The Later Cave-Men - Part 11
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Part 11

How do you think the children played in the winter? What do you play in the winter?

How do you think the Cave-men would hunt when there was only a light fall of snow?

How would they hunt when the snow was deep?

How would they hunt when there was a hard crust on the snow?

_How the Children Played in Winter_

When the children saw their fathers and mothers go out of doors, they, too, wanted to go. But they had no warm clothing, so their mothers tried to keep them in doors.

Sometimes Fleetfoot and Flaker teased to go out and play in the snow.

And when the days were warm enough, Antler let them go out and play.

But on very cold days they had to stay in the cave.

The children had good times in the cave. They played many animal games. They played they were grown men and women, and they made believe do all sorts of work. They peeked out of the cave many times each day. They heard their fathers and mothers talk. And they listened to Greybeard's stories.

And so the children always knew what the men and women were doing.

After a heavy fall of snow, they knew they would trap the animals in the drifts. When a hard crust formed, they knew they would dig pitfalls.

Antler often wished that the children might play out doors every day.

Greybeard wanted the boys to learn to make pitfalls and traps. But neither Antler nor Greybeard had thought of making clothing for little children.

The day Antler thought of making clothes for the boys, was the day they ran away to the pitfall. It was soon after Chipper came to the cave and said that two reindeer were in the pit.

When the boys heard what Chipper said, they were playing they were Bighorn and Chipper. They had tied the skins of wolves' heads over their heads, and they let the rest of the skins hang down as if they were capes.

When the news came about the reindeer, everybody was excited.

Everybody hurried to the pitfall so as to see the reindeer. n.o.body noticed the boys steal out of the cave. n.o.body noticed them run to the pitfall.

But soon after she started, Antler saw the tracks of their bare feet.

She guessed at once where the boys had gone. And it was then that she thought of making them clothing.

While the children slept that night, Antler talked with the women. And when morning came, the women took skins and made the children warm clothes and moccasins.

When the children put on their wolf-skin suits, they looked like a pack of wolves. Sometimes they played they were wolves. Then they chased make-believe wild horses.

Sometimes when the children were playing in the snow, they found the antlers of a full-grown stag. The children began to look for the antlers of the full-grown stags in early winter. But they knew that the other reindeer kept their antlers until early spring.

An old stag's antlers were large and strong, and the children liked to find them. They would pick them up and hold them in their hands and would then make believe they were Cave-men trapping reindeer in the snow.

One day Greybeard showed Fleetfoot and Flaker how to trap the reindeer in the snow. He showed them how to dig a pitfall in the drifts. The boys found a large drift near the trail and they cut out a large block of snow. They hollowed a deep pit under the crust which they took pains not to break. Then they fitted the block of snow in its place, thus covering the pit.

To make sure that the reindeer would come to the pitfall they scattered moss over the thin crust. Then Greybeard taught them to say,

"_Come down to the river, reindeer;_ _Come down to the river to drink._ _Come eat the moss I have spread for you,_ _Come and fall into my trap._"

All the Cave-men believed that these words would charm the reindeer to the spot. They always muttered such lines as charms when they went out to hunt. And so Greybeard taught the boys the lines, for he wanted them to know all the Cave-men's charms.

#THINGS TO DO#

_Name the animals which you know by their tracks. Draw a picture of the tracks you know best._

_Tell a story about hunting an animal by tracking it._

_Next time there is a heavy fall of snow, play hunting animals by driving them into the drifts._

_See if you can show in your sand-box how the pitfall was made._

_See if you can think of a way of having real drifts in your sand-box._

_Draw a picture of the children playing with the antlers of the reindeer._

_Draw a picture of the reindeer in the pitfall._

XVIII

THINGS TO THINK ABOUT

Do you know whether we can tell what the weather is going to be?

Have you ever heard any one talking about the signs of the weather?

What signs do you know?

Notice animals and see how they act before a storm.

Notice what animals and birds are here in summer that are not here in winter. Are any here in winter that are not here in the summer?

Why did the bison go away from the Cave-men's hunting grounds each winter? When they went away would they go in large or small herds?

If the weather kept pleasant how do you think they would travel?

What would they do if it looked like a storm?

Notice the animals that live near you and see whether they turn their heads or backs toward the storm.

_Overtaken by a Storm_

Winter pa.s.sed and summer came and now it was almost gone. The cattle had gone to the forests in the lowlands where they spent the winter.

Straggling lines of bison were moving down the valley. Now and then they stopped a few days to eat the tall gra.s.s. Then they slowly moved onward toward the lower lands.

The days were like the Indian summer days which we sometimes have in late autumn. Everybody enjoyed each day as it came, and thought little about the coming cold. But one morning the sky was gray and gloomy, and the sun could not pierce through the heavy clouds. The air was cold and now and then a snowflake was falling.

There was no meat at the cave, and everybody was hungry. So Bighorn said to the men, "Let's hunt the bison to-day."