the john muir exhibit - writings - my_first_summer_in_the_sierra - chapter 2
My First Summer in the Sierra
by John Muir
Chapter 2
In Camp on the North Fork of the Merced
Camp, North Fork of the Merced
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June 8.
--The sheep, now grassy and good natured, slowly nibbled their way
down into the valley of the North Fork of the Merced at the foot of
Pilot Peak Ridge to the place selected by the Don for our first
central camp, a picturesque
hopper-shaped hollow formed by converging hill-slopes at a bend of the
river. Here racks for dishes and provisions were made in the shade of
the river-bank trees, and beds of fern fronds, cedar plumes, and
various flowers, each to the taste of its owner, and a corral back on
the open flat for the wool.
June 9.
--How deep our sleep last night in the mountain's heart, beneath the
trees and stars, hushed by solemn-sounding waterfalls and many small
soothing voices in sweet accord whispering peace! And our first pure
mountain day, warm, calm, cloudless, --how immeasurable it seems, how
serenely wild! I can scarcely remember its beginning. Along the river,
over the hills, in the ground, in the sky, spring work is going on
with joyful enthusiasm, new life, new beauty, unfolding, unrolling in
glorious exuberant extravagance, --new birds in their nests, new
winged creatures in the air, and new leaves, new flowers, spreading,
shining, rejoicing everywhere.
The trees about the camp stand close, giving ample shade for ferns and
lilies, while back from the bank most of the sunshine reaches the
ground, calling up the grasses and flowers in glorious array, tall
bromus waving like bamboos, starry composit, monardella, Mariposa
tulips, lupines, gilias, violets, glad children of light. Soon every
fern frond will be unrolled, great beds of common pteris and
woodwardia along the river, wreaths and rosettes of pellaea and
cheilanthes on sunny rocks. Some of the woodwardia fronds are already
six feet high.
A handsome little shrub, Chamoebatia foliolosa, belonging to the rose
family, spreads a yellow-green mantle beneath the sugar pines for
miles without a break, not mixed or roughened with other plants. Only
here and there a Washington lily may be seen nodding above its even
surface, or a bunch or two of tall bromus as if for ornament. This
fine carpet shrub begins to appear at,
say, twenty-five hundred or three thousand feet above sea level, is
about knee high or less, has brown branches, and the largest stems are
only about half an inch in diameter. The leaves, light yellow green,
thrice pinnate and finely cut, give them a rich ferny appearance, and
they are dotted with minute glands that secrete wax with a peculiar
pleasant odor that blends finely with the spicy fragrance of the
pines. The flowers are white, five eighths of an inch in diameter, and
look like those of the strawberry. Am delighted with this little bush.
It is the only true carpet shrub of this part of the Sierra. The
manzanita, rhamnus, and most of the species of ceanothus make shaggy
rugs and border fringes rather than carpets or mantles.
The sheep do not take kindly to their new pastures, perhaps from being
too closely hemmed in by the hills. They are never fully at rest. Last
night they were frightened, probably by bears or coyotes prowling
and planning for a share of the grand mass of mutton.
June 10.
--Very warm. We get water for the camp from a rock basin at the foot
of a picturesque cascading reach of the river where it is well stirred
and made lively without being beaten into dusty foam. The rock here is
black metamorphic slate, worn into smooth knobs in the stream
channels, contrasting with the fine gray and white cascading water as
it glides and glances and falls in lace-like sheets and braided
overfolding currents. Tufts of sedge growing on the rock knobs that
rise above the surface produce a charming effect, the long elastic
leaves arching over in every direction, the tips of the longest
drooping into the current, which dividing against the projecting rocks
makes still finer lines, uniting with the sedges to see how beautiful
the happy stream can be made. Nor is this all, for the giant saxifrage
also is growing on some of the knob rock islets, firmly
anchored and displaying their broad round umbrella-like leaves in
showy groups by themselves, or above the sedge tufts. The flowers of
this species (Saxifraga peltata) are purple, and form tall glandular
racemes that are in bloom before the appearance of the leaves. The
fleshy root-stocks grip the rock in cracks and hollows, and thus
enable the plant to hold on against occasional floods, --a marked
species employed by Nature to make yet more beautiful the most
interesting portions of these cool clear streams. Near camp the trees
arch over from bank to bank, making a leafy tunnel full of soft
subdued light, through which the young river sings and shines like a
happy living creature.
Heard a few peals of thunder from the upper Sierra, and saw firm white
bossy cumuli rising back of the pines. This was about noon.
June 11.
--On one of the eastern branches of the river discovered some charming
A Forest Brook
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cascades with a pool at the foot of each of them. White dashing water,
a few bushes and tufts of carex on ledges leaning over with fine
effect, and large orange lilies assembled in superb groups on fertile
soil-beds beside the pools.
There are no large meadows or grassy plains near camp to supply
lasting pasture for our thousands of busy nibblers. The main
dependence is ceanothus brush on the hills and tufted grass patches
here and there, with lupines and pea-vines among the flowers on sunny
open spaces. Large areas have already been stripped bare, or nearly
so, compelling the poor hungry wool bundles to scatter far and wide,
keeping the shepherds and dogs at the top of their speed to hold them
within bounds. Mr. Delaney has gone back to the plains, taking the
Indian and Chinaman with him, leaving instruction to keep the flock
here or hereabouts until his return, which he promised would not be
long delayed.
How fine the weather is! Nothing more
celestial can I conceive. How gently the winds blow! Scarce can these
tranquil air-currents be called winds. They seem the very breath of
Nature, whispering peace to every living thing. Down in the camp dell
there is no swaying of tree-tops; most of the time not a leaf moves. I
don't remember having seen a single lily swinging on its stalk, though
they are so tall the least breeze would rock them. What grand bells
these lilies have! Some of them big enough for children's bonnets. I
have been sketching them, and would fain draw every leaf of their wide
shining whorls and every curved and spotted petal. More beautiful,
better kept gardens cannot be imagined. The species is Lilium
pardalinum, five to six feet high, leaf-whorls a foot wide, flowers
about six inches wide, bright orange, purple spotted in the throat,
segments revolute--a majestic plant.
