miles, even from far Alaska. Then they too grow rich and spend their
money on red cloth and trinkets. About a thousand Indians are
required as pickers at the Snoqualmie ranch alone, and a
lively and
merry picture they make in the field, arrayed in bright, showy
calicoes, lowering the rustling vine pillars with
incessant song-singing
and fun. Still more
striking are their queer camps on the
edges of the fields or over on the river bank, with the firelight
shining on their wild jolly faces. But woe to the ranch should fire-water get there!
But the chief attractions here are not found in the hops, but in
trout-fishing and bear-hunting, and in the two fine falls on the
river. Formerly the trip from Seattle was a hard one, over corduroy
roads; now it is reached in a few hours by rail along the shores of
Lake Washington and Lake Squak, through a fine
sample section of the
forest and past the brow of the main Snoqualmie Fall. From the hotel
at the ranch village the road to the fall leads down the right bank of
the river through the
magnificent maple woods I have mentioned
elsewhere, and fine views of the fall may be had on that side, both
from above and below. It is
situated on the main river, where it
plunges over a sheer
precipice, about two hundred and forty feet high,
in leaving the level meadows of the ancient lake basin. In a general
way it resembles the
well-known Nevada Fall in Yosemite, having the
same twisted appearance at the top and the free
plunge in numberless
comet-shaped masses into a deep pool seventy-five or eighty yards in
diameter. The pool is of
considerable depth, as is shown by the
radiating well-beaten foam and mist, which is of a beautiful rose
color at times, of
exquisitefineness of tone, and by the heavy waves
that lash the rocks in front of it.
Though to a Californian the
height of this fall would not seem great,
the
volume of water is heavy, and all the surroundings are delightful.
The maple forest, of itself worth a long journey, the beauty of the
river-reaches above and below, and the views down the
valley afar over
the
mighty forests, with all its lovely trimmings of ferns and
flowers, make this one of the most interesting falls I have ever seen.
The upper fall is about seventy-five feet high, with bouncing rapids
at head and foot, set in a
romantic dell thatched with dripping mosses
and ferns and embowered in dense evergreens and
blooming bushes, the
distance to it from the upper end of the meadows being about eight
miles. The road leads through
majestic woods with ferns ten feet high
beneath some of the thickets, and across a gravelly plain deforested
by fire many years ago. Orange lilies are
plentiful, and handsome
shining mats of the kinnikinic, sprinkled with bright
scarlet berries.
From a place called "Hunt's," at the end of the wagon road, a trail
leads through lush, dripping woods (never dry) to Thuja and Mertens,
Menzies, and Douglas
spruces. The ground is covered with the best
moss-work of the moist lands of the north, made up
mostly of the
various
species of hypnum, with some liverworts, marchantia,
jungermannia, etc., in broad sheets and bosses, where never a dust
particle floated, and where all the flowers, fresh with mist and
spray, are wetter than water lilies. The pool at the foot of the fall
is a place surpassingly lovely to look at, with the
enthusiastic rush
and song of the falls, the
majestic trees
overhead leaning over the
brink like listeners eager to catch every word of the white refreshing
waters, the
delicate maidenhairs and aspleniums with fronds outspread
gathering the
rainbow sprays, and the myriads of hooded mosses, every
cup fresh and shining.
XX
An Ascent of Mount Rainier
Ambitious climbers, seeking adventures and opportunities to test their
strength and skill,
occasionally attempt to
penetrate the wilderness
on the west side of the Sound, and push on to the
summit of Mount
Olympus. But the grandest
excursion of all to be make hereabouts is
to Mount Rainier, to climb to the top of its icy crown. The mountain
is very high[29], fourteen thousand four hundred feet, and laden with
glaciers that are
terribly roughened and interrupted by crevasses and
ice cliffs. Only good climbers should attempt to gain the
summit, led
by a guide of proved nerve and
endurance. A good trail has been cut
through the woods to the base of the mountain on the north; but the
summit of the mountain never has been reached from this side, though
many brave attempts have been made upon it.
