the john muir exhibit - writings - my_first_summer_in_the_sierra - chapter 8
My First Summer in the Sierra
by John Muir
Chapter 8
The Mono Trail
August 7.
--Early this morning bade good-by to the bears and blessed silver fir
camp, and moved slowly eastward along the Mono Trail. At sundown
camped for the night on one of the many small flowery meadows so
greatly enjoyed on my excursion to Lake Tenaya. The dusty, noisy flock
seems outrageously foreign and out of place in these nature gardens,
more so than bears among sheep. The harm they do goes to the heart,
but glorious hope lifts above all the dust and din and bids me look
forward to a good time coming, when money enough will be earned to
enable me to go
walking where I like in pure wildness, with what I can carry on my
back, and when the bread-sack is empty, run down to the nearest point
on the bread-line for more. Nor will these run-downs be blanks, for,
whether up or down, every step and jump on these blessed mountains is
full of fine lessons.
August 8.
--Camp at the west end of Lake Tenaya. Arriving early, I took a walk
on the glacier-polished pavements along the north shore, and climbed
the magnificent mountain rock at the east end of the lake, now shining
in the late afternoon light. Almost every yard of its surface shows
the scoring and polishing action of a great glacier that enveloped it
and swept heavily over its summit, though it is about two thousand
feet high above the lake and ten thousand above sea-level. This
majestic, ancient ice-flood came from the eastward, as the scoring and
crushing of the surface shows. Even below the waters of the lake
the rock in some places is still grooved and polished; the lapping of
the waves and their disintegrating action have not as yet obliterated
even the superficial marks of glaciation. In climbing the steepest
polished places I had to take off shoes and
View of Tenaya Lake Showing
Cathedral Peak
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stockings. A
fine region this for study of glacial action in mountain-making. I
found many charming plants: arctic daisies, phlox, white spiraea,
bryanthus, and rock-ferns, --pellaea, cheilanthes, allosorus, --fringing
weathered seams all the way up to the
summit; and sturdy junipers, grand old gray and brown monuments, stood
bravely erect on fissured spots here and there, telling storm and
avalanche stories of hundreds of winters. The view of the lake from
the top is, I think, the best of all. There is another rock, more
striking in form than this, standing isolated at the head of the lake,
but it is not more than half as high. It is a knob or knot of
burnished granite, perhaps about a thousand feet high, apparently as
flawless and strong in structure as a wave-worn pebble, and probably
owes its existence to the superior resistance it offered to the action
of the overflowing ice-flood.
Made sketch of the lake, and sauntered back to camp, my iron-shod
shoes clanking on the pavements disturbing the chipmunks and birds.
After dark went out to the shore, --not a breath of air astir, the
lake a perfect mirror reflecting the sky and mountains with their
stars and trees and
wonderful sculpture, all their grandeur refined and doubled, --a
marvelously impressive picture, that seemed to belong more to heaven
than earth.
August 9.
--I went ahead of the flock, and crossed over the divide between the
One of the Tributary Fountains of the Tuolumne Cañon
Waters, on the North Side of the Hoffman Range
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Merced and Tuolumne
basins. The gap between the east end of the Hoffman spur and the mass
of mountain rocks about Cathedral Peak, though roughened by ridges and
waving folds, seems to be one of the
channels of a broad ancient glacier that came from the mountains on
the summit of the range. In crossing this divide the ice-river made an
ascent of about five hundred feet from the Tuolumne meadows. This
entire region must have been overswept by ice.
From the top of the divide, and also from the big Tuolumne Meadows,
the wonderful mountain called Cathedral Peak is in sight. From every
point of view it shows marked individuality. It is a majestic temple
of one stone, hewn from the living rock, and adorned with spires and
pinnacles in regular cathedral style. The dwarf pines on the roof look
like mosses. I hope some time to climb to it to say my prayers and
hear the stone sermons.