June 12.
--A slight sprinkle of rain, --large drops far apart, falling with
hearty pat and plash on leaves and stones and into the
mouths of the flowers. Cumuli rising to the eastward. How beautiful
their pearly bosses! How well they harmonize with the upswelling rocks
beneath them. Mountains of the sky, solid-looking, finely sculptured,
their richly varied topography wonderfully defined. Never before have
I seen clouds so substantial looking in form and texture. Nearly every
day toward noon they rise with visible swelling motion as if new
worlds were being created. And how fondly they brood and hover over
the gardens and forests with their cooling shadows and showers,
keeping every petal and leaf in glad health and heart. One may fancy
the clouds themselves are plants, springing up in the sky-fields at
the call of the sun, growing in beauty until they reach their prime,
scattering rain and hail like berries and seeds, then wilting and
dying.
The mountain live oak, common here and a thousand feet or so higher,
is like the live oak of Florida, not only in general appearance,
foliage, bark, and wide-branching habit, but in its tough, knotty,
unwedgeable wood. Standing alone with plenty of elbow room, the
largest trees are about seven to eight feet in diameter near the
ground, sixty feet high,
Mountain Live Oak (Quercus chrysolepis),
Eight Feet in Diameter
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and as wide or wider across the head. The leaves are small
and undivided, mostly without teeth or wavy edging, though on young
shoots some are sharply serrated, both kinds being found on the same
tree. The cups of
the medium-sized acorns are shallow, thick walled, and covered with a
golden dust of minute hairs. Some of the trees have hardly any main
trunk, dividing near the ground into large wide-spreading limbs, and
these, dividing again and again, terminate in long, drooping,
cord-like branchlets, many of which reach nearly to the ground, while
a dense canopy of short, shining leafy branchlets forms a round head
which looks something like a cumulus cloud when the sunshine is
pouring over it.
A marked plant is the bush poppy (Dendromecon rigidum), found on the
hot hillsides near camp, the only woody member of the order I have yet
met in all my walks. Its flowers are bright orange yellow, an inch to
two inches wide, fruit-pods three or four inches long, slender and
curving, --height of bushes about four feet, made up of many slim,
straight branches, radiating from the root, --a companion of the
manzanita and other sun-loving chaparral shrubs.
June 13.
--Another glorious Sierra day in which one seems to be dissolved and
absorbed and sent pulsing onward we know not where. Life seems neither
long nor short, and we take no more heed to save time or make haste
than do the trees and stars. This is true freedom, a good practical
sort of immortality. Yonder rises another white skyland. How sharply
the yellow pine spires and the palm-like crowns of the sugar pines are
outlined on its smooth white domes. And hark! the grand thunder
billows booming, rolling from ridge to ridge, followed by the faithful
shower.
A good many herbaceous plants come thus far up the mountains from the
plains, and are now in flower, two months later than their lowland
relatives. Saw a few columbines today. Most of the ferns are in their
prime, --rock ferns on the sunny hillsides, cheilanthes, pellaea,
gymnogramme; woodwardia, aspidium, woodsia along the stream banks, and
the common Pteris aquilina on sandy flats.
This last, however common, is here making shows of strong, exuberant,
abounding beauty to set the botanist wild with admiration. I measured
some scarce full grown that are more than seven feet high. Though the
commonest and most widely distributed of all the ferns, I might almost
say that I never saw it before. The broad-shouldered fronds held high
on smooth stout stalks growing close together, overleaning and
overlapping, make a complete ceiling, beneath which one may walk erect
over several acres without being seen, as if beneath a roof. And how
soft and lovely the light streaming through this living ceiling,
revealing the arching branching ribs and veins of the fronds as the
framework of countless panes of pale green and yellow plant-glass
nicely fitted together--a fairyland created out of the commonest
fern-stuff.
The smaller animals wander about as if in a tropical forest. I saw the
entire flock of sheep vanish at one side of a patch and
reappear a hundred yards farther on at the other, their progress
betrayed only by the jerking and trembling of the fronds; and strange
to say very few of the stout woody stalks were broken. I sat a long
time beneath the tallest fronds, and never enjoyed anything in the way
of a bower of wild leaves more strangely impressive. Only spread a
fern frond over a man's head and worldly cares are cast out, and
freedom and beauty and peace come in. The waving of a pine tree on the
top of a mountain, --a magic wand in Nature's hand, --every devout
mountaineer knows its power; but the marvelous beauty value of what
the Scotch call a breckan in a still dell, what poet has sung this? It
would seem impossible that any one, however incrusted with care, could
escape the Godful influence of these sacred fern forests. Yet this
very day I saw a shepherd pass through one of the finest of them
without betraying more feeling than his sheep. "What do you think of
these grand ferns?"
I asked. "Oh, they're only d--d big brakes," he replied.
