[Illustration]




The Mountains of California

by John Muir

Contents

 I THE SIERRA NEVADA
 II THE GLACIERS
 III THE SNOW
 IV A NEAR VIEW OF THE HIGH SIERRA
 V THE PASSES
 VI THE GLACIER LAKES
 VII THE GLACIER MEADOWS
 VIII THE FORESTS
 IX THE DOUGLAS SQUIRREL
 X A WIND-STORM IN THE FORESTS
 XI THE RIVER FLOODS
 XII SIERRA THUNDER-STORMS
 XIII THE WATER-OUZEL
 XIV THE WILD SHEEP
 XV IN THE SIERRA FOOT-HILLS
 XVI THE BEE-PASTURES

[Illustration: HOOFED LOCUSTS.]

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

 HOOFED LOCUSTS
 MOUNT TAMALPAIS—NORTH OF THE GOLDEN GATE
 MAP OF THE SIERRA NEVADA
 MOUNT SHASTA
 MOUNT HOOD
 MAP OF THE GLACIER COUNTRY
 MOUNT RAINIER; NORTH PUYALLUP GLACIER FROM EAGLE CLIFF
 KOLANA ROCK, HETCH-HETCHY VALLEY
 GENERAL GRANT TREE, GENERAL GRANT NATIONAL PARK
 MAP OF THE YOSEMITE VALLEY
 MAP OF THE YOSEMITE VALLEY, SHOWING PRESENT RESERVATION BOUNDARY
 RANCHERIA FALLS, HETCH-HETCHY VALLEY
 VIEW OF THE MONO PLAIN FROM THE FOOT OF BLOODY CAÑON
 LAKE TENAYA, ONE OF THE YOSEMITE FOUNTAINS
 THE DEATH OF A LAKE
 SHADOW LAKE (MERCED LAKE), YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
 VERNAL FALL, YOSEMITE VALLEY
 LAKE STARR KING
 VIEW IN THE SIERRA FOREST
 EDGE OF THE TIMBER LINE ON MOUNT SHASTA
 VIEW IN THE MAIN PINE BELT OF THE SIERRA FOREST
 NUT PINE
 THE GROVE FORM
 LOWER MARGIN OF THE MAIN PINE BELT, SHOWING OPEN CHARACTER OF WOODS
 SUGAR PINE ON EXPOSED RIDGE
 YOUNG SUGAR PINE BEGINNING TO BEAR CONES
 FOREST OF SEQUOIA, SUGAR PINE, AND DOUGLAS SPRUCE
 PINUS PONDEROSA
 SILVER PINE 210 FEET HIGH
 INCENSE CEDAR IN ITS PRIME
 FOREST OF GRAND SILVER FIRS
 VIEW OF FOREST OF THE MAGNIFICENT SILVER FIR
 SILVER-FIR FOREST GROWING ON MORAINES OF THE HOFFMAN AND TENAYA GLACIERS
 SEQUOIA GIGANTEA. VIEW IN GENERAL GRANT NATIONAL PARK
 MUIR GORGE, TUOLUMNE CAÑON—YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
 VIEW IN TUOLUMNE CAÑON, YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
 JUNIPER, OR RED CEDAR
 STORM-BEATEN JUNIPERS
 STORM-BEATEN HEMLOCK SPRUCE, FORTY FEET HIGH
 GROUP OF ERECT DWARF PINES
 A DWARF PINE
 OAK GROWING AMONG YELLOW PINES
 PATE VALLEY, SHOWING THE OAKS. TUOLUMNE CAÑON, YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
 TRACK OF DOUGLAS SQUIRREL ONCE DOWN AND UP A PINE-TREE WHEN SHOWING OFF TO A SPECTATOR
 SEEDS, WINGS, AND SCALE OF SUGAR PINE
 TRYING THE BOW
 A WIND-STORM IN THE CALIFORNIA FORESTS
 YELLOW PINE AND LIBOCEDRUS
 BRIDAL VEIL FALLS, YOSEMITE VALLEY
 WATER-OUZEL DIVING AND FEEDING
 ONE OF THE LATE-SUMMER FEEDING-GROUNDS OF THE OUZEL
 OUZEL ENTERING A WHITE CURRENT
 THE OUZEL AT HOME
 YOSEMITE BIRDS, SNOW-COUND AT THE FOOT OF INDIAN CAÑON
 SNOW-BOUND ON MOUNT SHASTA
 HEAD OF THE MERINO RAM
 HEAD OF ROCKY MOUNTAIN WILD SHEEP
 CROSSING A CAÑON STREAM
 WILD SHEEP JUMPING OVER A PRECIPICE
 INDIANS HUNTING WILD SHEEP
 A BEE-RANCH IN LOWER CALIFORNIA
 WILD BEE GARDEN
 IN THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY.—WHITE SAGE
 A BEE-RANCH ON A SPUR OF THE SAN GABRIEL RANGE.—CARDINAL FLOWER
 WILD BUCKWHEAT.—A BEE-RANCH IN THE WILDERNESS
 A BEE-PASTURE ON THE MORAINE DESERT.—SPANISH BAYONET
 A BEE-KEEPER’S CABIN




CHAPTER I
THE SIERRA NEVADA


Go where you may within the bounds of California, mountains are ever in
sight, charming and glorifying every landscape. Yet so simple and
massive is the topography of the State in general views, that the main
central portion displays only one valley, and two chains of mountains
which seem almost perfectly regular in trend and height: the Coast
Range on the west side, the Sierra Nevada on the east. These two ranges
coming together in curves on the north and south inclose a magnificent
basin, with a level floor more than 400 miles long, and from 35 to 60
miles wide. This is the grand Central Valley of California, the waters
of which have only one outlet to the sea through the Golden Gate. But
with this general simplicity of features there is great complexity of
hidden detail. The Coast Range, rising as a grand green barrier against
the ocean, from 2000 to 8000 feet high, is composed of innumerable
forest-crowned spurs, ridges, and rolling hill-waves which inclose a
multitude of smaller valleys; some looking out through long,
forest-lined vistas to the sea; others, with but few trees, to the
Central Valley; while a thousand others yet smaller are embosomed and
concealed in mild, round-browed hills, each, with its own climate,
soil, and productions.

Making your way through the mazes of the Coast Range to the summit of
any of the inner peaks or passes opposite San Francisco, in the clear
springtime, the grandest and most telling of all California landscapes
is outspread before you. At your feet lies the great Central Valley
glowing golden in the sunshine, extending north and south farther than
the eye can reach, one smooth, flowery, lake-like bed of fertile soil.
Along its eastern margin rises the mighty Sierra, miles in height,
reposing like a smooth, cumulous cloud in the sunny sky, and so
gloriously colored, and so luminous, it seems to be not clothed with
light, but wholly composed of it, like the wall of some celestial city.
Along the top, and extending a good way down, you see a pale,
pearl-gray belt of snow; and below it a belt of blue and dark purple,
marking the extension of the forests; and along the base of the range a
broad belt of rose-purple and yellow, where lie the minor’s gold-fields
and the foot-hill gardens. All these colored belts blending smoothly
make a wall of light ineffably fine, and as beautiful as a rainbow, yet
firm as adamant.

When I first enjoyed this superb view, one glowing April day, from the
summit of the Pacheco Pass, the Central Valley, but little trampled or
plowed as yet, was one furred, rich sheet of golden compositae, and the
luminous wall of the mountains shone in all its glory. Then it seemed
to me the Sierra should be called not the Nevada, or Snowy Range, but
the Range of Light. And after ten years spent in the heart of it,
rejoicing and wondering, bathing in its glorious floods of light,
seeing the sunbursts of morning among the icy peaks, the noonday
radiance on the trees and rocks and snow, the flush of the alpenglow,
and a thousand dashing waterfalls with their marvelous abundance of
irised spray, it still seems to me above all others the Range of Light,
the most divinely beautiful of all the mountain-chains I have ever
seen.

The Sierra is about 500 miles long, 70 miles wide, and from 7000 to
nearly 15,000 feet high. In general views no mark of man is visible on
it, nor anything to suggest the richness of the life it cherishes, or
the depth and grandeur of its sculpture. None of its magnificent
forest-crowned ridges rises much above the general level to publish its
wealth. No great valley or lake is seen, or river, or group of
well-marked features of any kind, standing out in distinct pictures.
Even the summit-peaks, so clear and high in the sky, seem comparatively
smooth and featureless. Nevertheless, glaciers are still at work in the
shadows of the peaks, and thousands of lakes and meadows shine and
bloom beneath them, and the whole range is furrowed with cañons to a
depth of from 2000 to 5000 feet, in which once flowed majestic
glaciers, and in which now flow and sing a band of beautiful rivers.

Though of such stupendous depth, these famous cañons are not raw,
gloomy, jagged-walled gorges, savage and inaccessible. With rough
passages here and there they still make delightful pathways for the
mountaineer, conducting from the fertile lowlands to the highest icy
fountains, as a kind of mountain streets full of charming life and
light, graded and sculptured by the ancient glaciers, and presenting,
throughout all their courses, a rich variety of novel and attractive
scenery, the most attractive that has yet been discovered in the
mountain-ranges of the world.

In many places, especially in the middle region of the western flank of
the range, the main cañons widen into spacious valleys or parks,
diversified like artificial landscape-gardens, with charming groves and
meadows, and thickets of blooming bushes, while the lofty, retiring
walls, infinitely varied in form and sculpture, are fringed with ferns,
flowering-plants of many species, oaks, and evergreens, which find
anchorage on a thousand narrow steps and benches; while the whole is
enlivened and made glorious with rejoicing streams that come dancing
and foaming over the sunny brows of the cliffs to join the shining
river that flows in tranquil beauty down the middle of each one of
them.

The walls of these park valleys of the Yosemite kind are made up of
rocks mountains in size, partly separated from each other by narrow
gorges and side-cañons; and they are so sheer in front, and so
compactly built together on a level floor, that, comprehensively seen,
the parks they inclose look like immense halls or temples lighted from
above. Every rock seems to glow with life. Some lean back in majestic
repose; others, absolutely sheer, or nearly so, for thousands of feet,
advance their brows in thoughtful attitudes beyond their companions,
giving welcome to storms and calms alike, seemingly conscious yet
heedless of everything going on about them, awful in stern majesty,
types of permanence, yet associated with beauty of the frailest and
most fleeting forms; their feet set in pine-groves and gay emerald
meadows, their brows in the sky; bathed in light, bathed in floods of
singing water, while snow-clouds, avalanches, and the winds shine and
surge and wreathe about them as the years go by, as if into these
mountain mansions Nature had taken pains to gather her choicest
treasures to draw her lovers into close and confiding communion with
her.

[Illustration: MOUNT TAMALPAIS—NORTH OF THE GOLDEN GATE.]

Here, too, in the middle region of deepest cañons are the grandest
forest-trees, the Sequoia, king of conifers, the noble Sugar and Yellow
Pines, Douglas Spruce, Libocedrus, and the Silver Firs, each a giant of
its kind, assembled together in one and the same forest, surpassing all
other coniferous forests in the world, both in the number of its
species and in the size and beauty of its trees. The winds flow in
melody through their colossal spires, and they are vocal everywhere
with the songs of birds and running water. Miles of fragrant ceanothus
and manzanita bushes bloom beneath them, and lily gardens and meadows,
and damp, ferny glens in endless variety of fragrance and color,
compelling the admiration of every observer. Sweeping on over ridge and
valley, these noble trees extend a continuous belt from end to end of
the range, only slightly interrupted by sheer-walled cañons at
intervals of about fifteen and twenty miles. Here the great burly brown
bears delight to roam, harmonizing with the brown boles of the trees
beneath which they feed. Deer, also, dwell here, and find food and
shelter in the ceanothus tangles, with a multitude of smaller people.
Above this region of giants, the trees grow smaller until the utmost
limit of the timber line is reached on the stormy mountain-slopes at a
height of from ten to twelve thousand feet above the sea, where the
Dwarf Pine is so lowly and hard beset by storms and heavy snow, it is
pressed into flat tangles, over the tops of which we may easily walk.
Below the main forest belt the trees likewise diminish in size, frost
and burning drought repressing and blasting alike.

[Illustration: MAP OF THE SIERRA NEVADA]

The rose-purple zone along the base of the range comprehends nearly all
the famous gold region of California. And here it was that miners from
every country under the sun assembled in a wild, torrent-like rush to
seek their fortunes. On the banks of every river, ravine, and gully
they have left their marks. Every gravel- and boulder-bed has been
desperately riddled over and over again. But in this region the pick
and shovel, once wielded with savage enthusiasm, have been laid away,
and only quartz-mining is now being carried on to any considerable
extent. The zone in general is made up of low, tawny, waving
foot-hills, roughened here and there with brush and trees, and
outcropping masses of slate, colored gray and red with lichens. The
smaller masses of slate, rising abruptly from the dry, grassy sod in
leaning slabs, look like ancient tombstones in a deserted
burying-ground. In early spring, say from February to April, the whole
of this foot-hill belt is a paradise of bees and flowers. Refreshing
rains then fall freely, birds are busy building their nests, and the
sunshine is balmy and delightful. But by the end of May the soil,
plants, and sky seem to have been baked in an oven. Most of the plants
crumble to dust beneath the foot, and the ground is full of cracks;
while the thirsty traveler gazes with eager longing through the burning
glare to the snowy summits looming like hazy clouds in the distance.

The trees, mostly _Quercus Douglasii_ and _Pinus Sabiniana_, thirty to
forty feet high, with thin, pale-green foliage, stand far apart and
cast but little shade. Lizards glide about on the rocks enjoying a
constitution that no drought can dry, and ants in amazing numbers,
whose tiny sparks of life seem to burn the brighter with the increasing
heat, ramble industriously in long trains in search of food. Crows,
ravens, magpies—friends in distress—gather on the ground beneath the
best shade-trees, panting with drooping wings and bills wide open,
scarce a note from any of them during the midday hours. Quails, too,
seek the shade during the heat of the day about tepid pools in the
channels of the larger mid-river streams. Rabbits scurry from thicket
to thicket among the ceanothus bushes, and occasionally a long-eared
hare is seen cantering gracefully across the wider openings. The nights
are calm and dewless during the summer, and a thousand voices proclaim
the abundance of life, notwithstanding the desolating effect of dry
sunshine on the plants and larger animals. The hylas make a
delightfully pure and tranquil music after sunset; and coyotes, the
little, despised dogs of the wilderness, brave, hardy fellows, looking
like withered wisps of hay, bark in chorus for hours. Mining-towns,
most of them dead, and a few living ones with bright bits of
cultivation about them, occur at long intervals along the belt, and
cottages covered with climbing roses, in the midst of orange and peach
orchards, and sweet-scented hay-fields in fertile flats where water for
irrigation may be had. But they are mostly far apart, and make scarce
any mark in general views.

Every winter the High Sierra and the middle forest region get snow in
glorious abundance, and even the foot-hills are at times whitened. Then
all the range looks like a vast beveled wall of purest marble. The
rough places are then made smooth, the death and decay of the year is
covered gently and kindly, and the ground seems as clean as the sky.
And though silent in its flight from the clouds, and when it is taking
its place on rock, or tree, or grassy meadow, how soon the gentle snow
finds a voice! Slipping from the heights, gathering in avalanches, it
booms and roars like thunder, and makes a glorious show as it sweeps
down the mountain-side, arrayed in long, silken streamers and
wreathing, swirling films of crystal dust.

The north half of the range is mostly covered with floods of lava, and
dotted with volcanoes and craters, some of them recent and perfect in
form, others in various stages of decay. The south half is composed of
granite nearly from base to summit, while a considerable number of
peaks, in the middle of the range, are capped with metamorphic slates,
among which are Mounts Dana and Gibbs to the east of Yosemite Valley.
Mount Whitney, the culminating point of the range near its southern
extremity, lifts its helmet-shaped crest to a height of nearly 14,700
feet. Mount Shasta, a colossal volcanic cone, rises to a height of
14,440 feet at the northern extremity, and forms a noble landmark for
all the surrounding region within a radius of a hundred miles. Residual
masses of volcanic rocks occur throughout most of the granitic southern
portion also, and a considerable number of old volcanoes on the flanks,
especially along the eastern base of the range near Mono Lake and
southward. But it is only to the northward that the entire range, from
base to summit, is covered with lava.

From the summit of Mount Whitney only granite is seen. Innumerable
peaks and spires but little lower than its own storm-beaten crags rise
in groups like forest-trees, in full view, segregated by cañons of
tremendous depth and ruggedness. On Shasta nearly every feature in the
vast view speaks of the old volcanic fires. Far to the northward, in
Oregon, the icy volcanoes of Mount Pitt and the Three Sisters rise
above the dark evergreen woods. Southward innumerable smaller craters
and cones are distributed along the axis of the range and on each
flank. Of these, Lassen’s Butte is the highest, being nearly 11,000
feet above sea-level. Miles of its flanks are reeking and bubbling with
hot springs, many of them so boisterous and sulphurous they seem over
ready to become spouting geysers like those of the Yellowstone.

The Cinder Cone near marks the most recent volcanic eruption in the
Sierra. It is a symmetrical truncated cone about 700 feet high, covered
with gray cinders and ashes, and has a regular unchanged crater on its
summit, in which a few small Two-leaved Pines are growing. These show
that the age of the cone is not less than eighty years. It stands
between two lakes, which a short time ago were one. Before the cone was
built, a flood of rough vesicular lava was poured into the lake,
cutting it in two, and, overflowing its banks, the fiery flood advanced
into the pine-woods, overwhelming the trees in its way, the charred
ends of some of which may still be seen projecting from beneath the
snout of the lava-stream where it came to rest. Later still there was
an eruption of ashes and loose obsidian cinders, probably from the same
vent, which, besides forming the Cinder Cone, scattered a heavy shower
over the surrounding woods for miles to a depth of from six inches to
several feet.

The history of this last Sierra eruption is also preserved in the
traditions of the Pitt River Indians. They tell of a fearful time of
darkness, when the sky was black with ashes and smoke that threatened
every living thing with death, and that when at length the sun appeared
once more it was red like blood.

Less recent craters in great numbers roughen the adjacent region; some
of them with lakes in their throats, others overgrown with trees and
flowers, Nature in these old hearths and firesides having literally
given beauty for ashes. On the northwest side of Mount Shasta there is
a subordinate cone about 3000 feet below the summit, which, has been
active subsequent to the breaking up of the main ice-cap that once
covered the mountain, as is shown by its comparatively unwasted crater
and the streams of unglaciated lava radiating from it. The main summit
is about a mile and a half in diameter, bounded by small crumbling
peaks and ridges, among which we seek in vain for the outlines of the
ancient crater.

These ruinous masses, and the deep glacial grooves that flute the sides
of the mountain, show that it has been considerably lowered and wasted
by ice; how much we have no sure means of knowing. Just below the
extreme summit hot sulphurous gases and vapor issue from irregular
fissures, mixed with spray derived from melting snow, the last feeble
expression of the mighty force that built the mountain. Not in one
great convulsion was Shasta given birth. The crags of the summit and
the sections exposed by the glaciers down the sides display enough of
its internal framework to prove that comparatively long periods of
quiescence intervened between many distinct eruptions, during which the
cooling lavas ceased to flow, and became permanent additions to the
bulk of the growing mountain. With alternate haste and deliberation
eruption succeeded eruption till the old volcano surpassed even its
present sublime height.

[Illustration: MOUNT SHASTA]

Standing on the icy top of this, the grandest of all the fire-mountains
of the Sierra, we can hardly fail to look forward to its next eruption.
Gardens, vineyards, homes have been planted confidingly on the flanks
of volcanoes which, after remaining steadfast for ages, have suddenly
blazed into violent action, and poured forth overwhelming floods of
fire. It is known that more than a thousand years of cool calm have
intervened between violent eruptions. Like gigantic geysers spouting
molten rock instead of water, volcanoes work and rest, and we have no
sure means of knowing whether they are dead when still, or only
sleeping.

Along the western base of the range a telling series of sedimentary
rocks containing the early history of the Sierra are now being studied.
But leaving for the present these first chapters, we see that only a
very short geological time ago, just before the coming on of that
winter of winters called the glacial period, a vast deluge of molten
rocks poured from many a chasm and crater on the flanks and summit of
the range, filling lake basins and river channels, and obliterating
nearly every existing feature on the northern portion. At length these
all-destroying floods ceased to flow. But while the great volcanic
cones built up along the axis still burned and smoked, the whole Sierra
passed under the domain of ice and snow. Then over the bald,
featureless, fire-blackened mountains, glaciers began to crawl,
covering them from the summits to the sea with a mantle of ice; and
then with infinite deliberation the work went on of sculpturing the
range anew. These mighty agents of erosion, halting never through
unnumbered centuries, crushed and ground the flinty lavas and granites
beneath their crystal folds, wasting and building until in the fullness
of time the Sierra was born again, brought to light nearly as we behold
it today, with glaciers and snow-crushed pines at the top of the range,
wheat-fields and orange-groves at the foot of it.

This change from icy darkness and death to life and beauty was slow, as
we count time, and is still going on, north and south, over all the
world wherever glaciers exist, whether in the form of distinct rivers,
as in Switzerland, Norway, the mountains of Asia, and the Pacific
Coast; or in continuous mantling folds, as in portions of Alaska,
Greenland, Franz-Joseph-Land, Nova Zembla, Spitzbergen, and the lands
about the South Pole. But in no country, as far as I know, may these
majestic changes be studied to better advantage than in the plains and
mountains of California.

Toward the close of the glacial period, when the snow-clouds became
less fertile and the melting waste of sunshine became greater, the
lower folds of the ice-sheet in California, discharging fleets of
icebergs into the sea, began to shallow and recede from the lowlands,
and then move slowly up the flanks of the Sierra in compliance with the
changes of climate. The great white mantle on the mountains broke up
into a series of glaciers more or less distinct and river-like, with
many tributaries, and these again were melted and divided into still
smaller glaciers, until now only a few of the smallest residual topmost
branches of the grand system exist on the cool slopes of the summit
peaks.

Plants and animals, biding their time, closely followed the retiring
ice, bestowing quick and joyous animation on the new-born landscapes.
Pine-trees marched up the sun-warmed moraines in long, hopeful files,
taking the ground and establishing themselves as soon as it was ready
for them; brown-spiked sedges fringed the shores of the newborn lakes;
young rivers roared in the abandoned channels of the glaciers; flowers
bloomed around the feet of the great burnished domes,—while with quick
fertility mellow beds of soil, settling and warming, offered food to
multitudes of Nature’s waiting children, great and small, animals as
well as plants; mice, squirrels, marmots, deer, bears, elephants, etc.
The ground burst into bloom with magical rapidity, and the young
forests into bird-song: life in every form warming and sweetening and
growing richer as the years passed away over the mighty Sierra so
lately suggestive of death and consummate desolation only.

It is hard without long and loving study to realize the magnitude of
the work done on these mountains during the last glacial period by
glaciers, which are only streams of closely compacted snow-crystals.
Careful study of the phenomena presented goes to show that the
pre-glacial condition of the range was comparatively simple: one vast
wave of stone in which a thousand mountains, domes, cañons, ridges,
etc., lay concealed. And in the development of these Nature chose for a
tool not the earthquake or lightning to rend and split asunder, not the
stormy torrent or eroding rain, but the tender snow-flowers noiselessly
falling through unnumbered centuries, the offspring of the sun and sea.
Laboring harmoniously in united strength they crushed and ground and
wore away the rocks in their march, making vast beds of soil, and at
the same time developed and fashioned the landscapes into the
delightful variety of hill and dale and lordly mountain that mortals
call beauty. Perhaps more than a mile in average depth has the range
been thus degraded during the last glacial period,—a quantity of
mechanical work almost inconceivably great. And our admiration must be
excited again and again as we toil and study and learn that this vast
job of rockwork, so far-reaching in its influences, was done by agents
so fragile and small as are these flowers of the mountain clouds.
Strong only by force of numbers, they carried away entire mountains,
particle by particle, block by block, and cast them into the sea;
sculptured, fashioned, modeled all the range, and developed its
predestined beauty. All these new Sierra landscapes were evidently
predestined, for the physical structure of the rocks on which the
features of the scenery depend was acquired while they lay at least a
mile deep below the pre-glacial surface. And it was while these
features were taking form in the depths of the range, the particles of
the rocks marching to their appointed places in the dark with reference
to the coming beauty, that the particles of icy vapor in the sky
marching to the same music assembled to bring them to the light. Then,
after their grand task was done, these bands of snow-flowers, these
mighty glaciers, were melted and removed as if of no more importance
than dew destined to last but an hour. Few, however, of Nature’s agents
have left monuments so noble and enduring as they. The great granite
domes a mile high, the cañons as deep, the noble peaks, the Yosemite
valleys, these, and indeed nearly all other features of the Sierra
scenery, are glacier monuments.

Contemplating the works of these flowers of the sky, one may easily
fancy them endowed with life: messengers sent down to work in the
mountain mines on errands of divine love. Silently flying through the
darkened air, swirling, glinting, to their appointed places, they seem
to have taken counsel together, saying, “Come, we are feeble; let us
help one another. We are many, and together we will be strong. Marching
in close, deep ranks, let us roll away the stones from these mountain
sepulchers, and set the landscapes free. Let us uncover these
clustering domes. Here let us carve a lake basin; there, a Yosemite
Valley; here, a channel for a river with fluted steps and brows for the
plunge of songful cataracts. Yonder let us spread broad sheets of soil,
that man and beast may be fed; and here pile trains of boulders for
pines and giant Sequoias. Here make ground for a meadow; there, for a
garden and grove, making it smooth and fine for small daisies and
violets and beds of heathy bryanthus, spicing it well with crystals,
garnet feldspar, and zircon.” Thus and so on it has oftentimes seemed
to me sang and planned and labored the hearty snow-flower crusaders;
and nothing that I can write can possibly exaggerate the grandeur and
beauty of their work. Like morning mist they have vanished in sunshine,
all save the few small companies that still linger on the coolest
mountainsides, and, as residual glaciers, are still busily at work
completing the last of the lake basins, the last beds of soil, and the
sculpture of some of the highest peaks.

[Illustration: MOUNT HOOD]




CHAPTER II
THE GLACIERS


Of the small residual glaciers mentioned in the preceding chapter, I
have found sixty-five in that portion of the range lying between
latitude 36° 30′ and 39°. They occur singly or in small groups on the
north sides of the peaks of the High Sierra, sheltered beneath broad
frosty shadows, in amphitheaters of their own making, where the snow,
shooting down from the surrounding heights in avalanches, is most
abundant. Over two thirds of the entire number lie between latitude 37°
and 38°, and form the highest fountains of the San Joaquin, Merced,
Tuolumne, and Owen’s rivers.

The glaciers of Switzerland, like those of the Sierra, are mere wasting
remnants of mighty ice-floods that once filled the great valleys and
poured into the sea. So, also, are those of Norway, Asia, and South
America. Even the grand continuous mantles of ice that still cover
Greenland, Spitsbergen, Nova Zembla, Franz-Joseph-Land, parts of
Alaska, and the south polar region are shallowing and shrinking. Every
glacier in the world is smaller than it once was. All the world is
growing warmer, or the crop of snow-flowers is diminishing. But in
contemplating the condition of the glaciers of the world, we must bear
in mind while trying to account for the changes going on that the same
sunshine that wastes them builds them. Every glacier records the
expenditure of an enormous amount of sun-heat in lifting the vapor for
the snow of which it is made from the ocean to the mountains, as
Tyndall strikingly shows.

The number of glaciers in the Alps, according to the Schlagintweit
brothers, is 1100, of which 100 may be regarded as primary, and the
total area of ice, snow, and _névé_ is estimated at 1177 square miles,
or an average for each glacier of little more than one square mile. On
the same authority, the average height above sea-level at which they
melt is about 7414 feet. The Grindelwald glacier descends below 4000
feet, and one of the Mont Blanc glaciers reaches nearly as low a point.
One of the largest of the Himalaya glaciers on the head waters of the
Ganges does not, according to Captain Hodgson, descend below 12,914
feet. The largest of the Sierra glaciers on Mount Shasta descends to
within 9500 feet of the level of the sea, which, as far as I have
observed, is the lowest point reached by any glacier within the bounds
of California, the average height of all being not far from 11,000
feet.

The changes that have taken place in the glacial conditions of the
Sierra from the time of greatest extension is well illustrated by the
series of glaciers of every size and form extending along the mountains
of the coast to Alaska. A general exploration of this instructive
region shows that to the north of California, through Oregon and
Washington, groups of active glaciers still exist on all the high
volcanic cones of the Cascade Range,—Mount Pitt, the Three Sisters,
Mounts Jefferson, Hood, St. Helens, Adams, Rainier, Baker, and
others,—some of them of considerable size, though none of them approach
the sea. Of these mountains Rainier, in Washington, is the highest and
iciest. Its dome-like summit, between 14,000 and 15,000 feet high, is
capped with ice, and eight glaciers, seven to twelve miles long,
radiate from it as a center, and form the sources of the principal
streams of the State. The lowest-descending of this fine group flows
through beautiful forests to within 3500 feet of the sea-level, and
sends forth a river laden with glacier mud and sand. On through British
Columbia and southeastern Alaska the broad, sustained mountain-chain,
extending along the coast, is generally glacier-bearing. The upper
branches of nearly all the main cañons and fiords are occupied by
glaciers, which gradually increase in size, and descend lower until the
high region between Mount Fairweather and Mount St. Elias is reached,
where a considerable number discharge into the waters of the ocean.
This is preëminently the ice-land of Alaska and of the entire Pacific
Coast.

[Illustration: MAP OF THE GLACIER COUNTRY]

Northward from here the glaciers gradually diminish in size and
thickness, and melt at higher levels. In Prince William Sound and
Cook’s Inlet many fine glaciers are displayed, pouring from the
surrounding mountains; but to the north of latitude 62° few, if any,
glaciers remain, the ground being mostly low and the snowfall light.
Between latitude 56° and 60° there are probably more than 5000
glaciers, not counting the smallest. Hundreds of the largest size
descend through the forests to the level of the sea, or near it, though
as far as my own observations have reached, after a pretty thorough
examination of the region, not more than twenty-five discharge icebergs
into the sea. All the long high-walled fiords into which these great
glaciers of the first class flow are of course crowded with icebergs of
every conceivable form, which are detached with thundering noise at
intervals of a few minutes from an imposing ice-wall that is thrust
forward into deep water. But these Pacific Coast icebergs are small as
compared with those of Greenland and the Antarctic region, and only a
few of them escape from the intricate system of channels, with which
this portion of the coast is fringed, into the open sea. Nearly all of
them are swashed and drifted by wind and tide back and forth in the
fiords until finally melted by the ocean water, the sunshine, the warm
winds, and the copious rains of summer. Only one glacier on the coast,
observed by Prof. Russell, discharges its bergs directly into the open
sea, at Icy Cape, opposite Mount St. Elias. The southernmost of the
glaciers that reach the sea occupies a narrow, picturesque fiord about
twenty miles to the northwest of the mouth of the Stikeen River, in
latitude 56° 50′. The fiord is called by the natives “Hutli,” or
Thunder Bay, from the noise made by the discharge of the icebergs.
About one degree farther north there are four of these complete
glaciers, discharging at the heads of the long arms of Holkam Bay. At
the head of the Tahkoo Inlet, still farther north, there is one; and at
the head and around the sides of Glacier Bay, trending in a general
northerly direction from Cross Sound in latitude 58° to 59°, there are
seven of these complete glaciers pouring bergs into the bay and its
branches, and keeping up an eternal thundering. The largest of this
group, the Muir, has upward of 200 tributaries, and a width below the
confluence of the main tributaries of about twenty-five miles. Between
the west side of this icy bay and the ocean all the ground, high and
low, excepting the peaks of the Fairweather Range, is covered with a
mantle of ice from 1000 to probably 3000 feet thick, which discharges
by many distinct mouths.

[Illustration: MOUNT RAINIER; NORTH PUYALLUP GLACIER FROM EAGLE CLIFF]

This fragmentary ice-sheet, and the immense glaciers about Mount St.
Elias, together with the multitude of separate river-like glaciers that
load the slopes of the coast mountains, evidently once formed part of a
continuous ice-sheet that flowed over all the region hereabouts, and
only a comparatively short time ago extended as far southward as the
mouth of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, probably farther. All the islands
of the Alexander Archipelago, as well as the headlands and promontories
of the mainland, display telling traces of this great mantle that are
still fresh and unmistakable. They all have the forms of the greatest
strength with reference to the action of a vast rigid press of
oversweeping ice from the north and northwest, and their surfaces have
a smooth, rounded, overrubbed appearance, generally free from angles.
The intricate labyrinth of canals, channels, straits, passages, sounds,
narrows, etc. between the islands, and extending into the mainland, of
course manifest in their forms and trends and general characteristics
the same subordination to the grinding action of universal glaciation
as to their origin, and differ from the islands and banks of the fiords
only in being portions of the pre-glacial margin of the continent more
deeply eroded, and therefore covered by the ocean waters which flowed
into them as the ice was melted out of them. The formation and
extension of fiords in this manner is still going on, and may be
witnessed in many places in Glacier Bay, Yakutat Bay, and adjacent
regions. That the domain of the sea is being extended over the land by
the wearing away of its shores, is well known, but in these icy regions
of Alaska, and even as far south as Vancouver Island, the coast rocks
have been so short a time exposed to wave-action they are but little
wasted as yet. In these regions the extension of the sea effected by
its own action in post-glacial time is scarcely appreciable as compared
with that effected by ice-action.

Traces of the vanished glaciers made during the period of greater
extension abound on the Sierra as far south as latitude 36°. Even the
polished rock surfaces, the most evanescent of glacial records, are
still found in a wonderfully perfect state of preservation on the upper
half of the middle portion of the range, and form the most striking of
all the glacial phenomena. They occur in large irregular patches in the
summit and middle regions, and though they have been subjected to the
action of the weather with its corroding storms for thousands of years,
their mechanical excellence is such that they still reflect the
sunbeams like glass, and attract the attention of every observer. The
attention of the mountaineer is seldom arrested by moraines, however
regular and high they may be, or by cañons, however deep, or by rocks,
however noble in form and sculpture; but he stoops and rubs his hands
admiringly on the shining surfaces and trios hard to account for their
mysterious smoothness. He has seen the snow descending in avalanches,
but concludes this cannot be the work of snow, for he finds it where no
avalanches occur. Nor can water have done it, for he sees this
smoothness glowing on the sides and tops of the highest domes. Only the
winds of all the agents he knows seem capable of flowing in the
directions indicated by the scoring. Indians, usually so little curious
about geological phenomena, have come to me occasionally and asked me,
“What makeum the ground so smooth at Lake Tenaya?” Even horses and dogs
gaze wonderingly at the strange brightness of the ground, and smell the
polished spaces and place their feet cautiously on them when they come
to them for the first time, as if afraid of sinking. The most perfect
of the polished pavements and walls lie at an elevation of from 7000 to
9000 feet above the sea, where the rock is compact silicious granite.
Small dim patches may be found as low as 3000 feet on the driest and
most enduring portions of sheer walls with a southern exposure, and on
compact swelling bosses partially protected from rain by a covering of
large boulders. On the north half of the range the striated and
polished surfaces are less common, not only because this part of the
chain is lower, but because the surface rocks are chiefly porous lavas
subject to comparatively rapid waste. The ancient moraines also, though
well preserved on most of the south half of the range, are nearly
obliterated to the northward, but then material is found scattered and
disintegrated.

A similar blurred condition of the superficial records of glacial
action obtains throughout most of Oregon, Washington, British Columbia,
and Alaska, due in great part to the action of excessive moisture. Even
in southeastern Alaska, where the most extensive glaciers on the
continent are, the more evanescent of the traces of their former
greater extension, though comparatively recent, are more obscure than
those of the ancient California glaciers whore the climate is drier and
the rocks more resisting.

These general views of the glaciers of the Pacific Coast will enable my
readers to see something of the changes that have taken place in
California, and will throw light on the residual glaciers of the High
Sierra.

Prior to the autumn of 1871 the glaciers of the Sierra were unknown. In
October of that year I discovered the Black Mountain Glacier in a
shadowy amphitheater between Black and Rod Mountains, two of the peaks
of the Merced group. This group is the highest portion of a spur that
straggles out from the main axis of the range in the direction of
Yosemite Valley. At the time of this interesting discovery I was
exploring the _névé_ amphitheaters of the group, and tracing the
courses of the ancient glaciers that once poured from its ample
fountains through the Illilouette Basin and the Yosemite Valley, not
expecting to find any active glaciers so far south in the land of
sunshine.

Beginning on the northwestern extremity of the group, I explored the
chief tributary basins in succession, their moraines, roches
moutonnées, and splendid glacier pavements, taking them in regular
succession without any reference to the time consumed in their study.
The monuments of the tributary that poured its ice from between Red and
Black Mountains I found to be the most interesting of them all; and
when I saw its magnificent moraines extending in majestic curves from
the spacious amphitheater between the mountains, I was exhilarated with
the work that lay before me. It was one of the golden days of the
Sierra Indian summer, when the rich sunshine glorifies every landscape
however rocky and cold, and suggests anything rather than glaciers. The
path of the vanished glacier was warm now, and shone in many places as
if washed with silver. The tall pines growing on the moraines stood
transfigured in the glowing light, the poplar groves on the levels of
the basin were masses of orange-yellow, and the late-blooming
goldenrods added gold to gold. Pushing on over my rosy glacial highway,
I passed lake after lake set in solid basins of granite, and many a
thicket and meadow watered by a stream that issues from the
amphitheater and links the lakes together; now wading through plushy
bogs knee-deep in yellow and purple sphagnum; now passing over bare
rock. The main lateral moraines that bounded the view on either hand
are from 100 to nearly 200 feet high, and about as regular as
artificial embankments, and covered with a superb growth of Silver Fir
and Pine. But this garden and forest luxuriance was speedily left
behind. The trees were dwarfed as I ascended; patches of the alpine
bryanthus and cassiope began to appear, and arctic willows pressed into
flat carpets by the winter snow. The lakelets, which a few miles down
the valley were so richly embroidered with flowery meadows, had here,
at an elevation of 10,000 feet, only small brown mats of carex, leaving
bare rocks around more than half their shores. Yet amid this alpine
suppression the Mountain Pine bravely tossed his storm-beaten branches
on the ledges and buttresses of Red Mountain, some specimens being over
100 feet high, and 24 feet in circumference, seemingly as fresh and
vigorous as the giants of the lower zones.

Evening came on just as I got fairly within the portal of the main
amphitheater. It is about a mile wide, and a little less than two miles
long. The crumbling spurs and battlements of Red Mountain bound it on
the north, the somber, rudely sculptured precipices of Black Mountain
on the south, and a hacked, splintery _col_, curving around from
mountain to mountain, shuts it in on the east.

I chose a camping-ground on the brink of one of the lakes where a
thicket of Hemlock Spruce sheltered me from the night wind. Then, after
making a tin-cupful of tea, I sat by my camp-fire reflecting on the
grandeur and significance of the glacial records I had seen. As the
night advanced the mighty rock walls of my mountain mansion seemed to
come nearer, while the starry sky in glorious brightness stretched
across like a ceiling from wall to wall, and fitted closely down into
all the spiky irregularities of the summits. Then, after a long
fireside rest and a glance at my note-book, I cut a few leafy branches
for a bed, and fell into the clear, death-like sleep of the tired
mountaineer.

Early next morning I set out to trace the grand old glacier that had
done so much for the beauty of the Yosemite region back to its farthest
fountains, enjoying the charm that every explorer feels in Nature’s
untrodden wildernesses. The voices of the mountains were still asleep.
The wind scarce stirred the pine-needles. The sun was up, but it was
yet too cold for the birds and the few burrowing animals that dwell
here. Only the stream, cascading from pool to pool, seemed to be wholly
awake. Yet the spirit of the opening day called to action. The sunbeams
came streaming gloriously through the jagged openings of the _col_,
glancing on the burnished pavements and lighting the silvery lakes,
while every sun-touched rock burned white on its edges like melting
iron in a furnace. Passing round the north shore of my camp lake I
followed the central stream past many cascades from lakelet to lakelet.
The scenery became more rigidly arctic, the Dwarf Pines and Hemlocks
disappeared, and the stream was bordered with icicles. As the sun rose
higher rocks were loosened on shattered portions of the cliffs, and
came down in rattling avalanches, echoing wildly from crag to crag.

The main lateral moraines that extend from the jaws of the amphitheater
into the Illilouette Basin are continued in straggling masses along the
walls of the amphitheater, while separate boulders, hundreds of tons in
weight, are left stranded here and there out in the middle of the
channel. Here, also, I observed a series of small terminal moraines
ranged along the south wall of the amphitheater, corresponding in size
and form with the shadows cast by the highest portions. The meaning of
this correspondence between moraines and shadows was afterward made
plain. Tracing the stream back to the last of its chain of lakelets, I
noticed a deposit of fine gray mud on the bottom except where the force
of the entering current had prevented its settling. It looked like the
mud worn from a grindstone, and I at once suspected its glacial origin,
for the stream that was carrying it came gurgling out of the base of a
raw moraine that seemed in process of formation. Not a plant or
weather-stain was visible on its rough, unsettled surface. It is from
60 to over 100 feet high, and plunges forward at an angle of 38°.
Cautiously picking my way, I gained the top of the moraine and was
delighted to see a small but well characterized glacier swooping down
from the gloomy precipices of Black Mountain in a finely graduated
curve to the moraine on which I stood. The compact ice appeared on all
the lower portions of the glacier, though gray with dirt and stones
embedded in it. Farther up the ice disappeared beneath coarse
granulated snow. The surface of the glacier was further characterized
by dirt bands and the outcropping edges of the blue veins, showing the
laminated structure of the ice. The uppermost crevasse, or
“bergschrund,” where the _névé_ was attached to the mountain, was from
12 to 14 feet wide, and was bridged in a few places by the remains of
snow avalanches. Creeping along the edge of the schrund, holding on
with benumbed fingers, I discovered clear sections where the bedded
structure was beautifully revealed. The surface snow, though sprinkled
with stones shot down from the cliffs, was in some places almost pure,
gradually becoming crystalline and changing to whitish porous ice of
different shades of color, and this again changing at a depth of 20 or
30 feet to blue ice, some of the ribbon-like bands of which were nearly
pure, and blended with the paler bands in the most gradual and delicate
manner imaginable. A series of rugged zigzags enabled me to make my way
down into the weird under-world of the crevasse. Its chambered hollows
were hung with a multitude of clustered icicles, amid which pale,
subdued light pulsed and shimmered with indescribable loveliness. Water
dripped and tinkled overhead, and from far below came strange, solemn
murmurings from currents that were feeling their way through veins and
fissures in the dark. The chambers of a glacier are perfectly
enchanting, notwithstanding one feels out of place in their frosty
beauty. I was soon cold in my shirt-sleeves, and the leaning wall
threatened to engulf me; yet it was hard to leave the delicious music
of the water and the lovely light. Coming again to the surface, I
noticed boulders of every size on their journeys to the terminal
moraine—journeys of more than a hundred years, without a single stop,
night or day, winter or summer.

The sun gave birth to a network of sweet-voiced rills that ran
gracefully down the glacier, curling and swirling in their shining
channels, and cutting clear sections through the porous surface-ice
into the solid blue, where the structure of the glacier was beautifully
illustrated.

The series of small terminal moraines which I had observed in the
morning, along the south wall of the amphitheater, correspond in every
way with the moraine of this glacier, and their distribution with
reference to shadows was now understood. When the climatic changes came
on that caused the melting and retreat of the main glacier that filled
the amphitheater, a series of residual glaciers were left in the cliff
shadows, under the protection of which they lingered, until they formed
the moraines we are studying. Then, as the snow became still less
abundant, all of them vanished in succession, except the one just
described; and the cause of its longer life is sufficiently apparent in
the greater area of snow-basin it drains, and its more perfect
protection from wasting sunshine. How much longer this little glacier
will last depends, of course, on the amount of snow it receives from
year to year, as compared with melting waste.

After this discovery, I made excursions over all the High Sierra,
pushing my explorations summer after summer, and discovered that what
at first sight in the distance looked like extensive snow-fields, wore
in great part glaciers, busily at work completing the sculpture of the
summit-peaks so grandly blocked out by their giant predecessors.

On August 21, I set a series of stakes in the Maclure Glacier, near
Mount Lyell, and found its rate of motion to be little more than an
inch a day in the middle, showing a great contrast to the Muir Glacier
in Alaska, which, near the front, flows at a rate of from five to ten
feet in twenty-four hours. Mount Shasta has three glaciers, but Mount
Whitney, although it is the highest mountain in the range, does not now
cherish a single glacier. Small patches of lasting snow and ice occur
on its northern slopes, but they are shallow, and present no well
marked evidence of glacial motion. Its sides, however, are scored and
polished in many places by the action of its ancient glaciers that
flowed east and west as tributaries of the great glaciers that once
filled the valleys of the Kern and Owen’s rivers.




CHAPTER III
THE SNOW


The first snow that whitens the Sierra, usually falls about the end of
October or early in November, to a depth of a few inches, after months
of the most charming Indian summer weather imaginable. But in a few
days, this light covering mostly melts from the slopes exposed to the
sun and causes but little apprehension on the part of mountaineers who
may be lingering among the high peaks at this time. The first general
winter storm that yields snow that is to form a lasting portion of the
season’s supply, seldom breaks on the mountains before the end of
November. Then, warned by the sky, cautions mountaineers, together with
the wild sheep, deer, and most of the birds and bears, make haste to
the lowlands or foot-hills; and burrowing marmots, mountain beavers,
wood-rats, and such people go into winter quarters, some of them not
again to see the light of day until the general awakening and
resurrection of the spring in June or July. The first heavy fall is
usually from about two to four feet in depth. Then, with intervals of
splendid sunshine, storm succeeds storm, heaping snow on snow, until
thirty to fifty feet has fallen. But on account of its settling and
compacting, and the almost constant waste from melting and evaporation,
the average depth actually found at any time seldom exceeds ten feet in
the forest region, or fifteen feet along the slopes of the summit
peaks.

Even during the coldest weather evaporation never wholly ceases, and
the sunshine that abounds between the storms is sufficiently powerful
to melt the surface more or less through all the winter months. Waste
from melting also goes on to some extent on the bottom from heat stored
up in the rocks, and given off slowly to the snow in contact with them,
as is shown by the rising of the streams on all the higher regions
after the first snowfall, and their steady sustained flow all winter.

The greater portion of the snow deposited around the lofty summits of
the range falls in small crisp flakes and broken crystals, or, when
accompanied by strong winds and low temperature, the crystals, instead
of being locked together in their fall to form tufted flakes, are
beaten and broken into meal and fine dust. But down in the forest
region the greater portion comes gently to the ground, light and
feathery, some of the flakes in mild weather being nearly an inch in
diameter, and it is evenly distributed and kept from drifting to any
great extent by the shelter afforded by the large trees. Every tree
during the progress of gentle storms is loaded with, fairy bloom at the
coldest and darkest time of year, bending the branches, and hushing
every singing needle. But as soon as the storm is over, and the sun
shines, the snow at once begins to shift and settle and fall from the
branches in miniature avalanches, and the white forest soon becomes
green again. The snow on the ground also settles and thaws every bright
day, and freezes at night, until it becomes coarsely granulated, and
loses every trace of its rayed crystalline structure, and then a man
may walk firmly over its frozen surface as if on ice. The forest region
up to an elevation of 7000 feet is usually in great part free from snow
in June, but at this time the higher regions are still heavy-laden, and
are not touched by spring weather to any considerable extent before the
middle or end of July.

One of the most striking effects of the snow on the mountains is the
burial of the rivers and small lakes.

As the snow fa’s in the river
A moment white, then lost forever,


sang Burns, in illustrating the fleeting character of human pleasure.
The first snowflakes that fall into the Sierra rivers vanish thus
suddenly; but in great storms, when the temperature is low, the
abundance of the snow at length chills the water nearly to the
freezing-point, and then, of course, it ceases to melt and consume the
snow so suddenly. The falling flakes and crystals form, cloud-like
masses of blue sludge, which are swept forward with the current and
carried down to warmer climates many miles distant, while some are
lodged against logs and rocks and projecting points of the banks, and
last for days, piled high above the level of the water, and show white
again, instead of being at once “lost forever,” while the rivers
themselves are at length lost for months during the snowy period. The
snow is first built out from the banks in bossy, over-curling drifts,
compacting and cementing until the streams are spanned. They then flow
in the dark beneath a continuous covering across the snowy zone, which
is about thirty miles wide. All the Sierra rivers and their tributaries
in these high regions are thus lost every winter, as if another glacial
period had come on. Not a drop of running water is to be seen excepting
at a few points where large falls occur, though the rush and rumble of
the heavier currents may still be heard. Toward spring, when the
weather is warm during the day and frosty at night, repeated thawing
and freezing and new layers of snow render the bridging-masses dense
and firm, so that one may safely walk across the streams, or even lead
a horse across them without danger of falling through. In June the
thinnest parts of the winter ceiling, and those most exposed to
sunshine, begin to give way, forming dark, rugged-edged, pit-like
sinks, at the bottom of which the rushing water may be seen. At the end
of June only here and there may the mountaineer find a secure
snow-bridge. The most lasting of the winter bridges, thawing from below
as well as from above, because of warm currents of air passing through
the tunnels, are strikingly arched and sculptured; and by the
occasional freezing of the oozing, dripping water of the ceiling they
become brightly and picturesquely icy. In some of the reaches, where
there is a free margin, we may walk through them. Small skylights
appearing here and there, these tunnels are not very dark. The roaring
river fills all the arching way with impressively loud reverberating
music, which is sweetened at times by the ouzel, a bird that is not
afraid to go wherever a stream may go, and to sing wherever a stream
sings.

All the small alpine pools and lakelets are in like manner obliterated
from the winter landscapes, either by being first frozen and then
covered by snow, or by being filled in by avalanches. The first
avalanche of the season shot into a lake basin may perhaps find the
surface frozen. Then there is a grand crashing of breaking ice and
dashing of waves mingled with the low, deep booming of the avalanche.
Detached masses of the invading snow, mixed with fragments of ice,
drift about in sludgy, island-like heaps, while the main body of it
forms a talus with its base wholly or in part resting on the bottom of
the basin, as controlled by its depth and the size of the avalanche.
The next avalanche, of course, encroaches still farther, and so on with
each in succession until the entire basin may be filled and its water
sponged up or displaced. This huge mass of sludge, more or less mixed
with sand, stones, and perhaps timber, is frozen to a considerable
depth, and much sun-heat is required to thaw it. Some of these
unfortunate lakelets are not clear of ice and snow until near the end
of summer. Others are never quite free, opening only on the side
opposite the entrance of the avalanches. Some show only a narrow
crescent of water lying between the shore and sheer bluffs of icy
compacted snow, masses of which breaking off float in front like
icebergs in a miniature Arctic Ocean, while the avalanche heaps leaning
back against the mountains look like small glaciers. The frontal cliffs
are in some instances quite picturesque, and with the berg-dotted
waters in front of them lighted with sunshine are exceedingly
beautiful. It often happens that while one side of a lake basin is
hopelessly snow-buried and frozen, the other, enjoying sunshine, is
adorned with beautiful flower-gardens. Some of the smaller lakes are
extinguished in an instant by a heavy avalanche either of rocks or
snow. The rolling, sliding, ponderous mass entering on one side sweeps
across the bottom and up the opposite side, displacing the water and
even scraping the basin clean, and shoving the accumulated rocks and
sediments up the farther bank and taking full possession. The dislodged
water is in part absorbed, but most of it is sent around the front of
the avalanche and down the channel of the outlet, roaring and hurrying
as if frightened and glad to escape.

SNOW-BANNERS

The most magnificent storm phenomenon I ever saw, surpassing in showy
grandeur the most imposing effects of clouds, floods, or avalanches,
was the peaks of the High Sierra, back of Yosemite Valley, decorated
with snow-banners. Many of the starry snow-flowers, out of which these
banners are made, fall before they are ripe, while most of those that
do attain perfect development as six-rayed crystals glint and chafe
against one another in their fall through the frosty air, and are
broken into fragments. This dry fragmentary snow is still further
prepared for the formation of banners by the action of the wind. For,
instead of finding rest at once, like the snow which falls into the
tranquil depths of the forests, it is rolled over and over, beaten
against rock-ridges, and swirled in pits and hollows, like boulders,
pebbles, and sand in the pot-holes of a river, until finally the
delicate angles of the crystals are worn off, and the whole mass is
reduced to dust. And whenever storm-winds find this prepared snow-dust
in a loose condition on exposed slopes, where there is a free upward
sweep to leeward, it is tossed back into the sky, and borne onward from
peak to peak in the form of banners or cloudy drifts, according to the
velocity of the wind and the conformation of the slopes up or around
which it is driven. While thus flying through the air, a small portion
makes good its escape, and remains in the sky as vapor. But far the
greater part, after being driven into the sky again and again, is at
length locked fast in bossy drifts, or in the wombs of glaciers, some
of it to remain silent and rigid for centuries before it is finally
melted and sent singing down the mountainsides to the sea.

Yet, notwithstanding the abundance of winter snow-dust in the
mountains, and the frequency of high winds, and the length of time the
dust remains loose and exposed to their action, the occurrence of
well-formed banners is, for causes we shall hereafter note,
comparatively rare. I have seen only one display of this kind that
seemed in every way perfect. This was in the winter of 1873, when the
snow-laden summits were swept by a wild “norther.” I happened at the
time to be wintering in Yosemite Valley, that sublime Sierra temple
where every day one may see the grandest sights. Yet even here the wild
gala-day of the north wind seemed surpassingly glorious. I was awakened
in the morning by the rocking of my cabin and the beating of pine-burs
on the roof. Detached torrents and avalanches from the main wind-flood
overhead were rushing wildly down the narrow side cañons, and over the
precipitous walls, with loud resounding roar, rousing the pines to
enthusiastic action, and making the whole valley vibrate as though it
were an instrument being played.

