Of all the people who live in the
Green Forest none is more admired than Lightfoot the
Deer. So perhaps you can guess how delighted
every one was when, just as the morning lesson was
to begin, Lightfoot himself stepped daintily out from
a thicket and bowed to Old Mother Nature.
“I heard,” said he, “that
my little friends here are to learn something about
my family this morning, and thought you would not
mind if I joined them.”
“I should say not!” exclaimed
Peter Rabbit forgetting that Lightfoot had spoken
to Old Mother Nature.
All laughed, even Old Mother Nature.
You see, Peter was so very much in earnest, and at
the same time so excited, that it really was funny.
“Peter has spoken for all of
us,” said Old Mother Nature. “You
are more than welcome, Lightfoot. I had intended
to send for you, but it slipped my mind. I am
delighted to have you here and I know that the others
are. I suspect you will be most comfortable if
you lie down, but before you do this I want everybody
to have a good look at you. Just stand for a
few minutes in that little open space where all can
see you.”
Lightfoot walked over to the open
space where the sun fell full on him and there he
stood, a picture of grace and beauty with just enough
honest pride in his appearance to give him an air of
noble dignity. There was more than one little
gasp of admiration among his little neighbors.
“There,” began Old Mother
Nature, “is one of the most beautiful of all
my children, and the knowledge that he is beautiful
does not spoil him. Lightfoot belongs to the
Deer family, as you all know, and this in turn is
in the order called Ungulata, which means hoofed.”
Peter Rabbit abruptly sat up, and
his ears stood up like exclamation points. “Farmer
Brown’s cows have those funny feet called hoofs;
are they related to Lightfoot?” he asked eagerly.
“They belong to another family,
but it is in the same order. So they are distant
cousins of Lightfoot,” replied Old Mother Nature.
“And Farmer Brown’s Pigs,
what about them?” asked Chatterer the Red Squirrel.
“They also belong to that order and so are related,”
explained Old Mother Nature.
“Huh!” exclaimed Chatterer.
“If I were in Lightfoot’s place I never,
never would acknowledge any such homely, stupid creatures
as those as relatives of mine.”
“Don’t forget that Prickly
Porky the Porcupine and Robber the Rat are members
of the same order to which you belong,” retorted
Old Mother Nature softly, and Chatterer hung his head.
“Lightfoot,” she continued, “is
the White-tailed or Virginia Deer, and is in some
ways the most beautiful of the Deer family. You
have only to look at him to know that those slim legs
of his are meant for speed. He can go very fast,
but not for long distances without stopping.
Like Peter Rabbit he is a jumper rather than a true
runner, and travels with low bounds with occasional
high ones when alarmed. He can make very long
and high jumps, and this is one reason he prefers
to live in the Green Forest where there are fallen
trees and tangles of old logs. If frightened
he can leap over them, whereas his enemies must crawl
under or climb over or go around them. Ordinary
fences, such as Farmer Brown has built around his
fields, do not bother Lightfoot in the least.
He can leap over them as easily as Peter Rabbit can
jump over that little log he is sitting beside.
“Just now, because it is summer,
Lightfoot’s coat is decidedly reddish in color
and very handsome. But in winter it is wholly
different.”
“I know,” spoke up Chatterer
the Red Squirrel. “It is gray then.
I’ve often seen Lightfoot in winter, and there
isn’t a red hair on him at that season.
“Quite right,” agreed
Old Mother Nature. “His red coat is for
summer only. Notice that Lightfoot has a black
nose. That is, the tip of it is black.
Beneath his chin is a black spot. A band across
his nose, the inside of each ear and a circle around
each eye is whitish. His throat is white and
he is white beneath. Now, Peter, you are so
interested in tails, tell me without looking what
color Lightfoot’s tail is.”
“White, snowy white,”
replied Peter promptly. “I suppose that
is why he is called the White-tailed Deer.”
“Huh!” grunted Johnny
Chuck who happened to be sitting a little back of
Lightfoot, “I don’t call it white.
It has a white edge, but mostly it is the color of
his coat.”
Now while Lightfoot had been standing
there his tail had hung down, and it was as Johnny
Chuck had said. But at Johnny’s remark
up flew Lightfoot’s tail, showing only the under
side. It was like a pointed white flag.
