382 



FISH — COAL CASTKO, 



Feb. 



account, but I may here add that smelt, mullet, a kind of 

 bass, and other fish are plentiful during the summer months- 

 The natives often catch many more than they want by placing 

 very simple weirs across creeks at high-water, with a passage 

 in the middle, which is shut when the tide begins to ebb. 

 Some of these weirs are rough stone walls (on a small scale), 

 others are wattled like hurdles. The number of fish kept 

 back by them and left dry, as the water falls, is really sur- 

 prising. Seals are now rare, and whales are fast diminishing 

 in numbers. There is a good deal of coal in Chiloe, but I am 

 told that it is of an inferior description, like thai of Concep- 

 cion. Geologists say it is not true coal : lignite would be a 

 more appropriate term. Be this as it may I tried some of it* 

 in my cabin stove, and found it burn readily, though what I 

 had was a lump taken from the surface of the ground. The 

 Chilotes scarcely noticed it then, having so much wood around 

 them, but a day may arrive in which its value may be better 

 appreciated. 



Next to San Carlos,-[- in size and population, is Castro, the 

 former seat of Government, which has dwindled to a mere 

 village. Chacao, where the governor afterwards resided, is 

 only a hamlet. Remains of a town, such as lines of streets 

 and the ruins of a churchy are visible, but there are now 

 only a few straggling cottages and a ruinous chapel. It is 

 said, on the spot, that the former church of Chacao was burned 

 by the old Spaniards, to oblige the natives to quit the place 

 and go to San Carlos. Castro, formerly styled a city, now 

 consists of two or three short streets of bad wooden houses 

 and two churches : one of which was built by the J esuits more 

 than a hundred years ago, and is fast decaying though 

 ' shored up (supported by props) on all sides. 



The first discovery of Chiloe was made by Spaniards in 

 1558, one of whom was Ercilla. Enthusiastic in every thing, 

 the warrior-poet tells us that he ran to a tree, half-a-mile south 



* Obtained for me by Mr. Robert Williams from the neighbourhood of 

 San Carlos. t Described in vol. i. p. 274-5. 



