Repairing broken Wagons. Fording Rivers. Quicksand. Wagon Boats. Bull
Boats. Crossing Packs. Swimming Animals. Marching with loose Horses.
Herding Mules. Best Methods of Marching. Herding and guarding Animals.
Descending Mountains. Storms. Northers.
REPAIRS OF ACCIDENTS.
The accidents most liable to happen
to wagons on the plains arise from the great dryness
of the atmosphere, and the consequent shrinkage and
contraction of the wood-work in the wheels, the tires
working loose, and the wheels, in passing over sidling
ground, oftentimes falling down and breaking all the
spokes where they enter the hub. It therefore
becomes a matter of absolute necessity for the prairie
traveler to devise some means of repairing such damages,
or of guarding against them by the use of timely expedients.
The wheels should be frequently and
closely examined, and whenever a tire becomes at all
loose it should at once be tightened with pieces of
hoop-iron or wooden wedges driven by twos simultaneously
from opposite sides. Another remedy for the same
thing is to take off the wheels after encamping, sink
them in water, and allow them to remain over night.
This swells the wood, but is only temporary, requiring
frequent repetition; and, after a time, if the wheels
have not been made of thoroughly seasoned timber,
it becomes necessary to reset the tires in order to
guard against their destruction by falling to pieces
and breaking the spokes.
If the tires run off near a blacksmith’s
shop, or if there be a traveling forge with the train,
they may be tied on with raw hide or ropes, and thus
driven to the shop or camp. When a rear wheel
breaks down upon a march, the best method I know of
for taking the vehicle to a place where it can be
repaired is to take off the damaged wheel, and place
a stout pole of three or four inches in diameter under
the end of the axle, outside the wagon-bed, and extending
forward above the front wheel, where it is firmly
lashed with ropes, while the other end of the pole
runs six or eight feet to the rear, and drags upon
the ground. The pole must be of such length and
inclination that the axle shall be raised and retained
in its proper horizontal position, when it can be
driven to any distance that may be desired. The
wagon should be relieved as much as practicable of
its loading, as the pole dragging upon the ground
will cause it to run heavily.
When a front wheel breaks down, the
expedient just mentioned can not be applied to the
front axle, but the two rear wheels may be taken off
and placed upon this axle (they will always fit),
while the sound front wheel can be substituted upon
one side of the rear axle, after which the pole may
be applied as before described. This plan I have
adopted upon several different occasions, and I can
vouch for its efficacy.
The foregoing facts may appear very
simple and unimportant in themselves, but blacksmiths
and wheelwrights are not met with at every turn of
the roads upon the prairies; and in the wilderness,
where the traveler is dependent solely upon his own
resources, this kind of information will be found
highly useful.
When the spokes in a wheel shrink
more than the felloes, they work loose in the hub,
and can not be tightened by wedging. The only
remedy in such cases is to cut the felloe with a saw
on opposite sides, taking out two pieces of such dimensions
that the reduced circumference will draw back the
spokes into their proper places and make them snug.
A thin wagon-bow, or barrel-hoops, may then be wrapped
around the outside of the felloe, and secured with
small nails or tacks. This increases the diameter
of the wheel, so that when the tire has been heated,
put on, and cooled, it forces back the spokes into
their true places, and makes the wheel as sound and
strong as it ever was. This simple process can
be executed in about half an hour if there be fuel
for heating, and obviates the necessity of cutting
and welding the tire. I would recommend that
the tires should be secured with bolts and nuts, which
will prevent them from running off when they work loose,
and, if they have been cut and reset, they should
be well tried with a hammer where they are welded
to make sure that the junction is sound.
FORDING RIVERS.
Many streams that intersect the different
routes across our continent are broad and shallow,
and flow over beds of quicksand, which, in seasons
of high water, become boggy and unstable, and are then
exceedingly difficult of crossing. When these
streams are on the rise, and, indeed, before any swelling
is perceptible, their beds become surcharged with
the sand loosened by the action of the under-current
from the approaching flood, and from this time until
the water subsides fording is difficult, requiring
great precautions.
