Page Two THE DARE COUNTY TIMES PHOTOGRAPHING SNOW GEESE IN THE DARE COUNTY REFUGE The Story of Ben Dixon MacNeiM’s Adventures With Quicksands and Weather in Making Pictures , of These Birds in Dare County By Ben Dixon MacNeill in “The News and Observer.” had been .squandered in purposeless pursuit of these noisesome and fan tastically vigilant creatures that never let you get nearer than one mile of them on the ground and that can out-fly any airplane from which photography is at all feas- jible. There had to be an end to it I some time and Del Thomas had I seen a crippled specimen on Pea 1 Island the day before: we might !run that one down and make it pose. I There is, literally, not a photo- i.- j • • > graph of a Snow Goose in existence Del Thomas continued in opti- Here and there along the Outer anywhere. Even the National Geo- mism. Five minutes before time Banks you strike quick-sand when graphic Society, with all its re fer Toby Tillett to start his nine-' the water covers the flats. Just sources and indefatigable determi thirty trip across Oregon Inlet, and small areas of it, not mqre_than a nation, had recourse to a drawing likely the sun would stand stock j dozen feet across, but nonetheless when it issued Dr. Grosvenor’s still and wait for him if Toby Til-1 quicksand. This was a very limit- magnificent book lon American lett omitted to start his trip on ed area of it, not wide enough to, birds. Often enough Drinkwater time—we were a good three Outer , - . _ wheels of the vehicle. We were I failure with “You know demed well settled down until the rear hubs | a thing that eats .sandspurs is were submerged in sand and there. ashamed to let you take its pic were ten inches of water above j ture. . . . Thing for you to do is that. We were in the middle of get you a mess of sandspurs and Banks miles from the ferry and these sort of miles are not done in three to the five minutes. Not of ten anyway. To be sure the last mile and a half of it is across the fiats and if there’s no water on the fiats, you can make sixty miles an hour. More than that—or less, if your vehicle has seen better than a hun dred thousand miles and a good part of them along the Outer Banks. There was some basis for Del Thomas’ optimism. Except that we had not consider ed the direction of the wind. The wind was out of the northwest, and . - , - where, practically waiting beside ^ accommodate both front and back'has co.mforted me after another the road for you to take their pic-lj^to brought almost tn,.cc. — 4.I.' . in o contact with them. about a hundred acre field of water. The co.mforting thing about Pro- eat ’em and then you’ll know better how to go about it. . . . ” Del Thomas had been much more vidence is that it never loses its helpful. He comes from Pitt sense of perspective: What we needed must at the moment was something to hoist the stern of the vehicle out of the sand and water, a pole about ten feet long, and a block upon which to rest it while we hoisted. Providence had ar ranged it very nicely some while there were nine inches of very salty when a ship was wrecked and and very cold water on the flats, ashore not more than' a hun- It looked like it might have beenl^^®*^ yards from where we were as deep as the ocean, but along the 11oundeded, and so arranged the Outer Banks you just pitch in and see what happens. It was not so long in happening: barrels of water giot up under the hood and the mo tor just quit. Still Del Thomas continued in op timism. He said let her drain a minute and we’ve still got two min utes to .make the ferry. Jhe clouds would keep the sun from knowing if Toby waited for us and we’d make itT And Toby did wait for a of wreckage that some timbers portable size were loosened. And after .all, extricating your self from quick-sand in the middle of a hundred-acre lake itsn’t any job to be writing a half column about. Besides, this is a piece about taking pictures of the most elusive bird in the world, the same being these fabulous Snow Geese which spend their summers in the north of Greenland and their winters on Pea Island or thereabouts feasting full five minutes, there not being any other passengers on this side on sand spurs, and it was boo misty for seeing! This was next to the last day whether there was anybody waiting that I proposed to fool with them, over there or not. ' By now the better part of a month County, belongs to the CCG and is attached to one of the sections that is fashioning a stupendous refuge for the Biological Survey on Pea Island, impounding a great lake of fresh water that will grow all sorts of grass for all sorts of wild fowl. Last summer Dr. Bartsch had found 43 species of birds nesting thereabouts. This lad has been so long on Pea Island that he knows the useages of all the things that inhabit it, even as winter tourists. AH the old Canada geese know him and he can walk among them, and ducks and swan don’t bother with him. Now and then he has- been right close to .some of the fabulous Snow Geese, and he thought that maybe if we took a Sunday off down there, we might get in range of them. Watching them every day, he had a pretty good idea of how they op erated. Like most wild fowl afifl all sensible aviators, they took off into the wind, and if there was not much wind, they had some little difficulty in gaining altitude. They take off into the wind, and if they are agitated, they turn and fly with it, adding the strength of the wind to the strength of their wings and not bothering about altitude until they had got up some speed. Of course, there was never any knowing what they’d do once they got into the air. Like as not they would fly out to sea, or across Pam lico Sound, or, if they felfif-llf^e it, climb rapidly and make like they were headed for Greenland or back Bay or somewhere. There is just never any telling what a flock of Snow Greese will do I have I timed them flying at 110 miles an I .hour—but that was lon another campaign against them, and that morning they headed straight for I Bermuda or somewhere beyond the 12-mile limit. Anyhow, we’d just take the day below The Inlet and try to sneak up on them. If they went away, we’d hide and wait for them to come hack—and maybe luck would change. .... And here we were two feet down in quicksand and the inexorable Toby gone with his ferry and two hours before he’d be going again, and that would make it the middle of the day and this north- west wind was bringing ram near-1 time as the senior warden indicated er Already there were drifts of it that they should fly, and so lost in before we got thought hoisting our-.the mist that it would be no use selves out of the bog of sand wasting film on them. I stopped N Economic Data on North Carolina 'M llllimTn;®. II , down the lens another stop to While we were waiting we’d as sharpen the focus. They were just well go back up there to the light-, planning to dribble out of the pic- house and take a crack at them. ture. There were three or four hundred' Thpv a v, of them idling anound there, and j nroceede^Tth we might slip up on them. . . That, o/Nanoleon.V got there the other aftemo^rjJIu^rden preposterous before sundown, with Snow Geese Tack "f me against the lighthouse, they were fuf sifuanl ih. h pretty good, Del Thomas thought. tehicTe anr^n ^^r^ i”’”'^’'! But not goiod enough. It had to thev went ratha be as good as, well as good as we ^ tL air And thar*" could get anywhere we-wanted it. At anv rate bera was that. of Canada geese They were every-1 ^°'««thing. 5 IIMIIIIlffl^ "■ III!) I lll-nigr — ii"i I ii'rvg' TrTTTrfhJ*. riimoffla Hirrrgrjs kTnrg^ !■ UFT 52: >25 W TTT>7 C7 trig Columns of coins represent brewers’ annual expenditures in North Carolina, together with the tion of beer consumed In value of beer and ale sold in the state. Of $9,380,000 to North CaroU^ Ain’t you afraid you’ll break your | contrive^Whl^ la r n kodak?” And of course nobodyitK daTlie7iflh ev„ Witt taking: w,™ ^ went and sat down in Pamlico Sound about a mile off shore tucked their heads under their wings and m began their Sunday nap. . . .^Del of them. Yonder, Del Thomas stated, was something he had not seen before. There was a lone Snow Goose with a flock of 300 Qanadas. He 1 Thomas said tiaot ,,1,4 j j looked, to me, a little sheepish, like qj. rather what I tippH h. might h.™ tallan . a»ky tj motions of flight, thought better of thmgs^was an airplane. it and settled uneasily while the nr , , , Canada geese contemplated us sol- j u Probably no. That emnly. It looked like, anyhow, we!^ bad already tried. They are es- mig.ht get something. We were only i P®oially allergic to airplanes, and 50 yards away. | minute they hear one start Without any further ado the ^ Roanoke Island Snow Goose loosed a scandalous campaign, honking and hoisted himself out ofi surging circles, pro- the grass . j ceeding somewhat like a hurricane. The Canada geese hesitated a|center, shifting little, and decided that they’d as'^^T so rapidly that it is well go, too. So they all went over; to the other side of the pond and i “'^'css you creep up settled down. The Snow Geese flew! them, they are likely to outfly with twice the speed of his dark,j^°^; . distant relatives. . . . Undoubted-!., .° living has seen more of ly, they are the swiftest waterfowl; a Driskill who known to these regions. i Fairchild Freighter for the They were not, or this one was'Sf'tlrle not, absolutely white. The tips of fena-h of Thl ^ Tl- ^ t their wings are black. And while probably equal.ying the Canada! ^ntTons ^ "“i^b e m\\t^^^ =7&Z’ “"soS"; •»”»»« p TV,!;.. rxff • landing* in some open flat swifter, and their flight mare acro^ ^''of ^and unburden batic. They lack the stateliness of k^has to bTrL;^ A T if' the Canada goose, and their massed i L^wolSrowTow nights are not done with the order--l-t-rt • 4. Pd p,.eisl.p of bl.ck gpeoe. Th,,'S,3XrG„»T.nd ' flyonanarrower front, in long, gure, he’d be glad to take a ^"dlerack at it. Go right after dinner. ?he worl^ to^ snow geese in.He’d been to Ocracoke that mom- . . . . But that was the next day. beside the mast from which he from time to time displays weather NNUAL business volume esti mated at $9,380,000 has been developed and maintained In North Carolina by the legalized beer busi ness and most of this