Lizards of every temper, style, and color dwell here, seemingly as
happy and companionable as the birds and squirrels. Lowly, gentle
fellow mortals, enjoying God's sunshine, and doing the best they can
in getting a living, I like to watch them at their work and play. They
bear acquaintance well, and one likes them the better the longer one
looks into their beautiful, innocent eyes. They are easily tamed, and
one soon learns to love them, as they dart about on the hot rocks,
swift as dragon-flies. The eye can hardly follow them; but they never
make long-sustained runs, usually only about ten or twelve feet, then
a sudden stop, and as sudden a start again; going all their journeys
by quick, jerking impulses. These many stops I find are necessary as
rests, for they are short-winded, and when pursued steadily are soon
out of breath, pant pitifully, and are easily caught. Their bodies
are more than half tail, but these tails are well managed, never
heavily dragged nor curved up as if hard to carry; on the contrary,
they seem to follow the body lightly of their own will. Some are
colored like the sky, bright as bluebirds, others gray like the
lichened rocks on which they hunt and bask. Even the horned toad of
the plains is a mild, harmless creature, and so are the snake-like
species which glide in curves with true snake motion, while their
small, undeveloped limbs drag as useless appendages. One specimen
fourteen inches long which I observed closely made no use whatever of
its tender, sprouting limbs, but glided with all the soft, sly ease
and grace of a snake. Here comes a little, gray, dusty fellow who
seems to know and trust me, running about my feet, and looking up
cunningly into my face. Carlo is watching, makes a quick pounce on
him, for the fun of the thing I suppose; but Liz has shot away from
his paws like an arrow, and is
safe in the recesses of a clump of chaparral. Gentle saurians,
dragons, descendants of an ancient and mighty race, Heaven bless you
all and make your virtues known! for few of us know as yet that scales
may cover fellow creatures as gentle and lovable as feathers, or hair,
or cloth.
Mastodons and elephants used to live here no great geological time
ago, as shown by their bones, often discovered by miners in washing
gold-gravel. And bears of at least two species are here now, besides
the California lion or panther, and wild cats, wolves, foxes, snakes,
scorpions, wasps, tarantulas; but one is almost tempted at times to
regard a small savage black ant as the master existence of this vast
mountain world. These fearless, restless, wandering imps, though only
about a quarter of an inch long, are fonder of fighting and biting
than any beast I know. They attack every living thing around their
homes, often without cause as far as I can see. Their bodies are
mostly
jaws curved like ice-hooks, and to get work for these weapons seems to
be their chief aim and pleasure. Most of their colonies are
established in living oaks somewhat decayed or hollowed, in which they
can conveniently build their cells. These are chosen probably because
of their strength as opposed to the attacks of animals and storms.
They work both day and night, creep into dark caves, climb the highest
trees, wander and hunt through cool ravines as well as on hot,
unshaded ridges, and extend their highways and byways over everything
but water and sky. From the foothills to a mile above the level of the
sea nothing can stir without their knowledge; and alarms are spread in
an incredibly short time, without any howl or cry that we can hear. I
can't understand the need of their ferocious courage; there seems to
be no common sense in it. Sometimes, no doubt, they fight in defense
of their homes, but they fight anywhere and always wherever
they can find anything to bite. As soon as a vulnerable spot is
discovered on man or beast, they stand on their heads and sink their
jaws, and though torn limb from limb, they will yet hold on and die
biting deeper. When I contemplate this fierce creature so widely
distributed and strongly intrenched, I see that much remains to be
done ere the world is brought under the rule of universal peace and
love.
On my way to camp a few minutes ago, I passed a dead pine nearly ten
feet in diameter. It has been enveloped in fire from top to bottom so
that now it looks like a grand black pillar set up as a monument. In
this noble shaft a colony of large jetblack ants have established
themselves, laboriously cutting tunnels and cells through the wood,
whether sound or decayed. The entire trunk seems to have been
honey-combed, judging by the size of the talus of gnawed chips like
sawdust piled up around its base. They are more intelligent looking
than their small, belligerent, strong-scented brethren, and have
better manners, though quick to fight when required. Their towns are
carved in fallen trunks as well as in those left standing, but never
in sound, living trees or in the ground. When you happen to sit down
to rest or take notes near a colony, some wandering hunter is sure to
find you and come cautiously forward to discover the nature of the
intruder and what ought to be done. If you are not too near the town
and keep perfectly still he may run across your feet a few times, over
your legs and hands and face, up your trousers, as if taking your
measure and getting comprehensive views, then go in peace without
raising an alarm. If, however, a tempting spot is offered or some
suspicious movement excites him, a bite follows, and such a bite! I
fancy that a bear or wolf bite is not to be compared with it. A quick
electric flame of pain flashes along the outraged nerves, and you
discover for the first
time how great is the capacity for sensation you are possessed of. A
shriek, a grab for the animal, and a bewildered stare follow this bite
of bites as one comes back to consciousness from sudden eclipse.
Fortunately, if careful, one need not be bitten oftener than once or
twice in a lifetime. This wonderful electric species is about three
fourths of an inch long. Bears are fond of them, and tear and gnaw
their home-logs to pieces, and roughly devour the eggs, larv, parent
ants, and the rotten or sound wood of the cells, all in one spicy acid
hash. The Digger Indians also are fond of the larv and even of the
perfect ants, so I have been told by old mountaineers. They bite off
and reject the head, and eat the tickly acid body with keen relish.
Thus are the poor biters bitten, like every other biter, big or
little, in the world's great family.
There is also a fine, active, intelligent-looking red species,
intermediate in size between the above. They dwell in the ground,
and build large piles of seed husks, leaves, straw, etc., over their
nests. Their food seems to be mostly insects and plant leaves, seeds
and sap. How many mouths Nature has to fill, how many neighbors we
have, how little we know about them, and how seldom we get in each
other's way! Then to think of the infinite numbers of smaller fellow
mortals, invisibly small, compared with which the smallest ants are as
mastodons.
June 14.
--The pool-basins below the falls and cascades hereabouts, formed by
the heavy down-plunging currents, are kept nicely clean and clear of
detritus. The heavier parts of the material swept over the falls are
heaped up a short distance in front of the basins in the form of a
dam, thus tending, together with erosion, to increase their size.
