August 1. We travelled
about seven miles west by north. Silver-leaved
Ironbark ridges, of a dreary aspect, and covered with
small shining brown iron pebbles, alternating with
small plains and box-flats, extended generally to
the northward. Some of the hills were open at
their summits, timbered with apple-gum, and covered
with white ant-hills; their bases were surrounded
with thickets of the Severn tree. We encamped
at a fine Nymphaea lagoon, in the rich shade of a
white drooping gum tree. A large but dry creek
was near us to the westward. The grass was excellent.
August 2. We travelled
twelve miles west-north-west, over a fine box-flat,
crossed a good sized creek, about five miles from the
camp, and, to the westward of it, passed over seven
miles of Ironbark ridges. We descended from them
into the valley of a creek fringed with the white-gum
tree, and followed it down for about three miles before
we found water. We encamped at a good water-hole,
at the foot of the ridges, in latitude 18 degrees
0 minutes 42 seconds. Brown and Charley, who had
gone two miles lower down, told me that they had found
salt-water, and deposits of very fine salt. Many
lagoons were on the flats, surrounded by Polygonums,
and frequented by ducks, spoonbills, and various aquatic
birds. They had shot, however, only one teal and
a spoonbill. In travelling down the creek, we
frequently started wallabies. Geophaps plumifera
was very frequent on the Ironbark ridges. A cormorant
with white breast and belly, and the rose cockatoo
were shot; the former tasted as well as a duck.
Brown collected a good quantity of the gum of Terminalia,
and the seeds of the river bean, which made an excellent
coffee. The native bee was very abundant.
The natives seemed to have burned
the grass systematically along every watercourse,
and round every water-hole, in order to have them surrounded
with young grass as soon as the rain sets in.
These burnings were not connected with camping places,
where the fire is liable to spread from the fire-places,
and would clear the neighbouring ground. Long
strips of lately burnt grass were frequently observed
extending for many miles along the creeks. The
banks of small isolated water-holes in the forest,
were equally attended to, although water had not been
in either for a considerable time. It is no doubt
connected with a systematic management of their runs,
to attract game to particular spots, in the same way
that stockholders burn parts of theirs in proper seasons;
at least those who are not influenced by the erroneous
notion, that burning the grass injures the richness
and density of the natural turf. The natives,
however, frequently burn the high and stiff grass,
particularly along shady creeks, with the intention
of driving the concealed game out of it; and we have
frequently seen them watching anxiously, even for lizards,
when other game was wanting.
August 3. We travelled,
for the first two miles, degrees W. over scrubby
ironstone ridges, and then entered upon a fine plain,
from which smoke was seen to the west and north-west.
I chose the latter direction, and passed over ironstone
ridges covered with stunted silver-leaved Ironbark;
and a species of Terminalia, a small tree, with long
spathulate glaucous leaves, slightly winged seed-vessels,
and with an abundance of fine transparent eatable
gum; of which John and Brown gathered a great quantity.
Some of the ridges were openly timbered with a rather
stunted white-gum tree, and were well grassed; but
the grass was wiry and stiff. At the end of our
stage, about sixteen miles distant from our last camp,
we crossed some rusty-gum forest; and encamped at a
fine water-hole in the bed of a rocky creek, shaded
by the white drooping gum, which seemed to have taken
the place of the flooded gum. Groves of Pandanus
spiralis grew along the creek, which ran to the north
by east. All the small watercourses we passed,
inclined to the eastward. Charley found the shell
of a Cytherea on an old camping-place of the natives,
which indicated our approach to the salt water.
A native had carved a representation
of the foot of an emu in the bark of a gum-tree; and
he had performed it with all the exactness of a good
observer. It was the first specimen of the fine
arts we had witnessed in our journey.
August 4. We travelled
about ten miles west-north-west, over scrubby ridges,
plains, and box-flats. In a patch of rusty-gum
forest we found Acacia equisetifolia, and the dwarf
Grevillea of the upper Lynd in blossom; the thyrsi
of scarlet flowers of the latter were particularly
beautiful. As we entered into the plains, Binoe’s
Trichinium and Salicornia re-appeared.
