Packing. Saddles. Mexican Method. Madrina, or Bell-mare. Attachment
of the Mule illustrated. Best Method of Packing. Hoppling Animals.
Selecting Horses and Mules. Grama and bunch Grass. European Saddles.
California Saddle. Saddle Wounds. Alkali. Flies. Colic. Rattlesnake
Bites. Cures for the Bite.
PACKING AND DRIVING.
With a train of pack animals properly
organized and equipped, a party may travel with much
comfort and celerity. It is enabled to take short
cuts, and move over the country in almost any direction
without regard to roads. Mountains and broken
ground may easily be traversed, and exemption is gained
from many of the troubles and detentions attendant
upon the transit of cumbersome wagon-trains.
One of the most essential requisites
to the outfit of a pack train is a good pack-saddle.
Various patterns are in use, many of which are mere
instruments of torture upon the backs of the poor brutes,
lacerating them cruelly, and causing continued pain.
The Mexicans use a leathern pack-saddle
without a tree. It is stuffed with hay, and is
very large, covering almost the entire back, and extending
far down the sides. It is secured with a broad
hair girth, and the load is kept in position by a
lash-rope drawn by two men so tight as to give the
unfortunate beast intense suffering.
A pack-saddle is made by T. Grimsley,
N Main Street, St. Louis, Mo. It is open
at the top, with a light, compact, and strong tree,
which fits the animal’s back well, and is covered
with raw hide, put on green, and drawn tight by the
contraction in drying. It has a leathern breast-strap,
breeching, and lash-strap, with a broad hair girth
fastened in the Mexican fashion. Of sixty-five
of these saddles that I used in crossing the Rocky
Mountains, over an exceedingly rough and broken section,
not one of them wounded a mule’s back, and I
regard them as the best saddles I have ever seen.
No people, probably, are more familiar
with the art of packing than the Mexicans. They
understand the habits, disposition, and powers of the
mule perfectly, and will get more work out of him than
any other men I have ever seen. The mule and
the donkey are to them as the camel to the Arab their
porters over deserts and mountains where no other means
of transportation can be used to advantage. The
Spanish Mexicans are, however, cruel masters, having
no mercy upon their beasts, and it is no uncommon
thing for them to load their mules with the enormous
burden of three or four hundred pounds.
These muleteers believe that, when
the pack is firmly lashed, the animal supports his
burden better and travels with greater ease, which
seems quite probable, as the tension forms, as it were,
an external sheath supporting and bracing the muscles.
It also has a tendency to prevent the saddle from
slipping and chafing the mule’s back. With
such huge cargas as the Mexicans load upon
their mules, it is impossible, by any precautions,
to prevent their backs and withers from becoming horribly
mangled, and it is common to see them working their
animals day after day in this miserable plight.
This heavy packing causes the scars that so often
mark Mexican mules.
The animal, in starting out from camp
in the morning, groaning under the weight of his heavy
burden, seems hardly able to move; but the pack soon
settles, and so loosens the lashing that after a short
time he moves along with more ease. Constant
care and vigilance on the part of the muleteers are
necessary to prevent the packs from working loose and
falling off. The adjustment of a carga
upon a mule does not, however, detain the caravan,
as the others move on while it is being righted.
If the mules are suffered to halt, they are apt to
lie down, and it is very difficult for them, with
their loads, to rise; besides, they are likely to
strain themselves in their efforts to do so. The
Mexicans, in traveling with large caravans, usually
make the day’s march without nooning, as too
much time would be consumed in unloading and packing
up again.
Packs, when taken off in camp, should
be piled in a row upon the ground, and, if there be
a prospect of rain, the saddles should be placed over
them, and the whole covered with the saddle-blankets
or canvas.
The muleteers and herders should be
mounted upon well-trained horses, and be careful to
keep the animals of the caravan from wandering or
scattering along the road. This can easily be
done by having some of the men riding upon each side,
and others in rear of the caravan.
In herding mules it is customary among
prairie travelers to have a bell-mare, to which the
mules soon become so attached that they will follow
her wherever she goes. By keeping her in charge
of one of the herdsmen, the herds are easily controlled;
and during a stampede, if the herdsman mounts her,
and rushes ahead toward camp, they will generally
follow.
In crossing rivers the bell-mare should
pass first, after which the mules are easily induced
to take to the water and pass over, even if they have
to swim. Mules are good swimmers unless they happen,
by plunging off a high bank, to get water in their
ears, when they are often drowned. Whenever a
mule in the water drops his ears, it is a sure indication
that he has water in them, and he should be taken out
as soon as possible. To prevent accidents of this
nature, where the water is deep and the banks abrupt,
the mule herds should be allowed to enter slowly,
and without crowding, as otherwise they are not only
likely to get their heads under water, but to throw
each other over and get injured.
