Mooswa & Others of the Boundaries

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Mooswa & Others of the Boundaries by William Alexander Fraser, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: William Alexander Fraser ISBN: 9781465584496
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: William Alexander Fraser
ISBN: 9781465584496
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
This simple romance of a simple people, the furred dwellers of the Northern forests, came to me from time to time during the six seasons I spent on the Athabasca and Saskatchewan Rivers in the far North-West of Canada. Long evenings have passed pleasantly, swiftly, as sitting over a smouldering camp-fire I have listened to famous Trappers as they spoke with enthusiastic vividness of the most fascinating life in the world,--the fur-winner's calling. If the incidents and tales in this book fail of interest the fault is mine, for, coming from their lips, they pleased as did the song of the Minstrel in the heroic past. Several of the little tales are absolutely true. Black Fox was trapped as here described, by a Half-breed, Johnnie Groat, who was with me for a season. Carcajou has raided, not one, but many shacks through the chimney, as fifty Trappers in the North-West could be brought to testify. The trapping of this clever little animal by means of a hollow stump, all other schemes having failed, was an actual occurrence. It is a well known fact that many a Trapper has had to abandon his "marten road" and move to another locality when Carcajou has set up to drive him out. Mooswa is still plentiful in the forests of the Athabasca, and is the embodiment of dignity among animals. There is no living thing more characteristic of the Northern land than Whisky-Jack, the Jay. Wherever a traveller stops, on plain or in forest, and uncovers food, there will be one or two of these saucy, thieving birds. Where they nest, or how, is much of a mystery. I never met but one man who claimed to have found Jack's nest, and this man, a Trapper, was of rather an imaginative turn of mind.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
This simple romance of a simple people, the furred dwellers of the Northern forests, came to me from time to time during the six seasons I spent on the Athabasca and Saskatchewan Rivers in the far North-West of Canada. Long evenings have passed pleasantly, swiftly, as sitting over a smouldering camp-fire I have listened to famous Trappers as they spoke with enthusiastic vividness of the most fascinating life in the world,--the fur-winner's calling. If the incidents and tales in this book fail of interest the fault is mine, for, coming from their lips, they pleased as did the song of the Minstrel in the heroic past. Several of the little tales are absolutely true. Black Fox was trapped as here described, by a Half-breed, Johnnie Groat, who was with me for a season. Carcajou has raided, not one, but many shacks through the chimney, as fifty Trappers in the North-West could be brought to testify. The trapping of this clever little animal by means of a hollow stump, all other schemes having failed, was an actual occurrence. It is a well known fact that many a Trapper has had to abandon his "marten road" and move to another locality when Carcajou has set up to drive him out. Mooswa is still plentiful in the forests of the Athabasca, and is the embodiment of dignity among animals. There is no living thing more characteristic of the Northern land than Whisky-Jack, the Jay. Wherever a traveller stops, on plain or in forest, and uncovers food, there will be one or two of these saucy, thieving birds. Where they nest, or how, is much of a mystery. I never met but one man who claimed to have found Jack's nest, and this man, a Trapper, was of rather an imaginative turn of mind.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Fix Bay'nets: The Regiment in the Hills by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book Every Girl's Book by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book Cardigan by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book Science and Practice in Farm Cultivation by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book The Enemies of Women (Los Enemigos De La Mujer) by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book Brave and True: Short Stories for Children by George Manville Fenn and Others by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book The Mysterious Visitor and A Mystery of the Sand-Hills by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book White Nights and Other Stories by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book The Portent by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book Poems of James Russell Lowell With Biographical Sketch by Nathan Haskell Dole by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book With The Flag In The Channel: The Adventures of Captain Gustavus Conyngham by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book The Path of Light by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book Dora Thorne by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book The Adventures of a Grain of Dust by William Alexander Fraser
Cover of the book The Cruise of the Nonsuch Buccaneer by William Alexander Fraser
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy