Journals Of Two Expeditions Of Discovery In North West And Western Australia Volume 1 (Of 2) - George Grey (best free e book reader txt) 📗
- Author: George Grey
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Getting Off 280 Gallons For They Were Obliged To Carry The Water In Small
Baricos To The Boat, Over Slippery Rocks And Deep Mud: And On The 21st,
Thinking It Better To Complete Their Water At Timor, They Set Sail. This
Difficulty Of Watering Only Arose From The Lowness Of The Tides (Neap)
And Our Ignorance Of The Country. Subsequently We Found No Difficulty In
Procuring It; Indeed No Country In The World Is Better Watered Than This
Portion Of Australia.
Since The Sailing Of The Lynher The Party Had Been Actively Engaged
Volume 1 Chapter 6 (Hanover Bay And Its Vicinity) Pg 68Building A Shed For The Stores. This Labour Was Still Continued, After My
Arrival, And Completed On Christmas Eve.
Christmas Dinner.
On Christmas Day We All Dined Together In A Little Booth Made Of Boughs,
Which We Dressed Up As Gaily As We Could. I Could Not But Feel
Considerable Pleasure In Seeing The Happy Countenances Of The Men Ranged
Round The Rough Plank That Formed Our Table. We Sat Down, A Little Band
Of Nine, Bound Upon An Adventure Of Which The Issue To Any And All Of Us
Was Very Uncertain: Yet No Forebodings Appeared To Damp The Pleasure Of
The Present Moment; And As I Anxiously Looked Round I Could Not Detect
The Slightest Trace Of A Gloomy Thought In Any Of The Cheerful Faces That
Surrounded Me. After Dinner We Drank The Queen's Health, The First Time
Such A Toast Had Been Given In These Regions; And Then, Mr. Walker And
Myself Retiring To Talk Alone, Left The Rest To Their Own Amusements.
1838.
Planting Useful Seeds.
The Interval Between That And New Year's Day Found And Left Us Full Of
Occupation. On This Latter Day I Had Resolved To Do Homage To The Country
By A Seasonable Gift; And Therefore, Rising With The Earliest Dawn, Spent
The Whole Day In Planting, In Various Positions, Seeds Of The Most Useful
Fruits And Vegetables. Those We Had Already Planted Were Doing Well, And
I Hoped That This Benefaction Might Prove One Of No Small Value, Perhaps
To Civilized Man, Or At Least To The Natives Of The Vicinity.
Walk To Munster Water.
January 4.
A Party Of Us This Day Walked To Hanover Bay For The Purpose Of Making
Some Observations On The Sandy Beach There, After Which We Went Over To
Prince Regent's River, Near Munster Water. The Country Until Near The
Bank Of The River At This Point Was Of The Same Sandy Nature As That
About The Beach: There However It Improves; And From The Circumstance Of
My Finding A Regular Haunt Of The Natives I Feel Sure That There Is
Plenty Of Fresh Water In The Neighbourhood. This Place Of Their Sojourn
Resembled One Before Described, And Many Others I Had Seen. An Extensive
Circle Was Formed By Laying A Large Flat Stone Upon The Ground, And On
Each Of These A Smaller One; Between The Two They Evidently Crushed The
Shellfish And Nuts Which Formed Their Food. Near Some Of The Stones Were
Laid Huge Shells For The Purpose Of Drinking From; And In The Centre Of
The Circle Were The Marks Of Frequent Fires. We Heard The Natives Calling
To One Another In The Woods, But Saw None Of Them; And In The Evening
Returned To Our Encampment.
Isthmus Near Hanover Bay.
Volume 1 Chapter 6 (Hanover Bay And Its Vicinity) Pg 69
January 6.
I Made An Excursion This Day For The Purpose Of Examining The Land Lying
Between Port George The Fourth And Hanover Bay: It Consists Of A Low Neck
Which Connects The Peninsula Terminating In High Bluff Point With The
Main. Thus It Is Bounded On Two Sides By The Sea, And On The Other Two By
Rocky Hills Which Are Perfectly Precipitous, Both Towards The Main And
The Peninsula; But A Natural Terrace Runs Along Under The Cliff In The
Direction Of Camden Sound, Which I Believe Would Form A Good Road To That
Harbour. The Tract Thus Enclosed Appears To Be Very Fertile. Porphyry And
Basalt Are The Common Rocks. The Soil Is Rich Vegetable Mould, Mixed With
Gravel And Covered With The Most Luxuriant Grass. The Trees Were In
General Small. We Only Found Three Springs Here; These However Were
Sufficient To Prove That It Was Well Supplied In This Respect. A Species
Of Plant Was Observed Here, Which In Appearance And Smell Exactly
Resembled The Jasmine Of England: And It Would Be Difficult To Give Any
Adequate Impression Of The Singular Sensation Of Pleasure Derived From
The Sight Of This Simple Emblem Of Home. Here Were Regular Beaten Tracks
Of The Natives, As Completely Pathways As Those We Find In England
Leading From A Village To A Farmhouse.
