through all the
shaggy undergrowth of the woods go with
tribute to the
small streams, and these again to the larger. The rivers swell, but
there are no devastating floods; for the thick felt of roots and
mosses holds the abounding waters in check, stored in a thousand
thousand fountains. Neither are there any
violent hurricanes here, At
least, I never have heard of any, nor have I come upon their tracks.
Most of the streams are clear and cool always, for their waters are
filtered through deep beds of mosses, and flow beneath shadows all the
way to the sea. Only the streams from the glaciers are turbid and
muddy. On the slopes of the mountains where they rush from their
crystal caves, they carry not only small particles of rock-mud, worn
off the sides and bottoms of the channels of the glaciers, but grains
of sand and pebbles and large boulders tons in weight, rolling them
forward on their way rumbling and bumping to their appointed places at
the foot of steep slopes, to be built into rough bars and beds, while
the smaller material is carried farther and outspread in flats,
perhaps for coming wheat fields and gardens, the finest of it going
out to sea, floating on the tides for weeks and months ere it finds
rest on the bottom.
Snow seldom falls to any great depth on the lowlands, though it comes
in
gloriousabundance on the mountains. And only on the mountains
does the temperature fall much below the freezing point. In the
warmest summer weather a temperature of eighty-five degrees or even
more
occasionally is reached, but not for long at a time, as such heat
is
speedily followed by a
breeze from the sea. The most
charming days
here are days of perfect calm, when all the winds are
holding their
breath and not a leaf stirs. The surface of the Sound shines like a
silver mirror over all its vast
extent, reflecting its lovely islands
and shores; and long sheets of spangles flash and dance in the wake of
every swimming seabird and boat. The sun, looking down on the
tranquil
landscape, seems
conscious of the presence of every living
thing on which he is pouring his blessings, while they in turn, with
perhaps the
exception of man, seem
conscious of the sun as a
benevolent father and stand hushed and waiting.
XVIII
The Forests of Washington
When we force our way into the depths of the forests, following any of
the rivers back to their fountains, we find that the bulk of the woods
is made up of the Douglas
spruce (Pseudotsuga Douglasii), named in
honor of David Douglas, an
enthusiastic botanical
explorer of early
Hudson's Bay times. It is not only a very large tree but a very
beautiful one, with
lively bright-green drooping
foliage, handsome
pendent cones, and a shaft
exquisitely straight and regular. For so
large a tree it is
astonishing how many find
nourishment and space to
grow on any given area. The
magnificent shafts push their spires into
the sky close together with as regular a growth as that of a well-tilled
field of grain. And no ground has been better tilled for the
growth of trees than that on which these forests are growing. For it
has been
thoroughly ploughed and rolled by the
mighty glaciers from
the mountains, and sifted and mellowed and outspread in beds hundreds
of feet in depth by the broad streams that issued from their fronts at
the time of their recession, after they had long covered all the land.
The largest tree of this
species that I have myself measured was
nearly twelve feet in
diameter at a
height of five feet from the
ground, and, as near as I could make out under the circumstances,
about three hundred feet in length. It stood near the head of the
Sound not far from Olympia. I have seen a few others, both near the
coast and thirty or forty miles back in the
interior, that were from
eight to ten feet in
diameter, measured above their bulging insteps;
and many from six to seven feet. I have heard of some that were said
to be three hundred and twenty-five feet in
height and fifteen feet in
diameter, but none that I measured were so large, though it is not at
all
unlikely that such
colossal giants do exist where conditions of
soil and
exposure are surpassingly
favorable. The average size of all
the trees of this
species found up to an
elevation on the mountain
slopes of, say, two thousand feet above sea level,
taking into account
only what may be called
mature trees two hundred and fifty to five
hundred years of age, is perhaps, at a vague guess, not more than a
height of one hundred and seventy-five or two hundred feet and a
diameter of three feet; though, of course, throughout the richest
sections the size is much greater.
In
portion" target="_blank" title="n.比率 vt.使成比例">
proportion to its weight when dry, the
timber from this tree is
perhaps stronger than that of any other conifer in the country. It is
tough and
durable and
admirably adapted in every way for shipbuilding,
piles, and heavy
timbers in general. But its
hardness and liability
to warp render it much
inferior to white or sugar pine for fine work.
In the
lumber markets of California it is known as "Oregon pine" and
is used almost
exclusively for spars,
bridgetimbers, heavy planking,
and the
framework of houses.
The same
species extends
northward in
abundance through British
Columbia and
southward through the coast and middle regions of Oregon
and California. It is also a common tree in the canyons and hollows
of the Wahsatch Mountains in Utah, where it is called "red pine" and
on
portions of the Rocky Mountains and some of the short ranges of the
Great Basin. Along the coast of California it keeps company with the
redwood
wherever it can find a
favorableopening. On the
westernslope of the Sierra, with the yellow pine and
incense cedar, it forms
a pretty well-defined belt at a
height of from three thousand to six
thousand feet above the sea, and extends into the San Gabriel and San
Bernardino Mountains in Southern California. But, though widely
dis
tributed, it is only in these cool, moist northlands that it
reaches its finest development, tall, straight,
elastic, and free from
limbs to an
immenseheight, growing down to tide water, where ships of
the largest size may lie close
alongside and load at the least
possible cost.
Growing with the Douglas we find the white
spruce, or "Sitka pine," as
it is sometimes called. This also is a very beautiful and majestic
tree, frequently attaining a
height of two hundred feet or more and a
diameter of five or six feet. It is very
abundant in southeastern
Alaska, forming the greater part of the best forests there. Here it
is found
mostly around the sides of beaver-dam and other meadows and
on the borders of the streams, especially where the ground is low.
One tree that I saw felled at the head of the Hop-Ranch meadows on the
upper Snoqualmie River, though far from being the largest I have seen,
measured a hundred and eighty feet in length and four and a half in
diameter, and was two hundred and fifty-seven years of age.
In habit and general appearance it resembles the Douglas
spruce, but
it is somewhat less
slender and the needles grow close together all
around the branchlets and are so stiff and sharp-pointed on the
younger branches that they cannot well be handled without gloves. The
timber is tough, close-grained, white, and looks more like pine than
any other of the
spruces. It splits
freely, makes excellent shingles
and in general use in house-building takes the place of pine. I have
seen logs of this
species a hundred feet long and two feet in
diameterat the upper end. It was named in honor of the old Scotch botanist
Archibald Menzies, who came to this coast with Vancouver in 1792[23].
The beautiful
hemlockspruce with its warm yellow-green
foliage is
also common in some
portions of these woods. It is tall and
slenderand
exceedinglygraceful in habit before old age comes on, but the
timber is
inferior and is seldom used for any other than the roughest
work, such as wharf-building.
The Western arbor-vitae[24] (Thuja gigantea) grows to a size truly
gigantic on low rich ground. Specimens ten feet in
diameter and a
hundred and forty feet high are not at all rare. Some that I have
heard of are said to be fifteen and even eighteen feet thick. Clad in
rich,
glossy plumes, with gray lichens covering their smooth, tapering
boles, perfect trees of this
species are truly noble objects and well
worthy the place they hold in these
glorious forests. It is of this
tree that the Indians make their fine canoes.
Of the other conifers that are so happy as to have place here, there