Last summer I gained the
summit from the south side, in a day and a
half from the timberline, without encountering any
desperate obstacles
that could not in some way be passed in good weather. I was
accompanied by Keith, the artist, Professor Ingraham, and five
ambitious young climbers from Seattle. We were led by the veteran
mountaineer and guide Van Trump, of Yelm, who many years before guided
General Stevens in his
memorableascent, and later Mr. Bailey, of
Oakland. With a cumbersome
abundance of campstools and blankets we
set out from Seattle, traveling by rail as far as Yelm Prairie, on the
Tacoma and Oregon road. Here we made our first camp and arranged with
Mr. Longmire, a farmer in the
neighborhood, for pack and saddle
animals. The noble King Mountain was in full view from here,
glorifying the bright, sunny day with his presence, rising in godlike
majesty over the woods, with the
magnificentprairie as a foreground.
The distance to the mountain from Yelm in a straight line is perhaps
fifty miles; but by the mule and yellowjacket trail we had to follow
it is a hundred miles. For,
standing" target="_blank" title="prep.&conj.虽然;还是">
notwithstanding a
portion of this trail
runs in the air, where the wasps work hardest, it is far from being an
air line as
commonly understood.
By night of the third day we reached the Soda Springs on the right
bank of the Nisqually, which goes roaring by, gray with mud, gravel,
and boulders from the caves of the
glaciers of Rainier, now close at
hand. The distance from the Soda Springs to the Camp of the Clouds is
about ten miles. The first part of the way lies up the Nisqually
Canyon, the bottom of which is flat in some places and the walls very
high and precipitous, like those of the Yosemite Valley. The upper
part of the
canyon is still occupied by one of the Nisqually
glaciers,
from which this branch of the river draws its source, issuing from a
cave in the gray, rock-strewn snout. About a mile below the
glacierwe had to ford the river, which caused some
anxiety, for the current
is very rapid and carried forward large boulders as well as lighter
material, while its
savage roar is bewildering.
At this point we left the
canyon, climbing out of it by a steep zigzag
up the old
lateral moraine of the
glacier, which was deposited when
the present
glacier flowed past at this
height, and is about eight
hundred feet high. It is now covered with a
superb growth of Picea
amabilis[30]; so also is the
correspondingportion of the right
lateral. From the top of the moraine, still ascending, we passed for
a mile or two through a forest of mixed growth,
mainly silver fir,
Patton
spruce, and mountain pine, and then came to the
charming park
region, at an
elevation of about five thousand feet above sea level.
Here the vast
continuous woods at length begin to give way under the
dominion of
climate, though still at this
height retaining their
beauty and giving no sign of
stress of storm,
sweepingupward in belts
of varying width,
composedmainly of one
species of fir, sharp and
spiry in form, leaving smooth,
spacious parks, with here and there
separate groups of trees
standing out in the midst of the openings
like islands in a lake. Every one of these parks, great and small, is
a garden filled knee-deep with fresh, lovely flowers of every hue, the
most
luxuriant and the most extravagantly beautiful of all the
alpinegardens I ever
beheld in all my mountain-top wanderings.
We arrived at the Cloud Camp at noon, but no clouds were in sight,
save a few gauzy
ornamental wreaths adrift in the
sunshine. Out of
the forest at last there stood the mountain,
wholly unveiled, awful in
bulk and
majesty, filling all the view like a separate, new-born
world, yet
withal so fine and so beautiful it might well fire the
dullest
observer to
desperateenthusiasm. Long we gazed in silent
admiration, buried in tall daisies and anemones by the side of a
snowbank. Higher we could not go with the animals and find food for
them and wood for our own campfires, for just beyond this lies the
region of ice, with only here and there an open spot on the ridges in
the midst of the ice, with dwarf
alpine plants, such as saxifrages and
drabas, which reach far up between the
glaciers, and low mats of the
beautiful bryanthus, while back of us were the gardens and
abundanceof everything that heart could wish. Here we lay all the afternoon,
considering the lilies and the lines of the mountains with reference
to a way to the
summit.