The big Tuolumne Meadows are flowery lawns, lying along the south fork
of the Tuolumne River at a height of about eighty-five hundred to nine
thousand feet above the sea, partially separated by forests and
Tuolumne Meadow from Cathedral Peak
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bars of glaciated granite. Here the mountains seem to have been
cleared away or set back, so that wide-open views may be had in every
direction. The upper end of the series lies at the base of Mt. Lyell,
the lower below the east end of the Hoffman Range, so the length must
be about ten or twelve miles. They vary in width from a quarter of a
mile to perhaps three quarters, and a good many branch meadows put out
along the banks of the tributary streams. This is the most spacious
and delightful high pleasure-ground I have yet seen. The air is keen
and bracing, yet warm during the day; and though lying high in the
sky, the surrounding mountains are so much higher, one feels protected
as if in a grand hall. Mts. Dana and Gibbs, massive red mountains,
perhaps thirteen thousand feet high or more, bound the view on the
east, the Cathedral and Unicorn Peaks, with many nameless peaks, on
the south, the Hoffman Range on the west, and a number of peaks
unnamed, as far as I know, on the north. One of these last is much
like the Cathedral. The grass of the meadows is mostly fine and silky,
with exceedingly slender leaves, making a close sod, above which the
panicles of minute purple flowers seem to float in airy, misty
lightness, while the sod is enriched with at least three species of
gentian and as many or more of orthocarpus, potentilla, ivesia,
solidago, pentstemon, with their gay colors, --purple, blue, yellow,
and red, --all of which I may know better ere long. A central camp
will probably be made in this region, from which I hope to make long
excursions into the surrounding mountains.
On the return trip I met the flock about three miles east of Lake
Tenaya. Here we camped for the night near a small lake lying on top of
the divide in a clump of the two-leaved pine. We are now about nine
thousand feet above the sea. Small lakes abound in all sorts of
situations, --on ridges, along
mountain sides, and in piles of moraine boulders, most of them mere
pools. Only in those cañons of the larger streams at the foot of
declivities, where the down thrust of the glaciers was heaviest, do we
find lakes of considerable size and depth. How grateful a task it
would be to trace them all and study them! How pure their waters are,
clear as crystal in polished stone basins! None of them, so far as I
have seen, have fishes, I suppose on account of falls making them
inaccessible. Yet one would think their eggs might get into these
lakes by some chance or other; on ducks' feet, for example, or in
their mouths, or in their crops, as some plant seeds are distributed.
Nature has so many ways of doing such things. How did the frogs, found
in all the bogs and pools and lakes, however high, manage to get up
these mountains? Surely not by jumping. Such excursions through miles
of dry brush and boulders would be very hard on frogs. Perhaps their
stringy gelatinous spawn is occasionally
entangled or glued on the feet of water birds. Anyhow, they are here
and in hearty health and voice. I like their cheery tronk and crink.
They take the place of song-birds at a pinch.
August 10.
--Another of those charming exhilarating days that makes the blood
dance and excites nerve currents that render one unweariable and
well-nigh immortal. Had another view of the broad ice-ploughed divide,
and gazed again and again at the Sierra temple and the great red
mountains east of the meadows.
We are camped near the Soda Springs on the north side of the river. A
hard time we had getting the sheep across. They were driven into a
horseshoe bend and fairly crowded off the bank. They seemed willing to
suffer death rather than risk getting wet, though they swim well
enough when they have to. Why sheep should be so unreasonably afraid
of water, I don't know, but they do fear it as soon as they are born
and
perhaps before. I once saw a lamb only a few hours old approach a
shallow stream about two feet wide and an inch deep, after it had
walked only about a hundred yards on its life journey. All the flock
to which it belonged had crossed this inch-deep stream, and as the
mother and her lamb were the last to cross, I had a good opportunity
to observe them. As soon as the flock was out of the way, the anxious
mother crossed over and called the youngster. It walked cautiously to
the brink, gazed at the water, bleated piteously, and refused to
venture. The patient mother went back to it again and again to
encourage it, but long without avail. Like the pilgrim on Jordan's
stormy bank it feared to launch away. At length gathering its
trembling inexperienced legs for the mighty effort, throwing up its
head as if it knew all about drowning, and was anxious to keep its
nose above water, it made the tremendous leap, and landed in the
middle of the inch-deep stream. It seemed astonished to find that,
instead of
sinking over head and ears, only its toes were wet, gazed at the
shining water a few seconds, and then sprang to the shore safe and dry
through the dreadful adventure. All kinds of wild sheep are mountain
animals, and their descendants' dread of water is not easily accounted
for.
