Further Ascents and Work at Bujongolo. 
insufficient handholds, and skirting round rocky gendarmes on 
their smooth, steep sides, they reached the real summit about 
six in the evening. 
The mist had entirely disappeared, but nightfall was very 
near. Commander Cagni had scarcely time to take observations 
of all the peaks with the compass. They came down in the 
dark. 
On the following morning by sunrise, the weather being 
perfectly clear, Cagni was once more on the summit, and was 
able to take measurements of all the angles with the theodolite 
and with the compass. They set up a stone man, and by eight 
o’clock they were preparing to return when the first mists began 
to rise. They came back by the same way, along the spur to 
the north of the peak and then down into the little valley 
to the west of it, which they now descended to the point 
where it opens into the Mobuku Valley. Here the mist, which 
had become dense, was added to all the other difficulties of 
crossing the tangled forest, which was very similar to the one 
above Kichuchu. They reached Bujongolo the same evening. 
Sella was there alone, waiting for Cagni’s Alpine tent to set 
forth upon a new photographic expedition. The Duke had 
gone up to Camp I upon Mt. Baker that very day. From 
this point on the following day, July 10th, through a gully to 
the east and then along the south ridge, he reached the 
Wollaston Peak, 15,286 feet, which had not as yet been 
ascended by any member of the expedition. The rocks were 
covered with ice. The weather was clear, and he was able 
to take observations for two whole hours. Next, following 
the high ridge, he traversed to the Moore Peak, whence he 
came down along the ridge which had already been climbed 
by Vittorio Sella, to the Grauer Col, and so back to Bujongolo. 
