Willow Vale Bowen
March 6th 1882
The Baron von Mueller.
Dear Sir
When I received your telegram
I suspected that the specimens I sent you must have got damaged and was afraid I
might be too late as the season for cones was nearly over, and our wet season had
fairly set in it was raining heavily when I got your telegram on Wednesday and rained
all thursday & Friday on Saturday it cleared a little and on Sunday morning I resolved
to act on a suggestion you once threw out with regard to Mount Elliott viz — To make
a dash for it — so I started on Sunday morning and camped among the Cycas late that
night the distance being about 50 miles = In the morning to my dismay I found that
since my last trip the Black's had been there gathering their usual Harvest of the
Cycas fruit and had burned the Country for miles and that the Cycas leaves were all
hanging down dead & brown many having fallen off altogether and this made matching
the cones far more difficult as it was mostly by the leaves I was guided; and only
the cones on the tallest trees had escaped scorching and to get some of these without
breaking them was difficult and there was hardly a nut to be found as the Blacks do
their harvesting most effectually — — — I rode miles trying to find a patch that had
escaped the fire but in vain — it had been burned before the rain, and had not been
burned the year before so it swept every thing before it — I got however 4 cones 2
of Normanbyana and one each of the two other species and I believe I have matched
them correctly, I have dried them and sprinkled them with Kerosene and carefully sowed
them up in mosquito net and put nothing in the box with them except a few well dried
wood shavings which do not readily heat or decay and I think this time they will reach
you safely I send some young rachis with the ovules and some full grown fruit on the
rachis by which you will see, that where the ovules do not all swell into fruit their
place and number are clearly shown, on the rachis thus Normanbyana will sometimes
have only one full grown and one abortive nut, but I do not think it ever shows 3
or 4, and media may have only 2, 3 or 4 nuts but it will always show the places of
at least 6 and sometimes 7 or 8 = of no 2 which you have kindly named after me
I send good rachis with fruit ripe and rachis with the ovules only formed off two
different trees — and you can see no trace of more than 4 fruit on each = it is not
until you get well up among the mountains that the two species which bushmen designate
"Curly" from the peculiar appearance which the curved frond gives them is found no
2 appearing even more so than no 1 from the second upward curve of the frond In this one the frond is not near so long in proportion to size of stem — as either
of the others and the stem of several that I noticed lately appear to be more massive
at the butt and thicker at the Top than either of the others, But this may be accidental,
The stems that I have shipped away to Goldie & others might have a few no 1 amongst
them but not likely no 2 — They would mostly be good specimens of media (no 3) as
for the sake of carriage I got them as low down the ranges as possible and then it
was 40 miles and very difficult to get at with teams
The Normanby ranges commence about 40 miles from Bowen in a southerly direction; on
the highest portion of them 60 miles from Bowen the Normanby diggings are situated
a reefing field of considerable extent which has been abandoned owing to the hardness
of the sinking and most of the reefs though rich were narrow — and though some of
them gave 2 oz & more to the ton miners said it did not pay and it is now deserted;
these ranges are about 30 miles long by about 10 to 15 wide E & W — and the whole
of this space is covered with Cycas in countless thousands I may even say millions
the stems of them were used for building Humpies & for slabbing shallow shafts on
the Diggings being more plentiful than any timber
The ranges are all Grey Granite except just on the diggings where they strike a hard
blue Rock at 30 to 40 feet though the surface even there shows Granite Boulders —
I know of no Zamia nearer here than the neighbourhood of Peak Downs which I believe
is their most northern boundary they extend from there south into New South Wales
in Isolated patches — being most plentiful I believe near Springsure I never saw but
one species (Spiralis) with fruit of an irregular oblong square — I have frequently
had the fruit sent me from Springsure;
I mention this because when camped at a station about 60 miles west from Bowen one
of the young gentlemen showed me what I took to be a Zamia nut made into a match box;
he said it was a Cycas and came from somewhere near the Barcoo (SW) it was oval shaped
like a Cycas nut but more than twice the size being about 2 inches long by about 1¼
in wide with the texture of Zamia seed rather than Cycas — and beatifully
polished He declined to part with it —
With regard to
or M. Hopeii or Katakidozamia I know nothing except what I saw on the Daintree and
it appeared to be identical with M Denisonia that I had seen just previously in the
Botanic Garden Sydney — and this must have been Mr Hills
as there was no other large Cycad either on the Daintree or Mossman or any of the
Rivers in Trinity Bay and I saw a good deal of the Country much more than any other
Collector I found these macrozamias or whatever they are from the size of ones fist
up to 12 or 14 feet high and a foot thick I found one with a cone of fruit but as
it was only half grown I did not take it — I brought away a lot of young ones — I
enclose sample of leaf of small plant — — I would like to have about £50 to spend
on collecting between Cardwell and Cooktown I could do more now for £50 than any one
could have done 4 or 5 years ago for three times that amount as there is now more
or less of settlement on all the Rivers and I would know exactly how to get about
and where to go — and any thing that I could not get at the time of my visit I would
point out to some resident to get for me at the proper time — But though I would like
such a trip I could not make it pay — and it is hard to get about new country without
money —
Our resident photographer is at present in England perfecting himself in the business
but will be back in May — when it will be possible to get Cycas views on reasonable
terms —
yours faithfully
Eugene Fitzalan