By the uninitiated it may be regarded
simply as fun and pastime to climb a mountain whose
summit soars into cloudland; in reality it is serious
business, not necessarily accompanied with great danger,
but always accomplished by laborious effort.
However, it is better for the clamberer to look upon
his undertaking as play rather than work. Should
he come to feel that it is actual toil, he might soon
weary of a task engaged in so largely for its own
sake, and decide to expend his time and energy in
something that would “pay better.”
Moreover, if he is impelled by a hobby ornithology,
for instance in addition to the mere love
of mountaineering, he will find that something very
near akin to wings has been annexed to the climbing
gear of which he is naturally possessed.
The morning of June 27 saw my youthful
companion and myself mounted each upon a shaggy burro,
scrambling up the steep hill above Georgetown, en
route for Gray’s Peak, the ascent of which was
the chief goal of our ambition in coming to the Rockies
on the present expedition. The distance from
Georgetown to the summit of this peak is fourteen miles,
and the crest itself is fourteen thousand four hundred
and forty-one feet above sea-level, almost three hundred
feet higher than Pike’s Peak, and cannot be
scaled by means of a cog-wheel railway or any other
contrivance that uses steam or electricity as a motor.
Indeed, the only motor available at the time of our
ascent that is, for the final climb was
“shank’s horses,” very useful and
mostly safe, even if a little plebeian. We had
been wise enough not to plunge at once among the heights,
having spent almost a week rambling over the plains,
mesas, foothills, and lower ranges, then had
been occupied for five or six days more in exploring
the valleys and mountain sides in the vicinity of
Georgetown, and thus, by gradually approaching them,
we had become inured to “roughing it”
in the higher altitudes when we reached them, and
suffered no ill effects from the rarefied atmosphere.
We passed the famous “Georgetown
Loop,” crept at a snail’s pace for
that is the natural gait of the burro through
the town of Silver Plume, and pursued our leisurely
journey toward the beckoning, snow-clad heights beyond.
No, we did not hurry, for two reasons: First,
our little four-footers would not or could not quicken
their pace, urge them as we would; second, we desired
to name all the birds along the route, and that “without
a gun,” as Emerson mercifully enjoins.
Have you ever ridden a burro?
Have you ever been astride of an old one, a hirsute,
unkempt, snail-paced, obstinate one, which thinks he
knows better what gait he ought to assume than you
do? If you have not, I venture to suggest modestly
that your education and moral discipline are not quite
complete. The pair which we had hired were slow
and headstrong enough to develop the patience of Job
in a most satisfactory way, and to test it, too.
They were as homely as the proverbial “mud fence”
is supposed to be. Never having seen a fence
of that kind, I speak with some degree of caution,
not wanting to cast any disparagement upon something
of which I have so little knowledge. If our long-eared
companions had ever seen a curry-comb, it must have
been in the days of Noah. You see, we were “tenderfoots,”
as far as having had any experience with burros was
concerned, or we might have selected a more sprightly
pair for our fellow-pilgrims. A fine picture,
fit for the camera or the artist’s brush, we
presented as we crept with the speed of a tortoise
along the steep mountain roads and trails. Our
“jacks,” as Messrs. Longears are called
colloquially, were not lazy oh, no! they
were simply averse to leaving home! Their domestic
ties were so strong they bound them with cords of
steel and hooks of iron to stall and stable-yard!
The thought of forsaking friends and kindred even for
only a few days wrung their loving hearts with anguish!
No wonder we had a delicate and pathetic task on hand
when we attempted to start our caravan up the mountain
road. From side to side the gentle animals wabbled,
their load of grief weighing them down tenfold more
than the loads on their backs, and times without count
they were prompted to veer about and “turn again
home.”
Much labor and time and patience were
expended in persuading our steeds to crawl up the
hill, but I am delighted to say that no profane history
was quoted, as we were a strictly moral crowd.
At length we arrived in state at the village of Silver
Plume. Canter into the town like a gang of border
ruffians we did not; we entered deliberately, as became
a dignified company of travellers. But here a
new difficulty confronted us, stared us blankly in
the face. Our little charges could not be convinced
that there was any occasion for going farther than
the town. They seemed to have conscientious scruples
about the matter; so they stopped without any invitation
from their riders, sidled off, turned in toward the
residences, stores, groceries, shoe-shops, drugstores,
barns, and even the saloons, the while the idlers
on the streets and the small boys were gawking at
us, smiling in a half-suppressed way, and making quaint
remarks in which we could see no wisdom nor humor.
