CHAPTER V
PATAGONIA
Port
Desire — Eastern Magellan Straits — Punta Arenas — Western Magellan
Straits —
Patagonian Channels
The most southerly portion
of the South
American continent, called Patagonia, first became known in the
endeavour to
find a new way into the Pacific. Magellan was commissioned by Charles
of Spain
to try to find by the south that ocean passage to the Indies which
Columbus had
sought in vain further north. He sailed in August 1519, and began his
search
along the coast at the River Plate; on October 21st, the day of the
Eleven
Thousand Virgins, he came in sight of a large channel opening out to
the west: the
promontory to the north of this channel still bears the name he
bestowed of
Cape Virgins. He proceeded cautiously, sending boats ahead to explore,
and on
November 28th entered the Pacific. When he saw the open sea he is said
to have
wept for joy, and christened the last cape "Deseado," or the "Desired."
The sea power of England,
which had been
negligible in the time of the first voyages to the New World, was
growing in
strength; and, though she had attempted no settlement on the southern
continent, she saw no reason to acquiesce in the edicts of the King of
Spain,
shutting her off from all trade with the New World. In 1578 Drake took
Magellan's route, with the object of intercepting galleons on the
Pacific
coast, and passed through the Straits in sixteen days. On entering the
Pacific
he was blown backward towards Cape Horn, and was the first to realise
that
there was another waterway, yet further south, from the Atlantic to the
Pacific. Up till this time the land had been supposed to extend to the
Antarctic.
A hundred years later
Charles II of England
sent an expedition under Sir John Narborough to explore this part of
the world
and trade with the Indians, which wintered on the eastern coast of
Patagonia.
Anson's squadron avoided
the Straits, taking
the way by the Horn.
The Chilean and Argentine
Boundary Commission
divided Patagonia between the two countries, giving the west and south
to Chile
and bisecting Tierra del Fuego, 1902.
We left
Buenos Aires on September 19th, achieving the descent of the river
without a
pilot, and for the next fortnight had a varying share of fair winds,
contrary
winds, and calms. Our chief interest was the man who had taken the
place of the
absconding steward, who shall be known as "Freeman"; we heard of him
through a seamen's home, and arranged that he should go with us to
Punta
Arenas, to which place he wished for a passage. He was a clean-looking
"Britisher,"
who for the last seven years had been knocking about South America, He
brought
with him a gramophone, and a Parabellum automatic pistol, with which he
proved
an excellent shot, and he made it a sine
qua non that we should find room on board for his saddle; thus was
my
knowledge increased of the necessary equipment of an indoor servant. We
paid
him at the rate of £100 a year, and though we found that he could
neither boil
a suet pudding nor lay a table, so enlightening were his accounts of
up-country
life that we did not grudge him the money.
We
flatter ourselves our experience in detecting mendacity would qualify
us as
police-court magistrates, but we never saw any reason to doubt the
substantial
accuracy of Freeman's stories. His experience dated back to the time
when mares
of two or three years old were sold for ten shillings, or were boiled
down for
fat, as, after the Spanish fashion, no man would demean himself by
riding one.
He had at one time ridden across the continent from the Patagonian to
the
Chilean coast, a journey of six weeks, half of which time he never saw
a human
being; he was followed all the way by a dog, though the poor animal was
once
two or three days without water; it got left behind at times, but
always managed
to pick up his trail. He was most candid about the means by which he
had made
money when at one time employed on the railway, for honesty was not in
his
opinion the way that the game was played in South America, and
therefore no
individual could afford to make it part of his programme: it did happen
to be
one of the rules on Mana, and we
never knew him break it. He was once running away after some drunken
escapade,
when a policeman appeared and took pot-shots at him with a rifle.
Freeman
turned and dropped him with his revolver; he did it the more
reluctantly as he
knew and liked the man. Happily the shot was not fatal, and he felt
convinced that
he himself had not been recognised.
After,
therefore, carefully arranging an alibi elsewhere he returned, condoled
with
the victim on the lawless deed, and gave him what assistance he could;
he felt,
however, that that part of the country had become not very "healthy,"
and subsequently moved on. Even our experiences of the ports had
scarcely
prepared us for the cynical indifference to human life which his
experiences
incidentally revealed as an everyday affair in "the camp." In
sparsely inhabited districts, with their very recent population, the
factors
are absent through which primitive societies generally secure justice,
clans do
not exist, families are the exception, and in almost every case a man
is simply
a unit. The more advanced methods of keeping the peace have either not
been
formed or are not effective, for crime is often connived at by the
authorities
themselves. The result is that the era of vendetta and private revenge
seems
civilised in comparison with a state of things where no notice is taken
of
murder, and the victim who falls in a brawl or by fouler means simply
disappears unknown and unmissed, while the murderer goes scot-free to
repeat
his crime on the next occasion.
Freeman
had, inter alia, been employed on one
of the farms in Patagonia, along the coast of which we were sailing,
and told
tales of the pumas, or South American lions, which abounded in a
certain
neighbourhood. This district had railway connection with a little
anchorage
known as Port Desire, and as one of our intervals in harbour was now
due S.
arranged to turn in here, and go up-country with him to try to get a
shot at
the animals. We therefore put into the port on October 3rd. It is a
small
inlet, of which the surrounding country is covered with grass, but flat
and dreary
in the extreme, the only relief being a distant vision of blue hills.
Sir John
Narborough, who spent part of the winter here in 1670, said he never
saw in the
country "a stick of wood large enough to make the handle of a
hatchet.''
The human
dwellings are a few tin shanties. In a walk on shore we were able to
see in a
gully, a few remains of the walls of the old Spanish settlement. As to
the
puma, fortunately from its point of view, the railway service left a
good deal
to be desired. We arrived on Friday, and there turned out to be no
train till
the following Tuesday, so it lived to be shot another day — unless
indeed it
met a more ignominious end, for the South American lion is so unworthy
of its
name that it is sometimes killed by being ridden down and brained with
a
stirrup-iron. We took three sheep on board, as mutton at twopence a
pound
appealed to the housekeeping mind, and were able to secure some water,
which is
brought down by rail; it was a relief to have our tanks well supplied,
as the
ports further down the coast are defended by bars, and would have been
difficult of access in bad weather. Drake, on whose course we were now
entering, selected St. Julian, the next bay to the southward, for his
port of
call before entering the Straits of Magellan; it was there he had
trouble with
his crew, and was obliged to hang Doughty.
We sailed
from Port Desire on Monday morning, but were not to say good-bye to it
so
speedily. We soon encountered a strong head-wind, with the result that
Wednesday evening found us fifteen miles backwards on a return journey
to
Buenos Aires, and the whole of Thursday saw us still within sight of
it. We
amused ourselves by discussing the voyage, which had now lasted more
than seven
months. One of the company declared that he had lost all sense of time
and felt
like a native or an animal: things just went on from day to day; there
was
neither before nor after, neither early nor late. It did not, he said,
seem
very long since we left Falmouth, but on the other hand our stay at
Pernambuco
was certainly in the remote past, and so with everything else. We had
now, in
fact, done about three-quarters of the distance from Buenos Aires
towards the
Straits of Magellan, and had 300 miles left before we reached their
entrance at
Cape Virgins.
Ever
since the Expedition was originally projected the passage of the
Straits had
been spoken of in somewhat hushed tones; but now, when with a more
favourable
wind we began to approach them, instead of going into Arctic regions,
as some
of us had anticipated, the weather improved, the sun went south faster
than we
did, and the days lengthened rapidly. Our numerous delays had at least
one
fortunate result — they secured us a much better time of year in the
Straits
than we had expected would fall to our lot. The feeling in the air was
that of
an English April, bright and sunny, but fresh; we kept the saloon cold
on
principle during the daytime, living in big coats; in the evening we
had on the
hot-water apparatus, so as to go warm to bed. It was quite possible to
write on
deck, and the sea was almost too beautifully calm. We had a great many
ocean
callers, who seemed attracted by the vessel: porpoises tumbled about
the bows
till we could nearly stroke them, a whale would go round and round the
yacht,
coming up to blow at intervals, while seals reared their heads and
shoulders
out of the waters and looked at us in a way that was positively
bewitching;
once a whale and seal paid us a visit at the same time. One night S.,
who was
keeping a watch for one of the officers who was indisposed, was
interested in
watching the gulls still feeding during the dark hours.
