/ 
3 6 Animals of St ]^go. Its Road. 
1 699- Mules, Deer, Goats, Hogs, and black- 
fac’d long-tail’d Monkeys. Of Fowls they 
have Cocks and Hens , Ducks, Gumea- 
Hens, both tame and wild, Parakites, 
Parrots, Pidgeons, Turtle-Doves, Herons, 
Hawks, Crab-catchers, Galdens, (a larger 
^ fort of Crab-catchers)Curlew’s, &c. Their 
Fifh is the fame as at Majo and the reft 
of thefe Iflands, and for the moft part thefe 
Iflands have the fame Beafts and Birds alfo : 
But fome of the Ifles have Pafturage and 
Employment for fome particular Beafts 
more than other •, and the Birds are in- 
courag’d, by Woods for fhelter, and Maiz 
and Fruits for Food, to flock rather to ' 
fome of the Iflands (as to this of St. Jagoj 
than to others. 
St. Jago Road is one of the worft that I 
have been in. There is not clean Ground 
enough for above ^ Ships ; and thofe alfo 
muft lie very near each other. One even of 
thefe muft lie clofe to the Shore, with a 
Eand-faft there : And that is the beft for a 
final! Ship. I fliould not have come in 
here if I had -not been told that it was a 
good fecure Place ; but I found it fo much ^ 
otherways, that I was in pain to be gone. 
Captain Barefoot , who came to an An- 
chor while I was here , in foul Ground, 
loft ouickly 2 Anchors ; and I had loft a 
fmall 