But afar on the lofty exposed peaks of the range standing so high in
the sky, the storm was expressing itself in still grander characters,
which I was soon to see in all their glory. I had long been anxious to
study some points in the structure of the ice-cone that is formed every
winter at the foot of the upper Yosemite fall, but the blinding spray
by which it is invested had hitherto prevented me from making a
sufficiently near approach. This morning the entire body of the fall
was torn into gauzy shreds, and blown horizontally along the face of
the cliff, leaving the cone dry; and while making my way to the top of
an overlooking ledge to seize so favorable an opportunity to examine
the interior of the cone, the peaks of the Merced group came in sight
over the shoulder of the South Dome, each waving a resplendent banner
against the blue sky, as regular in form, and as firm in texture, as if
woven of fine silk. So rare and splendid a phenomenon, of course,
overbore all other considerations, and I at once let the ice-cone go,
and began to force my way out of the valley to some dome or ridge
sufficiently lofty to command a general view of the main summits,
feeling assured that I should find them bannered still more gloriously;
nor was I in the least disappointed. Indian Cañon, through which I
climbed, was choked with snow that had been shot down in avalanches
from the high cliffs on either side, rendering the ascent difficult;
but inspired by the roaring storm, the tedious wallowing brought no
fatigue, and in four hours I gained the top of a ridge above the
valley, 8000 feet high. And there in bold relief, like a clear
painting, appeared a most imposing scene. Innumerable peaks, black and
sharp, rose grandly into the dark blue sky, their bases set in solid
white, their sides streaked and splashed with snow, like ocean rocks
with foam; and from every summit, all free and unconfused, was
streaming a beautiful silky silvery banner, from half a mile to a mile
in length, slender at the point of attachment, then widening gradually
as it extended from the peak until it was about 1000 or 1500 feet in
breadth, as near as I could estimate. The cluster of peaks called the
“Crown of the Sierra,” at the head of the Merced and Tuolumne
rivers,—Mounts Dana, Gibbs, Conness, Lyell, Maclure, Ritter, with their
nameless compeers,—each had its own refulgent banner, waving with a
clearly visible motion in the sunglow, and there was not a single cloud
in the sky to mar their simple grandeur. Fancy yourself standing on
this Yosemite ridge looking eastward. You notice a strange garish
glitter in the air. The gale drives wildly overhead with a fierce,
tempestuous roar, but its violence is not felt, for you are looking
through a sheltered opening in the woods as through a window. There, in
the immediate foreground of your picture, rises a majestic forest of
Silver Fir blooming in eternal freshness, the foliage yellow-green, and
the snow beneath the trees strewn with their beautiful plumes, plucked
off by the wind. Beyond, and extending over all the middle ground, are
somber swaths of pine, interrupted by huge swelling ridges and domes;
and just beyond the dark forest you see the monarchs of the High Sierra
waving their magnificent banners. They are twenty miles away, but you
would not wish them nearer, for every feature is distinct, and the
whole glorious show is seen in its right proportions. After this
general view, mark how sharply the dark snowless ribs and buttresses
and summits of the peaks are defined, excepting the portions veiled by
the banners, and how delicately their sides are streaked with snow,
where it has come to rest in narrow flutings and gorges. Mark, too, how
grandly the banners wave as the wind is deflected against their sides,
and how trimly each is attached to the very summit of its peak, like a
streamer at a masthead; how smooth and silky they are in texture, and
how finely their fading fringes are penciled on the azure sky. See how
dense and opaque they are at the point of attachment, and how filmy and
translucent toward the end, so that the peaks back of them are seen
dimly, as though you were looking through ground glass. Yet again
observe how some of the longest, belonging to the loftiest summits,
stream perfectly free all the way across intervening notches and passes
from peak to peak, while others overlap and partly hide each other. And
consider how keenly every particle of this wondrous cloth of snow is
flashing out jets of light. These are the main features of the
beautiful and terrible picture as seen from the forest window; and it
would still be surpassingly glorious were the fore- and middle-grounds
obliterated altogether, leaving only the black peaks, the white
banners, and the blue sky.

[Illustration: KOLANA ROCK, HETCH-HETCHY VALLEY]

Glancing now in a general way at the formation of snow-banners, we find
that the main causes of the wondrous beauty and perfection of those we
have been contemplating were the favorable direction and great force of
the wind, the abundance of snow-dust, and the peculiar conformation of
the slopes of the peaks. It is essential not only that the wind should
move with great velocity and steadiness to supply a sufficiently
copious and continuous stream of snow-dust, but that it should come
from the north. No perfect banner is ever hung on the Sierra peaks by a
south wind. Had the gale that day blown from the south, leaving other
conditions unchanged, only a dull, confused, fog-like drift would have
been produced; for the snow, instead of being spouted up over the tops
of the peaks in concentrated currents to be drawn out as streamers,
would have been shed off around the sides, and piled down into the
glacier wombs. The cause of the concentrated action of the north wind
is found in the peculiar form of the north sides of the peaks, where
the amphitheaters of the residual glaciers are. In general the south
sides are convex and irregular, while the north sides are concave both
in their vertical and horizontal sections; the wind in ascending these
curves converges toward the summits, carrying the snow in concentrating
currents with it, shooting it almost straight up into the air above the
peaks, from which it is then carried away in a horizontal direction.

This difference in form between the north and south sides of the peaks
was almost wholly produced by the difference in the kind and quantity
of the glaciation to which they have been subjected, the north sides
having been hollowed by residual shadow-glaciers of a form that never
existed on the sun-beaten sides.

It appears, therefore, that shadows in great part determine not only
the forms of lofty icy mountains, but also those of the snow-banners
that the wild winds hang on them.




CHAPTER IV
A NEAR VIEW OF THE HIGH SIERRA


Early one bright morning in the middle of Indian summer, while the
glacier meadows were still crisp with frost crystals, I set out from
the foot of Mount Lyell, on my way down to Yosemite Valley, to
replenish my exhausted store of bread and tea. I had spent the past
summer, as many preceding ones, exploring the glaciers that lie on the
head waters of the San Joaquin, Tuolumne, Merced, and Owen’s rivers;
measuring and studying their movements, trends, crevasses, moraines,
etc., and the part they had played during the period of their greater
extension in the creation and development of the landscapes of this
alpine wonderland. The time for this kind of work was nearly over for
the year, and I began to look forward with delight to the approaching
winter with its wondrous storms, when I would be warmly snow-bound in
my Yosemite cabin with plenty of bread and books; but a tinge of regret
came on when I considered that possibly I might not see this favorite
region again until the next summer, excepting distant views from the
heights about the Yosemite walls.

To artists, few portions of the High Sierra are, strictly speaking,
picturesque. The whole massive uplift of the range is one great
picture, not clearly divisible into smaller ones; differing much in
this respect from the older, and what may be called, riper mountains of
the Coast Range. All the landscapes of the Sierra, as we have seen,
were born again, remodeled from base to summit by the developing
ice-floods of the last glacial winter. But all those new landscapes
were not brought forth simultaneously; some of the highest, where the
ice lingered longest, are tens of centuries younger than those of the
warmer regions below them. In general, the younger the
mountain-landscapes,—younger, I mean, with reference to the time of
their emergence from the ice of the glacial period,—the less separable
are they into artistic bits capable of being made into warm,
sympathetic, lovable pictures with appreciable humanity in them.

Here, however, on the head waters of the Tuolumne, is a group of wild
peaks on which the geologist may say that the sun has but just begun to
shine, which is yet in a high degree picturesque, and in its main
features so regular and evenly balanced as almost to appear
conventional—one somber cluster of snow-laden peaks with gray
pine-fringed granite bosses braided around its base, the whole surging
free into the sky from the head of a magnificent valley, whose lofty
walls are beveled away on both sides so as to embrace it all without
admitting anything not strictly belonging to it. The foreground was now
aflame with autumn colors, brown and purple and gold, ripe in the
mellow sunshine; contrasting brightly with the deep, cobalt blue of the
sky, and the black and gray, and pure, spiritual white of the rocks and
glaciers. Down through the midst, the young Tuolumne was seen pouring
from its crystal fountains, now resting in glassy pools as if changing
back again into ice, now leaping in white cascades as if turning to
snow; gliding right and left between granite bosses, then sweeping on
through the smooth, meadowy levels of the valley, swaying pensively
from side to side with calm, stately gestures past dipping willows and
sedges, and around groves of arrowy pine; and throughout its whole
eventful course, whether flowing fast or slow, singing loud or low,
ever filling the landscape with spiritual animation, and manifesting
the grandeur of its sources in every movement and tone.

Pursuing my lonely way down the valley, I turned again and again to
gaze on the glorious picture, throwing up my arms to inclose it as in a
frame. After long ages of growth in the darkness beneath the glaciers,
through sunshine and storms, it seemed now to be ready and waiting for
the elected artist, like yellow wheat for the reaper; and I could not
help wishing that I might carry colors and brushes with me on my
travels, and learn to paint. In the mean time I had to be content with
photographs on my mind and sketches in my note-books. At length, after
I had rounded a precipitous headland that puts out from the west wall
of the valley, every peak vanished from sight, and I pushed rapidly
along the frozen meadows, over the divide between the waters of the
Merced and Tuolumne, and down through the forests that clothe the
slopes of Cloud’s Rest, arriving in Yosemite in due time—which, with
me, is _any_ time. And, strange to say, among the first people I met
here were two artists who, with letters of introduction, were awaiting
my return. They inquired whether in the course of my explorations in
the adjacent mountains I had ever come upon a landscape suitable for a
large painting; whereupon I began a description of the one that had so
lately excited my admiration. Then, as I went on further and further
into details, their faces began to glow, and I offered to guide them to
it, while they declared that they would gladly follow, far or near,
whithersoever I could spare the time to lead them.

Since storms might come breaking down through the fine weather at any
time, burying the colors in snow, and cutting off the artists’ retreat,
I advised getting ready at once.

I led them out of the valley by the Vernal and Nevada Falls, thence
over the main dividing ridge to the Big Tuolumne Meadows, by the old
Mono trail, and thence along the upper Tuolumne River to its head. This
was my companions’ first excursion into the High Sierra, and as I was
almost always alone in my mountaineering, the way that the fresh beauty
was reflected in their faces made for me a novel and interesting study.
They naturally were affected most of all by the colors—the intense
azure of the sky, the purplish grays of the granite, the red and browns
of dry meadows, and the translucent purple and crimson of huckleberry
bogs; the flaming yellow of aspen groves, the silvery flashing of the
streams, and the bright green and blue of the glacier lakes. But the
general expression of the scenery—rocky and savage—seemed sadly
disappointing; and as they threaded the forest from ridge to ridge,
eagerly scanning the landscapes as they were unfolded, they said: “All
this is huge and sublime, but we see nothing as yet at all available
for effective pictures. Art is long, and art is limited, you know; and
here are foregrounds, middle-grounds, backgrounds, all alike; bare
rock-waves, woods, groves, diminutive flecks of meadow, and strips of
glittering water.” “Never mind,” I replied, “only bide a wee, and I
will show you something you will like.”

At length, toward the end of the second day, the Sierra Crown began to
come into view, and when we had fairly rounded the projecting headland
before mentioned, the whole picture stood revealed in the flush of the
alpenglow. Their enthusiasm was excited beyond bounds, and the more
impulsive of the two, a young Scotchman, dashed ahead, shouting and
gesticulating and tossing his arms in the air like a madman. Here, at
last, was a typical alpine landscape.

After feasting awhile on the view, I proceeded to make camp in a
sheltered grove a little way back from the meadow, where pine-boughs
could be obtained for beds, and where there was plenty of dry wood for
fires, while the artists ran here and there, along the river-bends and
up the sides of the cañon, choosing foregrounds for sketches. After
dark, when our tea was made and a rousing fire had been built, we began
to make our plans. They decided to remain several days, at the least,
while I concluded to make an excursion in the mean time to the
untouched summit of Ritter.

It was now about the middle of October, the springtime of snow-flowers.
The first winter-clouds had already bloomed, and the peaks were strewn
with fresh crystals, without, however, affecting the climbing to any
dangerous extent. And as the weather was still profoundly calm, and the
distance to the foot of the mountain only a little more than a day, I
felt that I was running no great risk of being storm-bound.

Mount Ritter is king of the mountains of the middle portion of the High
Sierra, as Shasta of the north and Whitney of the south sections.
Moreover, as far as I know, it had never been climbed. I had explored
the adjacent wilderness summer after summer, but my studies thus far
had never drawn me to the top of it. Its height above sea-level is
about 13,300 feet, and it is fenced round by steeply inclined glaciers,
and cañons of tremendous depth and ruggedness, which render it almost
inaccessible. But difficulties of this kind only exhilarate the
mountaineer.

Next morning, the artists went heartily to their work and I to mine.
Former experiences had given good reason to know that passionate
storms, invisible as yet, might be brooding in the calm sun-gold;
therefore, before bidding farewell, I warned the artists not to be
alarmed should I fail to appear before a week or ten days, and advised
them, in case a snow-storm should set in, to keep up big fires and
shelter themselves as best they could, and on no account to become
frightened and attempt to seek their way back to Yosemite alone through
the drifts.

My general plan was simply this: to scale the cañon, wall, cross over
to the eastern flank of the range, and then make my way southward to
the northern spurs of Mount Ritter in compliance with the intervening
topography; for to push on directly southward from camp through the
innumerable peaks and pinnacles that adorn this portion of the axis of
the range, however interesting, would take too much time, besides being
extremely difficult and dangerous at this time of year.

All my first day was pure pleasure; simply mountaineering indulgence,
crossing the dry pathways of the ancient glaciers, tracing happy
streams, and learning the habits of the birds and marmots in the groves
and rocks. Before I had gone a mile from camp, I came to the foot of a
white cascade that beats its way down a rugged gorge in the cañon wall,
from a height of about nine hundred feet, and pours its throbbing
waters into the Tuolumne. I was acquainted with its fountains, which,
fortunately, lay in my course. What a fine traveling companion it
proved to be, what songs it sang, and how passionately it told the
mountain’s own joy! Gladly I climbed along its dashing border,
absorbing its divine music, and bathing from time to time in waftings
of irised spray. Climbing higher, higher, now beauty came streaming on
the sight: painted meadows, late-blooming gardens, peaks of rare
architecture, lakes here and there, shining like silver, and glimpses
of the forested middle region and the yellow lowlands far in the west.
Beyond the range I saw the so-called Mono Desert, lying dreamily silent
in thick purple light—a desert of heavy sun-glare beheld from a desert
of ice-burnished granite. Here the waters divide, shouting in glorious
enthusiasm, and falling eastward to vanish in the volcanic sands and
dry sky of the Great Basin, or westward to the Great Valley of
California, and thence through the Bay of San Francisco and the Golden
Gate to the sea.

Passing a little way down over the summit until I had reached an
elevation of about 10,000 feet, I pushed on southward toward a group of
savage peaks that stand guard about Ritter on the north and west,
groping my way, and dealing instinctively with every obstacle as it
presented itself. Here a huge gorge would be found cutting across my
path, along the dizzy edge of which I scrambled until some less
precipitous point was discovered where I might safely venture to the
bottom and then, selecting some feasible portion of the opposite wall,
reascend with the same slow caution. Massive, flat-topped spurs
alternate with the gorges, plunging abruptly from the shoulders of the
snowy peaks, and planting their feet in the warm desert. These were
everywhere marked and adorned with characteristic sculptures of the
ancient glaciers that swept over this entire region like one vast
ice-wind, and the polished surfaces produced by the ponderous flood are
still so perfectly preserved that in many places the sunlight reflected
from them is about as trying to the eyes as sheets of snow.

God’s glacial-mills grind slowly, but they have been kept in motion
long enough in California to grind sufficient soil for a glorious
abundance of life, though most of the grist has been carried to the
lowlands, leaving these high regions comparatively lean and bare; while
the post-glacial agents of erosion have not yet furnished sufficient
available food over the general surface for more than a few tufts of
the hardiest plants, chiefly carices and eriogonae. And it is
interesting to learn in this connection that the sparseness and
repressed character of the vegetation at this height is caused more by
want of soil than by harshness of climate; for, here and there, in
sheltered hollows (countersunk beneath the general surface) into which
a few rods of well-ground moraine chips have been dumped, we find
groves of spruce and pine thirty to forty feet high, trimmed around the
edges with willow and huckleberry bushes, and oftentimes still further
by an outer ring of tall grasses, bright with lupines, larkspurs, and
showy columbines, suggesting a climate by no means repressingly severe.
All the streams, too, and the pools at this elevation are furnished
with little gardens wherever soil can be made to lie, which, though
making scarce any show at a distance, constitute charming surprises to
the appreciative observer. In these bits of leanness a few birds find
grateful homes. Having no acquaintance with man, they fear no ill, and
flock curiously about the stranger, almost allowing themselves to be
taken in the hand. In so wild and so beautiful a region was spent my
first day, every sight and sound inspiring, leading one far out of
himself, yet feeding and building up his individuality.

Now came the solemn, silent evening. Long, blue, spiky shadows crept
out across the snow-fields, while a rosy glow, at first scarce
discernible, gradually deepened and suffused every mountain-top,
flushing the glaciers and the harsh crags above them. This was the
alpenglow, to me one of the most impressive of all the terrestrial
manifestations of God. At the touch of this divine light, the mountains
seemed to kindle to a rapt, religious consciousness, and stood hushed
and waiting like devout worshipers. Just before the alpenglow began to
fade, two crimson clouds came streaming across the summit like wings of
flame, rendering the sublime scene yet more impressive; then came
darkness and the stars.

Icy Ritter was still miles away, but I could proceed no farther that
night. I found a good campground on the rim of a glacier basin about
11,000 feet above the sea. A small lake nestles in the bottom of it,
from which I got water for my tea, and a storm-beaten thicket near by
furnished abundance of resiny fire-wood. Somber peaks, hacked and
shattered, circled half-way around the horizon, wearing a savage aspect
in the gloaming, and a waterfall chanted solemnly across the lake on
its way down from the foot of a glacier. The fall and the lake and the
glacier were almost equally bare; while the scraggy pines anchored in
the rock-fissures were so dwarfed and shorn by storm-winds that you
might walk over their tops. In tone and aspect the scene was one of the
most desolate I ever beheld. But the darkest scriptures of the
mountains are illumined with bright passages of love that never fail to
make themselves felt when one is alone.

I made my bed in a nook of the pine-thicket, where the branches were
pressed and crinkled overhead like a roof, and bent down around the
sides. These are the best bedchambers the high mountains afford—snug as
squirrel-nests, well ventilated, full of spicy odors, and with plenty
of wind-played needles to sing one asleep. I little expected company,
but, creeping in through a low side-door, I found five or six birds
nestling among the tassels. The night-wind began to blow soon after
dark; at first only a gentle breathing, but increasing toward midnight
to a rough gale that fell upon my leafy roof in ragged surges like a
cascade, bearing wild sounds from the crags overhead. The waterfall
sang in chorus, filling the old ice-fountain with its solemn roar, and
seeming to increase in power as the night advanced—fit voice for such a
landscape. I had to creep out many times to the fire during the night,
for it was biting cold and I had no blankets. Gladly I welcomed the
morning star.

The dawn in the dry, wavering air of the desert was glorious.
Everything encouraged my undertaking and betokened success. There was
no cloud in the sky, no storm-tone in the wind. Breakfast of bread and
tea was soon made. I fastened a hard, durable crust to my belt by way
of provision, in case I should be compelled to pass a night on the
mountain-top; then, securing the remainder of my little stock against
wolves and wood-rats, I set forth free and hopeful.

How glorious a greeting the sun gives the mountains! To behold this
alone is worth the pains of any excursion a thousand times over. The
highest peaks burned like islands in a sea of liquid shade. Then the
lower peaks and spires caught the glow, and long lances of light,
streaming through many a notch and pass, fell thick on the frozen
meadows. The majestic form of Ritter was full in sight, and I pushed
rapidly on over rounded rock-bosses and pavements, my iron-shod shoes
making a clanking sound, suddenly hushed now and then in rugs of
bryanthus, and sedgy lake-margins soft as moss. Here, too, in this
so-called “land of desolation,” I met cassiope, growing in fringes
among the battered rocks. Her blossoms had faded long ago, but they
were still clinging with happy memories to the evergreen sprays, and
still so beautiful as to thrill every fiber of one’s being. Winter and
summer, you may hear her voice, the low, sweet melody of her purple
bells. No evangel among all the mountain plants speaks Nature’s love
more plainly than cassiope. Where she dwells, the redemption of the
coldest solitude is complete. The very rocks and glaciers seem to feel
her presence, and become imbued with her own fountain sweetness. All
things were warming and awakening. Frozen rills began to flow, the
marmots came out of their nests in boulder-piles and climbed sunny
rocks to bask, and the dun-headed sparrows were flitting about seeking
their breakfasts. The lakes seen from every ridge-top were brilliantly
rippled and spangled, shimmering like the thickets of the low Dwarf
Pines. The rocks, too, seemed responsive to the vital
heat—rock-crystals and snow-crystals thrilling alike. I strode on
exhilarated, as if never more to feel fatigue, limbs moving of
themselves, every sense unfolding like the thawing flowers, to take
part in the new day harmony.

All along my course thus far, excepting when down in the cañons, the
landscapes were mostly open to me, and expansive, at least on one side.
On the left were the purple plains of Mono, reposing dreamily and warm;
on the right, the near peaks springing keenly into the thin sky with
more and more impressive sublimity. But these larger views were at
length lost. Rugged spurs, and moraines, and huge, projecting
buttresses began to shut me in. Every feature became more rigidly
alpine, without, however, producing any chilling effect; for going to
the mountains is like going home. We always find that the strangest
objects in these fountain wilds are in some degree familiar, and we
look upon them with a vague sense of having seen them before.

[Illustration: GENERAL GRANT TREE, GENERAL GRANT NATIONAL PARK]

On the southern shore of a frozen lake, I encountered an extensive
field of hard, granular snow, up which I scampered in fine tone,
intending to follow it to its head, and cross the rocky spur against
which it leans, hoping thus to come direct upon the base of the main
Ritter peak. The surface was pitted with oval hollows, made by stones
and drifted pine-needles that had melted themselves into the mass by
the radiation of absorbed sun-heat. These afforded good footholds, but
the surface curved more and more steeply at the head, and the pits
became shallower and less abundant, until I found myself in danger of
being shed off like avalanching snow. I persisted, however, creeping on
all fours, and shuffling up the smoothest places on my back, as I had
often done on burnished granite, until, after slipping several times, I
was compelled to retrace my course to the bottom, and make my way
around the west end of the lake, and thence up to the summit of the
divide between the head waters of Rush Creek and the northernmost
tributaries of the San Joaquin.

Arriving on the summit of this dividing crest, one of the most exciting
pieces of pure wilderness was disclosed that I ever discovered in all
my mountaineering. There, immediately in front, loomed the majestic
mass of Mount Ritter, with a glacier swooping down its face nearly to
my feet, then curving westward and pouring its frozen flood into a dark
blue lake, whose shores were bound with precipices of crystalline snow;
while a deep chasm drawn between the divide and the glacier separated
the massive picture from everything else. I could see only the one
sublime mountain, the one glacier, the one lake; the whole veiled with
one blue shadow—rock, ice, and water close together without a single
leaf or sign of life. After gazing spellbound, I began instinctively to
scrutinize every notch and gorge and weathered buttress of the
mountain, with reference to making the ascent. The entire front above
the glacier appeared as one tremendous precipice, slightly receding at
the top, and bristling with spires and pinnacles set above one another
in formidable array. Massive lichen-stained battlements stood forward
here and there, hacked at the top with angular notches, and separated
by frosty gullies and recesses that have been veiled in shadow ever
since their creation; while to right and left, as far as I could see,
were huge, crumbling buttresses, offering no hope to the climber. The
head of the glacier sends up a few finger-like branches through narrow
_couloirs_; but these seemed too steep and short to be available,
especially as I had no ax with which to cut steps, and the numerous
narrow-throated gullies down which stones and snow are avalanched
seemed hopelessly steep, besides being interrupted by vertical cliffs;
while the whole front was rendered still more terribly forbidding by
the chill shadow and the gloomy blackness of the rocks.

Descending the divide in a hesitating mood, I picked my way across the
yawning chasm at the foot, and climbed out upon the glacier. There were
no meadows now to cheer with their brave colors, nor could I hear the
dun-headed sparrows, whose cheery notes so often relieve the silence of
our highest mountains. The only sounds were the gurgling of small rills
down in the veins and crevasses of the glacier, and now and then the
rattling report of falling stones, with the echoes they shot out into
the crisp air.

I could not distinctly hope to reach the summit from this side, yet I
moved on across the glacier as if driven by fate. Contending with
myself, the season is too far spent, I said, and even should I be
successful, I might be storm-bound on the mountain; and in the
cloud-darkness, with the cliffs and crevasses covered with snow, how
could I escape? No; I must wait till next summer. I would only approach
the mountain now, and inspect it, creep about its flanks, learn what I
could of its history, holding myself ready to flee on the approach of
the first storm-cloud. But we little know until tried how much of the
uncontrollable there is in us, urging across glaciers and torrents, and
up dangerous heights, let the judgment forbid as it may.

I succeeded in gaining the foot of the cliff on the eastern extremity
of the glacier, and there discovered the mouth of a narrow avalanche
gully, through which I began to climb, intending to follow it as far as
possible, and at least obtain some fine wild views for my pains. Its
general course is oblique to the plane of the mountain-face, and the
metamorphic slates of which the mountain is built are cut by cleavage
planes in such a way that they weather off in angular blocks, giving
rise to irregular steps that greatly facilitate climbing on the sheer
places. I thus made my way into a wilderness of crumbling spires and
battlements, built together in bewildering combinations, and glazed in
many places with a thin coating of ice, which I had to hammer off with
stones. The situation was becoming gradually more perilous; but, having
passed several dangerous spots, I dared not think of descending; for,
so steep was the entire ascent, one would inevitably fall to the
glacier in case a single misstep were made. Knowing, therefore, the
tried danger beneath, I became all the more anxious concerning the
developments to be made above, and began to be conscious of a vague
foreboding of what actually befell; not that I was given to fear, but
rather because my instincts, usually so positive and true, seemed
vitiated in some way, and were leading me astray. At length, after
attaining an elevation of about 12,800 feet, I found myself at the foot
of a sheer drop in the bed of the avalanche channel I was tracing,
which seemed absolutely to bar further progress. It was only about
forty-five or fifty feet high, and somewhat roughened by fissures and
projections; but these seemed so slight and insecure, as footholds,
that I tried hard to avoid the precipice altogether, by scaling the
wall of the channel on either side. But, though less steep, the walls
were smoother than the obstructing rock, and repeated efforts only
showed that I must either go right ahead or turn back. The tried
dangers beneath seemed even greater than that of the cliff in front;
therefore, after scanning its face again and again, I began to scale
it, picking my holds with intense caution. After gaining a point about
halfway to the top, I was suddenly brought to a dead stop, with arms
outspread, clinging close to the face of the rock, unable to move hand
or foot either up or down. My doom appeared fixed. I _must_ fall. There
would be a moment of bewilderment, and then a lifeless rumble down the
one general precipice to the glacier below.

When this final danger flashed upon me, I became nerve-shaken for the
first time since setting foot on the mountains, and my mind seemed to
fill with a stifling smoke. But this terrible eclipse lasted only a
moment, when life blazed forth again with preternatural clearness. I
seemed suddenly to become possessed of a new sense. The other self,
bygone experiences, Instinct, or Guardian Angel,—call it what you
will,—came forward and assumed control. Then my trembling muscles
became firm again, every rift and flaw in the rock was seen as through
a microscope, and my limbs moved with a positiveness and precision with
which I seemed to have nothing at all to do. Had I been borne aloft
upon wings, my deliverance could not have been more complete.

Above this memorable spot, the face of the mountain is still more
savagely hacked and torn. It is a maze of yawning chasms and gullies,
in the angles of which rise beetling crags and piles of detached
boulders that seem to have been gotten ready to be launched below. But
the strange influx of strength I had received seemed inexhaustible. I
found a way without effort, and soon stood upon the topmost crag in the
blessed light.

How truly glorious the landscape circled around this noble
summit!—giant mountains, valleys innumerable, glaciers and meadows,
rivers and lakes, with the wide blue sky bent tenderly over them all.
But in my first hour of freedom from that terrible shadow, the sunlight
in which I was laving seemed all in all.

Looking southward along the axis of the range, the eye is first caught
by a row of exceedingly sharp and slender spires, which rise openly to
a height of about a thousand feet, above a series of short, residual
glaciers that lean back against their bases; their fantastic sculpture
and the unrelieved sharpness with which they spring out of the ice
rendering them peculiarly wild and striking. These are “The Minarets.”
Beyond them you behold a sublime wilderness of mountains, their snowy
summits towering together in crowded abundance, peak beyond peak,
swelling higher, higher as they sweep on southward, until the
culminating point of the range is reached on Mount Whitney, near the
head of the Kern River, at an elevation of nearly 14,700 feet above the
level of the sea.

Westward, the general flank of the range is seen flowing sublimely away
from the sharp summits, in smooth undulations; a sea of huge gray
granite waves dotted with lakes and meadows, and fluted with stupendous
cañons that grow steadily deeper as they recede in the distance. Below
this gray region lies the dark forest zone, broken here and there by
upswelling ridges and domes; and yet beyond lies a yellow, hazy belt,
marking the broad plain of the San Joaquin, bounded on its farther side
by the blue mountains of the coast.

Turning now to the northward, there in the immediate foreground is the
glorious Sierra Crown, with Cathedral Peak, a temple of marvelous
architecture, a few degrees to the left of it; the gray, massive form
of Mammoth Mountain to the right; while Mounts Ord, Gibbs, Dana,
Conness, Tower Peak, Castle Peak, Silver Mountain, and a host of noble
companions, as yet nameless, make a sublime show along the axis of the
range.

Eastward, the whole region seems a land of desolation covered with
beautiful light. The torrid volcanic basin of Mono, with its one bare
lake fourteen miles long; Owen’s Valley and the broad lava table-land
at its head, dotted with craters, and the massive Inyo Range, rivaling
even the Sierra in height; these are spread, map-like, beneath you,
with countless ranges beyond, passing and overlapping one another and
fading on the glowing horizon.

[Illustration: MAP OF THE YOSEMITE VALLEY]

At a distance of less than 3000 feet below the summit of Mount Ritter
you may find tributaries of the San Joaquin and Owen’s rivers, bursting
forth from the ice and snow of the glaciers that load its flanks; while
a little to the north of here are found the highest affluents of the
Tuolumne and Merced. Thus, the fountains of four of the principal
rivers of California are within a radius of four or five miles.

Lakes are seen gleaming in all sorts of places,—round, or oval, or
square, like very mirrors; others narrow and sinuous, drawn close
around the peaks like silver zones, the highest reflecting only rocks,
snow, and the sky. But neither these nor the glaciers, nor the bits of
brown meadow and moorland that occur here and there, are large enough
to make any marked impression upon the mighty wilderness of mountains.
The eye, rejoicing in its freedom, roves about the vast expanse, yet
returns again and again to the fountain peaks. Perhaps some one of the
multitude excites special attention, some gigantic castle with turret
and battlement, or some Gothic cathedral more abundantly spired than
Milan’s. But, generally, when looking for the first time from an
all-embracing standpoint like this, the inexperienced observer is
oppressed by the incomprehensible grandeur, variety, and abundance of
the mountains rising shoulder to shoulder beyond the reach of vision;
and it is only after they have been studied one by one, long and
lovingly, that their far-reaching harmonies become manifest. Then,
penetrate the wilderness where you may, the main telling features, to
which all the surrounding topography is subordinate, are quickly
perceived, and the most complicated clusters of peaks stand revealed
harmoniously correlated and fashioned like works of art—eloquent
monuments of the ancient ice-rivers that brought them into relief from
the general mass of the range. The cañons, too, some of them a mile
deep, mazing wildly through the mighty host of mountains, however
lawless and ungovernable at first sight they appear, are at length
recognized as the necessary effects of causes which followed each other
in harmonious sequence—Nature’s poems carved on tables of stone—the
simplest and most emphatic of her glacial compositions.

Could we have been here to observe during the glacial period, we should
have overlooked a wrinkled ocean of ice as continuous as that now
covering the landscapes of Greenland; filling every valley and cañon
with only the tops of the fountain peaks rising darkly above the
rock-encumbered ice-waves like islets in a stormy sea—those islets the
only hints of the glorious landscapes now smiling in the sun. Standing
here in the deep, brooding silence all the wilderness seems motionless,
as if the work of creation were done. But in the midst of this outer
steadfastness we know there is incessant motion and change. Ever and
anon, avalanches are falling from yonder peaks. These cliff-bound
glaciers, seemingly wedged and immovable, are flowing like water and
grinding the rocks beneath them. The lakes are lapping their granite
shores and wearing them away, and every one of these rills and young
rivers is fretting the air into music, and carrying the mountains to
the plains. Here are the roots of all the life of the valleys, and here
more simply than elsewhere is the eternal flux of nature manifested.
Ice changing to water, lakes to meadows, and mountains to plains. And
while we thus contemplate Nature’s methods of landscape creation, and,
reading the records she has carved on the rocks, reconstruct, however
imperfectly, the landscapes of the past, we also learn that as these we
now behold have succeeded those of the pre-glacial age, so they in turn
are withering and vanishing to be succeeded by others yet unborn.

But in the midst of these fine lessons and landscapes, I had to
remember that the sun was wheeling far to the west, while a new way
down the mountain had to be discovered to some point on the timber line
where I could have a fire; for I had not even burdened myself with a
coat. I first scanned the western spurs, hoping some way might appear
through which I might reach the northern glacier, and cross its snout;
or pass around the lake into which it flows, and thus strike my morning
track. This route was soon sufficiently unfolded to show that, if
practicable at all, it would require so much time that reaching camp
that night would be out of the question. I therefore scrambled back
eastward, descending the southern slopes obliquely at the same time.
Here the crags seemed less formidable, and the head of a glacier that
flows northeast came in sight, which I determined to follow as far as
possible, hoping thus to make my way to the foot of the peak on the
east side, and thence across the intervening cañons and ridges to camp.

The inclination of the glacier is quite moderate at the head, and, as
the sun had softened the _névé_, I made safe and rapid progress,
running and sliding, and keeping up a sharp outlook for crevasses.
About half a mile from the head, there is an ice-cascade, where the
glacier pours over a sharp declivity and is shattered into massive
blocks separated by deep, blue fissures. To thread my way through the
slippery mazes of this crevassed portion seemed impossible, and I
endeavored to avoid it by climbing off to the shoulder of the mountain.
But the slopes rapidly steepened and at length fell away in sheer
precipices, compelling a return to the ice. Fortunately, the day had
been warm enough to loosen the ice-crystals so as to admit of hollows
being dug in the rotten portions of the blocks, thus enabling me to
pick my way with far less difficulty than I had anticipated. Continuing
down over the snout, and along the left lateral moraine, was only a
confident saunter, showing that the ascent of the mountain by way of
this glacier is easy, provided one is armed with an ax to cut steps
here and there.

The lower end of the glacier was beautifully waved and barred by the
outcropping edges of the bedded ice-layers which represent the annual
snowfalls, and to some extent the irregularities of structure caused by
the weathering of the walls of crevasses, and by separate snowfalls
which have been followed by rain, hail, thawing and freezing, etc.
Small rills were gliding and swirling over the melting surface with a
smooth, oily appearance, in channels of pure ice—their quick, compliant
movements contrasting most impressively with the rigid, invisible flow
of the glacier itself, on whose back they all were riding.

Night drew near before I reached the eastern base of the mountain, and
my camp lay many a rugged mile to the north; but ultimate success was
assured. It was now only a matter of endurance and ordinary
mountain-craft. The sunset was, if possible, yet more beautiful than
that of the day before. The Mono landscape seemed to be fairly
saturated with warm, purple light. The peaks marshaled along the summit
were in shadow, but through every notch and pass streamed vivid
sun-fire, soothing and irradiating their rough, black angles, while
companies of small, luminous clouds hovered above them like very angels
of light.

Darkness came on, but I found my way by the trends of the cañons and
the peaks projected against the sky. All excitement died with the
light, and then I was weary. But the joyful sound of the waterfall
across the lake was heard at last, and soon the stars were seen
reflected in the lake itself. Taking my bearings from these, I
discovered the little pine thicket in which my nest was, and then I had
a rest such as only a tired mountaineer may enjoy. After lying loose
and lost for awhile, I made a sunrise fire, went down to the lake,
dashed water on my head, and dipped a cupful for tea. The revival
brought about by bread and tea was as complete as the exhaustion from
excessive enjoyment and toil. Then I crept beneath the pine-tassels to
bed. The wind was frosty and the fire burned low, but my sleep was none
the less sound, and the evening constellations had swept far to the
west before I awoke.

After thawing and resting in the morning sunshine, I sauntered
home,—that is, back to the Tuolumne camp,—bearing away toward a cluster
of peaks that hold the fountain snows of one of the north tributaries
of Rush Creek. Here I discovered a group of beautiful glacier lakes,
nestled together in a grand amphitheater. Toward evening, I crossed the
divide separating the Mono waters from those of the Tuolumne, and
entered the glacier basin that now holds the fountain snows of the
stream that forms the upper Tuolumne cascades. This stream I traced
down through its many dells and gorges, meadows and bogs, reaching the
brink of the main Tuolumne at dusk.

A loud whoop for the artists was answered again and again. Their
camp-fire came in sight, and half an hour afterward I was with them.
They seemed unreasonably glad to see me. I had been absent only three
days; nevertheless, though the weather was fine, they had already been
weighing chances as to whether I would ever return, and trying to
decide whether they should wait longer or begin to seek their way back
to the lowlands. Now their curious troubles were over. They packed
their precious sketches, and next morning we set out homeward bound,
and in two days entered the Yosemite Valley from the north by way of
Indian Cañon.




CHAPTER V
THE PASSES


The sustained grandeur of the High Sierra is strikingly illustrated by
the great height of the passes. Between latitude 36° 20′ and 38° the
lowest pass, gap, gorge, or notch of any kind cutting across the axis
of the range, as far as I have discovered, exceeds 9000 feet in height
above the level of the sea; while the average height of all that are in
use, either by Indians or whites, is perhaps not less than 11,000 feet,
and not one of these is a carriage-pass.

Farther north a carriage-road has been constructed through what is
known as the Sonora Pass, on the head waters of the Stanislaus and
Walker’s rivers, the summit of which is about 10,000 feet above the
sea. Substantial wagon-roads have also been built through the Carson
and Johnson passes, near the head of Lake Tahoe, over which immense
quantities of freight were hauled from California to the mining regions
of Nevada, before the construction of the Central Pacific Railroad.

Still farther north, a considerable number of comparatively low passes
occur, some of which are accessible to wheeled vehicles, and through
these rugged defiles during the exciting years of the gold period long
emigrant-trains with foot-sore cattle wearily toiled. After the
toil-worn adventurers had escaped a thousand dangers and had crawled
thousands of miles across the plains the snowy Sierra at last loomed in
sight, the eastern wall of the land of gold. And as with shaded eyes
they gazed through the tremulous haze of the desert, with what joy must
they have descried the pass through which they were to enter the better
land of their hopes and dreams!

Between the Sonora Pass and the southern extremity of the High Sierra,
a distance of nearly 160 miles, there are only five passes through
which trails conduct from one side of the range to the other. These are
barely practicable for animals; a pass in these regions meaning simply
any notch or cañon through which one may, by the exercise of unlimited
patience, make out to lead a mule, or a sure-footed mustang; animals
that can slide or jump as well as walk. Only three of the five passes
may be said to be in use, viz.: the Kearsarge, Mono, and Virginia
Creek; the tracks leading through the others being only obscure Indian
trails, not graded in the least, and scarcely traceable by white men;
for much of the way is over solid rock and earthquake avalanche
taluses, where the unshod ponies of the Indians leave no appreciable
sign. Only skilled mountaineers are able to detect the marks that serve
to guide the Indians, such as slight abrasions of the looser rocks, the
displacement of stones here and there, and bent bushes and weeds. A
general knowledge of the topography is, then, the main guide, enabling
one to determine where the trail ought to go—_must_ go. One of these
Indian trails crosses the range by a nameless pass between the head
waters of the south and middle forks of the San Joaquin, the other
between the north and middle forks of the same river, just to the south
of “The Minarets”; this last being about 9000 feet high, is the lowest
of the five. The Kearsarge is the highest, crossing the summit near the
head of the south fork of King’s River, about eight miles to the north
of Mount Tyndall, through the midst of the most stupendous
rock-scenery. The summit of this pass is over 12,000 feet above
sea-level; nevertheless, it is one of the safest of the five, and is
used every summer, from July to October or November, by hunters,
prospectors, and stock-owners, and to some extent by enterprising
pleasure-seekers also. For, besides the surpassing grandeur of the
scenery about the summit, the trail, in ascending the western flank of
the range, conducts through a grove of the giant Sequoias, and through
the magnificent Yosemite Valley of the south fork of King’s River. This
is, perhaps, the highest traveled pass on the North American continent.

[Illustration: MAP OF THE YOSEMITE VALLEY, SHOWING PRESENT RESERVATION
BOUNDARY.]

The Mono Pass lies to the east of Yosemite Valley, at the head of one
of the tributaries of the south fork of the Tuolumne. This is the best
known and most extensively traveled of all that exist in the High
Sierra. A trail was made through it about the time of the Mono gold
excitement, in the year 1858, by adventurous miners and prospectors—men
who would build a trail down the throat of darkest Erebus on the way to
gold. Though more than a thousand feet lower than the Kearsarge, it is
scarcely less sublime in rock-scenery, while in snowy, falling water it
far surpasses it. Being so favorably situated for the stream of
Yosemite travel, the more adventurous tourists cross over through this
glorious gateway to the volcanic region around Mono Lake. It has
therefore gained a name and fame above every other pass in the range.
According to the few barometrical observations made upon it, its
highest point is 10,765 feet above the sea. The other pass of the five
we have been considering is somewhat lower, and crosses the axis of the
range a few miles to the north of the Mono Pass, at the head of the
southernmost tributary of Walker’s River. It is used chiefly by roaming
bands of the Pah Ute Indians and “sheepmen.”

But, leaving wheels and animals out of the question, the free
mountaineer with a sack of bread on his shoulders and an ax to cut
steps in ice and frozen snow can make his way across the range almost
everywhere, and at any time of year when the weather is calm. To him
nearly every notch between the peaks is a pass, though much patient
step-cutting is at times required up and down steeply inclined
glaciers, with cautious climbing over precipices that at first sight
would seem hopelessly inaccessible.

In pursuing my studies, I have crossed from side to side of the range
at intervals of a few miles all along the highest portion of the chain,
with far less real danger than one would naturally count on. And what
fine wildness was thus revealed—storms and avalanches, lakes and
waterfalls, gardens and meadows, and interesting animals—only those
will ever know who give the freest and most buoyant portion of their
lives to climbing and seeing for themselves.

To the timid traveler, fresh from the sedimentary levels of the
lowlands, these highways, however picturesque and grand, seem terribly
forbidding—cold, dead, gloomy gashes in the bones of the mountains, and
of all Nature’s ways the ones to be most cautiously avoided. Yet they
are full of the finest and most telling examples of Nature’s love; and
though hard to travel, none are safer. For they lead through regions
that lie far above the ordinary haunts of the devil, and of the
pestilence that walks in darkness. True, there are innumerable places
where the careless step will be the last step; and a rock falling from
the cliffs may crush without warning like lightning from the sky; but
what then! Accidents in the mountains are less common than in the
lowlands, and these mountain mansions are decent, delightful, even
divine, places to die in, compared with the doleful chambers of
civilization. Few places in this world are more dangerous than home.
Fear not, therefore, to try the mountain-passes. They will kill care,
save you from deadly apathy, set you free, and call forth every faculty
into vigorous, enthusiastic action. Even the sick should try these
so-called dangerous passes, because for every unfortunate they kill,
they cure a thousand.

All the passes make their steepest ascents on the eastern flank. On
this side the average rise is not far from a thousand feet to the mile,
while on the west it is about two hundred feet. Another marked
difference between the eastern and western portions of the passes is
that the former begin at the very foot of the range, while the latter
can hardly be said to begin lower than an elevation of from seven to
ten thousand feet. Approaching the range from the gray levels of Mono
and Owen’s Valley on the east, the traveler sees before him the steep,
short passes in full view, fenced in by rugged spurs that come plunging
down from the shoulders of the peaks on either side, the courses of the
more direct being disclosed from top to bottom without interruption.
But from the west one sees nothing of the way he may be seeking until
near the summit, after days have been spent in threading the forests
growing on the main dividing ridges between the river cañons.

It is interesting to observe how surely the alp-crossing animals of
every kind fall into the same trails. The more rugged and inaccessible
the general character of the topography of any particular region, the
more surely will the trails of white men, Indians, bears, wild sheep,
etc., be found converging into the best passes. The Indians of the
western slope venture cautiously over the passes in settled weather to
attend dances, and obtain loads of pine-nuts and the larvae of a small
fly that breeds in Mono and Owen’s lakes, which, when dried, forms an
important article of food; while the Pah Utes cross over from the east
to hunt the deer and obtain supplies of acorns; and it is truly
astonishing to see what immense loads the haggard old squaws make out
to carry bare-footed through these rough passes, oftentimes for a
distance of sixty or seventy miles. They are always accompanied by the
men, who stride on, unburdened and erect, a little in advance, kindly
stooping at difficult places to pile stepping-stones for their patient,
pack-animal wives, just as they would prepare the way for their ponies.

Bears evince great sagacity as mountaineers, but although they are
tireless and enterprising travelers they seldom cross the range. I have
several times tracked them through the Mono Pass, but only in late
years, after cattle and sheep had passed that way, when they doubtless
were following to feed on the stragglers and on those that had been
killed by falling over the rocks. Even the wild sheep, the best
mountaineers of all, choose regular passes in making journeys across
the summits. Deer seldom cross the range in either direction. I have
never yet observed a single specimen of the mule-deer of the Great
Basin west of the summit, and rarely one of the black-tailed species on
the eastern slope, notwithstanding many of the latter ascend the range
nearly to the summit every summer, to feed in the wild gardens and
bring forth their young.

The glaciers are the pass-makers, and it is by them that the courses of
all mountaineers are predestined. Without exception every pass in the
Sierra was created by them without the slightest aid or predetermining
guidance from any of the cataclysmic agents. I have seen elaborate
statements of the amount of drilling and blasting accomplished in the
construction of the railroad across the Sierra, above Donner Lake; but
for every pound of rock moved in this way, the glaciers which descended
east and west through this same pass, crushed and carried away more
than a hundred tons.

The so-called practicable road-passes are simply those portions of the
range more degraded by glacial action than the adjacent portions, and
degraded in such a way as to leave the summits rounded, instead of
sharp; while the peaks, from the superior strength and hardness of
their rocks, or from more favorable position, having suffered less
degradation, are left towering above the passes as if they had been
heaved into the sky by some force acting from beneath.

The scenery of all the passes, especially at the head, is of the
wildest and grandest description,—lofty peaks massed together and laden
around their bases with ice and snow; chains of glacier lakes;
cascading streams in endless variety, with glorious views, westward
over a sea of rocks and woods, and eastward over strange ashy plains,
volcanoes, and the dry, dead-looking ranges of the Great Basin. Every
pass, however, possesses treasures of beauty all its own.

Having thus in a general way indicated the height, leading features,
and distribution of the principal passes, I will now endeavor to
describe the Mono Pass in particular, which may, I think, be regarded
as a fair example of the higher alpine passes in general.

The main portion of the Mono Pass is formed by Bloody Cañon, which
begins at the summit of the range, and runs in a general
east-northeasterly direction to the edge of the Mono Plain.

The first white men who forced a way through its somber depths were, as
we have seen, eager gold-seekers. But the cañon was known and traveled
as a pass by the Indians and mountain animals long before its discovery
by white men, as is shown by the numerous tributary trails which come
into it from every direction. Its name accords well with the character
of the “early times” in California, and may perhaps have been suggested
by the predominant color of the metamorphic slates in which it is in
great part eroded; or more probably by blood-stains made by the
unfortunate animals which were compelled to slip and shuffle awkwardly
over its rough, cutting rocks. I have never known an animal, either
mule or horse, to make its way through the cañon, either in going up or
down, without losing more or less blood from wounds on the legs.
Occasionally one is killed outright—falling headlong and rolling over
precipices like a boulder. But such accidents are rarer than from the
terrible appearance of the trail one would be led to expect; the more
experienced when driven loose find their way over the dangerous places
with a caution and sagacity that is truly wonderful. During the gold
excitement it was at times a matter of considerable pecuniary
importance to force a way through the cañon with pack-trains early in
the spring while it was yet heavily blocked with snow; and then the
mules with their loads had sometimes to be let down over the steepest
drifts and avalanche beds by means of ropes.

A good bridle-path leads from Yosemite through many a grove and meadow
up to the head of the cañon, a distance of about thirty miles. Here the
scenery undergoes a sudden and startling condensation. Mountains, red,
gray, and black, rise close at hand on the right, whitened around their
bases with banks of enduring snow; on the left swells the huge red mass
of Mount Gibbs, while in front the eye wanders down the shadowy cañon,
and out on the warm plain of Mono, where the lake is seen gleaming like
a burnished metallic disk, with clusters of lofty volcanic cones to the
south of it.

When at length we enter the mountain gateway, the somber rocks seem
aware of our presence, and seem to come thronging closer about us.
Happily the ouzel and the old familiar robin are here to sing us
welcome, and azure daisies beam with trustfulness and sympathy,
enabling us to feel something of Nature’s love even here, beneath the
gaze of her coldest rocks.

The effect of this expressive outspokenness on the part of the
cañon-rocks is greatly enhanced by the quiet aspect of the alpine
meadows through which we pass just before entering the narrow gateway.
The forests in which they lie, and the mountain-tops rising beyond
them, seem quiet and tranquil. We catch their restful spirit, yield to
the soothing influences of the sunshine, and saunter dreamily on
through flowers and bees, scarce touched by a definite thought; then
suddenly we find ourselves in the shadowy cañon, closeted with Nature
in one of her wildest strongholds.

After the first bewildering impression begins to wear off, we perceive
that it is not altogether terrible; for besides the reassuring birds
and flowers we discover a chain of shining lakelets hanging down from
the very summit of the pass, and linked together by a silvery stream.
The highest are set in bleak, rough bowls, scantily fringed with brown
and yellow sedges. Winter storms blow snow through the cañon in
blinding drifts, and avalanches shoot from the heights. Then are these
sparkling tarns filled and buried, leaving not a hint of their
existence. In June and July they begin to blink and thaw out like
sleepy eyes, the carices thrust up their short brown spikes, the
daisies bloom in turn, and the most profoundly buried of them all is at
length warmed and summered as if winter were only a dream.

Red Lake is the lowest of the chain, and also the largest. It seems
rather dull and forbidding at first sight, lying motionless in its
deep, dark bed. The cañon wall rises sheer from the water’s edge on the
south, but on the opposite side there is sufficient space and sunshine
for a sedgy daisy garden, the center of which is brilliantly lighted
with lilies, castilleias, larkspurs, and columbines, sheltered from the
wind by leafy willows, and forming a most joyful outburst of plant-life
keenly emphasized by the chill baldness of the onlooking cliffs.

After indulging here in a dozing, shimmering lake-rest, the happy
stream sets forth again, warbling and trilling like an ouzel, ever
delightfully confiding, no matter how dark the way; leaping, gliding,
hither, thither, clear or foaming: manifesting the beauty of its
wildness in every sound and gesture.

One of its most beautiful developments is the Diamond Cascade, situated
a short distance below Red Lake. Here the tense, crystalline water is
first dashed into coarse, granular spray mixed with dusty foam, and
then divided into a diamond pattern by following the diagonal
cleavage-joints that intersect the face of the precipice over which it
pours. Viewed in front, it resembles a strip of embroidery of definite
pattern, varying through the seasons with the temperature and the
volume of water. Scarce a flower may be seen along its snowy border. A
few bent pines look on from a distance, and small fringes of cassiope
and rock-ferns are growing in fissures near the head, but these are so
lowly and undemonstrative that only the attentive observer will be
likely to notice them.

On the north wall of the cañon, a little below the Diamond Cascade, a
glittering side stream makes its appearance, seeming to leap directly
out of the sky. It first resembles a crinkled ribbon of silver hanging
loosely down the wall, but grows wider as it descends, and dashes the
dull rock with foam. A long rough talus curves up against this part of
the cliff, overgrown with snow-pressed willows, in which the fall
disappears with many an eager surge and swirl and plashing leap,
finally beating its way down to its confluence with the main cañon
stream.

Below this point the climate is no longer arctic. Butterflies become
larger and more abundant, grasses with imposing spread of panicle wave
above your shoulders, and the summery drone of the bumblebee thickens
the air. The Dwarf Pine, the tree-mountaineer that climbs highest and
braves the coldest blasts, is found scattered in storm-beaten clumps
from the summit of the pass about half-way down the cañon. Here it is
succeeded by the hardy Two-leaved Pine, which is speedily joined by the
taller Yellow and Mountain Pines. These, with the burly juniper, and
shimmering aspen, rapidly grow larger as the sunshine becomes richer,
forming groves that block the view; or they stand more apart here and
there in picturesque groups, that make beautiful and obvious harmony
with the rocks and with one another. Blooming underbrush becomes
abundant,—azalea, spiraea, and the brier-rose weaving fringes for the
streams, and shaggy rugs to relieve the stern, unflinching rock-bosses.

[Illustration: RANCHERIA FALLS, HETCH-HETCHY VALLEY]

Through this delightful wilderness, Cañon Creek roves without any
constraining channel, throbbing and wavering; now in sunshine, now in
thoughtful shade; falling, swirling, flashing from side to side in
weariless exuberance of energy. A glorious milky way of cascades is
thus developed, of which Bower Cascade, though one of the smallest, is
perhaps the most beautiful of them all. It is situated in the lower
region of the pass, just where the sunshine begins to mellow between
the cold and warm climates. Here the glad creek, grown strong with
tribute gathered from many a snowy fountain on the heights, sings
richer strains, and becomes more human and lovable at every step. Now
you may by its side find the rose and homely yarrow, and small meadows
full of bees and clover. At the head of a low-browed rock, luxuriant
dogwood bushes and willows arch over from bank to bank, embowering the
stream with their leafy branches; and drooping plumes, kept in motion
by the current, fringe the brow of the cascade in front. From this
leafy covert the stream leaps out into the light in a fluted curve
thick sown with sparkling crystals, and falls into a pool filled with
brown boulders, out of which it creeps gray with foam-bells and
disappears in a tangle of verdure like that from which it came.

Hence, to the foot of the cañon, the metamorphic slates give place to
granite, whose nobler sculpture calls forth expressions of
corresponding beauty from the stream in passing over it,—bright trills
of rapids, booming notes of falls, solemn hushes of smooth-gliding
sheets, all chanting and blending in glorious harmony. When, at length,
its impetuous alpine life is done, it slips through a meadow with
scarce an audible whisper, and falls asleep in Moraine Lake.

This water-bed is one of the finest I ever saw. Evergreens wave
soothingly about it, and the breath of flowers floats over it like
incense. Here our blessed stream rests from its rocky wanderings, all
its mountaineering done,—no more foaming rock-leaping, no more wild,
exulting song. It falls into a smooth, glassy sleep, stirred only by
the night-wind, which, coming down the cañon, makes it croon and mutter
in ripples along its broidered shores.

Leaving the lake, it glides quietly through the rushes, destined never
more to touch the living rock. Henceforth its path lies through ancient
moraines and reaches of ashy sage-plain, which nowhere afford rocks
suitable for the development of cascades or sheer falls. Yet this
beauty of maturity, though less striking, is of a still higher order,
enticing us lovingly on through gentian meadows and groves of rustling
aspen to Lake Mono, where, spirit-like, our happy stream vanishes in
vapor, and floats free again in the sky.

