pon after lunch, having; added to its population several white grunts and a 
French angel. Found it necessary to remove the big Nassau because he 
constantly was bothering the other fish, not allowing them to be near the 
cleaner for seme reason. 
After that things settled down, and several of the grunts came to the 
cleaner with their mouths open, and the shrimp went inside. The fish seemed 
to bo interested only in their mouths, and the cleaner worked on no other 
part of them. The French angel had the side of her cheek cleaned, but very 
discreetly, on the side away from the camera. She is still immature 
still carries her white stripes — although she is more than six inches 
long, and must retain some of her earlier cleaning habits, for twice I 
have seen her move up to the small Nassau grouper and peck at something on 
his side. This grouper about ten inches -- spent his time near an over- 
hanging rook. It wasn *t until ho had been there for some time that I 
realized he was being cleaned by two boxers. Sometimes they moved about 
over his scales, but usually they reached out and worked at him while 
clinging to the rook. Never did they work on any part of the fish exposed 
to direct sunlight. 
July 21, 
Spent the morning with the angler, he appeared to be hungry, and would 
shake his bait at anything in sight. The boys caught some mojara.s and we 
