<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197"></SPAN>[197]</span></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ich16" style="max-width: 46.875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_ch16.jpg" alt="Chapter XVI" /></div>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVI">XVI<br/> THE SURGEON OF THE DEER FOREST</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">“In</span> the Forest and on the moor there is a mighty
Doctor before whom the greatest physicians and
surgeons in the world must bow down. Nature
acting in a pure air on an absolutely healthy
subject will work wonderful cures.... It seems
marvellous that the broken leg of an animal so
restless as a stag should heal, but it is the case....
Such a wound will heal and the animal
ultimately be little the worse for it.”</p>
<p>Such are the words, in his book <cite>Wild Sport
with Gun, Rifle, and Salmon Rod</cite>, of Mr. Gilfrid<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198"></SPAN>[198]</span>
W. Hartley, a stalker of great experience, and the
author of some most fascinating reminiscences
on stalking.</p>
<p>Every good sportsman is, of course, greatly
distressed if he has the misfortune to wound a
stag without being able to kill him. No matter
what care may be exercised, it is impossible, even
for the best of shots who has been accustomed to
stalk for many years, not to experience some time
or other a catastrophe of this kind. It is at any
rate some slight consolation to know that Nature
can effect the marvellous cures of which there is
authentic record.</p>
<p>Much can, no doubt, be done to improve one’s
shooting by regular practice. Some years ago
I was discussing the subject with one of the old
Highland proprietors who is a first-class rifle shot,
and he told me that for many years he had been
in the habit of practising shooting at a small
wooden stag, which he had placed in all kinds of
different positions and at different distances on
the hill. He added that he was sure that this
had greatly improved his shooting. This interested
me greatly, for I had for a long time
been doing the same thing and am a great believer
in its advantages. Amongst other things<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199"></SPAN>[199]</span>
which it teaches one, is to judge distances more
accurately.</p>
<p>In the course of my wanderings through many
forests, I have often discussed with experienced
stalkers the subject of Nature’s wonderful cures,
and as recently as the year before last, whilst I
was stalking in a forest in the Western Highlands,
the head stalker related to me a remarkable
experience of his own. I thought the story
worth recording in some permanent form, but
felt that I myself could not do justice to it. I
therefore asked my friend the stalker if he could
find time, after the stalking season was over, to
write out for me the account of this particular
experience.</p>
<p>Some five months later I received the account
from him, accompanied by a letter which contained
the following words: “You will find the enclosed
story about the wounded stag. And indeed, I
would prefer stalking through wet and bogs for
six hours than one hour trying to put my experience
on paper.” Here is the story in question:</p>
<p>“As I promised, I am writing about one of my
experiences which fixed it greatly on my mind as
to the power of a stag to recover from a serious
wound.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200"></SPAN>[200]</span></p>
<p>“The year 1905 was a very wet season in this
district, and while stags were not good in condition,
there were some good heads to be seen. I
had that season one of the best of sportsmen who
knew a great deal about deer and their ways, and
had an experience of thirty years behind him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="EDGE" id="EDGE"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i200fp" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_200_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">ON THE EDGE OF THE DEER FOREST.</p>
<p class="pfs80">By <span class="smcap">Finlay Mackinnon</span>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>“My beat is a narrow long piece of high
ground and stretching well in between three
adjoining forests coming to a narrow point, and
on this narrow part there is a small corrie. This
corrie is the best for keeping stags I know of,
but rather difficult to stalk except with north-west
wind. With other winds, although successful
in a stalk, one is sure to drive the rest of the
deer into one of the adjoining forests, the stalkers
in which were very much on the alert at that time
to make the best use of any move in their favour
on the marches. There was a long spell of south
and south-west wind, and although there were
quite a lot of stags in this corrie we had to wait long
for favourable wind so as to move them further
into our own ground. About September 25 we
were having a spy at the corrie, and noticed a
newcomer with quite a big, strong head of ten
points, and on each horn very peculiarly shaped
tops with cups, the three points on the top in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201"></SPAN>[201]</span>
each horn curving towards one another until the
tips almost touched. We at once came to stalk
him, while keeping so far as safe with wind
between them and the boundary. We came to a
point we considered likely if they kept on their
way feeding, as in so doing they would pass us
within a reasonable distance. This they did,
but the ten-pointer keeping well at the end.
When he was within 150 yards head on, all of a
sudden he turned right round and began feeding
quietly away tail on, with haunches towards us.
We were in a high fever discussing whether he
would still turn and follow the rest of the deer
or had made up his mind to part with them
altogether. We concluded the last was his
decision, and so prepared to have a long shot
if he would give us the best chance. When well
over 200 yards, he turned half-broadside, and
immediately the gentleman had a go at him.
