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.

That Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and Washington still continue to permit sheep slaughter is outrageous.  Their answer is that “The sportsmen won’t stand for stopping it altogether.”  I will add:—­and the great mass of people are too criminally indifferent to take a hand in the matter, and do their duty regardless of the men of blood.

The seed stock of big-horn sheep now alive in the United States aggregates a pitifully small number.  After twenty-five years of unbroken protection in Colorado, Dillon Wallace estimates, after an investigation on the ground, that the state possesses perhaps thirty-five hundred head.  He credits Montana and Wyoming with five hundred each—­which I think is far too liberal a number.  I do not believe that either of those states contains more than one hundred unprotected sheep, at the very utmost limit.  If there are more, where are they?

In the Yellowstone Park there are 210 head, safe and sound, and slowly increasing.  I can not understand why they have not increased more rapidly than they have.  In Glacier Park, now under permanent protection, three guides on Lake McDonald, in 1910, estimated the number of sheep at seven hundred.  Idaho has in her rugged Bitter Root and Clearwater Mountains and elsewhere, a remnant of possibly two hundred sheep, and Washington has only what chemists call “a trace.”  It has recently been discovered that California still contains a few sheep, and in southwestern Nevada there are a few more.

In Utah, the big-horn species is probably quite extinct.  In Arizona, there are a few very small bands, very widely scattered.  They are in the Santa Catalina Mountains, the Grand Canyon country, the Gila Range, and the Quitovaquita Mountains, near Sonoyta.  But who can protect from slaughter those Arizona sheep?  Absolutely no one!  They are too few and too widely scattered for the game wardens to keep in touch with them.  The “prospectors” have them entirely at their mercy, and the world well knows what prospectors’ “mercy” to edible big game looks like on the ground.  It leads straight to the frying-pan, the coyotes and the vultures.

The Lower California peninsula contains about five hundred mountain sheep, without the slightest protection save low, desert mountains, heat and thirst.  But that is no real protection whatever.  Those sheep are too fine to be butchered the way they have been, and now are being butchered.  In 1908 I strongly called the attention of the Mexican Government to the situation; and the Departmento de Fomento secured the issue of an executive order forbidding the hunting of any big game in Lower California without the written authority of the government.  I am sure, however, that owing to the political and military upheaval it never stopped the slaughter of sheep.  In such easy mountains as those of Lower California, it is a simple matter to exterminate quickly all the mountain sheep that they possess.  The time for President Madero and his cabinet to inaugurate serious protective measures has fully arrived.

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