Unable at first for fear to attempt the beast's mouth, the clever boy offers a sturdy stick, which the animal is all too willing to swallow: the little hero places the stick upright in the crocodile's dilated jaws and, in the resulting reprieve, reaches down his throat and fetches the lute; this done, the boy taunts his foe with a few carefree plucks of the strings.
He then dances across some pond rocks, ending up on the shell-back of an unamused turtle, who carries the boy to land and curtly drops him off.
The boy then skips over some more rocks to meet his sweetheart, who sits in a small boat; he fools around with his ukulele and drops it into the water.
The dancing palm tree from the first musical number in the cartoon appears to be recycled from the Bosko short "Congo Jazz."
When underwater, the boy hides from a big fish used in the cartoon "Bosko at the Zoo," released a couple of weeks before this one.