Muskrat City
Muskrat City
Book Excerpt
he steep slope from our lookout, we were quickly buried among the evergreens, with the only extended view toward the blue sky and floating clouds above the tall tree tops. Having in mind the experience of the previous day, the compass was frequently consulted, but travel was difficult and progress slow.
An hour later we came upon a small log cabin, having a roof of spruce bark, no floor, but a puncheon door and one window. In one corner was a crude fireplace made of stones, having two lengths of stove pipe which passed through the window for a chimney. Opposite the fireplace was a balsam bed and in another corner was a pile of spruce gum. There were also a frying pan, tin plate, knife and fork, and on a bark shelf some food stuff. We left the shack and on a path a short distance from it, we met its owner who was returning. He was of uncertain age, but with white hair and white scraggy beard. He carried a bag partly filled with gum and in one hand a long pole having a small shovel-shaped piece of steel
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Not a fiction story as much as it is an account of two fishermen who get lost in the rain hiking to a lake and stumble across a settlement of muskrats. They find they like that spot better, and the story turns into an account of winter trapping and the habits and fur of the various animals in the vicinity.
The piece is nicely descriptive and gives a good atmosphere of the Adirondacks a century ago.
The piece is nicely descriptive and gives a good atmosphere of the Adirondacks a century ago.
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