<h2> <SPAN name="chap_11" id="chap_11"></SPAN> <a>CHAPTER XI</SPAN><br/><span>THE TROUBLES OF A FATHER</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Every</span> young cub, I imagine, gets into about the
same amount of trouble and causes about the
same worry and anxiety to his parents. I know
that little Wahka took the earliest possible
opportunity of getting himself stuck full of
porcupine quills, and I do not suppose he made
any more fuss when his mother pulled them out
than I had done under similar circumstances five
summers before. He nearly drowned himself by
tumbling into the swiftest part of the stream that
he could find, and when I laughed at him, shivering
and whining, while his mother alternately
licked and cuffed him on the head, I could not
help thinking of my own misery when I went
downhill into the snow.</p>
<p>As I looked at him, so preposterously small,
and fluffy, and brown, it was, as I said at the
beginning, hard to believe that I was ever quite
like that. But I recognised myself in things that
he did fifty times a day.</p>
<p>Kahwa, too, was exactly like the other little
Kahwa, her aunt who was dead. Wahka would
be sitting looking into the air at nothing, as cubs
do, when she would steal up behind him and
make a sudden grab at his hind-foot. I could
remember just how it felt when her teeth caught
hold. And he would roll over on his side, squealing,
and smack her head until she let go. In a
few minutes they were perfectly good friends again
hunting squirrels up the trees, and standing down
below with open mouths, waiting for them to drop
in. I showed them how to play at pulling each
other down the hill, and often of an afternoon
I would sit with my own back against the tree,
and invite them to pull me down. Then it was
just as it used to be. Wahka came at me on
one side, slowly and doggedly, almost in silence,
but intensely in earnest, while on the other side
Kahwa rushed on me like a little whirlwind,
yapping and snarling, and scuffling all over me
with her mouth wide open to grab anything that
was within reach—the same ferocious, reckless
little spitfire as I had known years ago. They
were good children, I think. At all events,
Wooffa and I were very proud of them, and she
used to spend an astonishing amount of time licking
them, and combing them, and smacking their little
woolly heads.</p>
<p>Then we began to take them out and teach them
how to find food, and what food to eat; that the
easiest way to get at a lily bulb is not to scrabble
at it with both paws straight down, but to scoop
it out with one good scrape from the side; how
to wipe off the top of an ant-hill at one smooth
stroke; how to distinguish the wild-onion by its
smell; and what the young shoots of the white
camas look like. They soon learned not to pass
any fair-sized stone without turning it over to
look for the insects beneath, and also that it is
useless to go on turning the same stone over and
over again to keep looking at the ‘other side.’
Every fallen log had to be carefully inspected,
the bark ripped off where it was rotten to get at
the beetles and grubs and wood-lice underneath,
and, if it were not too heavy, the log itself should
be rolled over. We taught them that, in approaching
a log or large stone, one should always sniff well
first to see if there is a mouse or chipmunk underneath,
and, if there be fresh scent, turn it over
with one paw while holding the other ready to strike.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Mice bothered them dreadfully at first, dodging
and zigzagging round their hind-legs, and keeping
them hopping in the air, while they grabbed wildly
at the little thing that was never where it ought
to be when the paw came down to squash it. I
shall never forget the first time that Wahka found
a chipmunk by himself. He lifted a stone very
cautiously, with his nose much too close to it,
apparently expecting the chipmunk to run into
his mouth, which it did not do; but as soon as
the stone was lifted an inch it was out and on to
Wahka’s nose, and over his head, down the middle
of his back, and off into the wood. Wahka really
never saw it at all, and was spinning round and
round trying to get at the middle of his own back
after the chipmunk was a hundred yards away.</p>
<p>We took the cubs down to the stream and showed
them how to root along the edges among the grass
and weeds for frogs and snails, and water-beetles
and things, and when the trout came upstream
we caught some for them, and showed them how
to do it; but fishing is a thing that needs too
much patience to commend itself to cubs.</p>
<p>Wahka did not have any adventure with a
puma, but he had one experience which might
have been even more serious. He had wandered
away from his mother and myself, just as he had
been told hundreds of times not to do, when
suddenly there was the noise of a scuffle from
his direction, and he was screaming with all his
might. I was there in a moment, with his mother
close behind me, and saw two huge gray wolves
which had already rolled him over, and in another
instant would have done for him. We charged
them, but they were gone before we reached the
spot; and beyond a bad shaking and one scar on
his shoulder Wahka was none the worse. He
was a thoroughly frightened cub, however, and
it would have taken a great deal of persuasion to
make him leave his mother’s side for the rest of
that day. Indeed, it was necessary to be careful
for more than that day, because the wolves hung
around us, hoping still to catch either him or
Kahwa alone where they could make away with
them.</p>
<p>I dislike wolves immensely. In spite of their
size and the strength of their jaws, they are
cowardly animals, and one wolf will never attack
even a much smaller beast than himself alone, if
he can get another to help him. Bears are not
like that. We want to have our fighting to ourselves.
