Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

“To illustrate the comparatively small number of dead feathers which are collected, I will mention that in one year I and my associates shipped to New York eighty pounds of the plumes of the large heron and twelve pounds of the little recurved plumes of the snowy heron.  In this whole lot there were not over five pounds of plumes that had been gathered from the ground—­and these were of little value.  The plume-birds have been nearly exterminated in the United States and Mexico, and the same condition of affairs will soon exist in tropical America.  This extermination will come about because of the fact that the young are left to starve in the nest when the old birds are killed, any other statement made by interested parties to the contrary notwithstanding.

“I am so incensed at the ridiculously absurd and misleading stories that are being published on this question that I want to give you this letter, and, before delivering it to you, shall take oath to its truthfulness.”

Here is the testimony of Mr. Caspar Whitney, of New York, formerly editor of Outing Magazine and Outdoor America

“During extended travel throughout South America, from 1903 to 1907, inclusive, I journeyed, on three separate occasions, by canoe (1904-1907), on the Lower Orinoco and Apure rivers and their tributaries.  This is the region, so far as Venezuela is concerned, in which is the greatest slaughter of white herons for their plumage, or more specifically for the marital plumes, which are carried only in the mating and breeding season, and are known in the millinery trade as ‘aigrettes.’

“There is literally no room for question.  The snowy herons are killed exactly as I describe.  It is the custom of all those who hunt for the millinery trade, and is recognized by the natives as the usual method.”

Here is the testimony of Mr. Julian A. Dimock, of Peekamose, N.Y., the famous outdoor photographer, and illustrator of “Florida Enchantments”: 

“I know a goodly number of the plume-hunters of Florida.  I have camped with them, and talked to them.  I have heard their tales, and even full accounts of the ‘shooting-up’ of an egret rookery.  Never has a man in Florida suggested to me that plumes could be obtained without killing the birds.  I have known the wardens, and have visited rookeries after they had been ‘shot-up,’ and the evidence all pointed to the everlasting use of the gun. It is certainly not true that the plumes can be obtained without killing the birds bearing them.

“Nineteen years ago, I visited the Cuthbert Rookery with one of the men who discovered the birds nesting in that lake.  He and his partner had sold the plumes gathered there for more than a thousand dollars.  He showed me how they hid in the bushes and shot the birds.  He even gave me a chance to watch him kill two or three birds.

“I know personally the man chiefly responsible for the slaughter of the birds at Alligator Bay. He laughed at the idea of getting plumes without killing the birds! I well know the man who shot the birds up Rogers River, and even saw some of the empty shells left on the ground by him.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.