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<h2> CHAPTER XXXVII Thunderfoot, Fleetfoot and Longcoat </h2>
<p>"Who remembers the name of the order to which all members of the Deer
family belong?" asked Old Mother Nature.</p>
<p>"I remember what it means, but not the name," spoke up Happy Jack
Squirrel. "It means hoofed."</p>
<p>"It is Un—Un-Ungu—" began Peter Rabbit and then stopped. For
the life of him he couldn't think of the rest.</p>
<p>"Ungulata," Old Mother Nature finished for him. "And Happy Jack has the
meaning right. It is the order to which all hoofed animals belong. There
are several families in the order, one of which you already have learned
about—the Deer family. Now comes the family of Cattle and Sheep. It
is called the Bovidae family, and the biggest and most important member is
Thunderfoot the Bison, commonly called Buffalo.</p>
<p>"Thunderfoot is more closely related to Bossy, Farmer Brown's Cow, than
are the members of the Deer family, for he has true horns, not antlers.
These are hollow and are not dropped each year, but are carried through
life. Mrs. Thunderfoot has them also. The horns grow out from the sides of
the forehead and then curve upward and inward, and are smooth and sharp.
They are never branched.</p>
<p>"Thunderfoot is a great, heavy fellow the size of Farmer Brown's Ox, and
has a great hump on his shoulders. He carries his head low and from his
throat hangs a great beard. His head is large and is so covered with
thick, curly hair that it appears much larger than it really is. His tail
is rather short and ends in a tassel of hair. The hair on his body and
hind quarters is short and light brown, but on his shoulders and neck and
his fore legs to the knees it is long and shaggy, dark brown above and
almost black below."</p>
<p>"He must be a queer looking fellow," spoke up Chatterer the Red Squirrel.</p>
<p>"He is," replied Old Mother Nature. "The front half of him looks so much
bigger than the rear half that it almost seems as if they didn't belong
together."</p>
<p>"What does he eat?" asked Jumper the Hare.</p>
<p>"Grass," replied Old Mother Nature promptly. "He grazes just as does
Bossy. When the weather becomes hot his thick coat, although much of it
has been shed, becomes most uncomfortable. Also he is tormented by flies.
Then he delights in rolling in mud until he is plastered with it from head
to feet.</p>
<p>"Many years ago there were more Bison than any other large animal in this
country, and they were found in nearly all parts of it. Some lived in the
woods and were called Wood Buffaloes, but the greatest number lived on the
great plains and prairies, where the grass was plentiful. I have told you
about the great herd of Barren Ground Caribou, but this is nothing to the
great herds of Bison that used to move north or south, according to the
season, across the great prairies. In the fall they moved south. In the
spring they moved north, following the new grass as it appeared. When they
galloped, the noise of their feet was like thunder.</p>
<p>"But the hunters with terrible guns came and killed them for their skins,
killed them by hundreds of thousands, and in just a few years those great
herds became only a memory. Thunderfoot, once Lord of the Prairies, was
driven out of all his great kingdom, and the Bison, from being the most
numerous of all large animals, is to-day reduced to just a few hundreds,
and most of these are kept in parks by man. Barely in time did man make
laws to protect Thunderfoot. Without this protection he would not exist
to-day.</p>
<p>"A close neighbor of Thunderfoot's in the days when he was Lord of the
Prairies was Fleetfoot the Antelope. Fleetfoot is about the size of a
small Deer, and in his graceful appearance reminds one of Lightfoot, for
he has the same trim body and long slim legs. He is built for speed and
looks it. From just a glance at him you would know him for a runner just
as surely as a look at Jumper the Hare would tell you that he must travel
in great bounds. The truth is, Fleetfoot is the fastest runner among all
my children in this country. Not one can keep up with him in a race.</p>
<p>"Fleetfoot's coat is a light yellowish-brown on the back and white
underneath. His forehead is brown and the sides of his face white. His
throat and under side of his neck are white, crossed by two bands of
brown. His hoofs, horns and eyes are black, and there is a black spot
under each ear. Near the end of his nose he is also black, and down the
back of his neck is a black line of stiff longer hairs. A large white
patch surrounds his short tail. Who remembers what I told you about
Antelope Jack, the big Jack Hare of the Southwest?"</p>
<p>"I do!" cried Peter Rabbit and Jumper the Hare together.</p>
<p>"What was it, Jumper?" asked Old Mother Nature.</p>
<p>"You said that he has a way of making the white of his sides seem to grow
so that he seems almost all white, and can signal his friends in this
way," replied Jumper.</p>
<p>"Quite right," replied Old Mother Nature. "I am glad to find that you
remember so well. Fleetfoot does the same thing with this white patch
around his tail. The hairs are quite long and he can make them spread out
so that that white patch becomes much larger, and when he is running it
can be seen flashing in the sun long after he is so far away that nothing
else of him can be seen. His eyes are wonderfully keen, so by means of
these white patches he and his friends can signal each other when they are
far apart.</p>
<p>"Fleetfoot has true horns, but they are unlike any other horns in that
they are shed every year, just like the antlers of the Deer family. They
grow straight up just over the eyes, are rather short, and fork. One
branch is much shorter than the other, and the longer one is turned over
at the end like a hook. From these horns he gets the name of Pronghorn.</p>
<p>"When running from danger he carries his head low and makes long leaps.
