Further Ascents and Work at Bujongolo. 
and a piece of meat. One night the splendid animal fell into 
this trap and was killed on the spot with two balls through 
its skull. 
On the 12th of July, the Prince was able to consider the 
work of the expedition as ended. On the 7th, Roccati, who 
had again returned to the Mobuku Glacier to put marks of 
red paint on the rocks at the limit where the ice stopped, 
and who had finished arranging all his collections, had 
already left Bujongolo with Cavalli and with a party of 
Bakonjo porters carrying a portion of the equipment, bound 
for Ibanda, the lowest camp in the Mobuku Valley. 
One mountain alone remained unclimbed, namely, 
Mt. Gessi, and the Duke was not in a mood to leave it 
unattempted, all the more so as this ascent would be 
connected with an exploration of the Bujuku Valley as yet 
absolutely unknown and worth traversing in its whole length. 
A party of Bakonjo had started from the point where the 
Bujuku Valley opens into the Mobuku Valley opposite 
Nakitawa, and had already cut a rough track as far as the 
head of the Valley. 
The plan was now for the Duke to descend the Bujuku 
Valley with Sella, while Cagni was to direct the transport 
of all the portion of the equipment which was still at 
Bujongolo down the Mobuku Valley, and was then to meet 
Cavalli and Roccati at Ibanda and there wait for the Duke. 
Thus Ibanda became the general rendezvous for the whole 
expedition. 
