. Natal province : descriptive guide and official hand-book . *g&*3£-* v / -*• v. ■&! & v *i? Umhlatuzan River [Photo by Trapptsts RIVERS.—Owing to the configuration of Natal, it is unhappily the case that but tworivers in the country are navigable at all, and those only for a few miles from the coast. Thevery circumstance which bestows on the Province its variety of climates—that is. its steppesor terraces—cuts off this cheap and easy means of transport and pleasure. Of first-class streams there are three—the Tugela, the Umkomaas. and the Tugela, which is in the north of the Pro


. Natal province : descriptive guide and official hand-book . *g&*3£-* v / -*• v. ■&! & v *i? Umhlatuzan River [Photo by Trapptsts RIVERS.—Owing to the configuration of Natal, it is unhappily the case that but tworivers in the country are navigable at all, and those only for a few miles from the coast. Thevery circumstance which bestows on the Province its variety of climates—that is. its steppesor terraces—cuts off this cheap and easy means of transport and pleasure. Of first-class streams there are three—the Tugela, the Umkomaas. and the Tugela, which is in the north of the Province, is the longest and most beautiful. Takingits source in the Drakensberg, as already stated, it leaps with one bound over a cliff 554 feet sheer, into the Province. At sixty miles from the sea the Tugela is joined by the BuffaloRiver. The chief tributaries of the Tugela are the Klip, Sundays, and Buffalo Rivers fromthe north, and the Mnwe, Umlambonga, Little Tugela, Blaauw Krantz, Bushmans, Mooi, andInadi Rivers from the


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