Sep. We travelled N.W.
by W. and came, after passing some of the usual tea-tree
scrub, to an undulating country, with scattered shrubs
of the salt water tea-tree, which grew particularly
on the sandy heads of salt water creeks. Salicornia
was another sure indication of salt water; and, after
about seven or eight miles, our course was intercepted
by a broad salt-water creek. Its bed, however,
was sandy, and the water shallow, which enabled us
to cross it a little higher up, without difficulty.
We turned again to the N.W. by W., steering for one
of the numerous smokes of the natives’ fires
which were visible in every direction. We soon
came, however, to broad sands with deep impressions
of the tracks of émus, wallabies, and natives;
and to sandy depressions sloping towards narrow salt-water
creeks densely fringed with Mangroves. A
large river was no doubt before us. To get out
of this difficult meshwork of salt-waters, I turned
to the south-west, and continued in this direction
until the sands, Mangrove creeks, and Salicornias,
disappeared, and we were again fairly in the scrubs,
which however we found more open, and frequently interspersed
with bloodwood and Pandanus. I sent Charley and
Brown in different directions to look for water, and
a small pool with brackish ferruginous nasty water
was found, which made a very miserable tea, and affected
our bowels. In the Mangrove creeks we found Telescopium,
Pleurotoma; and heaps of oyster-shells, for the first
time on our journey. Arcas were frequent,
but no Cythereas. The mussels (Unios) of the
slightly brackish water were small, but plentiful.
It was on this stage that we first
met with a leafless species of Bossiaea, from three
to five feet high, with compressed stem, and branches
of the habit of Bossiaea scolopendrium, with yellow
blossoms, and smooth many-seeded pods little more
than an inch long. This shrub was one of the
principal components of all the scrubs we passed from
this place to Limmen Bight, and was also found, though
less frequently, towards the centre of Arnheim’s
Land.
The day was exceedingly hot, though
cloudy; the wind from the east: the night cool,
without wind.
When Brown and Charley rejoined us,
the former appeared so much alarmed and agitated,
that I thought they had met some natives, and had received
some injury, although they said they had not.
My imagination was working on the possibility of an
attack of the natives, and I consequently laid myself
down without taking my boots and trowsers off, to be
ready at a moment’s notice, and rose several
times in the course of the night to see that the watches
were strictly kept. In the morning watch, John
Murphy roused me by saying that he saw a native:
I felt certain now that an attack was about to be
made upon us. I, therefore, immediately gave the
alarm, and every one had his gun ready, when it was
discovered that our own Brown was the man whom John
had mistaken for a strange native. He had left
his couch without being observed, and, when he returned,
it was too dark to recognize him; he was, however,
very near losing his life, or at least being shot
at, for his wild yells “tis me! tis me!”
which he uttered when he became aware of his dangerous
position, were not understood, but only increased
our belief that they were the war-cry of attacking
natives.
The creek, on a water-hole of which
we encamped in la degrees 54 minutes 50 seconds,
was doubtless one of the heads of the broad salt-water
creek we crossed, and which I called “Turner’s
Creek,” after Cowper Turner, Esq. of Sydney:
Sep. We travelled about
nine miles west by north, through an open tea-tree
forest skirting the heads of those scrubby creeks which
went down to the salt water, the dark mangrove line
of which we had seen yesterday. But we crossed
four good sized dry creeks, lined with drooping tea-trees
and white-gum trees. Their banks and flats were
covered with groves of Pandanus, whose stately crowns
were adorned with red-fruited cones: the seed-vessels
contained in their stringy texture a rich mellow pear-like
substance, which however was hot, and made our lips
and tongues very sore. We encamped on some water-holes,
with excellent water, in a fifth creek, which lower
down contained some fine reaches of brackish water
covered with wild geese (Anseranas melanoleuca, Gould.)
and black ducks. As Charley was watching some
geese, an emu walked up to him, which he shot; he
succeeded besides in getting two geese, which were
in most excellent condition, and weighed better than
five pounds each.
A well beaten foot-path of the natives
led up a broad salt-water creek, to the northward
of the creek on which we were encamped, and which joined
it lower down. Charley, when going after the horses,
saw a camping place of the natives with spears and
the usual utensils: but the inhabitants had either
not yet returned from their hunting and fishing excursions,
or had left it, frightened by the frequent discharge
of our guns.
Sep. We travelled about
eleven miles west by north. The first three miles
and a half led us through scrub; we forded a salt-water
creek about thirty yards broad, and then, for the
next four miles, proceeded through a scrubby country,
and came to a second salt-water creek as broad as the
first, but containing only pools of water. The
scrub now opened, and the last four miles lay through
a fine box-flat, bounded by long hollows surrounded
with drooping tea-trees and the white water-gum, the
bright foliage of which formed a most agreeable contrast
with the dull green of the scrubs and the box-trees.
After crossing a small sandy creek, along which grew
a few Sarcocephalus, we came to a large creek lined
with drooping tea-trees and Sarcocephalus, and encamped
on a fine pool of water, within its deep bed.
I named this creek after W.C. Wentworth, Esq.
M.C. who had kindly contributed to the outfit of my
expedition.
At early dawn, a flight of wild geese
filed in long line over our camp, the flapping of
their wings was heavy, but short, and the note they
emitted resembled that of the common goose, but was
some-what shriller. In the box-flat we started
a flock of émus, and Spring caught a fine male
bird. It would have been highly amusing for a
looker on to observe how remarkably eager we were
to pluck the feathers from its rump, and cut the skin,
to see how thick the fat was, and whether it was a
rich yellow, or only flesh-coloured. We had,
indeed, a most extraordinary desire for anything fat;
and we soon found where to look for it. In the
emu it accumulates all over the skin, but particularly
on the rump, and between the shoulders, and round
the sternal plate. To obtain the oil, we skinned
those parts, and suspended them before a slow fire,
and caught the oil in our frying pan; this was of
a light yellowish colour, tasteless, and almost free
from scent. Several times, when suffering from
excessive fatigue, I rubbed it into the skin all over
the body, and its slightly exciting properties proved
very beneficial. It has always been considered
by the white inhabitants of the bush, a good anti-rheumatic.
