AN ENCOUNTER WITH A GRIZZLY 437 



because of the single one I killed while there, 

 while Camp Moose was so-called because of the 

 photograph of a moose that I took so late in the 

 day that I couldn't develop it. 



There were Camps Shoshone whenever we 

 camped with a hunting party of that tribe, many 

 of which were out for game and pinon nuts. 

 Other camps were of The Three Tetons and 

 Camp Trout, Camps Cliff Dwellers and Conti- 

 nental Divide, Snake River and Smoky Water, 

 Cottonwood and Cottontail, Bear, Beaver, and 

 Buffalo Forks. Near the latter camp we saw 

 geese, swan, ducks, and snipe as well as Rocky 

 Mountain and ruffed grouse, while a picture I 

 took of that camp w r ould classify me as a game 

 hog to-day. 



We visited the Yellowstone Park as tourists 

 with unloaded guns and our experiences, like the 

 photographs I took, were conventional. When 

 we came out of the Park we were starved for 

 meat and could have eaten a tourist raw. A few 

 hours of hunting brought us no game and it was 

 nearing night when we saw the smoke of a camp- 



