Hunting. Its Benefits to the Soldier. Buffalo. Deer. Antelope. Bear.
Big-horn, or Mountain Sheep. Their Habits, and Hints upon the best
Methods of hunting them.
HUNTING.
I know of no better school of practice
for perfecting men in target-firing, and the use of
firearms generally, than that in which the frontier
hunter receives his education. One of the first
and most important lessons that he is taught impresses
him with the conviction that, unless his gun is in
good order and steadily directed upon the game, he
must go without his supper; and if ambition does not
stimulate his efforts, his appetite will, and ultimately
lead to success and confidence in his own powers.
The man who is afraid to place the
butt of his piece firmly against his shoulder, or
who turns away his head at the instant of pulling trigger
(as soldiers often do before they have been drilled
at target-practice), will not be likely to bag much
game or to contribute materially toward the result
of a battle. The successful hunter, as a general
rule, is a good shot, will always charge his gun properly,
and may be relied upon in action. I would, therefore,
when in garrison or at permanent camps, encourage
officers and soldiers in field-sports. If permitted,
men very readily cultivate a fondness for these innocent
and healthy exercises, and occupy their leisure time
in their pursuit; whereas, if confined to the narrow
limits of a frontier camp or garrison, having no amusements
within their reach, they are prone to indulge in practices
which are highly detrimental to their physical and
moral condition.
By making short excursions about the
country they acquire a knowledge of it, become inured
to fatigue, learn the art of bivouacking, trailing,
etc., etc., all of which will be found serviceable
in border warfare; and, even if they should perchance
now and then miss some of the minor routine duties
of the garrison, the benefits they would derive from
hunting would, in my opinion, more than counterbalance
its effects. Under the old regime it was thought
that drills, dress-parades, and guard-mountings comprehended
the sum total of the soldier’s education, but
the experience of the last ten years has taught us
that these are only the rudiments, and that to combat
successfully with Indians we must receive instruction
from them, study their tactics, and, where they suit
our purposes, copy from them.
The union of discipline with the individuality,
self-reliance, and rapidity of locomotion of the savage
is what we should aim at. This will be the tendency
of the course indicated, and it is conceived by the
writer that an army composed of well-disciplined hunters
will be the most efficient of all others against the
only enemy we have to encounter within the limits
of our vast possessions.
I find some pertinent remarks upon
this subject in a very sensible essay by “a
late captain of infantry” (U.S.). He says:
“It is conceived that scattered
bands of mounted hunters, with the speed of a horse
and the watchfulness of a wolf or antelope, whose
faculties are sharpened by their necessities; who,
when they get short of provisions, separate and look
for something to eat, and find it in the water, in
the ground, or on the surface; whose bill of fare ranges
from grass-seed, nuts, roots, grasshoppers, lizards,
and rattlesnakes up to the antelope, deer, elk, bear,
and buffalo, and who have a continent to roam over,
will be neither surprised, caught, conquered, overawed,
or reduced to famine by a rumbling, bugle-blowing,
drum-beating town passing through their country on
wheels at the speed of a loaded wagon.
“If the Indians are in the path
and do not wish to be seen, they cross a ridge, and
the town moves on, ignorant whether there are fifty
Indians within a mile or no Indian within fifty miles.
If the Indians wish to see, they return to the crest
of the ridge, crawl up to the edge, pull up a bunch
of grass by the roots, and look through or under it
at the procession.”
Although I would always encourage
men in hunting when permanently located, yet, unless
they are good woodsmen, it is not safe to permit them
to go out alone in marching through the Indian country,
as, aside from the danger of encountering Indians,
they would be liable to become bewildered and perhaps
lost, and this might detain the entire party in searching
for them. The better plan upon a march is for
three or four to go out together, accompanied by a
good woodsman, who will be able with certainty to
lead them back to camp.
The little group could ascertain if
Indians are about, and would be strong enough to act
on the defensive against small parties of them; and,
while they are amusing themselves, they may perform
an important part as scouts and flankers.