The sea breeze from the northward
still continued during the day; the nights were clear
and dewy, but ceased to be so cold.
I found a piece of granite and a fragment
of fortification agate in the sandy bed of the creek.
Sep. We travelled about
ten miles west by north, to la degrees 48 minutes
22 seconds. Having passed a rather open forest
of bloodwood, apple-gum, and leguminous Ironbark,
with isolated patches of scrub, and some dry teat-ree
swamps with heaps of calcined mussel-shells, we came
to a thick stringy-bark forest, on a sandy soil, with
a hard sandstone cropping out frequently. This
opened into the flats of a sandy Pandanus creek, which
we crossed; and, three miles farther, we came to another
broad creek with salt water. Its bed was rocky,
and we forded it easily. I followed one of its
branches for several miles, and found, after passing
its salt-water pools, a small pool of fresh water in
its rocky sandy bed, near which I observed an old
camping place of the natives. I was considerably
in advance of my train, and the dog was with me.
As I was examining the pool of water and the numerous
tracks round it, an emu came walking along the shady
bed of the creek; I immediately mounted my horse and
pursued it with the dog, and caught it after a very
short run; to prevent its wounding the dog, I dismounted
to kill it, when my horse became frightened, broke
loose, and ran away. I returned with the emu to
the water, and when the train arrived, I sent Charley
after the horse, whilst I walked about two miles further
up the creek to find a better supply of water.
Not succeeding, however, I returned and encamped at
the small pool, which we enlarged with the spade,
and obtained a sufficient supply of very good water.
Charley returned with the horse, but my saddlebags,
my journals and a calabash were lost. I was in
great anxiety, and blamed myself severely for having
committed such an act of imprudence. Charley
went, however, a second time on foot, and succeeded
in finding everything but the calabash, which was a
great loss to our dog.
In the camping place of the natives,
I found a large round stone of porphyry, upon which
the natives were accustomed to break the seed-vessels
of Pandanus. I could discover no indications of
this rock in the creek, not even the smallest pebble;
and I am consequently inclined to think that this
stone was brought by the natives from a considerable
distance to the south-west. But, from the broken
pieces of granite of our last camp, it became evident
that a rocky primitive country, like that of the upper
Lynd, could not be very distant. Even the vegetation
agreed well with that of the same locality; as the
dwarf Grevillea, G. chrysodendrum, and the falcate
Grevillea of the upper Lynd, were here again observed.
The tea-trees along the banks of the creek, as far
as the salt-water extended, were leafless and dead.
This may be accounted for by a succession of dry years
in which usual freshes have not taken place; and by
the supposition that the drooping tea-tree cannot live
on water entirely salt.
Sep. We travelled twelve
miles north-west, through Pandanus and bloodwood forest,
alternating with scrub, stringy-bark forest, and tea-tree
thickets; and, in the latter part of the stage, through
broad-leaved tea-tree forest. We encamped at a
fine river, with a bed three hundred yards broad from
bank to bank, but with a narrow channel of running
water. This channel was fringed with the water
Pandanus, which we first observed at Beames’s
Brook; the sandy bed was covered with drooping tea-trees
and Grevillea chrysodendrum. Charley shot a bustard,
the stomach of which was filled with seeds of Grewia,
with small yellow seeds, and some beetles. On
this stage, we again passed some of those remarkable
dry tea-tree swamps surrounded with heaps
of very large mussel shells evidently showing
that they had been a long time under water, though
they were now overgrown with small tea-trees, perhaps
five or six years old; and which proved, like the
drooping tea-trees on the banks of the creek, that
the last few years had been exceedingly dry. I
supposed the river to be the Van Alphen of the Dutch
navigators, as its latitude, where I crossed it, was
about 16 degrees 41 minutes, and its longitude I calculated
to be 137 degrees 48 minutes.
Sep. We travelled about
nine miles N. N. W. to latitude 16 degrees 35 minutes;
the first part of the stage was scrubby, the latter
part undulating with a fine open stringy-bark forest.
The trees were tall, but rarely more than a foot in
diameter. Here we met with hard baked sandstone,
of a whitish grey colour. About seven miles from
our camp, we saw a low blue range to the westward;
and, soon after, passed a sandy Pandanus creek, with
scrubby broken banks: this was joined by a second,
and both together entered a broad tea-tree creek, coming
from the south-west, in which we found a fine pool
of water covered with white and yellow Villarsias
and yellow Utricularias.
The rose-coloured Sterculia, and a
smooth broad-leaved Terminalia, were observed on the
sandy flats of the creek; and a small fan-leaved palm
(Livistona humilis, R. Br.), a small insignificant
trunkless plant, growing between sandstone rocks,
was here first observed. A taller species of
this palm, as we subsequently found, formed large tracts
of forest on the Cobourg Peninsula, and near the Alligator
rivers.
As our tea bag was getting very low,
and as I was afraid that we should have to go a long
time without this most useful article, I thought it
advisable to make a more saving arrangement. We
had, consequently, a pot of good tea at luncheon,
when we arrived at our camp tired and exhausted, and
most in want of an exciting and refreshing beverage.
The tea-leaves remaining in the pot, were saved and
boiled up for supper, allowing a pint to each person.
In the morning, we had our soup, and drank water ad
libitum. Tea is unquestionably one of the most
important provisions of such an expedition: sugar
is of very little consequence, and I believe that
one does even better without it. We have not felt
the slightest inconvenience from the want of flour;
and we were a long time without salt. The want
of the latter, however, made us costive, and, when
we began to use it again, almost every one of us had
a slight attack of diarrhoea.
Our horses were still in excellent
condition, and even improving; and our five bullocks
also kept in good working order, although the oldest
of them rather lagged behind. In choosing bullocks
for such a journey, one should be particularly careful
to choose young powerful beasts, about five or six
years old, and not too heavy. All our old and
heavy bullocks proved to be bad travellers; only one
had borne the journey until now, and he was only preserved
by great care and attention. During summer, the
ground is so hot, and frequently so rotten, that even
the feet of a dog sink deep. This heat, should
there be a want of water during a long stage, and
perhaps a run after game in addition, would inevitably
kill a soft dog. It is, therefore, of the greatest
importance to have a good traveller, with hard feet:
a cross of the kangaroo dog with the bloodhound would
be, perhaps, the best. He should be light, and
satisfied with little food in case of scarcity; although
the dried tripe of our bullocks gave ample and good
food to one dog. It is necessary to carry water
for them; and to a little calabash, which we obtained
from the natives of the Isaacs, we have been frequently
indebted for the life of Spring.
