<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2></div>
<p class="caption3">NOMADS OF THE FOREST</p>
<p>Three days after the field meet we left with Tserin
Dorchy and two other Mongols for a wapiti hunt. We
rode along the Terelche River for three miles, sometimes
splashing through the soggy edges of a marsh, and
again halfway up a hillside where the ground was firm
and hard; then, turning west on a mountain slope, we
came to a low plateau which rolled away in undulating
sweeps of hush-land between the edges of the dark pine
woods. It was a truly boreal landscape; we were on the
edge of the forest, which stretches in a vast, rolling sea
of green far beyond the Siberian frontier.</p>
<p>From the summit of the table-land we descended between
dark walls of pine trees to a beautiful valley filled
with parklike openings. Just at dark Tserin Dorchy
turned abruptly into the stream and crossed to a pretty
grove of spruces on a little island formed by two
branches of the river. It was as secluded as a cavern,
and made an ideal place in which to camp. A hundred
feet away the tent was invisible and, save for the tiny
wreaths of smoke which curled above the tree-tops,
there was no sign of our presence there.</p>
<p>After dinner Tserin Dorchy shouldered a pack of
skins and went to a "salt lick" in a meadow west of camp
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">- 162 -</span>
to spend the night. He returned in the first gray light
of dawn, just as I was making coffee, and reported that
he had heard wapiti barking, but that no animals had
visited the lick. He directed me to go along the hillsides
north of camp, while the Mongol hunters struck
westward across the mountains.</p>
<p>I had not been gone an hour, and had just worked
across the lower end of a deep ravine, when I heard a
wapiti bark above and behind me. It was a hoarse roar,
exactly like a roebuck, except that it was deeper toned
and louder. I was thrilled as though by an electric current.
It seemed very far away, much farther than it
really was, and as I crept to the summit of a ridge a
splendid bull wapiti broke through the underbrush. He
had been feeding in the bottom of the ravine and saw
my head instantly as it appeared above the sky line.
There was no chance to shoot because of the heavy
cover; and even when he paused for a moment on the
opposite hillside a screen of tree branches was in my
way.</p>
<p>Absolutely disgusted with myself, I followed the animal's
trail until it was lost in the heavy forest. The
wapiti was gone for good, but on the way back to camp
I picked up a roebuck which acted as some balm to my
injured feelings.</p>
<p>I had climbed to the crest of the mountains enclosing
the valley in which we were camped, and was working
slowly down the rim of a deep ravine. In my soft
leather moccasins I could walk over the springy moss
without a sound, and suddenly saw a yellow-red form
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">- 163 -</span>
moving about in a luxurious growth of grass and tinted
leaves. My heart missed a beat, for I thought it was a
wapiti.</p>
<p>Instantly I dropped behind a bush and, as the animal
moved into the open, I saw it was an enormous roebuck
bearing a splendid pair of antlers. I watched him for
a moment, then aimed low behind the foreleg and fired.
The deer bounded into the air and rolled to the bottom
of the ravine, kicking feebly; my bullet had burst the
heart. It was one of the few times I have ever seen an
animal instantly killed with a heart shot for usually
they run a few yards, and then suddenly collapse.</p>
<p>The buck was almost as large as the first one I had
killed with Tserin Dorchy but it had a twisted right
antler. Evidently it had been injured during the animal's
youth and had continued to grow at right angles
to the head, instead of straight up in the normal way.</p>
<p>When I reached camp I found Yvette busily picking
currants in the bushes beside the stream. Her face and
hands were covered with red stains and she looked like
a very naughty little boy who had run away from school
for a day in the woods. Although blueberries grew on
every hillside, we never found strawberries, such as the
Russians in Urga gather on the Bogdo-ol, and only one
patch of raspberries on a burned-off mountain slope;
But the currants were delicious when smothered in
sugar.</p>
<p>Yvette and I rode out to the spot where I had killed
the roebuck to bring it in on Kublai Khan and before
we returned the Mongol hunters had reached camp;
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">- 164 -</span>
neither of them had seen game of any kind. During
the day we discovered some huge trout in the stream
almost at our door. We had no hooks or hues, but the
Mongols devised a way to catch the fish which brought
us food, although it would have made a sportsman
shiver. They built a dam of stones across the stream
and one man waded slowly along, beating the water
with a branch to drive the trout out of the pools into the
ripples; then we dashed into the water and tried to catch
them with our hands. At least a dozen got away but we
secured three by cornering them among the rocks.</p>
<p>They were huge trout, nearly three feet long. Unfortunately
I was not able to preserve any of them and
I do not know what species they represented. The
Mongols and Chinese often catch the same fish in the
Tola River by means of nets and we sometimes bought
them in Urga. One, which we put on the scales, weighed
nine pounds. Although Ted MacCallie tried to catch
them with a fly at Urga he never had any success but
they probably would take live bait.</p>
<p>August 20 was our second day in camp. At dawn
I was awakened by the patter of rain on the tent and
soon it became a steady downpour. There was no use
in hunting and I went back to sleep. At seven o'clock
Chen, who was fussing about the fire, rushed over to say
that he could see two wapiti on the opposite mountain.