At 10
p.m. on October 15th the light of Cape Virgins was sighted, and we woke
to find
ourselves actually in the Straits of Magellan. The Magellan route, as
compared
with that by the Horn, is not only a short road from the Atlantic to
the
Pacific, cutting off the islands to the south of the continent, but
ensures
calm waters, instead of the stupendous seas of the Antarctic Ocean. For
a
sailing-ship, however, the difficulties are great; the prevailing wind
is from
the west, and there is no space for a large vessel to beat up against
it, nor
does she gain the advantage that can be derived from any slight shift
of wind;
outside the gale may vary a point or two, but within the channel it
always
blows straight down as in a gully. The early mariners could overcome
these
obstacles through the strength of their crews; in case of necessity
they
lowered their boats and towed the ship, but the vessels of the present
no longer
carry sufficient men to make such a proceeding possible. Sailing-ships
therefore take to-day the Cape Horn route, in spite of its well-known
delays,
trials, and hardships. When later the German cruiser turned up at
Easter Island
with her captured crews, the great regret of the latter was that they
had been
taken just too late, after they had gone through the unpleasantness of
the
passage round the Horn.
The first
sight of Tierra del Fuego is certainly disappointing. The word calls up
visions
of desolate snowy mountains inhabited by giants; what is seen are low
cliffs,
behind which are rolling downs, sunny and smiling, divided up into
prosaic
sheep farms. A reasonably careful study of the map would of course have
shown
what was to be expected, as on the Atlantic coast the plains continue
to the
extreme south of the continent, while the chain of the Andes looks only
on to
the Pacific. Nevertheless^ if not thrilling, it was at least enjoyable
to be in
a stretch of smooth water, with Patagonia on the north and Tierra del
Fuego on
the south. The land on either hand is excellent pasture for sheep, and
there is
said to be sometimes as much as 97 per cent, increase in a flock. The
largest
owners are one or two Chilean firms, but the shepherds employed are
almost all
Scotsmen, and indeed the scenery recalls some of the less beautiful
districts
in the Highlands. When sheep-farming was established, the Indians, not
unnaturally from their point of view, made raids on the new animals,
with the
result that the representatives of the company were consumed with wrath
at
seeing their stock eaten by lazy natives; they started a campaign of
extermination, shooting at sight and offering a reward for Indian
tongues. Our
friend Freeman had worked on one of the farms, which had a stock of
200,000
sheep, and the information he gave on this head was fully confirmed
later in
conversations at Punta Arenas. The destruction of the Indians was
spoken of
there as a matter for regret, but as rendered inevitable by
circumstances.
The navigation
through the straits of a craft like ours makes it necessary to anchor
in the
dark hours: the first night we spent off the Fuegian coast, in sight of
one of
the pillars which define the boundary of Chile and Patagonia; the
second we lay
in Possession Bay, which is on the Patagonian side. We had time at the
latter
anchorage to examine the pathetic wreck of a steamer, which had gone
aground.
She was a paddle-boat, which was being towed presumably from one lake
or river
area to another, and had to be cut adrift. Even in such an unheroic
vessel it
was touching to see the sign of departed and luxurious life cast away
on this
lonely shore, stained-glass doors bearing the inscription of
"smoking" or "dining-room," and good mahogany fittings such
as washing-stands still in place. It is said that the outer coast is
strewn
with wrecks containing valuable articles which it is worth no one's
while to
remove. S. walked up to the neighbouring lighthouse, and was presented
with
three rhea eggs.
FIG. 8. — IN THE
MAGELLAN STRAITS.
S. and an ostrich.
The next
morning we were under way at 5 o'clock, in order to pass with the
correct tide
through what are known as the First Narrows. The current here is so
strong that
it would have been impossible for us to make headway against it; as it
was, the
wind sank soon after we started, and we only just accomplished the
passage,
anchoring in St. Jago Bay. The following day, Sunday, we negotiated
successfully the Second Narrows. From our next anchorage we saw from
the yacht
several rhea, or South American ostriches, on a small promontory. S.
went
ashore on the point and shot two of them, while Mr. Ritchie and Mr.
Gillam, who
had landed on the neck of the promontory, endeavoured to cut off the
retreat of
the two remaining birds. The one marked by Mr. Ritchie went through
some water
and escaped him; the onlookers then viewed with much interest a duel
between
Mr. Gillam on the one hand, running about in sea-boots armed with a
revolver,
and the last ostrich on the other, vigorously using its legs and wings
and on
its own ground. Victory remained with the bird, which reached the
mainland
triumphantly, or at least disappeared behind a bush and was no more
seen. Seven
miles south-west of the Second Narrows lies Elizabeth Island, so named
by
Drake. We took the passage known as Queen's Road on the Fuegian side of
the
island, and reached Punta Arenas next afternoon, Monday, October 20th.
We had
intended to be there for two or three days only, but fate willed
otherwise, and
we sat for weeks in a tearing wind among small crests of foam, gazing
at a
little checkered pattern of houses on the open hillside opposite.
It will
be remembered that the motor engine, to our great chagrin, was
practically
useless through heated bearings, and that all our endeavours at Buenos
Aires to
diagnose and remedy its ailment had been ineffectual. We had
consequently to
rely on passing through the Straits either under sail, or, as the late
Lord
Crawford had suggested to us before starting, through getting a tow
from some
passing tramp by means of a £50 cheque to the skipper, a transaction
which
would probably not appear in their log. However, in mentioning our
disappointment to the British Consul, who was one of an engineering
firm, he
and his partner hazarded the suggestion that the defect lay, not in the
engine,
where it had been sought, but in the installation; that the shaft was
probably
not "true." They bravely undertook the job of overhauling it on the
principle of "no cure, no pay," and were entirely justified by the
result. The alteration was to have been finished in ten days, but there
were
the usual delays, one of which was a strike at the "shops," when a
piece of work could only be continued by inducing one man to ply his
trade
behind closed doors while S. turned the lathe. It was six weeks before
the
anxious moment finally came for the eight hours' trial, which had been
part of
the bargain, but the motor did it triumphantly without turning a hair.
We found
what consolation for the delay was possible in the reflection that we
had at
least done all in our power to guard against such misfortune. The
engine had
been purchased from a first-class firm who had done the installation;
the work
had been supervised on our behalf by a private firm and passed by
Lloyds; nevertheless
it was peculiarly aggravating, for not only did it involve great money
loss,
but it sacrificed some of the strictly limited time of our navigator
and
geologist. We had the pleasure at this time of welcoming the said
geologist,
Mr. Lowry-Corry, who now joined the Expedition after successfully
completing
his work in India.
Punta
Arenas, with which we became so well acquainted, is a new and
unpretentious
little town, but it is the centre of the sheep-grazing districts, and
its shops
are remarkably good. Anything in reason can be purchased there, and on
the
whole at more moderate prices than elsewhere in South America. The
beautiful
part of the Straits is not yet reached, and save for some distant views
the
place is ugly, but it gives a sensation of cleanliness and fresh air,
and our
detention might have been worse. There is indeed, on occasion, too much
air,
for it was at times impossible to get from the ship to the shore or
vice versa,
and if members of the party were on land when the wind sprang up they
had to
spend the night at the little hotel; the waves were not big, but the
gales were
too strong for the men to pull against them. I was with reluctance
obliged to
give up some promising Spanish lessons, with which I had hoped to
occupy the
time, for it was impossible to be sure of keeping any appointment from
the
yacht. Punta Arenas boasts an English chaplain, and Boy Scouts are in
evidence.
The chief celebrity is an Arctic spider-crab, which multiplies in the
channels
and is delicious eating, but we never discovered anything of much local
interest.
I made
one day a vain attempt to find the graves of the officers and crew of
H.M.S. Dotterel, which was blown up off Sandy
Point some thirty years ago. The cemetery overlooked the Straits; it
was desolate
and dreary, the ground being unlevelled and the tufted grass, with
which it was
covered, unkept and unmown. Most of the graves were humble enclosures,
some of
which gave the impression of greenhouses, being covered with erections
of wood
and glass; but here and there were small mausoleums, the property of
rich
families or corporations. It is the custom with some Chileans so to
preserve
the remains that the faces continue visible; an Englishman at Santiago
told us
that after a funeral which he had attended, the mourners expressed a
desire to
"see Aunt Maria," whereupon the coffin of a formerly deceased
relative was taken down from its niche for her features to be
inspected. The
police of Punta Arenas had their home together in a large vault, which
was apparently
being prepared for a new occupant; while the veterans of '79 (the war
between
Chile and Peru) slept as they had fought, side by side. There was
apparently no
Protestant corner, for the graves of English, Germans, and Norwegians
were
intermingled with those of Chileans. The resting-places of all, rich
and poor
alike, were lovingly decorated with the metal wreaths so prevalent in
Latin
countries, but unattractive to the English eye. Whilst I wandered among
the
tombs a storm burst, which had been gathering for some time amongst
distant
mountains, and chilly flakes of snow swept down in force, with biting
wind and
hail. I sheltered in the lee of a mausoleum, on whose roof balanced a
large
figure of the angel of peace bearing the palm-branch of victory, and
the
inscription on which showed it to be the property of a wealthy family,
whose
name report specially connected with the poisoning of Indians. The
landscape
was temporarily obscured by the driving storm, not a soul was in sight,
and the
iron wreaths on hundreds of graves rattled with a weird and ghostly
sound.