August 11.
--Fine shining weather, with a ten minutes' noon thunder-storm and
rain. Rambling all day getting acquainted with the region north of the
river. Found a small lake and many charming glacier meadows embosomed
in an extensive forest of the two-leaved pine. The forest is growing
on broad, almost continuous deposits of moraine material, is
remarkably even in its growth, and the trees are much closer together
than in any of the fir or pine woods farther down the range. The
evenness of the growth would seem to indicate that the trees are all
of the same age or nearly so. This regularity has probably been in
great part the result of fire. I saw several large patches and strips
of dead
bleached spars, the ground beneath them covered with a young even
growth. Fire can run in these woods, not only because the thin bark of
the trees is dripping with resin, but because the growth is close, and
the comparatively rich soil produces good crops of tall broad-leaved
grasses on which fire can travel, even when the weather is calm.
Besides these fire-killed patches there are a good many fallen
uprooted trees here and there, some with the bark and needles still
on, as if they had lately been blown down in some thunder-storm blast.
Saw a large blacktailed deer, a buck with antlers like the upturned
roots of a fallen pine.
After a long ramble through the dense encumbered woods I emerged upon
a smooth meadow full of sunshine like a lake of light, about a mile
and a half long, a quarter to half a mile wide, and bounded by tall
arrowy pines. The sod, like that of all the glacier meadows
hereabouts, is made of silky agrostis and calamagrostis chiefly; their
panicles
of purple flowers and purple stems, exceedingly light and airy, seem
to float above the green plush of leaves like a thin misty cloud,
while the sod is brightened by several species of gentian, potentilla,
ivesia, orthocarpus,
Glacier Meadow, on the Headwaters of the Tuolumne,
9500 Feet above the Sea
|
and their corresponding bees and butterflies. All
the glacier meadows are beautiful, but few are so perfect as this one.
Compared with it the most carefully leveled, licked, snipped
artificial lawns of pleasure-grounds are coarse things. I should like
to live here
always. It is so calm and withdrawn while open to the universe in full
communion with everything good. To the north of this glorious meadow I
discovered the camp of some Indian hunters. Their fire was still
burning, but they had not yet returned from the chase.
From meadow to meadow, every one beautiful beyond telling, and from
lake to lake through groves and belts of arrowy trees, I held my way
northward toward Mt. Conness, finding telling beauty everywhere, while
the encompassing mountains were calling "Come." Hope I may climb them
all.
August 12.
--The sky-scenery has changed but little so far with the change in
elevation. Clouds about .05. Glorious pearly cumulitinted with purple
of ineffable fineness of tone. Moved camp to the side of the glacier
meadow mentioned above. To let sheep trample so divinely fine a place
seems barbarous. Fortunately they prefer the
succulent broad-leaved triticum and other woodland grasses to the
silky species of the meadows, and therefore seldom bite them or set
foot on them.
The shepherd and the Don cannot agree about methods of herding. Billy
sets his dog Jack on the sheep far too often, so the Don thinks; and
after some dispute today, in which the shepherd loudly claimed the
right to dog the sheep as often as he pleased, he started for the
plains. Now I suppose the care of the sheep will fall on me, though
Mr. Delaney promises to do the herding himself for a while, then
return to the lowlands and bring another shepherd, so as to leave me
free to rove as I like.
Had another rich ramble. Pushed northward beyond the forests to the
head of the general basin, where traces of glacial action are
strikingly clear and interesting. The recesses among the peaks look
like quarries, so raw and fresh are the moraine chips and
boulders that strew the ground in Nature's glacial workshops.
Soon after my return to camp we received a visit from an Indian,
probably one of the hunters whose camp I had discovered. He came from
Mono, he said, with others of his tribe, to hunt deer. One that he had
killed a short distance from here he was carrying on his back, its
legs tied together in an ornamental bunch on his forehead. Throwing
down his burden, he gazed stolidly for a few minutes in silent Indian
fashion, then cut off eight or ten pounds of venison for us, and
begged a "lill" (little) of everything he saw or could think of,
--flour, bread, sugar, tobacco, whiskey, needles, etc. We gave a fair
price for the meat in flour and sugar and added a few needles. A
strangely dirty and irregular life these dark-eyed, dark-haired,
half-happy savages lead in this clean wilderness, --starvation and
abundance, deathlike calm, indolence, and admirable, indefatigable
action succeding each other in stormy rhythm like winter and summer.
