Here The River Seems
To Issue From A Cavern, The Rocks Having Fallen From Above So As To
Block Up The Channel And Bar Further Progress.
The fall itself
can only be reached by a path which ascends behind a huge slice
of rock which
Has partly fallen away from the mountain, leaving a
space two or three feet wide, but disclosing a dark chasm
descending into the bowels of the mountain, and which, having
visited several such, I had no great curiosity to explore.
Crossing the stream a little below the upper fall, the path
ascends a steep slope for about five hundred feet, and passing
through a gap enters a narrow valley, shut in by walls of rock
absolutely perpendicular and of great height. Half a mile further
this valley turns abruptly to the right, and becomes a mere rift
in the mountain. This extends another half mile, the walls
gradually approaching until they are only two feet apart, and the
bottom rising steeply to a pass which leads probably into another
valley, but which I had no time to explore. Returning to where
this rift had begun the main path turns up to the left in a sort
of gully, and reaches a summit over which a fine natural arch of
rock passes at a height of about fifty feet. Thence was a steep
descent through thick jungle with glimpses of precipices and
distant rocky mountains, probably leading into the main river
valley again. This was a most tempting region to explore, but
there were several reasons why I could go no further. I had no
guide, and no permission to enter the Bugis territories, and as
the rains might at any time set in, I might be prevented from
returning by the flooding of the river. I therefore devoted
myself during the short time of my visit to obtaining what
knowledge I could of the natural productions of the place.
The narrow chasms produced several fine insects quite new to me,
and one new bird, the curious Phlaegenas tristigmata, a large
ground pigeon with yellow breast and crown, and purple neck.
This rugged path is the highway from Maros to the Bugis country
beyond the mountains. During the rainy season it is quite impassable,
the river filling its bed and rushing between perpendicular
cliffs many hundred feet high. Even at the time of my visit it
was most precipitous and fatiguing, yet women and children came
over it daily, and men carrying heavy loads of palm sugar (of very
little value). It was along the path between the lower and the
upper falls, and about the margin of the upper pool, that I found
most insects. The large semi-transparent butterfly, Idea tondana,
flew lazily along by dozens, and it was here that I at length
obtained an insect which I had hoped but hardly expected to meet
with - the magnificent Papilio androcles, one of the largest and
rarest known swallow-tailed butterflies. During my four days'
stay at the falls, I was so fortunate as to obtain six good
specimens.
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