[The Winning of the West, Volume Two by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link bookThe Winning of the West, Volume Two CHAPTER IV 44/101
The crops did not fail; not only was there plenty of corn, the one essential, but there was also wheat, as well as potatoes, melons, pumpkins, turnips, and the like. Sugar was made by tapping the maple trees; but salt was bought at a very exorbitant price at the Falls, being carried down in boats from the old Redstone Fort.
Flax had been generally sown (though in the poorer settlements nettle bark still served as a substitute), and the young men and girls formed parties to pick it, often ending their labor by an hour or two's search for wild plums.
The men killed all the game they wished, and so there was no lack of meat.
They also surveyed the land and tended the stock--cattle, horses, and hogs, which throve and multiplied out on the range, fattening on the cane, and large white buffalo-clover.
At odd times the men and boys visited their lines of traps.
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