nest, the nest and eggs, incubating, 
feeding the young, brooding, the growth 
of the young from day to day, and 
feeding the young after they have left 
the nest. Such a series of photographs 
entails the expenditure of a large 
amount of time and patience, but when 
a favorable opportunity presents itself 
no effort should be spared to secure a 
pictorial record of this nature. 
In general, it may be said of bird 
photography that the more one knows 
of birds the better bird photographer 
he is and the more one photographs 
birds the better ornithologist he be¬ 
comes. 
TRIALS OF THE TRAP¬ 
PING TRAILS 
(Continued from page 365) 
that night and was lucky enough to 
shoot a big buck deer within a half 
mile of camp and right on the trail. I 
gave the dogs a big feed of the meat 
and the next morning started for Mile 
27. Nearly two weeks had elapsed 
since I left the wife at Edson, and as 
she would be expecting me I took my 
catch and drove into town the next 
day. In making this trip the dogs gen¬ 
erally covered the twenty-seven miles 
in about four hours. 
After staying in Edson for a few 
days I again took reluctant leave of 
my little pal and hit the long, long trail 
to the northwest. This trip was the 
longest one of that winter. I went 
straight through to the lower cabin, at 
the mouth of Lynx Creek on the Atha¬ 
basca, from there west to a chain of 
lakes, and prospected some for fox 
signs. Here I was disappointed, so I 
went on east, via the Medicine Lodge 
Trail, to Rapeljes. Instead of coming 
back over my traplines on the south 
side of the Athabasca, I decided to gc 
north to Kimberly Lake, where it will 
be remembered the wife and I had set 
out traps earlier in the season. 
It was along in October that we had 
set these traps and now it was Febru¬ 
ary—surely a bad example for one of 
my sort to set. The truth of the mat¬ 
ter was that I had made a single trip 
up there since setting the traps, and 
as I had seen no favorable signs I had 
not taken the trouble to visit a few 
traps that were a little off the main 
trail. The only reason I made the trip 
this time was because La Rocque, the 
breed from Mile Ninety House, had 
been down to trade at Edson and had 
left a good toboggan trail behind. Ac¬ 
companying me on this trip north was 
Parnall, a white trapper who plied his 
trade further up the Baptiste. 
The day we left Parnall’s camp on 
the Baptiste it turned real warm, and 
after the chinook wind had played 
aavoc with La Rocque’s toboggan trail 
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