I steered towards the smoke of a Blackfellow’s
fire, which we saw rising on the plains; the fire
was attended to by a gin. Charley went forward
to examine a belt of trees visible in the distance;
and John Murphy followed a hollow in the plain, and
succeeded in finding a fine lagoon, about half a mile
long, partly rocky and partly muddy, surrounded by
Polygonums, and fields of Salicornia. A few gum
trees, and raspberry-jam trees grew straggling around
it; but no dry timber was to be found, and we had to
make a fire with a broken down half dried raspberry-jam
tree. Our meat bags were now empty, and it was
necessary to kill another bullock, although the spot
was by no means favourable for the purpose. Natives
were around us, and we saw them climbing the neighbouring
trees to observe our proceedings. When Charley
joined us, he stated that a fine broad salt-water
river was scarcely a quarter of a mile from the lagoon;
that he had seen a tribe of natives fishing, who had
been polite enough to make a sign that the water was
not drinkable, when he stooped down to taste it, but
that freshwater was to be found in the direction of
the lagoon, at which we were encamped. No time
was to be lost, and, as the afternoon had advanced,
we commenced operations immediately. Though the
bullock was young, and in excellent working condition,
the incessant travelling round the gulf had taken
nearly all the fat out of him, and there was scarcely
enough left to fry his liver. At sunset, we saw
the natives approaching our camp, with loud vociférations,
swinging their spears, and poising and putting them
into their wommalas. We immediately saddled and
mounted two of our horses, and discharged a pistol.
The latter stopped their noise at once; and some cowered
down to the ground. John and Charley rode slowly
towards them; at first they tried to face, and then
to surround the horsemen; but John and Charley separated,
and threatened to cut them off from the river.
As soon as they saw their supposed danger, they ran
to the river, plunged in, and crossed it. We
were very watchful during the night, but were not disturbed.
Next morning, natives passed at some distance, but
showed no inclination to molest us.
August 5. We cut our meat
into slices, and, although we were reduced in number,
we had become so expert, that we had finished a full
sized bullock by half past eleven, A. M. The process
occupied four of us about four hours and a half; John
and Brown were employed in putting it out on the kangaroo
net to dry. The strong sea breeze dried it beautifully;
but it attracted much moisture again in the night,
and was very moist when we packed it into the bags
at starting.
The sea breeze set in on the 4th at
11 o’clock, became very strong during the afternoon,
lessened at sunset, and died away about 9 o’clock,
P. M. when it became thick and foggy. This was
the case on the 5th, 6th, and 7th, and was very regular.
August 6. We left the large
lagoon, which, as I was prevented from making an observation,
I supposed to be in latitude 17 degrees 47 minutes
minutes, and followed the winding course of the
river up to latitude 17 degrees 57 minutes. The
river, I am inclined to think, is the Albert of Captain
Stokes, and the Maet Suyker of the Dutch Navigators,
and its general course is from south-south-west, to
north-north-east. Plains, forest country, open
scrub frequently broken by gullies, alternated with
each other. Several large and deep basins parallel
to the river, were dry. The rough-leaved fig
tree, the white cedar, and a stiff-leaved Ipomoea
with pink blossoms, grew on its sandy banks; and some
low straggling mangroves at the water’s
edge. The day was far advanced, and I became
very anxious about our moist meat; and feared that
we should have to encamp without water. We saw
burnt grass every where, and logs were even still
burning; and fresh water could not be very far off,
but yet we were unable to detect it. At last,
I observed some trees, of a fresher appearance than
usual, beyond a small rise; and, riding up to it,
found a small water-hole surrounded by Polygonums:
on examination, it was found to contain only a very
small quantity of water, yet what remained was good.
Charley, who returned afterwards, said that he had
been before at this water-hole, and had found a tribe
of natives encamped on it, one of whom lifted his
spear against him, but his courage forsook him upon
observing Charley still riding towards him, when he
and the whole camp took to their heels, leaving a
good supply of Convolvulus roots, and of Terminalia
gum behind them. We found shells of Cymbium
and Cytherea, an enormous waddie, which could have
been wielded only by a powerful arm, nets and various
instruments for fishing, in their deserted camp.
August 7. I thought it
advisable to stop here, and give our meat a fair drying.
The natives were not seen again. Charley and John
took a ride to procure some game, and came to a salt-water
creek, which joined the river about three miles from
our camp; the river flowed in a very winding course
from the eastward. They found some good fresh
water-holes, at the head of the salt-water.
August 8. We travelled
about seven miles E.S.E. over plains and Ironbark
ridges. The approaches of the creek, broken by
watercourses and gullies, were covered with thickets
of raspberry-jam trees. The rock cropped out
frequently in the creek, which was said to be very
rocky lower down. The salt-water Hibiscus, a
species of Paritium, Adr. Juss. (Hibiscus tiliaceus?
Linn. D.C. Prodr. I. grew round
the water-holes. We found the same little tree
at the salt-water rivers on the west coast of the
gulf, and at Port Essington. I had formerly seen
it at the sea coast of Moreton Bay; its bark is tough
and fibrous, and the heart-wood is brown with a velvety
lustre.
