Kino plans to use stone tools to disable the trackers on their bodies while they are asleep. This will allow them to move freely without being monitored by the trackers.
the trackers
the trackers use rocks, footprints, and other things that have been caused by kino, juana, and coyotito. they follow them using smell sound and other things. they are violent and it is ironic because they have a rifle like kino wants. they also end up killing coytito.
Kino kills the trackers in Chapter 5 of "The Pearl," towards the end of the chapter. The specific page number can vary depending on the edition of the book.
booty swaggers
lizard
Kino gets in a fight with a group of trackers at the end of the chapter. They want to take the valuable pearl he found, leading to a violent confrontation.
Kino heard the Song of Death when he went to the village to sell the pearl. It was played by the trackers who were attempting to follow him and steal the pearl from him.
i believe that Kino is responsible for Coyotito's death because the sheep trackers would have never killed his kid if he wasn't so greedy to sell the pearl
Coyotito dies from the trackers the trackers say well if thisis a cyotie than this will stop itand then the traker with the rifleshot it into the air and kino heard the cry ofdeath and coyotitos head was shot completlly of
Kino kills the trackers who are following him and his family. But right before he attacked them, one of the trackers shot Coyotito in the head. This is because Coyotito made a noise that sounded like a coyote pup and he started shooting. Kino and Juana, carrying Coyotito's body on her back, go back to La Paz, their village. Everyone gathers around to watch as Kino throws the pearl back into the ocean, ending the greed associated with it.
In "The Pearl" by John Steinbeck, the falling action is the events that occur after Kino kills a man in self-defense during his pursuit of the pearl. This leads to Kino and his family being followed and hunted by trackers, culminating in a tragic outcome. The falling action highlights the consequences of Kino's actions and the impact of greed and violence on his family.
Juana likely refused to go to safety because she wanted to stay by Kino's side during a dangerous time and protect her family. She was fiercely loyal and determined to support Kino, despite the risks involved. Additionally, she may have felt that they were safer together rather than separated.