Lacertus Indicus, Senembi & Inguana dictus: The Guana.
This kind of Lizard somewhat resembles the Crocodile or Alligator
in shape, but has a shorter Head, and a serrated Crest on the Ridge
of the Back, extending from behind its Head to the middle of the
Tail. They are of various Sizes, from two to five Feet in Length,
their Mouths are furnished with exceeding small Teeth, but their
jaws are armed with a bony Beak, with which they bite with great
Strength: They inhabit warm Countries only, and are rarely to be
met with any where North, or South, of the Tropicks. Many
of the Bahama Islands abound with them, they nestle in hollow
Rocks and Trees; their Eggs have not an hard Shell, like the Eggs
of Alligators, but a Skin only, like those of Turtle, and are estem'd
good Food; they lay a great Number of them at a Time in the Earth,
which are there hatched by the Sun's Heat. These Guana's
are a great Part of the Subsistance of the Inhabitants of the Bahama
Islands, for which Purpose they visit many of the remote Kays
and Islands in their Sloops to catch them, which they do by Dogs
trained up for that Purpose, which are so dexterous as not often
to kill them, which if they do, they serve only for present spending;
if otherwise they sew up their Mouths to prevent their biting, and
put them into the Hold of their Sloop till they have catched a sufficient
Number, which they either carry alive for Sale to Carolina,
or salt and barrel up for the Use of their Families at Home. These
Guana's feed wholly on Vegetables and Fruit, particularly
on a Kind of Fungus, growing at the Roots of Trees, and of
this and others of the Anana Kind. Their Flesh is easy of
Digestion, delicate, and well tasted; they are sometimes roasted,
but the more common Way is to boil them, taking out the Leaves of
Fat, which they melt and clarify; this they put into a Calabash
or Dish, into which they dip the Flesh of the Guano as they eat
it: It is remarkable that this Fat which adheres to the Inside of
the Abdomen, imbibes the Colour of the Fruit they last eat, which
I have frequently seen tinged with pale red, yellow, and sometimes
of a purple Colour, which last was from eating the Prunus Maritima,
which Fruit at the same Time I took out of them. Tho' they are not
amphibious, they are said to keep under Water above an Hour: When
they swim they use not their Feet, but clap them close to their
Body, and guide themselves with their Tails: They swallow all they
eat whole. They cannot run fast, their Holes being a greater Security
to them than their Heels. They are so impatient of Cold, that they
rarely appear out of their Holes, but when the Sun shines.
Anona maxima, foliis latis fructu maximo luteo conoide, cortice
glabro.
This Shrub or small Tree grows to the Height of about sixteen Feet,
with a small Trunc, and smooth greenish Bark, the Leaves thick,
stiff, and shaped like those of a Limon, the Flowers I did not see.
The Fruit is in Size and Form of the Figure, covered with a smooth
yellowish green Skin. The Pulp or Flesh of the Fruit of the Consistence
of a ripe Pear, containing many conic brown Seeds: This is an eatable
Fruit, very sweet, but somewhat insipid, yet it is the Food of Guana's
and many other wild Creatures.
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