the john muir exhibit - writings - my_first_summer_in_the_sierra - chapter 4
My First Summer in the Sierra
by John Muir
Chapter 4
To the High Mountains
July 8.
--Now away we go toward the topmost mountains. Many still, small
voices, as well as the noon thunder, are calling, "Come higher."
Farewell, blessed dell, woods, gardens, streams, birds, squirrels,
lizards, and a thousand others. Farewell. Farewell.
Up through the woods the hoofed locusts streamed beneath a cloud of
brown dust.
Scarcely were they driven a hundred yards from the old corral ere they
seemed to know that at last they were going to new pastures, and
rushed wildly ahead, crowding through gaps in the brush, jumping,
tumbling like exulting, hurrahing flood-waters escaping through a
broken dam. A man on each flank kept shouting advice to the leaders,
who in their famishing condition were behaving like Gadarene swine;
two other drivers were busy with stragglers, helping them out of
brush-tangles; the Indian, calm, alert, silently watched for wanderers
likely to be over-looked; the two dogs ran here and there, at a loss
to know what was best to be done, while the Don, soon far in the rear,
was trying to keep in sight of his trouble-some wealth.
As soon as the boundary of the old eaten-out range was passed the
hungry horde suddenly became calm, like a mountain stream in a meadow.
Thenceforward they were allowed to eat their way as slowly as they
wished, care being taken only to keep them headed toward the summit of
the Merced and Tuolumne divide. Soon the two thousand flattened
paunches were bulged out with sweet-pea vines and grass, and the
gaunt, desperate creatures, more like wolves than
Divide Between the Tuolumne and the Merced,
below Hazel Green
|
sheep, became bland and governable, while the howling
drivers changed to gentle shepherds, and sauntered in peace.
Toward sundown we reached Hazel Green, a charming spot on the summit
of the dividing ridge between the basins of the
Merced and Tuolumne, where there is a small brook flowing through
hazel and dogwood thickets beneath magnificent silver firs and pines.
Here we are camped for the night, our big fire, heaped high with
rosiny logs and branches, is blazing like a sunrise, gladly giving
back the light slowly sifted from the sunbeams of centuries of
summers; and in the glow of that old sunlight how impressively
surrounding objects are brought forward in relief against the outer
darkness! Grasses, larkspurs, columbines, lilies, hazel bushes, and
the great trees form a circle around the fire like thoughtful
spectators, gazing and listening with human-like enthusiasm. The night
breeze is cool, for all day we have been climbing into the upper sky,
the home of the cloud mountains we so long have admired. How sweet and
keen the air! Every breath a blessing. Here the sugar pine reaches its
fullest development in size and beauty and number of individuals,
filling every swell and hollow and down-plunging ravine almost to
the exclusion of other species. A few yellow pines are still to be
found as companions, and in the coolest places silver firs; but noble
as these are, the sugar pine is king, and spreads long protecting arms
above them while they rock and wave in sign of recognition.
We have now reached a height of six thousand feet. In the forenoon we
passed along a flat part of the dividing ridge that is planted with
manzanita (Arctostaphylos), some specimens the largest I have seen.
I measured one, the bole of which is four feet in diameter and only
eighteen inches high from the ground, where it dissolves into many
wide-spreading branches forming a broad round head about ten or twelve
feet high, covered with clusters of small narrow-throated pink bells.
The leaves are pale green, glandular, and set on edge by a twist of
the petiole. The branches seem naked; for the chocolate-colored bark
is very smooth and thin, and is shed off in flakes
that curl when dry. The wood is red, close-grained, hard, and heavy. I
wonder how old these curious tree-bushes are, probably as old as the
great pines. Indians and bears and birds and fat grubs feast on the
berries, which look like small apples, often rosy on one side, green
on the other. The Indians are said to make a kind of beer or cider out
of them. There are many species. This one, Arctostaphylos pungens, is
common hereabouts. No need have they to fear the wind, so low they are
and steadfastly rooted. Even the fires that sweep the woods seldom
destroy them utterly, for they rise again from the root, and some of
the dry ridges they grow on are seldom touched by fire. I must try to
know them better.
