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WILDLIFE ON THE ROCKIES

BY ENOS A. MILLS

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS

Boston and New York
Houghton Mifflin Company
The Riverside Press Cambridge

COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY ENOS A. MILLS

Published March 1909


To John Muir


Long's Peak from the East.

Preface

THIS book contains the record of a few of the many happy days and novel experiences which I have had in the wilds. For more than twenty years it has been my good fortune to live most of the time with nature, on the mountains of the West. I have made scores of long exploring rambles over the mountains in every season of the year, a nature-lover charmed with the birds and the trees. On my later excursions I have gone alone and without firearms. During three succeeding winters, in which I was a Government Experiment Officer and called the “State Snow Observer,” I scaled many of the higher peaks of the Rockies and made many studies on the upper slopes of these mountains.

Colorado Snow Observer” was printed in part in The Youth’s Companion, for May 18, 1905, under the title of “In the Mountain Snows”; “The Story of a Thousand-Year Pine” appeared in The World’s Work for August, 1908; and “The Beaver and his Works” is reprinted from The World To-Day for December, 1908.

E. A. M.

Contents

Colorado Snow Observer
The Story of a Thousand-Year Pine
The Beaver and his Works
The Wilds without Firearms
A Watcher on the Heights
Climbing Long’s Peak
Midget, the Return Horse
Faithful Scotch
Bob and Some Other Birds
Kinnikinick
The Lodge-Pole Pine

Rocky Mountain Forests
Besieged by Bears
Mountain Parks and Camp-Fires

Illustrations

Long’s Peak from the East
A Man with a History
The Crest of the Continent in Winter, 13,000 Feet above Sea-Level
A Snow-Slide Track
A Veteran Western Yellow Pine
A Beaver-House
A Beaver-Dam in Winter
Lake Odessa
On the Heights
A Storm on the Rockies
Long's Peak from the Summit of Mt. Meeker
On the Tip-Top of Long’s Peak
A Miner on a Return Horse
Scotch near Timber-Line
The Cloud-Capped Continental Divide
Ptarmigan
Summer at an Altitude of 12,000 Feet
A Typical Lodge-Pole Forest
Aspens
A Grove of Silver Spruce
Ouray, Colorado, a Typical Mining Town
Estes Park and the Big Thompson River from the Top of Mt. Olympus
In the Uncompahgre Mountains
A Grass-Plot among Engelmann Spruce

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