August 9. When Charley
returned with the horses, he told us, that, when he
was sitting down to drink at a water-hole about three
miles up the creek, ten émus came to the other
side of the water; keeping himself quiet, he took
a careful aim, and shot one dead; then mounting his
horse immediately, he pursued the others, and approaching
them very near, succeeded in shooting another.
He broke the wings of both and concealed them under
water. It is a singular custom of the natives,
that of breaking the wings upon killing an emu; as
the wings could only slightly assist the animal in
making its escape, should it revive. But in conversation
with Brown as to the possibility of one of the émus
having escaped, he said very seriously: “Blackfellow
knows better than white fellow; he never leaves the
emu without breaking a wing. Blackfellows killed
an emu once, and went off intending to call their friends
to help them to eat, and when they came back, they
looked about, looked about, but there was no emu;
the emu was gone therefore the Blackfellows
always broke the wings of the émus they killed
afterwards.” This was, however, very probably
one of Brown’s yarns, made up for the occasion.
I sent Mr. Calvert and Charley to
fetch the game, whilst we loaded the bullocks, and
by the time they returned, we were ready to start.
The émus were fine large birds, but not fat;
this season seemed to be unfavourable for them.
When we came out into the plain, we saw the smoke of
the natives to the southward, and I steered for it,
supposing that they were either near the river, or
at all events not far from fresh water. After
two miles travelling, we crossed another creek with
fine Polygonum water-holes, and, emerging from it
into a second plain, we saw a flock of émus in
the distance. Chase was given to them, and with
the assistance of Spring, one was caught. Loaded
with three émus, we travelled over a succession
of plains, separated by narrow belts of timber, mostly
of-box, bloodwood, and tea-tree. The plains were
broken by irregular melon-holes, which rendered our
progress slow and fatiguing. We came to Ironbark
ridges, and to the very spot where the natives had
been burning the grass, but no watercourse, nor lagoon
was seen. Brown rode farther to the southward,
and observed the tracks of the natives in that direction,
but found nothing but box-tree flats. I sent
Charley forward to the westward, and followed slowly
in the same direction; night overtook us, when we
were crossing a large plain, but Charley had lighted
a large fire, which guided us, and made us believe
that he had found water. He was indeed at the
steep banks of the river Albert, but it was still salt.
We hobbled and tethered all the horses, and watched
the bullocks. Fortunately we had provided ourselves
with some water, which allowed half a pint to every
man, so that we felt the inconvenience of a waterless
camp less than formerly. Besides, we had fresh
meat, which made a great difference in our desire
for water. It was a beautiful night, and even
the dew was wanting, which had been such a hindrance
to drying our meat during the previous nights.
During my watch, I seated myself on one of the prominences
of the steep banks, and watched the loud splashings
of numerous large fish which momentarily disturbed
the tranquillity of the mirror-like surface of the
water. Brown had found a bar across the river,
and, on examination it proved perfectly dry during
low water, and allowed us to cross, after having brought
our bullocks and horses down the steep banks, which,
however, was not effected without great difficulty.
We had most fortunately hit the very spot where such
a crossing was possible. Brown saw a great number
of fine fish in the river, which he called “Taylors.”
The natives had been here frequently: the grass
had been recently burnt, and fish bones indicated
this as one of their habitual camping places.
We could not, however, discover where they quenched
their thirst. I sent Charley forward in a north-west
direction to look for water. When we came out
into the plains which stretched along both sides of
the river as far as the eye could reach, we saw smoke
very near us on the right. I went towards it,
until I found that it rose on the opposite side of
the river we had just crossed; Brown, however, detected
a pool of slightly brackish water in a deep creek
at a short distance from its junction with the river.
It was too boggy for our cattle to approach, but it
allowed us to quench our own thirst. We now re-entered
the plains, and followed the track of Charley, who
soon returned with the pleasing intelligence that
he had found some fine water-holes. These were
in the bed of a creek, surrounded by a band of forest
composed of box, raspberry-jam trees, and the broad-leaved
Terminalia, the fruit of which was eaten by the black
cockatoo. The slopes of the water-holes were steep
and boggy, and one of our bullocks was so exhausted
that he slipped on the steep banks, rolled into the
water, and got so severely bogged, that we were compelled
to kill him, after trying everything in our power to
extricate him. On the 12th August we cut him up.
The night, however, was very foggy with heavy dew,
which prevented the meat from drying. The miserably
exhausted state of the animal had rendered the meat
very flabby and moist, and it not only dried badly,
but was liable to taint and to get fly-blown.
August 13. We had a fine
sea-breeze from the northward, which dried the outside
of the meat well enough, but not the inside, so that
it became in many parts so putrid that I had to throw
them away, although we saved a good deal by splitting
the puffed pieces, and exposing the inside to the
air.