I miss my river songs to-night. Here Hazel Creek at its topmost
springs has a voice like a bird. The wind-tones in the great trees
overhead are strangely impressive, all the more because not a leaf
stirs below them. But it grows late, and I must to
bed. The camp is silent; everybody asleep. It seems extravagant to
spend hours so precious in sleep. "He giveth his beloved sleep." Pity
the poor beloved needs it, weak, weary, forspent; oh, the pity of it,
to sleep in the midst of eternal, beautiful motion instead of gazing
forever, like the stars.
July 9
--Exhilarated with the mountain air, I feel like shouting this morning
with excess of wild animal joy. The Indian lay down away from the fire
last night, without blankets, having nothing on, by way of clothing,
but a pair of blue overalls and a calico shirt wet with sweat. The
night air is chilly at this elevation, and we gave him some
horse-blankets, but he did n't seem to care for them. A fine thing to
be independent of clothing where it is so hard to carry. When food is
scarce, he can live on whatever comes in his way, --a few berries,
roots, bird eggs, grasshoppers, black ants, fat wasp or bumblebee
larv, without feeling that he is doing
anything worth mention, so I have been told.
Our course to-day was along the broad top of the main ridge to a
hollow beyond Crane Flat. It is scarce at all rocky, and is covered
with the noblest pines and spruces I have yet seen. Sugar pines from
six to eight feet in diameter are not uncommon, with a height of two
hundred feet or even more. The silver firs (Abies concolor and A.
magnifica) are exceedingly beautiful, especially the magnifica,
which becomes more abundant the higher we go. It is of great size, one
of the most notable in every way of the giant conifers of the Sierra.
I saw specimens that measured seven feet in diameter and over two
hundred feet in height, while the average size for what might be
called full-grown mature trees can hardly be less than one hundred and
eighty or two hundred feet high and five or six feet in diameter; and
with these noble dimensions there is a symmetry and perfection of
finish
not to be seen in any other tree, hereabout at least. The branches are
whorled in fives mostly, and stand out from the tall, straight,
exquisitely tapered bole in level collars, each branch regularly
pinnated like the fronds of ferns, and densely clad with leaves all
around the branchlets, thus giving them a singularly rich and
sumptuous appearance. The extreme top of the tree is a thick blunt
shoot pointing straight to the zenith like an admonishing finger. The
cones stand erect like casks on the upper branches. They are about six
inches long, three in diameter, blunt, velvety, and cylindrical in
form, and very rich and precious looking. The seeds are about three
quarters of an inch long, dark reddish brown with brilliant iridescent
purple wings, and when ripe, the cone falls to pieces, and the seeds
thus set free at a height of one hundred and fifty or two hundred feet
have a good send off and may fly considerable distances in a good
breeze; and it is when a good breeze
is blowing that most of them are shaken free to fly.
The other species, Abies concolor, attains nearly as great a height
and thickness as the magnifica, but the branches do not form such
regular whorls, nor are they so exactly pinnated or richly leaf-clad.
Instead of growing all around the branchlets, the leaves are mostly
arranged in two flat horizontal rows. The cones and seeds are like
those of the magnifica in form but less than half as large. The bark
of the magnifica is reddish purple and closely furrowed, that of the
concolor gray and widely furrowed. A noble pair.
