The Young Voyagers: Or the Boy Hunters in the NorthTicknor and Fields, 1857 - Всего страниц: 354 |
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Стр. 39
... length he rose within a few feet of their margin , and diving again was seen no more ! He had crept in among the sedge , and no doubt was lying with only his head , or part of it , above the water , his body concealed by the broad ...
... length he rose within a few feet of their margin , and diving again was seen no more ! He had crept in among the sedge , and no doubt was lying with only his head , or part of it , above the water , his body concealed by the broad ...
Стр. 46
... length , though there are males still larger , some of them measuring five feet . Its color is white , except upon the head and back part of the neck , where there is a coppery tinge . The bill and feet are black . From the angle of the ...
... length , though there are males still larger , some of them measuring five feet . Its color is white , except upon the head and back part of the neck , where there is a coppery tinge . The bill and feet are black . From the angle of the ...
Стр. 49
... length . Its specific name ' trumpeter ' ( C. buccinator ) is given to it on account of its note , which resembles the sound of a French horn , or trum- pet , played at a distance . The bird is white , with black bill and feet , and has ...
... length . Its specific name ' trumpeter ' ( C. buccinator ) is given to it on account of its note , which resembles the sound of a French horn , or trum- pet , played at a distance . The bird is white , with black bill and feet , and has ...
Стр. 50
... length , and weighing only fourteen pounds , while the hooper is over twenty pounds in weight , and the trumpeter is often obtained of the enormous weight of thirty ! " Bewick's swan is also said to be identical with one of Brehm's ...
... length , and weighing only fourteen pounds , while the hooper is over twenty pounds in weight , and the trumpeter is often obtained of the enormous weight of thirty ! " Bewick's swan is also said to be identical with one of Brehm's ...
Стр. 56
... length of time , would become soaked and heavy , and would not run so well . When kept all night , bot- tom upward , it drips and becomes dryer and lighter . In the morning , at the commencement of the day's journey , it sits higher ...
... length of time , would become soaked and heavy , and would not run so well . When kept all night , bot- tom upward , it drips and becomes dryer and lighter . In the morning , at the commencement of the day's journey , it sits higher ...
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America animal appeared Arctic Arctic fox Arctic Sea bank bark Barren Grounds Basil and Norman Bewick's swan birch birds boys buck buffalo bull camp canoe caribou carried color course cousin creature deer ducks eagle eyes feet fire fish François fur countries grouse gunwale head heard hill hooper horns Hudson's Bay Hudson's Bay Company hundred yards hunt hunter Indians journey killed kind knew Lake Winnipeg latter length looked Lucien Marengo marmots miles moose naturalist nearly nest night North ospray paddles pemmican piece prairie prey quadruped reach Red River regions rifle rock rope seen shore shot side skin Slave Lake snow snowy owl soon species spot stood stream surface swan thing thongs timber travellers tree trumpeter TRUMPETER SWAN uttered wapiti wild willows wings winter wolf wolverene wolves woods young voyageurs Zizania aquatica
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Стр. 350 - The owl measured exactly two feet in length from the point of the bill to the end of the tail ; and its " alar spread," as naturalists term it, was full five feet in extent.
Стр. 201 - of great importance in the Fur Countries, as they furnish at certain seasons in the year, in many extensive districts, almost the only article of food that can be procured. The arrival of the water-fowl marks the commencement of spring, and diffuses as much joy among the wandering hunters of the arctic regions as the harvest or vintage excites in more genial climes.
Стр. 129 - Lake Winnipeg is remarkable, as being in the very centre of the North American Continent, and may be called the centre of the canoe navigation. From this point it is possible to travel by water to Hudson's Bay on the north-east, to the Atlantic Ocean on the east, to the Gulf of Mexico on the south, to the Pacific on the west, and to the Polar Sea on the north and northwest. Considering that some of these distances are upwards of three thousand miles, it will be perceived that Lake Winnipeg holds...
Стр. 245 - A fish diet exclusively was not the thing; and as our party soon grew tired of it, the hunter Basil shouldered his rifle, and strode off into the woods in search of game. The others remained working upon the cabin, which was still far from being finished. Basil kept along the edge of the lake in an easterly direction. He had not gone more than a quarter of a mile, when he came upon a dry gravelly ridge, which was thickly covered with a species of pine-trees that resembled the Scotch fir (Pinus sylveslris).
Стр. 35 - He had the current in his favour — so had they. He had oars or paddles — his feet; they had oars as well. He " carried sail," while they spread not a " rag." The wind chanced to blow directly down-stream, and the broad wings of the bird, held out from his body, and half extended, caught the very pith of the breeze on their...
Стр. 37 - From this forest the strange cry had proceeded, and from the right bank. Its echoes had hardly ceased, when it was answered by a similar cry from the trees upon the left. So like were the two, that it seemed as if some one of God's wild creatures was mocking another. These cries were hideous enough to frighten any one not used to them. They had not that effect upon our voyageurs, who knew their import. One and all of them were familiar with the voice of the white-headed eagle!
Стр. 51 - The swans are eagerly hunted, both by the Indians and white hunters. Their skins, with the quills and down, form a source of profit to the natives of the fur countries, who dispose of them to the Hudson's Bay Company. In some years as many as ten thousand skins have been exported, and sold at the rate of six or seven shillings each. Most of the skins thus sold were those of the trumpeter swans, which are the most numerous.
Стр. 38 - Instead of rising into the air, as he had purposed, he suddenly lowered his head, and disappeared under the water. Again was heard the wild scream and the maniac laugh ; and the next moment, an eagle swept out from the timber, and, after a few strokes of its broad wing, poised itself over the spot where the trumpeter had gone down. The other, its mate, was seen crossing at the same tune from the opposite side. XXVL— THE SAME, CONCLUDED. PRESENTLY the swan rose to the surface ; but his head was...