On the Trail 
 
Project Gutenberg's On the Trail, by Lina Beard and Adelia Belle 
Beard This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
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Title: On the Trail An Outdoor Book for Girls 
Author: Lina Beard and Adelia Belle Beard 
Release Date: June 7, 2006 [EBook #18525] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON THE 
TRAIL *** 
 
Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Emmy and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
On the Trail 
An Outdoor Book for Girls 
By LINA BEARD
AND 
ADELIA BELLE BEARD 
With Illustrations by the Authors 
NEW YORK 
Charles Scribner's Sons 
1915 
COPYRIGHT, 1915, BY 
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 
Published June, 1915 
TO ALL GIRLS WHO LOVE THE LIFE OF THE OPEN WE 
DEDICATE THIS BOOK 
[Illustration: Over-night camp. 
Fire notice is posted on tree.] 
 
PRESENTATION 
The joyous, exhilarating call of the wilderness and the forest camp is 
surely and steadily penetrating through the barriers of brick, stone, and 
concrete; through the more or less artificial life of town and city; and 
the American girl is listening eagerly. It is awakening in her longings 
for free, wholesome, and adventurous outdoor life, for the innocent 
delights of nature-loving Thoreau and bird-loving Burroughs. Sturdy, 
independent, self-reliant, she is now demanding outdoor books that are 
genuine and filled with practical information; books that tell how to do 
worth-while things, that teach real woodcraft and are not adapted to the 
girl supposed to be afraid of a caterpillar or to shudder at sight of a
harmless snake. 
In answer to the demand, "On the Trail" has been written. The authors' 
deep desire is to help girls respond to this new, insistent call by 
pointing out to them the open trail. It is their hope and wish that their 
girl readers may seek the charm of the wild and may find the same 
happiness in the life of the open that the American boy has enjoyed 
since the first settler built his little cabin on the shores of the New 
World. To forward this object, the why and how, the where and when 
of things of camp and trail have been embodied in this book. 
Thanks are due to Edward Cave, president and editor of Recreation, for 
kindly allowing the use of some of his wild-life photographs. 
LINA BEARD, ADELIA BELLE BEARD. FLUSHING, N. Y., March 
16, 1915. 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I. TRAILING 3 II. WOODCRAFT 21 III. CAMPING 44 IV. WHAT 
TO WEAR ON THE TRAIL 84 V. OUTDOOR HANDICRAFT 106 
VI. MAKING FRIENDS WITH THE OUTDOOR FOLK 119 VII. 
WILD FOOD ON THE TRAIL 138 VIII. LITTLE FOES OF THE 
TRAILER 165 IX. ON THE TRAIL WITH YOUR CAMERA 187 X. 
ON AND IN THE WATER 205 XI. USEFUL KNOTS AND HOW TO 
TIE THEM 233 XII. ACCIDENTS 244 XIII. CAMP FUN AND 
FROLICS 255 XIV. HAPPY AND SANE SUNDAY IN CAMP 269 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
Over-night camp Frontispiece 
PAGE One can generally pass around obstructions like this on the trail
5 
Difficulties of the Adirondack trail 9 
Blazing the trail by bending down and breaking branches 11 
Returning to camp by the blazed trail 13 
Footprints of animals 17 
Footprints of animals 19 
Ink impressions of leaves 23 
Ink impressions of leaves 24 
Ink impressions of leaves 25 
Pitch-pine and cone 26 
Sycamore leaf and fruit of sycamore 26 
How to use the axe 29 
The compass and the North Star 37 
A permanent camp 49 
Outdoor shelters 51 
Dining-tent, handy racks, and log bedstead 53 
A forest camp by the water 55 
In camp 57 
The bough-bed, the cook-fire, and the wall-tent 59 
Soft wood 63
Hard wood 65 
Bringing wood for the fire 69 
Camp fires and camp sanitation 81 
Trailers' outfits 87 
The head-net and blanket-roll 91 
Some things to carry and how to carry them 101 
Handicraft in the woods 107 
Outdoor dressing-table, camp-cupboard, hammock-frame, seat, and 
pot-hook 109 
Camp-chair, biscuit-stick, and blanket camp-bed 111 
The birch-bark dish that will hold fluids. Details of making 115 
A bear would rather be your friend than your enemy 118 
Making friends with a ruffed grouse 120 
Found on the trail 122 
Timber wolves 124 
Baby moose 126 
Stalking wild birds 128 
The fish-hawk will sometimes build near the ground 131 
Antelopes of the western plains 135 
Good food on the trail 143 
Fruits found principally in the south and the middle west 147
Fruits found principally in the north and the middle west 151 
Fruits common to most of the States 155 
Hickory nuts, sweet and bitter 159 
Nuts with soft shells. Beechnut and chestnut 161    
    
		
	
	
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