<SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter XII</h2>
<h2 align="center">The Return to Fort Wrangell</h2>
<!-- Page 178 -->
<p>The day of our start for Wrangell was bright and the Hoon, the
north wind, strong. We passed around the east side of the larger
island which lies near the south extremity of the point of land
between the Chilcat and the Chilcoot channels and thence held a direct
course down the east shore of the canal. At sunset we encamped in a
small bay at the head of a beautiful harbor three or four miles south
of Berner's Bay, and the next day, being Sunday, we remained in camp
as usual, though the wind was fair and it is not a sin to go home. The
Indians spent most of the day in washing, mending, eating, and singing
hymns with Mr. Young, who also gave them a Bible lesson, while I wrote
notes and sketched. Charley made a sweathouse and all the crew got
good baths. This is one of the most delightful little bays we have
thus far enjoyed, girdled with tall trees whose branches almost meet,
and with views of pure-white mountains across the broad, river-like
canal.</p>
<p>Seeing smoke back in the dense woods, we went ashore to seek it and
discovered a Hootsenoo whiskey-factory in full blast. The Indians said
that an old man, a friend of theirs, was about to die and they were
making whiskey for his funeral.</p>
<p>Our Indians were already out of oily flesh, which they regard as a
necessity and consume in enormous <!-- Page 179 -->
quantities. The bacon was nearly gone and they eagerly inquired for
flesh at every camp we passed. Here we found skinned carcasses of
porcupines and a heap of wild mutton lying on the confused hut floor.
Our cook boiled the porcupines in a big pot with a lot of potatoes we
obtained at the same hut, and although the potatoes were protected by
their skins, the awfully wild penetrating porcupine flavor found a way
through the skins and flavored them to the very heart. Bread and beans
and dried fruit we had in abundance, and none of these rank aboriginal
dainties ever came nigh any meal of mine. The Indians eat the hips of
wild roses entire like berries, and I was laughed at for eating only
the outside of this fruit and rejecting the seeds.</p>
<p>When we were approaching the village of the Auk tribe, venerable
Toyatte seemed to be unusually pensive, as if weighed down by some
melancholy thought. This was so unusual that I waited attentively to
find out the cause of his trouble.</p>
<p>When at last he broke silence it was to say, “Mr. Young, Mr.
Young,”--he usually repeated the name,--“I hope you will
not stop at the Auk village.”</p>
<p>“Why, Toyatte?” asked Mr. Young.</p>
<p>“Because they are a bad lot, and preaching to them can do no
good.”</p>
<p>“Toyatte,” said Mr. Young, “have you forgotten
what Christ said to his disciples when he charged them to go forth and
preach the gospel to everybody; and that we should love our enemies
and do good to those who use us badly?”</p>
<!-- Page 180 -->
<p>“Well,” replied Toyatte, “if you preach to them,
you must not call on me to pray, because I cannot pray for
Auks.”</p>
<p>“But the Bible says we should pray for all men, however bad
they may be.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, I know that, Mr. Young; I know it very well. But
Auks are not men, good or bad,--they are dogs.”</p>
<p>It was now nearly dark and quite so ere we found a harbor, not far
from the fine Auk Glacier which descends into the narrow channel that
separates Douglas Island from the mainland. Two of the Auks followed
us to our camp after eight o'clock and inquired into our object in
visiting them, that they might carry the news to their chief. One of
the chief's houses is opposite our camp a mile or two distant, and we
concluded to call on him next morning.</p>
<p>I wanted to examine the Auk Glacier in the morning, but tried to be
satisfied with a general view and sketch as we sailed around its wide
fan-shaped front. It is one of the most beautiful of all the coast
glaciers that are in the first stage of decadence. We called on the
Auk chief at daylight, when he was yet in bed, but he arose
goodnaturedly, put on a calico shirt, drew a blanket around his legs,
and comfortably seated himself beside a small fire that gave light
enough to show his features and those of his children and the three
women that one by one came out of the shadows. All listened
attentively to Mr. Young's message of goodwill. The chief was a
serious, sharp-featured, dark-complexioned man, sensible-looking and
with good <!-- Page 181 --> manners. He was very sorry, he said, that
his people had been drinking in his absence and had used us so ill; he
would like to hear us talk and would call his people together if we
would return to the village. This offer we had to decline. We gave him
good words and tobacco and bade him good-bye.</p>
<p>The scenery all through the channel is magnificent, something like
Yosemite Valley in its lofty avalanche-swept wall cliffs, especially
on the mainland side, which are so steep few trees can find footing.