An expedition may have been perfectly
organized, and every thing provided that the wisest
forethought could suggest, yet circumstances beyond
the control of the most experienced traveler may sometimes
arise to defeat the best concerted plans. It
is not, for example, an impossible contingency that
the traveler may, by unforeseen delays, consume his
provisions, lose them in crossing streams, or have
them stolen by hostile Indians, and be reduced to
the necessity of depending upon game for subsistence.
Under these circumstances, a few observations upon
the habits of the different animals that frequent the
Plains and on the best methods of hunting them may
not be altogether devoid of interest or utility in
this connection.
THE BUFFALO.
The largest and most useful animal
that roams over the prairies is the buffalo.
It provides food, clothing, and shelter to thousands
of natives whose means of livelihood depend almost
exclusively upon this gigantic monarch of the prairies.
Not many years since they thronged
in countless multitudes over all that vast area lying
between Mexico and the British possessions, but now
their range is confined within very narrow limits,
and a few more years will probably witness the extinction
of the species.
The traveler, in passing from Texas
or Arkansas through southern New Mexico to California,
does not, at the present day, encounter the buffalo;
but upon all the routes north of latitude 36 deg.
the animal is still found between the 99th and 102d
meridians of longitude.
Although generally regarded as migratory
in their habits, yet the buffalo often winter
in the snows of a high northern latitude. Early
in the spring of 1858 I found them in the Rocky Mountains,
at the head of the Arkansas and South Platte Rivers,
and there was every indication that this was a permanent
abiding-place for them.
There are two methods generally practiced
in hunting the buffalo, viz.: running them
on horseback, and stalking, or still-hunting.
The first method requires a sure-footed and tolerably
fleet horse that is not easily frightened. The
buffalo cow, which makes much better beef than the
bull, when pursued by the hunter runs rapidly, and,
unless the horse be fleet, it requires a long and
exhausting chase to overtake her.
When the buffalo are discovered, and
the hunter intends to give chase, he should first
dismount, arrange his saddle-blanket and saddle, buckle
the girth tight, and make every thing about his horse
furniture snug and secure. He should then put
his arms in good firing order, and, taking the lee
side of the herd, so that they may not get “the
wind” of him, he should approach in a walk
as close as possible, taking advantage of any cover
that may offer. His horse then, being cool and
fresh, will be able to dash into the herd, and probably
carry his rider very near the animal he has selected
before he becomes alarmed.
If the hunter be right-handed, and
uses a pistol, he should approach upon the left side,
and when nearly opposite and close upon the buffalo,
deliver his shot, taking aim a little below the centre
of the body, and about eight inches back of the shoulder.
This will strike the vitals, and generally render
another shot unnecessary.
When a rifle or shot-gun is used the
hunter rides up on the right side, keeping his horse
well in hand, so as to be able to turn off if the
beast charges upon him; this, however, never happens
except with a buffalo that is wounded, when it is
advisable to keep out of his reach.
The buffalo has immense powers of
endurance, and will run for many miles without any
apparent effort or diminution in speed. The first
buffalo I ever saw I followed about ten miles, and
when I left him he seemed to run faster than when
the chase commenced.
As a long buffalo-chase is very severe
labor upon a horse, I would recommend to all travelers,
unless they have a good deal of surplus horse-flesh,
never to expend it in running buffalo.
Still-hunting, which requires no consumption
of horse-flesh, and is equally successful with the
other method, is recommended. In stalking on
horseback, the most broken and hilly localities should
be selected, as these will furnish cover to the hunter,
who passes from the crest of one hill to another,
examining the country carefully in all directions.
When the game is discovered, if it happen to be on
the lee side, the hunter should endeavor, by making
a wide detour, to get upon the opposite side, as he
will find it impossible to approach within rifle range
with the wind.