Sep. We travelled about
ten miles north-west by west, to latitude 16 degrees
(Unclear:)81 minutes. The first and last parts
of the stage were scrubby, or covered with a dense
underwood of several species of Acacia, Grevillea
chrysodendrum and a species of Pultenaea with leafless
compressed stem. The intervening part of our journey
was through a stringy-bark forest, with sandy, and
frequently rotten soil, on sandstone ridges or undulations.
Some patches of stiffer soil were covered with box
or with straggling apple-gum and bloodwood. In
the scrub, I again observed Fusanus with pinnate leaves.
Several good sized dry sandy creeks were surrounded
with Pandanus. We saw a low range in form of a
horse-shoe, to the westward; and a higher one beyond
it in the distance. We encamped at a small river,
which had just ceased running, but contained in its
bed two chains of small deep ponds full of perches,
and shaded with Pandanus and drooping tea-trees, which
grew to a large size all over the bed between the
two ponds. I named this river the “Calvert,”
in acknowledgment of the good services of Mr. Calvert
during our expedition, and which I feel much pleasure
in recording. We saw two émus, and Brown
killed one of them, with the assistance of the dog,
which received a severe cut in the neck from the sharp
claw of the bird.
The whole country round the gulf was
well-grassed, particularly before we crossed the Nicholson;
and on the plains and approaches to the rivers and
creeks. The large water-holes were frequently
surrounded with a dense turf of Fimbristylis (a small
sedge), which our horses liked to feed upon.
Some stiff grasses made their appearance when we approached
the sea-coast, as well on the plains as in the forest.
The well-known kangaroo grass (Anthisteria) forms
still one of the principal components of the pasture.
The scrubby country had a good supply of a tufty wind-grass;
and, although the feed was dry during this part of
the year, our horses and cattle did exceedingly well,
as I have already mentioned. Both took an occasional
bite of some Acacias, of Grevillea chrysodendrum,
and of several other shrubs. Cattle driven over
the country we have passed, by short stages, and during
the proper season, would even fatten on the road.
When we approached the water-hole
on which we were going to encamp, John observed a
fine large Iguana in the water, which was so strikingly
coloured that he thought it different from those we
had previously seen.
Xyris, Philydrum, a species of Xerotes,
and an aromatic spreading herb, grew in great abundance
round the water. I found a great quantity of the
latter in the stomach of the emu. A species of
Crotolaria, two or three feet high, with simple woolly
oblong or oblongo-lanceolate leaves, and with
a beautiful green blossom of the form and size of that
of Kennedya rubicunda, grew in the bed of the
river. Great numbers of large bright yellow hornets,
with some black marks across the abdomen, visited the
water. Flies were exceedingly troublesome:
but the mosquitoes annoyed us very rarely, and only
where water was very abundant. The nights have
been very dewy, but not cold. The wind in the
morning from the south-east, veering round to the
northward during the day.
Sep. We travelled north-west
by north, and for several miles, through a scrubby
stringy-bark forest, when we came to steep sandstone
ridges, composed of a hard flaggy horizontally stratified
rock. Higher ranges were seen to the W.N.W. and
west; and I found myself fairly caught between rocky
hills when I least expected them, but hoped to enter
upon a country corresponding in its character with
the low coast marked down in the map, in this latitude.
I turned to the northward, and found a practicable
path between the hills, and came, after crossing a
small sandy creek to a fine salt-water river, as broad
as any we had seen. High hills were at its left
bank; and, as we followed it up in a direction degrees W., the right became more broken, and the
vegetation richer. A very conspicuous foot-path
led us through heaps of cockle shells to a fishing
station of the natives, where they seemed to have a
permanent camp; the huts being erected in a substantial
manner with poles, and thatched with grass and the
leaves of Pandanus; there were extensive fire places
containing heaps of pebbles; and an abundance of fish
bones. The weir was, as usual, formed with dry
sticks, across a shallow part of the river. A
spring of fresh water was below the camp at the edge
of high water. As the tide was high, and an abundant
supply of fresh water was found in a creek which joined
the river a few hundred yards from the fishery, we
encamped on the creek, in la degrees 28 minutes
57 seconds, lo degrees 23 minutes. I consider
this river to be the “Abel Tasman” of
the Dutch navigators: and that it is probably
joined by the Calvert. Its flats were well-grassed,
and very openly timbered with bloodwood, stringy-bark,
leguminous Ironbark, then in blossom, and a large
tree with white smooth bark, spreading branches, and
pinnate leaves. The salt water Hibiscus (Paritium)
and Acacia (Inga moniliformis), were also in blossom.
Charley, Brown, and John, went to
spear some fish, but the tide was out, the water shallow,
and the fish were gone. Charley saw here, for
the first time, the Torres Straits pigeon (Carpophaga
luctuosa, Gould.)
The little creek, at which we were
encamped, had formed its channel through sandstone
rock; and its narrow bed, containing a ferruginous
water supplied by springs, was crowded with high reeds,
and shaded with various trees of a dense green foliage.
Frogs croaked, and crickets chirped, the whole night;
and the call of goat-suckers, and the hooting of owls,
were heard in every direction; large fish were splashing
in the water; wallabies were bleating as they
came down to the creek, and saw our horses; and mosquitoes
by their loud humming prevented our sleeping.
This noise of animal life during the night formed an
agreeable contrast to the dead silence which we had
observed at almost all our camps around the gulf,
with the exception of the one occupied on the 1st September,
and of that at the Marlow, where the flying-fox was
the merry reveller of night.
