out the whole party, revolver in hand), we deter- mined to devote our last day to this sport. A wide expanse of distant marsh and paddy fields was our beat, and well it was that such a decision was come to, for we truly had some splendid shooting. Several ducks, a host of bitterns of every size and color, and innumerable snipes, composed our bag, the painted variety of the latter being very numerous. Although this is a handsome bird in appearance, he is sadly behind the common snipe in sporting requisites, 60 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. being heavy and slow of flight, seldom wild, and very inferior for the table. That night we beat back to Hong Kong harbor, while the stentorian lungs of one of the party, and the key-bugle notes of another, awoke the slumbering echoes of the neighboring hills, and astonished the celestial sea- O O ' men, who passed on their various missions, with what " all that bobbery could be." Castle Peak, from what I have said, can easily be found by any of the sportsmen at the distant garri- son of Hong Kong; but there are numerous other shooting-grounds as good, and scarcely farther dis- tant, viz., the Shangmoon Valley, at the top of Pirates' Bay, the covers at the top of which always harbor pheasants ; the far side of Meer's Bay, after crossing the Kowloone Ridge, have afforded me many days' excellent sport ; and the nearest end of Llama Island to Victoria, about two or three hours' sail from the Barracks, if occasionally visited, will yield ample remuneration for a few hours' work. DUCK. SHOOTING IN AMERICA. 61 DUCK SHOOTING IE" AMEEICA. IT may not be uninteresting to sportsmen to have an account of what sport they may look forward to if chance or intention should place them on the prairies of the Western Continent. It has long been my belief that Nature had strongly before her the wants of the votaries of field sports when this favored land was constructed, for the abundance of indige- nous food, the variety of cover, the distribution of water, and the salubrity of the climate are such, that probably in no other portion of the globe similar happy combinations can be found ; and, as a result, the abundance of game falls not one iota behind what might be expected. In wild-fowl shooting there are two desiderata on which success depends : first, suitable weather ; secondly, the gunner being clothed in suitable colors, Having both the above advantages, please to imagine yourselves, on a cold, blustering afternoon, a few flakes of snow falling, and a strong presentiment of a severe frost before 62 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. morning, situated among the withered leaves of a persimmon bush, on the edge of an interminable slough, in the center of one of the western prairies. In every direction that you cast your eyes, ducks will be seen, "flock upon flock, while single birds, like an army of skirmishers, dart here, there, and every- where. Having arranged your shot, powder, caps, and loading- stick, as most convenient — that is, pro- vided you shoot with the muzzle-loader, and I am still old-fashioned enough to believe it the hardest hitter — foi every moment is of value, look out ; you will not be kept long waiting ere such work com- mences as you seldom or never previously enjoyed. Your situation, half up to your knees in slush and water, may not be conducive to health, but all the inconvenience is more than overbalanced by the ex- citement of the moment ; and what will not a man endure, if possessed with true sporting proclivities, to gratify his passion, and does he not consider himself more than rewarded by the possession of a heavy bag, alike evidence of his skill and hardihood. On the afternoon of November , I started for my blind ; the weather was such as clearly foretold the sport to be anticipated. My hardy mustang soon brought me to the scene of operations, and, DUCK SHOOTING IN AMERICA. 63 after attending to his creature comforts, I was sta- tioned in my blind, a few corn-stalks and grass having been added to the withered, foliage of the bush I had selected, the better to screen me ; further, I had tied a bunch of prairie grass around my cap, to assimilate it more to the color of the cheerless landscape ; at my.feet was an old and true friend, a setter, whose perfections in the hunting-field, or retrieving by water I never saw excelled. At first the sport was but languid, only an occasional duck passing within range, so that after an hour only four or five mallards had been brought to bag, but as the day advanced and the weather became more inclem- ent, I had less leisure to ruminate arid take note of the passage of time. By four, p. M., the ball had opened in earnest ; if I had had two guns and an attendant to load, still they would not have been idle. First come half a dozen mallards sweeping along in front of the blast, the pace terrific ; about forty yards olF they pass to the left ; with intuitive knowledge the gun comes to the shoulder and eye, and at the correct moment the triggers are pressed; good two yards in front have I to shoot, arid my judgment is correct, for a bird topples over to each report, while the sur- vivors rush upward with unaltered speed, take a 64: GUN", ROD, AND SADDLE. sweep round to find from whence comes the danger, and, disliking the neighborhood, start for parts un- known and less to be dreaded. As I hastily sent home my Avads over my shot, keeping an eye all the time to windward, what is that ever-changing cloud I see, reminding one of the reflected light that glances off the backs of a flight of gray plovers ? By Jove, they are blue- winged teal ! On, on they come, occasionally rising or swooping downward as fancy directs. In a moment they will be here — for your life don't move ; even depress your eyes so that the rim of your hat will prevent the leaders seeing them. At last they are within range, and each barrel's course is marked by a lane of birds, whom the shot has caused to alter their forward movement. As night approaches, the pintail and butter ducks put in an appearance, and without cessation your gun plays its part, the pile of game at your feet is becoming enormous, and Beau is never idle for a moment. As darkness increases, you think of going home, still linger for one or two more shots. Now you can only see the birds on the wing that are between your sight and some clear spot in the sky, but around you on the water are thousands. As every arrival is greeted DUCK SHOOTING IN AMERICA. 65 with a loud quack, quack, frequently so close at hand that you start, almost believing that one of your victims has come to life. But hark ! what is that honk ! honk ! Geese ! I can't go till I dust some of their jackets. As none of all the web- footed tribe are so wary, extra precaution is necessary. At length you see a massive dark line against the sole clear portion of northern sky remaining. Would that heavier shot were in my gun. Onward they come, slowly and cautiously; waiting till they are nearly perpendicular? I play my part, and the heavy splash on one side and thud on the other clearly states that two are down, one in the water* and the other on shore. With such a finale you cease, nor is it too soon, for I really believe that if you were to remain after dark- ness you might receive an injury, as the birds, no longer dreading a foe, rush about in the most reck- less way, that I have felt quite a relief at getting out of the marsh without a mallard going at express speed coming in contact with my cranium. On the night in question twenty-eight brace of ducks, two geese, and three brant was the bag — good sport, as all must agree, for three or four hours' shooting. 66 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. BUFFED GKOTJSE. (TETBAO UMBELLUS.) IN "Land and Water" of May 30th, I have advocated the introduction into England of the American partridge (Ortex Virginiensis), having perfect confidence in their being most suitable birds for naturalization, knowing them to be almost per- fection in sporting qualities, anc^very superior as additions to the larder ; but with all my partiality for that little beauty, I will presume upon your space and good-nature by mentioning the claims of one of the grouse family, that equally deserves honorable notice and the attention of those persons who may be desirous of having a greater variety of feathered game than at present is to be found. The ruffed grouse (Tetrao umbellits) must not, how- ever, be confused with the pinnated grouse (Tetrao cupido), for although both have a great similarity in appearance and size, their modes of life and BUFFED GROUSE. 67 choice of quarters are totally dissimilar, the former being found among timber or brush, or in its immediate vicinity, while the latter chooses the open grass-covered prairies, perching upon trees only when the winter is very severe and the ground covered with snow, and then making use of such trees as are always to be found standing alone, and sparsely sprinkled along the margin of these immense western savannas. Both these varieties are splendid birds, but the characteristics of the ruffed grouse make him much better adapted for a residence here, and so strongly am I disposed in their favor, that I believe if once introduced they would as soon as known outrival the pheasant in popularity, being much hardier, swifter on the wing, lying better to dogs, disinclined to run before flushing, requiring the quickest and straightest aim to bring them to bag, nor are they much inferior to the oriental favorite in beauty of plumage. The ruffed grouse a little exceeds the red grouse in size, being almost eighteen inches in length, is very handsome and upright in form, of a beautiful rich chestnut-brown color, variegated with gray and dark spots, and pencilings on the back, breast, and neck. The tail is gray, with a black bar across it 68 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. near its termination, and is generally carried open like a fan. On the top of the head there is a slight crest, and down each side of the neck are curious fan-shaped tufts of glossy, black, velvet-looking feathers. In April these birds pair, but I should imagine from the seasons in the northern portion of the United States and Canada being more back- ward than ours, if they were introduced here they would do so a month earlier. They lay from ten to sixteen eggs, their nest, which is a very primitive one, being generally secreted in brush or under the shelter of a fallen log. They are most affectionate parents, and use the same artifices as the wild duck to draw away the intruders from the vicinity of their youthful progeny. This grouse has two distinct calls, one a soft, mellow, prolonged note, generally used in gathering after the covey has been broken up; the other an extraordinary drumming . sound made by the cocks in pairing season, and capable of being heard in still weather a great distance. The latter noise is caused by the rapid vibration of the wings when the male is perched on a fallen tree or stump. Indiscriminately they live on a great variety of food — ants, grubs, alder-berries, wild cherries, and grain being their favorite diet. Early RUFFED GROUSE. 69 in autumn, when the weather is fine, particularly in the morning and evening, they will be found in the open cultivation, more especially if there be rough ground with brush in the vicinity ; but as severe weather approaches the woods will become their constant resort. In shooting the ruffed grouse, great difficulty is always experienced in marking them. The flight, as I have previously said, is wonderfully rapid, and they have a method of doubling back in the reverse direction in which they started ; however, as they do not generally go far (about three or four hundred yards), with patience, and a selection of the nearest irregular ground which has young timber upon it, or the densest brush that is in the vicinity, a second opportunity will probably be again found of bring- ing more of the family to bag. All over the United States and Canada they are to be found, being generally known by the misnomers of partridge and pheasant. Where the country is wide and sparsely settled, they are sometimes stupidly tame, almost permitting themselves to be knocked down with a stick. Frequently, when trout-fishing in the wilds of the State of Maine, I have come suddenly upon them, when they would rise into the nearest tree, 70 and remain with unconcern watching you, when, from evident curiosity, they would stretch their necks, and get into all kinds of grotesque attitudes, and so little would they then regard the report of a gun, that I have known pot-hunters kill quite a number of the same family by always shooting the lowest birds first. But when the ruffed grouse becomes familiar with man, he is perfectly cognizant of the danger of being in his proximity, for although they lie close enough to shoot at, their color harmon- izes so well with that of the ground that it is next to im- possible to see them before they are on the wing, when such is their impetuosity that the timid, nervous, pot- tering shot, or the poacher with all his devices, would find it next to impossible to kill a single specimen. In the undergrowth which springs up in that por- tion of the country where the timber has been de- stroyed by fire, in the States of Maine, New Hamp- shire, and Yermont, I found them very abundant, it being almost impossible to wander half a mile from camp or settlement without flushing a covey. Now the winters here are particularly long and rigorous, far exceeding in severity those of Scotland ; still, the bird's natural hardiness prevents his suffering. In the Alleghanies and all the southern ranges of hills RUFFED GEOTTSE. 71 of the United States he is also abundant, where, if the winters are less severe, the heat in summer is sometimes excessive, proving that the ruffed grouse is capable of enduring great varieties of climate. The palate of the most fastidious epicure can not fail to be gratified with his appearance on the table, the flesh being extremely delicate, with a strong flavor of our red grouse. I have eaten them cooked in every conceivable manner, and whether it be simply roasted over a camp fire or forming a portion of an omnium-gatherum stew, they will be found alike acceptable. Although scarcity of food may compel this grouse to change his beat, still they are not mi- gratory, as stated by some naturalists. This suppo- sition has arisen from their being found in great numbers during summer and autumn on the scrub barren land, which they leave as soon as the more severe weather commences, for the shelter of the dense timber. A family of these birds I was ac- quainted with for a year. On their range there was an abundance of food and water, and during that period I could always find them, their home being a little hilly island in the prairie covered with timber and brush, and detached from any irregular land by several miles of grass. 72 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. Some authorities have placed woodcock shooting first in the list, and called it the fox-hunting of those pleasures in which the dog and gun form the chief accessories. As far as present British field-sports are concerned, I believe they are correct, but should the ruffed grouse be introduced, and they once ex- perienced the suddenness of their rise, the velocity and irregularity of their flight, the uncertainty of their movements, and the beauty and size of this game when bagged, they would assuredly insert a saving clause, or change their opinions in toto. Much as I have said in favor of the American partridge, with equal fervor I can advance the claims of the ruffed grouse ; still, they both are very different, but the nearest explanation I can at present think of, is that the former is essentially adapted to the require- ment of the veteran sportsman, while the pursuit of the latter will tax all the strength of limb and im- petuous ardor of our younger enthusiasts; the one is game that will afford the most delightful pastime, similar to hare-hunting with beagles, while the other will demand in its successful pursuit all the energy of the highly bred, dashing, courageous fox-hound. 4 1 doubt not many, I believe all, of the warm admirers of shooting, will agree with me, that there is a supe- RUFFED GROUSE. 73 rior pleasure in making a mixed bag, now a mallard, next a woodcock, perchance thirdly, a partridge, and so forth — loading your discharged barrel, scarcely knowing at what description of game it will be used. Yes, truly, constant novelty and change is a great additional attraction even in field sports, and with our demesnes, parks, and forests, inhabited by a goodly number of both these varieties, the ruffed grouse and American partridge, in addition to their present tenants, the cravings of the most insatiable ought to be satisfied ; and at a very trifling expense and trouble these introductions could be accom- plished. 74 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. GUN FOR GENERAL FOREIGN SHOOTING. THERE is no gun so generally useful for all descrip- tions of shooting on the American Continent, in my humble opinion, as one of the following dimensions : viz., twenty-six inches long in the barrel, ten bore, and weighing about eight pounds. These dimen- sions are those of my constant and well-tried old companion, and I have never met with a gun that could perform better. A gun-maker in "New York, who has deservedly a good reputation, told me that the best-shooting guns he had ever made were of these dimensions. If any intend ordering a gun for American shooting, I should further recommend that it be perfectly plain, and free from all engraving. As to choice between muzzle and breech loaders, I should advise the former, as cartridges are trouble- some and bulky to carry, and if the stock should run short, a considerable loss of time would occur (if you were on the confines of civilization) before a fresh GUN FOR GENERAL FOREIGN SHOOTING. 75 supply could be obtained, but there is no place, from a trading-post to a hamlet, where the ordinary loose ammunition can not be obtained. Further, I am of opinion that the muzzle-loader has greater force, kill- ing farther and hitting harder than the breech- loader. 76 SUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. CHINESE OTSTEES. . tsr my wanderings about the Chinese coast in search of game, I frequently came across immense banks of oysters, apparently no person's property; and this is the more remarkable when we remember that there is probably no people on the face of the globe who have the same skill in rendering all descriptions of animal matter fit for table purposes. About thirty miles from Victoria, the capital of Hong Kong, on the route to the entrance of the Canton River, is situated the entrance to a bay, which from the distance it runs inland is designated Deep Bay; the northern shore is one continuous mud-bank, on the upper portion of which are to be found actually acres of oysters. My acquaint- ance with this fact is not likely to be forgotten. A friend and I had been shooting wild fowl ; a cripple had given us a long chase toward shore, and after we had succeeded in capturing the bird, we found our return cut off, as the tide had receded, and the CHINESE OYSTEKS. 77 sharp edges of the oyster shells become so close to the bottom of the boat, that if we had persevered in forcing her out, we should soon have cut a hole in her bottom. To get out and wade was im- possible, as shoe leather would never have stood the ordeal, therefore there was no alternative left but to remain till the rising tide w^ould float us out ; any thing but a pleasant resource, when time was valuable and shooting at a premium. Slightly to console our wounded feelings, we attacked the oysters, which were excellent, and certainly de- molished an immense quantity. Another time, in a pheasant-shooting trip to Meer's Bay, one of the minor inlets, where our lorcha was anchored, had its margin densely covered with oysters, and the natives did not make the slightest objection to our using as many as required. From this circum- stance it may be presumed that they knew no marketable value for them, for if a Chinaman can have the slightest grounds for fabricating an excuse for squeezing an Englishman, he is certain to do it. The only oysters that I have known exposed for sale in Hong Kong, and those only in very small quantities, when they are always purchased by the Europeans, are from Amoy, and they are really 78 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. excellent, for from appearance and flavor they can favorably compare with those of Colchester. For some years the resident merchants of Hong Kong have been aware of the fact, and like Shanghai mutton and game, the representatives of head- quarters at the port of Amoy annually send pro- pitiatory offerings of their delicate shell-fish to their superiors. Some time since I was informed that a considerable shipment of oysters was about to take place, with the intention of making an effort to furnish Australia and New Zealand with this luxury. Now instead of taking them from here, if the coast of China was selected, the probabilities of success in my opinion would be much* greater, for the transportation distance can scarcely be over one-fourth of the voyage to Europe, and moreover, in favorable seasons any thing but a stormy passage might be anticipated, a circumstance not without considerable importance, for it is well known that the oyster can support itself a long time out of water on its own juice. If this hint should be adopted, then I have neither wasted the ink and paper with which this is indited, nor my time in giving my readers the information that oysters are to be obtained in the Celestial Empire. CUTTLE-FISH. 79 CUTTLE-FISH. THERE are very few inhabitants of the ocean which have so extensive a range of residence as the cuttle- fish. In the Atlantic or Pacific he is equally at home, and in the western end of the Mediterranean he abounds. Wondrous stories are told of his savage proclivities, and in a shop in China I saw a picture in which one of this family was represented embracing a junk (which, judging from the size of the figures on board, must have been two or three hundred tons), and quietly helping himself to mariners, as appetite dictated. Why the Celestials did not get under the hatches I was unable to comprehend. That some of this species grow to an immense size, there is no doubt, as the whale is often found to contain dismembered arms and other parts of this their favorite food, which must originally have been component parts of monsters of gigantic proportions. To their belligerent dispo- sition I can attest, for well I remember seeing one 80 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. about five feet across, attempting to seize a retriever who was paddling in the shallow water at the head of Rosia Bay, Gibraltar. During my residence in that garrison, there resided a sefiorita who, from her graceful carriage and pretty feet, never failed to attract attention ; but she always wore her mantilla so disposed that her face could not be seen. Curiosity induced me to inquire the reason from one of her acquaintances, when I was informed that while bathing she had been seized by a cuttle-fish across the face, and that ever since an unsightly mark, where the blood had been drawn to the surface, remained. The cuttle-fish, although most repulsive to look at, is much prized on the coast of Spain as an article of food; they are frequently taken on the hook, but more generally caught among the rocks in shallow water with a gaff. A number of such in a boat doubtless would be con- sidered unpleasant companions, for out of the water they can move with facility ; however, this is not so, for the fisherman immediately on bringing him to the surface, with his hands turns the globe which forms the body inside out, thereby destroying all the power of suction. This is easily done, for there is an orifice on one side which the fingers can be CUTTLE-FISH. 81 forced into, and unless the fish should be of unusual size, no difficulty is experienced in placing him hors de combat. I have often eaten them; their flesh when properly cooked being excellent. The best mode of preparing them according to my taste, is the following : first cleanse thoroughly by scalding, then rub body and legs with garlic, afterward cut the whole into small pieces, which fry in olive oil, one or two fresh plucked Chili peppers being introduced for seasoning. 82 G0N, ROD, AND SADDLE. THE SNIPE OF AMEEIOA. (SCOLOPAX WILSONII.) I NEVER met a good shot who was not partial to snipe shooting; whether I am a good shot or no, matters not ; but of all pleasures, there are few I so thoroughly enjoy as a day among the long bills. In the different portions of the globe that fate or luck has knocked me about, I have always been able to find snipe ; so I am inclined to believe that there is no family more generally and universally distributed. But the prairies of Western America far outdo all others in the abundance of this descrip- tion of feathered game. Scdopax Wilsonii is truly a splendid bird, so nearly similar to our own home beauty that the skillful naturalist is alone able to distinguish the one from the other ; in habits, flight, and even call, they are essentially alike. How my heart warmed the first day I shot them, for the familiar cry that each bird uttered as he flushed, THE SNIPE OF AMERICA. 83 transported me back to days long gone by, to the society of old companions long under the sod, and a happy circle of relations, to whom it was ever my delight to exhibit the proofs of my skill. The Wilson snipe — for by this name he is famil- iarly known all over the American continent — spends the winter months in the Southern States, principally in those that border the Gulf of Mexico ; but as spring advances, they follow up northward the line of demarkation between frost and thaw, ultimately arriving in that boundless expanse which stretches northward from the Great Lakes to the Arctic Ocean. Up in this remote haunt is their principal breeding-ground, although occasionally a nest may be found much farther to the south ; but in all instances of such that I have been able to find, I have been induced to believe that either the male or female bird had met with an accident, preventing the following of the migration of his or her com- panions. What a beautiful lesson all may learn from this ; how it should speak home to the human heart this attachment of the mate, who, sooner than desert a companion, forsakes for the time being his whole race, save one, and foregoes even following the journey dictated by nature. 84: GOT, KOD, AND SADDLE. In southern Illinois, where I had the greatest 7 O amount of experience in killing this game, the advance heralds of migration generally arrived about the 10th of March. Much, of course, depended whether the winter was late or otherwise ; but if a thaw had taken place, and a moist southerly wind had been blowing over night, the ground that yesterday you had tramped over in pursuit of wild duck without seeing a single snipe, on the morrow would harbor thousands. Their journey being a continuation of short flights, they are seldom out of condition on arrival ; and as they do not take up a permanent residence, little compunction is felt in shooting them. Out of the large number that I have brought to bag, I do not remember a single instance of an egg, or other indication that pairing had taken place. The prairies of this State (Illinois) are generally burned late in the fall, or early in spring, to improve the succeeding year's grazing, leaving the surface of the soil entirely denuded of grass, except where moisture has prevented the burn taking effect. Over this, especially in the vicinity of sloughs, dwarf persimmon bushes abound, and there the snipe much frequent. A dog is not necessary here, for the game is so abundant, unless, THE SNIPE OF AMEKICA. 85 perhaps, a good retriever, who must be under such control as never to attempt to leave heel, except when ordered by his master to recover a cripple. A fur- ther attraction to this sport, beyond the numbers that can be killed, is that few days pass on which numbers of teal, pin-tailed duck, or mallard do not assist to swell the size of your game-bag. From the advent of the first flight till the middle of May, additional arrivals take place, but after that date all disappear till the fall of the leaf, and gusty change- able weather fortells the near approach of winter. But the autumnal flight is never numerically equal to that of spring ; still, if twenty brace will satisfy the sportsman, he can have that reward for his labor, provided he be a fair shot. In America are to be found many excellent shots. By them the arrival of the snipe is looked forward to with much pleasure ; but to the pot-hunter, the fellow who will shoot pinnated grouse on the ground, the duck upon the water, or crawl all day through brush to have a standing chance at a wild turkey, this branch of shooting presents little attraction. How satisfactory it is that there is at least one game- bird who can laugh with derision at such pursuers. At first, when the snipe makes its appearance, 86 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. especially if the weather be wet and blustering, they are inclined to be wild; but much depends upon the amount of cover, and consequently shelter, afforded by the locality, but when the genial sun of spring shines with invigorating warmth, they will frequently lie so close that many will flush almost at your feet. When wild, their flights are long and rapid ; when not so, they droop their wings, and frequently alight before a hundred yards have been traversed. However, this does .not apply to the whole day, for toward sunset, possibly from having by that time digested their last night's meal, for they feed principally by night, they invariably become wild, and more difficult of access. To be successful in making a heavy bag of snipe, there is a rule which may be beneficial to the tyro to remember, viz., always to hunt down wind, or as much so as possible, provided always dogs are not used. The stronger the breeze, the more necessity for doing so ; the reason being, that invariably snipe fly against the wind, and being flushed by your advancing on them from windward, the birds will wheel round to the right or left, and present an easy cross-shot, in their determination to pursue the desired direction. THE SNIPE OF AMERICA. 