"WHAT'S IN A NAME?"
"I pine fir yew," wrote the bell-hop to this sweetheart. He might
have been naming the Douglas Fir. This, our largest tree, is scarcely
big enough to bear all the names that have been hung on upon it. Early
settlers were unable to find, in their stock of tree names, one to fit
it. "Oregon pine" was the first name, although neither bark nor needles
nor cones resembled those of a pine. Pine needles are long, and so are
most pine cone. Cones and needles of the Douglas fir are short.
"Douglas spruce" was next tried. Douglas was an enterprising Scotch
botanist who visited this region in the 1920's. Many of our trees and
flowers were discovered by him. It was a fine thing to honor him, but
the tree wasn't a spruce. Its needles are soft and blunt, while those
of a spruce are stiff and sharp.
We now call the tree Douglas fir. In vain, in vain, it isn't a fir.
Fir cones stand up straight from the branches. Douglas fir cones hang
down. Botanists, despairing of an exact name, joined a Greek and a
Japanese word and called it Pseudotsuaga, False Hemlock.
Alas, poor Douglas tree, neither pine, nor spruce, nor fir, nor yet a
hemlock.
By S. B. Jones, Ranger-Naturalist.
LIFE IS HARD IN THE WILDERNESS
They toil not, neither do they spin, may apply very well to the
Lilies of the Field, but life does not often run that smoothly for the
four-footed creatures of the wild.
True, there are seasons of plenty when Mother Nature is generous with
her children, but there are also times of want when the good old Dame
finds that cupboard is bare and the wild things suffer and die.
Winter is always a time of famine in the wilderness. Starvation
stalks the hills and death follows in his wake. Since food is so hard
to obtain, the wild animals have been forced to discover means of
outwitting starvation. Those that fail to do so do not survive.
With the coming of spring the struggle becomes less intense but even
in times of normal supply the wild-folk must work if they would eat.
The deer may come to the waiting cougar and the salmon to the paw of the
fishing bear but the cougar and the bear wait hungry hours for the game
to come.
The cony and the field mouse labors all through the summer to store
food for the long winter, otherwise they never see the spring, and the
coyote and the wolf cover many miles of rugged range for every rabbit
captured. Man is not the only one that works for what he gets.
By F. W. Schmoe, Naturalist.