When the animal is upon a hill, or
in any other position where he can not be approached
without danger of disturbing him, the hunter should
wait until he moves off to more favorable ground, and
this will not generally require much time, as they
wander about a great deal when not grazing; he then
pickets his horse, and approaches cautiously, seeking
to screen himself as much as possible by the undulations
in the surface, or behind such other objects as may
present themselves; but if the surface should offer
no cover, he must crawl upon his hands and knees when
near the game, and in this way he can generally get
within rifle range.
Should there be several animals together,
and his first shot take effect, the hunter can often
get several other shots before they become frightened.
A Delaware Indian and myself once killed five buffaloes
out of a small herd before the remainder were so much
disturbed as to move away; although we were within
the short distance of twenty yards, yet the reports
of our rifles did not frighten them in the least, and
they continued grazing during all the time we were
loading and firing.
The sense of smelling is exceedingly
acute with the buffalo, and they will take the wind
from the hunter at as great a distance as a mile.
When the animal is wounded, and stops,
it is better not to go near him until he lies down,
as he will often run a great distance if disturbed;
but if left to himself, will in many cases die in a
short time.
The tongues, humps, and marrow-bones
are regarded as the choice parts of the animal.
The tongue is taken out by ripping open the skin between
the prongs of the lower jaw-bone and pulling it out
through the orifice. The hump may be taken off
by skinning down on each side of the shoulders and
cutting away the meat, after which the hump-ribs can
be unjointed where they unite with the spine.
The marrow, when roasted in the bones, is delicious.
THE DEER.
Of all game quadrupeds indigenous
to this continent, the common red deer is probably
more widely dispersed from north to south and from
east to west over our vast possessions than any other.
They are found in all latitudes from Hudson’s
Bay to Mexico, and they clamber over the most elevated
peaks of the western sierras with the same ease that
they range the eastern forests or the everglades of
Florida. In summer they crop the grass upon the
summits of the Rocky Mountains, and in winter, when
the snow falls deep, they descend into sheltered valleys,
where they fall an easy prey to the Indians.
Besides the common red deer of the
Eastern States, two other varieties are found in the
Rocky Mountains, viz., the “black-tailed
deer,” which takes its name from the fact of
its having a small tuft of black hair upon the end
of its tail, and the long-tailed species.
The former of these is considerably larger than the
eastern deer, and is much darker, being of a very
deep-yellowish iron-gray, with a yellowish red upon
the belly. It frequents the mountains, and is
never seen far away from them. Its habits are
similar to those of the red deer, and it is hunted
in the same way. The only difference I have been
able to discern between the long-tailed variety and
the common deer is in the length of the tail and body.
I have seen this animal only in the neighborhood of
the Rocky Mountains, but it may resort to other localities.
Although the deer are still abundant
in many of our forest districts in the east, and do
not appear to decrease very rapidly, yet there has
within a few years been a very evident diminution in
the numbers of those frequenting our Western prairies.
In passing through Southern Texas in 1846, thousands
of deer were met with daily, and, astonishing as it
may appear, it was no uncommon spectacle to see from
one to two hundred in a single herd; the prairies
seemed literally alive with them; but in 1855 it was
seldom that a herd often was seen in the same localities.
It seemed to me that the vast herds first met with
could not have been killed off by the hunters in that
sparsely-populated section, and I was puzzled to know
what had become of them. It is possible they
may have moved off into Mexico; they certainly are
not in our territory at the present time.
Twenty years’ experience in
deer-hunting has taught me several facts relative
to the habits of the animal which, when well understood,
will be found of much service to the inexperienced
hunter, and greatly contribute to his success.
The best target-shots are not necessarily the most
skillful deer-stalkers. One of the great secrets
of this art is in knowing how to approach the game
without giving alarm, and this can not easily be done
unless the hunter sees it before he is himself discovered.
There are so many objects in the woods resembling the
deer in color that none but a practiced eye can often
detect the difference.
When the deer is reposing he generally
turns his head from the wind, in which position he
can see an enemy approaching from that direction, and
his nose will apprise him of the presence of danger
from the opposite side. The best method of hunting
deer, therefore, is across the wind.
While the deer are feeding, early
in the morning and a short time before dark in the
evening are the best times to stalk them, as they
are then busily occupied and less on the alert.
When a deer is espied with his head down, cropping
the grass, the hunter advances cautiously, keeping
his eyes constantly directed upon him, and screening
himself behind intervening objects, or, in the absence
of other cover, crawls along upon his hands and knees
in the grass, until the deer hears his steps and raises
his head, when he must instantly stop and remain in
an attitude fixed and motionless as a statue, for
the animal’s vision is his keenest sense.
When alarmed he will detect the slightest movement
of a small object, and, unless the hunter stands or
lies perfectly still, his presence will be detected.
If the hunter does not move, the deer will, after
a short time, recover from his alarm and resume his
grazing, when he may be again approached. The
deer always exhibits his alarm by a sudden jerking
of the tail just before he raises his head.
I once saw a Delaware Indian walk
directly up within rifle range of a deer that was
feeding upon the open prairie and shoot him down; he
was, however, a long time in approaching, and made
frequent halts whenever the animal flirted his tail
and raised his head. Although he often turned
toward the hunter, yet he did not appear to notice
him, probably taking him for a stump or tree.
When the deer are lying down in the
smooth prairie, unless the grass is tall, it is difficult
to get near them, as they are generally looking around,
and become alarmed at the least noise.
The Indians are in the habit of using
a small instrument which imitates the bleat of the
young fawn, with which they lure the doe within range
of their rifles. The young fawn gives out no scent
upon its track until it is sufficiently grown to make
good running, and instinct teaches the mother that
this wise provision of nature to preserve the helpless
little quadruped from the ravages of wolves, panthers,
and other carnivorous beasts, will be defeated if
she remains with it, as her tracks can not be concealed.
She therefore hides her fawn in the grass, where it
is almost impossible to see it, even when very near
it, goes off to some neighboring thicket within call,
and makes her bed alone. The Indian pot-hunter,
who is but little scrupulous as to the means he employs
in accomplishing his ends, sounds the bleat along near
the places where he thinks the game is lying, and
the unsuspicious doe, who imagines that her offspring
is in distress, rushes with headlong impetuosity toward
the sound, and often goes within a few yards of the
hunter to receive her death-wound.
This is cruel sport, and can only
be justified when meat is scarce, which is very frequently
the case in the Indian’s larder.
It does not always comport with a
man’s feelings of security, especially if he
happens to be a little nervous, to sound the deer-bleat
in a wild region of country. I once undertook
to experiment with the instrument myself, and made
my first essay in attempting to call up an antelope
which I discovered in the distance. I succeeded
admirably in luring the wary victim within shooting
range, had raised upon my knees, and was just in the
act of pulling trigger, when a rustling in the grass
on my left drew my attention in that direction, where,
much to my surprise, I beheld a huge panther within
about twenty yards, bounding with gigantic strides
directly toward me. I turned my rifle, and in
an instant, much to my relief and gratification, its
contents were lodged in the heart of the beast.
Many men, when they suddenly encounter
a deer, are seized with nervous excitement, called
in sporting parlance the “buck fever,”
which causes them to fire at random. Notwithstanding
I have had much experience in hunting, I must confess
that I am never entirely free from some of the symptoms
of this malady when firing at large game, and I believe
that in four out of five cases where I have missed
the game my balls have passed too high. I have
endeavored to obviate this by sighting my rifle low,
and it has been attended with more successful results.
The same remarks apply to most other men I have met
with. They fire too high when excited.
THE ANTELOPE.
This animal frequents the most elevated
bleak and naked prairies in all latitudes from Mexico
to Oregon, and constitutes an important item of subsistence
with many of the Prairie Indians. It is the most
wary, timid, and fleet animal that inhabits the Plains.
It is about the size of a small deer, with a heavy
coating of coarse, wiry hair, and its flesh is more
tender and juicy than that of the deer. It seldom
enters a timbered country, but seems to delight in
cropping the grass from the elevated swells of the
prairies. When disturbed by the traveler, it
will circle around him with the speed of the wind,
but does not stop until it reaches some prominent
position whence it can survey the country on all sides,
and nothing seems to escape its keen vision. They
will sometimes stand for a long time and look at a
man, provided he does not move or go out of sight;
but if he goes behind a hill with the intention of
passing around and getting nearer to them, he will
never find them again in the same place. I have
often tried the experiment, and invariably found that,
as soon as I went where the antelope could not see
me, he moved off. Their sense of hearing, as well
as vision, is very acute, which renders it difficult
to stalk them. By taking advantage of the cover
afforded in broken ground, the hunter may, by moving
slowly and cautiously over the crests of the irregularities
in the surface, sometimes approach within rifle range.
The antelope possesses a greater degree
of curiosity than any other animal I know of, and
will often approach very near a strange object.
The experienced hunter, taking advantage of this peculiarity,
lies down and secretes himself in the grass, after
which he raises his handkerchief, hand, or foot, so
as to attract the attention of the animal, and thus
often succeeds in beguiling him within shooting distance.
In some valleys near the Rocky Mountains,
where the pasturage is good during the winter season,
they collect in immense herds. The Indians are
in the habit of surrounding them in such localities
and running them with their horses until they tire
them out, when they slay large numbers.
The antelope makes a track much shorter
than the deer, very broad and round at the heel, and
quite sharp at the toe; a little experience renders
it easy to distinguish them.
THE BEAR.
Besides the common black bear of the
Eastern States, several others are found in the mountains
of California, Oregon, Utah, and New Mexico, viz.,
the grizzly, brown, and cinnamon varieties; all have
nearly the same habits, and are hunted in the same
manner.
From all I had heard of the grizzly
bear, I was induced to believe him one of the most
formidable and savage animals in the universe, and
that the man who would deliberately encounter and
kill one of these beasts had performed a signal feat
of courage which entitled him to a lofty position
among the votaries of Nimrod. So firmly had I
become impressed with this conviction, that I should
have been very reluctant to fire upon one had I met
him when alone and on foot. The grizzly bear is
assuredly the monarch of the American forests, and,
so far as physical strength is concerned, he is perhaps
without a rival in the world; but, after some experience
in hunting, my opinions regarding his courage and
his willingness to attack men have very materially
changed.
In passing over the elevated table-lands
lying between the two forks of the Platte River in
1858, I encountered a full-grown female grizzly bear,
with two cubs, very quietly reposing upon the open
prairie, several miles distant from any timber.
This being the first opportunity that had ever occurred
to me for an encounter with the ursine monster, and
being imbued with the most exalted notions of the beast’s
proclivities for offensive warfare, especially when
in the presence of her offspring, it may very justly
be imagined that I was rather more excited than usual.
I, however, determined to make the assault. I
felt the utmost confidence in my horse, as she was
afraid of nothing; and, after arranging every thing
about my saddle and arms in good order, I advanced
to within about eighty yards before I was discovered
by the bear, when she raised upon her haunches and
gave me a scrutinizing examination. I seized
this opportune moment to fire, but missed my aim,
and she started off, followed by her cubs at their
utmost speed. After reloading my rifle, I pursued,
and, on coming again within range, delivered another
shot, which struck the large bear in the fleshy part
of the thigh, whereupon she set up a most distressing
howl and accelerated her pace, leaving her cubs behind.
After loading again I gave the spurs to my horse and
resumed the chase, soon passing the cubs, who were
making the most plaintive cries of distress. They
were heard by the dam, but she gave no other heed
to them than occasionally to halt for an instant,
turn around, sit up on her posteriors, and give
a hasty look back; but, as soon as she saw me following
her, she invariably turned again and redoubled her
speed. I pursued about four miles and fired four
balls into her before I succeeded in bringing her
to the ground, and from the time I first saw her until
her death-wound, notwithstanding I was often very
close upon her heels, she never came to bay or made
the slightest demonstration of resistance. Her
sole purpose seemed to be to make her escape, leaving
her cubs in the most cowardly manner.