We had not come into the town, like Don Quixote and
Sancho Panza, merely to furnish the villagers amusement.
Applying our canes and straps forcibly to the haunches
and rumps of our burros only seemed to embarrass the
poor creatures, for you can readily see how they would
reason the matter out from their own premises:
If they were to go no farther, as had been decided
by themselves, why should their riders belabor them
in that merciless way? For downright dialectics
commend me to the Rocky Mountain burro.
Finally a providence in the shape
of two small boys came to our rescue, and in a most
interesting and effective way. Seeing the predicament
we were in, and appreciating the gravity of the situation,
those nimble-witted lads picked up a couple of clubs
from the street, and, getting in the rear of our champing
steeds, began to pound them over the haunches.
For small boys they delivered sturdy blows. Now,
if there is anything that will make a burro move dexterously
out of his tracks, it is to get behind him with a
club and beat a steady tattoo on his hams and legs.
No sooner did the boys begin to apply their clubs in
good earnest than our burros began to print tracks
in quick succession on the dusty road, and we went
gayly through the town, the lads making a merry din
with their shouts and whacks, mingled with the patter
of hoofs on the street. It was so dramatic that
even the women came to their doors to witness the
pageant. We tried not to laugh, and so did the
delicately mannered spectators, but I suspect that
a good deal of laughing was done on the sly, in spite
of the canons of etiquette.
At length the obliging lads became
a little too accommodating. They used their persuasives
upon the donkeys so vigorously that they the
donkeys started off on a lope, a sort of
awkward, lop-sided gallop. Now, if there is anything
that is beyond the ability of Master Jack, especially
if he is old, it is to canter and at the same time
preserve his equilibrium. It is evident that
he is not built to make a rocking-chair of his back
bone. So a little comedy was enacted, all involuntary
on the part of the dramatis personae. Suddenly
Turpentine that was the name of the little
gray burro ridden by my boy companion took
a header, sending his youthful rider sprawling to the
ground, where he did not remain a moment longer than
good manners demanded. Fortunately he succeeded
in disengaging his feet from the stirrups and directing
his movements in such a way that the animal did not
fall upon him. But poor Turpentine, what of him?
He tumbled clean over his head upon his back, and
I want to confess in all candor that one of the most
instructive and interesting “animal pictures”
I have ever seen, including those done by Landseer,
Rosa Bonheur, and Ernest Thompson Seton, was that
little iron-gray, long-eared donkey lying on his back
on the street and clawing the air with his hoofs.
And he clawed fast, too fairly sawed the
air. For once in his life Turpentine, the snail
paced, was in a hurry; for once he moved with more
celerity than grace. It threw us into spasms
of laughter to see him exert himself so vigorously
to reverse his position to get his feet
down and his back up. A cat could not have done
it with more celerity. You never would have believed
him capable of putting so much vim and vigor into his
easy-going personality. After chopping the air
with his hoofs for a second or two, he succeeded in
righting himself, and was on his feet in less time
than it takes to tell it. There he stood, as meek
as Mary’s lamb, trying to look as if he had
never turned an undignified somersault in all his
tranquil life.
We started on our journey again, and
presently, to our intense relief, reached the border
of the town, thanked the lads who had expedited our
march along the street, and proceeded on our way up
the valley. We soon settled down to taking our
burros philosophically, and erelong they were going
calmly on the even tenor of their way, and afterwards
we had little trouble with them, and actually became
quite attached to the gentle creatures before our
joint pilgrimage drew to an end.
It is time to pass from quadrupeds
to bipeds. While our feathered friends were not
so abundant in the wilder regions as we might have
wished, still we had almost constant avian companionship
along the way. The warbling vireos were especially
plentiful, and in full tune, making a silvery trail
of song beside the dusty road. We had them at
our elbow as far as Graymont, where we made a sharp
detour from the open valley, and clambered along a
steep mountain side, with a deep, wooded gorge below
us. Here the vireos suddenly decided that they
could escort us no farther, as they had no taste for
crepuscular canyons and alpine heights. Not a
vireo was seen above Graymont, which has an altitude
of nearly ten thousand feet. We left them singing
in the valley as we turned from it, and did not hear
them again until we came back to Graymont.
Almost the same may be said of the
broad-tailed humming-birds, whose insect-like buzzing
we heard at frequent intervals along the route to a
shoulder of the mountain a little above Graymont, when
it suddenly ceased and was heard no more until we
returned to the same spot a few days later. House-wrens,
willow thrushes, Brewer’s blackbirds, and long-crested
jays were also last seen at Graymont, which seemed
to be a kind of territorial limit for a number of
species.
