Saturday, 31 March 2018
Hunting the Canadian Wolf
By Jno A. Hope.
Illustrated
by Warwick Reynolds.
From The Wide World Magazine June 1911, Vol. xxvii.—17.
A rousing account of sport with rifle and snow-shoe in the great forests of
Canada. In the school of wood-craft and cunning, says the author— himself a
veteran hunter—the wolf has no four-footed equal. Mr. Hope describes the happenings of a three months’ hunt in
the winter of 1908-9.
It is only in recent years that the great, gaunt, grey-coated wolf (Canis
lupus)—found throughout the unsettled
portions of Canada, from the Atlantic to the Pacific—has come to be regarded by big-game hunters as a sporting animal.
“And,” they very pertinently ask, “why not? Did not the Kings of France and
England, centuries ago, keep great packs of hounds specially bred and trained
to hunt wolves for sport? And do not sportsmen hunt them, in various ways, in
several European countries to-day? Moreover, have we any animal harder to see,
to outwit, to outmanoeuvre and shoot, than the wolf?”
Certainly not here in North America. Hunting wolves from horseback
behind a pack of nondescript dogs is, of course, not a new sport on our vast,
level prairies of the West. But in the still vaster forested regions of
Northern Quebec and Ontario wolf-hunting as a sport is in its infancy; and here
horse and hound must give place to rifle and snow-shoe in a rough, rugged
country, intersected like a chequer-board by innumerable lakes, rivers, and
streams, covered with from two to three feet of snow, and with the thermometer
anywhere from ten to thirty degrees below zero. Therefore plenty of stamina and
endurance is required to face these conditions, with a keen interest in the
sport—more especially as wolves in numbers must be sought for well back
in the deep, silent forests, miles from the nearest railroad or settlement. Men with these qualifications are not numerous.
By many people wolf-hunting is considered a science. At the end of
twenty-seven years hunting of various kinds of big game, including the wolf, in
different countries, I have no reason to dispute this statement. It matters not
what method one employs to hunt wolves in a forested or mountainous country,
stratagem and cunning must be freely used to outwit cunning—combined as it is with faultless
wood-craft and extreme cowardice—when trying to get them within range of the sportsman’s rifle.
Only those who make a close study of wolves and their habits throughout the
year can hope for success. All the men in Canada who do this, however, can be
counted on the fingers of one hand.
In the school of wood-craft and knowledge of how to keep out of
danger wolves have no four-footed equals. The fox is a dunce in comparison, the coyote—or prairie wolf—a fool, and
the rest nowhere. The giant moose, king of the Canadian woods, is the most
difficult of all the deer species to stalk in the fall months; but,
nevertheless, it is often stalked successfully and shot by amateurs. Not so the
wolf. Knowing this, and that true sport must combine a maximum of exertion and
even danger to a minimum of destruction (though nothing would be said about the
destruction of too many wolves), also that there was more honour to be gained
in outwitting and shooting one wolf than a dozen easily-stalked and innocent deer,
the writer organized a wolf-hunt for the winter of 1908-9, built three log-cabins some miles apart, and invited
sportsmen to participate.
During the three midwinter months they came into camp in twos and threes for a week or ten days’ hunt. To all of them the sport was new, healthful, and exciting, not to say dangerous, considering
the quarry sought and the risk of breaking through thin ice on lakes and rivers in its pursuit.
As
soon as the first hunters arrived—in
December—we shot several
wood-hares and ruffed-grouse. These we placed at rocky points round the large
lake, infested with wolves, on which
the cabins fronted. A couple of nights
later half a score of wolves—judging
by the way fur and feathers,
legs and wings, heads and tails, were scattered over a wide area of the snow-covered ice, punctuated
in between with thousands of their footmarks—must have had a glorious scrimmage
over these dainties; yet not a particle of either grouse or hares had been
eaten! This was subsequently repeated on several occasions, which goes to
disprove the hitherto accepted statement that “wolves are always hungry”—at least, they are not here in
Canada.
Some three days later, while coming down the lake at midday from
No. 3 camp, a ringing chorus of “yi-ki-hies” burst on our ears; from among the
timber-covered ridges some half a mile away on our left. It came from a pack of wolves in
full cry after a deer.
The writer, an old fox-hunter, could distinguish no difference
between these wild hounds giving tongue under the arches of a virgin forest far
from civilization, and the civilized foxhounds of his youth making merry music
in the British Isles. Presently they gave tongue only intermittently; then the
sounds ceased altogether. They had killed, we decided, and so continued on our
way, which was in the same direction, as the pack were running.
