WAR!—VIOLATION OF BRITISH TERRITORY AT NAKOB—THE END pp. 324-334

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

[THE AUTHOR AT NAKOB, READY FOR A LONG TRIP]Frontispiece
FACING PAGE
[“BABYING” FOR DIAMONDS]8
[SEALERS AT OLIFANTS ROCKS]20
[TAKING THE HORSES ACROSS OLIFANTS RIVER]20
[PROSPECTING PARTY NEARING THE MOUNTAIN OF RICHTERSFELDT, NAMAQUALAND]26
[DRIFTWOOD ON THE DESOLATE BEACH NEAR CAPE VOLTAS]26
[THE TERRIBLE DESOLATION OF BARREN, RIVEN ROCK BELOW THE GREAT FALLS]36
[T’SAMMA IN THE DUNES]52
[IN THE HEART OF THE SOUTHERN KALAHARI]52
[A FLOWER OF THE DESERT, SOUTHERN KALAHARI]68
[THE CAMEL POST AT ZWARTMODDER, GORDONIA]68
[A BEAUTIFUL GORGE OF THE ORANGE RIVER (NEAR “AUSENKEHR”)]84
[GRANITE RANGE BEHIND KUBOOS, RICHTERSFELDT]94
[ENTRANCE TO A BAD PASS, RICHTERSFELDT]94
[FEEDING THE HUNGRY AT THE STEINKOPF NATIVE MISSION STATION, LITTLE NAMAQUALAND]100
[HARD PULLING IN THE HALGHAT RIVER KLEIN, NAMAQUALAND]100
[“KOKER-BOOMEN” (ALOE DICHOTOMA), RICHTERSFELDT MOUNTAINS]112
[A MOUNTAIN OF LACMATITI NEAR ZENDLING’S DRIFT, RICHTERSFELDT]112
[THE DEEP GORGE, 500 FEET OR MORE IN DEPTH, IN WHICH THE ORANGE RIVER IS PENNED BELOW THE GREAT FALLS]132
[LAUNCH OF THE “OUTRIGGER”]168
[“OUTRIGGER” ON WHICH WE CROSSED TO THE GERMAN POST AT ZENDLING’S DRIFT]168
[HOTTENTOT REFUGEES FROM THE GERMANS AT MOUTH OF THE MOLOPO, ORANGE RIVER]192
[INTERNATIONAL BEACON IN THE BAK RIVER, BORDER OF GERMAN SOUTH-WEST]192
[THE MAIN FALL, GREAT FALLS OF THE ORANGE]202
[DUMPED WITH MY BELONGINGS IN THE DESERT WHILST THE OXEN WERE DRIVEN ON TO SAVE THEM FROM DYING OF THIRST]218
[PACKING THE CART FOR THE JOURNEY]218
[“OLD GERT”]230
[“CANDELABRA EUPHORBIA”]230
[ON THE GREAT SALT PAN, IN THE CENTRE OF THE SOUTHERN KALAHARI DESERT]242
[ON THE GREAT SALT PAN, SOUTHERN KALAHARI]254
[BUSHMAN AT BOOMPLAATS, SOUTHERN KALAHARI]282
[TEACHING CAMELS TO EAT T’SAMMA]282
[THE HUGE NESTS OF THE “SOCIAL BIRDS”]288
[WASHING FOR DIAMONDS AT THE BASE OF THE ESCARPMENT AT NAKOB]300
[A BREAKDOWN ON THE ROAD FROM PRIESKA]300
[AN INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY BEACON BETWEEN GERMAN (LATE) SOUTH-WEST AFRICA TERRITORY AND BRITISH (GORDONIA)]316
[GRANITE MONOLITH AT “LANGKLEP”]328
[WATER-PITS IN THE DRY MOLOPO AT NAKOB]328

THE GLAMOUR OF
PROSPECTING

CHAPTER I

SOME WILD-GOOSE CHASES—DISCOVERY OF DIAMONDS IN GERMAN SOUTH-WEST AFRICA—BRIEF HISTORY OF THE NEW MANDATORY, LUDERITZBUCHT.

What gave me “diamond fever” I don’t pretend to say. Certainly I have no love for the cut and finished article, and nothing would induce me to wear it; but for the rough stone, and for the rough life entailed in searching for it, I have always had a passion. Yet the luck attending many of my ventures has been but bad, or at the best, indifferent. The first tiny glittering crystal that I found at the bottom of my wooden “batea” in Brazil, many years ago, had cost me weeks of hard work and every penny I possessed; and the months of hard digging and perilous prospecting that followed that first “find,” and that led me through the diamond-fields of Diamantina and Minhas Geraes, left me none the richer except in experience. But the memory of those long-ago hardships is a faint thing compared with the glamour that still clings to that time; and even here in South Africa, the home of the diamond, not all the vicissitudes of years spent on the Vaal River Diggings, or of prospecting in far wilder spots, have taken away the fascination that, to me, lies in this most precarious of all professions. Still, the fruitless searches have been many, and I have often been called upon to make long and arduous trips where the quest of precious stones has proved nothing but a wild-goose chase.

A stray diamond, very possibly dropped by an ostrich, and maybe the only one for a hundred square miles, has often led to a rush to where it was found, whilst, frequently, circumstantial tales of the finding of “precious” stones have been founded on the picking up of a beautiful but worthless quartz crystal.

At no period of late years were rumours as to the finding of diamonds more rife in South Africa than in 1907, when the sands of Luderitzbucht, in adjacent German territory, were found to be full of them, and when luck led me many hundreds of miles in another direction, and spoilt my chance of being one of the first in those new and wonderful fields.

Ever since the discovery of the first South African diamond in the Hopetown District in 1867, a belief has been prevalent among the thousands of diamond seekers scattered along the Vaal River Diggings that rich fields of a similar nature must exist far lower downstream. Yet, although the theory is logical enough, and many expeditions have from time to time searched the banks far beyond the confluence of Vaal and Orange, and a few have even reached the little-known lower reaches of the latter and located both promising gravel and even stray diamonds, nothing of a payable nature has so far been discovered in that direction.