CHAPTER XVI. 



NOTES OX TROPICAL TRAVEL. 



Hints on travel Food supplies Bathing Medicines Modes of travel- 

 ling Shelter Resting-places Barter Articles for exchange 

 Arms in a wild laud Products of the island Prospects of 

 Borneo. 



The traveller who finds himseif for the first time in a 

 wild tropical country devoid of roads, railways, horses, 

 bridges, hotels, and Europeans, may be excused if he feels 

 a little anxious when called upon to make an expedition 

 which will require several weeks to accomplish on foot, 

 and during which time nearly all necessaries must be 

 carried by the party en route. A party of say twenty 

 natives will require a clear head to manage it rightly, and 

 it is only by maintaining a system that the thing can be 

 conveniently done. The main points to be considered 

 may be tabulated thus : 



Health is best preserved by regular habits, taking care 

 to avoid chills by wearing flannel next to the skin, and 



V 2 