We were mistaken, however, in
supposing they had killed the deer, for on rounding a point a few minutes later
we noticed, at the distance of about fourteen hundred yards (being a thousand
feet above sea-level the air is rarefied and clear, therefore objects appear closer
than they really are), a dark-grey animal come out from among the trees and
move along the edge of the lake. Almost immediately it was followed by another
and another, until fourteen of what subsequently proved to be wolves were moving
round the lake in single file.
For years, in all parts of Canada and the Western States, I had
heard wolves howl and give tongue; but here was the first pack I had ever seen
in plain view. For fully two minutes we crouched behind the snow-covered rocks
on the point and watched them. Between us and them was a deep, wide bay, so
that there was no way of getting to them without being seen. The range was too
far to make accurate shooting, and the intense cold gave us notice to move on.
What should we do?
“Walk straight towards them,” suggested one sportsman, “and see if
they will attack us.”
This speculative policy was agreed to and acted on. Advancing
towards them across the bay, they took no notice of us for the first hundred
yards. Then they suddenly bunched together, sat up on their haunches, and
watched us intently. Wondering what they would do, we continued our advance.
Would they really attack us—as all kinds of backwoods literature, white men, and Indians said
they would—or seek cover?
In less than thirty seconds our doubts on that point were set at
rest. Six of the bunched-up animals got off their haunches and, springing clear
of the rest, headed straight towards us. The others quickly tailed on behind,
and down they came in long, low, steady jumps that carried them over the level
ice with a speed and swiftness I had not credited them with possessing.
As they approached they spread out like a lady’s fan, so as to
outflank and encircle us. This, though distinctly disconcerting, was nothing
compared with the deadly silence they maintained throughout, and which unnerved
us much more than their sudden attack had done. Every moment we expected they
would burst into merry music, as they had been doing only a short twenty
minutes before among the timbered ridges; but evidently wolves, when in sight
of their prey, run it down in perfect silence.
“Curse the brutes!” muttered someone. “Why don’t they give tongue,
or even howl?”
Such a course would certainly have relieved our nervous tension.
As it was, all the blood-curdling stories. I had ever read or heard about
wolves flashed through my mind. But did they know we were men, or had they
mistaken our three indistinct figures, so far away, for deer? Seconds would now
decide the question. Down went our small packs, snow-shoes were kicked off, and
cartridge-belts pulled round to be handy for instant use.
Glancing up, I noticed that they had covered half the distance,
though hardly a minute had elapsed since they had started—a good twelve hundred yards away. At
five hundred yards or so we could not only see how swiftly and smoothly, with a
hardly-perceptible up-and-down motion, they could get over level ice or ground,
but also their mode of surrounding and pulling down their prey. For they were
bearing down like the Spanish Armada, in the shape of a half-moon, the two
outer points of which were three hundred feet apart, and widening as they came.
At three hundred and fifty yards the white teeth and gleaming eyes
of a large dog near the centre caught and held my attention. Being in the
middle of my companions that dog— according to the code of field sports—was mine. “Don’t shoot until
they are close up,” I whispered; “then each of you attend to the outer wings.”
I had thrown my powerful Mauser forward to align the sights on the
big dog when the whole pack suddenly wheeled round, without stopping, and
headed at full speed back the way they had come. My bullet, however, caught the big dog as he turned, nearly cutting him in two, while
a second sprang high in the air, shot dead by the rifle on my left. Two more
dropped under the rapid fire, just as they had straightened out for the “home
run.”
One, with its hind leg broken, got up again and limped after the rest, but a second bullet put it out of pain.
The remainder, with heads well down, to escape the showers of frozen snow and ice that the high-power
bullets ripped up and sent over them at five, six, and seven hundred yards,
sped back with the same long, low, smooth bounds that quickly carried them to
the edge of the woods, into which they disappeared.
Curiously enough, even when badly wounded they never once uttered
a sound.