The natives had surrounded the water-hole
on which we encamped with a barricade or hedge of
dry sticks, leaving only one opening to allow the
émus to approach the water. Near this the
natives probably kept themselves concealed and waited
for the émus; which in these parts were remarkably
numerous. On the 11th, John, Charley, and Brown,
rode down three birds, and, on the 14th, they obtained
four more, two of which were killed by John Murphy,
who rode the fleetest horse and was the lightest weight.
The possibility of riding émus down, clearly showed
in what excellent condition our horses were.
Even our bullocks although foot-weary upon arriving
at the camp, recovered wonderfully, and played about
like young steers in the grassy shady bed of the creek,
lifting their tails, scratching the ground with their
fore feet, and shaking their horns at us, as if to
say, we’ll have a run before you catch us.
The latitude of these water-holes
was 18 degrees 4 minutes 27 seconds, and they were
about nine miles from the crossing place of the river,
which I calculated to be in longitude 139 degrees 20
minutes (appr.). The plains were covered with
flocks of small white cockatoos, (Cocatua sanguinea,
Gould.) which Mr. Gilbert had mentioned as having
been found in Port Essington: their cry was rather
plaintive, and less unmelodious than the scream of
the large cockatoo; nor were they so shy and wary,
particularly when approaching the water.
August 15. Our beasts were
so heavily laden with the meat of two bullocks, that
I found it rather difficult to carry the additional
meat of the émus. We, however, divided every
emu into four parts the chest, the rump,
and the two thighs and suspended each of
the latter to one of the four hooks of a packsaddle;
the remaining parts were carried on our horses.
We travelled about eight miles north-north-west,
over a succession of plains, interrupted by some watercourses,
and a good sized creek. At the end of the day’s
stage, we found a small pool of water in a little creek
which we had followed down. According to Charley’s
account, salt-water existed a mile lower down.
Though our arrival at the camp was very late, we set
immediately to work, and cut up the four émus,
which I put on ropes and branches to dry. Fortunately,
a cold dry south-east wind set in, which very much
assisted us in the operation of drying. The sea
breeze was strong, as usual, during the day; clouds
gathered very suddenly about 11 o’clock, P.
M. to the southward and south-east, and rose very
quickly with a strong south-east wind; they passed
as quickly as they came; when the wind ceased.
Another mass of clouds formed, and rose quite as suddenly,
and, having passed, the sky became quite clear, and
a cold strong wind set in from the south-east, which
lasted for the next two days, and rendered the nights
of the 16th and 17th August cold, dry, and dewless.
We had forgotten to drive our bullocks
to the water, which they had passed not five yards
off, and in sight of which they had been unloaded;
the poor brutes, however, had not the instinct to find
it, and they strayed back. Charley started after
them the same night, and went at once to our old camp,
supposing that the bullocks had taken that direction;
but they had not done so; they had wandered about seven
miles from the camp, without having found water.
August 16. We travelled
about twelve miles west-north-west, first over plains,
but afterwards, and for the greater part of the stage,
over openly timbered well-grassed box-flats, which
seemed to bound the plains to the southward; they
were drained by no watercourse, but contained many
melon-holes. I changed my westerly course a little
more to the northward, and again crossed a succession
of plains, separated by hollows. These hollows
were covered with thickets of small trees, principally
raspberry-jam trees; and contained many dry water-holes,
either in regular chains or scattered. They,
no doubt, formed the heads of creeks; as we invariably
came on decided watercourses whenever we followed
hollows of this character down to the northward.
After sunset, we came to a dry creek, and were compelled
to encamp without water. We took care, however,
to watch our bullocks, and hobble and tether our horses,
which enabled us to start early in the morning of
the 17th, when we followed the creek about seven miles
north-east, and there found some very fine water-holes
within its bed, in latitude 17 degrees 51 minutes,
at which we encamped, to allow our cattle to recover;
for they had had very little water during the two
last days. Smoke was seen to the north-west, north,
and north-east. Charley shot two more émus,
and I felt the loss of our bullock very much, as it
became difficult to carry the additional meat, which,
however, was too valuable to be wasted or thrown away.
Although we had followed the creek for seven miles,
we did not find it joined by any of those hollows
we had crossed the day before; and it would appear
that the intervening plains extended far to the north-ward,
and that the hollows and creeks converged only very
gradually towards each other.
