Johnny Chuck was the first one on
hand the next morning. The fact is, Johnny was
quite excited over the discovery that he had some
near relatives. He always had supposed that the
Woodchucks were a family by themselves. Now
that he knew that he had some close relatives, he
was filled with quite as much curiosity as ever Peter
Rabbit possessed. Just as soon as Old Mother
Nature was ready to begin, Johnny Chuck was ready
with a question. “If you please,”
said he, “who are my nearest relatives?”
“The Marmots of the Far West,”
replied Old Mother Nature. “You know,
you are a Marmot, and these cousins of yours out there
are a great deal like you in a general way.
The biggest and handsomest of all is Whistler, who
lives in the mountains of the Northwest. The
fact is, he is the biggest of all the Marmot family.”
“Is he much bigger than Johnny
Chuck?” asked Peter Rabbit.
“Considerably bigger,”
replied Old Mother Nature, nodding her head.
“Considerably bigger. I should think he
would weight twice as much as Johnny.”
Johnny’s eyes opened very wide.
“My!” he exclaimed, “I should like
to see him. Does he look like me?”
“In his shape he does,”
said Old Mother Nature, “but he has a very much
handsomer coat. His coat is a mixture of dark
brown and white hairs which give him a grayish color.
The upper part of his head, his feet and nails are
black, and so are his ears. A black band runs
from behind each ear down to his neck. His chin
is pure white and there is white on his nose.
Underneath he is a light, rusty color. His
fur is thicker and softer than yours, Johnny; this
is because he lives where it is colder. His
tail is larger, somewhat bushier, and is a blackish-brown.”
“If you please, why is he called
Whistler?” asked Johnny Chuck eagerly.
“Because he has a sharp, clear
whistle which can be heard a very long distance,”
replied Old Mother Nature. “He sits up
just as you do. If he sees danger approaching
he whistles, as a warning to all his relatives within
hearing.”
“I suppose it is foolish to
ask if he lives in a hole in the ground as Johnny
Chuck does,” spoke up Peter Rabbit.
“He does,” replied Old
Mother Nature. “All Marmots live in holes
in the ground, but Whistler lives in entirely different
country. He lives up on the sides of the mountains,
often so high that no trees grow there and the ground
is rocky. He digs his hole down in between the
rocks.”
“It must be a nice, safe hole,”
said Peter. “I guess he doesn’t
have to worry about being dug out by Reddy fox.”
“You guessed quite right,”
laughed Old Mother Nature. “Nevertheless,
he has reason to fear being dug out. You see,
out where he lives, Grizzly, the big cousin of Buster
Bear, also lives, and Grizzly is very fond of a Marmot
dinner when he can get one. He is so big and
strong and has such great claws that he can pull the
rocks apart and dig Whistler out. By the way,
I forgot to tell you that Whistler is also called
the Gray Marmot and the Hoary Marmot. He lives
on grass and other green things and, like Johnny Chuck,
gets very fat in the fall and then sleeps all winter.
There are one or two other Marmots in the Far West
who live farther south than does Whistler, but their
habits are much the same as those of Whistler and Johnny
Chuck. None of them are social. I mean
by that you never find two Marmot homes very close
together. In this they differ from Johnny’s
smaller cousin, Yap Yap the Prairie Dog. Yap
Yap wouldn’t be happy if he didn’t have
close neighbors of his own kind. He has one of
the most social natures of all my little people.”
“Tell us about him,” begged
Happy Jack Squirrel before Johnny Chuck, who is naturally
slow, could ask for the same thing.
“Yap Yap is the smallest of
the Marmot family,” said Old Mother Nature.
“In a way he is about as closely related to
the Ground Squirrels as he is to the Marmots.
Johnny Chuck has only four claws on each front foot,
but Yap Yap has five, just as the Ground Squirrels
have. He looks very much like a small Chuck dressed
in light yellow-brown. His tail for the most
part is the same color as his coat, but the end is
black, though there is one member of the family whose
tail has a white tip. In each cheek is a small
pouch, that is, a small pocket, and this is one of
the things that shows how closely related to the Spermophiles
he is.
“As I said before, Yap Yap is
very social by nature. He lives on the great
open plains of the West and Southwest, frequently where
it is very dry and rain seldom falls. When you
find his home you are sure to find the homes of many
more Prairie Dogs very close at hand. Sometimes
there are hundreds and hundreds of homes, making a
regular town. This is because the Prairie Dogs
dearly love the company of their own kind.”