However, several species as
species, of course, not as individuals convoyed
us all the way from Georgetown to the timber-line
and, in some instances, beyond. Let me call the
roll of these faithful “steadies”:
Mountain hermit thrushes, gray-headed juncos,
red-shafted flickers, pine siskins, western robins,
Audubon’s and Wilson’s warblers, mountain
bluebirds and white-crowned sparrows. Of course,
it must be borne in mind that these birds were not
seen everywhere along the upward journey, simply in
their favorite habitats. The deep, pine-shadowed
gorges were avoided by the warblers and white-crowned
sparrows, whilst every open, sunlit, and bushy spot
or bosky glen was enlivened by a contingent of these
merry minnesingers. One little bird added
to our list in the gorge above Graymont was the mountain
chickadee, which was found thereafter up to the timber-line.
It was sometime in the afternoon when
we reached Graymont, which we found to be no “mount”
at all, as we had expected, but a hamlet, now mostly
deserted, in a narrow valley in sight of several gray
mountains looming in the distance. Straight up
the valley were some snow-mantled peaks, but none
of them was Gray’s; they did not beckon to us
from the right direction. From the upper part
of the hamlet, looking to our left, we saw a frowning,
snow-clad ridge towering like an angry giant in the
air, and we cried simultaneously, “Gray’s
Peak!” The terrific aspect of that mountain
sent a momentary shiver through our veins as we thought
of scaling it without a guide. We were in error,
as we afterwards found, for the mountain was Torrey’s
Peak, not Gray’s, which is not visible from
Graymont, being hidden by two intervening elevations,
Mount Kelso and Torrey’s Peak. There are
several points about a mile above Graymont from which
Gray’s serene peak is visible, but of this we
were not aware until on our return trip, when we had
learned to recognize him by his calm and magisterial
aspect.
As evening drew on, and the westering
sun fell below the ridges, and the shadows deepened
in the gorges, making them doubly weird, we began to
feel very lonely, and, to add to our misgivings, we
were uncertain of our way. The prospect of having
to spend a cold night out of doors in a solitary place
like this was not very refreshing, I am free to confess,
much as one might desire to proclaim himself a brave
man. Presently our eyes were gladdened by the
sight of a miner’s shack just across the hollow,
perhaps the one for which we were anxiously looking.
A man at Graymont had told us about a miner up this
way, saying he was a “nice man” and would
no doubt give us accommodation for the night.
I crossed the narrow foot-bridge that spanned the
booming torrent, and found the miner at home.
Would he give two way-worn travellers a place to sleep
beneath his roof? We had brought plenty of food
and some blankets with us, and all we required was
four walls around us and a roof over our heads.
Yes, he replied, we were welcome to such accommodation
as he had, and he could even give us a bed, though
it “wasn’t very stylish.” Those
were among the sweetest and most musical words that
ever fell on my ear.
Having tethered our burros in a grassy
cove on the mountain side, and cooked our supper in
the gloaming among some rocks by the bank of the brawling
stream, we turned into the cabin for the night, more
than grateful for a shelter from the chill winds scurrying
down from the snow-capped mountains. The shack
nestled at the foot of Mount Kelso, which we had also
mistaken for Gray’s Peak. As we sat by the
light of a tallow candle, beguiling the evening with
conversation, the miner told us that the mountain
jays, colloquially called “camp robbers,”
were common around his cabin, especially in winter;
but familiar as they were, he had never been able
to find a nest. The one thing about which they
insist on the utmost privacy is their nesting places.
My friend also told me that a couple of gray squirrels
made the woods around his camp their home. The
jays would frequently carry morsels of food up to
the branches of the pines, and stow them in some crevice
for future use, whereupon the squirrels, always on
the lookout for their own interests, would scuttle
up the tree and steal the hidden provender, eating
it with many a chuckle of self-congratulation.
Had not the weather turned so cold
during the night, we might have slept quite comfortably
in the miner’s shack, but I must confess that,
though it was the twenty-eighth of June and I had
a small mountain of cover over me, I shivered a good
deal toward morning. An hour or so after daylight
four or five mountain jays came to the cabin for their
breakfast, flitting to the ground and greedily devouring
such tidbits as they could find. They were not
in the least shy. But where were their nests?
That was the question that most deeply interested me.