On arriving upon the bank of a river
of this character which has not recently been crossed,
the condition of the quicksand may be ascertained
by sending an intelligent man over the fording-place,
and, should the sand not yield under his feet, it
may be regarded as safe for animals or wagons.
Should it, however, prove soft and yielding, it must
be thoroughly examined, and the best track selected.
This can be done by a man on foot, who will take a
number of sharp sticks long enough, when driven into
the bottom of the river, to stand above the surface
of the water. He starts from the shore, and with
one of the sticks and his feet tries the bottom in
the direction of the opposite bank until he finds
the firmest ground, where he plants one of the sticks
to mark the track. A man incurs no danger in walking
over quicksand provided he step rapidly, and he will
soon detect the safest ground. He then proceeds,
planting his sticks as often as may be necessary to
mark the way, until he reaches the opposite bank.
The ford is thus ascertained, and, if there are footmen
in the party, they should cross before the animals
and wagons, as they pack the sand, and make the track
more firm and secure.
If the sand is soft, horses should
be led across, and not allowed to stop in the stream;
and the better to insure this, they should be watered
before entering upon the ford; otherwise, as soon as
they stand still, their feet sink in the sand, and
soon it becomes difficult to extricate them.
The same rule holds in the passage of wagons:
they must be driven steadily across, and the animals
never allowed to stop while in the river, as the wheels
sink rapidly in quicksand. Mules will often stop
from fear, and, when once embarrassed in the sand,
they lie down, and will not use the slightest exertion
to regain their footing. The only alternative,
then, is to drag them out with ropes. I have even
known some mules refuse to put forth the least exertion
to get up after being pulled out upon firm ground,
and it was necessary to set them upon their feet before
they were restored to a consciousness of their own
powers.
In crossing rivers where the water
is so high as to come into the wagon-beds, but is
not above a fording stage, the contents of the wagons
may be kept dry by raising the beds between the uprights,
and retaining them in that position with blocks of
wood placed at each corner between the rockers and
the bottom of the wagon-beds. The blocks must
be squared at each end, and their length, of course,
should vary with the depth of water, which can be
determined before cutting them. This is a very
common and simple method of passing streams among
emigrant travelers.
When streams are deep, with a very
rapid current, it is difficult for the drivers to
direct their teams to the proper coming-out places,
as the current has a tendency to carry them too far
down. This difficulty may be obviated by attaching
a lariat rope to the leading animals, and having a
mounted man ride in front with the rope in his hand,
to assist the team in stemming the current, and direct
it toward the point of egress. It is also a wise
precaution, if the ford be at all hazardous, to place
a mounted man on the lower side of the team with a
whip, to urge forward any animal that may not work
properly.
Where rivers are wide, with a swift
current, they should always, if possible, be forded
obliquely down stream, as the action of the water
against the wagons assists very materially in carrying
them across. In crossing the North Platte upon
the Cherokee trail at a season when the water was
high and very rapid, we were obliged to take the only
practicable ford, which ran diagonally up the stream.
The consequence was, that the heavy current, coming
down with great force against the wagons, offered
such powerful resistance to the efforts of the mules
that it was with difficulty they could retain their
footing, and several were drowned. Had the ford
crossed obliquely down the river, there would have
been no difficulty.
When it becomes necessary, with loaded
wagons, to cross a stream of this character against
the current, I would recommend that the teams be doubled,
the leading animals led, a horseman placed on each
side with whips to assist the driver, and that, before
the first wagon enters the water, a man should be
sent in advance to ascertain the best ford.
During seasons of high water, men,
in traversing the plains, often encounter rivers which
rise above a fording stage, and remain in that condition
for many days, and to await the falling of the water
might involve a great loss of time. If the traveler
be alone, his only way is to swim his horse; but if
he retains the seat on his saddle, his weight presses
the animal down into the water, and cramps his movements
very sensibly. It is a much better plan to attach
a cord to the bridle-bit, and drive him into the stream;
then, seizing his tail, allow him to tow you across.
If he turns out of the course, or attempts to turn
back, he can be checked with the cord, or by splashing
water at his head. If the rider remains in the
saddle, he should allow the horse to have a loose
rein, and never pull upon it except when necessary
to guide. If he wishes to steady himself, he
can lay hold upon the mane.