We would much rather have any other
bear that is near stand and look on instead of
coming to help us—unless, of course, it is a case of
husband and wife, and one or other is overmatched.
What we do, we do in the open, and
prefer that people should understand our intentions
clearly, and take us just as we are. A wolf
is exactly the opposite. He never does anything
openly that he can do in secret. He likes to keep
out of sight, and hunt by stealth, owing what he
gets to his cunning and to superior numbers,
rather than to his own individual fighting spirit.</p>
<p>We recognise that wolves know many things
that we do not; though some of them are things
that we would not want to know. And they think
us fools—but they keep out of our way. There
have indeed, I believe, been cases where a number
of wolves together have succeeded in killing a bear—not
in fair fight, but by dogging and following
him for days, preventing his either eating or
sleeping, until from sheer exhaustion he has been
unable to resist them when they have attacked
him in force and pulled him down. This, however,
could not happen in the mountains. The
wolves are only there in the summer, and then
they run in couples, or alone, or at most in families
of two old ones and the cubs together. In the
autumn they go down to the foot-hills and the
plains, and then it is only in hard weather that
they collect in packs. At that time the bears are
usually in their winter dens, and all the wolves
that were ever born could never get a bear out
of his den, where they can reach him only in
front.</p>
<p>In this case, the wolves which had attacked
Wahka seldom showed themselves, but that they
were constantly near us, and watching us, we
knew. With all their cunning, they could not
help getting between us and the wind once in a
while, and sometimes, when they were a little
distance away, we could hear them quarrelling
between themselves over some small animal they
had killed, or some scrap of food that they had
found in the forest. It is not pleasant being
shadowed, whether it is your child or yourself
that is being hunted, and we had to be extremely
cautious not to let either Kahwa or Wahka out of
our sight. Nor was it always easy, in spite of his
recent fright, to keep the latter under restraint,
for he was an independent, self-reliant youngster,
of inexhaustible inquisitiveness.</p>
<p>One day, when we knew the wolves were following
us, and we were keeping Wahka well in hand,
we met a family of elk,<SPAN name="Anchor-4" id="Anchor-4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote-4" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 4.">[4]</SPAN> two parents and quite a
young fawn, and Wahka must needs go and try
to find out all about the fawn. He meant no
harm whatever, and had no idea that there was
any danger. He only thought the fawn would
be a nice thing to play with; and before we could
stop him he had trotted straight up to it. Elk
are jealous animals, and, like all deer, in spite of
their timidity, will fight to protect their young;
and with his tremendous antlers and great strength
a big stag is a person to be let alone.</p>
<p>Wahka knew nothing about all this, and went
straight towards the fawn in the friendliest and
most confiding way. Fortunately, the stag was
some yards away, and we were able to put Wahka
on his guard in time. But it was a narrow escape,
and I do not think the stag’s antler missed his tail
by half an inch. Wooffa jumped in the stag’s way,
and for a minute it looked as if there would be