The lower island side walls are mostly forested. The trees are heavily
draped with lichens, giving the woods a remarkably gray, ancient look.
I noticed a good many two-leafed pines in boggy spots. The water was
smooth, and the reflections of the lofty walls striped with cascades
were charmingly distinct.</p>
<p>It was not easy to keep my crew full of wild flesh. We called at an
Indian summer camp on the mainland about noon, where there were three
very squalid huts crowded and jammed full of flesh of many colors and
smells, among which we discovered a lot of bright fresh trout, lovely
creatures about fifteen inches long, their sides adorned with vivid
red spots. We purchased five of them and a couple of salmon for a box
of gun-caps and a little tobacco. About the middle of the afternoon we
passed through a fleet of icebergs, their number increasing as we
neared the mouth of the Taku Fiord, where we camped, hoping to explore
the fiord and see the glaciers where the bergs, the first we had seen
since leaving Icy Bay, are derived.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/tia_182.jpg" width-obs="270" height-obs="180" alt="Stranded Icebergs, Taku Glacier" />
<p>We left camp at six o'clock, nearly an hour before
<!-- Page 182 --> daybreak. My Indians were glad to find the fiord
barred by a violent wind, against which we failed to make any headway;
and as it was too late in the season to wait for better weather, I
reluctantly gave up this promising work for another year, and directed
the crew to go straight ahead down the coast. We sailed across the
mouth of the happy inlet at fine speed, keeping a man at the bow to
look out for the smallest of the bergs, not easily seen in the dim
light, and another bailing the canoe as the tops of some of the white
caps broke over us. About two o'clock we passed a large bay or fiord,
out of which a violent wind was blowing, though the main Stephens
Passage was calm. About dusk, when we were all tired and anxious to
get into camp, we reached the mouth of Sum Dum Bay, but nothing like a
safe landing could we find. Our experienced captain was indignant, as
well he might be, because we did not see fit to stop early in the
afternoon at a good camp-ground he had chosen. He seemed determined to
give us enough of night sailing as a punishment to last us for the
rest of the voyage. Accordingly, though the night was dark and rainy
and the bay full of icebergs, he pushed grimly on, saying that we must
try to reach an Indian village on the other side of the bay or an old
Indian fort on an island in the middle of it. We made slow, weary,
anxious progress while Toyatte, who was well acquainted with every
feature of this part of the coast and could find his way in the dark,
only laughed at our misery. After a mile or two of this dismal night
work we struck across toward the island, now invisible,
<!-- Page 183 --> and came near being wrecked on a rock which showed a
smooth round back over which the waves were breaking. In the hurried
Indian shouts that followed and while we were close against the rock,
Mr. Young shouted, as he leaned over against me, “It's a whale,
a whale!” evidently fearing its tail, several specimens of these
animals, which were probably still on his mind, having been seen in
the forenoon. While we were passing along the east shore of the island
we saw a light on the opposite shore, a joyful sight, which Toyatte
took for a fire in the Indian village, and steered for it. John stood
in the bow, as guide through the bergs. Suddenly, we ran aground on a
sand bar. Clearing this, and running back half a mile or so, we again
stood for the light, which now shone brightly. I thought it strange
that Indians should have so large a fire. A broad white mass dimly
visible back of the fire Mr. Young took for the glow of the fire on
the clouds. This proved to be the front of a glacier. After we had
effected a landing and stumbled up toward the fire over a ledge of
slippery, algæ-covered rocks, and through the ordinary tangle of
shore grass, we were astonished to find white men instead of Indians,
the first we had seen for a month. They proved to be a party of seven
gold-seekers from Fort Wrangell. It was now about eight o'clock and
they were in bed, but a jolly Irishman got up to make coffee for us
and find out who we were, where we had come from, where going, and the