Presently, however, the tempest passed and the sun shone out, while
over the
Straits, towards the Fuegian land, there came out in the sky a
wonderful arc of
light edged by the colours of the rainbow, which turned the sea at its
foot
into a translucent and sparkling green.
But if
there was not much occupation on shore, the unexpected length of our
stay
provided us unpleasantly with domestic employment. We had on arrival
parted
from our friend Freeman, his object in coming to Punta Arenas was, it
transpired, to collect the remainder of a sum due to him in connection
with the
sale of a skating-rink, which he had at one time started there and run
with
considerable success: we were proud to think that service on an English
scientific vessel would now be added to his experiences. Life below
deck was
then in the hands of Luke, the under-steward, who, as will be
remembered by
careful readers, had been the salvation of the inner man during our
first gale
in the North Atlantic . We had engaged him at Southampton on the
strength of a
character from a liner on which he had served in some subordinate
capacity, and
he. signed on for the voyage of three years at the rate of £2 10s. a
month.
Though never what registry offices would call "clean in person and
work," he plodded through somehow, and again in the Freeman episode
rescued the ship from starvation; we accordingly doubled his wages as a
testimonial of esteem. My feelings can therefore be imagined when one
morning,
after we had been some weeks at Punta Arenas, I was told that Luke was
not on
board and his cabin was cleared. He had somehow in the early morning
eluded the
anchor watch and had gone off in a strange boat. A deserter forfeits of
course
his accumulated wages, which, by a probably wise regulation, are
payable to
Government and not to the owner; but there is nothing to prevent a man
who is
leaving a vessel recouping himself by means of any little articles that
he may
judge will come in handy in his new career. The one that I grudged most
to Luke
was my cookery book, to which he had become much attached, and which
was never
seen again after his departure; it was really a mean theft, from which
I
suffered much in the future.
S.
offered, through the police, a reward for his detention, and enlarged
his
knowledge of the town by going personally through every low haunt, but
without
success. A rumour subsequently reached us that a muffled figure had
been seen
going on board one of the little steamers which plied backwards and
forwards to
the ports in Tierra del Fuego, and we heard, when it was too late, that
Luke
had been enticed to a sheep farm there, with the promise of permanent
employment at £10 a month, with £2 bonus during shearing-time, which
was then
in progress. The temptation was enormous, and I have to this day a
sneaking
kindliness for Luke, but for those who tempted him no pardon at all.
The
condition in which the successive defaulters had left their quarters is
better
pictured than described, and so stringent is the line of ship's
etiquette
between work on deck and below, that, as the simplest way and for the
honour of
the yacht, the Stewardess did the job of cleaning out cabin and pantry
herself.
The moral for shipowners is — do not dally in South American ports.
Now began
a strange hunt in the middle of nowhere for anything that could call
itself a
cook or steward. The beachcombers who applied were marvellous; one
persistent
applicant was the pianist at the local cinema; our expedition, as
already discovered,
had a certain romantic sound, which was apt to attract those who had by
no
means always counted the cost. Mail steamers pass Punta Arenas every
fortnight,
once a month in each direction, and these we now boarded with the tale
of our
woes. Both captain and purser were most kind in allowing us to ask for
a
volunteer among the stewards, but the attempt was only temporarily
successful;
the routine work of a big vessel under constant supervision proved not
the
right training for such a post as ours.
FIG. 9. — PUNTA
ARENAS.
Finally,
we were told of a British cook who had been left in hospital by a
merchant ship
passing through the Straits. The cause of his detention was a broken
arm,
obtained in fighting on board; this hardly seemed promising, but the
captain
was reported to have said that he was "sorry to lose him," and we
were only too thankful to get hold of anything with some sort of
recommendation. On the whole Bailey was a success. He too had knocked
about the
world; at one time he had made money over a coffee-and-cake stall in
Australia,
and then thrown it away. We had our differences of course; he once, for
instance, told me that as cook he took "a superior position on the
ship's
books to the stewardess," but his moments of temper soon blew over. I
shall always cherish pleasant memories of the way in which he and I
stood by
one another for weeks and months in a position of loneliness and
difficulty;
but this is anticipating.
As
departure drew near, provisioning for the next stage became a serious
business,
as, with the exception of a few depots for shipwrecked mariners, there
was no
possibility of obtaining anything after we sailed, before we reached
our
Chilean destination of Talcahuano. S.'s work was more simple, as he had
only to
fill up to the greatest extent with coal and oil, knowing that at the
worst the
channels provide plenty of wood and water.
The next
few weeks, when we traversed the remainder of the Magellan Straits and
the
Patagonian Channels, were the most fascinating part of the voyage. The
whole of
this portion of South America is a bewildering labyrinth of waterways
and
islands; fresh passages open up from every point of view, till the
voyager
longs to see what is round the corner, not in one direction, but in
all. It
has, too, much of the charm of the unknown: such charts as exist have
been made
principally by four English men-of-war at different periods, the
earliest being
that of the Beagle, in the celebrated
voyage in which Darwin took part. A large portion of the ways and
inlets are,
however, entirely unexplored. The effect of both straits and channels
is best
imagined by picturing a Switzerland into whose valleys and gorges the
sea has
been let in; above tower snow-clad peaks, while below precipices,
clothed with
beautiful verdure, go straight down to the water's edge. The simile of
a
sea-invaded Alps is indeed fairly accurate, for this is the tail of the
Andes
which has been partially submerged. The mountains do not rise above
5,000 feet,
but the full benefit of the height is obtained as they are seen from
the
sea-level. The permanent snow line is at about 1,200 feet. The depths
are very
great, being in some places as much as 4,000 feet, and the only places
where it
is possible to anchor are in certain little harbours where there is a
break in
the wall of rock. These anchorages lie anything from five miles to
twenty or
thirty miles apart, and as it was impossible to travel at night it was
essential to reach one of them before dark. If for any reason it did
not prove
feasible to accomplish the necessary distance, there was no option but
to turn
back in time to reach the last resting-place before daylight failed,
and start
again on the next suitable day. On the other hand, when things were
propitious,
we were able on occasion to reach an even further harbour than the one
which
had been planned.
The
proceeding amusingly resembled a game, played in the days of one's
youth, with
dice on a numbered board, and entitled "Willie's Walk to Grandmamma":
the player might not start till he had thrown the right number, and
even when
he had begun his journey he might, by an unlucky cast, find that he was
"stopping to play marbles" and lose a turn, or be obliged to go back
to the beginning; if, however, he were fortunate he might pass, like an
express
train, through several intermediate stopping-places, and outdistance
all
competitors. The two other sailing yachts with whose record we competed
were
the Sunbeam in 1876 and the Nyanza in
1888: the match was scarcely a
fair one, as the Sunheam had strong
steam power and soon left us out of sight, while the Nyanza,
though a much bigger vessel, had no motor, and we halved
her record.
It will
be seen that it was of first-rate importance to make the most of the
hours of
daylight, which were now at their longest, and to effect as early a
start as
possible, so that in case of accident or delay we should have plenty of
time in
hand before dark. We therefore, long before such became fashionable,
passed a
summer-time bill of a most extended character, the clock being put five
hours
forward. Breakfast was really at 3 a.m., and we were under way an hour
later,
when it was broad daylight; but as the hours were called eight and nine
everyone felt quite comfortable and as usual, it was a great success.
The difficulty
lay in retiring proportionately early. Stevenson's words continually
rose to
mind: "In summer quite the other way — I have to go to bed by day."
The greatest drawback was the loss of sunset effects; we should,
theoretically,
have had the sunrise instead, but the mornings were often grey and
misty, and
it did not clear till later in the day.
