With the onset of summer the following…
July 1699 CE
With the onset of summer the following year the stifling atmosphere, along with other causes, leads to a large number of deaths in the Darien colony.
Eventually, the mortality rate rises to ten settlers a day.
Although local Indians bring gifts of fruit and plantains, these are appropriated by the leaders and sailors, who largely remain onboard ship.
The only luck the settlers have is in hunting for giant turtle, but increasingly fewer men are sufficiently fit for such strenuous work.
The situation is exacerbated by the lack of food, mainly due to a high rate of spoilage caused by improper stowing.
At the same time, King William, unwilling to incur the wrath of the Spanish Empire, has instructed the Dutch and English colonies in America not to supply the Scots' settlement.
The only reward the council has to give is alcohol, and drunkenness becomes common, even though it speeds the deaths of many men weakened by dysentery, fever and the rotting, worm-infested food.
After eight months, the colony is abandoned in July 1699, apart from six men who are too weak to move.