objects of our travels. We unrolled our chart and asked for
information as to the extent and features of the bay. But our
benevolent friend <!-- Page 184 --> took great pains to pull wool over
our eyes, and made haste to say that if “ice and
sceneries” were what we were looking for, this was a very poor,
dull place. There were “big rocks, gulches, and sceneries”
of a far better quality down the coast on the way to Wrangell. He and
his party were prospecting, he said, but thus far they had found only
a few colors and they proposed going over to Admiralty Island in the
morning to try their luck.</p>
<p>In the morning, however, when the prospectors were to have gone
over to the island, we noticed a smoke half a mile back on a large
stream, the outlet of the glacier we had seen the night before, and an
Indian told us that the white men were building a big log house up
there. It appeared that they had found a promising placer mine in the
moraine and feared we might find it and spread the news. Daylight
revealed a magnificent fiord that brought Glacier Bay to mind. Miles
of bergs lay stranded on the shores, and the waters of the branch
fiords, not on Vancouver's chart, were crowded with them as far as the
eye could reach. After breakfast we set out to explore an arm of the
bay that trends southeastward, and managed to force a way through the
bergs about ten miles. Farther we could not go. The pack was so close
no open water was in sight, and, convinced at last that this part of
my work would have to be left for another year, we struggled across to
the west side of the fiord and camped.</p>
<p>I climbed a mountain next morning, hoping to gain a view of the
great fruitful glaciers at the head of <!-- Page 185 --> the fiord or,
at least, of their snowy fountains. But in this also I failed; for at
a distance of about sixteen miles from the mouth of the fiord a change
to the northward in its general trend cut off all its upper course
from sight.</p>
<p>Returning to camp baffled and weary, I ordered all hands to pack up
and get out of the ice as soon as possible. And how gladly was that
order obeyed! Toyatte's grand countenance glowed like a sun-filled
glacier, as he joyfully and teasingly remarked that “the big Sum
Dum ice-mountain had hidden his face from me and refused to let me pay
him a visit.” All the crew worked hard boring a way down the
west side of the fiord, and early in the afternoon we reached
comparatively open water near the mouth of the bay. Resting a few
minutes among the drifting bergs, taking last lingering looks at the
wonderful place I might never see again, and feeling sad over my weary
failure to explore it, I was cheered by a friend I little expected to
meet here. Suddenly, I heard the familiar whir of an ousel's wings,
and, looking up, saw my little comforter coming straight from the
shore. In a second or two he was with me, and flew three times around
my head with a happy salute, as if saying, “Cheer up, old
friend, you see I am here and all's well.” He then flew back to
the shore, alighted on the topmost jag of a stranded iceberg, and
began to nod and bow as though he were on one of his favorite rocks in
the middle of a sunny California mountain cataract.</p>
<p>Mr. Young regretted not meeting the Indians here, but mission work
also had to be left until next season. <!-- Page 186 --> Our happy
crew hoisted sail to a fair wind, shouted “Good-bye, Sum
Dum!” and soon after dark reached a harbor a few miles north of
Hobart Point.</p>
<p>We made an early start the next day, a fine, calm morning, glided
smoothly down the coast, admiring the magnificent mountains arrayed in
their winter robes, and early in the afternoon reached a lovely harbor
on an island five or six miles north of Cape Fanshawe. Toyatte
predicted a heavy winter storm, though only a mild rain was falling as
yet. Everybody was tired and hungry, and as the voyage was nearing the
end, I consented to stop here. While the shelter tents were being set
up and our blankets stowed under cover, John went out to hunt and
killed a deer within two hundred yards of the camp. When we were at
the camp-fire in Sum Dum Bay, one of the prospectors, replying to Mr.
Young's complaint that they were oftentimes out of meat, asked Toyatte
why he and his men did not shoot plenty of ducks for the minister.