Hill Of Shells.
Near The Sea We Also Came Upon A Complete Hill Of Broken Shells, Which It
Must Have Taken Some Centuries To Form, For It Covered Nearly, If Not
Quite, Half An Acre Of Ground, And In Some Places Was Ten Feet High: It
Was Situated Just Over A Bed Of Cockles, And Was Evidently Formed From
The Remains Of Native Feasts, As Their Fireplaces, And The Last Small
Heaps Of Shells Were Visible On The Summit Of The Hill.* This Neck Of
Land Is Undoubtedly Of The First Importance; For, Lying As It Does
Between Port George The Fourth And Hanover Bay, It Commands Two Excellent
Harbours, And Its Soil Is Moreover Highly Fertile. I Conceive That A
Point Nearer Camden Bay Would Be Of Greater Consequence To The Mother
Country; But, After Such A Spot, This Neck Of Land Is The Most Important
Position On The North-West Coast Of Australia.
For Some Days After Our Return From This Excursion All Hands Were
Occupied In Drying The Stores, Which Had Suffered A Little From The Late
Rains; In Planting Barley And Potatoes; And In A Variety Of Occupations
Of The Same Nature
Volume 1 Chapter 6 (Footnote) Pg 70
(*Footnote. A Similar Mass Of Shells, Though Of Smaller Dimensions, Is
Spoken Of By Captain King, At Port Essington: A Curious Mound,
Constructed Entirely Of Shells, Rudely Heaped Together, Measuring Thirty
Feet In Diameter, And Fourteen Feet High, Was Also Noticed Near The
Beach, And Was Supposed To Be A Burying-Place Of The Indians. King's
Australia Volume 1 Page 87.)
Volume 1 Chapter 6 (Hanover Bay And Its Vicinity) Pg 71
Excursion To Country About Prince Regent's River.
As All The Necessary Magnetic And Astronomical Observations Were Now
Completed I Seized The Opportunity Offered By The First Favourable Day
And Started With A Party Of Three In The Direction Of Prince Regent's
River.
We Made The River About Halfway Bay, And Then Followed Its Course,
Keeping About A Mile Or Two Inland. A Considerable Portion Of The Land In
The Neighbourhood Of The River Was Most Excellent, Consisting Of Rich
Meadow Plains. The General Proportion Of Good Country Compared With The
Bad Was Still However But Small.
Gouty-Stemmed Trees.
There Was A Very Remarkable Feature In The Appearance Of This Part Of The
Country, Caused By The Number Of Gouty Stemmed Trees (A Species Of
Capparis ?) These Trees Grow To A Considerable Height, And Had The
Appearance Of Suffering From Some Disease, But, From The Circumstance Of
All Of Them Being Affected In The Same Way, This Was Undoubtedly Their
Natural State. I Measured One Of The Largest I Here Saw, And Found That
At Eighteen Inches Above The Ground Its Circumference Was About
Twenty-Eight Feet Six Inches.
The Foliage Of This Tree Was Slight But Graceful, And It Was Loaded With
A Fruit Of An Elliptical Form, As Large As A Coconut. This Fruit Was
Enclosed In A Rind, Closely Resembling That Of The Almond, And Inside The
Rind Was A Shell Containing A Soft White Pulp, In Which Were Placed A
Species Of Almond, Very Palatable To The Taste, And Arranged In This Pulp
Much In The Manner In Which The Seeds Are Placed In The Pomegranate. Upon
The Bark Of These Trees Being Cut They Yielded In Small Quantities A
Nutritious White Gum, Which Both In Taste And Appearance Resembles
Macaroni; And Upon This Bark Being Soaked In Hot Water An Agreeable
Mucilaginous Drink Was Produced.
This Tree Is, From This Combination Of Useful Qualities, A Vegetable
Production Of No Slight Value, And Probably Comes Near The Cocoa-Nut Tree
In Value. Its Worth Is Well Known To The Natives For Its Vicinity Is One
Of Their Favourite Haunts. Around Nearly All Of Them I Have Found Marks
Of Their Fires, And On Many Of These Trees Were Several Successive Rows
Of Notches, Formed In This Manner:
All But The Last Row Being Invariably Scratched Out. These Rows Of
Notches Were Evidently Of Different Ages, And I Imagine Must Indicate The
Number Of Nuts Taken Each Year From The Tree.* I Often Also Found Rude
Drawings Scratched Upon The Trees, But None Of These Sketches Indicated
Anything But A Very Ordinary Degree Of Talent, Even For A Savage: Some
Were So Imperfect That It Was Impossible To Tell What They Were Meant To
Volume 1 Chapter 6 (Hanover Bay And Its Vicinity) Pg 71
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