Bloody Cañon, like every other in the Sierra, was recently occupied by
a glacier, which derived its fountain snows from the adjacent summits,
and descended into Mono Lake, at a time when its waters stood at a much
higher level than now. The principal characters in which the history of
the ancient glaciers is preserved are displayed here in marvelous
freshness and simplicity, furnishing the student with extraordinary
advantages for the acquisition of knowledge of this sort. The most
striking passages are polished and striated surfaces, which in many
places reflect the rays of the sun like smooth water. The dam of Red
Lake is an elegantly modeled rib of metamorphic slate, brought into
relief because of its superior strength, and because of the greater
intensity of the glacial erosion of the rock immediately above it,
caused by a steeply inclined tributary glacier, which entered the main
trunk with a heavy down-thrust at the head of the lake.

Moraine Lake furnishes an equally interesting example of a basin formed
wholly, or in part, by a terminal moraine dam curved across the path of
a stream between two lateral moraines.

At Moraine Lake the cañon proper terminates, although apparently
continued by the two lateral moraines of the vanished glacier. These
moraines are about 300 feet high, and extend unbrokenly from the sides
of the cañon into the plain, a distance of about five miles, curving
and tapering in beautiful lines. Their sunward sides are gardens, their
shady sides are groves; the former devoted chiefly to eriogonae,
compositae, and graminae; a square rod containing five or six profusely
flowered eriogonums of several species, about the same number of bahia
and linosyris, and a few grass tufts; each species being planted trimly
apart, with bare gravel between, as if cultivated artificially.

My first visit to Bloody Cañon was made in the summer of 1869, under
circumstances well calculated to heighten the impressions that are the
peculiar offspring of mountains. I came from the blooming tangles of
Florida, and waded out into the plant-gold of the great valley of
California, when its flora was as yet untrodden. Never before had I
beheld congregations of social flowers half so extensive or half so
glorious. Golden composite covered all the ground from the Coast Range
to the Sierra like a stratum of curdled sunshine, in which I reveled
for weeks, watching the rising and setting of their innumerable suns;
then I gave myself up to be borne forward on the crest of the summer
wave that sweeps annually up the Sierra and spends itself on the snowy
summits.

At the Big Tuolumne Meadows I remained more than a month, sketching,
botanizing, and climbing among the surrounding mountains. The
mountaineer with whom I then happened to be camping was one of those
remarkable men one so frequently meets in California, the hard angles
and bosses of whose characters have been brought into relief by the
grinding excitements of the gold period, until they resemble glacial
landscapes. But at this late day, my friend’s activities had subsided,
and his craving for rest caused him to become a gentle shepherd and
literally to lie down with the lamb.

Recognizing the unsatisfiable longings of my Scotch Highland instincts,
he threw out some hints concerning Bloody Cañon, and advised me to
explore it. “I have never seen it myself,” he said, “for I never was so
unfortunate as to pass that way. But I have heard many a strange story
about it, and I warrant you will at least find it wild enough.”

Then of course I made haste to see it. Early next morning I made up a
bundle of bread, tied my note-book to my belt, and strode away in the
bracing air, full of eager, indefinite hope. The plushy lawns that lay
in my path served to soothe my morning haste. The sod in many places
was starred with daisies and blue gentians, over which I lingered. I
traced the paths of the ancient glaciers over many a shining pavement,
and marked the gaps in the upper forests that told the power of the
winter avalanches. Climbing higher, I saw for the first time the
gradual dwarfing of the pines in compliance with climate, and on the
summit discovered creeping mats of the arctic willow overgrown with
silky catkins, and patches of the dwarf vaccinium with its round
flowers sprinkled in the grass like purple hail; while in every
direction the landscape stretched sublimely away in fresh wildness—a
manuscript written by the hand of Nature alone.

At length, as I entered the pass, the huge rocks began to close around
in all their wild, mysterious impressiveness, when suddenly, as I was
gazing eagerly about me, a drove of gray hairy beings came in sight,
lumbering toward me with a kind of boneless, wallowing motion like
bears.

I never turn back, though often so inclined, and in this particular
instance, amid such surroundings, everything seemed singularly
unfavorable for the calm acceptance of so grim a company. Suppressing
my fears, I soon discovered that although as hairy as bears and as
crooked as summit pines, the strange creatures were sufficiently erect
to belong to our own species. They proved to be nothing more formidable
than Mono Indians dressed in the skins of sage-rabbits. Both the men
and the women begged persistently for whisky and tobacco, and seemed so
accustomed to denials that I found it impossible to convince them that
I had none to give. Excepting the names of these two products of
civilization, they seemed to understand not a word of English; but I
afterward learned that they were on their way to Yosemite Valley to
feast awhile on trout and procure a load of acorns to carry back
through the pass to their huts on the shore of Mono Lake.

Occasionally a good countenance may be seen among the Mono Indians, but
these, the first specimens I had seen, were mostly ugly, and some of
them altogether hideous. The dirt on their faces was fairly stratified,
and seemed so ancient and so undisturbed it might almost possess a
geological significance. The older faces were, moreover, strangely
blurred and divided into sections by furrows that looked like the
cleavage-joints of rocks, suggesting exposure on the mountains in a
castaway condition for ages. Somehow they seemed to have no right place
in the landscape, and I was glad to see them fading out of sight down
the pass.

Then came evening, and the somber cliffs were inspired with the
ineffable beauty of the alpenglow. A solemn calm fell upon everything.
All the lower portion of the cañon was in gloaming shadow, and I crept
into a hollow near one of the upper lakelets to smooth the ground in a
sheltered nook for a bed. When the short twilight faded, I kindled a
sunny fire, made a cup of tea, and lay down to rest and look at the
stars. Soon the night-wind began to flow and pour in torrents among the
jagged peaks, mingling strange tones with those of the waterfalls
sounding far below; and as I drifted toward sleep I began to experience
an uncomfortable feeling of nearness to the furred Monos. Then the full
moon looked down over the edge of the cañon wall, her countenance
seemingly filled with intense concern, and apparently so near as to
produce a startling effect as if she had entered my bedroom, forgetting
all the world, to gaze on me alone.

The night was full of strange sounds, and I gladly welcomed the
morning. Breakfast was soon done, and I set forth in the exhilarating
freshness of the new day, rejoicing in the abundance of pure wildness
so close about me. The stupendous rocks, hacked and scarred with
centuries of storms, stood sharply out in the thin early light, while
down in the bottom of the cañon grooved and polished bosses heaved and
glistened like swelling sea-waves, telling a grand old story of the
ancient glacier that poured its crushing floods above them.

Here for the first time I met the arctic daisies in all their
perfection of purity and spirituality,—gentle mountaineers face to face
with the stormy sky, kept safe and warm by a thousand miracles. I
leaped lightly from rock to rock, glorying in the eternal freshness and
sufficiency of Nature, and in the ineffable tenderness with which she
nurtures her mountain darlings in the very fountains of storms. Fresh
beauty appeared at every step, delicate rock-ferns, and groups of the
fairest flowers. Now another lake came to view, now a waterfall. Never
fell light in brighter spangles, never fell water in whiter foam. I
seemed to float through the cañon enchanted, feeling nothing of its
roughness, and was out in the Mono levels before I was aware.

Looking back from the shore of Moraine Lake, my morning ramble seemed
all a dream. There curved Bloody Cañon, a mere glacial furrow 2000 feet
deep, with smooth rocks projecting from the sides and braided together
in the middle, like bulging, swelling muscles. Here the lilies were
higher than my head, and the sunshine was warm enough for palms. Yet
the snow around the arctic willows was plainly visible only four miles
away, and between were narrow specimen zones of all the principal
climates of the globe.

On the bank of a small brook that comes gurgling down the side of the
left lateral moraine, I found a camp-fire still burning, which no doubt
belonged to the gray Indians I had met on the summit, and I listened
instinctively and moved cautiously forward, half expecting to see some
of their grim faces peering out of the bushes.

Passing on toward the open plain, I noticed three well-defined terminal
moraines curved gracefully across the cañon stream, and joined by long
splices to the two noble laterals. These mark the halting-places of the
vanished glacier when it was retreating into its summit shadows on the
breaking-up of the glacial winter.

Five miles below the foot of Moraine Lake, just where the lateral
moraines lose themselves in the plain, there was a field of wild rye,
growing in magnificent waving bunches six to eight feet high, bearing
heads from six to twelve inches long. Rubbing out some of the grains, I
found them about five eighths of an inch long, dark-colored, and sweet.
Indian women were gathering it in baskets, bending down large handfuls,
beating it out, and fanning it in the wind. They were quite
picturesque, coming through the rye, as one caught glimpses of them
here and there, in winding lanes and openings, with splendid tufts
arching above their heads, while their incessant chat and laughter
showed their heedless joy.

Like the rye-field, I found the so-called desert of Mono blooming in a
high state of natural cultivation with the wild rose, cherry, aster,
and the delicate abronia; also innumerable gilias, phloxes, poppies,
and bush-compositae. I observed their gestures and the various
expressions of their corollas, inquiring how they could be so fresh and
beautiful out in this volcanic desert. They told as happy a life as any
plant-company I ever met, and seemed to enjoy even the hot sand and the
wind.

But the vegetation of the pass has been in great part destroyed, and
the same may be said of all the more accessible passes throughout the
range. Immense numbers of starving sheep and cattle have been driven
through them into Nevada, trampling the wild gardens and meadows almost
out of existence. The lofty walls are untouched by any foot, and the
falls sing on unchanged; but the sight of crushed flowers and stripped,
bitten bushes goes far toward destroying the charm of wildness.

The cañon should be seen in winter. A good, strong traveler, who knows
the way and the weather, might easily make a safe excursion through it
from Yosemite Valley on snow-shoes during some tranquil time, when the
storms are hushed. The lakes and falls would be buried then; but so,
also, would be the traces of destructive feet, while the views of the
mountains in their winter garb, and the ride at lightning speed down
the pass between the snowy walls, would be truly glorious.

[Illustration: VIEW OF THE MONO PLAIN FROM THE FOOT OF BLOODY CAÑON.]




CHAPTER VI
THE GLACIER LAKES


Among the many unlooked-for treasures that are bound up and hidden away
in the depths of Sierra solitudes, none more surely charm and surprise
all kinds of travelers than the glacier lakes. The forests and the
glaciers and the snowy fountains of the streams advertise their wealth
in a more or less telling manner even in the distance, but nothing is
seen of the lakes until we have climbed above them. All the upper
branches of the rivers are fairly laden with lakes, like orchard trees
with fruit. They lie embosomed in the deep woods, down in the grovy
bottoms of cañons, high on bald tablelands, and around the feet of the
icy peaks, mirroring back their wild beauty over and over again. Some
conception of their lavish abundance may be made from the fact that,
from one standpoint on the summit of Red Mountain, a day’s journey to
the east of Yosemite Valley, no fewer than forty-two are displayed
within a radius of ten miles. The whole number in the Sierra can hardly
be less than fifteen hundred, not counting the smaller pools and tarns,
which are innumerable. Perhaps two thirds or more lie on the western
flank of the range, and all are restricted to the alpine and subalpine
regions. At the close of the last glacial period, the middle and
foot-hill regions also abounded in lakes, all of which have long since
vanished as completely as the magnificent ancient glaciers that brought
them into existence.

Though the eastern flank of the range is excessively steep, we find
lakes pretty regularly distributed throughout even the most precipitous
portions. They are mostly found in the upper branches of the cañons,
and in the glacial amphitheaters around the peaks.

Occasionally long, narrow specimens occur upon the steep sides of
dividing ridges, their basins swung lengthwise like hammocks, and very
rarely one is found lying so exactly on the summit of the range at the
head of some pass that its waters are discharged down both flanks when
the snow is melting fast. But, however situated, they soon cease to
form surprises to the studious mountaineer; for, like all the love-work
of Nature, they are harmoniously related to one another, and to all the
other features of the mountains. It is easy, therefore, to find the
bright lake-eyes in the roughest and most ungovernable-looking
topography of any landscape countenance. Even in the lower regions,
where they have been closed for many a century, their rocky orbits are
still discernible, filled in with the detritus of flood and avalanche.
A beautiful system of grouping in correspondence with the glacial
fountains is soon perceived; also their extension in the direction of
the trends of the ancient glaciers; and in general their dependence as
to form, size, and position upon the character of the rocks in which
their basins have been eroded, and the quantity and direction of
application of the glacial force expended upon each basin.

In the upper cañons we usually find them in pretty regular succession,
strung together like beads on the bright ribbons of their
feeding-streams, which pour, white and gray with foam and spray, from
one to the other, their perfect mirror stillness making impressive
contrasts with the grand blare and glare of the connecting cataracts.
In Lake Hollow, on the north side of the Hoffman spur, immediately
above the great Tuolumne cañon, there are ten lovely lakelets lying
near together in one general hollow, like eggs in a nest. Seen from
above, in a general view, feathered with Hemlock Spruce, and fringed
with sedge, they seem to me the most singularly beautiful and
interestingly located lake-cluster I have ever yet discovered.

Lake Tahoe, 22 miles long by about 10 wide, and from 500 to over 1600
feet in depth, is the largest of all the Sierra lakes. It lies just
beyond the northern limit of the higher portion of the range between
the main axis and a spur that puts out on the east side from near the
head of the Carson River. Its forested shores go curving in and out
around many an emerald bay and pine-crowned promontory, and its waters
are everywhere as keenly pure as any to be found among the highest
mountains.

Donner Lake, rendered memorable by the terrible fate of the Donner
party, is about three miles long, and lies about ten miles to the north
of Tahoe, at the head of one of the tributaries of the Truckee. A few
miles farther north lies Lake Independence, about the same size as
Donner. But far the greater number of the lakes lie much higher and are
quite small, few of them exceeding a mile in length, most of them less
than half a mile.

Along the lower edge of the lake-belt, the smallest have disappeared by
the filling-in of their basins, leaving only those of considerable
size. But all along the upper freshly glaciated margin of the
lake-bearing zone, every hollow, however small, lying within reach of
any portion of the close network of streams, contains a bright,
brimming pool; so that the landscape viewed from the mountain-tops
seems to be sown broadcast with them. Many of the larger lakes are
encircled with smaller ones like central gems girdled with sparkling
brilliants. In general, however, there is no marked dividing line as to
size. In order, therefore, to prevent confusion, I would state here
that in giving numbers, I include none less than 500 yards in
circumference.

In the basin of the Merced River, I counted 131, of which 111 are upon
the tributaries that fall so grandly into Yosemite Valley. Pohono
Creek, which forms the fall of that name, takes its rise in a beautiful
lake, lying beneath the shadow of a lofty granite spur that puts out
from Buena Vista peak. This is now the only lake left in the whole
Pohono Basin. The Illilouette has sixteen, the Nevada no fewer than
sixty-seven, the Tenaya eight, Hoffmann Creek five, and Yosemite Creek
fourteen. There are but two other lake-bearing affluents of the Merced,
viz., the South Fork with fifteen, and Cascade Creek with five, both of
which unite with the main trunk below Yosemite.

[Illustration: LAKE TENAYA, ONE OF THE YOSEMITE FOUNTAINS.]

The Merced River, as a whole, is remarkably like an elm-tree, and it
requires but little effort on the part of the imagination to picture it
standing upright, with all its lakes hanging upon its spreading
branches, the topmost eighty miles in height. Now add all the other
lake-bearing rivers of the Sierra, each in its place, and you will have
a truly glorious spectacle,—an avenue the length and width of the
range; the long, slender, gray shafts of the main trunks, the milky way
of arching branches, and the silvery lakes, all clearly defined and
shining on the sky. How excitedly such an addition to the scenery would
be gazed at! Yet these lakeful rivers are still more excitingly
beautiful and impressive in their natural positions to those who have
the eyes to see them as they lie imbedded in their meadows and forests
and glacier-sculptured rocks.

When a mountain lake is born,—when, like a young eye, it first opens to
the light,—it is an irregular, expressionless crescent, inclosed in
banks of rock and ice,—bare, glaciated rock on the lower side, the
rugged snout of a glacier on the upper. In this condition it remains
for many a year, until at length, toward the end of some auspicious
cluster of seasons, the glacier recedes beyond the upper margin of the
basin, leaving it open from shore to shore for the first time,
thousands of years after its conception beneath the glacier that
excavated its basin. The landscape, cold and bare, is reflected in its
pure depths; the winds ruffle its glassy surface, and the sun fills it
with throbbing spangles, while its waves begin to lap and murmur around
its leafless shores,—sun-spangles during the day and reflected stars at
night its only flowers, the winds and the snow its only visitors.
Meanwhile, the glacier continues to recede, and numerous rills, still
younger than the lake itself, bring down glacier-mud, sand-grains, and
pebbles, giving rise to margin-rings and plats of soil. To these fresh
soil-beds come many a waiting plant. First, a hardy carex with arching
leaves and a spike of brown flowers; then, as the seasons grow warmer,
and the soil-beds deeper and wider, other sedges take their appointed
places, and these are joined by blue gentians, daisies, dodecatheons,
violets, honeyworts, and many a lowly moss. Shrubs also hasten in time
to the new gardens,—kalmia with its glossy leaves and purple flowers,
the arctic willow, making soft woven carpets, together with the heathy
bryanthus and cassiope, the fairest and dearest of them all. Insects
now enrich the air, frogs pipe cheerily in the shallows, soon followed
by the ouzel, which is the first bird to visit a glacier lake, as the
sedge is the first of plants.

So the young lake grows in beauty, becoming more and more humanly
lovable from century to century. Groves of aspen spring up, and hardy
pines, and the Hemlock Spruce, until it is richly overshadowed and
embowered. But while its shores are being enriched, the soil-beds creep
out with incessant growth, contracting its area, while the lighter
mud-particles deposited on the bottom cause it to grow constantly
shallower, until at length the last remnant of the lake
vanishes,—closed forever in ripe and natural old age. And now its
feeding-stream goes winding on without halting through the new gardens
and groves that have taken its place.

The length of the life of any lake depends ordinarily upon the capacity
of its basin, as compared with the carrying power of the streams that
flow into it, the character of the rocks over which these streams flow,
and the relative position of the lake toward other lakes. In a series
whose basins lie in the same cañon, and are fed by one and the same
main stream, the uppermost will, of course, vanish first unless some
other lake-filling agent comes in to modify the result; because at
first it receives nearly all of the sediments that the stream brings
down, only the finest of the mud-particles being carried through the
highest of the series to the next below. Then the next higher, and the
next would be successively filled, and the lowest would be the last to
vanish. But this simplicity as to duration is broken in upon in various
ways, chiefly through the action of side-streams that enter the lower
lakes direct. For, notwithstanding many of these side tributaries are
quite short, and, during late summer, feeble, they all become powerful
torrents in springtime when the snow is melting, and carry not only
sand and pine-needles, but large trunks and boulders tons in weight,
sweeping them down their steeply inclined channels and into the lake
basins with astounding energy. Many of these side affluents also have
the advantage of access to the main lateral moraines of the vanished
glacier that occupied the cañon, and upon these they draw for
lake-filling material, while the main trunk stream flows mostly over
clean glacier pavements, where but little moraine matter is ever left
for them to carry. Thus a small rapid stream with abundance of loose
transportable material within its reach may fill up an extensive basin
in a few centuries, while a large perennial trunk stream, flowing over
clean, enduring pavements, though ordinarily a hundred times larger,
may not fill a smaller basin in thousands of years.

The comparative influence of great and small streams as lake-fillers is
strikingly illustrated in Yosemite Valley, through which the Merced
flows. The bottom of the valley is now composed of level meadow-lands
and dry, sloping soil-beds planted with oak and pine, but it was once a
lake stretching from wall to wall and nearly from one end of the valley
to the other, forming one of the most beautiful cliff-bound sheets of
water that ever existed in the Sierra. And though never perhaps seen by
human eye, it was but yesterday, geologically speaking, since it
disappeared, and the traces of its existence are still so fresh, it may
easily be restored to the eye of imagination and viewed in all its
grandeur, about as truly and vividly as if actually before us. Now we
find that the detritus which fills this magnificent basin was not
brought down from the distant mountains by the main streams that
converge here to form the river, however powerful and available for the
purpose at first sight they appear; but almost wholly by the small
local tributaries, such as those of Indian Cañon, the Sentinel, and the
Three Brothers, and by a few small residual glaciers which lingered in
the shadows of the walls long after the main trunk glacier had receded
beyond the head of the valley.

Had the glaciers that once covered the range been melted at once,
leaving the entire surface bare from top to bottom simultaneously, then
of course all the lakes would have come into existence at the same
time, and the highest, other circumstances being equal, would, as we
have seen, be the first to vanish. But because they melted gradually
from the foot of the range upward, the lower lakes were the first to
see the light and the first to be obliterated. Therefore, instead of
finding the lakes of the present day at the foot of the range, we find
them at the top. Most of the lower lakes vanished thousands of years
before those now brightening the alpine landscapes were born. And in
general, owing to the deliberation of the upward retreat of the
glaciers, the lowest of the existing lakes are also the oldest, a
gradual transition being apparent throughout the entire belt, from the
older, forested, meadow-rimmed and contracted forms all the way up to
those that are new born, lying bare and meadowless among the highest
peaks.

[Illustration: THE DEATH OF A LAKE.]

A few small lakes unfortunately situated are extinguished suddenly by a
single swoop of an avalanche, carrying down immense numbers of trees,
together with the soil they were growing upon. Others are obliterated
by land-slips, earthquake taluses, etc., but these lake-deaths compared
with those resulting from the deliberate and incessant deposition of
sediments, may be termed accidental. Their fate is like that of trees
struck by lightning.

The lake-line is of course still rising, its present elevation being
about 8000 feet above sea-level; somewhat higher than this toward the
southern extremity of the range, lower toward the northern, on account
of the difference in time of the withdrawal of the glaciers, due to
difference in climate. Specimens occur here and there considerably
below this limit, in basins specially protected from inwashing
detritus, or exceptional in size. These, however, are not sufficiently
numerous to make any marked irregularity in the line. The highest I
have yet found lies at an elevation of about 12,000 feet, in a glacier
womb, at the foot of one of the highest of the summit peaks, a few
miles to the north of Mount Hitter. The basins of perhaps twenty-five
or thirty are still in process of formation beneath the few lingering
glaciers, but by the time they are born, an equal or greater number
will probably have died. Since the beginning of the close of the
ice-period the whole number in the range has perhaps never been greater
than at present.

A rough approximation to the average duration of these mountain lakes
may be made from data already suggested, but I cannot stop here to
present the subject in detail. I must also forego, in the mean time,
the pleasure of a full discussion of the interesting question of
lake-basin formation, for which fine, clear, demonstrative material
abounds in these mountains. In addition to what has been already given
on the subject, I will only make this one statement. Every lake in the
Sierra is a glacier lake. Their basins were not merely remodeled and
scoured out by this mighty agent, but in the first place were eroded
from the solid.

I must now make haste to give some nearer views of representative
specimens lying at different elevations on the main lake-belt,
confining myself to descriptions of the features most characteristic of
each.

SHADOW LAKE

This is a fine specimen of the oldest and lowest of the existing lakes.
It lies about eight miles above Yosemite Valley, on the main branch of
the Merced, at an elevation of about 7350 feet above the sea; and is
everywhere so securely cliff-bound that without artificial trails only
wild animals can get down to its rocky shores from any direction. Its
original length was about a mile and a half; now it is only half a mile
in length by about a fourth of a mile in width, and over the lowest
portion of the basin ninety-eight feet deep. Its crystal waters are
clasped around on the north and south by majestic granite walls
sculptured in true Yosemitic style into domes, gables, and battlemented
headlands, which on the south come plunging down sheer into deep water,
from a height of from 1500 to 2000 feet. The South Lyell glacier eroded
this magnificent basin out of solid porphyritic granite while forcing
its way westward from the summit fountains toward Yosemite, and the
exposed rocks around the shores, and the projecting bosses of the
walls, ground and burnished beneath the vast ice-flood, still glow with
silvery radiance, notwithstanding the innumerable corroding storms that
have fallen upon them. The general conformation of the basin, as well
as the moraines laid along the top of the walls, and the grooves and
scratches on the bottom and sides, indicate in the most unmistakable
manner the direction pursued by this mighty ice-river, its great depth,
and the tremendous energy it exerted in thrusting itself into and out
of the basin; bearing down with superior pressure upon this portion of
its channel, because of the greater declivity, consequently eroding it
deeper than the other portions about it, and producing the lake-bowl as
the necessary result.

With these magnificent ice-characters so vividly before us it is not
easy to realize that the old glacier that made them vanished tens of
centuries ago; for, excepting the vegetation that has sprung up, and
the changes effected by an earthquake that hurled rock-avalanches from
the weaker headlands, the basin as a whole presents the same appearance
that it did when first brought to light. The lake itself, however, has
undergone marked changes; one sees at a glance that it is growing old.
More than two thirds of its original area is now dry land, covered with
meadow-grasses and groves of pine and fir, and the level bed of
alluvium stretching across from wall to wall at the head is evidently
growing out all along its lakeward margin, and will at length close the
lake forever.

[Illustration: SHADOW LAKE (MERCED LAKE), YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK.]

Every lover of fine wildness would delight to saunter on a summer day
through the flowery groves now occupying the filled-up portion of the
basin. The curving shore is clearly traced by a ribbon of white sand
upon which the ripples play; then comes a belt of broad-leafed sedges,
interrupted here and there by impenetrable tangles of willows; beyond
this there are groves of trembling aspen; then a dark, shadowy belt of
Two-leaved Pine, with here and there a round carex meadow ensconced
nest-like in its midst; and lastly, a narrow outer margin of majestic
Silver Fir 200 feet high. The ground beneath the trees is covered with
a luxuriant crop of grasses, chiefly triticum, bromus, and
calamagrostis, with purple spikes and panicles arching to one’s
shoulders; while the open meadow patches glow throughout the summer
with showy flowers,—heleniums, goldenrods, erigerons, lupines,
castilleias, and lilies, and form favorite hiding and feeding-grounds
for bears and deer.

The rugged south wall is feathered darkly along the top with an
imposing array of spirey Silver Firs, while the rifted precipices all
the way down to the water’s edge are adorned with picturesque old
junipers, their cinnamon-colored bark showing finely upon the neutral
gray of the granite. These, with a few venturesome Dwarf Pines and
Spruces, lean out over fissured ribs and tablets, or stand erect back
in shadowy niches, in an indescribably wild and fearless manner.
Moreover, the white-flowered Douglas spiraea and dwarf evergreen oak
form graceful fringes along the narrower seams, wherever the slightest
hold can be effected. Rock-ferns, too, are here, such as allosorus,
pellaea, and cheilanthes, making handsome rosettes on the drier
fissures; and the delicate maidenhair, cistoperis, and woodsia hide
back in mossy grottoes, moistened by some trickling rill; and then the
orange wall-flower holds up its showy panicles here and there in the
sunshine, and bahia makes bosses of gold. But, notwithstanding all this
plant beauty, the general impression in looking across the lake is of
stern, unflinching rockiness; the ferns and flowers are scarcely seen,
and not one fiftieth of the whole surface is screened with plant life.

The sunnier north wall is more varied in sculpture, but the general
tone is the same. A few headlands, flat-topped and soil-covered,
support clumps of cedar and pine; and up-curving tangles of chinquapin
and live-oak, growing on rough earthquake taluses, girdle their bases.
Small streams come cascading down between them, their foaming margins
brightened with gay primulas, gilias, and mimuluses. And close along
the shore on this side there is a strip of rocky meadow enameled with
buttercups, daisies, and white violets, and the purple-topped grasses
out on its beveled border dip their leaves into the water.

The lower edge of the basin is a dam-like swell of solid granite,
heavily abraded by the old glacier, but scarce at all cut into as yet
by the outflowing stream, though it has flowed on unceasingly since the
lake came into existence.

As soon as the stream is fairly over the lake-lip it breaks into
cascades, never for a moment halting, and scarce abating one jot of its
glad energy, until it reaches the next filled-up basin, a mile below.
Then swirling and curving drowsily through meadow and grove, it breaks
forth anew into gray rapids and falls, leaping and gliding in glorious
exuberance of wild bound and dance down into another and yet another
filled-up lake basin. Then, after a long rest in the levels of Little
Yosemite, it makes its grandest display in the famous Nevada Fall. Out
of the clouds of spray at the foot of the fall the battered, roaring
river gropes its way, makes another mile of cascades and rapids, rests
a moment in Emerald Pool, then plunges over the grand cliff of the
Vernal Fall, and goes thundering and chafing down a boulder-choked
gorge of tremendous depth and wildness into the tranquil reaches of the
old Yosemite lake basin.

The color-beauty about Shadow Lake during the Indian summer is much
richer than one could hope to find in so young and so glacial a
wilderness. Almost every leaf is tinted then, and the golden-rods are
in bloom; but most of the color is given by the ripe grasses, willows,
and aspens. At the foot of the lake you stand in a trembling aspen
grove, every leaf painted like a butterfly, and away to right and left
round the shores sweeps a curving ribbon of meadow, red and brown
dotted with pale yellow, shading off here and there into hazy purple.
The walls, too, are dashed with bits of bright color that gleam out on
the neutral granite gray. But neither the walls, nor the margin meadow,
nor yet the gay, fluttering grove in which you stand, nor the lake
itself, flashing with spangles, can long hold your attention; for at
the head of the lake there is a gorgeous mass of orange-yellow,
belonging to the main aspen belt of the basin, which seems the very
fountain whence all the color below it had flowed, and here your eye is
filled and fixed. This glorious mass is about thirty feet high, and
extends across the basin nearly from wall to wall. Rich bosses of
willow flame in front of it, and from the base of these the brown
meadow comes forward to the water’s edge, the whole being relieved
against the unyielding green of the coniferae, while thick sun-gold is
poured over all.

During these blessed color-days no cloud darkens the sky, the winds are
gentle, and the landscape rests, hushed everywhere, and indescribably
impressive. A few ducks are usually seen sailing on the lake,
apparently more for pleasure than anything else, and the ouzels at the
head of the rapids sing always; while robins, grosbeaks, and the
Douglas squirrels are busy in the groves, making delightful company,
and intensifying the feeling of grateful sequestration without ruffling
the deep, hushed calm and peace.

[Illustration: VERNAL FALL, YOSEMITE VALLEY]

This autumnal mellowness usually lasts until the end of November. Then
come days of quite another kind. The winter clouds grow, and bloom, and
shed their starry crystals on every leaf and rock, and all the colors
vanish like a sunset. The deer gather and hasten down their well-known
trails, fearful of being snow-bound. Storm succeeds storm, heaping snow
on the cliffs and meadows, and bending the slender pines to the ground
in wide arches, one over the other, clustering and interlacing like
lodged wheat. Avalanches rush and boom from the shelving heights,
piling immense heaps upon the frozen lake, and all the summer glory is
buried and lost. Yet in the midst of this hearty winter the sun shines
warm at times, calling the Douglas squirrel to frisk in the snowy pines
and seek out his hidden stores; and the weather is never so severe as
to drive away the grouse and little nut-hatches and chickadees.

Toward May, the lake begins to open. The hot sun sends down innumerable
streams over the cliffs, streaking them round and round with foam. The
snow slowly vanishes, and the meadows show tintings of green. Then
spring comes on apace; flowers and flies enrich the air and the sod,
and the deer come back to the upper groves like birds to an old nest.

I first discovered this charming lake in the autumn of 1872, while on
my way to the glaciers at the head of the river. It was rejoicing then
in its gayest colors, untrodden, hidden in the glorious wildness like
unmined gold. Year after year I walked its shores without discovering
any other trace of humanity than the remains of an Indian camp-fire,
and the thigh-bones of a deer that had been broken to get at the
marrow. It lies out of the regular ways of Indians, who love to hunt in
more accessible fields adjacent to trails. Their knowledge of
deer-haunts had probably enticed them here some hunger-time when they
wished to make sure of a feast; for hunting in this lake-hollow is like
hunting in a fenced park. I had told the beauty of Shadow Lake only to
a few friends, fearing it might come to be trampled and “improved” like
Yosemite. On my last visit, as I was sauntering along the shore on the
strip of sand between the water and sod, reading the tracks of the wild
animals that live here, I was startled by a human track, which I at
once saw belonged to some shepherd; for each step was turned out 35° or
40° from the general course pursued, and was also run over in an
uncertain sprawling fashion at the heel, while a row of round dots on
the right indicated the staff that shepherds carry. None but a shepherd
could make such a track, and after tracing it a few minutes I began to
fear that he might be seeking pasturage; for what else could he be
seeking? Returning from the glaciers shortly afterward, nay worst fears
were realized. A trail had been made down the mountain-side from the
north, and all the gardens and meadows were destroyed by a horde of
hoofed locusts, as if swept by a fire. The money-changers were in the
temple.

ORANGE LAKE

Besides these larger cañon lakes, fed by the main cañon streams, there
are many smaller ones lying aloft on the top of rock benches, entirely
independent of the general drainage channels, and of course drawing
their supplies from a very limited area. Notwithstanding they are
mostly small and shallow, owing to their immunity from avalanche
detritus and the inwashings of powerful streams, they often endure
longer than others many times larger but less favorably situated. When
very shallow they become dry toward the end of summer; but because
their basins are ground out of seamless stone they suffer no loss save
from evaporation alone; and the great depth of snow that falls, lasting
into June, makes their dry season short in any case.

Orange Lake is a fair illustration of this bench form. It lies in the
middle of a beautiful glacial pavement near the lower margin of the
lake-line, about a mile and a half to the northwest of Shadow Lake. It
is only about 100 yards in circumference. Next the water there is a
girdle of carices with wide overarching leaves, then in regular order a
shaggy ruff of huckleberry bushes, a zone of willows with here and
there a bush of the Mountain Ash, then a zone of aspens with a few
pines around the outside. These zones are of course concentric, and
together form a wall beyond which the naked ice-burnished granite
stretches away in every direction, leaving it conspicuously relieved,
like a bunch of palms in a desert.

In autumn, when the colors are ripe, the whole circular grove, at a
little distance, looks like a big handful of flowers set in a cup to be
kept fresh—a tuft of goldenrods. Its feeding-streams are exceedingly
beautiful, notwithstanding their inconstancy and extreme shallowness.
They have no channel whatever, and consequently are left free to spread
in thin sheets upon the shining granite and wander at will. In many
places the current is less than a fourth of an inch deep, and flows
with so little friction it is scarcely visible. Sometimes there is not
a single foam-bell, or drifting pine-needle, or irregularity of any
sort to manifest its motion. Yet when observed narrowly it is seen to
form a web of gliding lacework exquisitely woven, giving beautiful
reflections from its minute curving ripples and eddies, and differing
from the water-laces of large cascades in being everywhere transparent.
In spring, when the snow is melting, the lake-bowl is brimming full,
and sends forth quite a large stream that slips glassily for 200 yards
or so, until it comes to an almost vertical precipice 800 feet high,
down which it plunges in a fine cataract; then it gathers its scattered
waters and goes smoothly over folds of gently dipping granite to its
confluence with the main cañon stream. During the greater portion of
the year, however, not a single water sound will you hear either at
head or foot of the lake, not oven the whispered lappings of
ripple-waves along the shore; for the winds are fenced out. But the
deep mountain silence is sweetened now and then by birds that stop here
to rest and drink on their way across the cañon.

LAKE STARR KING

A beautiful variety of the bench-top lakes occurs just where the great
lateral moraines of the main glaciers have been shoved forward in
outswelling concentric rings by small residual tributary glaciers.
Instead of being encompassed by a narrow ring of trees like Orange
Lake, these lie embosomed in dense moraine woods, so dense that in
seeking them you may pass them by again and again, although you may
know nearly where they lie concealed.

[Illustration: LAKE STARR KING.]

Lake Starr King, lying to the north of the cone of that name, above the
Little Yosemite Valley, is a fine specimen of this variety. The ouzels
pass it by, and so do the ducks; they could hardly get into it if they
would, without plumping straight down inside the circling trees.

Yet these isolated gems, lying like fallen fruit detached from the
branches, are not altogether without inhabitants and joyous, animating
visitors. Of course fishes cannot get into them, and this is generally
true of nearly every glacier lake in the range, but they are all well
stocked with happy frogs. How did the frogs get into them in the first
place? Perhaps their sticky spawn was carried in on the feet of ducks
or other birds, else their progenitors must have made some exciting
excursions through the woods and up the sides of the cañons. Down in
the still, pure depths of these hidden lakelets you may also find the
larvae of innumerable insects and a great variety of beetles, while the
air above them is thick with humming wings, through the midst of which
fly-catchers are constantly darting. And in autumn, when the
huckleberries are ripe, bands of robins and grosbeaks come to feast,
forming altogether delightful little byworlds for the naturalist.

Pushing our way upward toward the axis of the range, we find lakes in
greater and greater abundance, and more youthful in aspect. At an
elevation of about 9000 feet above sea-level they seem to have arrived
at middle age,—that is, their basins seem to be about half filled with
alluvium. Broad sheets of meadow-land are seen extending into them,
imperfect and boggy in many places and more nearly level than those of
the older lakes below them, and the vegetation of their shores is of
course more alpine. Kalmia, lodum, and cassiope fringe the meadow
rocks, while the luxuriant, waving groves, so characteristic of the
lower lakes, are represented only by clumps of the Dwarf Pine and
Hemlock Spruce. These, however, are oftentimes very picturesquely
grouped on rocky headlands around the outer rim of the meadows, or with
still more striking effect crown some rocky islet.

Moreover, from causes that we cannot stop here to explain, the cliffs
about these middle-aged lakes are seldom of the massive Yosemite type,
but are more broken, and less sheer, and they usually stand back,
leaving the shores comparatively free; while the few precipitous rocks
that do come forward and plunge directly into deep water are seldom
more than three or four hundred feet high.

I have never yet met ducks in any of the lakes of this kind, but the
ouzel is never wanting where the feeding-streams are perennial. Wild
sheep and deer may occasionally be seen on the meadows, and very rarely
a bear. One might camp on the rugged shores of these bright fountains
for weeks, without meeting any animal larger than the marmots that
burrow beneath glacier boulders along the edges of the meadows.

The highest and youngest of all the lakes lie nestled in glacier wombs.
At first sight, they seem pictures of pure bloodless desolation,
miniature arctic seas, bound in perpetual ice and snow, and
overshadowed by harsh, gloomy, crumbling precipices. Their waters are
keen ultramarine blue in the deepest parts, lively grass-green toward
the shore shallows and around the edges of the small bergs usually
floating about in them. A few hardy sedges, frost-pinched every night,
are occasionally found making soft sods along the sun-touched portions
of their shores, and when their northern banks slope openly to the
south, and are soil-covered, no matter how coarsely, they are sure to
be brightened with flowers. One lake in particular now comes to mind
which illustrates the floweriness of the sun-touched banks of these icy
gems. Close up under the shadow of the Sierra Matterhorn, on the
eastern slope of the range, lies one of the iciest of these glacier
lakes at an elevation of about 12,000 feet. A short, ragged-edged
glacier crawls into it from the south, and on the opposite side it is
embanked and dammed by a series of concentric terminal moraines, made
by the glacier when it entirely filled the basin. Half a mile below
lies a second lake, at a height of 11,500 feet, about as cold and as
pure as a snow-crystal. The waters of the first come gurgling down into
it over and through the moraine dam, while a second stream pours into
it direct from a glacier that lies to the southeast. Sheer precipices
of crystalline snow rise out of deep water on the south, keeping
perpetual winter on that side, but there is a fine summery spot on the
other, notwithstanding the lake is only about 300 yards wide. Here, on
August 25, 1873, I found a charming company of flowers, not pinched,
crouching dwarfs, scarce able to look up, but warm and juicy, standing
erect in rich cheery color and bloom. On a narrow strip of shingle,
close to the water’s edge, there were a few tufts of carex gone to
seed; and a little way back up the rocky bank at the foot of a
crumbling wall so inclined as to absorb and radiate as well as reflect
a considerable quantity of sun-heat, was the garden, containing a
thrifty thicket of Cowania covered with large yellow flowers; several
bushes of the alpine ribes with berries nearly ripe and wildly acid; a
few handsome grasses belonging to two distinct species, and one
goldenrod; a few hairy lupines and radiant spragueas, whose blue and
rose-colored flowers were set off to fine advantage amid green carices;
and along a narrow seam in the very warmest angle of the wall a
perfectly gorgeous fringe of _Epilobium obcordatum_ with flowers an
inch wide, crowded together in lavish profusion, and colored as royal a
purple as ever was worn by any high-bred plant of the tropics; and best
of all, and greatest of all, a noble thistle in full bloom, standing
erect, head and shoulders above his companions, and thrusting out his
lances in sturdy vigor as if growing on a Scottish brae. All this brave
warm bloom among the raw stones, right in the face of the onlooking
glaciers.

As far as I have been able to find out, these upper lakes are
snow-buried in winter to a depth of about thirty-five or forty feet,
and those most exposed to avalanches, to a depth of even a hundred feet
or more. These last are, of course, nearly lost to the landscape. Some
remain buried for years, when the snowfall is exceptionally great, and
many open only on one side late in the season. The snow of the closed
side is composed of coarse granules compacted and frozen into a firm,
faintly stratified mass, like the _névé_ of a glacier. The lapping
waves of the open portion gradually undermine and cause it to break off
in large masses like icebergs, which gives rise to a precipitous front
like the discharging wall of a glacier entering the sea. The play of
the lights among the crystal angles of these snow-cliffs, the pearly
white of the outswelling bosses, the bergs drifting in front, aglow in
the sun and edged with green water, and the deep blue disk of the lake
itself extending to your feet,—this forms a picture that enriches all
your afterlife, and is never forgotten. But however perfect the season
and the day, the cold incompleteness of these young lakes is always
keenly felt. We approach them with a kind of mean caution, and steal
unconfidingly around their crystal shores, dashed and ill at ease, as
if expecting to hear some forbidding voice. But the love-songs of the
ouzels and the love-looks of the daisies gradually reassure us, and
manifest the warm fountain humanity that pervades the coldest and most
solitary of them all.




CHAPTER VII
THE GLACIER MEADOWS


After the lakes on the High Sierra come the glacier meadows. They are
smooth, level, silky lawns, lying embedded in the upper forests, on the
floors of the valleys, and along the broad backs of the main dividing
ridges, at a height of about 8000 to 9500 feet above the sea.

They are nearly as level as the lakes whose places they have taken, and
present a dry, even surface free from rock-heaps, mossy bogginess, and
the frowsy roughness of rank, coarse-leaved, weedy, and shrubby
vegetation. The sod is close and fine, and so complete that you cannot
see the ground; and at the same time so brightly enameled with flowers
and butterflies that it may well be called a garden-meadow, or
meadow-garden; for the plushy sod is in many places so crowded with
gentians, daisies, ivesias, and various species of orthocarpus that the
grass is scarcely noticeable, while in others the flowers are only
pricked in here and there singly, or in small ornamental rosettes.

The most influential of the grasses composing the sod is a delicate
calamagrostis with fine filiform leaves, and loose, airy panicles that
seem to float above the flowery lawn like a purple mist. But, write as
I may, I cannot give anything like an adequate idea of the exquisite
beauty of these mountain carpets as they lie smoothly outspread in the
savage wilderness. What words are fine enough to picture them I to what
shall we liken them? The flowery levels of the prairies of the old
West, the luxuriant savannahs of the South, and the finest of
cultivated meadows are coarse in comparison. One may at first sight
compare them with the carefully tended lawns of pleasure-grounds; for
they are as free from weeds as they, and as smooth, but here the
likeness ends; for these wild lawns, with all their exquisite fineness,
have no trace of that painful, licked, snipped, repressed appearance
that pleasure-ground lawns are apt to have even when viewed at a
distance. And, not to mention the flowers with which they are
brightened, their grasses are very much finer both in color and
texture, and instead of lying flat and motionless, matted together like
a dead green cloth, they respond to the touches of every breeze,
rejoicing in pure wildness, blooming and fruiting in the vital light.

Glacier meadows abound throughout all the alpine and subalpine regions
of the Sierra in still greater numbers than the lakes. Probably from
2500 to 3000 exist between latitude 36° 30′ and 39°, distributed, of
course, like the lakes, in concordance with all the other glacial
features of the landscape.

On the head waters of the rivers there are what are called “Big
Meadows,” usually about from five to ten miles long. These occupy the
basins of the ancient ice-seas, where many tributary glaciers came
together to form the grand trunks. Most, however, are quite small,
averaging perhaps but little more than three fourths of a mile in
length.

One of the very finest of the thousands I have enjoyed lies hidden in
an extensive forest of the Two-leaved Pine, on the edge of the basin of
the ancient Tuolumne Mer de Glace, about eight miles to the west of
Mount Dana.

Imagine yourself at the Tuolumne Soda Springs on the bank of the river,
a day’s journey above Yosemite Valley. You set off northward through a
forest that stretches away indefinitely before you, seemingly unbroken
by openings of any kind. As soon as you are fairly into the woods, the
gray mountain-peaks, with their snowy gorges and hollows, are lost to
view. The ground is littered with fallen trunks that lie crossed and
recrossed like storm-lodged wheat; and besides this close forest of
pines, the rich moraine soil supports a luxuriant growth of
ribbon-leaved grasses—bromus, triticum, calamagrostis, agrostis, etc.,
which rear their handsome spikes and panicles above your waist. Making
your way through the fertile wilderness,—finding lively bits of
interest now and then in the squirrels and Clark crows, and perchance
in a deer or bear,—after the lapse of an hour or two vertical bars of
sunshine are seen ahead between the brown shafts of the pines, showing
that you are approaching an open space, and then you suddenly emerge
from the forest shadows upon a delightful purple lawn lying smooth and
free in the light like a lake. This is a glacier meadow. It is about a
mile and a half long by a quarter of a mile wide. The trees come
pressing forward all around in close serried ranks, planting their feet
exactly on its margin, and holding themselves erect, strict and orderly
like soldiers on parade; thus bounding the meadow with exquisite
precision, yet with free curving lines such as Nature alone can draw.
With inexpressible delight you wade out into the grassy sun-lake,
feeling yourself contained in one of Nature’s most sacred chambers,
withdrawn from the sterner influences of the mountains, secure from all
intrusion, secure from yourself, free in the universal beauty. And
notwithstanding the scene is so impressively spiritual, and you seem
dissolved in it, yet everything about you is beating with warm,
terrestrial, human love and life delightfully substantial and familiar.
The resiny pines are types of health and steadfastness; the robins
feeding on the sod belong to the same species you have known since
childhood; and surely these daisies, larkspurs, and goldenrods are the
very friend-flowers of the old home garden. Bees hum as in a harvest
noon, butterflies waver above the flowers, and like them you lave in
the vital sunshine, too richly and homogeneously joy-filled to be
capable of partial thought. You are all eye, sifted through and through
with light and beauty. Sauntering along the brook that meanders
silently through the meadow from the east, special flowers call you
back to discriminating consciousness. The sod comes curving down to the
water’s edge, forming bossy outswelling banks, and in some places
overlapping countersunk boulders and forming bridges. Here you find
mats of the curious dwarf willow scarce an inch high, yet sending up a
multitude of gray silky catkins, illumined here and there with, the
purple cups and bells of bryanthus and vaccinium.

Go where you may, you everywhere find the lawn divinely beautiful, as
if Nature had fingered and adjusted every plant this very day. The
floating grass panicles are scarcely felt in brushing through their
midst, so flue are they, and none of the flowers have tall or rigid
stalks. In the brightest places you find three species of gentians with
different shades of blue, daisies pure as the sky, silky leaved ivesias
with warm yellow flowers, several species of orthocarpus with blunt,
bossy spikes, red and purple and yellow; the alpine goldenrod,
pentstemon, and clover, fragrant and honeyful, with their colors massed
and blended. Parting the grasses and looking more closely you may trace
the branching of their shining stems, and note the marvelous beauty of
their mist of flowers, the glumes and pales exquisitely penciled, the
yellow dangling stamens, and feathery pistils. Beneath the lowest
leaves you discover a fairy realm of mosses,—hypnum, dicranum,
polytriclium, and many others,—their precious spore-cups poised
daintily on polished shafts, curiously hooded, or open, showing the
richly ornate peristomas worn like royal crowns. Creeping liverworts
are here also in abundance, and several rare species of fungi,
exceedingly small, and frail, and delicate, as if made only for beauty.
Caterpillars, black beetles, and ants roam the wilds of this lower
world, making their way through miniature groves and thickets like
bears in a thick wood.

And how rich, too, is the life of the sunny air! Every leaf and flower
seems to have its winged representative overhead. Dragon-flies shoot in
vigorous zigzags through the dancing swarms, and a rich profusion of
butterflies—the leguminosae of insects—make a fine addition to the
general show. Many of these last are comparatively small at this
elevation, and as yet almost unknown to science; but every now and then
a familiar vanessa or papilio comes sailing past. Humming-birds, too,
are quite common here, and the robin is always found along the margin
of the stream, or out in the shallowest portions of the sod, and
sometimes the grouse and mountain quail, with their broods of precious
fluffy chickens. Swallows skim the grassy lake from end to end,
fly-catchers come and go in fitful flights from the tops of dead spars,
while woodpeckers swing across from side to side in graceful festoon
curves,—birds, insects, and flowers all in their own way telling a deep
summer joy.

The influences of pure nature seem to be so little known as yet, that
it is generally supposed that complete pleasure of this kind,
permeating one’s very flesh and bones, unfits the student for
scientific pursuits in which cool judgment and observation are
required. But the effect is just the opposite. Instead of producing a
dissipated condition, the mind is fertilized and stimulated and
developed like sun-fed plants. All that we have seen here enables us to
see with surer vision the fountains among the summit-peaks to the east
whence flowed the glaciers that ground soil for the surrounding forest;
and down at the foot of the meadow the moraine which formed the dam
which gave rise to the lake that occupied this basin before the meadow
was made; and around the margin the stones that were shoved back and
piled up into a rude wall by the expansion of the lake ice during long
bygone winters; and along the sides of the streams the slight hollows
of the meadow which mark those portions of the old lake that were the
last to vanish.

I would fain ask my readers to linger awhile in this fertile
wilderness, to trace its history from its earliest glacial beginnings,
and learn what we may of its wild inhabitants and visitors. How happy
the birds are all summer and some of them all winter; how the pouched
marmots drive tunnels under the snow, and how fine and brave a life the
slandered coyote lives here, and the deer and bears! But, knowing well
the difference between reading and seeing, I will only ask attention to
some brief sketches of its varying aspects as they are presented
throughout the more marked seasons of the year.

The summer life we have been depicting lasts with but little abatement
until October, when the night frosts begin to sting, bronzing the
grasses, and ripening the leaves of the creeping heathworts along the
banks of the stream to reddish purple and crimson; while the flowers
disappear, all save the goldenrods and a few daisies, that continue to
bloom on unscathed until the beginning of snowy winter. In still nights
the grass panicles and every leaf and stalk are laden with frost
crystals, through which the morning sunbeams sift in ravishing
splendor, transforming each to a precious diamond radiating the colors
of the rainbow. The brook shallows are plaited across and across with
slender lances of ice, but both these and the grass crystals are melted
before midday, and, notwithstanding the great elevation of the meadow,
the afternoons are still warm enough to revive the chilled butterflies
and call them out to enjoy the late-flowering goldenrods. The divine
alpenglow flushes the surrounding forest every evening, followed by a
crystal night with hosts of lily stars, whose size and brilliancy
cannot be conceived by those who have never risen above the lowlands.

Thus come and go the bright sun-days of autumn, not a cloud in the sky,
week after week until near December. Then comes a sudden change. Clouds
of a peculiar aspect with a slow, crawling gait gather and grow in the
azure, throwing out satiny fringes, and becoming gradually darker until
every lake-like rift and opening is closed and the whole bent firmament
is obscured in equal structureless gloom. Then comes the snow, for the
clouds are ripe, the meadows of the sky are in bloom, and shed their
radiant blossoms like an orchard in the spring. Lightly, lightly they
lodge in the brown grasses and in the tasseled needles of the pines,
falling hour after hour, day after day, silently, lovingly,—all the
winds hushed,—glancing and circling hither, thither, glinting against
one another, rays interlocking in flakes as large as daisies; and then
the dry grasses, and the trees, and the stones are all equally abloom
again. Thunder-showers occur here during the summer months, and
impressive it is to watch the coming of the big transparent drops, each
a small world in itself,—one unbroken ocean without islands hurling
free through the air like planets through space. But still more
impressive to me is the coming of the snow-flowers,—falling stars,
winter daisies,—giving bloom to all the ground alike. Raindrops blossom
brilliantly in the rainbow, and change to flowers in the sod, but snow
comes in full flower direct from the dark, frozen sky.

The later snow-storms are oftentimes accompanied by winds that break up
the crystals, when the temperature is low, into single petals and
irregular dusty fragments; but there is comparatively little drifting
on the meadow, so securely is it embosomed in the woods. From December
to May, storm succeeds storm, until the snow is about fifteen or twenty
feet deep, but the surface is always as smooth as the breast of a bird.

Hushed now is the life that so late was beating warmly. Most of the
birds have gone down below the snow-line, the plants sleep, and all the
fly-wings are folded. Yet the sun beams gloriously many a cloudless day
in midwinter, casting long lance shadows athwart the dazzling expanse.
In June small flecks of the dead, decaying sod begin to appear,
gradually widening and uniting with one another, covered with creeping
rags of water during the day, and ice by night, looking as hopeless and
unvital as crushed rocks just emerging from the darkness of the glacial
period. Walk the meadow now! Scarce the memory of a flower will you
find. The ground seems twice dead. Nevertheless, the annual
resurrection is drawing near. The life-giving sun pours his floods, the
last snow-wreath melts, myriads of growing points push eagerly through
the steaming mold, the birds come back, new wings fill the air, and
fervid summer life comes surging on, seemingly yet more glorious than
before.

This is a perfect meadow, and under favorable circumstances exists
without manifesting any marked changes for centuries. Nevertheless,
soon or late it must inevitably grow old and vanish. During the calm
Indian summer, scarce a sand-grain moves around its banks, but in
flood-times and storm-times, soil is washed forward upon it and laid in
successive sheets around its gently sloping rim, and is gradually
extended to the center, making it dryer. Through a considerable period
the meadow vegetation is not greatly affected thereby, for it gradually
rises with the rising ground, keeping on the surface like water-plants
rising on the swell of waves. But at length the elevation of the
meadow-land goes on so far as to produce too dry a soil for the
specific meadow-plants, when, of course, they have to give up their
places to others fitted for the new conditions. The most characteristic
of the newcomers at this elevation above the sea are principally
sun-loving gilias, eriogonae, and compositae, and finally forest-trees.
Henceforward the obscuring changes are so manifold that the original
lake-meadow can be unveiled and seen only by the geologist.

Generally speaking, glacier lakes vanish more slowly than the meadows
that succeed them, because, unless very shallow, a greater quantity of
material is required to fill up their basins and obliterate them than
is required to render the surface of the meadow too high and dry for
meadow vegetation. Furthermore, owing to the weathering to which the
adjacent rocks are subjected, material of the finer sort, susceptible
of transportation by rains and ordinary floods, is more abundant during
the meadow period than during the lake period. Yet doubtless many a
fine meadow favorably situated exists in almost prime beauty for
thousands of years, the process of extinction being exceedingly slow,
as we reckon time. This is especially the case with meadows
circumstanced like the one we have described—embosomed in deep woods,
with the ground rising gently away from it all around, the network of
tree-roots in which all the ground is clasped preventing any rapid
torrential washing. But, in exceptional cases, beautiful lawns formed
with great deliberation are overwhelmed and obliterated at once by the
action of land-slips, earthquake avalanches, or extraordinary floods,
just as lakes are.

