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put them in the csge for him. Mojaras are bottom feeders and should have 
gone to the bottom, but they remained at the top of the pen, several feet 
from the angler. In the course of an hour or so they had deconded a foot 
or so, but still were much out of his range. By one o'clock the situation 
remained unchanged and wo wore too hungry to wait any longer. So we climbed 
up the line to the boat and had lunch. There were five mojara minnows, 
all halo and hearty and perverse. TiVhen we came down again after lunch they 
wore only four. And the angler was no longer angling. The minnows prac- 
tically flapped their tails in his face, and ho paid not the slightest 
attention. So. 
A big fuzzy cloud in the west sapped the strength out of our sunlight 
early in the afternoon. Obviously the angler would eat nothing more. We 
careiully removed the minnows — keep his cupboard bare until tomorrow. 
The cleaner shrimp had been inactive ail morning. And in the afternoon 
there wasn't enough light to make his picture. Wo folded for the day, 
having shot less than a hundred feet of film. 
July 22. 
Put in some more mojaras for the angler this morning, and ho appeared 
ready to follow them about for a good close angling job, creeping cautiously 
and ponderously after them on his pectoral— feet. But the minnows wore 
uninterested in his bait and remained about a half-inch too far away for 
his lunge to catch them, and they lived. By early afternoon the clouds 