Whether they charged
down at us as human beings or deer is a problem difficult to solve. Taking into
consideration, however, their wheeling round so quickly, with an unmistakably
crestfallen air, and before a shot was fired, and the fact that we were carrying
small packs strapped to our backs and wearing whitish-grey Eskimo
hunting-shirts, and were also forcing our way with bent bodies against a sharp
wind driving a slight flurry of snow, I incline to the latter belief; otherwise
they would have charged home. Built for strength and speed, this strong
pack—above the average in numbers— could have torn the three of us to pieces in as many seconds. Therefore I
maintain—and I have no reason to change my opinion either from former
experience or since—that, for once, a pack of wolves had really charged three men in
mistake for deer.
It mattered not which cabin we occupied, we were at some part of the night “serenaded” by long, dismal howls of one or more wolves. And let me
say here that a wolves’ “concert” held at night in the dark, gloomy
pine-forests of Canada is the most spirit-depressing music ever listened to.
Even when shut up securely in a cabin, it sends a cold shiver of some impending
calamity through the frame of the stoutest man.
One night, about ten o’clock, at No. 2 camp, a longer and more
dismal howl than usual broke the quiet stillness of the surrounding woods, lit
up by countless thousands of sparkling stars and a bright moon, nearly at the
full. The howl came from the point of a peninsula nearly a mile distant across the
lake. Instantly from a ridge behind and to one side of the cabin, came a short,
sharp answering howl. The echoes had barely died away when from the same
quarter of the ridge the main pack broke into a chorus of “yi-ki-hies” that
sounded like a volley of rifle-shots. Then down they came past the cabin and
out on to the lake.
Opening the cabin-door let in a volume of yelps so deafening that
for the moment we thought the cabin was full of tongue-giving wolves. But, looking
across towards the peninsula, we could see about a dozen swiftly-moving black
dots out on the ice, which lay shimmering like molten silver under the bright,
frosty moon, the “yi-ki-hies” becoming fainter and fainter after they had
passed under the shadows cast by the tall conifers on the peninsula, finally
dying away completely.
That the long, dismal howl of the lone wolf had carried a message—even if unintelligible to man—to the main pack there could be no
doubt, and to this the clean-picked skeleton of a deer, found on the far side
of the peninsula the next morning by following their trail, clearly testified.
And this trail, after it entered the woods, proved to be very interesting from the
fact that it showed only too plainly that the instinct of these wild hounds in
knowing how to outmanoeuvre, surround, and pull down their prey is infinitely
superior to that of the trained hound. Although, as
I have tried to point out, wolves are possessed of wonderful speed, they depend
more on their brains than their legs, for while part of the pack had stopped behind
to drive the deer forward, the rest had outflanked it to right and left,
forcing it to
go in the direction wanted, when the deer
was finally encircled and pulled down. I venture to say from
experience that no pack of domestic hounds ever
bred and trained by man can run down their quarry as quickly and intelligently
as do these wild hounds from their own natural instinct.
It was about midnight when we lay down on our bed, composed of
balsam and pine needles —but not to sleep; we were too excited after witnessing such a
novel hunt in the moonlight. Instead, therefore, we lit our pipes, put out the
light, and lay smoking and discussing wolves and their habits for over an hour,
when suddenly our conversation was interrupted by a prolonged shrill scream,
ending in a caterwauling “meow.”
Before I had-time to explain that it came from the great Northern lynx (Felis canadensis), its mate
answered from somewhere near by the cabin, which brought us sharply to our
feet. I was just in the act of lighting a match when again came the shrill
scream, answered, not by its mate, but by wolves, singly, in pairs, and all
together, from several parts of the lake.
“Merciful
powers!” exclaimed one of my companions, nervously. “I’d rather be out on the
lake than shut up in here listening to such weird, mournful brutes. It makes
one think of death and the grave” —which
explains the feeling created better than the writer can.
As
trying to sleep was out of the question, I suggested dressing again and walking
across to the peninsula to see if they had more courage to attack us at night
than they had in daylight. Being very still, freezing hard, and bright as day, one could see toshoot perfectly. We had not advanced very far out on the ice when every howl ceased. That all the keen-eyed brutes saw us, however, was quickly made apparent, for presently a sharp “wouff-wouff” came
from an unseen brute on a point slightly behind and to one side of us. Then another, in
the same key, from the peninsula, followed by
others, until one grand chorus swelled up from the weird orchestra.
When we were back near the cabin one of my companions—a New York gentleman—suddenly faced round and emptied his magazine rifle at the nearest point, exclaiming
angrily as he did so: “You cowardly brutes! You keep our nerves on the rack all night, and
when we come out and challenge you to fight it out, you won’t show a hair!”
