INTRODUCTION you de you an ma o save money, money, To save ul Buny for Pa ed for work e ortunately, his friends were. When Paul was was Paul When were. friends his ortunately, F you’d onc y you’d able to sa to be able To for Paul. Paul. ork for es to w over themselv over ell fth winter, he had the great idea to hitch Babe the Blue Ox to an entire section of land, and have Babe Babe have and of land, section Ox to an entire Blue the to hitch Babe idea great the had he fth winter, fi lled wagon like a sprinkler to make the ice roads, and the plan worked. However, that night, their wagon- night, their that However, worked. plan the and roads, ice the to make a sprinkler like lled wagon ack Math

Lumberj Paul could always find a good stand of white pine, but as more and more lumber companies moved into the into the moved companies lumber more and more as but white pine, of a good stand find always could Paul lumber the providing to keep to be able west farther moved Paul stands. timber less quality were there Midwest, he Midwest, to the returned never Paul Although in America. timber best quality roundest, tallest, with the baron left legends and tall tales throughout all of ’s cities and towns. As a foreman, Paul had a great eye for finding high-quality stands of trees. He was also very efficient. One winter very efficient. also was He of trees. stands high-quality finding for eye a great had Paul a foreman, As sticking trees had that a stand found Paul tops of trees. the see only could a person much that so it snowed The baron. lumber for the goal met his and winter, that trees tops off those the cut He snow. of the out 60 feet the from record his to beat stumps 100 foot the cut and back, went he so much less snow, was there winter, next winter before. The next year, Paul gave all his crew double-sided axes, so they could chop two trees at once. Shot Shot Lumberjack at once. trees two chop could they so axes, double-sided crew his all gave Paul year, next The four fell and hand, in each an axe swing could he that invention new this wielding good at so was Gunderson at a time. trees f Lumberjacks the from a day trips four made They camp. 30 miles from about cutting were crew his and he winter, same That a used They a day. six trips make could they roads, ice had if they that thought Paul river. to the of trees stand water-fi big that road an ice Having River. Mississippi the it formed that much water so spilling a leak, sprung sprinkler to market! logs the to transport easier it even made promoted to foreman in his sixth year as a lumberjack (after growing 8 more inches so that he was 7'2"), he made made 7'2"), he was he that so inches 8 more growing (after a lumberjack as sixth year in his to foreman promoted expenses. other and wages, lumberjacks’ the cut, trees of the track keeping were friends his sure so much ink! camp the saved It “t’s.” their crossing and “i’s” their staff to stop dotting his asked Paul likes the machine, a well-oiled like functioned that crew a picked had Paul long, Before loggers. among a legend since. been seen not have of which Although Paul had many strengths, he was not very good at math. good at math. very not was he strengths, many had Paul Although In Paul’s In Paul’s to cut able were lumberjacks the landing, river to the stand timber got the they Once river. to the land the pull was process the and it belonged, where to of land section that returned Babe sheep. shearing were they like trees the so of land, a section to return forgot once crew the time, saved that Though section. with another repeated stop. them made foreman In Paul’s third winter, he was promoted to stamper (and had grown another 6 inches). He stamped some logs with logs some stamped He inches). 6 another grown had (and to stamper promoted was he winter, third In Paul’s log. of the end other up at the show would stamp the that strength such When Paul was 14 years old and six feet tall, he spent his first winter in a logging camp as an axman. He was so was He axman. as an camp first winter in a logging his spent he tall, six feet old and 14 years was Paul When cut of lumber worth a day’s have would and quickly, worked He chop. in one down a tree cut could he that strong well- always was He river. to the logs pull help and of horses, team a strap then a nap, take He’d lunchtime. by sang. and told jokes he because camps, logging in the liked was born in the woods of Maine. He quickly outgrew the East, and moved to the expanse of the of the expanse the to moved and East, the outgrew quickly He of Maine. woods born in the was Bunyan Paul long wasn’t It stands. pine great and trees of tall tales lumberjack and on wild game, raised was He Midwest. camps. logging in the life his to spend wanted he knew Paul before Paul Bunyan, An American Legend American An Bunyan, Paul