His first shot went high, and the stag bolted
down the corrie, and with his second got him high
in the offside hind leg and broke completely his
thigh-bone, as I could see his leg swinging out to
his side at every jump. We sat down, watching
him going down the lower corrie until he came
to a shoulder, and began to climb up the ridge<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202"></SPAN>[202]</span>
towards the highest part of the mountain. When
almost on the top he stood looking towards us,
and after a long time lay down. When we saw
him settling we moved quietly to where we left
the gillie, and gave him instructions to watch and
let us know which way the stag went if he got
up and went away, for we had to make a long
detour out of his view to get round and, if possible,
to get above him. When we arrived he was not
to be seen anywhere, so we began to spy and get
directions from the gillie, who signed that he went
round the shoulder before us. It was getting
late and dark, so we hurried after the stag. When
we got round the shoulder we could dimly see him
limping away a good deal below us, and towards
the boundary, so we considered it was best not
to follow further in case we forced him over the
march and then lost him in the dark, for we were
in hopes to find him next morning near this
place, and possibly dead. As he did not catch us
following him, he slowed down to a stand, so we
left him there.</p>
<p>“Next morning, we were on the move early
and got up to where we left him, searched every
hollow and corner on our side and as far into the
other side as I dared, but could not find or see him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203"></SPAN>[203]</span>
anywhere. So, when home, we wrote to the surrounding
tenants with a description of the head,
and to have a look-out, when we would expect
the head to be sent to us if the stag were found
dead. But none ever came across him, so we gave
up hopes and expected he was dead in some hole.</p>
<p>“The following year the forest was taken by
a new tenant, and there was no more thought
about the lost wounded stag till, about the
beginning of October, what was my surprise to
see, and very near the same place and corrie, a
stag with the same kind of head and peculiarly
formed tops. I mentioned to the gentleman our
experience last season with one very like this stag
in the same corrie, but I remember our remark
was that it was more likely one of the same breed,
so lost no time in spying, as everything was
favourable for a successful stalk. We got to a
nice distance, and shot him dead. When I went
down to examine him I was surprised to find that
he had no brow-points, and instead of being a
ten-pointer he was only an eight-pointer. I
could not see anything like last year’s wound at
the time, but next morning, when I went to the
larder where he was hanging skinned, I noticed at
once his right leg showing exactly where our last<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204"></SPAN>[204]</span>
year’s bullet had broken it, but now nicely healed
up, and it looked as though both legs were
exactly the same length. I could not say if he
had a limp, as he was standing all the time till
we had our shot. I got this haunch for my
own use and had it boiled and stripped of
flesh, when I could see plainly how well it joined.
The bone was jagged at both ends, and the
longest points exactly touching, and the missing
parts were filled up with tough hard flesh. I
noticed a splinter on the outside which lay so
neatly in place, and even to both ends. The stag
weighed 15 st. 11 lb. He was in fair condition,
but not up to the average; he looked to me to be
much heavier the year before, although that year
we had much better average weights.”</p>
<p>Lieut.-General Crealock, in <cite>Deer Stalking in
the Highlands of Scotland</cite>, relates a case of the
same kind:</p>
<p>“I remember,” he says, “wounding a Royal
Stag some years ago at Loch Luichart—I broke
his fore leg at the shoulder. Having no dog with
me I never succeeded in getting up to him to
finish him before dark, and so lost him. The
wound was not mortal—it had shattered the
bone; he recovered and lived for several years<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205"></SPAN>[205]</span>
after, but he always had a stiff joint. The first
year he never shed his velvet and dropped a point
from his royal head; the second year he cleaned,
but never regained his royal head or even a good
one again.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="FOREST" id="FOREST"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp52" id="i204fp" style="max-width: 43.6875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_204_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">IN ACHNASHELLACH FOREST.</p>
<p class="pfs80">By <span class="smcap">Finlay Mackinnon</span>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>In Speedy’s <cite>Natural History of Sport in
Scotland with Rod and Gun</cite> there is an interesting
account of a thirteen-pointer whose hind leg was
broken above the hock. In the forest in Inverness-shire
where this stag was, the deer were regularly
fed during the winter. “When feeding commenced
he came regularly as before; but in
consequence of his wound he was reduced to a
skeleton, and, being very weak, was kept off by the
other stags. He used to hide, however, not far
off, and when the others took their departure he
returned to the feeding-place, when the keeper
attended to him and had opportunities, with the
aid of his glass, of noting the injured limb at a
comparatively short distance. Within a month
after feeding commenced, he was able to use it, and
in three months was master of the herd.... As
the new antlers grew it was found that the one on
the opposite side from the broken limb was minus
the brow-point.” He was shot in that season, and
scaled 17 st. 12 lb. clean, being then nine years old.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206"></SPAN>[206]</span></p>
<p>I myself had a personal experience which is
perhaps worth recording in this connection. I
was stalking late in the season—indeed it was the
last day that I was out—and we had been unable
to get a shot until late in the evening, when I
killed a good stag. We had some miles to go
before we reached the end of the road in the forest
where the motor-car from the lodge was to meet
us, and the light was beginning to fail. We were
high up on the side of a corrie, and were preparing
to start on our homeward journey, when Sandy,
the stalker, suddenly turned to me and said, pulling
out his glass, “I see some deer down there
on the flat.”</p>
<p>In a moment he had his glass on them, and
said: “Would you be liking another stag?