The madrina, or bell-mare,
acts a most important part in a herd of mules, and
is regarded by experienced campaigners as indispensable
to their security. She is selected for her quiet
and regular habits. She will not wander far from
the camp. If she happen to have a colt by her
side, this is no objection, as the mules soon form
the most devoted attachment to it. I have often
seen them leave their grazing when very hungry, and
flock around a small colt, manifesting their delight
by rubbing it with their noses, licking it with their
tongues, kicking up their heels, and making a variety
of other grotesque demonstrations of affection, while
the poor little colt, perfectly unconscious of the
cause of these ungainly caresses, stood trembling with
fear, but unable to make his escape from the compact
circle of his mulish admirers. Horses and asses
are also used as bell animals, and the mules soon
become accustomed to following them. If a man
leads or rides a bell animal in advance, the mules
follow, like so many dogs, in the most orderly procession.
“After traveling about fourteen
miles,” says Bayard Taylor, “we were joined
by three miners, and our mules, taking a sudden liking
for their horses, jogged on at a more brisk pace.
The instincts of the mulish heart form an interesting
study to the traveler in the mountains. I would
(were the comparison not too ungallant) liken it to
a woman’s, for it is quite as uncertain in its
sympathies, bestowing its affections when least expected,
and, when bestowed, quite as constant, so long as
the object is not taken away. Sometimes a horse,
sometimes an ass, captivates the fancy of a whole
drove of mules, but often an animal nowise akin.
Lieutenant Beale told me that his whole train of mules
once galloped off suddenly, on the plains of the Cimarone,
and ran half a mile, when they halted in apparent
satisfaction. The cause of their freak was found
to be a buffalo calf which had strayed from the herd.
They were frisking around it in the greatest delight,
rubbing their noses against it, throwing up their
heels, and making themselves ridiculous by abortive
attempts to neigh and bray, while the calf, unconscious
of its attractive qualities, stood trembling in their
midst.”
“If several large troops,”
says Charles Darwin, “are turned into one field
to graze in the morning, the muleteer has only to lead
the madrinas a little apart and tinkle their
bells, and, although there may be 200 or 300 mules
together, each immediately knows its own bell, and
separates itself from the rest. The affection
of these animals for their madrina saves infinite
trouble. It is nearly impossible to lose an old
mule, for, if detained several hours by force, she
will, by the power of smell, like a dog, track out
her companions, or rather the madrina; for, according
to the muleteer, she is the chief object of affection.
The feeling, however, is not of an individual nature,
for I believe I am right in saying that any animal
with a bell will serve as a madrina.”
Of the attachment that a mule will
form for a horse, I will cite an instance from my
own observation, which struck me at the time as being
one of the most remarkable and touching evidences of
devotion that I have ever known among the brute creation.
On leaving Fort Leavenworth with the
army for Utah in 1857, one of the officers rode a
small mule, whose kind and gentle disposition soon
caused him to become a favorite among the soldiers,
and they named him “Billy.” As this
officer and myself were often thrown together upon
the march, the mule, in the course of a few days,
evinced a growing attachment for a mare that I rode.
The sentiment was not, however, reciprocated on her
part, and she intimated as much by the reversed position
of her ears, and the free exercise of her feet and
teeth whenever Billy came within her reach; but these
signal marks of displeasure, instead of discouraging,
rather seemed to increase his devotion, and whenever
at liberty he invariably sought to get near her, and
appeared much distressed when not permitted to follow
her.
On leaving Camp Scott for New Mexico
Billy was among the number of mules selected for the
expedition. During the march I was in the habit,
when starting out from camp in the morning, of leading
off the party, and directing the packmen to hold the
mule until I should get so far in advance with the
mare that he could not see us; but the moment he was
released he would, in spite of all the efforts of the
packers, start off at a most furious pace, and never
stop or cease braying until he reached the mare’s
side. We soon found it impossible to keep him
with the other mules, and he was finally permitted
to have his own way.
In the course of time we encountered
the deep snows in the Rocky Mountains, where the animals
could get no forage, and Billy, in common with the
others, at length became so weak and jaded that he
was unable any longer to leave his place in the caravan
and break a track through the snow around to the front.
He made frequent attempts to turn out and force his
way ahead, but after numerous unsuccessful efforts
he would fall down exhausted, and set up a most mournful
braying.
The other mules soon began to fail,
and to be left, worn out and famished, to die by the
wayside; it was not, however, for some time that Billy
showed symptoms of becoming one of the victims, until
one evening after our arrival at camp I was informed
that he had dropped down and been left upon the road
during the day. The men all deplored his loss
exceedingly, as his devotion to the mare had touched
their kind hearts, and many expressions of sympathy
were uttered around their bivouac fires on that evening.
