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Hunting Buffalo With Teddy Roosevelt |
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The party pitched their permanent camp
in a canyon of the Brazos known as Canyon Blanco. The last few days of
their journey they traveled beside the river through a veritable hunter's
paradise. The drought had forced all the animals to come to the larger
water-courses, and the country was literally swarming with game. Every
day, and all day long, the wagons traveled through the herds of antelopes
that grazed on every side, while, whenever they approached the canyon
brink, bands of deer started from the timber that fringed the river's
course; often, even the deer wandered out on the prairie with the
antelope. Nor was the game shy; for the hunters, both red and white,
followed only the
buffaloes,
until the huge, shaggy herds were destroyed, and the smaller beasts were
in consequence but little molested.
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Cowboys at Blanco Canyon, 1908, photo by
Erwin E.
Smith, courtesy
Amon Carter Museum. |
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Once my brother shot five antelopes
from a single stand, when the party were short of fresh venison; he was
out of sight and to leeward, and the antelopes seemed confused rather than
alarmed at the rifle-reports and the fall of their companions. As was to
be expected where game was so plenty, wolves and coyotes also abounded. At
night they surrounded the camp, wailing and howling in a kind of shrieking
chorus throughout the hours of darkness; one night they came up so close
that the frightened horses had to be hobbled and guarded. On another
occasion a large wolf actually crept into camp, where he was seized by the
dogs, and the yelling, writhing knot of combatants rolled over one of the
sleepers; finally, the long-toothed prowler managed to shake himself
loose, and vanished in the gloom. One evening they were almost as much
startled by a visit of a different kind. They were just finishing supper
when an
Indian
stalked suddenly and silently out of the surrounding darkness, squatted
down in the circle of firelight, remarked gravely, "Me Tonk," and began
helping himself from the stew. He belonged to the friendly tribe of
Tonkaways, so his hosts speedily recovered their equanimity; as for him,
he had never lost his, and he sat eating by the fire until there was
literally nothing left to eat. The panic caused by his appearance was
natural; for at that time the
Comanches
were a scourge to the buffalo-hunters,
ambushing them and raiding their camps; and several bloody fights had
taken place.
Their camp had been pitched near a
deep pool or water-hole. On both sides the bluffs rose like walls, and
where they had crumbled and lost their sheerness, the vast
buffalo
herds, passing and re-passing for countless generations, had worn furrowed
trails so deep that the backs of the beasts were but little above the
surrounding soil. In the bottom, and in places along the crests of the
cliffs that hemmed in the canyon-like valley, there were groves of tangled
trees, tenanted by great flocks of wild turkeys. Once my brother made two
really remarkable shots at a pair of these great birds. It was at dusk,
and they were flying directly overhead from one cliff to the other. He had
in his hand a thirty-eight caliber Ballard rifle, and, as the gobblers
winged their way heavily by, he brought both down with two successive
bullets. This was of course mainly a piece of mere luck; but it meant good
shooting, too. The Ballard was a very accurate, handy little weapon; it
belonged to me, and was the first rifle I ever owned or used. With it I
had once killed a deer, the only specimen of large game I had then shot;
and I presented the rifle to my brother when he went to
Texas.
In our happy ignorance we deemed it quite good enough for
buffalo
or anything else; but out on the plains my brother soon found himself
forced to procure a heavier and more deadly weapon.
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Cowboys sitting down to dinner.
This image available for photographic prints
HERE!
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When camp was pitched the horses were turned loose to graze and refresh
themselves after their trying journey, during which they had lost flesh
woefully. They were watched and tended by the two men who were always left
in camp, and, save on rare occasions, were only used to haul in the
buffalo
hides. The camp-guards for the time being acted as cooks; and, though
coffee and flour both ran short and finally gave out, fresh meat of every
kind was abundant. The camp was never without
buffalo-beef,
deer and antelope venison, wild turkeys, prairie-chickens, quails, ducks,
and rabbits. The birds were simply "potted," as occasion required; when
the quarry was deer or antelope, the hunters took the dogs with them to
run down the wounded animals. But almost the entire attention of the
hunters was given to the
buffalo.
After an evening spent in lounging round the campfire and a sound night's
sleep, wrapped in robes and blankets, they would get up before daybreak,
snatch a hurried breakfast, and start off in couples through the chilly
dawn.