Sudden changes, however, are effected during the spring floods, when
the snow is melting and the upper tributaries are roaring loud from
"bank to brae." Then boulders that
have fallen into the channels, and which the ordinary summer and
winter currents were unable to move, are suddenly swept forward as by
a mighty besom, hurled over the falls into these pools, and piled up
in a new dam together with part of the old one, while some of the
smaller boulders are carried further down stream and variously lodged
according to size and shape, all seeking rest where the force of the
current is less than the resistance they are able to offer. But the
greatest changes made in these relations of fall, pool, and dam are
caused, not by the ordinary spring floods, but by extraordinary ones
that occur at irregular intervals. The testimony of trees growing on
flood boulder deposits shows that a century or more has passed since
the last master flood came to awaken everything movable to go swirling
and dancing on wonderful journeys. These floods may occur during the
summer, when heavy thunder-showers, called "cloud-bursts," fall on
wide, steeply inclined stream basins furrowed by
converging channels, which suddenly gather the waters together into
the main trunk in booming torrents of enormous transporting power,
though short lived.
One of these ancient flood boulders stands firm in the middle of the
stream channel, just below the lower edge of the pool dam at the foot
of the fall nearest our camp. It is a nearly cubical mass of granite
about eight feet high, plushed with mosses over the top and down the
sides to ordinary high-water mark. When I climbed on top of it to-day
and lay down to rest, it seemed the most romantic spot I had yet
found, --the one big stone with its mossy level top and smooth sides
standing square and firm and solitary, like an altar, the fall in
front of it bathing it lightly with the finest of the spray, just
enough to keep its moss cover fresh; the clear green pool beneath,
with its foam-bells and its half circle of lilies leaning forward like
a band of admirers, and flowering dogwood and alder trees leaning over
all in sun-sifted arches.
How soothingly, restfully cool it is beneath that leafy, translucent
ceiling, and how delightful the water music--the deep bass tones of
the fall, the clashing, ringing spray, and infinite variety of small
low tones of the current gliding past the side of the boulder-island,
and glinting against a thousand smaller stones down the ferny channel!
All this shut in; every one of these influences acting at short range
as if in a quiet room. The place seemed holy, where one might hope to
see God.
After dark, when the camp was at rest, I groped my way back to the
altar boulder and passed the night on it, --above the water, beneath
the leaves and stars, --everything still more impressive than by day,
the fall seen dimly white, singing Nature's old love song with solemn
enthusiasm, while the stars peering through the leaf-roof seemed to
join in the white water's song. Precious night, precious day to abide
in me forever. Thanks be to God for this immortal gift.
June 15.
--Another reviving morning. Down the long mountain-slopes the sunbeams
pour, gilding the awakening pines, cheering every needle, filling
every living thing with joy. Robins are singing in the alder and maple
groves, the same old song that has cheered and sweetened countless
seasons over almost all of our blessed continent. In this mountain
hollow he seems as much at home as in farmers' orchards. Bullock's
oriole and the Louisiana tanager are here also, with many warblers and
other little mountain troubadours, most of them now busy about their
nests.
Discovered another magnificent specimen of the goldcup oak six feet in
diameter, a Douglas spruce seven feet, and a twining lily
(Stropholirion), with stem eight feet long, and sixty rose-colored
flowers.
Sugar pine cones are cylindrical, slightly tapered at the end and
rounded at the base. Found one to-day nearly twenty-four inches long
and six in diameter, the scales being
open. Another specimen nineteen inches long; the average length of
full-grown
Sugar Pine
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cones on trees favorably situated is nearly
eighteen inches. On the lower edge of the belt at a height of about
twenty-five
A Sugar Pine (on the left)
|
hundred feet above the sea they are smaller, say a foot to fifteen
inches long, and at a height of seven thousand feet or more near the
upper limits of its growth in the Yosemite region they are about the
same size. This noble tree is an inexhaustible study and source of
pleasure. I never weary of gazing at its grand tassel cones, its
perfectly round bole one hundred feet or more without a limb, the fine
purplish color of its bark, and its magnificent outsweeping,
down-curving feathery arms forming a crown always bold and striking
and exhilarating. In habit and general port it looks somewhat like a
palm, but no palm that I have yet seen displays such majesty of form
and behavior either when poised silent and thoughtful in sunshine, or
wide-awake waving in storm winds with every needle quivering. When
young it is very straight and regular in form like most other
conifers; but at the age of fifty to one hundred years it begins to
acquire individuality, so that no two
are alike in their prime or old age. Every tree calls for special
admiration. I have been making many sketches, and regret that I cannot
draw every needle. It is said to reach a height of three hundred feet,
though the tallest I have measured falls short of this stature sixty
feet or more. The diameter of the largest near the ground is about ten
feet, though I've heard of some twelve feet thick or even fifteen. The
diameter is held to a great height, the taper being almost
imperceptibly gradual. Its companion, the yellow pine, is almost as
large. The long silvery foliage of the younger specimens forms
magnificent cylindrical brushes on the top shoots and the ends of the
upturned branches, and when the wind sways the needles all one way at
a certain angle every tree becomes a tower of white quivering
sun-fire. Well may this shining species be called the silver pine. The
needles are sometimes more than a foot long, almost as long as those
of the long-leaf pine of Florida. But though in
size the yellow pine almost equals the sugar pine, and in rugged
enduring strength seems to surpass it, it is far less marked in
general habit and expression, with its regular conventional spire and
its comparatively small cones clustered stiffly among the needles.
Were there no sugar pine, then would this be the king of the world's
eighty or ninety species, the brightest of the bright, waving,
worshiping multitude. Were they mere mechanical sculptures, what noble
objects they would still be! How much more throbbing, thrilling,
overflowing, full of life in every fibre and cell, grand glowing
silverrods--the very gods of the plant kingdom, living their sublime
century lives in sight of Heaven, watched and loved and admired from
generation to generation! And how many other radiant resiny sun trees
are here and higher up, --libocedrus, Douglas spruce, silver fir,
sequoia. How rich our inheritance in these blessed mountains, the tree
pastures into which our eyes are turned!
Now comes sundown. The west is all a glory of color transfiguring
everything. Far up the Pilot Peak Ridge the radiant host of trees
stand hushed and thoughtful, receiving the Sun's good-night, as solemn
and impressive a leave-taking as if sun and trees were to meet no
more. The daylight fades, the color spell is broken, and the forest
breathes free in the night breeze beneath the stars.
