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<h2> CHAPTER XXXVI. </h2>
<p>Discovery of the Trail—Prairie Detectives.<br/></p>
<p>Meanwhile, Kit Carson, who was with Major Carleton, had discovered a trail
made by three of the enemy. Carefully following it up, it was found to
join the principal path, a short distance away. When Quinn arrived he had
also some discoveries to report, and the scouts held a consultation over
the question. It was agreed by all that they were on the track of the
enemy they were seeking.</p>
<p>The general reader is not apt to appreciate the skill, patience and
intelligence shown by the scouts and hunters in tracing the flight of an
enemy through a wild and desolate country. As an evidence of the wonderful
attainments of border men in woodcraft, the following letter may be given,
written by the surgeon at Fort Randall in Dacotah in 1869:</p>
<p>"The most extraordinary skill that is exhibited in this part of the
country, either by the white man, or red native, is in the practice of
trailing. Here it may be accounted an art as much as music, painting or
sculpture is in the East. The Indian or trapper that is a shrewd trailer,
is a man of close observation, quick perception, and prompt action. As he
goes along, nothing escapes his observation, and what he sees and hears he
accounts for immediately. Often not another step is taken until a mystery
that may present itself in this line is fairly solved. The Indian trailer
will stand still for hours in succession, to account for certain traces or
effects in tracks, and sometimes gives to the matter unremitting attention
for days and weeks.</p>
<p>"The trailer is not a graceful man. He carries his head much inclined, his
eye is quick and restless, always on the watch, and he is practising his
art unconsciously, hardly ever crossing the track of man or animal without
seeing it. When he enters a house, he brings the habits he contracted in
the practice of his art with him. I know a trailer as soon he enters my
room. He comes in through the door softly, and with an air of exceeding
caution. Before he is fairly in, or at least has sat down, he has taken
note of every article and person. Though there may be a dozen vacant
chairs in the room, he is not used to chairs, and, like the Indian,
prefers a more humble seat. When I was employed by General Harney last
summer to take charge temporarily of the Indians that were gathered here
to form a new reservation, one day a guide and trailer came into the
General's headquarters. I told him to be seated. He sat down on the floor,
bracing his back against the wall. The General saw this, and in vexation
cried out, 'My God, why don't you take a chair when there are plenty here
not occupied?' The man arose and seated himself in a chair, but in so
awkward and uncomfortable a manner that he looked as if he might slip from
it at any moment. But when this uncouth person came to transact his
business with the General, he turned out to be a man of no ordinary
abilities. His description of a route he took as guide and trailer for the
Ogallalas in bringing them from the Platte to this place was minute, and
to me exceedingly interesting. Every war party that for the season had
crossed his trail, he described with minuteness as to their number, the
kinds of arms they had, and stated the tribes they belonged to. In these
strange revelations that he made there was neither imposition nor
supposition, for he gave satisfactory reasons for every assertion he made.</p>
<p>"I have rode several hundred miles with an experienced guide and trailer,
Hack, whom I interrogated upon many points in the practice of this art.
Nearly all tracks I saw, either old or new, as a novice in the art, I
questioned him about. In going to the Niobrara River crossed the track of
an Indian pony. My guide followed the track a few miles and then said, 'It
is a stray, black horse, with a long, bushy tail, nearly starved to death,
has a split hoof of the left fore foot, and goes very lame, and he passed
here early this morning.' Astonished and incredulous, I asked him the
reasons for knowing these particulars by the tracks of the animal, when he
replied:</p>
<p>"'It was a stray horse, because it did not go in a direct line; his tail
was long, for he dragged it over the snow; in brushing against a bush he
left some of his hair which shows its color. He was very hungry, for, in
going along, he has nipped at those high, dry weeds, which horses seldom
eat. The fissure of the left fore foot left also its track, and the depth
of the indentation shows the degree of his lameness; and his tracks show
he was here this morning, when the snow was hard with frost.'</p>
<p>"At another place we came across an Indian track, and he said, 'It is an
old Yankton who came across the Missouri last evening to look at his
traps. In coming over he carried in his right hand a trap, and in his left
a lasso to catch a pony which he had lost. He returned without finding the
horse, but had caught in the trap he had out a prairie wolf, which he
carried home on his back and a bundle of kinikinic wood in his right
hand.' Then, he gave his reasons: 'I know he is old, by the impression his
gait has made and a Yankton by that of his moccasin. He is from the other
side of the river, as there are no Yanktons on this side. The trap he
carried struck the snow now and then, and in same manner as when he came,
shows that he did not find his pony. A drop of blood in the centre of his
tracks shows that he carried the wolf on his back, and the bundle of
kinikinic wood he used for a staff for support, and catching a wolf, shows
that he had traps out.' But I asked, 'how do you know it is wolf; why not
a fox, or a coyote, or even a deer?' Said he: 'If it had been a fox, or
coyote or any other small game he would have slipped the head of the
animal in his waist belt, and so carried it by his side, and not on his
shoulders. Deer are not caught by traps but if it had been a deer, he
would not have crossed this high hill, but would have gone back by way of
the ravine, and the load would have made his steps still more tottering.'</p>
<p>"Another Indian track which we saw twenty miles west of this he put this
serious construction upon: 'He is an upper Indian—a prowling horse
thief—carried a double shot gun, and is a rascal that killed some
white man lately, and passed here one week ago; for,' said he, 'a lone
Indian in these parts is on mischief, and generally on the lookout for
horses. He had on the shoes of a white man whom he had in all probability
killed, but his steps are those of an Indian. Going through the ravine,
the end of his gun hit into the deep snow. A week ago we had a very warm
day, and the snow being soft, he made these deep tracks; ever since it has
been intensely cold weather, which makes very shallow tracks.' I suggested
that perhaps he bought those shoes. 'Indians don't buy shoes, and if they
did they would not buy them as large as these were, for Indians have very
small feet.'</p>
<p>"The most noted trailer of this country was Paul Daloria, a half breed,
who died under my hands of Indian consumption last summer. I have spoken
of him in a former letter. At one time I rode with him, and trailing was
naturally the subject of our conversation. I begged to trail with him an
old track over the prairie, in order to learn its history. I had hardly
made the proposition, when he drew up his horse, which was at a ravine,
and said, 'Well, here is an old elk track. Let us get off our horses and
follow it.' We followed it but a few rods, when he said, it was exactly a
month old, and made at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. This he knew, as then
we had our last rain, and at the hour named the ground was softer than at
any other time. The track before us was then made. He broke up here and
there clusters of grass that lay in the path of the track, and showed me
the dry ends of some, the stumps of others, and by numerous other similar
items accounted for many circumstances that astonished me. We followed the
trail over a mile. Now and then we saw that a wolf, a fox, and other
animals had practised their trailing instincts on the elk's tracks. Here
and there, he would show me where a snake, a rat, and a prairie dog had
crossed the track. Nothing had followed or crossed the track that the
quick eye of Daloria did not detect. He gave an account of the habits of
all the animals that had left their footprints on the track, also of the
state of the weather since the elk passed, and the effect of sunshine,
winds, aridity, sand storms, and other influences that had a bearing on
these tracks."</p>
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