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HUNTING |
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Blackfoot
Lodge Tales, by George Bird Grinnell, [1892] |
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The
Blackfoot country probably contained more game and in greater variety
than any other part of the continent. Theirs was a land whose physical
characteristics presented sharp contrasts. There were far-stretching
grassy prairies, affording rich pasturage for the buffalo and the
antelope; rough breaks and bad lands for the climbing mountain sheep;
wooded buttes, loved by the mule deer; timbered river bottoms, where the
white-tailed deer and the elk could browse and hide; narrow, swampy
valleys for the moose; and snow-patched, glittering pinnacles of rock,
over which the sure-footed white goat took his deliberate way. The
climate varied from arid to humid; the game of the prairie, the timber,
and the rocks, found places suited to their habits. Fur-bearing animals
abounded. Noisy hordes of wild fowl passed north and south in their
migrations, and many stopped here to breed. |
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The
Blackfoot country is especially favored by the warm Chinook winds, which
insure mild winters with but little snow; and although on the plains
there is usually little rain in summer, the short prairie grasses are
sweet and rich. All over this vast domain, the buffalo were found in
countless herds. Elk, deer, antelope, mountain sheep, and bear without
number were there. In those days, sheep were to be found on every ridge,
and along the rough bad lands far from the mountains. Now, except a few
in the "breaks" of the Missouri, they occur only on the highest and most
inaccessible mountains, along with the white goats, which, although
pre-eminently mountain animals, were in early days sometimes found far
out on the prairie. |
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BUFFALO |
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The
Blackfeet were a race of meat-eaters, and, while they killed large
quantities of other game, they still depended for subsistence on the
buffalo. This animal provided them with almost all that they needed in
the way of food, clothing, and shelter, and when they had an abundance
of the buffalo they lived in comfort. |
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Almost
every part of the beast was utilized. The skin, dressed with the hair
on, protected them from the winter's cold; freed from the hair, it was
used for a summer sheet or blanket, for moccasins, leggings, shirts, and
women's dresses. The tanned cowskins made their lodges, the warmest and
most comfortable portable shelters ever devised. From the rawhide, the
hair having been shaved off, were made parfleches, or trunks, in which
to pack small articles. The tough, thick hide of the bull's neck, spread
out and allowed to shrink smooth, made a shield for war which would stop
an arrow, and turn a lance thrust or the ball from an old-fashioned,
smooth-bore gun. The green hide served as a kettle, in which to boil
meat. The skin of the hind leg, cut off above the pastern and again some
distance above the hock, was sometimes used as a moccasin or boot, the
lower opening being sewed up for the toe. |
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A variety
of small articles, such as cradles, gun covers, whips, mittens, quivers,
bow cases, knife-sheaths, etc., were made from the hide. Braided strands
of hide furnished them with ropes and lines. The hair was used to stuff
cushions and, later, saddles, and parts of the long black flowing beard
to ornament wearing apparel and implements of war, such as shields and
quivers. The horns gave them spoons and ladles—sometimes used as small
dishes—and ornamented their war bonnets. From the hoofs they made a
glue, which they used in fastening the |
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Heads and
feathers on their arrows, and the sinew backs on their bows. The sinews
which lie along the back and on the belly were used as thread and
string, and as backing for bows to give them elasticity and strength.
From the ribs were made scrapers used in dressing hides, and runners for
small sledges drawn by dogs; and they were employed by the children in
coasting down hill on snow or ice. The shoulder-blades, lashed to a
wooden handle, formed axes, hoes, and fleshers. From the cannon bones
(metatarsals and metacarpals) were made scrapers for dressing hides. The
skin of the tail, fitted on a stick, was used as a fly brush. These are
but a few of the uses to which the product of the buffalo was put. As
has been said, almost every part of the flesh was eaten. |
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Now it
must be remembered that in early days the hunting weapons of this people
consisted only of stone-pointed arrows, and with such armament the
capture of game of the larger sorts must have been a matter of some
uncertainty. To drive a rude stone-headed arrow through the tough hide
and into the vitals of the buffalo, could not have been—even under the
most favorable circumstances—other than a difficult matter; and although
we may assume that, in those days, it was easy to steal up to within a
few yards of the unsuspicious animals, we can readily conceive that many
arrows must have been shot without effect, for one that brought down the
game. |
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Certain
ingenious methods were therefore devised to insure the taking of game in
large numbers at one time. This was especially the case with the
buffalo, which were the food and raiment of the people. One of these
contrivances was called pis´kun, deep-kettle; or, since the termination
of the word seems to indicate the last syllable of the word ah'-pun,
blood, it is more likely deep-blood-kettle. This was a large corral, or
enclosure, built out from the foot of a perpendicular cliff or bluff,
and formed of natural banks, rocks, and logs or brush—anything in fact
to make a close, high barrier.