Sep. We were again
too late for low tide, to cross at the fishery of
the natives, and consequently travelled about two miles
and a half higher up, passing in our way three other
fisheries; where we crossed the river, the bed was
very wide, and covered with shrubs, shingle, and blocks
of sandstone; but its rapid stream of fresh water was
only about fifteen or twenty yards broad, and three
feet deep. At the left side of the river, we
saw four or five fine Cycas palms, from eight
to ten feet high, and the stem from six to nine inches
in diameter. High rocky sandstone ridges extended
on the same side, in a direction parallel to the river,
and at the distance of two or three miles. They
were covered with scrub, open box, and stringy-bark
forest; and the wallabi and kangaroo tracks going
down to the river, were very numerous. The appearance
of the Cypress pine, which formed groups within the
stringy-bark forest, and particularly on the rises
and sandy slopes, was of a most striking character.
A new species of Grevillea, and also of Calythrix,
were found in blossom. Beyond the ridges, the
stringy-bark forest was obstructed by the leguminous
shrub with broad stem (Bossiaea). Several Pandanus
creeks went down to the north-east; and the second
contained a little water. After travelling about
twelve miles to the north-west by north, we encamped
at a fine creek with large pools of water, in la degrees 21 minutes. During the night, we heard
the well-known note of what we called the “Glucking
bird,” when we first met with it, in the Cypress
pine country, at the early part of our expedition.
Its re-appearance with the Cypress pine corroborated
my supposition, that the bird lived on the seeds of
that tree.
Sep. We travelled
about twelve miles north by west, over a country in
which scrub, stringy-bark forest, and Cypress pine
thickets alternated. We passed some patches of
broad-leaved tea-tree forest. The raspberry-jam
tree became again more frequent. About a mile
from the camp, we crossed a small creek with water;
and at seven miles further, another, but it was dry;
and, at the end of the stage we came to a fine sandy
creek with large pools. Seeing that the natives
had encamped here frequently, and some very lately,
by the heaps of broken Pandanus fruit, I did not hesitate
to pitch our tents; but, on examining the water, I
was greatly disappointed in finding it so brackish
that the horses and cattle would not drink it.
I, therefore, started with Charley in search of better,
and, in the upper part of the creek, we found some
large water-holes just dried up: but, on digging,
they yielded an ample supply of good water. On
this little excursion, we were fortunate enough, by
the aid of Spring, to kill two émus; but the
poor dog again received some deep scratches.
The camps of the natives were, as
usual, distinguished by heaps of shells of Cytherea,
oysters, fresh-water mussels, and fish bones.
The fresh-water mussel was small, and of a yellowish
colour.
We had some few drops of rain at about
half-past 11 o’clock, A. M,
Sep. The horses, though
hobbled, had strayed so far in search of water, that
we had to wait for them until 1 o’clock.
We started, however, but, after travelling a short
distance, finding the day far advanced, and our chance
of finding water very doubtful, I determined to return
to the water-hole which we had dug yesterday; about
two miles and a half west by south. The flats
of the creek were well-grassed; large drooping tea-trees
with groves of Pandanus grew on the hollows near the
creek, and tea-tree thickets farther off.
I frequently tasted the fine-looking
fruit of the Pandanus, but was every time severely
punished with sore lips and a blistered tongue; and
the first time that I ate it, I was attacked by a
violent diarrhoea. I could not make out how the
natives neutralized the noxious properties of the
fruit; which, from the large heaps in their camps,
seemed to form no small portion of their food.
The fruit appeared either to have been soaked, or
roasted and broken, to obtain the kernels; for which
purpose we invariably found large flat stones and
pebbles to pound them with. I supposed that they
washed out the sweet mealy matter contained between
the stringy fibres, and that they drank the liquid,
as they do with the honey; and that their large koolimans
which we had occasionally seen, were used for the
purpose. I, consequently, gathered some very ripe
fruit, scraped the soft part with a knife, and washed
it until all the sweet substance was out, and then
boiled it; by which process it lost almost all its
sharpness, had a very pleasant taste, and, taken in
moderate quantities, did not affect the bowels.
The fruit should be so ripe as to be ready to drop
from the tree.
Sep. We travelled
about ten miles degrees W., through a succession
of tea-tree and Cypress pine thickets of the worst
description, interrupted by three creeks, the first
dry, the second with pools of brackish water, and
the third with chains of Nymphaea ponds within and
parallel to its bed. We came at last to the steep
banks of a salt-water creek densely covered with Cypress
pine scrub, and followed it for several miles up to
its head, when two kites betrayed to us a fine lagoon,
surrounded with Polygonums and good pasture. The
natives were either able to drink very brackish water,
or they carried the necessary supply of fresh water
to these Pandanus groves, at which they had evidently
remained a long time to gather the fruit.
Sep. We travelled
three or four miles north-west, through a tea-tree
forest, when the country opened, and a broad salt-water
river intercepted our course. It came from W.S.W.,
and went to E.N.E. We proceeded eight or ten
miles along its banks before we came to fresh water.
In its immediate neighbourhood, the country was beautifully
grassed, and openly timbered with bloodwood, stringy-bark,
the leguminous Ironbark, and the white-barked tree
of the Abel Tasman. Over the short space of eight
miles we saw at least one hundred émus, in flocks
of three, five, ten, and even more, at a time:
they had been attracted here by the young herbage.
We killed seven of them, but they were not fat, and
none seemed more than a year old. The extraordinary
success induced me to call this river, the “Seven
Emu River.”
By following a track of the natives,
I found a fine well in the bed of the river, under
the banks; the water was almost perfectly fresh; and
that of the river was only slightly brackish.
A fishing weir crossed the stream, where it was about
twenty yards broad, and from two to three feet deep.
We were occupied to a late hour of the night in cutting
up our émus. I had intended to stop the
next day, but, as our camp in the bed of the river
was surrounded by a thick underwood; as the dew was
very heavy, the water brackish, and the young feed
dangerous for our cattle, which had fed so long on
dry grass, I thought it prudent to continue my journey.
The longitude of this river, according to my daily
distances, was 137 degrees 5 minutes.
Sep. We travelled
about fifteen miles degrees W., passing for
the first eight miles over a very fine available country,
but without meeting with water, or even with a watercourse.