June 16.
--One of the Indians from Brown's Flat got right into the middle of
the camp this morning, unobserved. I was seated on a stone, looking
over my notes and sketches, and happening to look up, was startled to
see him standing grim and silent within a few steps of me, as
motionless and weather-stained as an old tree-stump that had stood
there for centuries. All Indians seem to have learned this wonderful
way of walking unseen, --making themselves invisible like certain
spiders I have been observing here, which, in case of alarm, caused,
for example, by a bird alighting on the bush their
webs are spread upon, immediately bounce themselves up and down on
their elastic threads so rapidly that only a blur is visible. The wild
Indian power of escaping observation, even where there is little or no
cover to hide in, was probably slowly acquired in hard hunting and
fighting lessons while trying to approach game, take enemies by
surprise, or get safely away when compelled to retreat. And this
experience transmitted through many generations seems at length to
have become what is vaguely called instinct.
How smooth and changeless seems the surface of the mountains about us!
Scarce a track is to be found beyond the range of the sheep except on
small open spots on the sides of the streams, or where the forest
carpets are thin or wanting. On the smoothest of these open strips and
patches deer tracks may be seen, and the great suggestive footprints
of bears, which, with those of the many small animals, are scarce
enough to answer as a kind of light ornamental stitching or
embroidery.
Along the main ridges and larger branches of the river Indian trails
may be traced, but they are not nearly as distinct as one would expect
to find them. How many centuries Indians have roamed these woods
nobody knows, probably a great many, extending far beyond the time
that Columbus touched our shores, and it seems strange that heavier
marks have not been made. Indians walk softly and hurt the landscape
hardly more than the birds and squirrels, and their brush and bark
huts last hardly longer than those of wood rats, while their more
enduring monuments, excepting those wrought on the forests by the
fires they made to improve their hunting grounds, vanish in a few
centuries.
How different are most of those of the white man, especially on the
lower gold region, --roads blasted in teh solid rock, wild streams
dammed and tamed and turned out of their channels and led along the
sides of cañons and valleys to work in mines like slaves. Crossing
from ridge to ridge, high in
the air, on long straddling trestles as if flowing on stilts, or down
and up across valleys and hills, imprisoned in iron pipes to strike
and wash away hills and miles of the skin of the mountain's face,
riddling, stripping every gold gully and flat. These are the white
man's marks made in a few feverish years, to say nothing of mills,
fields, villages, scattered hundreds of miles along the flank of the
Range. Long will it be ere these marks are effaced, though Nature is
doing what she can, replanting, gardening, sweeping away old dams and
flumes, leveling gravel and boulder piles, patiently trying to heal
every raw scar. The main gold storm is over. Calm enough are the gray
old miners scratching a bare living in waste diggings here and there.
Thundering underground blasting is still going on to feed the pounding
quartz mills, but their influence on the landscape is light as
compared with that of the pick-and-shovel storms waged a few years
ago. Fortunately for Sierra scenery the
gold-bearing slates are mostly restricted to the foothills. The region
about our camp is still wild, and higher lies the snow about as
trackless as the sky.
Only a few hills and domes of cloudland were built yesterday and none
at all to-day. The light is peculiarly white and thin, though
pleasantly warm. The serenity of this mountain weather in the spring,
just when Nature's pulses are beating highest, is one of its greatest
charms. There is only a moderate breeze from the summits of the Range
at night, and a slight breathing from the sea and the lowland hills
and plains during the day, or stillness so complete no leaf stirs. The
trees hereabouts have but little wind history to tell.
Sheep, like people, are ungovernable when hungry. Excepting my guarded
lily gardens, almost every leaf that these hoofed locusts can reach
within a radius of a mile or two from camp has been devoured. Even the
bushes are stripped bare, and in spite of
dogs and shepherds the sheep scatter to all points of the compass and
vanish in dust. I fear some are lost, for one of the sixteen black
ones is missing.
June 17.
--Counted the wool bundles this morning as they bounced through the
narrow corral gate. About three hundred are missing, and as the
shepherd could not go to seek them, I had to go. I tied a crust of
bread to my belt, and with Carlo set out for the upper slopes of the
Pilot Peak Ridge, and had a good day, notwithstanding the care of
seeking the silly runaways. I went out for wool, and did not come back
shorn. A peculiar light circled around the horizon, white and thin
like that often seen over the auroral corona, blending into the blue
of the upper sky. The only clouds were a few faint flossy pencilings
like combed silk. I pushed direct to the boundary of the usual range
of the flock, and around it until I found the outgoing trail of the
wanderers. It led far up the ridge into an open place
surrounded by a hedge-like growth of ceanothus chaparral. Carlo knew
what I was about, and eagerly followed the scent until we came up to
them, huddled in a timid, silent bunch. They had evidently been here
all night and all the forenoon, afraid to go out to feed. Having
escaped restraint, they were, like some people we know of, afraid of
their freedom, did not know what to do with it, and seemed glad to get
back into the old familiar bondage.
June 18.
--Another inspiring morning, nothing better in any world can be
conceived. No description of Heaven that I have ever heard or read of
seems half so fine. At noon the clouds occupied about .05 of the sky,
white filmy touches drawn delicately on the azure.
The high ridges and hilltops beyond the woolly locusts are now gay
with monardella, clarkia, coreopsis, and tall tufted grasses, some of
them tall enough to wave like pines. The lupines, of which there are
many ill-defined species, are now mostly out of flower, and many of
the composit are beginning to fade, their radiant corollas vanishing
in fluffy pappus like stars in mist.
We had another visitor from Brown's Flat to-day, an old Indian woman
with a basket on her back. Like our first caller from the village, she
got fairly into camp and was standing in plain view when discovered.