Yvette and I scrambled out of our sleeping bags just
in time to see a doe and a fawn silhouetted against the
sky rim as they disappeared over the crest. Half an
hour later they returned, and I tried a stalk but I lost
them in the fog and rain. Tserin Dorchy believed that
the animals had gone into a patch of forest on the other
side of the mountain. We tried to drive them out but
the only thing that appeared was a four-year-old roebuck
which the Mongol killed with a single shot.</p>
<p class="tdr">PLATE XII</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_xiia.png" width-obs="631" height-obs="449" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">WRESTLERS AT TERELCHE VALLEY FIELD MEET</div>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate_xiib.png" width-obs="618" height-obs="444" alt="" /> <div class="caption4">WOMEN SPECTATORS AT THE FIELD MEET</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">- 165 -</span></p>
<p>We had ridden up the mountain by zigzagging across
the slope, but when we started back I was astounded to
see Tserin Dorchy keep to his saddle. The wet grass
was so slippery that I could not even stand erect and
half the time was sliding on my back, while Kublai Khan
picked his way carefully down the steep descent. The
Mongol never left his horse till we reached camp.
Sometimes he even urged the pony to a trot and, moreover,
had the roebuck strapped behind his saddle. I
would not have ridden down that mountain side for all
the deer in Mongolia!</p>
<p>It had begun to rain in earnest by eleven o'clock, and
we spent a quiet afternoon. There is a charm about a
rainy day when one can read comfortably and let it
pour. The steady patter on the tent gives one the delightful
sensation of immediately escaping extreme discomfort.
There is no pleasure in being warm unless
the weather is cold; and one never realizes how agreeable
it is to be dry unless the day is wet. This day was
very wet indeed. We had a month's accumulation of
unopened magazines which a Mongol had brought to
our base camp just before we left, so there was no chance
of being bored. The fire had been built half under a
huge, back-log which kept a cheery glow of coals
throughout all the downpour, and Chen made us
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">- 166 -</span>
"<i>chowdzes</i>"—delicious little balls of meat mixed with
onions and seasoned with Chinese sauce. The Mongols
slept and ate and slept some more. We ate and slept
and read. Therefore, we were very happy.</p>
<p>The weather during that summer in the forest was a
source of constant surprise to us. We had never seen
such rapid changes from brilliant sunshine to sheets of
rain. For an hour or two the sky might stretch above
us like a vast blue curtain flecked with tiny masses of
snow-white clouds. Suddenly, a leaden blanket would
spread itself over every inch of celestial space, while a
rush of rain and wind changed the forest to a black chaos
of writhing branches and dripping leaves. In fifteen
minutes the storm would sweep across the mountain
tops, and the sun would again flood our peaceful valley
with the golden light of early autumn.</p>
<p>For autumn had already reached us even though the
season was only mid-August. It was like October in
New York, and we had nightly frosts which withered the
countless flowers and turned the leaves to red and gold.
In the morning, when I crossed the meadows to the
forest, the grass was white with frost and crackled beneath
my feet like delicate threads of spun glass. My
moccasins were powdered with gleaming crystals of
frozen dew, but at the first touch of sun every twig and
leaf and blade of grass began to drip, as though from a
heavy rain. My feet and legs waist-high were soaked
in half an hour, and at the end of the morning hunt I
was as wet as though I had waded a dozen rivers.</p>
<p>One cannot move on foot in northern Mongolia without
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">- 167 -</span>
the certainty of a thorough wetting. When the sun
has dried the dew, there are swamps and streamlets in
every valley and even far up the mountain slopes. It
is the heavy rainfall, the rich soil, and the brilliant
sunshine that make northern Mongolia a paradise of
luxurious grass and flowers, even though the real summer
lasts only from May till August. Then, the valleys
are like an exquisite garden and the woods are
ablaze with color. Bluebells, their stalks bending under
the weight of blossoms, clothe every hillside in a glorious
azure dress bespangled with yellow roses, daisies, and
forget-me-nots. But I think I like the wild poppies
best of all, for their delicate, fragile beauty is wonderfully
appealing. I learned to love them first in Alaska,
where their pale, yellow faces look up happily from the
storm-swept hills of the Pribilof Islands in the Bering
Sea.</p>
<p>Besides its flowers, this northern country is one of
exceeding beauty. The dark green forests of spruce,
larch and pine, broken now and then by a grove of
poplars or silver birches, the secluded valleys and the
rounded hills are strangely restful and give one a sense
of infinite peace. It is a place to go for tired nerves.
