Everybody knew that Paddy the Beaver
was laying up a supply of food for the winter, and
everybody thought it was queer food. That is,
everybody but Prickly Porky the Porcupine thought so.
Prickly Porky likes the same kind of food, but he never
lays up a supply. He just goes out and gets it
when he wants it, winter or summer. What kind
of food was it? Why, bark, to be sure. Yes,
Sir, it was just bark—the bark of certain
kinds of trees.
Now Prickly Porky can climb the trees
and eat the bark right there, but Paddy the Beaver
cannot climb, and if he would just eat the bark that
he can reach from the ground, it would take such a
lot of trees to keep him filled up that he would soon
spoil the Green Forest. You know, when the bark
is taken off a tree all the way around, the tree dies.
That is because all the things that a tree draws out
of the ground to make it grow and keep it alive are
carried up from the roots in the sap, and the sap
cannot go up the tree trunks and into the branches
when the bark is taken off, because it is up the inside
of the bark that it travels. So when the bark
is taken from a tree all the way around the trunk,
the tree just starves to death.
Now Paddy the Beaver loves the Green
Forest as dearly as you and I do, and perhaps even
a little more dearly. You see, it is his home.
Besides, Paddy never is wasteful. So he cuts down
a tree so that he can get all the bark instead of
killing a whole lot of trees for a very little bark,
as he might do if he were lazy. There isn’t
a lazy bone in him—not one. The bark
he likes best is from the aspen. When he cannot
get that, he will eat the bark from the poplar, the
alder, the willow, and even the birch. But he
likes the aspen so much better that he will work very
hard to get it. Perhaps it tastes better because
he does have to work so hard for it.
There were some aspen trees growing
right on the edge of the pond Paddy had made in the
Green Forest. These he cut just as he had cut
the trees for his dam. As soon as a tree was down,
he would cut it into short lengths, and with these
swim out to where the water was deep, close to his
new house. He took them one by one and carried
the first ones to the bottom, where he pushed them
into the mud just enough to hold them. Then, as
fast as he brought more, he piled them on the first
ones. And so the pile grew and grew.
Jerry Muskrat, Peter Rabbit, Bobby
Coon, and the other little people of the Green Forest
watched him with the greatest interest and curiosity.
They couldn’t quite make out what he was doing.
It was almost as if he were building the foundation
for another house.
“What’s he doing, Jerry?”
demanded Peter, when he could keep still no longer.
“I don’t exactly know,”
replied Jerry. “He said that he was going
to lay in a supply of food for the winter, just as
I told you, and I suppose that is what he is doing.
But I don’t quite understand what he is taking
it all out into the pond for. I believe I’ll
go ask him.”
“Do, and then come tell us,”
begged Peter, who was growing so curious that he couldn’t
sit still.
So Jerry swam out to where Paddy was
so busy. “Is this your food supply, Cousin
Paddy?” he asked.
“Yes,” replied Paddy,
crawling up on the side of his house to rest.
“Yes, this is my food supply. Isn’t
it splendid?”
“I guess it is,” replied
Jerry, trying to be polite, “though I like lily
roots and clams better. But what are you going
to do with it? Where is your storehouse?”
“This pond is my storehouse,”
replied Paddy. “I will make a great pile
right here close to my house, and the water will keep
it nice and fresh all winter. When the pond is
frozen over, all I will have to do is to slip out
of one of my doorways down there on the bottom, swim
over here and get a stick, and fill my stomach.
Isn’t it handy?”