One of
the charms of the channels, is the smoothness of the water: we were
able to
carry our cutter in the davits as well as the dinghy. It also suited
the motor,
which proved of the greatest use, entirely redeeming its character,
there is no
doubt however, that to become accustomed to sailing is to be spoilt for
any
other method of progression. The photographers accomplished something,
but the
scenery scarcely lends itself to the camera and the light was seldom
good. The
water-colour scribbles with which I occupied myself serve their purpose
as a
personal diary.
We
speculated from time to time whether these parts will ultimately turn
into the
"playground of South America," when that continent becomes densely
populated after the manner of Europe, and amused ourselves by selecting
sites
for fashionable hotels: golf-courses no mortal power will ever make. On
the
whole the probability seems the other way, for the climate is against
it; it is
too near to the Antarctic to be warm even under the most favourable
conditions,
and the Andes will always intercept the rain-clouds of the Pacific. One
of the survey-ships
chronicled an average of eleven hours of rain in the twenty-four, all
through
the summer months. We ourselves were fortunate both in the time of year
and in
the weather. It resembled in our experience a cold and wet October at
home; but
there were few days, I cannot recall more than two, when we lost the
greater part
of the view through fog and rain. On the rare occasions when it was
sunny and
clear the effect was disappointing, and less impressive than when the
mountains
were seen partially veiled in mist and with driving cloud. The last
hundred
miles before the Gulf of Peñas it became markedly warmer, and the
steam-heating
was no longer necessary.
It was
far from our thoughts that exactly one year later these same channels
would
witness a game of deadly hide-and-seek in a great naval war between
Germany and
England. In them the German ship Dresden lay
hidden, after making her escape from the battle of the Falkland
Islands, while
for two and a half months English ships looked for her in vain. They
explored
in the search more than 7,000 miles of waterway, not only taking the
risks of
these uncharted passages, but expecting round every corner to come upon
the
enemy with all her guns trained on the spot where they must appear.
We left
Punta Arenas on Saturday, November 29th, 1913, spending the night in
Freshwater
Bay, and the next afternoon anchored in St. Nicholas Bay, which is on
the
mainland. Opposite to it, on the other side of the Straits, is Dawson
Island,
and separating Dawson from the next island to the westward is Magdalen
Sound,
which leads into Cockburn Channel; it was in this last that the Dresden found her first hiding-place
after escaping from Sturdee's squadron and obtaining an illicit supply
of coal
at Punta Arenas. St. Nicholas Bay forms the mouth of a considerable
river, the
banks of which are clothed with forests which come down to the sea;
near the
estuary is a little island, and on it there is a conspicuous tree. Mr.
Corry
and I went out in the boat, and found affixed to the tree a number of
boards
with the names of vessels which had visited the place. Jeffery
scrambled up and
added Mana's card to those already
there. This was our first introduction to a plan frequently encountered
later
in out-of-the-way holes and corners, and which subsequently played a
part in
the war. At the outbreak of hostilities the
Dresden was in the Atlantic, and had to creep round the Horn to
join the
squadron of Von Spee in the Pacific. She put into Orange Bay, one of
the
furthest anchorages to the south; there she found that many months
before the Bremen had left her name on a similar
board. Moved by habit someone on the cruiser wrote below it "Dresden,
September 11th, 1914";
then caution supervened, and the record was partially, but only
partially,
obliterated; there it was shortly afterwards read by the British ships Glasgow and Monmouth, and formed a
record of the proceedings of the enemy.
FIG. 10 — RIVER
SCENE, ST. NICHOLAS BAY
On
Monday, December ist, we started at daylight and made our way with
motor and
sail as far as Cape Froward, the most southerly point of the Straits;
but the
sea was running too high to proceed. We had to retrace our steps, and
cast
anchor again in St. Nicholas Bay. This time S. and I were determined to
explore
the river, so, after an early luncheon, in order to get the benefit of
the
tide, we made our way up it in the cutter. It was most pleasant rowing
between
the banks of the quiet stream, and so warm and sheltered that we might
almost
have imagined ourselves on the Cherwell, if the illusion had not been
dispelled
by the strange vegetation which overhung the banks,, amongst which were
beautiful flowering azaleas. Every here and there also a bend in the
course of
the river gave magnificent views of snow-clad peaks above. A happy
little
family of teal, father, mother, and children, disported themselves in
the
water. Later in the voyage, as the mountains grew steeper, we had many
waterfalls, but never again a river which was navigable to any
distance. Some
of the crew had been left to cut firewood, and we found on our return
that they
had achieved a splendid collection, which Mr. Ritchie and Mr. Corry had
kindly
been helping to chop. Burning wood was not popular in the galley, but
we were
anxious to save our supplies of coal.
Tuesday,
December 2nd, we again left the bay, and this time were more fortunate.
It was
misty and sunless, but as we rounded Cape Froward it stood out grandly,
with
its foot in grey seas and with driving clouds above. We had now
definitely
entered on the western half of the Straits and were amongst the spurs
of the
Andes. As the day advanced the wind freshened^ the clouds were swept
away, and
blue sky appeared, while the sea suddenly became dark blue and covered
with a
mass of foaming, tumbling waves; on each coast the white-capped
mountains came
out clear and strong. This part of the channel, which is known as
Froward
Reach, is a path of water, about five miles wide, lying between rocky
walls;
and up this track Mana beat to
windward, rushing along as if she thoroughly enjoyed it. Every few
minutes came
the call "Ready about, lee oh!” and over she went on a fresh tack,
travelling perfectly steadily, but listed over until the water bubbled
beneath
the bulwarks on the lee side. It would have been a poor heart indeed
that did
not rejoice, and every soul on board responded to the excitement and
thrill of
the motion: that experience alone was worth many hundred miles of
travel. As
evening came the wind sank, and we were glad of the prosaic motor to
see us
into our haven at Fortescue Bay.
The next
day the wind was too strong to attempt to leave the harbour, and we
went to bed
with the gale still raging, but during the night it disappeared, and
before
dawn we were under way. As light and colour gradually stole into the
dim
landscape, the grey trunks and brown foliage of trees on the near
mountainsides
gave the effect of the most lovely misty brown velvet. Rain and mist
subsequently obscured the view, but it cleared happily as we turned
into the
harbour of Angosto on the southern side of the channel. Rounding the
corner of
a narrow entrance, we found ourselves in a perfect little basin about a
quarter
of a mile across, surrounded with steep cliffs some 300 feet in height,
on one
side of which a waterfall tore down from the snows above. Our geologist
reported it as a glacier tarn, which, as the land gradually sank, had
been
invaded by the sea. We left it with regret at daylight next morning.
FIG. 11 — CAPE
FROWARD, MAGELLAN STRAITS.
Looking East.
The
Straits became now broader and the scenery was more bleak, the great
grey
masses being scarcely touched with vegetation till they reached the
water's
edge. It was decided to spend the night at Port Churruca in Desolation
Island,
rather than at Port Tamar on the mainland opposite, which is generally
frequented by vessels on entering and leaving the Straits. We passed
through
the entrance into a rocky basin, but when we were at the narrowest part
between
precipitous cliffs the motor stopped. It had been frequently pointed
out, when
we were wrestling with the engine, how perilous would be our position
if
anything went wrong with it in narrow waters. I confess that I held my
breath.
S. disappeared into the engine-room, the Navigator's eyes were glued to
the
compass, and the Sailing-master gave orders to stand by the boats in
case it
was necessary to run out a kedge anchor and attach the yacht to the
shore. It
was a distinct relief when the throb of the motor was once more heard;
the
difficulty had arisen from the lowness of the temperature, which had
interfered
with the flow of the oil. The ship, how ever, was luckily well under
control,
with the wind at the moment behind her. In an inner basin soundings
were taken,
“twenty-five fathoms no bottom, thirty fathoms no bottom," till, when
the
bowsprit seemed almost touching the sheer wall of rock, the Nassau
Anchorage
was found and down went the hook.
We grew
well acquainted with Churruca, as we were detained there for five days;
Saturday through the overhauling of the engine; Sunday, Monday, and
Tuesday by
bad weather; of Wednesday more anon. The position was not without a
certain
eeriness: we lay in this remote niche in the mountains, while the storm
raged
in the channel without and in the peaks above; at night, after turning
in, the
gale could be heard tearing down from above in each direction in turn,
and the
vessel's chain rattling over the stony bottom as she swung round to
meet it.