During the next few days I made many a long and toilsome
search for them in the woods and ravines and on the
steep mountain sides, but none of the birds invited
me to their houses. These birds know how to keep
a secret. Anything but feathered Apollos,
they have a kind of ghoulish aspect, making you think
of the apparitional as they move in their noiseless
way among the shadowing pines. There is a look
in their dark, deep-set eyes and about their thick,
clumpy heads which gives you a feeling that they might
be equal to any imaginable act of cruelty. Yet
I cannot say I dislike these mountain roustabouts,
for some of their talk among themselves is very tender
and affectionate, proving that, “whatever brawls
disturb the street,” there are love and concord
in jay household circles. That surely is a virtue
to be commended, and cannot be claimed for every family,
either avian or human.
At 4.30 that morning I crept out of
bed and climbed far up one of the mountain sides this
was before the jays came to the cabin. The wind
blew so icy from the snow-clad heights that I was only
too glad to wear woollen gloves and pin a bandanna
handkerchief around my neck, besides buttoning up
my coat collar. Even then I shivered. But
would you believe it? The mosquitoes were as
lively and active as if a balmy breeze were blowing
from Arcady, puncturing me wherever they could find
a vulnerable spot, and even thrusting their sabres
through my thick woollen gloves into the flesh.
They must be extremely hardy insects, for I am sure
such arctic weather would send the mosquitoes of our
lower altitudes into their winter hiding-places.
People who think there are no mosquitoes in the Rockies
are reckoning without their hosts. In many places
they assaulted us by the myriad until life among them
became intolerable, and some were found even in the
neighborhood of perpetual snow.
Raw as the morning was, the hermit
thrushes, mountain chickadees, Audubon’s warblers,
gray-headed juncos, and ruby-crowned kinglets
were giving a lively rehearsal. How shy they
were! They preferred being heard, not seen.
Unexpectedly I found a hermit thrush’s nest set
in plain sight in a pine bush. One would have
thought so shy a bird would make some attempt at concealment.
It was a well-constructed domicile, composed of grass,
twigs, and moss, but without mortar. The shy owner
was nowhere to be seen, nor did she make any outcry,
even though I stood for some minutes close to her
nest. What stolidity the mountain birds display!
You could actually rob the nests of some of them without
wringing a chirp from them. On two later visits
to the place I found Madame Thrush on her nest, where
she sat until I came quite close, when she silently
flitted away and ensconced herself among the pines,
never chirping a syllable of protest or fear.
In the bottom of the pretty crib lay four deep-blue
eggs. Afterwards I found one more hermit’s
nest, which was just in process of construction.
In this case, as in the first, no effort was made
at concealment, the nest being placed in the crotch
of a quaking asp a rod or so above the trail, from
which it could be plainly seen. The little madame
was carrying a load of timbers to her cottage as we
went down the trail, and sat in the nest moulding and
putting her material in place as I climbed up the steep
bank to inspect her work. Then she flew away,
making no demonstration while I examined the nest.
Having eaten our breakfast at the
miner’s cabin, my youthful companion and I mounted
our “gayly caparisoned steeds,” and resumed
our journey toward Gray’s Peak. The birds
just mentioned greeted us with their salvos as we
crept along. It was not until we had almost reached
the timber-line that Gray’s Peak loomed in sight,
solemn and majestic, photographed against the cobalt
sky, with its companion-piece, Torrey’s Peak,
standing sullen beside it. The twin peaks were
pointed out to us by another miner whom we met at
his shack just a little below the timber-line, and
who obligingly gave us permission to “bunk”
in one of the cabins of what is known as “Stephen’s
mine,” which is now abandoned or
was at the time of our visit. Near the timber-line,
where the valley opens to the sunlight, we found a
mountain bluebird flitting about some old, deserted
buildings, but, strangely enough, this was the last
time we saw him, although we looked for him again and
again. Nor did we see another mountain blue in
this alpine eyrie.
Our burros were tethered for the day
in a grassy hollow, our effects stowed away in the
cabin aforesaid, which we had leased for a few days;
then, with luncheon strapped over our shoulders and
butterfly net and field-glass in hand, we started
happily up the valley afoot toward the summit of our
aspirations, Gray’s Peak, rising fourteen thousand
four hundred and forty-one feet above the level of
the sea. In some scrubby pine bushes above timber-line
several Audubon’s warblers were flitting and
singing, living hard by the white fields of snow.