In traveling with large parties, the
following expedients for crossing rivers have been
successfully resorted to within my own experience,
and they are attended with no risk to life or property.
A rapid and deep stream, with high,
abrupt, and soft banks, probably presents the most
formidable array of unfavorable circumstances that
can be found. Streams of this character are occasionally
met with, and it is important to know how to cross
them with the greatest promptitude and safety.
A train of wagons having arrived upon
the bank of such a stream, first select the best point
for the passage, where the banks upon both sides require
the least excavation for a place of ingress and egress
to and from the river. As I have before remarked,
the place of entering the river should be above the
coming-out place on the opposite bank, as the current
will then assist in carrying wagons and animals across.
A spot should be sought where the bed of the stream
is firm at the place where the animals are to get
out on the opposite bank. If, however, no such
place can be found, brush and earth should be thrown
in to make a foundation sufficient to support the
animals, and to prevent them from bogging. After
the place for crossing has been selected, it will be
important to determine the breadth of the river between
the points of ingress and egress, in order to show
the length of rope necessary to reach across.
A very simple practical method of doing this without
instruments is found in the French “Manuel du
Genie.” It is as follows:
A man who is an expert swimmer then
takes the end of a fishing-line or a small cord in
his mouth, and carries it across, leaving the other
end fixed upon the opposite bank, after which a lariat
is attached to the cord, and one end of it pulled
across and made fast to a tree; but if there is nothing
convenient to which the lariat can be attached, an
extra axle or coupling-pole can be pulled over by the
man who has crossed, firmly planted in the ground,
and the rope tied to it. The rope must be long
enough to extend twice across the stream, so that one
end may always be left on each shore. A very good
substitute for a ferry-boat may be made with a wagon-bed
by filling it with empty water-casks, stopped tight
and secured in the wagon with ropes, with a cask lashed
opposite the centre of each outside. It is then
placed in the water bottom upward, and the rope that
has been stretched across the stream attached to one
end of it, while another rope is made fast to the
other end, after which it is loaded, the shore-end
loosened, and the men on the opposite bank pull it
across to the landing, where it is discharged and
returned for another load, and so on until all the
baggage and men are passed over.
The wagons can be taken across by
fastening them down to the axles, attaching a rope
to the end of the tongue, and another to the rear of
each to steady it and hold it from drifting below the
landing. It is then pushed into the stream, and
the men on the opposite bank pull it over. I
have passed a large train of wagons in this way across
a rapid stream fifteen feet deep without any difficulty.
I took, at the same time, a six-pounder cannon, which
was separated from its carriage, and ferried over
upon the wagon-boat; after which the carriage was pulled
over in the same way as described for the wagons.
There are not always a sufficient
number of airtight water-casks to fill a wagon-bed,
but a tentfly, paulin, or wagon-cover can generally
be had. In this event, the wagon-bed may be placed
in the centre of one of these, the cloth brought up
around the ends and sides, and secured firmly with
ropes tied around transversely, and another rope fastened
lengthwise around under the rim. This holds the
cloth in its place, and the wagon may then be placed
in the water right side upward, and managed in the
same manner as in the other case. If the cloth
be made of cotton, it will soon swell so as to leak
but very little, and answers a very good purpose.
Another method of ferrying streams
is by means of what is called by the mountaineers
a “bull-boat,” the frame-work of
which is made of willows bent into the shape of a
short and wide skiff, with a flat bottom. Willows
grow upon the banks of almost all the streams on the
prairies, and can be bent into any shape desired.
To make a boat with but one hide, a number of straight
willows are cut about an inch in diameter, the ends
sharpened and driven into the ground, forming a frame-work
in the shape of a half egg-shell cut through the longitudinal
axis. Where these rods cross they are firmly secured
with strings. A stout rod is then heated and
bent around the frame in such a position that the
edges of the hide, when laid over it and drawn tight,
will just reach it. This rod forms the gunwale,
which is secured by strings to the ribs. Small
rods are then wattled in so as to make it symmetrical
and strong. After which the green or soaked hide
is thrown over the edges, sewed to the gunwales, and
left to dry. The rods are then cut off even with
the gunwale, and the boat is ready for use.