a fight. Of course it would have ended in our
killing the stag—and probably also his wife and
the fawn as well—but one or the other of us would
have been likely to have had the end of an antler
through the ribs before the fight was over.</p>
<p>The stag showed not the slightest intention of
running away, though he must have known
perfectly well that the odds were hopelessly
against him; but he stood facing Wooffa, with
his head down, snorting and pawing the ground,
and telling her to come on. She was so angry at
the attack on Wahka that for a moment she was
inclined to do it, but I spoke to her, and she cooled
down, and we moved away, leaving the stag, still
pawing the ground and shaking his head, in possession
of the field.</p>
<p>I have already said that we had had warning
that the wolves were hanging about us that day,
and we had not gone far after the meeting with
the elk before we heard that some sort of trouble
was in progress behind. It was not difficult to guess
what it was; the snarling and yapping of the
wolves, the breaking of branches, and the clashing
of the elk’s antlers, told the story. The wolves,
following us, had made up their minds that the
fawn would be easier prey and better eating than
a bear-cub; and the stag, we knew, was doing his
best to defend his young. We were very much
inclined to go down and help the stag; but we
stood and listened, and suddenly the noise stopped.
The silence that ensued was too much for our
curiosity, and back we went.</p>
<p></p>
<p>As we came near we knew that the fight
could not be altogether over, for there was still
a sound of snarling and the angry stamping of a
stag, and the sight that at last met our eyes was
one that it did us good to see.</p>
<p>There was a wide circular open space, in which
every living thing had been trampled down, and the
ground was all scored and furrowed with the mark
of hoof and antler; and in the middle stood the
stag, erect and defiant. Before him on the ground
lay the body of the he-wolf, covered with blood
and stamped almost beyond recognition. There
was blood—his own blood—on the stag’s shoulder,
and blood on his horns, which was not his own.
At the edge of the circle, lying down and panting,
lay the she-wolf, sulky and baffled, and evidently
with no mind to go on with the combat alone,
though the stag challenged her to come on.</p>
<p>When he saw us, the stag perhaps thought that
we were new enemies come to take up the cause
of the remaining wolf, for he signalled to his wife,
who with the fawn was standing behind him, and
they began to move slowly away, the deer and
fawn going first, and the stag following, moving
backwards, and keeping his antlers always towards
the enemy, till they had passed out of the circle
of cleared space into the trees. The she-wolf lay
there till they had passed, turning sulkily to snarl
at us once in a while, and then, as we stood still
and showed no sign of approaching or attacking
her, she got up and walked over to the dead body
of her husband, and began turning it over with
her nose. Next she commenced to lick him, and
then, taking the throat in her mouth, deliberately
began to bite into it! Growling and snarling, she
crouched over the body, and we left her to her
horrid meal.</p>
<p>It was a relief to know that we at least would
be no more troubled by her or her husband.</p>
<p>On the whole, life went very peaceably with
us, as it had done with my parents when Kahwa
and I were cubs in the days before man came,
and before the forest fire drove us into his arms.