How long she had been quietly looking on, I cannot say. Even the dogs
failed to notice her stealthy approach. She was on her way, I suppose,
to some wild garden, probably for lupine and starchy saxifrage leaves
and rootstocks. Her dress was calico rags, far from clean. In every
way she seemed sadly unlike Nature's neat well-dressed animals, though
living like them on the bounty of the wilderness. Strange that mankind
alone is dirty. Had she been clad in fur, or cloth woven of grass or
shreddy bark, like the juniper and libocedrus mats, she might then
have seemed a
rightful part of the wilderness; like a good wolf at least, or bear.
But from no point of view that I have found are such debased fellow
beings a whit more natural than the glaring tailored tourists we saw
that frightened the birds and squirrels.
June 19.
--Pure sunshine all day. How beautiful a rock is made by leaf shadows!
Those of the live oak are particularly clear and distinct, and beyond
all art in grace and delicacy, now still as if painted on stone, now
gliding softly as if afraid of noise, now dancing, waltzing in swift,
merry swirls, or jumping on and off sunny rocks in quick dashes like
wave embroidery on seashore cliffs. How true and substantial is this
shadow beauty, and with what sublime extravagance is beauty thus
multiplied! The big orange lilies are now arrayed in all their glory
of leaf and flower. Noble plants, in perfect health, Nature's
darlings.
June 20.
--Some of the silly sheep got caught fast in a tangle of chaparral
this
morning, like flies in a spider's web, and had to be helped out. Carlo
found them and tried to drive them from the trap by the easiest way.
How far above sheep are intelligent dogs! No friend and helper can be
more affectionate and constant than Carlo. The noble St. Bernard is an
honor to his race.
The air is distinctly fragrant with balsam and resin and mint, --every
breath of it a gift we may well thank God for. Who could ever guess
that so rough a wilderness should yet be so fine, so full of good
things. One seems to be in a majestic domed pavilion in which a grand
play is being acted with scenery and music and and incense, --all the
furniture and action so interesting we are in no danger of being
called on to endure one dull moment. God himself seems to be always
doing his best here, working like a man in a glow of enthusiasm.
June 21.
--Sauntered along the river-bank to my lily gardens. The perfection of
beauty in these lilies of the wilderness is a
never-ending source of admiration and wonder. Their rhizomes are set
in black mould accumulated in hollows of the metamorphic slates beside
the pools, where they are well watered without being subjected to
flood action. Every leaf in the level whorls around the tall polished
stalks is as finely finished as the petals, and the light and heat
required are measured for them and tempered in passing through the
branches of over-leaning trees. However strong the winds from the noon
rain-storms, they are securely sheltered. Beautiful hypnum carpets
bordered with ferns are spread beneath them, violets too, and a few
daisies. Everything around them sweet and fresh like themselves.
Cloudland to-day is only a solitary white mountain; but it is so
enriched with sunshine and shade, the tones of color on its big domed
head and bossy outbulging ridges, and in the hollows and ravines
between them, are ineffably fine.
June 22.
--Unusually cloudy. Besides the periodical shower-bearing cumuli there
is a thin diffused fog-like cloud overhead. About .75 in all.
June 23.
--Oh, these vast, calm, measureless mountain days, inciting at once to
work and rest! Days in whose light everything seems equally divine,
opening a thousand windows to show us God. Nevermore, however weary,
should one faint by the way who gains the blessings of one mountain
day; whatever his fate, long life, short life, stormy or calm, he is
rich forever.
June 24.
--Our regular allowance of clouds and thunder. Shepherd Billy is in a
peck of trouble about the sheep; he declares that they are possessed
with more of the evil one than any other flock from the beginning of
the invention of mutton and wool to the last batch of it. No matter
how many are missing, he will not, he says, go a step to seek them,
because, as he reasons, while getting back one wanderer he would
probably lose
ten. Therefore runaway hunting must be Carlo's and mine. Billy's
little dog Jack is also giving trouble by leaving camp every night to
visit his neighbors up the mountain at Brown's Flat. He is a
common-looking cur of no particular breed, but tremendously
enterprising in love and war. He has cut all the ropes and leather
straps he has been tied with, until his master in desperation, after
climbing the brushy mountain again and again to drag him back,
fastened him with a pole attached to his collar under his chin at one
end, and to a stout sapling at the other. But the pole gave good
leverage, and by constant twisting during the night, the fastening at
the sapling end was chafed off, and he set out on his usual journey,
dragging the pole through the brush, and reached the Indian settlement
in safety. His master followed, and making no allowance, gave him a
beating, and swore in bad terms that next evening he would "fix that
infatuated pup" by anchoring him unmercifully to the heavy
cast-iron lid of our Dutch oven, weighing about as much as the dog. It
was linked directly to his collar close up under the chin, so that the
poor fellow seemed unable to stir. He stood quite discouraged until
after dark, unable to look about him, or even to lie down unless he
stretched himself out with his front feet across the lid, and his head
close down between his paws. Before morning, however, Jack was heard
far up the height howling Excelsior, cast-iron anchor to the contrary
notwithstanding. He must have walked, or rather climbed, erect on his
hind legs, clasping the heavy lid like a shield against his breast, a
formidable iron-clad condition in which to meet his rivals. Next
night, dog, pot-lid, and all, were tied up in an old bean-sack, and
thus at last angry Billy gained the victory. Just before leaving home,
Jack was bitten in the lower jaw by a rattlesnake, and for a week or
so his head and neck were swollen to more than double the normal size;
nevertheless he ran about as brisk
and lively as ever, and is now completely recovered. The only
treatment he got was fresh milk, --a gallon or two at a time forcibly
poured down his sore, poisoned throat.
June 25.
--Though only a sheep camp, this grand mountain hollow is home, sweet
home, every day growing sweeter, and I shall be sorry to leave it. The
lily gardens are safe as yet from the trampling flock. Poor, dusty,
raggedy, famishing creatures, I heartily pity them. Many a mile they
must go every day to gather their fifteen or twenty tons of chaparral
and grass.