The heavy rain turned every cliff-face into a multitude of waterfalls,
which
vanished at times into the air as a gust of wind caught t he j et of
water and
converted it into a cloud of spray. Although the weather prevented our
venturing outside, it was quite possible to explore the port by means
of the
ship's boats. It proved not unlike Angosto, but on a larger and more
complicated scale. Beyond our inner anchorage, although invisible from
it, was
a further extension known as the Lobo Arm, and there were also other
small
creeks and inlets
Even the
prosaic Sailing Directions venture on the statement that the scenery at
Port
Churruca is "scarcely surpassed," and one of the fiords must be
described, although the attempt seems almost profane. In its narrow
portion it
was about a mile in length and from loo to 200 yards in width; the
sheer cliffs
on either hand were clothed to the height of many hundreds of feet with
various
forms of fern and most brilliant moss. Above this belt of colour was
bleak
crag, and higher again the snow-line. The gorge ended in a precipice,
above
which was a mountain-peak; a glacier descending from above had been
arrested in
its descent by the precipice and now stood above it, forming part of
it, a
sheer wall of ice and snow as if cut off by a giant knife. There was
little
life to be seen, but an occasional gleam was caught from the white
breast of a
sea-bird against the dark setting of the ravine . In one part , high up
on the
cliff, where the wind was deflected by a piece of overhanging rock, was
a
little colony of nests; the mother birds and young broods sat on the
edge in
perfect shelter, even when to venture off it was to be beaten down on
to the
surface of the water by the strength of the wind. Some of our party
visited the
fiord on a second occasion to try to obtain photographs; it was blowing
at the
time a severe gale, and the effect was magical. The squalls, known as
"williwaws," rushed down the ravine in such force that the powerful
little launch was brought to a standstill. They lashed the water into
waves,
and then turned the foaming crests into spray, till the whole surface
presented
the aspect of a fiercely boiling cauldron, through which glimpses could
be
caught from time to time of the dark cliffs above.
FIG. 12. — THE
GLACIER GORGE,
PORT CHURRUCA.
While S.
and I were visiting the glacier gorge, the two other members of the
party were
exploring the last portion of the inlet named on the chart the Lobo
Arm. It
terminated on low ground, on which stood the frame of an Indian hut,
and pieces
of timber had been laid down to form a portage for canoes. A few steps
showed
that the low ground extended only for some i6o yards, while beyond this
was another
piece of water which had the appearance of an inland lake, some three
miles
long and a mile wide. The portage end of the water was vaguely shown on
the
chart of Port Churruca, but there was no indication of anything of the
kind on
the general map of Desolation Island. Our curiosity was mildly excited,
and we
all visited the place; one of our number remarked that "the water was
slightly salt," another that there "were tidal indications," a
third that "from higher ground the valley seemed to go on
indefinitely."
At last the map was again and more seriously examined, and it was seen
that,
while there were no signs of this water, there were on the opposite
side of the
island the commencements of two inlets from the open sea, neither of
which had
been followed up: the more northerly of these was immediately opposite
Port
Churruca. “If," we all agreed, “our lake is not a lake at all, but a
fiord" — and to this every appearance pointed — "it is in all
probability the termination of this northern inlet, and Desolation
Island is
cut in two except for the small isthmus with the portage." Then a great
ardour of exploration seized us, Mr. Corry fell a victim to it, Mr.
Gillam fell
likewise, and we refused to be depressed by Mr. Ritchie's dictum that
it had
"nothing to do with serious navigation." We wrestled with a
conscientious conviction that it had certainly nothing to do with
Easter
Island, and we ought to go forward at the earliest possible moment, but
the
exploration fever conquered. We discussed the possibility of getting
the motor-launch
over the portage, and were obliged reluctantly to abandon it as too
heavy, but
it was concluded that it would be quite feasible with the cutter.
The next
day proved too wet to attempt anything, but Wednesday dawned reasonably
fine,
though with squalls at intervals. Great were the preparations, from
compasses,
notebooks, and log-lines, to tinned beef and dry boots. At last at
11.30 (or
6.30 a.m. by true time) we sallied forth. The launch towed us down the
Lobo
Arm, and then came the work of passing the boat across the isthmus, at
which
all hands assisted. It was the prettiest sight imaginable; the portage,
which
had been cut through the thick forest undergrowth, had the appearance
of a long
and brilliant tunnel between the two waters, it was carpeted with
bright moss
and overhung by trees which were covered with lichen (fig. 14). The
bottom was
soft and boggy, and I at one time became so firmly embedded that I
could not
get out without assistance. In less than half an hour the boat was
launched on
the other side, and Mr. Corry, Mr. Gillam, our two selves, and two
seamen set
forth on our voyage. Soon after starting the creek divided, part going
to the
north-west and part to the south-east. We decided to follow the latter
as apparently
the main channel.
We rowed
for an hour and a quarter, taking our rate of speed by the log. The
mountains
on each side were of granite, showing very distinct traces of ice
action. At 2
p.m. we landed on the left bank for luncheon. It was, it must be
admitted, a
somewhat wet performance; the soaked wood proved too much even for our
expert
campers-out, who had been confident that they could make a fire under
all
circumstances, and had disdainfully declined a proffered thermos.
Enthusiasm
was, however, undamped. Mr. Corry ascended to high ground and
discovered that
there was another similar creek on the other side of the strip of
ground on
which we had landed, which converged towards that along which we were
travelling. After rowing for an hour and a half we reached the point
where the
two creeks joined; here we landed and scrambled up through some
brushwood to
the top of a low eminence. Looking backwards we could see up both
pieces of
water, while looking forward the two fiords, now one, passed at right
angles,
after some four miles, into a larger piece of water. This was where we
had
expected to find the open sea, and some distant blue mountains on the
far
horizon were somewhat of an enigma. As we had to row back against a
head wind,
it was useless to think of going further, unless we were prepared to
camp out,
so all we could do was to make as exact sketches as possible to work
out at
home.
The
return journey was easier than had been expected, for the wind dropped;
we kept
this time to the right bank, and stopped for "tea" by some rocks,
which added mussels to the repast for the taking. The portage was
gained four
hours after the time that the rest of the crew had been told to meet us
there;
and it was a relief to find that they had possessed their souls with
patience. Mana was finally reached at 11 p.m. It
was found by calculating the speed at which we had travelled and its
direction,
that our creek had led into the more southerly of the unsurveyed
inlets, and
not as we had expected into that to the northward. The distant blue
hills were
islands. Like all great explorers, from Christopher Columbus downwards,
our
results were therefore not precisely those we had looked for, but we
had
undoubtedly proved our contention that Desolation Island is in two
halves, united
only by the 160 yards covered by the portage on the Lobo Isthmus.
FIG. 13. — MANA
INLET
A
knowledge of the existence of this channel, connecting the Pacific
Ocean with
the Magellan Straits, might be of high importance to the crew of a
vessel lost
to the south of Cape Pillar, when making for the entrance to the
Straits.
Instead of trying to round that Cape against wind at sea, her boats
should run
to the southward until the entrance to the inlet is reached; they can
then
enter the Magellan Straits without difficulty at Port Churruca. With
the
consent of the Royal Geographical Society, it has been christened "Mana Inlet." 1
The next
morning, December 1st, we left Churruca with a fair wind, so that the
engine
was only needed at the beginning and end of the day; but the weather
was
drizzling and unpleasant, so that we could see little of Cape Pillar,2
where
the Magellan Straits enter the Pacific Ocean. Our own course was up the
waterways between the western coast of Patagonia and the islands which
lie off
the coast. It is a route that is little taken, owing to the dangers of
navigation. Not only is much of it uncharted and unsurveyed, but it is
also
unlighted, and its passage is excluded by the ordinary insurance terms
of
merchant ships; they consequently pass out at once into the open sea at
Cape
Pillar. We turned north at Smyth's Channel, the first of these
waterways, and
made such good progress that, instead of anchoring as we had intended
at
Burgoyne's Bay, we were able to reach Otter Bay. It is situated amid a
mass of
islands, and the sad vision of a ship with her back broken emphasised
the need
for caution. The general character of the Patagonian Channels is of the
same
nature as the Magellan Straits, but particularly beautiful views of the
Andes
are obtained to the eastward. The next day Mount Burney was an
impressive
spectacle, although only glimpses of the top could be obtained through
fleeting
mists; and the glistening heights of the Sarmiento Cordillera came out
clear
and strong. We anchored that night at Occasion Cove on Piazzi Island;
and on
Saturday, December 13th, had a twelve hours' run, using the engine all
the way.