87 The migration of this snipe, as well as of the American woodcock, is peculiar; all appear to act independently of the other. Dozens may be seen to pass or light near you in the space of a few minutes, yet each bird is alone. Many an evening, after sun- set, have I watched their coming, yet never saw two or more together. As a rule, these journeys by both the above-mentioned take place before sunrise and after sunset. This scattered mode of traveling, and the hour at which it takes place, are doubtless the reasons that none but close observers of nature witness these flights. By the end of May the migra- tion of this snipe has ceased, and their summer quarters are reached, which are, as previously stated, principally north of the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence ; although not a few spend the summer in ISTova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Maine. Early in June they commence laying their eggs, four in num- ber, in a nest of the most primitive construction, it being simply an indentation in some trifling excres- cence of the surface. The eggs, which are of a yellowish-brown color, blotched with dark markings, taper very much toward the small end; they are always placed in the nest with the larger end outward. As soon as the young are hatched, they 88 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. leave the nest, and in six weeks afterward are almost full grown. At this age it is impossible to tell the Wilson snipe from our home variety; however, at any period the difference is very slight ; and as they are quite as strong, swift, and erratic in their flight, and, moreover, to be found in immense quantities, ten or twelve dozen per day being no unusual bag in March, those who can spare time and money would, if fond of this description of shooting, find ample recompense by a visit across the Atlantic. A BIG BUCK. 89 A BIG BUCK. IN the autumn of 186-, when traveling across 7 O the Grand Prairie, I got caught in the first snow- storm of the season. The vicinity was but sparsely settled, and from the thickness of the drift our charioteer lost his way, and after getting mired times without number, and enduring one of the most disagreeable nights out of doors it is possible to imagine, we reached the village of Kent. Under ordinary circumstances it would have presented no great inducements, but the large wood fire that blazed in the bar-room of the diminutive tavern, after our protracted night of hardship, possessed such attractions, that I determined to lie over for a couple of days. The neighborhood was well stocked with game I learned the following evening, when I presented myself among the habitues, who commonly made this public-house their place of rendezvous after the toils of the/ day. No small portion of the conversation was in reference to a buck, who for years had constantly been seen, yet 90 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. none of the heretofore successful hunters had been able to circumvent him. It was evident that this animal was of no ordinary size, as he was dubbed by all with the sobriquet of the big buck, and one regular old leather-stocking, whose opinion was always listened to with the reverence due to an authority, ventured to assert that he believed the bullet would never be molded that would tumble him (the buck) in his tracks. This extraordinary deer had almost escaped my memory, and I was resting over my next morning's pipe, and beginning to fear that my visit was longer than necessary, for there was absolutely nothing to do but eat and sleep, unless the prices of pork, corn, or wheat had possessed an interest; when a man from the tim- ber land arrived with a load of wood, and held the following conversation with the mixer of mint-juleps, cocktails, etc. " Abe, have you e'er a shooting-iron that you can loan this coon ?" Abe having replied in the negative, and inquired the reason, was told that the most alfiestest big buck had crossed the road about a mile off, and gone into the Squire's corn.* Quietly going to my * Every person in Western America is either Squire or Colonel. A BIG BUCK. 91 bedroom, I unpacked my heaviest gun, a ten bore, in whom I have particular faith, and having noted the route that the teamster had come by, I followed the back track of his sled, and true enough found the prints of a very heavy buck. The day was still young, myself in good walking-trim, and with an internal determination not to be beaten, except night overtook me, and very probably with the hope to show the neighbors that a Britisher was good for some purposes, I followed the track with un- usually willing steps and light heart. To get into the corn-field the buck had jumped the snake fence and afterward doubled back, and as the wind did not suit for me to enter at the same place, I made a considerable detour. In my right barrel I had sixteen buck-shot, about the size that would run one hundred to the pound, and a bullet in the left. As the corn had not yet been gathered, and the under- growth of cuckle-burs and other weeds was tolerably dense; I had little doubt but that I would get sufficiently close to make use of the former. An old stager like my quarry, I knew from experience would be desperately sharp, so with the utmost caution I advanced up wind, eyes and ears strained to the utmost tension. I had only got about a 92 GUN, fourth of the field traversed, when I heard some voices right to windward encouraging a dog to hold a pig. The noise of the men, dog, and porker, I concluded would start the game off in the reverse direction, so hurriedly retracing my steps, I regained the fence, got over it, and took my stand at an angle that stretched close to a slough which was densely covered with a growth of various aquatic weeds and rushes. In about five minutes after gaming my position, I was greeted by a sight of the beauty, who hopped the fence where there was a broken rail, and gaining the opening, for a moment halted, then tossing up his head, offered me a fair cross- shot nearly eighty yards distant. Pitching my gun well in front, I pulled the trigger, and well I knew not fruitlessly, for he gave a short pro- tracted jump, dropped his white tail close into his hams, and with an increased pace disappeared in the swamp. Unless the wound was mortal, or so severe as to seriously incommode him, I was certain he would not be satisfied to remain in such close propinquity to danger, so after reloading I made a detour to find where he had left this cover to seek one more retired. My conjecture was correct, for after travel- A BIG BUCK. 93 ing nearly half-a-mile, I found the familiar tell- tale track. The snow was in pretty good order, both for tracking and walking, and I did not let the grass grow under my feet. As yet I had seen no signs of blood, which the more thoroughly impressed me that my lead had made more than a skin wound. In about an hour's walking, I found myself on the edge of another slough, which I was hesitating whether to enter or go round, when I espied my friend, some way beyond range, going over a neigh- boring swell of the prairie. Of course I cut off the angle and cast forward to where the view was obtained, and as I rose the swell, in the distance I saw my friend at a stand-still, evidently anxiously scrutinizing my direction. My cap was of a very light color, so I concluded he did not see me, and my supposition was again correct, for after a few minutes he relaxed his pace, and turning at right angles, walked into a small expanse of dense rushes, interspersed with an occasional stunted willow. In deer shooting, if you suppose an animal severely wounded, never hurry him; if he once lie down, and you give him time to stiffen, you will not have half the trouble in his ultimate capture that you would have by constantly keeping him on the 94: move. So I practiced in this instance ; carefully for ten or fifteen minutes I watched that he did not leave the cover ; then having concluded that he had lain down, I quietly lit my pipe and dawdled away an hour more. Deeming that I had granted suf- ficient law, I renewed operations and pushed forward ; the track was very irregular in length of pace from where he had reduced his gait to a walk, and several times from want of lifting his feet high enough, he had scuffed the surface of the snow with his toes. An old deer-stalker will know these symptoms, a young one may without harm remember them. Having cautiously followed the trail three parts of the way across the cover, and almost commenced to think I would have done better by waiting half-an-hour longer, the buck jumped up within twenty yards, heading straight from me, when I gave him the contents a second time of the right-hand barrel in the back of his head. The distance was too great to remove him home that day, so cutting a branch off a willow, I affixed my handkerchief to it, and left this banner waving to denote possession, also to furnish a hint to the prairie wolves that they had better steer clear. That A BIG BUCK. 95 night at the tavern bar in the most ostentatious manner, in presence of the assembled crowd, I order- ed a team to be got ready in the morning to bring in the big buck ; old leather-stocking, sotto voce, remarking, that I had not been reared on the right soil to be able to come that game. However, next morning, when I arrived with my trophy, the crowd congratulated me, while leather-stocking remarked, that he knew not what the world was coming to, by G — d, when a Britisher with a bird gun could kill the biggest buck in Illinois. In conclusion I would say, that in skinning we found that at the first shot one grain had gone through the lungs, while two more had lodged farther back. The gross weight of this deer was one hundred and eighty-four pounds. 96 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. BLACK BASS. IN advocating the introduction of birds, I feel I have not yet performed my work ; bear with me further, and grant me space to advocate another introduction that, in my opinion, deserves the favor- able attention of all lovers of tl^e gentle art. Although I love the dog and gun, still I am equally devoted to the rod. As every season has its beau- ties and its fascinations, so has every variety of field sports. On a glorious September day, what can exceed the pleasure of following a brace of well- trained, well-bred, high-couraged dogs over the golden stubbles ? On a mild spring day, with a soft southwest breeze and dark clouds overhead, can any thing be more delightful than following the tortuous course of a trout brook, taking from pool or stream the speckled beauties, or knee-deep in a rapid, bois- terous river, first rising, now hooking, and perchance killing the glorious salmon ? The whirr of pheasant or partridge is pleasant music ; the voice of hounds BLACK BASS. 97 is not less so ; but the screech of your reel, when first you are fast to a heavy game-fish, is a song that even Patti herself can not rival. For a fish to be popular among fishermen, he must have ^three requi- sites, viz., gameness when hooked, boldness in feed- ing, and, when he has yielded his life, be a fit feast for an epicure. All these requisites I claim for the black bass ; and, therefore, presume to lay his claims for introduction before your numerous readers. There is no section of the world so intersected by rivers and lakes as the North American continent, and in nearly all these waters, from northern Canada to the tributaries of the Mississippi, and the various waters that flow into the Gulf of Mexico, the black bass is to be found. It matters not whether it be river or lake ; whether the water be clear or muddy, stagnant or rapid ; in all he appears equally to flourish. What splendid homes could we offer him here ! All our ornamental waters, though generally unsuited to trout, would be retreats eminently fitted to his nature ; and the fishermen, instead of captur- ing such common pluckless fish as bream, tench, carp, or even perch, would have an antagonist that would test all his skill, the stoutness and endurance of his tackle, with that untiring, unflinching resolu- 5 98 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. tion and headstrong energy which no other fresh- water fish of the same size, I believe, possesses. The black bass is an extremely free feeder, and is caught in all the various ways used to capture trout. He rises freely at the fly ; with minnow or worm, craw-fish, spoon bait, or almost any artificial device, he can be taken. On being hooked, generally the first effort he makes for freedom is to spring from the water. Look out, Mr. Angler, dip your rod in courtesy to him, for if you neglect the requisite salam, your acquaintance will probably terminate. When this device has failed, with a purpose and force alike surprising, he makes a rush for parts un- known, and not until every effort, every trick is put in practice, that is known to the fish family, can you get the slightest chance to use your landing net. I have frequently, after a long and fierce struggle, been about to place the net under him, but the movement was enough ; though apparently exhaust- ed, the fish took a new lease of life, and a further trial of patience was demanded before I could call the prize mine. In shape, the black bass much re- sembles a well-fed trout ; but is deeper and thicker made, while the tail is remarkable for its breadth. Their weight varies from one pound to five pounds ; BLACK BASS. 99 yet on the Niagara River, near the village of Chippe- wa, I captured a splendid fellow, quite eight pounds ; but I was then assured that I had reason to cpn- gratulate myself, for fish of such a size were far from common. The color, as in all varieties of fish, varies much. In clear running water they are generally a very dark green upon the back (much such a shade as the darker hues in mackerel), gradually getting lighter, almost to white, as you approach the abdo- men; but in those Southern waters, which are strongly impregnated with alluvial deposit, and con- sequently turbid, the back of these bass is less brilliant in shade, while the stomach is not so clear a white. A still further advantage that may recom- mend them is, that they are in season when trout should not be killed. In spring they spawn, the exact time varying in different waters on account of season and position as to latitude. If I may judge from the quantity of spawn the female contains, they must be immensely prolific; for although the individual ovum is small, the roe is very large in proportion to the bulk of the fish. From my own observation and inquiries, I believe that the spawn is from sixteen to twenty days in maturing, after being deposited, which would give 100 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. ample time for its transportation across the Atlantic. I am further of opinion that, indiscriminately, gravel or soil bottom is selected on which to deposit the eggs ; for many of the rivers and ponds in which I have captured this bass flowed through, or were situated in deep bottom-lands, where a stone, even as large as a pebble, would be difficult to find. One pond in southern Illinois I particularly remember ; it covered a space of about thirty acres, with an average depth of about three feet, except in the southern extremity, where about eight feet of water could be found. The bottom was entirely composed of mud ; yet this pond swarmed with black bass. Lake Champlain, the St. Lawrence, and Lake Ontario (all who have visited these regions will remember) are remarkably clear, with gravelly or rocky bottoms, and each is a favorite haunt of this fish. I mention this to prove the better how univer- sal a favorite and extensive his adoption might become. A friend, once a resident of the Isle of Skye, and a well-known successful trout and salmon fisherman, had a beautiful little lake, about ten acres in extent, on his estate, not many miles from Toronto, which he had stocked with black bass. In a few years BLACK BASS. 101 their numbers so much increased, that in an hour or two, trolling of an evening, a dozen or more could easily be taken. This lake ha^ neither outlet or inlet, but was supplied with water from springs in the bottom. I fear it will be almost deemed heresy to place this fish on a par with the trout; at least, some such idea I had when I first heard the two com- pared; but I am bold, and will go farther. I consider he is the superior of the two, for he is equally good as an article of food, and much stronger and untiring in his efforts to escape when hooked. By all means let us have black bass introduced, I feel confident this fish requires but to be known to be most highly appreciated. 102 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. HINTS TO YOUNG ANGLEES. I CAN not hope to teach the expert, but I doubt not that there are many of the younger readers of this little work who may be assisted in taking a larger basket of fish than they otherwise would, by a knowledge of the following artifices, which I have often found most successful. In a clear, warm day, at the termination of the green drake season, when the trout can not be induced t^o rise at the artificial fly, I have frequently been most successful by practicing the following ruse, viz., having only a trail fly on your casting-line (which should be very long and light), make it slightly fast to a water-lily or other leaf; having marked where a fish is feeding, go up stream well above the place, and guide, through means of your rod, the leaf, so that it will pass close by the spot, taking the precaution of using a long line, and to keep as much out of sight as possible ; when the leaf has reached the trout's haunt, by a slight strike disengage your fly from HINTS TO YOUNG ANGLERS. 103 the leaf, so that it will drop in the water, and but seldom will the fish hesitate to rise, and on such occasions will yourself fail to strike successfully. Now for hint number two : when I have been unable to get a strike minnow fishing, I have stimulated the trout's appetite, by taking a worm and hooking it transversely across the center, so that when your minnow is put on, both sides of the worm hang on eithe*' side of his head. If fish reason, I suppose they thus argue: That fellow is going off with a prize ; if he was not in good health, he would scarcely have such a voracious appetite. It's evident Mister Fisherman has played no tricks on this chap. So at him he goes, and tyro's basket becomes heavier by another fish. Not to keenness but to accident I made this discovery. I had fished most unsuccessfully for several hours, having changed from worm to minnow and vice versa ; in one of these alterations, being careless from want of suc- cess, some worm was left on the shank of the hook after I reverted to the minnow: the hint was not lost, and often afterward practiced. 104 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. THE AMEEICAN THOROUGH- BRED. I THINK that few will disagree with me that horse-racing was established not alone for the amusement it affords, but for the encouragement of breeding a superior stamp of animal, alike capable of speed and endurance. Of late years the former quality has been the desideratum, and to so great a pitch has it come through light weights, short races, &c., that the most useless, as far as utility purposes may be considered, are patronized for sires. The result is, what would have been deemed a race-horse a quarter of a century ago, is now thought a hunter at best, while what our fathers would have con- demned as a weedy tucked-up brute, we, with our advanced views of civilization, call a race-horse. Speed for a short distance is what all harp after, and if stamina with speed can not be obtained, the more useful quality is neglected, or entirely sacrificed, for a second less time in a mile race. Double the THE AMERICAN THOROUGH-BRED. 105 length of the race — make the course two miles instead of one — and which would be first at the winning-post ? — or, still better, make the race three miles, and I much doubt if the weed would come home at all, leave alone save his distance. Much injury is doubtless done our horses by running them long before they reach maturity. If you take a growing boy and over-tax his strength, what will be the result ? A wreck before he reaches manhood. So it is with our thorough-bred colts and fillies. They are forced forward like hot-house plants, prematurely reach maturity of form, when they are put to work trying even to aged animals, their muscular development being still soft and unset, and consequently unequal to the task, caus- ing a broken-down cripple at the very time when, if permitted to have followed Nature's dictates, the poor creature would have rejoiced in all the per- fections of beauty that charm the eye and tell of speed and endurance. What an e very-day occurrence it is to hear of such and such a colt, immense favorites with the public from their success as two-year olds, being scratched? And why? In some closely-contested struggle, when flesh and blood was doing its utmost, under whip and spur, 106 GinSf, ROD, AND SADDLE. a yet further exertion was called for, and from the effort a strain or injury was received which time ultimately developed ; and thus the flower of the stable, the hope of the owner, is thrown out of work, ultimately to descend through the gradations from pampered pet to over-wrought cab-horse. True, it is not unfrequently the lot of man to undergo the same vicissitudes of fortune ; but he invariably has some hand in altering his position. But the poor horse earns degradation through his endeavor to serve a selfish master too well. The Americans are justly considered close observ- ers and an essentially practical people, possessed with that energy which has long characterized this their mother people. From being originally thrown in a new land, where every effort and resource had to be employed to raise them to the standard of older countries, constant required attention to all the details of life, through numerous generations, has made them what they are, inferior to none, and far, far ahead of many European powers who can date their existence back numerous centuries. At an early age the inherent love of Englishmen for horse-racing showed itself in America ; and as might be expected, when the importation of thorough-bred THE AMERICAN THOROUGH -BRED. 107 stock took place, such judgment was employed, that the best animals that could be obtained in England were only introduced. Unfortunately, however, racing got into bad repute, from the number of mauvais sujets it attracted, and although the Southern gentlemen did their utmost to cleanse away the stain, the fanatical puritanical spirit of many Northern States, tabooed the institution for years; thus it only had a partial existence, and but few horses were imported, and those always to the South ; but if the number was small, the selections were the more carefully made. However, again a revival took place, principally at first through the instrumentality of the late Mr. Atchi- son Alexander, of Woodford, Kentucky, and latterly through the efforts of Mr. Jerome, of New York ; so that at the present date almost every State boasts one or two race-courses, where as fine racing can be enjoyed as at home. From an innate love of the horse, I not only visited the majority of the American races, but obtained the entree to many of the training and breeding establishments ; thus gaining opportunities of forming opinions, that defective judgment alone would cause to be in- correct. One only of these establishments will I 108 GUN, KODj AND SADDLE. mention, because I was more conversant with it, not because it was either the largest or most replete with conveniences, — that of Mr. Sanford, in New Jersey, about thirty miles from the metropolis. This gentleman had a large number of all ages at work, all his own, for he was not a public trainer, but a person of affluence, loving the horse for his beauty and use, and running them with the hope that if they were entitled to the laurels they would bear them. In close proximity to his stables was his private training-ground, and the buildings were replete with every convenience that ingenuity, art, or money could supply. In looking over his pets, numerous descendants of imp. Hedgeford, Glencoe, Knight of St. George, &c., were found, all good ones, as some old memories will recall, and closely allied to the American-bred cracks, Lexington, Boston, Kentucky, and Asteroid. One thing that can not fail to strike the English visitors, is the much greater amount of stamina that all appear to possess over our home-bred animal ; and I am inclined to believe that this is not only show. I am aware that an English nobleman, probably the most successful of modern times on the turf, thought the same, and in consequence introduced THE AMEKICAN THOKOUGH-BKED. 109 a stallion. However, the importation did not turn out a success ; but might he not have been injured in the voyage, or the purchaser been wrong in his selection ? To successfully clear a rasper, there is nothing like going boldly at it ; so, without further preamble, I believe that the introduction of a good American stallion would be beneficial to those who want to breed weight-carrying, fast, lasting horses. Three or four miles is no unfrequent distance for a race to be run across the Atlantic, and it has always struck me how wonderfully game all ap- peared to finish, something like the Irishman's car- horse, a spurt always remaining to take your honor to the hall-door. The Americans run their youngsters in their two- year-old form, but the weights up are very light, the distances short, and the ordeal seldom required oftener than three or four times in a season ; therefore the occasion of accident that our colts of the same age suffer from is materially reduced ; in fact, if scratching in the United States was as frequent as here, where the number of entries does not exceed one-fourth of ours, they would have few or no horses show at the post. For three and four year olds, the old system of 110 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. heats is much in vogue ; no bad one, let me say, for proving endurance ; and here again I was much pleased with the gameness with which the con- testants always re-assembled. At Seacaucus, near New York, there is a bi-annual meeting ; the estab- lishment is superintended by a most hospitable, kind-hearted old Virginian, whose heart is in his work. I attended one of the meetings here, in. which a son of Knight of St. George won a heat race ; it was so closely contested, and so gamely finished, that it even now warms my blood while I write of it. The winner was a dark bay, wonder- fully compact in build, with a few gray hairs at the setting on of the tail, so common a mark of many of his family. What a charger, I thought to my- self, he would make ; nor do I believe I was far wrong. That day this horse proved himself a good one at long distances, and in heats, but he has also made his mile in one minute and forty-six seconds — reliable time. Now, this horse, Knight- hood by name, if I remember correctly, had not been galloped off his feet when a two-year old, or he never could have undergone successfully the trial he endured on the occasion mentioned. At Paterson, New Jersey, I witnessed another closely THE AMERICAN THOROUGH-BRED. Ill contested heat race ; the winner was a mare of Mr. San-ford's, called Nanny Butler ; she was an un- commonly well-put-together undersized nag, but with the most unsightly height of withers ; five heats had to be run before the race was decided. The mare was ridden by a well-known veteran jockey, black as my hat ; his reputation was great, and that day proved not without reason ; still a good jockey can't land a bad mount first, although a good jockey can materially assist a good horse. At the start, the odds were heavy against her, and when she was declared winner, not the mare, but the rider, got the credit from the shrewd public. Why not have divided the praise ? But such is too frequently the way of the world. Now, if Nanny had been run to death — or I will say had done the work of Achievement in her two-year old form — is it reasonable to suppose that she would have gamely and uninjured finished as winner the last and fifth heat of a two-mile-heat race ? I was in New York when the beautiful Jerome Park race-course was to be opened. Kentucky was then the acknowledged crack of Eastern stables, but away south of the Ohio River was his half- brother, both being sons of the famous Lexington. 112 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. Wonderful rumors had reached the Atlantic sea- board of what the Western representative could do. For a long time it was doubtful whether this great gun would put in an appearance. So Kentucky wras backed at immense odds for the great event — the Inauguration Stakes. At length a telegraph ar- rived, announcing the intention of Mr. Alexander to forward his horse Asteroid. Public opinion became divided, but, as is generally the case, drifted back to the home favorite. Asteroid arrived a few days be- fore the meeting, but unfortunately broke down; however, I availed myself of an opportunity to in- spect him, and such a horse I have seldom looked at — a hunter up to fourteen stone across any country — yet there was not a single gross point about him. To what his mishap could be attributed, few could say ; but I learned that, for an American horse, he had done an unusual amount of work in his younger days. Kentucky, the most successful, and possibly the best horse that has been produced in America in modern days, although differing in color, is very much like Blair Athole in form, very showy and cocky in his action, and of most desirable temper. He has, I believe, only once been beaten, and then THE AMERICAN TUOROrGII-BRLD. 113 by Norfolk, a half-brother, who was. shortly after- ward transported to the Pacific slope ; however, this is to be attributed to (as I have been in- formed by a most reliable person) being out of con- dition. He is also a son of Lexington, and therefore claims relationship to Boston and Imp. Glencoe, ancestors to whom he truly does no discredit. I have seen Kentucky run several times, but always he so immensely superior to his antagonists, that the race was quite one-sided. At Saratoga, I believe, on one occasion, his jockey pricked him, but I much doubt if such was necessary; Lexington I have frequently mentioned ; I much regret that I forget his genealogical tree. As a sire and race-horse, his superior in the Western hemisphere never produced. One performance was his run- ning at the Great State Race on Metaire course, Xew Orleans, a four-mile-heat race, in which one of the he&ts was made in 7 minutes 19f seconds — a perform- ance his owner might well be proud of — for I can find no record of its being excelled ; and it must be remembered that American time is always correctly taken by reliable persons, and published at the end of each heat or -race. Lexington still lives, and is the sire of numerous progeny, many of whom I know, 114: GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. and all except one who shall be nameless, are not only fast, but enduring horses. In conclusion, whether the American thorough-bred is as fast as ours would be difficult to decide ; but that he is a most lasting, enduring, game horse, I can assert, a proof that the Americans have not forgotten, in the universal mania of the age for fastness, the desideratum endurance — the sine qudnon for utility. HOW TO CAPTUBE GRAY MULLET. 115 HOW TO CAPTTJEE GEAY MULLET. OFTEN I have stood on the fluvial portion of a riv- er and watched the gray mullet freely sporting on the surface. Numerous were the efforts I made to catch these wily gentry with hook and line ; but all over- tures were rejected, and the fish preferred declining the bait to leaving their element. The gray mullet feeds principally on the surface, more particularly in warm weather, and as they are remarkably shy and gifted with but small mouths, with a preference to sucking in the bait, to freely swallowing like trout or others, the difficulties in the way of capturing them are obvious, and hence I will explain a method some might call poaching, but really no more so than trimmer fishing ; in truth, it is much more excusable, for by the latter you capture fish that freely take the hook, while on the other hand you ensnare rogues that all your skill and patience will fail otherwise to bring to bag. Obtain a piece of flat 116 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. cork about one inch in depth and the size of a regular ship biscuit ; have a pouch made of coarse gauze, in which a slice of bread, the size of the cork can be placed, the gauze retaining the bread flat against the cork. From the margin of the cork suspend around the bread a dozen hooks, about the size of those usually employed in trout bait fishing, these hooks to be tied on strong gut, six inches long, and on the points of a few of them a small dice of bread should be placed. Armed with half a dozen of these infernal machines, and provided with a landing net, go in your boat above where the mullet are known to resort, drop your corks in the water, about eight or ten yards apart, scattering some crumbs among them, and let the tide or current float them to the fish, keeping the boat a good way in the rear. Don't be in a hurry, the fish will not keep you long waiting ; each float will soon be surrounded, and when the mullet find that they can not carry away the bread wholesale, they will knock the floats with their noses, slap them with their tails, and in a few seconds you will have a prize on each trimmer, hooked by back, tail, or side. If the captives run large much sport will be enjoyed in retaking your floats, for it is wonderful how long a four or five HOW TO CAPTURE GRAY MULLET. 