The Only Insects At All Remarkable Or Interesting Were
The Butterflies, Which, Though Comparatively Few In Species, Were
Sufficiently Abundant, And Comprised A Large Proportion Of New Or Rare
Sorts.
The banks of the stream formed my best collecting-ground, and I
daily wandered up and down its shady bed, which about a mile up became
rocky and precipitous.
Here I obtained the rare and beautiful swallow-
tail butterflies, Papilio aenomaus and P. liris; the males of which
are quite unlike each other, and belong in fact to distinct sections
of the genus, while the females are so much alike that they are
undistinguishable on the wing, and to an uneducated eye equally so in
the cabinet. Several other beautiful butterflies rewarded my search in
this place, among which I may especially mention the Cethosia
leschenaultii, whose wings of the deepest purple are bordered with
buff in such a manner as to resemble at first sight our own Camberwell
beauty, although it belongs to a different genus. The most abundant
butterflies were the whites and yellows (Pieridae), several of which I
had already found at Lombock and at Coupang, while others were new to
me.
Early in February we made arrangements to stay for a week at a village
called Baliba, situated about four miles off on the mountains, at an
elevation of 2,000 feet. We took our baggage and a supply of all
necessaries on packhorses; and though the distance by the route we
took was not more than six or seven miles, we were half a day getting
there. The roads were mere tracks, sometimes up steep rocky stairs,
sometimes in narrow gullies worn by the horses' feet, and where it was
necessary to tuck up our legs on our horses' necks to avoid having
them crushed. At some of these places the baggage had to be unloaded,
at others it was knocked off. Sometimes the ascent or descent was so
steep that it was easier to walk than to cling to our ponies' backs;
and thus we went up and down over bare hills whose surface was
covered with small pebbles and scattered over with Eucalypti,
reminding me of what I had read of parts of the interior of Australia
rather than of the Malay Archipelago.
The village consisted of three houses only, with low walls raised a
few feet on posts, and very high roofs thatched with brass hanging
down to within two or three feet of the ground. A house which was
unfinished and partly open at the back was given for our use, and in
it we rigged up a table, some benches, and a screen, while an inner
enclosed portion served us for a sleeping apartment. We had a splendid
view down upon Delli and the sea beyond. The country around was
undulating and open, except in the hollows, where there were some
patches of forest, which Mr. Geach, who had been all over the eastern
part of Timor, assured me was the most luxuriant he had yet seen in
the island. I was in hopes of finding some insects here, but was much
disappointed, owing perhaps to the dampness of the climate; for it was
not until the sun was pretty high that the mists cleared away, and by
noon we were generally clouded up again, so that there was seldom more
than an hour or two of fitful sunshine. We searched in every direction
for birds and other game, but they were very scarce. On our
way I had shot the find white-headed pigeon, Ptilonopus cinctus, and
the pretty little lorikeet, Trichoglossus euteles. I got a few more of
these at the blossoms of the Eucalypti, and also the allied species
Trichoglossus iris, and a few other small but interesting birds. The
common jungle-cock of India (Gallus bankiva) was found here, and
furnished us with some excellent meals; but we could get no deer.
Potatoes are grown higher up the mountains in abundance, and are very
good. We had a sheep killed every other day, and ate our mutton with
much appetite in the cool climate, which rendered a fire always
agreeable.
Although one-half the European residents in Delli are continually ill
from fever, and the Portuguese have occupied the place for three
centuries, no one has yet built a house on these fine hills, which, if
a tolerable road were made, would be only an hour's ride from the
town; and almost equally good situations might be found on a lower
level at half an hour's distance. The fact that potatoes and wheat of
excellent quality are grown in abundance at from 3,000 to 3,500 feet
elevation, shows what the climate and soil are capable of if properly
cultivated. From one to two thousand feet high, coffee would thrive;
and there are hundreds of square miles of country over which all the
varied products which require climates between those of coffee and
wheat would flourish; but no attempt has yet been made to form a
single mile of road, or a single acre of plantation!
There must be something very unusual in the climate of Timor to permit
wheat being grown at so moderate an elevation. The grain is of
excellent quality, the bread made from it being equal to any I have
ever tasted, and it is universally acknowledged to be unsurpassed by
any made from imported European or American flour. The fact that the
natives have (quite of their own accord) taken to cultivating such
foreign articles as wheat and potatoes, which they bring in small
quantities on the backs of ponies by the most horrible mountain
tracks, and sell very cheaply at the seaside, sufficiently indicates
what might be done if good roads were made, and if the people were
taught, encouraged, and protected. Sheep also do well on the
mountains; and a breed of hardy ponies in much repute all over the
Archipelago, runs half-wild, so that it appears as if this island, so
barren-looking and devoid of the usual features of tropical
vegetation, were yet especially adapted to supply a variety of
products essential to Europeans, which the other islands will not
produce, and which they accordingly import from the other side of the
globe.
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