vavaava VINVS THE UNIVERSITY o Of CALIFORNIA n c Yr -J fc TE J jo Aavaan am o OF CALIFORNIA o THE UNIVERSITY o o THE LIBRARY OF o & NTA BARBARA THE UNIVERSITY Of CALIFORNIA o o VUV9HV9 ViNVS e o THE LIBRARY OF o VINSOillVD JO THE LIBRARY OF Of CALIFORNIA o AilS3AINn 3Hi JO AgVitail 3HJ o THE LIBRARY OF o THE UNIVERSITY t> OF CALIFORNIA o VINSOJOVD jo JO A8V88I1 3H1 THE UNIVERSITY o THE LIBRARY OF SANTA BARBARA OF CALIFORNIA aygava VINVS THE LIBRARY OF o o THE UNIVERSITY o O Of CALIFORNIA o I vavsava VINVS SANTA BARBARA UISAINn 3H1 e THE UNIVERSITY o SANTA BARBARA *> e THE LIBRARY Of VINXOJIVO iO o vavaava vmvs I 1 1 - o c * i 1 I s I I V8V9HV9 VINVS o THE LIBRARY OF o o THE UNIVERSITY o o VINSOJI1V3 JO SANTA BARBARA VHV9W9 VINVS nvD jo o Aiisa3AiNn 3Hi OF CALIFORNIA o THE UNIVERSITY o iO ASWS8I1 3H1 SANTA BARBARA o THE UNIVERSITY o o vavaava viNVS SANTA BARBARA jo Asvaen BHI UIS83AINn 3H1 *o THE UNIVERSITY o o THE LIBRARY OF a vavawa VINVS o S NTA BARBARA , VINVS o THE LIBRARY OF o O THE UNIVERSITY O S BIRD NEIGHBORS GOLDFINCH. K Life-size. NEIGHBORS NEW YORK UBLEDAT, PAGE &> CO. Copyright, 1904, by Doubieday, Page & Company Copyright, 1897, by Doubieday & McClure Company Colored plates copyrighted, 1897, by The Nature Study Publishing Company Chicago, 111. Xortoooti 33tcs3 : Berwick & Smith Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A. BIRD NEIGHBORS. AN INTRODUCTORY ACQUAINTANCE WITH ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY BIRDS COMMONLY FOUND IN THE GARDENS, MEADOWS, AND WOODS ABOUT OUR HOMES BY NELTJE BLANCHAN WITH INTRODUCTION BY JOHN BURROUGHS WITH MANY PHOTOGRAPHIC ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOR AND IN BLACK AND WHITE NEW YORK DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. 1904 Copyright, 1904, by Doubleday, Page & Company Copyright, 1897, by Doubleday & McClure Company Colored plates copyrighted, 1897, by The Nature Study Publishing Company Chicago, 111. XortoooB $rt : Berwick & Smith Co., Norwood, Mass., U.S.A. TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE INTRODUCTORY REMARKS TO "THE NATURE LIBRARY" . vii INTRODUCTION BY JOHN BURROUGHS xvii PREFACE xix LIST OF COLORED PLATES xxi LIST OF HALF-TONE PLATES xxiii I. BIRD FAMILIES: Their Characteristics and the Representatives of Each Family included in " Bird Neighbors " . . i II. HABITATS OF BIRDS 17 III. SEASONS OF BIRDS 25 IV. BIRDS GROUPED ACCORDING TO SIZE .... 33 V. DESCRIPTIONS OF BIRDS GROUPED ACCORDING TO COLOR : Birds Conspicuously Black ..... 39 Birds Conspicuously Black and White . . . 51 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Birds ... 65 Blue and Bluish Birds 97 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds . . . . .113 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds 167 Birds Conspicuously Yellow and Orange . . 187 Birds Conspicuously Red of any Shade . . .213 INDEX 229 THE NATURE LIBRARY AND WHAT IT MEANS TO THE READER BY JOHN BURROUGHS THE NATURE LIBRARY By JOHN BURROUGHS I DO NOT propose in these introductory remarks to this Nature Library to discuss the merits or the character of the sepa- rate volumes further than to say that they are all by competent hands and, so far as I can judge, entirely reliable. While accu- rate and scientific, I have found them very readable. The treat- ment is popular without being sensational. This library is free from the scientific dry rot on the one hand and from the florid and misleading romanticism of much recent nature writing on the other. It is a safe guide to the world of animal and plant life that lies about us. And that is all the wise reader wants. He should want to explore this world for himself. Indeed, nature-study, as it appeals to us in books, fails of its chief end if it does not send us to nature itself. What we want is not the mere facts about the flowers or the animals we want through them to add to the resources of our lives; and I know of nothing better calculated to do this than the study of nature at first hand. To add to the resources of one's life think how much that means! To add to those things that make us more at home in the world; that help guard us against ennui and stagnation; that invest the country with new interest and enticement; that make every walk in the fields or woods an excursion into a land of unexhausted treasures; that make the returning seasons fill us with expectation and delight; that make every rod of ground like the page of a book in which new and strange things may be read; in short, those things that help keep us fresh and sane and young, and make us immune to the strife and fever of the world. The main thing is to feel an interest in Nature an interest that leads to a loving unconscious study of her. Not entirely a scientific interest, but a human interest as well; science upon the one hand and an appreciation of the mystery, the beauty, and the bounty of life upon the other. The child feels a human inter- ix The Nature Library est in nature: when the schoolgirls come to school with their hands full of wild flowers, or the boys make excursions to the woods in May for wintergreens, or black birch, or crinkle root, they are all moved by an interest that is old and deep-seated in the race. Now, if to this interest and curiosity we can add a little science, just enough to guide them, we lift these feelings to another plane and give them a longer lease of life. The boy will not be so likely to rob birds' nests after the savage in him has been humanized by a touch of real knowledge and he has come to look upon the bird as something worthy of naming and studying and that ,has its place in the economy of the fields and woods. A touch of real knowledge how humanizing and elevating it is! Simply to learn that all the plants have been studied and named, even the humblest ; that they all have vital relations with one another family ties; that the great biological laws are operative in them also; that the deep, mysterious principle of variation, which is at the bottom of Darwin's theory of the origin of the species, is working in the lowliest plant we tread upon; to know that the chain of cause and effect runs through the whole organic world, binding together its remotest parts; that every- where is plan, development, evolution to know these and kin- dred things a few of the fundamentals of science is a joy to the spirit and a light to the mind. Science in the world is like the surveyor and the engineer in a new country; it opens up highways for the mind; it bridges the chasms and marshes; it gives us dominion over the wild; it brings order out of chaos. What a maze, what a tangle the world is till we come to look upon it with the clews and solu- tions in mind which science affords! The heavens seem a haphazard spatter of stars, the earth a wild jumble of plants, and animals, and blind forces all struggling with one another con- fusion, contradiction, failure everywhere. And so it was to the early men, and so it still is to those who have not the light of science, but so it need not remain to the child born into the world to-day. The great mysteries of life and death, of final causes and ultimate ends, still remain and will continue, but nature now, compared with the nature of a few centuries ago, is like a land subdued and peopled and cultivated compared with a pathless wilderness. The Nature Library And yet I would not in this connection, when considering the field of natural history, lay too much stress upon the scientific aspects of the question. To the real nature-lover the bird in the bush is worth much more than the bird in the hand, because the nature-lover is not after a specimen: he is after a living fact; he is after a new joy in life. It is an important part, but by no means the main part of what ornithology holds for us, to be able to name every bird on sight or call. To love the bird, to appreciate its place in the landscape and in the season, to relate it to your daily life, to divine its character, to know it emotionally in your heart that is much more. To know the birds as the sportsman knows his game; to experience the same thrill, purged of all thoughts of slaughter; to make their songs music in your life this is indeed something to be desired. The same with botany. I regard its class-room uses as very slight. The educational value of the technical part is almost nil. But the humanizing value of a love of the flowers, the hygienic value of a walk in their haunts, the aesthetic value of the observation of their forms and tints these are all vital. The scientific value which attaches to your knowledge of the names of their parts or of their families what is that ? Their habits are interesting; their means of fertilization are interesting; the part insects play in their lives the honey-yielders, the pollen-yielders, their means of scattering their seeds, and so forth all are interest- ing. To know their habitats and seasons; to have associations with them when you go fishing; to land your trout in a bed of bee-palm or jewel- weed; to pluck the linnaea in the moss on the Adirondack mountain you are climbing; to gather pond-lilies from a boat with your friend ; to pluck the arbutus on the first balmy day of April; to see the scarlet lobelia lighting up a dark nook by the stream as you row by in August; to walk or drive past vast acres of purple loosestrife, looking like a lake or sea of color this is botany with something back of it, and the only place to learn it is where it grows. The botany that trails the days and the season and the woods and the fields with it that is the kind that has educational value in it. I confess I have not much sympathy with the laboratory study of nature, except for economic purposes. Nature under the dissecting knife and the microscope yields important secrets The Nature Library to the students of biology, but the unprofessional students want but little of all this. I know a young woman who took a post- graduate course in biology at a noted summer school, and the one thing she learned was that certain bacilli were found only in the aqueous humor of the eyes of white mice. The world is full of curious facts like that, that have no human interest or educational value whatever. If one could number all the trees of the forest and all the leaves upon the trees, what would it profit him? To know the different kinds of trees when you see them, and the func- tion of the leaves upon them that were more worth while. I have read studies of leaves that were just as profitless as to know their numbers. I have heard discourses upon the changes, in the plumage of certain water-fowl from youth to age, and from one moult to another, that were as profitless and weari- some as studying the variations of the leaves or their numbers. I hardly know why I am impatient when people come to me with their hands full of different leaves and ask me what tree is this from, and this, and this ? If your business is not with trees, if you live in the city and care mainly for city things, why bother about the trees, unless for the pleasure of it during your summer excursions into the country; and if it affords you pleasure, you will not want any one to tell you: you will want to identify the trees themselves. The same with the birds. The main profit of this branch of natural history is in the pursuit not in the name, but in the bird. It is the chase that allures the sportsman, and it is the chase that profits the nature-student. Did you ever receive a gift of brook- trout by express? How pitiful they look stale fish only! But the trout you brought in at night after threading for miles the mountain stream : its voice all day in your ears ; its sparkle all day in your eyes; the love of its beauty and purity all day in your heart; wading through bee-balm or jewel-weed; skirting wild pastures; starting the grouse or the woodcock with their young; surprising bird and beast at their home occupations these were trout with a flavor. Whatever opens up new doors or windows for us into the world about us, whatever widens the field of our interests and sympathies, has some sort of value moral, intellectual, or aesthetic. But much of the so-called nature-study opens no new The Nature Library doors or windows ; it affords no mental satisfaction, or illumin- ation, or aesthetic pleasure ; it is mainly pottering with dry, unim- portant facts and details. Do you know the edelweiss of our own matchless arbutus after you have merely analyzed and classified them ? No more than you know a man after having weighed and measured him. The function of things is always interesting. What do they do ? How do they pay their way in the rigid economy of nature ? How do they survive ? How does the bulb of the common fawn-lily 1 get deeper and deeper into the ground each year ? Why does the wild ginger hide its blossom when nearly all other plants flaunt theirs ? Why are the plants of the common mouse-ear (antennaria) 2 always in groups, one sex here, another there, as if prohibited from mingling by some moral code in nature ? Why do nearly all our trees have a twist to the right or the left hard woods one way, and soft woods the other? Why do the roots of trees flow through the ground like "runnels of molten metal," often separating and uniting again, while the branches are thrust out in right lines or curves ? Why is our common yellow birch more often than any other tree planted upon a rock ? Why do oaks or chestnuts so often spring up where a pine or hemlock forest has been cleared away ? Why does lightning so commonly strike a hemlock tree or a pine or an oak, and rarely or never a beach ? Why does the bolt sometimes scatter the tree about, and at others only plow a channel down its trunk ? Why does the bumblebee complain so loudly when working upon certain flowers ? Why does the honey-bee lose the sting when it stings a person, while the wasp, the hornet, and the bumblebee do not ? How does the chimney-swallow get the twigs it builds its nest with ? From what does the hornet make its paper ? One of Herbert Spencer's questions was, Why do animals and birds of prey have their eyes in front, and others, as sheep and domestic fowl, on the side of the head ? Man, then, by the position of his eyes belongs to the predaceous animals. I have never been greatly interested in spiders, but I have always wanted to know how a certain spider managed to stretch her cable squarely across the road in the woods about my height from the ground ? Why are mud turtles so wild ? Why is the excre- 1 The adder's tongue. 2 Everlasting. Xiii The Nature Library ment of the young of some birds carried away by the parents, while with others it is voided from the nest ? Among certain of our birds the family relation, more or less marked, is kept up a long time after the young have left the nest. One sees the parent birds and the young going about in loose flocks often till late into the fall. Of what birds is this true ? The questions I have suggested are not important; they do not hold the key to any great storehouse of natural knowledge. Their only value is as a means to quicken the powers of observa- tion. We see vaguely, diffusely. Concentrate the attention not to the extent of missing total effects, as the specialist so often does, but for the purpose of reading correctly the play of life that is constantly going about us. Nature's book is like any other book: you must open the covers; you must fix your eyes upon the text; you must get into the spirit of it. When you have read one sentence correctly you are so much the better prepared to read the next one. A world of nature about us that we are quite apt to be oblivious to, except as it results in our annoyance, is the insect world. We do not take an intelligent interest in the ants, or the bees, or the moths, or the butterflies, yet here is a field of obser- vation that will amply repay one. One day in a great city I saw a butterfly calmly winging its way high above the crowded street. I knew it was the monarch (Anosia plexippus), probably the greatest traveler of all our butterflies. It is quite certain that they migrate to the South in the fall, and that many return in the spring. 1 learn from Mr. Holland's Butterfly Book in this library that they have even crossed both oceans of course, by catching a ride on vessels and are now found in Australia and in the Philippines, and they have been collected in England. Have you not seen its chrysalis suspended from some weed or bush, looking like the trunk from some tiny warrior encased in pale-green armor, riveted with gold-headed rivets, a broad, heavy shield over the abdomen, and plate upon plate over the shoulders and back? It is a milkweed butterfly, and will serve as a good introduction to this new world of winged life. Early last spring I found upon the window of my cabin in the woods a butterfly that had evidently hybernated in some snug crack or corner of the building. This was the mourning cloak, with me the first vernal butterfly. When one sees this butterfly dancing through The Nature Library the open sunny woods in March or early April he may know spring has really come and that the first hepatica will soon open its blue eye. Mr. Howard's Insect Book ought to start many of its readers to observing flies and bees and prying into their life-histories, many of which are as yet not fully known. Not a farm-boy but knows of the big fat grubs in cows' backs in the spring. It was always a mystery to me how they got there. Now it is known that the creature has traveled all the way from the cow's stomach, where the egg of its parent the bot-fly was hatched, making its way slowly "through the connective tissues of the cow, between the skin and the flesh, penetrating gradually along the neck, and ultimately reaching a point beneath the skin on the back of the animal." We have only to look into nature a little more closely and intently, to whet our powers of observation by the use of such books as this Nature Library contains, to add vastly to our pleasure in and our knowledge of the world that lies about us. INTRODUCTION I WRITE these few introductory sentences to this volume only to second so worthy an attempt to quicken and enlarge the gen- eral interest in our birds. The book itself is merely an introduc- tion, and is only designed to place a few clews in the reader's hands which he himself or herself is to follow up. I can say that it is reliable and is written in a vivacious strain and by a real bird lover, and should prove a help and a stimulus to any one who seeks by the aid of its pages to become better acquainted with our songsters. The pictures, with a few exceptions, are remarkably good and accurate, and these, with the various group- ing of the birds according to color, season, habitat, etc., ought to render the identification of the birds, with no other weapon than an opera glass, an easy matter. When I began the study of the birds I had access to a copy of Audubon, which greatly stimulated my interest in the pursuit, but I did not have the opera glass, and I could not take Audubon with me on my walks, as the reader may this volume, and he will find these colored plates quite as helpful as those of Audubon or Wilson. But you do not want to make out your bird the first time; the book or your friend must not make the problem too easy for you. You must go again and again, and see and hear your bird under varying conditions and get a good hold of several of its characteristic traits. Things easily learned are apt to be easily for- gotten. Some ladies, beginning the study of birds, once wrote to me, asking if I would not please come and help them, and set them right about certain birds in dispute. I replied that that would be getting their knowledge too easily; that what I and any one else told them they would be very apt to forget, but that the things they found out themselves they would always remem- ber. We must in a way earn what we have or keep. Only thus docs it become ours, a real part of us. Not very long afterward I had the pleasure of walking with one of the ladies, and I found her eye and ear quite as sharp as my own, and that she was in a fair way to conquer the bird king- dom without any outside help. She said that the groves and fields, through which she used to walk with only a languid inter- est, were now completely transformed to her and afforded her the keenest pleasure; a whole new world of interest had been disclosed to her; she felt as if she was constantly on the eve of some new discovery; the next turn in the path might reveal to her a new warbler or a new vireo. I remember the thrill she seemed to experience when I called her attention to a purple finch singing in the tree-tops in front of her house, a rare visitant she had not before heard. The thrill would of course have been greater had she identified the bird without my aid. One would rather bag one's own game, whether it be with a bullet or an eyebeam. The experience of this lady is the experience of all in whom is kindled this bird enthusiasm. A new interest is added to life; one more resource against ennui and stagnation. If you have only a city yard with a few sickly trees in it, you will find great delight in noting the numerous stragglers from the great army of spring and autumn migrants that find their way there. If you live in the country, it is as if new eyes and new ears were given you, with a correspondingly increased capacity for rural enjoyment. The birds link themselves to your memory of seasons and places, so that a song, a call, a gleam of Color, set going a sequence of delightful reminiscences in your mind. When a soli- tary great Carolina wren came one August day and took up its abode near me and sang and called and warbled as I had heard it long before on the Potomac, how it brought the old days, the old scenes back again, and made me for the moment younger by all those years ! A few seasons ago I feared the tribe of bluebirds were on the verge of extinction from the enormous number of them that perished from cold and hunger in the South in the winter of '94. For two summers not a blue wing, not a blue warble. I seemed to miss something kindred and precious from my environment the visible embodiment of the tender sky and the wistful soil. What a loss, I said, to the coming generations of dwellers in the country no bluebird in the spring ! What will the farm-boy date from ? But the fear was groundless : the birds are regaining their lost ground; broods of young blue-coats are again seen drifting from stake to stake or from mullen-stalk to mullen-stalk about the fields in summer, and our April air will doubtless again be warmed and thrilled by this lovely harbinger of spring. JOHN BURROUGHS. August 17, '97. PREFACE NOT to have so much as a bowing acquaintance with the birds that nest in our gardens or under the very eaves of our houses; that haunt our wood-piles; keep our fruit-trees free from slugs; waken us with their songs, and enliven our walks along the roadside and through the woods, seems to be, at least, a breach of etiquette toward some of our most kindly disposed neighbors. Birds of prey, game and water birds are not included in the book. The following pages are intended to be nothing more than a familiar introduction to the birds that live near us. Even in the principal park of a great city like New York, a bird-lover has found more than one hundred and thirty species; as many, probably, as could be discovered in the same sized territory anywhere. The plan of. the book is not a scientific one, if the term scientific is understood to mean technical and anatomical. The purpose of the writer is to give, in a popular and accessible form, knowledge which is accurate and reliable about the life of our common birds. This knowledge has not been collected from the stuffed carcasses of birds in museums, but gleaned afield. In a word, these short narrative descriptions treat of the bird's char- acteristics of size, color, and flight; its peculiarities of instinct and temperament; its nest and home life; its choice of food; its songs; and of the season in which we may expect it to play its part in the great panorama Nature unfolds with faithful precision year after year. They are an attempt to make the bird so live before the reader that, when seen out of doors, its recognition shall be instant and cordial, like that given to a friend. The coloring described in this book is sometimes more vivid than that found in the works of some learned authorities, whose conflicting testimony is often sadly bewildering to the novice. In different parts of the country, and at different seasons of the year, the plumage of some birds undergoes many changes. The reader must remember, therefore, that the specimens examined and described were not, as before stated, the faded ones in our museums, but live birds in their fresh, spring plumage, studied afield. The birds have been classed into color groups in the belief that this method, more than any other, will make identification most easy. The color of the bird is the first, and often the only, characteristic noticed. But they have also been classified accord- ing to the localities for which they show decided preferences and in which they are most likely to be found. Again, they have been grouped according to the season when they may be expected. In the brief paragraphs that deal with groups of birds separated into the various families represented in the book, the characteristics and traits of each clan are clearly emphasized. By these several aids it is believed the merest novice will be able to quickly identify any bird neighbor that is neither local nor rare. To the uninitiated or uninterested observer, all small, dull- colored birds are "common sparrows." The closer scrutiny of the trained eye quickly differentiates, and picks out not only the Song, the Canada, and the Fox Sparrows, but finds a dozen other familiar friends where one who "has eyes and sees not" does not even suspect their presence. Ruskin says: "The more I think of it, I find this conclusion more impressed upon me, that the greatest thing a human soul ever does in this world is to see something. . . . Hundreds of people can talk for one who can think, but thousands can think for one who can see. To see clearly is poetry, prophecy, and religion all in one." While the author is indebted to all the time-honored standard authorities, and to many ornithologists of the present day, too many for individual mention, it is to Mr. John Burroughs her deepest debt is due. To this clear-visioned prophet, who has opened the blind eyes of thousands to the delights that Nature holds within our easy reach, she would gratefully acknowledge many obligations: first of all, for the plan on which " Bird Neigh- bors " is arranged ; next, for his patient kindness in reading and annotating the manuscript of the book; and, not least, for the inspiration of his perennially charming writings that are so largely responsible for the ready-made audience now awaiting writers on out-of-door topics. NELTJE BLANCHAN. LIST OF COLORED PLATES FACING PAGB GOLDFINCH Frontispiece KINGBIRD 4 MOCKING-BIRD 12 CROW 41 BRONZED CRACKLE 44 RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD 48 DOWNY WOODPECKER 54 YELLOW-BELLIED SAPSUCKER 56 TOWHEES .58 ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAKS 60 BOBOLINKS 62 BLACK AND WHITE CREEPING WARBLER .... 