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In some
places the enclosure might be only a fence of brush, but even here the
buffalo did not break it down, for they did not push against it, but ran
round and round within, looking for a clear space through which they
might pass. From the top of the bluff, directly over the pis´kun, two
long lines of rock piles and brush extended far out on the prairie, ever
diverging from each other like the arms of the letter V, the opening
over the pis´kun being at the angle. |
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In the
evening of the day preceding a drive of buffalo into the pis´kun a
medicine man, usually one who was the possessor of a buffalo rock,
In-is'-kim, unrolled his pipe, and prayed to the Sun for success. Next
morning the man who was to call the buffalo arose very early, and told
his wives that they must not leave the lodge, nor even look out, until
he returned; that they should keep burning sweet grass, and should pray
to the Sun for his success and safety. Without eating or drinking, he
then went up on the prairie, and the people followed him, and concealed
themselves behind the rocks and bushes which formed the V, or chute. The
medicine man put on a head-dress made of the head of a buffalo, and a
robe, and then started out to approach the animals.
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When he
had come near to the herd, he moved about until he had attracted the
attention of some of the buffalo, and when they began to look at him, he
walked slowly away toward the entrance of the chute. Usually the buffalo
followed, and, as they did so, he gradually increased his pace. The
buffalo followed more rapidly, and the man continually went a little
faster. Finally, when the buffalo were fairly within the chute, the
people began to rise up from behind the rock piles which the herd had
passed, and to shout and wave their robes. |
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This
frightened the hinder-most buffalo, which pushed forward on the others,
and before long the whole herd was running at headlong speed toward the
precipice, the rock piles directing them to the point over the
enclosure. When they reached it, most of the animals were pushed over,
and usually even the last of the band plunged blindly down into the
pis´kun. Many were killed outright by the fall; others had broken legs
or broken backs, while some perhaps were uninjured. The barricade,
however, prevented them from escaping, and all were soon killed by the
arrows of the Indians. |
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It is
said that there was another way to get the buffalo into this chute. A
man who was very skilful in arousing the buffalo's curiosity, might go
out without disguise, and by wheeling round and round in front of the
herd, appearing and disappearing, would induce them to move toward him,
when it was easy to entice them into the chute. Once there, the people
began to rise up behind them, shouting and waving their robes, and the
now terror-stricken animals rushed ahead, and were driven over the cliff
into the pis´kun, where all were quickly killed and divided among the
people, the chiefs and the leading warrior getting the best and fattest
animals. |
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The
pis´kun was in use up to within thirty-five or forty years, and many men
are still living who have seen the buffalo driven over the cliff. Such
men even now speak with enthusiasm of the plenty that successful drives
brought to the camp. |
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The
pis´kuns of the Sik'-si-kau, or Blackfoot tribe, differed in some
particulars from those constructed by the Bloods and the Piegans, who
live further to the south, nearer to the mountains, and so in a country
which is rougher and more broken. The Sik'-si-kau built their pis´kuns
like the Crees, on level ground and usually near timber. A large pen or
corral was made of heavy logs about eight feet high. On the side where
the wings of the chute come together, a bridge, or causeway, was built,
sloping gently up from the prairie to the walls of the corral, which at
this point were cut away to the height of the bridge above the
ground—here about four feet—so that the animals running up the causeway
could jump down into the corral. |
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The
causeway was fenced in on either side by logs, so that the buffalo could
not run off it. After they had been lured within the wings of the chute,
they were driven toward the corral as already described. When they
reached the end of the >, they ran up the bridge, and jumped down into
the pen. When it was full, or all had entered, Indians, who had lain
hidden near by, ran upon the bridge, and placed poles, prepared
beforehand, across the opening through which the animals had entered,
and over these poles hung robes, so as entirely to close the opening.
