Page:Narrative of a survey of the intertropical and western coasts of Australia, Volume 2.djvu/348

 SLm ONS.  d  ui k wh, from   9e.    , mo !- may  ext. N. A, a in e ms  May  Ja blo*s with at n.  the as but ey en  ashroe e   a a-bze, for e nih  ly Aer e mon oF Jne the inds  e stward  Ca der a ve tgar, d '11y blow  �e souwd or south-west; they  hoer more coust  e Mt of Bucr's AJ!, here e sea- b bw uply fwm e N.W. ng t ld. At int5, dudn the east monsn, e nd blo stw  S.E., but only r a 8ho time, rhaps oy t a few houu. Ships may cep ong t st d New Holia W e etw during  eurly sn, when they could not make y progress in  mid s, tt much dela by cms. Towns e No-Mt Ca, nei e monsoon n  South t ade  much eeud,  nd behg nlly from the S.W. or N.W. dng e stn bf e Westerly mons, that in  mon of Deeemir and Jana, the wind re,far beeen W.N.W. and W.S.W., and, in the igh- urhood of the North-west  somegmes blo but even in ese twplcd re,ohs, when e weaer is very b, t ch is predicted by e bmer, whi& 0er- se is sccely aected. In Febm, hr e coast of NewHolld, the mohn is less const, nd the wind ohen blows oK e land, so at a ship couJd me her wesng, when, iF more t5 the nowd, it would  imssle r her to in y

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