At Crane Flat we climbed a thousand feet or more in a distance of
about two miles, the forest growing more dense and the silvery
magnifica fir forming a still greater portion of the whole. Crane
Flat is a meadow with a wide sandy border lying on the top of the
divide. It is often visited by blue cranes to rest and feed on their
long
journeys, hence the name. It is about half a mile long, draining into
the Merced, sedgy in the middle, with a margin bright with lilies,
columbines, larkspurs, lupines, castilleia, then an outer zone of dry,
gently sloping ground starred with a multitude of small flowers,
--eunanus, mimulus, gilia, with rosettes of spraguea, and tufts of
several species of eriogonum and the brilliant zauschneria. The noble
forest wall about it is made up of the two silver firs and the yellow
and sugar pines, which here seem to reach their highest pitch of
beauty and grandeur; for the elevation, six thousand feet or a little
more, is not too great for the sugar and yellow pines or too low for
the magnifica fir, while the concolor seems to find this elevation the
best possible. About a mile from the north end of the flat there is a
grove of Sequoia gigantea, the king of all the conifers. Furthermore,
the Douglas spruce (Pseudotsuga Douglasii) and Libocedrus decurrens,
and a few two-leaved pines, occur
here and there, forming a small part of the forest. Three pines, two
silver firs, one Douglas spruce, one sequoia, --all of them, except
the two-leaved pine, colossal trees, --are found here together, an
assemblage of conifers unrivaled on the globe.
We passed a number of charming garden-like meadows lying on top of the
divide or hanging like ribbons down its sides, imbedded in the
glorious forest. Some are taken up chiefly with the tall
white-flowered Veratrum Californicum, with boat-shaped leaves about a
foot long, eight or ten inches wide, and veined like those of
cypripedium, --a robust, hearty, liliaceous plant, fond of water and
determined to be seen. Columbine and larkspur grow on the dryer edges
of the meadows, with a tall handsome lupine standing waist-deep in
long grasses and sedges. Castilleias, too, of several species make a
bright show with beds of violets at their feet. But the glory of these
forest meadows is a lily
(L. parvum). The tallest are from seven to eight feet high with
magnificent racemes of ten to twenty or more small orange-colored
flowers; they stand out free in open ground, with just enough grass
and other companion plants about them to fringe their feet, and show
them off to best advantage. This is a grand addition to my lily
acquaintances, --a true mountaineer, reaching prime vigor and beauty
at a height of seven thousand feet or thereabouts. It varies, I find,
very much in size even in the same meadow, not only with the soil, but
with age. I saw a specimen that had only one flower, and another
within a stone's throw had twenty-five. And to think that the sheep
should be allowed in these lily meadows! after how many centuries of
Nature's care planting and watering them, tucking the bulbs in snugly
below winter frost, shading the tender shoots with clouds drawn above
them like curtains, pouring refreshing rain, making them perfect in
beauty, and keeping
them safe by a thousand miracles; yet, strange to say, allowing the
trampling of devastating sheep. One might reasonably look for a wall
of fire to fence such gardens. So extravagant is Nature with her
choicest treasures, spending plant beauty as she spends sunshine,
pouring it forth into land and sea, garden and desert. And so the
beauty of lilies falls on angels and men, bears and squirrels, wolves
and sheep, birds and bees, but as far as I have seen, man alone, and
the animals he tames, destroy these gardens. Awkward, lumbering bears,
the Don tells me, love to wallow in them in hot weather, and deer with
their sharp feet cross them again and again, sauntering and feeding,
yet never a lily have I seen spoiled by them. Rather, like gardeners,
they seem to cultivate them, pressing and dibbling as required. Anyhow
not a leaf or petal seems misplaced.
The trees round about them seem as perfect in beauty and form as the
lilies, their
boughs whorled like lily leaves in exact order. This evening, as
usual, the glow of our camp-fire is working enchantment on everything
within reach of its rays. Lying beneath the firs, it is glorious to
see them dipping their spires in the starry sky, the sky like one vast
lily meadow in bloom! How can I close my eyes on so precious a night?
July 10.
--A Douglas squirrel, peppery, pungent autocrat of the woods, is
barking overhead this morning, and the small forest birds, so seldom
seen when one travels noisily, are out on sunny branches along the
edge of the meadow getting warm, taking a sun bath and dew bath--a
fine sight. How charming the sprightly confident looks and ways of
these little feathered people of the trees! They seem sure of dainty,
wholesome breakfasts, and where are so many breakfasts to come from?