Much to our surprise, however, about
ten o’clock, just as we were about going to
sleep, we heard a mule braying about half a mile to
the rear upon our trail. Sure enough, it proved
to be Billy, who, after having rested, had followed
upon our track and overtaken us. As soon as he
reached the side of the mare he lay down and seemed
perfectly contented.
The next day I relieved him from his
pack, and allowed him to run loose; but during the
march he gave out, and was again abandoned to his
fate, and this time we certainly never expected to
see him more. To our great astonishment, however,
about twelve o’clock that night the sonorous
but not very musical notes of Billy in the distance
aroused us from our slumbers, and again announced
his approach. In an instant the men were upon
their feet, gave three hearty cheers, and rushed out
in a body to meet and escort him into camp.
But this well-meant ovation elicited
no response from him. He came reeling and floundering
along through the deep snow, perfectly regardless
of these honors, pushing aside all those who occupied
the trail or interrupted his progress in the least,
wandered about until he found the mare, dropped down
by her side, and remained until morning.
When we resumed our march on the following
day he made another desperate effort to proceed, but
soon fell down exhausted, when we reluctantly abandoned
him, and saw him no more.
Alas! poor Billy! your constancy deserved
a better fate; you may, indeed, be said to have been
a victim to unrequited affection.
The articles to be transported should
be made up into two packages of precisely equal weight,
and as nearly equal in bulk as practicable, otherwise
they will sway the saddle over to one side, and cause
it to chafe the animal’s back.
The packages made, two ropes about
six feet long are fastened around the ends by a slip-knot,
and if the packages contain corn or other articles
that will shift about, small sticks should be placed
between the sacks and the ropes, which equalizes the
pressure and keeps the packages snug. The ropes
are then looped at the ends, and made precisely of
the same length, so that the packs will balance and
come up well toward the top of the saddle. Two
men then, each taking a pack, go upon opposite sides
of the mule, that has been previously saddled, and,
raising the packs simultaneously, place the loops over
the pommel and cantel, settling them well down
into their places. The lashing-strap is then
thrown over the top, brought through the rings upon
each side, and drawn as tight at every turn as the
two men on the sides can pull it, and, after having
been carried back and forth diagonally across the
packs as often as its length admits (generally three
or four times), it is made fast to one of the rings,
and securely tied in a slip-knot.
The breast-strap and breeching must
not be buckled so close as to chafe the skin; the
girth should be broad and soft where it comes opposite
the fore legs, to prevent cutting them. Leather
girths should be wrapped with cloth or bound with
soft material. The hair girth, being soft and
elastic, is much better than leather.
The crupper should never be dispensed
with in a mountainous country, but it must be soft,
round, and about an inch in diameter where it comes
in contact with the tail, otherwise it will wound the
animal in making long and abrupt descents.
In Norway they use a short round stick,
about ten inches long, which passes under the tail,
and from each end of this a cord connects with the
saddle.
Camp-kettles, tin vessels, and other
articles that will rattle and be likely to frighten
animals, should be firmly lashed to the packs.
When the packs work loose, the lash-strap should be
untied, and a man upon each side draw it up again
and make it fast. When ropes are used for lashing,
they may be tightened by twisting them with a short
stick and making the stick fast.
One hundred and twenty-five pounds
is a sufficient load for a mule upon a long journey.
In traveling over a rocky country,
and upon all long journeys, horses and mules should
be shod, to prevent their hoofs wearing out or breaking.
The mountaineers contend that beasts travel better
without shoeing, but I have several times had occasion
to regret the omission of this very necessary precaution.
A few extra shoes and nails, with a small hammer,
will enable travelers to keep their animals shod.
In turning out pack animals to graze,
it is well either to keep the lariat ropes upon them
with the ends trailing upon the ground, or to hopple
them, as no corral can be made into which they may
be driven in order to catch them. A very good
way to catch an animal without driving him into an
inclosure is for two men to take a long rope and stretch
it out at the height of the animal’s neck; some
men then drive him slowly up against it, when one
of the men with the rope runs around behind the animal
and back to the front again, thus taking a turn with
the rope around his neck and holding him secure.
To prevent an animal from kicking,
take a forked stick and make the forked part fast
to the bridle-bit, bringing the two ends above the
head and securing them there, leaving the part of the
stick below the fork of sufficient length to reach
near the ground when the animal’s head is in
its natural position. He can not kick up unless
he lowers his head, and the stick effectually prevents
that.
Tether-ropes should be so attached
to the neck of the animal as not to slip and choke
him, and the picket-pins never be left on the ropes
except when in the ground, as, in the event of a stampede,
they are very likely to swing around and injure the
animals.
Many experienced travelers were formerly
in the habit of securing their animals with a strap
or iron ring fastened around the fetlock of one fore
foot, and this attached to the tether-rope. This
method holds the animal very securely to the picket-pin,
but when the rope is first put on, and before he becomes
accustomed to it, he is liable to throw himself down
and get hurt; so that I think the plan of tethering
by the neck or halter is the safest, and, so far as
I have observed, is now universally practiced.