August 18. Last night we
were busily employed in cutting up and drying our
two émus, in which operation we were favoured
by a slight breeze from the south-east. As we
had no fat nor emu oil to fry the meat with, I allowed
a sufficient quantity of meat to be left on the bones,
which made it worth while to grill them; and we enjoyed
a most beautiful moonlight night over a well grilled
emu bone with so much satisfaction, that a frequenter
of the Restaurants of the Palais Royal would have been
doubtful whether to pity or envy us.
We travelled to the north-west, because,
whenever I kept a westerly course, I had almost always
to follow creeks down to the northward to obtain water;
and, notwithstanding a north-west course, had, on previous
occasions, generally brought us to salt-water.
For the first three miles, we passed
several plains, and crossed a creek in which we recognised
a Casuarina, which tree we had not seen since we left
the Mitchell. We then came to a river from thirty
to forty yards broad, and apparently very deep; the
water was very soft, but not brackish, although affected
by the tide, which caused it to rise about two feet.
A narrow belt of brush, with drooping tea-trees, the
Corypha palm, the Pandanus, and Sarcocephalus, grew
along the water’s edge. The box, the broad-leaved
Terminalia, and the Inga moniliformis (articulate
podded Acacia), covered the gullies which came down from the plains, and the
flats along the river. We proceeded four or five miles up the river, in a
south-west direction, in order to find a crossing place. Large plains occupied
both sides, on which numerous patches of grass had been lately burnt; which
indicated the presence of natives. Fish were very plentiful, and Charley said he
had seen a crocodile. The plains and banks of the river were well grassed, and
adapted for cattle and horses. We encamped in latitude 17 degrees 57 minutes.
[This cannot possibly be 17 degrees 57 minutes it is about 17 degrees 52
minutes]
August 19. The river was
joined by a running creek from south-south-west, which
we had to follow up about five miles, where it formed
a very narrow channel between thickets of palm trees,
drooping tea-trees, Sarcocephalus, and particularly
Pandanus, which crowded round the tiny stream.
We again travelled north-west, over several plains,
separated by belts of timber, and, at the end of about
five miles, came to a fine brook, whose pure limpid
waters flowed rapidly in its deep but rather narrow
channel, over a bed of rich green long-leaved water
plants. Magnificent tea-trees, Casuarinas, and
Terminalias, gave a refreshing shade, and Pandanus
and Corypha palms added to the beauty of the spot.
The plains were well-grassed, but
full of melon-holes. I observed on them a few
small trees, belonging to the Sapindaceae, with pinnate
and rather drooping leaves, with a light grey bark,
exuding a good eatable gum.
I called the brook “Beames’s
Brook,” in acknowledgment of the liberal support
I received from Walter Beames, Esq. of Sydney.
We again enjoyed here the young shoots
of the Corypha palm.
August 20. We crossed Beames’s
brook without difficulty, and travelled about two
miles north-west, over a plain, when we came to a river
with a broad sandy bed and steep banks, overgrown
with large drooping tea-trees. Its stream was
five or six yards broad and very shallow. Parallel
lines of deep lagoons covered with Nymphaeas and Villarsias
were on its west side. The bergue between the
river and the lagoons was covered with bloodwood and
leguminous Ironbark; and fine box flats were beyond
the lagoons.
I called this river the “Nicholson,”
after Dr. William Alleyne Nicholson, of Bristol, whose
generous friendship had not only enabled me to devote
my time to the study of the natural sciences, but to
come out to Australia. The longitude of the Nicholson
was 138 degrees 55 minutes (approx.)
After passing the box flats along-the
river, we entered into a country covered with thickets
and scrub, rarely interrupted by small patches of
open forest, and travelled about fourteen miles north-west
from the river, when the setting sun compelled us
to encamp, without having been able to find water.
Just on entering the scrub, we saw four émus
walking gravely through a thicket of the little Severn
tree, picking its bitter fruit, and throwing occasionally
a wondering but distrustful glance at our approaching
train. Charley and Brown, accompanied by Spring,
gave chase to them, and killed one, which was in most
excellent condition. When we came to the camp,
we secured the horses, and watched the bullocks, as
was usual on such occasions, and fried and enjoyed
our fresh meat as well as we could. To satisfy
my companions I determined to reconnoitre the country
in advance by moonlight; and allowed them to return
to the lagoons of the Nicholson, should I not have
returned by 10 o’clock next morning. Accordingly,
I started with Charley when the moon was high enough
to give me a fair view of the country, and followed
the star Vega as it declined to the westward.
As we advanced, the country improved and became more
open. It was about midnight when Charley, in
passing a patch of thick scrub, noticed a slight watercourse,
which increased rapidly into large water-holes.
These were dry, and covered with withered grass, but,
on resuming our westerly course, we came in a very
short time to a creek with a succession of rocky basins.