117 pound fish will manage to avoid you. This method I have practiced often, both in smooth and rough water, and never without meeting with the greatest success, not only with the gray mullet but many other species. 118 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. THE PINNATED GROUSE. (TETRAQ CUPID o.) THE first pheasant I killed in China I thought the noblest game-bird that ever I had pulled a trigger upon, and truly he was a beauty ; the plumage was in the most perfect state — the neck of the greenest emerald, the ring of the purest white, the tail the longest, and the different shades and tints of wings and body the very brightest I had ever seen in one of his species; moreover, he weighed nearly one-half more than any of the same family I had killed at home, and to add additional appreciation, the shot that brought him to the ground was a difficult one and at long range. For years the pheasant of the southern portion of China reigned paramount in my opinion ; but a change has come over my ideas, and now superlative before all others, I place two varie- ties of American game-birds. What days of pleasure have I had in the pursuit of pinnated grouse ; what splendid bags have I made, and on such ground THE PINNATED GKOUSE. 119 as gave my darling companion setters the very best opportunities of showing their sagacity and careful education to the greatest advantage. In my previ- ous notice of the ruffed grouse (Tetrao umbellus), I have stated that I do not believe this bird (the pin- nated grouse) so worthy of acclimatization as the last mentioned ; and why ? he disregards distance in his late autumnal flights ; and therefore where shooting ranges are limited by bounds, unless the proprietors on every side would mutually agree for their introduction and protection, I fear that the labors of one landowner in introducing and propa- gating them would be fraught with dissatisfaction, as his neighbors would enjoy almost as much as himself the benefit of his expense and trouble. But for all that, the pinnated grouse is most worthy of our attention ; he is truly a most noble bird, and affords the sportsman the best of sport, till the cold winds preceding winter cause him to pack, in the same manner as our red and black game, when their wariness becomes so great that naught but quick shooting and Ely's green cartridges are likely to help the laborer to produce a bag remunerative for his toil. That this bird could be acclimated here there is no doubt, for he is capable of withstanding 120 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. great changes of temperature ; is not particular as to choice of ground as long as it is open ; and plenty of grain and grass seed can be obtained. Although his range is now principally confined to the prairie country of the United States, not being found in great numbers till the edge of the Grand Prairie is reached, still formerly he was found equally abund- ant all over the open lands ; still, however, Long Island and the island of Martha's Vineyard possess some remnants, who long since would have disap- peared but for the protection and care of the land- owners in those places, who have endeavored to prevent if possible the extinction of this valuable bird upon their estates. I can not well imagine any place so bleak in winter as the scrub uplands of the two aforementioned islands, unless, perhaps, Mull and Jura on the Scotch coast. The bird that could with impunity withstand the rigors of the cold in the former could doubtless with impunity do the same in the latter. The pinnated grouse pairs in March, and generally produces from twelve to fourteen young at a brood ; the chicks very early take to the wing, but their flight is weak and short until they are more than half grown. During the infancy of the family, the courage and artifice of the parent THE PINNATED GROUSE. 121 bird to intimidate or draw off intruders is worthy of notice. At first she will fly toward you as if intent on doing you battle, but when this course has failed, she will retire, droop her wings, struggle on the ground, only just keeping beyond your grasp, always moving in a direction contrary to where her brood are hid, until parent instinct tells her that the chil- dren are safe, when suddenly on strong wings she will start for a distant flight. The facility with which the young secrete themselves is most surpris- ing. Frequently have I got unexpectedly into the center of a family, when up they would rise like a flight of bees and as rapidly drop again; certainly you see the exact spot on which they have alighted — that tuft of grass you believe most surely con- tains one, but search as you will, turn over care- fully every blade, look well about the roots — all is useless, for no fledgeling will you tind. At the commencement of the pairing season, par- ticularly if the weather is calm and cloudy, the male birds will be heard calling all day ; their note re- sembling the lowing of a cow, which can be heard distinctly for over a mile. At this time fierce-look- ing encounters appear to take place, but I am inclined to believe that their fights are all a sham, performed 6 122 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. to show themselves to the greatest advantage before the admiring ladies who assemble around ; for I have never been able to find a maimed hero, and seldom more than a broken feather resulting from the con- test. As the spring advances they restrict their call- ing to evening and morning, and by the time the brood is hatched, cease it altogether. The peculiar- ity of the call of the males of this species is such, that once heard, it is difficult to forget, particularly when softened by distance; it is produceed by for- cing the air out of two orange-colored receptacles placed on either side of the throat, and which, when inflated, are as large in circumference as a man's fin- ger, perfectly free from feathers upon their surface, but hid when in a state of quiescence by fan-shaped bunches of hackles that completely cover them.* The pinnated grouse is about the size of our pheas- ant ; however, they differ considerably, those birds that inhabit southern Illinois being at least one-fourth larger than those obtained in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the northwest prairies. They are of a beautiful mottled brown and fawn color, frequently with white finger-marks on the upper portion of the wings and * The most killing hackles for tying trout-flies. THE PINNATED GROUSE. 123 back, are feathered down the legs to the feet, have beautifully set-on small heads, with a slight crest, and bright yellow iris. When standing, their attitude is very erect, but graceful, while their flight is strong and swift, more especially late in the season. On being flushed, they invariably cackle, and the first flight, except of young birds, is always long. In the commencement of the season, and in fact as long as the weather is bright and mild, they lie remarkably well to dogs ; but as soon as severe and cold weath- er sets in, they pack and become wild. However, late in October, if you should hit upon a warm, sum- mer-like day, the birds will lie so remarkably close between the hours of 10 A. M. and 3 P. M., that mar- velous bags can be made. As a delicacy, this bird can favorably compare with any of the grouse family, but is dissimilar in one respect from all the others, for the sooner it is cooked after being killed, the more delicate and savory it will be found. Even the skill of Delmo- iiico, in New York, the justly celebrated restaurant proprietor, with all his knowledge of cuisine, can not impart the flavor that the same bird would have had from the hands of the most ignorant cook, pro- vided it was served a few hours after it was killed. 124: GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. The pinnated grouse can easily be domesticated. Mr. Audubon, the^ naturalist, for some time kept quite a number in a walled garden, where they became as tame as domestic fowls ; nor do I believe there would be any difficulty in transporting them across the Atlantic. To gentlemen stocking preserves, or desirous of being able to show a great variety of game upon their estate, I believe this magnificent member of the grouse genus well worthy of attention. FISHING AT GIBRALTAR. 125 FISHING AT GIBBALTAB. DEAR old Gibraltar, much as thou art frequently railed at, I believe the faults are more imaginary than real. Englishmen are grumblers proverbially and truly, more particularly the untraveled speci- mens. Transport them once away from native soil, and nothing that they see or make use of is equal to what is to be had at home. I am almost inclined to believe that there is a spirit of discontent in the breed, for our cousins across the Atlantic, although to a less degree, are strongly pregnated with the same peculiarity. Why is it that you seldom find one who is doing garrison duty at Gibraltar who does not sigh for change ; true ! you, if a subaltern, have more guards to keep, and in the cool season an overplus of brigade days, still you have your hounds, who, although they do not kill whenever they meet, afford plenty of fun ; you have numerous pretty rides open to you into Spain, and if a fisherman or shot, sport can both be obtained in the bay and 126 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. over the straits in the vicinity of Tangiers quite as good as you probably enjoyed at home, unless you had the privilege of a well-stocked salmon river or carefully preserved demesne. Although I am certain this garrison is seldom without numerous followers of old Izaak Walton, yet I dare bet that few have essayed their art while there — why, I can not say — for although I did constantly, I never met a compan- ion, and more the pity ; for fishing (that is, sea-fish- ing) is here to be obtained of the greatest excellence. The N"ew Mole, where vessels obtain their requi- site fuel, used to be a favorite haunt of mine, more particularly on those serene, romantic nights peculiar to the Mediterranean, when with my light fly-rod and a small brilliant artificial minnow attached to very light tackle, I used to capture dozens of a beautiful little fish, of the mackerel family, there called horse- mackerel ; true they were not large, seldom exceed- ing nine or ten inches in length, but then they were so game, giving as much sport as a half-pound trout, before you could safely land them on terra firma ; and when fishing for these resplendent little beauties, you would occasionally hook a monster, when your only option was to give him the butt, place a check on your line, and force the weak portion of your tackle to FISHING AT GIBRALTAR. 127 part. So often did this occur to me, that I determined to go armed for emergencies; and having obtained a most powerful bamboo-rod and attached a sal- mon reel, with a sardine for bait, I determined to try the results, nor was I long kept in suspense ; the rush came, line was given, but all of no avail, for the hoped- for captive refused to be taken, and the loss of hooks and leader followed. A dozen times I made the essay, and a dozen times the results were similar. What those leviathans were, I never knew with cer- tainty, but I always strongly suspected the ravisher to be no less than a dolphin (Delphinus Tursio). To possess a big fellow I found was impossible, so I stuck to the little mackerel, and revenged upon them at breakfast the next morning, the depredations of their seniors. At Catalin Bay, where I had to serve the allotted period of imprisonment, I found the fishing even bet- ter than on the west side. When I was sent there, I should have liked to question the colonel as to the justice of his selection, but after all, the two months flitted by, and even now I look back with pleasure to the simple, small Genoese fishing-village. Perhaps by chance there is a fisherman stationed there now ; well, if so, I will put him up to the ropes. As you go 128 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. along southward from the village to visit your guards, there is a cave. Passing through it you find a port- hole, looking perpendicularly down on the Mediterra- nean. When there is an easterly wind blowing, the surf breaks beneath in grandest splendor. From this port-hole, with strong tackle and plenty of fresh sar- dines for bait, you can take more fish in the course of the day than will suffice for your whole detachment. Off Catalin Bay there is a bank, four good miles from land. Get the village fishermen to take you to it, and if fortune smiles upon you with the favor it did on me, you will cry before the night is over, " Hold, enough." The fish principally taken were a copper-colored bream,* about two or three pounds in weight, and so numerous were they, that we never thought of drawing up our lines till we had two or more victims hooked; and how do you think we knew this? Simply in this way, one fish on, you only felt a direct tug, two or more a constant vibra- tion, as if a party were squabbling over the line, and each endeavoring to take possession of it. * Called by the Spaniards "Bissengo." SPORTING REMINISCENCES. 129 SPOETIE'G REMINISCENCES. FOK some days I had had a terribly hard time of it. The ground had drunk its full — and to spare — of snow-water, game was scarce and wild, and the scanty herbage that my horse and mule were able to obtain since we entered the plains was barely sufficient to keep them alive ; still, good seventy miles more had to be traversed before I could reach the friendly shelter of the belt of timber that sur- rounded the Fork. If it had been autumn, I dare not have chosen this route, for it is a debatable ground of the Camanche and Arrapahoe, to whom a solitary white man would be so tempting a morsel that he could not fail to be caught, and we will not say what done to ; the very conjecture is disagree- able. The severity of the late weather, therefore, was my safety; for red skins, no less than white men, dislike unnecessary exposure. Still I was con- vinced some stragglers must have lately visited the neighborhood, for the occasional head of game I saw was so wary that I concluded hunters had lately 130 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. disturbed them. One thing was very much in my favor — I was in the lightest of marching order, no pack of peltries or well-stocked kit had I, for a few pounds of bullets, a pound of powder, and my buffalo robe, were all my animals had for a load. How independent a fellow feels when all his worldly goods can be summed up in so few words. To keep as much in the nags as possible, in case speed might be required, on the look-out for any thing suspicious, with cautious, slow steps, I pursued my route to the eastward. Nothing occurred to increase my watch- fulness ; in truth, I commenced to believe that I had unnecessarily alarmed myself, when, crossing a small water-course, on the edge of which was a sandy margin, plainly I saw the prints where three horses had lately passed. The forefeet of one of them was shod — a good indication. Still they might have lately been stolen from some distant white settlement, so all my previous alarm and caution were again reverted to. Half an hour afterward I heard the report of a rifle ; but, as there was a roll in the prairie between me and the direction the sound came from, I could not see who had iired the shot. In ignorance of what was to be seen beyond, it would have been niadixess to have ridden to the SPORTING REMINISCENCES. 131 top of the bluff; so, turning off to the right into irregular, broken ground, the effects of the previous year's heat, I hobbled my animals, and started cautiously to stalk my way to some high ground, from whence I might obtain a view of the surround- ing country, taking care to keep myself between the suspicious direction and my beasts. I had not traversed over 150 yards, and was halting, the better to notice the most available cover for future progress, when first the head and shoulders, then the entire figure, of a man loomed o'er the top of the swell Camanche or Arrapahoe I knew at once he was not — perhaps Osage or Pottawatomie ; but what the deuce would bring them so many hundred miles from their own hunting lands? However, as every thing in the shape of red skins is to be dealt cautiously with, I changed my caps and got into most convenient and unconspicuous shooting atti- tude, determined not to throw away a shot, or, much less, give my supposed foe a chance of return- ing the compliment. That he was alone, being dismounted, I knew could not be the case ; and as he was coming in the very direction of my fresh trail, which, if he was permitted to cross, he could not fail to discover, and, with the discovery, bring his whole 132 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. party in pursuit of me, there was but one alternative therefore for me to adopt. Last year, in this very locality, the Indians had been unusually active; scarcely a gang of emigrants or traders who had taken the -southern route but had lost members of their party ; in several instances neither sex nor age had been spared by these blood-thirsty marauders, so what could I expect if alone I fell into the hands of a party of braves on the war-path ? True, my scalp — for it has long been ignorant of a scalp-lock — would scarcely be worth lifting, but then I did not want to knock under yet ; and if so I preferred mak- ing a fight for it, as, I think, under the excitement, the process of being wiped out is less painful. By this time my stalwart apparition had approach- ed within eighty yards ; he was a noble-looking fig- ure, without the slouch of the red man when hunting, and his step was as free and independent as if he had been shooting over a private manor. A big bug he evidently was, conscious of his own divinity, still 110 eagle's feather or characteristic mark of a chief dis- tinguished him ; presently he halted, and threw his large gun across his arm, when I saw at once that he was a white man. Great was his surprise when he saw me leave my ambush ; quick as thought his rifle SPORTING REMINISCENCES. 133 was cocked and brought to the port, but I prevented him from further hostile demonstrations by a salute in mother tongue. Our meeting was strange, both took a pretty good stare, and then mutually men- tioned each other's name, for we had met before, and where ? — in no less distant a portion of the earth than in the realms of the Tycoon. A restless spirit, a crack shot, and passionately fond of field sports, the world was his demesne — and where game was abundant, there he would be found, whatever were the dangers that surrounded it, laughing at hard- ship and privation, the bitters that make the sweets of life the more enjoyable by contrast. Securing rny animals, I accompanied him to the party to which he had attached himself; they had only lately left civilization, and through his interest my equine companions got a feed of corn, to which they had long been unaccustomed ; the night passed discussing old friends, a flask of brandy, and a pack- age of kill-a-kinnick tobacco ; and when on the mor- row I shook his sterling hand at parting, before re- commencing my journey, he presented me with a couple more feeds of grain, which, without doubt, ma- terially assisted my four-footed friends in rapidly traversing the balance of the debatable ground. GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. FISHING OFF THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. WHO has tried the fishing in Simon's Bay, Cape of Good Hope ? Well, I have, and had such a take of fish as seldom do I remember falling to my lot. Those who have not visited southern Africa will please to learn that the coast is wild, irregular, and rocky ; pos- sibly as uninviting as can be imagined ; and the waves that roll in on this distant shore, are giants in stature. Outside the anchorage of Simon's Bay is a light-ship; it marks the end of a most dangerous reef, which has pounded many a hole in stout-built vessels : but this reef, though repellant to navigators, is most attrac- tive to the inhabitants of the briny deep ; and close to the light-ship, on the edge of the reef, we dropped anchor and commenced work. The bait, which certainly deserves a description, for such curious-looking shell-fish I never previously saw, was neither an oyster nor a mussel; it looked a little like both, for it had a hard external shell, and FISHING' OFF THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. 135 numbers clung together in bunches ; but oh, reader, hold your nostrils while they are opened, a description of the perfujne is almost impracticable. If you have met a pretty little animal in the American forests, called a skunk, got a good sniff of his otta not of roses, you may imagine the other, being tolerably similar, only that there was the additional flavor of decom- posed fish. But if we disliked the perfume, and made wry faces over it, the fish did not. They took it with a bolt the moment it reached the bottom. The prizes that we obtained were all rock fish, some of them of im- mense size ; in two or three hours we must have had several hundred-weight in our boat, but unfortunately it commenced to blow, and we were compelled to up anchor, and run for it. Weather on this coast is very variable, not unlike what often will be experienced in the west of Scotland. From the ship some of the seamen took a splendid fish, both for table and appearance. By the bum- boat people it was denominated the Cape salmon. As might be supposed, it had no relationship to the salmon family, but belonged, I think, to the same ge- nus as the striped bass of North America. The two are much alike, only the former is without the lateral lines possessed by the latter. This fish is well known 136 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. here, and I believe is esteemed their best for the cui- sine. A wonderful place also is Agulhas Bank for fish, but you must be becalmed to enjoy it, no pleasant circumstance when you are either in a hurry home or the reverse. A calm away down in those ocean lat- itudes does not bespeak a level deck, no, quite the reverse, the ship heaves, pitches, and rolls with the long swell. All motions are combined in her action, and the yards, masts, etc., creak and groan in the most discordant complaining manner. No, no, far sooner would I hear the blast whistling through the shrouds, ay, and so fiercely that the boatswain's whistle only played second fiddle, than listen to the complaining labors of a becalmed ship in the South- ern Indian Ocean. But about Agulhas Bank. A friend of mine, a really good and experienced fisher- man, had the luck (if such it may be called) to have a couple of days' fishing on this distant shoal. ISTow this person had fished on the Newfoundland banks, and had wondrous tales to tell, but never aught like this. His belief is that there is not a place in the world to equal it as a fishing-ground. If this be the case, is it not surprising that some tight little schooners have not yet made it their haunt ? The weather here cannot be more formidable or dangerous FISHING OFF THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. 137 to shipping than the northeast coast of America, while the traffic and consequent danger of collision is infinitely less ; moreover, there are excellent markets within as accessible distances as the vessels have that sail annually from British and French ports for the great bank of Newfoundland or the Labrador coast. 138 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. A BEAE ADVEE~TTJKE. IN following a flight of ruffed grouse, which had risen so far beyond range as to have prevented my getting a shot at them, I came across a perfect brake of wild grape-vines loaded with fruit. I could not withstand the temptation of halting for a feed, for they had been touched by frost, which changes them from the most unpalatable to the most delightfully flavored fruit. The day had been warm for the end of autumn and I suppose the fatigue of my tramp, together with the delightful shade afforded, induced me to lie down, and, as might be expected under the circumstances, I fell asleep. How long I might have been in a state of oblivion I can not say, but I was awoke by my companion, a mongrel English terrier, barking vociferously at some intruder. After a stretch, a yawn, and the usual awakening actions, I turned in the direction of Prince to see what on earth had raised his ire and disturbed my siesta, when, judge my astonishment, I beheld a large bear erect, pull- A BEAR ADVENTURE. 139 ing down the vines not twenty yards off, ignorant of my presence, but occasionally casting a furtive glance back at his angry assailant, who took precious good care to keep beyond arm's length. Men become cool in such situations, either from association or the power of controlling their feelings. My gun lay at my side loaded with number six ; if Bruin found me out and became aggressive, at close quarters, say eight or ten yards, I was prepared to risk the issue ; if he would only move off a little way, still keeping to windward I thought I might improve my opportunity by substi- tuting a brace of bullets. Under any circumstance my gun would be required, so watching the first op- portunity when the bear's back was turned, I brought my double-barrel close by my side and cocked each lock. Many may laugh when I say I did not feel nervous, but I did not, and remained watching with special pleasure the enjoyment that my foe appeared to take in crunch- ing up whole bunches of the luscious fruit. As he worked farther from me my dog became less demon- strative, only occasionally giving way to a suppressed growl, which his feelings were unable to control. First one barrel was unloaded and the heavier mis- sile substituted, then the next underwent the same operation, Bruin being now out of sight, still within 14:0 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. hearing ; but the tables were turned ; if formerly I was prepared to leave him alone, I now felt equal to acting on the aggressive. Giving Prince a little en- couragement, he again rushed to the attack, and it is wonderful with how much more ardor, knowing that his master's eye was on him. Soon I knew the dog had nipped him, for I heard a rush, and dogs will re- treat toward their masters, which brought Bruin full in view. As the distance was greater than I liked, I hesitated to fire, but the bear had seen me, and dis- liking my appearance, turned to make off, but the brave little cur was at his heels, and as I cheered him to the attack, he never lost an opportunity of pinch- ing Bruin's stern, who at length tree'd to avoid the per- secuting little pest which hung on his rear, the most desirable course for me he could have adopted. By the time I reached the spot the enemy had gained the first fork, not twenty feet overhead, and is it to be wondered at, that at such a short range, with not a twig to intervene, and with a clear view of his shoul- der, one barrel brought him to the ground with no more life in his carcass than the usual death-strug- gle ? My trophy was not large but well fed, and his hams afforded me for many a subsequent morning a bonne bouche worthy of a hunter. A BEAR ADVENTURE. 14:1 But poor little Prince got into trouble before he reached home. As I struck the margin of a river which lay in my route, I observed a large bald-headed eagle sailing about. Keeping under the shelter of some brush I waited for a chance. My right-hand bar- rel I had reloaded with heavy shot, and, as the bird passed about seventy yards off, I gave him a portion of its contents, which was responded to by his imme- diately reaching the ground with a broken wing. Prince, plucky with the issue of his late engagement, made a dash at the bird, but caught a Tartar, for he JO 7 was seized by both talons, and, but that I came to the rescue, would have been rendered useless for any oth- er purpose than baiting a wolf trap. As it was, after I had killed the bird I had some difficulty in loos- ening his claws, and I doubt if my faithful little mongrel had lived to the age of Methuselah, he ever would have been induced to tackle another easde. 142 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. FISHING IN MAINE-CHAR OR TROUT. MAINE, one of the oldest States of the many that compose the Union, is, strange to say, less densely settled, less cultivated, and probably less known, than many of those that can date their existence no further back than ten or twelve years. The causes to which this is attributable are three, viz., the severity of the winters, the indifference of the soil, and the rugged mountainous rocky surface of the landscape. But where man is scarce, there look for the wild den- izens of the forest. Here the moose, caribou, and bear are still to be found, the homes of the beaver, otter, fisher, and mink remain undisturbed, and even the dreaded panther, painter, or more correctly, puma, is not rare. Neither are fish wanting ; the country is a perfect labyrinth of lakes and rivers, which swarm with various species of the salmon genus : but sad to say, the grand, the great, Salmon FISHING IN MAINE. 143 salar, the beloved of the angler, the bonne boicche of the epicure, has almost disappeared, for unfortu- nately, on all the outlets of the rivers, there are towns, and the inhabitants have long since verified the proverb of the goose and the golden egg. "What Englishmen have done at home, so have their cousins done across the Atlantic. Englishmen and Americans, as merchants and traders, have been credited with acumen and foresight ; such credit they may have justly earned abroad; but their policy in reference to their home fisheries has been totally the reverse. Let us hope that they will at length see the error of their ways, and unanimously adopt the means that scientific men have pointed out, for remedying and counteracting their past transgressions. But let not the enthusiast run away with the idea that in Maine there are no drawbacks to pleasure, that sport is found without an alloy, for the pests of every new land here swarm, blacb-flies, mosquitoes, and sand-flies ; but fortunately their reign of terror does not exist over six weeks. The first (the black- fly), which is about the size of a small house-fly, and not dissimilar in appearance, is a perfect cannibal, re- fusing to be driven away, willingly immolating him- self in his thirst for blood, and drawing blood when- GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. ever he can obtain a footing, up your trousers, down your shirt sleeves or collar, everywhere he will get at his victim. Kill them by thousands, the pha- lanxes apparently undimmished will return to the attack; and even domestic animals do not escape. The unfortunate cow that had been driven up to supply us with milk, I have seen changed from a strawberry to a black, by the myriads of these vampires that clung to her ; and, but that we lit a large smudge* for her to stand over, I believe the poor old creature would have died under the incessant torture and irri- tation. But if the poor cow suffered, so did we, and it was only by constantly lubricating the exposed parts of our persons with oil of tar, or oil of penny- royal, that we were enabled to stand the ordeal. Fortunately, the black fly is hungry during day- light only ; like a respectable citizen, he early goes to rest, and equally early recommences business. Next come the mosquitoes ; I have found the same gentry troublesome in the Mediterranean, bad on the Malay Peninsula, worse in the paddy fields of China, but all these lack the 'cuteness and insolence of their * Decayed damp wood, which burns slowly and emits a great quantity of smoke. FISHING IK MAINE. 145 Yankee cousins. If your hand is bare for a moment a dozen will be on it ; when up to your knees in a pool, and fast in a big fish, both hands consequently employed, your face and the back of your neck will begin to itch — to burn — as if scalding water had been poured over them. Nor were the sand-flies deserving of better character, for though so small that you can scarcely perceive them, their powers of an- noyance are tremendous.