64 CHIMNEY SWIFT 67 WOOD PEWEE 68 PHCEBE 72 CHICKADEE 76 CATBIRD 80 WHITE- BREASTED NUTHATCH 84 NORTHERN SHRIKE 86 MYRTLE WARBLER 92 INDIGO BIRD 100 KINGFISHER 102 BLUE JAY 104 BARN SWALLOW 106 HOUSE WREN 115 LONG-BILLED MARSH WRENS , 118 FACING PAGE WILSON'S THRUSH ... .... 122 HERMIT THRUSH .124 FLICKER . . . . i^o MEADOWLARK '. .132 WHIPPOORWILL 136 YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO 142 CEDAR WAXWING 144 BROWN CREEPER I4 6 SONG SPARROW 158 RUBY-THROATED HUMMING-BIRDS . . . .' . 170 RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET 1-72 RED-EYED VIREO 176 WARBLING VIREO ^8 BLUE-WINGED YELLOW WARBLER . . . . .192 YELLOW WARBLER 204 YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT 206 BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER 208 BALTIMORE ORIOLE 210 CARDINAL 215 SCARLET TANAGER 218 RED CROSSBILLS 220 ORCHARD ORIOLE .... 226 xxii LIST OF HALF-TONE PLATES FACING PAGE CROW ON NEST 6 BLUE-WINGED WARBLER ALIGHTING TO FEED HER YOUNG . 10 YOUNG FLICKERS ON DAY OF LEAVING NEST ... 20 WINTER VISITORS : REDPOLLS 28 YOUNG KINGFISHERS 36 CRACKLE'S NEST AND YOUNG 46 YELLOWBIRD'S NEST, SHOWING COWBIRD'S EGG ... 50 BROTHER AND SISTER ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAKS, Two WEEKS OLD 60 ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAKS, Six DAYS OLD ... 60 YOUNG CRESTED FLYCATCHERS WITH HAIR STANDING ON END 74 YOUNG MOCKING-BIRD 82 HUNGRY YOUNG MOCKING-BIRDS 82 A CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER FAMILY 90 THE WOOD THRUSH HEARS THE CLICK OF THE CAMERA . 124 YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOOS THE DAY BEFORE LEAVING NEST . 140 FIELD SPARROW BABIES 152 MOTHER OVENBIRD IN NEST ; A BABY BIRD ON IT . . 180 THE ROBIN'S MUD-WALLED NURSERY 224 I BIRD FAMILIES THEIR CHARACTERISTICS AND THE REPRESENTATIVES OF EACH FAMILY INCLUDED IN "BIRD NEIGHBORS" BIRD FAMILIES THEIR CHARACTERISTICS AND THE REPRESENTATIVES OF EACH FAMILY INCLUDED IN "BIRD NEIGHBORS" Order Coccyges: CUCKOOS AND KINGFISHERS Family Cuculidce: CUCKOOS Long, pigeon-shaped birds, whose backs are grayish brown with a bronze lustre and whose under parts are whitish. Bill long and curved. Tail long ; raised and drooped slowly while the bird is perching. Two toes point forward and two backward. Call-note loud and like a tree-toad's rattle. Song lacking. Birds of low trees and undergrowth, where they also nest ; partial to neighborhood of streams, or wherever the tent caterpillar is abundant. Habits rather solitary, silent, and eccentric. Migratory. Yellow-billed Cuckoo. Black-billed Cuckoo. Family Alcedinidce: KINGFISHERS Large, top-heavy birds of streams and ponds. Usually seen perching over the water looking for fish. Head crested ; upper parts slate-blue ; underneath white, and belted with blue or rusty. Bill large and heavy. Middle and outer toes joined for half their length. Call-note loud and prolonged, like a policeman's rattle. Solitary birds ; little inclined to rove from a chosen local- ity. Migratory. Belted Kingfisher. Order Pici: WOODPECKERS Family Picidce: WOODPECKERS Medium-sized and small birds, usually with plumage black and white, and always with some red feathers about the head. 3 Bird Families (The flicker is brownish and yellow instead of black and white.) Stocky, high-shouldered build ; bill strong and long for drilling holes in bark of trees. Tail feathers pointed and stiffened to serve as a prop. Two toes before and two behind for clinging. Usually seen clinging erect on tree-trunks ; rarely, if ever, head downward, like the nuthatches, titmice, etc. Woodpeckers feed as they creep around the trunks and branches. Habits Tather phlegmatic. The flicker has better developed vocal powers than other birds of this class, whose rolling tattoo, beaten with their bills against the tree-trunks, must answer for their love-song. Nest in hollowed-out trees. Red-headed Woodpecker. Hairy Woodpecker. Downy Woodpecker. Yellow-bellied Woodpecker. Flicker. Order Macrochires: GOATSUCKERS, SWIFTS, AND HUM- MING-BIRDS Family Caprimulgidce : NIGHTHAWKS, WHIPPOORWILLS, ETC. Medium-sized, mottled brownish, gray, black, and white birds of heavy build. Short, thick head ; gaping, large mouth ; very small bill, with bristles at base. Take insect food on the wing. Feet small and weak ; wings long and powerful. These birds rest lengthwise on their perch while sleeping through the brightest daylight hours, or on the ground, where they nest. Nighthawk. Whippoorwill. Family Micropolida : SWIFTS Sooty, dusky birds seen on the wing, never resting except in chimneys of houses, or hollow trees, where they nest. Tips of tail feathers with sharp spines, used as props. They show their kinship with the goatsuckers in their nocturnal as well as diurnal habits, their small bills and large mouths for catching insects on 4 Bird Families the wing, and their weak feet. Gregarious, especially at the nesting season. Chimney Swift. Family Trochilidx : HUMMING-BIRDS Very small birds with green plumage (iridescent red or orange breast in males); long, needle-shaped bill for extracting insects and nectar from deep-cupped flowers, and exceedingly rapid, darting flight. Small feet. Ruby-throated Humming-bird. Order Passeres : PERCHING BIRDS Family Tyrannidce : FLYCATCHERS Small and medium-sized dull, dark-olive, or gray birds, with big heads that are sometimes crested. Bills hooked at end, and with bristles at base. Harsh or plaintive voices. Wings longer than tail ; both wings and tails usually drooped and vibrating when the birds are perching. Habits moody and silent when perching on a conspicuous limb, telegraph wire, dead tree, or fence rail and waiting for insects to fly within range. Sudden, nervous, spasmodic sallies in midair to seize insects on the wing. Usually they return to their identical perch or lookout. Pug- nacious and fearless. Excellent nest builders and devoted mates. Kingbird. Phcebe. Wood Pewee. Acadian Flycatcher. Great Crested Flycatcher. Least Flycatcher. Olive-sided Flycatcher. Yellow-bellied Flycatcher. Say's Flycatcher. Family Alaudidce : LARKS The only true larks to be found in this country are the two species given below. They are the kin of the European skylark, of which several unsuccessful attempts to introduce the bird have 5 Bird Families been made in this country. These two larks must not be con . fused with the meadow larks and titlarks, which belong to the blackbird and pipit families respectively. The horned larks are birds of the ground, and are seen in the United States only in the autumn and winter. In the nesting season at the North their voices are most musical. Plumage grayish and brown, in color harmony with their habitats. Usually found in flocks ; the first species on or near the shore. Horned Lark. Prairie Horned Lark. Family Corvidce : CROWS AND JAYS The crows are large black birds, walkers, with stout feet adapted for the purpose. Fond of shifting their residence at dif- ferent seasons rather than strictly migratory, for, except at the northern limit of range, they remain resident all the year. Gre- garious. Sexes alike. Omnivorous feeders, being partly car- nivorous, as are also the jays. Both crows and jays inhabit wooded country. Their voices are harsh and clamorous ; and their habits are boisterous and bold, particularly the jays. De- voted mates ; unpleasant neighbors. Common Crow. Fish Crow. Northern Raven. Blue Jay. Canada Jay. Family Icteridce : BLACKBIRDS, ORIOLES, ETC. Plumage black or a brilliant color combined with black. (The meadow lark a sole exception.) Sexes unlike. These birds form a connecting link between the crows and the finches. The blackbirds have strong feet for use upon the ground, where they generally feed, while the orioles are birds of the trees. They are both seed and insect eaters. The bills of the bobolink and cow- bird are short and conical, for they are conspicuous seed eaters. Bills of the others long and conical, adapted for insectivorous diet. About half the family are gifted songsters. Red-winged Blackbird. Rusty Blackbird. 6 Bird Families Purple Crackle. Bronzed Crackle. Cowbird. Meadow Lark. Western Meadow Lark. Bobolink. Orchard Oriole. Baltimore Oriole. Family Fringillidce : FINCHES, SPARROWS, GROSBEAKS, BUNTINGS, LINNETS, AND CROSSBILLS Generally fine songsters. Bills conical, short, and stout for cracking seeds. Length from five to nine inches, usually under eight inches. This, the .argest family of birds that we have (about one-seventh of all our birds belong to it), comprises birds of such varied plumage and habit that, while certain family re- semblances may be traced throughout, it is almost impossible to characterize the family as such. The sparrows are comparatively small gray and brown birds with striped upper parts, lighter underneath. Birds of the ground, or not far from it, elevated perches being chosen for rest and song. Nest in low bushes or on the ground. (Chipping sparrow often selects tall trees.) Coloring adapted to grassy, dusty habitats. Males and females similar. Flight labored. About forty species of sparrows are found in the United States ; of these, fourteen may be met with by a novice, and six, at least, surely will be. The finches and their larger kin are chiefly bright-plumaged birds, the females either duller or distinct from males ; bills heavy, dull, and conical, befitting seed eaters. Not so migratory as insectivorous birds nor so restless. Mostly phlegmatic in temperament. Fine songsters. Chipping Sparrow. English Sparrow. Field Sparrow. Fox Sparrow. Grasshopper Sparrow. Savanna Sparrow. Seaside Sparrow. Sharp-tailed Sparrow. Bird Families Song Sparrow. Swamp Song Sparrow. Tree Sparrow. Vesper Sparrow. White-crowned Sparrow. White-throated Sparrow. Lapland Longspur. Smith's Painted Longspur. Pine Siskin (or Finch). Purple Finch. Goldfinch. Redpoll. Greater Redpoll. Red Crossbill. White-winged Red Crossbill. Cardinal Grosbeak. Rose-breasted Grosbeak. Pine Grosbeak. Evening Grosbeak. Blue Grosbeak. Indigo Bunting. Junco. Snowflake. Chewink. Family Tanagridcz : TANAGERS Distinctly an American family, remarkable for their brilliant plumage, which, however, undergoes great changes twice a year. Females different from males, being dull and inconspicuous. Birds of the tropics, two species only finding their way north, and the summer tanager rarely found north of Pennsylvania. Shy inhabitants of woods. Though they may nest low in trees, they choose high perches when singing or feeding upon flowers, fruits, and insects. As a family, the tanagers have weak, squeaky voices, but both our species are good songsters. Suffering the fate of most bright-plumaged birds, immense numbers have been shot annually. Scarlet Tanager. Summer Tanager. Bird Families Family Hirundinidce : SWALLOWS Birds of the air, that take their insect food on the wing. Migratory. Flight strong, skimming, darting ; exceedingly graceful. When not flying they choose slender, conspicuous perches like telegraph wires, gutters, and eaves of barns. Plu- mage of some species dull, of others iridescent blues and greens above, whitish or ruddy below. Sexes similar. Bills small ; mouths large. Long and pointed wings, generally reaching the tip of 'the tail or beyond. Tail more or less forked. Feet small and weak from disuse. Song a twittering warble without power. Gregarious birds. Barn Swallow. Bank Swallow. Cliff (or Eaves) Swallow. Tree Swallow. Bough- winged Swallow. Purple Martin. Family Ampelidce : WAX WINGS Medium-sized Quaker-like birds, with plumage of soft browns and grays. Head crested ; black band across forehead and through the eye. Bodies plump from indolence. Tail tipped with yellow ; wings with red tips to coverts, resembling sealing- wax. Sexes similar. Silent, gentle, courteous, elegant birds. Usually seen in large flocks feeding upon berries in the trees or perching on the branches, except at the nesting season. Voices resemble a soft, lisping twitter. Cedar Bird. Bohemian Waxwing. Family Laniidce : SHRIKES Medium-sized grayish, black-and-white birds, with hooked and hawk-like bill for tearing the flesh of smaller birds, field- mice, and large insects that they impale on thorns. Handsome, bold birds, the terror of all small, feathered neighbors, not ex- cluding the English sparrow. They choose conspicuous perches when on the lookout for prey : a projecting or dead limb of a 9 Bird Families tree, the cupola of a house, the ridge-pole or weather-vane of a barn, or a telegraph wire, from which to suddenly drop upon a victim. Eyesight remarkable. Call-notes harsh and unmusical. Habits solitary and wandering. The first-named species is resi- dent during the colder months of the year; the latter is a summer resident only north of Maryland. Northern Shrike. Loggerhead Shrike. Family Vireonidce : VIREOS OR GREENLETS Small greenish-gray or olive birds, whitish or yellowish underneath, their plumage resembling the foliage of the trees they hunt, nest, and live among. Sexes alike. More deliberate in habit than the restless, flitting warblers that are chiefly seen darting about the ends of twigs. Vireos are more painstaking gleaners ; they carefully explore the bark, turn their heads up- ward to investigate the under side of leaves, and usually keep well hidden among the foliage. Bill hooked at tip for holding worms and insects. Gifted songsters, superior to the warblers. This family is peculiar to America. Red-eyed Vireo. Solitary Vireo. Warbling Vireo. White-eyed Vireo. Yellow-throated Vireo. Family {Mniotiltidce : WOOD WARBLERS A large group of birds, for the most part smaller than the English sparrow ; all, except the ground warblers, of beautiful plumage, in which yellow, olive, slate-blue, black, and white are predominant colors. Females generally duller than males. Ex- ceedingly active, graceful, restless feeders among the terminal twigs of trees and shrubbery ; haunters of tree-tops in the woods at nesting time. Abundant birds, especially during May and September, when the majority are migrating to and from regions north of the United States; but they are strangely unknown to all but devoted bird lovers, who seek them out during these months that particularly favor acquaintance. Several species are erratic in Bird Families their migrations and choose a different course to return southward from the one they travelled over in spring. A few species are sum- mer residents, and one, at least, of this tropical family, the myrtle warbler, winters at the north. The habits of the family are not identical in every representative ; some are more deliberate and less nervous than others ; a few, like the Canadian and Wilson's warblers, are expert flycatchers, taking their food on the wing, but not usually returning to the same perch, like true flycatchers; and a few of the warblers, as, for example, the black-and-white, the pine, and the worm-eating species, have the nuthatches' habit of creeping around the bark of trees. Quite a number feed upon the ground. All are insectivorous, though many vary their diet with blossom, fruit, or berries, and naturally their bills are slen- der and sharply pointed, rarely finch-like. The yellow-breasted chat has the greatest variety of vocal expressions. The ground warblers are compensated for their sober, thrush-like plumage by their exquisite voices, while the great majority of the family that are gaily dressed have notes that either resemble the trill of mid- summer insects or, by their limited range and feeble utterance, sadly belie the family name. Bay-breasted Warbler. Blackburnian Warbler. Blackpoll Warbler. Black-throated Blue Warbler. Black-throated Green Warbler. Black-and-white Creeping Warbler. Blue-winged Warbler. Canadian Warbler. Chestnut-sided Warbler. Golden-winged Warbler. Hooded Warbler. Kentucky Warbler. Magnolia Warbler. Mourning Warbler. Myrtle Warbler. Nashville Warbler. Palm Warbler. Parula Warbler. Pine Warbler. Prairie Warbler. Bird Families Redstart. Wilson's Warbler. Worm-eating Warbler. Yellow Warbler. Yellow Palm Warbler. Ovenbird. Northern Water Thrush. Louisiana Water Thrush. Maryland Yellowthroat. Yellow-breasted Chat. Family Motacillidce : WAGTAILS AND PIPITS Only three birds of this family inhabit North America, and of these only one is common enough, east of the Mississippi, to be included in this book. Terrestrial birds of open tracts near the coast, stubble-fields, and country roadsides, with brownish plumage to harmonize with their surroundings. The American pipit, or titlark, has a peculiar wavering flight when, after being flushed, it reluctantly leaves the ground. Then its white tail feathers are conspicuous. Its habit of wagging its tail when perching is not an exclusive family trait, as the family name might imply. American Pipit, or Titlark. Family Troglodytidce : THRASHERS, WRENS, ETC. Subfamily Mimince: THRASHERS, MOCKING-BIRDS, AND CATBIRDS Apparently the birds that comprise this large general family are too unlike to be related, but the missing links or inter- mediate species may all be found far South. The first subfamily is comprised of distinctively American birds. Most numerous in the tropics. Their long tails serve a double purpose in assist- ing their flight and acting as an outlet for their vivacity. Usually they inhabit scrubby undergrowth bordering woods. They rank among our finest songsters, with ventriloquial and imitative powers added to sweetness of tone. Brown Thrasher. Catbird. Mocking-bird. MOCKING-BIRD. % Life-size. Bird Families Subfamily Troglodytince : WRENS Small brown birds, more or less barred with darkest brown above, much lighter below. Usually carry their short tails erect. Wings are small, for short flight. Vivacious, busy, excitable, easily displeased, quick to take alarm. Most of the species have scolding notes in addition to their lyrical, gushing song, that seems much too powerful a performance for a diminutive bird. As a rule, wrens haunt thickets or marshes, but at least one species is thoroughly domesticated. All are insectivorous. Carolina Wren. House Wren. Winter Wren. Long-billed Marsh Wren. Short-billed Marsh Wren. Family Certhiidce: CREEPERS Only one species of this Old World family is found in Amer- ica. It is a brown, much mottled bird, that creeps spirally around and around the trunks of trees in fall and winter, pecking at the larvae in the bark with its long, sharp bill, and doing its work with faithful exactness but little spirit. It uses its tail as a prop in climbing, like the woodpeckers. Brown Creeper. Family Paridce : NUTHATCHES AND TITMICE Two distinct subfamilies are included under this general head. The nuthatches (Sittince) are small, slate-colored birds, seen chiefly in winter walking up and down the barks of trees, and sometimes running along the under side of branches upside down, like flies. Plumage compact and smooth. Their name is derived from their habit of wedging nuts (usually beechnuts) in the bark of trees, and then hatching them open with their strong straight bills. White-breasted Nuthatch. Red-breasted Nuthatch. The titmice or chickadees (Parince) are fluffy little gray birds, the one crested, the other with a black cap. They are also 13 Bird Families expert climbers, though not such wonderful gymnasts as the nut- hatches. These cousins are frequently seen together in winter woods or in the evergreens about houses. Chickadees are partial to tree-tops, especially to the highest pine cones, on which they hang fearlessly. Cheerful, constant residents, retreating to the deep woods only to nest. Tufted Titmouse. Chickadee. Family Sylmidx : KINGLETS AND GNATCATCHERS The kinglets (Regulince) are very small greenish-gray birds, with highly colored crown patch, that are seen chiefly in autumn, winter, and spring south of Labrador. Habits active ; diligent flitters among trees and shrubbery from limb to limb after minute insects. Beautiful nest builders. Song remarkable for so small a bird. Golden-crowned Kinglet. Ruby-crowned Kinglet. The one representative of the distinctly American subfamily of gnatcatchers (Polioptilince) that we have, is a small blue-gray bird, whitish below. It is rarely found outside moist, low tracts of woodland, where insects abound. These it takes on the wing with wonderful dexterity. It is exceedingly graceful and assumes many charming postures. A bird of trees, nesting in the high branches. A bird of strong character and an exquisitely finished though feeble songster. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. Family Turdida : THRUSHES, BLUEBIRDS, ETC. This group includes our finest songsters. Birds of moderate size, stout build ; as a rule, inhabitants of woodlands, but the robin and the bluebird are notable exceptions. Bills long and slender, suitable for worm diet. Only casual fruit-eaters. Slen- der, strong legs for running and hopping. True thrushes are grayish or olive-brown above; buff or whitish below, heavily streaked or spotted. Bluebird. Robin. Bird Families Alice's Thrush. Hermit Thrush. Olive-backed Thrusn. Wilson's Thrush (Veery). Wood Thrush. Order Columbv : PIGEONS AND DOVES Family Columbida : PIGEONS AND DOVES The wild pigeon is now too rare to be included among our bird neighbors ; but its beautiful relative, without the fatally gre- garious habit, still nests and sings a-coo-oo-oo to its devoted mate in unfrequented corners of the farm or the borders of woodland. Delicately shaded fawn-colored and bluish plumage. Small heads, protruding breasts. Often seen on ground. Flight strong and rapid, owing to long wings. Mourning or Carolina Dove. HABITATS OF BIRDS HABITATS OF BIRDS BIRDS OF THE AIR CATCHING THEIR FOOD AS THEY FLY Acadian Flycatcher, Great Crested Flycatcher, Least Fly- catcher, Olive-sided Flycatcher, Say's Flycatcher, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, Kingbird, Phoebe, Wood Pewee, Purple Martin, Chimney Swift, Barn Swallow, Bank Swallow, Cliff Swallow, Tree Swallow, Rough-winged Swallow, Canadian Warbler, Blackpoll, Wilson's Warbler, Nighthawk, Whippoorwill, Ruby- throated Humming-bird, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. BIRDS MOST FREQUENTLY SEEN IN THE UPPER HALF OF TREES Scarlet Tanager, Summer Tanager, Baltimore Oriole, Orchard Oriole, Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, nearly all the Warblers except the Ground Warblers; Cedar Bird, Bohe- mian Waxwing, the Vireos, Robin, Red Crossbill, White-winged Crossbill, Purple Crackle, Bronzed Grackle, Redstart, Northern Shrike, Loggerhead Shrike, Crow, Fish Crow, Raven, Purple Finch, Tree and Chipping Sparrows, Cardinal, Blue Jay, Kingbird, the Crested and other Flycatchers. BIRDS OF LOW TREES OR LOWER PARTS OF TREES Black-billed Cuckoo, Yellow-billed Cuckoo, the Sparrows, the Thrushes, the Grosbeaks, Goldfinch, Summer Yellowbird and other Warblers; the Wrens, Bluebird, Mocking-bird, Catbird, Brown Thrasher, Maryland Yellowthroat, Yellow-breasted Chat. BIRDS OF TREE-TRUNKS AND LARGE LIMBS Hairy Woodpecker, Downy Woodpecker, Red-headed Woodpecker, Yellow-bellied Woodpecker, Flicker, White- Habitats of Birds breasted Nuthatch, Red-breasted Nuthatch, Brown Creeper, Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse, Golden-crowned Kinglet, Ruby- crowned Kinglet, Black-and-white Creeping Warbler, Blue- winged Warbler, Worm-eating Warbler, Pine Warbler, Blackpoll Warbler, Whippoorwill, Nighthawk. BIRDS THAT SHOW A PREFERENCE FOR PINES AND OTHER EVERGREENS Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse, the Nuthatches, Brown Creeper, the Kinglets, Pine Warbler, Black-and-white Creeping Warbler and all the Warblers except the Ground Warblers; Pine Siskin, Cedar Bird and Bohemian Waxwing (in juniper and cedar trees), Pine Grosbeak, Red Crossbill, White-winged Cross- bill, the Crackles, Crow, Raven, Pine Finch. BIRDS SEEN FEEDING AMONG THE FOLIAGE AND TER- MINAL TWIGS OF TREES The Red-eyed Vireo, White-eyed Vireo, Warbling Vireo, Solitary Vireo, Yellow-throated Vireo, Golden-crowned King- let, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Black-billed Cuckoo, Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Yellow Warbler or Summer Yellowbird, nearly all the Warblers except the Pine and the Ground Warblers ; the Fly- catchers, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. BIRDS THAT CHOOSE CONSPICUOUS PERCHES Northern Shrike, Loggerhead Shrike, Kingbird, the Wood Pewee, the Phoebe and other Flycatchers, the Swallows, King- fisher, Crows, Grackles, Blue Jay and Canada Jay; the Song, the White-throated, and the Fox Sparrows ; the Grosbeaks, Cedar Bird, Goldfinch, Robin, Purple Finch, Cowbird, Brown Thrasher while in song. BIRDS OF THE GARDENS AND ORCHARDS Bluebird, Robin ; the English, Song, White-throated, Vesper, White-crowned, Fox, Chipping, and Tree Sparrows; Phoebe, Wood Pewee, the Least Flycatcher, Crested Flycatcher, Kingbird, Brown Thrasher, Wood Thrush, Mocking-bird, Catbird, House YOUNG FLICKERS ON DAY OF LEAVING NEST. Habitats of Birds Wren ; nearly all the Warblers, especially at blossom time among the shrubbery and fruit trees; Cedar Bird, Purple Martin, Eaves Swallow, Barn Swallow, Purple Finch, Cowbird, Baltimore and Orchard Orioles, Purple Crackle, Bronzed Crackle, Blue Jay, Crow, Fish Crow, Chimney Swift, Ruby-throated Humming- bird, the Woodpeckers, Flicker, the Nuthatches, Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse, the Cuckoos, Mourning Dove, Junco. BIRDS OF THE WOODS The Warblers almost without exception ; the Thrushes, the Woodpeckers, the Flycatchers, the Winter and the Carolina Wrens, the Tanagers, the Nuthatches and Titmice, the Kinglets, the Water Thrushes, the Vireos, Whippoorwill, Nighthawk, Kingfisher, Cardinal, Ovenbird, Brown Creeper, Tree Sparrow, Fox Sparrow, White-throated Sparrow, White-crowned Sparrow, Junco. BIRDS SEEN NEAR THE EDGES OF WOODS The Wrens, the Woodpeckers, the Flycatchers, the Warblers, Purple Finch, the Cuckoos, Brown Thrasher, Wood Thrush, Cow- bird, Brown Creepers, the Nuthatches and Titmice, the Kinglets, Chewink; the White-crowned, White-throated, Tree, Fox, and Song Sparrows ; Humming-bird, Bluebird, Junco, the Crossbills, the Grosbeaks, Nighthawk, Whippoorwill, Mourning Dove, Indigo Bird, Brown Thrasher. BIRDS OF SHRUBBERY, BUSHES, AND THICKETS Maryland Yellowthroat, Ovenbird (in woods) ; Myrtle Warbler, Mourning Warbler, Yellow-breasted Chat, and other Warblers during the migrations; the Shrikes; the White-throated, the Fox, the Song, and other Sparrows; Chickadee, Junco, Che- wink, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Cowbird, Red-winged Black- bird, Catbird, Mocking-bird, Wilson's Thrush, Goldfinch, Red- polls, Maryland Yellowthroat, White-eyed Vireo, Hooded Warbler. BIRDS SEEN FEEDING ON THE GROUND The Sparrows, Junco, Meadowlark, Horned Lark, Chewink, Robin, Ovenbird, Pipit or Titlark, Redpoll, Greater Redpoll, Habitats of Birds Snowflake, Lapland Longspur, Smith's Painted Longspur, Rusty Blackbird, Red-winged Blackbird, the Crows, Cowbird, the Water Thrushes, Bobolink, Canada Jay, the Crackles, Mourning Dove; the Worm-eating, the Prairie, the Kentucky, and the Mourning Ground Warblers; Flicker. BIRDS OF MEADOW, FIELD, AND UPLAND The Field and Vesper Sparrows, Bobolink, Meadowlark, Horned Lark, Goldfinch, the Swallows, Pipit or Titlark, Cow- bird, Redpoll, Greater Redpoll, Snowflake, Junco, Lapland Long- spur, Smith's Painted Longspur, Rusty Blackbird, Crow, Fish Crow, Nighthawk, Whippoorwill; the Yellow, the Palm, and the Prairie Warblers ; the Grackles, Flicker, Bluebird, Indigo Bird. BIRDS OF ROADSIDE AND FENCES The Sparrows, Kingbird, Crested Flycatcher, Yellow-breasted Chat, Indigo Bird, Bluebird, Flicker, Goldfinch, Brown Thrasher, Catbird, Robin, the Woodpeckers, Yellow Palm Warbler, the Vireos. BIRDS OF MARSHES AND BOGGY MEADOWS Long-billed Marsh Wren, Short-billed Marsh Wren; the Swamp, the Savanna, the Sharp-tailed, and the Seaside Sparrows; Red-winged Blackbird. BIRDS OF WET WOODLANDS AND MARSHY THICKETS Northern Water Thrush, Louisiana Water Thrush, Oven- bird, Winter Wren, Carolina Wren, Phrebe; Wood Pewee and the other Flycatchers ; Wilson's Thrush or Veery, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Yellow-breasted Chat ; the Canadian, Wilson's Black-capped, the Maryland Yellowthroat, the Hooded, and the Yellow-throated Warblers. BIRDS FOUND NEAR SALT WATER Fish Crow, Common Crow, Bank Swallow, Tree Swallow, Savanna Sparrow, Sharp-tailed Sparrow, Seaside Sparrow, Horned Lark, Pipit or Titlark. Habitats of Birds BIRDS FOUND NEAR STREAMS AND PONDS Kingfisher, the Swallows, Northern Water Thrush, Louisiana Water Thrush, Phoebe, Wood Pewee, the Flycatchers, Winter Wren, Wilson's Black-capped Warbler, the Canadian and the Yellow Warblers. BIRDS THAT SING ON THE WING Bobolink, Meadowlark, Indigo Bird, Purple Finch, Gold- finch, Ovenbird, Kingbird, Vesper Sparrow (rarely), Maryland Yellowthroat, Horned Lark, Kingfisher, the Swallows, Chimney Swift, Nighthawk, Song Sparrow, Red-winged Blackbird, Pipit or Titlark, Mocking-bird. Ill SEASONS OF BIRDS THE LATITUDE OF NEW YORK IS TAKEN AS AN ARBITRARY DIVISION FOR WHICH ALLOW- ANCES MUST BE MADE FOR OTHER LOCALITIES THE SEASONS OF BIRDS IN THE VICINITY OF NEW YORK OR, APPROXIMATELY, OF THE FORTY-SECOND DEGREE OF LATITUDE PERMANENT RESIDENTS Hairy Woodpecker. Swamp Sparrow. Downy Woodpecker. Song Sparrow. Yellow-bellied Woodpecker. Cedar Bird. Red-headed Woodpecker. Cardinal. Flicker. Carolina Wren. Meadowlark. White-breasted Nuthatch. Prairie Horned Lark. Tufted Titmouse. Blue Jay. Chickadee. Crow. Robin. Fish Crow. Bluebird. English Sparrow. Goldfinch. Social Sparrow. WINTER RESIDENTS AND VISITORS BIRDS SEEN BETWEEN NOVEMBER AND APRIL English Sparrow. Pine Grosbeak. Tree Sparrow. Redpoll. White-throated Sparrow. Greater Redpoll. Swamp Sparrow. Cedar Bird. Vesper Sparrow. Bohemian Waxwing. White-crowned Sparrow. Hairy Woodpecker. Fox Sparrow. Downy Woodpecker. Song Sparrow. Yellow-bellied Woodpecker. Snowflake. Flicker. Junco. Myrtle Warbler. Horned Lark. Northern Shrike. Meadowlark. White-breasted Nuthatch. 27 Seasons of Birds Red-breasted Nuthatch. Tufted Titmouse. Chickadee. Robin. Bluebird. Ruby-crowned Kinglet. Golden-crowned Kinglet Brown Creeper. Carolina Wren. Winter Wren. Pipit. Purple Finch. Goldfinch. Pine Siskin. Lapland Longspur. Smith's Painted Longspur. Evening Grosbeak. Cardinal. Blue Jay. Red Crossbill. White-winged Crossbill Crow. Fish Crow. Kingfisher. SUMMER RESIDENTS BIRDS SEEN BETWEEN APRIL AND NOVEMBER Mourning Dove. Black-billed Cuckoo. Yellow-billed Cuckoo. Kingfisher. Red-headed Woodpecker. Hairy Woodpecker. Downy Woodpecker. Yellow-bellied Woodpecker. Flicker. Whippoorwill. Nighthawk. Chimney Swift. Ruby-throated Humming-bird. Kingbird. Wood Pewee. Phoebe. Acadian Flycatcher. Crested Flycatcher. Least Flycatcher. Olive-sided Flycatcher. Yellow-bellied Flycatcher. Say's Flycatcher. Bobolink. Cowbird. Red-winged Blackbird. Rusty Blackbird. Orchard Oriole. Baltimore Oriole. Purple Crackle. Bronzed Crackle. Crow. Fish Crow. Raven. Blue Jay. Canada Jay. Chipping Sparrow. English Sparrow. Field Sparrow. Fox Sparrow. Grasshopper Sparrow. Savanna Sparrow. Seaside Sparrow. Sharp-tailed Sparrow. Swamp Song Sparrow. Song Sparrow. Vesper Sparrow. Rose-breasted Grosbeak. Blue Grosbeak. I WINTER VISITORS: REDPOLLS. Seasons of Birds Indigo Bird. Scarlet Tanager. Purple Martin. Barn Swallow. Bank Swallow. Cliff Swallow. Tree Swallow. Rough-winged Swallow. Red-eyed Vireo. White-eyed Vireo. Solitary Vireo. Warbling Vireo. Yellow-throated Vireo. Black-and-white Warbler. Black-throated Green Warbler. Blue-winged Warbler. Chestnut-sided Warbler. Golden-winged Warbler. Hooded Warbler. Pine Warbler. Prairie Warbler. Parula Warbler. Worm-eating Warbler. Yellow Warbler. Redstart. Ovenbird. Northern Water Thrush. Louisiana Water Thrush. Yellow-breasted Chat. Maryland Yellowthroat. Mocking-bird. Catbird. Brown Thrasher. House Wren. Carolina Wren. Long-billed Marsh Wren. Short-billed Marsh Wren. Alice's Thrush. Hermit Thrush. Olive-backed Thrush. Wilson's Thrush or Veery. Wood Thrush. Meadowlark. Western Meadowlark. Prairie Horned Lark. White-breasted Nuthatch. Chickadee. Tufted Titmouse. Chewink. Purple Finch. Goldfinch. Cardinal. Robin. Bluebird. Cedar Bird. Loggerhead Shrike. SPRING AND AUTUMN MIGRANTS ONLY, OR RARE SUMMER VISITORS The following Warblers : Bay-breasted. Blackburnian. Black-polled. Black-throated Blue. Canadian. Magnolia. Mourning. Myrtle. Nashville. Wilson's Black-capped. Palm. Yellow Palm. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. Summer Tanager. 29 Seasons of Birds MIGRATIONS OF BIRDS IN VICINITY OF NEW YORK FEBRUARY 1 5 TO MARCH 1 5 Bluebird, Robin, the Crackles, Song Sparrow, Fox Sparrow, Red-winged Blackbird, Kingfisher, Flicker, Purple Finch. MARCH 15 TO APRIL I Increased numbers of foregoing group; Cowbird, Meadow- lark, Phoebe ; the Field, the Vesper, and the Swamp Sparrows. APRIL i TO 15 The White-throated and the Chipping Sparrows, the Tree and the Barn Swallows, Rusty Blackbird, the Red-headed and the Yellow-bellied Woodpeckers, Hermit Thrush, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Pipit ; the Pine, the Myrtle, and the Yellow Palm War- blers; Goldfinch. APRIL 15 TO MAY I Increased numbers of foregoing group ; Brown Thrasher ; Alice's, the Olive-backed, and the Wood Thrushes ; Chimney Swift, Whippoorwill, Chewink, the Purple Martin, and the Cliff and the Bank Swallows; Least Flycatcher ; the Black-and-white Creeping, the Parula, and the Black-throated Green Warblers ; Ovenbird, House Wren, Catbird. MAY i TO 15 Increased numbers of foregoing group; Wilson's Thrush or Veery; Nighthawk, Ruby-throated Humming-bird, the Cuckoos, Crested Flycatcher, Kingbird, Wood Pewee, the Marsh Wrens, Bank Swallow, the five Vireos, the Baltimore and Orchard Ori- oles, Bobolink, Indigo Bird, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Scarlet Tana- ger, Maryland Yellowthroat, Yellow-breasted Chat, the Water Thrushes; and the Magnolia, the Yellow, the Black-throated Blue, the Bay-breasted, the Chestnut-sided, and the Golden- winged Warblers. 30 Seasons of Birds MAY 1 5 TO JUNE I Increased numbers of foregoing group ; Yellow-bellied Fly- catcher, Mocking-bird, Summer Tanager ; and the Blackburnian, the Blackpoll, the Worm-eating, the Hooded, Wilson's Black- capped, and the Canadian Warblers. JUNE, JULY, AUGUST In June few species of birds are not nesting; in July they may rove about more or less with their increased families, search- ing for their favorite foods ; August finds them moulting and mop- ing in silence, but toward the end of the month, thoughts of returning southward set them astir again. AUGUST 15 TO SEPTEMBER 15 Bobolink, Cliff Swallow, Scarlet Tanager, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, Purple Martin; the Blackburnian, the Worm-eating, the Bay-breasted, the Chestnut-sided, the Hooded, the Mourning, Wilson's Black-capped, and the Canadian Warblers; Baltimore Oriole, Humming-bird. SEPTEMBER 15 TO OCTOBER I Increased numbers of foregoing group ; Wilson's Thrush, Wood Thrush, Kingbird, Wood Pewee, Crested Flycatcher; the Least, the Olive-sided, and the Acadian Flycatchers; the Marsh Wrens, the Cuckoos, Whippoorwill, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Orchard Oriole, Indigo Bird; the Warbling, the Solitary, and the Yellow-throated Vireos; the Black-and-white Creeping, the Golden-winged, the Yellow, and the Black-throated Blue War- blers; Maryland Yellowthroat, Yellow-breasted Chat, Redstart. OCTOBER I TO 15 Increased numbers of foregoing group; Hermit Thrush, Cat- bird, House Wren, Ovenbird, the Water Thrushes, the Red-eyed and the White-eyed Vireos, Wood Pewee, Nighthawk, Chimney Swift, Cowbird, Horned Lark, Winter Wren, Junco; the Tree, the Vesper, the White-throated, and the Grasshopper Sparrows; the Blackpoll, the Parula, the Pine, the Yellow Palm, and the Prairie Warblers; Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse. Seasons of Birds OCTOBER 15 TO NOVEMBER 15 Increased numbers of foregoing group ; Wood Thrush, Wil- son's Thrush or Veery, Alice's Thrush, Olive-backed Thrush, Robin, Chewink, Brown Thrasher, Phoebe, Shrike; the Fox, the Field, the Swamp, the Savanna, the White-crowned, the Chipping, and the Song Sparrows; the Red-winged and the Rusty Blackbirds; Meadowlark, the Crackles, Flicker, the Red-headed and the Yellow-bellied Woodpeckers; Purple Finch, the Kinglets, the Nuthatches, Pine Siskin. IV BIRDS GROUPED ACCORDING TO SIZE BIRDS GROUPED ACCORDING TO SIZE SMALLER THAN THE ENGLISH SPARROW Humming-bird. The Kinglets. The Wrens. All the Warblers not mentioned elsewhere. Redstart. Ovenbird. Chickadee. Tufted Titmouse. Red-breasted Nuthatch. White-breasted Nuthatch, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. Yellow-bellied Flycatcher. Acadian Flycatcher. Least Flycatcher. The Redpolls. Goldfinch. Pine Siskin. Savanna Sparrow. Grasshopper Sparrow. Sharp-tailed Sparrow. Chipping Sparrow. Field Sparrow. Swamp Song Sparrow. Indigo Bunting. Warbling Vireo. Yellow-throated Vireo. Red-eyed Vireo. White-eyed Vireo. Brown Creeper. ABOUT THE SIZE OF THE ENGLISH SPARROW Purple Finch. The Crossbills. The Longspurs. Vesper Sparrow. Seaside Sparrow. Tree Sparrow. Junco. Song Sparrow. Solitary Vireo. The Water-thrushes. Pipit or Titlark. Downy Woodpecker. LARGER THAN THE ENGLISH SPARROW AND SMALLER THAN THE ROBIN Yellow-bellied Woodpecker. Chimney Swift (apparently). The Swallows (apparently). Kingbird. Crested Flycatcher. Phosbe. 35 Birds Grouped According to Size Olive-sided Flycatcher. Snowflake. Wood Pewee. White-crowned Sparrow. Horned Lark. White-throated Sparrow. Bobolink. Fox Sparrow. Cowbird. The Tanagers. Orchard Oriole. Cedar Bird. Baltimore Oriole. Bohemian Waxwing. The Grosbeaks : Evening, Blue, Yellow-breasted Chat Pine, Rose-breasted, and Car- The Thrushes. dinal. Bluebird. ABOUT THE LENGTH OF THE ROBIN Red-headed Woodpecker. Northern Shrike. Hairy Woodpecker. Mocking-bird. Red-winged Blackbird. Catbird. Rusty Blackbird. Chewink. Loggerhead Shrike. Purple Martin (apparently). LONGER THAN THE ROBIN Mourning Dove. Blue Jay. The Cuckoos. Canada Jay. Kingfisher. Meadowlark. Flicker. Whippoorwill (apparently) Raven. Nighthawk (apparently) Crow. The Grackles. Fish Crow. Brown Thrasher. YOUNG KINGFISHERS. V DESCRIPTIONS OF BIRDS GROUPED ACCORDING TO COLOR BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY BLACK Common Crow Fish Crow American Raven Purple Crackle Bronzed Crackle Rusty Blackbird Red-winged Blackbird Purple Martin Cowbird See also several of the Swallows; the Kingbird, the Phoebe, the Wood Pewee, and other Flycatchers; the Chimney Swift; and the Chewink. BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY BLACK The Common Crow (Corvus Americanus) Crow family Called also: CORN THIEF Length 16 to 17. 50 inches. Male Glossy black with violet reflections. Wings appear saw- toothed when spread, and almost equal the tail in length. Female Like male, except that the black is less brilliant. Range Throughput North America, from Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico. Migrations March. October. Summer and winter resident. If we have an eye for the picturesque, we place a certain value upon the broad, strong dash of color in the landscape, given by a flock of crows flapping their course above a corn-field, against an October sky ; but the practical eye of the farmer looks only for his gun in such a case. To him the crow is an unmitigated nuisance, all the more maddening because it is clever enough to circumvent every means devised for its ruin. Nothing escapes its rapacity ; fear is unknown to it. It migrates in broad day- light, chooses the most conspicuous perches, and yet its assur- ance is amply justified in its steadily increasing numbers. In the very early spring, note well the friendly way in which the crow follows the plow, ingratiating itself by eating the larvae, field mice, and worms upturned in the furrows, for this is its one serviceable act throughout the year. When the first brood of chickens is hatched, its serious depredations begin. Not only the farmer's young fledglings, ducks, turkeys, and chicks, are snatched up and devoured, but the nests of song birds are made desolate, eggs being crushed and eaten on the spot, when there are no birds to carry off to the rickety, coarse nest in the high tree top in the woods. The fish crow, however, is the much 41 Conspicuously Black greater enemy of the birds. Like the common crows, this, their smaller cousin, likes to congregate in winter along the seacoast to feed upon shell-fish and other sea-food that the tide brings to its feet. Samuels claims to have seen a pair of crows visit an orchard and destroy the young in two robins' nests in half an hour. He calculates that two crows kill, in one day alone, young birds that in the course of the season would have eaten a hundred thousand insects. When, in addition to these atrocities, we remember the crow's depredations in the corn-field, it is small wonder that among the first laws enacted in New York State was one offering a reward for its head. But the more scientific agriculturists now concede that the crow is the farmer's true friend. Fish Crow (Corvus ossifragus) Crow family Length 14 to 16 inches. About half as large again as the robin. Male and Female Glossy black, with purplish-blue reflections, generally greener underneath. Chin naked. e Along Atlantic coast and that of the Gulf of Mexico, northward to southern New England. Rare stragglers on the Pacific coast. Migrations March or April. September. Summer resident only at northern limit of range. Is found in Hudson River valley about half-way to Albany. Compared with the common crow, with which it is often confounded, the fish crow is of much smaller, more slender build. Thus its flight is less labored and more like a gull's, whose habit of catching fish that may be swimming near the surface of the water it sometimes adopts. Both Audubon and Wilson, who first made this species known, record its habit of snatching food as it flies over the southern waters a rare practice at the north. Its plumage, too, differs slightly from the common crow's in being a richer black everywhere, and particularly underneath, where the "corn thief" is dull. But it is the dif- ference between the two crows' call-note that we chiefly depend upon to distinguish these confusing cousins. To say that the fish crow says car-r-r instead of a loud, clear caw, means little 42 Conspicuously Black until we have had an opportunity to compare its hoarse, cracked voice with the other bird's familiar call. From the farmer's point of view, there is still another dis- tinction: the fish crow lets his crops alone. It contents itself with picking up refuse on the shores of the sea or rivers not far inland; haunting the neighborhood of fishermen's huts for the small fish discarded when the seines are drawn, and treading out with its toes the shell-fish hidden in the sand at low tide. When we see it in the fields it is usually intent upon catching field- mice, grubs, and worms, with which it often varies its fish diet. It is, however, the worst nest robber we have ; it probably destroys ten times as many eggs and young birds as its larger cousin. The fishermen have a tradition that this southern crow comes and goes with the shad and herring a saw which science unkindly disapproves. American Raven (Corvus corax principalis) Crow family Called also: NORTHERN RAVEN Length 26 to 27 inches. Nearly three times as large as a robin. Male and Female Glossy black above, with purplish and greenish reflections. Duller underneath. Feathers of the throat and breast long and loose, like fringe. Range North America, from polar regions to Mexico. Rare along Atlantic coast and in the south. Common in the west, and very abundant in the northwest. Migrations An erratic wanderer, usually resident where it finds its way. The weird, uncanny voice of this great bird that soars in wide circles above the evergreen trees of dark northern forests seems to come out of the skies like the malediction of an evil spirit. Without uttering the words of any language Poe's "Nevermore" was, of course, a poetic license people of all nationalities appear to understand that some dire calamity, some wicked portent, is being announced every time the unbirdlike creature utters its rasping call. The superstitious folk crow with an " I told you so," as they solemnly wag their heads when they hear of some death in the village after "the bird of ill-omen" has 43 Conspicuously Black made an unwelcome visit to the neighborhood. It receives the blame for every possible misfortune. When seen in the air, the crow is the only other bird for which the raven could be mistaken; but the raven does more sailing and less flapping, and he delights in describing circles as he easily soars high above the trees. On the ground, he is seen to be a far larger bird than the largest crow. The curious beard or fringe of feathers on his breast at once distinguishes him. These birds show the family instinct for living in flocks large and small, not of ravens only, but of any birds of their own gen- era. In the art of nest building they could instruct most of their relatives. High up in evergreen trees or on the top of cliffs, never very near the seashore, they make a compact, symmetrical nest of sticks, neatly lined with grasses and wool from the sheep pastures, adding soft, comfortable linings to the old nest from year to year for each new brood. When the young emerge from the eggs, which take many curious freaks of color and mark- ings, they are pied black and white, suggesting the young of the western white-necked raven, a similarity which, so far as plu- mage is concerned, they quickly outgrow. They early acquire the fortunate habit of eating whatever their parents set before them grubs, worms, grain, field-mice ; anything, in fact, for the raven is a conspicuously omnivorous bird. Purple Crackle (Quiscalus quiscula) Blackbird family Called also: CROW BLACKBIRD; MAIZE THIEF; KEEL- TAILED CRACKLE Length 12 to 13 inches. About one-fourth as large again as the robin. Male Iridescent black, in which metallic violet, blue, copper, and green tints predominate. The plumage of this grackle has iridescent bars. Iris cf eye bright yellow and conspic- uous. Tail longer than wings. Female Less brilliant black than male, and smaller. HangeGu\f of Mexico to 57th parallel north latitude. Migrations Permanent resident in Southern States. Few are permanent throughout range. Migrates in immense flocks in March and September. t Conspicuously Black The Bronzed Crackle (Quiscalus quiscula aweus) differs from the preceding chiefly in the more brownish bronze tint of its plumage and its lack of iridescent bars. Its range is more west- erly, and in the southwest it is particularly common ; but as a summer resident it finds its way to New England in large num- bers. The call-note is louder and more metallic than the purple grackle's. In nearly all respects the habits of these two birds are identical. Rusty Blackbird (Scolecophagus carolinus) Blackbird family Called also : THRUSH BLACKBIRD ; RUSTY CRACKLE ; RUSTY ORIOLE ; RUSTY CROW ; BLACKBIRD Length 9 to 9.55 inches. A trifle smaller than the robin. Male In full plumage, glossy black with metallic reflections, intermixed with rusty brown that becomes more pronounced as the season advances. Pale straw-colored eyes. Female Duller plumage and more rusty, inclining to gray. Light line over eye. Smaller than male. Range North America, from Newfoundland to Gulf of Mexico and westward to the Plains. Migrations April. November. A few winter north. A more sociable bird than the grackle, though it travel in smaller flocks, the rusty blackbird condescends to mingle freely with other feathered friends in marshes and by brooksides. You can identify it by its rusty feathers and pale yellow eye, and easily distinguish the rusty-gray female from the female redwing that is conspicuously streaked. In April flocks of these birds may frequently be seen along sluggish, secluded streams in the woods, feeding upon the seeds of various water or brookside plants, and probably upon insects also. At such times they often indulge in a curious spluttering, squeaking, musical concert that one listens to with pleasure. The breeding range is mostly north of the United States. But little seems to be known of the birds' habits in their northern home. Why it should ever have been called a