Here there was a succession of comparatively monotonous hills and
mountains, so
absolutely rounded by ice action as to give the impression of apple
dumplings
made for giants. The lines show always, as would be expected, that the
ice-flow
has been from the south. Later a ravine on Esperanza Island was
particularly
remarkable; its mysterious windings, which it would have been a joy to
explore,
were alternately hidden by driving cloud or radiant with gleams of sun.
Glimpses up Peel Inlet gave pleasant views, and two snowy peaks on
Hanover
Island, unnamed as usual, were absorbing our attention when we turned
into
Latitude Cove.
On December
14th the landscape was absolutely grey and colourless, so that Guia
Narrows
were not seen to advantage. Later the channel was wider and the
possibility of
sailing debated, but abandoned in view of the head wind. We had been
struck
with the absence of life and fewness of birds, but we now saw some
albatrosses.
In slacking away the anchor preparatory to
letting go in Tom Bay, in a depth stated to be seventeen fathoms, it
hit an
uncharted rock at eleven fathoms. It was still raining as we left Tom
Bay, but
when we turned up Brassey Pass, which lies off the regular channel, the
clouds
began to lift, and Hastings Fiord and Charrua Bay were grand beyond
description. From time to time the mists rose for an instant, and
revealed the
immediate presence of reach beyond reach of wooded precipices; or a
dark summit
appeared without warning, towering overhead at so great a height that,
severed
by cloud from its base, it seemed scarcely to belong to the earth. Then
as
suddenly the whole panorama was cut off, and we were alone once more
with a
grey sea and sky.
FIG. 14 — CANOE
CORDUROY PORTAGE BETWEEN PORT
CHURRUCA AND MANA INLET.
FIG. 15. —
PATAGONIAN WATERWAYS.
Showing water near the land smoothed by growing kelp.
As we
approached Charrua, we caught sight among the trees on a neighbouring
island of
something which was both white and nebulous; it might, of course, be
only an
isolated wreath of mist, but after watching it for a while we came to
the
conclusion that it was undoubtedly a cloud of smoke. Our hopes of
seeing
Indians, which had grown faint, began to revive. As soon as we were
anchored,
orders were given that immediately after dinner the launch should be
ready for
us to inspect what we hoped might prove a camping-ground. This turned
out to be
unnecessary, as the neighbours made the first call. In an hour's time
S. came
to inform me that two canoes were approaching full of natives "just
like
the picture-books," whereon the anthropologists felt inclined to adapt
the
words of the immortal Snark-hunters and exclaim:
"We
have sailed many weeks, we have sailed many days,
Seven days to the week I allow,
But
an Indian on whom we might lovingly gaze
We have never beheld until now."
The crew,
however, were fully convinced that the hour had arrived when they would
have to
defend themselves against ferocious savages. They had been carefully
primed in
every detail by disciples of Ananias at Buenos Aires, and by the
bloodcurdling
accounts of a certain mariner named Slocum, who claimed to have sailed
the
Straits single-handed and to have protected himself from native
onslaught by
means of tin-tacks sprinkled on the deck of his ship. The canoes were
about 23
feet in length, with beam of 4 to 6 feet and a depth of 2 feet. Six
Indians
were in one and seven in the other; all were young with the exception
of one
older man, and each boat contained a mother and baby. Their skins were
a dark
olive, which was relieved in the case of the women and children by a
beautiful
tinge of pink in the cheeks, and they had very good teeth. Their hair
was long
and straight, and a fillet was habitually worn round the brow; the top
was cut à la brosse, giving the impression of a
monk's tonsure which had been allowed to grow. The height of the men
was about
5 feet 4 inches. Most of the party were clad in old European garments,
but a
few wore capes of skins, and some seemed still more at home in a state
of
nature. They had brought nothing for sale, but begged for biscuits and
old
clothes. I parted with a wrench from a useful piece of calico, in the
interests
of one of the infants, which was still in its primitive condition; it
was
accepted, but with a howl of derision, which I humbly felt was well
merited
when it was seen that the rival baby was already wrapped in an old
waistcoat
given by the cook. One of the Indians talked a little Spanish, and was
understood to say he was a Christian.
After
dealing with them for a while we offered to tow them home, an offer
readily
understood, and accepted without hesitation. It was a strange
procession amid
weird surroundings; the sun had shown signs of coming out, but had
thought
better of it and retreated, and we made our way over a grey sea,
between
half-obscure cliffs in drizzling rain, taking keen note of our route
for fear
of losing our way back. Truly we seemed to have reached the uttermost
ends of
the earth. The lead was taken by that recent product of civilisation a
motor-launch, containing our two selves and our Glasgow socialist
engineer; then at the end of a rope came the
dinghy, to be used for landing, the broad back of one of our Devonshire
seamen
making a marked object as he stood up in it to superintend the towing
of the
craft behind. The two canoes followed, full of these most primitive
specimens
of humanity, while the rear was brought up by a seal, which swam after
us for a
mile or so, putting up its head at intervals to gaze curiously at the
scene. S.
had brought his gun, and as we approached the camp thought it well to
shoot a
sea-bird, for the double reason of showing that he was armed and giving
a
present to our new friends. The encampment was situated in a little
cove, and
nothing could have been more picturesque. In front was a shingly beach,
on
which the two canoes were presently drawn up, flanked by low rocks
covered with
bright seaweed. In the background was a mass of trees, shrubs, and
creepers,
which almost concealed two wigwams, from one of which had issued the
smoke
which attracted our notice (fig. 16).
We
returned next morning to photograph and study the scene. The size of
the
shelters, or tents, was about 12 feet by 9 feet, with a height of some
5 feet.
They were formed by a framework of rods set up in oval form, the tops
of which
were brought together and interwoven, and strengthened by rods laid
horizontally and tied in place: the opening was at the side and towards
the
sea. Over this structure seals' skins were thrown, which kept in place
by their
own weight, as the encampments are always made in sheltered positions
in dense
forests. With the exception that they do not possess a ridge-pole, the
tents,
which are always the same in size and make, closely resemble those of
English
gipsies, the skins taking the place of the blankets used by those
people. No
attempt was made to level the floor, the fire was in the middle, and in
one the
sole occupant was a naked sprawling baby, who occupied the place of
honour on
the floor beside it. In some of the old encampments, which we saw
subsequently
, there were as many as six huts, but it was doubtful if they had all
been occupied
at the same time. The middens are outside and generally near the door.
Some of
the Indians were quite friendly, but others were not very cordial, the
old
women in particular making it clear to the men of the party that their
presence
was not welcome. The old man, whose picture appears (fig. 17), was
apparently
the patriarch of the party, and quite amiable, though he firmly
declined to
part with his symbol of authority in the shape of his club; in order to
keep
him quiet while his photograph was taken he was fed on biscuits, which
he was
taught to catch after the manner of a pet dog. The staff of life is
mussels and
limpets, and we saw in addition small quantities of berries. A lump of
seal fat
weighing perhaps 10 lb. was being gnawed like an apple, and a portion
was
offered to our party. The dogs are smooth-haired black-and-tan
terriers, like
small heavy lurchers; they are, it is said, taught to assist their
masters in
the catching of fish.3
The
company presently showed signs of unusual activity, and began to shift
camp;
the movement was not connected, as far as we could tell, with our
presence,
and, judging by the odour of the place, the time for it had certainly
arrived.
It was interesting to see their chattels brought down one by one to the
canoes.
Amongst them were receptacles resembling large pillboxes, about 12
inches
across, made of birchwood, which was split thin and sewn with tendons.
In these
were kept running nooses made of whalebone for capturing wild geese,
and also harpoon-lines
cut out of sealskin: at one extremity of these last was a barbed head
made of
bone; this head, when in use, fits into the extremity of a long wooden
shaft,
to which it is then attached by the leather thong. The possessions
included an
adze-like tool for making canoes, the use of which was demonstrated,
and
resembled that of a plane; also an awl about 2 inches long, in form
like a
dumb-bell, with a protruding spike at one end. There were small pots
made of
birch bark for baling the boats, and some European axes. We did not see
any
form of cooking utensil. When all the objects, including the sealskin
coverings
of the huts, had been stowed in the canoes, the company all embarked
and rowed
off towards the open sea.