The buffalo will not dash themselves against a barrier which is entirely
closed, even though it be very frail; but if they can see through it to
the outside, they will rush against it, and their great weight and
strength make it easy for them to break down any but a heavy wall. Mr.
Hugh Monroe tells me that he has seen a pis´kun built of willow brush;
and the Cheyennes have stated to me that their buffalo corrals were
often built of brush. |
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Sometimes, if the walls of the pis´kun were not high, the buffalo tried
to jump or climb over them, and, in doing this, might break them down,
and some or all escape. As soon, however, as the animals were in the
corral, the people—women and children included—ran up and showed
themselves all about the walls, and by their cries kept the buffalo from
pressing against the walls. The animals ran round and round within, and
the men standing on the walls shot them down as they passed. The
butchering was done in the pis´kun, and after this was over, the place
was cleaned out, the heads, feet, and least perishable offal being
removed. Wolves, foxes, badgers, and other small carnivorous animals
visited the pis´kun, and soon made away with the entrails. |
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In
winter, when the snow was on the ground, and the buffalo were to be led
to the pis´kun, the following method was adopted to keep the herd
travelling in the desired direction after they had got between the wings
of the chute. A line of buffalo chips, each one supported on three small
sticks, so that it stood a few inches above the snow, was carried from
the mouth of the pis´kun straight out toward the prairie. The chips were
about thirty feet apart, and ran midway between the wings of the chute.
This line was, of course, conspicuous against the white snow, and when
the buffalo were running down the chute, they always followed it, never
turning to the right nor to the left. In the latter days of the pis´kun,
the man who led the buffalo was often mounted on a white horse. |
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Often,
when they drove the buffalo over a high vertical cliff, no corral was
built beneath. Most of those driven over were killed or disabled by the
fall, and only a few got away. The pis´kuns, as a rule, were built under
low-cut bluffs, and sometimes the buffalo were driven in by moonlight. |
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In
connection with the subject of leading or decoying the buffalo, another
matter not generally known may be mentioned. Sometimes, as a matter of
convenience, a herd was brought from a long distance close up to the
camp. This was usually done in the spring of the year, when the horses
were thin in flesh and not in condition to stand a long chase. I myself
have never seen this; but my friend, William Jackson, was once present
at such a drive by the Red River half-breeds, and has described to me
the way in which it was done. |
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The camp
was on Box Elder Creek near the Musselshell River. It was in the spring
of 1881, and the horses were all pretty well run down and thin, so that
their owners wished to spare them as much as possible. The buffalo were
seven or eight miles distant, and two men were sent out to bring them to
the camp. Other men, leading fresh horses, went with them, and hid
themselves among the hills at different points along the course that the
buffalo were expected to take, at intervals of a mile and a half. They
watched the herd, and were on hand to supply the fresh horses to the men
who were bringing it. |
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The
buffalo were on a wide flat, and the men rode over the hill and advanced
toward the herd at a walk. At length the buffalo noticed them, and began
to huddle up together and to walk about, and at length to walk away.
Then the men turned, and rode along parallel to the buffalo's course,
and at the same gait that these were taking. When the buffalo began to
trot, the men trotted, and when the herd began to lope, the men loped,
and at length they were all running pretty fast. The men kept about half
a mile from the herd, and up even with the leaders. As they ran, the
herd kept constantly edging a little toward the riders, as if trying to
cross in front of them. |
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This
inclination toward the men was least when they were far off, and
greatest when they drew nearer to them. At no time were the men nearer
to the herd than four hundred yards. If the buffalo edged too much
toward the riders, so that the course they were taking would lead them
away from camp, the men would drop back and cross over behind the herd
to the other side, and then, pushing their horses hard, would come up
with the leaders—but still at a distance from them,—and then the buffalo
would begin to edge toward them, and the herd would be brought back
again to the desired course. If necessary, this was repeated, and so the
buffalo were kept travelling in a course approximately straight. |
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By the
time the buffalo had got pretty near to the camp, they were pretty well
winded, and the tongues of many of them were hanging out. This herd was
led up among the rolling hills about a mile from the camp, and there the
people were waiting for them, and charged them, when the herd broke up,
the animals running in every direction. |
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Occasionally it would happen that for a long time the buffalo would not
be found in a place favorable for driving over the cliff or into a pen.