volume Is reflected directly In the state by employment, payrolls and taxes, ac cording to an analysis by the United Brewers Industrial Foundation, based on latest official statistics. North Carolina consumed ap proximately 268,000 barrels of beer In 1938 Production of this quantity used 294,000 bushels of premium malting barley, 46,400 bushels of corn, 27,400 bushels of rice and 166,160 pounds of hops, based on national averages for farm materi als necessary In brewing. An area of 13,530 acres was utilized to grow these materials with full-time em ployment for 464 farm workers. Far greater employment was cre ated through processing these ma terials and stimulation of activities In all fields servicing the brewing industry and retail outlets. Federal and state treasuries were among the major beneficiaries from North Carolina’s beer consuiof^ The state collected $872,598. sive of license fees, for the " C, while the Federal governinei’* Itj ceived approximately $1,340.0'^ Jj|,j $5 per barrel. Much of this ^, 'll)! was returned to the state tbf*’ J(jj Federal appropriations. j lely Brewers’ expenditures for materials, supplies, equipmen*. fuel In the production of beer , , ' sumed In North Carolina $1,500,000. This compared ^'L national brewery payroll of L 340,229 for 1937 and $201.9»^ expended for materials, etc. , it. While beer retailers were mediate gainers, additional ‘J j ficlarles Included real estate, labor, food purveyors, buildW?. ijj maintenance and various raib^ tions of local business. Ret**^ gains were measured not oD)f| their beer volume but also bf, ^ ^ additional business stiffl"’*''-^’' through sales of related iteir’* III signals. He THH ENTIRE COST OF THE CC.C. k W' ■3: COULD BE PAID FOR BY tCQ. THE TAXES OF THE BREWI no- industry! 'The Treasury Department shows expenditures of 326 million dollars for the Civilian Conservation Corps for the fiscal year of 1938. The brewing industry pays over a million dollars a day in taxes. ., J , - = — ran up a forbidding 01 uSy grazing in tn© shsl- collGction of vari-liiipH flno-a fViQt ^ a. j ^ ]nw of fiio tixof , - ! j. ^ags that in- morrow, or the next day, I may try low part of the pond that half-, dicated that presently all sorts of " ‘ . . . encircles Oregon Inlet light there! weather would break hereabouts, were maybe 500 of them, .all told, j Northwest storm warnings. They The road was 100 yards east of the , are bad. Small craft warnings, pond, and from the nearest of the. They are forbidding things. There geese. Infervening there was tall wa? nowhere m the firmament any grass, brown and limp in the thick-1 sign of a cloud anff so we bantered ening mi,?t, Del Thomas said that,'Drinkwater ~ if we could crawl through the grass] -Ain’t seen the weather report, . In ’ '"'^^Vut the orders says run ’em up' waY I “You’ll see some weather in was some discussion among the >he next few hours ” grazing snow geese as to what it Wp trnf o -4 •4x- might portend. Some of them flap-;half an hour after we had clTlbed ped their wings and others honked.'to 4,500 feet. We were still climb- Apparently they decided that the^i„g.’ We’d geV hTgh enLgh to dilapidated vehicle, recently exca- throttle the motor down to where we’d play with ’em. He opened the throttle and the ship swooped. All the Snow Geese in the wiorld rose as one goose and began maneu vering. First they split themselves into two equal companies and set out to spread confusion. There was no out-maneuvering them, though Driskill ably circled them, herded them together and swooped. . . . The picture will •have to tell the story. It seems bo be about as good as anybody can do, without the assistance of two or three miracles. . . . Del Thomas came by a little while ago to see how the pictures turned out. He said, with kindly intent, that they were pretty good, but maybe we could do better. How would it be to ... well, it would do. I’m through with Snow Geese, and to- cheese and other farm pro crackers, relishes, salads, meats and various other foo^ Hit. ll loj ,54 % «iia' On the planet, has 10,000 days. Jupiter, Our printing service is Phone 44, or send it to The *''' Beware Coughs from common col^ ThatHangC; 111 8 scr fie ^lev ^faj No matter how many medj^ , you have tried for your cot^ Hi vated from quicksand was not ' goose could hear it and approach innr>n r\-f o Qnri -n/v-f -t-. •.• •• . . . _ What Beer contributes to the re-building of America would fill a great volume Over 400 million dollars in taxes every year O ver 1,000,000 jobs. A market for S.Cui) 000 farm acres of produce. The brewing industry would like to pre serve for itself and the people the many economic benefits it has created in the past five years. Brewers everywhere realizethat this is a question bound up with the proper Vhited Brewers Industrial Foundation, 21 East 40th Slree^ New York, N. Y. distribution of their mild and wholesome beverage through retail outlets whose chau’- acter will be a credit to the community. Obviously, the brewers can enforce no laws. But they can—and will—cooperate with the local law-enforcement authorities. They will cooperate with every group—friend or