To build a boat with two or more hides:
A stout pole of the desired length is placed upon
the ground for a keel, the ends turned up and secured
by a lariat; willow rods of the required dimensions
are then cut, heated, and bent into the proper shape
for knees, after which their centres are placed at
equal distances upon the keel, and firmly tied with
cords. The knees are retained in their proper
curvature by cords around the ends. After a sufficient
number of them have been placed upon the keel, two
poles of suitable dimensions are heated, bent around
the ends for a gunwale, and firmly lashed to each knee.
Smaller willows are then interwoven, so as to model
the frame.
Green or soaked hides are cut into
the proper shape to fit the frame, and sewed together
with buckskin strings; then the frame of the boat is
placed in the middle, the hide drawn up snug around
the sides, and secured with raw-hide thongs to the
gunwale. The boat is then turned bottom upward
and left to dry, after which the seams where they have
been sewed are covered with a mixture of melted tallow
and pitch: the craft is now ready for launching.
A boat of this kind is very light
and serviceable, but after a while becomes water-soaked,
and should always be turned bottom upward to dry whenever
it is not in the water. Two men can easily build
a bull-boat of three hides in two days which
will carry ten men with perfect safety.
A small party traveling with a pack
train and arriving upon the banks of a deep stream
will not always have the time to stop or the means
to make any of the boats that have been described.
Should their luggage be such as to become seriously
injured by a wetting, and there be an India-rubber
or gutta-percha cloth disposable, or if even a
green beef or buffalo hide can be procured, it may
be spread out upon the ground, and the articles of
baggage placed in the centre, in a square or rectangular
form; the ends and sides are then brought up so as
entirely to envelop the package, and the whole secured
with ropes or raw hide. It is then placed in
the water with a rope attached to one end, and towed
across by men in the same manner as the boats before
described. If hides be used they will require
greasing occasionally, to prevent their becoming water-soaked.
When a mounted party with pack animals
arrive upon the borders of a rapid stream, too deep
to ford, and where the banks are high and abrupt,
with perhaps but one place where the beasts can get
out upon the opposite shore, it would not be safe
to drive or ride them in, calculating that all will
make the desired landing. Some of them will probably
be carried by the swift current too far down the stream,
and thereby endanger not only their own lives, but
the lives of their riders. I have seen the experiment
tried repeatedly, and have known several animals to
be carried by the current below the point of egress,
and thus drowned. Here is a simple, safe, and
expeditious method of taking animals over such a stream.
Suppose, for example, a party of mounted men arrive
upon the bank of the stream. There will always
be some good swimmers in the party, and probably others
who can not swim at all. Three or four of the
most expert of these are selected, and sent across
with one end of a rope made of lariats tied together,
while the other end is retained upon the first bank,
and made fast to the neck of a gentle and good swimming
horse; after which another gentle horse is brought
up and made fast by a lariat around his neck to the
tail of the first, and so on until all the horses are
thus tied together. The men who can not swim
are then mounted upon the best swimming horses and
tied on, otherwise they are liable to become frightened,
lose their balance, and be carried away in a rapid
current; or a horse may stumble and throw his rider.
After the horses have been strung out in a single
line by their riders, and every thing is in readiness,
the first horse is led carefully into the water, while
the men on the opposite bank, pulling upon the rope,
thus direct him across, and, if necessary, aid him
in stemming the current. As soon as this horse
strikes bottom he pulls upon those behind him, and
thereby assists them in making the landing, and in
this manner all are passed over in perfect safety.
DRIVING LOOSE HORSES.
In traveling with loose horses across
the plains, some persons are in the habit of attaching
them in pairs by their halters to a long, stout rope
stretched between two wagons drawn by mules, each wagon
being about half loaded. The principal object
of the rear wagon being to hold back and keep the
rope stretched, not more than two stout mules are
required, as the horses aid a good deal with their
heads in pulling this wagon. From thirty to forty
horses may be driven very well in this manner, and,
if they are wild, it is perhaps the safest method,
except that of leading them with halters held by men
riding beside them. The rope to which the horses
are attached should be about an inch and a quarter
in diameter, with loops or rings inserted at intervals
sufficient to admit the horses without allowing them
to kick each other, and the halter straps tied to
these loops. The horses, on first starting, should
have men by their sides, to accustom them to this
manner of being led. The wagons should be so driven
as to keep the rope continually stretched. Good
drivers must be assigned to these wagons, who will
constantly watch the movements of the horses attached,
as well as their own teams.
