[A Naturalist’s Voyage Round the World by Charles Darwin]@TWC D-Link book
A Naturalist’s Voyage Round the World

CHAPTER VI
11/44

The wind was very strong and cold, but I never slept more comfortably.
SEPTEMBER 10, 1833.
In the morning, having fairly scudded before the gale, we arrived by the middle of the day at the Sauce posta.

On the road we saw great numbers of deer, and near the mountain a guanaco.

The plain, which abuts against the Sierra, is traversed by some curious gulleys, of which one was about twenty feet wide, and at least thirty deep; we were obliged in consequence to make a considerable circuit before we could find a pass.

We stayed the night at the posta, the conversation, as was generally the case, being about the Indians.

The Sierra Ventana was formerly a great place of resort; and three or four years ago there was much fighting there.


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