The mountaineers and Indians seldom
tether their animals, but prefer the plan of hoppling,
as this gives them more latitude for ranging and selecting
the choicest grass.
Two methods of hoppling are practiced
among the Indians and hunters of the West: one
with a strap about two feet long buckling around the
fore legs above the fetlock joints; the other is what
they term the “side hopple” which
is made by buckling a strap around a front and rear
leg upon the same side. In both cases care should
be taken not to buckle the strap so tight as to chafe
the legs. The latter plan is the best, because
the animal, side-hoppled, is able to go but little
faster than a walk, while the front hopple permits
him, after a little practice, to gallop off at considerable
speed. If the hopples are made of iron connected
with chains, like handcuffs, with locks and keys, it
will be impossible for the Indians, without files,
to cut them; but the parts that come in contact with
the legs should be covered with soft leather.
“A horse,” says Mr. Galton,
“may be hoppled with a stirrup-leather by placing
the middle around one leg, then twisting it several
times and buckling it round the other leg. When
you wish to picket horses in the middle of a sandy
plain, dig a hole two or three feet deep, and, tying
your rope to a fagot of sticks or brushwood, or
even to a bag filled with sand, bury this in it.”
For prairie service, horses which
have been raised exclusively upon grass, and never
been fed on grain, or “range horses,”
as they are called in the West, are decidedly the
best, and will perform more hard labor than those
that have been stabled and groomed. The large,
stout ponies found among some of our frontier settlements
are well adapted to this service, and endure admirably.
The same remarks hold good in the choice of mules;
and it will be found that the square-built, big-bellied,
and short-legged Mexican mule will endure far more
hard service, on short allowance of forage, than the
larger American mule which has been accustomed to
grain.
In our trip across the Rocky Mountains
we had both the American and Mexican mules, and improved
a good opportunity of giving their relative powers
of endurance a thorough service-trial. For many
days they were reduced to a meagre allowance of dry
grass, and at length got nothing but pine leaves,
while their work in the deep snow was exceedingly
severe. This soon told upon the American mules,
and all of them, with the exception of two, died,
while most of the Mexican mules went through.
The result was perfectly conclusive.
We found that, where the snow was
not more than two feet deep, the animals soon learned
to paw it away and get at the grass. Of course
they do not get sufficient in this way, but they do
much better than one would suppose.
In Utah and New Mexico the autumn
is so dry that the grass does not lose its nutritious
properties by being washed with rains. It gradually
dries and cures like hay, so that animals eat it freely,
and will fatten upon it even in mid-winter. It
is seldom that any grain is fed to stock in either
of these territories.
Several of the varieties of grass
growing upon the slopes of the Rocky Mountains are
of excellent quality; among these may be mentioned
the Gramma and bunch grasses. Horses and mules
turned out to graze always prefer the grass upon the
mountain sides to grass of the valleys.
We left New Mexico about the first
of March, six weeks before the new grass appeared,
with 1500 animals, many of them low in flesh, yet they
improved upon the journey, and on their arrival in
Utah were all, with very few exceptions, in fine working
condition. Had this march been made at the same
season in the country bordering upon the Missouri
River, where there are heavy autumnal rains, the animals
would probably have become very poor.
In this journey the herds were allowed
to range over the best grass that could be found,
but were guarded both night and day with great care,
whereas, if they had been corraled or picketed at night,
I dare say they would have lost flesh.
SADDLES.
Great diversity of opinion exists
regarding the best equipment for horses, and the long-mooted
question is as yet very far from being definitely
settled.
I do not regard the opinions of Europeans
as having a more direct bearing upon this question,
or as tending to establish any more definite and positive
conclusions regarding it than have been developed
by the experience of our own border citizens, the major
part of whose lives has been spent in the saddle;
yet I am confident that the following brief description
of the horse equipments used in different parts of
Europe, the substance of which I have extracted from
Captain M’Clellan’s interesting report,
will be read with interest and instruction.
The saddle used by the African chasseurs
consists of a plain wooden tree, with a pad upon the
top, but without skirts, and is somewhat similar to
our own military saddle, but lower in the pommel and
cantle. The girth and surcingle are of leather,
with an ordinary woolen saddle-blanket. Their
bridle has a single head-stall, with the Spanish bit
buckled to it.
A new saddle has recently been introduced
into the French service by Captain Cogent, the tree
of which is cut out of a single piece of wood, the
cantle only being glued on, and a piece of walnut let
into the pommel, with a thin strip veneered upon the
front ends of the bars. The pommel and cantle
are lower than in the old model; the whole is covered
with wet raw hide, glued on and sewed at the edges.
