pginternal" href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@18525@[email protected]#front" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">Frontispiece
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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 |
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