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A Plentiful Hunting Camp
A Plentiful Hunting Camp.-Shoshonie Hunters—Hoback's
River —Mad River—Encampment Near the Pilot Knobs.—A
Consultation.—Preparations for a Perilous Voyage.
FIVE days were passed by Mr. Hunt and his companions
in the fresh meadows watered by the bright little mountain stream.
The hunters made great havoc among the buffaloes, and brought in
quantities of meat; the voyageurs busied themselves about the fires,
roasting and stewing for present purposes, or drying provisions for
the journey; the pack-horses, eased of their burdens, rolled on the
grass, or grazed at large about the ample pasture; those of the
party who had no call upon their services, indulged in the luxury of
perfect relaxation, and the camp presented a picture of rude
feasting and revelry, of mingled bustle and repose, characteristic
of a halt in a fine hunting country. In the course of one of their
excursions, some of the men came in sight of a small party of
Indians, who instantly fled in great apparent consternation. They
immediately retreated to camp with the intelligence: upon which Mr.
Hunt and four others flung themselves upon their horses, and sallied
forth to reconnoitre. After riding for about eight miles, they came
upon a wild mountain scene. A lonely green valley stretched before
them, surrounded by rugged heights. A herd of buffalo were careering
madly through it, with a troop of savage horsemen in full chase,
plying them with their bows and arrows. The appearance of Mr. Hunt
and his companions put an abrupt end to the hunt; the buffalo
scuttled off in one direction, while the Indians plied their lashes
and galloped off in another, as fast as their steeds could carry
them. Mr. Hunt gave chase; there was a sharp scamper, though of
short continuance. Two young Indians, who were indifferently
mounted, were soon overtaken. They were terribly frightened, and
evidently gave themselves up for lost. By degrees their fears were
allayed by kind treatment; but they continued to regard the
strangers with a mixture of awe and wonder, for it was the first
time in their lives they had ever seen a white man.
They belonged to a party of Snakes who had come across the mountains
on their autumnal hunting excursion to provide buffalo meat for the
winter. Being persuaded of the peaceful intentions of Mr. Hunt and
his companions, they willingly conducted them to their camp. It was
pitched in a narrow valley on the margin of a stream. The tents were
of dressed skins, some of them fantastically painted; with horses
grazing about them. The approach of the party caused a transient
alarm in the camp, for these poor Indians were ever on the look-out
for cruel foes. No sooner, however, did they recognize the garb and
complexion of their visitors, than their apprehensions were changed
into Joy; for some of them had dealt with white men, and knew them
to be friendly, and to abound with articles of singular value. They
welcomed them, therefore, to their tents, set food before them; and
entertained them to the best of their power.
They had been successful in their hunt, and their camp was full of
jerked buffalo meat, all of the choicest kind, and extremely fat.
Mr. Hunt purchased enough of them, in addition to what had been
killed and cured by his own hunters, to load all the horses
excepting those reserved for the partners and the wife of Pierre
Dorion. He found, also, a few beaver skins in their camp, for which
he paid liberally, as an inducement to them to hunt for more;
informing them that some of his party intended to live among the
mountains, and trade with the native hunters for their peltries. The
poor Snakes soon comprehended the advantages thus held out to them,
and promised to exert themselves to procure a quantity of beaver
skins for future traffic. Being now well supplied with provisions,
Mr. Hunt broke up his encampment on the 24th of September, and
continued on to the west. A march of fifteen miles, over a mountain
ridge, brought them to a stream about fifty feet in width, which
Hoback, one of their guides, who had trapped about the neighborhood
when in the service of Mr. Henry, recognized for one of the head
waters of the Columbia. The travellers hailed it with delight, as
the first stream they had encountered tending toward their point of
destination. They kept along it for two days, during which, from the
contribution of many rills and brooks, it gradually swelled into a
small river. As it meandered among rocks and precipices, they were
frequently obliged to ford it, and such was its rapidity that the
men were often in danger of being swept away. Sometimes the banks
advanced so close upon the river that they were obliged to scramble
up and down their rugged promontories, or to skirt along their bases
where there was scarce a foothold. Their horses had dangerous falls
in some of these passes. One of them rolled, with his load, nearly
two hundred feet down hill into the river, but without receiving any
injury. At length they emerged from these stupendous defiles, and
continued for several miles along the bank of Hoback's River,
through one of the stern mountain valleys. Here it was joined by a
river of greater magnitude and swifter current, and their united
waters swept off through the valley in one impetuous stream, which,
from its rapidity and turbulence, had received the name of the Mad
River. At the confluence of these streams the travellers encamped.
An important point in their arduous journey had been attained; a few
miles from their camp rose the three vast snowy peaks called the
Tetons, or the Pilot Knobs, the great landmarks of the Columbia, by
which they had shaped their course through this mountain wilderness.
By their feet flowed the rapid current of Mad River, a stream ample
enough to admit of the navigation of canoes, and down which they
might possibly be able to steer their course to the main body of the
Columbia. The Canadian voyageurs rejoiced at the idea of once more
launching themselves upon their favorite element; of exchanging
their horses for canoes, and of gliding down the bosoms of rivers,
instead of scrambling over the backs of mountains. Others of the
party, also, inexperienced in this kind of travelling, considered
their toils and troubles as drawing to a close. They had conquered
the chief difficulties of this great rocky barrier, and now
flattered themselves with the hope of an easy downward course for
the rest of their journey. Little did they dream of the hardships
and perils by land and water, which were yet to be encountered in
the frightful wilderness that intervened between them and the shores
of the Pacific!
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Astoria; Or Anecdotes Of An Enterprise Beyond The
Rocky Mountains
Astoria |