There’s a fine stag with hinds, and we shall not
be long getting down to them. It’s been poor
sport to-day.”</p>
<p>I hesitated for a moment, and then, I am
afraid, considering how late it was, weakly yielded
to the temptation. I said: “All right! We
shall have to be quick, otherwise we shall not be
able to see what we are doing.” We soon decided
our method of approach, and lost no time in
getting down the hill. The deer were feeding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207"></SPAN>[207]</span>
on a small flat piece of ground near the ruins of
what had been a watcher’s cottage many years
ago, and we hoped, by getting into a broad and
fairly deep burn, to reach a point about 200 yards
further down, from which I could get a shot. The
water was sometimes up to our waists and bitterly
cold, and our movements were necessarily slow,
but we arrived at last at a point which was about
140 yards from the stag. Peering over the top
of the bank of the burn, we saw that the stag was
on the far side of the hinds from us, and was lying
down in a dip of the ground, so that only the tops
of his horns were visible. After we had been
waiting in the burn for some time, the stag got
up, and, without giving me a chance for a shot,
walked on to lower ground, where he began to
feed in such a position that it was impossible to see
him until he put his head up, and then we could
only see the upper part of his horns. After a few
minutes I whispered: “I really can’t wait here
any longer, it is so frightfully cold, and the light
will soon be gone. Let us get out of the burn and
chance our being seen: at any rate, we shall be
higher up there, and be more likely to see the
stag.”</p>
<p>We cautiously hoisted ourselves out of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208"></SPAN>[208]</span>
burn on to the flat ground on the top of the bank,
but even there could only see the stag’s horns
and a very small part of his head.</p>
<p>Sandy whispered to me: “You will have to
shoot off my back, sir; it is the only chance.” He
carefully raised his back, and I put the rifle over
it. I said: “I am too low now; I can’t see the
stag’s body.”</p>
<p>“Ye’ll just have to put the coat on my back,”
said Sandy, pushing towards me my rolled-up
shooting-cape, which was fastened up with a strap.
I hoisted the rolled-up cape on to Sandy’s back,
and then prepared for a shot by putting the rifle
on the top of the cape—an extraordinarily foolish
proceeding. What I certainly ought to have
done was to have stood straight up and fired at
the stag from my shoulder. However, I took my
shot in the position described, and something, I
don’t know what exactly, caused me to pull off.</p>
<p>“His hind leg is broken,” said Sandy, as away
went the stag and the rest of the deer. I instantly
handed him the rifle, as I knew he was a first-class
shot at running deer, and told him, if he
could get the chance, to finish the stag off.</p>
<p>After a short interval I heard a shot, and then a
second shot. Soon afterwards Sandy returned,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209"></SPAN>[209]</span>
and said, “You’ll never see him again, sir. I
never touched him.”</p>
<p>It was almost dark, and we started on our
homeward journey along the narrow foot-track
through the forest. Sandy asked me to walk
first so that I could go at my own pace. He
followed me, and behind him came the gillie, there
being only room to walk in single file. It is not
easy to carry on a conversation with any one who
is walking behind, nor did the fact that I felt
very depressed at having left the wounded stag in
suffering, perhaps to die a painful, lingering death,
make it any easier. At first I made an occasional
observation and then lapsed into silence. As I
was walking along engrossed in my melancholy
thoughts I noticed that the path was becoming
more and more difficult to see, and indeed hardly
visible in the growing darkness.</p>
<p>I said, “It’s getting awfully dark, and I can
hardly see the path.” No answer. I turned
round: neither of the men was to be seen. I
stopped and shouted loudly, “Sandy!” Still
no answer. This I repeated several times with
the same result. I then began to think what I
had better do. It was almost dark by this time.