This year we saw no sign of man. We had no
wish to do so, and took care not to go in any
direction where we thought we were likely to
meet him. Once in midsummer we saw the sky
to the north of us red for two or three nights with
flames in the distance, and I wondered for a while
whether history was going to repeat itself; but
the wind blew steadily from the south-west, and
the fire did not come within many miles of
us. It must, I guessed, be somewhere in the
neighbourhood of the former fire, and, of course,
it is where man is that forest fires are frequent;
for man is the only animal that makes fires for
himself, and it is from his fires that the flames
spread to the woods. Sometimes, in very dry
seasons, the woods ignite of themselves, but that
is rare.</p>
<p>Of course, as the summer grew, we moved
about and wandered abroad as in other years,
keeping in the neighbourhood of the streams,
sheltering during the heat of the day, and roaming
over the mountains in the sweet cool air of the
night and morning. We always kept together,
though, of course, the little ones clung to their
mother more than to me. I was a kind father
to them, I think, and I believe they liked and
admired me as much as young cubs ought to
like and admire their father; but, as is always
the case in families like ours, while occasionally
one of them, generally Kahwa, would wander away
from the others with me, usually Wooffa and the
youngsters kept close together while I moved
about alone, though within calling distance, in
case I should be needed. Sometimes the father
bear leaves the family altogether during the early
summer months, and either goes alone or joins
other he-bears that are solitary like himself; but
it is better for the family to stay together.
Besides, Wooffa and I suited each other admirably
as hunting companions, and I am not ashamed
to confess that I was fond of my children.</p>
<p>I began to realize what an anxiety I must have
been to my own parents, for one or the other of the
cubs was always getting into trouble. They were
sitting one day watching Wooffa and myself
trying to turn over a big log. We had warned
them again and again not to stand below a log
downhill when we were moving it, but, of course,
Kahwa had paid no attention, and, as that was
the best place from which to watch the operation,
down she sat and contentedly awaited results.
After two or three efforts we felt the log begin
to move, and then, with one heave together, we
got it started, and it rolled straight down on
Kahwa. We had been too busy to notice where
she was till we heard her squeal. It might very
easily have killed her, and as it was her hind-leg
was firmly caught, with the whole weight of the
great log resting on it. Her mother boxed her
ears, while I managed to move the log enough
to set her free; but her foot was badly crushed,
and she limped more or less for the rest of the
summer.</p>
<p>On another occasion Wahka put his head into
a slit in a hollow tree to look for honey, and
could not get it out again. I have heard of bears
being killed in that way, when the hole is some
distance from the ground. The opening will
probably be narrower towards the bottom than
it is in the middle, and when a bear climbs up
to the hole, of course he puts his head in at the
widest part. Perhaps he slips, and his neck slides
down to where the slit is narrower. If he loses
his hold altogether, his whole weight comes on
his neck, and he breaks it; and even if that does
not happen, he may not be able to raise himself
and force his neck up to the wider opening again,
but has to hang there caught in a trap until he
dies.</p>
<p>In this case Wahka’s feet were on the ground,
as the hole was quite low down, so there was
no danger of his being hanged; but he was so
frightened when he found that he could not pull
his head out again that it is quite possible that if
he had been alone he never would have succeeded
in getting loose. But his mother smacked him
until he lifted his head a little to where the hole
was an inch or so wider, and he was able to pull
out. But there was not much hair left on the
back of his ears by the time he was free.</p>
<p>With all the trouble that they gave us, however,
and though I would not have let them know it for
worlds, and always made a point of noticing their
existence as little as possible, I was proud of my
children. Wahka, especially, gave promise of growing
into a splendid bear, while Kahwa was the very
image of her mother, even down to the little white
streak on her chest, though that did not appear
until she got her second year’s coat.</p>
<p>They were good, straightforward, rollicking
youngsters who got all the pleasure out of life
that there was to be got, and enjoyed amazingly
everything that was good to eat. I shall never
forget the first time that we introduced them to
a berry-patch; and their first wild-raspberries
drove them nearly crazy. They would not go to
sleep all next day, though it was blazing hot, but
sat up while we slept, and whenever we woke
begged to be taken to look for more raspberries.</p>
<p>When winter approached, we returned to the
place where we had hibernated the previous year.
Wooffa hollowed out her den to twice its former
size, so as to hold herself and both the cubs, and
I took my old quarters close by. Winter came
slowly, and after all our preparations were made
we were able to be about for a long time, during
which we did nothing but eat and sleep, and gather
strength and fatness for the long fast that was
coming.</p>
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