The Hawaiian Archipelago - Six Months Among The Palm Groves, Coral Reefs, And Volcanoes Of The Sandwich Islands By Isabella L. Bird
- Page 109 of 466 - First - Home
The Cascades Are Most Truly Beautiful, Gleaming White
Among The Dark Depths Of Foliage Far Away, And Falling Into Deep
Limpid basins, festooned and overhung with the richest and greenest
vegetation of this prolific climate, from the huge-leaved banana
And
shining breadfruit to the most feathery of ferns and lycopodiums.
Each gulch opens on a velvet lawn close to the sea, and most of them
have space for a few grass houses, with cocoanut trees, bananas, and
kalo patches. There are sixty-nine of these extraordinary chasms
within a distance of thirty miles!
I think we came through eleven, fording the streams in all but two.
The descent into some of them is quite alarming. You go down almost
standing in your stirrups, at a right angle with the horse's head,
and up, grasping his mane to prevent the saddle slipping. He goes
down like a goat, with his bare feet, looking cautiously at each
step, sometimes putting out a foot and withdrawing it again in
favour of better footing, and sometimes gathering his four feet
under him and sliding or jumping. The Mexican saddle has great
advantages on these tracks, which are nothing better than ledges cut
on the sides of precipices, for one goes up and down not only in
perfect security but without fatigue. I am beginning to hope that I
am not too old, as I feared I was, to learn a new mode of riding,
for my companions rode at full speed over places where I should have
picked my way carefully at a foot's pace; and my horse followed
them, galloping and stopping short at their pleasure, and I
successfully kept my seat, though not without occasional fears of an
ignominious downfall.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 109 of 466
Words from 29749 to 30037
of 127766