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GRAY BIRD - A LITTLE PLAINS INDIANGray Bird was a little Indian boy. He lived on the great plains. During the winter, the chief of his tribe picked out a sheltered spot at the edge of the forest for their home. When spring came they packed up and started for the hunting grounds. Gray Birds father was named Big Wolf, because he was so strong and tall and brave. His mother was White Swan. He had an older brother, Running Deer, and a younger sister, Little Fawn. They all lived together in a tent with a pointed top. It was called a teepee. When Big Wolf's chief decided that it was time to move, Big Wolf and his family did not have to leave their home behind them as white men do when they move. Gray Birds mother took the teepee down and rolled it up and tied it on a travois behind a horse. Then wherever they stopped, she put it up and that was their home.
To
make a travois White Swan tied two poles to a horse. She fastened one on
each side, with the other end dragging on the ground behind the horse.
Then she put the teepee and the bundles of clothing and food and dishes
across the two poles and tied them on tight. Whell everything was ready,
she climbed up on the horse’s back and rode off with the ends of the
travois dragging behind her. Nearly everything was carried in this way.
Big Wolf did not help White Swan take down or put up the teepee. He was a
hunter and a Warrior and Was not expected to do any of the work around the
camp. Little boys like Gray Bird helped their mothers. When they grew as
big as Running Deer they rode with the men and no one thought of asking
them to help do any of the Women’s Work.
When Gray Bird was a papoose he was carried in a papoose case, too, but as
soon as he could walk his mother let him run about with her while she
worked. By the time he was six years old, he could beat many of the big
boys of nine and ten at running.
Gray Bird's grandfather and grandmother taught him a great many interesting things. When he was only three, his grandfather began to teach him about the birds and animals of the forest. He also taught him to imitate the sounds they made. He taught him to be quiet and patient and to step lightly and never to kill animals or birds needlessly. When he was five Gray Bird could move so silently through the forest trails, that he could come almost within arm's reach of a squirrel before little fuzzy tail ran chattering up a tree.
Once when he was running silently down a trail in the woods, he almost
bumped into a bear cub. The little bear was quite as surprised as Gray
Bird was. They stood and looked at each other for a moment. Gray Bird
would have liked to make friends with the little bear, but his grandfather
had told him never to do such a thing when alone. “A little cub is harmless,” Grandfather said, “but where there is a cub, there is a mother bear not far away. If you tried to make friends with the cub, the mother might think you were going to hurt her baby. So be sure to leave bear cubs alone, until you are older and have won the right to be a hunter.”
Gray Bird remembered Grandfathers warning now. Instead of going toward the
friendly looking little cub, he backed quietly away and hid behind some
bushes at the side of the trail. He was glad he had obeyed, when he saw a
great mother bear running clumsily down the trail toward the cub.
Gray Bird had a dog named Bushy. Sometimes he made B. travois by fastening
two -strips of wood to Bushy as White Swan did by fastening the poles to a
horse. Then he stretched a blanket between the strips and took a ride behind
his dog. Bushy didn’t like to be The best time to catch him was when he was eating, so when Gray Bird wanted to take a ride, he would ask his mother for a bone with a little meat on it. When Bushy had a bone to pick he was so interested in it he would not even notice Gray Bird, and before he knew it he would be harnessed up.
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