In those glacier meadows that take the places of shallow lakes which
have been fed by feeble streams, glacier mud and fine vegetable humus
enter largely into the composition of the soil; and on account of the
shallowness of this soil, and the seamless, water-tight, undrained
condition of the rock-basins, they are usually wet, and therefore
occupied by tall grasses and sedges, whose coarse appearance offers a
striking contrast to that of the delicate lawn-making kind described
above. These shallow-soiled meadows are oftentimes still further
roughened and diversified by partially buried moraines and swelling
bosses of the bed-rock, which, with the trees and shrubs growing upon
them, produce a striking effect as they stand in relief like islands in
the grassy level, or sweep across in rugged curves from one forest wall
to the other.

Throughout the upper meadow region, wherever water is sufficiently
abundant and low in temperature, in basins secure from flood-washing,
handsome bogs are formed with a deep growth of brown and yellow
sphagnum picturesquely ruined with patches of kalmia and ledum which
ripen masses of beautiful color in the autumn. Between these cool,
spongy bogs and the dry, flowery meadows there are many interesting
varieties which are graduated into one another by the varied conditions
already alluded to, forming a series of delightful studies.

HANGING MEADOWS

Another, very well-marked and interesting kind of meadow, differing
greatly both in origin and appearance from the lake-meadows, is found
lying aslant upon moraine-covered hillsides trending in the direction
of greatest declivity, waving up and down over rock heaps and ledges,
like rich green ribbons brilliantly illumined with tall flowers. They
occur both in the alpine and subalpine regions in considerable numbers,
and never fail to make telling features in the landscape. They are
often a mile or more in length, but never very wide—usually from thirty
to fifty yards. When the mountain or cañon side on which, they lie dips
at the required angle, and other conditions are at the same time
favorable, they extend from above the timber line to the bottom of a
cañon or lake basin, descending in fine, fluent lines like cascades,
breaking here and there into a kind of spray on large boulders, or
dividing and flowing around on either side of some projecting islet.
Sometimes a noisy stream goes brawling down through them, and again,
scarcely a drop of water is in sight. They owe their existence,
however, to streams, whether visible or invisible, the wildest
specimens being found where some perennial fountain, as a glacier or
snowbank or moraine spring sends down its waters across a rough sheet
of soil in a dissipated web of feeble, oozing rivulets. These
conditions give rise to a meadowy vegetation, whose extending roots
still more obstruct the free flow of the waters, and tend to dissipate
them out over a yet wider area. Thus the moraine soil and the necessary
moisture requisite for the better class of meadow plants are at times
combined about as perfectly as if smoothly outspread on a level
surface. Where the soil happens to be composed of the finer qualities
of glacial detritus and the water is not in excess, the nearest
approach is made by the vegetation to that of the lake-meadow. But
where, as is more commonly the case, the soil is coarse and bouldery,
the vegetation is correspondingly rank. Tall, wide-leaved grasses take
their places along the sides, and rushes and nodding carices in the
wetter portions, mingled with the most beautiful and imposing
flowers,—orange lilies and larkspurs seven or eight feet high, lupines,
senecios, aliums, painted-cups, many species of mimulus and pentstemon,
the ample boat-leaved _veratrum alba_, and the magnificent alpine
columbine, with spurs an inch and a half long. At an elevation of from
seven to nine thousand feet showy flowers frequently form the bulk of
the vegetation; then the hanging meadows become hanging gardens.

In rare instances we find an alpine basin the bottom of which is a
perfect meadow, and the sides nearly all the way round, rising in
gentle curves, are covered with moraine soil, which, being saturated
with melting snow from encircling fountains, gives rise to an almost
continuous girdle of down-curving meadow vegetation that blends
gracefully into the level meadow at the bottom, thus forming a grand,
smooth, soft, meadow-lined mountain nest. It is in meadows of this sort
that the mountain beaver (_Haplodon_) loves to make his home,
excavating snug chambers beneath the sod, digging canals, turning the
underground waters from channel to channel to suit his convenience, and
feeding the vegetation.

Another kind of meadow or bog occurs on densely timbered hillsides
where small perennial streams have been dammed at short intervals by
fallen trees. Still another kind is found hanging down smooth, flat
precipices, while corresponding leaning meadows rise to meet them.

There are also three kinds of small pot-hole meadows one of which is
found along the banks of the main streams, another on the summits of
rocky ridges, and the third on glacier pavements, all of them
interesting in origin and brimful of plant beauty.




CHAPTER VIII
THE FORESTS


The coniferous forests of the Sierra are the grandest and most
beautiful in the world, and grow in a delightful climate on the most
interesting and accessible of mountain-ranges, yet strange to say they
are not well known. More than sixty years ago David Douglas, an
enthusiastic botanist and tree lover, wandered alone through fine
sections of the Sugar Pine and Silver Fir woods wild with delight. A
few years later, other botanists made short journeys from the coast
into the lower woods. Then came the wonderful multitude of miners into
the foot-hill zone, mostly blind with gold-dust, soon followed by
“sheepmen,” who, with wool over their eyes, chased their flocks through
all the forest belts from one end of the range to the other. Then the
Yosemite Valley was discovered, and thousands of admiring tourists
passed through sections of the lower and middle zones on their way to
that wonderful park, and gained fine glimpses of the Sugar Pines and
Silver Firs along the edges of dusty trails and roads. But few indeed,
strong and free with eyes undimmed with care, have gone far enough and
lived long enough with the trees to gain anything like a loving
conception of their grandeur and significance as manifested in the
harmonies of their distribution and varying aspects throughout the
seasons, as they stand arrayed in their winter garb rejoicing in
storms, putting forth their fresh leaves in the spring while steaming
with resiny fragrance, receiving the thunder-showers of summer, or
reposing heavy-laden with ripe cones in the rich sungold of autumn. For
knowledge of this kind one must dwell with the trees and grow with
them, without any reference to time in the almanac sense.

The distribution of the general forest in belts is readily perceived.
These, as we have seen, extend in regular order from one extremity of
the range to the other; and however dense and somber they may appear in
general views, neither on the rocky heights nor down in the leafiest
hollows will you find anything to remind you of the dank, malarial
selvas of the Amazon and Orinoco, with, their “boundless contiguity of
shade,” the monotonous uniformity of the Deodar forests of the
Himalaya, the Black Forest of Europe, or the dense dark woods of
Douglas Spruce where rolls the Oregon. The giant pines, and firs, and
Sequoias hold their arms open to the sunlight, rising above one another
on the mountain benches, marshaled in glorious array, giving forth the
utmost expression of grandeur and beauty with inexhaustible variety and
harmony.

[Illustration: VIEW IN THE SIERRA FOREST.]

The inviting openness of the Sierra woods is one of their most
distinguishing characteristics. The trees of all the species stand more
or less apart in groves, or in small, irregular groups, enabling one to
find a way nearly everywhere, along sunny colonnades and through
openings that have a smooth, park-like surface, strewn with brown
needles and burs. Now you cross a wild garden, now a meadow, now a
ferny, willowy stream; and ever and anon you emerge from all the groves
and flowers upon some granite pavement or high, bare ridge commanding
superb views above the waving sea of evergreens far and near.

One would experience but little difficulty in riding on horseback
through the successive belts all the way up to the storm-beaten fringes
of the icy peaks. The deep cañons, however, that extend from the axis
of the range, cut the belts more or less completely into sections, and
prevent the mounted traveler from tracing them lengthwise.

This simple arrangement in zones and sections brings the forest, as a
whole, within the comprehension of every observer. The different
species are ever found occupying the same relative positions to one
another, as controlled by soil, climate, and the comparative vigor of
each species in taking and holding the ground; and so appreciable are
these relations, one need never be at a loss in determining, within a
few hundred feet, the elevation above sea-level by the trees alone;
for, notwithstanding some of the species range upward for several
thousand feet, and all pass one another more or less, yet even those
possessing the greatest vertical range are available in this
connection, in as much as they take on new forms corresponding with the
variations in altitude.

Crossing the treeless plains of the Sacramento and San Joaquin from the
west and reaching the Sierra foot-hills, you enter the lower fringe of
the forest, composed of small oaks and pines, growing so far apart that
not one twentieth of the surface of the ground is in shade at clear
noonday. After advancing fifteen or twenty miles, and making an ascent
of from two to three thousand feet, you reach the lower margin of the
main pine belt, composed of the gigantic Sugar Pine, Yellow Pine,
Incense Cedar, and Sequoia. Next you come to the magnificent Silver Fir
belt, and lastly to the upper pine belt, which sweeps up the rocky
acclivities of the summit peaks in a dwarfed, wavering fringe to a
height of from ten to twelve thousand feet.

[Illustration: EDGE OF THE TIMBER LINE ON MOUNT SHASTA.]

This general order of distribution, with reference to climate dependent
on elevation, is perceived at once, but there are other harmonies, as
far-reaching in this connection, that become manifest only after
patient observation and study. Perhaps the most interesting of these is
the arrangement of the forests in long, curving bands, braided together
into lace-like patterns, and outspread in charming variety. The key to
this beautiful harmony is the ancient glaciers; where they flowed the
trees followed, tracing their wavering courses along cañons, over
ridges, and over high, rolling plateaus. The Cedars of Lebanon, says
Hooker, are growing upon one of the moraines of an ancient glacier. All
the forests of the Sierra are growing upon moraines. But moraines
vanish like the glaciers that make them. Every storm that falls upon
them wastes them, cutting gaps, disintegrating boulders, and carrying
away their decaying material into new formations, until at length they
are no longer recognizable by any save students, who trace their
transitional forms down from the fresh moraines still in process of
formation, through those that are more and more ancient, and more and
more obscured by vegetation and all kinds of post-glacial weathering.

Had the ice-sheet that once covered all the range been melted
simultaneously from the foot-hills to the summits, the flanks would, of
course, have been left almost bare of soil, and these noble forests
would be wanting. Many groves and thickets would undoubtedly have grown
up on lake and avalanche beds, and many a fair flower and shrub would
have found food and a dwelling-place in weathered nooks and crevices,
but the Sierra as a whole would have been a bare, rocky desert.

[Illustration: VIEW IN THE MAIN PINE BELT OF THE SIERRA FOREST.]

It appears, therefore, that the Sierra forests in general indicate the
extent and positions of the ancient moraines as well as they do lines
of climate. For forests, properly speaking, cannot exist without soil;
and, since the moraines have been deposited upon the solid rock, and
only upon elected places, leaving a considerable portion of the old
glacial surface bare, we find luxuriant forests of pine and fir
abruptly terminated by scored and polished pavements on which not even
a moss is growing, though soil alone is required to fit them for the
growth of trees 200 feet in height.

THE NUT PINE
(_Pinus Sabiniana_)

The Nut Pine, the first conifer met in ascending the range from the
west, grows only on the torrid foothills, seeming to delight in the
most ardent sun-heat, like a palm; springing up here and there singly,
or in scattered groups of five or six, among scrubby White Oaks and
thickets of ceanothus and manzanita; its extreme upper limit being
about 4000 feet above the sea, its lower about from 500 to 800 feet.

This tree is remarkable for its airy, widespread, tropical appearance,
which suggests a region of palms, rather than cool, resiny pine woods.
No one would take it at first sight to be a conifer of any kind, it is
so loose in habit and so widely branched, and its foliage is so thin
and gray. Full-grown specimens are from forty to fifty feet in height,
and from two to three feet in diameter. The trunk usually divides into
three or four main branches, about fifteen and twenty feet from the
ground, which, after bearing away from one another, shoot straight up
and form separate summits; while the crooked subordinate branches
aspire, and radiate, and droop in ornamental sprays. The slender,
grayish-green needles are from eight to twelve inches long, loosely
tasseled, and inclined to droop in handsome curves, contrasting with
the stiff, dark-colored trunk and branches in a very striking manner.
No other tree of my acquaintance, so substantial in body, is in its
foliage so thin and so pervious to the light. The sunbeams sift through
even the leafiest trees with scarcely any interruption, and the weary,
heated traveler finds but little protection in their shade.

[Illustration: THE NUT PINE (_Pinus Sabiniana_)]

The generous crop of nutritious nuts which the Nut Pine yields makes it
a favorite with Indians, bears, and squirrels. The cones are most
beautiful, measuring from five to eight inches in length, and not much
less in thickness, rich chocolate-brown in color, and protected by
strong, down-curving hooks which terminate the scales. Nevertheless,
the little Douglas squirrel can open them. Indians gathering the ripe
nuts make a striking picture. The men climb the trees like bears and
beat off the cones with sticks, or recklessly cut off the more fruitful
branches with hatchets, while the squaws gather the big, generous
cones, and roast them until the scales open sufficiently to allow the
hard-shelled seeds to be beaten out. Then, in the cool evenings, men,
women, and children, with their capacity for dirt greatly increased by
the soft resin with which they are all bedraggled, form circles around
camp-fires, on the bank of the nearest stream, and lie in easy
independence cracking nuts and laughing and chattering, as heedless of
the future as the squirrels.

_Pinus tuberculata_

This curious little pine is found at an elevation of from 1500 to 3000
feet, growing in close, willowy groves. It is exceedingly slender and
graceful in habit, although trees that chance to stand alone outside
the groves sweep forth long, curved branches, producing a striking
contrast to the ordinary grove form. The foliage is of the same
peculiar gray-green color as that of the Nut Pine, and is worn about as
loosely, so that the body of the tree is scarcely obscured by it.

[Illustration: THE GROVE FORM. THE ISOLATED FORM (PINUS TUBERCULATA).]

At the age of seven or eight years it begins to bear cones, not on
branches, but on the main axis, and, as they never fall off, the trunk
is soon picturesquely dotted with them. The branches also become
fruitful after they attain sufficient size. The average size of the
older trees is about thirty or forty feet in height, and twelve to
fourteen inches in diameter. The cones are about four inches long,
exceedingly hard, and covered with a sort of silicious varnish and gum,
rendering them impervious to moisture, evidently with a view to the
careful preservation of the seeds.

No other conifer in the range is so closely restricted to special
localities. It is usually found apart, standing deep in chaparral on
sunny hill-and cañon-sides where there is but little depth of soil,
and, where found at all, it is quite plentiful; but the ordinary
traveler, following carriage-roads and trails, may ascend the range
many times without meeting it.

While exploring the lower portion of the Merced Cañon I found a lonely
miner seeking his fortune in a quartz vein on a wild mountain-side
planted with this singular tree. He told me that he called it the
Hickory Pine, because of the whiteness and toughness of the wood. It is
so little known, however, that it can hardly be said to have a common
name. Most mountaineers refer to it as “that queer little pine-tree
covered all over with burs.” In my studies of this species I found a
very interesting and significant group of facts, whose relations will
be seen almost as soon as stated:

1st. All the trees in the groves I examined, however unequal in size,
are of the same age.

2d. Those groves are all planted on dry hillsides covered with
chaparral, and therefore are liable to be swept by fire.

3d. There are no seedlings or saplings in or about the living groves,
but there is always a fine, hopeful crop springing up on the ground
once occupied by any grove that has been destroyed by the burning of
the chaparral.

4th. The cones never fall off and never discharge their seeds until the
tree or branch to which they belong dies.

[Illustration: LOWER MARGIN OF THE MAIN PINE BELT, SHOWING OPEN
CHARACTER OF WOODS.]

A full discussion of the bearing of these facts upon one another would
perhaps be out of place here, but I may at least call attention to the
admirable adaptation of the tree to the fire-swept regions where alone
it is found. After a grove has been destroyed, the ground is at once
sown lavishly with all the seeds ripened during its whole life, which
seem to have been carefully held in store with reference to such a
calamity. Then a young grove immediately springs up, giving beauty for
ashes.

SUGAR PINE
(_Pinus Lambertiana_)

This is the noblest pine yet discovered, surpassing all others not
merely in size but also in kingly beauty and majesty.

It towers sublimely from every ridge and cañon of the range, at an
elevation of from three to seven thousand feet above the sea, attaining
most perfect development at a height of about 5000 feet.

Full-grown specimens are commonly about 220 feet high, and from six to
eight feet in diameter near the ground, though some grand old patriarch
is occasionally met that has enjoyed five or six centuries of storms,
and attained a thickness of ten or even twelve feet, living on
undecayed, sweet and fresh in every fiber.

In southern Oregon, where it was first discovered by David Douglas, on
the head waters of the Umpqua, it attains still grander dimensions, one
specimen having been measured that was 245 feet high, and over eighteen
feet in diameter three feet from the ground. The discoverer was the
Douglas for whom the noble Douglas Spruce is named, and many other
plants which will keep his memory sweet and fresh as long as trees and
flowers are loved. His first visit to the Pacific Coast was made in the
year 1825. The Oregon Indians watched him with curiosity as he wandered
in the woods collecting specimens, and, unlike the fur-gathering
strangers they had hitherto known, caring nothing about trade. And when
at length they came to know him better, and saw that from year to year
the growing things of the woods and prairies were his only objects of
pursuit, they called him “The Man of Grass,” a title of which he was
proud. During his first summer on the waters of the Columbia he made
Fort Vancouver his headquarters, making excursions from this Hudson Bay
post in every direction. On one of his long trips he saw in an Indian’s
pouch some of the seeds of a new species of pine which he learned were
obtained from a very large tree far to the southward of the Columbia.
At the end of the next summer, returning to Fort Vancouver after the
setting in of the winter rains, bearing in mind the big pine he had
heard of, he set out on an excursion up the Willamette Valley in search
of it; and how he fared, and what dangers and hardships he endured, are
best told in his own journal, from which I quote as follows:

_October_ 26, 1826. Weather dull. Cold and cloudy. When my friends in
England are made acquainted with my travels I fear they will think I
have told them nothing but my miseries…. I quitted my camp early in the
morning to survey the neighboring country, leaving my guide to take
charge of the horses until my return in the evening. About an hour’s
walk from the camp I met an Indian, who on perceiving me instantly
strung his bow, placed on his left arm a sleeve of raccoon skin and
stood on the defensive. Being quite sure that conduct was prompted by
fear and not by hostile intentions, the poor fellow having probably
never seen such a being as myself before, I laid my gun at my feet on
the ground and waved my hand for him to come to me, which he did slowly
and with great caution. I then made him place his bow and quiver of
arrows beside my gun, and striking a light gave him a smoke out of my
own pipe and a present of a few beads. With my pencil I made a rough
sketch of the cone and pine tree which I wanted to obtain, and drew his
attention to it, when he instantly pointed with his hand to the hills
fifteen or twenty miles distant towards the south; and when I expressed
my intention of going thither, cheerfully set out to accompany me. At
midday I reached my long-wished-for pines, and lost no time in
examining them and endeavoring to collect specimens and seeds. New and
strange things seldom fail to make strong impressions, and are
therefore frequently over-rated; so that, lest I should never see my
friends in England to inform them verbally of this most beautiful and
immensely grand tree, I shall here state the dimensions of the largest
I could find among several that had been blown down by the wind. At 3
feet from the ground its circumference is 57 feet 9 inches; at 134
feet, 17 feet 5 inches; the extreme length 245 feet…. As it was
impossible either to climb the tree or hew it down, I endeavored to
knock off the cones by firing at them with ball, when the report of my
gun brought eight Indians, all of them painted with red earth, armed
with bows, arrows, bone-tipped spears, and flint-knives. They appeared
anything but friendly. I explained to them what I wanted, and they
seemed satisfied and sat down to smoke; but presently I saw one of them
string his bow, and another sharpen his flint knife with a pair of
wooden pincers and suspend it off the wrist of his right hand. Further
testimony of their intentions was unnecessary. To save myself by flight
was impossible, so without hesitation I stepped back about five paces,
cocked my gun, drew one of the pistols out of my belt, and holding it
in my left hand and the gun in my right, showed myself determined to
fight for my life. As much as possible I endeavored to preserve my
coolness, and thus we stood looking at one another without making any
movement or uttering a word for perhaps ten minutes, when one at last,
who seemed to be the leader, gave a sign that they wished for some
tobacco; this I signified that they should have if they fetched a
quantity of cones. They went off immediately in search of them, and no
sooner were they all out of sight than I picked up my three cones and
some twigs of the trees and made the quickest possible retreat,
hurrying back to the camp, which I reached before dusk…. I now write
lying on the grass with my gun cocked beside me, and penning these
lines by the light of my Columbian candle, namely, an ignited piece of
rosin-wood.


This grand pine discovered under such, exciting circumstances Douglas
named in honor of his friend Dr. Lambert of London.

The trunk is a smooth, round, delicately tapered shaft, mostly without
limbs, and colored rich purplish-brown, usually enlivened with tufts of
yellow lichen. At the top of this magnificent bole, long, curving
branches sweep gracefully outward and downward, sometimes forming a
palm-like crown, but far more nobly impressive than any palm crown I
ever beheld. The needles are about three inches long, finely tempered
and arranged in rather close tassels at the ends of slender branchlets
that clothe the long, outsweeping limbs. How well they sing in the
wind, and how strikingly harmonious an effect is made by the immense
cylindrical cones that depend loosely from the ends of the main
branches! No one knows what Nature can do in the way of pine-burs until
he has seen those of the Sugar Pine. They are commonly from fifteen to
eighteen inches long, and three in diameter; green, shaded with dark
purple on their sunward sides. They are ripe in September and October.
Then the flat scales open and the seeds take wing, but the empty cones
become still more beautiful and effective, for their diameter is nearly
doubled by the spreading of the scales, and their color changes to a
warm yellowish-brown; while they remain swinging on the tree all the
following winter and summer, and continue effectively beautiful even on
the ground many years after they fall. The wood is deliciously
fragrant, and fine in grain and texture; it is of a rich cream-yellow,
as if formed of condensed sunbeams. _Retinospora obtusa, Siebold_, the
glory of Eastern forests, is called “Fu-si-no-ki” (tree of the sun) by
the Japanese; the Sugar Pine is the sun-tree of the Sierra.
Unfortunately it is greatly prized by the lumbermen, and in accessible
places is always the first tree in the woods to feel their steel. But
the regular lumbermen, with their saw-mills, have been, less generally
destructive thus far than the shingle-makers. The wood splits freely,
and there is a constant demand for the shingles. And because an ax, and
saw, and frow are all the capital required for the business, many of
that drifting, unsteady class of men so large in California engage in
it for a few months in the year. When prospectors, hunters, ranch
hands, etc., touch their “bottom dollar” and find themselves out of
employment, they say, “Well, I can at least go to the Sugar Pines and
make shingles.” A few posts are set in the ground, and a single length
cut from the first tree felled produces boards enough for the walls and
roof of a cabin; all the rest the lumberman makes is for sale, and he
is speedily independent. No gardener or haymaker is more sweetly
perfumed than these rough mountaineers while engaged in this business,
but the havoc they make is most deplorable.

[Illustration: SUGAR PINE ON EXPOSED RIDGE.]

The sugar, from which the common name is derived, is to my taste the
best of sweets—better than maple sugar. It exudes from the heart-wood,
where wounds have been made, either by forest fires, or the ax, in the
shape of irregular, crisp, candy-like kernels, which are crowded
together in masses of considerable size, like clusters of resin-beads.
When fresh, it is perfectly white and delicious, but, because most of
the wounds on which it is found have been made by fire, the exuding sap
is stained on the charred surface, and the hardened sugar becomes
brown. Indians are fond of it, but on account of its laxative
properties only small quantities may be eaten. Bears, so fond of sweet
things in general, seem never to taste it; at least I have failed to
find any trace of their teeth in this connection.

No lover of trees will ever forget his first meeting with the Sugar
Pine, nor will he afterward need a poet to call him to “listen what the
pine-tree saith.” In most pine-trees there is a sameness of expression,
which, to most people, is apt to become monotonous; for the typical
spiry form, however beautiful, affords but little scope for appreciable
individual character. The Sugar Pine is as free from conventionalities
of form and motion as any oak. No two are alike, even to the most
inattentive observer; and, notwithstanding they are ever tossing out
their immense arms in what might seem most extravagant gestures, there
is a majesty and repose about them that precludes all possibility of
the grotesque, or even picturesque, in their general expression. They
are the priests of pines, and seem ever to be addressing the
surrounding forest. The Yellow Pine is found growing with them on warm
hillsides, and the White Silver Fir on cool northern slopes; but, noble
as these are, the Sugar Pine is easily king, and spreads his arms above
them in blessing while they rock and wave in sign of recognition. The
main branches are sometimes found to be forty feet in length, yet
persistently simple, seldom dividing at all, excepting near the end;
but anything like a bare cable appearance is prevented by the small,
tasseled branchlets that extend all around them; and when these superb
limbs sweep out symmetrically on all sides, a crown sixty or seventy
feet wide is formed, which, gracefully poised on the summit of the
noble shaft, and filled with sunshine, is one of the most glorious
forest objects conceivable. Commonly, however, there is a great
preponderance of limbs toward the east, away from the direction of the
prevailing winds.

No other pine seems to me so unfamiliar and self-contained. In
approaching it, we feel as if in the presence of a superior being, and
begin to walk with a light step, holding our breath. Then, perchance,
while we gaze awe-stricken, along comes a merry squirrel, chattering
and laughing, to break the spell, running up the trunk with no
ceremony, and gnawing off the cones as if they were made only for him;
while the carpenter-woodpecker hammers away at the bark, drilling holes
in which to store his winter supply of acorns.

[Illustration: YOUNG SUGAR PINE BEGINNING TO BEAR CONES.]

Although so wild and unconventional when full-grown, the Sugar Pine is
a remarkably proper tree in youth. The old is the most original and
independent in appearance of all the Sierra evergreens; the young is
the most regular,—a strict follower of coniferous fashions,—slim,
erect, with leafy, supple branches kept exactly in place, each tapering
in outline and terminating in a spiry point. The successive
transitional forms presented between the cautious neatness of youth and
bold freedom of maturity offer a delightful study. At the age of fifty
or sixty years, the shy, fashionable form begins to be broken up.
Specialized branches push out in the most unthought-of places, and bend
with the great cones, at once marking individual character, and this
being constantly augmented from year to year by the varying action of
the sunlight, winds, snow-storms, etc., the individuality of the tree
is never again lost in the general forest.

The most constant companion of this species is the Yellow Pine, and a
worthy companion it is.

[Illustration: FOREST OF SEQUOIA, SUGAR PINE, AND DOUGLAS SPRUCE.]

The Douglas Spruce, Libocedrus, Sequoia, and the White Silver Fir are
also more or less associated with it; but on many deep-soiled
mountain-sides, at an elevation of about 5000 feet above the sea, it
forms the bulk of the forest, filling every swell and hollow and
down-plunging ravine. The majestic crowns, approaching each other in
bold curves, make a glorious canopy through which the tempered sunbeams
pour, silvering the needles, and gilding the massive boles, and
flowery, park-like ground, into a scene of enchantment.

On the most sunny slopes the white-flowered fragrant chamoebatia is
spread like a carpet, brightened during early summer with the crimson
Sarcodes, the wild rose, and innumerable violets and gilias. Not even
in the shadiest nooks will you find any rank, untidy weeds or
unwholesome darkness. On the north sides of ridges the boles are more
slender, and the ground is mostly occupied by an underbrush of hazel,
ceanothus, and flowering dogwood, but never so densely as to prevent
the traveler from sauntering where he will; while the crowning branches
are never impenetrable to the rays of the sun, and never so
interblended as to lose their individuality.

View the forest from beneath or from some commanding ridge-top; each
tree presents a study in itself, and proclaims the surpassing grandeur
of the species.

YELLOW, OR SILVER PINE
(_Pinus ponderosa_)

The Silver, or Yellow, Pine, as it is commonly called, ranks second
among the pines of the Sierra as a lumber tree, and almost rivals the
Sugar Pine in stature and nobleness of port. Because of its superior
powers of enduring variations of climate and soil, it has a more
extensive range than any other conifer growing on the Sierra. On the
western slope it is first met at an elevation of about 2000 feet, and
extends nearly to the upper limit of the timber line. Thence, crossing
the range by the lowest passes, it descends to the eastern base, and
pushes out for a considerable distance into the hot volcanic plains,
growing bravely upon well-watered moraines, gravelly lake basins,
arctic ridges, and torrid lava-beds; planting itself upon the lips of
craters, flourishing vigorously even there, and tossing ripe cones
among the ashes and cinders of Nature’s hearths.

The average size of full-grown trees on the western slope, where it is
associated with the Sugar Pine, is a little less than 200 feet in
height and from five to six feet in diameter, though specimens may
easily be found that are considerably larger. I measured one, growing
at an elevation of 4000 feet in the valley of the Merced, that is a few
inches over eight feet in diameter, and 220 feet high.

Where there is plenty of free sunshine and other conditions are
favorable, it presents a striking contrast in form to the Sugar Pine,
being a symmetrical spire, formed of a straight round trunk, clad with
innumerable branches that are divided over and over again. About one
half of the trunk is commonly branchless, but where it grows at all
close, three fourths or more become naked; the tree presenting then a
more slender and elegant shaft than any other tree in the woods. The
bark is mostly arranged in massive plates, some of them measuring four
or five feet in length by eighteen inches in width, with a thickness of
three or four inches, forming a quite marked and distinguishing
feature. The needles are of a fine, warm, yellow-green color, six to
eight inches long, firm and elastic, and crowded in handsome, radiant
tassels on the upturning ends of the branches. The cones are about
three or four inches long, and two and a half wide, growing in close,
sessile clusters among the leaves.

[Illustration: PINUS PONDEROSA]

The species attains its noblest form in filled-up lake basins,
especially in those of the older yosemites, and so prominent a part
does it form of their groves that it may well be called the Yosemite
Pine. Ripe specimens favorably situated are almost always 200 feet or
more in height, and the branches clothe the trunk nearly to the ground,
as seen in the illustration.

The Jeffrey variety attains its finest development in the northern
portion of the range, in the wide basins of the McCloud and Pitt
rivers, where it forms magnificent forests scarcely invaded by any
other tree. It differs from the ordinary form in size, being only about
half as tall, and in its redder and more closely furrowed bark,
grayish-green foliage, less divided branches, and larger cones; but
intermediate forms come in which make a clear separation impossible,
although some botanists regard it as a distinct species. It is this
variety that climbs storm-swept ridges, and wanders out among the
volcanoes of the Great Basin. Whether exposed to extremes of heat or
cold, it is dwarfed like every other tree, and becomes all knots and
angles, wholly unlike the majestic forms we have been sketching. Old
specimens, bearing cones about as big as pineapples, may sometimes be
found clinging to rifted rocks at an elevation of seven or eight
thousand feet, whose highest branches scarce reach above one’s
shoulders.

[Illustration: SILVER PINE 210 FEET HIGH. (THE FORM GROWING IN
YOSEMITE VALLEY.)]

I have oftentimes feasted on the beauty of these noble trees when they
were towering in all their winter grandeur, laden with snow—one mass of
bloom; in summer, too, when the brown, staminate clusters hang thick
among the shimmering needles, and the big purple burs are ripening in
the mellow light; but it is during cloudless wind-storms that these
colossal pines are most impressively beautiful. Then they bow like
willows, their leaves streaming forward all in one direction, and, when
the sun shines upon them at the required angle, entire groves glow as
if every leaf were burnished silver. The fall of tropic light on the
royal crown of a palm is a truly glorious spectacle, the fervid
sun-flood breaking upon the glossy leaves in long lance-rays, like
mountain water among boulders. But to me there is something more
impressive in the fall of light upon these Silver Pines. It seems
beaten to the finest dust, and is shed off in myriads of minute
sparkles that seem to come from the very heart of the trees, as if,
like rain falling upon fertile soil, it had been absorbed, to reappear
in flowers of light.

This species also gives forth the finest music to the wind. After
listening to it in all kinds of winds, night and day, season after
season, I think I could approximate to my position on the mountains by
this pine-music alone. If you would catch the tones of separate
needles, climb a tree. They are well tempered, and give forth no
uncertain sound, each standing out, with no interference excepting
during heavy gales; then you may detect the click of one needle upon
another, readily distinguishable from their free, wing-like hum. Some
idea of their temper may be drawn from the fact that, notwithstanding
they are so long, the vibrations that give rise to the peculiar
shimmering of the light are made at the rate of about two hundred and
fifty per minute.

When a Sugar Pine and one of this species equal in size are observed
together, the latter is seen to be far more simple in manners, more
lithely graceful, and its beauty is of a kind more easily appreciated;
but then, it is, on the other hand, much less dignified and original in
demeanor. The Silver Pine seems eager to shoot aloft. Even while it is
drowsing in autumn sun-gold, you may still detect a skyward aspiration.
But the Sugar Pine seems too unconsciously noble, and too complete in
every way, to leave room for even a heavenward care.

DOUGLAS SPRUCE
(_Pseudotsuga Douglasii_)

This tree is the king of the spruces, as the Sugar Pine is king of
pines. It is by far the most majestic spruce I ever beheld in any
forest, and one of the largest and longest lived of the giants that
flourish throughout the main pine belt, often attaining a height of
nearly 200 feet, and a diameter of six or seven. Where the growth is
not too close, the strong, spreading branches come more than halfway
down the trunk, and these are hung with innumerable slender, swaying
sprays, that are handsomely feathered with the short leaves which
radiate at right angles all around them. This vigorous spruce is ever
beautiful, welcoming the mountain winds and the snow as well as the
mellow summer light, and maintaining its youthful freshness
undiminished from century to century through a thousand storms.

It makes its finest appearance in the months of June and July. The rich
brown buds with which its sprays are tipped swell and break about this
time, revealing the young leaves, which at first are bright yellow,
making the tree appear as if covered with gay blossoms; while the
pendulous bracted cones with their shell-like scales are a constant
adornment.

The young trees are mostly gathered into beautiful family groups, each
sapling exquisitely symmetrical. The primary branches are whorled
regularly around the axis, generally in fives, while each is draped
with long, feathery sprays, that descend in curves as free and as
finely drawn as those of falling water.

In Oregon and Washington it grows in dense forests, growing tall and
mast-like to a height of 300 feet, and is greatly prized as a lumber
tree. But in the Sierra it is scattered among other trees, or forms
small groves, seldom ascending higher than 5500 feet, and never making
what would be called a forest. It is not particular in its choice of
soil—wet or dry, smooth or rocky, it makes out to live well on them
all. Two of the largest specimens I have measured are in Yosemite
Valley, one of which is more than eight feet in diameter, and is
growing upon the terminal moraine of the residual glacier that occupied
the South Fork Canon; the other is nearly as large, growing upon
angular blocks of granite that have been shaken from the precipitous
front of the Liberty Cap near the Nevada Fall. No other tree seems so
capable of adapting itself to earthquake taluses, and many of these
rough boulder-slopes are occupied by it almost exclusively, especially
in yosemite gorges moistened by the spray of waterfalls.

INCENSE CEDAR
(_Libocedrus decurrens_)

The Incense Cedar is another of the giants quite generally distributed
throughout this portion of the forest, without exclusively occupying
any considerable area, or even making extensive groves. It ascends to
about 5000 feet on the warmer hillsides, and reaches the climate most
congenial to it at about from 3000 to 4000 feet, growing vigorously at
this elevation on all kinds of soil, and in particular it is capable of
enduring more moisture about its roots than any of its companions,
excepting only the Sequoia.

The largest specimens are about 150 feet high, and seven feet in
diameter. The bark is brown, of a singularly rich tone very attractive
to artists, and the foliage is tinted with a warmer yellow than that of
any other evergreen in the woods. Casting your eye over the general
forest from some ridge-top, the color alone of its spiry summits is
sufficient to identify it in any company.

[Illustration: INCENSE CEDAR IN ITS PRIME.]

In youth, say up to the age of seventy or eighty years, no other tree
forms so strictly tapered a cone from top to bottom. The branches swoop
outward and downward in bold curves, excepting the younger ones near
the top, which aspire, while the lowest droop to the ground, and all
spread out in flat, ferny plumes, beautifully fronded, and imbricated
upon one another. As it becomes older, it grows strikingly irregular
and picturesque. Large special branches put out at right angles from
the trunk, form big, stubborn elbows, and then shoot up parallel with
the axis. Very old trees are usually dead at the top, the main axis
protruding above ample masses of green plumes, gray and lichen-covered,
and drilled full of acorn holes by the woodpeckers. The plumes are
exceedingly beautiful; no waving fern-frond in shady dell is more
unreservedly beautiful in form and texture, or half so inspiring in
color and spicy fragrance. In its prime, the whole tree is thatched
with them, so that they shed off rain and snow like a roof, making fine
mansions for storm-bound birds and mountaineers. But if you would see
the _Libocedrus_ in all its glory, you must go to the woods in winter.
Then it is laden with myriads of four-sided staminate cones about the
size of wheat grains,—winter wheat,—producing a golden tinge, and
forming a noble illustration of Nature’s immortal vigor and virility.
The fertile cones are about three fourths of an inch long, borne on the
outside of the plumy branchlets, where they serve to enrich still more
the surpassing beauty of this grand winter-blooming goldenrod.

WHITE SILVER FIR
(_Abies concolor_)

[Illustration: FOREST OF GRAND SILVER FIRS. TWO SEQUOIAS IN THE
FOREGROUND ON THE LEFT.]

We come now to the most regularly planted of all the main forest belts,
composed almost exclusively of two noble firs—_A. concolor_ and _A.
magnifica_. It extends with no marked interruption for 450 miles, at an
elevation of from 5000 to nearly 9000 feet above the sea. In its youth
_A. concolor_ is a charmingly symmetrical tree with branches regularly
whorled in level collars around its whitish-gray axis, which terminates
in a strong, hopeful shoot. The leaves are in two horizontal rows,
along branchlets that commonly are less than eight years old, forming
handsome plumes, pinnated like the fronds of ferns. The cones are
grayish-green when ripe, cylindrical, about from three to four inches
long by one and a half to two inches wide, and stand upright on the
upper branches.

Full-grown trees, favorably situated as to soil and exposure, are about
200 feet high, and five or six feet in diameter near the ground, though
larger specimens are by no means rare.

As old age creeps on, the bark becomes rougher and grayer, the branches
lose their exact regularity, many are snow-bent or broken off, and the
main axis often becomes double or otherwise irregular from accidents to
the terminal bud or shoot; but throughout all the vicissitudes of its
life on the mountains, come what may, the noble grandeur of the species
is patent to every eye.

MAGNIFICENT SILVER FIR, OR RED FIR
(_Abies magnifica_)

This is the most charmingly symmetrical of all the giants of the Sierra
woods, far surpassing its companion species in this respect, and easily
distinguished from it by the purplish-red bark, which is also more
closely furrowed than that of the white, and by its larger cones, more
regularly whorled and fronded branches, and by its leaves, which are
shorter, and grow all around the branchlets and point upward.

In size, these two Silver Firs are about equal, the _magnifica_ perhaps
a little the taller. Specimens from 200 to 250 feet high are not rare
on well-ground moraine soil, at an elevation of from 7500 to 8500 feet
above sea-level. The largest that I measured stands back three miles
from the brink of the north wall of Yosemite Valley. Fifteen years ago
it was 240 feet high, with a diameter of a little more than five feet.

Happy the man with the freedom and the love to climb one of these
superb trees in full flower and fruit. How admirable the forest-work of
Nature is then seen to be, as one makes his way up through the midst of
the broad, fronded branches, all arranged in exquisite order around the
trunk, like the whorled leaves of lilies, and each branch and branchlet
about as strictly pinnate as the most symmetrical fern-frond. The
staminate cones are seen growing straight downward from the under side
of the young branches in lavish profusion, making fine purple clusters
amid the grayish-green foliage. On the topmost branches the fertile
cones are set firmly on end like small casks. They are about six inches
long, three wide, covered with a fine gray down, and streaked with
crystal balsam that seems to have been poured upon each cone from
above.

Both the Silver Firs live 250 years or more when the conditions about
them are at all favorable. Some venerable patriarch may often be seen,
heavily storm-marked, towering in severe majesty above the rising
generation, with a protecting grove of saplings pressing close around
his feet, each dressed with such loving care that not a leaf seems
wanting. Other companies are made up of trees near the prime of life,
exquisitely harmonized to one another in form and gesture, as if Nature
had culled them one by one with nice discrimination from all the rest
of the woods.

[Illustration: VIEW OF FOREST OF THE MAGNIFICENT SILVER FIR.]

It is from this tree, called Red Fir by the lumberman, that
mountaineers always cut boughs to sleep on when they are so fortunate
as to be within its limits. Two rows of the plushy branches overlapping
along the middle, and a crescent of smaller plumes mixed with ferns and
flowers for a pillow, form the very best bed imaginable. The essences
of the pressed leaves seem to fill every pore of one’s body, the sounds
of falling water make a soothing hush, while the spaces between the
grand spires afford noble openings through which to gaze dreamily into
the starry sky. Even in the matter of sensuous ease, any combination of
cloth, steel springs, and feathers seems vulgar in comparison.

The fir woods are delightful sauntering-grounds at any time of year,
but most so in autumn. Then the noble trees are hushed in the hazy
light, and drip with balsam; the cones are ripe, and the seeds, with
their ample purple wings, mottle the air like flocks of butterflies;
while deer feeding in the flowery openings between the groves, and
birds and squirrels in the branches, make a pleasant stir which
enriches the deep, brooding calm of the wilderness, and gives a
peculiar impressiveness to every tree. No wonder the enthusiastic
Douglas went wild with joy when he first discovered this species. Even
in the Sierra, where so many noble evergreens challenge admiration, we
linger among these colossal firs with fresh love, and extol their
beauty again and again, as if no other in the world could henceforth
claim our regard.

[Illustration: SILVER-FIR FOREST GROWING ON MORAINES OF THE HOFFMAN
AND TENAYA GLACIERS.]

It is in these woods the great granite domes rise that are so striking
and characteristic a feature of the Sierra. And here too we find the
best of the garden meadows. They lie level on the tops of the dividing
ridges, or sloping on the sides of them, embedded in the magnificent
forest. Some of these meadows are in great part occupied by
_Veratrumalba_, which here grows rank and tall, with boat-shaped leaves
thirteen inches long and twelve inches wide, ribbed like those of
cypripedium. Columbine grows on the drier margins with tall larkspurs
and lupines waist-deep in grasses and sedges; several species of
castilleia also make a bright show in beds of blue and white violets
and daisies. But the glory of these forest meadows is a lily—_L.
parvum_. The flowers are orange-colored and quite small, the smallest I
ever saw of the true lilies; but it is showy nevertheless, for it is
seven to eight feet high and waves magnificent racemes of ten to twenty
flowers or more over one’s head, while it stands out in the open ground
with just enough of grass and other plants about it to make a fringe
for its feet and show it off to best advantage.

A dry spot a little way back from the margin of a Silver Fir lily
garden makes a glorious campground, especially where the slope is
toward the east and opens a view of the distant peaks along the summit
of the range. The tall lilies are brought forward in all their glory by
the light of your blazing camp-fire, relieved against the outer
darkness, and the nearest of the trees with their whorled branches
tower above you like larger lilies, and the sky seen through the garden
opening seems one vast meadow of white lily stars.

In the morning everything is joyous and bright, the delicious purple of
the dawn changes softly to daffodil yellow and white; while the
sunbeams pouring through the passes between the peaks give a margin of
gold to each of them. Then the spires of the firs in the hollows of the
middle region catch the glow, and your camp grove is filled with light.
The birds begin to stir, seeking sunny branches on the edge of the
meadow for sun-baths after the cold night, and looking for their
breakfasts, every one of them as fresh as a lily and as charmingly
arrayed. Innumerable insects begin to dance, the deer withdraw from the
open glades and ridge-tops to their leafy hiding-places in the
chaparral, the flowers open and straighten their petals as the dew
vanishes, every pulse beats high, every life-cell rejoices, the very
rocks seem to tingle with life, and God is felt brooding over
everything great and small.

BIG TREE
(_Sequoia gigantea_)

Between the heavy pine and Silver Fir belts we find the Big Tree, the
king of all the conifers in the world, “the noblest of a noble race.”
It extends in a widely interrupted belt from a small grove on the
middle fork of the American River to the head of Deer Creek, a distance
of about 260 miles, the northern limit being near the thirty-ninth
parallel, the southern a little below the thirty-sixth, and the
elevation of the belt above the sea varies from about 5000 to 8000
feet. From the American River grove to the forest on King’s River the
species occurs only in small isolated groups so sparsely distributed
along the belt that three of the gaps in it are from forty to sixty
miles wide. But from King’s River southward the Sequoia is not
restricted to mere groves, but extends across the broad rugged basins
of the Kaweah and Tule rivers in noble forests, a distance of nearly
seventy miles, the continuity of this part of the belt being broken
only by deep cañons. The Fresno, the largest of the northern groves,
occupies an area of three or four square miles, a short distance to the
southward of the famous Mariposa Grove. Along the beveled rim of the
cañon of the south fork of King’s River there is a majestic forest of
Sequoia about six miles long by two wide. This is the northernmost
assemblage of Big Trees that may fairly be called a forest. Descending
the precipitous divide between the King’s River and Kaweah you enter
the grand forests that form the main continuous portion of the belt.
Advancing southward the giants become more and more irrepressibly
exuberant, heaving their massive crowns into the sky from every ridge
and slope, and waving onward in graceful compliance with the
complicated topography of the region. The finest of the Kaweah section
of the belt is on the broad ridge between Marble Creek and the middle
fork, and extends from the granite headlands overlooking the hot plains
to within a few miles of the cool glacial fountains of the summit
peaks. The extreme upper limit of the belt is reached between the
middle and south forks of the Kaweah at an elevation of 8400 feet. But
the finest block of Big Tree forest in the entire belt is on the north
fork of Tule River. In the northern groves there are comparatively few
young trees or saplings. But here for every old, storm-stricken giant
there are many in all the glory of prime vigor, and for each of these a
crowd of eager, hopeful young trees and saplings growing heartily on
moraines, rocky ledges, along watercourses, and in the moist alluvium
of meadows, seemingly in hot pursuit of eternal life.

[Illustration:  SEQUOIA GIGANTEA—VIEW IN GENERAL GRANT NATIONAL PARK.]

But though the area occupied by the species increases so much from
north to south there is no marked increase in the size of the trees. A
height of 275 feet and a diameter near the ground of about 20 feet is
perhaps about the average size of full-grown trees favorably situated;
specimens 25 feet in diameter are not very rare, and a few are nearly
300 feet high. In the Calaveras Grove there are four trees over 300
feet in height, the tallest of which by careful measurement is 325
feet. The largest I have yet met in the course of my explorations is a
majestic old scarred monument in the King’s River forest. It is 35 feet
8 inches in diameter inside the bark four feet from the ground. Under
the most favorable conditions these giants probably live 5000 years or
more, though few of even the larger trees are more than half as old. I
never saw a Big Tree that had died a natural death; barring accidents
they seem to be immortal, being exempt from all the diseases that
afflict and kill other trees. Unless destroyed by man, they live on
indefinitely until burned, smashed by lightning, or cast down by
storms, or by the giving way of the ground on which they stand. The age
of one that was felled in the Calaveras Grove, for the sake of having
its stump for a dancing-floor, was about 1300 years, and its diameter,
measured across the stump, 24 feet inside the bark. Another that was
cut down in the King’s River forest was about the same size, but nearly
a thousand years older (2200 years), though not a very old-looking
tree. It was felled to procure a section for exhibition, and thus an
opportunity was given to count its annual rings of growth. The colossal
scarred monument in the King’s River forest mentioned above is burned
half through, and I spent a day in making an estimate of its age,
clearing away the charred surface with an ax and carefully counting the
annual rings with the aid of a pocket-lens. The wood-rings in the
section I laid bare were so involved and contorted in some places that
I was not able to determine its age exactly, but I counted over 4000
rings, which showed that this tree was in its prime, swaying in the
Sierra winds, when Christ walked the earth. No other tree in the world,
as far as I know, has looked down on so many centuries as the Sequoia,
or opens such impressive and suggestive views into history.

So exquisitely harmonious and finely balanced are even the very
mightiest of these monarchs of the woods in all their proportions and
circumstances there never is anything overgrown or monstrous-looking
about them. On coming in sight of them for the first time, you are
likely to say, “Oh, see what beautiful, noble-looking trees are
towering there among the firs and pines!”—their grandeur being in the
mean time in great part invisible, but to the living eye it will be
manifested sooner or later, stealing slowly on the senses, like the
grandeur of Niagara, or the lofty Yosemite domes. Their great size is
hidden from the inexperienced observer as long as they are seen at a
distance in one harmonious view. When, however, you approach them and
walk round them, you begin to wonder at their colossal size and seek a
measuring-rod. These giants bulge considerably at the base, but not
more than is required for beauty and safety; and the only reason that
this bulging seems in some cases excessive is that only a comparatively
small section of the shaft is seen at once in near views. One that I
measured in the King’s River forest was 25 feet in diameter at the
ground, and 10 feet in diameter 200 feet above the ground, showing that
the taper of the trunk as a whole is charmingly fine. And when you
stand back far enough to see the massive columns from the swelling
instep to the lofty summit dissolving in a dome of verdure, you rejoice
in the unrivaled display of combined grandeur and beauty. About a
hundred feet or more of the trunk is usually branchless, but its
massive simplicity is relieved by the bark furrows, which instead of
making an irregular network run evenly parallel, like the fluting of an
architectural column, and to some extent by tufts of slender sprays
that wave lightly in the winds and cast flecks of shade, seeming to
have been pinned on here and there for the sake of beauty only. The
young trees have slender simple branches down to the ground, put on
with strict regularity, sharply aspiring at the top, horizontal about
half-way down, and drooping in handsome curves at the base. By the time
the sapling is five or six hundred years old this spiry, feathery,
juvenile habit merges into the firm, rounded dome form of middle age,
which in turn takes on the eccentric picturesqueness of old age. No
other tree in the Sierra forest has foliage so densely massed or
presents outlines so firmly drawn and so steadily subordinate to a
special type. A knotty ungovernable-looking branch five to eight feet
thick may be seen pushing out abruptly from the smooth trunk, as if
sure to throw the regular curve into confusion, but as soon as the
general outline is reached it stops short and dissolves in spreading
bosses of law-abiding sprays, just as if every tree were growing
beneath some huge, invisible bell-glass, against whose sides every
branch was being pressed and molded, yet somehow indulging in so many
small departures from the regular form that there is still an
appearance of freedom.

The foliage of the saplings is dark bluish-green in color, while the
older trees ripen to a warm brownish-yellow tint like Libocedrus. The
bark is rich cinnamon-brown, purplish in young trees and in shady
portions of the old, while the ground is covered with brown leaves and
burs forming color-masses of extraordinary richness, not to mention the
flowers and underbrush that rejoice about them in their seasons. Walk
the Sequoia woods at any time of year and you will say they are the
most beautiful and majestic on earth. Beautiful and impressive
contrasts meet you everywhere: the colors of tree and flower, rock and
sky, light and shade, strength and frailty, endurance and evanescence,
tangles of supple hazel-bushes, tree-pillars about as rigid as granite
domes, roses and violets, the smallest of their kind, blooming around
the feet of the giants, and rugs of the lowly chamaebatia where the
sunbeams fall. Then in winter the trees themselves break forth in
bloom, myriads of small four-sided staminate cones crowd the ends of
the slender sprays, coloring the whole tree, and when ripe dusting the
air and the ground with golden pollen. The fertile cones are bright
grass-green, measuring about two inches in length by one and a half in
thickness, and are made up of about forty firm rhomboidal scales
densely packed, with from five to eight seeds at the base of each. A
single cone, therefore, contains from two to three hundred seeds, which
are about a fourth of an inch long by three sixteenths wide, including
a thin, flat margin that makes them go glancing and wavering in their
fall like a boy’s kite. The fruitfulness of Sequoia may be illustrated
by two specimen branches one and a half and two inches in diameter on
which I counted 480 cones. No other Sierra conifer produces nearly so
many seeds. Millions are ripened annually by a single tree, and in a
fruitful year the product of one of the northern groves would be enough
to plant all the mountain-ranges of the world. Nature takes care,
however, that not one seed in a million shall germinate at all, and of
those that do perhaps not one in ten thousand is suffered to live
through the many vicissitudes of storm, drought, fire, and
snow-crushing that beset their youth.

The Douglas squirrel is the happy harvester of most of the Sequoia
cones. Out of every hundred perhaps ninety fall to his share, and
unless cut off by his ivory sickle they shake out their seeds and
remain on the tree for many years. Watching the squirrels at their
harvest work in the Indian summer is one of the most delightful
diversions imaginable. The woods are calm and the ripe colors are
blazing in all their glory; the cone-laden trees stand motionless in
the warm, hazy air, and you may see the crimson-crested woodcock, the
prince of Sierra woodpeckers, drilling some dead limb or fallen trunk
with his bill, and ever and anon filling the glens with his happy
cackle. The humming-bird, too, dwells in these noble woods, and may
oftentimes be seen glancing among the flowers or resting wing-weary on
some leafless twig; here also are the familiar robin of the orchards,
and the brown and grizzly bears so obviously fitted for these majestic
solitudes; and the Douglas squirrel, making more hilarious, exuberant,
vital stir than all the bears, birds, and humming wings together.

As soon as any accident happens to the crown of these Sequoias, such as
being stricken off by lightning or broken by storms, then the branches
beneath the wound, no matter how situated, seem to be excited like a
colony of bees that have lost their queen, and become anxious to repair
the damage. Limbs that have grown outward for centuries at right angles
to the trunk begin to turn upward to assist in making a new crown, each
speedily assuming the special form of true summits. Even in the case of
mere stumps, burned half through, some mere ornamental tuft will try to
go aloft and do its best as a leader in forming a new head.

Groups of two or three of these grand trees are often found standing
close together, the seeds from which they sprang having probably grown
on ground cleared for their reception by the fall of a large tree of a
former generation. These patches of fresh, mellow soil beside the
upturned roots of the fallen giant may be from forty to sixty feet
wide, and they are speedily occupied by seedlings. Out of these
seedling-thickets perhaps two or three may become trees, forming those
close groups called “three graces,” “loving couples,” etc. For even
supposing that the trees should stand twenty or thirty feet apart while
young, by the time they are full-grown their trunks will touch and
crowd against each other and even appear as one in some cases.

It is generally believed that this grand Sequoia was once far more
widely distributed over the Sierra; but after long and careful study I
have come to the conclusion that it never was, at least since the close
of the glacial period, because a diligent search along the margins of
the groves, and in the gaps between, fails to reveal a single trace of
its previous existence beyond its present bounds. Notwithstanding, I
feel confident that if every Sequoia in the range were to die to-day,
numerous monuments of their existence would remain, of so imperishable
a nature as to be available for the student more than ten thousand
years hence.

In the first place we might notice that no species of coniferous tree
in the range keeps its individuals so well together as Sequoia; a mile
is perhaps the greatest distance of any straggler from the main body,
and all of those stragglers that have come under my observation are
young, instead of old monumental trees, relics of a more extended
growth.