It was unaccountable how these deep holes could have
become so soon dry, as every one of them must have
been full immediately after the rainy season.
After following the creek for about two hours, Charley
remarked that the cracked mud of one of the large
water-holes was moist, and, on digging about a foot
deep, a supply of water collected, abundantly sufficient
for ourselves and for our horses. The channel
divided several times, and Charley examined one branch,
and I took the other. Thus separated from my
companion, I caught the cheerful glance of a fire before
me, and, as I approached, a great number of them became
visible, belonging to a camp of the natives.
Though I wished to ascertain whether they were encamped
near a water-hole, or near wells, several of which
we had observed higher up the creek, I thought it
prudent, unarmed as I was, to wait for Charley.
I cooeed, which disturbed the dogs of the camp; but
the cold wind blew so strong from the east, that I
feared Charley would either not hear my cooee, or
I not his. The discharge of his gun, however,
showed me where he was, and we were soon together
again. We passed the camp; the fires sparkled
most comfortably in the cold night. We examined
the creek, but saw neither natives nor water.
Two miles lower down, however, we came to fine water-holes
with a good supply. We stopt here for an hour,
to make a pot of tea, and to allow our horses to feed.
We had followed the creek so far to the north-east
and east, that we were, according to my calculation,
about ten miles N.N.E. from our camp. Trusting
in Charley’s almost instinctive powers, I allowed
him to take the lead, but he, being drowsy in consequence
of a sleepless night, kept too much to the right,
and missed our tracks. As the appointed time for
my return had elapsed, and I was sure that my companions
had gone back, I changed my course to go at once to
the lagoons of the Nicholson; and came on the tracks
of the returning party, which we followed to the lagoons,
where my companions had already safely arrived.
We had been on the saddle from 10 o’clock at
night, to 6 o’clock in the afternoon of the next
day, and, with the exception of one hour, had ridden
the whole time through the most dreary and scrubby
country, and were, of course, extremely fatigued.
Most annoying, however, was the idea that all our
fatigues had been to no purpose, except to show to
my companions that I was right in my supposition,
that a good day’s journey parallel to the coast
would invariably bring us to water.
August 22. We travelled
about eighteen miles N.N.W., to those water-holes
we had found on our reconnoitring ride. Their
latitude was 17 degrees 39 minutes. The country
was so very scrubby and difficult, that we travelled
from morning until long after sunset before we reached
the place. The long journey had both tired and
galled our bullocks and horses, and our packs had
been torn into pieces by the scrub. This induced
me to stay a day at this creek (which I called Moonlight
Creek, as it had been found and explored during moonlight),
to allow some rest both to my bullocks and myself,
whom the long riding had much exhausted, and also
to re-arrange our packs.
The composition of the scrub depended
on the nature of the soil. The narrow-leaved
tea-tree, in shrubs from five to seven feet high, and
the broad-leaved tea-tree from twenty to twenty-five
feet high, grew on a sandy loam, with many ant-hills
between them; the little Severn tree and the glaucous
Terminalia preferred the light sandy soil with small
ironstone pebbles, on which the ant-hills were rare,
or entirely wanting; the raspberry-jam tree crowded
round water-holes, which were frequently rocky; and
the bloodwood, the leguminous Iron-bark, the box, and
apple-gum, formed patches of open forest.
We collected a great quantity of Terminalia
gum, and prepared it in different ways to render it
more palatable. The natives, whose tracks we
saw everywhere in the scrub, with frequent marks where
they had collected gum seemed to roast
it. It dissolved with difficulty in water:
added to gelatine soup, it was a great improvement;
a little ginger, which John had still kept, and a
little salt, would improve it very much. But it
acted as a good lenient purgative on all of us.
We found the days, when travelling
in the scrub, excessively hot, for the surrounding
vegetation prevented us from feeling the sea-breeze;
very cold easterly and south-easterly winds prevailed
during the night.
August 24. Mr. Calvert
and Brown, whom I had sent to reconnoitre the country,
returned with the sad intelligence that they had found
no water. They had crossed a great number of
creeks of different sizes, with fine rocky water-holes,
which seemed all to rise in scrubby ironstone hills,
and had a course from S. W. to N. E. and E. N. E.;
but towards their heads they were dry, and lower down
they contained salt water. The two explorers
had unfortunately forgotten their bag of provisions,
and were consequently compelled to return before they
could accomplish their object. As I anticipated
a very long stage, and perhaps a camp without water,
I had some wallabi skins softened and tied over our
quart pots filled with water, which enabled us to
carry about eight quarts with us.
August 25. We accordingly
started early, and travelled for several miles through
a pretty open broad-leaved tea-tree forest, formed
by small trees from twenty to thirty feet high.