* Thank Providence that none of these wretches are made as big as the ferce na- turce, or else genus homo must soon become extinct. I will here tell a little circumstance that befell the wri- ter : he and two acquaintances were fishing under a fall ; fish were abundant, but space, on account of the trees, too limited for so many rods, so down the stream he started, and forgot, in his desire to beat the others in results, the odious preparation of oil of tar. After half an hour's scrambling through brush and climbing over rocks, he at length reached such a lovely pool. The first cast showed it to be alive with fish, and they in the proper way of thinking. Soon the gravel mar- gin had over a dozen beauties glittering in all their glorious coloring, but the sun was near the horizon, * Called by the Indians "No-see urns," from their minuteness. 7* 146 GUST, BOD, AND SADDLE. and the attendant warned the angler that time was up. On joining his friends, long and vociferous were their peals of laughter whenever they looked at him. What the deuce was up ? On arrival at the shanty all was explained. The black flies had attacked him when so immersed in his sport, that they had been unnoticed, or brushed off, making his countenance the most extraordinary-looking mess of blood and bruised flies imaginable ; but if he did not then feel the pain, you may bet he did that night when warm in bed. Knowing that such torments exist, why did the wri- ter go there ? is naturally asked, and as simply an- swered, for before he started he was assured that not even a mosquito was to be found in Maine. After- ward it was discovered that the visit of his informant had been paid to this Ultima Thule late in autumn. A dozen times conclusions were come to of sloping (not for Texas) in the morning ; but the attractions were so great that the entire summer, even on to the end of October, was got through, the last two or three months so delightfully, that the self-sacrifice endured in June and July was more than compensated for; and never can be forgotten the beautiful weather, glorious sport, and free independent life enjoyed. The State of Maine being of considerably larger proportions FISHING IN MAINE. 14:7 than England and Scotland together, it is desirable that the particular locality should be mentioned. Seventy miles from the thriving sea-port of Portland, along the Grand Trunk line of railroad will be found on the map the picturesque, clean, flourishing village of Bethel ; twenty-seven miles north from it Lake Um- bagog. Here you have the last settlement, and by following up the Androscoggin River, which enters the top of the last-mentioned lake, you get into a per- fect labyrinth of lakes and ponds, united together by brawling streams, only navigable by the lumber- man's flat or Indian's birch-bark. On all sides precip- itous mountains rise, covered with pine-trees where there is a possibility of their clinging, or immense bowlders, to all appearance ready to roll from their resting-place into the waters beneath. And here in this vast solitude, free from cares, we made our home, fishing or hunting by day, and sleeping such sleep upon piles of hemlock as seldom is enjoyed on feather beds (that is at the end of the fly season) ; for though the bears might growl around, the gray wolf give us a proof of his vocal powers, or the weird note of the loon come shrilly over the waters, still all formed but a lullaby to make us rest the better. In fishing the rivers of all the wild lands of the 148 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. extreme northern portion of the United States and the Dominion for trout or salmon, little or no sport will be experienced by the angler until the snow-water has run off; in fact I do not believe the latter fish will enter a river that has not got rid of that addi- tion. We got to our fishing-ground just at the de- sired time ; a guide we consulted said we were too soon. It being better to be early than late, we pushed at once for our first halting-place, and the result was that we hit things so nicely that we struck the opening day. For about two or three weeks the take was very great, and the variety of coloring among our prizes something wonderful. A collect- ing naturalist, a pupil of the celebrated professor of natural history at Harvard College, Cambridge, Mas- sachusetts, joined our party a few days after our arrival, and all these various colored fish were desig- nated by him as Salmo fontinalis. To so great an authority I did not presume to differ, still when he informed me that the Salmo fontinalis of American waters was identical with our home brook-trout I thought that the lively, game little beauty of our mountain streams had wonderfully changed in color and appearance from his trans- Atlantic brother, or vice versd. As the weather began to get warmer FISHING IN MAINE. 149 the more brilliant-colored specimens became scarcer, and ultimately ceased to be taken in the river. This circumstance induced me further to think that there was some difference either in habits or choice of haunts which their more plain clothed relatives did not affect, and that at least there were different varie- ties, if not species, among the inhabitants of this stream; and the more I think the subject over now the more thoroughly io I feel convinced that the name of Salmo fontinalis has been frequently applied to what is, in reality, our red-bellied char. Memory is often not to be depended upon, but with the assistance of a few notes (the lapse of time not being more than three years), I will endeavor to tell the differences that I most particularly observed. In outline of shape what I suppose to be the red-bellied char much resembled a well-fed trout, except that the first dorsal fin is nearer the head, the caudal fin has a wider spread at its termination, and the junc- tion of their caudal fin with the body is more tapered away. In coloring the back was of a deep mackerel green, interwoven with irregular darker waving lines, while the belly was as brilliant as burnished copper. Above, where the green of the back and red of the stomach ran into each other, there were 150 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. three lateral lines of large brilliant red spots, inter- spersed with minor straw-colored ones, and in some specimens the anal and pectoral fins had the first two or three spines black. Altogether in shape and coloring a more game-looking, beautiful fish can not be imagined ; moreover, their table qualities sur- passed in delicacy of flavor any fish I have ever eaten, for the bright red flesh had a delicate nutty flavor indescribable, and, I fear, scarcely imaginable. Our guide, who was also cook and master of camp, used to fry in cream the smaller ones, and I doubt if ever prince or epicure had a dish placed before him more worthy of his palate. But having given what I know to be, more particu- larly to the naturalist, a far from perfect description of this handsome fish's peculiarities, its habits, as dif- fering from the trout I have known, may have inter- est. With the artificial fly they were not so readily taken as with minnow or worm. When hooked I never knew them to spring from the water, and the quiet reach of the pool was invariably a more cer- tain find than the brawling neck. After sunset I never could succeed in capturing them, and the best hours in the day were from sunrise till it commenced to get warm, and the two hours preceding sunset. FISHING IN MAINE. 151 After these fish had disappeared from the river, I dis- covered that they could be taken in the deep waters in the lakes, either with minnow or natural fly, the bait being sunk close to the bottom ; and the places where I was generally most successful in this fish- ing was where, our guide affirmed, were situated the springs that partially fed these lakes ; his reason for this statement being that this portion of the lake al- ways remained open in winter, while the balance every year froze up. Again, after these fish had deserted the river I had some admirable sport with them by going to the top of the lake and coming down on the annual lum- ber raft. I was put up to this by the guide, he for years had followed lumbering, and the rafts as they floated down, he assured me, were always followed by swarms of trout. His information was correct as to the numbers of fish, but instead of the trout of the river, I found my beautiful-brilliant colored friend. This habit is peculiar, to say the least of it, and untrout-like, and I could only account for it in two ways, viz., either the shade afforded by these immense logs formed the attraction, or the con- stant immersion of the timber in the water caused the insect denizens of the bark to be drowned out of 152 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. their retreats, and dropping off in the water furnished these fish with a favorite food. Summer drifted past, and with it disappeared the incessant persecuting flies. Autumn, with all that brilliant coloring so remarkable in America, made its appearance, and the oppressive heat gave way to the most desirable temperature. An English au- tumn to me is always sad, an American autumn is quite the reverse ; the hues and colors of the for- mer are somber, in those of the latter brilliancy unsurpassable predominates. An 'American autumn once seen makes as lasting an impression on the memory of matureage, as the gorgeous fairy scene of the pantomime when first beheld upon that of youth. For some time none of the bright-hued fish had been taken, and I much feared that my acquaintance with them for that year had ter- minated; but not so, a few sharp nights of frost took place, and going one morning to obtain suf- ficient fish for breakfast, in the run that formed the exit of the river from the lake, I with pleasure, in succession, captured several of the beauties. From that day forward they became more numerous, and the last morning's fishing which I here enjoyed, with the snow flying so thick that I could scarcely see my FISHING IN MAINE. 153 flies, I killed not only the greatest number, but the heaviest of the brilliant representatives I had captured during the season. With regret, having no desire to pass almost an arctic winter, I turned my back upon the three lonely, lovely lakes, with the following un- pronounceable Indian names, Molleychunkeymunk, Mooseluckmaguntic, and Moligewalk, to seek the boundless prairies of the far West, and to substitute for constant companion, my double barrel, in place of my well-tried tapering fly-rod. In my experience as a fisherman in Scotland and Ireland, I never knew of our river trout being cap- tured in the sea. In Long Island, what is there called the brook trout (Salmo fontinalis) is well known periodically, when practicable, to visit salt water; in fact they are constantly taken with the fly in the tidal portion of those streams. The char of Norway and Sweden does the same, and I can only say that both these fish are wondrously alike. On the other hand, the brilliant-colored inhabitants of the interior lakes of Maine, that I have mentioned, can not do so, for if they survived the descent of the Burling falls, their ascent would be impossible. Although the arctic char goes to the sea, the more resplendent colored relation remains, I think, con- 154: GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. stantly in his fresh-water retreats — id est, supposing this is a char. To me it would be particularly in- teresting to know if my surmises as to the proper species of this beautiful fish are correct ; and doubt- less there are numbers of English fishermen whose o verdict, even from my imperfect description, would set at rest a point important both to naturalist and sportsman. * - * Since the above was written specimens have been forwarded to Mr. Frank Buckland from America, and the surmises of the author are found to be correct. ANIMAL LTFK. 155 ANIMAL LIFE. " There is a pleasure in the pathless wood, There is a rapture on the lonely shore. " UNDOUBTEDLY every one who loves nature has felt the truth of the above assertions, but is not this pleasure, this rapture increased by the addition of animal life, whether it be the occasional glimpse of the timid hare, the momentary glance of the graceful playful squirrel, the sea-birds dipping o'er the count- less waves, or the fish-hawk hunting for his prey? Yes, there is society, where man does not intrude, and that society the most enchanting, that of the beautiful wild animals, rejoicing in their freedom, happy in their liberty, knowing no fear, dreading no intrusion. For hours in the far western forests of America I have stood, scarcely daring to breathe for fear I should disturb some family party, ay, although I knew full well that but for a successful shot, sup- perless I should have to sleep ; yet who that could for a moment think, would wantonly destroy a mem- 156 ber of the little coterie ; disturb their innocent gam- bols, their playful, graceful tricks. Were they but for a moment aware of man's dreaded presence, all would precipitantly make a hurried and fearful re- treat. The true lover of nature loves not alone the landscape, but loves those numerous additions, fasci- nating and inexpressible, without which, the effect of the grand foreground, the beautiful intermediate, and the soft subdued distance, would be materially diminished. In the northern portion of the State of Maine, the scenery is truly sublime ; mountain after mountain rises, as if each strove to overtop the other. Giant pine-trees cling from precipice and crag, hang- ing as if suspended in the air, bowlders and rocks of all fantastic outlines, far, far above threaten instant de- struction to all underneath ; brawling streams, grandly impetuous, leap and throw themselves from rock to rock, while every now and then glimpses of glassy surfaced lakes, embosomed in wood, form a lovely dis- tance. But this country, lovely as it is, is almost destitute of animal life ; no songster greeted my ear with his melody ; no startled deer bounded across my path, so that an intense solitude that became painful prevented the enjoyment that might have been anticipated. But if grand natural scenery, ne'er des- ANIMAL LIFE. 157 ecrated by the hand of man, wants animal life to set it off to the greatest perfection, how much more do our tame artificial grounds and waters require this adjunct ? Few of our citizens can, when they choose, fly away into the highlands, the lake district, or the wilds of of Connemara, but have to be satisfied with the artificial and formal beauties which our numerous public and private pleasure-grounds afford; but would not the enjoyment of those resorts be greatly enhanced if more animal life was added to the pic- ture ? In the city of Philadelphia a public park is tenanted by great numbers of squirrels, of different varieties, whose tameness, merry antics, and spright- liness cause them to be the admiration of all visitors. Could not squirrels be introduced here ? not our common red variety, but the handsome black, gray, or ground squirrel of the American continent. What a suitable place would Kensington be for such inmates, and what a fund of amusement they would afford to the juveniles that in such numbers frequent it ! There are also several beautiful varieties of water-fowl, whose advent would, I am certain, be welcomed, such as the wood-duck, sprig-tail duck, loon, sheldrake, summer and black duck ; all of these species are ex- 158 GHJN, ROD, AND SADDLE. ceedingly hardy, and the Serpentine and numerous other artificial waters are equally adapted to them. Further, while on the subject aquatic, I am informed that there are fish in the majority of these miniature lakes, but they must be of a very base order, grovel- ers in mud, so much afraid to show their ugly car- casses that the human eye is never greeted with their presence ; of course in comparatively speaking stag- nant water, the river or brook trout would not flour- ish, the lake trout might, although I doubt it, there being an insufficiency of depth without cool springs at the bottom to prevent the water in summer be- coming heated, and a cold retreat is absolutely ne- cessary for their health. However, there is a fish across the Atlantic, equal to either of the two men- tioned, gamer for his size and a much bolder feeder, viz., the black bass, which is a frequenter of both running and still water, clear or muddy, an admira- ble table adjunct, and almost unmatchable in the eyes of the sportsman for pluck and gameness, taking in- discriminately the artificial fly or trolling bait, spring- ing from the water when hooked, and refusing to be landed till after a long, fierce, and protracted strug- gle. I have killed a very great number of trout, and also black bass, and although it was a long time before ANIMAL LIFE. 159 I could believe that any thing of the size could equal the former, I have for some time been compelled un- equivocally to give the palm to the latter. Now if we had this fish in the Serpentine, the water would not remain without a ripple; his presence would soon become known by his rising at the flies and other- wise disporting himself upon the surface. Who that has stood at sunset by the brink of some calm river, or the margin of some unrippled loch, say in the high- lands, where trout are abundant, has not been de- lighted to watch the eager fish rising after their prey, and inwardly made notes of the size of each, from the amount of broken water displaced ? When we have suitable homes to offer, do by all means let us Jiave lots of animals; much room for thought is afforded by their habits, much pleasure from their innocent pastimes, and the influence engendered by association with them is certainly most beneficial. ICO GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. STKANGE FISHES. WHEX returning from shooting pinnated grouse in the State of Illinois, I came upon a party of farmers who were netting a pond on the edge of the timber land. This sheet of water was about two-thirds of a mile long, with an average breadth of one hundred and fifty yards. The bottom was composed of mud, ex- cept the southern end, where it was gravel. Only when very high floods occurred in. the Wabash River, was there outlet or inlet to this piece of water ; still, I knew it was well stocked with fish, for on a previous evening, as I stood on its margin as the sun went down, waiting for wild duck, I had seen the surface in por- tions broken into spray with the fishes' numerous pas- times, or energetic pursuit of their prey. With curios- ity I stopped to see the result of the first haul, and well was my patience rewarded, for what food for study was in the results ! First and foremost, from the size and peculiarity of formation, I will mention what the fisherman designated a "spoonbill catfish" — a name STRANGE FISHES. 161 without doubt given by some one who knew as little about genus and species as a cow does about a watch- pocket. This curious fish was beautifully shapecl,with all those perfections that characterize the salmon fam- ily, but projecting from his head was a muscular con- tinuation about sixteen inches long, and six broad in the center, not unlike the blade of a canoe-paddle. This spoonbill was entirely separated from and pro- jecting over and independent of the mouth, the lower jaw being in its ordinary place ; nor was the mouth large. As nature forms nothing without purpose, of what use was this projection ? My own idea is that it was a feeler, used in poking about through the weeds, decayed vegetation, and mud : and by its sen- sitiveness the fish was enabled to find his food. On handling this rara piscis, I found that the slightest pressure on this attachment appeared to produce in- tense pain. The skin was entirely free from scales from the tail to the termination of the projection, and was very smooth and soft, not at all dissimilar to that of an eel. For a trifle I secured the prize, as I was as- sured he was an excellent table addition, and my in- formants were perfectly correct. I afterward cut Hip the proboscis to satisfy my curiosity, and found it entirely composed of gristle, the surface underneath 162 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. the skin being a labyrinth of veins. Afterward I saw, at different times, many of this curious family, thus proving that they are in no way rare; still, I have never seen them mentioned by naturalists. Probably it is exclusively confined to inland Ameri- can waters. Further, I would say, the vitality was remarkable, for after transporting it home it lived for over an hour. The weight of the entire fish was probably about sixteen pounds. The next attraction noticed was what is familiarly known in that vicin- ity as " the pond fish." In color it much resembles the beautiful black bass, in shape slender but grace- ful ; the placement of the fins is the same as in the pike family, but the head is small and not unlike that of a trout. It is a greedy feeder, and from its being uneatable (the flesh being hard and rank) is considered a great bore by the fishermen. Their average weight is from two to four pounds. Still another variety with which I had been previously unacquainted was taken, viz., " the great western carp " there called "the buffalo fish." It is frequently captured of enor- mous size — several I have seen over twenty pounds. They are much and deservedly esteemed, and are tak- en in immense numbers in the spring of the year by* spearing ; for as soon as a flood takes place, when the STRANGE FISHES. 163 water is rising, they rush out over all the inundated lands, wherever there is sufficient depth for them to swim. For more than an hour one day I watched a lad, spear in hand, who had taken his post over an opening which passed under the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad, made similar to a sluice for the purpose of preventing the water in time of floods becoming dammed. During my stay this youngster must have killed a couple of hundred- weight. You must not im- agine that these were all that were in the net. Sun- fish, pike, pickerel, black bass, catfish, mullet, and tur- tle to a wagon-load rewarded the fishermen's efforts. In the end of the bag, I was about to place my hand upon what I considered a rare prize, when I was stop- ped by the rough intervention of one of the people, and the exclamation of, " You don't want to die before your time ? If he bite you, all the whisky in the coun- ty won't save you." (Whisky is considered an infal- lible cure for snake bites.) This nondescript to be avoided was like Siebold's salamander, with four of the smallest and most awkward-looking legs; the brute was about fourteen inches long, and was there known as a water-dog. It frequently takes the fisher- man's bait, who prefers to cut his line and lose the hook to becoming on any more intimate terms. 164 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. BUCK-SHOT. FOR many a day I puzzled myself to account for the uncertainty of the patterns frequently made with buck-shot, from the same barrels, with the same qual- ity and quantity of powder ; at one discharge at long range, say eighty yards, every pellet would enter a disk of five feet in diameter ; at the next discharge, for no obvious reason that I could learn, they would be scattered over the extent of a coach-house door ; through the first pattern it would be impossible for a deer to pass scatheless ; through the second the proba- bilities were all in his favor. However, after much time, I think not wasted, I believe I have hit on a method by which the wan- dering inclinations of buck-shot can be curtailed and reduced to considerable subservience. For instance, we will suppose a ten-bore gun (the size I invariably used abroad) be taken; procure buck-shot of such a size that the barrel will exactly chamber four, that is, that four will fit in the barrel without using force, BUCK-SHOT. 165 for if force be used their regularity of shape will be injured, and their flight will become erratic. Having thus learned the desired size of shot, make a cartridge of tolerably thick paper, carefully place your shot in layers of four each ; with some grease reduced to a liquid consistency from heat, fill up the vacancies between each layer, and as the grease cools and be- comes solid, place in each layer, till the cartridge contains sixteen pellets, when finish your cartridge by inserting a thin, hard wad, turn down the surplus paper over it, and fix with a drop of glue. Since adopting the above method, I have frequently killed wild duck returning of an evening from deer shooting, at ranges far beyond the reach of ordinary drop-shot ; at the same time I would not wish a sports- man to imagine that I would purposely load with this cartridge for duck shooting ; but that I made use of them, as my gun happened at the time to be thus loaded. I am no advocate for long barrels, twenty-six inches being the length of the hardest-shooting shot- guns, for ordinary shot, I have known. But I have observed that long barrels invariably throw buck-shot the best ; possibly the reason is that the missiles are then the less inclined to scatter, or that the friction with such large grain being less, the impetus does 166 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. not meet the resistance presented by the smaller and more compact fitting grains. An American gentleman who for some months frequently shot with me, had a ten-bore gun thirty-six inches in the barrels, made, I think, by a gunmaker named Abbey, of Chicago, and weighing very nearly nine pounds. Such a cannon would soon have worn me out, but my friend was big all over and strong as an ox, and on the lon- gest and hardest days, whether shooting snipe, duck, pinnated grouse, or deer, never appeared to suffer from its weight. Well this gun was an extraordinary performer with buck-shot ; on one occasion I saw him kill a brace of deer right and left so far off that I hesitate to say the distance, knowing how skeptical many are on the subject of long shots. THE AMEKICAN TKOTTING-HOKSE. 167 THE AMEEICAW TEOTTING HOESE-HIS OEIGIN. THEKE is no nation on the face of the earth so thoroughly embued with a love of the genus JEquus as we are ; and knowing this to be the case, I trust I may be pardoned in advancing a theory which I be- lieve not to be a fallacy, in reference to the origin of the American trotting-horse, and from what source they inherit that specialty, entitling them to be ac- knowledged the fastest animals in the world in that peculiar pace. But in case some readers are inclin- ed to disallow this superiority, and dispute the point, that American horses are faster trotters than ours, permit me to state that across the Atlantic I have seen many nags that could perform their mile in har- ness in less than two minutes and a half, and three that have trotted the same distance in less than two minutes and twenty seconds; moreover they have the most enduring qualities, as can be attested by several having performed their twenty miles within 16S GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. the hour ; and that, after much investigation, I have been unable to find a single instance recorded of any tiling like similiar rates of speed having been made by any of our home-bred animals. However, it would be better to state before going further, that there are plenty of thorough-bred horses in America; but it must be remembered that they are all sprung from stock imported from this country, and that they are totally distinct from the family of trotters, although of late years the appearance of the latter has been much improved by judicious crossing the two, — in fact, so much so, that some of the late crack trotters have quite a racy look, one in particular, Lady Thorne, who, if her appearance does not speak falsely, would make no contemptible figure on the turf or across country ; yet from all my experience and inquiries I have been unable to hear of a trotting debutante of pure breeding, nor do I believe such exists. Some Americans I have heard avow that it was the result of training, and that Englishmen did not under- stand the art of teaching ahorse how to make such use of his legs, so as to obtain the greatest amount of trotting speed ; and that they felt confident, that had they but the opportunity, they could select out of our pastures numerous youngsters, who, in course THE AMERICAN TKOTTING-HOKSE. 169 of time, would be made successfully to rival the perfor- mances of any of the prodigies who annually exhibit on the various trotting courses in the United States. To this supposition I beg to disagree, for I am con- vinced if such rara aves existed, their excellence would as certainly be developed in an English break- er's hands, as under the tutelage of a representative of any other nationality. At the same time it is true that trotting is not paid so much attention to, or near- ly so popular among us, as upon the Western Conti- nent, where it may almost be designated the national amusement ; but what person of means here would not be desirous of possessing a horse that could outpace all others on the road, assist him to catch a train or post, transport him in the shortest time to distant meets, bring him home at railway speed after a hard day's shooting, or when thoroughly drenched, tired, and exhausted, with a long day's hunting in a heavy country, land him at his hall door in half the accustomed time ? Doubtless all would like such a useful hack, and doubtless such an animal would sell at a fabulous price ; hence the inducement, if we had the raw material, to bring it to perfection. But have we the material? I say not, but be- lieve our horses and the American (not alluding to 8 170 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. the thorough-bred, who are much in the minority in numbers) owe their origin to different sources, that trotting is a national characteristic of the one, gal- loping or cantering of the other, and the more I have seen of the two races the more thoroughly am I convinced that such is the case. In Kentucky, when visiting the farm of an extensive breeder, and who has bred and owned some of the most celebra- ted race and trotting horses in that State, I inspected both his droves of young ones, the race-horses and the trotters (for both families are kept separate and distinct), and was very much struck with the marked difference in their appearance ; the latter being heavy chested, large limbed, small headed with tapering muzzle, while the tail was generally set on very low. However, if they differed in appearance, in man- ner and habit they were more essentially unlike: when you alarmed the thorough-bred s, off they went at a swinging gallop; if the trotters, their favorite pace would be chosen, and in few instances, how- ever much you might coerce them to increase their speed, could they be induced to break, and it must be borne in mind that the majority had not yet passed into the breaker's hands, so that their action was natural. THE AMERICAN TliOTTING-HOKSE. 