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Page:The Boy Travellers in Australasia.djvu/55

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FROM HONOLULU TO HILO.
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fresh water, "while the bay was salt, and a salt-water fish does not usually show a willingness to swim up a fresh-water stream except in the spawning season.

The run to Hilo was made in about forty hours, the steamer making several stops on the way. It rained "cats and dogs" when the party landed, but as all the baggage had been wrapped in water-proof coverings, nothing was damaged. Arrangements were speedily made for departure on the following morning without regard to the weather; horses and guides were engaged, the best animals being selected for the saddles and others for packing purposes, and a substantial lunch was made

HILO.

ready for the mid-day meal. Doctor Bronson insisted that the horses should all be freshly shod before starting, and an extra supply of shoes and nails carried along. The road goes over the lava-beds for nearly the whole distance, and if a horse loses a shoe he will go lame in a very few minutes, so rough and cutting is the lava.

Fortunately the morning was fine, and the bay of Hilo presented a pretty appearance. Groves of palm and other tropical trees lined the shore, the surf broke in regular pulsations upon the curving stretch of beach, and was made animate by dozens of men and boys at play in the waves. For the first time our friends saw some of the sport in the