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Page 38 text:
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Havergal College Magazine rigs and vehicles having to use alleys, as it would be very dangerous to all concerned if heavy wagons or sleighs were allowed to use the street. A bobsleigh is made of two hand-sleighs, with steel runners, with a board about 14 inches wide and 6 or 8 feet long. One sleigh is nailed securely to the back of the board ; the other sleigh is bolted to the front of the board so that it is possible to turn very fine corners. There is no sleigh under the middle of the board, and it is therefore very springy. Ropes are attached to the rings on the front sleigh, railings are nailed to the sides of the board, and a strut, along the front of the board against which the person steering rests his feet in order to get more purchase on the steering ropes. A u bob of this size will hold about six persons, and when fully loaded will go like the wind. The person steering needs a strong wrist and a pair of good eyes. Bumps got worn in the road, and then, if you do not take them dead straight, the bob will skid, shoot all its occupants off and scatter them down the road. Accidents sometimes happen when it skids, such as running into a telegraph post, or right over the sidewalk and through a picket fence into someone ' s garden. The road gets worn perfectly smooth with the snow packed hard, and the street is very noisy and unsafe for pedestrians from the time school is let out until twelve o ' clock at night. Quite a lot of skiing is done in Xelson, there being a number of Swedes and Norwegians there. It is good fun, but takes a great deal of patience to get the idea of it at first. If you are going ( ' own a steep hill and the toes of the skis get crossed it is all up, and you fall flat on your nose. It is very difficult to turn corners on them unless you have a stick to scratch along on the side to which you wish to turn. Some of the Swedes are adepts at it and can jump and do all kinds of things on skis, but it is a really difficult accomplishment as you need such a fine sense of balance. For climbing mountains on skis they tack deerskin with the hair downwards on the bottom of the skis. The hair does not hamper you going down — it rather accelerates the speed — and going up you walk on the skis and the hair pushes the wrong way, so that you cannot slide down, as you would without the hair. Snowshoeing is especially useful to the trappers, of whom there are a good many in the district, and also to prospectors. The bear-paw snowshoes are used in the mountains, as they are much wider, shorter and more upturned in front than the kind used on the prairies. As the snow is often from fourteen to twenty feet deep up in the mountains, snowshoes are most useful to those who have to travel over them. The snow covers the brush and does not reach the lowest branches of the fir trees, so it is prac- tically clear going, and a good speed can be ke pt up. In ISTelson the dogs as Well as the people have their winter 36
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Page 37 text:
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Havergal College Magazine I dwelt not on the orphans ' fate, For sadder thoughts oppressed my mind. Perchance I was for dinner late. So homewards fled, nor looked behind, But in Lucerne, search as I might, Were not the equal of those checks, Which, ' doming still that worthless wight Lay fathoms deep. ' T would angels vex ! Therefore I roam, a saddened critter, And nurse my woe, exceeding bitter. Y. Z. WINTER SPORTS IN WEST KOOTENAY West Kootenay, B.C., with its chief city, Nelson, should soon be as noted for winter sports in Canada, as Switzerland is in Europe. The mountains and lakes make such a splendid com- bination that practically all winter sports may be enjoyed. Each one in the population, both in the cities and in the country, likes one sport more than the others, and they can practise it to their hearts ' content, from the child in the baby carriage to the old man curling. Nelson is never cold enough to be uncomfortable, the average lowest temperature being 6 cleg, below zero. Plenty of snow falls, two or three feet, but it soon packs down hard on the roads. It does not thaw much in the middle of the day, so it is not sloppy. From the end of November to the middle of March it never rains, and the days are — except, of course, when it snows — beautifully bright and clear, the snow shining white on the trees and mountains, which look pink in the sunrise and sunset, and a bright blue sky above. For these reasons I think West Kootenay an ideal place in which to enjoy the winter. Wherever there is any ice the chief attraction is always skat- ing. Most winters the west arm of Kootenay Lake freezes over, and, until deep snow comes, you may skate for five or ten miles on good ice. When there has been a steady fall of snow, the school children go in a body to the jail to interview the warden. If he is in a good humor he takes out a dozen or so convicts armed with shovels and brooms and sets them to clear a large enough patch for hockey, another one for plain skating, and paths through the snow so as to get from one place to another. There is also one of the largest rinks in Canada at Nelson, the ice always being good except just at the end of the season. Very little fancy skating is done there, as few people seem, to care for it, but there are some splendid skaters who are very graceful without the fancy part. The next most popular pursuit is bobsleighing. One street is entirely given up by the city to this sport in the winter, all 35
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Page 39 text:
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Havergal College Magazine sport — that is, dog-sleigh racing; and they thoroughly enjoy it, especially when it ends in a fight. All kinds of dogs take part, from terriers to deerhonnds, bulldogs and St. Bernards. It is very difficult to get the dogs started fairly, as they always want to go, or else fight. Their masters stay at the side of the track and encourage them. Each dog has a harness with a light sleigh attached, and a small boy (or sometimes girl) has to sit on the sleigh or hang on. The driver, as they call him, has to be on the sleigh when the dog finishes. It is great fun for the spectators. Curling is somehow always thought of as an old man ' s game ; but, nevertheless, it takes great skill. It is the national game of Scotland, as cricket is of England or lacrosse of Canada, and al- most every Scotchman plays. They have no separate curling rink in Nelson, but flood part of the exhibition building, which does quite as well. For those who wish to combine pleasure with profit there can be found plenty of both in trapping. All kinds of valuable fur- bearing animals are numerous, and good hunting may be found almost anywhere. There are lynx, wolves, coyotes, bears, deer, marten, mink, mnskrats, weasels or ermine, wolverines, cougars, fishers, otters, and beavers. A favorite sport with the boys is snowballing the Yellow Peril, especially if he is loaded down with bags of washing. The Chinaman in Nelson has a lovely time all the year round: in winter, snowballs ; in summer, bad eggs and rotten tomatoes. The sportsmen of Nelson have just found out what sport does for the peo ple in general, and have formed a Sports Club. Each man who is an adept over the others in any one branch has volun- tarily consented to teach what he knows to anyone who wants to learn. Everyone in the district is taking a great interest in it, and as it is for both summer and winter sports, Nelson will per- haps send some contestants to the next Olympic Games. — Amy Ebbutt, Form VI. CAPTAIN SCOTT Twice within one short year the world has been horrified by the news of a terrible disaster: first, by the sinking of that splen- did sea-palace, the Titanic, and now by the heartbreaking news that the expedition of our Antarctic explorers has been dark- ened by the loss of its brave commander and four of his best men. It was early in 1910 that Scott, one of the most famous Ant- arctic explorers, left New Zealand for the polar regions with a twofold object in view: to discover the South Pole and to collect 37
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