Ragged peaks, towering mountains, and yawning
chasms, splendid as they are, may be subtly disturbing,
engendering a feeling of restlessness and vague depression.
There is none of this in the forests of Mongolia.
We felt as though we might be happy there all our lives—the
mad rush of our other world seemed very far
away and not much worth while.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">- 168 -</span></p>
<p>As yet this land has been but lightly touched by the
devastating hand of man. A log road cuts the forest
here and there and sometimes we saw a train of ox-carts
winding through the trees; but the primitive beauty of
the mountains remains unmarred, save where a hillside
has been swept by fire. In all our wanderings through
the forests we saw no evidences of occupation by the
Mongols except the wood roads and a few scattered
charcoal pits. These were old and moss-grown, and
save for ourselves the valleys were deserted.</p>
<p>One morning while I was hunting north of camp, I
heard a wapiti roar on the summit of a mountain. I
found its tracks in the soft earth of a game trail which
wound through forest so dense that I could hardly see
a dozen yards. As I stole along the path I heard a sudden
sneeze exactly like that of a human being and saw
a small, dark animal dash off the trail. I stopped instantly
and slowly sank to the ground, kneeling motionless,
with my rifle ready. For five minutes I
remained there—the silence of the forest broken only by
the clucking of a hazel grouse above my head. Then
came that sneeze again, sounding even more human
than before. I heard a nervous patter of tiny hoofs,
and the animal sneezed from the bushes at my right. I
kept as motionless as a statue, and the sneezes followed
each other in rapid succession, accompanied by impatient
stampings and gentle rustlings in the brush.
Then I saw a tiny head emerge from behind a leafy
screen and a pair of brilliant eyes gazing at me steadily.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">- 169 -</span>
Very, very slowly I raised the rifle until the stock
nestled against my cheek; then I fired quickly.</p>
<p>Running to the spot where the head had been I found
a beautiful brown-gray animal lying behind a bush. It
was no larger than a half-grown fawn, but on either side
of its mouth two daggerlike tusks projected, slender,
sharp and ivory white. It was a musk deer—the first
living, wild one I had ever seen. Even before I touched
the body I inhaled a heavy, not unpleasant, odor of
musk and discovered the gland upon the abdomen. It
was three inches long and two inches wide, but all the
hair on the rump and belly was strongly impregnated
with the odor.</p>
<p>These little deer are eagerly sought by the natives
throughout the Orient, as musk is valuable for perfume.
In Urga the Mongols could sell a "pod" for five dollars
(silver) and in other parts of China it is worth considerably
more. When we were in Yün-nan we frequently
heard of a musk buyer whom the Paris
perfumer, Pinaud, maintained in the remote mountain
village of Atunzi, on the Tibetan frontier.</p>
<p>Because of their commercial value the little animals
are relentlessly persecuted in every country which they
inhabit and in some places they have been completely
exterminated. Those in Mongolia are particularly difficult
to kill, since they live only on the mountain summits
in the thickest forests. Indeed, were it not for their
insatiable curiosity it would be almost impossible ever
to shoot them.</p>
<p>They might be snared, of course, but I never saw any
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">- 170 -</span>
traps or devices for catching animals which the Mongols
used; they seem to depend entirely upon their guns.
This is quite unlike the Chinese, Koreans, Manchus,
Malays, and other Orientals with whom I have hunted,
for they all have developed ingenious snares, pitfalls
and traps.</p>
<p>The musk sac is present only in the male deer and is,
of course, for the purpose of attracting the does. Unfortunately,
it is not possible to distinguish the sexes
except upon close examination, for both are hornless,
and as a result the natives sometimes kill females which
they would prefer to leave unmolested.</p>
<p>The musk deer use their tusks for fighting and also
to dig up the food upon which they live. I frequently
found new pine cones which they had torn apart to get
at the soft centers. During the winter they develop an
exceedingly long, thick coat of hair which, however, is
so brittle that it breaks almost like dry pine needles;
consequently, the skins have but little commercial value.</p>
<p>Late one rainy afternoon Tserin Dorchy and I rode
into a beautiful valley not far from where we were
camped. When well in the upper end, we left our horses
and proceeded on foot toward the summit of a ridge on
which he had killed a bear a month earlier.</p>
<p>Motioning me to walk to the crest of the ridge from
the other side, the old man vanished like a ghost among
the trees. When I was nearly at the top I reached the
edge of a small patch of burned forest. In the half
darkness the charred stumps and skeleton trees were as
black as ebony. As I was about to move into the open
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">- 171 -</span>
I saw an object which at first seemed to be a curiously
shaped stump. I looked at it casually, then something
about it arrested my attention. Suddenly a tail switched
nervously and I realized that the "stump" was an enormous
wild boar standing head-on, watching me.</p>