With it held aloft that way, no one behind Lightfoot
would suspect that his whole tail was not white.
“Notice how long and fluffy
the hair on that tail is,” said Old Mother Nature.
“Mrs. Lightfoot’s is just like it, and
this makes it very easy for her babies to follow her
in the dark. When Lightfoot is feeding or simply
walking about he carries it down, but when he is frightened
and bounds away, up goes that white flag. Now
look at his horns. They are not true horns.
The latter are hollow, while these are not.
Farmer Brown’s cows have horns. Lightfoot
has antlers. Just remember that. The so-called
horns of all the Deer family are antlers and are not
hollow. Notice how Lightfoot’s curve forward
with the branches or tines on the back side.”
Of course everybody looked at Lightfoot’s
crown as he held his head proudly. “What
is the matter with them?” asked Whitefoot the
Wood Mouse. “They look to me as if they
are covered with fur. I always supposed them
to be hard like bone.”
“So they will be a month from
now,” explained Old Mother Nature, smiling down
at Whitefoot. “That which you call fur
will come off. He will rub it off against the
trees until his antlers are polished, and there is
not a trace of it left. You see Lightfoot has
just grown that set this summer.”
“Do you mean those antlers?”
asked Danny Meadow Mouse, looking very much puzzled.
“Didn’t he have any before? How
could things like those grow, anyway?”
“Don’t you know that he
loses his horns, I mean antlers, every year?”
demanded Jumper the Hare. “I thought every
one knew that. His old ones fell off late last
winter. I know, for I saw him just afterward,
and he looked sort of ashamed. Anyway, he didn’t
carry his head as proudly as he does now. He
looked a lot like Mrs. Lightfoot; you know she hasn’t
any antlers.”
“But how could hard, bony things
like those grow?” persisted Danny Meadow Mouse.
“I think I will have to explain,”
said Old Mother Nature. “They were not
hard and bony when they were growing. Just as
soon as Lightfoot’s old antlers dropped off,
the new ones started. They sprouted out of his
head just as plants sprout out of the ground, and
they were soft and very tender and filled with blood,
just as all parts of your body are. At first
they were just two round knobs. Then these pushed
out and grew and grew. Little knobs sprang out
from them and grew to make the branches you see now.
All the time they were protected by a furry skin which
looks a great deal like what men call velvet.
When Lightfoot’s antlers are covered with this,
they are said to be in the velvet state.
“When they had reached their
full size they began to shrink and harden, so that
now they are quite hard, and very soon that velvet
will begin to come off. When they were growing
they were so tender that Lightfoot didn’t move
about any more than was necessary and kept quite by
himself. He was afraid of injuring those antlers.
By the time cool weather comes, Lightfoot will be quite
ready to use those sharp points on anybody who gets
in his way.
“As Jumper has said, Mrs. Lightfoot
has no antlers. Otherwise she looks much like
Lightfoot, save that she is not quite as big.
Have any of you ever seen her babies?”
“I have,” declared Jumper,
who, as you know, lives in the Green Forest just as
Lightfoot does. “They are the dearest little
things and look like their mother, only they have the
loveliest spotted coats.”
“That is to help them to remain
unseen by their enemies,” explained Old Mother
Nature. When they lie down where the sun breaks
through the trees and spots the ground with light
they seem so much like their surroundings that unless
they move they are not often seen even by the sharpest
eyes that may pass close by. They lie with their
little necks and heads stretched flat on the ground
and do not move so much as a hair. You see,
they usually are very obedient, and the first thing
their mother teaches them is to keep perfectly still
when she leaves them.
“When they are a few months
old and able to care for themselves a little, the
spots disappear. As a rule Mrs. Lightfoot has
two babies each spring. Once in a while she
has three, but two is the rule. She is a good
mother and always on the watch for possible danger.
While they are very small she keeps them hidden in
the deepest thickets. By the way, do you know
that Lightfoot and Mrs. Lightfoot are fine swimmers?”
Happy Jack Squirrel looked the surprise
he felt. “I don’t see how under
the sun any one with little hoofed feet like Lightfoot’s
can swim,” said he.