The great advantage this saddle possesses is in being
so arranged that it may be used for horses of all
sizes and conditions. The saddle-blanket is made
of thick felt cloth, and is attached to the pommel
by a small strap passing through holes in the blanket,
which is thus prevented from slipping, and at the
same time it raises the saddle so as to admit a free
circulation of air over the horse’s spine.
The Hungarian saddle is made of hard
wood entirely uncovered, with a raised pommel and
cantle. The seat is formed with a leather strap
four inches wide nailed to the forks on the front
and rear, and secured to the side-boards by leather
thongs, thus giving an elastic and easy saddle-seat.
This is also the form of the saddle-tree used by the
Russian and Austrian cavalry. The Russians have
a leather girth fastened by three small buckles:
it passes over the tree, and is tied to the side-boards.
The saddle-blanket is of stout felt cloth in four
thicknesses, and a layer of black leather over it,
and the whole held together by leather thongs passing
through and through. When the horse falls off
in flesh, more thicknesses are added, and “vice
versa.” This saddle-blanket is regarded
by the Russian officers as the best possible arrangement.
The Russians use the curb and snaffle-bits made of
steel.
The Cossack saddle has a thick padding
under the side-boards and on the seat, which raises
the rider very high on his horse, so that his feet
are above the bottom of the belly. Their bridle
has but a simple snaffle-bit, and no martingale.
The Prussian cuirassiers have
a heavy saddle with a low pommel and cantle, covered
with leather, but it is not thought by Captain M’Clellan
to present any thing worthy of imitation.
The other Prussian cavalry ride the
Hungarian saddle, of a heavier model than the one
in the Austrian service. The surcingle is of
leather, and fastens in the Mexican style; the girth
is also of leather, three and a half inches wide,
with a large buckle. It is in two parts, attached
to the bars by raw-hide thongs. The curb and
snaffle steel bits are used, and attached to a single
head-stall.
The English cavalry use a saddle which
has a lower cantle and pommel than our Grimsley
saddle, covered with leather. The snaffle-bit
is attached to the halter head-stall by a chain and
T; the curb has a separate head-stall, which on a
march is occasionally taken off and hung on the carbine
stock.
The Sardinian saddle has a bare wooden
tree very similar to the Hungarian. A common
blanket, folded in twelve thicknesses, is placed under
it. The girth and surcingle are of leather.
Without expressing any opinion as
to the comparative merits of these different saddles,
I may be permitted to give a few general principles,
which I regard as infallible in the choice of a saddle.
The side-boards should be large, and
made to conform to the shape of the horse’s
back, thereby distributing the burden over a large
surface. It should stand up well above the spine,
so as to admit a free circulation of air under it.
For long journeys, the crupper, where
it comes in contact with the tail, should be made
of soft leather. It should be drawn back only
far enough to hold the saddle from the withers.
Some horses require much more tension upon the crupper
than others. The girth should be made broad,
of a soft and elastic material. Those made of
hair, in use among the Mexicans, fulfill the precited
conditions.
A light and easy bit, which will not
fret or chafe the horse, is recommended.
The saddle-blanket must be folded
even and smooth, and placed on so as to cover every
part of the back that comes in contact with the saddle,
and in warm weather it is well to place a gunny bag
under the blanket, as it is cooler than the wool.
It will have been observed that, in
the French service, the folded saddle-blanket is tied
to the pommel to prevent it slipping back. This
is well if the blanket be taken off and thoroughly
dried whenever the horse is unsaddled.
A saddle-blanket made of moss is used
in some of the Southwestern States, which is regarded
by many as the perfection of this article of horse
equipment. It is a mat woven into the proper shape
and size from the beaten fibres of moss that hangs
from the trees in our Southern States. It is
cheap, durable, is not in any way affected by sweat,
and does not chafe or heat the horse’s spine
like the woolen blanket. Its open texture allows
a rapid evaporation, which tends to keep the back
cool, and obviates the danger of stripping and sudden
exposure of the heated parts to the sun and air.
The experience of some of our officers
who have used this mat for years in Mexico and Texas
corroborates all I have said in its favor; and they
are unanimous in the opinion that a horse will never
get a sore back when it is placed under a good saddle.
A saddle made by the Mexicans in California
is called the California saddle. This
is extensively used upon the Pacific slope of the
mountains, and is believed to possess, at least, as
many advantages for rough frontier service as any
other pattern that has been invented. Those hardy
and experienced veterans, the mountaineers, could not
be persuaded to ride any other saddle, and their ripened
knowledge of such matters certainly gives weight to
their conclusions.
The merits of the California saddle
consist in its being light, strong, and compact, and
conforming well to the shape of the horse. When
strapped on, it rests so firmly in position that the
strongest pull of a horse upon a lariat attached to
the pommel can not displace it. Its shape is
such that the rider is compelled to sit nearly erect,
with his legs on the continuation of the line of the
body, which makes his seat more secure, and, at the
same time, gives him a better control over his arms
and horse. This position is attained by setting
the stirrup-leathers farther back than on the old-fashioned
saddle. The pommel is high, like the Mexican
saddle, and prevents the rider from being thrown forward.