thrush blackbird is one of those inscrutable mysteries peculiar to the naming of birds 46 CRACKLE'S NEST AND YOUNG. Conspicuously Black which are so frequently called precisely what they are not. In spite of the compliment implied in associating the name of one of our finest songsters with it, the rusty blackbird has a clucking call as unmusical as it is infrequent, and only very rarely in the spring does it pipe a note that even suggests the sweetness of the redwing's. Red-winged Blackbird (Agelai us pbceniceus} Blackbird family Called also: SWAMP BLACKBIRD ; RED-WINGED ORIOLE ; RED-WINGED STARLING Length Exceptionally variable 7.50 to 9.80 inches. Usually about an inch smaller than the robin. Male Coal-black. Shoulders scarlet, edged with yellow. Female Feathers finely and inconspicuously speckled with brown, rusty black, whitish, and orange. Upper wing- coverts rusty black, tipped with white, or rufous and some- times spotted with black and red. Range North America. Breeds from Texas to Columbia River, and throughout the United States. Commonly found from Mexico to 57th degree north latitude. Migrations March. October. Common summer resident. In oozy pastures where a brook lazily finds its way through the farm is the ideal pleasure ground of this "bird of society." His notes, " h'-wa-ker-ee " or (i con-quer-ee" (on an ascending scale), are liquid in quality, suggesting the sweet, moist, cool retreats where he nests. Liking either heat or cold (he is fond of wintering in Florida, but often retreats to the north while the marshes are still frozen) ; enjoying not only the company of large flocks of his own kind with whom he travels, but any bird associates with whom he can scrape acquaintance ; or to sit quietly on a tree-top in the secluded, inaccessible bog while his mate is nesting ; satisfied with cut-worms, grubs, and insects, or with fruit and grain for his food the blackbird is an impressive and helpful example of how to get the best out of life. Yet, of all the birds, some farmers complain that the black- bird is the greatest nuisance. They dislike the noisy chatterings when a flock is simply indulging its social instincts. They 47 Conspicuously Black complain, too, that the blackbirds eat their corn, forgetting that having devoured innumerable grubs from it during the summer, the birds feel justly entitled to a share of the profits. Though occasionally guilty of eating the farmer's corn and oats and rice, yet it has been found that nearly seven-eighths of the red- wing's food is made up of weed-seeds or of insects injurious to agriculture. This bird builds its nest in low bushes on the margin of ponds or low in the bog grass of marshes. From three to five pale-blue eggs, curiously streaked, spotted, and scrawled with black or purple, constitute a brood. Nursery duties are soon finished, for in July the young birds are ready to gather in flocks with their elders. " The blackbirds make the maples ring With social cheer and jubilee ; The red-wing flutes his ' O-ka-lee ! ' " Emerson. Purple Martin (Progne subis) Swallow family Length-] to 8 inches. Two or three inches smaller than the robin. Male Rich glossy black with bluish and purple reflections ; duller black on wings and tail. Wings rather longer than the tail, which is forked. Female More brownish and mottled ; grayish below. Range Peculiar to America. Penetrates from Arctic Circle to South America. Migrations Late April. Early September. Summer resident. In old-fashioned gardens, set on a pole over which honey- suckle and roses climbed from a bed where China pinks, phlox, sweet Williams, and hollyhocks crowded each other below, martin boxes used always to be seen with a pair of these large, beautiful swallows circling overhead. But now, alas! the boxes, where set up at all, are quickly monopolized by the English spar- row, a bird that the martin, courageous as a kingbird in attacking crows and hawks, tolerates as a neighbor only when it must. Bradford Torrey tells of seeing quantities of long-necked squashes dangling from poles about the negro cabins all through 48 RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD Conspicuously Black the South. One day he asked an old colored man what these squashes were for. "Why, deh is martins' boxes," said Uncle Remus. "No danger of hawks carryin' off de chickens so long as de martins am around." The Indians, too, have always had a special liking for this bird. They often lined a hollowed-out gourd with bits of bark and fastened it in the crotch of their tent poles to invite its friend- ship. The Mohegan Indians have called it "the bird that never rests " a name better suited to the tireless barn swallow, Dr. Abbott thinks. Wasps, beetles, and all manner of injurious garden insects constitute its diet another reason for its universal popularity. It is simple enough to distinguish the martins from the other swallows by their larger size and iridescent dark coat, not to mention their song, which is very soft and sweet, like musical laughter, rippling up through the throat. Cowbird (Molothrus ater) Blackbird family Called also: BROWN-HEADED ORIOLE; COW-PEN BIRD; COW BLACKBIRD ; COW BUNTING Length y to 8 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Male Iridescent black, with head, neck, and breast glistening brown. Bill dark brown, feet brownish. Female Dull grayish-brown above, a shade lighter below, and streaked with paler shades of brown. Range United States, from coast to coast. North into British America, south into Mexico. Migrations March. November. Common summer resident. The cowbird takes its name from its habit of walking about among the cattle in the pasture, picking up the small insects which the cattle disturb in their grazing. The bird may often be seen within a foot or two of the nose of a cow or heifer, walk- ing briskly about like a miniature hen, intently watching for its insect prey. Its marital and domestic character is thoroughly bad. 49 Conspicuously Black Polygamous and utterly irresponsible for its offspring, this bird forms a striking contrast to other feathered neighbors, and indeed is almost an anomaly in the animal kingdom. In the breeding season an unnatural mother may be seen skulking about in the trees and shrubbery, seeking for nests in which to place a sur- reptitious egg, never imposing it upon a bird of its size, but se- lecting in a cowardly way a small nest, as that of the vireos or warblers or chipping sparrows, and there leaving the hatching and care of its young to the tender mercies of some already burdened little mother. It has been seen to remove an egg from the nest of the red-eyed vireo in order to place one of its own in its place. Not finding a convenient nest, it will even drop its eggs on the ground, trusting them to merciless fate, or, still worse, devouring them. The eggs are nearly an inch long, white speckled with brown or gray. Cowbirds are gregarious. The ungrateful young birds, as soon as they are able to go roaming, leave their foster-parents and join the flock of their own kind. In keeping with its unclean habits and unholy life and character, the cowbird's ordinary note is a gurgling, rasping whistle, followed by a few sharp notes. BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY BLACK AND WHITE Red-headed Woodpecker Hairy Woodpecker Downy Woodpecker Yellow-bellied Woodpecker Chewink Snowflake Rose-breasted Grosbeak Bobolink Black-poll Warbler Black-and-white Creeping Warbler See also the Swallows; the Shrikes; Nuthatches and Titmice: the Kingbird and other Flycatchers; the Nighthawk; the Redstart; and the following Warblers: the Myrtle; the Bay-breasted; the Blackburnian ; and the Black-throated Blue Warbler. BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY BLACK AND WHITE Red-headed Woodpecker (Melanerpes erythrocephalus) Woodpecker family Called also: TRI-COLOR ; RED-HEAD Length 8.50 to 9.75 inches. An inch or less smaller than the robin. Male and Female Head, neck, and throat crimson ; breast and underneath white; back black and white; wings and tail blue black, with broad white band on wings conspicuous in flight. Range United States, east of Rocky Mountains and north to Manitoba. Migrations Abundant but irregular migrant. Most commonly seen in Autumn, and rarely resident. In thinly populated sections, where there are few guns about, this is still one of the commonest as it is perhaps the most conspicuous member of the woodpecker family, but its striking glossy black-and-white body and its still more striking crimson head, flattened out against the side of a tree like a target, where it is feeding, have made it all too tempting a mark for the rifles of the sportsmen and the sling-shots of small boys. As if suffi- cient attention were not attracted to it by its plumage, it must needs keep up a noisy, guttural rattle, her-r-ruck, ker-r-ruck, very like a tree-toad's call, and flit about among the trees with the restlessness of a fly-catcher. Yet, in spite of these invita- tions for a shot to the passing gunner, it still multiplies in dis- tricts where nuts abound, being "more common than the robin " about Washington, says John Burroughs. All the familiar woodpeckers have two characteristics most prominently exemplified in this red-headed member of their tribe. The hairy, the downy, the crested, the red-bellied, the sapsucker, and the flicker have each a red mark somewhere about 53 Conspicuously Black and White their heads as if they had been wounded there and bled a little- some more, some less ; and the figures of all of them, from much flattening against tree-trunks, have become high-shouldered and long-waisted. The red-headed woodpecker selects, by preference, a partly decayed tree in which to excavate a hole for its nest, because the digging is easier, and the sawdust and chips make a softer lining than green wood. Both male and female take turns in this hollowing-out process. The one that is off duty is allowed "twenty minutes for refreshments," consisting of grubs, beetles, ripe apples or cherries, corn, or preferably beech-nuts. At a loving call from its mate in the hollow tree, it returns promptly to perform its share of the work, when the carefully observed "time is up." The heap of sawdust at the bottom of the hollow will eventually cradle from four to six glossy-white eggs. This woodpecker has the thrifty habit of storing away nuts in the knot-holes of trees, between cracks in the bark, or in decayed fence rails too often a convenient storehouse at which the squirrels may help themselves. But it is the black snake that enters the nest and eats the young family, and that is a more deadly foe than even the sportsman or the milliner. The Hairy Woodpecker (Dryobates villosus) Woodpecker family Length 9 to 10 inches. About the size of the robin. Ma/e Black and white above, white beneath. White stripe down the back, composed of long hair-like feathers. Bright- red band on the nape of neck. Wings striped and dashed with black and white. Outer tail feathers white, without bars. White stripe about eyes and on sides of the head. Female Without the red band on head, and body more brown- ish than that of the male. Range Eastern parts of United States, from the Canadian bor- der to the Carolinas. Migrations Resident throughout its range. The bill of the woodpecker is a hammering tool, well fitted for its work. Its mission in life is to rid the trees of insects, 54 DOWNY WOODPECKER. Life-size. Conspicuously Black and White which hide beneath the bark, and with this end in view, the bird is seen clinging to the trunks and branches of trees through fair and wintry weather, industriously scanning every inch for the well-known signs of the boring worm or destructive fly. In the autumn the male begins to excavate his winter quar- ters, carrying or throwing out the chips, by which this good workman is known, with his beak, while the female may make herself cosey or not, as she chooses, in an abandoned hole. About her comfort he seems shamefully unconcerned. Intent only on his own, he drills a perfectly round hole, usually on the under side of a limb where neither snow nor wind can harm him, and digs out a horizontal tunnel in the dry, brittle wood in the very heart of the tree, before turning downward into the deep, pear- shaped chamber, where he lives in selfish solitude. But when the nesting season comes, how devoted he is temporarily to the mate he has neglected and even abused through the winter ! Will she never learn that after her clear-white eggs are laid and her brood raised he will relapse into the savage and forget all his tender wiles ? The hairy woodpecker, like many another bird and beast, fur- nishes much doubtful weather lore for credulous and inexact ob- servers. " When the woodpecker pecks low on the trees, expect warm weather" is a common saying, but when different individ- uals are seen pecking at the same time, one but a few feet from the ground, and another among the high branches, one may make the prophecy that pleases him best. The hairy woodpeckers love the deep woods. They are drummers, not singers; but when walking in the desolate winter woods even the drumming and tapping of the busy feathered workmen on a resonant limb is a solace, giving a sense of life and cheerful activity which is invigorating. The Downy Woodpecker (Dryobates pubescens) Woodpecker family Length 6 to 7 inches. About the size of the English sparrow. Male Black above, striped with white. Tail shaped like a wedge. Outer tail feathers white, and barred with black. Middle tail feathers black. A black stripe on top of head, and distinct white band over and under the eyes. Red patch on upper 55 Conspicuously Black and White side of neck. Wings, with six white bands crossing them transversely; white underneath. Female Similar, but without scarlet on the nape, which is white. jRange Eastern North America, from Labrador to Florida. Migrations Resident all the year throughout its range. The downy woodpecker is similar to his big relative, the hairy woodpecker, in color and shape, though much smaller. His outer tail feathers are white, barred with black, but the hairy's white outer tail feathers lack these distinguishing marks. He is often called a sapsucker though quite another bird alone merits that name from the supposition that he bores into the trees for the purpose of sucking the sap ; but his tongue is ill adapted for such use, being barbed at the end, and most orni- thologists consider the charge libellous. It has been surmised that he bores the numerous little round holes close together, so often seen, with the idea of attracting insects to the luscious sap. The woodpeckers never drill for insects in live wood. The downy actually drills these little holes in apple and other trees to feed upon the inner milky bark of the tree the cambium layer. The only harm to be laid to his account is that, in his zeal, he sometimes makes a ring of small holes so continuous as to inad- vertently damage the tree by girdling it. The bird, like most others, does not debar himself entirely from fruit diet, but enjoys berries, especially poke-berries. He is very social with birds and men alike. In winter he attaches himself to strolling bands of nuthatches and chickadees, and in summer is fond of making friendly visits among village folk, frequenting the shade trees of the streets and grapevines of back gardens. He has even been known to fearlessly peck at flies on window panes. In contrast to his large brother woodpecker, who is seldom drawn from timber lands, the little downy member of the family brings the comfort of his cheery presence to country homes, beating his rolling tattoo in spring on some resonant limb under our windows in the garden with a strength worthy of a larger drummer. This rolling tattoo, or drumming, answers several purposes: by it he determines whether the tree is green or hollow; it startles insects from their lurking places underneath the bark, and it also serves as a love song. 56 YELLOW-BELLIED SAPSUCKER. 3 5 Life-size. Conspicuously Black and White Yellow-bellied Woodpecker (Spbyrapicus -varius) Woodpecker family Called also: THE SAPSUCKER Length 8 to 8.6 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Male Black, white, and yellowish white above, with bright-red crown, chin, and throat. Breast black, in form of crescent. A yellowish-white line, beginning at bill and passing below eye, merges into the pale yellow of the bird underneath. Wings spotted with white, and coverts chiefly white. Tail black; white on middle of feathers. Female Paler, and with head and throat white. Range Eastern North America, from Labrador to Central America. Migrations April. October. Resident north of Massachusetts. Most common in autumn. It is sad to record that this exquisitely marked woodpecker, the most jovial and boisterous of its family, is one of the very few bird visitors whose intimacy should be discouraged. For its useful appetite for slugs and insects which it can take on the wing with wonderful dexterity, it need not be wholly con- demned. But as we look upon a favorite maple or fruit tree devitalized or perhaps wholly dead from its ravages, we cannot forget that this bird, while a most abstemious fruit-eater, has a pernicious and most intemperate thirst for sap. Indeed, it spends much of its time in the orchard, drilling holes into the freshest, most vigorous trees ; then, when their sap begins to flow, it siphons it into an insatiable throat, stopping in its orgie only long enough to snap at the insects that have been attracted to the wounded tree by the streams of its heart-blood now trickling down its sides. Another favorite pastime is to strip the bark off a tree, then peck at the soft wood underneath almost as fatal a habit It drills holes in maples in early spring for sap only. If it drills holes in fruit trees it is for the cambium layer, a soft, pulpy, nutritious under-bark. These woodpeckers have a variety of call-notes, but their rapid drumming against the limbs and trunks of trees is the sound we always associate with them and the sound that Mr. Bicknell says is the love-note of the family. Unhappily, these birds, that many would be glad to have 57 Conspicuously Black and White decrease in numbers, take extra precautions for the safety of their young by making very deep excavations for their nests, often as deep as eighteen or twenty inches. The Chewink (Pipilo erytbrophthalmus) Finch family Called also: GROUND ROBIN ; TOWHEE ; TOWHEE BUNT- ING ; TOWHEE GROUND FINCH ; GRASEL Length 8 to 8.5 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Male Upper parts black, sometimes margined with rufous. Breast white; chestnut color on sides and rump. Wings marked with white. Three outer feathers of tail striped with white, conspicuous in flight. Bill black and stout. Red eyes; feet brown. Female Brownish where the male is black. Abdomen shading from chestnut to white in the centre. Range From Labrador, on the north, to the Southern States ; west to the Rocky Mountains. Migrations April. September and October. Summer resident. Very rarely a winter resident at the north. The unobtrusive little chewink is not infrequently mistaken for a robin, because of the reddish chestnut on its under parts. Careful observation, however, shows important distinctions. It is rather smaller and darker in color; its carriage and form are not those of the robin, but of the finch. The female is smaller still, and has an olive tint in her brown back. Her eggs are in- conspicuous in color, dirty white speckled with brown, and laid in a sunken nest on the ground. Dead leaves and twigs abound, and form, as the anxious mother fondly hopes, a safe hiding place for her brood. So careful concealment, however, brings peril to the fledglings, for the most cautious bird-lover may, and often does, inadvertently set his foot on the hidden nest. The chewink derives its name from the fancied resemblance of its note to these syllables, while those naming it "towhee" hear the sound to-whick, to-which, to-whee. Its song is rich, full, and pleasing, and given only when the bird has risen to the branches above its low foraging ground. It frequents the border of swampy places and bushy fields. 58 TOVYHEES. Conspicuously Black and White It is generally seen in the underbrush, picking about among the dead leaves for its steady diet of earthworms and larvae of in- sects, occasionally regaling itself with a few dropping berries and fruit. When startled, the bird rises not more than ten or twelve feet from the earth, and utters its characteristic calls. On ac- count of this habit of flying low and grubbing among the leaves, it is sometimes called the ground robin. In the South our modest and useful little food-gatherer is often called grasel, especially in Louisiana, where it is white-eyed, and is much esteemed, alas! by epicures. Snowflake (Plectropbenax nivalis) Finch family Called also: SNOW BUNTING; WHITEBIRD ; SNOWBIRD; SNOW LARK Length 7 to 7. 5 inches. About one-fourth smaller than the robin. Male and Female Head, neck, and beneath soiled white, with a few reddish-brown feathers on top of head, and suggesting an imperfect collar. Above, grayish brown obsoletely streaked with black, the markings being most conspicuous in a band between shoulders. Lower tail feathers black ; others, white and all edged with white. Wings brown, white, and gray. Plumage unusually variable. In summer dress (in arctic regions) the bird is almost white. Range Circumpolar regions to Kentucky (in winter only). Migrations Midwinter visitor; rarely, if ever, resident south of arctic regions. These snowflakes (mentioned collectively, for it is impossible to think of the bird except in great flocks) are the "true spirits of the snowstorm," says Thoreau. They are animated beings that ride upon it, and have their life in it. By comparison with the climate of the arctic regions, no doubt our hardiest winter weather seems luxuriously mild to them. We associate them only with those wonderful midwinter days when sky, fields, and woods alike are white, and a "hard, dull bitterness of cold" drives every other bird and beast to shelter. It is said they often pass the night buried beneath the snow. They have been seen to dive beneath it to escape a hawk. Whirling about in the drifting snow to catch the seeds on 59 Conspicuously Black and White the tallest stalks that the wind in the open meadows uncovers, the snowflakes suggest a lot of dead leaves being blown through the all-pervading whiteness. Beautiful soft brown, gray, and predominating black-and-white coloring distinguish these capri- cious visitors from the slaty junco, the "snowbird" more com- monly known. They are, indeed, the only birds we have that are nearly white ; and rarely, if ever, do they rise far above the ground their plumage so admirably imitates. At the far north, travellers have mentioned their inspiriting song, but in the United States we hear only their cheerful twitter. Nansen tells of seeing an occasional snow bunting in that desola- tion of arctic ice where the Fram drifted so long. The Rose-breasted Grosbeak (Hdbia ludoiiiciana) Finch family Length 7. 75 to 8. 5 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Male Head. and upper parts black. Breast has rose-carmine shield-shaped patch, often extending downward to the centre of the abdomen. Underneath, tail quills, and two spots on wings white. Conspicuous yellow, blunt beak. Female Brownish, with dark streakings, like a sparrow. No rose-color. Light sulphur yellow under wings. Dark brown, heavy beak. Range Eastern North America, from southern Canada to Panama. Migrations Early May. September. Summer resident. A certain ornithologist tells with complacent pride of having shot over fifty-eight rose-breasted grosbeaks in less than three weeks (during the breeding season) to learn what kind of food they had in their crops. This kind of devotion to science may have quite as much to do with the growing scarcity of this bird in some localities as the demands of the milliners, who, however, receive all of the blame for the slaughter of our beautiful songsters. The farmers in Pennsylvania, who, with more truth than poetry, call this the potato-bug bird, are taking active measures, how- ever, to protect the neighbor that is more useful to their crop than all the insecticides known. It also eats flies, wasps, and grubc. Seen upon the ground, the dark bird is scarcely attractive with his clumsy beak overbalancing a head that protrudes with stupid- 60 ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAKS. ," 8 Life-size. BROTHER AND SISTER ROSE BREASTED GROSBEAKS, TWO WEEKS OLD ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAKS, SIX DAYS OLD. Conspicuously Black and White looking awkwardness; but as he rises into the trees his lovely rose-colored breast and under-wing feathers are seen, and before he has had time to repeat his delicious, rich-voiced warble you are already in love with him. Vib r ating his wings after the manner of the mocking-bird, he pours forth a marvellously sweet, clear, mellow song (with something of the quality of the oriole's, robin's, and thrush's notes), making the day on which you first hear it memorable. This is one of the few birds that sing at night. A soft, sweet, rolling warble, heard when the moon is at its full on a midsummer night, is more than likely to come from the rose-breasted grosbeak. It is not that his quiet little sparrow-like wife has advanced notions of feminine independence that he takes his turn at sitting upon the nest, but that he is one of the most unselfish and devoted of mates. With their combined efforts they construct only a coarse, unlovely cradle in a thorn-bush or low tree near an old, overgrown pasture lot. The father may be the poorest of archi- tects, but as he patiently sits brooding over the green, speckled eggs, his beautiful rosy breast just showing above the grassy rim, he is a sufficient adornment for any bird's home. The Bobolink (Dolicbonyx ory^ivorus} Blackbird family Called also: REEDB1RD; MAYBIRD; MEADOW-BIRD; AMERI- CAN ORTOLAN ; BUTTER-BIRD ; SKUNK BLACKBIRD Length 7 inches. A trifle larger than the English sparrow. Male In spring plumage: black, with light-yellow patch on upper neck, also on edges of wings and tail feathers. Rump and upper wings splashed with white. Middle of back streaked with pale buff. Tail feathers have pointed tips. In autumn plumage, resembles female. Female Dull yellow-brown, with light and dark dashes on back, wings, and tail. Two decided dark stripes on top of head. Range North America, from eastern coast to western prairies. Migrates in early autumn to Southern States, and in winter to South America and West Indies. Migrations Early May. From August to October. Common summer resident. 