Part 10 (1/2)
”Your outfit is all right,” he said, ”but it remains to be seed whether you know how to handle 'em.”
”We cannot claim to be skilful,” was the modest remark of Jack, ”but we have had some experience at home, though when we hunted there it was mostly with shotguns.”
”The main thing, younker, is not to git rattled. Now, if you happen to see old Ephraim sailing for you, all you have to do is to make your aim sure and let him have it between the eyes, or just back of the foreleg; or, if you don't have the chance to do that, plug him in the chest, where there's a chance of reaching his heart.”
By ”old Ephraim” the hunter referred to the grizzly bear, as the boys knew.
”I have heard that it generally takes several shots to kill a grizzly.”
”That's 'cause the bullets are not put in the right place. You see, old Ephraim don't take any trouble to give you a better show than he has to, and you must look out fur yourself.”
”There are other kinds of bears in Wyoming?”
”Rather--several of 'em. For instance, there's the cinnamon, which, in my 'pinion, is about as bad as Ephraim. I've fit both kinds, and the one that left that big scar down the side of my cheek and chawed a piece out of my thigh was a cinnamon, while I never got a scratch that 'mounted to anything from Ephraim.”
”What about the black bear?”
”He's less dangerous than any of 'em. A black bear ain't much more than a big dog. Last fall I killed one with my revolver.”
”What other kinds of game are we likely to meet?”
”Wal, it would be hard to name 'em all. There's the deer and antelope, of course, which you find in all parts of the West. Then there's the mountain lion, that is fond of living on beef.”
”I never saw one of the creatures.”
”Have you ever seen the Eastern panther?” asked Garrison.
”No; though they used to be plentiful in the northern part of the State of New York.”
”Well, the mountain lion is the same animal. Our climate and conditions have made some changes in his appearance and habits, but there is no doubt the two are identical.”
”There's one kind of game that I wish we could meet,” resumed Hazletine, ”but they've got so scarce that I haven't seen one fur three years.
That's the big-horn sheep.”
”He seems to be disappearing from certain sections, like the buffalo from the country,” remarked Garrison.
”There's plenty of 'em in the mountains of Arizona and old Mexico, and I've no doubt there's thousands of 'em in the Wind River and other parts of the Rockies, but it's mighty hard to find 'em. Then there's the black wolf.”
”Is he fiercer than the gray one?”
”He's ten times worse. Whenever he meets the gray wolf he tears him to smithereens. You never seen a wolf of any kind that wasn't as hungry as you younkers was yesterday.”
”He couldn't be any hungrier,” said Fred, with a laugh.
”I have knowed one of them critters to foller a steamboat down the upper Missouri fur two days and nights, howling and watching fur a chance to git something to eat.”
”The buffaloes have disappeared.”
”The right name of the animal is the bison,” suggested Garrison; ”they have been slaughtered in pure wantonness. It is a crime, the way in which they have been extirpated.”