Australia Twice Traversed - The Romance Of Exploration, Through Central South Australia, And Western Australia, From 1872 To 1876 By Ernest Giles
- Page 571 of 753 - First - Home
We Had
Generally Very Cloudy Mornings; The Flies Were Particularly Numerous
And Troublesome, And I Became Convinced That Any Further Travel To The
West Would Have To Be Carried On Under Very Unfavourable
Circumstances.
This little dam was situated in latitude 29 degrees 19'
4", and longitude 128 degrees 38' 16", showing that we had crossed the
boundary line between the two colonies of South and Western Australia,
the 129th meridian.
I therefore called this the Boundary Dam. It must
be recollected that we are and have been for 7 1/2 degrees of
longitude - that is to say, for 450 miles of westing, and 130 miles of
northing - occupying the intervening period between the 9th of June, to
the 3rd of September, entirely enveloped in dense scrubs, and I may
say that very few if any explorers have ever before had such a region
to traverse. I had managed to penetrate this country up to the present
point, and it was not to be wondered at if we all ardently longed for
a change. Even a bare, boundless expanse of desert sand would be
welcomed as an alternative to the dark and dreary scrubs that
surrounded us. However, it appeared evident to me, as I had traversed
nothing but scrubs for hundreds of miles from the east, and had found
no water of any size whatever in all the distance I had yet come, that
no waters really existed in this country, except an occasional native
well or native dam, and those only at considerable distances apart.
Concluding this to be the case, and my object being that the
expedition should reach the city of Perth, I decided there was only
one way to accomplish this - namely, to go thither, at any risk, and
trust to Providence for an occasional supply of water here and there
in the intermediate distance.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 571 of 753
Words from 155408 to 155718
of 204780