The tree is covered with raw hide, put on green, and
sewed; when this dries and contracts it gives it great
strength. It has no iron in its composition,
but is kept together by buckskin strings, and can easily
be taken to pieces for mending or cleaning. It
has a hair girth about five inches wide.
The whole saddle is covered with a
large and thick sheet of sole-leather, having a hole
to lay over the pommel; it extends back over the horse’s
hips, and protects them from rain, and when taken off
in camp it furnishes a good security against dampness
when placed under the traveler’s bed.
The California saddle-tree is regarded
by many as the best of all others for the horse’s
back, and as having an easier seat than the Mexican.
General Comte de la Roche-Aymon, in
his treatise upon “Light Troops,” published
in Paris in 1856, says:
“In nearly all the European
armies the equipment of the horse is not in harmony
with the new tactics with those tactics
in which, during nearly all of a campaign, the cavalry
remains in bivouac. Have we reflected upon the
kind of saddle which, under these circumstances, would
cover the horse best without incommoding him during
the short periods that he is permitted to repose?
Have we reflected upon the kind of saddle which, offering
the least fragility, exposes the horse to the least
danger of sore back? All the cuirassiers
and the dragoons of Europe have saddles which they
call French saddle, the weight of which is
a load for the horse. The interior mechanism of
these saddles is complicated and filled with weak
bands of iron, which become deranged, bend, and sometimes
break; the rider does not perceive these accidents,
or he does not wish to perceive them, for fear of being
left behind or of having to go on foot; he continues
on, and at the end of a day’s march his horse
has a sore back, and in a few days is absolutely unserviceable.
We may satisfy ourselves of the truth of these observations
by comparing the lists of horses sent to the rear during
the course of a campaign by the cuirassiers and
dragoons who use the French saddle, and by the hussars
with the Hungarian saddle. The number sent to
the rear by the latter is infinitely less, although
employed in a service much more active and severe;
and it might be still less by making some slight improvements
in the manner of fixing their saddle upon the horse.
“It is a long time since Marshal
Saxe said there was but one kind of saddle fit for
cavalry, which was the hussar saddle: this combined
all advantages, lightness, solidity, and economy.
It is astonishing that the system of actual war had
not led to the employment of the kind of saddle in
use among the Tartars, the Cossacks, the Hungarians,
and, indeed, among all horsemen and nomads. This
saddle has the incontestable advantage of permitting
the horse to lie down and rest himself without inconvenience.
If, notwithstanding the folded blanket which they
place under the Hungarian saddle, this saddle will
still wound the animal’s back sometimes, this
only proceeds from the friction occasioned by the
motion of the horse and the movement of the rider
upon the saddle; a friction which it will be nearly
impossible to avoid, inasmuch as the saddle-bow is
held in its place only by a surcingle, the ends of
which are united by a leathern band: these bands
always relax more or less, and the saddle becomes loose.
To remedy this, I propose to attach to the saddle-bow
itself a double girth, one end of which shall be made
fast to the arch in front, and the other end to the
rear of the arch upon the right side, to unite in a
single girth, which would buckle to a strap attached
upon the left side in the usual manner. This
buckle will hold the saddle firmly in its place.
“Notwithstanding all these precautions,
however, there were still some inconveniences resulting
from the nature of the blanket placed under the saddle,
which I sought to remedy, and I easily accomplished
it. The woolen nap of the cavalry saddle-blankets,
not being carefully attended to, soon wears off, and
leaves only the rough, coarse threads of the fabric;
this absorbs the sweat from the horse, and, after it
has dried and become hard, it acts like a rasp upon
the withers, first taking off the hair, next the skin,
and then the flesh, and, finally, the beast is rendered
unserviceable.
“I sought, during the campaign
of 1807, a means to remedy this evil, and I soon succeeded
by a process as simple as it was cheap. I distributed
among a great number of cavalry soldiers pieces of
linen cloth folded double, two feet square, and previously
dipped in melted tallow. This cloth was laid
next to the horse’s back, under the saddle-blanket,
and it prevented all the bad effects of the woolen
blanket. No horses, after this appliance, were
afflicted with sore backs. Such are the slight
changes which I believe should be made in the use
of the Hungarian saddle. The remainder of the
equipment should remain (as it always has been) composed
of a breast-strap, crupper, and martingale, etc.”
The improvements of the present age
do not appear to have developed any thing advantageous
to the saddle; on the contrary, after experimenting
upon numerous modifications and inventions, public
sentiment has at length given the preference to the
saddle-tree of the natives in Asia and America, which
is very similar to that of the Hungarians.
SORES AND DISEASES.