“Because the duck's friend would not let us,” said
Toyatte; “when we want to shoot, Mr. Muir always shakes the
canoe.”</p>
<p>Just as we were passing the south headland of Port Houghton Bay, we
heard a shout, and a few minutes later saw four Indians in a canoe
paddling rapidly after us. In about an hour they overtook us. They
were an Indian, his son, and two women with a load of fish-oil and
dried salmon to sell and trade at Fort Wrangell. They camped within a
dozen yards of us; with their sheets of cedar bark and poles they
speedily made a hut, spread spruce boughs in it for a carpet,
<!-- Page 187 --> unloaded the canoe, and stored their goods under
cover. Toward evening the old man came smiling with a gift for
Toyatte,--a large fresh salmon, which was promptly boiled and eaten by
our captain and crew as if it were only a light refreshment like a
biscuit between meals. A few minutes after the big salmon had
vanished, our generous neighbor came to Toyatte with a second gift of
dried salmon, which after being toasted a few minutes tranquilly
followed the fresh one as though it were a mere mouthful. Then, from
the same generous hands, came a third gift,--a large milk-panful of
huckleberries and grease boiled together,--and, strange to say, this
wonderful mess went smoothly down to rest on the broad and deep salmon
foundation. Thus refreshed, and appetite sharpened, my sturdy crew
made haste to begin on the buck, beans, bread, etc., and, boiling and
roasting, managed to get comfortably full on but little more than half
of it by sundown, making a good deal of sport of my pity for the deer
and refusing to eat any of it and nicknaming me the ice <i>ancou</i>
and the deer and duck's <i>tillicum</i>.</p>
<p>Sunday was a wild, driving, windy day with but little rain but big
promise of more. I took a walk back in the woods. The timber here is
very fine, about as large as any I have seen in Alaska, much better
than farther north. The Sitka spruce and the common hemlock, one
hundred and fifty and two hundred feet high, are slender and handsome.
The Sitka spruce makes good firewood even when green, the hemlock very
poor. Back a little way from the sea, there was <!-- Page 188 --> a
good deal of yellow cedar, the best I had yet seen. The largest
specimen that I saw and measured on the trip was five feet three
inches in diameter and about one hundred and forty feet high. In the
evening Mr. Young gave the Indians a lesson, calling in our Indian
neighbors. He told them the story of Christ coming to save the world.
The Indians wanted to know why the Jews had killed him. The lesson was
listened to with very marked attention. Toyatte's generous friend
caught a devil-fish about three feet in diameter to add to his stores
of food. It would be very good, he said, when boiled in berry and
colicon-oil soup. Each arm of this savage animal with its double row
of button-like suction discs closed upon any object brought within
reach with a grip nothing could escape. The Indians tell me that
devil-fish live mostly on crabs, mussels, and clams, the shells of
which they easily crunch with their strong, parrot-like beaks. That
was a wild, stormy, rainy night. How the rain soaked us in our
tents!</p>
<p>“Just feel that,” said the minister in the night, as he
took my hand and plunged it into a pool about three inches deep in
which he was lying.</p>
<p>“Never mind,” I said, “it is only water.
Everything is wet now. It will soon be morning and we will dry at the
fire.”</p>
<p>Our Indian neighbors were, if possible, still wetter. Their hut had
been blown down several times during the night. Our tent leaked badly,
and we were lying in a mossy bog, but around the big camp-fire we were
soon warm and half dry. We had expected to reach <!-- Page 189 -->
Wrangell by this time. Toyatte said the storm might last several days
longer. We were out of tea and coffee, much to Mr. Young's distress.
On my return from a walk I brought in a good big bunch of glandular
ledum and boiled it in the teapot. The result of this experiment was a
bright, clear amber-colored, rank-smelling liquor which I did not
taste, but my suffering companion drank the whole potful and praised
it. The rain was so heavy we decided not to attempt to leave camp
until the storm somewhat abated, as we were assured by Toyatte that we
would not be able to round Cape Fanshawe, a sheer, outjutting
headland, the nose as he called it, past which the wind sweeps with
great violence in these southeastern storms. With what grateful
enthusiasm the trees welcomed the life-giving rain! Strong, towering
spruces, hemlocks, and cedars tossed their arms, bowing, waving, in
every leap, quivering and rejoicing together in the gray, roaring
storm. John and Charley put on their gun-coats and went hunting for
another deer, but returned later in the afternoon with clean hands,
having fortunately failed to shed any more blood. The wind still held
in the south, and Toyatte, grimly trying to comfort us, told us that
we might be held here a week or more, which we should not have minded
much, for we had abundance of provisions. Mr. Young and I shifted our
tent and tried to dry blankets. The wind moderated considerably, and
at 7 A.M. we started but met a rough sea and so stiff a wind we barely
succeeded in rounding the cape by all hands pulling their best. Thence
we struggled down the coast, <!-- Page 190 --> creeping close to the
shore and taking advantage of the shelter of protecting rocks, making
slow, hard-won progress until about the middle of the afternoon, when
the sky opened and the blessed sun shone out over the beautiful waters
and forests with rich amber light; and the high, glacier-laden
mountains, adorned with fresh snow, slowly came to view in all their
grandeur, the bluish-gray clouds crawling and lingering and dissolving
until every vestige of them vanished. The sunlight made the upper
snow-fields pale creamy yellow, like that seen on the Chilcat
mountains the first day of our return trip. Shortly after the sky
cleared, the wind abated and changed around to the north, so that we
ventured to hoist our sail, and then the weary Indians had rest. It
was interesting to note how speedily the heavy swell that had been
rolling for the last two or three days was subdued by the
comparatively light breeze from the opposite direction. In a few
minutes the sound was smooth and no trace of the storm was left, save
the fresh snow and the discoloration of the water. All the water of
the sound as far as I noticed was pale coffee-color like that of the
streams in boggy woods. How much of this color was due to the inflow
of the flooded streams many times increased in size and number by the
rain, and how much to the beating of the waves along the shore
stirring up vegetable matter in shallow bays, I cannot determine. The
effect, however, was very marked.</p>
<p>About four o'clock we saw smoke on the shore and ran in for news.