Beyond that, however, the country became more undulating,
and we crossed, for about four miles, a most wretched
sandstone scrub. Here we saw some natives, but
they avoided us. The scrub opened upon fine box
flats, with numerous shallow watercourses; farther
on, they were interrupted by scrubby or thickly timbered
elevations, on which we met with some Cycas palms
from thirty to fifty feet high, thick at the butt,
and tapering gradually towards the crown. At
one of the shallow creeks, which suddenly became rocky,
and probably formed falls and rapids in the wet season,
we struck upon a well beaten foot-path of the natives,
which led us through Cypress pine thickets, and over
open lawns to a creek, whose right bank was covered
with Cycas groves of the most strikingly picturesque
appearance; and here I observed that the Cycas,
although it generally has a simple stem, frequently
grew with two or three arms. The foot-path went
up the creek: lower down, I found broad, deep,
but dry water-holes; and, still lower, Salicornia
indicated the approach to the salt water. The
foot-path conducted us from one Zamia grove to another,
which alternated with fine forest composed principally
of white-gum, the fresh green foliage of which was
extremely pleasing to the eye. I observed some
large wells, ten or twelve feet deep, and eight or
ten in diameter, which the natives had dug near the
Zamia groves, but they were without the slightest indication
of moisture. I continued to follow the path for
five miles, until I came to a broad-leaved tea-tree
forest. The sun was then low, and my companions
far behind: I, therefore, returned to ascertain
the cause of their delay; and found that our old bullock
had refused to carry his pack, and it had been put
on a horse; but that, even then, the poor beast was
scarcely able to crawl before us. His weakness
had been occasioned by a diarrhoea brought on by the
green feed and the brackish water at Seven Emu River;
and I congratulated myself on not having remained there
longer, as probably all my bullocks would have been
equally affected. We encamped without water,
hobbled our horses, and watched the bullocks, which
were all very tired and little inclined to feed during
the greater part of the night.
Our emu meat became tainted, in consequence
of the heat and the long stage.
Sep. We continued
our course degrees W. and, at the end of two
miles, came to another foot-path of the natives, which
I requested Charley to follow. We passed through
tea-tree forest, and a succession of Cycas groves,
and came out into plains, and to the heads of sandy
creeks with tea-tree shrubs and Salicornia. We
were just turning to the westward, expecting to find
a large salt-water river before us, when we heard
Charley’s gun, the signal of his having found
water. He soon after joined us, and guided us
on the foot-path, three miles south-west, to a large
well, near a much frequented camping place of the natives,
under the banks of a magnificent salt-water river.
Its banks were covered with a close forest of Cycas
palms. The well was formed by the natives, who
had raised a wall of clay, by which they caught the
fresh water which sparingly oozed out of a layer of
clay very little above the mark of high water.
We unloaded our bullocks: but,
having watered our horses, we found that the supply
of the well was not even sufficient for them, and that
it was filling very slowly. The poor bullocks
had, therefore, to wait until the water could again
collect. We had fairly to defend it against our
horses, which eagerly pressed towards the water, or
stood anxiously waiting on the steep slopes, like
cats and dogs round a dog’s meat cart, now and
then uttering a neigh of discontent. When Charley
first discovered the well, he saw a crocodile leaning
its long head over the clay wall, enjoying a drink
of fresh water.
The river or creek at which we encamped,
and which I called “Cycas Creek,”
at two miles lower down, entered a still larger river
coming from the westward, which I called the “Robinson,”
in acknowledgment of the liberal support which I received
from J. P. Robinson, Esq., in the outfit of my expedition.
Charley saw a shoal of porpoises in it when he went
down the river to fetch the horses. Wishing to
ascertain how far the salt water extended, and whether
any fresh water lagoons were near us, I took Charley,
and followed a foot-path of the natives which led up
Cycas Creek, and passed a succession of Cycas
groves, of tea-tree forest with bloodwood and white-gum,
and some Cypress pine thickets. After seven miles,
the salt water ceased, and a ledge of rock separated
it from a fine pool of slightly brackish water, on
which some natives were encamped, but they left the
place directly we made our appearance. I crossed,
and found on the left side a fine rocky lagoon, above
the level of the water in the creek. After paying
a visit to the deserted camp, we returned to our companions,
made our dinner on tainted emu meat, reloaded our
bullocks and horses, and travelled by moonlight up
to the lagoon. About three miles before we reached
it, we were obliged to leave our old bullock, as he
refused to walk any farther: but Mr. Calvert and
Brown brought him next morning to the camp.
As we passed the Cycas groves,
some of the dry fruit was found and tasted by several
of my companions, upon whom it acted like a strong
emetic, resembling in this particular the fruit of
Zamia spiralis, (R. Br.) of New South Wales.
The natives, at this season, seemed to live principally
on the seeds of Pandanus spiralis, (R. Br.)
and Cycas; but both evidently required much preparation
to destroy their deleterious properties. At the
deserted camp of the natives, which I visited yesterday,
I saw half a cone of the Pandanus covered up in hot
ashes, large vessels (koolimans) filled with water
in which roasted seed-vessels were soaking; seed-vessels
which had been soaked, were roasting on the coals,
and large quantities of them broken on stones, and
deprived of their seeds. This seems to show that,
in preparing the fruit, when ripe, for use, it is
first baked in hot ashes, then soaked in water to obtain
the sweet substance contained between its fibres,
after which it is put on the coals and roasted to
render it brittle when it is broken to obtain the
kernels.
I also observed that seeds of Cycas
were cut into very thin slices, about the size of
a shilling, and these were spread out carefully on
the ground to dry, after which, (as I saw in another
camp a few days later) it seemed that the dry slices
are put for several days in water, and, after a good
soaking, are closely tied up in tea-tree bark to undergo
a peculiar process of fermentation.
The Cycas disappeared where the
fresh water commenced; and it seemed to be confined
to the sandy soil near the salt water.
Sep. I stopped at
Cycas Creek, to allow our old bullock to recover,
as it was easier for us to drive him than to carry
his meat, heavily laden as our other bullocks were.