In such cases, the Indians would steal out on foot, and, on a day when
there was no wind, would stealthily surround the herd. Then they would
startle the buffalo, and yet would keep them from breaking through the
circle. The buffalo would "mill" around until exhausted, and at length,
when worn out, would be shot down by the Indians. This corresponds
almost exactly with one of the methods employed in killing buffalo by
the Pawnees in early days before they had horses. 1
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In those
days the Pi-kŭn´-i were very numerous, and sometimes when a lot of
buffalo were found in a favorable position, and there was no wind, the
people would surround them, and set up their lodges about them, thus
practically building a corral of lodges. After all preparations had been
made, they would frighten the buffalo, which, being afraid to pass
through between the lodges, would run round and round in a great circle,
and when they were exhausted the people would kill them. |
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Then they
always had plenty of buffalo—if not fresh meat, that which they had
dried. For in winter they would kill large numbers of buffalo, and would
prepare great stores of dried meat. As spring opened, the buffalo would
move down to the more flat prairie country away from the pis´kuns. Then
the Blackfeet would also move away. As winter drew near, the buffalo
would again move up close to the mountains, and the Indians, as food
began to become scarce, would follow them toward the pis´kuns. In the
last of the summer and early autumn, they always had runners out,
looking for the buffalo, to find where they were, and which way they
were moving. In the early autumn, all the pis´kuns were repaired and
strengthened, so as to be in good order for winter. |
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In the
days before they had horses, and even in later times when the ground was
of such a character as to prevent running the buffalo, an ingenious
method of still-hunting them was practised. A story told by Hugh Monroe
illustrates it. He said: "I was often detailed by the Hudson's Bay
Company to go out in charge of a number of men, to kill meat for the
fort. When the ground was full of holes and wash-outs, so that running
was dangerous, I used to put on a big timber wolf's skin, which I
carried for the purpose, tying it at my neck and waist, and then to
sneak up to the buffalo. I used a bow and arrows, and generally shot a
number without alarming them. If one looked suspiciously at me, I would
howl like a wolf. |
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Sometimes
the smell of the blood from the wounded and dying would set the bulls
crazy. They would run up and lick the blood, and sometimes toss the dead
ones clear from the ground. Then they would bellow and fight each other,
sometimes goring one another so badly that they died. The great bulls,
their tongues covered with blood, their eyes flashing, and tails
sticking out straight, roaring and fighting, were terrible to see; and
it was a little dangerous for me, because the commotion would attract
buffalo from all directions to see what was going on. At such times, I
would signal to my men, and they would ride up and scare the buffalo
away." |
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In more
modern times, the height of pleasure to a Blackfoot was to ride a good
horse and run buffalo. When bows and arrows, and, later, muzzle-loading
"fukes" were the only weapons, no more buffalo were killed than could
actually be utilized. But after the Winchester repeater came in use, it
seemed as if the different tribes vied with each other in wanton
slaughter. Provided with one of these weapons and a couple of belts of
cartridges, the hunters would run as long as their horses could keep up
with the band, and literally cover the prairie with carcasses, many of
which were never even skinned. |
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ANTELOPE |
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It is
said that once in early times the men determined that they would use
antelope skins for their women's dresses, instead of cowskins. So they
found a place where antelope were plenty, and set up on the prairie long
lines of rock piles, or of bushes, so as to form a chute like a >. Near
the point where the lines joined, they dug deep pits, which they roofed
with slender poles, and covered these with grass and a little dirt. Then
the people scattered out, and while most of them hid behind the rock
piles and bushes, a few started the antelope toward the mouth of the
chute. As they ran by them, the people showed themselves and yelled, and
the antelope ran down the chute and finally reached the pits, and
falling into them were taken, when they were killed and divided among
the hunters. Afterward, this was the common method of securing antelopes
up to the coming of the whites. |
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EAGLES |
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Before
the whites came to the Blackfoot country, the Indian standard of value
was eagle tail-feathers. They were used to make war head-dresses, to tie
on the head, and to ornament shields, lances, and other weapons. Besides
this, the wings were used for fans, and the body feathers for
arrow-making. Always a wary bird, the eagle could seldom be approached
near enough for killing with the bow and arrow; and, in fact, it seems
as if it was considered improper to kill it in that way. The capture of
these birds appears to have had about it something of a sacred nature,
and, as was always the case among wild Indians when anything important
was to be undertaken, it was invariably preceded by earnest prayers to
the Deity for help and for success. |
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There are
still living many men who have caught eagles in the ancient method, and,
from several of these, accounts have been received, which, while
essentially similar, yet differ in certain particulars, especially in
the explanations of certain features of the ceremony. |
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Wolf
Calf's account of this ceremony is as follows:— |
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"A man
who started out to catch eagles moved his lodge and his family away from
the main camp, to some place where the birds were abundant. A spot was
chosen on top of a mound or butte within a few miles of his lodge, and
here he dug a pit in the ground as long as his body and somewhat deeper.