171 Again, I purchased a horse in Illinois, the produce of a very good trotting-mare. Up to the date of my owning him he had never been in harness. After a few trials he showed a very great turn of speed, and in a month or two was a very fast trotter ; and so much did he prefer this gait, that no amount of punishment would cause him to break. Now, in this animal's education I did not use other means than those I have always practiced at home ; still, I never previously had a hack that could drag a conveyance at the same velocity. To whom was the credit due, the horse or driver ? Doubtless the reader will agree with me. In temper and disposition a great dissimilarity is also apparent, for, as a rule, the American horse is very free from vice (kicking and biting being rarely found), sluggish, patient, and subservient, not unfre- quently without a certain amount of mulishness in look and manner ; in fact, one of the most celebrated trotting stallions (the sire of Dexter, who has made the best time in harness on record, and many others almost as good), is the most wonderful likeness to that useful cross, viz., between the horse and ass, and thoroughly dissimilar to any of his race that I have seen in England ; however, he must not be taken as 172 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. a representative of all, for few handsomer harness- horses can be found than Patchen, Jun., Butler, and George Wilkes, all three of whom have reaped hon- ors which will long render their names famous among the patrons of the American trotting turf. Having stated my belief that the transatlantic trotter has a different origin from our home stock, it behooves me now to endeavor to point out the source from whence he came, and thus in part ac- count for the marked difference which characterizes him. The horse is not a native of America. If we may believe historians, on the discovery of the American Continent, no such animal existed there ; the distant prairies and western slopes, which are now traversed by innumerable droves of wild horses, were then entirely without this genus. But whence are they sprung ? How are these innumerable herds which are now found there to be accounted for ? In the following manner : — The Spaniards were the first people to attempt any important conquests on the American Continent. The first horses that were landed in that country were the chargers of the mil- itary force under the command of Cortez. The natives who at first received the foreign invaders with the strongest demonstrations of welcome were THE AMERICAN TROTTING-HORSE. 173 overwhelmed with wonder, and awe-stricken when they beheld the strangers mounted on animals dis- similar to any they had previously seen. Nor were the Spaniards slow to avail themselves of this ad- vantage, and in the numerous re-enforcements con- stantly forwarded, cavalry formed a large portion ; familiarity between the natives and the dreaded ani- mals soon reduced their fears, and as a natural con- sequence in many of the engagements that took place, the rider being slain the charger was cast upon his own resources and became free. Again, upon the line of march, doubtless many a foot-sore and exhausted animal was left to perish, but liberty and rest imbued him with fresh spirit, and the for- saken, broken-down steed, with abundant pasture, abundant water, perfect idleness, and self-control, soon became thoroughly resuscitated. Further, we learn that on one of the repulses which the Spaniards were subjected to, in their hurry to save their lives, they turned their horses loose, and took to their ship ; and still again, when De Soto discovered the upper waters of the Mississippi, he turned all the expedi- tion's horses free, as he had determined to continue his researches through that then terra incognita^ on the bosom of the mighty father of waters. From 174: GUJSTj KOD, AND SADDLE. these horses introduced by the Spaniards, introduced by De Soto, are doubtless sprung the countless teams that the traveler may daily see over the unpeopled plains of northern Texas and northern Mexico. The Spaniards then brought the first horses to Amer- ica, from whence did they obtain them? N"one could be got nearer than Europe, none more conveni- ently than in their own country ; we have, therefore, every right to conclude that the horses were from Spain, probably from the southern portion of it, as horses are more numerous there, and the inhabitants more partial to horsemanship. Who, that has trav- eled in Spain, if his eyes have been employed to take observation of more than the sierras and senoritas, can have failed to observe that the native horse is very unlike (in many respects) the English or French species, and that this dissimilarity increases the farther you go south ; but it is in this very dis- similarity that the descendants across the Atlantic differ from our home breed. Moreover, in Spain I have observed among their nags, a great deal of what is termed in America " knee-action," a peculiar method of raising and placing the foot down, which is con- sidered a necessary by the connoisseur in selecting an embryo trotter. The Spaniards like this action, THE AMERICAN TKOTTrN"G-HOKSE. 175 they think it showy, and cultivate it in their saddle- horses, but for the purpose of display, they being too indolent or ignorant to turn it to better account. Further, the roads are generally villainous through- out the land, and veiy unsuitable for quick driving, in fact some of the most wealthy and aristocratic Spaniards, even at the present day, always use mules in their carriages. The Spanish horse doubtlessly has a very large proportion of Barb blood in his veins, more espe- cially those of the southern portion ; this may be ac- counted for by the shortness of the sea passage which in the neighborhood of Gibraltar, in suitable weather, even before the days of steam, could be made in three or four hours; but the influx of Barbs into Spain, which must have been great, I do not attrib- ute so much to accidental importation of individuals, as to the numbers which must doubtlessly have been taken there during the Moorish ascendency, for the purposes of war, more especially as the Moors at that period were famous as cavalry, and relied prin- cipally on this arm of the service for carrying out successfully their predatory system of warfare. The Moorish horse also has very frequently this knee-action, previously mentioned in the Spaniard. 176 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. I was particularly struck with it in some colts in the neighborhood of Tangiers, and more especially in a horse, the property of one of the consuls. Out of the numerous importations which come to Gibraltar, I have seen several who could trot very well, and if pains had been taken, might have been made fast, not perhaps so fast as the American ; but then it must be remembered that he (the latter) is a larger animal, of greater muscular development, which he doubt- lessly owes to superior climate, intermixture of Eng- lish blood, and the cultivating of this pace through successive generations. In proof that the Barb can be made a trotter, it may not be irrelevant to mention that, when in Malta, I possessed a Tunisian horse as a hack. I ran him in one or two of the scratch races that fre- quently take place on the road to Sliema : however, he acquitted himself so badly that he, and I fear his owner, became quite a laughing-stock. Now, al- though this horse could not gallop, he could trot ; and often surprised me with his spurts of speed when pushed. After mess one evening, a staff offi- cer, who was my guest, kept chaffing me on what he was pleased to call my dromedary. To put a termi- nation to his nonsense, I offered to back myself to THE AMERICAN TROTTING-HOKSE. 377 trot him to Sliema and back, from the St. Frances gate, in less than thirty-five minutes. The perform- ance was accomplished, and very much under time ; nor in the return did I push my nag, as I found 1 had the race in my hands. Now this Barb, if he had been in the possession of a person who would permit him no other gait, would doubtless have be- come a fast trotter. Although a great many years may have passed since any direct importation of horses from Spain to America took place> still the resemblance between the two breeds remains most striking. The cele- brated sire, known as Rydsich's Hamiltonian, whom I have alluded to before, as the father of the present champion of the transatlantic trotting turf, is un- like any horse I have ever seen in England, but is a perfect counterpart of many animals I have seen in Spain and Morocco, except that the American has the advantage in height and substance. Few of us have not seen pictures of the celebrated horse, famil- iarly known as the Godolphin Arab. Now, this horse was doubtlessly a Barb, his appearance at once tells it, if we can place reliance on the correct- ness of his portraits ; and even could we not, the majority of authorities who have written on horse- 8* 178 flesh, pronounce him to be so. In America I showed a picture of this animal (if I remember correctly, drawn by Stubbs) to a well-knownjbreeder and pos- sessor of trotting stock, and he assured me that it was a most perfect portrait of the sire of several trotting celebrities, and very like many others he had seen. I have further observed that a great number of American horses were addicted to those most un- gainly modes of progression called racking and pa- cing, a gait that is very seldom seen in England, while in Spain and Morocco it is extremely common. In fact, the Spaniards highly approve of it, believing that it shows both horse and rider to the greatest perfection ; nor is the American behind him in this taste, a good pacing hack being deemed by all as the most desirable animal for saddle purposes. Hav- ing shown, I think, conclusively, the similarity in appearance and proclivities between the American and the Barb, and further, how I account for the im- portation of the preponderance of Moorish blood in the Western Continent, I will endeavor to show the difference between the Barb and Arab, how our En- glish stock, with few exceptions, takes after the lat- ter, and that it is from this diiference of parentage we THE AMERICAN TEOTTINQ-HORSE. 179 may attribute the superior speed in trotting of the American horse over our home-bred animals. During an experience in the East that extended over three years, where I had the fortune to see every variety of Arab, from the pure-bred Medjid to the Persian, I never knew one that was a good trotter or was gifted with knee-action; their paces are principally walking, galloping, and cantering, their movements being too close to the ground to excel in the trot. NOY can this be accounted for otherwise than from the great difference in the characteristics of the surface of the ground in Arabia and in Bar- bary, and that Nature with her wonderful forethought has adapted the gait of both races to the different surfaces over which they have to travel. If we are correctly informed, the districts of Asia, where the pure caste Arab is reared, is undulating, very sandy, and sparsely covered with vegetation; where the colt or mare can, without any fear of danger of inter- ruption, lay well down to a gallop. But, on the other hand, Barbary is rough, rocky, and mountain- ous, intersected with ravines, and in many portions thickly covered with shrubs. On such grounds it would be impossible for a horse to gallop with safety, the velocity of his movements would certainly cause 180 GUN, KOI), AND SADDLE. him to come to grief, and the better to avoid this he trots, his legs being all under him, enabling hirn to halt or turn to one side or other with the greatest fa- cility. Further, by raising his legs so high in this pace he saves his hoofs from coming in contact with stones and brush, at the same time giving him a bet- ter choice of where he will replace his feet. Adopt- ing this action through numerous generations has developed those muscles wrhich are more strongly brought into play, causing a change of shape; so that if the horses of Arabia and Barbary have a common origin, their difference of appearance can in some measure be accounted for. So far I have been alluding to horses as trotters, that is to animals of such a height as would entitle them to that appellation. For a few moments I will take a glance at their more diminutive brethren, the ponies. Who in our metropolis has not been surprised to see/ how they trot, it may be under the weight of a patrician youngster or fat butcher-boy, in my lady's phaeton, or a grocer's delivery-cart ? Still they get over the ground at an amazing pace for such small quadrupeds, and much faster in proportion to their size and length of limb than their larger brethren. If we take up a sporting paper and see any trotting THE AMERICAN TROTTING-HORSE. 181 events narrated or predicted, it is invariably ponies that are going to figure, and wonderfully good time the little ones make, exhibiting speed, stoutness, and endurance that is truly wonderful, But where do the most of our ponies come from? Devonshire, Wales, Shetland, Orkney Islands, Connemara, the wilds of Donegal and Antrim. Now on the coast of each place mentioned, portions of the Spanish Armada were wrecked ; a large force of cavalry doubtlessly formed a part of that fortunately ill-fated expedition, and is it not more than probable that many horses reached the shore ? If so, these ponies have Spanish blood, and by that link are connected with the Barb, their present diminutive size being the result of severe climate, exposure, scarcity of food, and possibly want of housing in winter. The wild horse of America has also become smaller than his ancestors, but not to so great an extent, from his range lying many degrees of latitude nearer the equator. Further, all the above-mentioned places celebrated for ponies are rough, irregular, and rocky in their surface. Those who may be disinclined to acknowl- edge the Spanish origin or connection of our ponies may be disposed to think their trotting action is induced from the pamo reason that I attribute to the 182 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE, Barbs, viz., Nature adapting them to a pace which is most suited to the surface over which they have to travel. Now this can not be said for the American horse ; the ground there is not stony and irregular, in those portions where wild horses principally abounded — the magnificent flat savannas or undulating prairies on either side of the Mississippi ; so that it may be safely inferred that trotting in the American horse has not been the adopting of a pace better suited to his present home, but the retaining of a peculiarity inherent in his ancestors. This is a further proof of the con- nection existing between the transatlantic horse and the Barb, also an additional inducement for us to believe that our ponies have probably a large propor- tion of Spanish blood in their veins, and that from that source they obtain their excellence as trotters. I am aware that for some time great efforts have been made, more particularly at Exmoor, for the improve- ment of the original stamp of pony by the introduction of undersized Arab stallions. Success has been the result, and you frequently see ponies that are model race-horses, but, as a rule, the trotting proclivity does not exhibit itself in the beauties, but in the rough, shaggy, hardy, original breed, which not unfrequently THE AMERICAN TKOTTHSTG-HOKSE. 183 more resemble mules, cart-horses, or even Newfound- land dogs. In Australia, where racing has long been the favo- rite amusement, and where great attention has been paid to breeding, the proof of which is the excellent time made on their courses, fairly rivaling the best we have on record, I never heard but of one nag that had gained a great reputation as a trotter. Now in this colony a great number of Americans reside, and they, doubtless to gratify their favorite taste if they could have found the material, would have had some steppers whose reputation would have reached the parent country. Now it is a well-known fact that the horse is not indigenous to Australia, but that it was introduced from England, India, and the Cape — all three so far from Barbary and Spain that it is ex- tremely improbable that a native of the last-named countries ever set foot upon her soil. In Australia there have been no remarkable trotters. To Australia I doubt if there has been any direct importation of the Barb. Englishmen have long acknowledged the excellence of their throuo'h-breds to be attributed to o the Arab cross ; at the same time, it must not be for- gotten that many Barbs have been imported of which, as I have previously stated, the celebrated sire, the 184: GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. misnamed Godolphin Arab was one ; therefore a great many of our horses have Barb blood in their veins, but it is in the minority, the Arab being esteemed the favorite animal, and consequently much more sought after when the foreign cross was deemed advisable for the improvement of our stock. In conversing with many Americans on the subject of their crack trotters, and in what sires and families they found this pace better developed, to the English stallions, Messenger and Mambrino, many years since imported into the United States, they gave the cred- it. Now if any one will take the trouble to hunt out their pedigrees, they will find a stronger cross of the Barb (going back as far as the Godolphin and Barb mares) than is usually the case. Another stallion exported from here into Boston (Mass.), and who a long time stood in Long Island, near New York, called Bellfounder, or the Norfolk Trotter, has also produced a numerous progeny celebrated for this pace. Of his pedigree, although I used every en- deavor, I could learn nothing ; however, a friend procured me a print, said to represent him when performing the feat of trotting 1 7J miles in the hour, and never did I see a picture more remarkably rep- resent an animal with the prominent Barb points. THE AMERICAN TROTTING-HORSE. 185 To the difference in disposition and temper "be- tween the American and the English horse to which I have alluded, much allowance must be made to the varied systems of breaking practiced. The former, as a rule, commence to handle their youngsters at a very early age, almost making them pets, till they become so familiarized with man, that when suffi- ciently old they go to work with the steadiness of old ones; while, on the other hand, the vice which we frequently see at home results from severity of treatment, or from the teasing of mischievous boys, or bad-tempered grooms, who are too frequently .employed about our stables. A statement of the time made by some of the most celebrated American trotters I will here append, as it will doubtless be of interest to many ; at the same time due allowance must be made that such is done from memory, I having unfortunately lost my rec- ords. Of one thing the reader may be certain, that if a mistake does occur it is only in the fractions of seconds. Flora Temple, one mile, on Kalamazoo course, Michigan, 2 min. 19} sees. Dexter, at Buffalo, N. Y., one mile in 2 min. 18 sees. Ethan Allen in double harness, trotting with a running mate, on Fashion course, L. I., one mile in 2 min. 15 sees., 186 GOT, BOD, AND SADDLE. Dexter, his antagonist, being only two lengths behind at the finish, making his supposed time for the mile, 2 min. 16^- sees. In conclusion I will state that I believe most thor- oughly that the excellence of the American trotting- horse over ours is entirely owing to his having a preponderance or greater portion of Barb blood in his veins than our home-bred English animal, and for a proof that the American has this preponderance I refer you to his origin. HINTS ON SHOOTING. 187 HINTS ON SHOOTING. To lay down rules by the observance of which the majority of bad shots may become experts is easy enough ; but the trouble is, however great the deter- mination to follow the precepts may be, as soon as game is flushed the advice of instruction is thrown to the winds, and bang, bang, go both barrels, with the same unsuccessful results as previously. That more birds are missed by shooting too quickly, I as- sert as a fact that is indisputable ; and knowing this to be the case, why will it continue to be practiced ? For this reason, that many are so fearfully nervous that for the moment they have no control of their actions, or that they are so timid that firing off their gun they consider a duty, and the sooner it is got through with the better ; neither of such pupils are ever likely to become crack shots. I have a friend who is, without exception, the most unlucky shot — I was going to say the worst — that ever I met. We at one period very frequently shot together, and each 188 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. evening, on our tramp home, he was certain to tell me that he had discovered the reason for his apparent want of skill. How various the causes attributed would be beyond possibility of enumeration ; however, he always devised some means of counteracting them — viz., by stuffing cotton in his ears, not to hear the spring of the game ; to wear a loose collar, so that he could the better and more rapidly bring his head to the stock ; to discard a waistcoat, for the thickness of cloth over his shoulder militated against bringing his gun rapidly up. However, he was always wounding birds — at least he said so ; for constantly, if near, he would call out, " Don't you see the feathers fly ?" which, perhaps owing to my less keenness of vision, I never perceived, save it were the feathers flying off with the bird. Another peculiarity this gentleman possessed was, that although he might have discharged the entire contents of his shot-pouch without bagging a single head, as soon as we both shot over the same point, one or other of the birds knocked down was due to his skill ; doubtless companionship reassured him, or induced him to take more pains. I would advise such, therefore, always to shoot in company, only I would rather be excused becoming the compa- ny. Of course occasionally he would knock over a HINTS ON SHOOTING. 189 bird, but when this took place it either was lost or took no end of trouble to secure. I remember one in- stance in a marsh where we were snipe-shooting, a num- ber of mallards flushed within easy range ; following the report of his gun, one of the greenheads left his companions, sailed round several times, each circle becoming lower and less contracted, till he dropped. Half-an-hour was fruitlessly wasted in search, my friend would not give up, so I went forward alone ; some time afterward he joined me, but his perseve- rance had not been rewarded. All that day he la- mented over this lost bird, for, like many of our fish- ing friends, he doubtlessly thought it (because it was not bagged) far larger and far finer than any obtained. The reason for the so frequent loss of the few birds he hit was this, the victim seldom received more than a stray grain outside the disk described by the shot, and therefore was not generally seriously wounded. That there are many like my friend I know, and I fear it will be a hopeless task to endeavor to make them good shots ; at the same time I think there are many bad shots who might be much im- proved. I believe that too much importance can not be attached to the stocking of your gun. Occasional- 190 QUIT, ROD, AND SADDLE. ly you will meet with men who appear to do equal execution with either a crooked, straight, long, or short stock ; but such are rare, and when found you may feel certain that they have possessed unusual op- portunities for constant practice. The length of man's arm, neck, and conformation of shoulder are so various, that seldom will a gun come up alike to different in- dividuals ; the straight, tall figure wants a crooked stock; the short, stout person, the reverse ; and inter- mediate figures, the bend between both extremes. I once possessed an excellent gun, with which I inva- riably acquitted myself creditably. The stock had always been an eye-sore, for it was composed of bad wood, and the previous owner had chipped and scratch- ed it so badly that, after lengthened hesitation, I deter- mined to have it re-stocked. However, when it re- verted from the gunmaker to my hands, I was sur- prised how indifferently I shot with it ; but, on exami- nation, I found that the new stock was much straighter than the old. Again : being in a neighborhood where game was abundant, when I did not have one of my own guns with me, I borrowed from a friend, and my execution was so bad that before the day was over I gave up in disgust. This gun's stock was so straight that I doubt if any but its owner could use it. In HINTS ON SHOOTING. 191 having a gun made, there is nothing that should re- ceive from the gunmaker more careful attention than the figure of the purchaser ; for I feel confident that a very great deal of bad shooting is made through want of attention to this point. Again : a gun should never possess a superfluous ounce of metal that is not necessary to its safety. When we start in the morn- ing, fresh and vigorous, after a good night's rest, the weight may appear a trifle ; but in the evening, if the day's work has been severe — more especially on grouse moor or snipe bog — you will be surprised how little tells, and will induce you to undershoot your game. Still another equally important point is the strength that is required to pull your trigger. After long prac - tice you may get accustomed to either very fine or very heavy, but whatever you are used to, that retain. With the tyro it is different. Through frequent experiment he should find out what weight of pressure he cangive without disconcerting his aim at the precise moment that he has obtained the firing line of sight. By im- parting this knowledge to his gunsmith he will com- mence shooting under great advantage. A great deal, we all know, depends upon a good start. It is almost equally applicable to life, horse-racing, and 192 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. shooting. If you begin under advantageous circum- stances success becomes probable. Success begets confidence, and with confidence we are certain to shoot well. An habitually bad shot has no confi- dence. Constant failure makes him doubt his abili- ty, his gun, in fact, every portion of his shooting paraphernalia. Nearly all persons who do not shoot regularly, fire their right barrel first. When such is the case, your left should shoot the strongest, as the second shot is so frequently at longer range. A good workman, however, will use either indifferently, and if such can be attained it should invariably be practiced, that one barrel may not be worn out sooner than the other. A fault which a great num- ber are addicted to, is using too much shot. An ounce of number five, or any of the smaller sizes, is amply sufficient for a twelve-bore gun. However, if you have reason to use a larger grain, a quarter of an ounce more may be substituted. The reason for this is that the small packs the closer, and thus makes a more formidable resistance to the explosive power. For strong shooting, and, therefore, long shots, it is the driving force that is required, which you counteract by surplus lead, for friction is increased and power wasted in starting the charge. HINTS ON SHOOTING. 193 Old hands may smile after reading the above, and justly say, " The fellow has told us nothing new ; " but remember we are not all old hands, and that all were once beginners, for whose benefit these hints are given. 194 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. A CHINESE MODE OF FISHING. IN " Land and Water " is mentioned the circum- stance, that while a pleasure party were descending the Thames, a large pike jumped on board their boat. The reason attributed is doubtless the correct one, but perhaps few of your readers are aware that in China it is a common practice to take fish in this way : viz., by inducing them to jump on board. I do not speak from hearsay, but have several times witnessed it, and will endeavor to explain how it is practiced. The boat used is built for the purpose, excessively long, narrow, of light draught, and close to the water. A board about three feet high and almost the length of the boat, painted snow white, is erected lengthways on one side or other, while on the reverse side from this board is attached to the gun- wale of the boat, a shelf nearly the length of the boat, which gradually slopes to the water's edge also paint- ed white. When the weather is calm and the moon A CHINESE MODE OF FISHING. 195 bright, a single fisherman starts on the river in this craft, always shifting the board and ledge so that the former will be on the far side of the boat from the moon, while the latter is next it. The fish see the moonbeams glancing off this white arrangement and, why I can not say, jump at it, when they strike the board and fall into the bottom of the boat. On two occasions I examined the proceeds of John Chinaman's catch, and found it to be principally composed of gray mullet, and a representative of the Perka fami- ly. The Chinese, to all appearance, are a most stu- pid-looking lot, still they are wonderfully cunning in circumventing fish and game ; another instance of which is their training cormorants to assist them in taking fish. 196 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. AMERICAN RUFFED GROUSE AND PARTRIDGE. WITH but very few exceptions the grouse shooting for years has been an utter failure. Last year the results were the same, and we find ourselves thus early looking forward distrustfully to the future, hoping, but still doubting, that we shall ever again enjoy the sport which was usually awarded to our earlier experience. The grouse season for 1868 may virtually be said to have terminated, yet we are only commencing September, about three weeks' very in- different shooting being all the reward the sportsman has received in remuneration for keeping up a staff of keepers, a large kennel, and, if not a proprietor, paying a heavy rent for his moor, possibly not only for one but for several seasons past. This is a dread- ful state of affairs, enough to discourage the most ardent, for although he has paid liberally, still no re- turns can be obtained at all adequate to the outlay. The journey to Scotland has been so much time thrown RUFFED GROUSE AND PARTRIDGE. 197 away, and the relaxation and pleasure well earned, possibly after tedious Parliamentary duties, supplant- ed by disgust, annoyance, and disappointment. From the heather let us look at the stubbles. Near- ly all accounts tally in the smallness of the bags made and the extreme wildness of the birds. In this case we have not disease to lay the paucity of sport to, but a more than usually dry summer. Shooting in England will thus be seen to be a very uncertain amusement, for if the birds should survive the nu- merous ailments of their infancy, our eccentric climate may still intervene, and however good the early pros- pects were, when the time for enjoyment comes the sportsman has to be satisfied, after hours of unsuc- cessful tramping, with the information that the heat or wet, or a combination of both, is the cause that so indifferent a bag is made. If our game-birds are so susceptible of effects, that shooting becomes an amusement that can not be look- ed forward to with certainty, the best remedy to offer is the introduction of foreign game, hardy in constitu- tion, suited to our country and the sportsman's wants. In time these strangers might be influenced by the disadvantages the home birds suffer from, but we would have variety, and the season that was uusuited 198 GUN", KOD, AND SADDLE. to one species could scarcely be expected to be so to all. On the 12th of August, if the grouse fail, you have no. shooting. On the 1st of September, if the weather has been too dry and the heat more than usually protracted, the partridges are so wild that in- different sport can only be obtained. Now if the ruffed grouse and American partridge were intro- duced, if you could not fill your bags with one de- scription you would with another, better far than returning empty-handed, disappointed, and probably out of temper. The reasons that induce me to select these Ameri- can birds are that I believe they are in no way infe- rior to our own, that they are extremely hardy, with- standing with impunity the intense heat of the South- ern States' summer, or the protracted winters of New England. Many I know have objected to them, be- cause in the wildest portions of that continent, where man is seldom seen, when flushed they will occasion- ally perch on trees, but this is not the case in the set- tled parts, where they have become acquainted with dogs and guns. In the Alleghany Mountains, New York, and Pennsylvania, I never remember such an incident taking place. Again, some assert that our country is too highly cultivated, which I deny, for RUFFED GROUSE AND PARTRIDGE. 