“Nevertheless, Lightfoot is
a good swimmer and fond of the water,” replied
Old Mother Nature. “That is one way he
has of escaping his enemies. When he is hard
pressed by Wolves or Dogs he makes for the nearest
water and plunges in. He does not hesitate to
swim across a river or even a small lake.
“Lightfoot prefers the Green
Forest where there are close thickets with here and
there open places. He likes the edge of the Green
Forest where he can come out in the open fields, yet
be within a short distance of the protecting trees
and bushes. He requires much water and so is
usually found not far from a brook, pond or river.
He has a favorite drinking place and goes to drink
early in the morning and just at dusk. During
the day he usually sleeps hidden away in a thicket
or under a windfall, coming out late in the afternoon.
He feeds mostly in the early evening. He eats
grass and other plants, beechnuts and acorns, leaves
and twigs of certain trees, lily pads in summer and,
I am sorry to say, delights to get into Farmer Brown’s
garden, where almost every green thing tempts him.
“Like so many others he has
a hard time in winter, particularly when the snows
are deep. Then he and Mrs. Lightfoot and their
children live in what is called a yard. Of course
it isn’t really a yard such as Farmer Brown
has. It is simply a place where they keep the
snow trodden down in paths which cross and cross, and
is made where there is shelter and food. The
food is chiefly twigs and leaves of evergreen trees.
As the snow gets deeper and deeper they become prisoners
in the yard until spring comes to melt the snow and
set them free.
“Lightfoot depends for safety
more on his nose and ears than on his eyes.
His sense of smell is wonderful, and when he is moving
about he usually goes up wind; that is, in the direction
from which the wind is blowing. This is so that
it will bring to him the scent of any enemy that may
be ahead of him. He is very clever and cunning.
Often before lying down to rest he goes back a short
distance to a point where he can watch his trail, so
that if any one is following it he will have warning.
“His greatest enemy is the hunter
with his terrible gun. How any one can look
into those great soft eyes of Lightfoot and then even
think of trying to kill him is more than I can understand.
Dogs are his next worst enemies when he lives near
the homes of men. When he lives where Wolves,
Panthers and Bears are found, he has to be always
on the watch for them. Tufty the Lynx is ever
on the watch for Lightfoot’s babies.
“The White-tailed Deer is the
most widely distributed of all the Deer family.
He is found from the Sunny South to the great forests
of the North—everywhere but in the vast
open plains of the middle of this great country.
That is, he used to be. In many places he
has been so hunted by man that he has disappeared.
When he lives in the Sunny South he never grows to
be as big as when he lives in the North.
“In the great mountains of the
Far West lives a cousin, Blacktail, also called Columbian
Blacktailed Deer, and another cousin, Forkhorn the
Mule Deer. Blacktail is nearly the size of Lightfoot.
He is not quite so graceful, his ears are larger,
being much like those of Forkhorn the Mule Deer, to
whom he is closely related, and his tail is wholly
black on the upper surface. It is from this he
gets his name. His antlers vary, sometimes being
much like those of Lightfoot and again like those
of Forkhorn. He is a lover of dense forests and
is not widely distributed. He is not nearly so
smart as Lightfoot in outwitting hunters.
“Forkhorn the Mule Deer, sometimes
called Jumping Deer, is larger than Lightfoot and
much more heavily built. His big ears, much
like those of a Mule, have won for him the name of
Mule Deer. His face is a dull white with a black
patch on the forehead and a black band under the chin.
His tail is rather short and is not broad at the
base like Lightfoot’s. It is white with
a black tip. Because of this he is often called
Blacktailed Deer, but this is wrong because that name
belongs to his cousin, the true Blacktail.
“Forkhorn’s antlers are
his glory. They are even finer than Lightfoot’s.
The prongs, or tines, are in pairs like the letter
Y instead of in a row as are those of Lightfoot, and
usually there are two pairs on each antler.
Forkhorn prefers rough country and there he is very
much at home, his powers of jumping enabling him to
travel with ease where his enemies find it difficult
to follow. Like Blacktail he is not nearly so
clever as Lightfoot the White-tail and so is more
easily killed by hunters.
“All these members of the Deer
family belong to the round-horn branch, and are very
much smaller than the members of the flat-horn branch.
But there is one who in size makes all the others
look small indeed. It is Bugler the Elk, or
Wapiti, of whom I shall tell you to-morrow.”