"And what if the wind is right due east?" asked Sam, "which it surely will be when it rains?"
"And when the wind"s east," continued Caleb, addressing no one in particular, and not as though in answer to a question, "ye lap the flaps across each other tight in front, so," and he crossed his hands over his chest. "That leaves the east side high and shuts out the rain; if it don"t draw then, ye raise the bottom of the cover under the door just a little--that always fetches her. An" when you change her round don"t put her in under them trees. Trees is dangerous; in a storm they draw lightning, an" branches fall from them, an" after rain they keep on dripping for an hour. Ye need all the sun ye kin get on a teepee.
"Did you ever see Indians bring fire out of two sticks by rubbing, Mr.
Clark?"
"Oh, yes. Most of the Injuns now carry matches, but in the early days I seen it done often enough."
"Does it take long? Is it hard?"
"Not so long, and it"s easy enough, when ye know how."
"My! I"d rather bring fire out of two sticks than have a ten dollar bill," said Yan, with enthusiasm that meant much, for one dollar was his high-water mark of affluence, and this he had reached but once in his life.
"Oh, I dunno"; that depends," was Sam"s more guarded response.
"Can _you_ do it?" asked Yan.
"Wall, yes, if I kin get the right stuff. Ye see, it ain"t every wood that will do it. It"s got to be jest right. The Plains Injuns use Cottonwood root, an" the Mountain Injuns use Sage-brush root. I"ve seen the Canadian Injuns use Ba.s.swood, Cedar and dry White Pine, but the Chippewas mostly use Balsam Fir. The easiest way is with a bow-drill. Have ye any buckskin?"
"No."
"Or a strip o" soft leather?"
"I"ve got a leather shoe-lace," said Yan.
"Rather slim; but we"ll double it an" make it do. A cord will answer, but it frays out so soon." Caleb took the lace and the axe, then said, "Find me a stone "bout the size of an egg, with a little hole into it--like a socket hole--"bout a quarter inch deep."
The boys went to the creek to seek a stone and Caleb went into the woods.
They heard him chopping, and presently he came back with a flat piece of very dry Balsam Fir, a fifteen-inch pin of the same, a stick about three feet long, slightly bent, some dry Pine punk and some dry Cedar.
The pin was three-quarters of an inch thick and was roughly eight-sided, "so the lace would grip." It was pointed at both ends. He fastened the lace to the bent stick like a bow-string, but loosely, so that when it had one turn around the pin it was quite tight. The flat piece of Balsam he trimmed down to about half an inch thick. In the edge of this he now cut a notch one-quarter inch wide and half an inch deep, then on the top of this fire-board or block, just beyond the notch, he made with the point of his knife a little pit.
He next sc.r.a.ped and shredded a lot of dry Cedar wood like lint. Then making a hole half an inch deep in the ground, he laid in that a flat piece of Pine punk, and across this he set the fire-board. The point of the pin or drill was put in the pit of the fire-board, which he held down with one foot; the lace was given one turn on the pin, and its top went into the hole of the stone the boys brought. The stone was held firmly in Caleb"s left hand.
"Sometimes," he remarked, "when ye can"t find a stone, a Pine knot will do--ye kin make the socket-hole with a knife-point."
Now holding the bow in his right hand, he began to draw it back and forth with long, steady strokes, causing the pin to whirl round in the socket. Within a few seconds a brown powder began to run out of the notch of the fire-board onto the punk. The pit increased in size and blackened, the powder darkened, and a slight smoke arose from the pit.
Caleb increased the pressure of his left hand a little, and sawed faster with the right. The smoke steadily increased and the black powder began to fill the notch. The smoke was rolling in little clouds from under the pin, and it even seemed to come from the heap of powder. As soon as he saw that, Caleb dropped the bow and gently fanned the powder heap. It still smoked. He removed the fire-board, and lifting the punk, showed the interior of the powder to be one glowing coal. On this he laid the Cedar tinder and over that a second piece of punk. Then raising it, he waved it in the air and blew gently for awhile. It smouldered and then burst into a flame. The other material was handy, and in a very short time they had a blazing fire in the middle of the new teepee.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE RUBBING-STICKS FOR FIRE-MAKING]
All three were pictures of childish delight. The old man"s face fairly beamed with triumph. Had he failed in his experiment he would have gone off hating those boys, but having made a brilliant success he was ready to love every one concerned, though they had been nothing more than interested spectators of his exploit.
[Ill.u.s.tration: RUBBING-STICKS--FOR FIRE-MAKING (See Description Below)]
Two tools and two sticks are needed. The tools are bow and drill-socket; the sticks are drill and fire-board.
1. The simplest kind of bow--a bent stick with a stout leather thong fastened at each end. The stick must not spring. It is about 27 inches long and 5/8 inch thick.
2. A more elaborate bow with a hole at each end for the thong. At the handle end it goes through a disc of wood. This is to tighten the thong by pressure of the hand against the disc while using.
3. Simplest kind of drill-socket--a pine or hemlock knot with a shallow hole or pit in it. _3a_ is under view of same. It is about 4-1/2 inches long.
4. A more elaborate drill-socket--a pebble cemented with gum in a wooden holder. _4a_ is under view of same.
5. A very elaborate drill-socket; it is made of tulip wood, carved to represent the Thunderbird. It has eyes of green felspar cemented in with resin. On the under side (_5a_) is seen, in the middle, a soapstone socket let into the wood and fastened with pine gum, and on the head a hole kept filled with grease, to grease the top of the drill before use.
6. The drill, 12 to 18 inches long and about 3/4 of an inch thick; it is roughly 8-sided so the thong will not slip, pointed at each end.
The best wood for the drill is old, dry, brash, but not punky balsam fir or cotton-wood roots; but ba.s.swood, white cedar, red cedar, tamarack, and sometimes even white pine, will do.
7. Fire-board or block, about 3/4 of an inch thick and any length handy; _a_ is notch with pit just below shows the pit after once using and in good trim for a second time; _c_ shows the pit bored through and useless; the notch is 1/2 inch wide and 3/4 inch deep.
8. Shows the way of using the sticks. The block (_a_) is held down with one foot, the end of the drill in the pit, the drill-socket (_c_) is held on top in left hand, one end of the bow (_d_) is held in the right hand the bow is drawn back and forth.
9. Is a little wooden fire-pan, not essential but convenient; its thin edge is put under the notch to catch the powder that falls.
IX
The Bows and Arrows
"I don"t think much of your artillery," said Yan one day as they were shooting in the orchard with Sam"s "Western outfit." "It"s about like the first one I made when I was young."
"Well, grandpa, let"s see your up-to-date make?"
"It"d be about five times as strong, for one thing."
"You couldn"t pull it."
"Not the way you hold the arrow! But last winter I got a book about archery from the library and learned something worth while. You pinch the arrow that way and you can draw six or eight pounds, maybe, but you hook your fingers in the string--so--and you can draw five times as much, and that"s the right way to shoot."
"Feels mighty clumsy," said Sam, trying it.
"Of course it does at first, and you have to have a deep notch in the arrow or you can"t do it at all."
"You don"t seem to manage any better than I do."
"First time I ever had a chance to try since I read about it. But I want to make a first-cla.s.s bow and a lot of arrows. It"s not much good going with _one_."
[Ill.u.s.tration: The Archer"s Grip]
"Well, go ahead an" make an outfit if you know how. What"s the best wood? Did the book tell you that?"