June 26.
--Nuttall's flowering dogwood makes a fine show when in bloom. The
whole tree is then snowy white. The involucres are six to eight inches
wide. Along the streams it is a good-sized tree thirty to fifty feet
high, with a broad head when not crowded by companions. Its showy
involucres attract a crowd of moths, butterflies, and other winged
people about it for their own and, I suppose, the tree's advantage. It
likes plenty of cool water, and is a great drinker like the alder,
willow, and cottonwood, and flourishes best on stream banks, though it
often wanders far from streams in damp shady glens beneath the pines,
where it is much smaller. When the leaves ripen in the fall, they
become more beautiful than the flowers, displaying charming tones of
red, purple, and lavender. Another species grows in abundance as a
chaparral shrub on the shady sides of the hills, probably Cornus
sessilis. The leaves are eaten by the sheep.--Heard a few lightning
strokes in the distance, with rumbling, mumbling reverberations.
June 27.
--The beaked hazel (Corylus rostrata, var. California) is common on
cool slopes up toward the summit of the Pilot Peak Ridge. There is
something peculiarly attractive in the hazel, like the oaks and heaths
of the cool countries of our forefathers, and through them our love
for these plants has, I suppose, been transmitted. This
species is four or five feet high, leaves soft and hairy, grateful to
the touch, and the delicious nuts are eagerly gathered by Indians and
squirrels. The sky as usual adorned with white noon clouds.
June 28.
--Warm, mellow summer. The glowing sunbeams make every nerve tingle.
The new needles of the pines and firs are nearly full grown and shine
gloriously. Lizards are glinting about on the hot rocks; some that
live near the camp are more than half tame. They seem attentive to
every movement on our part, as if curious to simply look on without
suspicion of harm, turning their heads to look back, and making a
variety of pretty gestures. Gentle, guileless creatures with beautiful
eyes, I shall be sorry to leave them when we leave camp.
June 29.
--I have been making the acquaintance of a very interesting little
bird that flits about the falls and rapids of the main branches of the
river. It is not a water-bird in structure, though it gets its
living in the water, and never leaves the streams. It is not
web-footed, yet it dives fearlessly into deep swirling rapids,
evidently to feed at the bottom, using its wings to swim with under
water just as ducks and loons do. Sometimes it wades about in shallow
places, thrusting its head under from time to time in a jerking,
nodding, frisky way that is sure to attract attention. It is about the
size of a robin, has short crisp wings serviceable for flying either
in water or air, and a tail of moderate size slanted upward, giving
it, with its nodding, bobbing manners, a wrennish look. Its color is
plain bluish ash, with a tinge of brown on the head and shoulders. It
flies from fall to fall, rapid to rapid, with a solid whir of
wingbeats like those of a quail, follows the windings of the stream,
and usually alights on some rock jutting up out of the current, or on
some stranded snag, or rarely on the dry limb of an overhanging tree,
perching like regular tree birds when it suits its
convenience. It has the oddest, daintiest mincing manners imaginable;
and the little fellow can sing too, a sweet thrushy, fluty song,
rather low, not the least boisterous, and much less keen and
accentuated than from its vigorous briskness one would be led to look
for. What a romantic life this little bird leads on the most beautiful
portions of the streams, in a genial climate with shade and cool water
and spray to temper the summer heat. No wonder it is a fine singer,
considering the stream songs it hears day and night. Every breath the
little poet draws is part of a song, for all the air about the rapids
and falls is beaten into music, and its first lessons must begin
before it is born by the thrilling and quivering of the eggs in unison
with the tones of the falls. I have not yet found its nest, but it
must be near the streams, for it never leaves them.
June 30.
--Halfcloudy, halfsunny, clouds lustrous white. The tall pines crowded
along the top of the Pilot Peak Ridge look
like six-inch miniatures exquisitely outlined on the satiny sky.
Average cloudiness for the day about .25. No rain. And so this
memorable month ends, a stream of beauty unmeasured, no more to be
sectioned off by almanac arithmetic than sun-radiance or the currents
of seas and rivers--a peaceful, joyful stream of beauty. Every
morning, arising from the death of sleep, the happy plants and all our
fellow animal creatures great and small, and even the rocks, seemed to
be shouting, "Awake, awake, rejoice, rejoice, come love us and join in
our song. Come! Come!" Looking back through the stillness and romantic
enchanting beauty and peace of the camp grove, this June seems the
greatest of all the months of my life, the most truly, divinely free,
boundless like eternity, immortal. Everything in it seems equally
divine--one smooth, pure, wild glow of Heaven's love, never to be
blotted or blurred by anything past or to come.
July 1.
--Summer is ripe. Flocks of seeds
are already out of their cups and pods seeking their predestined
places. Some will strike root and grow up beside their parents, others
flying on the wings of the wind far from them, among strangers. Most
of the young birds are full feathered and out of their nests, though
still looked after by both father and mother, protected and fed and to
some extent educated. How beautiful the home life of birds! No wonder
we all love them.
I like to watch the squirrels. There are two species here, the large
California gray and the Douglas. The latter is the brightest of all
the squirrels I have ever seen, a hot spark of life, making every tree
tingle with his prickly toes, a condensed nugget of fresh mountain
vigor and valor, as free from disease as a sunbeam. One cannot think
of such an animal ever being weary or sick. He seems to think the
mountains belong to him, and at first tried to drive away the whole
flock of sheep as well as the shepherd and dogs. How he scolds, and
what faces
he makes, all eyes, teeth, and whiskers! If not so comically small, he
would indeed be a dreadful fellow. I should like to know more about
his bringing up, his life in the home knot-hole, as well as in the
tree-tops,
Douglas Squirrel Observing Brother Man
|
throughout all
seasons. Strange that I have not yet found a nest full of young ones.
