Lightfoot the Deer was the first one
on hand the next morning. In fact, he arrived
before sun-up and, lying down in a little thicket
close at hand, made himself very comfortable to wait
for the opening of school. You see, not for
anything would he have missed that lesson about his
big cousins. There the others found him when
they arrived.
“The Deer family,” began
Old Mother Nature, “is divided into two branches—the
round-horned and the flat-horned. I have told
you about the round-horned Deer with the exception
of the largest and noblest, Bugler the Elk.
He is commonly called Elk, but his right name is Wapiti.
“Bugler is found only in the
great mountains of the Far West, but once, before
hunters with terrible guns came, Elk were found in
nearly all parts of this country excepting the Far
South and the Far North—even on the great
plains. Now Bugler lives only in the forests
of the great mountains.”
“How big is he?” asked Lightfoot.
“So big that beside him you
would look very small,” replied Old Mother Nature.
“Have you ever seen Farmer Brown’s Horse?”
Lightfoot nodded. “Well,
Bugler stands as high as that Horse,” replied
Old Mother Nature. “He isn’t as heavy,
for his body is of different shape, not so big around,
but at that he weighs three times as much as you do.
In summer his coat is a light yellowish-brown, becoming
very dark on his neck and underneath. His legs
are dark brown. The hair on his neck is long
and coarse. His tail is very small, and around
it is a large patch so light in color as to be almost
whitish. In winter his coat becomes dark gray.
“Bugler’s crowning glory
are his antlers. They are very large and wide-spreading,
sweeping backward and upward, the long prongs, or
tines, curving upward from the front instead of from
the back, as in the case of Lightfoot’s antlers.
Above each eye is a long sharp prong. So big
are these antlers that Bugler looks almost as if he
were carrying a small, bare tree on his head.
“Big as these antlers are, they
are grown in a few months for Bugler is like his small
cousins in that he loses his antlers at the end of
every winter and must grow a new pair. While
they are growing, he hides in the wildest places he
can find, high up on the mountains. Mrs. Bugler
is at that time down in a valley with her baby or
babies. Usually she has one, but sometimes twins.
She has no antlers.
“In the fall, when his antlers
have hardened, Bugler moves down to join his family.
The bigger and stronger he is, the bigger his family
is, for he has a number of wives and they all live
together in a herd or band of which Bugler is lord
and master. He is ready and eager to fight for
them, and terrible battles take place when another
disputes his leadership. At this season he has
a habit of stretching his neck out and emitting a
far-reaching trumpet-like sound from which he gets
the name of Bugler. It is a warning that he
is ready to fight.
“When the snows of winter come,
many families get together and form great bands.
Then they move down from the mountains in search of
shelter and food. When a winter is very bad,
many starve to death, for man has fenced in and made
into farms much of the land where the elk once found
ample food for winter.
“But big as is Bugler the Elk,
there is a cousin who is bigger, the biggest of all
the Deer family. It is Flathorns the Moose.
As you must guess by his name he is a member of the
flat-horned branch of the family. His antlers
spread widely and are flattened instead of being round.
From the edges of the flattened part many sharp points
spring out.
“Flathorns, wearing his crown
of great spreading antlers, is a noble appearing animal
because of his great size, but when his antlers have
dropped he is a homely fellow. Mrs. Flathorns,
who has no antlers, is very homely. As I have
said, Flathorns is the biggest member of the Deer
family. He is quite as big as Farmer Brown’s
Horse and stands much higher at the shoulders.
Indeed, his shoulders are so high that he has a decided
hump there, for they are well above the line of his
back. His neck is very short, large and thick,
and his head is not at all like the heads of other
members of the Deer family. Instead of the narrow,
pointed face of other members of the Deer family,
he has a broad, long face, rather more like that of
a Horse. Towards the nose it humps up, and the
great thick upper lip overhangs the lower one.
His nose is very broad, and for his size his eyes
are small. His ears are large.
“From his throat hangs a hairy
fold of skin called a bell. He has a very short
tail, so short that it is hardly noticeable.
His legs are very long and rather large. His
hoofs are large and rounded, more like those of Bossy
the Cow than like those of Lightfoot the Deer.
Seen at a little distance in the woods, he looks to
be almost black, but really is for the most part dark
brown. His legs are gray on the inside.