Two things they have that civilized toilers might well envy them,
--pure air and pure water. These go far to cover and cure the
grossness of their lives. Their food is mostly good berries, pine
nuts, clover, lily bulbs, wild sheep, antelope, deer, grouse, sage
hens, and the larv of ants, wasps, bees, and other insects.
August 13.
--Day all sunshine, dawn and evening purple, noon gold, no clouds, air
motionless. Mr. Delaney arrived with two shepherds, one of them an
Indian. On his way up from the plains he left some provisions at the
Portuguese camp on Porcupine Creek near our old Yosemite camp, and I
set out this morning with one of the pack animals to fetch them.
Arrived at the Porcupine camp at noon, and might have returned to the
Tuolumne late in the evening, but concluded to stay over night with
the Portuguese shepherds at their pressing
invitation. They had sad stories to tell of losses from the Yosemite
bears, and were so discouraged they seemed on the point of leaving the
mountains; for the bears came every night and helped themselves to one
or several of the flock in spite of all their efforts to keep them
off.
I spent the afternoon in a grand ramble along the Yosemite walls. From
the highest of the rocks called the Three Brothers, I enjoyed a
magnificent view comprehending all the upper half of the floor of the
valley and nearly all the rocks of the walls on both sides and at the
head, with snowy peaks in the background. Saw also the Vernal and
Nevada Falls, a truly glorious picture, --rocky strength and
permanence combined with beauty of plants frail and fine and
evanescent; water descending in thunder, and the same water gliding
through meadows and groves in gentlest beauty. This standpoint is
about eight thousand feet above the sea, or four thousand feet above
the floor
of the valley, and every tree, though looking small and feathery,
stands in admirable clearness, and the shadows they cast are as
distinct in outline as if seen at a distance of a few yards. They
appeared even more so. No words will ever describe the exquisite
beauty and charm of this mountain park--Nature's landscape garden at
once tenderly beautiful and sublime. No wonder it draws nature-lovers
from all over the world.
Glacial action even on this lofty summit is plainly displayed. Not
only has all the lovely valley now smiling in sunshine been filled to
the brim with ice, but it has been deeply overflowed.
I visited our old Yosemite camp-ground on the head of Indian Creek,
and found it fairly patted and smoothed down with beartracks. The
bears had eaten all the sheep that were smothered in the corral, and
some of the grand animals must have died, for Mr. Delaney, before
leaving camp, put a large
quantity of poison in the carcasses. All sheepmen carry strychnine to
kill coyotes, bears, and panthers, though neither coyotes nor panthers
are at all numerous in the upper mountains. The little dog-like wolves
are far more numerous in the foothill region and on the plains, where
they find a better supply of food, --saw only one panther-track above
eight thousand feet.
On my return after sunset to the Portuguese camp I found the shepherds
greatly excited over the behavior of the bears that have learned to
like mutton. "They are getting worse and worse," they lamented. Not
willing to wait decently until after dark for their suppers, they come
and kill and eat their fill in broad daylight. The evening before my
arrival, when the two shepherds were leisurely driving the flock
toward camp half an hour before sunset, a hungry bear came out of the
chaparral within a few yards of them and shuffled deliberately toward
the flock. "Portuguese Joe,"
who always carried a gun loaded with buckshot, fired excitedly, threw
down his gun, fled to the nearest suitable tree, and climbed to a safe
height without waiting to see the effect of his shot. His companion
also ran, but said that he saw the bear rise on its hind legs and
throw out its arms as if feeling for somebody, and then go into the
brush as if wounded.
At another of their camps in this neighborhood, a bear with two cubs
attacked the flock before sunset, just as they were approaching the
corral. Joe promptly climbed a tree out of danger, while Antone,
rebuking his companion for cowardice in abandoning his charge, said
that he was not going to let bears "eat up his sheeps" in daylight,
and rushed towards the bears, shouting and setting his dog on them.