Again, Sequoia trunks frequently endure for centuries after they fall.
I have a specimen block, cut from a fallen trunk, which is hardly
distinguishable from specimens cut from living trees, although the old
trunk-fragment from which it was derived has lain in the damp forest
more than 380 years, probably thrice as long. The time measure in the
case is simply this: when the ponderous trunk to which the old vestige
belonged fell, it sunk itself into the ground, thus making a long,
straight ditch, and in the middle of this ditch a Silver Fir is growing
that is now four feet in diameter and 380 years old, as determined by
cutting it half through and counting the rings, thus demonstrating that
the remnant of the trunk that made the ditch has lain on the ground
_more_ than 380 years. For it is evident that to find the whole time,
we must add to the 380 years the time that the vanished portion of the
trunk lay in the ditch before being burned out of the way, plus the
time that passed before the seed from which the monumental fir sprang
fell into the prepared soil and took root. Now, because Sequoia trunks
are never wholly consumed in one forest fire, and those fires recur
only at considerable intervals, and because Sequoia ditches after being
cleared are often left unplanted for centuries, it becomes evident that
the trunk remnant in question may probably have lain a thousand years
or more. And this instance is by no means a rare one.

But admitting that upon those areas supposed to have been once covered
with Sequoia every tree may have fallen, and every trunk may have been
burned or buried, leaving not a remnant, many of the ditches made by
the fall of the ponderous trunks, and the bowls made by their upturning
roots, would remain patent for thousands of years after the last
vestige of the trunks that made them had vanished. Much of this
ditch-writing would no doubt be quickly effaced by the flood-action of
overflowing streams and rain-washing; but no inconsiderable portion
would remain enduringly engraved on ridge-tops beyond such destructive
action; for, where all the conditions are favorable, it is almost
imperishable. _Now these historic ditches and root bowls occur in all
the present Sequoia groves and forests, but as far as I have observed,
not the faintest vestige of one presents itself outside of them_.

We therefore conclude that the area covered by Sequoia has not been
diminished during the last eight or ten thousand years, and probably
not at all in post-glacial times.

_Is the species verging to extinction? What are its relations to
climate, soil, and associated trees?_

All the phenomena bearing on these questions also throw light, as we
shall endeavor to show, upon the peculiar distribution of the species,
and sustain the conclusion already arrived at on the question of
extension.

In the northern groups, as we have seen, there are few young trees or
saplings growing up around the failing old ones to perpetuate the race,
and in as much as those aged Sequoias, so nearly childless, are the
only ones commonly known, the species, to most observers, seems doomed
to speedy extinction, as being nothing more than an expiring remnant,
vanquished in the so-called struggle for life by pines and firs that
have driven it into its last strongholds in moist glens where climate
is exceptionally favorable. But the language of the majestic continuous
forests of the south creates a very different impression. No tree of
all the forest is more enduringly established in concordance with
climate and soil. It grows heartily everywhere—on moraines, rocky
ledges, along watercourses, and in the deep, moist alluvium of meadows,
with a multitude of seedlings and saplings crowding up around the aged,
seemingly abundantly able to maintain the forest in prime vigor. For
every old storm-stricken tree, there is one or more in all the glory of
prime; and for each of these many young trees and crowds of exuberant
saplings. So that if all the trees of any section of the main Sequoia
forest were ranged together according to age, a very promising curve
would be presented, all the way up from last year’s seedlings to
giants, and with the young and middle-aged portion of the curve many
times longer than the old portion. Even as far north as the Fresno, I
counted 536 saplings and seedlings growing promisingly upon a piece of
rough avalanche soil not exceeding two acres in area. This soil bed is
about seven years old, and has been seeded almost simultaneously by
pines, firs, Libocedrus, and Sequoia, presenting a simple and
instructive illustration of the struggle for life among the rival
species; and it was interesting to note that the conditions thus far
affecting them have enabled the young Sequoias to gain a marked
advantage.

In every instance like the above I have observed that the seedling
Sequoia is capable of growing on both drier and wetter soil than its
rivals, but requires more sunshine than they; the latter fact being
clearly shown wherever a Sugar Pine or fir is growing in close contact
with a Sequoia of about equal age and size, and equally exposed to the
sun; the branches of the latter in such cases are always less leafy.
Toward the south, however, where the Sequoia becomes _more_ exuberant
and numerous, the rival trees become _less_ so; and where they mix with
Sequoias, they mostly grow up beneath them, like slender grasses among
stalks of Indian corn. Upon a bed of sandy flood-soil I counted
ninety-four Sequoias, from one to twelve feet high, on a patch, of
ground once occupied by four large Sugar Pines which lay crumbling
beneath them,—an instance of conditions which have enabled Sequoias to
crowd out the pines.

[Illustration: MUIR GORGE, TUOLUMNE CAÑON—YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK.]

I also noted eighty-six vigorous saplings upon a piece of fresh ground
prepared for their reception by fire. Thus fire, the great destroyer of
Sequoia, also furnishes bare virgin ground, one of the conditions
essential for its growth from the seed. Fresh ground is, however,
furnished in sufficient quantities for the constant renewal of the
forests without fire, viz., by the fall of old trees. The soil is thus
upturned and mellowed, and many trees are planted for every one that
falls. Land-slips and floods also give rise to bare virgin ground; and
a tree now and then owes its existence to a burrowing wolf or squirrel,
but the most regular supply of fresh soil is furnished by the fall of
aged trees.

The climatic changes in progress in the Sierra, bearing on the tenure
of tree life, are entirely misapprehended, especially as to the time
and the means employed by Nature in effecting them. It is constantly
asserted in a vague way that the Sierra was vastly wetter than now, and
that the increasing drought will of itself extinguish Sequoia, leaving
its ground to other trees supposed capable of nourishing in a drier
climate. But that Sequoia can and does grow on as dry ground as any of
its present rivals, is manifest in a thousand places. “Why, then,” it
will be asked, “are Sequoias always found in greatest abundance in
well-watered places where streams are exceptionally abundant?” Simply
because a growth of Sequoias creates those streams. The thirsty
mountaineer knows well that in every Sequoia grove he will find running
water, but it is a mistake to suppose that the water is the cause of
the grove being there; on the contrary, the grove is the cause of the
water being there. Drain off the water and the trees will remain, but
cut off the trees, and the streams will vanish. Never was cause more
completely mistaken for effect than in the case of these related
phenomena of Sequoia woods and perennial streams, and I confess that at
first I shared in the blunder.

When attention is called to the method of Sequoia stream-making, it
will be apprehended at once. The roots of this immense tree fill the
ground, forming a thick sponge that absorbs and holds back the rains
and melting snows, only allowing them to ooze and flow gently. Indeed,
every fallen leaf and rootlet, as well as long clasping root, and
prostrate trunk, may be regarded as a dam hoarding the bounty of
storm-clouds, and dispensing it as blessings all through the summer,
instead of allowing it to go headlong in short-lived floods.
Evaporation is also checked by the dense foliage to a greater extent
than by any other Sierra tree, and the air is entangled in masses and
broad sheets that are quickly saturated; while thirsty winds are not
allowed to go sponging and licking along the ground.

So great is the retention of water in many places in the main belt,
that bogs and meadows are created by the killing of the trees. A single
trunk falling across a stream in the woods forms a dam 200 feet long,
and from ten to thirty feet high, giving rise to a pond which kills the
trees within its reach. These dead trees fall in turn, thus making a
clearing, while sediments gradually accumulate changing the pond into a
bog, or meadow, for a growth of carices and sphagnum. In some instances
a series of small bogs or meadows rise above one another on a hillside,
which are gradually merged into one another, forming sloping bogs, or
meadows, which make striking features of Sequoia woods, and since all
the trees that have fallen into them have been preserved, they contain
records of the generations that have passed since they began to form.

Since, then, it is a fact that thousands of Sequoias are growing
thriftily on what is termed dry ground, and even clinging like mountain
pines to rifts in granite precipices; and since it has also been shown
that the extra moisture found in connection with the denser growths is
an effect of their presence, instead of a cause of their presence, then
the notions as to the former extension of the species and its near
approach to extinction, based upon its supposed dependence on greater
moisture, are seen to be erroneous.

The decrease in the rain- and snow-fall since the close of the glacial
period in the Sierra is much less than is commonly guessed. The highest
post-glacial watermarks are well preserved in all the upper river
channels, and they are not greatly higher than the spring floodmarks of
the present; showing conclusively that no extraordinary decrease has
taken place in the volume of the upper tributaries of post-glacial
Sierra streams since they came into existence. But in the mean time,
eliminating all this complicated question of climatic change, the plain
fact remains that _the present rain- and snow-fall is abundantly
sufficient for the luxuriant growth of Sequoia forests_. Indeed, all my
observations tend to show that in a prolonged drought the Sugar Pines
and firs would perish before the Sequoia, not alone because of the
greater longevity of individual trees, but because the species can
endure more drought, and make the most of whatever moisture falls.

Again, if the restriction and irregular distribution of the species be
interpreted as a result of the desiccation of the range, then instead
of increasing as it does in individuals toward the south where the
rainfall is less, it should diminish.

If, then, the peculiar distribution of Sequoia has not been governed by
superior conditions of soil as to fertility or moisture, by what has it
been governed?

In the course of my studies I observed that the northern groves, the
only ones I was at first acquainted with, were located on just those
portions of the general forest soil-belt that were first laid bare
toward the close of the glacial period when the ice-sheet began to
break up into individual glaciers. And while searching the wide basin
of the San Joaquin, and trying to account for the absence of Sequoia
where every condition seemed favorable for its growth, it occured to me
that this remarkable gap in the Sequoia belt is located exactly in the
basin of the vast ancient _mer de glace_ of the San Joaquin and King’s
River basins, which poured its frozen floods to the plain, fed by the
snows that fell on more than fifty miles of the summit. I then
perceived that the next great gap in the belt to the northward, forty
miles wide, extending between the Calaveras and Tuolumne groves, occurs
in the basin of the great ancient _mer de glace_ of the Tuolumne and
Stanislaus basins, and that the smaller gap between the Merced and
Mariposa groves occurs in the basin of the smaller glacier of the
Merced. _The wider the ancient glacier, the wider the corresponding gap
in the Sequoia belt_.

Finally, pursuing my investigations across the basins of the Kaweah and
Tule, I discovered that the Sequoia belt attained its greatest
development just where, owing to the topographical peculiarities of the
region, the ground had been most perfectly protected from the main
ice-rivers that continued to pour past from the summit fountains long
after the smaller local glaciers had been melted.

Taking now a general view of the belt, beginning at the south, we see
that the majestic ancient glaciers were shed off right and left down
the valleys of Kern and King’s rivers by the lofty protective spurs
outspread embracingly above the warm Sequoia-filled basins of the
Kaweah and Tule. Then, next northward, occurs the wide Sequoia-less
channel, or basin, of the ancient San Joaquin and King’s River _mer de
glace_; then the warm, protected spots of Fresno and Mariposa groves;
then the Sequoia-less channel of the ancient Merced glacier; next the
warm, sheltered ground of the Merced and Tuolumne groves; then the
Sequoia-less channel of the grand ancient _mer de glace_ of the
Tuolumne and Stanislaus; then the warm old ground of the Calaveras and
Stanislaus groves. It appears, therefore, that just where, at a certain
period in the history of the Sierra, the glaciers were not, there the
Sequoia is, and just where the glaciers were, there the Sequoia is not.

[Illustration: VIEW IN TUOLUMNE CAÑON, YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK.]

What the other conditions may have been that enabled Sequoia to
establish itself upon these oldest and warmest portions of the main
glacial soil-belt, I cannot say. I might venture to state, however, in
this connection, that since the Sequoia forests present a more and more
ancient aspect as they extend southward, I am inclined to think that
the species was distributed from the south, while the Sugar Pine, its
great rival in the northern groves, seems to have come around the head
of the Sacramento valley and down the Sierra from the north;
consequently, when the Sierra soil-beds were first thrown open to
preemption on the melting of the ice-sheet, the Sequoia may have
established itself along the available portions of the south half of
the range prior to the arrival of the Sugar Pine, while the Sugar Pine
took possession of the north half prior to the arrival of Sequoia.

But however much uncertainty may attach to this branch of the question,
there are no obscuring shadows upon the grand general relationship we
have pointed out between the present distribution of Sequoia and the
ancient glaciers of the Sierra. And when we bear in mind that all the
present forests of the Sierra are young, growing on moraine soil
recently deposited, and that the flank of the range itself, with all
its landscapes, is new-born, recently sculptured, and brought to the
light of day from beneath the ice mantle of the glacial winter, then a
thousand lawless mysteries disappear, and broad harmonies take their
places.

But although all the observed phenomena bearing on the post-glacial
history of this colossal tree point to the conclusion that it never was
more widely distributed on the Sierra since the close of the glacial
epoch; that its present forests are scarcely past prime, if, indeed,
they have reached prime; that the post-glacial day of the species is
probably not half done; yet, when from a wider outlook the vast
antiquity of the genus is considered, and its ancient richness in
species and individuals; comparing our Sierra Giant and _Sequoia
sempervirens_ of the Coast Range, the only other living species of
Sequoia, with the twelve fossil species already discovered and
described by Heer and Lesquereux, some of which seem to have flourished
over vast areas in the Arctic regions and in Europe and our own
territories, during tertiary and cretaceous times,—then indeed it
becomes plain that our two surviving species, restricted to narrow
belts within the limits of California, are mere remnants of the genus,
both as to species and individuals, and that they probably are verging
to extinction. But the verge of a period beginning in cretaceous times
may have a breadth of tens of thousands of years, not to mention the
possible existence of conditions calculated to multiply and reëxtend
both species and individuals. This, however, is a branch of the
question into which I do not now purpose to enter.

In studying the fate of our forest king, we have thus far considered
the action of purely natural causes only; but, unfortunately, _man_ is
in the woods, and waste and pure destruction are making rapid headway.
If the importance of forests were at all understood, even from an
economic standpoint, their preservation would call forth the most
watchful attention of government. Only of late years by means of forest
reservations has the simplest groundwork for available legislation been
laid, while in many of the finest groves every species of destruction
is still moving on with accelerated speed.

In the course of my explorations I found no fewer than five mills
located on or near the lower edge of the Sequoia belt, all of which
were cutting considerable quantities of Big Tree lumber. Most of the
Fresno group are doomed to feed the mills recently erected near them,
and a company of lumbermen are now cutting the magnificent forest on
King’s River. In these milling operations waste far exceeds use, for
after the choice young manageable trees on any given spot have been
felled, the woods are fired to clear the ground of limbs and refuse
with reference to further operations, and, of course, most of the
seedlings and saplings are destroyed.

These mill ravages, however, are small as compared with the
comprehensive destruction caused by “sheepmen.” Incredible numbers of
sheep are driven to the mountain pastures every summer, and their
course is ever marked by desolation. Every wild garden is trodden down,
the shrubs are stripped of leaves as if devoured by locusts, and the
woods are burned. Running fires are set everywhere, with a view to
clearing the ground of prostrate trunks, to facilitate the movements of
the flocks and improve the pastures. The entire forest belt is thus
swept and devastated from one extremity of the range to the other, and,
with the exception of the resinous _Pinus contorta_, Sequoia suffers
most of all. Indians burn off the underbrush in certain localities to
facilitate deer-hunting, mountaineers and lumbermen carelessly allow
their camp-fires to run; but the fires of the sheepmen, or
_muttoneers_, form more than ninety per cent. of all destructive fires
that range the Sierra forests.

It appears, therefore, that notwithstanding our forest king might live
on gloriously in Nature’s keeping, it is rapidly vanishing before the
fire and steel of man; and unless protective measures be speedily
invented and applied, in a few decades, at the farthest, all that will
be left of _Sequoia gigantea_ will be a few hacked and scarred
monuments.

TWO-LEAVED, OR TAMARACK, PINE
(_Pinus contorta_, var._Marrayana_)

This species forms the bulk of the alpine forests, extending along the
range, above the fir zone, up to a height of from 8000 to 9500 feet
above the sea, growing in beautiful order upon moraines that are
scarcely changed as yet by post-glacial weathering. Compared with the
giants of the lower zones, this is a small tree, seldom attaining a
height of a hundred feet. The largest specimen I ever measured was
ninety feet in height, and a little over six in diameter four feet from
the ground. The average height of mature trees throughout the entire
belt is probably not far from fifty or sixty feet, with a diameter of
two feet. It is a well-proportioned, rather handsome little pine, with
grayish-brown bark, and crooked, much-divided branches, which cover the
greater portion of the trunk, not so densely, however, as to prevent
its being seen. The lower limbs curve downward, gradually take a
horizontal position about half-way up the trunk, then aspire more and
more toward the summit, thus forming a sharp, conical top. The foliage
is short and rigid, two leaves in a fascicle, arranged in comparatively
long, cylindrical tassels at the ends of the tough, up-curving
branchlets. The cones are about two inches long, growing in stiff
clusters among the needles, without making any striking effect, except
while very young, when they are of a vivid crimson color, and the whole
tree appears to be dotted with brilliant flowers. The sterile cones are
still more showy, on account of their great abundance, often giving a
reddish-yellow tinge to the whole mass of the foliage, and filling the
air with pollen.

No other pine on the range is so regularly planted as this one. Moraine
forests sweep along the sides of the high, rocky valleys for miles
without interruption; still, strictly speaking, they are not dense, for
flecks of sunshine and flowers find their way into the darkest places,
where the trees grow tallest and thickest. Tall, nutritious grasses are
specially abundant beneath them, growing over all the ground, in
sunshine and shade, over extensive areas like a farmer’s crop, and
serving as pasture for the multitude of sheep that are driven from the
arid plains every summer as soon as the snow is melted.

The Two-leaved Pine, more than any other, is subject to destruction by
fire. The thin bark is streaked and sprinkled with resin, as though it
had been showered down upon it like rain, so that even the green trees
catch fire readily, and during strong winds whole forests are
destroyed, the flames leaping from tree to tree, forming one continuous
belt of roaring fire that goes surging and racing onward above the
bending woods, like the grass-fires of a prairie. During the calm, dry
season of Indian summer, the fire creeps quietly along the ground,
feeding on the dry needles and burs; then, arriving at the foot of a
tree, the resiny bark is ignited, and the heated air ascends in a
powerful current, increasing in velocity, and dragging the flames
swiftly upward; then the leaves catch fire, and an immense column of
flame, beautifully spired on the edges, and tinted a rose-purple hue,
rushes aloft thirty or forty feet above the top of the tree, forming a
grand spectacle, especially on a dark night. It lasts, however, only a
few seconds, vanishing with magical rapidity, to be succeeded by others
along the fire-line at irregular intervals for weeks at a time—tree
after tree flashing and darkening, leaving the trunks and branches
hardly scarred. The heat, however, is sufficient to kill the trees, and
in a few years the bark shrivels and falls off. Belts miles in extent
are thus killed and left standing with the branches on, peeled and
rigid, appearing gray in the distance, like misty clouds. Later the
branches drop off, leaving a forest of bleached spars. At length the
roots decay, and the forlorn trunks are blown down during some storm,
and piled one upon another encumbering the ground until they are
consumed by the next fire, and leave it ready for a fresh crop.

The endurance of the species is shown by its wandering occasionally out
over the lava plains with the Yellow Pine, and climbing moraineless
mountain-sides with the Dwarf Pine, clinging to any chance support in
rifts and crevices of storm-beaten rocks—always, however, showing the
effects of such hardships in every feature.

Down in sheltered lake hollows, on beds of rich alluvium, it varies so
far from the common form as frequently to be taken for a distinct
species. Here it grows in dense sods, like grasses, from forty to
eighty feet high, bending all together to the breeze and whirling in
eddying gusts more lithely than any other tree in the woods. I have
frequently found specimens fifty feet high less than five inches in
diameter. Being thus slender, and at the same time well clad with leafy
boughs, it is oftentimes bent to the ground when laden with soft snow,
forming beautiful arches in endless variety, some of which last until
the melting of the snow in spring.

MOUNTAIN PINE
(_Pinus monticola_)

The Mountain Pine is king of the alpine woods, brave, hardy, and
long-lived, towering grandly above its companions, and becoming
stronger and more imposing just where other species begin to crouch and
disappear. At its best it is usually about ninety feet high and five or
six in diameter, though a specimen is often met considerably larger
than this. The trunk is as massive and as suggestive of enduring
strength as that of an oak. About two thirds of the trunk is commonly
free of limbs, but close, fringy tufts of sprays occur all the way
down, like those which adorn the colossal shafts of Sequoia. The bark
is deep reddish-brown upon trees that occupy exposed situations near
its upper limit, and furrowed rather deeply, the main furrows running
nearly parallel with each other, and connected by conspicuous cross
furrows, which, with one exception, are, as far as I have noticed,
peculiar to this species.

The cones are from four to eight inches long, slender, cylindrical, and
somewhat curved, resembling those of the common White Pine of the
Atlantic coast. They grow in clusters of about from three to six or
seven, becoming pendulous as they increase in weight, chiefly by the
bending of the branches.

This species is nearly related to the Sugar Pine, and, though not half
so tall, it constantly suggests its noble relative in the way that it
extends its long arms and in general habit. The Mountain Pine is first
met on the upper margin of the fir zone, growing singly in a subdued,
inconspicuous form, in what appear as chance situations, without making
much impression on the general forest. Continuing up through the
Two-leaved Pines in the same scattered growth, it begins to show its
character, and at an elevation of about 10,000 feet attains its noblest
development near the middle of the range, tossing its tough arms in the
frosty air, welcoming storms and feeding on them, and reaching the
grand old age of 1000 years.

JUNIPER, OR RED CEDAR
(_Juniperus occidentalis_)

[Illustration: JUNIPER, OR RED CEDAR.]

The Juniper is preëminently a rock tree, occupying the baldest domes
and pavements, where there is scarcely a handful of soil, at a height
of from 7000 to 9500 feet. In such situations the trunk is frequently
over eight feet in diameter, and not much more in height. The top is
almost always dead in old trees, and great stubborn limbs push out
horizontally that are mostly broken and bare at the ends, but densely
covered and embedded here and there with bossy mounds of gray foliage.
Some are mere weathered stumps, as broad as long, decorated with a few
leafy sprays, reminding one of the crumbling towers of some ancient
castle scantily draped with ivy. Only upon the head waters of the
Carson have I found this species established on good moraine soil. Here
it flourishes with the Silver and Two-leaved Pines, in great beauty and
luxuriance, attaining a height of from forty to sixty feet, and
manifesting but little of that rocky angularity so characteristic a
feature throughout the greater portion, of its range. Two of the
largest, growing at the head of Hope Valley, measured twenty-nine feet
three inches and twenty-five feet six inches in circumference,
respectively, four feet from the ground. The bark is of a bright
cinnamon color, and, in thrifty trees, beautifully braided and
reticulated, flaking off in thin, lustrous ribbons that are sometimes
used by Indians for tent-matting. Its fine color and odd
picturesqueness always catch an artist’s eye, but to me the Juniper
seems a singularly dull and taciturn tree, never speaking to one’s
heart. I have spent many a day and night in its company, in all kinds
of weather, and have ever found it silent, cold, and rigid, like a
column of ice. Its broad stumpiness, of course, precludes all
possibility of waving, or even shaking; but it is not this rocky
steadfastness that constitutes its silence. In calm, sun-days the Sugar
Pine preaches the grandeur of the mountains like an apostle without
moving a leaf.

[Illustration: STORM-BEATEN JUNIPERS.]

On level rocks it dies standing, and wastes insensibly out of existence
like granite, the wind exerting about as little control over it alive
or dead as it does over a glacier boulder. Some are undoubtedly over
2000 years old. All the trees of the alpine woods suffer, more or less,
from avalanches, the Two-leaved Pine most of all. Gaps two or three
hundred yards wide, extending from the upper limit of the tree-line to
the bottoms of valleys and lake basins, are of common occurrence in all
the upper forests, resembling the clearings of settlers in the old
backwoods. Scarcely a tree is spared, even the soil is scraped away,
while the thousands of uprooted pines and spruces are piled upon one
another heads downward, and tucked snugly in along the sides of the
clearing in two windrows, like lateral moraines. The pines lie with
branches wilted and drooping like weeds. Not so the burly junipers.
After braving in silence the storms of perhaps a dozen or twenty
centuries, they seem in this, their last calamity, to become somewhat
communicative, making sign of a very unwilling acceptance of their
fate, holding themselves well up from the ground on knees and elbows,
seemingly ill at ease, and anxious, like stubborn wrestlers, to rise
again.

HEMLOCK SPRUCE
(_Tsuga Pattoniana_)

The Hemlock Spruce is the most singularly beautiful of all the
California coniferae. So slender is its axis at the top, that it bends
over and droops like the stalk of a nodding lily. The branches droop
also, and divide into innumerable slender, waving sprays, which are
arranged in a varied, eloquent harmony that is wholly indescribable.
Its cones are purple, and hang free, in the form of little tassels two
inches long from all the sprays from top to bottom. Though exquisitely
delicate and feminine in expression, it grows best where the snow lies
deepest, far up in the region of storms, at an elevation of from 9000
to 9500 feet, on frosty northern slopes; but it is capable of growing
considerably higher, say 10,500 feet. The tallest specimens, growing in
sheltered hollows somewhat beneath the heaviest wind-currents, are from
eighty to a hundred feet high, and from two to four feet in diameter.
The very largest specimen I ever found was nineteen feet seven inches
in circumference four feet from the ground, growing on the edge of Lake
Hollow, at an elevation of 9250 feet above the level of the sea. At the
age of twenty or thirty years it becomes fruitful, and hangs out its
beautiful purple cones at the ends of the slender sprays, where they
swing free in the breeze, and contrast delightfully with the cool green
foliage. They are translucent when young, and their beauty is
delicious. After they are fully ripe, they spread their shell-like
scales and allow the brown-winged seeds to fly in the mellow air, while
the empty cones remain to beautify the tree until the coming of a fresh
crop.

[Illustration: STORM-BEATEN HEMLOCK SPRUCE, FORTY FEET HIGH.]

The staminate cones of all the coniferae are beautiful, growing in
bright clusters, yellow, and rose, and crimson. Those of the Hemlock
Spruce are the most beautiful of all, forming little conelets of blue
flowers, each on a slender stem.

Under all conditions, sheltered or storm-beaten, well-fed or ill-fed,
this tree is singularly graceful in habit. Even at its highest limit
upon exposed ridge-tops, though compelled to crouch in dense thickets,
huddled close together, as if for mutual protection, it still manages
to throw out its sprays in irrepressible loveliness; while on
well-ground moraine soil it develops a perfectly tropical luxuriance of
foliage and fruit, and is the very loveliest tree in the forest; poised
in thin white sunshine, clad with branches from head to foot, yet not
in the faintest degree heavy or bunchy, it towers in unassuming
majesty, drooping as if unaffected with the aspiring tendencies of its
race, loving the ground while transparently conscious of heaven and
joyously receptive of its blessings, reaching out its branches like
sensitive tentacles, feeling the light and reveling in it. No other of
our alpine conifers so finely veils its strength. Its delicate branches
yield to the mountains’ gentlest breath; yet is it strong to meet the
wildest onsets of the gale,—strong not in resistance, but compliance,
bowing, snow-laden, to the ground, gracefully accepting burial month
after month in the darkness beneath the heavy mantle of winter.

When the first soft snow begins to fall, the flakes lodge in the
leaves, weighing down the branches against the trunk. Then the axis
bends yet lower and lower, until the slender top touches the ground,
thus forming a fine ornamental arch. The snow still falls lavishly, and
the whole tree is at length buried, to sleep and rest in its beautiful
grave as though dead. Entire groves of young trees, from ten to forty
feet high, are thus buried every winter like slender grasses. But, like
the violets and daisies which the heaviest snows crush not, they are
safe. It is as though this were only Nature’s method of putting her
darlings to sleep instead of leaving them exposed to the biting storms
of winter.

Thus warmly wrapped they await the summer resurrection. The snow
becomes soft in the sunshine, and freezes at night, making the mass
hard and compact, like ice, so that during the months of April and May
you can ride a horse over the prostrate groves without catching sight
of a single leaf. At length the down-pouring sunshine sets them free.
First the elastic tops of the arches begin to appear, then one branch
after another, each springing loose with a gentle rustling sound, and
at length the whole tree, with the assistance of the winds, gradually
unbends and rises and settles back into its place in the warm air, as
dry and feathery and fresh as young ferns just out of the coil.

Some of the finest groves I have yet found are on the southern slopes
of Lassen’s Butte. There are also many charming companies on the head
waters of the Tuolumne, Merced, and San Joaquin, and, in general, the
species is so far from being rare that you can scarcely fail to find
groves of considerable extent in crossing the range, choose what pass
you may. The Mountain Pine grows beside it, and more frequently the
two-leaved species; but there are many beautiful groups, numbering 1000
individuals, or more, without a single intruder.

I wish I had space to write more of the surpassing beauty of this
favorite spruce. Every tree-lover is sure to regard it with special
admiration; apathetic mountaineers, even, seeking only game or gold,
stop to gaze on first meeting it, and mutter to themselves: “That’s a
mighty pretty tree,” some of them adding, “d——d pretty!” In autumn,
when its cones are ripe, the little striped tamias, and the Douglas
squirrel, and the Clark crow make a happy stir in its groves. The deer
love to lie down beneath its spreading branches; bright streams from
the snow that is always near ripple through its groves, and bryanthus
spreads precious carpets in its shade. But the best words only hint its
charms. Come to the mountains and see.

DWARF PINE
(_Pinus albicaulis_)

This species forms the extreme edge of the timber line throughout
nearly the whole extent of the range on both flanks. It is first met
growing in company with _Pinus contorta_, var. _Murrayana_, on the
upper margin of the belt, as an erect tree from fifteen to thirty feet
high and from one to two feet in thickness; thence it goes straggling
up the flanks of the summit peaks, upon moraines or crumbling ledges,
wherever it can obtain a foothold, to an elevation of from 10,000 to
12,000 feet, where it dwarfs to a mass of crumpled, prostrate branches,
covered with slender, upright shoots, each tipped with a short,
close-packed tassel of leaves. The bark is smooth and purplish, in some
places almost white. The fertile cones grow in rigid clusters upon the
upper branches, dark chocolate in color while young, and bear beautiful
pearly seeds about the size of peas, most of which are eaten by two
species of tamias and the notable Clark crow. The staminate cones occur
in clusters, about an inch wide, down among the leaves, and, as they
are colored bright rose-purple, they give rise to a lively, flowery
appearance little looked for in such a tree.

[Illustration: GROUP OF ERECT DWARF PINES.]

Pines are commonly regarded as sky-loving trees that must necessarily
aspire or die. This species forms a marked exception, creeping lowly,
in compliance with the most rigorous demands of climate, yet enduring
bravely to a more advanced age than many of its lofty relatives in the
sun-lands below. Seen from a distance, it would never be taken for a
tree of any kind. Yonder, for example, is Cathedral Peak, some three
miles away, with a scattered growth of this pine creeping like mosses
over the roof and around the beveled edges of the north gable, nowhere
giving any hint of an ascending axis. When approached quite near it
still appears matted and heathy, and is so low that one experiences no
great difficulty in walking over the top of it. Yet it is seldom
absolutely prostrate, at its lowest usually attaining a height of three
or four feet, with a main trunk, and branches outspread and
intertangled above it, as if in ascending they had been checked by a
ceiling, against which they had grown and been compelled to spread
horizontally. The winter snow is indeed such a ceiling, lasting half
the year; while the pressed, shorn surface is made yet smoother by
violent winds, armed with cutting sand-grains, that beat down any shoot
that offers to rise much above the general level, and carve the dead
trunks and branches in beautiful patterns.

During stormy nights I have often camped snugly beneath the interlacing
arches of this little pine. The needles, which have accumulated for
centuries, make fine beds, a fact well known to other mountaineers,
such as deer and wild sheep, who paw out oval hollows and lie beneath
the larger trees in safe and comfortable concealment.

[Illustration: A DWARF PINE.]

The longevity of this lowly dwarf is far greater than would be guessed.
Here, for example, is a specimen, growing at an elevation of 10,700
feet, which seems as though it might be plucked up by the roots, for it
is only three and a half inches in diameter, and its topmost tassel is
hardly three feet above the ground. Cutting it half through and
counting the annual rings with the aid of a lens, we find its age to be
no less than 255 years. Here is another telling specimen about the same
height, 426 years old, whose trunk is only six inches in diameter; and
one of its supple branchlets, hardly an eighth of an inch in diameter
inside the bark, is seventy-five years old, and so filled with oily
balsam, and so well seasoned by storms, that we may tie it in knots
like a whip-cord.

WHITE PINE
(_Pinus flexilis_)

This species is widely distributed throughout the Rocky Mountains, and
over all the higher of the many ranges of the Great Basin, between the
Wahsatch Mountains and the Sierra, where it is known as White Pine. In
the Sierra it is sparsely scattered along the eastern flank, from
Bloody Cañon southward nearly to the extremity of the range, opposite
the village of Lone Pine, nowhere forming any appreciable portion of
the general forest. From its peculiar position, in loose, straggling
parties, it seems to have been derived from the Basin ranges to the
eastward, where it is abundant.

It is a larger tree than the Dwarf Pine. At an elevation of about 9000
feet above the sea, it often attains a height of forty or fifty feet,
and a diameter of from three to five feet. The cones open freely when
ripe, and are twice as large as those of the _albicaulis_, and the
foliage and branches are more open, having a tendency to sweep out in
free, wild curves, like those of the Mountain Pine, to which it is
closely allied. It is seldom found lower than 9000 feet above
sea-level, but from this elevation it pushes upward over the roughest
ledges to the extreme limit of tree-growth, where, in its dwarfed,
storm-crushed condition, it is more like the white-barked species.

Throughout Utah and Nevada it is one of the principal timber-trees,
great quantities being cut every year for the mines. The famous White
Pine Mining District, White Pine City, and the White Pine Mountains
have derived their names from it.

NEEDLE PINE
(_Pinus aristata_)

This species is restricted in the Sierra to the southern portion of the
range, about the head waters of Kings and Kern rivers, where it forms
extensive forests, and in some places accompanies the Dwarf Pine to the
extreme limit of tree-growth.

It is first met at an elevation of between 9000 and 10,000 feet, and
runs up to 11,000 without seeming to suffer greatly from the climate or
the leanness of the soil. It is a much finer tree than the Dwarf Pine.
Instead of growing in clumps and low, heathy mats, it manages in some
way to maintain an erect position, and usually stands single. Wherever
the young trees are at all sheltered, they grow up straight and arrowy,
with delicately tapered bole, and ascending branches terminated with
glossy, bottle-brush tassels. At middle age, certain limbs are
specialized and pushed far out for the bearing of cones, after the
manner of the Sugar Pine; and in old age these branches droop and cast
about in every direction, giving rise to very picturesque effects. The
trunk becomes deep brown and rough, like that of the Mountain Pine,
while the young cones are of a strange, dull, blackish-blue color,
clustered on the upper branches. When ripe they are from three to four
inches long, yellowish brown, resembling in every way those of the
Mountain Pine. Excepting the Sugar Pine, no tree on the mountains is so
capable of individual expression, while in grace of form and movement
it constantly reminds one of the Hemlock Spruce.

[Illustration: OAK GROWING AMONG YELLOW PINES.]

The largest specimen I measured was a little over five feet in diameter
and ninety feet in height, but this is more than twice the ordinary
size.

This species is common throughout the Rocky Mountains and most of the
short ranges of the Great Basin, where it is called the Fox-tail Pine,
from its long dense leaf-tassels. On the Hot Creek, White Pine, and
Golden Gate ranges it is quite abundant. About a foot or eighteen
inches of the ends of the branches is densely packed with stiff
outstanding needles which radiate like an electric fox or squirrel’s
tail. The needles have a glossy polish, and the sunshine sifting
through them makes them burn with silvery luster, while their number
and elastic temper tell delightfully in the winds. This tree is here
still more original and picturesque than in the Sierra, far surpassing
not only its companion conifers in this respect, but also the most
noted of the lowland oaks. Some stand firmly erect, feathered with
radiant tassels down to the ground, forming slender tapering towers of
shining verdure; others, with two or three specialized branches pushed
out at right angles to the trunk and densely clad with tasseled sprays,
take the form of beautiful ornamental crosses. Again in the same woods
you find trees that are made up of several boles united near the
ground, spreading at the sides in a plane parallel to the axis of the
mountain, with the elegant tassels hung in charming order between them,
making a harp held against the main wind lines where they are most
effective in playing the grand storm harmonies. And besides these there
are many variable arching forms, alone or in groups, with innumerable
tassels drooping beneath the arches or radiant above them, and many
lowly giants of no particular form that have braved the storms of a
thousand years. But whether old or young, sheltered or exposed to the
wildest gales, this tree is ever found irrepressibly and extravagantly
picturesque, and offers a richer and more varied series of forms to the
artist than any other conifer I know of.

NUT PINE
(_Pinus monophylla_)

The Nut Pine covers or rather dots the eastern flank of the Sierra, to
which it is mostly restricted, in grayish, bush-like patches, from the
margin of the sage-plains to an elevation of from 7000 to 8000 feet.

A more contentedly fruitful and unaspiring conifer could not be
conceived. All the species we have been sketching make departures more
or less distant from the typical spire form, but none goes so far as
this. Without any apparent exigency of climate or soil, it remains near
the ground, throwing out crooked, divergent branches like an orchard
apple-tree, and seldom pushes a single shoot higher than fifteen or
twenty feet above the ground.

The average thickness of the trunk is, perhaps, about ten or twelve
inches. The leaves are mostly undivided, like round awls, instead of
being separated, like those of other pines, into twos and threes and
fives. The cones are green while growing, and are usually found over
all the tree, forming quite a marked feature as seen against the
bluish-gray foliage. They are quite small, only about two inches in
length, and give no promise of edible nuts; but when we come to open
them, we find that about half the entire bulk of the cone is made up of
sweet, nutritious seeds, the kernels of which are nearly as large as
those of hazel-nuts.

This is undoubtedly the most important food-tree on the Sierra, and
furnishes the Mono, Carson, and Walker River Indians with more and
better nuts than all the other species taken together. It is the
Indians’ own tree, and many a white man have they killed for cutting it
down.

In its development Nature seems to have aimed at the formation of as
great a fruit-bearing surface as possible. Being so low and accessible,
the cones are readily beaten off with poles, and the nuts procured by
roasting them until the scales open. In bountiful seasons a single
Indian will gather thirty or forty bushels of them—a fine squirrelish
employment.

Of all the conifers along the eastern base of the Sierra, and on all
the many mountain groups and short ranges of the Great Basin, this
foodful little pine is the commonest tree, and the most important.
Nearly every mountain is planted with it to a height of from 8000 to
9000 feet above the sea. Some are covered from base to summit by this
one species, with only a sparse growth of juniper on the lower slopes
to break the continuity of its curious woods, which, though
dark-looking at a distance, are almost shadeless, and have none of the
damp, leafy glens and hollows so characteristic of other pine woods.
Tens of thousands of acres occur in continuous belts. Indeed, viewed
comprehensively the entire Basin seems to be pretty evenly divided into
level plains dotted with sage-bushes and mountain-chains covered with
Nut Pines. No slope is too rough, none too dry, for these bountiful
orchards of the red man.

The value of this species to Nevada is not easily overestimated. It
furnishes charcoal and timber for the mines, and, with the juniper,
supplies the ranches with fuel and rough fencing. In fruitful seasons
the nut crop is perhaps greater than the California wheat crop, which
exerts so much influence throughout the food markets of the world.
When, the crop is ripe, the Indians make ready the long beating-poles;
bags, baskets, mats, and sacks are collected; the women out at service
among the settlers, washing or drudging, assemble at the family huts;
the men leave their ranch work; old and young, all are mounted on
ponies and start in great glee to the nut-lands, forming curiously
picturesque cavalcades; flaming scarfs and calico skirts stream loosely
over the knotty ponies, two squaws usually astride of each, with baby
midgets bandaged in baskets slung on their backs or balanced on the
saddle-bow; while nut-baskets and water-jars project from each side,
and the long beating-poles make angles in every direction. Arriving at
some well-known central point where grass and water are found, the
squaws with baskets, the men with poles ascend the ridges to the laden
trees, followed by the children. Then the beating begins right merrily,
the burs fly in every direction, rolling down the slopes, lodging here
and there against rocks and sage-bushes, chased and gathered by the
women and children with fine natural gladness. Smoke-columns speedily
mark the joyful scene of their labors as the roasting-fires are
kindled, and, at night, assembled in gay circles garrulous as jays,
they begin the first nut feast of the season.

The nuts are about half an inch long and a quarter of an inch in
diameter, pointed at the top, round at the base, light brown in general
color, and, like many other pine seeds, handsomely dotted with purple,
like birds’ eggs. The shells are thin and may be crushed between the
thumb and finger. The kernels are white, becoming brown by roasting,
and are sweet to every palate, being eaten by birds, squirrels, dogs,
horses, and men. Perhaps less than one bushel in a thousand of the
whole crop is ever gathered. Still, besides supplying their own wants,
in times of plenty the Indians bring large quantities to market; then
they are eaten around nearly every fireside in the State, and are even
fed to horses occasionally instead of barley.

Of other trees growing on the Sierra, but forming a very small part of
the general forest, we may briefly notice the following:

_Chamoecyparis Lawsoniana_ is a magnificent tree in the coast ranges,
but small in the Sierra. It is found only well to the northward along
the banks of cool streams on the upper Sacramento toward Mount Shasta.
Only a few trees of this species, as far as I have seen, have as yet
gained a place in the Sierra woods. It has evidently been derived from
the coast range by way of the tangle of connecting mountains at the
head of the Sacramento Valley.

In shady dells and on cool stream banks of the northern Sierra we also
find the Yew (_Taxus brevifolia_).

The interesting Nutmeg Tree (_Torreya Californica_) is sparsely
distributed along the western flank of the range at an elevation of
about 4000 feet, mostly in gulches and cañons. It is a small, prickly
leaved, glossy evergreen, like a conifer, from twenty to fifty feet
high, and one to two feet in diameter. The fruit resembles a green-gage
plum, and contains one seed, about the size of an acorn, and like a
nutmeg, hence the common name. The wood is fine-grained and of a
beautiful, creamy yellow color like box, sweet-scented when dry, though
the green leaves emit a disagreeable odor.

_Betula occidentalis_, the only birch, is a small, slender tree
restricted to the eastern flank of the range along stream-sides below
the pine-belt, especially in Owen’s Valley.

Alder, Maple, and Nuttall’s Flowering Dogwood make beautiful bowers
over swift, cool streams at an elevation of from 3000 to 5000 feet,
mixed more or less with willows and cottonwood; and above these in lake
basins the aspen forms fine ornamental groves, and lets its light shine
gloriously in the autumn months.

The Chestnut Oak (_Quercus densiflora_) seems to have come from the
coast range around the head of the Sacramento Valley, like the
_Chamaecyparis_, but as it extends southward along the lower edge of
the main pine-belt it grows smaller until it finally dwarfs to a mere
chaparral bush. In the coast mountains it is a fine, tall, rather
slender tree, about from sixty to seventy-five feet high, growing with
the grand _Sequoia sempervirens_, or Redwood. But unfortunately it is
too good to live, and is now being rapidly destroyed for tan-bark.

[Illustration: PATE VALLEY, SHOWING THE OAKS. TUOLUMNE CAÑON, YOSEMITE
NATIONAL PARK.]

Besides the common Douglas Oak and the grand _Quercus Wislizeni_ of the
foot-hills, and several small ones that make dense growths of
chaparral, there are two mountain-oaks that grow with the pines up to
an elevation of about 5000 feet above the sea, and greatly enhance the
beauty of the yosemite parks. These are the Mountain Live Oak and the
Kellogg Oak, named in honor of the admirable botanical pioneer of
California. Kellogg’s Oak (_Quercus Kelloggii_) is a firm, bright,
beautiful tree, reaching a height of sixty feet, four to seven feet in
diameter, with wide-spreading branches, and growing at an elevation of
from 3000 to 5000 feet in sunny valleys and flats among the evergreens,
and higher in a dwarfed state. In the cliff-bound parks about 4000 feet
above the sea it is so abundant and effective it might fairly be called
the Yosemite Oak. The leaves make beautiful masses of purple in the
spring, and yellow in ripe autumn; while its acorns are eagerly
gathered by Indians, squirrels, and woodpeckers. The Mountain Live Oak
(_Q. Chrysolepis_) is a tough, rugged mountaineer of a tree, growing
bravely and attaining noble dimensions on the roughest earthquake
taluses in deep cañons and yosemite valleys. The trunk is usually
short, dividing near the ground into great, wide-spreading limbs, and
these again into a multitude of slender sprays, many of them cord-like
and drooping to the ground, like those of the Great White Oak of the
lowlands (_Q. lobata_). The top of the tree where there is plenty of
space is broad and bossy, with a dense covering of shining leaves,
making delightful canopies, the complicated system of gray,
interlacing, arching branches as seen from beneath being exceedingly
rich and picturesque. No other tree that I know dwarfs so regularly and
completely as this under changes of climate due to changes in
elevation. At the foot of a cañon 4000 feet above the sea you may find
magnificent specimens of this oak fifty feet high, with craggy, bulging
trunks, five to seven feet in diameter, and at the head of the cañon,
2500 feet higher, a dense, soft, low, shrubby growth of the same
species, while all the way up the cañon between these extremes of size
and habit a perfect gradation may be traced. The largest I have seen
was fifty feet high, eight feet in diameter, and about seventy-five
feet in spread. The trunk was all knots and buttresses, gray like
granite, and about as angular and irregular as the boulders on which it
was growing—a type of steadfast, unwedgeable strength.




CHAPTER IX
THE DOUGLAS SQUIRREL
(_Sciurus Douglasii_)


The Douglas Squirrel is by far the most interesting and influential of
the California sciuridae, surpassing every other species in force of
character, numbers, and extent of range, and in the amount of influence
he brings to bear upon the health and distribution of the vast forests
he inhabits.

Go where you will throughout the noble woods of the Sierra Nevada,
among the giant pines and spruces of the lower zones, up through the
towering Silver Firs to the storm-bent thickets of the summit peaks,
you everywhere find this little squirrel the master-existence. Though
only a few inches long, so intense is his fiery vigor and restlessness,
he stirs every grove with wild life, and makes himself more important
than even the huge bears that shuffle through the tangled underbrush
beneath him. Every wind is fretted by his voice, almost every bole and
branch feels the sting of his sharp feet. How much the growth of the
trees is stimulated by this means it is not easy to learn, but his
action in manipulating their seeds is more appreciable. Nature has made
him master forester and committed most of her coniferous crops to his
paws. Probably over fifty per cent. of all the cones ripened on the
Sierra are cut off and handled by the Douglas alone, and of those of
the Big Trees perhaps ninety per cent. pass through his hands: the
greater portion is of course stored away for food to last during the
winter and spring, but some of them are tucked separately into loosely
covered holes, where some of the seeds germinate and become trees. But
the Sierra is only one of the many provinces over which he holds sway,
for his dominion extends over all the Redwood Belt of the Coast
Mountains, and far northward throughout the majestic forests of Oregon,
Washington, and British Columbia. I make haste to mention these facts,
to show upon how substantial a foundation the importance I ascribe to
him rests.

The Douglas is closely allied to the Red Squirrel or Chickaree of the
eastern woods. Ours may be a lineal descendant of this species,
distributed westward to the Pacific by way of the Great Lakes and the
Rocky Mountains, and thence southward along our forested ranges. This
view is suggested by the fact that our species becomes redder and more
Chickaree-like in general, the farther it is traced back along the
course indicated above. But whatever their relationship, and the
evolutionary forces that have acted upon them, the Douglas is now the
larger and more beautiful animal.

From the nose to the root of the tail he measures about eight inches;
and his tail, which he so effectively uses in interpreting his
feelings, is about six inches in length. He wears dark bluish-gray over
the back and half-way down the sides, bright buff on the belly, with a
stripe of dark gray, nearly black, separating the upper and under
colors; this dividing stripe, however, is not very sharply defined. He
has long black whiskers, which gives him a rather fierce look when
observed closely, strong claws, sharp as fish-hooks, and the brightest
of bright eyes, full of telling speculation.

A King’s River Indian told me that they call him “Pillillooeet,” which,
rapidly pronounced with the first syllable heavily accented, is not
unlike the lusty exclamation he utters on his way up a tree when
excited. Most mountaineers in California call him the Pine Squirrel;
and when I asked an old trapper whether he knew our little forester, he
replied with brightening countenance: “Oh, yes, of course I know him;
everybody knows him. When I’m huntin’ in the woods, I often find out
where the deer are by his barkin’ at ’em. I call ’em Lightnin’
Squirrels, because they’re so mighty quick and peert.”

All the true squirrels are more or less birdlike in speech and
movements; but the Douglas is preëminently so, possessing, as he does,
every attribute peculiarly squirrelish enthusiastically concentrated.
He is the squirrel of squirrels, flashing from branch to branch of his
favorite evergreens crisp and glossy and undiseased as a sunbeam. Give
him wings and he would outfly any bird in the woods. His big gray
cousin is a looser animal, seemingly light enough to float on the wind;
yet when leaping from limb to limb, or out of one tree-top to another,
he sometimes halts to gather strength, as if making efforts concerning
the upshot of which he does not always feel exactly confident. But the
Douglas, with his denser body, leaps and glides in hidden strength,
seemingly as independent of common muscles as a mountain stream. He
threads the tasseled branches of the pines, stirring their needles like
a rustling breeze; now shooting across openings in arrowy lines; now
launching in curves, glinting deftly from side to side in sudden
zigzags, and swirling in giddy loops and spirals around the knotty
trunks; getting into what seem to be the most impossible situations
without sense of danger; now on his haunches, now on his head; yet ever
graceful, and punctuating his most irrepressible outbursts of energy
with little dots and dashes of perfect repose. He is, without
exception, the wildest animal I ever saw,—a fiery, sputtering little
bolt of life, luxuriating in quick oxygen and the woods’ best juices.
One can hardly think of such a creature being dependent, like the rest
of us, on climate and food. But, after all, it requires no long
acquaintance to learn he is human, for he works for a living. His
busiest time is in the Indian summer. Then he gathers burs and
hazel-nuts like a plodding farmer, working continuously every day for
hours; saying not a word; cutting off the ripe cones at the top of his
speed, as if employed by the job, and examining every branch in regular
order, as if careful that not one should escape him; then, descending,
he stores them away beneath logs and stumps, in anticipation of the
pinching hunger days of winter. He seems himself a kind of coniferous
fruit,—both fruit and flower. The resiny essences of the pines pervade
every pore of his body, and eating his flesh is like chewing gum.

One never tires of this bright chip of nature,—this brave little voice
crying in the wilderness,—of observing his many works and ways, and
listening to his curious language. His musical, piny gossip is as
savory to the ear as balsam to the palate; and, though he has not
exactly the gift of song, some of his notes are as sweet as those of a
linnet—almost flute-like in softness, while others prick and tingle
like thistles. He is the mocking-bird of squirrels, pouring forth mixed
chatter and song like a perennial fountain; barking like a dog,
screaming like a hawk, chirping like a blackbird or a sparrow; while in
bluff, audacious noisiness he is a very jay.

[Illustration: TRACK OF DOUGLAS SQUIRREL ONCE DOWN AND UP A PINE-TREE
WHEN SHOWING OFF TO A SPECTATOR.]

In descending the trunk of a tree with the intention of alighting on
the ground, he preserves a cautious silence, mindful, perhaps, of foxes
and wildcats; but while rocking safely at home in the pine-tops there
is no end to his capers and noise; and woe to the gray squirrel or
chipmunk that ventures to set foot on his favorite tree! No matter how
slyly they trace the furrows of the bark, they are speedily discovered,
and kicked down-stairs with comic vehemence, while a torrent of angry
notes comes rushing from his whiskered lips that sounds remarkably like
swearing. He will even attempt at times to drive away dogs and men,
especially if he has had no previous knowledge of them. Seeing a man
for the first time, he approaches nearer and nearer, until within a few
feet; then, with an angry outburst, he makes a sudden rush, all teeth
and eyes, as if about to eat you up. But, finding that the big, forked
animal doesn’t scare, he prudently beats a retreat, and sets himself up
to reconnoiter on some overhanging branch, scrutinizing every movement
you make with ludicrous solemnity. Gathering courage, he ventures down
the trunk again, churring and chirping, and jerking nervously up and
down in curious loops, eyeing you all the time, as if snowing off and
demanding your admiration. Finally, growing calmer, he settles down in
a comfortable posture on some horizontal branch commanding a good view,
and beats time with his tail to a steady “Chee-up! chee-up!” or, when
somewhat less excited, “Pee-ah!” with the first syllable keenly
accented, and the second drawn out like the scream of a hawk,—repeating
this slowly and more emphatically at first, then gradually faster,
until a rate of about 150 words a minute is reached; usually sitting
all the time on his haunches, with paws resting on his breast, which
pulses visibly with each word. It is remarkable, too, that, though
articulating distinctly, he keeps his mouth shut most of the time, and
speaks through his nose. I have occasionally observed him even eating
Sequoia seeds and nibbling a troublesome flea, without ceasing or in
any way confusing his “Pee-ah! pee-ah!” for a single moment.

While ascending trees all his claws come into play, but in descending
the weight of his body is sustained chiefly by those of the hind feet;
still in neither case do his movements suggest effort, though if you
are near enough you may see the bulging strength of his short,
bear-like arms, and note his sinewy fists clinched in the bark.

Whether going up or down, he carries his tail extended at full length
in line with his body, unless it be required for gestures. But while
running along horizontal limbs or fallen trunks, it is frequently
folded forward over the back, with the airy tip daintily upcurled. In
cool weather it keeps him warm. Then, after he has finished his meal,
you may see him crouched close on some level limb with his tail-robe
neatly spread and reaching forward to his ears, the electric,
outstanding hairs quivering in the breeze like pine-needles. But in wet
or very cold weather he stays in his nest, and while curled up there
his comforter is long enough to come forward around his nose. It is
seldom so cold, however, as to prevent his going out to his stores when
hungry.

Once as I lay storm-bound on the upper edge of the timber line on Mount
Shasta, the thermometer nearly at zero and the sky thick with driving
snow, a Douglas came bravely out several times from one of the lower
hollows of a Dwarf Pine near my camp, faced the wind without seeming to
feel it much, frisked lightly about over the mealy snow, and dug his
way down to some hidden seeds with wonderful precision, as if to his
eyes the thick snow-covering were glass.

No other of the Sierra animals of my acquaintance is better fed, not
even the deer, amid abundance of sweet herbs and shrubs, or the
mountain sheep, or omnivorous bears. His food consists of grass-seeds,
berries, hazel-nuts, chinquapins, and the nuts and seeds of all the
coniferous trees without exception,—Pine, Fir, Spruce, Libocedrus,
Juniper, and Sequoia,—he is fond of them all, and they all agree with
him, green or ripe. No cone is too large for him to manage, none so
small as to be beneath his notice. The smaller ones, such as those of
the Hemlock, and the Douglas Spruce, and the Two-leaved Pine, he cuts
off and eats on a branch of the tree, without allowing them to fall;
beginning at the bottom of the cone and cutting away the scales to
expose the seeds; not gnawing by guess, like a bear, but turning them
round and round in regular order, in compliance with their spiral
arrangement.

