242 COUNTBY BELOW THE SACRAMENTO. 



climate, productions, and niineral resources of this interesting country , 

 and in so doing, I would fir^t draw a succinct view of the territory lying 

 between the Rio Sacramento and Oregon. 



Here we find the most forbidding aspect, with one exception, of any in 

 Western California. The soil is generally very dry and barren, and the 

 face of the country broken and hilly. The streams of water (as in the 

 Eastern Division) frequently sink and become lost in the sand, or force 

 themselves into the Ocean and parent streams by percolation or subterrane- 

 an passages. 



In many places is presented a surface of white -eun-baked clay, entirely 

 destitute of vegetation ; and in others, wide spreads of sand, alike denuded ; 

 and yet again iron-bound superfices of igneous rock. 



Now and then groves of pines or firs spread their broad branches as it 

 were to cover the nakedness of nature ; while here and there a valley of 

 greater or less extent smiles amid the surrounding desolation. 



All the various streams are skirted with bottoms of arable soil, ofttimes 

 not only large but verj' fertile, though perhaps unadapted to cultivation, on 

 account of their dryness, without a resort to irrigation. 



Smith's river pursues its way, for forty or fifty miles, through a wide 

 bottom of rich soil, most admirably suited for agricultural purposes v/ere it 

 not for its innate aridity ; — however, during the summer season, it is, to a 

 limited extent, watered from nightly dews, which enable it to sustain a 

 luxuriant vegetation. 



Not one fourth part of the northwestern portion of this section is fit for 

 tillage. That part contiguous to the sea-coast is sandy and far less broken 

 than those sections less interior. 



The Tlameth Mountains, pursuing a west-southwest course from Oregon, 

 strike the coast near lat. 41° north. This range has several lofty peaks 

 covered with perpetual snow, and shoots its collateral eminences far into the 

 adjacent prairies. 



There is one feasible pass through this chain a few miles inland from tlie 

 coast, that serves well for the purpose of intercommunication with OregoiL 



The less elevated parts of these mountains are frequently covered with 

 groves of small timber and openings of grass suitable for pasturage, while 

 intermingled with them are occasional valleys and prairillons of diminutive 

 space, favorable to the growth of grain and vegetables. The same may bt 

 said in reference to the California chain for its whole extent, especially in 

 the vicinity of the prairie. 



Following the course of this latter ridge from north to south, we find 

 upon both sides a reach of very broken and highly tumulous landscape, 

 Bome twenty or thirty miles broad. 



Near the head-waters of the Sacramento, these lands are well watered 

 md possess a general character for fertility, producing a variety of grass, 

 with shrubs and a few scattering trees. Below, however, they are more 

 Bterile, owing to the deficiency of water ; but yet they afford numerous invit- 

 ing spots. 



A considerable extent of country, south of the South Fork of the river 

 above named, is arid and stei ile, and has but few streams of water. It sus- 

 tains, however, among its hills and in its valleys, a sparse vegetation that 