The earth removed was carried away to a distance, and scattered about so
as to make no show. When the pit had been made large enough, it was
roofed over with small willow sticks, on which grass was scattered, and
over the grass a little earth and stones were laid, so as to give the
place a natural look, like the prairie all about it. |
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"The bait
was a piece of bloody neck of a buffalo. This, of course, could be seen
a long way off, and by the meat a stuffed wolf skin was often placed,
standing up, as if the animal were eating. To the piece of neck was tied
a rope, which passed down through the roof of the pit and was held in
the watcher's hand. |
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"After
all had been made ready, the next day the man rose very early, before it
was light, and, after smoking and praying, left his camp, telling his
wives and children not to use an awl while he was gone. He endeavored to
reach the pit early in the morning, before it became light, and lay down
in it, taking with him a slender stick about six feet long, a human
skull, and a little pemmican. Then he waited. |
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"When the
morning came, and the eagles were flying, one of them would see the meat
and descend to take it away from the wolf. Finding it held fast by the
rope, the bird began to feed on it; and while it was pecking at the
bait, the watcher seized it by the legs, and drew it into the pit, where
he killed it, either by twisting its neck, or by crushing it with his
knees. Then he laid it to one side, first opening the bill and putting a
little piece of pemmican in its mouth. This was done to make the other
eagles hungry. While he was in the pit, the man neither ate, drank, nor
slept. He had a sleeping-place not far off, to which he repaired each
night after dark, and there he ate and drank. |
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"The
reason for taking the skull into the hole with the catcher was, in part,
for his protection. It was believed that the ghost of the person to whom
the skull had belonged would protect the watcher against harm from the
eagle, and besides that, the skull, or ghost, would make the watcher
invisible, like a ghost. The eagle would not see him. |
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"The
stick was used to poke or drive away smaller birds, such as magpies,
crows, and ravens, which might alight on the roof of the pit, and try to
feed on the bait. It was used, also, to drive away the white-headed
eagle, which they did not care to catch. These are powerful birds; they
could almost kill a person. |
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"There
are two sacred things connected with the catching of eagles,—two things
which must be observed if the eagle-catcher is to have good luck. The
man who is watching must not eat rosebuds. If he does, the eagle, when
he comes down and alights by the bait, will begin to scratch himself and
will not attack the bait. The rosebuds will make him itch. Neither the
man nor his wife must use an awl while he is absent from his lodge, and
is trying to catch the birds. If this is done, the eagles will scratch
the catcher. Sometimes one man would catch a great many eagles." |
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In his
day, John Monroe was a famous eagle-catcher, and he has given me the
following account of the method as he has practiced it. The pit is dug,
six feet long, three wide, and four deep, on top of the highest knoll
that can be found near a stream. The earth taken out is carried a long
way off. Over the pit they put two long poles, one on each side, running
lengthwise of the pit, and other smaller sticks are laid across, resting
on the poles. The smaller sticks are covered with juniper twigs and long
grass. The skin of a wolf, coyote, or fox, is stuffed with grass, and
made to look as natural as possible. A hole is cut in the wolf skin and
a rope is passed through it, one end being tied to a large piece of meat
which lies by the skin, and the other passing through the roof down into
the pit. The bait is now covered with grass, and the man returns to his
lodge for the night. |
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During
the night, he sings his eagle songs and burns sweet grass for the
eagles, rubbing the smoke over his own body to purify himself, so that
on the morrow he will give out no scent. Before day he leaves his lodge
without eating or drinking, goes to the pit and lies down in it. He
uncovers the bait, arranges the roof, and sits there all day holding the
rope. Crows and other birds alight by the bait and peck at it, but he
pays no attention to them. |
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The
eagle, sailing about high in air, sees the bait, and settles down
slowly. It takes it a long time to make up its mind to come to the bait.