When thus employed, his location in the tree is betrayed by a dribble
of scales, shells, and seed-wings, and, every few minutes, by the fall
of the stripped axis of the cone. Then of course he is ready for
another, and if you are watching you may catch a glimpse of him as he
glides silently out to the end of a branch and see him examining the
cone-clusters until he finds one to his mind; then, leaning over, pull
back the springy needles out of his way, grasp the cone with his paws
to prevent its falling, snip it off in an incredibly short time, seize
it with jaws grotesquely stretched, and return to his chosen seat near
the trunk. But the immense size of the cones of the Sugar Pine—from
fifteen to twenty inches in length—and those of the Jeffrey variety of
the Yellow Pine compel him to adopt a quite different method. He cuts
them off without attempting to hold them, then goes down and drags them
from where they have chanced to fall up to the bare, swelling ground
around the instep of the tree, where he demolishes them in the same
methodical way, beginning at the bottom and following the scale-spirals
to the top.

[Illustration: SEEDS, WINGS, AND SCALE OF SUGAR PINE. (NAT. SIZE.)]

From a single Sugar Pine cone he gets from two to four hundred seeds
about half the size of a hazel-nut, so that in a few minutes he can
procure enough to last a week. He seems, however, to prefer those of
the two Silver First above all others; perhaps because they are most
easily obtained, as the scales drop off when ripe without needing to be
cut. Both species are filled with an exceedingly pungent, aromatic oil,
which spices all his flesh, and is of itself sufficient to account for
his lightning energy.

You may easily know this little workman by his chips. On sunny
hillsides around the principal trees they lie in big piles,—bushels and
basketfuls of them, all fresh and clean, making the most beautiful
kitchen-middens imaginable. The brown and yellow scales and nut-shells
are as abundant and as delicately penciled and tinted as the shells
along the sea-shore; while the beautiful red and purple seed-wings
mingled with them would lead one to fancy that innumerable butterflies
had there met their fate.

He feasts on all the species long before they are ripe, but is wise
enough to wait until they are matured before he gathers them into his
barns. This is in October and November, which with him are the two
busiest months of the year. All kinds of burs, big and little, are now
cut off and showered down alike, and the ground is speedily covered
with them. A constant thudding and bumping is kept up; some of the
larger cones chancing to fall on old logs make the forest reëcho with
the sound. Other nut-eaters less industrious know well what is going
on, and hasten to carry away the cones as they fall. But however busy
the harvester may be, he is not slow to descry the pilferers below, and
instantly leaves his work to drive them away. The little striped tamias
is a thorn in his flesh, stealing persistently, punish him as he may.
The large Gray Squirrel gives trouble also, although the Douglas has
been accused of stealing from him. Generally, however, just the
opposite is the case.

The excellence of the Sierra evergreens is well known to nurserymen
throughout the world, consequently there is considerable demand for the
seeds. The greater portion of the supply has hitherto been procured by
chopping down the trees in the more accessible sections of the forest
alongside of bridle-paths that cross the range. Sequoia seeds at first
brought from twenty to thirty dollars per pound, and therefore were
eagerly sought after. Some of the smaller fruitful trees were cut down
in the groves not protected by government, especially those of Fresno
and King’s River. Most of the Sequoias, however, are of so gigantic a
size that the seedsmen have to look for the greater portion of their
supplies to the Douglas, who soon learns he is no match for these
freebooters. He is wise enough, however, to cease working the instant
he perceives them, and never fails to embrace every opportunity to
recover his burs whenever they happen to be stored in any place
accessible to him, and the busy seedsman often finds on returning to
camp that the little Douglas has exhaustively spoiled the spoiler. I
know one seed-gatherer who, whenever he robs the squirrels, scatters
wheat or barley beneath the trees as conscience-money.

The want of appreciable life remarked by so many travelers in the
Sierra forests is never felt at this time of year. Banish all the
humming insects and the birds and quadrupeds, leaving only Sir Douglas,
and the most solitary of our so-called solitudes would still throb with
ardent life. But if you should go impatiently even into the most
populous of the groves on purpose to meet him, and walk about looking
up among the branches, you would see very little of him. But lie down
at the foot of one of the trees and straightway he will come. For, in
the midst of the ordinary forest sounds, the falling of burs, piping of
quails, the screaming of the Clark Crow, and the rustling of deer and
bears among the chaparral, he is quick to detect your strange
footsteps, and will hasten to make a good, close inspection of you as
soon as you are still. First, you may hear him sounding a few notes of
curious inquiry, but more likely the first intimation of his approach
will be the prickly sounds of his feet as he descends the tree
overhead, just before he makes his savage onrush to frighten you and
proclaim your presence to every squirrel and bird in the neighborhood.
If you remain perfectly motionless, he will come nearer and nearer, and
probably set your flesh a-tingle by frisking across your body. Once,
while I was seated at the foot of a Hemlock Spruce in one of the most
inaccessible of the San Joaquin yosemites engaged in sketching, a
reckless fellow came up behind me, passed under my bended arm, and
jumped on my paper. And one warm afternoon, while an old friend of mine
was reading out in the shade of his cabin, one of his Douglas neighbors
jumped from the gable upon his head, and then with admirable assurance
ran down over his shoulder and on to the book he held in his hand.

Our Douglas enjoys a large social circle; for, besides his numerous
relatives, _Sciurus fossor, Tamias quadrivitatus, T. Townsendii,
Spermophilus Beccheyi, S. Douglasii_, he maintains intimate relations
with the nut-eating birds, particularly the Clark Crow (_Picicorvus
columbianus_) and the numerous woodpeckers and jays. The two
spermophiles are astonishingly abundant in the lowlands and lower
foot-hills, but more and more sparingly distributed up through the
Douglas domains,—seldom venturing higher than six or seven thousand
feet above the level of the sea. The gray sciurus ranges but little
higher than this. The little striped tamias alone is associated with
him everywhere. In the lower and middle zones, where they all meet,
they are tolerably harmonious—a happy family, though very amusing
skirmishes may occasionally be witnessed. Wherever the ancient glaciers
have spread forest soil there you find our wee hero, most abundant
where depth of soil and genial climate have given rise to a
corresponding luxuriance in the trees, but following every kind of
growth up the curving moraines to the highest glacial fountains.

Though I cannot of course expect all my readers to sympathize fully in
my admiration of this little animal, few, I hope, will think this
sketch of his life too long. I cannot begin to tell here how much he
has cheered my lonely wanderings during all the years I have been
pursuing my studies in these glorious wilds; or how much unmistakable
humanity I have found in him. Take this for example: One calm, creamy
Indian summer morning, when the nuts were ripe, I was camped in the
upper pine-woods of the south fork of the San Joaquin, where the
squirrels seemed to be about as plentiful as the ripe burs. They were
taking an early breakfast before going to their regular harvest-work.
While I was busy with my own breakfast I heard the thudding fall of two
or three heavy cones from a Yellow Pine near me. I stole noiselessly
forward within about twenty feet of the base of it to observe. In a few
moments down came the Douglas. The breakfast-burs he had cut off had
rolled on the gently sloping ground into a clump of ceanothus bushes,
but he seemed to know exactly where they were, for he found them at
once, apparently without searching for them. They were more than twice
as heavy as himself, but after turning them into the right position for
getting a good hold with his long sickle-teeth he managed to drag them
up to the foot of the tree from which he had cut them, moving backward.
Then seating himself comfortably, he held them on end, bottom up, and
demolished them at his ease. A good deal of nibbling had to be done
before he got anything to eat, because the lower scales are barren, but
when he had patiently worked his way up to the fertile ones he found
two sweet nuts at the base of each, shaped like trimmed hams, and
spotted purple like birds’ eggs. And notwithstanding these cones were
dripping with soft balsam, and covered with prickles, and so strongly
put together that a boy would be puzzled to cut them open with a
jack-knife, he accomplished his meal with easy dignity and cleanliness,
making less effort apparently than a man would in eating soft cookery
from a plate.

Breakfast done, I whistled a tune for him before he went to work,
curious to see how he would be affected by it. He had not seen me all
this while; but the instant I began to whistle he darted up the tree
nearest to him, and came out on a small dead limb opposite me, and
composed himself to listen. I sang and whistled more than a dozen airs,
and as the music changed his eyes sparkled, and he turned his head
quickly from side to side, but made no other response. Other squirrels,
hearing the strange sounds, came around on all sides, also chipmunks
and birds. One of the birds, a handsome, speckle-breasted thrush,
seemed even more interested than the squirrels. After listening for
awhile on one of the lower dead sprays of a pine, he came swooping
forward within a few feet of my face, and remained fluttering in the
air for half a minute or so, sustaining himself with whirring
wing-beats, like a humming-bird in front of a flower, while I could
look into his eyes and see his innocent wonder.

By this time my performance must have lasted nearly half an hour. I
sang or whistled “Bonnie Boon,” “Lass o’ Gowrie,” “O’er the Water to
Charlie,” “Bonnie Woods o’ Cragie Lee,” etc., all of which seemed to be
listened to with bright interest, my first Douglas sitting patiently
through it all, with his telling eyes fixed upon me until I ventured to
give the “Old Hundredth,” when he screamed his Indian name,
Pillillooeet, turned tail, and darted with ludicrous haste up the tree
out of sight, his voice and actions in the case leaving a somewhat
profane impression, as if he had said, “I’ll be hanged if you get me to
hear anything so solemn and unpiny.” This acted as a signal for the
general dispersal of the whole hairy tribe, though the birds seemed
willing to wait further developments, music being naturally more in
their line.

What there can be in that grand old church-tune that is so offensive to
birds and squirrels I can’t imagine. A year or two after this High
Sierra concert, I was sitting one fine day on a hill in the Coast Range
where the common Ground Squirrels were abundant. They were very shy on
account of being hunted so much; but after I had been silent and
motionless for half an hour or so they began to venture out of their
holes and to feed on the seeds of the grasses and thistles around me as
if I were no more to be feared than a tree-stump. Then it occurred to
me that this was a good opportunity to find out whether they also
disliked “Old Hundredth.” Therefore I began to whistle as nearly as I
could remember the same familiar airs that had pleased the mountaineers
of the Sierra. They at once stopped eating, stood erect, and listened
patiently until I came to “Old Hundredth,” when with ludicrous haste
every one of them rushed to their holes and bolted in, their feet
twinkling in the air for a moment as they vanished.

No one who makes the acquaintance of our forester will fail to admire
him; but he is far too self-reliant and warlike ever to be taken for a
darling.

How long the life of a Douglas Squirrel may be, I don’t know. The young
seem to sprout from knot-holes, perfect from the first, and as enduring
as their own trees. It is difficult, indeed, to realize that so
condensed a piece of sun-fire should ever become dim or die at all. He
is seldom killed by hunters, for he is too small to encourage much of
their attention, and when pursued in settled regions becomes
excessively shy, and keeps close in the furrows of the highest trunks,
many of which are of the same color as himself. Indian boys, however,
lie in wait with unbounded patience to shoot them with arrows. In the
lower and middle zones a few fall a prey to rattlesnakes. Occasionally
he is pursued by hawks and wildcats, etc. But, upon the whole, he
dwells safely in the deep bosom of the woods, the most highly favored
of all his happy tribe. May his tribe increase!

[Illustration: TRYING THE BOW.]




CHAPTER X
A WIND-STORM IN THE FORESTS


The mountain winds, like the dew and rain, sunshine and snow, are
measured and bestowed with love on the forests to develop their
strength and beauty. However restricted the scope of other forest
influences, that of the winds is universal. The snow bends and trims
the upper forests every winter, the lightning strikes a single tree
here and there, while avalanches mow down thousands at a swoop as a
gardener trims out a bed of flowers. But the winds go to every tree,
fingering every leaf and branch and furrowed bole; not one is
forgotten; the Mountain Pine towering with outstretched arms on the
rugged buttresses of the icy peaks, the lowliest and most retiring
tenant of the dells; they seek and find them all, caressing them
tenderly, bending them in lusty exercise, stimulating their growth,
plucking off a leaf or limb as required, or removing an entire tree or
grove, now whispering and cooing through the branches like a sleepy
child, now roaring like the ocean; the winds blessing the forests, the
forests the winds, with ineffable beauty and harmony as the sure
result.

[Illustration: A WIND-STORM IN THE CALIFORNIA FORESTS. (AFTER A
SKETCH BY THE AUTHOR.)]

After one has seen pines six feet in diameter bending like grasses
before a mountain gale, and ever and anon some giant falling with a
crash that shakes the hills, it seems astonishing that any, save the
lowest thickset trees, could ever have found a period sufficiently
stormless to establish themselves; or, once established, that they
should not, sooner or later, have been blown down. But when the storm
is over, and we behold the same forests tranquil again, towering fresh
and unscathed in erect majesty, and consider what centuries of storms
have fallen upon them since they were first planted,—hail, to break the
tender seedlings; lightning, to scorch and shatter; snow, winds, and
avalanches, to crush and overwhelm,—while the manifest result of all
this wild storm-culture is the glorious perfection we behold; then
faith in Nature’s forestry is established, and we cease to deplore the
violence of her most destructive gales, or of any other storm-implement
whatsoever.

There are two trees in the Sierra forests that are never blown down, so
long as they continue in sound health. These are the Juniper and the
Dwarf Pine of the summit peaks. Their stiff, crooked roots grip the
storm-beaten ledges like eagles’ claws, while their lithe, cord-like
branches bend round compliantly, offering but slight holds for winds,
however violent. The other alpine conifers—the Needle Pine, Mountain
Pine, Two-leaved Pine, and Hemlock Spruce—are never thinned out by this
agent to any destructive extent, on account of their admirable
toughness and the closeness of their growth. In general the same is
true of the giants of the lower zones. The kingly Sugar Pine, towering
aloft to a height of more than 200 feet, offers a fine mark to
storm-winds; but it is not densely foliaged, and its long, horizontal
arms swing round compliantly in the blast, like tresses of green,
fluent algae in a brook; while the Silver Firs in most places keep
their ranks well together in united strength. The Yellow or Silver Pine
is more frequently overturned than any other tree on the Sierra,
because its leaves and branches form a larger mass in proportion to its
height, while in many places it is planted sparsely, leaving open lanes
through which storms may enter with full force. Furthermore, because it
is distributed along the lower portion of the range, which was the
first to be left bare on the breaking up of the ice-sheet at the close
of the glacial winter, the soil it is growing upon has been longer
exposed to post-glacial weathering, and consequently is in a more
crumbling, decayed condition than the fresher soils farther up the
range, and therefore offers a less secure anchorage for the roots.

While exploring the forest zones of Mount Shasta, I discovered the path
of a hurricane strewn with thousands of pines of this species. Great
and small had been uprooted or wrenched off by sheer force, making a
clean gap, like that made by a snow avalanche. But hurricanes capable
of doing this class of work are rare in the Sierra, and when we have
explored the forests from one extremity of the range to the other, we
are compelled to believe that they are the most beautiful on the face
of the earth, however we may regard the agents that have made them so.

There is always something deeply exciting, not only in the sounds of
winds in the woods, which exert more or less influence over every mind,
but in their varied waterlike flow as manifested by the movements of
the trees, especially those of the conifers. By no other trees are they
rendered so extensively and impressively visible, not even by the
lordly tropic palms or tree-ferns responsive to the gentlest breeze.
The waving of a forest of the giant Sequoias is indescribably
impressive and sublime, but the pines seem to me the best interpreters
of winds. They are mighty waving goldenrods, ever in tune, singing and
writing wind-music all their long century lives. Little, however, of
this noble tree-waving and tree-music will you see or hear in the
strictly alpine portion of the forests. The burly Juniper, whose girth
sometimes more than equals its height, is about as rigid as the rocks
on which it grows. The slender lash-like sprays of the Dwarf Pine
stream out in wavering ripples, but the tallest and slenderest are far
too unyielding to wave even in the heaviest gales. They only shake in
quick, short vibrations. The Hemlock Spruce, however, and the Mountain
Pine, and some of the tallest thickets of the Two-leaved species bow in
storms with considerable scope and gracefulness. But it is only in the
lower and middle zones that the meeting of winds and woods is to be
seen in all its grandeur.

One of the most beautiful and exhilarating storms I ever enjoyed in the
Sierra occurred in December, 1874, when I happened to be exploring one
of the tributary valleys of the Yuba River. The sky and the ground and
the trees had been thoroughly rain-washed and were dry again. The day
was intensely pure, one of those incomparable bits of California
winter, warm and balmy and full of white sparkling sunshine, redolent
of all the purest influences of the spring, and at the same time
enlivened with one of the most bracing wind-storms conceivable. Instead
of camping out, as I usually do, I then chanced to be stopping at the
house of a friend. But when the storm began to sound, I lost no time in
pushing out into the woods to enjoy it. For on such occasions Nature
has always something rare to show us, and the danger to life and limb
is hardly greater than one would experience crouching deprecatingly
beneath a roof.

It was still early morning when I found myself fairly adrift. Delicious
sunshine came pouring over the hills, lighting the tops of the pines,
and setting free a steam of summery fragrance that contrasted strangely
with the wild tones of the storm. The air was mottled with pine-tassels
and bright green plumes, that went flashing past in the sunlight like
birds pursued. But there was not the slightest dustiness, nothing less
pure than leaves, and ripe pollen, and flecks of withered bracken and
moss. I heard trees falling for hours at the rate of one every two or
three minutes; some uprooted, partly on account of the loose,
water-soaked condition of the ground; others broken straight across,
where some weakness caused by fire had determined the spot. The
gestures of the various trees made a delightful study. Young Sugar
Pines, light and feathery as squirrel-tails, were bowing almost to the
ground; while the grand old patriarchs, whose massive boles had been
tried in a hundred storms, waved solemnly above them, their long,
arching branches streaming fluently on the gale, and every needle
thrilling and ringing and shedding off keen lances of light like a
diamond. The Douglas Spruces, with long sprays drawn out in level
tresses, and needles massed in a gray, shimmering glow, presented a
most striking appearance as they stood in bold relief along the
hilltops. The madroños in the dells, with their red bark and large
glossy leaves tilted every way, reflected the sunshine in throbbing
spangles like those one so often sees on the rippled surface of a
glacier lake. But the Silver Pines were now the most impressively
beautiful of all. Colossal spires 200 feet in height waved like supple
golden-rods chanting and bowing low as if in worship, while the whole
mass of their long, tremulous foliage was kindled into one continuous
blaze of white sun-fire. The force of the gale was such that the most
steadfast monarch of them all rocked down to its roots with a motion
plainly perceptible when one leaned against it. Nature was holding high
festival, and every fiber of the most rigid giants thrilled with glad
excitement.

I drifted on through the midst of this passionate music and motion,
across many a glen, from ridge to ridge; often halting in the lee of a
rock for shelter, or to gaze and listen. Even when the grand anthem had
swelled to its highest pitch, I could distinctly hear the varying tones
of individual trees,—Spruce, and Fir, and Pine, and leafless Oak,—and
even the infinitely gentle rustle of the withered grasses at my feet.
Each was expressing itself in its own way,—singing its own song, and
making its own peculiar gestures,—manifesting a richness of variety to
be found in no other forest I have yet seen. The coniferous woods of
Canada, and the Carolinas, and Florida, are made up of trees that
resemble one another about as nearly as blades of grass, and grow close
together in much the same way. Coniferous trees, in general, seldom
possess individual character, such as is manifest among Oaks and Elms.
But the California forests are made up of a greater number of distinct
species than any other in the world. And in them we find, not only a
marked differentiation into special groups, but also a marked
individuality in almost every tree, giving rise to storm effects
indescribably glorious.

Toward midday, after a long, tingling scramble through copses of hazel
and ceanothus, I gained the summit of the highest ridge in the
neighborhood; and then it occurred to me that it would be a fine thing
to climb one of the trees to obtain a wider outlook and get my ear
close to the Aeolian music of its topmost needles. But under the
circumstances the choice of a tree was a serious matter. One whose
instep was not very strong seemed in danger of being blown down, or of
being struck by others in case they should fall; another was branchless
to a considerable height above the ground, and at the same time too
large to be grasped with arms and legs in climbing; while others were
not favorably situated for clear views. After cautiously casting about,
I made choice of the tallest of a group of Douglas Spruces that were
growing close together like a tuft of grass, no one of which seemed
likely to fall unless all the rest fell with it. Though comparatively
young, they were about 100 feet high, and their lithe, brushy tops were
rocking and swirling in wild ecstasy. Being accustomed to climb trees
in making botanical studies, I experienced no difficulty in reaching
the top of this one, and never before did I enjoy so noble an
exhilaration of motion. The slender tops fairly flapped and swished in
the passionate torrent, bending and swirling backward and forward,
round and round, tracing indescribable combinations of vertical and
horizontal curves, while I clung with muscles firm braced, like a
bobolink on a reed.

[Illustration: YELLOW PINE AND LIBOCEDRUS
The two inside trees are Libocedrus, the two outside trees, Yellow
Pine.]

In its widest sweeps my tree-top described an arc of from twenty to
thirty degrees, but I felt sure of its elastic temper, having seen
others of the same species still more severely tried—bent almost to the
ground indeed, in heavy snows—without breaking a fiber. I was therefore
safe, and free to take the wind into my pulses and enjoy the excited
forest from my superb outlook. The view from here must be extremely
beautiful in any weather. Now my eye roved over the piny hills and
dales as over fields of waving grain, and felt the light running in
ripples and broad swelling undulations across the valleys from ridge to
ridge, as the shining foliage was stirred by corresponding waves of
air. Oftentimes these waves of reflected light would break up suddenly
into a kind of beaten foam, and again, after chasing one another in
regular order, they would seem to bend forward in concentric curves,
and disappear on some hillside, like sea-waves on a shelving shore. The
quantity of light reflected from the bent needles was so great as to
make whole groves appear as if covered with snow, while the black
shadows beneath the trees greatly enhanced the effect of the silvery
splendor.

Excepting only the shadows there was nothing somber in all this wild
sea of pines. On the contrary, notwithstanding this was the winter
season, the colors were remarkably beautiful. The shafts of the pine
and libocedrus were brown and purple, and most of the foliage was well
tinged with yellow; the laurel groves, with the pale undersides of
their leaves turned upward, made masses of gray; and then there was
many a dash of chocolate color from clumps of manzanita, and jet of
vivid crimson from the bark of the madroños, while the ground on the
hillsides, appearing here and there through openings between the
groves, displayed masses of pale purple and brown.

The sounds of the storm corresponded gloriously with this wild
exuberance of light and motion. The profound bass of the naked branches
and boles booming like waterfalls; the quick, tense vibrations of the
pine-needles, now rising to a shrill, whistling hiss, now falling to a
silky murmur; the rustling of laurel groves in the dells, and the keen
metallic click of leaf on leaf—all this was heard in easy analysis when
the attention was calmly bent.

The varied gestures of the multitude were seen to fine advantage, so
that one could recognize the different species at a distance of several
miles by this means alone, as well as by their forms and colors, and
the way they reflected the light. All seemed strong and comfortable, as
if really enjoying the storm, while responding to its most enthusiastic
greetings. We hear much nowadays concerning the universal struggle for
existence, but no struggle in the common meaning of the word was
manifest here; no recognition of danger by any tree; no deprecation;
but rather an invincible gladness as remote from exultation as from
fear.

I kept my lofty perch for hours, frequently closing my eyes to enjoy
the music by itself, or to feast quietly on the delicious fragrance
that was streaming past. The fragrance of the woods was less marked
than that produced during warm rain, when so many balsamic buds and
leaves are steeped like tea; but, from the chafing of resiny branches
against each other, and the incessant attrition of myriads of needles,
the gale was spiced to a very tonic degree. And besides the fragrance
from these local sources there were traces of scents brought from afar.
For this wind came first from the sea, rubbing against its fresh, briny
waves, then distilled through the redwoods, threading rich ferny
gulches, and spreading itself in broad undulating currents over many a
flower-enameled ridge of the coast mountains, then across the golden
plains, up the purple foot-hills, and into these piny woods with the
varied incense gathered by the way.

Winds are advertisements of all they touch, however much or little we
may be able to read them; telling their wanderings even by their scents
alone. Mariners detect the flowery perfume of land-winds far at sea,
and sea-winds carry the fragrance of dulse and tangle far inland, where
it is quickly recognized, though mingled with the scents of a thousand
land-flowers. As an illustration of this, I may tell here that I
breathed sea-air on the Firth of Forth, in Scotland, while a boy; then
was taken to Wisconsin, where I remained nineteen years; then, without
in all this time having breathed one breath of the sea, I walked
quietly, alone, from the middle of the Mississippi Valley to the Gulf
of Mexico, on a botanical excursion, and while in Florida, far from the
coast, my attention wholly bent on the splendid tropical vegetation
about me, I suddenly recognized a sea-breeze, as it came sifting
through the palmettos and blooming vine-tangles, which at once awakened
and set free a thousand dormant associations, and made me a boy again
in Scotland, as if all the intervening years had been annihilated.

Most people like to look at mountain rivers, and bear them in mind; but
few care to look at the winds, though far more beautiful and sublime,
and though they become at times about as visible as flowing water. When
the north winds in winter are making upward sweeps over the curving
summits of the High Sierra, the fact is sometimes published with flying
snow-banners a mile long. Those portions of the winds thus embodied can
scarce be wholly invisible, even to the darkest imagination. And when
we look around over an agitated forest, we may see something of the
wind that stirs it, by its effects upon the trees. Yonder it descends
in a rush of water-like ripples, and sweeps over the bending pines from
hill to hill. Nearer, we see detached plumes and leaves, now speeding
by on level currents, now whirling in eddies, or, escaping over the
edges of the whirls, soaring aloft on grand, upswelling domes of air,
or tossing on flame-like crests. Smooth, deep currents, cascades,
falls, and swirling eddies, sing around every tree and leaf, and over
all the varied topography of the region with telling changes of form,
like mountain rivers conforming to the features of their channels.

After tracing the Sierra streams from their fountains to the plains,
marking where they bloom white in falls, glide in crystal plumes, surge
gray and foam-filled in boulder-choked gorges, and slip through the
woods in long, tranquil reaches—after thus learning their language and
forms in detail, we may at length hear them chanting all together in
one grand anthem, and comprehend them all in clear inner vision,
covering the range like lace. But even this spectacle is far less
sublime and not a whit more substantial than what we may behold of
these storm-streams of air in the mountain woods.

We all travel the milky way together, trees and men; but it never
occurred to me until this storm-day, while swinging in the wind, that
trees are travelers, in the ordinary sense. They make many journeys,
not extensive ones, it is true; but our own little journeys, away and
back again, are only little more than tree-wavings—many of them not so
much.

When the storm began to abate, I dismounted and sauntered down through
the calming woods. The storm-tones died away, and, turning toward the
east, I beheld the countless hosts of the forests hushed and tranquil,
towering above one another on the slopes of the hills like a devout
audience. The setting sun filled them with amber light, and seemed to
say, while they listened, “My peace I give unto you.”

As I gazed on the impressive scene, all the so-called ruin of the storm
was forgotten, and never before did these noble woods appear so fresh,
so joyous, so immortal.




CHAPTER XI
THE RIVER FLOODS


The Sierra rivers are flooded every spring by the melting of the snow
as regularly as the famous old Nile. They begin to rise in May, and in
June high-water mark is reached. But because the melting does not go on
rapidly over all the fountains, high and low, simultaneously, and the
melted snow is not reinforced at this time of year by rain, the spring
floods are seldom very violent or destructive. The thousand falls,
however, and the cascades in the cañons are then in full bloom, and
sing songs from one end of the range to the other. Of course the snow
on the lower tributaries of the rivers is first melted, then that on
the higher fountains most exposed to sunshine, and about a month later
the cooler, shadowy fountains send down their treasures, thus allowing
the main trunk streams nearly six weeks to get their waters hurried
through the foot-hills and across the lowlands to the sea. Therefore
very violent spring floods are avoided, and will be as long as the
shading, restraining forests last. The rivers of the north half of the
range are still less subject to sudden floods, because their upper
fountains in great part lie protected from the changes of the weather
beneath thick folds of lava, just as many of the rivers of Alaska lie
beneath folds of ice, coming to the light farther down the range in
large springs, while those of the high Sierra lie on the surface of
solid granite, exposed to every change of temperature. More than ninety
per cent. of the water derived from the snow and ice of Mount Shasta is
at once absorbed and drained away beneath the porous lava folds of the
mountain, where mumbling and groping in the dark they at length find
larger fissures and tunnel-like caves from which they emerge, filtered
and cool, in the form of large springs, some of them so large they give
birth to rivers that set out on their journeys beneath the sun without
any visible intermediate period of childhood. Thus the Shasta River
issues from a large lake-like spring in Shasta Valley, and about two
thirds of the volume of the McCloud River gushes forth suddenly from
the face of a lava bluff in a roaring spring seventy-five yards wide.

These spring rivers of the north are of course shorter than those of
the south whose tributaries extend up to the tops of the mountains.
Fall River, an important tributary of the Pitt or Upper Sacramento, is
only about ten miles long, and is all falls, cascades, and springs from
its head to its confluence with the Pitt. Bountiful springs, charmingly
embowered, issue from the rocks at one end of it, a snowy fall a
hundred and eighty feet high thunders at the other, and a rush of
crystal rapids sing and dance between. Of course such streams are but
little affected by the weather. Sheltered from evaporation their flow
is nearly as full in the autumn as in the time of general spring
floods. While those of the high Sierra diminish to less than the
hundredth part of their springtime prime, shallowing in autumn to a
series of silent pools among the rocks and hollows of their channels,
connected by feeble, creeping threads of water, like the sluggish
sentences of a tired writer, connected by a drizzle of “ands” and
“buts.” Strange to say, the greatest floods occur in winter, when one
would suppose all the wild waters would be muffled and chained in frost
and snow. The same long, all-day storms of the so-called Rainy Season
in California, that give rain to the lowlands, give dry frosty snow to
the mountains. But at rare intervals warm rains and warm winds invade
the mountains and push back the snow line from 2000 feet to 8000, or
even higher, and then come the big floods.

I was usually driven down out of the High Sierra about the end of
November, but the winter of 1874 and 1875 was so warm and calm that I
was tempted to seek general views of the geology and topography of the
basin of Feather River in January. And I had just completed a hasty
survey of the region, and made my way down to winter quarters, when one
of the grandest flood-storms that I ever saw broke on the mountains. I
was then in the edge of the main forest belt at a small foot-hill town
called Knoxville, on the divide between the waters of the Feather and
Yuba rivers. The cause of this notable flood was simply a sudden and
copious fall of warm wind and rain on the basins of these rivers at a
time when they contained a considerable quantity of snow. The rain was
so heavy and long-sustained that it was, of itself, sufficient to make
a good wild flood, while the snow which the warm wind and rain melted
on the upper and middle regions of the basins was sufficient to make
another flood equal to that of the rain. Now these two distinct
harvests of flood waters were gathered simultaneously and poured out on
the plain in one magnificent avalanche. The basins of the Yuba and
Feather, like many others of the Sierra, are admirably adapted to the
growth of floods of this kind. Their many tributaries radiate far and
wide, comprehending extensive areas, and the tributaries are steeply
inclined, while the trunks are comparatively level. While the
flood-storm was in progress the thermometer at Knoxville ranged between
44° and 50°; and when warm wind and warm rain fall simultaneously on
snow contained in basins like these, both the rain and that portion of
the snow which the rain and wind melt are at first sponged up and held
back until the combined mass becomes sludge, which at length, suddenly
dissolving, slips and descends all together to the trunk channel; and
since the deeper the stream the faster it flows, the flooded portion of
the current above overtakes the slower foot-hill portion below it, and
all sweeping forward together with a high, overcurling front, debouches
on the open plain with a violence and suddenness that at first seem
wholly unaccountable. The destructiveness of the lower portion of this
particular flood was somewhat augmented by mining gravel in the river
channels, and by levees which gave way after having at first restrained
and held back the accumulating waters. These exaggerating conditions
did not, however, greatly influence the general result, the main effect
having been caused by the rare combination of flood factors indicated
above. It is a pity that but few people meet and enjoy storms so noble
as this in their homes in the mountains, for, spending themselves in
the open levels of the plains, they are likely to be remembered more by
the bridges and houses they carry away than by their beauty or the
thousand blessings they bring to the fields and gardens of Nature.

On the morning of the flood, January 19th, all the Feather and Yuba
landscapes were covered with running water, muddy torrents filled every
gulch and ravine, and the sky was thick with rain. The pines had long
been sleeping in sunshine; they were now awake, roaring and waving with
the beating storm, and the winds sweeping along the curves of hill and
dale, streaming through the woods, surging and gurgling on the tops of
rocky ridges, made the wildest of wild storm melody.

It was easy to see that only a small part of the rain reached the
ground in the form of drops. Most of it was thrashed into dusty spray
like that into which small waterfalls are divided when they dash on
shelving rocks. Never have I seen water coming from the sky in denser
or more passionate streams. The wind chased the spray forward in
choking drifts, and compelled me again and again to seek shelter in the
dell copses and back of large trees to rest and catch my breath.
Wherever I went, on ridges or in hollows, enthusiastic water still
flashed and gurgled about my ankles, recalling a wild winter flood in
Yosemite when a hundred waterfalls came booming and chanting together
and filled the grand valley with a sea-like roar.

After drifting an hour or two in the lower woods, I set out for the
summit of a hill 900 feet high, with a view to getting as near the
heart of the storm as possible. In order to reach it I had to cross Dry
Creek, a tributary of the Yuba that goes crawling along the base of the
hill on the northwest. It was now a booming river as large as the
Tuolumne at ordinary stages, its current brown with mining-mud washed
down from many a “claim,” and mottled with sluice-boxes, fence-rails,
and logs that had long lain above its reach. A slim foot-bridge
stretched across it, now scarcely above the swollen current. Here I was
glad to linger, gazing and listening, while the storm was in its
richest mood—the gray rain-flood above, the brown river-flood beneath.
The language of the river was scarcely less enchanting than that of the
wind and rain; the sublime overboom of the main bouncing, exulting
current, the swash and gurgle of the eddies, the keen dash and clash of
heavy waves breaking against rocks, and the smooth, downy hush of
shallow currents feeling their way through the willow thickets of the
margin. And amid all this varied throng of sounds I heard the smothered
bumping and rumbling of boulders on the bottom as they were shoving and
rolling forward against one another in a wild rush, after having lain
still for probably 100 years or more.

The glad creek rose high above its banks and wandered from its channel
out over many a briery sand-flat and meadow. Alders and willows
waist-deep were bearing up against the current with nervous trembling
gestures, as if afraid of being carried away, while supple branches
bending confidingly, dipped lightly and rose again, as if stroking the
wild waters in play. Leaving the bridge and passing on through the
storm-thrashed woods, all the ground seemed to be moving. Pine-tassels,
flakes of bark, soil, leaves, and broken branches were being swept
forward, and many a rock-fragment, weathered from exposed ledges, was
now receiving its first rounding and polishing in the wild streams of
the storm. On they rushed through every gulch and hollow, leaping,
gliding, working with a will, and rejoicing like living creatures.

Nor was the flood confined to the ground. Every tree had a water system
of its own spreading far and wide like miniature Amazons and
Mississippis.

Toward midday, cloud, wind, and rain reached their highest development.
The storm was in full bloom, and formed, from my commanding outlook on
the hilltop, one of the most glorious views I ever beheld. As far as
the eye could reach, above, beneath, around, wind-driven rain filled
the air like one vast waterfall. Detached clouds swept imposingly up
the valley, as if they were endowed with independent motion and had
special work to do in replenishing the mountain wells, now rising above
the pine-tops, now descending into their midst, fondling their arrowy
spires and soothing every branch and leaf with gentleness in the midst
of all the savage sound and motion. Others keeping near the ground
glided behind separate groves, and brought them forward into relief
with admirable distinctness; or, passing in front, eclipsed whole
groves in succession, pine after pine melting in their gray fringes and
bursting forth again seemingly clearer than before.

The forms of storms are in great part measured, and controlled by the
topography of the regions where they rise and over which they pass.
When, therefore, we attempt to study them from the valleys, or from
gaps and openings of the forest, we are confounded by a multitude of
separate and apparently antagonistic impressions. The bottom of the
storm is broken up into innumerable waves and currents that surge
against the hillsides like sea-waves against a shore, and these,
reacting on the nether surface of the storm, erode immense cavernous
hollows and cañons, and sweep forward the resulting detritus in long
trains, like the moraines of glaciers. But, as we ascend, these
partial, confusing effects disappear and the phenomena are beheld
united and harmonious.

The longer I gazed into the storm, the more plainly visible it became.
The drifting cloud detritus gave it a kind of visible body, which
explained many perplexing phenomena, and published its movements in
plain terms, while the texture of the falling mass of rain rounded it
out and rendered it more complete. Because raindrops differ in size
they fall at different velocities and overtake and clash against one
another, producing mist and spray. They also, of course, yield unequal
compliance to the force of the wind, which gives rise to a still
greater degree of interference, and passionate gusts sweep off clouds
of spray from the groves like that torn from wave-tops in a gale. All
these factors of irregularity in density, color, and texture of the
general rain mass tend to make it the more appreciable and telling. It
is then seen as one grand flood rushing over bank and brae, bending the
pines like weeds, curving this way and that, whirling in huge eddies in
hollows and dells, while the main current pours grandly over all, like
ocean currents over the landscapes that lie hidden at the bottom of the
sea.

I watched the gestures of the pines while the storm was at its height,
and it was easy to see that they were not distressed. Several large
Sugar Pines stood near the thicket in which I was sheltered, bowing
solemnly and tossing their long arms as if interpreting the very words
of the storm while accepting its wildest onsets with passionate
exhilaration. The lions were feeding. Those who have observed
sunflowers feasting on sunshine during the golden days of Indian summer
know that none of their gestures express thankfulness. Their celestial
food is too heartily given, too heartily taken to leave room for
thanks. The pines were evidently accepting the benefactions of the
storm in the same whole-souled manner; and when I looked down among the
budding hazels, and still lower to the young violets and fern-tufts on
the rocks, I noticed the same divine methods of giving and taking, and
the same exquisite adaptations of what seems an outbreak of violent and
uncontrollable force to the purposes of beautiful and delicate life.
Calms like sleep come upon landscapes, just as they do on people and
trees, and storms awaken them in the same way. In the dry midsummer of
the lower portion of the range the withered hills and valleys seem to
lie as empty and expressionless as dead shells on a shore. Even the
highest mountains may be found occasionally dull and uncommunicative as
if in some way they had lost countenance and shrunk to less than half
their real stature. But when the lightnings crash and echo in the
cañons, and the clouds come down wreathing and crowning their bald
snowy heads, every feature beams with expression and they rise again in
all their imposing majesty.

Storms are fine speakers, and tell all they know, but their voices of
lightning, torrent, and rushing wind are much less numerous than the
nameless still, small voices too low for human ears; and because we are
poor listeners we fail to catch much that is fairly within reach. Our
best rains are heard mostly on roofs, and winds in chimneys; and when
by choice or compulsion we are pushed into the heart of a storm, the
confusion made by cumbersome equipments and nervous haste and mean
fear, prevent our hearing any other than the loudest expressions. Yet
we may draw enjoyment from storm sounds that are beyond hearing, and
storm movements we cannot see. The sublime whirl of planets around
their suns is as silent as raindrops oozing in the dark among the roots
of plants. In this great storm, as in every other, there were tones and
gestures inexpressibly gentle manifested in the midst of what is called
violence and fury, but easily recognized by all who look and listen for
them. The rain brought out the colors of the woods with delightful
freshness, the rich brown of the bark of the trees and the fallen burs
and leaves and dead ferns; the grays of rocks and lichens; the light
purple of swelling buds, and the warm yellow greens of the libocedrus
and mosses. The air was steaming with delightful fragrance, not rising
and wafting past in separate masses, but diffused through all the
atmosphere. Pine woods are always fragrant, but most so in spring when
the young tassels are opening and in warm weather when the various gums
and balsams are softened by the sun. The wind was now chafing their
innumerable needles and the warm rain was steeping them. Monardella
grows here in large beds in the openings, and there is plenty of laurel
in dells and manzanita on the hillsides, and the rosy, fragrant
chamoebatia carpets the ground almost everywhere. These, with the gums
and balsams of the woods, form the main local fragrance-fountains of
the storm. The ascending clouds of aroma wind-rolled and rain-washed
became pure like light and traveled with the wind as part of it. Toward
the middle of the afternoon the main flood cloud lifted along its
western border revealing a beautiful section of the Sacramento Valley
some twenty or thirty miles away, brilliantly sun-lighted and
glistering with rain-sheets as if paved with silver. Soon afterward a
jagged bluff-like cloud with a sheer face appeared over the valley of
the Yuba, dark-colored and roughened with numerous furrows like some
huge lava-table. The blue Coast Range was seen stretching along the sky
like a beveled wall, and the somber, craggy Marysville Buttes rose
impressively out of the flooded plain like islands out of the sea. Then
the rain began to abate and I sauntered down through the dripping
bushes reveling in the universal vigor and freshness that inspired all
the life about me. How clean and unworn and immortal the woods seemed
to be!—the lofty cedars in full bloom laden with golden pollen and
their washed plumes shining; the pines rocking gently and settling back
into rest, and the evening sunbeams spangling on the broad leaves of
the madroños, their tracery of yellow boughs relieved against dusky
thickets of Chestnut Oak; liverworts, lycopodiums, ferns were exulting
in glorious revival, and every moss that had ever lived seemed to be
coming crowding back from the dead to clothe each trunk and stone in
living green. The steaming ground seemed fairly to throb and tingle
with life; smilax, fritillaria, saxifrage, and young violets were
pushing up as if already conscious of the summer glory, and innumerable
green and yellow buds were peeping and smiling everywhere.

As for the birds and squirrels, not a wing or tail of them was to be
seen while the storm was blowing. Squirrels dislike wet weather more
than cats do; therefore they were at home rocking in their dry nests.
The birds were hiding in the dells out of the wind, some of the
strongest of them pecking at acorns and manzanita berries, but most
were perched on low twigs, their breast feathers puffed out and keeping
one another company through the hard time as best they could.

When I arrived at the village about sundown, the good people bestirred
themselves, pitying my bedraggled condition as if I were some benumbed
castaway snatched from the sea, while I, in turn, warm with excitement
and reeking like the ground, pitied them for being dry and defrauded of
all the glory that Nature had spread round about them that day.




CHAPTER XII
SIERRA THUNDER-STORMS


The weather of spring and summer in the middle region of the Sierra is
usually well flecked with rains and light dustings of snow, most of
which are far too obviously joyful and life-giving to be regarded as
storms; and in the picturesque beauty and clearness of outlines of
their clouds they offer striking contrasts to those boundless,
all-embracing cloud-mantles of the storms of winter. The smallest and
most perfectly individualized specimens present a richly modeled
cumulous cloud rising above the dark woods, about 11 A.M., swelling
with a visible motion straight up into the calm, sunny sky to a height
of 12,000 to 14,000 feet above the sea, its white, pearly bosses
relieved by gray and pale purple shadows in the hollows, and showing
outlines as keenly defined as those of the glacier-polished domes. In
less than an hour it attains full development and stands poised in the
blazing sunshine like some colossal mountain, as beautiful in form and
finish as if it were to become a permanent addition to the landscape.
Presently a thunderbolt crashes through the crisp air, ringing like
steel on steel, sharp and clear, its startling detonation breaking into
a spray of echoes against the cliffs and cañon walls. Then down comes a
cataract of rain. The big drops sift through the pine-needles, plash
and patter on the granite pavements, and pour down the sides of ridges
and domes in a network of gray, bubbling rills. In a few minutes the
cloud withers to a mesh of dim filaments and disappears, leaving the
sky perfectly clear and bright, every dust-particle wiped and washed
out of it. Everything is refreshed and invigorated, a steam of
fragrance rises, and the storm is finished—one cloud, one
lightning-stroke, and one dash of rain. This is the Sierra mid-summer
thunder-storm reduced to its lowest terms. But some of them attain much
larger proportions, and assume a grandeur and energy of expression
hardly surpassed by those bred in the depths of winter, producing those
sudden floods called “cloud-bursts,” which are local, and to a
considerable extent periodical, for they appear nearly every day about
the same time for weeks, usually about eleven o’clock, and lasting from
five minutes to an hour or two. One soon becomes so accustomed to see
them that the noon sky seems empty and abandoned without them, as if
Nature were forgetting something. When the glorious pearl and alabaster
clouds of these noonday storms are being built I never give attention
to anything else. No mountain or mountain-range, however divinely
clothed with light, has a more enduring charm than those fleeting
mountains of the sky—floating fountains bearing water for every well,
the angels of the streams and lakes; brooding in the deep azure, or
sweeping softly along the ground over ridge and dome, over meadow, over
forest, over garden and grove; lingering with cooling shadows,
refreshing every flower, and soothing rugged rock-brows with a
gentleness of touch and gesture wholly divine.

[Illustration: BRIDAL VEIL FALLS, YOSEMITE VALLEY.]

The most beautiful and imposing of the summer storms rise just above
the upper edge of the Silver Fir zone, and all are so beautiful that it
is not easy to choose any one for particular description. The one that
I remember best fell on the mountains near Yosemite Valley, July 19,
1869, while I was encamped in the Silver Fir woods. A range of bossy
cumuli took possession of the sky, huge domes and peaks rising one
beyond another with deep cañons between them, bending this way and that
in long curves and reaches, interrupted here and there with white
upboiling masses that looked like the spray of waterfalls. Zigzag
lances of lightning followed each other in quick succession, and the
thunder was so gloriously loud and massive it seemed as if surely an
entire mountain was being shattered at every stroke. Only the trees
were touched, however, so far as I could see,—a few firs 200 feet high,
perhaps, and five to six feet in diameter, were split into long rails
and slivers from top to bottom and scattered to all points of the
compass. Then came the rain in a hearty flood, covering the ground and
making it shine with a continuous sheet of water that, like a
transparent film or skin, fitted closely down over all the rugged
anatomy of the landscape.

It is not long, geologically speaking, since the first raindrop fell on
the present landscapes of the Sierra; and in the few tens of thousands
of years of stormy cultivation they have been blest with, how beautiful
they have become! The first rains fell on raw, crumbling moraines and
rocks without a plant. Now scarcely a drop can fail to find a beautiful
mark: on the tops of the peaks, on the smooth glacier pavements, on the
curves of the domes, on moraines full of crystals, on the thousand
forms of yosemitic sculpture with their tender beauty of balmy, flowery
vegetation, laving, plashing, glinting, pattering; some falling softly
on meadows, creeping out of sight, seeking and finding every thirsty
rootlet, some through the spires of the woods, sifting in dust through
the needles, and whispering good cheer to each of them; some falling
with blunt tapping sounds, drumming on the broad leaves of veratrum,
cypripedium, saxifrage; some falling straight into fragrant corollas,
kissing the lips of lilies, glinting on the sides of crystals, on
shining grains of gold; some falling into the fountains of snow to
swell their well-saved stores; some into the lakes and rivers, patting
the smooth glassy levels, making dimples and bells and spray, washing
the mountain windows, washing the wandering winds; some plashing into
the heart of snowy falls and cascades as if eager to join in the dance
and the song and beat the foam yet finer. Good work and happy work for
the merry mountain raindrops, each one of them a brave fall in itself,
rushing from the cliffs and hollows of the clouds into the cliffs and
hollows of the mountains; away from the thunder of the sky into the
thunder of the roaring rivers. And how far they have to go, and how
many cups to fill—cassiope-cups, holding half a drop, and lake basins
between the hills, each replenished with equal care—every drop God’s
messenger sent on its way with glorious pomp and display of
power—silvery new-born stars with lake and river, mountain and
valley—all that the landscape holds—reflected in their crystal depths.




CHAPTER XIII
THE WATER-OUZEL


The waterfalls of the Sierra are frequented by only one bird,—the Ouzel
or Water Thrush (_Cinclus Mexicanus_, SW.). He is a singularly joyous
and lovable little fellow, about the size of a robin, clad in a plain
waterproof suit of bluish gray, with a tinge of chocolate on the head
and shoulders. In form he is about as smoothly plump and compact as a
pebble that has been whirled in a pot-hole, the flowing contour of his
body being interrupted only by his strong feet and bill, the crisp
wing-tips, and the up-slanted wren-like tail. Among all the countless
waterfalls I have met in the course of ten years’ exploration in the
Sierra, whether among the icy peaks, or warm foot-hills, or in the
profound yosemitic cañons of the middle region, not one was found
without its Ouzel. No cañon is too cold for this little bird, none too
lonely, provided it be rich in falling water. Find a fall, or cascade,
or rushing rapid, anywhere upon a clear stream, and there you will
surely find its complementary Ouzel, flitting about in the spray,
diving in foaming eddies, whirling like a leaf among beaten foam-bells;
ever vigorous and enthusiastic, yet self-contained, and neither seeking
nor shunning your company.

[Illustration: WATER-OUZEL DIVING AND FEEDING.]

If disturbed while dipping about in the margin shallows, he either sets
off with a rapid whir to some other feeding-ground up or down the
stream, or alights on some half-submerged rock or snag out in the
current, and immediately begins to nod and courtesy like a wren,
turning his head from side to side with many other odd dainty movements
that never fail to fix the attention of the observer.

He is the mountain streams’ own darling, the humming-bird of blooming
waters, loving rocky ripple-slopes and sheets of foam as a bee loves
flowers, as a lark loves sunshine and meadows. Among all the mountain
birds, none has cheered me so much in my lonely wanderings,—none so
unfailingly. For both in winter and summer he sings, sweetly, cheerily,
independent alike of sunshine and of love, requiring no other
inspiration than the stream on which he dwells. While water sings, so
must he, in heat or cold, calm or storm, ever attuning his voice in
sure accord; low in the drought of summer and the drought of winter,
but never silent.

During the golden days of Indian summer, after most of the snow has
been melted, and the mountain streams have become feeble,—a succession
of silent pools, linked together by shallow, transparent currents and
strips of silvery lacework,—then the song of the Ouzel is at its lowest
ebb. But as soon as the winter clouds have bloomed, and the mountain
treasuries are once more replenished with snow, the voices of the
streams and ouzels increase in strength and richness until the flood
season of early summer. Then the torrents chant their noblest anthems,
and then is the flood-time of our songster’s melody. As for weather,
dark days and sun days are the same to him. The voices of most
song-birds, however joyous, suffer a long winter eclipse; but the Ouzel
sings on through all the seasons and every kind of storm. Indeed no
storm can be more violent than those of the waterfalls in the midst of
which he delights to dwell. However dark and boisterous the weather,
snowing, blowing, or cloudy, all the same he sings, and with never a
note of sadness. No need of spring sunshine to thaw _his_ song, for it
never freezes. Never shall you hear anything wintry from _his_ warm
breast; no pinched cheeping, no wavering notes between sorrow and joy;
his mellow, fluty voice is ever tuned to downright gladness, as free
from dejection as cock-crowing.

It is pitiful to see wee frost-pinched sparrows on cold mornings in the
mountain groves shaking the snow from their feathers, and hopping about
as if anxious to be cheery, then hastening back to their hidings out of
the wind, puffing out their breast-feathers over their toes, and
subsiding among the leaves, cold and breakfastless, while the snow
continues to fall, and there is no sign of clearing. But the Ouzel
never calls forth a single touch of pity; not because he is strong to
endure, but rather because he seems to live a charmed life beyond the
reach of every influence that makes endurance necessary.

One wild winter morning, when Yosemite Valley was swept its length from
west to east by a cordial snow-storm, I sallied forth to see what I
might learn and enjoy. A sort of gray, gloaming-like darkness filled
the valley, the huge walls were out of sight, all ordinary sounds were
smothered, and even the loudest booming of the falls was at times
buried beneath the roar of the heavy-laden blast. The loose snow was
already over five feet deep on the meadows, making extended walks
impossible without the aid of snow-shoes. I found no great difficulty,
however, in making my way to a certain ripple on the river where one of
my ouzels lived. He was at home, busily gleaning his breakfast among
the pebbles of a shallow portion of the margin, apparently unaware of
anything extraordinary in the weather. Presently he flew out to a stone
against which the icy current was beating, and turning his back to the
wind, sang as delightfully as a lark in springtime.

After spending an hour or two with my favorite, I made my way across
the valley, boring and wallowing through the drifts, to learn as
definitely as possible how the other birds were spending their time.
The Yosemite birds are easily found during the winter because all of
them excepting the Ouzel are restricted to the sunny north side of the
valley, the south side being constantly eclipsed by the great frosty
shadow of the wall. And because the Indian Cañon groves, from their
peculiar exposure, are the warmest, the birds congregate there, more
especially in severe weather.

I found most of the robins cowering on the lee side of the larger
branches where the snow could not fall upon them, while two or three of
the more enterprising were making desperate efforts to reach the
mistletoe berries by clinging nervously to the under side of the
snow-crowned masses, back downward, like woodpeckers. Every now and
then they would dislodge some of the loose fringes of the snow-crown,
which would come sifting down on them and send them screaming back to
camp, where they would subside among their companions with a shiver,
muttering in low, querulous chatter like hungry children.

Some of the sparrows were busy at the feet of the larger trees gleaning
seeds and benumbed insects, joined now and then by a robin weary of his
unsuccessful attempts upon the snow-covered berries. The brave
woodpeckers were clinging to the snowless sides of the larger boles and
overarching branches of the camp trees, making short nights from side
to side of the grove, pecking now and then at the acorns they had
stored in the bark, and chattering aimlessly as if unable to keep
still, yet evidently putting in the time in a very dull way, like
storm-bound travelers at a country tavern. The hardy nut-hatches were
threading the open furrows of the trunks in their usual industrious
manner, and uttering their quaint notes, evidently less distressed than
their neighbors. The Steller jays were of course making more noisy stir
than all the other birds combined; ever coming and going with loud
bluster, screaming as if each had a lump of melting sludge in his
throat, and taking good care to improve the favorable opportunity
afforded by the storm to steal from the acorn stores of the
woodpeckers. I also noticed one solitary gray eagle braving the storm
on the top of a tall pine-stump just outside the main grove. He was
standing bolt upright with his back to the wind, a tuft of snow piled
on his square shoulders, a monument of passive endurance. Thus every
snow-bound bird seemed more or less uncomfortable if not in positive
distress.

The storm was reflected in every gesture, and not one cheerful note,
not to say song, came from a single bill; their cowering, joyless
endurance offering a striking contrast to the spontaneous,
irrepressible gladness of the Ouzel, who could no more help exhaling
sweet song than a rose sweet fragrance. He _must_ sing though the
heavens fall. I remember noticing the distress of a pair of robins
during the violent earthquake of the year 1872, when the pines of the
Valley, with strange movements, flapped and waved their branches, and
beetling rock-brows came thundering down to the meadows in tremendous
avalanches. It did not occur to me in the midst of the excitement of
other observations to look for the ouzels, but I doubt not they were
singing straight on through it all, regarding the terrible rock-thunder
as fearlessly as they do the booming of the waterfalls.