The emu meat became so tainted that
it affected our bowels, and I had consequently to
reserve it for the dog. As the nutritious qualities
of our meat decreased, I had increased the daily allowance
from five pounds to seven; allowing two pounds and
a half for breakfast, the same quantity for luncheon,
and two pounds for dinner. Mr. Roper had slowly
recovered, but sufficiently to mount his horse without
assistance.
We were sadly distressed for want
of clothing. The few shirts which we had taken
with us, became so worn and threadbare, that the slightest
tension would tear them. To find materials for
mending the body, we had to cut off the sleeves, and,
when these were used, pieces were taken from the lower
part of the shirt to mend the upper. Our trowsers
became equally patched: and the want of soap
prevented us from washing them clean. We had,
however, saved our shoes so well, by wearing mocassins
while travelling along the eastern coast, that every
one was well provided, particularly after the death
of Mr. Gilbert, whose stock of clothes I divided among
my companions.
Sep. I went with Charley
to reconnoitre the country between Cycas creek
and the Robinson. A foot-path led us from one
to the other, passing through a series of Cycas
groves, box and tea-tree forest, and thickets of tea-tree
and Cypress pine. The latter covered long tracts
near the Robinson, and frequently attained a large
size.
The river was about two hundred yards
broad, with sleep banks intersected by deep gullies.
Two tea-tree creeks, which entered it at the point
where our examination stopped, contained fresh water
in the upper part of their short courses. We
crossed the river by a rocky bar, and, below it, was
another, on which the natives had erected a rude wall
of stone, for catching fish. The upper bar was
not covered even by the tide; but, above it, the water
although very bitter, was not salt. We found here
the carcase of a crocodile; and the skull of another
was found near our camp at Cycas Creek.
After crossing the river, we followed down its left
bank to the lower ford, in order to find some fresh
water, and at last came to a small tea-tree gully
with two pools of water, near which some natives were
encamped; there were, however, only two very old men
in the camp at the time, who, on seeing us, began
to chaunt their incantations. We were too anxious
to examine the water to stand upon ceremony, and, when
they saw us approach, they retired across the river
to their friends, who were probably occupied at no
great distance in collecting the seeds of Pandanus
and Cycas. In the camp, we observed Cycas
seeds sliced and drying on the ground; and some Pandanus
seeds soaking in large vessels; emu bones were lying
in the ashes, and the feet of the emu were rolled up
and concealed between the tea-tree bark of the hut.
A small packet contained red ochre to colour their
bodies, and larger packets contained soaked Cycas
seeds, which seemed to be undergoing fermentation.
They were of a mealy substance, and harmless; but
had a musty taste and smell, resembling that of the
common German cheese. There was also a very large
stone tomahawk made of greenstone; and some fans of
emu feathers.
In returning, we chased and shot an emu.
Sep. We moved our
camp to the water-holes at the left bank of the Robinson,
about six miles and a half west by north, from the
head of the salt-water in Cycas Creek. The
longitude of the Robinson is, according to my reckoning,
136 degrees 43 minutes. On our way we again met
the natives, men, women, and children, who ran away
screaming loudly. I visited their camp again,
and found that they had been there to fetch the emu
feet; but had left all the other things behind.
I went with Brown to examine the country before us.
The first three or four miles lay through an open
well-grassed forest and over some small plains, on
which we gave an unsuccessful chase to three émus.
The Cycas disappeared as we receded from the
river. We passed a small scrubby creek, and a
long tract of stringy-bark forest, mixed with bloodwood
and Pandanus, and patches of Cypress pine. Here
we again observed the gum-tree with orange blossoms
and large ribbed seed-vessels, which we found at the
upper Lynd, and had called Melaleuca gum. Sterculia
was frequent, and we collected a great quantity of
its ripe seeds. We passed several dry swamps,
surrounded with tea-tree thickets, and heaps of fresh
water mussel shells. A rich iron-stone rock cropped
out frequently; its surface had the appearance of
having been netted.
In a tract of broad-leaved tea-tree
forest, we came to a watercourse, which led us to
a fine creek surrounded with Pandanus and drooping
tea-trees, and containing a chain of deep water-holes
in its bed. Its course was from west to east.
Sep. We removed our
camp to the creek I had found last night, about nine
miles north-west from the Robinson. On our way,
we saw two flocks of émus, and Spring caught
one of the birds. According to Charley, who is
a native of Bathurst, the émus of this part of
the country are much smaller than those of his country,
which frequently yield from two to three gallons of
oil; but very few of the gulf émus contained fat
enough to fry their own liver; and their skin was
as dry as that of the native dog. A similar difference
has been observed in the bustard, which, at the gulf,
rarely weighed more than three pounds and a half; whereas
individuals of twenty and twenty-eight pounds weight
have been shot to the southward.
I succeeded here in cooking the seeds
of Sterculia, which had recently been gathered; first
by separating them from their prickly husks, and roasting
them slightly, and then pounding and boiling them for
a short time. They produced not only a good beverage
with an agreeable flavour, but ate well and appeared
to be very nourishing. They contained a great
quantity of oil.
Brown caught an Agama, of a light
yellowish colour, about a foot long.
The nights had been generally cloudy,
with the exception of the last, which was clear with
heavy dew. The days were very hot before the setting
in of the sea breeze, which now generally took place
at half past eleven. But the refreshing breeze
was little felt in the close stringy-bark forest,
which, with the dust rising under our bullocks’
feet, rendered the heat almost suffocating.
Sep. Our journey to-day
was in a degrees W. direction for about eleven
miles, through stringy-bark forest, in which the Melaleuca
and the Cypress pine were either scattered, or formed
small patches of forest. We then crossed a shallow
sandy creek surrounded with thickets of Cypress pine;
passed some broad-leaved tea-tree forest, and came
to a fine open country timbered with tea-tree, and,
farther on, with box and white gum. After fifteen
miles, our course was intercepted by the largest salt-water
river we had yet seen, and we turned at once to the
W.S.W. in order to head it. Deep hollows surrounded
by tea-trees, but quite dry, extended parallel to
the river. We observed several islands in the
river; and it was joined by some deep creeks filled
with salt water at their lower parts, but dry higher
up. The whole country was equally open and well
grassed. The leguminous Ironbark, the white-barked
tree of the Abel Tasman, the fig tree, and Sterculia
in fruit, grew in the forest; and the white water-gum
in the hollows, the drooping tea-tree at the level
of the freshes, and a species of salt-water Casuarina
below it.