On
leaving Charrua and returning to the main channel we obtained
magnificent views
of the Andes. Penguin Inlet leading inland opened up a marvellous
panorama of
snowy peaks, which can be visible only on a clear day such as we were
fortunate
in possessing; this range received at least one vote, in the final
comparing of
notes, as to the most beautiful thing seen between Punta Arenas and the
Gulf of
Pefias. A white line across the water showed where the ice terminated,
while
small pieces which reached the main channel, looked, as they floated
past us,
like stray water-lilies on the surface of the sea. We anchored at Ring
Dove
Inlet, and went on next day through Chasm Reach, where the channel is
only from
five hundred to a thousand yards in width. Our expectations, which had
been
greatly raised, were on the whole disappointed, but here again no doubt
it was
a question of lighting; the usually gloomy gorge was illuminated with
the full
radiance of the summer sun, leaving nothing to the imagination.
Chasm
Reach leads into Indian Reach, in which sea, mountain, and sky formed a
perfect
harmony in varying shades of blue, with touches of white from high
snow-clad
peaks. Suddenly, in the middle of this vista, as if made to fit into
the scene,
appeared a dark Indian canoe with its living freight, evidently making
for the
vessel. We stopped the engine, threw them a line, and towed them to our
anchorage in Eden Harbour. The weather had suddenly become much warmer,
and the
thermometer in the saloon had now risen to the comfortable but scarcely
excessive height of 64°; the crew of the canoe, however, were so
overcome with
the heat that they spent the time pouring what must have been very
chilly
sea-water over their naked bodies.4
FIG. 16. —
ENCAMPMENT OF THE PATAGONIAN
INDIANS, BRASSEY PASS.
FIG. 17. — INDIANS
OF BRASSEY PASS.
FIG. 18. — CANOE IN
INDIAN REACH.
The party
was conducted by two young men; a very old woman without a stitch of
clothing
crouched in the bow; while in the middle of the boat, in the midst of
ashes, mussel-shells,
and other debris, a charming girl mother sat in graceful attitude. She
was,
perhaps, seventeen, and wore an old coat draped round her waist, while
her
baby, of some eighteen months, in the attire of nature, occupied itself
from
time to time in trying to stand on its ten toes. A younger girl of
about
fourteen sat demurely in the stern with her folded arms resting on a
paddle
which lay athwart the canoe, beneath which two shapely little brown
legs were
just visible. Her rich colouring, and the faded green drapery which she
wore,
made against the dark background of the canoe a perfect study for an
artist,
but the moment an attempt was made to photograph her she hid her face
in her
hands. The party was completed by a couple of dogs and a family of fat
tan
puppies, who were held up from time to time, but whether for our
admiration or
purchase was not evident.
The
belongings were similar to those seen at the encampment and there were
also
baskets on board. The young mother had a necklace which looked like a
charm,
and therefore particularly excited our desires: in response to our
gestures she
handed to us a similar one worn by the baby, which was duly paid for in
matches. When we were still unsatisfied she beckoned to the young girl
to sell
hers, but stuck steadfastly to her own, till finally a mixed bribe of
matches
and biscuits proved too much, and the cherished ornament passed into
our
keeping. The young men readily came on deck of the yacht, but the women
were
obviously frightened, and kept saying mala,
mala in spite of our efforts to reassure them. After we had cast
anchor,
the party went with our crew to show them the best spot in which to
shoot the
net, and on their return ran up the square sail of their canoe, the
halyard
passing over a mast like a small clothes-prop with a Y-shaped
extremity, got
out their paddles, and vanished downstream.
At Eden
Harbour a wreck was lying in mid-stream, where she had evidently struck
on an
uncharted rock when trying to enter the bay, a danger from which no
possible
foresight can guard those who go down to the sea in ships. English
Narrows,
which was next reached, is considered the most difficult piece of
navigation in
the channels: a small island lies in the middle of the fairway, leaving
only a
narrow passage on either side, down which, under certain conditions,
the tide
runs at a terrific rate. It was exciting, as the yacht approached her
course
between the island and opposing cliff which are separated by only some
360
yards, to hear Mr. Ritchie ask Mr. Gillam to take the helm himself, and
the
latter give the order to "stand by the anchor" in case of mishap; but
we had hit it off correctly at slack water and got through without
difficulty.
From there our route passed through Messier Channel, which has all the
appearance of a broad processional avenue, out of which we presently
turned to
the right and found ourselves in Connor Cove. The harbour terminates in
a
precipitous gorge, down which a little river makes its way into the
inlet. We
endeavoured to row up it, but could not get further than 100 or 200
yards; even
that distance was achieved with difficulty, owing to the number of
fallen trees
which lay picturesquely across the stream.
The plant
life, which had always been most beautiful, became even more glorious
with the
rather milder climate, which we had now reached. When the trees were
stunted it
was from lack of soil, not from atmospheric conditions. Tree-ferns
abounded,
and flowering plants wandered up moss-grown stems; among the most
beautiful of
these blooms were one with a red bell and another one which almost
resembled a
snowdrop.5 The impression of the luxuriant mêlé
was rather that of a tropical forest than of an almost
Antarctic world, while the intrusion of rocks and falling water added
peculiar
charm. Butterflies were seen occasionally, and sometimes humming-birds.
Since our
detention at Churruca we had been favoured with unvarying good fortune,
and the
crew were beginning to say that thirteen, which we had counted on board
since
Mr. Corry joined us, was proving our lucky number. Now, however, our
fate
changed; twice did we set forth from this harbour only to be obliged to
return
and start afresh, till we began to feel that getting under way from
Connor Cove
was rapidly becoming a habit. On the first occasion the weather became
so thick
that in the opinion of our Navigator it was not safe to proceed: the
second
time the wind was against us. We tried both engine and sails, but
though we
could make a certain amount of headway under either it was obviously
impossible, at the rate of progression, to reach the next haven before
nightfall; when, therefore, we were already half-way to our goal we
once more
found it necessary to turn round. It was peculiarly tantalising to
reflect that
there were, in all probability, numerous little creeks on the way in
which we
could have sheltered for the night, but as none of them had been
surveyed there
was no alternative but to go back to our previous anchorage. Residence
there
had the redeeming point that it proved an excellent fishing-ground. On
each of
the three nights the trammel was shot at a short distance from the spot
where
the stream entered the bay, and we obtained in all some 200 mullet.
They formed
an acceptable change of diet, and those not immediately needed were
salted.
From that time till we left the channels we were never without fresh
fish,
catching, in addition to mullet, bream, gurnet, and a kind of whiting;
they
formed part of the menu at every meal, till the more ribald persons
suggested
that they themselves would shortly begin to swim.
Our third
effort to leave Connor Cove was crowned with greater success, and we
safely
reached Island Harbour, which, as its name suggests, is sheltered by
outlying
islands. This bay and the neighbouring anchorage of Hale Cove are the
last two
havens in the channels before the Gulf of Pefias is reached, and in
either of
them a vessel can lie with comfort and await suitable weather for
putting out
to sea. It is essential for a sailing vessel to obtain a fair wind, for
not
only has she to clear the gulf, but must, for the sake of safety, put
200 miles
between herself and the land; otherwise, should a westerly gale arise,
she
might be driven back on to the inhospitable Patagonian coast. In Island
Harbour
we filled our tanks, adorned the ship for'ard with drying clothes and
fish, and
for three days waited in readiness to set forth. At the end of that
time it was
still impossible to leave the channels, but we decided to move on the
short
distance to Hale Cove, which we reached on December 24th. Christmas Eve
was
spent by three of our party, Mr. Ritchie, Mr. Corry, and Mr. Gillam, on
a small
rock "taking stars" till 2 a.m. The rock, which had been selected at
low tide, grew by degrees unexpectedly small, and to keep carefully
balanced on
a diminishing platform out of reach of the rising water, while at the
same time
being continuously bitten by insects, was, they ruefully felt, to make
scientific observations under difficulties. On Christmas Day it poured
without
intermission, but it was a peaceful if not an exciting day. It is, I
believe,
the correct thing to give the menu on these occasions: the following
was ours.
Schooner
Yacht MANA, R.C.C.
Christmas
Day, 1913.
Potages
aux légumes à I'Anglais.
Mulets
d'eaux Patagonia.
Bœuf rôti
d'Argentine. Pommes de terre de Punta Arenas.
Petits
Pois à I'Angleterre.
Pouding
Noël de Army & Navy Stores, garni "Holly Antarctic."
Fromage
Gouda, Beurre, Pain de Mana, Biscuits Matelote.
Bonbons
Peppermint à la School-girl.
Café de
Rio de Janeiro.