What may be regarded as the separate songs of the Ouzel are exceedingly
difficult of description, because they are so variable and at the same
time so confluent. Though I have been acquainted with my favorite ten
years, and during most of this time have heard him sing nearly every
day, I still detect notes and strains that seem new to me. Nearly all
of his music is sweet and tender, lapsing from his round breast like
water over the smooth lip of a pool, then breaking farther on into a
sparkling foam of melodious notes, which, glow with subdued enthusiasm,
yet without expressing much of the strong, gushing ecstasy of the
bobolink or skylark.

The more striking strains are perfect arabesques of melody, composed of
a few full, round, mellow notes, embroidered with delicate trills which
fade and melt in long slender cadences. In a general way his music is
that of the streams refined and spiritualized. The deep booming notes
of the falls are in it, the trills of rapids, the gurgling of margin
eddies, the low whispering of level reaches, and the sweet tinkle of
separate drops oozing from the ends of mosses and falling into tranquil
pools.

The Ouzel never sings in chorus with other birds, nor with his kind,
but only with the streams. And like flowers that bloom beneath the
surface of the ground, some of our favorite’s best song-blossoms never
rise above the surface of the heavier music of the water. I have often
observed him singing in the midst of beaten spray, his music completely
buried beneath the water’s roar; yet I knew he was surely singing by
his gestures and the movements of his bill.

His food, as far as I have noticed, consists of all kinds of water
insects, which in summer are chiefly procured along shallow margins.
Here he wades about ducking his head under water and deftly turning
over pebbles and fallen leaves with his bill, seldom choosing to go
into deep water where he has to use his wings in diving.

He seems to be especially fond of the larvae; of mosquitos, found in
abundance attached to the bottom of smooth rock channels where the
current is shallow. When feeding in such places he wades up-stream, and
often while his head is under water the swift current is deflected
upward along the glossy curves of his neck and shoulders, in the form
of a clear, crystalline shell, which fairly incloses him like a
bell-glass, the shell being broken and re-formed as he lifts and dips
his head; while ever and anon he sidles out to where the too powerful
current carries him off his feet; then he dexterously rises on the wing
and goes gleaning again in shallower places.

But during the winter, when the stream-banks are embossed in snow, and
the streams themselves are chilled nearly to the freezing-point, so
that the snow falling into them in stormy weather is not wholly
dissolved, but forms a thin, blue sludge, thus rendering the current
opaque—then he seeks the deeper portions of the main rivers, where he
may dive to clear water beneath the sludge. Or he repairs to some open
lake or mill-pond, at the bottom of which he feeds in safety.

When thus compelled to betake himself to a lake, he does not plunge
into it at once like a duck, but always alights in the first place upon
some rock or fallen pine along the shore. Then flying out thirty or
forty yards, more or less, according to the character of the bottom, he
alights with a dainty glint on the surface, swims about, looks down,
finally makes up his mind, and disappears with a sharp stroke of his
wings. After feeding for two or three minutes he suddenly reappears,
showers the water from his wings with one vigorous shake, and rises
abruptly into the air as if pushed up from beneath, comes back to his
perch, sings a few minutes, and goes out to dive again; thus coming and
going, singing and diving at the same place for hours.

[Illustration: ONE OF THE LATE-SUMMER FEEDING-GROUNDS OF THE OUZEL.]

The Ouzel is usually found singly; rarely in pairs, excepting during
the breeding season, and _very_ rarely in threes or fours. I once
observed three thus spending a winter morning in company, upon a small
glacier lake, on the Upper Merced, about 7500 feet above the level of
the sea. A storm had occurred during the night, but the morning sun
shone unclouded, and the shadowy lake, gleaming darkly in its setting
of fresh snow, lay smooth and motionless as a mirror. My camp chanced
to be within a few feet of the water’s edge, opposite a fallen pine,
some of the branches of which leaned out over the lake. Here my three
dearly welcome visitors took up their station, and at once began to
embroider the frosty air with their delicious melody, doubly delightful
to me that particular morning, as I had been somewhat apprehensive of
danger in breaking my way down through the snow-choked cañons to the
lowlands.

The portion of the lake bottom selected for a feeding-ground lies at a
depth of fifteen or twenty feet below the surface, and is covered with
a short growth of algae and other aquatic plants,—facts I had
previously determined while sailing over it on a raft. After alighting
on the glassy surface, they occasionally indulged in a little play,
chasing one another round about in small circles; then all three would
suddenly dive together, and then come ashore and sing.

The Ouzel seldom swims more than a few yards on the surface, for, not
being web-footed, he makes rather slow progress, but by means of his
strong, crisp wings he swims, or rather flies, with celerity under the
surface, often to considerable distances. But it is in withstanding the
force of heavy rapids that his strength of wing in this respect is most
strikingly manifested. The following may be regarded as a fair
illustration of his power of sub-aquatic flight. One stormy morning in
winter when the Merced River was blue and green with unmelted snow, I
observed one of my ouzels perched on a snag out in the midst of a
swift-rushing rapid, singing cheerily, as if everything was just to his
mind; and while I stood on the bank admiring him, he suddenly plunged
into the sludgy current, leaving his song abruptly broken off. After
feeding a minute or two at the bottom, and when one would suppose that
he must inevitably be swept far down-stream, he emerged just where he
went down, alighted on the same snag, showered the water-beads from his
feathers, and continued his unfinished song, seemingly in tranquil ease
as if it had suffered no interruption.

[Illustration: OUZEL ENTERING A WHITE CURRENT.]

The Ouzel alone of all birds dares to enter a white torrent. And though
strictly terrestrial in structure, no other is so inseparably related
to water, not even the duck, or the bold ocean albatross, or the
stormy-petrel. For ducks go ashore as soon as they finish feeding in
undisturbed places, and very often make long flights over land from
lake to lake or field to field. The same is true of most other aquatic
birds. But the Ouzel, born on the brink of a stream, or on a snag or
boulder in the midst of it, seldom leaves it for a single moment. For,
notwithstanding he is often on the wing, he never flies overland, but
whirs with, rapid, quail-like beat above the stream, tracing all its
windings. Even when the stream is quite small, say from five to ten
feet wide, he seldom shortens his flight by crossing a bend, however
abrupt it may be; and even when disturbed by meeting some one on the
bank, he prefers to fly over one’s head, to dodging out over the
ground. When, therefore, his flight along a crooked stream is viewed
endwise, it appears most strikingly wavered—a description on the air of
every curve with lightning-like rapidity.

The vertical curves and angles of the most precipitous torrents he
traces with the same rigid fidelity, swooping down the inclines of
cascades, dropping sheer over dizzy falls amid the spray, and ascending
with the same fearlessness and ease, seldom seeking to lessen the
steepness of the acclivity by beginning to ascend before reaching the
base of the fall. No matter though it may be several hundred feet in
height he holds straight on, as if about to dash headlong into the
throng of booming rockets, then darts abruptly upward, and, after
alighting at the top of the precipice to rest a moment, proceeds to
feed and sing. His flight is solid and impetuous, without any
intermission of wing-beats,—one homogeneous buzz like that of a laden
bee on its way home. And while thus buzzing freely from fall to fall,
he is frequently heard giving utterance to a long outdrawn train of
unmodulated notes, in no way connected with his song, but corresponding
closely with his flight in sustained vigor.

Were the flights of all the ouzels in the Sierra traced on a chart,
they would indicate the direction of the flow of the entire system of
ancient glaciers, from about the period of the breaking up of the
ice-sheet until near the close of the glacial winter; because the
streams which the ouzels so rigidly follow are, with the unimportant
exceptions of a few side tributaries, all flowing in channels eroded
for them out of the solid flank of the range by the vanished
glaciers,—the streams tracing the ancient glaciers, the ouzels tracing
the streams. Nor do we find so complete compliance to glacial
conditions in the life of any other mountain bird, or animal of any
kind. Bears frequently accept the pathways laid down by glaciers as the
easiest to travel; but they often leave them and cross over from cañon
to cañon. So also, most of the birds trace the moraines to some extent,
because the forests are growing on them. But they wander far, crossing
the cañons from grove to grove, and draw exceedingly angular and
complicated courses.

The Ouzel’s nest is one of the most extraordinary pieces of bird
architecture I ever saw, odd and novel in design, perfectly fresh and
beautiful, and in every way worthy of the genius of the little builder.
It is about a foot in diameter, round and bossy in outline, with a
neatly arched opening near the bottom, somewhat like an old-fashioned
brick oven, or Hottentot’s hut. It is built almost exclusively of green
and yellow mosses, chiefly the beautiful fronded hypnum that covers the
rocks and old drift-logs in the vicinity of waterfalls. These are
deftly interwoven, and felted together into a charming little hut; and
so situated that many of the outer mosses continue to flourish as if
they had not been plucked. A few fine, silky-stemmed grasses are
occasionally found interwoven with the mosses, but, with the exception
of a thin layer lining the floor, their presence seems accidental, as
they are of a species found growing with the mosses and are probably
plucked with them. The site chosen for this curious mansion is usually
some little rock-shelf within reach of the lighter particles of the
spray of a waterfall, so that its walls are kept green and growing, at
least during the time of high water.

No harsh lines are presented by any portion of the nest as seen in
place, but when removed from its shelf, the back and bottom, and
sometimes a portion of the top, is found quite sharply angular, because
it is made to conform to the surface of the rock upon which and against
which it is built, the little architect always taking advantage of
slight crevices and protuberances that may chance to offer, to render
his structure stable by means of a kind of gripping and dovetailing.

In choosing a building-spot, concealment does not seem to be taken into
consideration; yet notwithstanding the nest is large and guilelessly
exposed to view, it is far from being easily detected, chiefly because
it swells forward like any other bulging moss-cushion growing naturally
in such situations. This is more especially the case where the nest is
kept fresh by being well sprinkled. Sometimes these romantic little
huts have their beauty enhanced by rock-ferns and grasses that spring
up around the mossy walls, or in front of the door-sill, dripping with
crystal beads.

Furthermore, at certain hours of the day, when the sunshine is poured
down at the required angle, the whole mass of the spray enveloping the
fairy establishment is brilliantly irised; and it is through so
glorious a rainbow atmosphere as this that some of our blessed ouzels
obtain their first peep at the world.

Ouzels seem so completely part and parcel of the streams they inhabit,
they scarce suggest any other origin than the streams themselves; and
one might almost be pardoned in fancying they come direct from the
living waters, like flowers from the ground. At least, from whatever
cause, it never occurred to me to look for their nests until more than
a year after I had made the acquaintance of the birds themselves,
although I found one the very day on which I began the search. In
making my way from Yosemite to the glaciers at the heads of the Merced
and Tuolumne rivers, I camped in a particularly wild and romantic
portion of the Nevada cañon where in previous excursions I had never
failed to enjoy the company of my favorites, who were attracted here,
no doubt, by the safe nesting-places in the shelving rocks, and by the
abundance of food and falling water. The river, for miles above and
below, consists of a succession of small falls from ten to sixty feet
in height, connected by flat, plume-like cascades that go flashing from
fall to fall, free and almost channelless, over waving folds of
glacier-polished granite.

On the south side of one of the falls, that portion of the precipice
which is bathed by the spray presents a series of little shelves and
tablets caused by the development of planes of cleavage in the granite,
and by the consequent fall of masses through the action of the water.
“Now here,” said I, “of all places, is the most charming spot for an
Ouzel’s nest.” Then carefully scanning the fretted face of the
precipice through the spray, I at length noticed a yellowish
moss-cushion, growing on the edge of a level tablet within five or six
feet of the outer folds of the fall. But apart from the fact of its
being situated where one acquainted with the lives of ouzels would
fancy an Ouzel’s nest ought to be, there was nothing in its appearance
visible at first sight, to distinguish it from other bosses of
rock-moss similarly situated with reference to perennial spray; and it
was not until I had scrutinized it again and again, and had removed my
shoes and stockings and crept along the face of the rock within eight
or ten feet of it, that I could decide certainly whether it was a nest
or a natural growth.

In these moss huts three or four eggs are laid, white like
foam-bubbles; and well may the little birds hatched from them sing
water songs, for they hear them all their lives, and even before they
are born.

I have often observed the young just out of the nest making their odd
gestures, and seeming in every way as much at home as their experienced
parents, like young bees on their first excursions to the flower
fields. No amount of familiarity with people and their ways seems to
change them in the least. To all appearance their behavior is just the
same on seeing a man for the first time, as when they have seen him
frequently.

[Illustration: THE OUZEL AT HOME.]

On the lower reaches of the rivers where mills are built, they sing on
through the din of the machinery, and all the noisy confusion of dogs,
cattle, and workmen. On one occasion, while a wood-chopper was at work
on the river-bank, I observed one cheerily singing within reach of the
flying chips. Nor does any kind of unwonted disturbance put him in bad
humor, or frighten him out of calm self-possession. In passing through
a narrow gorge, I once drove one ahead of me from rapid to rapid,
disturbing him four times in quick succession where he could not very
well fly past me on account of the narrowness of the channel. Most
birds under similar circumstances fancy themselves pursued, and become
suspiciously uneasy; but, instead of growing nervous about it, he made
his usual dippings, and sang one of his most tranquil strains. When
observed within a few yards their eyes are seen to express remarkable
gentleness and intelligence; but they seldom allow so near a view
unless one wears clothing of about the same color as the rocks and
trees, and knows how to sit still. On one occasion, while rambling
along the shore of a mountain lake, where the birds, at least those
born that season, had never seen a man, I sat down to rest on a large
stone close to the water’s edge, upon which it seemed the ouzels and
sandpipers were in the habit of alighting when they came to feed on
that part of the shore, and some of the other birds also, when they
came down to wash or drink. In a few minutes, along came a whirring
Ouzel and alighted on the stone beside me, within reach of my hand.
Then suddenly observing me, he stooped nervously as if about to fly on
the instant, but as I remained as motionless as the stone, he gained
confidence, and looked me steadily in the face for about a minute, then
flew quietly to the outlet and began to sing. Next came a sandpiper and
gazed at me with much the same guileless expression of eye as the
Ouzel. Lastly, down with a swoop came a Steller’s jay out of a
fir-tree, probably with the intention of moistening his noisy throat.
But instead of sitting confidingly as my other visitors had done, he
rushed off at once, nearly tumbling heels over head into the lake in
his suspicious confusion, and with loud screams roused the
neighborhood.

Love for song-birds, with their sweet human voices, appears to be more
common and unfailing than love for flowers. Every one loves flowers to
some extent, at least in life’s fresh morning, attracted by them as
instinctively as humming-birds and bees. Even the young Digger Indians
have sufficient love for the brightest of those found growing on the
mountains to gather them and braid them, as decorations for the hair.
And I was glad to discover, through the few Indians that could be
induced to talk on the subject, that they have names for the wild rose
and the lily, and other conspicuous flowers, whether available as food
or otherwise. Most men, however, whether savage or civilized, become
apathetic toward all plants that have no other apparent use than the
use of beauty. But fortunately one’s first instinctive love of
song-birds is never wholly obliterated, no matter what the influences
upon our lives may be. I have often been delighted to see a pure,
spiritual glow come into the countenances of hard business-men and old
miners, when a song-bird chanced to alight near them. Nevertheless, the
little mouthful of meat that swells out the breasts of some song-birds
is too often the cause of their death. Larks and robins in particular
are brought to market in hundreds. But fortunately the Ouzel has no
enemy so eager to eat his little body as to follow him into the
mountain solitudes. I never knew him to be chased even by hawks.

An acquaintance of mine, a sort of foot-hill mountaineer, had a pet
cat, a great, dozy, overgrown creature, about as broad-shouldered as a
lynx. During the winter, while the snow lay deep, the mountaineer sat
in his lonely cabin among the pines smoking his pipe and wearing the
dull time away. Tom was his sole companion, sharing his bed, and
sitting beside him on a stool with much the same drowsy expression of
eye as his master. The good-natured bachelor was content with his hard
fare of soda-bread and bacon, but Tom, the only creature in the world
acknowledging dependence on him, must needs be provided with fresh
meat. Accordingly he bestirred himself to contrive squirrel-traps, and
waded the snowy woods with his gun, making sad havoc among the few
winter birds, sparing neither robin, sparrow, nor tiny nuthatch, and
the pleasure of seeing Tom eat and grow fat was his great reward.

One cold afternoon, while hunting along the river-bank, he noticed a
plain-feathered little bird skipping about in the shallows, and
immediately raised his gun. But just then the confiding songster began
to sing, and after listening to his summery melody the charmed hunter
turned away, saying, “Bless your little heart, I can’t shoot you, not
even for Tom.”

[Illustration: YOSEMITE BIRDS, SNOW-BOUND AT THE FOOT OF INDIAN
CAÑON.]

Even so far north as icy Alaska, I have found my glad singer. When I
was exploring the glaciers between Mount Fairweather and the Stikeen
River, one cold day in November, after trying in vain to force a way
through the innumerable icebergs of Sum Dum Bay to the great glaciers
at the head of it, I was weary and baffled and sat resting in my canoe
convinced at last that I would have to leave this part of my work for
another year. Then I began to plan my escape to open water before the
young ice which was beginning to form should shut me in. While I thus
lingered drifting with the bergs, in the midst of these gloomy
forebodings and all the terrible glacial desolation and grandeur, I
suddenly heard the well-known whir of an Ouzel’s wings, and, looking
up, saw my little comforter coming straight across the ice from the
shore. In a second or two he was with me, flying three times round my
head with a happy salute, as if saying, “Cheer up, old friend; you see
I’m here, and all’s well.” Then he flew back to the shore, alighted on
the topmost jag of a stranded iceberg, and began to nod and bow as
though he were on one of his favorite boulders in the midst of a sunny
Sierra cascade.

The species is distributed all along the mountain-ranges of the Pacific
Coast from Alaska to Mexico, and east to the Rocky Mountains.
Nevertheless, it is as yet comparatively little known. Audubon and
Wilson did not meet it. Swainson was, I believe, the first naturalist
to describe a specimen from Mexico. Specimens were shortly afterward
procured by Drummond near the sources of the Athabasca River, between
the fifty-fourth and fifty-sixth parallels; and it has been collected
by nearly all of the numerous exploring expeditions undertaken of late
through our Western States and Territories; for it never fails to
engage the attention of naturalists in a very particular manner.

Such, then, is our little cinclus, beloved of every one who is so
fortunate as to know him. Tracing on strong wing every curve of the
most precipitous torrents from one extremity of the Sierra to the
other; not fearing to follow them through their darkest gorges and
coldest snow-tunnels; acquainted with every waterfall, echoing their
divine music; and throughout the whole of their beautiful lives
interpreting all that we in our unbelief call terrible in the
utterances of torrents and storms, as only varied expressions of God’s
eternal love.




CHAPTER XIV
THE WILD SHEEP
(_Ovis montana_)


The wild sheep ranks highest among the animal mountaineers of the
Sierra. Possessed of keen sight and scent, and strong limbs, he dwells
secure amid the loftiest summits, leaping unscathed from crag to crag,
up and down the fronts of giddy precipices, crossing foaming torrents
and slopes of frozen snow, exposed to the wildest storms, yet
maintaining a brave, warm life, and developing from generation to
generation in perfect strength and beauty.

Nearly all the lofty mountain-chains of the globe are inhabited by wild
sheep, most of which, on account of the remote and all but inaccessible
regions where they dwell, are imperfectly known as yet. They are
classified by different naturalists under from five to ten distinct
species or varieties, the best known being the burrhel of the Himalaya
(_Ovis burrhel_, Blyth); the argali, the large wild sheep of central
and northeastern Asia (_O. ammon_, Linn., or _Caprovis argali_); the
Corsican mouflon (_O. musimon_, Pal.); the aoudad of the mountains of
northern Africa (_Ammotragus tragelaphus_); and the Rocky Mountain
bighorn (_O. montana_, Cuv.). To this last-named species belongs the
wild sheep of the Sierra. Its range, according to the late Professor
Baird of the Smithsonian Institution, extends “from the region of the
upper Missouri and Yellowstone to the Rocky Mountains and the high
grounds adjacent to them on the eastern slope, and as far south as the
Rio Grande. Westward it extends to the coast ranges of Washington,
Oregon, and California, and follows the highlands some distance into
Mexico.”[1] Throughout the vast region bounded on the east by the
Wahsatch Mountains and on the west by the Sierra there are more than a
hundred subordinate ranges and mountain groups, trending north and
south, range beyond range, with summits rising from eight to twelve
thousand feet above the level of the sea, probably all of which,
according to my own observations, is, or has been, inhabited by this
species.

Compared with the argali, which, considering its size and the vast
extent of its range, is probably the most important of all the wild
sheep, our species is about the same size, but the horns are less
twisted and less divergent. The more important characteristics are,
however, essentially the same, some of the best naturalists maintaining
that the two are only varied forms of one species. In accordance with
this view, Cuvier conjectures that since central Asia seems to be the
region where the sheep first appeared, and from which it has been
distributed, the argali may have been distributed over this continent
from Asia by crossing Bering Strait on ice. This conjecture is not so
ill founded as at first sight would appear; for the Strait is only
about fifty miles wide, is interrupted by three islands, and is jammed
with ice nearly every winter. Furthermore the argali is abundant on the
mountains adjacent to the Strait at East Cape, where it is well known
to the Tschuckchi hunters and where I have seen many of their horns.

On account of the extreme variability of the sheep under culture, it is
generally supposed that the innumerable domestic breeds have all been
derived from the few wild species; but the whole question is involved
in obscurity. According to Darwin, sheep have been domesticated from a
very ancient period, the remains of a small breed, differing from any
now known, having been found in the famous Swiss lake-dwellings.

Compared with the best-known domestic breeds, we find that our wild
species is much larger, and, instead of an all-wool garment, wears a
thick over-coat of hair like that of the deer, and an under-covering of
fine wool. The hair, though rather coarse, is comfortably soft and
spongy, and lies smooth, as if carefully tended with comb and brush.
The predominant color during most of the year is brownish-gray, varying
to bluish-gray in the autumn; the belly and a large, conspicuous patch
on the buttocks are white; and the tail, which is very short, like that
of a deer, is black, with a yellowish border. The wool is white, and
grows in beautiful spirals down out of sight among the shining hair,
like delicate climbing vines among stalks of corn.

The horns of the male are of immense size, measuring in their greater
diameter from five to six and a half inches, and from two and a half to
three feet in length around the curve. They are yellowish-white in
color, and ridged transversely, like those of the domestic ram. Their
cross-section near the base is somewhat triangular in outline, and
flattened toward the tip. Rising boldly from the top of the head, they
curve gently backward and outward, then forward and outward, until
about three fourths of a circle is described, and until the flattened,
blunt tips are about two feet or two and a half feet apart. Those of
the female are flattened throughout their entire length, are less
curved than those of the male, and much smaller, measuring less than a
foot along the curve.

A ram and ewe that I obtained near the Modoc lava-beds, to the
northeast of Mount Shasta, measured as follows:

_Ram._ _Ewe._ 
_ft._ _in._ _ft._ _in._
Height at shoulders 3 6 3 0
Girth around shoulders 3 11 3 3¾
Length from nose to root of tail 5 10¼ 4 3½
Length of ears 0 4¾ 0 5
Length of tail 0 4½ 0 4½
Length of horns around curve 2 9 0 11½
Distance across from tip to tip of horns 2 5½  
Circumference of horns at base 1 4 0 6

The measurements of a male obtained in the Rocky Mountains by Audubon
vary but little as compared with the above. The weight of his specimen
was 344 pounds,[2] which is, perhaps, about an average for full-grown
males. The females are about a third lighter.

Besides these differences in size, color, hair, etc., as noted above,
we may observe that the domestic sheep, in a general way, is
expressionless, like a dull bundle of something only half alive, while
the wild is as elegant and graceful as a deer, every movement
manifesting admirable strength and character. The tame is timid; the
wild is bold. The tame is always more or less ruffled and dirty; while
the wild is as smooth and clean as the flowers of his mountain
pastures.

The earliest mention that I have been able to find of the wild sheep in
America is by Father Picolo, a Catholic missionary at Monterey, in the
year 1797, who, after describing it, oddly enough, as “a kind of deer
with a sheep-like head, and about as large as a calf one or two years
old,” naturally hurries on to remark: “I have eaten of these beasts;
their flesh is very tender and delicious.” Mackenzie, in his northern
travels, heard the species spoken of by the Indians as “white
buffaloes.” And Lewis and Clark tell us that, in a time of great
scarcity on the head waters of the Missouri, they saw plenty of wild
sheep, but they were “too shy to be shot.”

A few of the more energetic of the Pah Ute Indians hunt the wild sheep
every season among the more accessible sections of the High Sierra, in
the neighborhood of passes, where, from having been pursued, they have
become extremely wary; but in the rugged wilderness of peaks and
cañons, where the foaming tributaries of the San Joaquin and King’s
rivers take their rise, they fear no hunter save the wolf, and are more
guileless and approachable than their tame kindred.

While engaged in the work of exploring high regions where they delight
to roam I have been greatly interested in studying their habits. In the
months of November and December, and probably during a considerable
portion of midwinter, they all flock together, male and female, old and
young. I once found a complete band of this kind numbering upward of
fifty, which, on being alarmed, went bounding away across a jagged
lava-bed at admirable speed, led by a majestic old ram, with the lambs
safe in the middle of the flock.

In spring and summer, the full-grown rams form separate bands of from
three to twenty, and are usually found feeding along the edges of
glacier meadows, or resting among the castle-like crags of the high
summits; and whether quietly feeding, or scaling the wild cliffs, their
noble forms and the power and beauty of their movements never fail to
strike the beholder with lively admiration.

Their resting-places seem to be chosen with reference to sunshine and a
wide outlook, and most of all to safety. Their feeding-grounds are
among the most beautiful of the wild gardens, bright with daisies and
gentians and mats of purple bryanthus, lying hidden away on rocky
headlands and cañon sides, where sunshine is abundant, or down in the
shady glacier valleys, along the banks of the streams and lakes, where
the plushy sod is greenest. Here they feast all summer, the happy
wanderers, perhaps relishing the beauty as well as the taste of the
lovely flora on which they feed.

[Illustration: SNOW-BOUND ON MOUNT SHASTA.]

When the winter storms set in, loading their highland pastures with
snow, then, like the birds, they gather and go to lower climates,
usually descending the eastern flank of the range to the rough,
volcanic table-lands and treeless ranges of the Great Basin adjacent to
the Sierra. They never make haste, however, and seem to have no dread
of storms, many of the strongest only going down leisurely to bare,
wind-swept ridges, to feed on bushes and dry bunch-grass, and then
returning up into the snow. Once I was snow-bound on Mount Shasta for
three days, a little below the timber line. It was a dark and stormy
time, well calculated to test the skill and endurance of mountaineers.
The snow-laden gale drove on night and day in hissing, blinding floods,
and when at length it began to abate, I found that a small band of wild
sheep had weathered the storm in the lee of a clump of Dwarf Pines a
few yards above my storm-nest, where the snow was eight or ten feet
deep. I was warm back of a rock, with blankets, bread, and fire. My
brave companions lay in the snow, without food, and with only the
partial shelter of the short trees, yet they made no sign of suffering
or faint-heartedness.

In the months of May and June, the wild sheep bring forth their young
in solitary and almost inaccessible crags, far above the nesting-rocks
of the eagle. I have frequently come upon the beds of the ewes and
lambs at an elevation of from 12,000 to 13,000 feet above sea-level.
These beds are simply oval-shaped hollows, pawed out among loose,
disintegrating rock-chips and sand, upon some sunny spot commanding a
good outlook, and partially sheltered from the winds that sweep those
lofty peaks almost without intermission. Such is the cradle of the
little mountaineer, aloft in the very sky; rocked in storms, curtained
in clouds, sleeping in thin, icy air; but, wrapped in his hairy coat,
and nourished by a strong, warm mother, defended from the talons of the
eagle and the teeth of the sly coyote, the bonny lamb grows apace. He
soon learns to nibble the tufted rock-grasses and leaves of the white
spirsea; his horns begin to shoot, and before summer is done he is
strong and agile, and goes forth with the flock, watched by the same
divine love that tends the more helpless human lamb in its cradle by
the fireside.

Nothing is more commonly remarked by noisy, dusty trail-travelers in
the Sierra than the want of animal life—no song-birds, no deer, no
squirrels, no game of any kind, they say. But if such could only go
away quietly into the wilderness, sauntering afoot and alone with
natural deliberation, they would soon learn that these mountain
mansions are not without inhabitants, many of whom, confiding and
gentle, would not try to shun their acquaintance.

[Illustration: HEAD OF THE MERINO RAM (DOMESTIC).]

In the fall of 1873 I was tracing the South Fork of the San Joaquin up
its wild cañon to its farthest glacier fountains. It was the season of
alpine Indian summer. The sun beamed lovingly; the squirrels were
nutting in the pine-trees, butterflies hovered about the last of the
goldenrods, the willow and maple thickets were yellow, the meadows
brown, and the whole sunny, mellow landscape glowed like a countenance
in the deepest and sweetest repose. On my way over the glacier-polished
rocks along the river, I came to an expanded portion of the cañon,
about two miles long and half a mile wide, which formed a level park
inclosed with picturesque granite walls like those of Yosemite Valley.
Down through the middle of it poured the beautiful river shining and
spangling in the golden light, yellow groves on its banks, and strips
of brown meadow; while the whole park was astir with wild life, some of
which even the noisiest and least observing of travelers must have seen
had they been with me. Deer, with their supple, well-grown fawns,
bounded from thicket to thicket as I advanced; grouse kept rising from
the brown grass with a great whirring of wings, and, alighting on the
lower branches of the pines and poplars, allowed a near approach, as if
curious to see me. Farther on, a broad-shouldered wildcat showed
himself, coming out of a grove, and crossing the river on a flood-jamb
of logs, halting for a moment to look back. The bird-like tamias
frisked about my feet everywhere among the pine-needles and seedy
grass-tufts; cranes waded the shallows of the river-bends, the
kingfisher rattled from perch to perch, and the blessed ouzel sang amid
the spray of every cascade. Where may lonely wanderer find a more
interesting family of mountain-dwellers, earth-born companions and
fellow-mortals? It was afternoon when I joined them, and the glorious
landscape began to fade in the gloaming before I awoke from their
enchantment. Then I sought a camp-ground on the river-bank, made a
cupful of tea, and lay down to sleep on a smooth place among the yellow
leaves of an aspen grove. Next day I discovered yet grander landscapes
and grander life. Following the river over huge, swelling rock-bosses
through a majestic cañon, and past innumerable cascades, the scenery in
general became gradually wilder and more alpine. The Sugar Pine and
Silver Firs gave place to the hardier Cedar and Hemlock Spruce. The
cañon walls became more rugged and bare, and gentians and arctic
daisies became more abundant in the gardens and strips of meadow along
the streams. Toward the middle of the afternoon I came to another
valley, strikingly wild and original in all its features, and perhaps
never before touched by human foot. As regards area of level
bottom-land, it is one of the very smallest of the Yosemite type, but
its walls are sublime, rising to a height of from 2000 to 4000 feet
above the river. At the head of the valley the main cañon forks, as is
found to be the case in all yosemites. The formation of this one is due
chiefly to the action of two great glaciers, whose fountains lay to the
eastward, on the flanks of Mounts Humphrey and Emerson and a cluster of
nameless peaks farther south.

[Illustration: HEAD OF ROCKY MOUNTAIN WILD SHEEP.]

The gray, boulder-chafed river was singing loudly through the valley,
but above its massy roar I heard the booming of a waterfall, which drew
me eagerly on; and just as I emerged from the tangled groves and
brier-thickets at the head of the valley, the main fork of the river
came in sight, falling fresh from its glacier fountains in a snowy
cascade, between granite walls 2000 feet high. The steep incline down
which the glad waters thundered seemed to bar all farther progress. It
was not long, however, before I discovered a crooked seam in the rock,
by which I was enabled to climb to the edge of a terrace that crosses
the cañon, and divides the cataract nearly in the middle. Here I sat
down to take breath and make some entries in my note-book, taking
advantage, at the same time, of my elevated position above the trees to
gaze back over the valley into the heart of the noble landscape, little
knowing the while what neighbors were near.

After spending a few minutes in this way, I chanced to look across the
fall, and there stood three sheep quietly observing me. Never did the
sudden appearance of a mountain, or fall, or human friend more forcibly
seize and rivet my attention. Anxiety to observe accurately held me
perfectly still. Eagerly I marked the flowing undulations of their
firm, braided muscles, their strong legs, ears, eyes, heads, their
graceful rounded necks, the color of their hair, and the bold,
upsweeping curves of their noble horns. When they moved I watched every
gesture, while they, in no wise disconcerted either by my attention or
by the tumultuous roar of the water, advanced deliberately alongside
the rapids, between the two divisions of the cataract, turning now and
then to look at me. Presently they came to a steep, ice-burnished
acclivity, which they ascended by a succession of quick, short,
stiff-legged leaps, reaching the top without a struggle. This was the
most startling feat of mountaineering I had ever witnessed, and,
considering only the mechanics of the thing, my astonishment could
hardly have been greater had they displayed wings and taken to flight.
“Surefooted” mules on such ground would have fallen and rolled like
loosened boulders. Many a time, where the slopes are far lower, I have
been compelled to take off my shoes and stockings, tie them to my belt,
and creep barefooted, with the utmost caution. No wonder then, that I
watched the progress of these animal mountaineers with keen sympathy,
and exulted in the boundless sufficiency of wild nature displayed in
their invention, construction, and keeping. A few minutes later I
caught sight of a dozen more in one band, near the foot of the upper
fall. They were standing on the same side of the river with me, only
twenty-five or thirty yards away, looking as unworn and perfect as if
created on the spot. It appeared by their tracks, which I had seen in
the Little Yosemite, and by their present position, that when I came up
the cañon they were all feeding together down in the valley, and in
their haste to reach high ground, where they could look about them to
ascertain the nature of the strange disturbance, they were divided,
three ascending on one side the river, the rest on the other.

The main band, headed by an experienced chief, now began to cross the
wild rapids between the two divisions of the cascade. This was another
exciting feat; for, among all the varied experiences of mountaineers,
the crossing of boisterous, rock-dashed torrents is found to be one of
the most trying to the nerves. Yet these fine fellows walked fearlessly
to the brink, and jumped from boulder to boulder, holding themselves in
easy poise above the whirling, confusing current, as if they were doing
nothing extraordinary.

[Illustration: CROSSING A CAÑON STREAM.]

In the immediate foreground of this rare picture there was a fold of
ice-burnished granite, traversed by a few bold lines in which
rock-ferns and tufts of bryanthus were growing, the gray cañon walls on
the sides, nobly sculptured and adorned with brown cedars and pines;
lofty peaks in the distance, and in the middle ground the snowy fall,
the voice and soul of the landscape; fringing bushes beating time to
its thunder-tones, the brave sheep in front of it, their gray forms
slightly obscured in the spray, yet standing out in good, heavy relief
against the close white water, with their huge horns rising like the
upturned roots of dead pine-trees, while the evening sunbeams streaming
up the cañon colored all the picture a rosy purple and made it
glorious. After crossing the river, the dauntless climbers, led by
their chief, at once began to scale the cañon wall, turning now right,
now left, in long, single file, keeping well apart out of one another’s
way, and leaping in regular succession from crag to crag, now ascending
slippery dome-curves, now walking leisurely along the edges of
precipices, stopping at times to gaze down at me from some flat-topped
rock, with heads held aslant, as if curious to learn what I thought
about it, or whether I was likely to follow them. After reaching the
top of the wall, which, at this place, is somewhere between 1500 and
2000 feet high, they were still visible against the sky as they
lingered, looking down in groups of twos or threes.

Throughout the entire ascent they did not make a single awkward step,
or an unsuccessful effort of any kind. I have frequently seen tame
sheep in mountains jump upon a sloping rock-surface, hold on
tremulously a few seconds, and fall back baffled and irresolute. But in
the most trying situations, where the slightest want or inaccuracy
would have been fatal, these always seemed to move in comfortable
reliance on their strength and skill, the limits of which they never
appeared to know. Moreover, each one of the flock, while following the
guidance of the most experienced, yet climbed with intelligent
independence as a perfect individual, capable of separate existence
whenever it should wish or be compelled to withdraw from the little
clan. The domestic sheep, on the contrary, is only a fraction of an
animal, a whole flock being required to form an individual, just as
numerous flowerets are required to make one complete sunflower.

Those shepherds who, in summer, drive their flocks to the mountain
pastures, and, while watching them night and day, have seen them
frightened by bears and storms, and scattered like wind-driven chaff,
will, in some measure, be able to appreciate the self-reliance and
strength and noble individuality of Nature’s sheep.

Like the Alp-climbing ibex of Europe, our mountaineer is said to plunge
headlong down the faces of sheer precipices, and alight on his big
horns. I know only two hunters who claim to have actually witnessed
this feat; I never was so fortunate. They describe the act as a diving
head-foremost. The horns are so large at the base that they cover the
upper portion of the head down nearly to a level with the eyes, and the
skull is exceedingly strong. I struck an old, bleached specimen on
Mount Ritter a dozen blows with my ice-ax without breaking it. Such
skulls would not fracture very readily by the wildest rock-diving, but
other bones could hardly be expected to hold together in such a
performance; and the mechanical difficulties in the way of controlling
their movements, after striking upon an irregular surface, are, in
themselves, sufficient to show this boulder-like method of progression
to be impossible, even in the absence of all other evidence on the
subject; moreover, the ewes follow wherever the rams may lead, although
their horns are mere spikes. I have found many pairs of the horns of
the old rams considerably battered, doubtless a result of fighting. I
was particularly interested in the question, after witnessing the
performances of this San Joaquin band upon the glaciated rocks at the
foot of the falls; and as soon as I procured specimens and examined
their feet, all the mystery disappeared. The secret, considered in
connection with exceptionally strong muscles, is simply this: the wide
posterior portion of the bottom of the foot, instead of wearing down
and becoming flat and hard, like the feet of tame sheep and horses,
bulges out in a soft, rubber-like pad or cushion, which not only grips
and holds well on smooth rocks, but fits into small cavities, and down
upon or against slight protuberances. Even the hardest portions of the
edge of the hoof are comparatively soft and elastic; furthermore, the
toes admit of an extraordinary amount of both lateral and vertical
movement, allowing the foot to accommodate itself still more perfectly
to the irregularities of rock surfaces, while at the same time
increasing the gripping power.

At the base of Sheep Rock, one of the winter strongholds of the Shasta
flocks, there lives a stock-raiser who has had the advantage of
observing the movements of wild sheep every winter; and, in the course
of a conversation with him on the subject of their diving habits, he
pointed to the front of a lava headland about 150 feet high, which is
only eight or ten degrees out of the perpendicular. “There,” said he,
“I followed a band of them fellows to the back of that rock yonder, and
expected to capture them all, for I thought I had a dead thing on them.
I got behind them on a narrow bench that runs along the face of the
wall near the top and comes to an end where they couldn’t get away
without falling and being killed; but they jumped off, and landed all
right, as if that were the regular thing with them.”

“What!” said I, “jumped 150 feet perpendicular! Did you see them do
it?”

“No,” he replied, “I didn’t see them going down, for I was behind them;
but I saw them go off over the brink, and then I went below and found
their tracks where they struck on the loose rubbish at the bottom. They
just _sailed right off_, and landed on their feet right side up. That
is the kind of animal _they_ is—beats anything else that goes on four
legs.”

[Illustration: WILD SHEEP JUMPING OVER A PRECIPICE.]

On another occasion, a flock that was pursued by hunters retreated to
another portion of this same cliff where it is still higher, and, on
being followed, they were seen jumping down in perfect order, one
behind another, by two men who happened to be chopping where they had a
fair view of them and could watch their progress from top to bottom of
the precipice. Both ewes and rams made the frightful descent without
evincing any extraordinary concern, hugging the rock closely, and
controlling the velocity of their half falling, half leaping movements
by striking at short intervals and holding back with their cushioned,
rubber feet upon small ledges and roughened inclines until near the
bottom, when they “sailed off” into the free air and alighted on their
feet, but with their bodies so nearly in a vertical position that they
appeared to be diving.

It appears, therefore, that the methods of this wild mountaineering
become clearly comprehensible as soon as we make ourselves acquainted
with the rocks, and the kind of feet and muscles brought to bear upon
them.

The Modoc and Pah Ute Indians are, or rather have been, the most
successful hunters of the wild sheep in the regions that have come
under my own observation. I have seen large numbers of heads and horns
in the caves of Mount Shasta and the Modoc lava-beds, where the Indians
had been feasting in stormy weather; also in the cañons of the Sierra
opposite Owen’s Valley; while the heavy obsidian arrow-heads found on
some of the highest peaks show that this warfare has long been going
on.

In the more accessible ranges that stretch across the desert regions of
western Utah and Nevada, considerable numbers of Indians used to hunt
in company like packs of wolves, and being perfectly acquainted with
the topography of their hunting-grounds, and with the habits and
instincts of the game, they were pretty successful. On the tops of
nearly every one of the Nevada mountains that I have visited, I found
small, nest-like inclosures built of stones, in which, as I afterward
learned, one or more Indians would lie in wait while their companions
scoured the ridges below, knowing that the alarmed sheep would surely
run to the summit, and when they could be made to approach with the
wind they were shot at short range.

[Illustration: INDIANS HUNTING WILD SHEEP.]

Still larger bands of Indians used to make extensive hunts upon some
dominant mountain much frequented by the sheep, such as Mount Grant on
the Wassuck Range to the west of Walker Lake. On some particular spot,
favorably situated with reference to the well-known trails of the
sheep, they built a high-walled corral, with long guiding wings
diverging from the gateway; and into this inclosure they sometimes
succeeded in driving the noble game. Great numbers of Indians were of
course required, more, indeed, than they could usually muster, counting
in squaws, children, and all; they were compelled, therefore, to build
rows of dummy hunters out of stones, along the ridge-tops which they
wished to prevent the sheep from crossing. And, without discrediting
the sagacity of the game, these dummies were found effective; for, with
a few live Indians moving about excitedly among them, they could hardly
be distinguished at a little distance from men, by any one not in the
secret. The whole ridge-top then seemed to be alive with hunters.

The only animal that may fairly be regarded as a companion or rival of
the sheep is the so-called Rocky Mountain goat (_Aplocerus montana_,
Rich.), which, as its name indicates, is more antelope than goat. He,
too, is a brave and hardy climber, fearlessly crossing the wildest
summits, and braving the severest storms, but he is shaggy,
short-legged, and much less dignified in demeanor than the sheep. His
jet-black horns are only about five or six inches in length, and the
long, white hair with which he is covered obscures the expression of
his limbs. I have never yet seen a single specimen in the Sierra,
though possibly a few flocks may have lived on Mount Shasta a
comparatively short time ago.

The ranges of these two mountaineers are pretty distinct, and they see
but little of each other; the sheep being restricted mostly to the dry,
inland mountains; the goat or chamois to the wet, snowy glacier-laden
mountains of the northwest coast of the continent in Oregon,
Washington, British Columbia, and Alaska. Probably more than 200 dwell
on the icy, volcanic cone of Mount Rainier; and while I was exploring
the glaciers of Alaska I saw flocks of these admirable mountaineers
nearly every day, and often followed their trails through the mazes of
bewildering crevasses, in which they are excellent guides.

Three species of deer are found in California,—the black-tailed,
white-tailed, and mule deer. The first mentioned (_Cervus Columbianus_)
is by far the most abundant, and occasionally meets the sheep during
the summer on high glacier meadows, and along the edge of the timber
line; but being a forest animal, seeking shelter and rearing its young
in dense thickets, it seldom visits the wild sheep in its higher homes.
The antelope, though not a mountaineer, is occasionally met in winter
by the sheep while feeding along the edges of the sage-plains and bare
volcanic hills to the east of the Sierra. So also is the mule deer,
which is almost restricted in its range to this eastern region. The
white-tailed species belongs to the coast ranges.

Perhaps no wild animal in the world is without enemies, but
highlanders, as a class, have fewer than lowlanders. The wily panther,
slipping and crouching among long grass and bushes, pounces upon the
antelope and deer, but seldom crosses the bald, craggy thresholds of
the sheep. Neither can the bears be regarded as enemies; for, though
they seek to vary their every-day diet of nuts and berries by an
occasional meal of mutton, they prefer to hunt tame and helpless
flocks. Eagles and coyotes, no doubt, capture an unprotected lamb at
times, or some unfortunate beset in deep, soft snow, but these cases
are little more than accidents. So, also, a few perish in
long-continued snow-storms, though, in all my mountaineering, I have
not found more than five or six that seemed to have met their fate in
this way. A little band of three were discovered snow-bound in Bloody
Canon a few years ago, and were killed with an ax by mountaineers, who
chanced to be crossing the range in winter.

Man is the most dangerous enemy of all, but even from him our brave
mountain-dweller has little to fear in the remote solitudes of the High
Sierra. The golden plains of the Sacramento and San Joaquin were lately
thronged with bands of elk and antelope, but, being fertile and
accessible, they were required for human pastures. So, also, are many
of the feeding-grounds of the deer—hill, valley, forest, and meadow—but
it will be long before man will care to take the highland castles of
the sheep. And when we consider here how rapidly entire species of
noble animals, such as the elk, moose, and buffalo, are being pushed to
the very verge of extinction, all lovers of wildness will rejoice with
me in the rocky security of _Ovis montana_, the bravest of all the
Sierra mountaineers.

 [1] Pacific Railroad Survey, Vol. VIII, page 678.


 [2] Audubon and Bachman’s “Quadrupeds of North America.”




CHAPTER XV
IN THE SIERRA FOOT-HILLS


Murphy’s camp is a curious old mining-town in Calaveras County, at an
elevation of 2400 feet above the sea, situated like a nest in the
center of a rough, gravelly region, rich in gold. Granites, slates,
lavas, limestone, iron ores, quartz veins, auriferous gravels, remnants
of dead fire-rivers and dead water-rivers are developed here side by
side within a radius of a few miles, and placed invitingly open before
the student like a book, while the people and the region beyond the
camp furnish mines of study of never-failing interest and variety.

When I discovered this curious place, I was tracing the channels of the
ancient pre-glacial rivers, instructive sections of which have been
laid bare here and in the adjacent regions by the miners. Rivers,
according to the poets, “go on forever”; but those of the Sierra are
young as yet and have scarcely learned the way down to the sea; while
at least one generation of them have died and vanished together with
most of the basins they drained. All that remains of them to tell their
history is a series of interrupted fragments of channels, mostly choked
with gravel, and buried beneath broad, thick sheets of lava. These are
known as the “Dead Rivers of California,” and the gravel deposited in
them is comprehensively called the “Blue Lead.” In some places the
channels of the present rivers trend in the same direction, or nearly
so, as those of the ancient rivers; but, in general, there is little
correspondence between them, the entire drainage having been changed,
or, rather, made new. Many of the hills of the ancient landscapes have
become hollows, and the old hollows have become hills. Therefore the
fragmentary channels, with their loads of auriferous gravel, occur in
all kinds of unthought-of places, trending obliquely, or even at right
angles to the present drainage, across the tops of lofty ridges or far
beneath them, presenting impressive illustrations of the magnitude of
the changes accomplished since those ancient streams were annihilated.
The last volcanic period preceding the regeneration of the Sierra
landscapes seems to have come on over all the range almost
simultaneously, like the glacial period, notwithstanding lavas of
different age occur together in many places, indicating numerous
periods of activity in the Sierra fire-fountains. The most important of
the ancient river-channels in this region is a section that extends
from the south side of the town beneath Coyote Creek and the ridge
beyond it to the Cañon of the Stanislaus; but on account of its depth
below the general surface of the present valleys the rich gold gravels
it is known to contain cannot be easily worked on a large scale. Their
extraordinary richness may be inferred from the fact that many claims
were profitably worked in them by sinking shafts to a depth of 200 feet
or more, and hoisting the dirt by a windlass. Should the dip of this
ancient channel be such as to make the Stanislaus Cañon available as a
dump, then the grand deposit might be worked by the hydraulic method,
and although a long, expensive tunnel would be required, the scheme
might still prove profitable, for there is “millions in it.”

The importance of these ancient gravels as gold fountains is well known
to miners. Even the superficial placers of the present streams have
derived much of their gold from them. According to all accounts, the
Murphy placers have been very rich—“terrific rich,” as they say here.
The hills have been cut and scalped, and every gorge and gulch and
valley torn to pieces and disemboweled, expressing a fierce and
desperate energy hard to understand. Still, any kind of effort-making
is better than inaction, and there is something sublime in seeing men
working in dead earnest at anything, pursuing an object with
glacier-like energy and persistence. Many a brave fellow has recorded a
most eventful chapter of life on these Calaveras rocks. But most of the
pioneer miners are sleeping now, their wild day done, while the few
survivors linger languidly in the washed-out gulches or sleepy village
like harried bees around the ruins of their hive. “We have no industry
left _now_,” they told me, “and no men; everybody and everything
hereabouts has gone to decay. We are only bummers—out of the game, a
thin scatterin’ of poor, dilapidated cusses, compared with what we used
to be in the grand old gold-days. We were giants then, and you can look
around here and see our tracks.” But although these lingering pioneers
are perhaps more exhausted than the mines, and about as dead as the
dead rivers, they are yet a rare and interesting set of men, with much
gold mixed with the rough, rocky gravel of their characters; and they
manifest a breeding and intelligence little looked for in such
surroundings as theirs. As the heavy, long-continued grinding of the
glaciers brought out the features of the Sierra, so the intense
experiences of the gold period have brought out the features of these
old miners, forming a richness and variety of character little known as
yet. The sketches of Bret Harte, Hayes, and Miller have not exhausted
this field by any means. It is interesting to note the extremes
possible in one and the same character: harshness and gentleness,
manliness and childishness, apathy and fierce endeavor. Men who, twenty
years ago, would not cease their shoveling to save their lives, now
play in the streets with children. Their long, Micawber-like waiting
after the exhaustion of the placers has brought on an exaggerated form
of dotage. I heard a group of brawny pioneers in the street eagerly
discussing the quantity of tail required for a boy’s kite; and one
graybeard undertook the sport of flying it, volunteering the
information that he was a boy, “always was a boy, and d—n a man who was
not a boy inside, however ancient outside!” Mines, morals, politics,
the immortality of the soul, etc., were discussed beneath shade-trees
and in saloons, the time for each being governed apparently by the
temperature. Contact with Nature, and the habits of observation
acquired in gold-seeking, had made them all, to some extent,
collectors, and, like wood-rats, they had gathered all kinds of odd
specimens into their cabins, and now required me to examine them. They
were themselves the oddest and most interesting specimens. One of them
offered to show me around the old diggings, giving me fair warning
before setting out that I might not like him, “because,” said he,
“people say I’m eccentric. I notice everything, and gather beetles and
snakes and anything that’s queer; and so some don’t like me, and call
me eccentric. I’m always trying to find out things. Now, there’s a
weed; the Indians eat it for greens. What do you call those long-bodied
flies with big heads?” “Dragon-flies,” I suggested. “Well, their jaws
work sidewise, instead of up and down, and grasshoppers’ jaws work the
same way, and therefore I think they are the same species. I always
notice everything like that, and just because I do, they say I’m
eccentric,” etc.

Anxious that I should miss none of the wonders of their old gold-field,
the good people had much to say about the marvelous beauty of Cave City
Cave, and advised me to explore it. This I was very glad to do, and
finding a guide who knew the way to the mouth of it, I set out from
Murphy the next morning.

The most beautiful and extensive of the mountain caves of California
occur in a belt of metamorphic limestone that is pretty generally
developed along the western flank of the Sierra from the McCloud River
on the north to the Kaweah on the south, a distance of over 400 miles,
at an elevation of from 2000 to 7000 feet above the sea. Besides this
regular belt of caves, the California landscapes are diversified by
long imposing ranks of sea-caves, rugged and variable in architecture,
carved in the coast headlands and precipices by centuries of
wave-dashing; and innumerable lava-caves, great and small, originating
in the unequal flowing and hardening of the lava sheets in which they
occur, fine illustrations of which are presented in the famous Modoc
Lava Beds, and around the base of icy Shasta. In this comprehensive
glance we may also notice the shallow wind-worn caves in stratified
sandstones along the margins of the plains; and the cave-like recesses
in the Sierra slates and granites, where bears and other mountaineers
find shelter during the fall of sudden storms. In general, however, the
grand massive uplift of the Sierra, as far as it has been laid-bare to
observation, is about as solid and caveless as a boulder.

Fresh beauty opens one’s eyes wherever it is really seen, but the very
abundance and completeness of the common beauty that besets our steps
prevents its being absorbed and appreciated. It is a good thing,
therefore, to make short excursions now and then to the bottom of the
sea among dulse and coral, or up among the clouds on mountain-tops, or
in balloons, or even to creep like worms into dark holes and caverns
underground, not only to learn something of what is going on in those
out-of-the-way places, but to see better what the sun sees on our
return to common every-day beauty.

Our way from Murphy’s to the cave lay across a series of picturesque,
moory ridges in the chaparral region between the brown foot-hills and
the forests, a flowery stretch of rolling hill-waves breaking here and
there into a kind of rocky foam on the higher summits, and sinking into
delightful bosky hollows embowered with vines. The day was a fine
specimen of California summer, pure sunshine, unshaded most of the time
by a single cloud. As the sun rose higher, the heated air began to flow
in tremulous waves from every southern slope. The sea-breeze that
usually comes up the foot-hills at this season, with cooling on its
wings, was scarcely perceptible. The birds were assembled beneath leafy
shade, or made short, languid flights in search of food, all save the
majestic buzzard; with broad wings outspread he sailed the warm air
unwearily from ridge to ridge, seeming to enjoy the fervid sunshine
like a butterfly. Squirrels, too, whose spicy ardor no heat or cold may
abate, were nutting among the pines, and the innumerable hosts of the
insect kingdom were throbbing and wavering unwearied as sunbeams.

This brushy, berry-bearing region used to be a deer and bear pasture,
but since the disturbances of the gold period these fine animals have
almost wholly disappeared. Here, also, once roamed the mastodon and
elephant, whose bones are found entombed in the river gravels and
beneath thick folds of lava. Toward noon, as we were riding slowly over
bank and brae, basking in the unfeverish sun-heat, we witnessed the
upheaval of a new mountain-range, a Sierra of clouds abounding in
landscapes as truly sublime and beautiful—if only we have a mind to
think so and eyes to see—as the more ancient rocky Sierra beneath it,
with its forests and waterfalls; reminding us that, as there is a lower
world of caves, so, also, there is an upper world of clouds. Huge,
bossy cumuli developed with astonishing rapidity from mere buds,
swelling with visible motion into colossal mountains, and piling
higher, higher, in long massive ranges, peak beyond peak, dome over
dome, with many a picturesque valley and shadowy cave between; while
the dark firs and pines of the upper benches of the Sierra were
projected against their pearl bosses with exquisite clearness of
outline. These cloud mountains vanished in the azure as quickly as they
were developed, leaving no detritus; but they were not a whit less real
or interesting on this account. The more enduring hills over which we
rode were vanishing as surely as they, only not so fast, a difference
which is great or small according to the standpoint from which it is
contemplated.