I called this river the “Macarthur,”
in acknowledgment of the liberal support my expedition
received from Messrs. James and William Macarthur
of Cambden.
When we were passing through the stringy-bark
forest, about four or five miles from the camp of
the 20th, we heard the calls of some natives behind
us, and I stopped our train to ascertain what they
wanted: they were soon perceived running after
us, and, when they were sufficiently near, I dismounted
and advanced slowly to have a parley, and was met by
an old man with three or four young fellows behind
him. As soon as he saw that I intended to make
him a present, he prepared one in return; and when
I gave him some rings and buckles, he presented me
with some of the ornaments he wore on his person.
As our confidence in each other was thus established,
some of my companions and several others of the natives
came up, and we exchanged presents in a very amicable
manner. They were all well made, good looking
men; and one young man, whose body was coloured red,
was even handsome, although his expression was somewhat
wild and excited. All of them seemed to have
been circumcised. Charley told me afterwards,
that, at my first approach, some of them held their
bommerangs ready to throw, but I do not think that
it was more than a simple attitude of defence, in
case I should have proved the aggressor. On my
inquiring about water, they pointed in the direction
which we were going, and seemed to say, “It
is far, but it is large; Baco! Baco!
Umara!” they frequently repeated with emphasis.
John also told me that an old man had made signs of
a large water, but not fit to drink, and was very
anxious for us to change our course, Mr. Roper had
understood the same. But, as long as we were
ignorant what was before us, the pantomime and words
of the natives enabled us to form but very vague and
hopeless guesses. It was easy to understand them,
when we knew the reality. These natives must
have had some intercourse with white men, or Malays,
for they knew the use of a knife, and valued it so
highly, that one of them offered a gin for one.
They appeared equally acquainted with the use of our
fire-arms. No doubt they had seen the Malays,
and probably some had accompanied them to the islands;
as it is a common custom of the Malays to take natives
home with them, that they may become friendly to them
when fishing for trepang at this part of the gulf.
As the stage lengthened, our old bullock
began to lag behind, and at last lay down incapable
of walking any farther. In the hope of finding
water, I continued my journey until the decline of
day compelled me to encamp. We watched our bullocks
as usual during the night, and I was distressed to
find that another of them, a young but heavy beast,
had suffered so much, that I feared he would soon
have to be slaughtered, and the number of our pack
bullocks be again reduced.
Sep. I sent Mr. Calvert
and Charley back to fetch the bullock, whilst we continued
our journey up the river. The country maintained
the same character, being open and well-grassed.
At the end of about seven miles, we came to a range
of sandstone hills with horizontal strata, deeply
fissured and worn by the waters and the atmosphere.
A creek at the northern side of the range was dry;
but, at its southern foot, there was another, which
contained several small pools and two deep rocky basins
with an ample supply of water. Here, therefore,
we encamped to wait for our old bullock, which I now
resolved to kill; being well aware that he would be
a constant drawback to our progress. Wallabies
were exceedingly numerous, and their tracks as broad
as the foot-paths of the natives. Our lat. was
16 degrees 5 minutes 26 seconds; long. according to
reckoning, 136 degrees 10 minutes.
Mr. Calvert and Charley had succeeded
in driving our bullock to within about three miles
of our camp, where he had again lain down. As
soon as the moon rose, I went with Charley to bring
him on; but when we came to the place where they had
left him, he was gone. It was impossible even
for Charley to track him in the uncertain moonlight;
and, as the night was very cold and foggy along the
flats and hollows of the river, we made a fire, to
wait for daylight. By a most unfortunate accident,
my hat caught fire, and was consumed in an instant;
it was a great loss to me in such a climate, and under
daily exposure to a most powerful sun. I had to
make shift with a small bag made of strong canvass,
the long end of which I turned over my face to shade
it. When the sun rose, we resumed our search,
and succeeded in finding the poor beast, after tracking
him for six miles across the country; he had evidently
rambled in search of water, and had generally been
attracted by shady hollows, in which any one would
have reasonably expected to find it. He had, however,
been completely unsuccessful; the hollows appeared
to have been dry for a very long time; he travelled
tolerably well to our camp, where he was immediately
killed, skinned, quartered, and cut up. His meat
was not quite so flaccid and watery as that of our
last bullock; but it was by no means good. He
was an old, and a heavy beast, and the experience we
had of him strongly corroborates my observations,
that such beasts can neither bear the fatigues of
a long journey, nor travel with a load, unless regularly
well fed and watered.
On this occasion we made a grand discovery,
of which we afterwards profited greatly. A portion
of the skin of the bullock was dried, and a certain
quantity was added to our soup at night; which we soon
found to be not only a great improvement, but to be
in itself much preferable to the tasteless meat of
our knocked-up bullocks. The stomach was also
made use of on this occasion, as our useful dog, Spring,
was well provided with emu meat. We had our last
pot of tea on the 22nd, and we were now fairly put
on dry beef and water.
By a mere accident, we discovered
a remarkable medicinal property of the glutinous secretion
of the seed-vessels of a drooping Grevillea. John
Murphy, having no pockets in his trowsers, put the
seeds which he found during the stage into his bosom,
close to the skin, where he had already deposited
a great number of Sterculia, and was much inconvenienced
by the starry prickles which surround the seeds.
Afterwards, finding the drooping Grevillea in fruit,
he gathered some capsules and placed them as before
stated. Upon arriving at the camp, he felt great
pain; and, on examining the place, he saw, to his
greatest horror, that the whole of the skin of the
epigastric region was coloured black, and raised into
a great number of painful blisters. Upon his
showing it to me, I thought that it was caused by
the Sterculia prickles having irritated the skin,
and rendered it more sensitive to the sharp properties
of the exudation of the seed-vessels of Grevillea.