This changed, however, into dense scrub, which we
could only avoid by keeping more to the westward, in
which direction the tea-tree forest seemed to extend
to a great distance. Here we passed several tea-tree
swamps, dry at this time, level, like a table, and
covered with small trees, and surrounded by a belt
of fine box-trees and drooping water-gum trees.
In order to come to a watercourse, I again crossed
the thick scrub which covered the undulations of iron-stone
to the northward, and came to a fine rocky creek,
which Brown recognised as one of those he had seen,
but which contained only salt water lower down.
We consequently continued our journey to the north-west,
through tea-tree forest, and over some very large
tea-tree swamps, and came at last to a creek and to
a small river, along which we travelled until darkness
compelled us to encamp. It had fine water-holes,
and was densely shaded with drooping tea-trees; but
the holes were dry, with some few exceptions of small
wells of the natives. The latitude of our camp
was 17 degrees 25 minutes.
We had seen a great number of pigeons
and white cockatoos, and we were sure that a greater
supply of water was near, as many patches of burnt
grass showed that the natives had been here very lately.
Next morning, the 26th, when Charley returned with
the horses, he told us that we had passed a fine lagoon,
not a mile and a half off, at the left bank of the
river, which the night had prevented us from seeing,
and which the horses had found when returning on their
tracks. We moved our camp to this lagoon, which
was covered with Villarsia leaves, and contained a
reddish water coloured by very minute floating bodies
of that colour. The natives had surrounded it
with dry sticks, leaving an opening on one side, for
the purpose of taking émus, as before described.
These birds were very numerous, and lived exclusively
on the fruit of the little Severn tree, which was
excessively bitter and imparted its quality to the
meat; Charley and Brown, assisted by the dog, killed
one of them. A cockatoo was shot, which in form
and colours resembled the large white cockatoo, but
was rather smaller, and the feathers of the breast
were tipped with red. We saw the bones of a Jew
fish, and a broken shell of Cymbium, in an old
camp of the natives near the lagoon.
The apple-gum, the box, and the Moreton
Bay ash composed a very open well-grassed forest,
between the lagoon and the river; the latter had an
E. N. E. and almost easterly course. I called
this river or large creek, “Smith’s Creek,”
after Mr. Smith, a gentleman who had shown us the
greatest kindness and attention when we were staying
at Darling Downs.
Our journey round the head of the
gulf had shown that the “Plains of Promise”
of Capt. Stokes extended from Big Plain River
to the Nicholson, and that they extended farthest
to the southward, along two large salt water rivers
in the apex of the gulf, the more westerly of which
was no doubt the Albert of Capt. Stokes, and
the Maet Suyker of the Dutch navigators. These
plains were bounded to the southward by box-flats,
and drained by numerous creeks, which in their lower
course were tolerably supplied with water. The
most interesting fact, and which had already been
observed by Capt. Stokes, was the moderate temperature
of this part of the country. If my readers compare
my observations on the weather from la degrees
55 minutes at the east coast, to la degrees 39
minutes on the west coast of the gulf, they will be
struck by the general complaint of “cold nights.”
If they compare the direction of the winds, they will
find that at the east coast the southerly and south-south-westerly
winds were very cold, and that they became southerly
and south-easterly at the apex, and turned still more
to the eastward, at the west coast. In comparing
these directions of the wind, I was led to the conclusion,
that the large plains were the origin and the cause
of these winds.
The bracing nature of the winds and
of the cold nights, had a very beneficial influence
on our bodies; we were all well, with the exception
of Mr. Roper, who still suffered from the wound in
his loins, and from a distressing diarrhoea.
I am not aware of the season in which Capt. Stokes
explored this part of the country; but it must not
be forgotten, that the same causes which would produce
cold winds in the winter, might be the cause of hot
winds in the summer.
August 27. We travelled
about seventeen miles N. N. W. to la degrees
11 minutes 9 seconds, through an uninterrupted scrub
and broad-leaved tea-tree forest. Half way we
crossed a broad watercourse, with long tracks of burnt
grass. The Pandanus and the bloodwood grew on
its limited flats. At the end of our stage, we
came to a rocky watercourse, which we followed down,
and in which a native dog betrayed to us a deep pool
of water, covered with Villarsia leaves, and surrounded
by Polygonums. Many of the dry water-holes we
had passed were surrounded by emu traps; the tracks
of these birds were exceedingly numerous, A grove
of Pandanus was near the water on the sandy banks of
the creek.
August 28. We travelled
about eleven miles N. N. W. to la degrees 2 minutes
12 seconds, through the bleakest scrubby country we
had ever met: nothing but tea-tree scrub, and
that not even cheered by the occasional appearance
of a gum tree, or of the blood-wood. After ten
miles, we came to a salt water creek, rocky, with
detached pools of water and deposits of salt.