At the bottom of every dell we found little homesteads embosomed in
wild brush and vines wherever the recession of the hills left patches
of arable ground. These secluded flats are settled mostly by Italians
and Germans, who plant a few vegetables and grape-vines at odd times,
while their main business is mining and prospecting. In spite of all
the natural beauty of these dell cabins, they can hardly be called
homes. They are only a better kind of camp, gladly abandoned whenever
the hoped-for gold harvest has been gathered. There is an air of
profound unrest and melancholy about the best of them. Their beauty is
thrust upon them by exuberant Nature, apart from which they are only a
few logs and boards rudely jointed and without either ceiling or floor,
a rough fireplace with corresponding cooking utensils, a shelf-bed, and
stool. The ground about them is strewn with battered prospecting-pans,
picks, sluice-boxes, and quartz specimens from many a ledge, indicating
the trend of their owners’ hard lives.

The ride from Murphy’s to the cave is scarcely two hours long, but we
lingered among quartz-ledges and banks of dead river gravel until long
after noon. At length emerging from a narrow-throated gorge, a small
house came in sight set in a thicket of fig-trees at the base of a
limestone hill. “That,” said my guide, pointing to the house, “is Cave
City, and the cave is in that gray hill.” Arriving at the one house of
this one-house city, we were boisterously welcomed by three drunken men
who had come to town to hold a spree. The mistress of the house tried
to keep order, and in reply to our inquiries told us that the cave
guide was then in the cave with a party of ladies. “And must we wait
until he returns?” we asked. No, that was unnecessary; we might take
candles and go into the cave alone, provided we shouted from time to
time so as to be found by the guide, and were careful not to fall over
the rocks or into the dark pools. Accordingly taking a trail from the
house, we were led around the base of the hill to the mouth of the
cave, a small inconspicuous archway, mossy around the edges and shaped
like the door of a water-ouzel’s nest, with no appreciable hint or
advertisement of the grandeur of the many crystal chambers within.
Lighting our candles, which seemed to have no illuminating power in the
thick darkness, we groped our way onward as best we could along narrow
lanes and alleys, from chamber to chamber, around rustic columns and
heaps of fallen rocks, stopping to rest now and then in particularly
beautiful places—fairy alcoves furnished with admirable variety of
shelves and tables, and round bossy stools covered with sparkling
crystals. Some of the corridors were muddy, and in plodding along these
we seemed to be in the streets of some prairie village in spring-time.
Then we would come to handsome marble stairways conducting right and
left into upper chambers ranged above one another three or four stories
high, floors, ceilings, and walls lavishly decorated with innumerable
crystalline forms. After thus wandering exploringly, and alone for a
mile or so, fairly enchanted, a murmur of voices and a gleam of light
betrayed the approach of the guide and his party, from whom, when they
came up, we received a most hearty and natural stare, as we stood half
concealed in a side recess among stalagmites. I ventured to ask the
dripping, crouching company how they had enjoyed their saunter, anxious
to learn how the strange sunless scenery of the underworld had
impressed them. “Ah, it’s nice! It’s splendid!” they all replied and
echoed. “The Bridal Chamber back here is just glorious! This morning we
came down from the Calaveras Big Tree Grove, and the trees are nothing
to it.” After making this curious comparison they hastened sunward, the
guide promising to join us shortly on the bank of a deep pool, where we
were to wait for him. This is a charming little lakelet of unknown
depth, never yet stirred by a breeze, and its eternal calm excites the
imagination even more profoundly than the silvery lakes of the glaciers
rimmed with meadows and snow and reflecting sublime mountains.

Our guide, a jolly, rollicking Italian, led us into the heart of the
hill, up and down, right and left, from chamber to chamber more and
more magnificent, all a-glitter like a glacier cave with icicle-like
stalactites and stalagmites combined in forms of indescribable beauty.
We were shown one large room that was occasionally used as a
dancing-hall; another that was used as a chapel, with natural pulpit
and crosses and pews, sermons in every stone, where a priest had said
mass. Mass-saying is not so generally developed in connection with
natural wonders as dancing. One of the first conceits excited by the
giant Sequoias was to cut one of them down and dance on its stump. We
have also seen dancing in the spray of Niagara; dancing in the famous
Bower Cave above Coulterville; and nowhere have I seen so much dancing
as in Yosemite. A dance on the inaccessible South Dome would likely
follow the making of an easy way to the top of it.

It was delightful to witness here the infinite deliberation of Nature,
and the simplicity of her methods in the production of such mighty
results, such perfect repose combined with restless enthusiastic
energy. Though cold and bloodless as a landscape of polar ice, building
was going on in the dark with incessant activity. The archways and
ceilings were everywhere hung with down-growing crystals, like inverted
groves of leafless saplings, some of them large, others delicately
attenuated, each tipped with a single drop of water, like the terminal
bud of a pine-tree. The only appreciable sounds were the dripping and
tinkling of water failing into pools or faintly plashing on the crystal
floors.

In some places the crystal decorations are arranged in graceful flowing
folds deeply plicated like stiff silken drapery. In others straight
lines of the ordinary stalactite forms are combined with reference to
size and tone in a regularly graduated system like the strings of a
harp with musical tones corresponding thereto; and on these stone harps
we played by striking the crystal strings with a stick. The delicious
liquid tones they gave forth seemed perfectly divine as they sweetly
whispered and wavered through the majestic halls and died away in
faintest cadence,—the music of fairy-land. Here we lingered and
reveled, rejoicing to find so much music in stony silence, so much
splendor in darkness, so many mansions in the depths of the mountains,
buildings ever in process of construction, yet ever finished,
developing from perfection to perfection, profusion without
overabundance; every particle visible or invisible in glorious motion,
marching to the music of the spheres in a region regarded as the abode
of eternal stillness and death.

The outer chambers of mountain caves are frequently selected as homes
by wild beasts. In the Sierra, however, they seem to prefer homes and
hiding-places in chaparral and beneath shelving precipices, as I have
never seen their tracks in any of the caves. This is the more
remarkable because notwithstanding the darkness and oozing water there
is nothing uncomfortably cellar-like or sepulchral about them.

When we emerged into the bright landscapes of the sun everything looked
brighter, and we felt our faith in Nature’s beauty strengthened, and
saw more clearly that beauty is universal and immortal, above, beneath,
on land and sea, mountain and plain, in heat and cold, light and
darkness.




CHAPTER XVI
THE BEE-PASTURES


When California was wild, it was one sweet bee-garden throughout its
entire length, north and south, and all the way across from the snowy
Sierra to the ocean.

Wherever a bee might fly within the bounds of this virgin
wilderness—through the redwood forests, along the banks of the rivers,
along the bluffs and headlands fronting the sea, over valley and plain,
park and grove, and deep, leafy glen, or far up the piny slopes of the
mountains—throughout every belt and section of climate up to the timber
line, bee-flowers bloomed in lavish, abundance. Here they grew more or
less apart in special sheets and patches of no great size, there in
broad, flowing folds hundreds of miles in length—zones of polleny
forests, zones of flowery chaparral, stream-tangles of rubus and wild
rose, sheets of golden composite, beds of violets, beds of mint, beds
of bryanthus and clover, and so on, certain species blooming somewhere
all the year round.

But of late years plows and sheep have made sad havoc in these glorious
pastures, destroying tens of thousands of the flowery acres like a
fire, and banishing many species of the best honey-plants to rocky
cliffs and fence-corners, while, on the other hand, cultivation thus
far has given no adequate compensation, at least in kind; only acres of
alfalfa for miles of the richest wild pasture, ornamental roses and
honeysuckles around cottage doors for cascades of wild roses in the
dells, and small, square orchards and orange-groves for broad
mountain-belts of chaparral.

The Great Central Plain of California, during the months of March,
April, and May, was one smooth, continuous bed of honey-bloom, so
marvelously rich that, in walking from one end of it to the other, a
distance of more than 400 miles, your foot would press about a hundred
flowers at every step. Mints, gilias, nemophilas, castilleias, and
innumerable compositae were so crowded together that, had ninety-nine
per cent. of them been taken away, the plain would still have seemed to
any but Californians extravagantly flowery. The radiant, honeyful
corollas, touching and overlapping, and rising above one another,
glowed in the living light like a sunset sky—one sheet of purple and
gold, with the bright Sacramento pouring through the midst of it from
the north, the San Joaquin from the south, and their many tributaries
sweeping in at right angles from the mountains, dividing the plain into
sections fringed with trees.

Along the rivers there is a strip of bottom-land, countersunk beneath
the general level, and wider toward the foot-hills, where magnificent
oaks, from three to eight feet in diameter, cast grateful masses of
shade over the open, prairie-like levels. And close along the water’s
edge there was a fine jungle of tropical luxuriance, composed of
wild-rose and bramble bushes and a great variety of climbing vines,
wreathing and interlacing the branches and trunks of willows and
alders, and swinging across from summit to summit in heavy festoons.
Here the wild bees reveled in fresh bloom long after the flowers of the
drier plain had withered and gone to seed. And in midsummer, when the
“blackberries” were ripe, the Indians came from the mountains to
feast—men, women, and babies in long, noisy trains, often joined by the
farmers of the neighborhood, who gathered this wild fruit with
commendable appreciation of its superior flavor, while their home
orchards were full of ripe peaches, apricots, nectarines, and figs, and
their vineyards were laden with grapes. But, though these luxuriant,
shaggy river-beds were thus distinct from the smooth, treeless plain,
they made no heavy dividing lines in general views. The whole appeared
as one continuous sheet of bloom bounded only by the mountains.

When I first saw this central garden, the most extensive and regular of
all the bee-pastures of the State, it seemed all one sheet of plant
gold, hazy and vanishing in the distance, distinct as a new map along
the foot-hills at my feet.

Descending the eastern slopes of the Coast Range through beds of gilias
and lupines, and around many a breezy hillock and bush-crowned
headland, I at length waded out into the midst of it. All the ground
was covered, not with grass and green leaves, but with radiant
corollas, about ankle-deep next the foot-hills, knee-deep or more five
or six miles out. Here were bahia, madia, madaria, burrielia,
chrysopsis, corethrogyne, grindelia, etc., growing in close social
congregations of various shades of yellow, blending finely with the
purples of clarkia, orthocarpus, and oenothera, whose delicate petals
were drinking the vital sunbeams without giving back any sparkling
glow.

[Illustration: A BEE-RANCH IN LOWER CALIFORNIA.]

Because so long a period of extreme drought succeeds the rainy season,
most of the vegetation is composed of annuals, which spring up
simultaneously, and bloom together at about the same height above the
ground, the general surface being but slightly ruffled by the taller
phacelias, pentstemons, and groups of _Salvia carduacea_, the king of
the mints.

Sauntering in any direction, hundreds of these happy sun-plants brushed
against my feet at every step, and closed over them as if I were wading
in liquid gold. The air was sweet with fragrance, the larks sang their
blessed songs, rising on the wing as I advanced, then sinking out of
sight in the polleny sod, while myriads of wild bees stirred the lower
air with their monotonous hum—monotonous, yet forever fresh and sweet
as every-day sunshine. Hares and spermophiles showed themselves in
considerable numbers in shallow places, and small bands of antelopes
were almost constantly in sight, gazing curiously from some slight
elevation, and then bounding swiftly away with unrivaled grace of
motion. Yet I could discover no crushed flowers to mark their track,
nor, indeed, any destructive action of any wild foot or tooth whatever.

The great yellow days circled by uncounted, while I drifted toward the
north, observing the countless forms of life thronging about me, lying
down almost anywhere on the approach of night. And what glorious
botanical beds I had! Oftentimes on awaking I would find several new
species leaning over me and looking me full in the face, so that my
studies would begin before rising.

About the first of May I turned eastward, crossing the San Joaquin
River between the mouths of the Tuolumne and Merced, and by the time I
had reached the Sierra foot-hills most of the vegetation had gone to
seed and become as dry as hay.

All the seasons of the great plain are warm or temperate, and
bee-flowers are never wholly wanting; but the grand springtime—the
annual resurrection—is governed by the rains, which usually set in
about the middle of November or the beginning of December. Then the
seeds, that for six months have lain on the ground dry and fresh as if
they had been gathered into barns, at once unfold their treasured life.
The general brown and purple of the ground, and the dead vegetation of
the preceding year, give place to the green of mosses and liverworts
and myriads of young leaves. Then one species after another comes into
flower, gradually overspreading the green with yellow and purple, which
lasts until May.

The “rainy season” is by no means a gloomy, soggy period of constant
cloudiness and rain. Perhaps nowhere else in North America, perhaps in
the world, are the months of December, January, February, and March so
full of bland, plant-building sunshine. Referring to my notes of the
winter and spring of 1868-69, every day of which I spent out of doors,
on that section of the plain lying between the Tuolumne and Merced
rivers, I find that the first rain of the season fell on December 18th.
January had only six rainy days—that is, days on which rain fell;
February three, March five, April three, and May three, completing the
so-called rainy season, which was about an average one. The ordinary
rain-storm of this region is seldom very cold or violent. The winds,
which in settled weather come from the northwest, veer round into the
opposite direction, the sky fills gradually and evenly with one general
cloud, from which, the rain falls steadily, often for days in
succession, at a temperature of about 45° or 50°.

More than seventy-five per cent. of all the rain of this season came
from the northwest, down the coast over southeastern Alaska, British
Columbia, Washington, and Oregon, though the local winds of these
circular storms blow from the southeast. One magnificent local storm
from the northwest fell on March 21. A massive, round-browed cloud came
swelling and thundering over the flowery plain in most imposing
majesty, its bossy front burning white and purple in the full blaze of
the sun, while warm rain poured from its ample fountains like a
cataract, beating down flowers and bees, and flooding the dry
watercourses as suddenly as those of Nevada are flooded by the
so-called “cloudbursts.” But in less than half an hour not a trace of
the heavy, mountain-like cloud-structure was left in the sky, and the
bees were on the wing, as if nothing more gratefully refreshing could
have been sent them.

By the end of January four species of plants were in flower, and five
or six mosses had already adjusted their hoods and were in the prime of
life; but the flowers were not sufficiently numerous as yet to affect
greatly the general green of the young leaves. Violets made their
appearance in the first week of February, and toward the end of this
month the warmer portions of the plain were already golden with myriads
of the flowers of rayed composite.

This was the full springtime. The sunshine grew warmer and richer, new
plants bloomed every day; the air became more tuneful with humming
wings, and sweeter with the fragrance of the opening flowers. Ants and
ground squirrels were getting ready for their summer work, rubbing
their benumbed limbs, and sunning themselves on the husk-piles before
their doors, and spiders were busy mending their old webs, or weaving
new ones.

In March, the vegetation was more than doubled in depth and color;
claytonia, calandrinia, a large white gilia, and two nemophilas were in
bloom, together with a host of yellow composite, tall enough now to
bend in the wind and show wavering ripples of shade.

In April, plant-life, as a whole, reached its greatest height, and the
plain, over all its varied surface, was mantled with a close, furred
plush of purple and golden corollas. By the end of this month, most of
the species had ripened their seeds, but undecayed, still seemed to be
in bloom from the numerous corolla-like involucres and whorls of chaffy
scales of the composite. In May, the bees found in flower only a few
deep-set liliaceous plants and eriogonums.

June, July, August, and September is the season of rest and sleep,—a
winter of dry heat,—followed in October by a second outburst of bloom
at the very driest time of the year. Then, after the shrunken mass of
leaves and stalks of the dead vegetation crinkle and turn to dust
beneath the foot, as if it had been baked in an oven, _Hemizonia
virgata_, a slender, unobtrusive little plant, from six inches to three
feet high, suddenly makes its appearance in patches miles in extent,
like a resurrection of the bloom of April. I have counted upward of
3000 flowers, five eighths of an inch in diameter, on a single plant.
Both its leaves and stems are so slender as to be nearly invisible, at
a distance of a few yards, amid so showy a multitude of flowers. The
ray and disk flowers are both yellow, the stamens purple, and the
texture of the rays is rich and velvety, like the petals of garden
pansies. The prevailing wind turns all the heads round to the
southeast, so that in facing northwestward we have the flowers looking
us in the face. In my estimation, this little plant, the last born of
the brilliant host of compositae that glorify the plain, is the most
interesting of all. It remains in flower until November, uniting with
two or three species of wiry eriogonums, which continue the floral
chain around December to the spring flowers of January. Thus, although
the main bloom and honey season is only about three months long, the
floral circle, however thin around some of the hot, rainless months, is
never completely broken.

How long the various species of wild bees have lived in this
honey-garden, nobody knows; probably ever since the main body of the
present flora gained possession of the land, toward the close of the
glacial period. The first brown honey-bees brought to California are
said to have arrived in San Francisco in March, 1853. A bee-keeper by
the name of Shelton purchased a lot, consisting of twelve swarms, from
some one at Aspinwall, who had brought them from New York. When landed
at San Francisco, all the hives contained live bees, but they finally
dwindled to one hive, which was taken to San José. The little
immigrants flourished and multiplied in the bountiful pastures of the
Santa Clara Valley, sending off three swarms the first season. The
owner was killed shortly afterward, and in settling up his estate, two
of the swarms were sold at auction for $105 and $110 respectively.
Other importations were made, from time to time, by way of the Isthmus,
and, though great pains were taken to insure success, about one half
usually died on the way. Four swarms were brought safely across the
plains in 1859, the hives being placed in the rear end of a wagon,
which was stopped in the afternoon to allow the bees to fly and feed in
the floweriest places that were within reach until dark, when the hives
were closed.

In 1855, two years after the time of the first arrivals from New York,
a single swarm was brought over from San José, and let fly in the Great
Central Plain. Bee-culture, however, has never gained much attention
here, notwithstanding the extraordinary abundance of honey-bloom, and
the high price of honey during the early years. A few hives are found
here and there among settlers who chanced to have learned something
about the business before coming to the State. But sheep, cattle,
grain, and fruit raising are the chief industries, as they require less
skill and care, while the profits thus far have been greater. In 1856
honey sold here at from one and a half to two dollars per pound. Twelve
years later the price had fallen to twelve and a half cents. In 1868 I
sat down to dinner with a band of ravenous sheep-shearers at a ranch on
the San Joaquin, where fifteen or twenty hives were kept, and our host
advised us not to spare the large pan of honey he had placed on the
table, as it was the cheapest article he had to offer. In all my walks,
however, I have never come upon a regular bee-ranch in the Central
Valley like those so common and so skilfully managed in the southern
counties of the State. The few pounds of honey and wax produced are
consumed at home, and are scarcely taken into account among the coarser
products of the farm. The swarms that escape from their careless owners
have a weary, perplexing time of it in seeking suitable homes. Most of
them make their way to the foot-hills of the mountains, or to the trees
that line the banks of the rivers, where some hollow log or trunk may
be found. A friend of mine, while out hunting on the San Joaquin, came
upon an old coon trap, hidden among some tall grass, near the edge of
the river, upon which he sat down to rest. Shortly afterward his
attention was attracted to a crowd of angry bees that were flying
excitedly about his head, when he discovered that he was sitting upon
their hive, which was found to contain more than 200 pounds of honey.
Out in the broad, swampy delta of the Sacramento and San Joaquin
rivers, the little wanderers have been known to build their combs in a
bunch of rushes, or stiff, wiry grass, only slightly protected from the
weather, and in danger every spring of being carried away by floods.
They have the advantage, however, of a vast extent of fresh pasture,
accessible only to themselves.

The present condition of the Grand Central Garden is very different
from that we have sketched. About twenty years ago, when the gold
placers had been pretty thoroughly exhausted, the attention of
fortune-seekers—not home-seekers—was, in great part, turned away from
the mines to the fertile plains, and many began experiments in a kind
of restless, wild agriculture. A load of lumber would be hauled to some
spot on the free wilderness, where water could be easily found, and a
rude box-cabin built. Then a gang-plow was procured, and a dozen
mustang ponies, worth ten or fifteen dollars apiece, and with these
hundreds of acres were stirred as easily as if the land had been under
cultivation for years, tough, perennial roots being almost wholly
absent. Thus a ranch was established, and from these bare wooden huts,
as centers of desolation, the wild flora vanished in ever-widening
circles. But the arch destroyers are the shepherds, with their flocks
of hoofed locusts, sweeping over the ground like a fire, and trampling
down every rod that escapes the plow as completely as if the whole
plain were a cottage garden-plot without a fence. But notwithstanding
these destroyers, a thousand swarms of bees may be pastured here for
every one now gathering honey. The greater portion is still covered
every season with a repressed growth of bee-flowers, for most of the
species are annuals, and many of them are not relished by sheep or
cattle, while the rapidity of their growth enables them to develop and
mature their seeds before any foot has time to crush them. The ground
is, therefore, kept sweet, and the race is perpetuated, though only as
a suggestive shadow of the magnificence of its wildness.

The time will undoubtedly come when the entire area of this noble
valley will be tilled like a garden, when the fertilizing waters of the
mountains, now flowing to the sea, will be distributed to every acre,
giving rise to prosperous towns, wealth, arts, etc. Then, I suppose,
there will be few left, even among botanists, to deplore the vanished
primeval flora. In the mean time, the pure waste going on—the wanton
destruction of the innocents—is a sad sight to see, and the sun may
well be pitied in being compelled to look on.

The bee-pastures of the Coast Ranges last longer and are more varied
than those of the great plain, on account of differences of soil and
climate, moisture, and shade, etc. Some of the mountains are upward of
4000 feet in height, and small streams, springs, oozy bogs, etc., occur
in great abundance and variety in the wooded regions, while open parks,
flooded with sunshine, and hill-girt valleys lying at different
elevations, each with its own peculiar climate and exposure, possess
the required conditions for the development of species and families of
plants widely varied.

Next the plain there is, first, a series of smooth hills, planted with
a rich and showy vegetation that differs but little from that of the
plain itself—as if the edge of the plain had been lifted and bent into
flowing folds, with all its flowers in place, only toned down a little
as to their luxuriance, and a few new species introduced, such as the
hill lupines, mints, and gilias. The colors show finely when thus held
to view on the slopes; patches of red, purple, blue, yellow, and white,
blending around the edges, the whole appearing at a little distance
like a map colored in sections.

Above this lies the park and chaparral region, with oaks, mostly
evergreen, planted wide apart, and blooming shrubs from three to ten
feet high; manzanita and ceanothus of several species, mixed with
rhamnus, cercis, pickeringia, cherry, amelanchier, and adenostoma, in
shaggy, interlocking thickets, and many species of hosackia, clover,
monardella, castilleia, etc., in the openings.

The main ranges send out spurs somewhat parallel to their axes,
inclosing level valleys, many of them quite extensive, and containing a
great profusion of sun-loving bee-flowers in their wild state; but
these are, in great part, already lost to the bees by cultivation.

Nearer the coast are the giant forests of the redwoods, extending from
near the Oregon line to Santa Cruz. Beneath the cool, deep shade of
these majestic trees the ground is occupied by ferns, chiefly
woodwardia and aspidiums, with only a few flowering plants—oxalis,
trientalis, erythronium, fritillaria, smilax, and other shade-lovers.
But all along the redwood belt there are sunny openings on hill-slopes
looking to the south, where the giant trees stand back, and give the
ground to the small sunflowers and the bees. Around the lofty redwood
walls of these little bee-acres there is usually a fringe of Chestnut
Oak, Laurel, and Madroño, the last of which is a surpassingly beautiful
tree, and a great favorite with the bees. The trunks of the largest
specimens are seven or eight feet thick, and about fifty feet high; the
bark red and chocolate colored, the leaves plain, large, and glossy,
like those of _Magnolia grandiflora_, while the flowers are
yellowish-white, and urn-shaped, in well-proportioned panicles, from
five to ten inches long. When in full bloom, a single tree seems to be
visited at times by a whole hive of bees at once, and the deep hum of
such a multitude makes the listener guess that more than the ordinary
work of honey-winning must be going on.

How perfectly enchanting and care-obliterating are these withdrawn
gardens of the woods—long vistas opening to the sea—sunshine sifting
and pouring upon the flowery ground in a tremulous, shifting mosaic, as
the light-ways in the leafy wall open and close with the swaying
breeze—shining leaves and flowers, birds and bees, mingling together in
springtime harmony, and soothing fragrance exhaling from a thousand
thousand fountains! In these balmy, dissolving days, when the deep
heart-beats of Nature are felt thrilling rocks and trees and everything
alike, common business and friends are happily forgotten, and even the
natural honey-work of bees, and the care of birds for their young, and
mothers for their children, seem slightly out of place.

To the northward, in Humboldt and the adjacent counties, whole
hillsides are covered with rhododendron, making a glorious melody of
bee-bloom in the spring. And the Western azalea, hardly less flowery,
grows in massy thickets three to eight feet high around the edges of
groves and woods as far south as San Luis Obispo, usually accompanied
by manzanita; while the valleys, with their varying moisture and shade,
yield a rich variety of the smaller honey-flowers, such as mentha,
lycopus, micromeria, audibertia, trichostema, and other mints; with
vaccinium, wild strawberry, geranium, calais, and goldenrod; and in the
cool glens along the stream-banks, where the shade of trees is not too
deep, spiraea, dog-wood, heteromeles, and calycanthus, and many species
of rubus form interlacing tangles, some portion of which continues in
bloom for months.

Though the coast region was the first to be invaded and settled by
white men, it has suffered less from a bee point of view than either of
the other main divisions, chiefly, no doubt, because of the unevenness
of the surface, and because it is owned and protected instead of lying
exposed to the flocks of the wandering “sheepmen.” These remarks apply
more particularly to the north half of the coast. Farther south there
is less moisture, less forest shade, and the honey flora is less
varied.

The Sierra region is the largest of the three main divisions of the
bee-lands of the State, and the most regularly varied in its
subdivisions, owing to their gradual rise from the level of the Central
Plain to the alpine summits. The foot-hill region is about as dry and
sunful, from the end of May until the setting in of the winter rains,
as the plain. There are no shady forests, no damp glens, at all like
those lying at the same elevations in the Coast Mountains. The social
compositae of the plain, with a few added species, form the bulk of the
herbaceous portion of the vegetation up to a height of 1500 feet or
more, shaded lightly here and there with oaks and Sabine Pines, and
interrupted by patches of ceanothus and buckeye. Above this, and just
below the forest region, there is a dark, heath-like belt of chaparral,
composed almost exclusively of _Adenostoma fasciculata_, a bush
belonging to the rose family, from five to eight feet high, with small,
round leaves in fascicles, and bearing a multitude of small white
flowers in panicles on the ends of the upper branches. Where it occurs
at all, it usually covers all the ground with a close, impenetrable
growth, scarcely broken for miles.

Up through the forest region, to a height of about 9000 feet above
sea-level, there are ragged patches of manzanita, and five or six
species of ceanothus, called deer-brush or California lilac. These are
the most important of all the honey-bearing bushes of the Sierra.
_Chamaebatia foliolosa_, a little shrub about a foot high, with flowers
like the strawberry, makes handsome carpets beneath the pines, and
seems to be a favorite with the bees; while pines themselves furnish
unlimited quantities of pollen and honey-dew. The product of a single
tree, ripening its pollen at the right time of year, would be
sufficient for the wants of a whole hive. Along the streams there is a
rich growth of lilies, larkspurs, pedicularis, castilleias, and clover.
The alpine region contains the flowery glacier meadows, and countless
small gardens in all sorts of places full of potentilla of several
species, spraguea, ivesia, epilobium, and goldenrod, with beds of
bryanthus and the charming cassiope covered with sweet bells. Even the
tops of the mountains are blessed with flowers,—dwarf phlox,
polemonium, ribes, hulsea, etc. I have seen wild bees and butterflies
feeding at a height of 13,000 feet above the sea. Many, however, that
go up these dangerous heights never come down again. Some, undoubtedly,
perish in storms, and I have found thousands lying dead or benumbed on
the surface of the glaciers, to which they had perhaps been attracted
by the white glare, taking them for beds of bloom.

From swarms that escaped their owners in the lowlands, the honey-bee is
now generally distributed throughout the whole length of the Sierra, up
to an elevation of 8000 feet above sea-level. At this height they
flourish without care, though the snow every winter is deep. Even
higher than this several bee-trees have been cut which contained over
200 pounds of honey.

The destructive action of sheep has not been so general on the mountain
pastures as on those of the great plain, but in many places it has been
more complete, owing to the more friable character of the soil, and its
sloping position. The slant digging and down-raking action of hoofs on
the steeper slopes of moraines has uprooted and buried many of the
tender plants from year to year, without allowing them time to mature
their seeds. The shrubs, too, are badly bitten, especially the various
species of ceanothus. Fortunately, neither sheep nor cattle care to
feed on the manzanita, spiraea, or adenostoma; and these fine
honey-bushes are too stiff and tall, or grow in places too rough and
inaccessible, to be trodden under foot. Also the cañon walls and
gorges, which form so considerable a part of the area of the range,
while inaccessible to domestic sheep, are well fringed with
honey-shrubs, and contain thousands of lovely bee-gardens, lying hid in
narrow side-cañons and recesses fenced with avalanche taluses, and on
the top of flat, projecting headlands, where only bees would think to
look for them.

But, on the other hand, a great portion of the woody plants that escape
the feet and teeth of the sheep are destroyed by the shepherds by means
of running fires, which are set everywhere during the dry autumn for
the purpose of burning off the old fallen trunks and underbrush, with a
view to improving the pastures, and making more open ways for the
flocks. These destructive sheep-fires sweep through nearly the entire
forest belt of the range, from one extremity to the other, consuming
not only the underbrush, but the young trees and seedlings on which the
permanence of the forests depends; thus setting in motion a long train
of evils which will certainly reach far beyond bees and beekeepers.

[Illustration: WILD BEE GARDEN.]

The plow has not yet invaded the forest region to any appreciable
extent, neither has it accomplished much in the foot-hills. Thousands
of bee-ranches might be established along the margin of the plain, and
up to a height of 4000 feet, wherever water could be obtained. The
climate at this elevation admits of the making of permanent homes, and
by moving the hives to higher pastures as the lower pass out of bloom,
the annual yield of honey would be nearly doubled. The foot-hill
pastures, as we have seen, fail about the end of May, those of the
chaparral belt and lower forests are in full bloom in June, those of
the upper and alpine region in July, August, and September. In
Scotland, after the best of the Lowland bloom is past, the bees are
carried in carts to the Highlands, and set free on the heather hills.
In France, too, and in Poland, they are carried from pasture to pasture
among orchards and fields in the same way, and along the rivers in
barges to collect the honey of the delightful vegetation of the banks.
In Egypt they are taken far up the Nile, and floated slowly home again,
gathering the honey-harvest of the various fields on the way, timing
their movements in accord with the seasons. Were similar methods
pursued in California the productive season would last nearly all the
year.

The average elevation of the north half of the Sierra is, as we have
seen, considerably less than that of the south half, and small streams,
with the bank and meadow gardens dependent upon them, are less
abundant. Around the head waters of the Yuba, Feather, and Pitt rivers,
the extensive tablelands of lava are sparsely planted with pines,
through which the sunshine reaches the ground with little interruption.
Here flourishes a scattered, tufted growth of golden applopappus,
linosyris, bahia, wyetheia, arnica, artemisia, and similar plants; with
manzanita, cherry, plum, and thorn in ragged patches on the cooler
hill-slopes. At the extremities of the Great Central Plain, the Sierra
and Coast Ranges curve around and lock together in a labyrinth of
mountains and valleys, throughout which their floras are mingled,
making at the north, with its temperate climate and copious rainfall, a
perfect paradise for bees, though, strange to say, scarcely a single
regular bee-ranch has yet been established in it.

Of all the upper flower fields of the Sierra, Shasta is the most
honeyful, and may yet surpass in fame the celebrated honey hills of
Hybla and hearthy Hymettus. Regarding this noble mountain from a bee
point of view, encircled by its many climates, and sweeping aloft from
the torrid plain into the frosty azure, we find the first 5000 feet
from the summit generally snow-clad, and therefore about as honeyless
as the sea. The base of this arctic region is girdled by a belt of
crumbling lava measuring about 1000 feet in vertical breadth, and is
mostly free from snow in summer. Beautiful lichens enliven the faces of
the cliffs with their bright colors, and in some of the warmer nooks
there are a few tufts of alpine daisies, wall-flowers and pentstemons;
but, notwithstanding these bloom freely in the late summer, the zone as
a whole is almost as honeyless as the icy summit, and its lower edge
may be taken as the honey-line. Immediately below this comes the forest
zone, covered with a rich growth of conifers, chiefly Silver Firs, rich
in pollen and honey-dew, and diversified with countless garden
openings, many of them less than a hundred yards across. Next, in
orderly succession, comes the great bee zone. Its area far surpasses
that of the icy summit and both the other zones combined, for it goes
sweeping majestically around the entire mountain, with a breadth of six
or seven miles and a circumference of nearly a hundred miles.

Shasta, as we have already seen, is a fire-mountain created by a
succession of eruptions of ashes and molten lava, which, flowing over
the lips of its several craters, grew outward and upward like the trunk
of a knotty exogenous tree. Then followed a strange contrast. The
glacial winter came on, loading the cooling mountain with ice, which
flowed slowly outward in every direction, radiating from the summit in
the form of one vast conical glacier—a down-crawling mantle of ice upon
a fountain of smoldering fire, crushing and grinding for centuries its
brown, flinty lavas with incessant activity, and thus degrading and
remodeling the entire mountain. When, at length, the glacial period
began to draw near its close, the ice-mantle was gradually melted off
around the bottom, and, in receding and breaking into its present
fragmentary condition, irregular rings and heaps of moraine matter were
stored upon its flanks. The glacial erosion of most of the Shasta lavas
produces detritus, composed of rough, sub-angular boulders of moderate
size and of porous gravel and sand, which yields freely to the
transporting power of running water. Magnificent floods from the ample
fountains of ice and snow working with sublime energy upon this
prepared glacial detritus, sorted it out and carried down immense
quantities from the higher slopes, and reformed it in smooth,
delta-like beds around the base; and it is these flood-beds joined
together that now form the main honey-zone of the old volcano.

Thus, by forces seemingly antagonistic and destructive, has Mother
Nature accomplished her beneficent designs—now a flood of fire, now a
flood of ice, now a flood of water; and at length an outburst of
organic life, a milky way of snowy petals and wings, girdling the
rugged mountain like a cloud, as if the vivifying sunbeams beating
against its sides had broken into a foam of plant-bloom and bees, as
sea-waves break and bloom on a rock shore.

In this flowery wilderness the bees rove and revel, rejoicing in the
bounty of the sun, clambering eagerly through bramble and hucklebloom,
ringing the myriad bells of the manzanita, now humming aloft among
polleny willows and firs, now down on the ashy ground among gilias and
buttercups, and anon plunging deep into snowy banks of cherry and
buckthorn. They consider the lilies and roll into them, and, like
lilies, they toil not, for they are impelled by sun-power, as
water-wheels by water-power; and when the one has plenty of
high-pressure water, the other plenty of sunshine, they hum and quiver
alike. Sauntering in the Shasta bee-lands in the sun-days of summer,
one may readily infer the time of day from the comparative energy of
bee-movements alone—drowsy and moderate in the cool of the morning,
increasing in energy with the ascending sun, and, at high noon,
thrilling and quivering in wild ecstasy, then gradually declining again
to the stillness of night. In my excursions among the glaciers I
occasionally meet bees that are hungry, like mountaineers who venture
too far and remain too long above the bread-line; then they droop and
wither like autumn leaves. The Shasta bees are perhaps better fed than
any others in the Sierra. Their field-work is one perpetual feast; but,
however exhilarating the sunshine or bountiful the supply of flowers,
they are always dainty feeders. Humming-moths and hummingbirds seldom
set foot upon a flower, but poise on the wing in front of it, and reach
forward as if they were sucking through straws. But bees, though, as
dainty as they, hug their favorite flowers with profound cordiality,
and push their blunt, polleny faces against them, like babies on their
mother’s bosom. And fondly, too, with eternal love, does Mother Nature
clasp her small bee-babies, and suckle them, multitudes at once, on her
warm Shasta breast.

Besides the common honey-bee there are many other species here—fine
mossy, burly fellows, who were nourished on the mountains thousands of
sunny seasons before the advent of the domestic species. Among these
are the bumblebees, mason-bees, carpenter-bees, and leaf-cutters.
Butterflies, too, and moths of every size and pattern; some
broad-winged like bats, flapping slowly, and sailing in easy curves;
others like small, flying violets, shaking about loosely in short,
crooked flights close to the flowers, feasting luxuriously night and
day. Great numbers of deer also delight to dwell in the brushy portions
of the bee-pastures.

Bears, too, roam the sweet wilderness, their blunt, shaggy forms
harmonizing well with the trees and tangled bushes, and with the bees,
also, notwithstanding the disparity in size. They are fond of all good
things, and enjoy them to the utmost, with but little troublesome
discrimination—flowers and leaves as well as berries, and the bees
themselves as well as their honey. Though the California bears have as
yet had but little experience with honeybees, they often succeed in
reaching their bountiful stores, and it seems doubtful whether bees
themselves enjoy honey with so great a relish. By means of their
powerful teeth and claws they can gnaw and tear open almost any hive
conveniently accessible. Most honey-bees, however, in search of a home
are wise enough to make choice of a hollow in a living tree, a
considerable distance above the ground, when such places are to be had;
then they are pretty secure, for though the smaller black and brown
bears climb well, they are unable to break into strong hives while
compelled to exert themselves to keep from falling, and at the same
time to endure the stings of the fighting bees without having their
paws free to rub them off. But woe to the black bumblebees discovered
in their mossy nests in the ground! With a few strokes of their huge
paws the bears uncover the entire establishment, and, before time is
given for a general buzz, bees old and young, larvae, honey, stings,
nest, and all are taken in one ravishing mouthful.

Not the least influential of the agents concerned in the superior
sweetness of the Shasta flora are its storms—storms I mean that are
strictly local, bred and born on the mountain. The magical rapidity
with which they are grown on the mountain-top, and bestow their charity
in rain and snow, never fails to astonish the inexperienced lowlander.
Often in calm, glowing days, while the bees are still on the wing, a
storm-cloud may be seen far above in the pure ether, swelling its pearl
bosses, and growing silently, like a plant. Presently a clear, ringing
discharge of thunder is heard, followed by a rush of wind that comes
sounding over the bending woods like the roar of the ocean, mingling
raindrops, snow-flowers, honey-flowers, and bees in wild storm harmony.

Still more impressive are the warm, reviving days of spring in the
mountain pastures. The blood of the plants throbbing beneath the
life-giving sunshine seems to be heard and felt. Plant growth goes on
before our eyes, and every tree in the woods, and every bush and flower
is seen as a hive of restless industry. The deeps of the sky are
mottled with singing wings of every tone and color; clouds of brilliant
chrysididae dancing and swirling in exquisite rhythm, golden-barred
vespidae, dragon-flies, butterflies, grating cicadas, and jolly,
rattling grasshoppers, fairly enameling the light.

[Illustration: IN THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY.—WHITE SAGE.]

On bright, crisp mornings a striking optical effect may frequently be
observed from the shadows of the higher mountains while the sunbeams
are pouring past overhead. Then every insect, no matter what may be its
own proper color, burns white in the light. Gauzy-winged hymenoptera,
moths, jet-black beetles, all are transfigured alike in pure, spiritual
white, like snowflakes.

In Southern California, where bee-culture has had so much skilful
attention of late years, the pasturage is not more abundant, or more
advantageously varied as to the number of its honey-plants and their
distribution over mountain and plain, than that of many other portions
of the State where the industrial currents flow in other channels. The
famous White Sage (_Audibertia_), belonging to the mint family,
flourishes here in all its glory, blooming in May, and yielding great
quantities of clear, pale honey, which is greatly prized in every
market it has yet reached. This species grows chiefly in the valleys
and low hills. The Black Sage on the mountains is part of a dense,
thorny chaparral, which is composed chiefly of adenostoma, ceanothus,
manzanita, and cherry—not differing greatly from that of the southern
portion of the Sierra, but more dense and continuous, and taller, and
remaining longer in bloom. Stream-side gardens, so charming a feature
of both the Sierra and Coast Mountains, are less numerous in Southern
California, but they are exceedingly rich in honey-flowers, wherever
found,—melilotus, columbine, collinsia, verbena, zauschneria, wild
rose, honeysuckle, philadelphus, and lilies rising from the warm, moist
dells in a very storm of exuberance. Wild buckwheat of many species is
developed in abundance over the dry, sandy valleys and lower slopes of
the mountains, toward the end of summer, and is, at this time, the main
dependence of the bees, reinforced here and there by orange groves,
alfalfa fields, and small home gardens.

The main honey months, in ordinary seasons, are April, May, June, July,
and August; while the other months are usually flowery enough to yield
sufficient for the bees.

According to Mr. J.T. Gordon, President of the Los Angeles County
Bee-keepers’ Association, the first bees introduced into the county
were a single hive, which cost $150 in San Francisco, and arrived in
September, 1854.[1] In April, of the following year, this hive sent out
two swarms, which were sold for $100 each. From this small beginning
the bees gradually multiplied to about 3000 swarms in the year 1873. In
1876 it was estimated that there were between 15,000 and 20,000 hives
in the county, producing an annual yield of about 100 pounds to the
hive—in some exceptional cases, a much greater yield.

In San Diego County, at the beginning of the season of 1878, there were
about 24,000 hives, and the shipments from the one port of San Diego
for the same year, from July 17 to November 10, were 1071 barrels,
15,544 cases, and nearly 90 tons. The largest bee-ranches have about a
thousand hives, and are carefully and skilfully managed, every
scientific appliance of merit being brought into use. There are few
bee-keepers, however, who own half as many as this, or who give their
undivided attention to the business. Orange culture, at present, is
heavily overshadowing every other business.

A good many of the so-called bee-ranches of Los Angeles and San Diego
counties are still of the rudest pioneer kind imaginable. A man
unsuccessful in everything else hears the interesting story of the
profits and comforts of bee-keeping, and concludes to try it; he buys a
few colonies, or gets them, from some overstocked ranch on shares,
takes them back to the foot of some cañon, where the pasturage is
fresh, squats on the land, with, or without, the permission of the
owner, sets up his hives, makes a box-cabin for himself, scarcely
bigger than a bee-hive, and awaits his fortune.

Bees suffer sadly from famine during the dry years which occasionally
occur in the southern and middle portions of the State. If the rainfall
amounts only to three or four inches, instead of from twelve to twenty,
as in ordinary seasons, then sheep and cattle die in thousands, and so
do these small, winged cattle, unless they are carefully fed, or
removed to other pastures. The year 1877 will long be remembered as
exceptionally rainless and distressing. Scarcely a flower bloomed on
the dry valleys away from the stream-sides, and not a single
grain-field depending upon rain was reaped. The seed only sprouted,
came up a little way, and withered. Horses, cattle, and sheep grew
thinner day by day, nibbling at bushes and weeds, along the shallowing
edges of streams, many of which were dried up altogether, for the first
time since the settlement of the country.

[Illustration: A BEE-RANCH ON A SPUR OF THE SAN GABRIEL RANGE.
CARDINAL FLOWER.]

In the course of a trip I made during the summer of that year through
Monterey, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Ventura, and Los Angeles
counties, the deplorable effects of the drought were everywhere
visible—leafless fields, dead and dying cattle, dead bees, and
half-dead people with dusty, doleful faces. Even the birds and
squirrels were in distress, though their suffering was less painfully
apparent than that of the poor cattle. These were falling one by one in
slow, sure starvation along the banks of the hot, sluggish streams,
while thousands of buzzards correspondingly fat were sailing above
them, or standing gorged on the ground beneath the trees, waiting with
easy faith for fresh carcasses. The quails, prudently considering the
hard times, abandoned all thought of pairing. They were too poor to
marry, and so continued in flocks all through the year without
attempting to rear young. The ground-squirrels, though an exceptionally
industrious and enterprising race, as every farmer knows, were hard
pushed for a living; not a fresh leaf or seed was to be found save in
the trees, whose bossy masses of dark green foliage presented a
striking contrast to the ashen baldness of the ground beneath them. The
squirrels, leaving their accustomed feeding-grounds, betook themselves
to the leafy oaks to gnaw out the acorn stores of the provident
woodpeckers, but the latter kept up a vigilant watch upon their
movements. I noticed four woodpeckers in league against one squirrel,
driving the poor fellow out of an oak that they claimed. He dodged
round the knotty trunk from side to side, as nimbly as he could in his
famished condition, only to find a sharp bill everywhere. But the fate
of the bees that year seemed the saddest of all. In different portions
of Los Angeles and San Diego counties, from one half to three fourths
of them died of sheer starvation. Not less than 18,000 colonies
perished in these two counties alone, while in the adjacent counties
the death-rate was hardly less.

[Illustration: WILD BUCKWHEAT.—A BEE RANCH IN THE WILDERNESS.]

Even the colonies nearest to the mountains suffered this year, for the
smaller vegetation on the foot-hills was affected by the drought almost
as severely as that of the valleys and plains, and even the hardy,
deep-rooted chaparral, the surest dependence of the bees, bloomed
sparingly, while much of it was beyond reach. Every swarm could have
been saved, however, by promptly supplying them with food when their
own stores began to fail, and before they became enfeebled and
discouraged; or by cutting roads back into the mountains, and taking
them into the heart of the flowery chaparral. The Santa Lucia, San
Rafael, San Gabriel, San Jacinto, and San Bernardino ranges are almost
untouched as yet save by the wild bees. Some idea of their resources,
and of the advantages and disadvantages they offer to bee-keepers, may
be formed from an excursion that I made into the San Gabriel Range
about the beginning of August of “the dry year.” This range, containing
most of the characteristic features of the other ranges just mentioned,
overlooks the Los Angeles vineyards and orange groves from the north,
and is more rigidly inaccessible in the ordinary meaning of the word
than any other that I ever attempted to penetrate. The slopes are
exceptionally steep and insecure to the foot, and they are covered with
thorny bushes from five to ten feet high. With the exception of little
spots not visible in general views, the entire surface is covered with
them, massed in close hedge growth, sweeping gracefully down into every
gorge and hollow, and swelling over every ridge and summit in shaggy,
ungovernable exuberance, offering more honey to the acre for half the
year than the most crowded clover-field. But when beheld from the open
San Gabriel Valley, beaten with dry sunshine, all that was seen of the
range seemed to wear a forbidding aspect. From base to summit all
seemed gray, barren, silent, its glorious chaparral appearing like dry
moss creeping over its dull, wrinkled ridges and hollows.

Setting out from Pasadena, I reached the foot of the range about
sundown; and being weary and heated with my walk across the shadeless
valley, concluded to camp for the night. After resting a few moments, I
began to look about among the flood-boulders of Eaton Creek for a
camp-ground, when I came upon a strange, dark-looking man who had been
chopping cord-wood. He seemed surprised at seeing me, so I sat down
with him on the live-oak log he had been cutting, and made haste to
give a reason for my appearance in his solitude, explaining that I was
anxious to find out something about the mountains, and meant to make my
way up Eaton Creek next morning. Then he kindly invited me to camp with
him, and led me to his little cabin, situated at the foot of the
mountains, where a small spring oozes out of a bank overgrown with
wild-rose bushes. After supper, when the daylight was gone, he
explained that he was out of candles; so we sat in the dark, while he
gave me a sketch of his life in a mixture of Spanish and English. He
was born in Mexico, his father Irish, his mother Spanish. He had been a
miner, rancher, prospector, hunter, etc., rambling always, and wearing
his life away in mere waste; but now he was going to settle down. His
past life, he said, was of “no account,” but the future was promising.
He was going to “make money and marry a Spanish woman.” People mine
here for water as for gold. He had been running a tunnel into a spur of
the mountain back of his cabin. “My prospect is good,” he said, “and if
I chance to strike a good, strong flow, I’ll soon be worth $5000 or
$10,000. For that flat out there,” referring to a small, irregular
patch of bouldery detritus, two or three acres in size, that had been
deposited by Eaton Creek during some flood season,—“that flat is large
enough for a nice orange-grove, and the bank behind the cabin will do
for a vineyard, and after watering my own trees and vines I will have
some water left to sell to my neighbors below me, down the valley. And
then,” he continued, “I can keep bees, and make money that way, too,
for the mountains above here are just full of honey in the summer-time,
and one of my neighbors down here says that he will let me have a whole
lot of hives, on shares, to start with. You see I’ve a good thing; I’m
all right now.” All this prospective affluence in the sunken,
boulder-choked flood-bed of a mountain-stream! Leaving the bees out of
the count, most fortune-seekers would as soon think of settling on the
summit of Mount Shasta. Next morning, wishing my hopeful entertainer
good luck, I set out on my shaggy excursion.

[Illustration: A BEE-PASTURE ON THE MORAINE DESERT, SPANISH BAYONET.]

About half an hour’s walk above the cabin, I came to “The Fall,” famous
throughout the valley settlements as the finest yet discovered in the
San Gabriel Mountains. It is a charming little thing, with a low, sweet
voice, singing like a bird, as it pours from a notch in a short ledge,
some thirty-five or forty feet into a round mirror-pool. The face of
the cliff back of it, and on both sides, is smoothly covered and
embossed with mosses, against which the white water shines out in showy
relief, like a silver instrument in a velvet case. Hither come the San
Gabriel lads and lassies, to gather ferns and dabble away their hot
holidays in the cool water, glad to escape from their commonplace
palm-gardens and orange-groves. The delicate maidenhair grows on
fissured rocks within reach of the spray, while broad-leaved maples and
sycamores cast soft, mellow shade over a rich profusion of bee-flowers,
growing among boulders in front of the pool—the fall, the flowers, the
bees, the ferny rocks, and leafy shade forming a charming little poem
of wildness, the last of a series extending down the flowery slopes of
Mount San Antonio through the rugged, foam-beaten bosses of the main
Eaton Canon.

From the base of the fall I followed the ridge that forms the western
rim of the Eaton basin to the summit of one of the principal peaks,
which is about 5000 feet above sea-level. Then, turning eastward, I
crossed the middle of the basin, forcing a way over its many
subordinate ridges and across its eastern rim, having to contend almost
everywhere with the floweriest and most impenetrable growth of
honey-bushes I had ever encountered since first my mountaineering
began. Most of the Shasta chaparral is leafy nearly to the ground; here
the main stems are naked for three or four feet, and interspiked with
dead twigs, forming a stiff _chevaux de frise_ through which even the
bears make their way with difficulty. I was compelled to creep for
miles on all fours, and in following the bear-trails often found tufts
of hair on the bushes where they had forced themselves through.

For 100 feet or so above the fall the ascent was made possible only by
tough cushions of club-moss that clung to the rock. Above this the
ridge weathers away to a thin knife-blade for a few hundred yards, and
thence to the summit of the range it carries a bristly mane of
chaparral. Here and there small openings occur on rocky places,
commanding fine views across the cultivated valley to the ocean. These
I found by the tracks were favorite outlooks and resting-places for the
wild animals—bears, wolves, foxes, wildcats, etc.—which abound here,
and would have to be taken into account in the establishment of
bee-ranches. In the deepest thickets I found wood-rat villages—groups
of huts four to six feet high, built of sticks and leaves in rough,
tapering piles, like musk-rat cabins. I noticed a good many bees, too,
most of them wild. The tame honey-bees seemed languid and wing-weary,
as if they had come all the way up from the flowerless valley.

After reaching the summit I had time to make only a hasty survey of the
basin, now glowing in the sunset gold, before hastening down into one
of the tributary cañons in search, of water. Emerging from a
particularly tedious breadth of chaparral, I found myself free and
erect in a beautiful park-like grove of Mountain Live Oak, where the
ground was planted with aspidiums and brier-roses, while the glossy
foliage made a close canopy overhead, leaving the gray dividing trunks
bare to show the beauty of their interlacing arches. The bottom of the
cañon was dry where I first reached it, but a bunch of scarlet mimulus
indicated water at no great distance, and I soon discovered about a
bucketful in a hollow of the rock. This, however, was full of dead
bees, wasps, beetles, and leaves, well steeped and simmered, and would,
therefore, require boiling and filtering through fresh charcoal before
it could be made available. Tracing the dry channel about a mile
farther down to its junction with a larger tributary cañon, I at length
discovered a lot of boulder pools, clear as crystal, brimming full, and
linked together by glistening streamlets just strong enough to sing
audibly. Flowers in full bloom adorned their margins, lilies ten feet
high, larkspur, columbines, and luxuriant ferns, leaning and
overarching in lavish abundance, while a noble old Live Oak spread its
rugged arms over all. Here I camped, making my bed on smooth
cobblestones.

[Illustration: A BEE-KEEPER’S CABIN.—BURRIELIA (ABOVE).—MADIA (BELOW).]

Next day, in the channel of a tributary that heads on Mount San
Antonio, I passed about fifteen or twenty gardens like the one in which
I slept—lilies in every one of them, in the full pomp of bloom. My
third camp was made near the middle of the general basin, at the head
of a long system of cascades from ten to 200 feet high, one following
the other in close succession down a rocky, inaccessible cañon, making
a total descent of nearly 1700 feet. Above the cascades the main stream
passes through a series of open, sunny levels, the largest of which are
about an acre in size, where the wild bees and their companions were
feasting on a showy growth of zauschneria, painted cups, and
monardella; and gray squirrels were busy harvesting the burs of the
Douglas Spruce, the only conifer I met in the basin.

The eastern slopes of the basin are in every way similar to those we
have described, and the same may be said of other portions of the
range. From the highest summit, far as the eye could reach, the
landscape was one vast bee-pasture, a rolling wilderness of
honey-bloom, scarcely broken by bits of forest or the rocky outcrops of
hilltops and ridges.

Behind the San Bernardino Range lies the wild “sage-brush country,”
bounded on the east by the Colorado River, and extending in a general
northerly direction to Nevada and along the eastern base of the Sierra
beyond Mono Lake.

The greater portion of this immense region, including Owen’s Valley,
Death Valley, and the Sink of the Mohave, the area of which is nearly
one fifth that of the entire State, is usually regarded as a desert,
not because of any lack in the soil, but for want of rain, and rivers
available for irrigation. Very little of it, however, is desert in the
eyes of a bee.

Looking now over all the available pastures of California, it appears
that the business of beekeeping is still in its infancy. Even in the
more enterprising of the southern counties, where so vigorous a
beginning has been made, less than a tenth of their honey resources
have as yet been developed; while in the Great Plain, the Coast Ranges,
the Sierra Nevada, and the northern region about Mount Shasta, the
business can hardly be said to exist at all. What the limits of its
developments in the future may be, with the advantages of cheaper
transportation and the invention of better methods in general, it is
not easy to guess. Nor, on the other hand, are we able to measure the
influence on bee interests likely to follow the destruction of the
forests, now rapidly falling before fire and the ax. As to the sheep
evil, that can hardly become greater than it is at the present day. In
short, notwithstanding the wide-spread deterioration and destruction of
every kind already effected, California, with her incomparable climate
and flora, is still, as far as I know, the best of all the bee-lands of
the world.

 [1] Fifteen hives of Italian bees were introduced into Los Angeles
 County in 1855, and in 1876 they had increased to 500. The marked
 superiority claimed for them over the common species is now attracting
 considerable attention.