I was in the heart of one of the largest forests in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210"></SPAN>[210]</span>
the North of Scotland, miles from any human
habitation, without a scrap of food, with an empty
flask, and soaked to the skin up to my waist
through wading and standing in the burn, which
was in flood.</p>
<p>I decided to retrace my steps to the old ruins of
the watcher’s cottage from which we had started.
Taking great care not to lose the path, I began
to do this, shouting now and then but hearing
no reply. I tried to think out why the men
should not have been following me on this path
on which I was now returning, and which ran
beside a broad burn which was in spate. I then
remembered that the path which I had been
following across the forest before I came to the
burn was almost at right angles both to the burn
and the path I was now on, and it occurred to me
that possibly the path which I ought to have
taken lay straight across the burn, and that the
men might have crossed the burn and gone in
that direction. I had, I knew, been walking, as I
always do on these occasions, very fast, and this
made me think it not unlikely, especially as it was
so dark, that the men had assumed that I had
crossed the burn in front of them. Being careful
not to lose the narrow track I was on in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211"></SPAN>[211]</span>
darkness, I discovered the point at which I had
turned up the burn-side, and found that the other
path leading up to the burn was a little wider,
which encouraged me to hope that my supposed
explanation might prove to be the true one. I
then waded across the burn and found there was
a path at right angles to it on the other side
which looked more used than the track which I
had just left. I therefore made up my mind to
follow this path for a time, shouting every now
and then in the hope that the men might hear me,
and if I did not hear any reply I would then
consider whether I would go on or retrace my
steps to the old ruins and there spend the night—a
cheerful prospect indeed.</p>
<p>After going some distance along the path I
suddenly heard what I thought was the sound of
shouting a long way off. I stopped and shouted
more loudly than ever, and then heard the shouts
coming nearer, and very soon after Sandy and
the gillie appeared. It turned out that what
I had supposed had happened, and that they had
crossed the burn thinking that I was still in
front of them.</p>
<p>I have never since then, on my return from
stalking, walked in front of the stalker along a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212"></SPAN>[212]</span>
path which I do not know. This unpleasant
incident made us later than ever, and I did not
get back to the lodge until nearly 10 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span></p>
<p>The following season I was again stalking in
the same forest, and on my first day was on the
same beat where I had had the misfortune to
wound the stag, as described above, and the same
stalker was once more with me. I asked him
whether he had heard anything of the wounded
stag, and he replied, “Nothing whatever,” adding
that although he was sure that the near
hind leg was broken, he could not be sure in the
darkness at what part exactly, but he thought it
was low down.</p>
<p>We began by spying a corrie, which was about
three miles from the place where I had wounded
the stag in the previous season, and presently
found five shootable stags which were together.
After watching them for a time, Sandy said,
“There are two much bigger than the others—one
a dark beast; he’s a good stag, with only one
horn.”</p>
<p>“All right!” I said. “Let’s shoot him;
he’ll be interesting anyhow.”</p>
<p>We then stalked the stags and managed to get
within about 120 yards of them. As soon as I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213"></SPAN>[213]</span>
got a good view of the beasts I noticed that
the stag with one horn was limping slightly, and
it flashed through my mind that he was almost
certainly the stag which I had wounded in the
previous season, particularly as he was the same
colour and the horn seemed to me to be very
similar to what I recollected of the horns of
the wounded stag. Whilst these thoughts
were rapidly passing through my mind, Sandy
whispered, “Don’t take the stag with one horn,
sir, but the yellow stag on the right which is a
much better beast.”</p>
<p><SPAN name="POOLEWE" id="POOLEWE"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i212fp" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_212_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">EVENING GLOW, POOLEWE, ROSS-SHIRE.</p>
<p class="pfs80">By <span class="smcap">Finlay Mackinnon</span>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>I replied by shooting the dark-coloured stag—this
time in the right place.</p>
<p>“You’ve shot the wrong beast!” said Sandy.
I said, “Oh, no I haven’t. You were with me
last time I fired my rifle, and I then fired it at
that very stag; let us have a look at him and see
if I’m not right.”</p>
<p>On examining the stag we found that low
down on his near hind leg the bone had evidently
been fractured just above the fetlock, but had
healed completely and set in the most wonderful
way. This, of course, was what had caused the
limp which I had noticed, and also the absence
of the horn on the other side of the head. After<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214"></SPAN>[214]</span>
examining the stag, Sandy quite agreed that
there was no doubt it must be the same stag, and
we both thought, although it was in very good
condition, that it was at least a stone lighter than
it had been in the previous season.</p>
<p>It is interesting to note that in the case of
stags, as in that of human beings, the muscular
movements are controlled by nerve centres which
are situated on the opposite side of the brain.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />