October 25, 1816
Coffee is good this morning. I can remember the first time that I ever took a drink of it. I was just a young lad and the morning was cold. My mother had just pored father some and I will never forget how the steam rose out of the cup as he lifted it to his lips and gently blew on it. He noticed me watching him, and after taking a sip, he sit the cup back down on the rough hewn table and pushed it towards me and told me to try it. The face I made must have been priceless. I had never tasted anything so hot and bitter in my life and my father laughed as my mother scolded him for putting me up to taking a drink. Saying that I was to young to drink coffee. I remember wondering why anyone would want to drink the hot bitter liquid. But that was long ago and seems as if it had been another lifetime. Now, I enjoy coffee. It took some time, but I love a hot cup of the bitter water. As a matter of fact the stronger the better. Coffee, like tobacco, is one of the little enjoyments in this life.
The salt pork is all gone. The last of it being eaten yesterday. So it's coffee and dried jerky for breakfast this morning.
I am sitting on the ground leaning back against a large post oak as I make this journal entry. I am trying to get it done early, for once the day gets started good, I may not have the time or the desire to write one. If the four traps that were set yesterday all happen to hold beaver this morning, it will be a busy day of skinning, fleshing and stretching.
It always amazes me how quite the forest is before the dawn and then when the first rays of light start peaking out from the east it comes alive with activity. Right now as I write this, the song birds are singing their glories songs as a Red Headed Woodpecker pecks on a dead tree close by. A crow is cawing from the east, while a squirrel chatters in the treetops behind me. It looks like it is going to be a beautiful fall day.
Yesterday, after making the beaver sets, I found fresh spring water seeping out from under a large rock that lays on the sloping side of a southern ridge that is well covered with post oak timber. With a little work it can be made into suitable supply of drinking water. A shelter can also be constructed with little ease here and the ridge line will help protect both me and the animals from the cold north winds that will surely be coming soon. I believe that it is there that I will make the winter camp.
John W. Hart