Following it up, we came to a well beaten foot-path
of the natives, which brought us in a short time to
a good supply of drinkable, though very brackish water.
The sandstone hills before us and to the northward,
were covered with low shrubs and the broad-leaved tea-tree,
with wiry and stiff grasses, and looked very unpropitious.
The rock was composed of quartz pebbles of different
colours, imbedded in a red clayey paste.
We have commenced to carry with us
not only our quart pots, but also our two gallon pot
full of water.
August 29. We travelled
to la degrees 58 minutes 27 seconds lon
degrees 25 minutes; a distance of about eight miles
N.N.W. and N.W. over a more open country, with occasional
patches of thick scrub. We crossed several watercourses
and creeks; and came to a small river which flowed
to the N. by E. and which I called the “Marlow,”
after Capt. Marlow of the Royal Engineers, who
had kindly assisted me in the outfit of my expedition.
We went down the river about two or three miles, and
came to a plentiful supply of water, which was indicated,
a long time before we arrived at it, by the call of
the red-breasted cockatoos, noticed a few days since;
but which was probably only a variety of the common
species.
A low shrubby Acacia with sigmoid
phyllodia was frequent on the hills. A little
fly-catcher (Givagone brevirostris?) charmed us with
its pretty note at our last camps. Bronze-winged
pigeons were very numerous, and I saw a pair of Geophaps
plumifera rising from under a shady rock, as I was
riding down a rocky creek. Two black ducks and
three cockatoos were shot; the long reaches of water
down the river were covered with water-fowl, and Charley
and Brown were so desirous of procuring some messes
of black ducks, that they did their best to persuade
me to stop; but, being anxious to escape from this
scrubby country, I did not yield to their solicitations.
The crops of the large cockatoos were
filled with the young red shoots of the Haemodorum,
which were almost as pungent as chillis, but more
aromatic; the plant abounded on the sandy soil.
The small cockatoo of the plains, which we saw again
in great numbers, seems to feed on a white root and
on the honey of the whole seed-vessel, or the flower-bud,
of the drooping tea-tree.
The first part of the night was clear,
but it became foggy and cloudy after midnight.
In the morning, the dew was dropping from the trees,
but the grass and our things were not at all wet.
August 30. We travelled
about ten miles degrees W. over a scrubby though
a little more open country, full of enormous massive
ant-hills, surpassing even those of Big Ant-Hill Creek,
in height and circumference, and came, at the distance
of eight miles from our camp, to a low scrub on sandy
soil with shallow watercourses. Salicornia grew
in abundance; and emu tracks were very frequent.
Coming on a broad foot-path of the natives, I followed
it to the south-west, and came to some fine fresh
water-holes in the bed of a creek, surrounded by high
drooping tea trees, which were in blossom and covered
with swarms of white cockatoos. These water-holes
were in la degrees 55 degrees, and situated to
the south-west of some low scrubby hills. We
encamped in a grove of Pandanus. The natives
had just left, and the tea-tree bark was still smoking
from the fire which had spread from their camp.
Large flights of the small white cockatoo
came to the water. The flying-fox visited the
blossoms of the tea-tree at night, and made an incessant
screeching noise. Charley shot one of them, which
was very fat, particularly between the shoulders and
on the rump, and proved to be most delicate eating.
August 31. It rained the
whole day; in consequence of which I gave my cattle
a rest. The rain came from the westward, but continued
with a southerly wind; it ceased with wind from the
S.E. and E.S.E. Lightning was observed to the
south-west. We erected our tents for the first
time since Mr. Gilbert’s death; using tarpaulings
and blankets for the purpose. Our shots amused
themselves by shooting Blue Mountainers for the pot;
and a strange mess was made of cockatoo, Blue Mountainers,
an eagle hawk, and dried emu. I served out our
last gelatine for Sunday luncheon; it was as good
as when we started: the heat had, however, frequently
softened it, and made it stick to the bag and to the
things with which it was covered.
The fire places of the natives were
here arranged in a straight line, and sheltered from
the cold wind by dry branches: they were circular,
the circumference was slightly raised, and the centre
depressed and filled with pebbles, which the natives
heat to cook their victuals.
The bell which one of our horses carried,
was unaccountably broken at our last camp; and it
was quite a misery to hear its dull jarring sound,
instead of the former cheerful tinkling. One of
our horses had separated from the rest, and had gone
so far up the creek, that Charley did not return with
it until very late in the afternoon of the 1st September,
which compelled us to stop at our camp.