When not frightened he trots and holds his head high and proudly. He
prefers flat open country, and there is no more beautiful sight on all the
great plains of the West than a band of Fleetfoot and his friends. He is
social and likes the company of his own kind.</p>
<p>"The time was when these beautiful creatures were almost as numerous as
the Bison, but like the latter they have been killed until now there is
real danger that unless man protects them better than he is doing there
will come a day when the last Antelope will be killed, and one of the most
beautiful and interesting of all my children will be but a memory."</p>
<p>There was a note of great sadness in Old Mother Nature's voice. For a few
minutes no one spoke. All were thinking of the terrible thing that had
happened at the hands of man to the great hosts of two of the finest
animals in all this great land, the Bison and Antelope, and there was
bitterness in the heart of each one, for there was not one there who did
not himself have cause to fear man.</p>
<p>Old Mother Nature was the first to break the silence. "Now," said she, "I
will tell you of the oddest member of the Cattle and Sheep family. It is
Longcoat the Musk Ox, and he appears to belong wholly neither to the
Cattle nor the Sheep branch of the family, but to both. He connects the
two branches in appearance, reminding one somewhat of a small Bison and at
the same time having things about him very like a Sheep.</p>
<p>"Longcoat the Musk Ox lives in the Farthest North, the land of snow and
ice. He has been found very near the Arctic Ocean, and how he finds enough
to eat in the long winter is a mystery to those who know that snow-covered
land. He is a heavily built, round-bodied animal with short, stout legs,
shoulders so high that they form a hump, a low-hung head and sheeplike
face, heavy horns which are flat and broad at the base and meet at the
center of the forehead, sweeping down on each side of the head and then
turning up in sharp points. His tail is so short that it is hidden in the
long hair which covers him.</p>
<p>"This hair is so long that it hangs down on each side so that often it
touches the snow and hides his legs nearly down to his feet. In color it
is very dark-brown, almost black, and on his sides is straight. But on his
shoulders it is curly. In the middle of the back is a patch of shorter
dull-gray hair.</p>
<p>"Underneath this coat of long hair is another coat of woolly, fine
light-brown hair, so close that neither cold nor rain can get through it.
It is this warm coat that makes it possible for him to live in that
terribly cold region. He is about twice as heavy as a big Deer. At times
he gives off a musky odor, and it is from this that he gets his name of
Musk Ox.</p>
<p>"Longcoat is seldom found alone, but usually with a band of his friends.
This is partly for protection from his worst enemies, the Wolves. When the
latter appear, Longcoat and his friends form a circle with their heads
out, and it is only a desperately hungry Wolf that will try to break
through that line of sharp-pointed horns.</p>
<p>"In rough, rocky country he is as sure-footed as a Sheep. In the short
summer of that region he finds plenty to eat, but in winter he has to paw
away the snow to get at the moss and other plants buried beneath it.
Practically all other animals living so far North have white coats, but
Longcoat retains his dark coat the year through.</p>
<p>"My, how time flies! This is all for to-day. To-morrow I will tell you of
two wonderful mountain climbers who go with ease where even man cannot
follow."</p>
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