We found a company of Taku Indians, <!-- Page 191 --> who were on
their way to Fort Wrangell, some six men and about the same number of
women. The men were sitting in a bark hut, handsomely reinforced and
embowered with fresh spruce boughs. The women were out at the side of
a stream, washing their many bits of calico. A little girl, six or
seven years old, was sitting on the gravelly beach, building a
playhouse of white quartz pebbles, scarcely caring to stop her work to
gaze at us. Toyatte found a friend among the men, and wished to encamp
beside them for the night, assuring us that this was the only safe
harbor to be found within a good many miles. But we resolved to push
on a little farther and make use of the smooth weather after being
stormbound so long, much to Toyatte and his companion's disgust. We
rowed about a couple of miles and ran into a cozy cove where wood and
water were close at hand. How beautiful and homelike it was! plushy
moss for mattresses decked with red corner berries, noble spruce
standing guard about us and spreading kindly protecting arms. A few
ferns, aspidiums, polypodiums, with dewberry vines, coptis, pyrola,
leafless huckleberry bushes, and ledum grow beneath the trees. We
retired at eight o'clock, and just then Toyatte, who had been
attentively studying the sky, presaged rain and another southeaster
for the morrow.</p>
<p>The sky was a little cloudy next morning, but the air was still and
the water smooth. We all hoped that Toyatte, the old weather prophet,
had misread the sky signs. But before reaching Point Vanderpeut the
rain began to fall and the dreaded southeast wind to <!-- Page 192 -->
blow, which soon increased to a stiff breeze, next thing to a gale,
that lashed the sound into ragged white caps. Cape Vanderpeut is part
of the terminal of an ancient glacier that once extended six or eight
miles out from the base of the mountains. Three large glaciers that
once were tributaries still descend nearly to the sea-level, though
their fronts are back in narrow fiords, eight or ten miles from the
sound. A similar point juts out into the sound five or six miles to
the south, while the missing portion is submerged and forms a
shoal.</p>
<p>All the cape is forested save a narrow strip about a mile long,
composed of large boulders against which the waves beat with loud
roaring. A bar of foam a mile or so farther out showed where the waves
were breaking on a submerged part of the moraine, and I supposed that
we would be compelled to pass around it in deep water, but Toyatte,
usually so cautious, determined to cross it, and after giving
particular directions, with an encouraging shout every oar and paddle
was strained to shoot through a narrow gap. Just at the most critical
point a big wave heaved us aloft and dropped us between two huge
rounded boulders, where, had the canoe been a foot or two closer to
either of them, it must have been smashed. Though I had offered no
objection to our experienced pilot's plan, it looked dangerous, and I
took the precaution to untie my shoes so they could be quickly shaken
off for swimming. But after crossing the bar we were not yet out of
danger, for we had to struggle hard to keep from being driven ashore
while the waves were beating <!-- Page 193 --> us broadside on. At
length we discovered a little inlet, into which we gladly escaped. A
pure-white iceberg, weathered to the form of a cross, stood amid
drifts of kelp and the black rocks of the wave-beaten shore in sign of
safety and welcome. A good fire soon warmed and dried us into common
comfort. Our narrow escape was the burden of conversation as we sat
around the fire. Captain Toyatte told us of two similar adventures
while he was a strong young man. In both of them his canoe was smashed
and he swam ashore out of the surge with a gun in his teeth. He says
that if we had struck the rocks he and Mr. Young would have been
drowned, all the rest of us probably would have been saved. Then,
turning to me, he asked me if I could have made a fire in such a case
without matches, and found a way to Wrangell without canoe or
food.</p>
<p>We started about daybreak from our blessed white cross harbor, and,
after rounding a bluff cape opposite the mouth of Wrangell Narrows, a
fleet of icebergs came in sight, and of course I was eager to trace
them to their source. Toyatte naturally enough was greatly excited
about the safety of his canoe and begged that we should not venture to
