قراءة كتاب Ranching, Sport and Travel

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
Ranching, Sport and Travel

Ranching, Sport and Travel

تقييمك:
0
No votes yet
المؤلف:
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@20382@[email protected]#Page_270" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">270

Yucatan—Honduras—Costa Rica—Panama—Equador—Peru—Chile—Argentina—Brazil—Teneriffe.   XIV. Fifth Tour Abroad 287 California—Honolulu—Japan—China—Singapore—Burmah—India—Ceylon—The End.   Appendix 317

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

One of the "Boys" (see page 125) Frontispiece
Plucking Tea Leaf 20
Nagas 37
Roping a Grizzly 70
A Shooting Scrape 76
One of our Men, to show hang of Six-Shooter 78
1883 in Arizona, Author and Party 80
Wound Up, Horse tangled in Rope 106
Watering a Herd 116
Herd on Trail, showing Lead Steer 137
Changing Horses 153
A Real Bad One 164
Breaking the Prairie 230
First Crop—Milo Maize 230
Llamas as Pack Animals 279
Drifting Sand Dune, One of Thousands 279
Peruvian Ruins. Note Dimensions of Stones and Locking System 281
Palace of Maharana of Udaipur 310




RANCHING, SPORT AND TRAVEL


CHAPTER I

TEA PLANTING

In Cachar—Apprenticeship—Tea Planting described—Polo—In Sylhet—Pilgrims at Sacred Pool—Wild Game—Amusements—Rainfall—Return to Cachar—Scottpore—Snakes—A Haunted Tree—Hill Tribes—Selecting a Location—Return to England.

Having no inclination for the seclusion and drudgery of office work, determined to lead a country life of some kind or other, and even then having a longing desire to roam the world and see foreign countries, I had arranged to accompany a friend to the Comoro Islands, north of Madagascar; but changing my mind and accepting the better advice of friends, my start was made, not to the Comoro Islands, but to India and the tea district of Cachar. Accordingly the age of twenty-two and the year 1876 saw me on board a steamer bound for Calcutta.

Steamers were slow sailers in those days, and it was a long trip via Gibraltar, Suez, Malta, the Canal and Point de Galle; but it was all very interesting to me.

Near Point de Galle we witnessed from the steamer a remarkable sight, a desperate fight, it seemed to be a fight and not play, between a sea-serpent, which seemed to be about fifteen feet long, and a huge ray. The battle was fought on the surface of the water and even out of it, as the ray several times threw himself into the air. How it ended we could not see. Anyway we had seen the sea-serpent, though not the fabulous monster so often written about, and yet whose existence cannot be disproved. The sea-serpent's tail is flattened.

At Calcutta I visited a tea firm, who sent me up to Cachar to

Pages