The birch-bark dish that will hold fluids. Details of making
115
|
A bear would rather be your friend than your enemy
|
118
|
Making friends with a ruffed grouse
|
120
|
Found on the trail
|
122
|
Timber wolves
|
124
|
Baby moose
|
126
|
Stalking wild birds
|
128
|
The fish-hawk will sometimes build near the ground
|
131
|
Antelopes of the western plains
|
135
|
Good food on the trail
|
143
|
Fruits found principally in the south and the middle west
|
147
|
Fruits found principally in the north and the middle west
|
151
|
Fruits common to most of the States
|
155
|
Hickory nuts, sweet and bitter
|
159
|
Nuts with soft shells. Beechnut and chestnut
|
161
|
Poisonous and non-poisonous snakes
|
173
|
Plants poison to the touch
|
181
|
Plants poison to the taste
|
185
|
The white birch-tree makes a fine background for the beaver
|
191
|
Blacktail deer snapped with a background of snow
|
193
|
The skunk
|
195
|
The porcupine stood in the shade but the background was light
|
197
|
Photographing a woodcock from ambush
|
199
|
The country through which you pass, with a trailer in the foreground
|
201
|
Method of protecting roots to keep plants fresh while you carry them to camp for photographing
|
203
|
A rowboat is a safer craft than a canoe
|
206
|
Keep your body steady
|
208
|
Canoeing on placid waters
|
210
|
Bring your canoe up broadside to the shore
|
212
|
How to use the paddle and a flat-bottomed rowboat
|
215
|
The raft of logs
|
219
|
Primitive weaving in raft building
|
221
|
Learn to be at home in the water
|
225
|
For dinner
|
229
|
The veteran
|
231
|
Bends in knot tying
|
235
|
Figure eight knot
|
237
|
Overhand bow-line knot
|
237
|
Underhand bow-line knot
|
239
|
Sheepshank knot
|
239
|
Parcel slip-knot
|
241
|
Cross-tie parcel knot
|
241
|
Fisherman's knot
|
241
|
The halter, slip-knot, and hitching-tie
|
243
|
The fireman's lift
|
245
|
Aids in "first aid"
|
|