English:
Identifier: oursearchforwild00nile (find matches)
Title: Our search for a wilderness; an account of two ornithological expeditions to Venezuela and to British Guiana
Year: 1910 (1910s)
Authors: Niles, Blair Beebe, William, 1877-1962
Subjects: Natural history Birds
Publisher: New York, H. Holt and company
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patched and faded shirt, with sleeves rolledto the elbow, still more patched trousers rolled to the knee,bare as to feet, a crownless hat on one side of his head, anancient and odoriferous pipe hanging from his mouth, a bigmachete at his side, in the capacity of cook would make diemost shiftless housekeeper gasp with horror. I often wondered why he so persistently declared himself cocinero, notmariner o, for he could hardly have been a greater failure in anycalling than he was in that of chef. Among the most valued 78 OUR SEARCH FOR A WILDERNESS. of my memories are some mental pictures of Maestro, which,while I live, I can never manage to forget. I often shut my eyes and see him with streaming eyesstirring some fearful concoction over, the little stove; or againon his knees mixing dough for the leaden dumplings to beboiled in the pig-tail stew which appeared at every meal. Weso often wished we had brought graham flour. White flourdoes show the dirt so! Still another picture is Maestro
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Fig. 42 Captain Truxii.lo paddling us up ttte Ouarapichepast Cano Colorado. washing the table-cloth. This was a piece of oilcloth, origi-nally white, and Maestros method of washing it was to spreadit on the deck, pour water over it, dance upon it in his barefeet, to the accompaniment of some weird chant, and finallyhang it on the rail to dry! No doubt after this proceeding hefelt as self satisfied as the most pompous and well-trainedEnglish butler. Tn justice, I must say that Maestro did make one or two A WOMANS EXPERIENCES IN VENEZUELA. 79 edible dishes; he could boil the native vegetables, yam,tania and kuch-kuch and he made very good cornmeal mush.Then after a long, happy day on the canos we were alwayshungry, and happiness and honest hunger overlook a multi-tude of sins. Besides, whatever was lacking in Maestros billof fare was compensated by the dried soups, cocoa, crackersand preserves from our own stores. So we managed one wayor another to keep the wolf from the door, or perhap
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