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The great beasts were very plentiful; in the first day's hunt twenty
were slain; but the herds were restless and ever on the move. Sometimes
they would be seen right by the camp, and again it would need an all-day's
tramp to find them. There was no difficulty in spying them—the chief
trouble with forest game; for on the prairie a
buffalo
makes no effort to hide and its black, shaggy bulk looms up as far as the
eye can see. Sometimes they were found in small parties of three or four
individuals, sometimes in bands of about two hundred, and again in great
herds of many thousands; and solitary old bulls, expelled from the herds,
were common. If on broken land, among the hills and ravines, there was not
much difficulty in approaching from the leeward; for, though the sense of
smell in the
buffalo
is very acute, they do not see well at a distance through their
overhanging frontlets of coarse and matted hair. If, as was generally the
case, they were out in the open, rolling prairie, the stalking was far
more difficult. Every hollow, every earth hummock and sagebrush had to be
used as cover. The hunter wriggled through the grass flat on his face,
pushing himself along for perhaps a quarter of a mile by his toes and
fingers, heedless of the spiny cactus. When near enough to the huge,
unconscious quarry the hunter began firing, still keeping himself
carefully concealed. If the smoke was blown away by the wind, and if the
buffaloes
caught no glimpse of the assailant, they would often stand motionless and
stupid until many of their number had been slain, the hunter being careful
not to fire too high, aiming just behind the shoulder, about a third of
the way up the body, that his bullet might go through the lungs.
Sometimes, even after they saw the man, they would act as if confused and
panic-struck, huddling together and staring at the smoke puffs; but
generally they were off at a lumbering gallop as soon as they had an idea
of the point of danger. When once started, they ran for many miles before
halting, and their pursuit on foot was extremely laborious.
One morning my cousin and brother had
been left in camp as guards. They were sitting idly warming themselves in
the first sunbeams, when their attention was sharply drawn to four
buffaloes
that were coming to the pool to drink. The beasts came down a game trail,
a deep rut in the bluff, fronting where they were sitting, and they did
not dare to stir for fear of being discovered. The
buffaloes
walked into the pool, and after drinking their fill, stood for some time
with the water running out of their mouths, idly lashing their sides with
their short tails, enjoying the bright warmth of the early sunshine; then,
with much splashing and the gurgling of soft mud, they left the pool and
clambered up the bluff with unwieldy agility. As soon as they turned, my
brother and cousin ran for their rifles, but before they got back the
buffaloes
had crossed the bluff crest. Climbing after them, the two hunters found,
when they reached the summit, that their game, instead of halting, had
struck straight off across the prairie at a slow lope, doubtless intending
to rejoin the herd they had left. After a moment's consultation the men
went in pursuit, excitement overcoming their knowledge that they ought
not, by rights, to leave camp. They struck a steady trot, following the
animals by sight until they passed over a knoll, and then trailing them.
Where the grass was long, as it was for the first four or five miles, this
was a work of no difficulty, and they did not break their gait, only
glancing now and then at the trial. As the sun rose and the day became
warm, their breathing grew quicker; and the sweat rolled off their faces
as they ran across the rough prairie sward, up and down the long inclines,
now and then shifting their heavy rifles from one shoulder to the other.
But they were in good training, and they did not have to halt. At last
they reached stretches of bare ground, sun-baked and grassless, where the
trail grew dim; and here they had to go very slowly, carefully examining
the faint dents and marks made in the soil by the heavy hoofs, and
unraveling the trail from the mass of old footmarks. It was tedious work,
but it enabled them to completely recover their breath by the time that
they again struck the grassland; and but a few hundred yards from the
edge, in a slight hollow, they saw the four
buffaloes
just entering a herd of fifty or sixty that were scattered out grazing.
The herd paid no attention to the new-comers, and these immediately began
to feed greedily. After a whispered consultation, the two hunters crept
back, and made a long circle that brought them well to leeward of the
herd, in line with a slight rise in the ground. They then crawled up to
this rise and, peering through the tufts of tall, rank grass, saw the
unconscious beasts a hundred and twenty-five or fifty yards away. They
fired together, each mortally wounding his animal, and then, rushing in as
the herd halted in confusion, and following them as they ran, impeded by
numbers, hurry, and panic, they eventually got three more.
Continued
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West and Cowboy Bumper Stickers - Great
Old West
and
Cowboy
bumper stickers for yourself or for your friends. Made of durable
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