the best of pasturage, and where there was excellent
water. Now that we were again going to continue
our route, I found that the horses were so much improved
in appearance and in strength, that I thought we might
once again venture, without oppression to the animals,
occasionally to ride; I selected therefore, the strongest
from among them for this purpose, and Wylie and myself
walked and rode alternately; after passing the scrubby
sand-ridges, and descending to the open downs behind
them, I steered direct for Cape Arid, cutting off
Cape Pasley, and encamping after a stage of eighteen
miles, where it bore south-east of us. We halted
for the night upon a ridge timbered with casuarinae,
and abounding in grass. Once more we were in a
country where trees were found, and again we were able
at night to make our fires of large logs, which did
not incessantly require renewing to prevent their
going out. We had now crossed the level bank which
had so long shut out the interior from us; gradually
it had declined in elevation, until at last it had
merged in the surrounding country, and we hardly knew
where it commenced, or how it ended. The high
bluff and craggy hills, whose tops we had formerly
seen, stood out now in bold relief, with a low level
tract of country stretching to their base, covered
with dwarf brush, heathy plants and grass-tree, with
many intervals of open grassy land, and abounding
in kangaroos. I named these lofty and abrupt
mountain masses the “Russell Range,” after
the Right Honourable the Secretary of State for the
Colonies—Lord John Russell. They constitute
the first great break in the character and appearance
of the country for many hundreds of miles, and they
offer a point of great interest, from which future
researches may hereafter be made towards the interior.
Nearer to the coast, and on either side of Cape Pasley
were sand-drifts, in which I have no doubt that water
might have been procured. We found none where
we were encamped, but had sufficient in the kegs for
our own use, and the horses were not thirsty; many
and recent tracks of natives were observed, but the
people themselves were not seen.
The morning of the 27th was exceedingly cold; and as we left our encampments early, neither I nor Wylie were inclined to ride for the first few miles; it was as much as we could do to keep ourselves from shivering whilst walking; the dews were so heavy, that we were soon wet through by the spangles from the shrubs and grass, whilst the pace at which we travelled was not sufficiently rapid to promote a quick circulation, and enable us to keep ourselves warm.