It was very tantalizing, certainly. Complete silence followed the
rifle-shots, however, and we slept peacefully until late in the morning.
A few days afterwards my two companions left for home, and three fresh
hunters arrived in their place. Then what I had been waiting for set in—a January thaw! I could now make a blood-trail, and see if
wolves would follow it, as if they did the problem of how to get them within accurate rifle-range
was solved.
The blood of a dozen wood-hares (locally, rabbits) made a trail
about two thousand yards in length, running past two points jutting well out and across the bay fronting
on No. 2 cabin, and finishing at a point some three hundred yards away, in plain
sight from the door. Two mornings later, the weather keeping soft and our taint
having gone from along the trail, we were awakened from a sound sleep by what
sounded at first like a band of music, but which turned out a moment later,
when we were fully awake, to be a troop of ten wolves giving tongue.
Rushing to the little window and
looking out we could see them as they swept across the bay on the blood-trail,
in extended order. Being well within range, we managed to get in a dozen or so
shots before they rounded the nearest point. But this was because one of us ran
down to the edge of the ice and whistled sharply. Thereupon the whole band
stopped for a moment to investigate the unusual sound. That investigation cost
them two of their number, and started the rest off at full speed for the
nearest cover. Before they reached it, however, a third dropped, rolled over,
got up, and then lay down for good. Subsequently several more were shot on
other blood-trails; but further details would only be a repetition of the
foregoing.
Measuring and weighing the wolves secured—the animals are shown in the
photographs— they were found to average eighty-seven pounds in weight, six feet
from nose to tip of tail, and to stand twenty-eight inches at the shoulder;
which is a fair average size and weight for the timber-wolf found throughout
Canada.
Labels:
1911,
Canadian Wolf,
canis lupis,
Jno Hope,
the Wide World
Location:
Unnamed Road, Penhurst, ON P0M, Canada
Sunday, 25 March 2018
Across Unknown Labrador -Part II
Across
Unknown Labrador(Part II of III (others not available)).
The Wide World Magazine June 1911, Vol.
xxvii.—22.
Digitized by Doug Frizzle, Stillwoods, March 2018. (About 30 years ago I visited Fort Chimo and
Ungava Bay to be a part of a Hydrographic survey of the area.)
Labrador—“the
land that God gave to Cain”— contains an
area forty or fifty thousand miles square that is utterly unexplored; even the
heads of the inlets and bays are
uncharted. Mr. Hesketh Prichard essayed to do what no white man had ever
done before—to
cross this desolate wilderness from the Atlantic to the George River. Those
familiar with the conditions said that the feat was
impossible; that he and his companions would share the
fate of Mr. Leonidas Hubbard, the American explorer, and
perish miserably of starvation amid the interminable “barrens” of the interior.
But Mr. Prichard persisted, and in the series
of articles which we are privileged to publish he
gives a graphic account of the experiences of his party,
whose sufferings and adventures constitute a unique chapter
in the annals of exploration.
At the end of my last article I left our party in
camp near the George or Barren-ground River, all of us well pleased that we had
at length achieved success. I will begin this paper
with some account of the remarkable valley in which we found ourselves.
The hollow of the valley is filled with that great widening
of the George that is called Indian House Lake, and which is a mile in width
and about twenty in length. On either side of its waters rise high rolling
ridges, dotted with spruce, willow, and juniper, which grow freely among
immense boulders and masses of rock. The whole of the land surface is seamed
with the old trails of caribou that have pursued their age-long wanderings in
this desolate environment.
Tradition gives this place as the spot where, in 1894, an
Indian killed the last recorded specimen of the red or Barren-ground bear. The
whole country is covered with the bones of long-dead deer; another noticeable
fact was that rarely could one look round the sky without seeing flocks of
ravens in the air. The croak of the raven, the cry of the loon,
and the howl of the wolf are certainly the three characteristic sounds of this
wilderness.
Concerning wolves, I was much interested in trying to
discover whether these animals (which, though seldom seen by daylight, are very
numerous in Labrador) chase or attack the lonely traveller or hunter, a pastime
that, according to report and the illustrated papers, their cousins of Europe
undoubtedly indulge in. Who cannot recall a picture of a flying droshky and its
bearded driver, with the passenger shooting a revolver over the crook of his
arm at the pursuing wolf-pack?