How helpless should we find ourselves should we try to set a table for
them of such buds, seeds, insects, etc., as would keep them in the
pure wild health
they enjoy! Not a headache or any other ache amongst them, I guess. As
for the irrepressible Douglas squirrels, one never thinks of their
breakfasts or the possibility of hunger, sickness, or death; rather
they seem like stars above chance or change, even though we may see
them at times busy gathering burrs, working hard for a living.
On through the forest ever higher we go, a cloud of dust dimming the
way, thousands of feet, trampling leaves and flowers, but in this
mighty wilderness they seem but a feeble band, and a thousand gardens
will escape their blighting touch. They cannot hurt the trees, though
some of the seedlings suffer, and should the woolly locusts be greatly
multiplied, as on account of dollar value they are likely to be, then
the forests, too, may in time be destroyed. Only the sky will then be
safe, though hid from view by dust and smoke, incense of a bad
sacrifice. Poor, helpless, hungry sheep, in great part misbegotten,
without good right to be,
semi-manufactured, made less by God than man, born out of time and
place, yet their voices are strangely human and call out one's pity.
Our way is still along the Merced and Tuolumne divide, the streams on
our right going to swell the songful Yosemite River, those on our left
to the songful Tuolumne, slipping through sunny carex and lily
meadows, and breaking into song down a thousand ravines almost as soon
as they are born. A more tuneful set of streams surely nowhere exists,
or more sparkling crystal pure, now gliding with tinkling whisper, now
with merry dimpling rush, in and out through sunshine and shade,
shimmering in pools, uniting their currents, bouncing, dancing from
form to form over cliffs and inclines, ever more beautiful the farther
they go until they pour into the main glacial rivers.
All day I have been gazing in growing admiration at the noble groups
of the magnificent silver fir which more and more is
taking the ground to itself. The woods above Crane Flat still continue
comparatively open, letting in the sunshine on the brown needle-strewn
ground. Not only are the individual trees admirable in symmetry and
superb in foliage and port, but half a dozen or more often form temple
groves in which the trees are so nicely graded in size and position as
to seem one. Here, indeed, is the tree-lover's paradise. The dullest
eye in the world must surely be quickened by such trees as these.
Fortunately the sheep need little attention, as they are driven slowly
and allowed to nip and nibble as they like. Since leaving Hazel Green
we have been following the Yosemite trail; visitors to the famous
valley coming by way of Coulterville and Chinese Camp pass this
way--the two trails uniting at Crane Flat--and enter the valley on the
north side. Another trail enters on the south side by way of Mariposa.
The tourists we saw were in parties of from three or four to
fifteen or twenty, mounted on mules or small mustang ponies. A strange
show they made, winding single file through the solemn woods in gaudy
attire, scaring the wild creatures, and one might fancy that even the
great pines would be disturbed and groan aghast. But what may we say
of ourselves and the flock?
We are now camped at Tamarack Flat, within four or five miles of the
lower end of Yosemite. Here is another fine meadow embosomed in the
woods, with a deep, clear stream gliding through it, its banks rounded
and beveled with a thatch of dipping sedges. The flat is named after
the two-leaved pine (Pinus contorta, var. Murrayana), common here,
especially around the cool margin of the meadow. On rocky ground it is
a rough, thickset tree, about forty to sixty feet high and one to
three feet in diameter, bark thin and gummy, branches rather naked,
tassels, leaves, and cones small. But in damp, rich soil it grows
close and slender, and reaches
a height at times of nearly a hundred feet. Specimens only six inches
in diameter at the ground are often fifty or sixty feet in height, as
slender and sharp in outline as arrows, like the true tamarack (larch)
of the Eastern States; hence the name, though it is a pine.
July 11.
--The Don has gone ahead on one of the pack animals to spy out the
land to the north of Yosemite in search of the best point for a
central camp. Much higher than this we cannot now go, for the upper
pastures, said to be better than any here-abouts, are still buried in
heavy winter snow. Glad I am that camp is to be fixed in the Yosemite
region, for many a glorious ramble I'll have along the top of the
walls, and then what landscapes I shall find with their new mountains
and cañons, forests and gardens, lakes and streams and falls.