Still farther up the hollow Wilson’s warblers
were trilling blithely, proclaiming themselves yet
more venturesome than their gorgeous cousins, the
Audubons. There is reason for this difference,
for Wilson’s warblers nest in willows and other
bushes which thrive on higher ground and nearer the
snowy zone than do the pines to which Audubon’s
warblers are especially attached. At all events,
Sylvania pusilla was one of the two species
which accompanied us all the way from Georgetown to
the foot of Gray’s Peak, giving us a kind of
“personally conducted” journey.
Our other brave escorts were the white-crowned
sparrows, which pursued the narrowing valleys until
they were merged into the snowy gorges that rive the
sides of the towering twin peaks. In the arctic
gulches the scrubby copses came to an end, and therefore
the white-crowns ascended no higher, for they are,
in a pre-eminent sense, “birds of the bush.”
Subsequently I found them as far up the sides of Mount
Kelso as the thickets extended, which was hundreds
of feet higher than the snow-bound gorges just mentioned,
for Kelso receives more sunshine than his taller companions,
particularly on his eastern side. Brave birds
are these handsome and musical sparrows. It was
interesting to see them hopping about on the snow-fields,
picking up dainties from the white crystals.
How lyrical they were in this upper mountain valley!
As has been said, for some unaccountable reason the
white-crowns in the vicinity of Georgetown were quite
chary of their music. Not so those that dwelt
in the valley below Gray’s and Torrey’s
peaks, for there they trilled their melodious measures
with a richness and abandon that were enchanting.
On reaching the snow-belt, though
still a little below the limit of copsy growths, we
saw our first pipits, which, it will be remembered,
I had encountered on the summit of Pike’s Peak
two years before. In our climb up Gray’s
Peak we found the pipit realm and that of the white-crowned
sparrows slightly overlapping. As soon, however,
as we began the steep climb above the matted copses,
the white-crowns disappeared and the pipits grew
more abundant. At frequent intervals these birds
would suddenly start up from the ground, utter their
protesting “Te-cheer! te-cheer!” and
hurl themselves recklessly across a snowy gulch, or
dart high into the air and let their semi-musical calls
drop and dribble from the turquoise depths of the sky.
Did the pipits accompany you to the summit of
the peak? I half regret to admit that they did
not, but ceased to appear a good while before the summit
was attained. This is all the more remarkable
when it is remembered that these birds were extremely
abundant on the crest of Pike’s Peak, where
they behaved in a “very-much-at-home” way.
However, there was ample compensation
in the ascent of Gray’s Peak. As we clambered
up the steep and rugged side of the mountain, sometimes
wading snow up to our knees, then making a short cut
straight up the acclivity to avoid the snow-banks,
unable to follow the trail a large part of the way,
we were suddenly made aware of the presence of another
fearless feathered comrade. With a chirp that
was the very quintessence of good cheer and lightness
of heart, he hopped about on the snow, picking dainties
from his immaculate tablecloth, and permitting us to
approach him quite close before he thought it worth
while to take to wing. We were happy indeed to
meet so companionable a little friend, one that, amid
these lonely and awe-inspiring heights, seemed to feel
so much at ease and exhibited so confiding a disposition.
Was it fancy or was it really true? He appeared
to be giving us a hospitable welcome to his alpine
home, telling us we might venture upward into cloudland
or skyland without peril; then, to make good his assurance,
he mounted upward on resilient wings to prove how
little danger there was. We were doubly glad
for our little seer, for just then we needed someone
to “prophesy smooth things” to us.
The bird was the brown-capped leucosticte or rosy
finch. Thus far I have used the singular number,
but the plural would have been more accurate, for
there were many of these finches on the acclivity
and summit, all of them in a most cheerful mood, their
good will and cordial welcome giving us a pleasant
feeling of comradery as we journeyed together up the
mountain side.
Our climb up Gray’s Peak was
a somewhat memorable event in our experience, and
I am disposed to dwell upon it. The valley which
we had followed terminates in a deep gorge, filled
with drift snow the year round, no doubt, and wedging
itself between Gray’s and Torrey’s shoulders
and peaks. Here the melting snows form the head
waters of Clear Creek, whose sinuous course we had
followed by rail, foot, and burro from the city of
Denver.
The trail, leaving the ravine, meandered
up a shoulder of the mountain, wheeled to the left
and crept along a ridge, with some fine, blood-curdling
abysses on the eastern side; then went zigzagging back
and forth on the precipitous wall of Gray’s titanic
mount, until at last, with a long pull and a strong
pull, it scaled the backbone of the ridge. All
this, however, is much more easily told than done.
