Chapter XXVI
., it is said to be "sluiced."
When there is a jam of entangled logs as they are swept down-stream, if it is impossible to find and pry loose the "key-log," it is sometimes necessary to blow up the restraining logs with dynamite.
When the floating logs are caught upon rocks, and the men are prying them loose, they are said to be "carding" the ledges.
A "jill-poke," a pet aversion of drivers, is a log with one end lodged on the bank and the other thrust out into the stream.
The "cant-dog" is illustrated on the cover of the book.
The "peavy" is the Maine name for a slightly different variety of "cant-dog," which takes its title from its maker in Old Town.
The "pick-pole" is an ashen pole ten to twelve feet long, shod with an iron point with a screw-tip, which enables a driver to pull a log towards him or to push it away.
KING SPRUCE
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