Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

For some reason, the musk-ox herds do not seem to have perceptibly increased since man first encountered them.  The number alive to-day appears to be no greater than it was fifty years ago; and this leads to the conclusion that the present delicate balance could easily be disturbed the wrong way.  Fortunately, it seems reasonably certain that the Indians of the Canadian Barren Grounds, the Eskimo of the far north, and the stray explorers all live outside the haunts of the species, and come in touch only with the edge of the musk-ox population as a whole.  This leads us to hope and believe that, through the difficulties involved in reaching them, the main bodies of musk-ox of both species are safe from extermination.

At the same time, the time has come for Canada, the United States and Denmark to join in formulating a stiff law for the prevention of wholesale slaughter of musk-ox for sport.  It should be rendered impossible for another sportsman to kill twenty-three head in one day, as once occurred.  Give the sportsman a bag of three bulls, and no more.  To this, no true sportsman will object, and the objections of game-hogs only serve to confirm the justice of the thing they oppose.

THE GRIZZLY BEAR.—­To many persons it may seem strange that anyone should feel disposed to accord protection to such fierce predatory animals as grizzly bears, lions and tigers.  But the spirit of fair play springs eternal in some human breasts.  The sportsmen of the world do not stick at using long-range, high-power repeating rifles on big game, but they draw the line this side of traps, poisons and extermination.  The sportsmen of India once thought,—­for about a year and a day,—­that it was permissible to kill troublesome and expensive tigers by poison.  Mr. G.P.  Sanderson tried it, and when his strychnine operations promptly developed three bloated and disgusting tiger carcasses, even his native followers revolted at the principle.  That was the alpha and omega of Sanderson’s poisoning activities.

I am quite sure that if the extermination of the tiger from the whole of India were possible, and the to-be or not-to-be were put to a vote of the sportsmen of India, the answer would be a thundering "No!" Says Major J. Stevenson-Hamilton in his “Animal Life in Africa:”  “It is impossible to contemplate the use against the lion of any other weapon than the rifle.”

The real sportsmen and naturalists of America are decidedly opposed to the extermination of the grizzly bear.  They feel that the wilds of North America are wide enough for the accommodation of many grizzlies, without crowding the proletariat.  A Rocky Mountain without a grizzly upon it, or at least a bear of some kind, is only half a mountain,—­commonplace and tame.  Put one two-year-old grizzly cub upon it, and presto! every cubic yard of its local atmosphere reeks with romantic uncertainty and fearsome thrills.

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Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.