199 the American partridge is only to be found in the neighborhood of farms ; and I have been assured that this bird is more abundant now on the western end of Long Island, which is close to the city of New York, and more carefully cultivated, than it was in days gone by, and the country more wild. The ruffed grouse, on the other hand, but requires irregular ground, plenty of water, and a fair proportion of tim- ber, and they will attach themselves to a neighbor- hood without straggling off for parts unknown, like the pheasant. That the ruffed grouse will breed here, there is scarcely room for doubt. I know that the American partridge has already done so, and that in a state of captivity ; but let the experiment be made — the cost at most would be but trilling — and, if successful, their importation could be gone into on a larger scale. In America, over a great portion of the country, their partridge goes by the name of quail. The same de- lusion appears to have crept over here, and a fear that the introduction of this species would be unsuccessful, for the reason that our migratory quail is scarcer now than in days gone by, from the land being more care- fully tilled, is advanced as a caution to those who might entertain an idea of making the experiment. The 200 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. quail of Europe I know well ; I have killed them in im- mense numbers in Spain, Italy, and Greece. Twenty years ago in the north of Ireland, when partridge shooting, I seldom would conclude a day without bag- ging several couple ; so I have no hesitation in say- ing that these birds are so totally dissimilar, that what might affect the residence of one should not be entertained as an argument to prevent the intro- duction of the other. THE POWER OF A SHARK'S JAW. 201 THE POWER OF A SHARK'S JAW. EIGHT bells had only struck a few minutes, and the old watch had been relieved, when the cap- tain came on deck and ordered a man into the chains to heave the lead and obtain correct sound- ings. For several days this order had been so frequently given that it attracted little attention; and only that I happened to be lounging near the waist of the ship at the time, ruminating over a Manilla cheroot, I should not have been an eyewit- ness to the following incident. The weather was thick, blustering, and wet. For a day or two we had been unable to obtain an obser- vation, and as we were in a most dangerous part of the Chinese seas, it was necessary to be more than usually careful. Moreover, the barometer had suddenly fallen, a warning not to be neglected dur- ing the typhoon season ; so our cautious old Scotch captain was not satisfied with bringing on deck the 202 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. topgallant yards, placing the ship under reefed top- sails, but had as further precautions the lead hove every half-hour. Although a long way off the coast, the singing chant of the leadsman had in the earlier watches proclaimed six fathoms, six and a half: shoal water, all will say, for the center of a vast sea; but for days between the Straits of Sunda and the mouth of the Canton River you may sail without wetting the knots that mark ten fathoms. It may be necessary to explain, for the benefit of the uninitiated, that the deep-sea lead is a bar of that metal about two feet long gradually tapering from the base (which is about four or five inches in diameter) to the top, where the line is made fast. In the base is a deep indentation, containing about half a pound of lard, which coming in contact with the bottom, informs the navigator (by the particles that adhere) of what formation the surface of mother earth is composed. The line which is attached is of various lengths (a hundred fathoms, I think, was on this occasion), carefully coiled in a tub, so that noth- ing can prevent it being freely paid out. Well, the lead was hove, and rapidly the line ran out ; five, six, seven fathoms were passed, still no stop, — on, on, till double that number, yet no indi- THE POWER OF A SHARERS JAW. 203 cation of bottom. The captain looked surprised, but said nothing, till a third of the contents of the tub had gone over board, and then he uttered an ex- clamation very forcible, but far from polite. How- ever this did not alter matters, for soon scarce twen- ty fathoms were left. The seaman was now ordered to stop the line, and in doing so exclaimed, after a violent effort, that he was unable. Two or three turns round a belaying-pin soon settled this difficulty, and at length the lead was drawn on board. On being handled, it was found to be very much cut ; so, to have a better inspection, it was transferred at once to the chart-room. On examination we found on the • reverse sides a succession of furrows over half an inch deep, out of which we picked, with the point of the compasses, a number of broken fragments of a large shark's teeth. The opinion of the majority was that the brute had smelt the fat and been thus induced to lay hold. From my knowledge of the habits of the fish, I believe he was attracted by the glitter of the metal passing rapidly through the water ; under either circumstance, the rapidity with which he must have dashed through the water to seize his prey, is a proof of the agility with which some of the species of this genus are possessed. The 204: GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. amount of strength of jaw necessary to make such deep indentations on a bar of lead four or five inches in diameter, can scarcely be conceived possible in a cartilaginous fish. If this shark is still alive, I pity the sailor that chances to fall over board in his neigh- borhood. BLACK BA.3S AND MITSKALLONGB FISHING. 205 BLACK BASS AND MUSK- ALLONGE FISHING. IN the memory of the past there are always remi- niscences the recalling of which give us the greatest pleasure. Such is particularly the case with me when I think of the scenes and events which I am about to endeavor to describe. I was living on the confines of civilization literally, for there was but one residence farther north than the house of which I was an inmate, and it was inhabited by a canny Scot, who never knew what it was to take a day's relaxation, his entire ener- gy, early and late, being devoted to the improvement , of his homestead. Shortly after my arrival I paid him a visit, but I found that information on shooting matters would have to be obtained through my own exertions, for more than a complaint against Bruin occasionally depriving him of a pig, he knew literally nothing of the sporting capabilities of his neighborhood. It is always pleasant on a new field of operations to obtain a slight inkling of what you may expect. It is far from 206 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. agreeable to have to draw a charge of snipe-shot, and thus lose time, to substitute B B, or perhaps ball, small game being expected and large game found. The locality of which I am about to speak is at the extreme northern end of Lake Simcoe, where one uninterrupted forest extends northward for several hundred miles to the banks of the Upper Ottawa, except when an occasional lake or river occurs to break the monotony of this ocean of timber. In wandering about the neighborhood of my temporary residence, about two miles from home I came upon one of those beautiful little sheets of water so frequently found upon the northern portion of the American continent. This soon became a favorite retreat, for wild duck were numerous on a portion where wild rice grew luxuriantly, and wood pigeons and spruce grouse had adopted it as a watering-place, owing to its freedom from intruders. All devoted admirers of nature know what a pleasure it is to be alone where none of man's work mars the prospect, where every object the eye rests upon is as it came from the Creator's hands, unsul- lied and unchanged. As I sat on a rocky promontory to seethe sun dip the horizon, perhaps visions of my distant land and far-off friends flitting before me, I was struck with the immense numbers of fish that kept breaking BLACK BASS AND MTJSKALLONGE FISHING. 207 the unrippled surface, — good evidence that the rod and line might find abundant work, and on the next visit I determined to put it to the test. To those who are acquainted with the birch-bark canoe it is needless for me to say any thing. All the praises I could sound could not further enhance it in their estimation ; but to those who are not, to them let me say, that there is not in existence a more perfect piece of mechanism for the purpose it is intended. Only learn to handle it properly, and you can go in it anywhere, over shoals, down rapids, through channels where an oar would be useless, and finally, if necessary, you can take it on your shoulders and tramp across portages where nothing but an ox-team could transport a boat. In construction they are models of skill, yet the Indian alone knows how to make them ; for although a white man may occasionally attempt their manufacture, they never do so successfully. On the following day, with my birch-bark on my shoulders, looking like a gigantic animated letter T, I crossed the portage with a formidable array of lines and artificial baits, full of most mischievous intent toward the finny tribe. This day the surface was broken by that desirable ripple, 208 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. whether it be for trolling or fly-fishing, and dark clouds occasionally darkened with their shadow the face of the water. With exhilarating freedom, deep I dipped my paddle, pushing for the rocky end, waiting till I had crossed the centre of the lake be- fore I commenced to fish ; for, as a rule, unless there should happen to be a reef, seldom any fish will be taken far from the margin. When alone in a canoe one line will be found as much as can be conveni- ently attended to, for the navigation of your craft requires both hands. Getting under good headway, I soon had twenty-five to thirty yards of line astern, with a few inches of red cloth for lure, which proved so attractive that I almost immediately had a break, and in a moment or two afterward a fish hooked. Of all plucky, determined fish, to Black Bass I give the palm, they are so thoroughly reckless in their efforts to escape, — first springing from the water, then possibly coming at you like a cricket- ball, giving you often more than you can do to get the line out of their way, — next dashing to the right or left, and only succumbing when exhausted nature refuses to do more. For two or three hours such was the sport which continued with never over a few minutes' cessation. BLACK BASS AND MUSKALLONGE FISHING. 209 As I pushed slowly along the shore I came to a river previously unknown to me, and which I have since learned is the only outlet from this lake. The edge of this stream was fringed with a dense net- work of weeds, and the channel had scarcely a per- ceptible current. On breaking full in view several dozens of wild duck rose, conspicuous among whom were many of the beautiful wood duck, a gem among his brilliant-plumed race. What a pity at home we could not acclimatize this bird, but I fear his migra- tory habits would sadly interfere. The sedgy na- ture of the shore here predicted pike, so, replacing the red cloth by a large Buell's spoon with some scarlet ibis feathers tied along the shanks of the hooks, I again tried my fortune. Few who have not heard of the muskallonge, the king in stature of the pike family. He is to be found in nearly all the rivers and lakes of northern Canada. Among the shoals and rapids of " The Thousand Islands," on the St. Lawrence, he is said to attain an immense size, even eighty pounds ; but the largest I have seen did not exceed two-thirds of that weight. Such large fish as the above I had not on that occasion to deal with, but before I ceased, the bottom of my canoe had a goodly show of bass and pike : so many, that I was 210 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. satisfied to select three or four for present use and hide the others, with my birch-bark, till I could send across for them in the morning; but a couple of bears, judging from the different-sized tracks, got at my cache during the night, and had the bad taste to maul and pull about what they did not eat, so that I rejected it as unfit for food. Fish I have always found the most tempting bait with which to attract Bruin into a trap, so I built a bower-house and hung up the bait at the end of it, with my trap nicely cov- ered with leaves ; still all would not do, he and his companion were too wide awake, or had left the neighborhood. This lake I often visited again, and with equal success ; the influences of weather never appeared to affect the fishes' appetites, and they are always a welcome addition to a backwoodman's fare. In company of a Chippewa Indian I also tried fish- ing through the ice. The method adopted is simple, viz., cutting a hole two or three feet in diameter, over which is built a small hut to keep out the light and sufficiently large for the fisherman to sit inside, the end of his fish-spear protruding through the top. With an artificial minnow on a few feet of line in the left hand, and weighted so as to make it readily sink, you attract the pike to the surface, when, with a BLACK BASS AND MUSKALLONGE FISHING. 211 dexterous blow, you drive your leister home. Very much like poaching ; still where fish are so abundant and wanted for food, this system becomes less cul- pable. At the northern end of Lake Couchachin, the beautiful Severn, after tumbling over a grand fall, starts on its erratic, precipitous course for Lake Huron. To visit this spot was not more than seven or eight miles of water, through a labyrinth of islands, and along the most picturesquely beautiful shore, wooded to the margin. Beside the fall was a saw- mill belonging to a descendant of the French aris- tocracy, who had emigrated before the days of " The Empire." Whether or not the proprietor hap- pened to be at home, a cordial welcome could be re- lied upon, and the fishing underneath the fall was always excellent — sometimes so good that your bait would scarcely touch the water ere it was seized. However, there was one drawback, for the spot was infested with snakes, particularly a large, thick, dir- ty-brown water species, which looked exceedingly venomous. From the indifference with which the mill hands treated them, I imagine their look was worse than their bite. They had, however, a pen- chant for minnow, for I saw one captured on the 212 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. hook. As the wild fowl migrate this is a splendid stand ; for if the weather is in the least stormy, with an indication of cold, the ducks keep passing all day, and their flight invariably is so low that they are well within range. By following the Severn down to its junction with Lake Huron, plenty of occupa- tion can be found for both rod and gun ; and the ap- petite your open-air life will impart will make all you eat taste superior to any thing obtained in civilized quarters. LIFTING THE TRAPS. 213 LIFTING THE TRAPS. ON the northwest of the State of Maine exists a ridge of hills which divide it from the township of Success, in the State of New Hampshire. Whatever may have been the cause (possibly the presumption of the namer), it has remained as wild and unsettled as it was in the days when the whole country be- longed to the aborigines. No, I make a mistake ; a ruin of a tumble-down diminutive barn, on close scrutiny, may be found. Th e area of this township is composed of an immense meadow (through which a clear but deep and sluggish stream flows) and the pine-clad slopes that divide it from the State of Maine. For some weeks I had been residing eight or ten miles distant from Success. The person in whose house I stayed was a trapper during winter, when the inhospitable climate foiled any attempt at cultivating what at no season was a productive soil. ISTight after night with pleas- ure I listened to his stories of how he had run down 214 QTJN, ROD, AND SADDLE. this moose, shot that caribou, or at length trapped the most troublesome of bears. For some days my fly-rod had been indefatigably most successfully at work, furnishing not only my own table, but many of the neighboring families with trout, so that a change of programme was far from unacceptable. One morning as I was deliberating in which direction I would go, my host asked me if I should have any objection to accompany him to lift some traps he had not visited since spring. The trip promised an acquaintance with a new beat, and an insight into what I "was not as yet conversant with in this section of the American continent, viz., the method followed of trapping martens. As the sun was rising over the eastern hills — for these primitive people are early risers — -we found ourselves about to leave the surveyed road. My friend bore on his back a sack in which to place his long-neglected traps, while I carried my trusty ten-bore double gun, loaded by request with ball in one barrel, and buck-shot in the other. Our route at first was through a dense cedar swamp, exceedingly irregular on the surface, wrhile the undergrowth was so close that it was with difficulty parted ; a thick coating of moss was under foot, so spongy and full of water that if we remained station- LIFTING THE TKAPS. 215 ary for a few seconds we would be over the insteps in water. Nevertheless, the tracks of the American hare were innumerable ; an animal, by the bye, which I be- lieve very closely allied to the Scotch mountain hare, slightly changed by climate and different habits of life, caused by the very dissimilar localities in which they are found. A blazed path was all we had for direction, but as both were in the full vigor of man- hood, we steadily progressed. Several times we flushed the Canadian willow grouse, but as my projectiles were not suited to this stamp of game, and my com- panion continually kept informing me that larger might be looked for, I forbore troubling them. From the swamp we got on drier soil, very rocky, and densely wooded with pine, — such glorious pine- trees as might one day form, without discredit, the mainmast of a three-decker. Upward, like the youth who shouted " Excelsior," we kept ascending, but we had not the maiden to warn us, but whose warning I doubt not, unless she had been unusually pretty, would have been disregarded. , Soon the walking became climbing, and after an hour's clambering the summit of the ridge was reach- ed. Here the first trap was lifted, and at intervals of two hundred yards or so, according to the nature of 216 GUN", ROD, AND SADDLE. the ground, the others were found distributed. As they had been down for nearly two months, whatever had been captured was found in a decomposed state. Soon the whole had been gathered, over a dozen, when we descended to a stream literally alive with fish ; trout of all sizes up to a pound, appeared to be actually crowding each other, while our presence by them was totally disregarded. Lunch-time had ar- rived, and on the margin of the brook we enjoyed our meal ; several of the trout which my companion had taken with the most primitive tackle, and rod cut from the nearest tree, forming no inconsiderable portion of the meal. After a smoke and half hour's dawdle, we started on our return, following an entirely different route, still equally disadvantageous for rapid progression. During our homeward tramp I learned that martens could only be taken on the highest ridges, and that the bait used was either a red squirrel, the beautiful little cedar-bird, or the heart or liver of the American hare. I was not a little surprised at the number of times my companion halted to inquire if my gun was all right, more especially as so far we had seen no indications of large game, excepting some broken-up stumps, moved logs, or scratched trees where Bruin long since LIFTING THE TRAPS. 217 had been searching for insects or stretching himself. As the sun set, we once more regained the path, well fatigued with our rough and protracted tramp, myself not a little disgusted that I had seen nothing sufficient- ly large to be worthy of considering fit game for the heavy missiles which both my barrels contained ; in fact, I could not help openly grumbling that I should have been inveigled into such a useless journey, to which I was informed that I might thank my stars we had got back safe. With this answer for the time I had to be satisfied, but that evening the mystery came out, and the selfish motives that had dictated my companionship being sought. I will endeavor to state the story as told by the trapper. Last April, when the snow was on the ground, I laid out the traps we have to-day lifted. The travel- ing was very bad at the time, for it was near the break-up of winter. I got along the ridge all right ; but as I thought the walking would be better to re- turn as I had come, I had determined to retrace my steps, I had scarcely turned about when I found to my surprise, the print of an animal following my old track. I looked in every direction to see where the follower could be, but was unable to detect him. However, I knew well that the skulking villain was 10 218 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. no other than a painter (Anglicb, puma) ; and as I had only my old single-barrel loaded with bird-shot, I became justly scared. All of a tremble, I started for home, and you may bet I made tracks. The very evi- dence of the brute following me, showed he was after no good, and I was right ; for as I drew near the out- side edge of the swamp I saw him right ahead ; but I went out of the way to avoid him, and after I left the wood I heard him howl, doubtless in anger because he had missed having me for supper. At the time I could not help thinking that my host had been needlessly alarmed, and told him so, when he informed me that nothing would have in- duced him to return alone — in fact, that he would sooner have lost his traps than do so ; that a painter in those regions, more especially in winter, was much to be dreaded, and in corroboration informed me of a little tragedy that occurred some years past in the same neighborhood. Two friends once trapped the township of Success. They had two beats, running in reverse directions, while the shanty in which they both lived together was situated equally distant from each. The one who examined the traps to the north to-day, visited those to the south to-morrow, chang- ing their routes with each other daily, and always LIFTING THE TRAPS. 219 meeting at night at their common residence. Al- most half the season had thus passed away, when the trapper who had returned for the night became se- riously alarmed at the continued absence of his friend. At length the little cur dog who constantly accom- panied the missing man came home alone. There is an end to every thing, and so there is to a long winter night ; and with the earliest indications of day he sallied forth to find the missing trapper, whom he found dreadfully mangled and partially eaten. The assassin had been a painter. The tracks on the tell-tale snow spoke correctly. About thirty feet above where the corpse lay, an immense limb ran out at right angles from the parent tree. From this the skulking coward had doubtless sprung upon the unsuspecting trapper. That the puma has attacked and killed human be- ings is well corroborated ; but fortunately he is such a cowardly, skulking scoundrel, that he seldom makes the attempt. 220 GUN, KOD, AND SAEDLE. STKANGE FISH IN CALAIS, MAINE. THE strange fish lately caught on the coast of the State of Maine, and dubbed the shark dog-fish by some of the learned in those regions, I have little doubt, from the description given in American peri- odicals, is the basking-shark, for these reasons, that the basking-shark has been found on the Newfound- land banks not far from that neighborhood, that the basking-shark is the only proper fish with which we are acquainted that grows to this gigantic size, thirty-three feet long ; that it could not belong to the whale family, or the inhabitants of that section of the coast, from their long experience and connection with the whale fisheries, would have known it, and given it either its proper name or a local one recog- nizable ; and that from its being so excessively like an ordinary white or blue shark, with which the American coast abounds. To make the name more telling or characteristic it is christened with a Chris- STRANGE FISH IN CALAIS, MAINE. 221 tian name and surname, each of different species of the same genus. Don't laugh at the Yankee misno- mer ; remember the tunny that was melted down in- to an albicore by some of our educated fellow-citizens and accepted natural historians. But still the most important part of the mystery remains unexplained. The anal fins of the basking-shark have an elongation of a different color and texture from the balance of these fins, which, if broken, would look excessively like a flipper on a small scale. If the carcass had been knocking about on the coast for some time be- fore it was stranded, is it not very possible that this fragile portion of the anal fins would get broken ? and hence the fractured members in the imaginative minds of the country people, be supposed intended to perform the functions of feet. It has long been be- lieved that the basking-shark lives principally on ma- rine vegetable matter, although on dissection one was found to contain a portion of a mangled crab. In my opinion a desire for romancing or attaching mys- tery to a strange animal has induced the good people of " away down East " t<) exaggerate the most strik- ing peculiarities. 222 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. BUFFALO PLAINS. WITHIN the last year or two the borders of Mis- souri and Kansas, where they adjoin, have become so much altered, from the springing up of new towns, and the making of the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad, that the points which were formerly considered the best starting-places for the plains, on account of their being situated on the verge of civilization, are deemed so no longer. However, as in days gone by, I should choose Leavenworth for commencing outdoor life, if the intention were to reach the hunting ground by land. Although all frontier towns are to be avoided, from the number of loafers and blackguards that constantly haunt them, Leavenworth nowadays can scarcely be classed in this light ; moreover, the reli- able and minute information with which you will be furnished by the ever-kindhearted officers of the United States' regular army stationed in its fort, is most desirable to obtain. But instead of going by land, I would by choice take the river route by one BUFFALO PLAINS. '223 of the numerous trading-boats that sail for the upper waters of the Missouri, every May, from St. Louis. Here, also, I would purchase my horses and stores, which when once on board would be safe and well taken care of till required. However, to avoid the tedious journey up the river to Leavenworth, I should leave my traps and nags (provided I had an attend- ant), and go by train to Leavenworth. Of course it would be even better, if your party be large enough, and do not object to expense, to charter a boat of your own, as you would then always have a com- fortable home, good hard food for your horses, and the means of transporting many luxuries, which it would be impossible to carry with a limited number of pack mules, for the river is navigable through a large portion of the best hunting range, and from the boats being of very light draught you can land or ship your horses without trouble ; on many occa- sions, while the vessel is progressing onward, you may be hunting, for the bends in the river are fre- quent and abrupt. The exact places where buffalo will be found is difficult to say. In summer they keep going north, feeding on the just-sprouted grass, up to almost the sixtieth degree of latitude, while in autumn their progress is south, till New Mexico and 224: ' GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. Texas is reached ; nor do they follow the same routes yearly, the section of country passed over one season often being deserted for years. A few years ago the Black Hills used to be a favorite wintering-place of the hunter and game, but it was ever dangerous from hostile Indians. All are now fled that locality, hunt- ers, game, and Indians, and the formerly lonely sier- ras and woods now echo to the navvies' whistle, the stroke of the chopper's ax, or the grunting of the locomotive ; but why I mention the Black Hills is, that between them and the waters of the Yellow Stone and the Upper Missouri the sportsman can not fail to obtain more game than it is possible to make use of. KENCOUNTEK WITH A BEAE. 225 EENCOUNTEE WITH A BEAE. IN America a bear-story and a snake-story are synonymous, to the generality of listeners, to cram- mers. Knowing such to be the case a man can not help approaching this subject without nervous feel- ings, particularly when a bear figures as one of the principals among the dramatis personce of the narra- tive. But it matters not, travelers appear to be born to be doubted. I do not hesitate to say that they will sometimes romance, but invariably the fiction portion is credited and the reality ignored. We do not need to look at the experience of modern times, our forefathers were impregnated with the same spirit ; vide the reception poor Bruce received after his incredible hardships in Nubia and Abyssinia. A friend, in the true sense of the word, and myself went to visit a small lake that was reported to swarm with trout, almost believing that no such place ex- isted, but as a tramp through the woods was never objectionable we determined to make an effort to 10* 226 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. find it out. An old lumberman, long superannuated, gave us our instructions thus : " First go through the woods two miles north, then incline a little to the westward, and after about half-an-hour's walking through a swamp you will strike a small brook, which follow up and you will certain sure make the pond."