Later in the season, when the trail is clear of snow-drifts,
sure-footed horses and burros are ridden to the summit;
but we were too early to follow the trail even on
foot. Indeed, many persons familiar with the mountains
had declared that we could not reach the top so early
in the season, on account of the large snow-banks
that still covered the trail. Even the old miner,
who in the valley below pointed out the peak to us,
expressed grave doubts about the success and wisdom
of our undertaking. “See!” he said,
“the trail’s covered with snow in many
places on the mountain side. I’m afraid
you can’t reach the top, sir.” I did
not see as clearly as he did, but said nothing aloud.
In my mind I shouted, “Excelsior!” and
then added, mentally, of course, “Faint heart
never won fair lady or fairer mountain’s crest hurrah
for the peak!” I simply felt that if there were
birds and butterflies on that sky-aspiring tower,
I must see them. The die was cast; we had
come to Colorado expressly to climb Gray’s Peak,
and climb it we would, or have some good reason to
give for not doing so.
And now we were making the attempt.
We had scarcely reached the mountain’s shoulder
before we were obliged to wade snow. For quite
a distance we were able to creep along the edge of
the trail, or skirt the snow-beds by making short
detours, and then returning to the trail; but by and
by we came to a wide, gleaming snow-field that stretched
right athwart our path and brought us to a standstill
with the exclamation, “What shall we do now?”
Having already sunk a number of times into the snow
over our boot-tops, we felt that it would not be safe
to venture across so large an area of soft and treacherous
crystals melting in the afternoon sun and only slightly
covering we knew not what deep gorges. In some
places we had been able to walk on the top of the snow,
but elsewhere it was quite soft, and we could hear
the gurgling of water underneath, and sometimes it
sounded a little more sepulchral than we liked.
Looking far up the acclivity, we saw still larger snow-fields
obliterating the trail. “We can never cross
those snow-fields,” one of us declared, a good
deal of doubt in his tones. A moment’s reflection
followed, and then the other exclaimed stoutly, “Let
us climb straight up, then!” To which his companion
replied, “All right, little Corporal! Beyond
the Alps lies Italy!”
Over rocks and stones and stretches
of gravel, sometimes loose, sometimes solid, we clambered,
half the time on all fours, skirting the snow-fields
that lay in our unblazed pathway; on and up, each cheering
the other at frequent intervals by crying lustily,
“We can make it! We can make it!”
ever and anon throwing ourselves on the rocks to recover
our breath and rest our aching limbs; on and up we
scrambled and crept, like ants on a wall, until at
length, reaching the ridge at the left a little below
the top, we again struck the trail, when we stopped
a few minutes to catch breath, made one more mighty
effort, and, behold! we stood on Gray’s summit,
looking down triumphantly at the world crouching at
our feet. Never before had we felt so much like
Jupiter on Olympus.
GRAY’S AND TORREY’S PEAKS
Gray’s to the left, Torrey’s
to the right. As the lookout of the photographer
was nearer Torrey’s than Gray’s, the former
appears the higher in the picture, while the reverse
is really the case. The trail winds through a
ravine at the right of the ridge in front; then creeps
along the farther side of the ridge above the gorge
at Torrey’s base; comes to the crest of the
ridge pretty well toward the left; then crawls and
zigzags back and forth along the titanic wall of Gray’s
to the summit. In the vale, where some of the
head waters of Clear Creek will be seen, the white-crowned
sparrows and Wilson’s warblers find homes.
A little before the ascent of the ridge begins, the
first pipits are seen; thence the clamberer has pipit
company to the point where the ridge joins the main
bulk of the mountain. Here the pipits stop, and
the first leucostictes are noted, which, chirping
cheerily all the way, escort the traveller to the
summit.
In making the ascent, some persons,
even among those who ride, become sick; others suffer
with bleeding at the nose, and others are so overcome
with exhaustion and weakness that they cannot enjoy
the superb panorama spread out before them. However
you may account for it, my youthful comrade and I,
in spite of our arduous climb, were in excellent physical
condition when we reached our goal, suffering no pain
whatever in eyes, head, or lungs. The bracing
air, rare as it was, soon exhilarated us, our temporary
weariness disappeared, and we were in the best of
trim for scouring the summit, pursuing our natural
history hobbies, and revelling in the inspiring cyclorama
that Nature had reared for our delectation.
