PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE.
The open water has made still further inroads upon
the ice. The islands are all now in the open sea, and
it is but a few rods from the ship to its margin. The
ice still clings tightly to the schooner, notwithstanding
all our efforts to free her. In anticipation of a
southerly swell setting into the harbor and breaking
the ice, I have had the men at work for several days
sawing a crack across the harbor from the vessel's fore-*foot
in the one direction, and from the stern-post in
the other. The ice is now only 4-1/2 feet thick.
The sails are all bent on, the hawsers are brought on board, our depot ashore is completed, and we are ready for any fortune. If blown with the ice out to sea, we are fully prepared.
Upon the hill-top of the north side of the harbor we have constructed a cairn, and under it I have deposited a brief record of the voyage. The Observatory I leave standing, and Kalutunah engages that the Esquimaux will not disturb it during my absence. All of them who have been here are so amply enriched that I think I ought to rely upon their good faith; yet the wood will be valuable to them, and these poor savages are not the only people who find it hard to resist temptation.
July 9th.
I have paid another visit to Chester Valley, and have had adieu to "Brother John." If the latter continues to grow until I come again, the stakes which I have stuck into its back will show some useful results. The valley was clothed in the full robes of summer. The green slopes were sparkling with flowers, and the ice had wholly disappeared from Alida Lake. Jensen shot some birds and tried hard to catch a deer, and while thus engaged I secured a yellow-