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Many species of dragons have been identified and recorded their
habits well-known. The intellectual Chinese Dragon, serenely floating
like a cloud over the fields, the belligerent Welsh Dragon with it's penchant
for "canned food" and mid-knight snacks.
So it was very exciting for me to be able to spot and record an entirely
new type of dragon - a wild and heretofore unidentified species.
This wild dragon has been spotted only briefly, just long enough to make
a few sketches. It has an appearance of liquid metal, with a fluid, flowing
body, very sharp claws, and a long flowing tail.
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Please scroll down for more pictures and the story.
The First
Sighting:
The weather
had turned cold suddenly, and now, only a week after the first frost,
the first serious snow of the season had arrived eight inches
in four hours locally, but there would be more, much more, in the mountains.
Our foreign expert had finally arrived, after being delayed at the border
for nearly two weeks. We had hoped to get up into the mountains sooner,
but fate, as usual, conspired against us. Often, we conclude that Fate
and the dragons have a mighty fine arrangement between them that prevents
us from more successful sorties into their world.
However,
despite the impending bad weather, the low-front moving in, and the
general fool-hardiness of heading into the back country in the beginning
of the winter season, when the first big storms are due, but the ground
has none of the stability of months of hard freezing, we loaded up the
sleds, clambered onto the ATVs and headed out. I still prefer to use
live animals for transportation, horses or pack goats, but even I could
see that where we were going, nothing short of mountain goats would
be useful, and we didn't have any of those. If Fate wanted to keep us
out, she would have to kill us not that I believe that she would
hesitate for a second to do so.
Three days
of hard travelling took us deep into the back country the ATVs
left behind now, above the treeline and into serious climbing country.
The dogs I had selected for this expedition were only two the
only two in my kennel that were suitable for this climate. One, a canny
old malamute cross with a half marked face and one blue eye, named Fritz,
and the other a young bitch of underdetermined parentage known affectionately
as "The Bush Wolf" for her looks, or "Loki's Spawn"
for her behaviour. However, both of them were superb at tracking dragons,
and fearless enough to do so. It was my discovery that some dogs could
track dragons that had made all the difference in our expeditions, and
since then I have formulated some theories about the reasons that humans
and dogs have formed such a lasting partnership. However, I digress.
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On the third
night, Fritz acted restless and lay at the door to the tent, in an alert
position, simply watching. I don't believe he slept, simply dozing, looking
out the door flap that I kept partially open for his benefit. This resulted
in my cocooning myself even more mummy-like in my sleeping bag, with The
Bush Wolf curled behind my knees for warmth. In the other tent, our guest
expert and my long-time companion and surrogate muscles burrowed deeply
in their own sleeping bags, but without the factor of the open tent door.
Morning dawned
crystal-clear and bright, but with the promise of worse weather to come
Fritz was in full alert now, and The Bush Wolf was circling the
camp. Breakfast was a hasty affair, cold food and left-over coffee, and
we decided to not break the camp, leaving it where it was for an early
start. Armed only with climbing gear, I crouched down beside Fritz, where
he was staring out to the north and west, and gave the magic command.
Find it and he was off, an easy lope through the snow,
air-scenting as he went, into the rocks. We took off after him at our
own best pace, with The Bush Wolf running the course between Fritz and
us, making sure that we stayed on his tracks. After a short while, the
track became too strong for her to ignore, and overcame her instinct to
keep the pack together and soon we followed their joint tracks alone,
fresh in the snow. The landscape began to look strange
a characteristic when nearing the lair of a dragon. Years of experience
told us to keep looking down and follow the fresh dog tracks the
only real thing in a surreal landscape. Only experience too allowed us
to ignore the nagging feeling that we were on the wrong trail, in a part
of the mountain that we shouldn't be in, and other nameless sensations
that are part of the dragons arsenal of defense.
It was nearly
noon, and the weather was holding better than I expected, when I heard
barks from the dogs The Bush Wolf, a few short high pitched barks,
and short moaning howl from Fritz. Minutes later, we scrambled out from
the craggy boulders and into a clearing, a half circle, about 30 feet
across, completely cleared of rocks, fronting onto a sheer cliff wall.
About 10 feet up the cliff, surprise, surprise, a cave faced into the
clearing.
Our imported
expert unshipped the still camera, an aged, fully-manual Rolli,
we gave up on video and any electronic equipment ages ago, the natural
electrical energy of the dragon makes any electronic equipment fail miserably
at their will and he started taking pictures of the cave entrance.
The dogs were
silent, but every muscle as taunt as a spring - there was no doubt that
the trail led here, and if the inhabitant was not home, he or she had
been recently. While we stood and watched, contemplating whether our next
move was to climb up and into the cave entrance, we heard a "surring"
noise, a dry scraping, of something smooth but heavy being dragged over
stone. We waited, unmoving, breathless, too anticipatory to even move
to cover. The noise grew a little, and then ceased, and as it ceased,
we saw movement, a shimmer in the cave's dark entrance. Then, full into
the sunlight, one of the most breathtaking spectacles even seen
a wild dragon. She poised at the cave's entrance, and the full light of
day shimmered off her silvered skin she gleamed like polished metal.
Her talons gripped the edge of the cave opening, and her long tail writhed
up and coiled behind her. A crest like a horse's mane, but made of living
tendrils that writhed and moved of their own accord, ran from her forehead
down her back and out of sight into the darkness of the cave. I thought
I could see an arrowhead shape at the tail tip, indicating some possible
kinship with the ancient dragons of Great Britain. She turned her head
to look at us with one eye, and it was an icy blue, as cold as the heart
of winter.
She posed
there, the image burning into our memory, for one endless, fleeting, immeasurable
fragment of time, in which we all forgot to breath and then, she
tipped her nose to the sky and let out a trumpet blast of sound. The answer
was an almost immediate lightening blast and accompanying thunder
and when we picked ourselves up she was gone.
But now, we
had weather. The blue sky disappeared in an instant, and fat wet flakes
of snow whirled down, and we knew we had but minutes to get out of there.
We turned and headed out the way we had come, stumbling as an impossible
wind started to howl around us.
Suffice it
to say that we eventually made it back to camp, but that we would never
have done so without the help of the dogs as usual. We spent another
3 days huddled in the tents, waiting for the fury of the unnatural storm
to blow itself out sketching and making notes. On the fourth day,
the weather lost its furious edge, and we broke camp and made our way
down the mountain in merely ordinary blizzard conditions.
Our conclusions:
a previously unknown dragon living on the mountain, with the usual mind-befuddling
dragon defenses. A native to snow and ice conditions surely those
claws functioned as ice picks in forays out onto the glaciers with
the ability to control the weather. Appeared to be in prime condition
and in peak health. All in all, a very encouraging and successful expedition.
Dragons aren't extinct they're just
very good at hiding!
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