61 Conspicuously Black and White Perhaps none of our birds have so fitted into song and story as the bobolink. Unlike a good child, who should "be seen and not heard," he is heard more frequently than seen. Very shy, of peering eyes, he keeps well out of sight in the meadow grass before entrancing our listening ears. The bobolink never soars like the lark, as the poets would have us believe, but gen- erally sings on the wing, flying with a peculiar self-conscious flight horizontally thirty or forty feet above the meadow grass. He also sings perched upon the fence or tuft of grass. He is one of the greatest poseurs among the birds. In spring and early summer the bobolinks respond to every poet's effort to imitate their notes. "Dignified 'Robert of Lin- coln' is telling his name," says one; "Spink, spank, spink," an- other hears him say. But best of all are Wilson Flagg's lines : ..." Now they rise and now they fly ; They cross and turn, and in and out, and down the middle and wheel about, With a ' Phew, shew, Wadolincon ; listen to me Bobolincon ! ' " After midsummer the cares of the family have so worn upon the jollity of our dashing, rollicking friend that his song is seldom heard. The colors of his coat fade into a dull yellowish brown like that of his faithful mate, who has borne the greater burden of the season, for he has two complete moults each year. The bobolinks build their nest on the ground in high grass. The eggs are of a bluish white. Their food is largely insectivo- rous : grasshoppers, crickets, beetles, spiders, with seeds of grass especially for variety. In August they begin their journey southward, flying mainly by night. Arriving in the Southern States, they become the sad- colored, low-voiced rice or reed bird, feeding on the rice fields, where they descend to the ignominious fate of being dressed for the plate of the epicure. Could there be a more tragic ending to the glorious note of the gay songster of the north ? Conspicuously Black and White Blackpoll Warbler (Dendroica striata) Wood Warbler family Length 5.5 to 6 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. MateBlack cap; cheeks and beneath grayish white, forming a sort of collar, more or less distinct. Upper parts striped gray, black, and olive. Breast and under parts white, with black streaks. Tail olive-brown, with yellow-white spots. Female Without cap. Greenish-olive above, faintly streaked with black. Paler than male. Bands on wings, yellowish. Range North America, to Greenland and Alaska. In winter, to northern part of South America. Migrations Last of May. Late October. A faint " screep, screep," like "the noise made by striking two pebbles together," Audubon says, is often the only indication of the blackpoll's presence; but surely that tireless bird-student had heard its more characteristic notes, which, rapidly uttered, increasing in the middle of the strain and diminishing toward the end, suggest the shrill, wiry hum of some midsummer insect. After the opera-glass has searched him out we find him by no means an inconspicuous bird. A dainty little fellow, with a glossy black cap pulled over his eyes, he is almost hidden by the dense foliage on the trees by the time he returns to us at the very end of spring. Giraud says that he is the very last of his tribe to come north, though the bay-breasted warbler has usually been thought the bird to wind up the spring procession. The blackpoll has a certain characteristic motion that distin- guishes him from the black-and-white creeper, for which a hasty glance might mistake him, and from the jolly little chickadee with his black cap. Apparently he runs about the tree-trunk, but in reality he so flits his wings that his feet do not touch the bark at all ; yet so rapidly does he go that the flipping wing-motion is not observed. He is most often seen in May in the apple trees, peeping into the opening blossoms for insects, uttering now and then his slender, lisping, brief song. Vivacious, a busy hunter, often catching insects on the wing like the flycatchers, he is a cheerful, useful neighbor the short time he spends with us before travelling to the far north, where he mates and nests. A nest has been found on Slide Mountain, in the Catskills, but the hardy evergreens of Canada, and some- 63 Conspicuously Black and White times those of northern New England, are the chosen home of this little bird that builds a nest of bits of root, lichens, and sedges, amply large for a family twice the size of his. Black-and-white Creeping Warbler (Mniotilta varia) Wood Warbler family Called also: VARIED CREEPING WARBLER ; BLACK-AND- WHITE CREEPER ; WHITEPOLL WARBLER Length 5 to 5.5 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Male Upper parts white, varied with black. A white stripe along the summit of the head and back of the neck, edged with black. White line above and below the eye. Black cheeks and throat, grayish in females and young. Breast white in middle, with black stripes on sides. Wings and tail rusty black, with two white cross-bars on former, and soiled white markings on tail quills. Female Paler and less distinct markings throughout. Range Peculiar to America. Eastern United States and west- ward to the plains. North as far as the fur countries. Win- ters in tropics south of Florida. Migrations April. Late September. Summer resident. Nine times out of ten this active little warbler is mistaken for the downy woodpecker, not because of his coloring alone, but also on account of their common habit of running up and down the trunks of trees and on the under side of branches, looking for insects, on which all the warblers subsist. But presently the true warbler characteristic of restless flitting about shows itself. A woodpecker would go over a tree with painstaking, systematic care, while the black-and-white warbler, no less intent upon securing its food, hurries off from tree to tree, wherever the most promising menu is offered. Clinging to the mottled bark of the tree-trunk, which he so closely resembles, it would be difficult to find him were it not for these sudden flirtings and the feeble song, " Weacby, weacby, weacby, 'twee, 'twee, 'tweet," he half lisps, half sings between his dashes after slugs. Very rarely indeed can his nest be found in an old stump or mossy bank, where bark, leaves, and hair make the downy cradle for his four or five tiny babies. 64 BLACK AND WHITE CREEPING WARBLER. Life-sixe. DUSKY AND GRAY AND SLATE-COLORED BIRDS Chimney Swift Kingbird Wood Pewee Phoebe and Say's Phoebe Crested Flycatcher Olive-sided Flycatcher Least Flycatcher Chickadee Tufted Titmouse Canada Jay Catbird Mocking-bird Junco White-breasted Nuthatch Red-breasted Nuthatch Loggerhead Shrike Northern Shrike Bohemian Waxwing Bay-breasted Warbler Chestnut-sided Warbler Golden-winged Warbler Myrtle Warbler Parula Warbler Black-throated Blue Warbler See also the Grayish Green and the Grayish Brown Birds, particularly the Cedar Bird, several Swallows, the Acadian and the Yellow-bellied Flycatchers; Alice's and the Olive-backed Thrushes; the Louisiana Water Thrush; the Blue-gray Gnat- catcher; and the Seaside Sparrow. See also the females of the following birds: Pine Grosbeak; White-winged Red Crossbill; Purple Martin; and the Nashville, the Pine, and the Magnolia Warblers. - ~, CHIMNEY SWIFT. % Life-size. DUSKY, GRAY, AND SLATE-COLORED BIRDS Chimney Swift (Chcetura pelagica) Swift family Called also: CHIMNEY SWALLOW; AMERICAN SWIFT Length 5 to 5.45 inches. About an inch shorter than the Eng- lish sparrow. Long wings make its length appear greater. Male and Female Deep sooty gray ; throat of a trifle lighter gray. Wings extend an inch and a half beyond the even tail, which has sharply pointed and very elastic quills, that serve as props. Feet are muscular, and have exceedingly sharp claws. Range Peculiar to North America east of the Rockies, and from Labrador to Panama. Migrations April. September or October. Common summer resident. The chimney swift is, properly speaking, not a swallow at all, though chimney swallow is its more popular name. Rowing towards the roof of your house, as if it used first one wing, then the other, its flight, while swift and powerful, is stiff and mechan- ical, unlike the swallow's, and its entire aspect suggests a bat. The nighthawk and whippoorwill are its relatives, and it resem- bles them not a little, especially in its nocturnal habits. So much fault has been found with the misleading names of many birds, it is pleasant to record the fact that the name of the chimney swift is everything it ought to be. No other birds can surpass and few can equal it in its powerful flight, sometimes covering a thousand miles in twenty-four hours, it is said, and never resting except in its roosting places (hollow trees or chim- neys of dwellings), where it does not perch, but rather clings to the sides with its sharp claws, partly supported by its sharper tail. Audubon tells of a certain plane tree in Kentucky where he counted over nine thousand of these swifts clinging to the hollow trunk. 67 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Their nest, which is a loosely woven twig lattice, made of twigs of trees, which the birds snap off with their beaks and carry in their beaks, is glued with the bird's saliva or tree-gum into a solid structure, and firmly attached to the inside of chimneys, or hollow trees where there are no houses about. Two broods in a season usually emerge from the pure white, elongated eggs. What a twittering there is in the chimney that the swifts appropriate after the winter fires have died out! Instead of the hospitable column of smoke curling from the top, a cloud of sooty birds wheels and floats above it. A sound as of distant thunder fills the chimney as a host of these birds, startled, perhaps, by some indoor noise, whirl their way upward. Woe betide the happy colony if a sudden cold snap in early summer necessitates the starting of a fire on the hearth by the unsuspecting householder! The glue being melted by the fire, "down comes the cradle, babies and all " into the glowing embers. A prolonged, heavy rain also causes their nests to loosen their hold and fall with the soot to the bottom. Thrifty New England housekeepers claim that bedbugs, commonly found on bats, infest the bodies of swifts also, which is one reason why wire netting is stretched across the chimney tops before the birds arrive from the South. Kingbird (Tyrannus tyrannus) Flycatcher family Called also: TYRANT FLYCATCHER; BEE MARTIN Length 8 inches. About two inches shorter than the robin. Male Ashy black above ; white, shaded with ash-color, beneath. A concealed crest of orange-red on crown. Tail black, ter- minating with a white band conspicuous in flight. Wing feathers edged with white. Feet and bill black. Female Similar to the male, but lacking the crown. Range United States to the Rocky Mountains. British provinces to Central and South America. Migrations May. September. Common summer resident. If the pugnacious propensity of the kingbird is the occasion of its royal name, he cannot be said to deserve it from any fine or noble qualities he possesses. He is a born fighter from the very 68 WOOD PEWEF. s /6 Life-size. Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored love of it, without provocation, rhyme, or reason. One can but watch with a degree of admiration his bold sallies on the big, black crow or the marauding hawk, but when he bullies the small inoffensive birds in wanton attacks for sheer amusement, the charge is less entertaining. Occasionally, when the little vic- tim shows pluck and faces his assailant, the kingbird will literally turn tail and show the white feather. His method of attack is always when a bird is in flight; then he swoops down from the telegraph pole or high point of vantage, and strikes on the head or back of the neck, darting back like a flash to the exact spot from which he started. By these tactics he avoids a return blow and retreats from danger. He never makes a fair hand-to-hand fight, or whatever is equivalent in bird warfare. It is a satisfaction to record that he does not attempt to give battle to the catbird, but whenever in view makes a grand detour to give him a wide berth. The kingbird feeds on beetles, canker-worms, and winged insects, with an occasional dessert of berries. He is popularly supposed to prefer the honeybee as his favorite tidbit, but the weight of opinion is adverse to the charge of his depopulating the beehive, even though he owes his appellation bee martin to this tradition. One or two ornithologists declare that he selects only the drones for his diet, which would give him credit for marvel- lous sight in his rapid motion through the air. The kingbird is preeminently a bird of the garden and orchard. The nest is open, though deep, and not carefully concealed. Eggs are nearly round, bluish white spotted with brown and lilac. With truly royal exclusiveness, the tyrant favors no community of interest, but sits in regal state on a conspicuous throne, and takes his grand flights alone or with his queen, but never with a flock of his kind. Wood Pewee (Contopus virens) Flycatcher family Length 6.50 inches. A trifle larger than the English sparrow. Male Dusky brownish olive above, darkest on head ; paler on throat, lighter still underneath, and with a yellowish tinge on the dusky gray under parts. Dusky wings and tail, the wing coverts tipped with soiled white, forming two indistinct bars. Whitish eye-ring. Wings longer than tail. Female Similar, but slightly more buff underneath. 69 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Range Eastern North America, from Florida to northern British provinces. Winters in Central America. Migrations May. October. Common summer resident. The wood pewee, like the olive-sided flycatcher, has wings decidedly longer than its tail, and it is by no means a simple matter for the novice to tell these birds apart or separate them distinctly in the mind from the other members of a family whose coloring and habits are most confusingly similar. This dusky haunter of tall shady trees has not yet learned to be sociable like the phoebe; but while it may not be so much in evidence close to our homes, it is doubtless just as common. The orchard is as near the house as it often cares to come. An old orchard, where modern insecticides are unknown and neglect allows insects to riot among the decayed bark and fallen fruit, is a happy hunting ground enough ; but the bird's real preferences are decidedly for high tree-tops in the woods, where no sunshine touches the feathers on his dusky coat. It is one of the few shade-loving birds. In deep solitudes, where it surely retreats by nesting time, however neighborly it may be during the migrations, its pensive, pathetic notes, long drawn out, seem like the expression of some hidden sorrow. Pe-a-wee, pe-a-wee, pewee-ah-peer is the burden of its plaintive song, a sound as depressing as it is familiar in every walk through the woods, and the bird's most prominent characteristic. To see the bird dashing about in his aerial chase for insects, no one would accuse him of melancholia. He keeps an eye on the "main chance," whatever his preying grief may be, and never allows it to affect his appetite. Returning to his perch after a successful sally in pursuit of the passing fly, he repeats his "sweetly solemn thought" over and over again all day long and every day throughout the summer. The wood pewees show that devotion to each other and to their home, characteristic of their family. Both lovers work on the construction of the flat nest that is saddled on some mossy or lichen-covered limb, and so cleverly do they cover the rounded edge with bits of bark and lichen that sharp eyes only can detect where the cradle lies. Creamy-white eggs, whose larger end is wreathed with brown and lilac spots, are guarded with fierce 1 solicitude. Trowbridge has celebrated this bird in a beautiful poem. 70 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe) Flycatcher family Called also; DUSKY FLYCATCHER; BRIDGE PE WEE; WATER PEWEE Length 7 inches. About an inch longer than the English sparrow. Male and Female Dusky olive-brown above ; darkest on head, which is slightly crested. Wings and tail dusky, the outer edges of some tail feathers whitish. Dingy yellowish white underneath. Bill and feet black. Range North America, from Newfoundland to the South At- lantic States, and westward to the Rockies. Winters south of the Carolinas, into Mexico, Central America, and the West Indies. Migrations March. October. Common summer resident. The earliest representative of the flycatcher family to come out of the tropics where insect life fairly swarms and teems, what does the friendly little phoebe find to attract him to the north in March while his prospective dinners must all be still in embryo ? He looks dejected, it is true, as he sits solitary and silent on some projecting bare limb in the garden, awaiting the coming of his tardy mate; nevertheless, the date of his return will not vary by more than a few days in a given locality year after year. Why birds that are mated for life, as these are said to be, and such de- voted lovers, should not travel together on their journey north, is another of the many mysteries of bird-life awaiting solution. The reunited, happy couple go about the garden and out- buildings like domesticated wrens, investigating the crannies on piazzas, where people may be coming and going, and boldly entering barn-lofts to find a suitable site for the nest that it must take much of both time and skill to build. Pewit, phoebe, phoebe; pewit, phoebe, they contentedly but rather monotonously sing as they investigate all the sites in the neighborhood. Presently a location is chosen under a beam or rafter, and the work of collecting moss and mud for the founda- tion and hair and feathers or wool to line the exquisite little home begins. But the labor is done cheerfully, with many a sally in midair either to let off superfluous high spirits or to catch a morsel on the wing, and with many a vivacious outburst of what by courtesy only we may name a song. 71 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored When not domesticated, as these birds are rapidly becoming, the phoebes dearly love a cool, wet woodland retreat. Here they hunt and bathe ; here they also build in a rocky bank or ledge of rocks or underneath a bridge, but always with clever adaptation of their nest to its surroundings, out of which it seems a natural growth. It is one of the most finished, beautiful nests ever found. A pair of phoebes become attached to a spot where they have once nested ; they never stray far from it, and return to it regularly, though they may not again occupy the old nest. This is because it soon becomes infested with lice from the hen's feathers used in lining it, for which reason too close relationship with this friendly bird-neighbor is discouraged by thrifty house- keepers. When the baby birds have come out from the four or six little white eggs, their helpless bodies are mercilessly attacked by parasites, and are often so enfeebled that half the brood die. The next season another nest will be built near the first, the fol- lowing summer still another, until it would appear that a colony of birds had made their homes in the place. Throughout the long summer for as the phoebe is the first flycatcher to come, so it is the last to go the bird is a tireless hunter of insects, which it catches on the wing with a sharp click of its beak, like the other members of its dexterous family. Say's Phoebe (Sayornis saya) is the Western representative of the Eastern species, which it resembles in coloring and many of its habits. It is the bird of the open plains, a tireless hunter in midair sallies from an isolated perch, and has the same vibrat- ing motion of the tail that the Eastern phoebe indulges in when excited. This bird differs chiefly in its lighter coloring, but not in habits, from the black pewee of the Pacific slope. Great-crested Flycatcher (Myiarcbus crinitus) Flycatcher family Called also: CRESTED FLYCATCHER Length 8. 