Camp and Trail

By Stewart Edward White (1907). What a gem this Project Gutenberg ebook is. Though you may be ‘ultralight’ in your hiking/hunting methodology now there is much you owe to strategies outlined here so long ago, or which you may have forgotten, and should re-learn.  Anyway it will make an excellent Xmas holiday read if you download it to your phone for free. The contents and list of illustrations may give some hint of the joys within.

CHAPTERPAGE
IThe Wilderness Traveler3
IICommon Sense in the Wilderness23
IIIPersonal Equipment35
IVPersonal Equipment (Continued)63
VCamp Outfit79
VIThe Cook Outfit97
VIIGrub115
VIIICamp Cookery135
IXHorse Outfits149
XHorse Packs169
XIHorses, Mules, Burros203
XIICanoes221

ILLUSTRATIONS

The home of the Red Gods(Frontispiece)
OPPOSITE
PAGE   
On the trail (from a painting by N. C. Wyeth)16
The Author doing a little washing on his own account32
“Mountain on mountain towering high, and a valley in between”48
One of the mishaps to be expected64
“Bed in the bush with stars to see”80
“We may live without friends, we may live without books,
but civilized man cannot live without cooks”
104
When you quit the trail for a day’s rest120
In the heat of the day’s struggle144
Nearing a crest and in sight of game160
A downward journey176
In mid-day the shade of the pines is inviting208
Getting ready for another day of it224
Like me he thinks: ‘What is the most valuable quality a wilderness traveler can possess. Always I have replied unhesitatingly; for no matter how useful or desirable such attributes as patience, courage, strength, endurance, good nature, and ingenuity, may prove to be, undoubtedly a man with them but without the sense of direction, is practically helpless in the wilds.

A sense of direction, therefore, I should name as the prime requisite for him who would become a true woodsman, depending on himself rather than on guides. The faculty is largely developed, of course, by much practice; but it must be inborn.

The sense of direction in its simplest and most elementary phase, of course, leads a man back to camp, or over a half-forgotten trail. The tenderfoot finds his way by little landmarks, and an attempt to remember details. A woodsman adds to this the general “lay” of the country, the direction its streams ought to flow, the course the hills[5] must take, the dip of strata, the growth of trees. So if the tenderfoot forgets whether he turns to right or left at a certain half-remembered burnt stub, he is lost. But if at the same point the woodsman’s memory fails him, he turns unhesitatingly to the left, because he knows by all the logic of nature’s signboards that the way must be to the left. A good mountaineer follows the half-obliterated trails as much by his knowledge of where a trail must go, as by the sparse indications that men have passed that way…’

Worth a read, don’t you think?

Download it here: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32950/32950-h/32950-h.htm

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