“Does Yap Yap dig the same kind
of a hole that I do?” asked Johnny Chuck.
“In a way it is like yours,”
replied Old Mother Nature, “but at the same
time it is different. In the first place, it
goes almost straight down for a long distance.
In the second place there is no mound of sand in
front of Yap Yap’s doorway. Instead of
that the doorway is right in the very middle of the
mound of sand. One reason for this is that when
it does rain out where Yap Yap lives it rains very
hard indeed, so that the water stands on the ground
for a short time. The ground being flat, a lot
of water would run down into Yap Yap’s home
and make him most uncomfortable if he did not do something
to keep it out. So he brings the sand out and
piles it all the way around his doorway and presses
it down with his nose. In that way he builds
up a firm mound which he uses for two purposes; one
is to keep the water from running down the hole, and
the other is as a sort of watch tower. He sits
on the top of his mound to watch for his enemies.
His cousins with the white tail digs a hole more
like yours.
“Yap Yap loves to visit his
neighbors and to have them visit him. They are
lively little people and do a great deal of talking
among themselves. The instant one of them sees
an enemy he gives a signal. Then every Prairie
Dog scampers for his own hole and dives in head first.
Almost at once he pops his head out again to see what
the danger may be.”
“How can he do that without
going clear to the bottom to turn around?” demanded
Peter
“I wondered if any of you would
think of that question,” chuckled Old Mother
Nature. “Just a little way down from the
entrance Yap Yap digs a little room at one side of
his tunnel. All he has to do is to scramble
into that, turn around and then pop his head out.
As I said before, his tunnel goes down very deep; then
it turns and goes almost equally far underground.
Down there he has a nice little bedroom. Sometimes
he has more than one.”
“If it is so dry out where he
lives, how does he get water to drink?” asked
Happy Jack.
“He doesn’t have to drink,”
replied Old Mother Nature. “Some folks
think that he digs down until he finds water way down
underneath, but this isn’t so. He doesn’t
have to have water. He gets all the moisture
he needs from the green things he eats.”
“I suppose, like the rest of
us, he has lots of enemies?” said Peter.
Old Mother Nature nodded. “Of
course,” said she. “Old Man Coyote
and Reddy Fox are very fond of Prairie Dog. So
are members of the Hawk family. Then in some
places there is a cousin of Shadow the Weasel called
the Black-footed Ferret. He is to be feared most
of all because he can follow Yap Yap down into his
hole. There is a cousin of Hooty the Owl called
the Burrowing Owl because it builds its home in a
hole in the ground. You are likely to find many
Burrowing Owls living in Prairie Dog villages.
Also you are apt to find Buzztail the Rattlesnake
there.
“A lot of people believe that
Yap Yap, Buzztail and the little Burrowing Owl are
the best of friends and often live together in the
same hole. This isn’t so at all.
Buzztail is very fond of young Prairie Dog and so
is the Burrowing Owl. Rather than dig a hole
for himself the Owl will sometimes take possession
of one of Yap Yap’s deserted holes. If
he should make a mistake and enter a hole in which
Yap Yap was at home, the chances are that Yap Yap
would kill the Owl for he knows that the Owl is an
enemy. Buzztail the Rattlesnake also makes use
of Prairie Dog holes, but it is safe to say that if
there are any Prairie Dog babies down there they never
live to see what the outside world is like. So
Buzztail and the Burrowing Owl are really enemies
instead of friends of Yap Yap, the Prairie Dog.”
“Why is he called a Dog?” asked Peter.
Old Mother Nature laughed right out.
“Goodness knows,” said she. “He
doesn’t look like a Dog and he doesn’t
act like a Dog, so why people should call him a Dog
I don’t know, unless it is because of his habit
of barking, and even his bark isn’t at all like
a Dog’s—not nearly so much so as
the bark of Reddy Fox. Now I guess this will
do for to-day. Haven’t you little folks
had enough of school?”
“No,” cried Peter Rabbit
and Jumper the Hare and Happy Jack and Chatterer the
Red Squirrel and Striped Chipmunk and Johnny Chuck.
“We want to know about the rest of the members
of the order of Rodents or Gnawers,” added Peter.
“Of course in a way they are sort of related
to us and we want to know about them.”
Old Mother Nature laughed good-naturedly.
“All right,” said she, “come again
to-morrow morning and we’ll see what more we
can learn.”