I.[The Nameless Season]1
II.[March Days]5
III.[The Home Fireside]13
IV.[The Crow]17
V.[The Mink]22
VI.[April Days]27
VII.[The Woodchuck]33
VIII.[The Chipmunk]37
IX.[Spring Shooting]40
X.[The Garter-Snake]43
XI.[The Toad]48
XII.[May Days]52
XIII.[The Bobolink]56
XIV.[The Golden-Winged Woodpecker]59
XV.[June Days]63
XVI.[The Bullfrog]66
XVII.[The Angler]70
XVIII.[Farmers and Field Sports]79
XIX.[To a Trespass Sign]84
XX.[A Gentle Sportsman]88
XXI.[July Days]91
XXII.[Camping Out]98
XXIII.[The Camp-Fire]103
XXIV.[A Rainy Day in Camp]107
XXV.[August Days]113
XXVI.[A Voyage in the Dark]118
XXVII.[The Summer Camp-Fire]129
XXVIII.[The Raccoon]132
XXIX.[The Reluctant Camp-Fire]141
XXX.[September Days]143
XXXI.[A Plea for the Unprotected]148
XXXII.[The Skunk]154
XXXIII.[A Camp-Fire Run Wild]158
XXXIV.[The Dead Camp-Fire]163
XXXV.[October Days]168
XXXVI.[A Common Experience]172
XXXVII.[The Red Squirrel]178
XXXVIII.[The Ruffed Grouse]182
XXXIX.[Two Shots]189
XL.[November Days]196
XLI.[The Muskrat]201
XLII.[November Voices]205
XLIII.[Thanksgiving]208
XLIV.[December Days]211
XLV.[Winter Voices]216
XLVI.[The Varying Hare]219
XLVII.[The Winter Camp-Fire]224
XLVIII.[January Days]229
XLIX.[A New England Woodpile]235
L.[A Century of Extermination]251
LI.[The Persistency of Pests]255
LII.[The Weasel]260
LIII.[February Days]263
LIV.[The Fox]270
LV.[An Ice-Storm]276
LVI.[Spare the Trees]281
LVII.[The Chickadee]284

IN NEW ENGLAND FIELDS AND WOODS


I

THE NAMELESS SEASON

In the March page of our almanac, opposite the 20th of the month we find the bold assertion, "Now spring begins;" but in the northern part of New England, for which this almanac was especially compiled, the weather does not bear out the statement.

The snow may be gone from the fields except in grimy drifts, in hollows and along fences and woodsides; but there is scarcely a sign of spring in the nakedness of pasture, meadow, and ploughed land, now more dreary in the dun desolation of lifeless grass, débris of stacks, and black furrows than when the first snow covered the lingering greenness of December.

It is quite as likely that the open lands are still under the worn and dusty blanket of snow, smirched with all the litter cast upon it by cross-lot-faring teams, and wintry winds blowing for months from every quarter. The same untidiness pervades all outdoors. We could never believe that so many odds and ends could have been thrown out of doors helter-skelter, in three months of ordinary life, till the proof confronts us on the surface of the subsiding snow or lies stranded on the bare earth. The wind comes with an icier breath from the wintrier north, and yet blows untempered from the south, over fields by turns frozen and sodden, through which the swollen brooks rush in yellow torrents with sullen monotonous complaint.

One may get more comfort in the woods, though the snow still lies deep in their shelter; for here may be found the sugar-maker's camp, with its mixed odors of pungent smoke and saccharine steam, its wide environment of dripping spouts and tinkling tin buckets, signs that at last the pulse of the trees is stirred by a subtle promise of returning spring.