If a horse be sweating at the time
he is unsaddled, it is well to strap the folded saddle-blanket
upon his back with the surcingle, where it is allowed
to remain until he is perfectly dry. This causes
the back to cool gradually, and prevents scalding
or swelling. Some persons are in the habit of
washing their horses’ backs while heated and
sweating with cold water, but this is pernicious,
and often produces sores. It is well enough to
wash the back after it cools, but not before.
After horses’ backs or shoulders once become
chafed and sore, it is very difficult to heal them,
particularly when they are continued at work.
It is better, if practicable, to stop using them for
a while, and wash the bruised parts often with castile
soap and water. Should it be necessary, however,
to continue the animal in use, I have known very severe
sores entirely healed by the free application of grease
to the parts immediately after halting, and while
the animal is warm and sweating. This seems to
harden the skin and heal the wound even when working
with the collar in contact with it. A piece of
bacon rind tied upon the collar over the wound is
also an excellent remedy.
In Texas, when the horse-flies are
numerous, they attack animals without mercy, and where
a contusion is found in the skin they deposit eggs,
which speedily produce worms in great numbers.
I have tried the effect of spirits of turpentine and
several other remedies, but nothing seemed to have
the desired effect but calomel blown into the wound,
which destroyed the worms and soon effected a cure.
In the vicinity of the South Pass,
upon the Humboldt River, and in some sections upon
other routes to California, alkaline water is found,
which is very poisonous to animals that drink it, and
generates a disease known in California as “alkali.”
This disease first makes its appearance by swellings
upon the abdomen and between the fore legs, and is
attended with a cough, which ultimately destroys the
lungs and kills the animal. If taken at an early
stage, this disease is curable, and the following
treatment is generally considered as the most efficacious.
The animal is first raked, after which a large dose
of grease is poured down its throat; acids are said
to have the same effect, and give immediate relief.
When neither of these remedies can be procured, many
of the emigrants have been in the habit of mixing
starch or flour in a bucket of water, and allowing
the animal to drink it. It is supposed that this
forms a coating over the mucous membrane, and thus
defeats the action of the poison.
Animals should never be allowed to
graze in the vicinity of alkaline water, as the deposits
upon the grass after floods are equally deleterious
with the water itself.
In seasons when the water is low in
the Humboldt River, there is much less danger of the
alkali, as the running water in the river then comes
from pure mountain springs, and is confined to the
channel; whereas, during high water, when the banks
are overflowed, the salts are dissolved, making the
water more impure.
For colic, a good remedy is
a mixture of two table-spoonfuls of brandy and two
tea-spoonfuls of laudanum dissolved in a bottle of
water and poured down the animal’s throat.
Another remedy, which has been recommended to me by
an experienced officer as producing speedy relief,
is a table-spoonful of chloride of lime dissolved in
a bottle of water, and administered as in the other
case.
RATTLESNAKE BITES.
Upon the southern routes to California
rattlesnakes are often met with, but it is seldom
that any person is bitten by them; yet this is a possible
contingency, and it can never be amiss to have an antidote
at hand.
Hartshorn applied externally to the
wound, and drunk in small quantities diluted with
water whenever the patient becomes faint or exhausted
from the effects of the poison, is one of the most
common remedies.
In the absence of all medicines, a
string or ligature should at once be bound firmly
above the puncture, then scarify deeply with a knife,
suck out the poison, and spit out the saliva.
Andersson, in his book on Southwestern
Africa, says: “In the Cape Colony the Dutch
farmers resort to a cruel but apparently effective
plan to counteract the bad effects of a serpent’s
bite. An incision having been made in the breast
of a living fowl, the bitten part is applied to the
wound. If the poison be very deadly, the bird
soon evinces symptoms of distress, becomes drowsy,
droops its head, and dies. It is replaced by
a second, a third, and more if requisite. When,
however, the bird no longer exhibits any of the signs
just mentioned, the patient is considered out of danger.
A frog similarly applied is supposed to be equally
efficacious.”
Haunberg, in his Travels in South
Africa, mentions an antidote against the bite of serpents.
He says: “The blood of the turtle was much
cried up, which, on account of this extraordinary
virtue, the inhabitants dry in the form of small scales
or membranes, and carry about them when they travel
in this country, which swarms with this most noxious
vermin. Whenever any one is wounded by a serpent,
he takes a couple of pinches of the dried blood internally,
and applies a little of it to the wound.”
I was present upon one occasion when
an Indian child was struck in the fore finger by a
large rattlesnake. His mother, who was near at
the time, seized him in her arms, and, placing the
wounded finger in her mouth, sucked the poison from
the puncture for some minutes, repeatedly spitting
out the saliva; after which she chewed and mashed some
plantain leaves and applied to the wound. Over
this she sprinkled some finely-powdered tobacco, and
wrapped the finger up in a rag. I did not observe
that the child suffered afterward the least pain or
inconvenience. The immediate application of the
remedies probably saved his life.
