APPENDIX. 197 
branches: its mouth is about twenty miles from that of the 
Keiskamma. _ 
The Goonobie, or Brambleberry River, follows next in 
magnitude, and is about twenty miles beyond the last- 
mentioned. ! 
_ The "Kwelegha blends its waters with the ocean : twenty 
miles in advance, it is a considerable river, and equal to the 
Keiskamma. 
_ The ’Knebia or Kei, the White Keys River of the mari- 
time charts, falls into the sea in lat. 32° 35’, and long, 28° 30’: 
itis a very large stream, and waters a wide extent of country ; 
its sources are in the Stormberg mountains, one hundred 
and sixty miles direct from the coast; a part of the great 
range already alluded to, from which it issues by several 
spruits or branches in the Tambookee, of which I shall 
have occasion hereafter to speak.. The principal of these 
branches are the Stormberg, the Zwarte Kei, the Ameva, 
and the Somo, the latter crossed for the first time by 
civilized men by W. van Reenen’s party, in search of the 
Grosvenor Indiaman. . These various spruits join previous to 
entering the Amakosz territory, where, together, they form 
the Witte or White Kei, or Kei River. 
_ The ’Kobaknabba, whose estuary is about eight miles 
from the mouth of the Knebia, is rather a large stream, fer- 
tilizing a large and populous valley ; and next is the Kogha, 
of similar size, near which the wreck of the French vessel, 
L’Ecole, took place in 1829,.in that part marked in Com- 
‘modore Owen’s survey as Sandy Point. 
The ’Ombashee is a large river, having - several tribu- 
taries in the secondary range of mountains in the Tam- 
bookie country. This river forms the extreme boundary of 
_the Caffers Proper, whose territory it enters about twenty- 
five miles from the coast: it is supposed to be navigable. 