My pen falters when I think of describing
the scene that broke upon our vision. I sigh
and wish the task were done. The summit itself
is a narrow ridge on which you may stand and look
down the declivities on both sides, scarcely having
to step out of your tracks to do so. It is quite
different from the top of Pike’s Peak, which
is a comparatively level plateau several acres in
extent, carpeted, if one may so speak, with immense
granite rocks piled upon one another or laid side by
side in semi-systematic order; whereas Gray’s,
as has been said, is a narrow ridge, composed chiefly
of comparatively small stones, with a sprinkling of
good-sized boulders. The finer rocks give the
impression of having been ground down by crushing
and attrition to their present dimensions in the far-away,
prehistoric ages.
A short distance to the northwest
frowned Torrey’s Peak, Gray’s companion-piece,
the twain being connected by a ridge which dips in
an arc perhaps a hundred feet below the summits.
The ridge was covered with a deep drift of snow, looking
as frigid and unyielding as a scene in the arctic
regions. Torrey’s is only a few feet lower
than Gray’s one of my books says
five. Mention has been made of its forbidding
aspect. It is indeed one of the most ferocious-looking
mountains in the Rockies, its crown pointed and grim,
helmeted with snow, its sides, especially east and
north, seamed and ridged and jagged, the gorges filled
with snow, the beetling cliffs jutting dark and threatening,
bearing huge drifts upon their shoulders. Torrey’s
Peak actually seemed to be calling over to us like
some boastful Hercules, “Ah, ha! you have climbed
my mild-tempered brother, but I dare you to climb
me!” For reasons of our own we declined the
challenge.
The panorama from Gray’s Peak
is one to inspire awe and dwell forever in the memory,
an alpine wonderland indeed and in truth. To the
north, northwest, and west there stretches, as far
as the eye can reach, a vast wilderness of snowy peaks
and ranges, many of them with a rosy glow in the sunshine,
tier upon tier, terrace above terrace, here in serried
ranks, there in isolated grandeur, some just beyond
the dividing canyons, others fifty, sixty, a hundred
miles away, cyclopean, majestic, infinite. Far
to the north, Long’s Peak lifts his seamed and
hoary pyramid, almost as high as the crest on which
we are standing; in the west rise that famous triad
of peaks, Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, their fanelike
towers, sketched against the sky, disputing the palm
with old Gray himself; while a hundred miles to the
south Pike’s Peak stands solitary and smiling
in the sun, seeming to say, “I am sufficient
unto myself!” Between our viewpoint and the
last-named mountain lies South Park, like a paradise
of green immured by guardian walls of rock and snow,
and far to the east, beyond the billowing ranges, white,
gray, and green, stretch the limitless plains, vanishing
in the hazy distance. In such surroundings one’s
breast throbs and swells with the thought of Nature’s
omnipotence.
PANORAMA FROM GRAY’S PEAK NORTHWEST
The picture includes the northern
spur of Gray’s Peak, with the dismantled signal
station on its crest. The main ridge of the peak
extends out to the left of the signal station.
The summit is so situated as to be exposed to the
sun the greater part of the day; hence, although it
is the highest point in the region, there is less snow
upon it in summer than upon many of the surrounding
elevations. Looking northwest from the signal
station, the eye falls upon a wilderness of snow-clad
peaks and ranges, some standing in serried ranks, others
in picturesque disorder. It is truly an arctic
scene, summer or winter. Yet it is the summer
home of the brown-capped leucosticte and the white-tailed
ptarmigan, which range in happy freedom over the upper
story of our country.
The summit of Gray’s Peak is
a favorable viewpoint from which to study the complexion,
the idiosyncrasies, if you please, of individual mountains,
each of which seems to have a personality of its own.
Here is Gray’s Peak itself, calm, smiling, good-natured
as a summer morning; yonder is Torrey’s, next-door
neighbor, cruel, relentless, defiant, always threatening
with cyclone or tornado, or forging the thunder-bolts
of Vulcan. Some mountains appear grand and dignified,
others look like spitfires. On one side some
bear smooth and green slopes almost to the top, while
the other is scarred, craggy, and precipitous.
The day was serene and beautiful,
the sky a deep indigo, unflecked with clouds, save
a few filmy wracks here and there, and the breeze as
balmy as that of a May morning in my native State.
So quiet was the alpine solitude that on all sides
we could hear the solemn roar of the streams in the
ravines hundreds of feet below, some of them in one
key and some in another, making almost a symphony.
For several hours we tarried, held by a spell.
“But you have forgotten your ornithology!”
some one reminds me. No one could blame me if
I had. Such, however, is not the case, for ornithology,
like the poor, is never far from some of us. The
genial little optimists that had been hopping about
on the snow on the declivities had acted as our cicérones
clear to the summit, and some of them remained there
while we tarried. Indeed the leucostictes were
quite plentiful on the mountain’s brow.