In the pit, the man can hear the sound of the eagle coming. When the
bird settles on the ground, it does not alight on the bait, but at one
side of it, striking the ground with a thud—heavily. The man never
mistakes anything else for that sound. The eagle walks toward the bait,
and all the other birds fly away. It walks on to the roof; and, through
the crevices that have been left between the sticks, the man can see in
which direction the bird's head is. He carefully pushes the stick aside
and, reaching out, grasps the eagle by the two feet. The bird does not
struggle much. It is drawn down into the pit, and the man wrings its
neck. Then the opening is closed, and the roof arranged as before. So
the man waits and catches the eagles that come through the day.
Sometimes he sits all day and gets nothing; again he may get eight or
ten in a day. |
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When
darkness comes, the man leaves his hiding-place, takes his eagles, and
goes home. He carries the birds to a special lodge, prepared outside of
the camp, which is called the eagles' lodge. He places them on the
ground in a row, and raises their heads, resting them on a stick laid in
front of the row. In the mouth of each one is put a piece of pemmican,
so that they may not be afraid of the people. The object of feeding the
eagles is that their spirits may tell other eagles how they are being
treated—that they are being fed by the people. In the lodge is a human
skull, and they pray to it, asking the ghost to help them get the
eagles. |
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It is
said that in one pit, once, forty eagles were killed in a day. The
larger hawks were caught, as well as eagles, though the latter were the
most highly valued. Five eagles used to be worth a good horse, a
valuation which shows that, in the Blackfoot country, eagles were more
plenty, or horses more valuable, than farther south, where, in old
times, two eagles would purchase a horse. |
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OTHER
GAME |
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They had
no special means of capturing deer in any numbers. These were usually
killed singly. The hunters used to creep up on elk and deer in the
brush, and when they had come close to them, they could drive even their
stone-pointed arrows deep in the flesh. Often their game was killed dead
on the spot, but if not, they left it alone until the next day, when, on
going back to the place, it was usually found nearby, either dead or so
desperately wounded that they could secure it. |
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Deadfalls
were used to catch wolves, foxes, and other fur animals, and small
apertures in the pis´kun walls were provided with nooses and snares for
the same purpose. Another way to catch wolves and coyotes was to set
heavy stakes in the ground in a circle, about the carcasses of one or
two dead buffalo. The stakes were placed at an angle of about forty-five
degrees, a few inches apart, and all pointing toward the centre of the
circle. At one place, dirt was piled up against the stakes from the
outside, and the wolves, climbing up on this, jumped down into the
enclosure, but were unable to jump out. Hugh Monroe tells me that, about
thirty years ago, he and his sons made a trap like this, and in one
night caught eighty-three wolves and coyotes. |
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In early
times, beaver were very abundant and very tame, and were shot with bows
and arrows. |
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The
Blackfeet were splendid prairie hunters. They had no superiors in the
art of stalking and killing such wary animals as the antelope. Sometimes
they wore hats made of the skin and horns of an antelope head, which
were very useful when approaching the game. Although the prairie was
pre-eminently their hunting-ground, they were also skilful in climbing
mountains and killing sheep and goats. On the other hand, the northern
Crees, who also are a prairie people, are poor mountain hunters. |
|
(Courtesy
Tiger Lilli Sakima) |

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