The Big Otter, by R.M. 
Ballantyne 
 
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Title: The Big Otter 
Author: R.M. Ballantyne 
Release Date: June 7, 2007 [EBook #21718] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BIG 
OTTER *** 
 
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England 
 
THE BIG OTTER, BY R.M. BALLANTYNE. 
CHAPTER ONE. 
SLEEPING IN SNOW.
Cold comfort is naturally suggested by a bed of snow, yet I have 
enjoyed great comfort and much warmth in such a bed. 
My friend Lumley was particularly fond of warmth and of physical 
ease, yet he often expressed the opinion, with much emphasis, that 
there was nothing he enjoyed so much as a night in a snow-bed. Jack 
Lumley was my chum--a fine manly fellow with a vigorous will, a 
hardy frame, and a kindly heart. We had a natural leaning towards each 
other--a sort of undefinable sympathy--which inclined us to seek each 
other's company in a quiet unobtrusive way. We were neither of us 
demonstrative; we did not express regard for each other; we made no 
protestations of undying friendship, but we drew together, somehow, 
especially in our hunting expeditions which were numerous. 
On holidays--we had two in the week at the outpost in the American 
backwoods where we dwelt--when the other young fellows were 
cleaning gulls or arranging snow-shoes for the day's work, Lumley was 
wont to say to me:-- 
"Where d'you intend to shoot to-day, Max?" (Max was an abbreviation; 
my real name is George Maxby.) 
"I think I'll go up by the willows and round by Beaver Creek." 
"I've half a mind to go that way too." 
"Come along then." 
And so we would go off together for the day. 
One morning Lumley said to me, "I'm off to North River; will you 
come?" 
"With pleasure, but we'll have to camp out." 
"Well, it won't be the first time." 
"D'you know that the thermometer stood at forty below zero this 
morning before breakfast?"
"I know it; what then? Mercurial fellows like you don't freeze easily." 
I did not condescend to reply, but set about preparing for our 
expedition, resolving to carry my largest blanket with me, for camping 
out implied sleeping in the snow. 
Of course I must guard my readers--especially my juvenile 
readers--from supposing that it was our purpose that night to undress 
and calmly lie down in, or on, the pure white winding-sheet in which 
the frozen world of the Great Nor'-west had been at that time wrapped 
for more than four months. Our snow-bed, like other beds, required 
making, but I will postpone the making of it till bed-time. Meanwhile, 
let us follow the steps of Lumley, who, being taller and stronger than I, 
always led the way. 
This leading of the way through the trackless wilderness in snow 
averaging four feet deep is harder work than one might suppose. It 
could not be done at all without the aid of snow-shoes, which, varying 
from three to five feet in length, enable the traveller to walk on the 
surface of the snow, into which he would otherwise sink, more or less, 
according to its condition. If it be newly fallen and very soft, he sinks 
six, eight, or more inches. If it be somewhat compressed by time or 
wind he sinks only an inch or two. On the hard surface of exposed lakes 
and rivers, where it is beaten to the appearance of marble, he dispenses 
with snow-shoes altogether, slings them on his gun, and carries them 
over his shoulder. 
Our first mile lay through a clump of pine-wood, where snow had 
recently fallen. When I looked at my comrade's broad back, and 
observed the vigour of his action as he trod deep into the virgin snow at 
every stride, scattering it aside like fine white powder as he lifted each 
foot, I thought how admirably he was fitted for a pioneer in the 
wilderness, or for the work of those dauntless, persevering men who go 
forth to add to the world's geographical knowledge, and to lead the 
expeditions sent out in search of such lost heroes as Franklin and 
Livingstone. 
My own work was comparatively light. I had merely to tread in the
beaten path. I was not, however, thereby secured from disaster, as I 
found when, having advanced about half a mile, my right shoe caught a 
twig to which it held for a moment, and then, breaking loose, allowed 
me to pitch head down with such violence that I    
    
		
	
	
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