Several perched on the dismantled walls of the abandoned
government building on the summit, called cheerily,
then wheeled about over the crest, darted out and went
careering over the gulches with perfect aplomb, while
we watched them with envious eyes, wishing we too
had wings like a leucosticte, not that we “might
fly away,” as the Psalmist longed to do, but
that we might scale the mountains at our own sweet
will. The favorite occupation of our little comrades,
besides flying, was hopping about on the snow and
picking up dainties that were evidently palatable.
Afterwards we examined the snow, and found several
kinds of small beetles and other insects creeping
up through it or about on its surface. Without
doubt these were leucosticte’s choice morsels.
Thus Nature spreads her table everywhere with loving
care for her feathered children. The general
habits of the rosy finches are elsewhere depicted in
this volume. It only remains to be said that
they were much more abundant and familiar on Gray’s
Peak than on Pike’s Peak, that is,
at the time of my respective visits to those summits.
To omit all mention of the butterflies
seen on this trip would be proof of avian monomania
with a vengeance. The lad who was with me found
a number of individuals of two species zigzagging
over the summit, and occasionally settling upon the
rocks right by the fields of snow. What kind
of nectar they sipped I know not, for there were no
flowers or verdure on the heights. They were
the Painted Lady or Thistle Butterfly (Pyrameis
cardui) and the Western White (Pieris occidentalis).
He captured an individual of the latter species with
his net, and to-day it graces his collection, a memento
of a hard but glorious climb. The descent of
the mountain was laborious and protracted, including
some floundering in the snow, but was accomplished
without accident. A warm supper in the miner’s
shack which we had leased prepared us for the restful
slumbers of the night.
Although the weather was so cold that
a thin coating of ice was formed on still water out
of doors, the next morning the white-crowned sparrows
were singing their sonatas long before dawn, and when
at peep of day I stepped outside, they were flitting
about the cabins as if in search of their breakfast.
The evening before, I left the stable-door open while
I went to bring the burros up from their grazing plat.
When I returned with the animals, a white-crown flew
out of the building just as I stepped into the entrance,
almost fluttering against my feet, and chirping sharply
at what he seemed to think a narrow escape. He
had doubtless gone into the stable on a foraging expedition.
The day was spent in exploring the
valley and steep mountain sides. A robin’s
nest was found a little below the timber-line on the
slope of Mount Kelso. In the woods a short distance
farther down, a gray-headed junco’s nest was
discovered after a good deal of patient waiting.
A female was preening her feathers on a small pine-tree,
a sure sign that she had recently come from brooding
her eggs. Presently she began to flit about from
the tree to the ground and back again, making many
feints and starts, which proved that she was embarrassed
by my espionage; but at last she disappeared and did
not return. With quickened pulse I approached
the place where I had last seen her. It was not
long before she flew up with a nervous chirp, revealing
a pretty domicile under a roof of green grass, with
four daintily speckled eggs on the concave floor.
I noticed especially that the doorway of the tiny
cottage was open toward the morning sun.
At the timber-line there were ruby-crowned
kinglets, mountain chickadees, and gray-headed juncos,
while far above this wavering boundary a pair of red-shafted
flickers were observed ambling about among the bushes
and watching me as intently as I was watching them.
I climbed far up the side of Mount Kelso, then around
its rocky shoulder, following an old trail that led
to several abandoned silver mines, but no new birds
rewarded my toilsome quest, although I was pleased
to learn that the pipits and leucostictes did
not give the “go-by” to this grand old
mountain, but performed their thrilling calisthenics
in the air about its slopes and ravines with as much
grace as they did on the loftier mountain peaks the
day before. A beautiful fox and three cubs were
seen among the large stones, and many mountain rats
and a sly mink went scuttling about over the rocks.
On the morning of June 30 the white-crowns,
as usual, were chanting their litanies long before
day broke. We left the enchanting valley that
morning, the trills of the white-crowns ringing in
the alpenglow like a sad farewell, as if they felt
that we should never meet again. On our way down
the winding road we frequently turned to gaze with
longing eyes upon the snowy summits of the twin peaks,
Gray’s all asmile in the sunshine, and Torrey’s or
did we only imagine it? relenting a little
now that he was looking upon us for the last time.
Did the mountains and the white-crowns call after
us, “Auf wiedersehen!” or was
that only imagination too?