50 to 9 inches. A little smaller than the robin. Male and Female Feathers of the head pointed and erect. Upper parts dark grayish-olive, inclining to rusty brown on wings and tail. Wing coverts crossed with two irregular bars of yellowish white. Throat gray, shading into sulphur-yellow 72 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored underneath, that also extends under the wings. Inner vane of several tail quills rusty red. Bristles at base of bill. Range From Mexico, Central America, and West Indies north- ward to southern Canada and westward to the plains. Most common in Mississippi basin ; common also in eastern United States, south of New England. Migrations May. September. Common summer resident. The most dignified and handsomely dressed member of his family, the crested flycatcher has, nevertheless, an air of pensive melancholy about him when in repose that can be accounted for only by the pain he must feel every time he hears himself screech. His harsh, shrill call, louder and more disagreeable than the king- bird's, cannot but rasp his ears as it does ours. And yet it is chiefly by this piercing note, given with a rising inflection, that we know the bird is in our neighborhood ; for he is somewhat of a recluse, and we must often follow the disagreeable noise to its source in the tree-tops before we can catch a glimpse of the screecher. Perched on a high lookout, he appears morose and sluggish, in spite of his aristocratic-looking crest, trim figure, and feathers that must seem rather gay to one of his dusky tribe. A low soliloquy, apparently born of discontent, can be overheard from the foot of his tree. But another second, and he has dashed off in hot pursuit of an insect flying beyond our sight, and with extremely quick, dexterous evolutions in midair, he finishes the hunt with a sharp click of his bill as it closes over the unhappy victim, and then he returns to his perch. On the wing he is exceedingly active and joyous; in the tree he appears just the reverse. That he is a domineering fellow, quite as much of a tyrant as the notorious kingbird, that bears the greater burden of opprobrium, is shown in the fierce way he promptly dashes at a feathered stranger that may have alighted too near his perch, and pursues it beyond the bounds of justice, all the while screaming his rasping cry into the intruder's ears, that must pierce as deep as the thrusts from his relentless beak. He has even been known to drive off woodpeckers and bluebirds from the hollows in the trees that he, like them, chooses for a nest, and appropriate the results of their labor for his scarcely less belligerent mate. With a slight but important and indispensable addition, the stolen nest is ready to receive her four cream-colored eggs, that look as if a pen dipped in purple ink had been scratched over them. 73 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored The fact that gives the great-crested flycatcher a unique in- terest among all North American birds is that it invariably lines its nest with snake-skins if one can be had. Science would scarcely be worth the studying if it did not set our imaginations to work delving for plausible reasons for Nature's strange doings. Most of us will doubtless agree with Wilson (who made a special study of these interesting nests and never found a single one without cast snake-skins in it, even in districts where snakes were so rare they were supposed not to exist at all), that the lining was chosen to terrorize all intruders. The scientific mind that is unwilling to dismiss any detail of Nature's work as merely arbitrary and haphazard, is greatly exercised over the reason for the existence of crests on birds. But, surely, may not the sight of snake-skins that first greet the eyes of the fledgling flycatchers as they emerge from the shell be a good and sufficient reason why the feathers on their little heads should stand on end? "In the absence of a snake-skin, I have found an onion skin and shad scales in the nest," says John Burroughs, who calls this bird "the wild Irishman of the flycatchers." Olive-sided Flycatcher (Contopus borealis) Flycatcher family Length'] to 7.5 inches. About an inch longer than the English sparrow. Male and female Dusky olive or grayish brown above ; head darkest. Wings and tail blackish brown, the former some- times, but not always, margined and tipped with dusky white. Throat yellowish white ; other under parts slightly lighter shade than above. Olive-gray on sides. A tuft of yellowish-white, downy feathers on flanks. Bristles at base of bill. Range From Labrador to Panama. Winters in the tropics. Nests usually north of United States, but it also breeds in the Catskills. Migrations May. September. Resident only in northern part of its range. Only in the migrations may people south of Massachusetts hope to see this flycatcher, which can be distinguished from the rest of its kin by the darker under parts, and by the fluffy, yel- 74 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored lowish-white tufts of feathers on its flanks. Its habits have the family characteristics: It takes its food on the wing, suddenly sallying forth from its perch, darting about midair to seize its prey, then as suddenly returning to its identical point of vantage, usually in some distended, dead limb in the tree-top; it is pug- nacious, bold, and tyrannical; mopish and inert when not on the hunt, but wonderfully alert and swift when in pursuit of insect or feathered foe. The short necks of the flycatchers make their heads appear large for their bodies, a peculiarity slightly em- phasized in this member of the family. High up in some evergreen tree, well out on a branch, over which the shapeless mass of twigs and moss that serves as a nest is saddled, four or five buff-speckled eggs are laid, and by some special dispensation rarely fall out of their insecure cradle. A sharp, loud whistle, wbeu o-wbeu-o-wheu-o , rings out from the throat of this olive-sided tyrant, warning all intruders off the premises ; but however harshly he may treat the rest of the feathered world, he has only gentle devotion to offer his brooding mate. Least Flycatcher (Empidonax minimus) Flycatcher family Called also: CHEBEC Length 5 to 5.5 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Male Gray or olive-gray above, paler on wings and lower part of back, and a more distinct olive-green on head. Under- neath grayish white, sometimes faintly suffused with pale yellow. Wings have whitish bars. White eye-ring. Lower half of bill horn-color. Female Is slightly more yellowish underneath. Range Eastern North America, from tropics northward to Quebec. Migrations May. Septembe". Common summer resident. This, the smallest member of its family, takes the place of the more southerly Acadian flycatcher, throughout New England and the region of the Great Lakes. But, unlike his Southern rela- tive, he prefers orchards and gardens close to our homes for his hunting grounds rather than the wet recesses of the forests. Cbe-bec, cbe-bec, the diminutive olive-pated gray sprite calls out 75 Dusky. Gray, and Slate-colored from the orchard between his aerial sallies after the passing insects that have been attracted by the decaying fruit, and chebec is the name by which many New Englanders know him. While giving this characteristic call-note, with drooping, jerking tail, trembling wings, and uplifted parti-colored bill, he looks unnerved and limp by the effort it has cost him. But in the next instant a gnat flies past. How quickly the bird recovers itself, and charges full-tilt at his passing dinner! The sharp click of his little bill proves that he has not missed his aim ; and after careering about in the air another minute or two, looking for more game to snap up on the wing, he will return to the same perch and take up his familiar refrain. Without hearing this call- note one might often mistake the bird for either the wood pewee or the pho3be, for all the three are similarly clothed and have many traits in common. The slightly larger size of the phoebe and pewee is not always apparent when they are seen perching on the trees. Unlike the "tuft of hay" to which the Acadian flycatcher's nest has been likened, the least flycatcher's home is a neat, substantial cup-shaped cradle softly lined with down or horsehair, and placed generally in an upright crotch of a tree, well above the ground. The Chickadee (Parus atricapillus) Titmouse family Called also: BLACK-CAPPED TITMOUSE; BLACK-CAP TIT Length 5 to 5.5 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Not crested. Crown and nape and throat black. Above gray, slightly tinged with brown. A white space, beginning at base of bill, extends backwards, widen- ing over cheeks and upper part of breast, forming a sort of collar that almost surrounds neck. Underneath dirty white, with pale rusty-brown wash on sides. Wings and tail gray, with white edgings. Plumage downy. Range Eastern North America. North of the Carolinas to Lab- rador. Does not migrate in the North. Migrations Late September. May. Winter resident ; perma- nent resident in northern parts of the United States. No "fair weather friend " is the jolly little chickadee. In the depth of the autumn equinoctial storm it returns to the tops of 76 CHICKADEE. Life-size. Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored the trees close by the house, where, through the sunshine, snow, and tempest of the entire winter, you may hear its cheery, irrepressible chickadee-dee- dee-dee or day-day-day as it swings around the dangling cones of the evergreens. It fairly over- flows with good spirits, and is never more contagiously gay than in a snowstorm. So active, so friendly and cheering, what would the long northern winters be like without this lovable little neighbor ? It serves a more utilitarian purpose, however, than bracing faint-hearted spirits. "There is no bird that compares with it in destroying the female canker-worm moths and their eggs," writes a well-known entomologist. He calculates that as a chickadee destroys about 5,500 eggs in one day, it will eat 138,750 eggs in the twenty-five days it takes the canker-worm moth to crawl up the trees. The moral that it pays to attract chickadees about your home by feeding them in winter is obvious. Mrs. Mabel Osgood Wright, in her delightful and helpful book "Birdcraft," tells us how she makes a sort of a bird-hash of finely minced raw meat, waste canary-seed, buckwheat, and cracked oats, which she scatters in a sheltered spot for all the winter birds. The way this is consumed leaves no doubt of its popularity. A raw bone, hung from an evergreen limb, is equally appreciated. Friendly as the chickadee is and Dr. Abbott declares it the tamest bird we have it prefers well-timbered districts, especially where there are red-bud trees, when it is time to nest. It is very often clever enough to leave the labor of hollowing out a nest in the tree-trunk to the woodpecker or nuthatch, whose old homes it readily appropriates ; or, when these birds object, a knot-hole or a hollow fence-rail answers every purpose. Here, in the sum- mer woods, when family cares beset it, a plaintive, minor whistle replaces the chickadee-dee-dee that Thoreau likens to "silver tink- ling " as he heard it on a frosty morning. " Piped a tiny voice near by, Gay and polite, a cheerful cry Chick-chickadeedee ! saucy note Out of sound heart and merry throat, As if it said, ' Good-day, good Sir ! Fine afternoon, old passenger ! Happy to meet you in these places Where January brings few faces.' " Emerson. 77 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Tufted Titmouse (Parus bicolor] Titmouse family Called also: CRESTED TITMOUSE; CRESTED TOMTIT Length 6 to 6.5 inches. About the size of the English sparrow. Male and Female Crest high and pointed. Leaden or ash-gray above; darkest on wings and tail. Frontlet, bill, and shoul- ders black; space between eyes gray. Sides of head dull white. Under parts light gray; sides yellowish, tinged with red. Range United States east of plains, and only rarely seen so far north as New England. Migrations October. April. Winter resident, but also found throughout the year in many States. "A noisy titmouse is Jack Frost's trumpeter" may be one of those few weather-wise proverbs with a grain of truth in them. As the chickadee comes from the woods with the frost, so it may be noticed his cousin, the crested titmouse, is in more noisy evi- dence throughout the winter. One might sometimes think his whistle, like a tugboat's, worked by steam. But how effectually nesting cares alone can silence it in April ! Titmice always see to it you are not lonely as you walk through the woods. This lordly tomtit, with his jaunty crest, keeps up a persistent whistle at you as he flits from tree to tree, leading you deeper into the forest, calling out " Here-here-here ! " and looking like a pert and jaunty little blue jay, minus his gay clothes. Mr. Nehrling translates one of the calls " Heedle-dee- lle-dee-dle-dee !" and another ' ' Peto-peto-peto-daytee-daytee ! " But it is at the former, sharply whistled as the crested titmouse gives it, that every dog pricks up his ears. Comparatively little has been written about this bird, because Jt is not often found in New England, where most of the bird litterateurs have lived. South of New York State, however, it is a common resident, and much respected for the good work it does in destroying injurious insects, though it is more fond of varying its diet with nuts, berries, and seeds than that all-round benefactor, the chickadee. 78 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Canada Jay (Perisoreus canadensis) Crow and Jay family Called also: WHISKY JACK OR JOHN; MOOSE-BIRD; MEAT- BIRD; VENISON HERON; GREASE-BIRD; CANADIAN CARRION-BIRD; CAMP ROBBER Length \ i to 12 inches. About two inches larger than the robin. Male and Female Upper parts gray; darkest on wings and tail; back of the head and nape of the neck sooty, almost black. Forehead, throat, and neck white, and a few white tips on wings and tail. Underneath lighter gray. Tail long. Plu- mage fluffy. Range Northern parts of the United States and British provinces of North America. Migrations Resident where found. The Canada jay looks like an exaggerated chickadee, and both birds are equally fond of bitter cold weather, but here the similarity stops short. Where the chickadee is friendly the jay is impudent and bold; hardly less of a villain than his blue relative when it comes to marauding other birds' nests and destroying their young. With all his vices, however, intemperance cannot be attributed to him, in spite of the name given him by the Adi- rondack lumbermen and guides. "Whisky John" is a purely innocent corruption of " Wis-ka-tjon," as the Indians call this bird that haunts their camps and familiarly enters their wigwams. The numerous popular names by which the Canada jays are known are admirably accounted for by Mr. Hardy in a bulletin issued by the Smithsonian Institution. "They will enter the tents, and often alight on the bow of a canoe, where the paddle at every stroke comes within eighteen inches of them. I know nothing which can be eaten that they will not take, and I had one steal all my candles, pulling them out endwise, one by one, from a piece of birch bark in which they were rolled, and another peck a large hole in a keg of cas- tile soap. A duck which I had picked and laid down for a few minutes, had the entire breast eaten out by one or more of these birds. I have seen one alight in the middle of my canoe and peck away at the carcass of a beaver I had skinned. They often spoil deer saddles by pecking into them near the kidneys. They 79 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored do great damage to the trappers by stealing the bait from traps set for martens and minks and by eating trapped game. They will sit quietly and see you build a log trap and bait it, and then, almost before your back is turned, you hear their hateful ca-ca-ca! as they glide down and peer into it. They will work steadily, carrying off meat and hiding it. I have thrown out pieces, and watched one to see how much he would carry off. He flew across a wide stream, and in a short time looked as bloody as a butcher from carrying large pieces; but his patience held out longer than mine. I think one would work as long as Mark Twain's California jay did trying to fill a miner's cabin with acorns through a knot-hole in the roof. They are fond of the berries of the mountain ash, and, in fact, few things come amiss; I believe they do not possess a single good quality except industry." One virtue not mentioned by Mr. Hardy is their prudent saving from the summer surplus to keep the winter storeroom well sup- plied like a squirrel's. Such thrift is the more necessary when a clamorous, hungry family of young jays must be reared while the thermometer is often as low as thirty degrees below zero at the end of March. How eggs are ever hatched at all in a tempera- ture calculated to freeze any sitting bird stiff, is one of the mys- teries of the woods. And yet four or five fluffy little jays, that look as if they were dressed in gray fur, emerge from the eggs before the spring sunshine has unbound the icy rivers or melted the snowdrifts piled high around the evergreens. Catbird (Galeoscoptes carolinensis) Mocking-bird family Called also: BLACK-CAPPED THRUSH Length 9 inches. An inch shorter than the robin. Male and Female Dark slate above; below somewhat paler; top of head black. Distinct chestnut patch under the tail, which is black; feet and bill black also. Wings short, more than two inches shorter than the tail. Range British provinces to Mexico; west to Rocky Mountains, rarely to Pacific coast. Winters in Southern States, Central America, and Cuba. Migrations May. November. Common summer resident. 80 CATBIRD. Life-size. Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Our familiar catbird, of all the feathered tribe, presents the most contrary characteristics, and is therefore held in varied esti- mation loved, admired, ridiculed, abused. He is the veriest "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" of birds. Exquisitely proportioned, with finely poised black head and satin-gray coat, which he bathes most carefully and prunes and prinks by the hour, he ap- pears from his toilet a Beau Brummell, an aristocratic-looking, even dandified neighbor. Suddenly, as if shot, he drops head and tail and assumes the most hang-dog air, without the least sign of self-respect ; then crouches and lengthens into a roll, head forward and tail straightened, till he looks like a little, short gray snake, lank and limp. Anon, with a jerk and a sprint, every muscle tense, tail erect, eyes snapping, he darts into the air intent upon some well-planned mischief. It is impossible to describe his various attitudes or moods. In song and call he presents the same opposite characteristics. How such a bird, exquisite in style, can demean himself to utter such harsh, altogether hateful catcalls and squawks as have given the bird his common name, is a wonder when in the next moment his throat swells and be- gmn'mgpbut-pbut-coquillicot, he gives forth a long glorious song, only second to that of the wood thrush in melody. He is a jes- ter, a caricaturist, a mocking-bird. The catbird's nest is like a veritable scrap-basket, loosely woven of coarse twigs, bits of newspaper, scraps, and rags, till this rough exterior is softly lined and made fit to receive the four to six pretty dark green-blue eggs to be laid therein. As a fruit thief harsh epithets are showered upon the friendly, confiding little creature at our doors; but surely his depredations may be pardoned, for he is industrious at all times and unusually adroit in catching insects, especially in the moth stage. The Mocking-bird polyglottus) Mocking-bird family Length 9 to io inches. About the size of the robin. Male and Female Gray above; wings and wedge-shaped tail brownish; upper wing feathers tipped with white; outer tail quills white, conspicuous in flight; chin white; under- neath light gray, shading to whitish. Range Peculiar to torrid and temperate zones of two Americas. Migrations No fixed migrations ; usually resident where seen. 81 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored North of Delaware this commonest of Southern birds is all too rarely seen outside of cages, yet even in midwinter it is not unknown in Central Park, New York. This is the angel that it is said the catbird was before he fell from grace. Slim, neat, graceful, imitative, amusing, with a rich, tender song that only the thrush can hope to rival, and with an instinctive preference for the society of man, it is little wonder he is a favorite, caged or free. He is a most devoted parent, too, when the four or six speckled green eggs have produced as many mouths to be sup- plied with insects and berries. In the Connecticut Valley, where many mocking-birds' nests have been found, year after year, they are all seen near the ground, and without exception are loosely, poorly constructed affairs of leaves, feathers, grass, and even rags. With all his virtues, it must be added, however, that this charming bird is a sad tease. There is no sound, whether made by bird or beast about him, that he cannot imitate so clearly as to deceive every one but himself. Very rarely can you find a mocking-bird without intelligence and mischief enough to appre- ciate his ventriloquism. In Sidney Lanier's college note-book was found written this reflection: "A poet is the mocking-bird of the spiritual universe. In him are collected all the individual songs of all individual natures." Later in life, with the same thought in mind, he referred to the bird as "yon slim Shakespeare on the tree." His exquisite stanzas, "To Our Mocking-bird," exalt the singer with the immortals : Trillets of humor, shrewdest whistle-wit Contralto cadences of grave desire, Such as from off the passionate Indian pyre Drift down through sandal-odored flames that split About the slim young widow, who doth sit And sing above, midnights of tone entire, Tissues of moonlight, shot with songs of fire ; Bright drops of tune, from oceans infinite Of melody, sipped off the thin-edged wave And trickling down the beak, discourses brave Of serious matter that no man may guess, Good-fellow greetings, cries of light distress All these but now within the house we heard : O Death, wast thou too deaf to hear the bird? Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored ic Nay, Bird ; my griet gainsays the Lord's best right. The Lord was fain, at some late festal time, That Keats should set all heaven's woods in rhyme, And Thou in bird-notes. Lo, this tearful night Methinks I see thee, fresh from Death's despite, Perched in a palm-grove, wild with pantomime O'er blissful companies couched in shady thyme. Methinks I hear thy silver whistlings bright Meet with the mighty discourse of the wise, 'Till broad Beethoven, deaf no more, and Keats, 'Midst of much talk, uplift their smiling eyes And mark the music of thy wood-conceits, And half-way pause on some large courteous word, And call thee ' Brother,' O thou heavenly Bird ! " Junco (Junco hyemalis) Finch family Called also: SNOWBIRD; SLATE-COLORED SNOWBIRD Length 5.5 to 6.5 inches. About the size of the English sparrow. Male Upper parts slate-colored ; darkest on head and neck, which are sometimes almost black and marked like a cowl. Gray on breast, like a vest. Underneath white. Several outer tail feathers white, conspicuous in flight. Female Lighter gray, inclining to brown. Range North America. Not common in warm latitudes. Breeds in the Catskills and northern New England. Migrations September. April. Winter resident. "Leaden skies above; snow below," is Mr. Parkhurst's sug- gestive description of this rather timid little neighbor, that is only starved into familiarity. When the snow has buried seed and berries, a flock of juncos, mingling sociably with the sparrows and chickadees about the kitchen door, will pick up scraps of food with an intimacy quite touching in a bird naturally rather shy. Here we can readily distinguish these "little gray-robed monks and nuns," as Miss Florence Merriam calls them. They are trim, sprightly, sleek, and even natty; their disposi- tions are genial and vivacious, not quarrelsome, like their sparrow cousins, and what is perhaps best about them, they are birds we may surely depend upon seeing in the winter months. A few come forth in September, migrating at night from the deep 83 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored woods of the north, where they have nested and moulted during the summer ; but not until frost has sharpened the air are large numbers of them seen. Rejoicing in winter, they nevertheless do not revel in the deep and fierce arctic blasts, as the snowflakes do, but take good care to avoid the open pastures before the hard storms overtake them. Early in the spring their song is sometimes heard before they leave us to woo and to nest in the north. Mr. Bicknell describes it as "a crisp call-note, a simple trill, and a faint, whispered warble, usually much broken, but not without sweetness." White-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis) Nuthatch family Called also: TREE-MOUSE; DEVIL DOWNHEAD Length 5. 5 to 6 inches. A trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts slate-color. Top of head and nape black. Wings dark slate, edged with black, that fades to brown. Tail feathers brownish black, with white bars. Sides of head and underneath white, shading to pale reddish under the tail. (Female's head leaden.) Body flat and com- pact. Bill longer than head. Range British provinces to Mexico. Eastern United States. Migrations October. April. Common resident. Most promi- nent in winter. " Shrewd little haunter of woods all gray, Whom I meet on my walk of a winter day You're busy inspecting each cranny and hole In the ragged bark of yon hickory bole ; You intent on your task, and I on the law Of your wonderful head and gymnastic claw ! The woodpecker well may despair of this feat Only the fly with you can compete ! So much is clear ; but I fain would know How you can so reckless and fearless go, Head upward, head downward, all one to you, Zenith and nadir the same in your view ? " Edith M. Thomas. Could a dozen lines well contain a fuller description or more apt characterization of a bird than these " To a Nuthatch " ? 84 WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH. Life-size. Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored With more artless inquisitiveness than fear, this lively little acrobat stops his hammering or hatcheting at your approach, and stretching himself out from the tree until it would seem he must fall off, he peers down at you, head downward, straight into your upturned opera-glasses. If there is too much snow on the upper side of a branch, watch how he runs along underneath it like a fly, busily tapping the bark, or adroitly breaking the de- cayed bits with his bill, as he searches for the spider's eggs, larvae, etc., hidden there; yet somehow, between mouthfuls, managing to call out his cheery quank ! quank ! hank ! hank ! Titmice and nuthatches, which have many similar charac- teristics, are often seen in the most friendly hunting parties on the same tree. A pine woods is their dearest delight. There, as the mercury goes down, their spirits only seem to go up higher. In the spring they have been thought by many to migrate in flocks, whereas they are only retreating with their relations away from the haunts of men to the deep, cool woods, where they nest. With infinite patience the nuthatch excavates a hole in a tree, lining it with feathers and moss, and often depositing as many as ten white eggs (speckled with red and lilac) for a single brood. Red-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta canadensis) Nuthatch family Called also: CANADA NUTHATCH Length 4 to 4.75 inches. One-third smaller than the English sparrow. Male Lead-colored above; brownish on wings and tail. Head, neck, and stripe passing through eye to shoulder, black. Frontlet, chin, and shoulders white; also a white stripe over eye, meeting on brow. Under parts light, rusty red. Tail feathers barred with white near end, and tipped with pale brown. Female Has crown of brownish black, and is lighter beneath than male. Range Northern parts of North America. Not often seen south of the most northerly States. Migrations November. April. Winter resident. The brighter coloring of this tiny, hardy bird distinguishes it from the other and larger nuthatch, with whom it is usually 85 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored seen, for the winter birds have a delightfully social manner, so that a colony of these Free masons is apt to contain not only both kinds of nuthatches and chickadees, but kinglets and brown creepers as well. It shares the family habit of walking about the trees, head downward, and running along the under side of limbs like a fly. By Thanksgiving Day the quank! quank! of the white-breasted species is answered by the tai-tai-tait 7 of the red- breasted cousin in the orchard, where the family party is cele- brating with an elaborate menu of slugs, insects' eggs, and oily seeds from the evergreen trees. For many years this nuthatch, a more northern species than the white-breasted bird, was thought to be only a spring and autumn visitor, but latterly it is credited with habits like its congener's in nearly every particular. Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius ludovicianus) Shrike family Length 8.5 to 9 inches. A little smaller than the robin. Male and Female Upper parts gray ; narrow black line across forehead, connecting small black patches on sides of head at base of bill. Wings and tail black, plentifully marked with white, the outer tail feathers often being entirely white and conspicuous in flight. Underneath white or very light gray. Bill hooked and hawk-like. Range Eastern United States to the plains. Migrations May. October. Summer resident. It is not easy, even at a slight distance, to distinguish the loggerhead from the Northern shrike. Both have the pernicious habit of killing insects and smaller birds and impaling them on thorns; both have the peculiarity of flying, with strong, vigorous flight and much wing-flapping, close along the ground, then suddenly rising to a tree, on the lookout for prey. Their harsh, unmusical call-notes are similar too, and their hawk-like method of dropping suddenly upon a victim on the ground below is iden- tical. Indeed, the same description very nearly answers for both birds. But there is one very important difference. While the Northern shrike is a winter visitor, the loggerhead, being his South- ern counterpart, does not arrive until after the frost is out of the ground, and he can be sure of a truly warm welcome. A lesser 86 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored distinction between the only two representatives of the shrike family that frequent our neighborhood and they are two too many is in the smaller size of the loggerhead and its \ighter-gray plumage. But as both these birds select some high, commanding position, like a distended branch near the tree-top, a cupola, house-peak, lightning-rod, telegraph wire, or weather-vane, the better to detect a passing dinner, it would be quite impossible at such a distance to know which shrike was sitting up there silently plotting villainies, without remembering the season when each may be expected. Northern Shrike (Lanius borealis) Shrike family Called also: BUTCHER-BIRD; NINE-KILLER Length 9.5 to 10.5 inches. About the size of the robin. Male Upper parts slate-gray; wing quills and tail black, edged and tipped with white, conspicuous in flight; a white spot on centre of outer wing feathers. A black band runs from bill, through eye to side of throat. Light gray below, tinged with brownish, and faintly marked with waving lines of darker gray. Bill hooked and hawk-like. Female With eye-band more obscure than male's, and with more distinct brownish cast on her plumage. Range Northern North America. South in winter to middle portion of United States. Migrations November. April. A roving winter resident. " Matching the bravest of the brave among birds of prey in deeds of daring, and no less relentless than reckless, the shrike compels that sort of deference, not unmixed with indignation, we are accustomed to accord to creatures of seeming insignificance whose exploits demand much strength, great spirit, and insatiate love for carnage. We cannot be indifferent to the marauder who takes his own wherever he finds it a feudal baron who holds his own with undisputed sway and an ogre whose victims are so many more than he can eat, that he actually keeps a private graveyard for the balance." Who is honestly able to give the shrikes a better character than Dr. Coues, just quoted ? A few offer them questionable defence by recording the large numbers 87 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored of English sparrows they kill in a season, as if wanton carnage were ever justifiable. Not even a hawk itself can produce the consternation among a flock of sparrows that the harsh, rasping voice of the butcher- bird creates, for escape they well know to be difficult before the small ogre swoops down upon his victim, and carries it off to impale it on a thorn or frozen twig, there to devour it later piecemeal. Every shrike thus either impales or else hangs up, as a butcher does his meat, more little birds of many kinds, field- mice, grasshoppers, and other large insects than it can hope to devour in a week of bloody orgies. Field-mice are perhaps its favorite diet, but even snakes are not disdained. More contemptible than the actual slaughter of its victims, if possible, is the method by which the shrike often lures and sneaks upon his prey. Hiding in a clump of bushes in the meadow or garden, he imitates with fiendish cleverness the call-notes of little birds that come in cheerful response, hopping and flitting within easy range of him. His bloody work is finished in a trice. Usually, however, it must be owned, the shrike's hunt- ing habits are the reverse of sneaking. Perched on a point of vantage on some tree-top or weather-vane, his hawk-like eye can detect a grasshopper going through the grass fifty yards away. What is our surprise when some fine warm day in March, just before our butcher, ogre, sneak, and fiend leaves us for colder regions, to hear him break out into song ! Love has warmed even his cold heart, and with sweet, warbled notes on the tip of a beak that but yesterday was reeking with his victim's blood, he starts for Canada, leaving behind him the only good impres- sion he has made during a long winter's visit. Bohemian Waxwing (Ampelis garrulus) Waxwing family Called also : BLACK-THROATED WAXWING ; LAPLAND WAXWING ; SILKTAIL Length -8 to 9. 5 inches. A little smaller than the robin. Male and Female General color drab, with faint brownish wash above, shading into lighter gray below. Crest conspicuous, Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored being nearly an inch and a half in length ; rufous at the base, shading into light gray above. Velvety-black forehead, chin, and line through the eye. Wings grayish brown, with very dark quills, which have two white bars; the bar at the edge of the upper wing coverts being tipped with red sealing-wax- like points, that give the bird its name. A few wing feathers tipped with yellow on outer edge. Tail quills dark brown, with yellow band across the end, and faint red streaks on upper and inner sides. Range Northern United States and British America. Most com- mon in Canada and northern Mississippi region. Migrations Very irregular winter visitor. When Charles Bonaparte, Prince of Canino, who was the first to count this common waxwing of Europe and Asia among the birds of North America, published an account of it in his "Synopsis," it was considered a very rare bird indeed. It may be these wax- wings have greatly increased, but however uncommon they may still be considered, certainly no one who had ever seen a flock containing more than a thousand of them, resting on the trees of a lawn within sight of New York City, as the writer has done, could be expected to consider the birds "very rare." The Bohemian waxwing, like the only other member of the family that ever visits us, the cedar-bird, is a roving gipsy. In Germany they say seven years must elapse between its visitations, which the superstitious old cronies are wont to associate with woful stories of pestilence just such tales as are resurrected from the depths of morbid memories here when a comet reappears or the seven-year locust ascends from the ground. The goings and comings of these birds are certainly most erratic and infrequent; nevertheless, when hunger drives them from the far north to feast upon the juniper and other winter berries of our Northern States, they come in enormous flocks, making up in quantity what they lack in regularity of visits and evenness of distribution. Surely no bird has less right to be associated with evil than this mild waxwing. It seems the very incarnation of peace and harmony. Part of a flock that has lodged in a tree will sit almost motionless for hours and whisper in softly hissed twitterings, very much as a company of Quaker ladies, similarly dressed, might sit at yearly meeting. Exquisitely clothed in silky-gray feathers that no berry juice is ever permitted to stain, they are 89 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored dainty, gentle, aristocratic-looking birds, a trifle heavy and indo- lent, perhaps, when walking on the ground or perching ; but as they fly in compact squads just above the tree-tops their flight is exceedingly swift and graceful. Bay-breasted Warbler (Dendroica castanea) Wood Warbler family Length 5.25 to 5.75 inches. A little smaller than the English sparrow. Male Crown, chin, throat, upper breast, and sides dull chest- nut. Forehead, sides of head, and cheeks black. Above olive-gray, streaked with black. Underneath buffy. Two white wing-bars. Outer tail quills with white patches on tips. Cream-white patch on either side of neck. female Has more greenish-olive above. Range Eastern North America, from Hudson's Bay to Central America. Nests north of the United States. Winters in tropical limit of range. Migrations May. September. Rare migrant. The chestnut breast of this capricious little visitor makes him look like a diminutive robin. In spring, when these warblers are said to take a more easterly route than the one they choose in autumn to return by to Central America, they may be so sud- denly abundant that the fresh green trees and shrubbery of the garden will contain a dozen of the busy little hunters. Another season they may pass northward either by another route or leave your garden unvisited; and perhaps the people in the very next town may be counting your rare bird common, while it is simply perverse. Whether common or rare, before your acquaintance has had time to ripen into friendship, away go the freaky little creatures to nest in the tree-tops of the Canadian coniferous forests. Chestnut-sided Warbler (Dendroica pennsyl-vanica) Wood Warbler family Called also: BLOODY-SIDED WARBLER Length About 5 inches. Over an inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male Top of head and streaks in wings yellow. A black line 90 A CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER FAMILY. Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored running through the eye and round back of crown, and a black spot in front of eye, extending to cheeks. Ear coverts, chin, and underneath white. Back greenish gray and slate, streaked with black. Sides of bird chestnut. Wings, which are streaked with black and yellow, have yellowish-white bars. Very dark tail with white patches on inner vanes of the outer quills. Female Similar, but duller. Chestnut sides are often scarcely apparent. Range Eastern North America, from Manitoba and Labrador to the tropics, where it winters. Migrations May. September. Summer resident, most common in migrations. In the Alleghanies, and from New Jersey and Illinois north- ward, this restless little warbler nests in the bushy borders of woodlands and the undergrowth of the woods, for which he for- sakes our gardens and orchards after a Very short visit in May. While hopping over the ground catching ants, of which he seems to be inordinately fond, or flitting actively about the shrubbery after grubs and insects, we may note his coat of many colors patchwork in which nearly all the warbler colors are curiously combined. With drooped wings that often conceal the bird's chestnut sides, which are his chief distinguishing mark, and with tail erected like a redstart's, he hunts incessantly. Here in the garden he is as refreshingly indifferent to your interest in him as later in his breeding haunts he is shy and distrustful. His song is bright and animated, like that of the yellow warbler. Golden-winged Warbler ( Helminthophila cbrysoptera) Wood Warbler family Length About 5 inches. More than an inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male Yellow crown and yellow patches on the wings. Upper parts bluish gray, sometimes tinged with greenish. Stripe through the eye and throat black. Sides of head, chin, and line over the eye white. Underneath white, grayish on sides. A few white markings on outer tail feathers. Female Crown duller ; gray where male is black, with olive upper parts and grayer underneath. 91 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Range From Canadian border to Central America, where it winters. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. After one has seen a golden-winged warbler fluttering hither and thither about the shrubbery of a park within sight and sound of a great city's distractions and with blissful unconcern of them all, partaking of a hearty lunch of insects that infest the leaves before one's eyes, one counts the bird less rare and shy than one has been taught to consider it. Whoever looks for a warbler with gaudy yellow wings will not find the golden-winged vari- ety. His wings have golden patches only, and while these are distinguishing marks, they are scarcely prominent enough feat- ures to have given the bird the rather misleading name he bears. But, then, most warblers' names are misleading. They serve their best purpose in cultivating patience and other gentle virtues in the novice. Such habits and choice of haunts as characterize the blue- winged warbler are also the golden-winged's. But their voices are quite different, the former's being sharp and metallic, while the latter's %ee, %ee, %ee comes more lazily and without accent. Myrtle Warbler (Dendroica coronata) Wood Warbler family Called also: YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLER; MYRTLE- BIRD; YELLOW-CROWNED WARBLER Length 5 to 5.5 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Male In summer plumage : A yellow patch on top of head, lower back, and either side of the breast. Upper parts blu- ish slate, streaked with black. Upper breast black ; throat white; all other under parts whitish, streaked with black. Two white wing-bars, and tail quills have white spots near the tip. In winter : Upper parts olive-brown, streaked with black; the yellow spot on lower back the only yellow mark remaining. Wing-bars grayish. Female Resembles male in winter plumage. Range Eastern North America. Occasional on Pacific slope. Summers from Minnesota and northern New England north- ward to Fur Countries. Winters from Middle States south- 92 MYRTLE WARBLER. Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored ward into Central America; a few often remaining at the northern United States all the winter. Migrations April. October. November. Also, but more rarely, a winter resident. The first of the warblers to arrive in the spring and the last to leave us in the autumn, some even remaining throughout the northern winter, the myrtle warbler, next to the summer yellow- bird, is the most familiar of its multitudinous kin. Though we become acquainted with it chiefly in the migrations, it impresses us by its numbers rather than by any gorgeousness of attire. The four yellow spots on crown, lower back, and sides are its distin- guishing marks; and in the autumn these marks have dwindled to only one, that on the lower back or rump. The great diffi- culty experienced in identifying any warbler is in its restless habit of flitting about. For a few days in early May we are forcibly reminded of the Florida peninsula, which fairly teems with these birds ; they become almost superabundant, a distraction during the precious days when the rarer species are quietly slipping by, not to return again for a year, perhaps longer, for some warblers are notoriously irregular in their routes north and south, and never return by the way they travelled in the spring. But if we look sharply into every group of myrtle warblers, we are quite likely to discover some of their dainty, fragile cous- ins that gladly seek the escort of birds so fearless as they. By the last of May all the warblers are gone from the neighborhood except the constant little summer yellowbird and redstart. In autumn, when the myrtle warblers return after a busy enough summer passed in Canadian nurseries, they chiefly haunt those regions where juniper and bay-berries abound. These latter (Myrica cerifera), or the myrtle wax-berries, as they are some- times called, and which are the bird's favorite food, have given it their name. Wherever the supply of these berries is sufficient to last through the winter, there it may be found foraging in the scrubby bushes. Sometimes driven by cold and hunger from the fields, this hardiest member of a family that properly belongs to the tropics, seeks shelter and food close to the outbuildings on the farm. 93 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Parula Warbler (CompsotUypis americana) Wood Warbler family Called also: BLUE YELLOW-BACKED WARBLER Length 4.5 to 4.75 inches. About, an inch and a half shorter than the English sparrow. Male and Female Slate-colored above, with a greenish-yellow or bronze patch in the middle of the back. Chin, throat, and breast yellow. A black, bluish, or rufous band across the breast, usually lacking in female. Underneath white, some- times marked with rufous on sides, but these markings are variable. Wings have two white patches ; outer tail feathers have white patch near the end. Range Eastern North America. Winters from Florida southward. Migrations April. October. Summer resident. Through an open window of an apartment in the very heart of New York City, a parula warbler flew this spring of 1897, surely the daintiest, most exquisitely beautiful bird visitor that ever voluntarily lodged between two brick walls. A number of such airy, tiny beauties flitting about among the blossoms of the shrubbery on a bright May morning and swaying on the slenderest branches with their inimitable grace, is a sight that the memory should retain into old age. They seem the very embodiment of life, joy, beauty, grace ; of everything lovely that birds by any possibility could be. Apparently they are wafted about the garden; they fly with no more effort than a dainty lifting of the wings, as if to catch the breeze, that seems to lift them as it might a bunch of thistledown. They go through a great variety of charming posturings as they hunt for their food upon the blossoms and tender fresh twigs, now creeping like a nuthatch along the bark and peering into the crevices, now grace- fully swaying and balancing like a goldfinch upon a slender, pendent stem. One little sprite pauses in its hunt for the insects to raise its pretty head and trill a short and wiry song. But the parula warbler does not remain long about the gar- dens and orchards, though it will not forsake us altogether for the Canadian forests, where most of its relatives pass the summer. It retreats only to the woods near the water, if may be, or to just as close a counterpart of a swampy southern woods, where the 94 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Spanish or Usnea " moss" drapes itself over the cypresses, as it can find here at the north. Its rarely beautiful nest, that hangs suspended from a slender branch very much like the Baltimore oriole's, is so woven and festooned with this moss that its con- cealment is perfect. Black-throated Blue Warbler (Dendroica cczrulescens) Wood Warbler family Length 5.30 inches. About an inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male Slate-color, not blue above ; lightest on forehi ad and darkest on lower back. Wings and tail edged wit| bluish. Cheeks, chin, throat, upper breast, and sides black/ Breast and underneath white. White spots on wings, a*' 1 a little white on tail. Female Olive-green above ; underneath soiled yellow. Wing- spots inconspicuous. Tail generally has a faint bluish tinge. Range Eastern North America, from Labrador to tropics, where it winters. Migrations May. September. Usually a migrant only in the United States. Whoever looks for this beautifully marked warbler among the bluebirds, will wish that the man who named him had pos- sessed a truer eye for color. But if the name so illy fits the bright slate-colored male, how grieved must be his little olive- and-yellow mate to answer to the name of black-throated blue warbler when she has neither a black throat nor a blue feather! It is not easy to distinguish her as she flits about the twigs and leaves of the garden in May or early autumn, except as she is seen in company with her husband, whose name she has taken with him for better or for worse. The white spot on the wings should always be looked for to positively identify this bird. Before flying up to a twig to peck off the insects, the birds have a pretty vireo trick of cocking their heads on one side to in- vestigate the quantity hidden underneath the leaves. They seem less nervous and more deliberate than many of their restless family. Most warblers go over the Canada border to nest, but there are many records of the nests of this species in the Alleghanies as far south as Georgia, in the Catskills, in Connecticut, northern 95 Dusky, Gray, and Slate-colored Minnesota and Michigan. Laurel thickets and moist undergrowth of woods in the United States, and more commonly pine woods in Canada, are the favorite nesting haunts. A sharp %ip, %ip, like some midsummer insect's noise, is the bird's call-note, but its love-song, %ee, %ee, %ee, or twee, twea, twea-e-e, as one authority writes it, is only rarely heard in the migrations. It is a languid, drawling little strain, with an upward slide that is easily drowned in the full bird chorus of Mav. 96 BLUE AND BLUISH BIRDS Bluebird Indigo Bunting Belted Kingfisher Blue Jay Blue Grosbeak Barn Swallow Cliff Swallow Mourning Dove Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Look also among Slate-colored Birds in preceding group, particularly among the Warblers there, or in the group of Birds conspicuously Yellow and Orange. BLUE AND BLUISH BIRDS The Bluebird (Sialia sialis) Thrush family Called also: BLUE ROBIN Length'] inches. About an inch longer than the English sparrow. Male Upper parts, wings, and tail bright blue, with rusty wash in autumn. Throat, breast, and sides cinnamon-red. Under- neath white. Female Has duller blue feathers, washed with gray, and a paler breast than male. Range North America, from Nova Scotia and Manitoba to Gulf of Mexico. Southward in winter from Middle States to Ber- muda and West Indies. Migrations March. November. Summer resident. A few some- times remain throughout the winter. With the first soft, plaintive warble of the bluebirds early in March, the sugar camps, waiting for their signal, take on a bust- ling activity ; the farmer looks to his plough ; orders are hurried off to the seedsmen ; a fever to be out of doors seizes one : spring is here. Snowstorms may yet whiten fields and gardens, high winds may howl about the trees and chimneys, but the little blue heralds persistently proclaim from the orchard and garden that the spring procession has begun to move. Tru-al-ly, tru-al-ly, they sweetly assert to our incredulous ears. The bluebird is not always a migrant, except in the more northern portions of the country. Some representatives there are always with us, but the great majority winter south and drop out of the spring procession on its way northward, the males a little ahead of their mates, which show housewifely instincts imme- diately after their arrival. A pair of these rather undemonstrative, matter-of-fact lovers go about looking for some deserted wood- pecker's hole in the orchard, peering into cavities in the fencr- 99 Blue and Bluish rails, or into the bird-houses that, once set up in the old-fashioned gardens for their special benefit, are now appropriated too often by the ubiquitous sparrow. Wrens they can readily dispossess of an attractive tenement, and do. With a temper as heavenly as the color of their feathers, the bluebird's sense of justice is not always so adorable. But sparrows unnerve them into cowardice. The comparatively infrequent nesting of the bluebirds about our homes at the present time is one of the most deplorable results of unrestricted sparrow immigration. Formerly they were the commonest of bird neighbors. Nest-building is not a favorite occupation with the bluebirds, that are conspicuously domestic none the less. Two, and even three, broods in a season fully occupy their time. As in most cases, the mother-bird does more than her share of the work. The male looks with wondering admiration at the housewifely activity, applauds her with song, feeds her as she sits brooding over the nestful of pale greenish-blue eggs, but his adoration of her virtues does not lead him into emulation. " Shifting his light load of song, From post to post along the cheerless fence," Lowell observed that he carried his duties quite as lightly. When the young birds first emerge from the shell they are almost black; they come into their splendid heritage of color by degrees, lest their young heads might be turned. It is only as they spread their tiny wings for their first flight from the nest that we can see a few blue feathers. With the first cool days of autumn the bluebirds collect in flocks, often associating with orioles and kingbirds in sheltered, sunny places where insects are still plentiful. Their steady, undu- lating flight now becomes erratic as they take food on the wing^ a habit that they may have learned by association with the king- birds, for they have also adopted the habit of perching upon some conspicuous lookout and then suddenly launching out into the air for a passing fly and returning to their perch. Long after their associates have gone southward, they linger like the last leaves on the tree. It is indeed " good-bye to summer " when the blue- birds withdraw their touch of brightness from the dreary Novem- ber landscape. The bluebirds from Canada and the northern portions of New INDIGO BIRD. Life-size. Blue and Bluish England and New York migrate into Virginia and the Carolinas; the birds from the Middle States move down into the Gulf States to pass the winter. It was there that countless numbers were cut off by the severe winter of 1894-95, which was so severe in that section. Indigo Bunting 1 (Passerina cyanea) Finch family Called also: INDIGO BIRD Length 5.5 to 6 inches. Smaller than the English sparrow, or the size of a canary. Male In certain lights rich blue, deepest on head. In another light the blue feathers show verdigris tints. Wings, tail, and lower back with brownish wash, most prominent in autumn plumage. Quills of wings and tail deep blue, margined with light. female Plain sienna-brown above. Yellowish on breast and shading to white underneath, and indistinctly streaked. Wings and tail darkest, sometimes with slight tinge of blue in outer webs and on shoulders. Range North America, from Hudson Bay to Panama. Most common in eastern part of United States. Winters in Central America and Mexico. