It was the last day of Old Mother
Nature’s school in the Green Forest, and when
jolly, round, bright Mr. Sun had climbed high enough
in the blue, blue sky to peep down through the trees,
he found not one missing of the little people who
had been learning so much about themselves, their
relatives, neighbors and all the other animals in every
part of this great country. You see, not for
anything in the world would one of them willingly
have missed that last lesson.
“I told you yesterday,”
began Old Mother Nature, “that the land is surrounded
by water, salt water, sometimes called the ocean and
sometimes the sea. In this live the largest animals
in all the Great World and many others, some of which
sometimes come on land, and others which never do.
“One of those which come on
land is first cousin to Little Joe Otter and is named
the Sea Otter.
He lives in the cold waters of the
western ocean of the Far North. He much resembles
Little Joe Otter, whom you all know, but has finer,
handsomer fur. In fact, so handsome is his fur
that he has been hunted for it until now. He
is among the shyest and rarest of all animals, and
has taken to living in the water practically all the
time, rarely visiting land. He lies on his back
in the water and gets his food from the bottom of
the sea. It is chiefly clams and other shellfish.
He rests on floating masses of sea plants. He
is very playful and delights to toss pieces of seaweed
from paw to paw as he lies floating on his back.
Of course he is a wonderful swimmer and diver.
Otherwise he couldn’t live in the sea.
“Another who comes on land,
but only for a very short distance from the water,
is called the Walrus. He belongs to an order
called Finnipedia, which means fin-footed. Instead
of having legs and feet for walking, members of this
order have limbs designed for swimming; these are
more like fins or paddles than anything else and are
called flippers. The Walrus is so big that I
can give you no idea how big he is, excepting to say
that he will weight two thousand pounds. He
is simply a great mass of living flesh covered with
a rough, very thick skin without hair. From his
upper jaw two immense ivory tusks hang straight down,
and with these he digs up shellfish at the bottom
of the sea. It is a terrible effort for him
to move on shore, and so he is content to stay within
a few feet of the water. He also lives in the
cold waters of the Far North amidst floating ice.
On this he often climbs out to lie for hours.
His voice is a deep grunt or bellowing roar.
The young are born on land close to the water.
“The Sea Lions belong to this
same fin-footed order. The best known of these
are the California Sea Lion and the Fur Seal, which
is not a true Seal. The California Sea Lion is
also called the Barking Sea Lion because of its habit
of barking, and is the best known of the family.
It is frequently seen on the rocks along the shore
and on the islands off the western coast. These
Sea Lions are sleek animals, exceedingly graceful
in the water. They have long necks and carry
their heads high. They are covered with short
coarse hair and have small, sharp-pointed ears.
Their front flippers have neither hair nor claws,
but their hind flippers have webbed toes. They
are able to move about on land surprisingly well for
animals lacking regular legs and feet, and can climb
on and over rocks rapidly. Naturally they are
splendid swimmers.
“The largest member of the family
is the Steller Sea Lion, who sometimes grows to be
almost as big as a Walrus. He is not sleek and
graceful like his smaller cousin, but has an enormously
thick neck and heavy shoulders. His voice is
a roar rather than a bark. The head of an old
Sea Lion is so much like that of a true Lion that
the name Sea Lion has been given this family.
“The most valuable member of
the family, so far as man is concerned, is the Fur
Seal, also called Sea Bear. It is very nearly
the size and form of the California Sea Lion, but
under the coarse outer hair, which is gray in color,
is a wonderful soft, fine, brown fur and for this
the Fur Seal has been hunted so persistently that there
was real danger that soon the very last one would
be killed. Now wise and needed laws protect
the Fur Seals on their breeding grounds, which are
certain islands in the Far North. The young of
all members of this family are born on shore, but
soon take to the water. The Fur Seal migrates
just as the birds do, but always returns to the place
of its birth. Man and the Polar Bear are its
enemies on land and ice, and the Killer Whale in the
water. Mr. Fur Seal always has many wives and
this is true of the other members of the Sea Lion family
and of the Walrus. The males are three or four
times the size of the females. Among themselves
the males are fierce fighters.
