" Story-telling flourishes best
when pine-knots blaze and when, after lines are dried and guns cleaned,
weary men of the out-of-doors relax. Then the tall tale, America`s own
unique contribution to world yarning, reaches out from the imagination
to tell of fabulous folk heroes...Old timers tell also of strange
animals that once roamed Minnesota`s north country and now are scarce
and rare because the state has given them no protection...Plum Nelly
today knows more about the Swamp Auger,Snow Snake,Agropelter and Hodag
than any living naturalist.his long life in the woods has brought him
into close contact with the Hidebehind and the Tote-Road Shagamaw. He
is not concerned with any conservation program for the Gamehog...
"A
distressingly ugly animal , the Hodag,as described by old-timers...has a
knobby head from which two prominent eyes bulge. Two heavy lateral
horns, like those of a male stag-beetle, make him a fierce foe. The
claws are stout and powerful, and the saw-toothed tail terminates in a
hook. A row of dorsal spines runs from tip of nose to end of tail...A
group of Kabekona county sportsmen, including local Isaac Walton
League,made definite plans during the winter of 1949 to preserve
Minnesota`s few remaining Snow Snakes. According to all accounts, the
Snow Snake ( Aestateesommus hiemepericulosus) first was recognized
during the year of Two Winters, when temperatures in August dropped to
71 degrees below zero...Pure white in color, the Snow Snake blends so
harmoniously against its white background that no one has distinguished
its shape or size.
The author then mentions the
Agropelter (Brachiipotentes craniofractans),or "forest monkey", tame
enough to be carried in a shirt pocket and able to darn
socks."Needleeye, an Agropelter from Stillwater, took a blue ribbon at
the state fair in 1861 for the best bit of embroidery - a covering for
the deacon`s seat.Agropelters were then described as being so sort after
that they were trapped and sent to work in spinning mills in the
southern U..S.A. They became unpopular as they were trained by
Minnesotans to become violent to prevent their enslavement in the
southern mills.
A curious bit of folklore is
attributed to a mystery snipe, in that when it becomes excited it emits
sparks. "Competent naturalists for years have insisted that the great
Hinckley fire of 1894 was started with such sparks... Like the Snipe,
the Filla-Ma-Loo bird (Fulica stultusregrediens) ,never has been caught,
but its numbers are increasing in Minnesota...Known variously as the
Flu-fly Bird and the Goofus bird, the Filla-Ma-Loo has a Turkey-like
head on a long bottle-green neck that is spangled with large,silvery
scales. A black right wing and a pink left one makes a color combination
hard to miss...All Filla-Ma-Loos are male."
No comments:
Post a Comment