But on the Labrador—near the settlements, at any rate—the wolf bears a
fairly good character in this respect. The only instance that I know of when
wolves attacked a man I have on the authority of Bishop Martin, of
Nain. A settler had killed some seals on the edge of the ice and returned to
his home. Later on he went back to bring in the carcasses, taking with him only
a spade, as the place was not far from the station.
While he was engaged in shovelling off the snow which had
collected on the bodies of the seals, four wolves came down upon him and seemed
threatening. He was rather helpless, having no gun with him, but he defended
himself by cutting at the neck of one of the animals with his spade. Then,
keeping his face towards them, he held them off with the spade as he retreated
in the direction of the shore and the settlement. The fact that they meant an
attack seems to be proved by their following him for some distance, but he
escaped.
Now, in the autumn, though we often saw the tracks of
wolves, only on a single occasion had I a glimpse of one in the flesh, for they
seem to spend the hours of daylight in the shelter of some rock or bush.
More than ever as I sat beside the camp-fire on the day
after our long-desired arrival at the George River did I regret the
unfortunate accident to my ankle. The muscles near the tendon had been badly
strained, and I found myself quite unable to do more than hobble about. Any
attempt to travel over the rocky ranges and through the treacherous valleys
choked with boulders and moss appeared to be hopelessly out of the question.
Complete rest was my only possible chance. Yet, although this presented a very
pleasant prospect to my weary limbs as well as to my ankle, the outlook was
not so bright as it might have been owing to the fact that we were in the
centre of a very sterile country, with but four days’ provisions on short
rations remaining to us.
In the morning, it is true, Hardy and Porter
had seen a herd of fourteen deer, but these had immediately left the locality,
for their forms were later seen by all of us against the skyline of the mighty
ridge above Slippery Brook—as we named the torrent by which we were camped.
Having passed to windward of us, we knew only too well that the deer would
put many a league of safety between ourselves and them, and would follow the
herds which had already passed away on their migration. My companions had left
the
camp,
Porter to gather wood, and Hardy— having been requested in the words of the old squaw Nokomis in “Hiawatha” :—
Go,
my son, into the forest,
Kill
for us a deer with antlers—
had
started away into the vast medley of trees, boulders, and marshes that hemmed
us in on the north. In order to try and do something towards the general
support, I picked up the rod and began to fish the torrent which roared within
twenty yards of the camp. On the previous night Hardy and I had taken six trout
from this quick water, but when he sallied out among the mosquitoes at dawn he
had failed to get a single rise. I, however, was luckier, as after a few
minutes’ fishing I saw a good-sized trout rise, and before the mosquitoes drove
me to bury my face in a “smudge” (the smoke of a fire of damp moss and leaves)
I had caught him and three of his fellows. After this, though I tried both fly
and spinning bait, I could catch no more. Just as I had returned from
fishing I heard the report of a rifle, and an hour later Hardy came
into camp with the greater part of the meat of a very small caribou.
Soon—very soon—the kidneys, heart,
and liver were sizzling in the frying-pan, with three thin concomitant slices
of our now most precious bacon. As we had been a month on rations, and the
latter part of it on very short commons —having, indeed, had but one full meal
since leaving Sandy Camp, and that on the occasion when I had killed the deer—we
did full justice to the meat, and the pan was filled and emptied
more than once before pipes were pulled out, filled, and lighted. Then we
held a council.
It was finally decided that Robert Porter should go back over the
trail to bring up a relay of provisions while Hardy and I remained in the camp,
where we were to dry the meat of the caribou. But though we tried to carry out
this programme we were not very successful as regards one portion of it, as
before Porter could start he must rest, and by the third
day very little was left of Hardy’s deer, which, as I have said, was a
small one. We were, moreover, helped in disposing of the meat by foxes and
ravens, which found and took toll of the carcass on the night after it was killed and
before Hardy could reach it the next morning with his packing-strap. The small amount that
remained over we dried in a rough and ready fashion upon the flat rocks by the
river, but if we left the meat for a single instant or ceased waving branches
of leafy birch above it, every piece became black with botflies,
blackflies, and mosquitoes. While engaged in this pleasant occupation
we, for the first time, really understood how and why it is not good for man to live alone—especially
in the Arctic and sub-Arctic.
In civilization it is said that a wife does
not always add to her husband’s ease or render his life more supportable,
but up on the Barren-grounds the worst of wives
would be better than none.
