WILD TURKEY AND DEER SHOOTING. 249 



to advantage in Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, and 

 Arkansas, where there are still plenty. It should 

 also be tried in Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, etc. 

 Even in barrens and timber-land it would be 

 better to hunt deer in this way than to still 

 hunt for them on foot, if the ground is prac- 

 ticable for a horse. In some rugged places a 

 horse cannot go ; and in wet marshes, morasses, 

 and shaking bogs a horse with a man on his 

 back would sink in and be unable to struggle 

 out. In Missouri deer are generally driven with 

 hounds, and shot at crossing-places and runways. 

 There are also many killed by still hunting. 



To have any chance of success in deer-hunt- 

 ing, it is necessary that the sportsman should 

 know the lay of the country and the places in 

 which they are likely to be found. A stranger 

 to the neighborhood had better get an old hunter 

 to go out with him for a few days. A know- 

 ledge of their habits in the different localities is 

 required, and it would take a long time to learn 

 these if they were not imparted by some one 

 who knows them. The deer are now wild and 

 shy in most places. They have a keen nose, and 

 can scent a man to windward before he can see 

 them, which makes it requisite to hunt up,wind. 