The Douglas is nearly allied to the red squirrel of the Atlantic
slope, and may have been distributed to this side of the continent by
way of the great unbroken forests of the north.
The California gray is one of the most beautiful, and, next to the
Douglas, the most interesting of our hairy neighbors. Compared with
the Douglas he is twice as large, but far less lively and influential
as a worker in the woods, and he manages to make his way through
leaves and branches with less stir than his small brother. I have
never heard him bark at anything except our dogs. When in search of
food he glides silently from branch to branch, examining last year's
cones, to see whether some few seeds may not be left between the
scales, or gleans fallen ones among the leaves on the ground, since
none of the present season's crop is yet available. His tail floats
now behind him, now above him, level or gracefully curled like a wisp
of cirrus cloud, every hair in its place, clean and shining and
radiant as thistle-down in spite of rough, gummy work. His whole body
seems about as unsubstantial as his tail. The little Douglas is fiery,
peppery, full of brag
and fight and show, with movements so quick and keen they almost sting
the on-looker, and the harlequin gyrating show he makes of himself
turns one giddy to see. The gray is shy, and oftentimes stealthy in
his movements, as if half expecting an enemy in every tree and bush,
and back of every log, wishing only to be let alone apparently, and
manifesting no desire to be seen or admired or feared. The Indians
hunt this species for food, a good cause for caution, not to mention
other enemies, --hawks, snakes, wild cats. In woods where food is
abundant they wear paths through sheltering thickets and over
prostrate trees to some favorite pool where in hot and dry weather
they drink at nearly the same hour every day. These pools are said to
be narrowly watched, especially by the boys, who lie in ambush with
bow and arrow, and kill without noise. But, in spite of enemies,
squirrels are happy fellows, forest favorites, types of tireless life.
Of all Nature's wild beasts, they
seem to me the wildest. May we come to know each other better.
The chaparral-covered hill-slope to the south of the camp, besides
furnishing nesting-places for countless merry birds, is the home and
hiding-place of the curious wood rat (Neotoma), a handsome,
interesting animal, always attracting attention wherever seen. It is
more like a squirrel than a rat, is much larger, has delicate, thick,
soft fur of a bluish slate color, white on the belly; ears large,
thin, and translucent; eyes soft, full, and liquid; claws slender,
sharp as needles; and as his limbs are strong, he can climb about as
well as a squirrel. No rat or squirrel has so innocent a look, is so
easily approached, or expresses such confidence in one's good
intentions. He seems too fine for the thorny thickets he inhabits, and
his hut also is as unlike himself as may be, though softly furnished
inside. No other animal inhabitant of these mountains builds houses so
large and striking in appearance. The
traveler coming suddenly upon a group of them for the first time will
not be likely to forget them. They are built of all kinds of sticks,
old rotten pieces picked up anywhere, and green prickly twigs bitten
from the nearest bushes, the whole mixed with miscellaneous odds and
ends of everything movable, such as bits of cloddy earth, stones,
bones, deerhorn, etc., piled up in a conical mass as if it were got
ready for burning. Some of these curious cabins are six feet high and
as wide at the base, and a dozen or more of them are occasionally
grouped together, less perhaps for the sake of society than for
advantages of food and shelter. Coming through the dense shaggy
thickets of some lonely hillside, the solitary explorer happening into
one of these strange villages is startled at the sight, and may fancy
himself in an Indian settlement, and begin to wonder what kind of
reception he is likely to get. But no savage face will he see, perhaps
not a single inhabitant, or at most two or three seated
on top of their wigwams, looking at the stranger with the mildest of
wild eyes, and allowing a near approach. In the centre of the rough
spiky hut a soft nest is made of the inner fibres of bark chewed to
tow, and lined with feathers and the down of various seeds, such as
willow and milkweed. The delicate creature in its prickly,
thick-walled home suggests a tender flower in a thorny involucre. Some
of the nests are built in trees thirty or forty feet from the ground,
and even in garrets, as if seeking the company and protection of man,
like swallows and linnets, though accustomed to the wildest solitude.
Among housekeepers Neotoma has the reputation of a thief, because he
carries away everything transportable to his queer hut, --knives,
forks, combs, nails, tin cups, spectacles, etc., --merely, however, to
stregthen his fortifications, I guess. His food at home, as far as I
have learned, is nearly the same as that of the squirrels, --nuts,
berries, seeds, and
sometimes the bark and tender shoots of the various species of
ceanothus.
July 2.
--Warm, sunny day, thrilling plant and animals and rocks alike, making
sap and blood flow fast, and making every particle of the crystal
mountains throb and swirl and dance in glad accord like star-dust. No
dullness anywhere visible or thinkable. No stagnation, no death.
Everything kept in joyful rhythmic motion in the pulses of Nature's
big heart.
Pearl cumuli over the higher mountains, --clouds, not with a silver
lining, but all silver. The brightest, crispest, rockiest-looking
clouds, most varied in features and keenest in outline I ever saw at
any time of year in any country. The daily building and unbuilding of
these snowy cloud-ranges--the highest Sierra--is a prime marvel to me,
and I gaze at the stupendous white domes, miles high, with ever fresh
admiration. But in the midst of these sky and mountain affairs a
change of diet is pulling us down.
We have been out of bread a few days, and begin to miss it more than
seems reasonable, for we have plenty of meat and sugar and tea.
Strange we should feel food-poor in so rich a wilderness. The Indians
put us to shame, so do the squirrels, --starchy roots and seeds and
bark in abundance, yet the failure of the meal sack disturbs our
bodily balance, and threatens our best enjoyments.
July 3.
--Warm. Breeze just enough to sift through the woods and waft
fragrance from their thousand fountains. The pine and fir cones are
growing well, resin and balsam dripping from every tree, and seeds are
ripening fast, promising a fine harvest. The squirrels will have
bread. They eat all kinds of nuts long before they are ripe, and yet
never seem to suffer in stomach.
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