<p>I fired instantly, but even as I pressed the trigger
the animal moved and I knew that the bullet would
never reach its mark. But my brain could not telegraph
to my finger quickly enough to stop its action and the
boar dashed away unharmed. It was the largest pig
I have ever seen. As he stood on the summit of the
ridge he looked almost as big as a Mongol pony. It was
too dark to follow the animal so I returned to camp, a
very dejected man.</p>
<p>I have never been able to forget that boar and I suppose
I never shall. Later, I killed others but they can
never destroy the memory of that enormous animal as
he stood there looking down at me. Had I realized that
it was a pig only the fraction of a second sooner it would
have been a different story. But that is the fortune of
shooting. In no other sport is the line between success
and failure so closely drawn; of course, it is that which
makes it so fascinating. At the end of a long day's hunt
one chance may be given; then all depends on a clear
eye, a steady hand and, above all, judgment. In your
action in that single golden second rests the success or
failure of, perhaps, a season's trip. You may have traveled
thousands of miles, spent hundreds of dollars, and
had just one shot at the "head of heads."</p>
<p>Some men tell me that they never get excited when
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">- 172 -</span>
they hunt. Thank God, I do. There would be no fun
at all for me if I <i>didn't</i> get excited. But, fortunately,
it all comes after the crucial moment. When the stock
of the rifle settles against my cheek and I look across
the sights, I am as cold as steel. I can shoot, and keep
on shooting, with every brain cell concentrated on the
work in hand but when it is done, for better or worse,
I get the reaction which makes it all worth while.</p>
<p>One morning, a week after we had been in camp,
Tserin Dorchy and I discovered a cow and a calf wapiti
feeding in an open forest. It was a delight to see how
the old Mongol stalked the deer, slipping from tree to
bush, sometimes on his knees or flat on his face in the
soft moss carpet. When we were two hundred yards
away we drew up behind a stump. I took the cow,
while Tserin Dorchy covered the calf and at the sound
of our rifles both animals went down for good. I was
glad to have them for specimens because we never got
a shot at a bull in Mongolia, although twice I lost one
by the merest chance. One of our hunters brought in
a three-year-old moose a short time after we got the
wapiti and another had a long chase after a wounded
bear.</p>
<p>It was the first week in September when we returned
to the base camp, our ponies heavily loaded with skins
and antlers. The Chinese taxidermists under my direction
had made a splendid collection of small mammals,
and we had pretty thoroughly exhausted the resources
of the forests in the Terelche region. Therefore, Yvette
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">- 173 -</span>
and I decided that it would be well to ride into Urga
and make arrangements for our return to Peking.</p>
<p>We did the fifty miles with the greatest ease and
spent the night with Mamen in Mai-ma-cheng. Next
day Mr. and Mrs. MacCallie arrived, much to our delight.
They were to spend the winter in Urga on business
and they brought a supply of much needed ammunition,
photographic plates, traps and my Mannlicher
rifle. This equipment had been shipped from
New York ten months earlier but had only just reached
Peking and been released from the Customs through
the heroic efforts of Mr. Guptil.</p>
<p>We had another two weeks' hunting trip before we
said good-by to Mongolia but it netted few results.
All the valleys, which had been deserted when we were
there before, were filled with Mongols cutting hay for
the winter feed of their sheep and goats. Of course,
every camp was guarded by a dog or two, and their continual
barking had driven the moose, elk, and bear far
back into the deepest forests where we had no time to
follow.</p>
<p>Mr. and Mrs. MacCallie had taken a house in Urga,
just opposite the Russian Consulate, and they entertained
us while I packed our collections which were
stored in Andersen, Meyer's godown. It was a full
week's work, for we had more than a thousand specimens.
The forests of Mongolia had yielded up their
treasures as we had not dared to hope they would, and
we left them with almost as much regret as we had left
the plains.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">- 174 -</span></p>
<p>October first the specimens started southward on
camel back. Kublai Khan, my pony, went with them,
while we left in the Chinese Government motor cars.
For two hundred miles we rushed over the same plains
which, a few months earlier, we had laboriously crossed
with our caravan. Every spot was pregnant with delightful
memories. At this well we had camped for a
week and hunted antelope; in that ragged mass of rocks
we had killed a wolf; out on the Turin plain we had
trapped twenty-six marmots in an enormous colony.</p>
<p>Those had been glorious days and our hearts were sad
as we raced back to Peking and civilization. But one
bright spot remained—we need not yet leave our beloved
East! Far to the south, in brigand-infested mountains
on the edge of China, there dwelt a herd of bighorn
sheep, the <i>argali</i> of the Mongols. Among them was a
great ram, and we had learned his hiding place. How
we got him is another story.</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">- 175 -</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />