Everybody loves wild woods and flowers more or less. Seeds of all
these Oregon evergreens and of many of the flowering shrubs and plants
have been sent to almost every country under the sun, and they are now
growing in carefully tended parks and gardens. And now that the ways
of approach are open one would expect to find these woods and gardens
full of admiring visitors reveling in their beauty like bees in a
clover field. Yet few care to visit them. A
portion of the bark of
one of the California trees, the mere dead skin, excited the wondering
attention of thousands when it was set up in the Crystal Palace in
London, as did also a few peeled spars, the shafts of mere saplings
from Oregon or Washington. Could one of these great silver firs or
sugar pines three hundred feet high have been transplanted entire to
that
exhibition, how
enthusiastic would have been the praises accorded
to it!
Nevertheless, the
countless hosts waving at home beneath their own
sky, beside their own noble rivers and mountains, and
standing on a
flower-enameled
carpet of mosses thousands of square miles in extent,
attract but little attention. Most travelers content themselves with
what they may chance to see from car windows, hotel verandas, or the
deck of a
steamer on the lower Columbia--clinging to the battered
highways like drowning sailors to a life raft. When an
excursion into
the woods is proposed, all sorts of exaggerated or
imaginary dangers
are conjured up, filling the kindly, soothing
wilderness with colds,
fevers, Indians, bears, snakes, bugs, impassable rivers, and jungles
of brush, to which is always added quick and sure
starvation.
As to
starvation, the woods are full of food, and a supply of bread
may easily be carried for habit's sake, and replenished now and then
at outlying farms and camps. The Indians are seldom found in the
woods, being confined
mainly to the banks of the rivers, where the
greater part of their food is
obtained. Moreover, the most of them
have been either buried since the settlement of the country or
civilized into
comparativeinnocence, industry, or
harmless laziness.
There are bears in the woods, but not in such numbers nor of such
unspeakable
ferocity as town-dwellers imagine, nor do bears spend
their lives in going about the country like the devil, seeking whom
they may
devour. Oregon bears, like most others, have no
liking for
man either as meat or as society; and while some may be curious at
times to see what manner of creature he is, most of them have learned
to shun people as
deadly enemies. They have been poisoned, trapped,
and shot at until they have become shy, and it is no longer easy to
make their
acquaintance. Indeed, since the settlement of the country,
notwith
standing far the greater
portion is yet wild, it is difficult
to find any of the larger animals that once were numerous and
comparatively familiar, such as the bear, wolf,
panther, lynx, deer,
elk, and
antelope.
As early as 1843, while the settlers numbered only a few thousands,
and before any sort of government had been organized, they came
together and held what they called "a wolf meeting," at which a
committee was appointed to
devise means for the
destruction of wild
animals
destructive to tame ones, which committee in due time begged
to report as follows:--
It being admitted by all that bears, wolves,
panthers, etc., are
destructive to the useful animals owned by the settlers of this
colony, your committee would
submit the following resolutions as
the sense of this meeting, by which the
community may be governed
in carrying on a
defensive and
destructive war on all such
animals:--
Resolved, 1st.--That we deem it
expedient for the
community to take
immediate measures for the
destruction of all wolves,
panthers, and
bears, and such other animals as are known to be
destructive to
cattle, horses, sheep and hogs.
2d.--That a
bounty of fifty cents be paid for the
destruction of a
small wolf, $3.00 for a large wolf, $1.50 for a lynx, $2.00 for a
bear and $5.00 for a
panther.
This center of
destruction was in the Willamette Valley. But for many
years prior to the
beginning of the operations of the "Wolf
Organization" the Hudson's Bay Company had established forts and
trading stations over all the country,
wherever fur-gathering Indians
could be found, and vast numbers of these animals were killed. Their
destruction has since gone on at an accelerated rate from year to year
as the settlements have been
extended, so that in some cases it is
difficult to
obtainspecimens enough for the use of naturalists. But
even before any of these settlements were made, and before the coming
of the Hudson's Bay Company, there was very little danger to be met in
passing through this
wilderness as far as animals were
concerned, and
but little of any kind as compared with the dangers encountered in
crowded houses and streets.
When Lewis and Clark made their famous trip across the
continent in
1804-05, when all the Rocky Mountain region was wild, as well as the
Pacific Slope, they did not lose a single man by wild animals, nor,
though frequently attacked, especially by the grizzlies of the Rocky
Mountains, were any of them wounded
seriously. Captain Clark was
bitten on the hand by a wolf as he lay asleep; that was one bite among
more than a hundred men while traveling through eight to nine thousand
miles of
savagewilderness. They could hardly have been so fortunate
had they stayed at home. They wintered on the edge of the Clatsop
plains, on the south side of the Columbia River near its mouth. In
the woods on that side they found game
abundant, especially elk, and
with the aid of the friendly Indians who furnished
salmon and
"wapatoo" (the tubers of Sagittaria variabilis), they were in no
danger of starving.
But on the return trip in the spring they reached the base of the
Rocky Mountains when the range was yet too heavily snow-laden to be
crossed with horses. Therefore they had to wait some weeks. This was
at the head of one of the northern branches of the Snake River, and,
their
scanty stock of provisions being nearly exhausted, the whole
party was compelled to live
mostly on bears and dogs; deer,
antelope,
and elk, usually
abundant, were now
scarce because the region had been
closely hunted over by the Indians before their arrival.
Lewis and Clark had killed a number of bears and saved the skins of
the more interesting
specimens, and the variations they found in size,
color of the hair, etc., made great difficulty in classification.
Wishing to get the opinion of the Chopumish Indians, near one of whose
villages they were encamped,
concerning the various
species, the
explorers unpacked their bundles and spread out for
examination all
the skins they had taken. The Indian
hunters immediately classed the
white, the deep and the pale
grizzly red, the
grizzly dark-brown--in
short, all those with the extremities of the hair of a white or frosty
color without regard to the color of the ground or foil--under the
name of hoh-host. The Indians
assured them that these were all of the
same
species as the white bear, that they associated together, had
longer nails than the others, and never climbed trees. On the other
hand, the black skins, those that were black with white hairs
intermixed or with a white breast, the uniform bay, the brown, and the
light reddish-brown, were classed under the name yack-ah, and were
said to
resemble each other in being smaller and having shorter nails,
in climbing trees, and being so little
vicious that they could be
pursued with safety.
Lewis and Clark came to the
conclusion that all those with white-tipped
hair found by them in the basin of the Columbia belonged to the
same
species as the grizzlies of the upper Missouri; and that the
black and reddish-brown, etc., of the Rocky Mountains belong to a
second
speciesequallydistinct from the
grizzly and the black bear of
the Pacific Coast and the East, which never vary in color.
As much as possible should be made by the ordinary traveler of these
descriptions, for he will be likely to see very little of any
speciesfor himself; not that bears no longer exist here, but because, being
shy, they keep out of the way. In order to see them and learn their
habits one must go
softly and alone, lingering long in the fringing
woods on the banks of the
salmon streams, and in the small openings in
the midst of thickets where berries are most
abundant.
As for rattlesnakes, the other grand dread of town dwellers when they
leave
beaten roads, there are two, or perhaps three,
species of them
in Oregon. But they are
nowhere to be found in great numbers. In
western Oregon they are hardly known at all. In all my walks in the
Oregon forest I have never met a single
specimen, though a few have
been seen at long intervals.
When the country was first settled by the whites, fifty years ago, the