We are now about seven thousand feet above the sea, and the nights are
so cool we have to pile coats and extra clothing on top
of our blankets. Tamarack Creek is icy cold, delicious, exhilarating
champagne water. It is flowing bank full in the meadow with silent
speed, but only a few hundred yards below our camp the ground is bare
gray granite strewn with boulders, large spaces being without a single
tree or only a small one here and there anchored in narrow seams and
cracks. The boulders, many of them very large, are not in piles or
scattered like rubbish among loose crumbling debris as if weathered
out of the solid as boulders of disintegration; they mostly occur
singly, and are lying on a clean pavement on which the sunshine falls
in a glare that contrasts with the shimmer of light and shade we have
been accustomed to in the leafy woods. And, strange to say, these
boulders lying so still and deserted, with no moving force near them,
no boulder carrier anywhere in sight, were nevertheless brought from a
distance, as difference in color and composition shows, quarried and
carried and
laid down here each in its place; nor have they stirred, most of them,
through calm and storm since first they arrived. They look lonely
here, strangers in a strange land, --huge blocks, angular mountain
chips, the largest twenty or thirty feet in diameter, the chips that
Nature has made in modeling her landscapes, fashioning the forms of
her mountains and valleys. And with what tool were they quarried and
carried? On the pavement we find its marks. The most resisting
unweathered portion of the surface is scored and striated in a rigidly
parallel way, indicating that the region has been overswept by a
glacier from the northeastward, grinding down the general mass of the
mountains, scoring and polishing, producing a strange, raw, wiped
appearance, and dropping whatever boulders it chanced to be carrying
at the time it was melted at the close of the Glacial Period. A fine
discovery this. As for the forests we have been passing through, they
are probably
A Glacial Boulder
|
growing on deposits of soil most of which has been laid down by this
same ice agent in the form of moraines of different sorts, now in
great part disintegrated and out-spread by post-glacial weathering.
Out of the grassy meadow and down over this ice-planed granite runs
the glad young Tamarack Creek, rejoicing, exulting, chanting, dancing
in white, glowing, irised falls and cascades on its way to the Merced
Cañon, a few miles below Yosemite, falling more than three thousand
feet in a distance of about two miles.
All the Merced streams are wonderful singers, and Yosemite is the
centre where the main tributaries meet. From a point about half a mile
from our camp we can see into the lower end of the famous valley, with
its wonderful cliffs and groves, a grand page of mountain manuscript
that I would gladly give my life to be able to read. How vast it
seems, how short human life when we happen to think of it, and how
little we
may learn, however hard we try! Yet why bewail our poor inevitable
ignorance? Some of the external beauty is always in sight, enough to
keep every fibre of us tingling, and this we are able to gloriously
enjoy though the methods of its creation may lie beyond our ken. Sing
on, brave Tamarack Creek, fresh from your snowy fountains, plash and
swirl and dance to your fate in the sea; bathing, cheering every
living thing along your way.
Have greatly enjoyed all this huge day, sauntering and seeing,
steeping in the mountain influences, sketching, noting, pressing
flowers, drinking ozone and Tamarack water. Found the white fragrant
Washington lily, the finest of all the Sierra lilies. Its bulbs are
buried in shaggy chaparral tangles, I suppose for safety from pawing
bears; and its magnificent panicles sway and rock over the top of the
rough snow-pressed bushes, while big, bold, blunt-nosed bees drone and
mumble in its polleny bells. A lovely flower, worth
going hungry and footsore endless miles to see. The whole world seems
richer now that I have found this plant in so noble a landscape.
A log house serves to mark a claim to the Tamarack meadow, which may
become valuable as a station in case travel to Yosemite should greatly
increase. Belated parties occasionally stop here. A white man with an
Indian woman is holding possession of the place.
Sauntered up the meadow about sundown, out of sight of camp and sheep
and all human mark, into the deep peace of the solemn old woods,
everything glowing with Heaven's unquenchable enthusiasm.
July 12.
