Out of Doors--California and Oregon | Page 8

J. A. Graves
a pleasant outing proved to be rather a
hard experience, but we were too old at the game not to have enjoyed it,

and do you realize that after we got rested up, we felt better for our
experience? Life in the open, the change of air, the excitement of
hunting, all united in sweeping the cobwebs from our brains and left us
better prepared for the battle of life than we were before we started.

Professor "Lo," Philosopher
My Interview with an Educated Indian in the Wilds of Oregon:
In the summer of 1902 I was camping, in company with the late Judge
Sterry of Los Angeles, on Spring Creek in the Klamath Indian
Reservation in Southeast Oregon. Spring Creek rises out, of lava rocks
and flows in a southeasterly direction, carrying over 200,000 inches of
the clearest, coldest water I ever saw. In fact, its waters are so clear that
the best anglers can only catch trout, with which the stream abounds, in
riffles, that is where the stream runs over rocks of such size as to keep
the surface in constant commotion, thus obscuring the vision of the
fish.
Two miles, or thereabouts, from its source, Spring Creek empties into
the Williamson River. The Williamson rises miles away in a tule
swamp, and its waters are as black as black coffee. Where the two
streams come together, the dark waters of the Williamson stay on the
left hand side of the stream, going down, and the clear waters of Spring
Creek on the right hand side, for half a mile or more. Here some rapids,
formed by a swift declivity of the stream, over sunken boulders, cause a
mixup of the light and dark waters, and from there on they flow
intermingled and indistinguishable.
Nine miles down stream, the Sprague River comes in from the left. It is
as large as the Williamson, and its waters are the color of milk, or
nearly so. The stream flows for miles over chalk beds and through
chalk cliffs, which gives its waters their weird coloring. The union of
the waters of the Williamson and the Sprague Rivers results in the dirty,
gray coloring of the waters of Klamath Lake, into which they empty,
and of the Klamath River, which discharges the lake into the Pacific
Ocean.
Killican.
The place where the Williamson is joined by the Sprague is known as
the "Killican." The stream here flows over a lava bottom and is quite
wide, in places very deep and in places quite shallow. There seemed to

be quite an area of this shallow water. The shallow places suddenly
dropped off into pools of great depth, and it was something of a stunt to
wander around on the shallow bed rock and cast off into the pools
below. I tried it and found the lava as smooth and slippery as polished
glass.
After sitting down a couple of times in water two feet deep, I concluded
to stay on shore and cast out into the pool. Following this exhilarating
exercise with indifferent success, I noticed approaching a little, old
Indian. He was bareheaded and barefooted. His shirt was open,
exposing his throat and breast. His eyes were deep set, his hair and
beard a grizzly gray. He had a willow fishing pole in one hand and a
short bush with green leaves on it, with which he was whacking
grasshoppers, in the other. He circled around on the bank near me, now
and again catching a hopper. I noticed that he ate about two out of
every five that he caught. The others he kept for bait.
Finally he approached the stream. He paid no attention whatever to me.
He selected a spot almost under me, squatted down upon a flat rock,
put two grasshoppers on his hook, threw it into the stream, and in a
very short time drew out a good six-pound trout. Filled with admiration
for the feat, while he was tying a string through the fish's gills I said to
him, "Muy mahe," which another Indian had told me meant "big trout."
Without looking up or turning his head, he said to me in perfect English,
"What sort of lingo are you giving me, young man? The true
pronunciation of those words is," and then he repeated "Muy mahe,"
with just a little twist to his words that I had not given them. Resuming
the conversation he remarked, "Why not speak English? When both
parties understand it, it is much more comfortable. I intended to catch
but one fish, but as you have admired this one, allow me to present it to
you with my compliments." He had turned around now, and held out
the struggling trout, a pleasant smile upon his worn features.
Embarrassed beyond measure,
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 35
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.