“Flathorns lives in the great
northern forests clear across the country, and is
especially fond of swampy places. He is fond
of the water and is a good swimmer. In summer
he delights to feed on the pads, stems and roots of
water lilies, and his long legs enable him to wade
out to get them. For the most part his food
consists of leaves and tender twigs of young trees,
such as striped maple, aspen, birch, hemlock, alder
and willow. His great height enables him to
reach the upper branches of young trees. When
they are too tall for this, he straddles them and bends
or breaks them down to get at the upper branches.
His front teeth are big, broad and sharp-edged.
With these he strips the bark from the larger branches.
He also eats grass and moss. Because of his
long legs and short neck he finds it easiest to kneel
when feeding on the ground.
“Big as he is, he can steal
through thick growth without making a sound.
He does not jump like other Deer, but travels at an
awkward trot which takes him over the ground very
fast. In the winter when snow is deep, the Moose
family lives in a yard such as I told you Lightfoot
makes. The greatest enemy of Flathorns is the
hunter, and from being much hunted Flathorns has learned
to make the most of his ears, eyes and nose.
He is very smart and not easily surprised. When
wounded he will sometimes attack man, and occasionally
when not wounded. Then he strikes with his sharp-edged
front hoofs, and they are terrible weapons.
Altogether he is a wonderful animal, and it is a matter
for sorrow that man persists in hunting him merely
to get his wonderful head.
“In parts of these same northern
forests lives another big member of the Deer family,
Wanderhoof the Woodland Caribou. He is bigger
than Lightfoot the Deer, but smaller than Bugler the
Elk, rather an awkward-looking fellow. His legs
are quite long but stout. His neck is rather
short, and instead of carrying his head proudly as
does Lightfoot, he carries it stretched out before
him or hanging low. The hair on the lower part
of his neck is long.
“Wanderhoof wears a coat of
brown. His neck being much lighter or almost
gray. He has an undercoat which is very thick
and woolly. In winter his whole coat becomes
grayish and his neck white. Above each hoof
is a band of white. His tail is very short, and
white on the under side. His antlers are wonderful,
being very long and both round and flat. That
is, parts of them are round and parts flattened.
They have more prongs than those of any other Deer.
“His hoofs are very large, deeply
slit, and cup-shaped. When he walks they make
a snapping or clicking sound. These big feet
were given him for a purpose. He is very fond
of boggy ground, and because of these big feet and
the fact that the hoofs spread when he steps, he can
walk safely where others would sink in. This
is equally true in snow, when they serve as snowshoes.
As a result he is not forced to live in yards as
are Lightfoot and Flathorns when the snow is deep,
but goes where he pleases.
“He is very fond of the water
and delights to splash about in it, and is a splendid
swimmer. His hair floats him so that when swimming
he is higher out of water than any other member of
the family. In winter he lives in the thickest
parts of the forest among the hemlocks and spruces,
and feeds on the mosses and lichens which grow on
the trees. In summer he moves to the open, boggy
ground around shallow lakes where moss covers the ground,
and on this he lives.
“He is a great wanderer, hence
his name Wanderhoof. Mrs. Caribou has antlers,
wherein she differs from Mrs. Lightfoot, Mrs. Flathorns
and Mrs. Bugler. Wanderhoof is fond of company
and usually is found with many companions of his own
kind. When they are moving from their summer
home to their winter home, or back again, they often
travel in very large bands.
“In the Far North beyond the
great forests Wanderhoof has a cousin who looks very
much like him, called the Barren Ground Caribou.
The name comes from the fact that way up there little
excepting moss grows, and on this the Caribou lives.
In summer this Caribou is found almost up to the
Arctic Ocean, moving southward in great herds as the
cold weather approaches. No other animals of
to-day get together in such great numbers. In
the extreme North is another Caribou, called Peary’s
Caribou, whose coat is wholly white. The Caribou
are close cousins of the Reindeer and look much like
them.
“All male members of the smaller
Deer are called bucks, the female members are called
does, and the young are called fawns. All male
members of the big Deer, such as Bugler the Elk, Flathorns
the Moose and Wanderhoof the Caribou, are called bulls.
The females are called cows and the young are called
calves. All members of the Deer family, with
the exception of the Barren Ground Caribou, are forest-loving
animals and are seldom seen far from the sheltering
woods.
“This, I think, will do for
the Deer family. To-morrow I shall tell you
about Thunderfoot the Bison, Fleetfoot the Antelope,
and Longcoat the Musk Ox.”