AUGUST
The Plains of Ulur Camp, or Mannasat, the native name for the locality,
was to be one of the most pleasant and interesting "homes" I had ever had in
New Guinea. We remained here until August 31. Mist nets, museum specials,
Victor rat traps, 4 Hav-a-Heart live traps, steel traps of two sizes, snares,
and ground pits were soon in action. We were again fortunate to have several
hunters with their dogs to assist us from time to time. We also set up a
bowl-shaped reflector lined with aluminum paper on a tripod, and put a
Coleman kerosene pressure lamp in the center of the reflector. This threw
up a beam of light that attracted moths which in turn attracted bats. As
they flickered through the narrow cone we attempted to shoot them on the
wing. MacGowan, who had been a champion rifleman in Port Moresby, became
our most successful wing-shot at this camp.
There is a mystery about the name Ulur. One of the high peaks on the
Cromwell Ridge is plainly marked Mt. Ulur. But the natives from Indagen who
own the Ridge, and our carriers from Avenggu had never heard of the name
"Ulur". They had their own names for the several peaks: from east to west,
Samiang, Kwarakambuk, and Upusenga (the highest). On August 11 MacGowan and
Tobram set up a climbing camp at the southern edge of the Cromwell Ridge,
and early on August 12 they climbed Kwarakambuk and then Samiang (Mt. Ulur?).
The altimeter on top of the latter read 9,370 feet (2,857 m.). The summit
of the ridge was almost a razor-edge in places, and they were forced to cut
trail through the dense "mossy forest". From the peak they could see out
through the moss-covered branches, and looked across the Kunai plain to our
camp five miles to the south. On August 19 Grierson, Tobram, Edewawa (one
of Hoogland's "flower-flower boys"), and I climbed Kwarakambuk and "Mt. Ulur"
(altimeter 9,400 feet). On the way to the Ridge we flushed two beautiful