The Hawaiian archipelago Author:Isabella Lucy Bird Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: LETTER VIII. Windward Hawaii—"Gulches"—The Mexican Saddle—Onomea—A Sugar Plantation—Sugar Making—The Ruling Interest. Onomea, Hawaii. Judge Austin's. ... more » RS. A. has been ill for some time, and Mrs. S., her sister, and another friend "plotted" in a very " clandestine " manner that I should come here for a few days in order to give her " a little change of society," but I am quite sure that under this they only veil a kind wish that I should see something of plantation life. There is a plan, too, that I should take a five days' trip to a remarkable valley called Waipio, but this is only a " castle in the air." Mr. A. sent in for me a capital little lean rat of a horse which by dint of spirit and activity managed to keep within sight of two large horses, ridden by Mr. Thompson, and a very handsome young lady riding " cavalier fashion," who convoyed me out. Borrowed saddle-bags, and a couple of shingles for carrying ferns formed my WINDWARD HAWAII. 97 outfit, and were carried behind my saddle. It is a magnificent ride here. The track crosses the deep, still, Wai- luku River on a wooden bridge, and then, after winding up a steep hill, among native houses fantastically situated, hangs on the verge of the lofty precipices which descend perpendicularly to the sea, dips into tremendous gulches, loses itself in the bright fern-fringed torrents which have cleft their way down from the mountains, and at last emerges on the delicious height on which this house is built. This coast looked beautiful from the deck of the Kilauea, but I am now convinced that I have never seen anything so perfectly lovely as it is when one is actually among its details. Onomea is six hundred feet high, and every yard of the ascent from Hilo brings one into a fresher and purer air. One looks u...« less