The
forecastle was visited after dinner and each man given a half-pound tin
of
tobacco. Boxing Day was comparatively fine, and a laundry was organised
on
shore with great success; a fire was made, old kerosene tins turned
into
boilers, and the articles washed in camp-baths with water from a
streamlet. It is
one thing, however, to wet clothes in the Patagonian Channels; it is
quite
another to dry them. For days afterwards the rain descended in
torrents, while
the wind blew persistently from the north-west; with one short
intermission we
lay in Hale Cove weather-bound for thirteen days, till, as some one
remarked, “it
was a pity that we had not given it as a postal address." It was
tiresome
of course, but an interval of rest for all on board after the strenuous
passage
of the channels was not without advantage; for ourselves journals were
written
up, flowers pressed, and photographs developed.
Hale Cove
was fortunately one of those few ports in which it was possible to get
a little
exercise, which the denseness of the undergrowth generally rendered
impossible.
The cliffs, at the foot of which Mana
lay, were precipitous and clothed with vegetation to the sky-line, they
thus
scarcely lent themselves to exploration. There was, however, across the
small
bay a southern spur, on the top of which for some reason trees had not
flourished and which was comparatively clear; this it was possible to
reach by
landing on a little beach and scrambling along an old track which had
been cut
through an intermediate belt of wood. We could in this way get some
sort of a
walk, at the cost of course of becoming soaked through from bogs and
dripping
vegetation.
Not far
from the cove there were traces of a small frame house, and near it
flourished
European wheat and grass, which had obviously taken root from stray
seed. Its
history was difficult to guess. Why had a white man lived there, and on
what
had he subsisted? The only solution suggested was that it might at one
time
have been a port of call for a line of steamers, and a woodman had been
employed to cut fuel. Another dwelling, but made of material found on
the spot,
had obviously been destroyed by fire, and on its abandoned site native
wigwams
had been erected. The place was evidently the resort of Indians; when,
therefore, we noted near the old track, and not far from the
water-course, part
of two rough boards protruding from the earth, we hoped that we had
chanced on
an Indian burial-ground, which would naturally have been of much
anthropological interest. The soil which had originally covered the
boards had
been partially washed away by the rain, and on moving them we found, as
had
been guessed, that just below were human bones; they were so deeply
encrusted
with roots and earth that it was only by much digging with our fingers
we could
get them out at all. Then they proved to be in much confusion, two
parts of the
skull even were in different places, and it was difficult at first to
say
whether the body, which was that of a man in middle life, had been
buried full
length or in the folded attitude so common among primitive peoples. It
was my
first experience in scientific body-snatching, a proceeding to which
later I
became fairly well inured, and it felt not a little weird being thus in
contact
with the dead in his lonely resting-place. A great tree-fern kept guard
over
the grave on one side, a gnarled trunk bent over it from the other, and
the sun
gleamed at intervals through the thick branches of surrounding cedars.
At last
it became obvious that the body had been outstretched, and the grave
lined as
well as covered with boards, in addition to which there had been a
wrapping of
some woven material; it seemed therefore evident that the corpse had
been that
of a civilised man. Who was he? the lumberman, the remains of whose hut
we had
seen? one of the crew of some vessel which had put in here? or possibly
a
ship-wrecked mariner? for there were traces of an ill-fated vessel in a
quantity of coal washed up on the beach. Why, though he had been buried
with
considerable care, was the grave so shallow, and why had it been left
unmarked?
We buried him again reverently, and though he was very possibly an
unpleasant
person when alive, the thoughts of one of us at least, who is naturally
mid-Victorian,
turned to the mother who had once borne and tended him somewhere and
who could
so little have pictured where he would lie.
"One
midst the forest of the west
By a dark stream is laid;
The
Indian knows his place of rest,
Far in the cedar shade."
Mrs.
Hemans.
We
discussed marking the spot, but came to the conclusion that the best
way to
prevent its again being disturbed was to obliterate all traces of it;
so there
the nameless man rests on in his hidden grave.
The wind
still being contrary, charts and sailing directions were ransacked for
change
of scene, and on New Year's Eve we shifted our quarters, proceeding up
Kriiger
Channel, and anchoring in a little cove called after De Wet: as Joubert
was
also in the neighbourhood, officials of the Chilean Government who had
surveyed
the district had apparently been of pro-Boer sympathies. On January
1st, 1914,
we went out into the Gulf of Peñas, only to find that it was useless to
attempt
to put to sea, and we returned again to Hale Cove. The Challenger
had, we found, anchored in the same spot on New Year's
Day, 1876. During the next few days Mr. Ritchie, with the help of Mr.
Corry,
occupied himself at my husband's request in surveying a small cove as a
possible anchorage for lesser craft.
A
shooting expedition also took place after kelp-geese, which are large
birds
about the size of Aylesbury ducks. When cruising in the launch we saw
at some
distance a couple of them swimming in the sea; we circled round them in
the
endeavour to get a shot, till we were about a hundred yards distant,
when they
took the alarm and made off. They are unable to fly, but when, as in
this case,
they anticipate danger scuttle along on the top of the water, lashing
it up
with their webbed feet. The surface was smooth as a mirror, and the
boat went
about seven miles an hour, but for some two miles we were unable to
overhaul
them. Presently they dived and separated, and on their reappearance we
continued to follow one of them. During the whole of the pursuit,
whenever the
wobbling of the boat and the antics of the bird permitted the fore and
back
sights to be brought in line, a .275 mauser bullet was sent somewhere
in the
neighbourhood of the fleeing object. The goose apparently came to the
conclusion that the white launch, with its spluttering motor, was a
peculiarly
formidable sea-beast, and the safest place would be on land; he
therefore went
on shore, climbed up some rocks, and looked at it; a bullet between his
feet,
however, unsettled his mind on the subject, and he once more took to
the water,
where he finally met his doom. Light, who happened to be with us,
witnessed the
chase with intense delight, and constantly referred to it afterwards as
the
most exciting recollection of the voyage. As was not astonishing in the
case of
such an athletic bird, no part of him proved to be eatable except his
liver,
which was excellent.6
FIG. 19 — HALF COVE.
On
Tuesday, January 6th, we at last got our favourable wind and said
good-bye to
Hale Cove. It is the usual resort for vessels entering and leaving the
channels, but we had lain there for nearly a fortnight in the height of
the
season without seeing a trace of a ship, a fact which shows how little
these
waterways are frequented. As we passed out of the Gulf of Peñas we
gazed with
interest on the unfriendly and barren peaks of Wager Island, where
Anson's
store-ship of that name was lost on May 14th, 1740, after the squadron
had
rounded the Horn. The members of the crew who survived the wreck, one
hundred
and forty-five in number, were there for five months, at the end of
which time
they had been reduced by about one-third, chiefly through starvation.
Seventy
or eighty of the remainder then took to the longboat and cutter, of
whom thirty
finally reached the coast of Brazil via the Magellan Straits. The rest
of the
survivors, a party of twenty, including the captain and an officer
named Byron,
a great-uncle of the poet, made their way northward, and through the
aid of
Indians four of them managed to reach the Spanish settlements in Chile.
The
graphic account given by Byron of their surroundings on the island
would be
equally applicable to-day, and has already been quoted in these pages.
1 We were
subsequently interested to learn from a private diary kept on board The Challenger that they had also taken
their boat over into this water; they had, however, neither explored it
nor
marked it on the map.
2 Cape
Pillar is the name which has been given to Magellan's "Cape Deseado"
since the days of Sir John Narborough; it has two peaks, of which the
western
one is like a pillar. The point which on the chart is named Deseado
lies two
miles to the south-west and could not possibly have been seen by
Magellan: see Early Spanish Voyages and the Straits of
Magellan, edited by Sir C. Markham, Hakluyt Series II. vol. xxviii.
3
"The Indians had taught their dogs to drive the fish into a corner of
some
pond or lake, from whence they were easily taken out by the skill and
address
of these savages." — Narrative of
Hon. J. Byron, ed. 1768, p. 56.
4 "We
were well clothed, and though sitting close to the fire were far from
too warm;
yet these naked savages (Fuegians), though further off, were observed,
to our
great surprise, to be streaming with perspiration." — Voyage
of H.M.S. "Beagle" (Darwin), ed. 1870, p. 220.
5 Philesia
buxifolia and Luzuriaga erecta.
6
"Among the birds we generally shot was a bird much larger than a goose,
which we called the Racehorse, from the velocity with which it moved
upon the
surface of the water in a sort of half-flying, half-running motion." — The Narrative of the Hon. John Byron, ed.
1768, p. 50.
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