Bujuku Valley.—Return of the Expedition. 
grander than the mountain scenery at the head of the Mobuku 
Valley. 
They soon discovered, among the mosses and reeds on the 
shore of the lake, the track prepared for them by the Bakonjo 
natives across the gently sloping plain of the upper valley. 
This plain ends in a gorge formed by spurs which run 
down from the Moore Peak of Mt. Baker and the Johnston 
THE BUJUKU VALLEY. 
Peak of Mt. Speke. Here there is a short, steep barrier, similar 
in every respect to those which intersect the Mobuku Valley. 
They now had a sight of the first heaths (f 2,297 feet), mingled 
with a few lobelias, which were nearly all dead. 
Making their way down, now on the right hand and now 
on the left of the torrent, they reached a second plain, after 
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