1 8 GAME AND FISH RESORTS. 



Souiheren's Station. For game, route, etc., see Castle Rock. Fifly-fott _ 

 miles from Redding. 



AllirCs Station. Fo game, route, etc., see Castle Rock. Twenty-two miles 

 from Redding. 



Sishiyou County^ 



Soda Springs. Black and brown bear, black-tail, and mule deer, grouse, quail; 

 brook and Dolly Varden trout, Kdmon and white fish. For route, see Castle 

 Rock. Sixty-five miles firom Redding. Hotel $1.75, $8 per week ; saddle horses 

 $1.50. Guides are necessary for the hnnting and fishing grounds of the McCIoud 

 and Sacramento Rivers, Soda Creek and Castle Lake. Sisson's is eight miles 

 distant, where all necessary outfits and supplies will be found. The country is 

 mountainous, but not rough. « 



Coles. Deer, black, brown, and grizzly bears, panthers, mountain qu^. 

 grouse. Reached by stage firom Reddmg, on the Oregon Division of the Central 

 Pacific Railroad. Board $1.50, $7 per week. Country mountainous. 



Berryvale^ OX Sisson's Station, at the base of Mt. Shasta. Black, brown and 

 cinnamon bears, black tail and mule deer, mountain sheep, antelope, elk, jack 

 rabbits, grouse, sage hens, quail ; salmon and three varieties of trout. The game 

 and fish m great abundance. Reached via stage, seventy-five miles firom Red- 

 ding, the terminus of the Oregon Division of the Central Pacific Railroad. Fare 

 $7.50. J. H. Sisson keeps a sportsman's house, $1.50, $10 per week. For hunting 

 expeditions, he furnishes saddle and pack horses, complete camping outfit, w^ith 

 guides and cook, and furnishes board. The expense per man, is about $5 per 

 day. Excursions are made into the Klamath Basin for antelope and mountain 

 sheep, and into Oregon for elk. This is also an excellent headquarters for fishing 

 in the McCloud River, 



Solano County — 



DijTon. On the Sacramento River the sportsman will find geese, ducks, maU 

 lards, pin-tails, widgeons and teal, bitterns, cran^j, snipe, curlew ; quail in the 

 foot-hills ; fish abundant in Patch Creek. ReachetJ via the California Pacific 

 Railroad, sixty-five miles from Sao Francisco, tv/enry-one miles from Sacramento. 

 Board $2, with boats free, gnides $3, teams $5. The country is level prairie. 



Fairfield. Ducks, geese, quail, and many varieties of wild fowl ; trout, sal- 

 mon. Reached via the California Pacific Railroad. Board $1.50 to $2, or %^ per 

 week, guides and boats $3 to $5 per day. Country hiUy and prairie. 



Sonoma County^- 



Healdshurgh. Deer, bears, panthers, wild-cats, foxes, rabbits, hares, quail, 

 grouse, and ducks of all varieties. Of fiir-bearing animals, there are beavers, 

 pine martens, minks, coons and grey squirrels. Salmon, salmon trout and moun- 

 tain trout are abundant in the rivers and small streams. Take the San Francisco 

 and North Pacific Railroad. Sylvester Scott, who lives trventy^ve miles from 

 Healdsburgh, is an old hunter and a good guide. 



Tke Wackalla, on the coast, is a noted territory for deer and bears. Hunting 

 is done chiefly with dogs, in the hot dry season. 



Stanislaus County — 



Oakdale. Cinnamon bear, quail, ducks, geese and other wild fowl ; salmon 

 and trout. Reached via Modesta, on the Central Pacific Railroad. Board $1.50 * 



teams $5. ' 



TeKatna County — 



Vina. Bears, deer, California lions, quail, geese, ducks, cranes and other 

 water-fowl. Reached via the Oregon Division of the Central Pacific Railroad. 

 Board $4 to $5 per week ; teams $4 ; guides at reasonable rates. For the best 

 sport, camping is necessary. 



f}ulare County — 



Cross Creek. Bear, deer, antelope, grouse, quail, ducks and geese -salmon, 

 trout, and other fish. Reached via Visalia Division of Central Pacific Railroad. 

 Hotel §1 50; guides $3 to Js, with boats $5 ; teams $3 to $5. For goof* import, 

 :amp out Country prairie and siountains. 