force a way through the bergs, risking the loss of the canoe and our
lives now that we were so near the end of our long voyage.</p>
<p>“Oh, never fear, Toyatte,” I replied. “You know
we are always lucky--the weather is good. I only want to see the
Thunder Glacier for a few minutes, and should the bergs be packed
dangerously close, <!-- Page 194 --> I promise to turn back and wait
until next summer.”</p>
<p>Thus assured, he pushed rapidly on until we entered the fiord,
where we had to go cautiously slow. The bergs were close packed almost
throughout the whole extent of the fiord, but we managed to reach a
point about two miles from the head--commanding a good view of the
down-plunging lower end of the glacier and blue, jagged ice-wall. This
was one of the most imposing of the first-class glaciers I had as yet
seen, and with its magnificent fiord formed a fine triumphant close
for our season's ice work. I made a few notes and sketches and turned
back in time to escape from the thickest packs of bergs before dark.
Then Kadachan was stationed in the bow to guide through the open
portion of the mouth of the fiord and across Soutchoi Strait. It was
not until several hours after dark that we were finally free from ice.
We occasionally encountered stranded packs on the delta, which in the
starlight seemed to extend indefinitely in every direction. Our danger
lay in breaking the canoe on small bergs hard to see and in getting
too near the larger ones that might split or roll over.</p>
<p>“Oh, when will we escape from this ice?” moaned
much-enduring old Toyatte.</p>
<p>We ran aground in several places in crossing the Stickeen delta,
but finally succeeded in groping our way over muddy shallows before
the tide fell, and encamped on the boggy shore of a small island,
where we discovered a spot dry enough to sleep on, after tumbling
about in a tangle of bushes and mossy logs.</p>
<!-- Page 195 -->
<p>We left our last camp November 21 at daybreak. The weather was calm
and bright. Wrangell Island came into view beneath a lovely rosy sky,
all the forest down to the water's edge silvery gray with a dusting of
snow. John and Charley seemed to be seriously distressed to find
themselves at the end of their journey while a portion of the stock of
provisions remained uneaten. “What is to be done about
it?” they asked, more than half in earnest. The fine, strong,
and specious deliberation of Indians was well illustrated on this
eventful trip. It was fresh every morning. They all behaved well,
however, exerted themselves under tedious hardships without flinching
for days or weeks at a time; never seemed in the least nonplussed;
were prompt to act in every exigency; good as servants, fellow
travelers, and even friends.</p>
<p>We landed on an island in sight of Wrangell and built a big smoky
signal fire for friends in town, then set sail, unfurled our flag, and
about noon completed our long journey of seven or eight hundred miles.
As we approached the town, a large canoeful of friendly Indians came
flying out to meet us, cheering and handshaking in lusty Boston
fashion. The friends of Mr. Young had intended to come out in a body
to welcome him back, but had not had time to complete their
arrangements before we landed. Mr. Young was eager for news. I told
him there could be no news of importance about a town. We only had
real news, drawn from the wilderness. The mail steamer had left
Wrangell eight days before, and Mr. Vanderbilt and family had sailed
on her to Portland. I had <!-- Page 196 --> to wait a month for the
next steamer, and though I would have liked to go again to Nature, the
mountains were locked for the winter and canoe excursions no longer
safe.</p>
<p>So I shut myself up in a good garret alone to wait and work. I was
invited to live with Mr. Young but concluded to prepare my own food
and enjoy quiet work. How grandly long the nights were and short the
days! At noon the sun seemed to be about an hour high, the clouds
colored like sunset. The weather was rather stormy. North winds
prevailed for a week at a time, sending down the temperature to near
zero and chilling the vapor of the bay into white reek, presenting a
curious appearance as it streamed forward on the wind, like combed
wool. At Sitka the minimum was eight degrees plus; at Wrangell, near
the storm-throat of the Stickeen, zero. This is said to be the coldest
weather ever experienced in southeastern Alaska.</p>
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