There, among the heathen tribes, if a man’s wife dies—provided he be not
a polygamist, in which case there is less need for hurry he often marries again
within the week, and even the Christian Eskimo widowers are
with difficulty persuaded by the Moravian missionaries to allow six weeks
to elapse between the death and remarriage. Certain it is that on the very day
after the six weeks have elapsed the hunter presents himself with a new bride,
and asks that the marriage service may be speedily read.
Nor is the reason for these things far to seek. We say in
civilization that “a woman’s work is never done,” and far more is that true of
the helpmate of the savage and the semi-savage, the womanofthe Barren - grounds or of the ice-edge. She makes and breaks camp,
cooks, cuts up and carries to camp her husband’s kill; she dresses the skins of
deer and seal (a laborious process, as the skin often has to be chewed to make
it soft for sewing); she is responsible for the fashioning of foot-gear and
clothes; on a journey she often paddles the canoe, and on portage she carries a heavy load.
In fact, it is easier to write down the duties not expected of a squaw
than those which by immemorial custom she must
perform. Indeed, the Northland is a country calling aloud for a woman’s movement,
a crusade of emancipation; but such will never come, even in a thousand years,
for in the wilderness the provider of food, Man the Hunter, has reigned, reigns
now, and ever will reign. Having slain his deer or his bear, he will take his
ease in the best place in the lodge, deputing all the lesser offices to the
mother of his children. It is a law, and the laws of the Northland do not
change.
But to return to the process of meat-drying, which led to
this digression. We dried some pounds, and would have dried more had it not
been that some animal, probably a fox, raided our meat supply during the night.
We imagined that we had placed it in safety by sinking it in the water of the
torrent, but when we awoke on the morning of the 21st a great part of it was
gone, and, as we had practically no flour or other provision left, the loss was
a serious one. A great piece of good fortune, however, followed close upon it,
for as, on the same evening, I was sitting talking to Hardy by the fire as the
sun was beginning to sink, a caribou suddenly appeared on the other side of the
torrent. Seizing my rifle, I had time to get in a shot just before the
deer crossed our wind. The deer collapsed in its tracks. It turned out to be a
doe, with horns of thirteen points, and soon we had her carcass cleaned and
sunk in a deep pool far beyond the reach of even the most cunning of foxes.
The next morning Porter got away early, and Hardy and I
were left to draw our belts tight, for we decided that it would be only common
prudence to keep the meat of the last deer as a precaution against unforeseen
eventualities. In the wilderness only a very thin partition exists between
safety and danger, between life and death, and it has been in consequence of
ignoring this fact until it was too late that many have perished.
During Porter’s absence, Hardy and I spent most of our time
in fishing and hunting. There were very few trout in Slippery Brook, and without
a canoe it was difficult to fish Indian House Lake; but Hardy succeeded in taking
two fine namaycush. These, rather to our surprise, rose in the fast water of
the torrent.
Day by day the swelling of my ankle was subsiding; the
weather was good and everything favourable, though the lack of all farinaceous
food affected us considerably at first.
At length Porter returned, bringing with him a pack of a
few pounds of flour and bacon. He had gone and come at the rate of twenty-five
miles a day—a fine performance over such a country. We were at this time very
thin, and more than a little run-down, so I decided that we had better indulge in a
couple of days of full rations, even though that might mean real hunger later.
I have always been strongly of the opinion that men working hard for a long period can overdo the
ration-cutting business, and that the party who start strong and live upon
what the Red Gods send can win out better than the party who never have a full
meal, but eke out a small supply of provisions over endless days. But the party that eats its food must be composed of
men used to every aspect of the wilderness
life, and must be certain of a minimum game
supply. It is a very good rule—I know of none better to estimate the amount
of fish and game one expects to secure and then divide the expectation by four.
If the answer to that sum is enough to take the party to safety, well and good;
if not, it is common sense to be very careful of the food in hand.
Hardly had Porter arrived—certainly he had not been in camp
above two hours—when a most tremendous storm began to blow from
the south-east. It clean blew away our fire, though protected by a break-wind
of boulders, and as it brought one or two trees near by crashing to the ground, we
thought it wiser to cut down those which overhung the camp. Had this gale—one
might almost call it a tornado—caught Porter upon the bare and
shelterless plateau he would have had a miserable, if memorable,
experience.
All night long the wind howled and roared,
banishing sleep, then shortly before dawn it shifted and partially carried away
our lean-to. We rose and changed the position of our camp until it was
once more back to wind—a cold, bleak business.