* To those who have not wandered through an Ameri- can forest, such instructions will" be perceived to be far from lucid ; to the thorough woodsman, however, it would be sufficient. Before we left the township road where we were to branch off, there stood a shanty, at which we halted to put up the horse and buggy in which we had thus far traveled. From the head of the establishment we made inquiries, who, calling to his son, who was within, gave the fol- lowing directions — " Bub,f take the gents and show them the pond." Now " Bub" was a most commu- nicative youngster about fourteen years of age, and scenting a dollar in the distance, hopefully undertook the job. A cow-path we, the trio, followed for more than a mile, then we continued on what is familiarly designated a blaze road — id est, a path marked out * Small lakes in Maine are always called ponds, f A Yankee father's familiar way of addressing his son; daughters after the same manner are called " siss." RENCOUNTER WITH A BEAR. 227 by a tree at every hundred yards, more or less, hav- ing a piece scooped out of its bark. The walking was as bad as possible, for constantly we were de- layed by giants of the forest who had been pros- trated by the gales of the preceding winters. At length, tired and frightfully worried by mosquitoes, we reached a brook eight or ten feet in diameter, but deep and sullen as a canal ; down this we pursued an erratic course till between two lofty bluffs we came upon a beautiful sheet of water of an area of about forty acres. To fish it from the banks was impossi- ble, for the sumac and cedar grew to its margin, so that no other resource was left but to cut a num- ber of cedar logs and form a raft. An hour or more was lost in this operation, and when we had launched out we found that nothing but the smallest fry could be taken, although these were in such quanti- ties that frequently we would have three or four rises to a cast. For an hour or more we fished indefatiga- bly, still nothing over a quarter of a pound rewarded our labors, and when we landed for our pic-nic lunch I determined to fish the stream with the hope of ob- taining some heavier specimens. My friend, who felt indisposed, either from the effects of the sun, or some State-of-Maine whisky (which is warranted to kill as 228 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. far as a six-shooter), and which he had been imbib- ing, refused to accompany me ; so, with the youth who had acted as Palumrus, I left him to ruminate over his transgressions or misfortune. As I had supposed, large fish were to be found in the stream, and my basket began to groan under its weight ; when I hooked my flies in the top of a larch that leaned over the water close in my rear. With all my efforts I could not get them free, so sending the lad aloft, I waited patiently for him to cast them off The place where I stood was hummocky, such lumps as you come across in the bogs of Ireland when snipe- shooting, only a great deal larger. With care and pre- caution the hummocks could be traversed without wetting a foot, but hurry would certainly get you between them, when over the boot-tops would be the consequence. I had stood for several minutes for the youngster to get the line loose, when across the stream, but a short distance off, I heard an animal grunt ; the spot from whence the sound issued was a large clump of whortleberries, where some fallen timber lay. Not being quite certain that my ears had not deceived me, I waited, when the noise was repeated. By this time my line was free, and my juvenile companion was descending, when I asked RENCOUNTER WITH A BEAR. 229 him to listen to the noise, for I felt convinced it emanated from no other than a bear feeding, enjoying his favorite bonne bouche, the blue-berries. Young America listened ; Bruin gave another grunt of evident satisfaction, when the former — exclaiming "bear!" slid down the tree with such agility as would have put in shade the majority of monkeys. As soon as he reached the ground, off he started down stream, but the funniest part of all was that my guide, in the precipitancy of his movements, must have tripped over the hummocks at least half-a-dozen times in a dozen strides. When we had got thirty or forty yards off, — for I followed, though scarcely as rapid- ly,— my amour propre asserted itself, and I halted ; not so with my companion ; soon he disappeared through the labyrinth of shrubs, and I remained alone. To my relief I found no bear was in pursuit, so, placing my rod against a stalwart hemlock, I ascended its branches to take a view of the situation ; for a long time I could not discover Bruin, but at length detected a large mass of black fur, accompanied by two smaller ones, busily employed feeding. They had quitted the wet ground and were on the edge of an acclivity, where the mother was most industriously drawing the broken fragments of shattered logs on one side, while 230 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. her hopeful progeny feasted upon the beetles and ants thus exposed. The old lady had neither winded nor heard us, and she remained sedulously pursuing her avocation, perfectly ignorant that her industry and strength were forming a subject of admiration to a son of Adam. At length their search for insects took them out of sight, and I descended to join my companions. The day by this was far spent, and neither of us having arms suitable for an assault upon the happy family, we determined to seek the settlement and revisit the scene on the morrow. Next day, at an early hour, with quite a re-enforcement, all armed with most formidable fire-arms, from the Spencer rifle to the old smooth bore, and accompanied by a well-tried bear dog, we sallied forth ; for miles we tracked Madam Bruin by the broken fragments of decayed timber and the numerous logs she had disturbed from their original resting-place. Finally, we thought she could not be far distant, and the dog was untied; off he went like a thunder- bolt, and in a quarter of an hour we heard him baying vociferously. Guns were looked to, the men most energetic previously now dropped behind, doubtless to examine their trusty rifles and see that the pow- KENCOUOTEK WITH A BEAK. 231 der was up in the nipples; but when we reached Watch, what was our disgust, of course, to find that he had tree'd a covey of Canadian partridge ? * "Unwillingly we went to work and decimated this unhappy and unconscious brood, nor could all our efforts afterward induce the unfailing bear-dog to take up the desired track ; intensely disgusted we all returned, and bear-meat and bear-hunting for a long time were subjects that few of the would-be hunters liked to hear mentioned by the residents of the settle- ment, for there was a strong suspicion that what was said on these subjects was said in chaff. * Willow Grouse. 232 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING-. To those who have gained skill from constant prac- tice in the gentle art, I do not address my remarks ; still they can read if they will, provided they will do so in good temper, and furnish beginners with such minutia? as have been forgotten, or have not been told. I fancy I hear numbers dissenting from my proviso, for it was only through long months, ay, years of toil — we may also say pleasure — they gained the information on fly-fishing which they now possess, and, therefore, why impart the result of their study to Tom, Dick, and Harry. But if our forefathers through generations had held back their views and experiences, for such selfish reasons, do you suppose the machinist, the naturalist, the navigator, etc., etc., of the days in which we live, would be as proficient as they are in their respec- tive trades or sciences ? For all Izaak Walton states, I much fear the followers of the rod and line pos- sess the quality of selfishness. As one of its votaries, IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING. 233 I can well remember keeping buried in my own bosom, the position of pools, the color of flies, etc., where I was either certain of taking the largest fish, or by the using of which, I could almost guarantee myself good sport. But I trust I no longer possess this love of self, and in no better way can I prove it than by endeavor- ing to teach the young idea, not how to shoot, but to fish ; come forward ye, also, who have experience, and help me in my task. But to commence, we will first allude to the imple- ments. The fly rod, like the gun, can not be too light, as long as it possesses the requisite strength. This is even a greater desideratum in the former than in the latter, for there is no convenient resting-position in which you can carry it incessantly ; while on the river it is at work, not even the respite for loading being necessary, and if a heavy gun after a hard day's work will make you undershoot your game, a heavy rod will make you a sluggard at evening in striking your fish, and the result will be about similar in both instances. For the trout fisherman, he, I mean, who fly-fishes burns and rivers, from twelve to thirteen feet is quite sufficient length for his rod to be (lake ' fishermen frequently use longer, but what they gain in reach they lose in quickness, a loss, in my estimation, 234 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. of most serious importance), and sucli an implement should not exceed in weight eight or nine ounces. I can imagine I see many cast up their eyes and ex- claim, that such is impossible to procure, but let me say they are mistaken. I have owned several of that weight, and with them, days in succession, taken baskets of fish, of not only all the ordinary sizes, but on one occasion I killed a trout nine pounds in weight. As I can not help regarding this as a performance to be proud of, I will relate how it took place. A couple of companions and myself were en- camped on the margin of Mad River in Oxford Coun- ty, State of Maine. Our guns had failed to provide dinner, so taking a hazel wand I essayed to capture sufficient chub to make a chowder, a description of omnium gatherum stew. In taking a small fish, as I was about lifting him into the canoe a large trout rushed from underneath the birch-bark, seized the chub, and although I gave him both line and time to pouch what had not been intended for a bait, on taking a pull upon him the chub came away, and I was free from the larger antagonist. Having taken suf- ficient small fry I went home, brooding over my mis- fortune, but keeping the adventure closely locked in* my own bosom (selfishness ag:iin). About the hour IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING. 235 that the sun began to dip behind the giant pines, I had made up my mind to the course I would pursue, which was to take my pet rod, mount a cast of two flies, and carefully whip the hole from end to end. As if it were but yesterday, I remember distinctly the flies. The trail one was ginger-colored cock's hackle, with light corn crake wing, tipped with silver ; the dropper a large-sized moth. "For work at that hour," I hear some internally mutter, " the moth did the business." No, it did not ; cock's hackles of all shades may invariably be backed against the field, and the cock's hackle on this occa- sion kept up its reputation. Down on my knees in the bow of the canoe, the camp-keeper holding her back by a pole in the stern, slowly and cautiously I fished the throat, from thence down into the less an- gry but wider-spread current, when just as my flies passed over an eddy that divided the downward flow from the back water, there was a splash rapidly re- sponded to by a nervous quick movement of the wrist, which planted the hook firmly home. I doubt if I exaggerate, in fact I think I scarcely state enough, when I say that thirty minutes elapsed be- fore my trophy could sufficiently endure the sight of a landing-net to have it placed under him. Thus 236 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. was taken the largest river (sahno fario) trout I ever caught. But to my rod ; it was made out of cedar from butt to tip, did not exceed nine ounces, and was the most lively, quick, light casting treasure I ever used. Cedar fly-rods I have heard objected to, because they are brittle; doubtless you may find them so, and your casting-line also, if you change its use into that of a carriage whip. However much I admire a cedar rod I do not think it suited for a tyro, but when the beginner has gained experience, and is able to offer an opinion and use a fly rod as it should be used, I doubt not he will perfectly agree with me. A cedar rod can seldom be purchased ready made, as tradesmen dislike the job ; so if any read- ers of " Gun, Rod, and Saddle " should wish to possess one, he had better go to the very best workman he knows of, and give him the order. Next to the cedar rod, but one that will stand any amount of fair work, is the split bamboo ; this, I think, can be procured even lighter than the former. There is a firm, the Messrs. Clark, of Maiden Lane, New York, who make this a specialite. I never had the fortune to use one, but have handled them often and listened to the raptures of experts on their merits ; on their good qualities I believe I can say nothing IDEAS ON FLY- FISHING. 237 that they do not deserve, but their price is necessa- rily high, from the care with which the cane has to be selected and put together. When I was a boy, I believed Flint and Martin Kelly, both of Dublin, before all other makers. I have used their rods over a great portion of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and did not, until I used the cedar rod, believe that any rod ever was made that could compete with theirs, but so it is, and so it will continue to be. Old bluff-bowed lumbering packet- ships sufficed our fathers to go to India ; now we have the P. and O. service, with rail across the Isthmus, and it is far from probable that this means of transit will always suit our children. If Joe Manton was to arise among us, I doubt much if he could hold his own among modern gunmakers. Some persons, particularly Irish fishermen, are at- tached to double-action rods; that is, rods which have so much elasticity in them, that they display two movements, one up and the other down, when suddenly used. I do not like them, for more than one reason ; the movement of the wrist in striking the fish, while raising the butt, throws the tip down, thus giving quite a contrary motion to what is intended. Again, if you have to fish against the wind, they 238 GOT, ROD, AND SADDLE. will not only be found most difficult to manage, but excessively fatiguing. There is a rod made in Castle Connell (principally for salmon), after the above pat- tern ; it has many admirers, who doubtless through experience have become proficient in its use ; still I can speak only from what I know, and my verdict is, leave them to their present advocates. A combination-rod has always been my horror. I mean such as fishing-tackle shop proprietors guaran- tee to be both a perfect fly and bait rod only by al- tering the tip. If persons will but use their brains they can in a moment see that such is impossible. The two uses are essentially different, requiring the spring and elasticity in totally different parts. The act of placing a dull, lumbering tip on the first three joints of a delicate, pliant trout rod is really desecra- tion. However, some may say, you will find a medium between the two more generally useful. My answer is, what is worth doing is worth doing well ; and if your intent is fly-fishing, the most perfect rod for that purpose should be selected. If the river is so discolor- ed or swollen that bait has to be resorted to, or you must go supperless to bed, for goodness' sake go and cut a hazel wand, unless you carry a bait rod — an arti- cle for capturing trout that no true fisherman ought to IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING. 239 be proud, of. In fact, I am not certain that its pos- session should not entitle the owner to be arrested, in the same way as a pocketful of snares for game would a known poacher. Hybrids, whether in rod or gun, are to be carefully avoided. I remember being once entrapped into using a hybrid gun, in the town- ship of Markham, Upper Canada. Going through some brush I flushed a quantity of woodcock. I sta- ted the circumstance when I returned to the farm- house where I was residing. As I had no gun with me the host offered me the use of his, which from his de- scription was worthy of a royal duke and therefore I accepted the offer. On production it proved to be half shot-gun, half rifle — that is, the right-hand barrel was smooth, the left rifled. This was my first experience of such a weapon, and most probably my last. The game was found, the cover was close, and snap shooting ne- cessary. It was of no use. The gun would not come up, or the game come down. The fact was, that the shot barrel was only half the weight of the rifled, conse- quently the whole fabric was without balance, and do what I would my aim was invariably disconcerted. Of the joints used in fly-rods the plain sliding one is probably the most convenient. If properly fitted it should never jam or work loose; but if I lived on 24:0 GUN", ROD, AND SADDLE. a river I should never make use of any other than » the simple splice, for the lashing affects less the ac- tion of the spring ; and if a few additional moments are lost in putting it together, the return is ample recompense. But I fear the age is too fast for its adoption. Having given my thoughts upon the rod I will now go to the reel. Of late years, at least since I was a boy, all kinds of mechanical inventions and appliances have been used to produce a more perfect reel : there are now to be obtained stop reels, multiplying reels, and reels with as many internal cog and other wheels as would start a clockmaker. Of these complicated apparatuses beware, for they are fraught with disap- pointment and vexation of spirit ; the old simple click reel is the only one that deserves the honor of being attached to a fly-rod. Still, too much care and attention can not be devoted to their construction. Every screw and joint should be as perfectly finished as those of a gun from a first- class manufacturer. The barrel of the reel should be wide in proportion to its length, for you thus gain power or give line with greater freedom; nothing is more unsightly or more awkward than a long narrow-barreled reel. Brass is the metal usual- IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING. 241 ly employed for their construction, but the newly- invented aluminium bronze is infinitely to be pre- ferred, for it does not corrode or discolor with the action of the atmosphere, and it is less liable to suffer from a blow or a fall ; mischances that the fly-fisher's paraphernalia, more particularly in a rocky mountainous country, are especially liable to when following the course of a trout brook, for stones will be slippery and of treacherous foundation. Who among our expert salmon or trout fishermen can not remember having obtained a frightful cropper when precipitously following up or down stream a heavy fish he was fast to ? I do not require to tax my mem- ory greatly to recall half-a-dozen such casualties. There are various methods of attaching the reel to the rod. Of none do I approve so highly as that by which the reel is held fast in a shallow indentation by a movable band. In those cases where the butt is pierced, or the reel held on the rod by a brass band attached to it, which closes with a screw, the nuts are constantly getting lost or loose, through the thread being worn out ; moreover, the hand not unfrequently gets chafed by coming in contact with them. On the subject of fly-lines there is great diversity 11 24:2 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. of opinion. Of whatever materials they are com- posed they should taper. Hair and silk I was at one time much in favor of; but, after a lengthened trial, I found one great objection — the two materials had not the same amount of elasticity, so that a heavy strain would bear more severely on one than on the other, which ultimately caused brittleness. A plaited-silk line, which has been submitted to a pro- cess of varnishing, rendering it impervious to water, will, I think, do the greatest amount of work and throw the greatest length of line; but for deli- cate, light, fine fishing, nothing I know of can surpass the old-fashioned one, composed entirely of horse- hair ; for they are possessed of more vitality, elastici- ty, and quickness. In the selection of one of these every foot should be carefully examined and tested, for a careless, slop-shop workman will frequently work in short and worthless hair, possibly in the center, which will destroy the whole fabric ; for if the line be once broken it is useless. It matters not how much in- genuity and time you spend over the splice. For a day or two it may pass through the rings, but the fric- tion will wear it rough, and it will catch, sooner or later, not improbably with a large fish, for then the strain is greatest. Can any thing more disgusting IDEAB ON FLY-FISHING. 243 be imagined than taking the last look at eight or ten yards of your line, perhaps more, rapidly dis- appearing in the eddying stream with your cast- ing line and flies acting as advance guard? The thought of such a catastrophe is enough to make a man's blood run cold. Casting lines should also taper, and, provided the gut is good, can scarcely have too fine a termina- tion. Although a great many disciples of the rod always purchase these ready-made, every fisherman should be able to knot one up himself. The process is simple. Select your hairs — coarse ones for the top, fine ones for the bottom — steep ihem for some minutes in water, as warm as the hand can conven- iently bear, then knot them together, increasing or diminishing gradually in size according to the end you have commenced at. Care must be taken that such a knot be used as there is no slip to. The safest I know of is formed thus : take the ends to be joined and place them alongside one another, then take one end and make a single hitch by doub- ling it back and passing the end through the loop, which pull tight. Do the same with the reverse end, when by pulling on the line both will slip together, the strain having the tendency to tighten the knot. 244: GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. After cutting off the surplus ends a few turns of very fine silk to whip them down and the smallest quantity of varnish, will add much to the appearance of the line. There is no amusement that I know of in which it is so requisite for the follower of it to know how to make use of his hands and his ingenuity. Bad luck, or whatever you choose to call it, may, be- fore an hour's fishing be done, reduce you to the alter- native of either ceasing work or manufacturing out of broken fragments a new casting line. Very possi- bly this is caused by the fish being more than usual- ly on the feed. How disagreeable to be compelled to halt ! — better far to spend ten minutes with the dry end of gut in your mouth, the more rapidly to render the hairs fit for knotting, and to know how to put them together afterward. The rings upon your rod should be large and not too numerous, five are sufficient for the lower joints, and about five more for the tip, supposing it to be a rod thirteen feet in length, and in three pieces. In America I lately saw rods ringed on both sides, so that if after unusual hard work and constant use a tendency to warp was evinced, you altered your reel to the reverse side and thus counteracted it. How- ever, the better plan, I should say, would be to use IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING. 245 the reverse sides day about. The only objection to this double arrangement of rings is additional weight, but that must be very trifling. Having now described the rod, the reel, the line, and the cast, I approach a subject that I hesitate to touch, viz., fly-tying, for I do not believe that any one can become an expert, but through constant practice, after having received a few elementary les- sons from an adept. I believe I can tie a fair fly ; but how long do you suppose it was before I reached my present excellence? Years; and even now I discover wrinkles and new methods of which I was not previously aware ; however, one rule may be laid down : never to take a turn of the silk round your hook without purpose, or without giving it sufficient strength to keep it in its place and perform the duty intended. The most important part is the simplest and first, the securing of the gut to the shank of the hook. Unless this is attended to all your labor is vain and worthless — so much time thrown away and wasted. Here comes all the strain, and a thoughtless turn or two will cause naught but o o disappointment. Some anglers, particularly Irish ones, place the wings on so that the feather points from the hook, then double them back and tie them 24:6 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. down. In this method much practice is necessary to form a handsome head ; but its advocates claim for it strength. However, I have so frequently found the silk slip, and the feathers consequently point in the reverse direction, that I unhesitatingly condemn the practice. To make a handsome and serviceable fly, I have always followed the. method of putting the wings on separately, care being taken not to injure the pile of the feathers ; and this should be done last, the most minute drop of varnish being used over the silk when the head is finished off. My first effort to tie a fly turned out a thing like a humming-bird, my second like a humble-bee, and so on till I have succeeded in making a good imitation of a gnat. Patience and perseverance have done this, and none will ever excel in fly-tying without exercising these qualities, so essentially useful in every walk in life. As a rule, the bigger the river, the more water it contains ; and the more boisterous the weather, the larger the flies that are used ; but in summer, when the streams and burns have become clear and low, the smallest sizes must be resorted to, thrown with the lightest line, from the most unobservable and most sheltered position. Three flies, their coloring and component parts IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING. 247 that I have found successful on almost all waters and at every portion of the open season, I will describe ; in fact, I have so much faith in them that I invari- ably use all three in making my first essay on an un- known river, viz., the red hackle, hare's ear and yel- low, and black hackle. In America, on the small trout-brooks, I found them equally attractive, evi- dence of a similarity of taste in fish on the Eastern and Western continents. Fly No. 1, the red hackle, body composed of rufus wool, twisted in with tying silk, lower portions of body to be fine, gradually in- creasing in thickness till the shoulder is reached. Shoulder of bright-red cock's hackle, the color that is obtained in a natural state from the domestic fowl, game fowls generally producing the finest ; but if those from the East Indian jungle-cock can be obtained, you will possess the very best. Wings put on separately, and obtained from the wings of the corn crake, shot immediately previous to their au- tumnal migration. Fly No. 2, hare's ear and yellow ; this has a tail composed of two strands from the larger feathers of the guinea fowl, body composed of the fine mottled hair off the ears of a hare, mixed with fine mohair, of any of the intermediate shades from straw color to olive. The mohair should be cut 248 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. short, so that it will the better mix with the hare's ear. This dubbing must also be tied in with the silk, and the fly should be large at the shoulder. No hackle in this specimen is required. The wings from the large wing-feathers of the fieldfare, each placed on separately. Fly No. 3, black hackle ; body of blue wool or mohair, finished at termination with a couple of turns of silver tinsel, black hackle from domestic fowl for shoulder, with the wing composed of the feather either from tail or wing of the water-hen. The angler had better be provided with various sizes of these, as rivers are not always in the same condi- tion, and weather is variable. For me to say that other flies will not kill better on some rivers, or at least equally well, would be absurd, but those de- scribed I have found most generally useful. A hand- some and frequently very killing fly at times, partic- ularly in blustering weather, is made of the following material. Body of two of the longest and most rufus strands of a feather from a brown turkey; these strands to have the fingers pulled up them, so as to cause the fine edges to stand out ; then wrapped firm- ly on. Shoulder of brown cock's hackle, with brown grouse feather for wing. In autumn, particularly if the stream should be clearing after a flood, I have IDEAS ON FLY-FISHING. 249 known this fly to be most effective. However, it is no bad plan if you are a stranger in a neighborhood, to get hold of a poor honest disciple of Izaak Walton, who will give you information, and very probably sell you some of the contents of his book. However, be- ware that he does not palm off upon you the debris of his collection. Except for sea-trout fishing, the bril- liant and many-colored macaw-like compositions are totally useless in our inland streams, so let not love of gaudy coloring or the advice of inexperienced persons induce you to spend your time and money on such fabrications. We will suppose the novice accoutered with all that money and judgment can obtain in the shape of tackle and rod, at the same time hoping that his gar- ments are composed of those sober quiet colors that are least observable ; for whether in shooting, deer- stalking, or fishing, attention to this is all important ; that he wears naught that is not useful, and not like the Laocoon, as I once observed a young gentleman, BO covered was he with straps and bright-colored strings suspending lunch-box, and flasks, and innumer- able other contrivances, the very weight of which must have impeded his movements and fagged him to death long ere the day was over. He is on the 11* 250 GUN, EOD, AND SADDLE. river's margin, at a spot free from bush, rock, or other impediment. The rod is carefully put togeth- er (I hope it is a spliced one, for I shall have more hope for the beginner's ultimate success from this choice), the reel is attached, the line drawn through the rings, and the cast and flies carefully taken off his hat, round which they have been wrapped (to make them more subservient and less obstreperous on commencing work), and made fast to the line. Ere an attempt at the first cast is made, take one word of advice. Englishmen are so horsey in their proclivities that they invariably consider a rod, when first they handle it, an instrument to be treated and used in exactly the same manner as a carriage whip. From boyhood upward they have been used to the latter, and the Englishman's hand has obtained won- derful cunning in cracking the same. Now the two motions are essentially different ; the one is perform- ed by the quickest possible jerk, the other by making the widest possible sweep, as free from angles as the turns on a race-course. Get this information so grafted into your brain that you will not be likely to forget yourself, for on each occasion of this forgetful- ness you will pay a penalty by being minus a fly, pro- bably the trail one. I have known some persons so IDEAS ON FLYFISHING. 251 skilled in snapping off flies, even although possessed of considerable experience, that their custom must have been of no small advantage to the tradesman who supplied them with tackle. Supposing the angler is facing a river which he is desirous of throwing across. The rod being held in the right hand, gradually, but with increasing veloci- ty, raise your rod from left to right ; when the line is straight out from you, make a sweep, and bring the flies down upon the water with a half-circular motion of the hand. This last movement will raise the slack of the line and cause the trail fly to strike the water first, which should always happen. When this first lesson is thoroughly learned with the left hand, it should then be practiced up and down stream : when, with perseverance and attention, such precision may be gained that the fisherman can place the flies at every effort within an inch or two of the desired spot. 252 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. STEONG SHOOTING. Do guns of this day shoot better than those manu- factured ten years ago ? The reason why I propound such a question is, that I hear and read of birds being killed steadily at seventy and eighty yards, of trap- shooting being practiced with a fifty yards' rise, and the performers scoring four out of five. I never lived in a neighborhood where it was not reported that there was a wonderful shooting gun, but I never have had the fortune to see any of them perform their unprecedented feats; either the shooter's nerves were out of order or the powder was bad. How unfortu- nate it is that powder will so often be bad, more especially when it is desirable that it should be ex- cellent. When I hear sportsmen, particularly the young gentlemen, narrate the performances of their double barrels, I can not help commiserating myself that I have never been able to obtain better than a third-rate article for my use, for I have heretofore thought thef gun which killed reliably at forty and STKONG SHOOTING. 253 with considerable certainty at fifty yards was as near perfection as obtainable. I do not mean to say that occasionally a snipe, or even a duck, has not been turn- ed over at seventy yards, still at such ranges I have always thought the odds very much in favor of the birds. As none of my old battery can accomplish more than above stated, before I go abroad again it would be desirable to obtain a modern gun, yet I should not like to adopt a new favorite, which would shelve an old, without first seeing him perform, but if the novice will kill steadily at seventy with ordinary gunpowder, such as Curtis and Harvey's, I shall not have a moment's hesitation on the subject ; therefore I ask, do modern guns shoot much better — say thirty per cent, better — than those turned out ten years ago? 254 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. IDEAS OE" DOG How many that would have turned out good men and useful members of the community, have been ru- ined in their youth through not being understood, and possibly treated with undue severity? How many promising colts, perfect in general appearance, have turned out runaways, apt to shy, and possessed of every failing that it was possible for horseflesh to learn, therefore irrecoverably ruined, through the bul- lying and barbarity of the trainer? As men are ruined, as colts are ruined, so are a preponderating percentage of our pointers and setters. My old Dom- inie used habitu ally to go about with the end of his strap hanging out of his pocket ; no ordinary strap, but what the reader might imagine a couple of feet cut off an omnibus trace, terrible only to behold by such as were fond of toffey, or encased in tight-fitting jackets. And then the possessor of this strap was no puny bookworm — no, not he — but a stalwart Celt with a biceps so tremendous that his wife, proud of IDEAS ON DOG-BREAKING. 