The frightened cubs climbed a tree, but the mother ran to meet the
shepherd and seemed anxious to fight. Antone stood astonished for a
moment, eyeing the oncoming bear, then
turned and fled, closely pursued. Unable to reach a suitable tree for
climbing, he ran to the camp and scrambled up to the roof of the
little cabin; the bear followed, but did not climb to the roof, --only
stood glaring up at him for a few minutes, threatening him and holding
him in mortal terror, then went to her cubs, called them down, went to
the flock, caught a sheep for supper, and vanished in the brush. As
soon as the bear left the cabin the trembling Antone begged Joe to
show him a good safe tree, up which he climbed like a sailor climbing
a mast, and remained as long as he could hold on, the tree being
almost branchless. After these disastrous experiences the two
shepherds chopped and gathered large piles of dry wood and made a ring
of fire around the corral every night, while one with a gun kept watch
from a comfortable stage built on a neighboring pine that commanded a
view of the corral. This evening the show made by the circle
of fire was very fine, bringing out the surrounding trees in most
impressive relief, and making the thousands of sheep eyes glow like a
glorious bed of diamonds.
August 14.
--Up to the time I went to bed last night all was quiet, though we
expected the shaggy freebooters every minute. They did not come till
near midnight, when a pair walked boldly to the corral between two of
the great fires, climbed in, killed two sheep and smothered ten, while
the frightened watcher in the tree did not fire a single shot, saying
that he was afraid he might kill some of the sheep, for the bears got
into the corral before he got a good clear view of them. I told the
shepherds they should at once move the flock to another camp. "Oh, no
use, no use," they lamented; "where we go, the bears go too. See my
poor dead sheeps, --soon all dead. No use try another camp. We go down
to the plains." And as I afterwards learned, they were driven out of
the mountains a
month before the usual time. Were bears much more numerous and
destructive, the sheep would be kept away altogether.
It seems strange that bears, so fond of all sorts of flesh, running
the risks of guns and fires and poison, should never attack men except
in defense of their young. How easily and safely a bear could pick us
up as we lie asleep! Only wolves and tigers seem to have learned to
hunt man for food, and perhaps sharks and crocodiles. Mosquitoes and
other insects would, I suppose, devour a helpless man in some parts of
the world, and so might lions, leopards, wolves, hyenas, and panthers
at times if pressed by hunger, --but under ordinary circumstances,
perhaps, only the tiger among land animals may be said to be a
man-eater, --unless we add man himself.
Clouds as usual about .05. Another glorious Sierra day, warm, crisp,
fragrant, and clear. Many of the flowering plants have gone to seed,
but many others are unfolding
their petals every day, and the firs and pines are more fragrant than
ever. Their seeds are nearly ripe, and will soon be flying in the
merriest flocks that ever spread a wing.
On the way back to our Tuolumne camp, I enjoyed the scenery if
possible more than when it first came to view. Every feature already
seems familiar as if I had lived here always. I never weary gazing at
the wonderful Cathedral. It has more individual character than any
other rock or mountain I ever saw, excepting perhaps the Yosemite
South Dome. The forests, too, seem kindly familiar, and the lakes and
meadows and glad singing streams. I should like to dwell with them
forever. Here with bread and water I should be content. Even if not
allowed to roam and climb, tethered to a stake or tree in some meadow
or grove, even then I should be content forever. Bathed in such
beauty, watching the expressions ever varying on the faces of the
mountains, watching the stars, which here have a glory that
the lowlander never dreams of, watching the circling seasons,
listening to the songs of the waters and winds and birds, would be
endless pleasure. And what glorious cloud-lands I should see, storms
and calms, --a new heaven and a new earth every day, aye and new
inhabitants. And how many visitors I should have. I feel sure I should
not have one dull moment. And why should this appear extravagant? It
is only common sense, a sign of health, genuine, natural, all-awake
health. One would be at an endless Godful play, and what speeches and
music and acting and scenery and lights!--sun, moon, stars, auroras.
Creation just beginning, the morning stars "still singing together and
all the sons of God shouting for joy."
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