I have had 150 loose horses driven
by ten mounted herdsmen. This requires great
care for some considerable time, until the horses become
gentle and accustomed to their herders. It is
important to ascertain, as soon as possible after
starting, which horses are wild, and may be likely
to stampede and lead off the herd; such should be led,
and never suffered to run loose, either on the march
or in camp. Animals of this character will soon
indicate their propensities, and can be secured during
the first days of the march. It is desirable that
all animals that will not stampede when not working
should run loose on a march, as they pick up a good
deal of grass along the road when traveling, and the
success of an expedition, when animals get no other
forage but grass, depends in a great degree upon the
time given them for grazing. They will thrive
much better when allowed a free range than when picketed,
as they then are at liberty to select such grass as
suits them. It may therefore be set down as an
infallible rule never to be departed from, that all
animals, excepting such as will be likely to stampede,
should be turned loose for grazing immediately after
arriving at the camping-place; but it is equally important
that they should be carefully herded as near the camp
as good grass will admit; and those that it is necessary
to picket should be placed upon the best grass, and
their places changed often. The ropes to which
they are attached should be about forty feet long;
the picket-pins, of iron, fifteen inches long, with
ring and swivel at top, so that the rope shall not
twist as the animal feeds around it; and the pins must
be firmly driven into tenacious earth.
Animals should be herded during the
day at such distances as to leave sufficient grass
undisturbed around and near the camp for grazing through
the night.
METHOD OF MARCHING.
Among men of limited experience in
frontier life will be found a great diversity of opinion
regarding the best methods of marching, and of treating
animals in expeditions upon the prairies. Some
will make late starts and travel during the heat of
the day without nooning, while others will start early
and make two marches, laying by during the middle
of the day; some will picket their animals continually
in camp, while others will herd them day and night,
etc., etc. For mounted troops, or,
indeed, for any body of men traveling with horses and
mules, a few general rules may be specified which have
the sanction of mature experience, and a deviation
from them will inevitably result in consequences highly
detrimental to the best interests of an expedition.
In ordinary marches through a country
where grass and water are abundant and good, animals
receiving proper attention should not fall away, even
if they receive no grain; and, as I said before, they
should not be made to travel faster than a walk unless
absolutely necessary; neither should they be taken
off the road for the purpose of hunting or chasing
buffalo, as one buffalo-chase injures them more than
a week of moderate riding. In the vicinity of
hostile Indians, the animals must be carefully herded
and guarded within protection of the camp, while those
picketed should be changed as often as the grass is
eaten off within the circle described by the tether-rope.
At night they should be brought within the chain of
sentinels and picketed as compactly as is consistent
with the space needed for grazing, and under no circumstances,
unless the Indians are known to be near and an attack
is to be expected, should they be tied up to a picket
line where they can get no grass. Unless allowed
to graze at night they will fall away rapidly, and
soon become unserviceable. It is much better to
march after nightfall, turn some distance off the
road, and to encamp without fires in a depressed locality
where the Indians can not track the party, and the
animals may be picketed without danger.
In descending abrupt hills and mountains
one wheel of a loaded wagon should always be locked,
as this relieves the wheel animals and makes every
thing more secure. When the declivity is great
both rear wheels should be locked, and if very abrupt,
requiring great effort on the wheel animals to hold
the wagon, the wheels should be rough-locked by lengthening
the lock-chains so that the part which goes around
the wheels will come directly upon the ground, and
thus create more friction. Occasionally, however,
hills are met with so nearly perpendicular that it
becomes necessary to attach ropes to the rear axle,
and to station men to hold back upon them and steady
the vehicle down the descent. Rough-locking is
a very safe method of passing heavy artillery down
abrupt declivities. There are several mountains
between the Missouri River and California where it
is necessary to resort to one of the two last-mentioned
methods in order to descend with security. If
there are no lock-chains upon wagons, the front and
rear wheels on the same side may be tied together
with ropes so as to lock them very firmly.
