639/873
Home / Albums / Tag Place:America /

Making a booth -1

The Lodge - 4.jpg Rendezvous sceneThumbnailsExtent of the main glacial advancesRendezvous sceneThumbnailsExtent of the main glacial advancesRendezvous sceneThumbnailsExtent of the main glacial advancesRendezvous sceneThumbnailsExtent of the main glacial advancesRendezvous sceneThumbnailsExtent of the main glacial advances
Google+ Twitter Facebook Tumblr

Buffalo-Bird Woman tells of the booth which Turtle made in her cornfield. A booth is easily made of willows or long branches.

A short digging stick will be needed. This was of ash, a foot or two in length, sharpened at one end by burning in a fire. The point was often rubbed with fat and charred over the coals to harden it. (Such a digging stick was not the kind used for cultivating corn.)

If you have no ash stick, a section of a broom handle will do.

With a stone, drive the digging stick four inches in the ground, as in Figure. Withdraw digging stick and repeat until you have six holes set in a circle. The diameter of the circle should be about five feet.

Author
Waheenee--An Indian Girl's Story
By Waheenee
as told to Gilbert Livingstone Wilson
Illustrator: Frederick N. Wilson
Published in 1921
Available from gutenberg.org
Dimensions
346*712
Visits
1207
Downloads
47