On August 29th we broke the camp by Slippery Brook, which
we had occupied since the 18th, and set out for the southern end of Indian
House Lake. My ankle, though stiff and apt to swell after a long day, did not
retard our speed very much.
All the morning we travelled over the ridges, and it was
late in the afternoon before we reached the level of the lake at a point about
a dozen miles south of our camp. Here we found each promontory set with the
remains of the deserted Indian camps from which this reach of the river takes its
name, for it is here that the tribe of Naskopi Indians make their annual
killing of the deer, which in their migration cross the narrows of the lake in
immense herds. Their course is not always the. same—if it were the problem of
existence would be easily solved by the Indian—for in some seasons the
migration passes elsewhere, along some other and perhaps distant route.
As it grew dark we came to an Indian camp which had only
recently been deserted. All about it were scattered the bones and hair of deer,
which, from appearances, seemed to have been killed a month or so previously.
The Indians had departed, it being the season when they make their summer
journey to the coast.
The Naskopis are one of the wildest tribes still left in North
America. Their visits to the Hudson Bay posts, or to the mission
settlements are few and far between. After a successful year’s spearing of the
caribou, as the beautiful deer cross the lakes and rivers, they
carry down over the long journey to the eastern coast enough skins to barter
for the necessities and few luxuries which they appreciate. Powder and bullets,
tea and tobacco, finery for their women, and a few gaudy articles of clothing,
are nearly all that the posts supply to these children of the wilderness, who
care little for the white man’s easements of existence. In the Naskopi camps
upon the George, however, there is one belle, and at the stores whatever she
desires seems to be purchased for her. I give her photograph on the next page,
and, lest the reader should miss her, she is the first on the left.
To the Indians, both the Montagnais of the more wooded
south and the Naskopis of the Barren-ground water, the caribou are the staff of
life. By them they live; the meat feeds them; their lodges are covered with the
skins; the clothes which protect them against the northern winter are fashioned
from the pelts, the hair inside, against the wearer’s skin. Their moccasins
are sewn from the hides, and the very sparse store of civilized luxury which
finds its way to the tents upon the promontories is largely gained by barter of
smoked hides.
About the season when the caribou may be expected in their
thousands-strong migration all is activity in the Indian camps. Up and down the
river the scouts are watching, and when the first caribou makes its appearance
he who sees it signals to his fellows—the first deer must not be turned. But, once a fair proportion have crossed the river, the Indians in their
canoes slay as many as a thousand deer. There is no sport in it—merely a massacre of
helpless, swimming creatures, and a lengthy description of the proceedings
would serve no purpose. But for many a day after the battue the Indian warriors
sit by their fires and enjoy the greatest of all the luxuries the wilderness
provides—the marrow of the deer. Countless numbers of caribou have been slain
by Indian House Lake; so many, indeed, that the place has become historic.
This raiding of the herds, with trapping,
ptarmigan shooting, and rabbit snaring, makes up the Indians’ hunting in a successful season.
But it is a rare year when one month or another of the
twelve does not see the tribes face to face with famine. Then Indian House Lake is a
battle-ground, over which an unrecorded but terrible
struggle is fought out. This battle has endured for many years; the antagonists are Nature upon the
one side and the little tribe of Naskopis upon the other. The Naskopis
can
hope for no aid in their struggle. Shut in upon all sides by
the mighty Barrens, help cannot reach them, nor
have they sought it. Few people of white race have yet set eyes on Indian House Lake,
and the half-dozen expeditions that have passed up and down the great river
have spent but half an hour at the Indian camp and then boarded
their canoes and voyaged
It would seem, according to the best authorities, that the
Naskopis came from the far south, being driven north by the Iroquois at the
date when Canada was first occupied by the French. They fled through the wooded
south of Labrador, still pursued by their remorseless enemies, who were
probably only shaken off when they had pushed the flying tribe north to those
naked table-lands which form the roof of Labrador. These are indented with
innumerable lakes and dotted with gigantic Laurentian boulders, enormous tracts
being entirely timberless and exposed to the cruel forces of the Arctic.