255 his manly development, used frequently to ask her friends, her female ones of course, when discussing the relative merits of husbands, " Have you ever seen Wil- liam's muscle ? " I don't know that I ever saw it ; I am certain that I often felt it, and believe now that I would have been much better informed, and at that period more devoted to my books, but for the whack- ings that no excuse, whether just or not, could save me from. So it is with the majority of dog-breakers, they invest their surplus cash in the purchase of the most formidable whip that can be found, and with it conspicuously displayed from the yawning pocket of their velveteen coat strut about in conscious pride, and are at once dubbed dog-breakers ; and truly they are dog breakers, if breaking the heart and spirit of poor canines deserves the appellation. The dog I have found much like the child ; study his character, mark his eccentricities ; when he does wrong gently admonish him, when he does well, with- hold not the approbation merited. Of course in both races a headstrong pupil will occasionally be found, when castigation becomes necessary. With this I can find no fault, but I am persuaded that un- necessary correction is too often administered to both. In the course of my life I have possessed a great num- 256 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. ber of pointers and setters, the majority of which I have broken, and not giving myself undeserved praise, I have had among the number dogs which 1 have seldom seen equaled, never surpassed, and why ? Simply because I through kindness got my pupils to love me, to repose confidence in me, and never caused them to suppose that their love was misplaced and their confidence trespassed upon. No, no, neither is the strap the necessary adjunct of the schoolmaster, nor the dog-whip that of the instructor of the de- voted, unselfish, enduring, and persevering compan- ion of man. The dog, like the child, is possessed of affection, which can easily be won if the proper means are used, and affection alone will induce both child and dog to do all in their power to serve the object of their adoration. Probably the most important point to be attended to is that the material you go to work on be well bred and well made. In a puppy two or three months old the latter is no easy thing to tell, for it is really ex- traordinary how they change; but if, on the other hand, he should be nine or ten months, and possessed of the following points, you may go to work with the prospect of your labor not being thrown away : Medium size, short back, strong couplings, and well IDEAS ON DOG-BREAKING. 257 ribbed up, feet and limbs large, eyes high and intelli- gent. This last is perhaps not so absolutely neces- sary, for I have seen dogs with the most washy-look- ing daylights possessed of wonderful sagacity, partic- ularly among spaniels and French poodles, but I can not consider it other than a great defect in their per- sonal appearance. Above all things, avoid a young- ster with a curly tail. I know nothing more unsight- ly. The last, although the most requisite, desidera- tum is to know that the pupil possesses a good nose. When very young this is not so easy to find out, still with attention to the rapidity with which he notices tidbits of bread or meat, a probably correct opinion may be come at ; but when of matures age, say old enough to be shown game, if when 1 anting he carries his head well up there can be no longer room for doubt that his olfactory nerves are all right. Your field language should always be th*3 same, and each command be expressed by a word of one syllable, the words being as dissimilar in intonation as possible ; but it is better far to do without the voice by substituting the whistle. At all events never speak to your dog while hunting unless absohiUiy necessary. In early education I always accompany each order with a movement of the hand ; for in- 258 stance, in saying " down " I hold up my right hand. In a short time the holding up the hand alone is suffi- cient. In quartering your ground, if your dog is far ahead and you wish him to hunt either to the right or left of his present position, with one note on the whistle attract his attention, then turn in the line you wish him to hunt, at the same time waving your hand in the desired direction. Before long, with a note on the whistle to make him look toward you, a wave of the hand will be all that is necessary to cause him to alter his course to that which may be wished. All well-bred dogs will stand game. I believe they do it for the purpose of ascertaining the exact position of the birds, that by a sudden direct rush they may have a chance of capturing one. To pro- long this pause is the important part of the young- ster's education, and for that purpose the check- string is to be used. A plan that I have adopted with the greatest success is the following : — Procure some game birds, I generally use quail, pluck the feathers from one wing so as to reduce their power of flight ; drop them at different places in a grass field, marking within a few feet of the spot with a piece of paper, then give the birds ten or fifteen IDEAS ON DOG-BREAKING. 259 minutes' lair, so that they may get over their fright and move about. Time being up, take your pupil, with check-string made fast to him, and hunt him up wind. As you approach where a bird has been deposited, caution him, appear to be anxiously expecting game, your manner will make him doubly cautious, so that when he winds the game he will give you credit for more capability of finding than himself; your ability will be appreciated, which will be shown by the desire he will manifest in carrying out your future orders ; but having come up to the birds, when the dog stands tighten the check-line, bearing heavily against him if he appears determined to be headstrong, cau- tioning him in a soothing, confidential tone, and the instant the bird flutters up give him a sharp jerk and cause him to " down," as if the departure of the bird was his fault. Three lessons of this kind, given with care and proper attention, the pupil being at the proper stage in other respects, I have always found sufficient to make him steady on his point. Why I disapprove so much the use of the voice, is founded on two reasons : first, that it is more alarm- ing to game and more apt to cause them to be wild than any other sound, not even excepting the report 260 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. of the gun ; secondly, if you keep constantly speaking to your dogs, from hearing incessantly your voice they become so used to it, that in emergencies they will fail to give it that prompt attention so desir- able. I always teach my setters and pointers to retrieve both by land and water; with the former breed this portion of their education I have never had any difficulty to impart, with the latter I have in one or two instances found a most de- cided antipathy to the aquatic portion, yet I have always succeeded in the end by following this plan. When the weather is warm take the youngsters with you bathing, with one or two more aged and previ- ously instructed companions, wade some distance out and then call them ; if you have gained their af- fection they will ultimately come ; if you can do so without alarming them caress them when in the wa- ter, and give them a small piece of food. After get- ting the puppies to wade till nearly out of their depth, cross deeper water, and if they will not come at first, hide yourself, occasionally calling them; I never knew an instance in which they would not ultimately come, more particularly when they see the example of their more aged companions. A few lessons of this sort will give them confidence, IDEAS ON DOG-BREAKING. 261 and after instructing them to retrieve by land, they will do the same from water. Some dogs have a natural tendency to retrieve; with such there will be no difficulty, while others take a long time to comprehend what is desired of them, one pupil that I possessed coud not be tempted for a length of time to take any thing in his mouth and carry it. For days I tried to overcome this repug- nance till my patience was almost exhausted ; at last I adopted a new plan and found it successful, I attach- ed a long string to a ball and after rolling it from me, he would go and nose it, but do no more ; when he was about to leave, by pulling the ball his curiosity became excited, and he wrould then lay hold of it. Repeating this, it awakened a desire to retain it, and at length, as if in sheer opposition, he would keep it in his mouth and carry it with him. With others I have tried the same course, and always successfully. I do not consider any dog of these breeds perfectly broken that will not retrieve from both elements ; and although I know that in England it is not generally considered a necessary part of their education, the advantages are so obvious that it does not need fur- ther comment. At four or five months old you should commence to handle your youngsters. Ac- 262 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. custom them to the roads, it will help to overcome their timidity and assist in hardening their feet. At six or seven months they should be familiar and conver- sant with the more simple portions of their education, such as " down," " heel,"&c.; and at about ten months game can be shown them; but on no account permit them to do a day's work, or exhaust themselves in hunting, till six or seven months more are over their heads. As to speed, it is a common supposition that if a dog have a good nose he cannot have too much speed; but very fast dogs are apt to run over game, and consequently flush it from the very rate they are moving at. I have observed also that those who will do the longest and severest day's work are less impet- uous as a rule than others. When shooting regularly, the dogs in use should always be kept in their kennel except when in the field ; their associating liberty with their work makes them more zealous and anxious to please. On hunting days one good substantial meal, immediately after reaching home, with a piece of oaten or coarse bread in the middle of the day, will be found the best working diet ; a dog with a full stomach is in a most unfit state to be used. There is one description of dog I never would keep in my kennel, viz., one that trails his game. Some IDEAS ON DOG-BREAKING. 263 persons recommend an artifice to make him hold his head up, which is in my opinion all nonsense, be- cause the fault lies in the animal being defective in scenting powers. But even if such should not be the case, and they are capable of finding as much game as the dog who ranges with his head up, you will not have the same sport, for although game may lie well to the latter, they certainly will not to the former. The birds possibly argue thus, " that harum-scarum fellow with head up, slashing along after some impor- tant business to the other side of the field, is too pre- occupied to mind us ; as long as we lie close, there is nothing to be feared." But, on the other hand, the inquiry (if birds talk to one another) will be made by some sagacious old paterfamilias, " What's that pot- tering dog doing down there ? " All eyes are im- mediately directed to the disagreeable intruder in question, and very soon it becomes a decided point among the feathered family that their footsteps are being followed, and that with felonious intentions, and in preference to waiting for further information they wing their way to safer retreats. It is not because birds and quadrupeds don't talk that they don't think, particularly wild ones, when it is on a point regarding safety. When young dogs are 264 GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. so jealous and headstrong that they will not back one another, it is well to use them separately, along with an old and stanch favorite. A point being obtained by the senior, let the younger approach him as close as, if possible, for him to see the old dog, then make him down charge, by raising your hand, and keep him in that position till your barrels are reloaded ; but if it be attainable, the elder dog being the farthest ahead, call up the pupil and give him the wind, after- ward slowly approaching where the first point is made, showing by both manner and voice that you are on the qui vive, and do not let his pace be faster than your own till the elder dog is reached, when any attempt to outstrip or go ahead of the proprietor of the find, should be instantly corrected. With a little patience and repetition of these maneuvers success will be the result. I can not recommend, however, the practice of constantly hunting old and young dogs together ; for the former, from greater experi- ence, will find more game, and the latter seeing this will begin to disbelieve in his own powers, and follow the veteran, that he may always be at hand when sport is obtained. The report of the gun should invariably be the sig- nal for dogs to drop to shot ; this lesson should early IDEAS ON DOG-BKEAKINa. 265 be inculcated at home. To familiarize the dog with the gun I have been in the habit of taking a pistol with me to the kennel, and all the youngsters being called into the yard, fire it, making all drop to shot ; after having kept them a sufficient time down, I would cause the food to be brought in, and with a wave of the hand permit them to rise and have their grub. To have to shout " down," keeping an eye at the same time on each of your dogs so as to enforce the order if necessary, is very unsportsmanlike, and certainly very much out of place when all your powers of vision and observation are indispensable to mark where the departing covey are going to pitch, or the dead and wounded drop. When seeking for a wounded or killed bird never allow your dogs to know that you have been unsuc- cessful : if you have given as long a time as you can spare for the purpose and see no ultimate prospect of finding, take one of your bagged birds and drop it when the dog is engaged, then cast back that he may wind it, and thus believe that his Search has not been fruitless. The setters most in vogue at the present day I do not like nearly as much as those that were preferred fifteen years ago, for this reason, that they appear to ^ 266 GUN, BOD, AND SADDLE. me too seedy ; such of course may suit the person who only shoots a few hours at a time, and then overt highly cultivated level land, but the sportsman who goes in for work, who shoots for shooting's sake, and not simply to get up an appetite, to whom every day that he is out is too short, would, I am certain, find more satisfaction in the representatives of the old school. Some time since so deeply was I impressed with this idea, that I crossed some of my stock with a well-bred, but rather large cover spaniel ; the result was that the second cross were not only handsome, but animals that there was no end of work in, with great activity and energy. It frequently happens that among a lot of young- sters you will find one most provokingly backward, who won't hunt or take any interest in the proceed- ings. Put a curb on your temper and have patience. You may have to wait, but gradually the apathy will wear off, and ultimately he may turn out the flower of the flock. I remember a youngster, which until he was eighteen months old, refused to take notice of game. Two or three times a week, for months, he saw birds killed, yet all was incapable of imbuing him with the proper spirit, for he would scarcely ever leave heel. At length the ice was broken. He got by ac- IDEAS ON DOG-BREAKING. 267 cident among a covey, which his experience told him he would flush if he moved, and from that day a new era commenced in his life. But this is not so much to be Wondered at. Can not all of us remember some contemporaries at school who were supposed to be almost wanting common sense, but who, ultimately, turned out brilliant men? Intellect is not equally rapidly developed in each, and precocity is not al- ways the precursor of brilliancy in mature life. Having said thus much about our favorites, I can scarcely lay down my pen without expressing an idea or two on the lords of the creation. Bad sportsmen never have good dogs. The fussy, nervous, excitable person never has good dogs. It is a moral impossi- bility that they can be so, although they may have been most perfectly broken. In such hands they are certain to retrograde in performance, in the same way that the regiment that is perfect in its drill when under its cool and collected colonel, becomes a rabble under the irate, irascible, nervous major. " Keep cool" should be your motto ; for if you can not, your suc- cess will only be moderate. Nothing is so destruc- tive to both dogs and success as hurry. Listen in conclusion to the advice of an old and excellent sportsman, and you will see that his ideas much coin- 268 aujsr, ROD, AND SADDLE. cide with mine : — Above all things never permit your- self to be hurried ; but when using youngsters, yes, and even old and tried dogs, perform your loading and duties with as much accuracy as a soldier upon parade, remembering that the loss of a crippled bird is nothing to spoiling a valuable dog ; for those which have courage and energy, and consequently the most promising, will, from such neglect, be the most liable to suffer. WILDERNESS LIFE. 269 WILDERNESS LIFE. CIRCUMSTANCES had caused me to attach myself to a trader, who, with about twenty teamsters, was en route for northern Mexico. My duties were to hunt and supply the party with game, a pleasant enough occupa- tion but not without danger, for the greater portion of the country we traversed belonged to the much-dread- ed Comanche, the most reckless race of freebooters and horsemen probably on the face of the earth, who are at war with every one, and prize nothing more than a white man's scalp. Knowing such to be the case it behooved me to keep my weather eye open when separated from my newly-formed acquaintances, but for all my watchfulness I several times had narrow escapes. Still time fled pleasantly onward, and as I write this I look back with delight to the happy, free, thoughtless hours passed either in the saddle or watching the movements of the wild animals that knew no bounds to their demesne. The Indians sel- dom troubled my thoughts, for I had a mare, that 270 GUN, KOD, AND SADDLE. I daily rode, handsome as a picture, and as game, fleet, and enduring as any animal I had ever thrown a leg over, thorough-bred I believe, and as sagacious as a dog. Between her and my bat mule there ex- isted a most extraordinary affection. I had but to go ahead, and the latter was certain to follow, so if I did not fall into an ambuscade I knew full well I could distance any Comanche braves till I regained camp, where, behind the wagons backed by the stal- wart Missourian teamsters, who well knew the use of their rifles, I would be safe. Unfortunately the principal of the expedition was a most unpleasant and unpopular person, so that between his bullying and his unpleasant manner, a mutiny was raised among his retainers, and the consequence was that the majority started en masse on their own hook, to seek another employer, or find their way back to their native State. My education and antecedents had been such as to give me a horror of mutiny ; moreover, up to this date, I had nothing to complain of, so I determined to stick to the wagons, and use every effort in my power to save the owner from the only alternative that appeared left, the deserting of all his property in the wilderness. Ere long, however, I was com- WILDERNESS LIFE. 271 pelled to change my resolution, for no one could sub- mit to his irascible temper and constant insulting lan- guage; so, with no companions but my mare and mule, I left the camp, one bright morning in the month of February, with the determination of returning east- ward alone. The step was full of danger, but I pre- ferred running the risk rather than remain to be fur- ther insulted, or seek redress by recourse to weapons, too often done in this lawless portion of the world. As the teams were being hitched up I started in the reverse direction, little aware of the trying ordeal that was before me. My animals were in good condi- tion and spirits. For a week I traveled northeast, in the hope of finding a suitable halting-place to remain in till spring fairly commenced. At length I came upon a spot which took my fancy — a small table-land well sheltered from the northern wind, and under- neath a valley, from which the snow had partially disappeared, and where there was a fair quantity of bunch grass, the most desirable food for the quadru- peds. Under a projecting rock I made my camp, for the spot was so inclosed that I hoped the light- ing of a fire would not attract attention. Weeks o rolled by, and the mare and mule lost little of their 272 GUN", KOD, AND SADDLE. condition, although the weather was frequently pinch- ing cold. The canons in the neighborhood sup- plied me with abundance of game, and each day I expected that a break in the weather would justify a start for the eastern settlements. Of course one day was only in outline a repetition of the other, but how widely different in detail. In the morning the horses were taken to the bottom, breakfast was cooked, the enjoyable pipe lit, and the direction settled in which I would hunt, returning earlier or later, accord- ing to success. The afternoon would pass mending moccasins or clothes, cleaning arms or arranging camp, procuring firewood, till it was time to hunt up the nags, which being accomplished, and the evening meal dispatched, on a bed of leaves I would smoke myself to sleep, painting pictures of distant home till no longer conscious. A hunter's camp always becomes a rendezvous for two or three wolves, and two of these scoundrels were seldom beyond sight. Latter- ly they became so tame that they would come close enough to pick up a bone if thrown to them, and one night when the cold was more rigorous than usual, on awaking to add fresh fuel to the fire, I saw one of them sitting beside the warm embers, nodding his head like a sleepy listener to a prosy sermon. Every WILDERNESS LIFE. 273 day I expected to be able to set out. The appear- ance of the sky denoted change as I turned in on the last evening, but whether it was anticipation of the good things to be obtained when civilization had been reached, I know not, or an unaccountable con- sciousness that danger was not far distant, I could not sleep. First I tried one side and then the other, but without effect. As it was not cold the fire had gradually decayed till only a few embers remained, making the surrounding darkness more intense. While I was hesitating whether the rebuilding of the fire or a fresh pipe would induce sleep, uneasiness seemed to have taken possession of my animals. The mule was as watchful as a dog, and as I knew he would not leave his friend, I invariably left him un- tied. Several times he uttered that short, quick snort so peculiar to the species, and always indicative of alarm, while the mare kept moving as far as her lariat would permit her. It might be any thing, from a deer to an Indian, so as my arms were at hand, I quietly crawled out of my lair, taking special caution that no momentary flicker from the fire should disclose my movements, and by a short detour got beside the nags, and soon had the soft, silky muz- zle of Beckey in the palm of my hand. The great- 12 * GUN, ROD, AND SADDLE. est disaster a man can suffer in such a situation is the loss either of his ammunition or of his horses. If there were any hostile redskins in the neighborhood, by the step I had taken a stampede of my animals was now impossible. A few of the longest hours I thus sat, my presence reassuring the beasts, and, when day broke, so still had all become, that I doubt not I should have been asleep, only that the hour preceding day is well known to be invariably the time selected by Indians to carry out their machina- tions. In the morning, quietly moving about camp, as if pursuing unsuspiciously my usual avocations, I particularly examined the locality, when, among the remaining scattered patches of snow, the easily-dis- tinguished bruised moccasin track of an Indian was discovered, doubtless made by a brave, who in search for game had got benighted, when he had stum- bled across my hiding-place. My camp was there- fore no longer safe ; the coming night, he, with his companions, would be back, when woe betide the solitary white man. My horses I accompanied to their feeding-ground, not permitting them to get be- yond control, and as soon as their appetites were sufficiently satisfied, I returned to my little home for the last time. The few trifles I possessed were WILDERNESS LIFE. 275 soon packed, and nothing remained further to delay me. Still I waited a quarter of an hour longer, for the purpose of building a pile of wood, in which I placed some smoldering embers, in the hope that it would not blaze up till several hours after dark — an indication that I doubted not the redskins would construe into a certain evidence that I was still ig- norant of being discovered. On my arrival in the Bayou my mare had been a little tender in front from her hoofs having been worn very close ; the period of rest had rectified this, and, full of hope and anticipation, I pushed my way eastward, the only regret that passed like a cloud over my mind occur- ring as I took the last, ay, and long look, at my wilderness home. CHOICE BOOKS FOR SPORTSMEN. "Grreat in moiatlis of* -wisest oen.su.re." I. T71RANK FORESTER'S FIELD SPORTS of the United States JP and British Provinces of North America. By HENRY WM. HERBERT. fcTew Edition, revised since the death of Mr. Herbert, containing corrections and additions, with a brief Memoir of the author. With numerous Illustra- tions on wood of every species of Game, drawn from Nature. Two vols. crown 4to., tinted paper, green and scarlet cloth, gilt back and sides. $7 50 II. FRANK FORESTER'S FISH AND FISHING of the United States and British Provinces. Illustrated from Nature by One Hundred Engravings on Wood, and a Steel Plato of Twenty-four Colored Flies. By HENRY WM. HERBERT. This Edition has been thoroughly revised since the death of Mr. Herbert, and is enlarged by the addition of a Practical Treatise on Fly Fishing, by DINKS. One vol. crown 4to., tinted paper, green and scarlet cloth, gilt back and side 5 BO III. TTIRANK FORESTER'S HORSE AND HORSEMANSHIP of the Jj United States and British Provinces of North America. By HENRY WM. HERBERT. Illustrated with steel-engraved Original Portraits, from paintings and drawings, by the most distinguished artists, of celebrated Horses, including numerous fine wood engravings. New Ee vised Edition. Two vols. imperial 8vo., embossed cloth, gilt back and side 20 00 IV. TTTIRANK FORESTER'S COMPLETE MANUAL for Young Jj Sportsmen, of Fowling, Fishing, and Field Sports. With directions for handling the Gun, the Rifle, and the Rod. Illustrated with numerous Engravings on Wood. Prepared for the instruction and use of the Youth of America, by HENRY WM. HEKBEHT. One vol. crown Svo., tinted paper, green and scarlet cloth, pp. 480 3 00 V. THE DOG. BY DINKS, MAYHEW, AND HUTCHINSON. — COM- piled, Illustrated, and Edited by FRANK FORESTER. 'usely Illustrated with Original Drawings. Embracing the SPORTSMAN'S ADE-MECUM, by " DINKS." DOGS : THKIR MANAGEMENT : bv EDWARD MAYHEW. DOG-BREAKING: by COL. W. N. HUTCHINSON. One vol. crown 8vo., tinted paper, green and scarlet cloth, pp. C64 3 00 VI. rTIHE DEAD SHOT; OR, SPORTSMAN'S COMPLETE GUIDE; being a _1_ Treatise on the use of the Gun, with rudimentary and finishing lessons in the Art of Shooting Game of all kinds ; Pigeon-Shooting, Dog-Breaking, etc. By MARKSMAN. With six full page Engravings of Attitudes and Positions. With explanations of the difference and relations of English and American Game, from the works of FRANK FOKESTER. One vol. 12mo., uniform with THE CRACK SHOT 2 00 Published by W, A, TOWNSEUD & ADAMS, 434 Broome Street. Mailed by the Publishers free of Postage, and for sale by all Booksellers. CRITICAL OPINIONS OF THE DEAD SHOT. ^ THE DEAD SHOT is in every respect the best work on -L the art of shooting for the young sportsman. It comprises a searching and clear exposition of the secrets of good shooting, with the best practical instructions in dog-breaking. All who read it will assuredly profit by its truthful and convincing explanations. Bad shots, nervous and inexperienced sportsmen, who peruse this little treatise, will find much light thrown on the mystery of shooting with unerring precision." — SPORTING MAGAZINE. ^ MARKSMAN'S opinion is entitled to respect, because he •jL'JL shows in every page of his book that he understands the subject of which he treats. His advice to young sportsmen is brief, clear, and practical; and we believe that he who acts upon it steadily can not fail to improve his shooting; and if nature has given him a quick eye and steady hand and nerve he will have placed himself in the right road to attain the reputation of a dead shot.11— SATURDAY KE- VIEW. •• THIS is the most complete sportsman's manual that we -I- have yet seen ; and we feel a pleasure in recommending it to the notice of every one who carries a gun after game, whether he be an old hand ;r a mere tyro. If the former, he will find much to enjoy in the record of work cleverly done, to- gether with a profusion of useful hints that can not fail to satisfy and please ; if the latter, in MAKKSMAN he meets a friend who will lead him from the first rudimentary lesson in handling a gun, to the proficiency of a dead shot. We have not read a more useful or agreeable sporting book for a long time, and heartily recommend it to every sportsman, old as well as young." — BELI/S LIFE. U npHIS is a capital little book, the work of a man who JL thoroughly knows what he is writing about The Volunteer movement has naturally Jed to the publication of several treatises on the use of a gun, especially the use of a rifle; but we d< not call to mind any one that so completely comes up to our own notion of a useful manual on the science of shooting as this of MARKS- MAN s. We feel quite sure, that by a close adherence to the rules and instructions here given, the shooter can not fail to become a good shot, and will, Very probably, become a dead shot." — MORNING CHRONICLE. " MARKSMAN'S volume is worth the study of sportsmen, -L'A- whether young or old. We particularly recommend to the former the attitudes represented in the plates.11— GARDENERS1 CHRONICLE. •• T/t^E fully believe that the careful study of this book will M be equivalent to a considerable amount of practice in fitting a man to do his work in the field with credit to himself. The author writes like a man who thoroughly understands his business. His maxims are all plain, intelligible, and founded on co'iuinon sense. . . . The book is full of practical and precisely-expressed rules, which are fully supported by reason; and which, if they are carefully observed, will bring any one. with a reasonable amount of practice, steady nerves, and a good eve, up to the level implied in the phrase, 'a dead shot.1 " — JOHN BULL. ^ TO teach the novice how to handle a g-un, and to hit with -L certainty, and to cure defects in bad marksmen, ?8 the object of the DEAD SHOT. Commencing with the gun itself. MARKSMAN enters con