George Bass had married Elizabeth Waterhouse at…
November 1802 CE
She is the sister of Henry Waterhouse, Bass's former shipmate and captain of the Reliance.
In January 1801 Bass had set sail again for Port Jackson, leaving Elizabeth behind, and though the couple write to each other, they will not meet again, as Bass will never return from this journey.
Bass and a syndicate of friends had invested some ten thousand pounds in the copper-sheathed brig the Venus, and a cargo of general goods to transport and sell in Port Jackson.
Bass is the owner-manager and set sail in early 1801. (Among his influential friends and key business associates in the Antipodes is the principal surgeon of the satellite British colony on Norfolk Island, Thomas Jamison, who will subsequently be appointed Surgeon-General of New South Wales.)
On passing through Bass Strait on his 1801 voyage he had recorded it simply as Bass Strait, like any other geographical feature.
On arrival Bass finds the colony awash with goods and he was unable to sell his cargo.
Governor King is operating on a strict program of economy and will not take the goods into the government store, even at a fifty percent discount.
What King does though is contract with Bass to ship salt pork from Tahiti.
Food is scarce in Sydney at this time prices were being driven up, yet pigs were plentiful in the Society Islands and King can contract with Bass at sixpence a pound where he'd been paying a shilling (twelve pence) previously.
The arrangement suits King's thrift, and is profitable for Bass.
With his partner Charles Bishop, Bass sails from Sydney in the Venus for Dusky Sound in New Zealand, where they spend fourteen days stripping iron from the wreck of Captain Brampton's old ship the Endeavour.
This is made into axes which are used to trade for the pork in Tahiti before returning with the latter to Sydney by November 1802.