It is an old and well-established
custom among men experienced in frontier life always
to cross a stream upon which it is intended to encamp
for the night, and this rule should never be departed
from where a stream is to be forded, as a rise during
the night might detain the traveler for several days
in awaiting the fall of the waters.
STORMS.
In Western Texas, during the autumn
and winter months, storms arise very suddenly, and,
when accompanied by a north wind, are very severe
upon men and animals; indeed, they are sometimes so
terrific as to make it necessary for travelers to
hasten to the nearest sheltered place to save the
lives of their animals. When these storms come
from the north, they are called “northers;”
and as, during the winter season, the temperature
often undergoes a sudden change of many degrees at
the time the storm sets in, the perspiration is checked,
and the system receives an instantaneous shock, against
which it requires great vital energy to bear up.
Men and animals are not, in this mild climate, prepared
for these capricious meteoric revolutions, and they
not unfrequently perish under their effects.
While passing near the head waters
of the Colorado in October, 1849, I left one of my
camps at an early hour in the morning under a mild
and soft atmosphere, with a gentle breeze from the
south, but had marched only a short distance when
the wind suddenly whipped around into the north, bringing
with it a furious chilling rain, and in a short time
the road became so soft and heavy as to make the labor
of pulling the wagons over it very exhausting upon
the mules, and they came into camp in a profuse sweat,
with the rain pouring down in torrents upon them.
They were turned out of harness into
the most sheltered place that could be found; but,
instead of eating, as was their custom, they turned
their heads from the wind, and remained in that position,
chilled and trembling, without making the least effort
to move. The rain continued with unabated fury
during the entire day and night, and on the following
morning thirty-five out of one hundred and ten mules
had perished, while those remaining could hardly be
said to have had a spark of vitality left. They
were drawn up with the cold, and could with difficulty
walk. Tents and wagon-covers were cut up to protect
them, and they were then driven about for some time,
until a little vital energy was restored, after which
they commenced eating grass, but it was three or four
days before they recovered sufficiently to resume
the march.
The mistake I made was in driving
the mules after the “norther” commenced.
Had I gone immediately into camp, before they became
heated and wearied, they would probably have eaten
the grass, and this, I have no doubt, would have saved
them; but as it was, their blood became heated from
overwork, and the sudden chill brought on a reaction
which proved fatal. If an animal will eat his
forage plentifully, there is but little danger of
his perishing with cold. This I assert with much
confidence, as I once, when traveling with about 1500
horses and mules, encountered the most terrific snow-storm
that has been known within the memory of the oldest
mountaineers. It commenced on the last day of
April, and continued without cessation for sixty consecutive
hours. The day had been mild and pleasant; the
green grass was about six inches high; the trees had
put out their new leaves, and all nature conspired
to show that the sombre garb of winter had been permanently
superseded by the smiling attire of spring. About
dark, however, the wind turned into the north; it
commenced to snow violently, and increased until it
became a frightful tempest, filling the atmosphere
with a dense cloud of driving snow, against which
it was impossible to ride or walk. Soon after
the storm set in, one herd of three hundred horses
and mules broke away from the herdsmen who were around
them, and, in spite of all their efforts, ran at full
speed, directly with the wind and snow, for fifty
miles before they stopped.
Three of the herdsmen followed them
as far as they were able, but soon became exhausted
and lost on the prairie. One of them found his
way back to camp in a state of great prostration and
suffering. One of the others was found dead,
and the third crawling about upon his hands and knees,
after the storm ceased.
It happened, fortunately, that I had
reserved a quantity of corn to be used in the event
of finding a scarcity of grass, and as soon as the
ground became covered with snow, so that the animals
could not get at the grass, I fed out the corn, which
I am induced to believe saved their lives. Indeed,
they did not seem to be at all affected by this prolonged
and unseasonable tempest. This occurred upon the
summit of the elevated ridge dividing the waters of
the Arkansas and South Platte Rivers, where storms
are said to be of frequent occurrence.
The greater part of the animals that
stampeded were recovered after the storm, and, although
they had traveled a hundred miles at a very rapid
pace, they did not seem to be much affected by it.