Irritation from the bite of gnats
and musquitoes, etc., may be relieved by chewing
the plantain, and rubbing the spittle on the bite.
I knew of another instance near Fort
Towson, in Northern Texas, where a small child was
left upon the earthen floor of a cabin while its mother
was washing at a spring near by. She heard a cry
of distress, and, on going to the cabin, what was
her horror on seeing a rattlesnake coiled around the
child’s arm, and striking it repeatedly with
its fangs. After killing the snake, she hurried
to her nearest neighbor, procured a bottle of brandy,
and returned as soon as possible; but the poison had
already so operated upon the arm that it was as black
as a negro’s. She poured down the child’s
throat a huge draught of the liquor, which soon took
effect, making it very drunk, and stopped the action
of the poison. Although the child was relieved,
it remained sick for a long time, but ultimately recovered.
A man was struck in the leg by a very
large rattlesnake near Fort Belknap, Texas, in 1853.
No other remedy being at hand, a small piece of indigo
was pulverized, made into a poultice with water, and
applied to the puncture. It seemed to draw out
the poison, turning the indigo white, after which
it was removed and another poultice applied. These
applications were repeated until the indigo ceased
to change its color. The man was then carried
to the hospital at Fort Belknap, and soon recovered,
and the surgeon of the post pronounced it a very satisfactory
cure.
A Chickasaw woman, who was bitten
upon the foot near Fort Washita by a ground rattlesnake
(a very venomous species), drank a bottle of whisky
and applied the indigo poultice, and when I saw her,
three days afterward, she was recovering, but the
flesh around the wound sloughed away.
A Delaware remedy, which is said to
be efficacious, is to burn powder upon the wound,
but I have never known it to be tried excepting upon
a horse. In this case it was successful, or,
at all events, the animal recovered.
Of all the remedies known to me, I
should decidedly prefer ardent spirits. It is
considered a sovereign antidote among our Western
frontier settlers, and I would make use of it with
great confidence. It must be taken until the
patient becomes very much intoxicated, and this requires
a large quantity, as the action of the poison seems
to counteract its effects.
Should the fangs of the snake penetrate
deep enough to reach an artery, it is probable the
person would die in a short time. I imagine,
however, that this does not often occur.
The following remedial measures for
the treatment of the bites of poisonous reptiles are
recommended by Dr. Philip Weston in the London Lancet
for July, 1859:
1. The application of a ligature
round the limb close to the wound, between it and
the heart, to arrest the return of venous blood.
2. Excision of the bitten parts,
or free incision through the wounds made by the poison-teeth,
subsequently encouraging the bleeding by warm solutions
to favor the escape of the poison from the circulation.
3. Cauterization widely round
the limb of the bite with a strong solution of nitrate
of silver, one drachm to the ounce, to prevent the
introduction of the poison into the system by the lymphatics.
4. As soon as indications of
the absorption of the poison into the circulation
begin to manifest themselves, the internal administration
of ammonia in aerated or soda-water every quarter of
an hour, to support the nervous energy and allay the
distressing thirst.
“But,” he continues, “there
is yet wanting some remedy that shall rapidly counteract
the poison introduced into the blood, and assist in
expelling it from the system. The well-authenticated
accounts of the success attending the internal use
of arsenic in injuries arising from the bites of venomous
reptiles in the East and West Indies, and also in
Africa, and the well-known properties of this medicine
as a powerful tonic and alterative in conditions of
impaired vitality of the blood arising from the absorption
of certain blood-poisons, would lead me to include
this agent in the treatment already mentioned.
It should be administered in combination with ammonia,
in full doses, frequently repeated, so as to neutralize
quickly the poison circulating in the blood before
it can be eliminated from the system. This could
readily be accomplished by adding ten to fifteen minims
of Fowler’s solution to the compound spirit
of ammonia, to be given every quarter of an hour in
aerated or soda-water, until the vomiting and the more
urgent symptoms of collapse have subsided, subsequently
repeating the dose at longer intervals until reaction
had become fully established, and the patient relieved
by copious bilious déjections.”
Cedron, which is a nut that
grows on the Isthmus of Panama, and which is sold
by the druggists in New York, is said to be an infallible
antidote to serpent-bites. In the Bullet. de
l’Acad. de Med. for February, 1858, it is
stated that a man was bitten at Panama by a coral
snake, the most poisonous species on the Isthmus.
During the few seconds that it took him to take the
cedron from his bag, he was seized with violent pains
at the heart and throat; but he had scarcely chewed
and swallowed a piece of the nut about the size of
a small bean, when the pains ceased as by magic.
He chewed a little more, and applied it externally
to the wound, when the pains disappeared, and were
followed by a copious evacuation of a substance like
curdled milk. Many other cases are mentioned
where the cedron proved an antidote.