“The true Seals are short-necked,
thick-bodied, and have rather round heads with no
visible ears. The Walrus and Sea Lions can turn
their hind flippers forward to use as feet on land,
but this the true Seals cannot do. Therefore
they are more clumsy out of water. Their front
flippers are covered with hair.
“The one best known is the Harbor
or Leopard Seal. It is found along both coasts,
often swimming far up big rivers. It is one
of the smallest members of the family. Sometimes
it is yellowish-gray spotted with black and sometimes
dark brown with light spots.
“The Ringed Seal is about the
same size or a little smaller than the Harbor Seal
and is found as far north as it can find breathing
holes in the ice. You know all these animals
breathe air just as land animals do. This Seal
looks much like the Harbor Seal, but is a little more
slender.
“Another member of the family
is the Harp, Saddle-back or Greenland Seal.
He is larger than the other two and has a black head
and gray body with a large black ring on the back.
The female is not so handsome, being merely spotted.
“The handsomest Seal is the
Ribbon Seal. He is about the size of his cousin
the Harbor Seal. He is also called the Harlequin
Seal. Sometimes his coat is blackish-brown and
sometimes yellowish-gray, but always he has a band
of yellowish-white, like a broad ribbon, from his
throat around over the top of his head, and another
band which starts on his chest and goes over his shoulder,
curves down and finally goes around his body not far
above the hind flippers. Only the male is so
marked. This Seal is rather rare. Like
most of the others it lives in the cold waters of
the Far North.
“The largest of the Seals is
the Elephant Seal, once numerous, but killed by man
until now there are few members of this branch of the
family. He is a tremendous fellow and has a movable
nose which hangs several inches below his mouth.
“The queerest-looking member
of the family is the Hooded Seal. Mr. Seal of
this branch of the family is rather large, and on top
of his nose he carries a large bag of skin which he
can fill with air until he looks as if he were wearing
a queer hood or bonnet.
“The Seals complete the list
of animals which live mostly in the water but come
out on land or ice at times. Now I will tell
you of a true mammal, warm-blooded, just as you are,
and air-breathing, but which never comes on land.
This is the Manatee or Sea Cow. It lives in
the warm waters of the Sunny South, coming up from
the sea in the big rivers. It is a very large
animal, sometimes growing as big as a medium-sized
Walrus. The head is round, somewhat like that
of a Seal. The lips are thick and big, the upper
one split in the middle. The eyes are small.
It has but two flippers, and these are set in at
the shoulders. Instead of hind flippers, such
as the Seals and Sea Lions have, the Manatee has a
broad, flattened and rounded tail which is used as
a propeller, just as fish use their tails. The
neck is short and large. In the water the Manatee
looks black. The skin is almost hairless.
“This curious animal lives on
water plants. Sometimes it will come close to
a river bank and with head and shoulders out of water
feed on the grasses which hang down from the bank.
The babies are, of course, born in the water, as
the Manatee never comes on shore. Now I think
this will end to-day’s lesson and the school.”
Peter Rabbit hopped up excitedly.
“You said that the largest animals in the world
live in the sea, and you haven’t told us what
they are,” he cried.
“True enough, Peter,”
replied Old Mother Nature pleasantly. “The
largest living animal is a Whale, a true mammal and
not a fish at all, as some people appear to think.
There are several kinds of Whales, some of them comparatively
small and some the largest animals in the world, so
large that I cannot give you any idea of how big they
are. Beside one of these, the biggest Walrus
would look like a baby. But the Whales do not
belong just to this country, so I think we will not
include them.
“Now we will close school.
I hope you have enjoyed learning as much as I have
enjoyed teaching, and I hope that what you have learned
will be of use to you as long as you live. The
more knowledge you possess the better fitted for your
part in the work of the Great World you will be.
Don’t forget that, and never miss a chance
to learn.”
And so ended Old Mother Nature’s
school in the Green Forest. One by one her little
pupils thanked her for all she had taught them, and
then started for home. Peter Rabbit was the last.
“I know ever and ever so much
more than I did when I first came to you, but I guess
that after all I know very little of all there is
to know,” said he shyly, which shows that Peter
really had learned a great deal. Then he started
for the dear Old Briar-patch, lipperty-lipperty-lip.