After many wanderings, these poor hunted creatures must have
found in the valley of the Barren-ground River a true Land of Promise. Here all
was changed indeed. Spruce, alder, tamarack, and birch grew in the sheltered
spots and woods and marshes alike were lined and crossed with the high roads of
travelling bear And caribou ; the tangled brush hid coveys of willow-grouse,
while the very rocks yielded the crouching ptarmigan. All these they found, not
to speak of other game—foxes, wolves, hares, Canada geese, black ducks, and
many more, it can well be imagined that when the Naskopis first entered this
region they believed that the faces of their gods were indeed turned towards
them. Game on the hills, fish in the river, wood for their fires, tepee poles
to be had for the cutting.
One can almost see them seeking out a strategic camping
ground on a promontory running far out into the lake and there setting up their
wigwams and resting from their wanderings. Neither history nor legend tells us
at what time of year those long-dead Naskopis found Indian House Lake, but
almost certainly it was in spring or summer while the waterways were open.
In those days the country was virgin and the deer plentiful.
Even within late years it is on record that the caribou in migration passed a
point near Fort Chin(m)o in solid
masses of “thousands and thousands ” for a period of three days. During many
years the Indians must have fared well, for Indian House Lake possesses the
favourite crossing-place in all Labrador for the migrating caribou. Thus they
learned to live by the deer, and so, while the deer were plentiful, all went
well on the banks of the George. After 1828, when M‘Lean visited them, a veil
dropped over their life by the lake for more than seventy years. No one, save
one Roman Catholic priest, saw them in their home camps; the tribe lived secure
behind their impenetrable ramparts. No doubt they gorged and starved
alternately. At any rate, they survived in numbers not too much lessened, and
so they continued to exist until the dreadful winter of 1893, when deer and
game failed, and half the tribes are said “to have been found dead in their
lodges by the spring.” But still some are left to carry on the age-long war
with Nature, which they are still prosecuting as you read this page—a
hunter-people dependent upon game for life, the only permanent inhabitants of
the interior of Labrador.
It was with great interest that we examined the deserted
camp and the various devices for dressing skins, and while Hardy and I were
doing this Porter went on over a hill to prospect. As he crossed the brow of
the ridge an eagle rose suddenly, and, going to the place, he found that it had
killed and partly eaten a young black fox. The month being August, of course
the skin was worthless, but had it been December the skin of this fox, small as
it was, would have been worth some hundreds of dollars. Poor Porter!
When Porter returned it was growing late, and we went up from
the deserted Indian camp into the twilight of the woods, where, as it was bitterly
cold, we made a large camp-fire, by the light of which we set up our slender
camp.
Later we took stock of our provisions, and it was almost a
shock to discover how little our ravening hunger had left to us. There was a
single full meal of caribou venison, with two or three small pieces which we
meant to keep over. Besides this we possessed three pounds of flour, three
soup-squares, about half a pound of mildewed tea, and three-quarters of a pound
of bacon. This shortage did not prevent our enjoying a fair meal of meat and
flour, as that night was the last we should spend in the timber, for owing to
the provisions being at so low an ebb we had determined to set out in the
morning upon the march back to the coast. Therefore the next night would find
us once more upon the bare plateau, where we could hope for no fuel more
adequate than the leaves and stems of the dwarf birch. So the motto was carpe diem, which we fully carried
out, and afterwards sat long by the camp-fire smoking and discussing the
journey that lay before us.
Before very long, however, the talk, as usual, veered round
to the all-important topic of food. How well one knows those conversations of
hungry men! Lead the talk where you will, back it turns like a magnet to the
Pole to the various dishes one would order were one in such-and-such a
restaurant. Nearly all one’s desires are towards plenty of fat, plenty of
sweet, and plenty of rather heavy, solid bread; true hunger abhors kickshaws
and seasonings. Fat mutton, strawberry jam, bread, and baked potatoes, that is
the meal which tempts me in dreams when I am really hungry!
From time to time I have known real hunger in many
different lands, and, as a matter of personal experience, I have found that
hunger reaches its height before one begins to starve. Starvation, indeed, like
other disagreeable things, is painful, and it is impossible to feel as hungry
when one is suffering spasms of pain and emptiness as in the earlier stages,
when the only feeling is the intense craving for food.
On this night, however, after the first comfort of our
dinner had passed off, we were just in the mood to discuss what we would eat an
we had it. It was late when at last we rolled ourselves in our blankets and
turned in for the last sleep before we set our faces towards the east and home.
(To be continued.)
Labels:
1911,
Fort Chimo,
George River,
Hesketh Prichard,
Indian House Lake,
labrador,
Naskopis,
Quebec
Location:
Division No. 10, Subd. D, NL, Canada
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