--The Don has returned, and again we go on pilgrimage. "Looking over
the Yosemite Creek country," he said, "from the tops of the hills you
see nothing but rocks and patches of trees; but when you go down into
the rocky desert you find no end of small grassy banks and meadows,
and so the country is not half so lean as it looks. There we'll go and
stay until the snow is melted from the upper country."
I was glad to hear that the high snow made a stay in the Yosemite
region necessary, for I am anxious to see as much of it as possible.
What fine times I shall have sketching, studying plants and rocks, and
scrambling about the brink of the great valley alone, out of sight and
sound of camp!
We saw another party of Yosemite tourists to-day. Somehow most of
these travelers seem to care but little for the glorious objects about
them, though enough to spend time and money and endure long rides to
see the famous valley. And when they are fairly within the mighty
walls of the temple and hear the psalms of the falls, they will forget
themselves and become devout. Blessed, indeed, should be every pilgrim
in these holy mountains!
We moved slowly eastward along the
Mono Trail, and early in the afternoon unpacked and camped on the bank
of Cascade Creek. The Mono Trail crosses the range by the Bloody Cañon
Pass to gold mines near the north end of Mono Lake. These mines were
reported to be rich when first discovered, and a grand rush took
place, making a trail necessary. A few small bridges were built over
streams where fording was not practicable on account of the softness
of the bottom, sections of fallen trees cut out, and lanes made
through thickets wide enough to allow the passage of bulky packs; but
over the greater part of the way scarce a stone or shovelful of earth
has been moved.
The woods we passed through are composed almost wholly of Abies
magnifica, the companion species, concolor, being mostly left
behind on account of altitude, while the increasing elevation seems
grateful to the charming magnifica. No words can do anything like
justice to this noble tree. At one
place many had fallen during some heavy wind-storm, owing to the loose
sandy character of the soil, which offered no secure anchorage. The
soil is mostly decomposed and disintegrated moraine material.
The sheep are lying down on a bare rocky spot such as they like,
chewing the cud in grassy peace. Cooking is going on, appetites
growing keener every day. No lowlander can appreciate the mountain
appetite, and the facility with which heavy food called "grub" is
disposed of. Eating, walking, resting, seem alike delightful, and one
feels inclined to shout lustily on rising in the morning like a
crowing cock. Sleep and digestion as clear as the air. Fine spicy
plush boughs for bedding we shall have tonight, and a glorious lullaby
from this cascading creek. Never was stream more fittingly named, for
as far as I have traced it above and below our camp it is one
continuous bouncing, dancing, white bloom of cascades. And at the very
last unwearied it
finishes its wild course in a grand leap of three hundred feet or more
to the bottom of the main Yosemite cañon near the fall of Tamarack
Creek, a few miles below the foot of the valley. These falls almost
rival some of the far-famed Yosemite falls. Never shall I forget these
glad cascade songs, the low booming, the roaring, the keen, silvery
clashing of the cool water rushing exulting from form to form beneath
irised spray; or in the deep still night seen white in the darkness,
and its multitude of voices sounding still more impressively sublime.
Here I find the little water ouzel as much at home as any linnet in a
leafy grove, seeming to take the greater delight the more boisterous
the stream. The dizzy precipices, the swift dashing energy displayed,
and the thunder tones of the sheer falls are awe inspiring, but there
is nothing awful about this little bird. Its song is sweet and low,
and all its gestures, as it flits about amid the loud uproar, bespeak
strength and peace and joy. Contemplating
these darlings of Nature coming forth from spray-sprinkled nests on
the brink of savage streams, Samson's riddle comes to mind, "Out of
the strong cometh forth sweetness." A yet finer bloom is this little
bird than the foam-bells in eddying pools. Gentle bird, a precious
message you bring me. We may miss the meaning of the torrent, but thy
sweet voice, only love is in it.
July 13.
