42 THE SEALS AND WALRUSES. 



"This ground, over which the Sea Lious are driven, is mostly a rolling level, thickly grassed 

 and mossed over, with here and there a fresh-water pond into which the animals plunge with great 

 apparent satisfaction, seeming to cool themselves, and out of which the natives have no trouble in 

 driving them. The distance between the sea-lion pen at Northeast Point and the village is about 

 ten miles, as the Sea Lious are driven, and occupies over live or six days under the most favorable 

 circumstances, such as wet, cold weather; and when a little warmer, or as in July or August, a 

 few seasons ago, they were some three weeks coming down with a drove, and even then left a 

 hundred or so along on the road. 



" After the drove has been brought into the village ou the killing-grounds, the natives shoot 

 down the bulls and then surround and huddle up the cows, spearing them just behind the fore 

 flippers. The killing of the Sea Lions is quite an exciting spectacle, a strange and unparalleled 

 exhibition of its kind. . . . The bodies are at once stripped of their hides and much of 

 the tlesh, sinews, intestines (with which the native water-proof coats, &c., are made), in conjunction 

 with the throat-linings (oesophagus), and the skin of the flippers, which is exceedingly tough and 

 elastic, and used for soles to their boots or Harbosars.' 



"As the Sea Lion is without fur, the skin has little or no commercial value; the hair is short, 

 and longest over the nape of the neck, straight, and somewhat coarse, varying in color greatly as 

 the seasons come and go. For instance, when the JEumetopias makes his first appearance in the 

 spring, and dries out upon the land, he has a light-brownish, rufous tint, darker shades back and 

 under the fore flippers and on the abdomen ; by the expiration of a month or six weeks, 15th June, 

 he will be a bright golden-rufous or ocher, and this is just before shedding, which sets in by the 

 middle of August, or a little earlier. After the new coat has fairly grown, and just before he leaves 

 the island for the season, ia November, it will be a light sepia, or vandyke-brown, with deeper 

 shades, almost dark upon the belly. The cows, after shedding, do not color up so dark as the 

 bulls, but when they come back to the land next year they are identically the same in color, so 

 that the eye, in glancing over a sea-lion rookery in June and July, cannot discern any noted 

 dissimilarity of coloring between the bulls and the cows; and also the young males and yearlings 

 appear in the same golden-brown and ocher, with here and there an animal spotted somewhat like 

 a leojjard, the yellow, rufous ground predominating, with patches of dark-brown irregularly inter- 

 spersed. I have never seen any of the old bulls or cows thus mottled, and think very likely it is 

 due to some irregularity in the younger animals during the season of shedding, for I have not 

 noticed it early in the season, and failed to observe it at the close. Many of the old bulls have a 

 grizzled or slightly brindled look during the shedding period, or, that is, from the 10th August 

 np to the 10th or 20th of November. The pups, when born, are of a rich, dark chestnut-brown; 

 this coat they shed in October, and take one much lighter, but still darker than their parents', but 

 not a great deal. 



"Although, as I have already indicated, the Sea Lion, in its habit and disposition, approxi- 

 mates the Fur Seal, yet in no respect does it maintain and enforce the system and regularity found 

 ou the breeding-grounds of the Gallorhinus. The time of arrival at, stay on, and departure from 

 the island is about the same; but if the winter is an open, mild one, the Sea Liou will be seen 

 frequently all through it, and the natives occasionally shoot them around the island long after the 

 Fur Seals have entirely disappeared for the year. It also does not confine its landing to these 

 Pribylov Islands alone, as the Fur Seal unquestionably does, with reference to our continent, for it 

 has been and is often shot upon the Aleutian Islands and many rocky islets of the northwest coast. 



"The Sea Lion in no respect whatever manifests the intelligence and sagacity exhibited by 

 the Fur Seal, and must be rated far below, although next, in natural order. I have no hesitation 