critic —to the end that retail beer outlets give no offense to anyone. Wb they’d not Pea island with the sun to our bother with It. They continued to backs. We’d be on them before graze. They w«e not eating sand- they knew anything about it, and spurs. . That night, in Itself then where’d they be. Well, we be a hopeful portent. .hoped, etched on a piece of film. We reasoned that if Del Thomas! But there was the weather that stayed in the vehicle the geese Drinkwater had been running up might have to spend some of their | flags about. Far off, low on the time watching him, and maybe the | southern horizon, well over 10.0 camera could be advanced, like Na-,miles away—we could trace the poleon’s army, belly-wise, through white line of the surf for 90 miles the grass. This, plus the possibil-j and the cloud bank, glistening ity that the thickening rain might!white like thunderheads, was be- leave them with no great inclina-i yond that. The bank was coming tion toward flying. Even so, it left I appreciably nearer, the grass pretty clammy, and there | By riSw we were at 9,000 feet, being no convenient way to carry and the ship quit climbing so ener- the camera on my back—well, I getically. Northward the horizon don’t know what Napoleon wiouldiwas clear, and there was the have thought of his army sliding ;.smudge of Norfolk 90 miles away, forward through grass on its back. Westward there was Williamston walking on my head through the bog for their amusement. Back on the Island, when we landed, the approaching storm was still mot visible, and Drinkwater’s bright flags mapped with the wind in bright sunshine. . . The storm broke six hours later. cough, chest cold, or bronchia'^ . tation, you may get relief no" -j le Creomulsion. Serious troubled ij, ■ be brewing and you cannot ^ to take a chance with any oi less potent than Creomulsion, goes right to the seat of the and aids nature to soothe Icj the inflamed mucous meffl'^ll'fT. and to loosen and expel laden phlegm. , j i ' Even if other remedies have 'Vij, don’t be discouraged, try Cv^2 ""His Bion. Your druggist is authon^) t refund your money if you (» * thoroughly satisfled with the "j , fits obtained. Creomulsion 1 word, ask for it plainly, see name on the bottle is Creoni“5 and you’ll get the genuine and the reuef you want, I'l'i with cameras balanced across their bellies. It should be set down to the and Washington and swinging around the circle. Swan Quarter and Ocracoke. Eastward the At- credit of Del Thomas’ self-restraint lantic Ocean went its limitless way that the situation was not aggra- j to darkness. Across the south was vated by rgay unseemly eruptive the glaring slash of the approach- merriment. He did say, afterward ing storm, still hours and hours Beer...a Beverage of Moderation' '-It fO'^ and casually that he wished he had had a camera so he could have re corded my progress gooseward through the grass. But he was very serious about it. He had, by now, begun to take the photogra phy of these geese entirely seri ously. Well, there they were, about 200 of them with a camera nearer them than any snow goose had ever allowed a camera to come before. Last year the nearest Eckenberg got, when he spent a week under taking pictures for the Times, was one mile. And here they were within '50 feet of me. Not many of them, to be sure, but some. And the rain continued to drift down. One preposterously solemn old gander, obviously the senior war den of this parish, eyed me with stolid malevolence. He emitted a honk. I’m sure that he dared me to come one inch nearer, or he’d fly. He stood still while the rest of the congrregation walked calmly away from me, aiming to be well off. But it was sending out a scouting veil of haze; the Banks were not so clearly etched against the dark of the Atlantic. And below, there was all of The Island, curiously patterned against the dark water of the four sounds that surround it. “Too bad about that haze coming up the beach,” Driskill said. “If it wasn’t for that you could get the whole of the National Seashore in one picture from here. And the island, too. Wait a minute, and I’ll get you fumed right Now, how’s that?” But what about the geese? Well, they were there this morning, but from here it’s 25 miles, air line, to Pea Island . . . Well we can put; her in a glide from here and we’ll be down there on ’em withouL their hearing us, or seeing us either. 'Hiat’s the way we figured if. The Snow Geese had some other notions about it, and by, the time we were over them, they Ead abandoned the Island and were settled down on the Sound. Driskill said if that F8ENCH LICK, INU INDIANAPOLIS, INO. WILLIAMSPORT, PA, -Porfi Hoi«F * *Gilb«rt Houl” WHEELING WVA. NORFOLK VA WASHINGTON, n t CHATTANOOGA, TENN' 'Gilbm-Ellii'’ lELLAIRE. OHIO BALTIMORE, MD -AhoiMt* 4Cl >yi 'fy. liSj M hi out of range of the camera at such was the way they wanted to. play, Ac MAKE YOUR Winter DRIVING SAFER I Shorten your trip to downtown Norfolk and lessen the hazards of winter driving by taking Route Va-21 direct to the - - - - - Wai NORFOLK- berKley bridge The “Connecting Link” on the Ocean Highway North and South