--Our course all day has been eastward over the rim of Yosemite Creek
basin and down about halfway to the bottom, where we have encamped on
a sheet of glacier-polished granite, a firm foundation for beds. Saw
the tracks of a very large bear on the trail, and the Don talked of
bears in general. I said I should like to see the maker of these
immense tracks as he marched along, and follow him for days, without
disturbing him, to learn something of the life of this master beast of
the wilderness. Lambs, the Don told me, born in the lowland, that
never saw or heard a bear,
snort and run in terror when they catch the scent, showing how fully
they have inherited a knowledge of their enemy. Hogs, mules, horses,
and cattle are afraid of bears, and are seized with ungovernable
terror when they approach, particularly hogs and mules. Hogs are
frequently driven to pastures in the foothills of the Coast Range and
Sierra where acorns are abundant, and are herded in droves of hundreds
like sheep. When a bear comes to the range they promptly leave it,
emigrating in a body, usually in the night time, the keepers being
powerless to prevent; they thus show more sense than sheep, that
simply scatter in the rocks and brush and await their fate. Mules flee
like the wind with or without riders when they see a bear, and, if
picketed, sometimes break their necks in trying to break their ropes,
though I have not heard of bears killing mules or horses. Of hogs they
are said to be particularly fond, bolting small ones, bones and all,
without choice of
parts. In particular, Mr. Delaney assured me that all kinds of bears
in the Sierra are very shy, and that hunters found far greater
difficulty in getting within gunshot of them than of deer or indeed
any other animal in the Sierra, and if I was anxious to see much of
them I should have to wait and watch with endless Indian patience and
pay no attention to anything else.
Night is coming on, the gray rock waves are growing dim in the
twilight. How raw and young this region appears! Had the ice sheet
that swept over it vanished but yesterday, its traces on the more
resisting portions about our camp could hardly be more distinct than
they now are. The horses and sheep and all of us, indeed, slipped on
the smoothest places.
July 14.
--How deathlike is sleep in this mountain air, and quick the awakening
into newness of life! A calm dawn, yellow and purple, then floods of
sun-gold, making everything tingle and glow.
In an hour or two we came to Yosemite Creek, the stream that makes the
greatest of all the Yosemite falls. It is about forty feet wide at the
Mono Trail crossing, and now about four feet in average depth, flowing
about three miles an hour. The distance to the verge of the Yosemite
wall, where it makes its tremendous plunge, is only about two miles
from here. Calm, beautiful, and nearly silent, it glides with stately
gestures, a dense growth of the slender two-leaved pine along its
banks, and a fringe of willow, purple spirea, sedges, daisies, lilies,
and columbines. Some of the sedges and willow boughs dip into the
current, and just outside of the close ranks of trees there is a sunny
flat of washed gravelly sand which seems to have been deposited by
some ancient flood. It is covered with millions of erethrea,
eriogonum, and oxytheca, with more flowers than leaves, forming an
even growth, slightly dimpled and ruffled here and there by rosettes
of Spraguea umbellata.
Back of this flowery strip there is a wavy upsloping plain of solid
granite, so smoothly ice-polished in many places that it glistens in
the sun like glass. In shallow hollows there are patches of trees,
mostly the rough form of the two-leaved pine, rather scrawny looking
where there is little or no soil. Also a few junipers (Juniperus
occidentalis), short and stout, with bright cinnamon-colored bark
and gray foliage, standing alone mostly, on the sun-beaten pavement,
safe from fire, clinging by slight joints, --a sturdy storm-enduring
mountaineer of a tree, living on sunshine and snow, maintaining tough
health on this diet for perhaps more than a thousand years.
Up towards the head of the basin I see groups of domes rising above
the wave-like ridges, and some picturesque castellated masses, and
dark strips and patches of silver fir, indicating deposits of fertile
soil. Would that I could command the time to study them! What rich
excursions one could make in
this well-defined basin! Its glacial inscriptions and sculptures, how
marvelous they seem, how noble the studies they offer! I tremble with
excitement in the dawn of these glorious mountain sublimities, but I
can only gaze and wonder, and, like a child, gather here and there a
lily, half hoping I may be able to study and learn in years to come.