Upon three other different occasions
I met the mountain bears, and once the cinnamon species,
which is called the most formidable of all, and in
none of these instances did they exhibit the slightest
indication of anger or resistance, but invariably
ran from me.
Such is my experience with this formidable
monarch of the mountains. It is possible that
if a man came suddenly upon the beast in a thicket,
where it could have no previous warning, he might be
attacked; but it is my opinion that if the bear gets
the wind or sight of a man at any considerable
distance, it will endeavor to get away as soon as
possible. I am so fully impressed with this idea
that I shall hereafter hunt bear with a feeling of
as much security as I would have in hunting the buffalo.
The grizzly, like the black bear,
hybernates in winter, and makes his appearance in
the spring with his claws grown out long and very soft
and tender; he is then poor, and unfit for food.
I have heard a very curious fact stated
by several old mountaineers regarding the mountain
bears, which, of course, I can not vouch for, but
it is given by them with great apparent sincerity and
candor. They assert that no instance has ever
been known of a female bear having been killed in
a state of pregnancy. This singular fact in the
history of the animal seems most inexplicable to me,
unless she remain concealed in her brumal slumber
until after she has been delivered of her cubs.
I was told by an old Delaware Indian
that when the bear has been traveling against the
wind and wishes to lie down, he always turns in an
opposite direction, and goes some distance away from
his first track before making his bed. If an
enemy then comes upon his trail, his keen sense of
smell will apprise him of the danger. The same
Indian mentioned that when a bear had been pursued
and sought shelter in a cave, he had often endeavored
to eject him with smoke, but that the bear would advance
to the mouth of the cave, where the fire was burning,
and put it out with his paws, then retreat into the
cave again. This would indicate that Bruin is
endowed with some glimpses of reason beyond the ordinary
instincts of the brute creation in general, and, indeed,
is capable of discerning the connection between cause
and effect. Notwithstanding the extraordinary
intelligence which this quadruped exhibits upon some
occasions, upon others he shows himself to be one
of the most stupid brutes imaginable. For example,
when he has taken possession of a cavern, and the
courageous hunter enters with a torch and rifle, it
is said he will, instead of forcibly ejecting the
intruder, raise himself upon his haunches and cover
his eyes with his paws, so as to exclude the light,
apparently thinking that in this situation he can
not be seen. The hunter can then approach as close
as he pleases and shoot him down.
THE BIG-HORN.
The big-horn or mountain sheep, which
has a body like the deer, with the head of a sheep,
surmounted by an enormous pair of short, heavy horns,
is found throughout the Rocky Mountains, and resorts
to the most inaccessible peaks and to the wildest
and least-frequented glens. It clambers over
almost perpendicular cliffs with the greatest ease
and celerity, and skips from rock to rock, cropping
the tender herbage that grows upon them.
It has been supposed by some that
this animal leaps down from crag to crag, lighting
upon his horns, as an evidence of which it has been
advanced that the front part of the horns is often
much battered. This I believe to be erroneous,
as it is very common to see horns that have no bruises
upon them.
The old mountaineers say they have
often seen the bucks engaged in desperate encounters
with their huge horns, which, in striking together,
made loud reports. This will account for the marks
sometimes seen upon them.
The flesh of the big-horn, when fat,
is more tender, juicy, and delicious than that of
any other animal I know of, but it is a bon bouche
which will not grace the tables of our city epicures
until a railroad to the Rocky Mountains affords the
means of transporting it to a market a thousand miles
distant from its haunts.
In its habits the mountain sheep greatly
resembles the chamois of Switzerland, and it is hunted
in the same manner. The hunter traverses the
most inaccessible and broken localities, moving along
with great caution, as the least unusual noise causes
them to flit away like a phantom, and they will be
seen no more. The animal is gregarious, but it
is seldom that more than eight or ten are found in
a flock. When not grazing they seek the sheltered
sides of the mountains, and repose among the rocks.