- 176 - 



and nearly all look deoidedly xmsafs to handle as they are old. 

 mostly muzzle loadery and very loose. I oaia© upon a party of 12iem 

 hunt in' in a field. One of their number carried a snail reflector 

 laxup and tiehlnd him came seven or 'eight, eadi carrying a gun, and 

 or£. or two, in addition t®^ their g&ne and perangs carried spears. 

 TbBj told me when they met a door, they all fired to be sure of 

 getting it. So I cm in&eine in this locality deer are not as 

 common as they, of the shore, at first led ran to believe. 



When I rotiirnGd to the shore after hunting- for Beveral hours 

 1 discovered that our sanpan had not been securely made fast and 

 had drifted aray, so finally after much hunting about in the dark- 

 ness, we found a tiny eampan^r^ith outriggers and cai^ried it do?/n to 

 the ?mt0r's edg©, aM waitln^j o-tr opportunity, safely laumhad it 

 and. paddled off to the larger host, uelng coo omit leaves for imddles. 



Jtily 16, 1914. 



fiirondja to l);aii!pcl.'is. 



W© got up anchor about nine o'clock this morning but there was 

 only a very light breeae which hardly more than movod us along. 

 Later the wind oesaa from the south or a little west of south and we 

 made good time and rouiidcd * and Jong Manimbaj;;, and then headed for 

 fanajoag ^^ampe Im , fifteen miles further on, then tha wind died out 

 and the boat rocked and rolled ^mtil finally after an hour or so 

 e&me a stiff wind from the land and we were just able to 'la^y a 

 coui^se and reached Tandjon^:: i)au.i)elas about dusk, but under tlis lee 

 of the -ooint which la high and caaeB down steep right to the shore, 

 there was r,othlng but litt?uO guBtc of wind., sow© kept a little 

 farther from tlie shore and called on into the covo. 2he water is 

 very deep and a Bohool of porpoises plfiyed about the boat axid 