Brown, however, merely touched the skin of his arm
with the matter, when blisters immediately rose; showing
clearly its properties. The discoloration of the
skin was like the effects of nitrate of silver.
Sep. When Charley
returned with the horses from a higher part of the
river, he told us that he had seen so many wallabies
and such numerous tracks of émus and crocodiles,
that I sent John and Brown to procure some game.
They returned with only a red wallabi (Halmaturus
agilis) and a spoonbill. According to their
account, the river enlarged into an immense sandy
bed, like that of the Lynd, and was covered with trees
and shrubs, very much resembling those of that river.
Its course was from the westward; and in that direction
large plains extended. They had seen three crocodiles,
one of which lay in the shade of a Sarcocephalus tree.
The bean of the Mackenzie grew plentifully along the
river, and was covered with ripe seeds. In the
morning of the 25th, I sent John and Brown to collect
as many of them as they could, for coffee; whilst
I and Charley went to reconnoitre the country for water.
A W.N.W. course brought us so much into sandstone
ranges, gullies, and heads of creeks, that we turned
to the northward, until we came again into the open
box and tea-tree forest, mixed with bloodwood and gum.
About four miles from the camp, we found water-holes
supplied by springs, and which had just been left
by the natives, who were busy in burning the grass
along the ridges, and on the fine intervening flats.
It was here that I again met with a species of Banksia,
on the sandy flats immediately below the sandstone
ranges, which was either a variety of B. integrifolia,
or a species very nearly allied to it. We found
it afterwards all over Arnheim’s Land, especially
on the table land and on the rocky heads of the South
Alligator River, where it grew on sandy flats surrounding
the rocks, and particularly round sandy swamps.
The Cypress-pine and Pandanus were frequent, but Sterculia
was rare. We remarked that the little finches
generally anticipated us in the harvest of the ripe
fruit of the latter. About eight miles from the
springs, after crossing a great number of small dry
sandy watercourses, we came to a fine creek with two
large Nymphaea ponds.
On our return, we ran down an emu,
the stomach of which was full of the fruit of the
little Severn tree. The meat of the whole body
was so exceedingly bitter, that I could scarcely eat
it. Brown and John had returned with a good supply
of beans, and of the large eatable roots of a Convolvolus
growing on the plains. The former allowed us again
a pot of coffee at luncheon for the next three weeks.
This coffee had at first a relaxing effect, but we
soon became accustomed to it, and enjoyed it even
to the grounds themselves.
Sep. We removed our
camp to the water-holes I had found the day before.
We crossed the river at the head of the salt water,
where the shallow stream of fresh water was about
fifteen yards broad. Sandstone ridges were all
round our last camp, and on the opposite side of the
river, where it was joined by a deep Pandanus creek.
John Murphy told me that he shot a fish at the crossing
place, which had the first ray of the dorsal fin very
much prolonged, like one of the fresh-water fishes
of Darling Downs; they had been in such a hurry to
roast it, that I had no chance of examining it.
The day was exceedingly hot, particularly
from 7 to 11 o’clock, when the strong sea breeze
set in from the north-east.
Sep. I went with Brown
to reconnoitre the country to the north-west.
About a mile from the camp, we crossed a fine creek
with a chain of ponds and a tiny stream densely fringed
with Pandanus. To the north-west of it, we rode
through a succession of scrubby and open stringy-bark
forest of tea-tree flats and thickets, and over long
tracts of stringy-bark saplings which had been recently
burned. The Melaleuca gum was very frequent in
the stringy-bark forest: the Cypress-pine formed
either small thickets or occurred scattered. Sterculia,
which at the time was particularly valuable to us,
was rare.
Red ironstone cropped out every where,
and formed large shallow basins, surrounded by tea-tree
thickets; like those swamps I have mentioned on several
occasions. About eight miles from the camp, we
crossed a good sized waterless creek, with drooping
tea-trees, and groves of Pandanus; and about three
miles farther, came to a large creek with some very
long water-holes, which were all stocked with small
fish. On our return, it became so dark that we
missed our tracks; and, by keeping too much to the
eastward, we came to a very wild rocky country, in
which the large Pandanus creek, as well as that on
which we were encamped, changed their character so
much that we crossed without recognising them.
We encamped out, and the next morning, the 28th, we
changed our course to the southward, which brought
us to a little hill we had passed two days before,
and which Brown immediately recognised: thus affording
another instance of the quickness of his eye, and
of his wonderful memory for localities. We returned
on our former bullock tracks to the camp; and having
taken some breakfast, and loaded our bullocks, we immediately
started for the water-holes, which were situated about
eleven miles to the north-west, in la degrees
47 minutes 23 seconds.
Sep. I reconnoitered
with Charley in a north by west course, and travelled
through a most wretched country. Cypress-pine
thickets alternated with scrubby stringy-bark forest,
acacia and tea-tree thickets, and with broad tea-tree
forest. The Bossiaea with broad leafless stem,
was one of the principal components of the scrub.
About eight miles from our camp, we crossed a small
creek with good water-holes; and at four miles and
a half further, came to a river with several channels,
separated by high and irregular bergues, with a sandy
bed containing large pools of water surrounded with
water Pandanus and drooping tea-trees. Acacia
neurocarpa, and a species of Cassia, which we had
observed since leaving Seven Emu River, grew on the
sands. After giving our horses a short rest,
during which we refreshed ourselves with a pot of
Sterculia coffee, we returned towards our camp; but,
wishing to find a more open road, kept more to the
eastward, and came sooner than I expected to Sterculia
Creek: which name I had given to the creek on
which we were encamped, in reference to the groves
of Sterculias of both species, rose-coloured as well
as heterophylla, which grow on its banks. We
followed it up for seven miles, when the setting sun,
and our great fatigue, induced us to stop. The
creek changed its character every quarter of a mile,
forming now a broad sandy or pebbly bed, then a narrow
channel between steep banks; and again several channels,
either with fine water-holes, or almost entirely filled
up and over-grown with a scanty vegetation. On
the banks, thickets alternated with scrubs and open
country, and, lower down, the country became very fine
and open. Early in the morning of the 30th, we
started again, and arrived at the camp after a long
ride, both hungry and tired.