The drivers and dogs had a lively, laborious time getting the sheep
across the creek, the second large stream thus far that they have been
compelled to cross without a bridge; the first being the North Fork of
the Merced near Bower Cave. Men and dogs, shouting and barking, drove
the timid, water-fearing creatures in a close crowd against the bank,
but not one of the flock would launch away. While thus jammed, the Don
and the shepherd rushed through the frightened crowd to stampede those
in front, but this would only cause a break backward, and away they
would scamper through the
stream-bank trees and scatter over the rocky pavement. Then with the
aid of the dogs the runaways would again be gathered and made to face
the stream, and again the compacted mass would break away, amid wild
shouting and barking that might well have disturbed the stream itself
and marred the music of its falls, to which visitors no doubt from all
quarters of the globe were listening. "Hold them there! Now hold them
there!" shouted the Don; "the front ranks will soon tire of the
pressure, and be glad to take to the water, then all will jump in and
cross in a hurry." But they did nothing of the kind; they only avoided
the pressure by breaking back in scores and hundreds, leaving the
beauty of the banks sadly trampled.
If only one could be got to cross over, all would make haste to
follow; but that one could not be found. A lamb was caught, carried
across, and tied to a bush on the opposite bank, where it cried
piteously for
its mother. But though greatly concerned, the mother only called it
back. That play on maternal affection failed, and we began to fear
that we should be forced to make a long roundabout drive and cross the
wide-spread tributaries of the creek in succession. This would require
several days, but it had its advantages, for I was eager to see the
sources of so famous a stream. Don Quixote, however, determined that
they must ford just here, and immediately began a sort of siege by
cutting down slender pines on the bank and building a corral barely
large enough to hold the flock when well pressed together. And as the
stream would form one side of the corral he believed that they could
easily be forced into the water.
In a few hours the inclosure was completed, and the silly animals were
driven in and rammed hard against the brink of the ford. Then the Don,
forcing a way through the compacted mass, pitched a few of the
terrified unfortunates into the stream by
main strength; but instead of crossing over, they swam about close to
the bank, making desperate attempts to get back into the flock. Then a
dozen or more were shoved off, and the Don, tall like a crane and a
good natural wader, jumped in after them, seized a struggling wether,
and dragged it to the opposite shore. But no sooner did he let it go
than it jumped into the stream and swam back to its frightened
companions in the corral, thus manifesting sheep-nature as
unchangeable as gravitation. Pan with his pipes would have had no
better luck, I fear. We were now pretty well baffled. The silly
creatures would suffer any sort of death rather than cross that
stream. Calling a council, the dripping Don declared that starvation
was now the only likely scheme to try, and that we might as well camp
here in comfort and let the besieged flock grow hungry and cool, and
come to their senses, if they had any. In a few minutes after being
thus let alone, an adventurer in the
foremost rank plunged in and swam bravely to the farther shore. Then
suddenly all rushed in pell-mell together, trampling one another under
water, while we vainly tried to hold them back. The Don jumped into
the thickest of the gasping, gurgling, drowning mass, and shoved them
right and left as if each sheep was a piece of floating timber. The
current also served to drift them apart; a long bent column was soon
formed, and in a few minutes all were over and began baaing and
feeding as if nothing out of the common had happened. That none were
drowned seems wonderful. I fully expected that hundreds would gain the
romantic fate of being swept into Yosemite over the highest waterfall
in the world.
As the day was far spent, we camped a little way back from the ford,
and let the dripping flock scatter and feed until sundown. The wool is
dry now, and calm, cud-chewing peace has fallen on all the comfortable
band, leaving no trace of the watery
battle. I have seen fish driven out of the water with less ado than
was made in driving these animals into it. Sheep brain must surely be
poor stuff. Compare to-day's exhibition with the performances of deer
swimming quietly across broad and rapid rivers, and from island to
island in seas and lakes; or with dogs, or even with the squirrels
that, as the story goes, cross the Mississippi River on selected
chips, with tails for sails comfortably trimmed to the breeze. A sheep
can hardly be called an animal; an entire flock is required to make
one foolish individual.
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