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. The "glowing indigo" of this tropical-looking visitor that so delighted Thoreau in the Walden woods, often seems only the more intense by comparison with the blue sky, against which it stands out in relief as the bird perches singing in a tree-top. What has this gaily dressed, dapper little cavalier in common with his dingy sparrow cousins that haunt the ground and de- light in dust-baths, leaving their feathers no whit more dingy than they were before, and in temper, as in plumage, suggesting more of earth than of heaven ? Apparently he has nothing, and yet the small brown bird in the roadside thicket, which you have misnamed a sparrow, not noticing the glint of blue in her shoul- ders and tail, is his mate. Besides the structural resemblances, which are, of course, the only ones considered by ornithologists in classifying birds, the indigo buntings have several sparrow- like traits. They feed upon the ground, mainly upon seeds of grasses and herbs, with a few insects interspersed to give relish Blue and Bluish to the grain ; they build grassy nests in low bushes or tall, rank grass ; and their flight is short and labored. Borders of woods, roadside thickets, and even garden shrubbery, with open pasture lots for foraging grounds near by, are favorite haunts of these birds, that return again and again to some preferred spot. But however close to our homes they build theirs, our presence never ceases to be regarded by them with anything but suspicion, not to say alarm. Their metallic cheep, cheep, warns you to keep away from the little blue-white eggs, hidden away securely in the bushes ; and the nervous tail twitchings and jerkings are pathetic to see. Happily for the safety of their nest, the brood- ing mother has no tell-tale feathers to attract the eye. Dense foliage no more conceals the male bird's brilliant coat than it can the tanager's or oriole's. With no attempt at concealment, which he doubtless under- stands would be quite impossible, he chooses some high, con- spicuous perch to which he mounts by easy stages, singing as he goes ; and there begins a loud and rapid strain that promises much, but growing weaker and weaker, ends as if the bird were either out of breath or too weak to finish. Then suddenly he begins the same song over again, and keeps up this continuous performance for nearly half an hour. The noonday heat of an August day that silences nearly every other voice, seems to give to the indigo bird's only fresh animation and timbre. The Belted Kingfisher (Ceryle alcyon) Kingfisher family Called also: THE HALCYON Length 12 to 13 inches. About one-fourth as large again as the robin. Male Upper part grayish blue, with prominent crest on head reaching to the nape. A white spot in front of the eye. Bill longer than the head, which is large and heavy. Wings and the short tail minutely speckled and marked with broken bands of white. Chin, band around throat, and underneath white. Two bluish bands across the breast and a bluish wash on sides. Female Female and immature specimens have rufous bands where the adult male's are blue. Plumage of both birds oily. KINGFISHER. 1 Life-size. Blue and Bluish Range North America, except where the Texan kingfisher replaces it in a limited area in the Southwest. Common from Labrador to Florida, east and west. Winters chiefly from Virginia southward to South America. Migrations March. December. Common summer resident. Usually a winter resident also. If the kingfisher is not so neighborly as we could wish, or as he used to be, it is not because he has grown less friendly, but because the streams near our homes are fished out. Fish he must and will have, and to get them nowadays it is too often necessary to follow the stream back through secluded woods to the quiet waters of its source : a clear, cool pond or lake whose scaly inmates have not yet learned wisdom at the point of the sportsman's fly. In such quiet haunts the kingfisher is easily the most con- spicuous object in sight, where he perches on some dead or pro- jecting branch over the water, intently watching for a dinner that is all unsuspectingly swimming below. Suddenly the bird drops dives ; there is a splash, a struggle, and then the "lone fisher- man " returns triumphant to his perch, holding a shining fish in his beak. If the fish is small it is swallowed at once, but if it is large and bony it must first be killed against the branch. A few sharp knocks, and the struggles of the fish are over, but the kingfisher's have only begun. How he gags and writhes, swallows his dinner, and then, regretting his haste, brings it up again to try another wider avenue down his throat ! The many abortive efforts he makes to land his dinner safely below in his stomach, his grim contortions as the fishbones scratch his throat-lining on their way down and up again, force a smile in spite of the bird's evident distress. It is small wonder he supplements his fish diet with various kinds of the larger insects, shrimps, and fresh- water mollusks. Flying well over the tree-tops or along the waterways, the kingfisher makes the woodland echo with his noisy rattle, that breaks the stillness like a watchman's at midnight. It is, per- haps, the most familiar sound heard along the banks of the inland rivers. No love or cradle song does he know. Instead of soften- ing and growing sweet, as the voices of most birds do in the nesting season, the endearments uttered by a pair of mated king- fishers are the most strident, rattly shrieks ever heard by lovers. 103 Blue and Bluish It sounds as if they were perpetually quarrelling, and yet they are really particularly devoted. The nest of these birds, like the bank swallow's, is excavated in the face of a high bank, preferably one that rises from a stream ; and at about six feet from the entrance of the tunnel six or eight clear, shining white eggs are placed on a curious nest. All the fish- bones and scales that, being indigestible, are disgorged in pellets by the parents, are carefully carried to the end of the tunnel to form a prickly cradle for the unhappy fledglings. Very rarely a nest is made in the hollow trunk of a tree ; but wherever the home is, the kingfishers become strongly attached to it, returning again and again to the spot that has cost them so much labor to exca- vate. Some observers have accused them of appropriating the holes of the water-rats. In ancient times of myths and fables, kingfishers or halcyons were said to build a floating nest on the sea, and to possess some mysterious power that calmed the troubled waves while the eggs were hatching and the young birds were being reared, hence the term "halcyon days," meaning days of fair weather. Blue Jay (Cyanocitta cristata) Crow and Jay family Length 1 1 to 12 inches. A little larger than the robin. Male and Female Blue above. Black band around the neck, join- ing some black feathers on the back. Under parts dusky white. Wing coverts and tail bright blue, striped trans- versely with black. Tail much rounded. Many feathers edged and tipped with white. Head finely crested ; bill, tongue, and legs black. Range Eastern coast of North America to the plains, and from northern Canada to Florida and eastern Texas. Migrations Permanent resident. Although seen in flocks mov- ing southward or northward, they are merely seeking hap- pier hunting grounds, not migrating. No bird of finer color or presence sojourns with us the year round than the blue jay. In a peculiar sense his is a case of "beauty covering a multitude of sins." Among close students of bird traits, we find none so poor as to do him reverence. Dis- honest, cruel, inquisitive, murderous, voracious, villainous, are 104 Blue and Bluish some of the epithets applied to this bird of exquisite plumage. Emerson, however, has said in his defence he does "more good than harm," alluding, no doubt, to his habit of burying nuts and hard seeds in the ground, so that many a waste place is clothed with trees and shrubs, thanks to his propensity and industry. He is mischievous as a small boy, destructive as a monkey, deft at hiding as a squirrel. He is unsociable and unamiable, disliking the society of other birds. His harsh screams, shrieks, and most aggressive and unmusical calls seem often intended maliciously to drown the songs of the sweet-voiced singers. From April to September, the breeding and moulting season, the blue jays are almost silent, only sallying forth from the woods to pillage and devour the young and eggs of their more peaceful neighbors. In a bulky nest, usually placed in a tree-crotch high above our heads, from four to six eggs, olive-gray with brown spots, are laid and most carefully tended. Notwithstanding the unlovely characteristics of the blue jay, we could ill spare the flash of color, like a bit of blue sky dropped from above, which is so rare a tint even in our land, that we number not more than three or four true blue birds, and in Eng- land, it is said, there is none. Blue Grosbeak (Guiraca ccerulea) Finch family Length 7 inches. About an inch larger than the English sparrow. Male Deep blue, dark, and almost black on the back ; wings and tail black, slightly edged with blue, and the former marked with bright chestnut. Cheeks and chin black. Bill heavy and bluish. Female Grayish brown above, sometimes with bluish tinge on head, lower back, and shoulders. Wings dark olive-brown, with faint buff markings; tail same shade as wings, but with bluish-gray markings. Underneath brownish cream-color, the breast feathers often blue at the base. Range United States, from southern New England westward to the Rocky Mountains and southward into Mexico and be- yond. Most common in the Southwest. Rare along the Atlantic seaboard. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. This beautiful but rather shy and solitary bird occasionally 105 Blue and Bluish wanders eastward to rival the bluebird and the indigo bunting in their rare and lovely coloring, and eclipse them both in song. Audubon, we remember, found the nest in New Jersey. Penn- sylvania is still favored with one now and then, but it is in the Southwest only that the blue grosbeak is as common as the evening grosbeak is in the Northwest. Since rice is its favorite food, it naturally abounds where that cereal grows. Seeds and kernels of the hardest kinds, that its heavy, strong beak is well adapted to crack, constitute its diet when it strays beyond the rice-fields. Possibly the heavy bills of all the grosbeaks make them look stupid whether they are or not a characteristic that the blue gros- beak's habit of sitting motionless with a vacant stare many min- utes at a time unfortunately emphasizes. When seen in the roadside thickets or tall weeds, such as the field sparrow chooses to frequent, it shows little fear of man un- less actually approached and threatened, but whether this fearless- ness comes from actual confidence or stupidity is by no means certain. Whatever the motive of its inactivity, it accomplishes an end to be desired by the cleverest bird ; its presence is almost never suspected by the passer-by, and its grassy nest on a tree- branch, containing three or four pale bluish-white eggs, is never betrayed by look or sign to the marauding small boy. Barn Swallow (Chelidon erytbrogaster ) Swallow family Length 6.5 to 7 inches. A trifle larger than the English sparrow. Apparently considerably larger, because of its wide wing- spread. Male Glistening steel-blue shading to black above. Chin, breast, and underneath bright chestnut-brown and brilliant buff that glistens in the sunlight. A partial collar of steel-blue. Tail very deeply forked and slender. Female Smaller and paler, with shorter outer tail feathers, mak- ing the fork less prominent. Range Throughout North America. Winters in tropics of both Americas. Migrations April. September. Summer resident. Any one who attempts to describe the coloring of a bird's plumage knows how inadequate words are to convey a just idea 106 il I* M Blue and Bluish of the delicacy, richness, and brilliancy of the living tints. But, happily, the beautiful barn swallow is too familiar to need descrip- tion. Wheeling about our barns and houses, skimming over the fields, its bright sides flashing in the sunlight, playing "cross tag " with its friends at evening, when the insects, too, are on the wing, gyrating, darting, and gliding through the air, it is no more possible to adequately describe the exquisite grace of a swallow's flight than the glistening buff of its breast. This is a typical bird of the air, as an oriole is of the trees and a sparrow of the ground. Though the swallow may often be seen perching on a telegraph wire, suddenly it darts off as if it had received a shock of electricity, and we see the bird in its true element. While this swallow is peculiarly American, it is often con- founded with its European cousin Hirundo rustica in noted ornithologies. Up in the rafters of the barn, or in the arch of an old bridge that spans a stream, these swallows build their bracket-like nests of clay or mud pellets intermixed with straw. Here the noisy little broods pick their way out of the white eggs curiously spotted with brown and lilac that were all too familiar in the marauding days of our childhood. Cliff Swallow (Petrocbelidon lunifrons) Swallow family Called also; HAVE SWALLOW; CRESCENT SWALLOW; ROCKY MOUNTAIN SWALLOW Length 6 inches. A trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Apparently considerably larger because of its wide wing- spread. Male and Female Steel-blue above, shading to blue-black on crown of head and on wings and tail. A brownish-gray ring around the neck. Beneath dusty white, with rufous tint. Crescent-like frontlet. Chin, throat, sides of head, and tail coverts rufous. Range North and South America. Winters in the tropics. Migrations Early April. Late September. Summer resident. Not quite so brilliantly colored as the barn swallow, nor with tail so deeply forked, and consequently without so much 107 Blue and Bluish grace in flying, and with a squeak rather than the really musi- cal twitter of the gayer bird, the cliff swallow may be posi- tively identified by the rufous feathers of its tail coverts, but more definitely by its crescent-shaped frontlet shining like a new moon ; hence its specific Latin name from luna moon, and/ros=front. Such great numbers of these swallows have been seen in the far West that the name of Rocky Mountain swallows is some- times given to them ; though however rare they may have been in 1824, when DeWitt Clinton thought he "discovered" them near Lake Champlain, they are now common enough in all parts of the United States. In the West this swallow is wholly a cliff-dweller, but it has learned to modify its home in different localities. As usually seen, it is gourd-shaped, opened at the top, built entirely of mud pellets ("bricks without straw"), softly lined with feathers and wisps of grass, and attached by the larger part to a projecting cliff or eave. Like all the swallows, this bird lives in colonies, and the clay- colored nests beneath the eaves of barns are often so close to- gether that a group of them resembles nothing so much as a gigantic wasp's nest It is said that when swallows pair they are mated for life ; but, then, more is said about swallows than the most tireless bird-lover could substantiate. The tradition that swallows fly low when it is going to rain may be easily credited, because the air before a storm is usually too heavy with moisture for the winged insects, upon which the swallows feed, to fly high. Mourning Dove (Zenaidura macrouraj Pigeon family Called also: CAROLINA DOVE; TURTLE DOVE Length 12 to 13 inches. About one-half as large again as the robin. Male Grayish brown or fawn-color above, varying to bluish gray. Crown and upper part of head greenish blue, with green and golden metallic reflections on sides of neck. A black spot under each ear. Forehead and breast reddish buff; lighter underneath. (General impression of color, bluish fawn.) Bill black, with tumid, fleshy covering; feet red; two middle tail feathers longest ; all others banded with black 108 Blue and Bluish and tipped with ashy white. Wing coverts sparsely spotted with black. Flanks and underneath the wings bluish. Female Duller and without iridescent reflections on neck. Range North America, from Quebec to Panama, and westward to Arizona. Most common in temperate climate, east of Rocky Mountains. Migrations March. November. Common summer resident ; not migratory south of Virginia. The beautiful, soft-colored plumage of this incessant and rather melancholy love-maker is not on public exhibition. To see it we must trace the a-coo-o, coo-o, coo-oo, coo-o to its source in the thick foliage in some tree in an out-of-the-way corner of the farm, or to an evergreen near the edge of the woods. The slow, plaintive notes, more like a dirge than a love-song, penetrate to a surprising distance. They may not always be the same lovers we hear from April to the end of summer, but surely the sound seems to indicate that they are. The dove is a shy bird, attached to its gentle and refined mate with a devotion that has passed into a proverb, but caring little or nothing for the society of other feathered friends, and very little for its own kind, unless after the nesting season has passed. In this respect it differs widely from its cousins, the wild pigeons, flocks of which, numbering many millions, are recorded by Wilson and other early writers before the days when netting these birds became so fatally profitable. What the dove finds to adore so ardently in the "shiftless housewife," as Mrs. Wright calls his lady-love, must pass the comprehension of the phcebe, that constructs such an exquisite home, or of a bustling, energetic Jenny wren, that "looketh well to the ways of her household and eateth not the bread of idle- ness." She is a flabby, spineless bundle of flesh and pretty feathers, gentle and refined in manners, but slack and incompe- tent in all she does. Her nest consists of a few loose sticks, without rim or lining; and when her two babies emerge from the white eggs, that somehow do not fall through or roll out of the rickety lattice, their tender little naked bodies must suffer from many bruises. We are almost inclined to blame the incon- siderate mother for allowing her offspring to enter the world unclothed obviously not her fault, though she is capable of just such negligence. Fortunate are the baby doves when their lazy mother scatters her makeshift nest on top of one that a robin has 109 Blue and Bluish deserted, as she frequently does. It is almost excusable to take her young birds and rear them in captivity, where they invariably thrive, mate, and live happily, unless death comes to one, when the other often refuses food and grieves its life away. In the wild state, when the nesting season approaches, both birds make curious acrobatic flights above the tree-tops; then, after a short sail in midair, they return to their perch. This appears to be their only giddiness and frivolity, unless a dust- bath in the country road might be considered a dissipation. In the autumn a few pairs of doves show slight gregarious tendencies, feeding amiably together in the grain fields and retir- ing to the same roost at sundown. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (Polioptila ccerulea) Gnatcatcher family Called also , SYLVAN FLYCATCHER Length 4.5 inches. About two inches smaller than the English sparrow. Male Grayish blue above, dull grayish white below. Grayish tips on wings. Tail with white outer quills changing gradu- ally through black and white to all black on centre quills. Narrow black band over the forehead and eyes. Resembles in manner and form a miniature catbird. Female More grayish and less blue, and without the black on head. Range United States to Canadian border on the north, the Rockies on the west, and the Atlantic States, from Maine to Florida ; most common in the Middle States. A rare bird north of New Jersey. Winters in Mexico and beyond. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. In thick woodlands, where a stream that lazily creeps through the mossy, oozy ground attracts myriads of insects to its humid neighborhood, this tiny hunter loves to hide in the denser foliage of the upper branches. He has the habit of nervously flitting about from twig to twig of his relatives, the kinglets, but unhap- pily he lacks their social, friendly instincts, and therefore is rarely seen. Formerly classed among the warblers, then among the fly- catchers, while still as much a lover of flies, gnats, and mosquitoes as ever, his vocal powers have now won for him recognition Blue and Bluish among the singing birds. Some one has likened his voice to the squeak of a mouse, and Nuttall says it is "scarcely louder," which is all too true, for at a little distance it is quite inaudible. But in addition to the mouse-like call-note, the tiny bird has a rather feeble but exquisitely finished song, so faint it seems almost as if the bird were singing in its sleep. If by accident you enter the neighborhood of its nest, you soon find out that this timid, soft-voiced little creature can be roused to rashness and make its presence disagreeable to ears and eyes alike as it angrily darts about your unoffending head, peck- ing at your face and uttering its shrill squeak close to your very ear-drums. All this excitement is in defence of a dainty, lichen- covered nest, whose presence you may not have even suspected before, and of four or five bluish-white, speckled eggs well be- yond reach in the tree-tops. During the migrations the bird seems not unwilling to show its delicate, trim little body, that has often been likened to a di- minutive mocking-bird's, very near the homes of men. Its grace- ful postures, its song and constant motion, are sure to attract attention. In Central Park, New York City, the bird is not unknown. BROWN, OLIVE OR GRAYISH BROWN, AND BROWN AND GRAY SPARROWY BIRDS House Wren Carolina Wren Winter Wren Long-billed Marsh Wren Short-billed Marsh Wren Brown Thrasher Wilson's Thrush or Veery Wood Thrush Hermit Thrush Alice's Thrush Olive-backed Thrush Louisiana Water Thrush Northern Water Thrush Flicker Meadowlark and Western Meadowlark Horned Lark and Prairie Horned Lark Pipit or Titlark Whippoorwill Nighthawk Black-billed Cuckoo Yellow-billed Cuckoo Bank Swallow and Rough- winged Swallow Cedar Bird Brown Creeper Pine Siskin Smith's Painted Longspur Lapland Longspur Chipping Sparrow English Sparrow Field Sparrow Fox Sparrow Grasshopper Sparrow Savanna Sparrow Seaside Sparrow Sharp-tailed Sparrow Song Sparrow Swamp Song Sparrow Tree Sparrow Vesper Sparrow White-crowned Sparrow White-throated Sparrow See also winter plumage of the Bobolink, Goldfinch, and Myrtle Warbler. See females of Red-winged Blackbird, Rusty Blackbird, the Crackles, Bobolink, Cow- bird, the Redpolls, Purple Finch, Chewink, Bluebird, Indigo Bunting, Baltimore Oriole, Cardinal, and of the Evening, the Blue, and the Rose-breasted Grosbeaks. See also Purple Finch, the Redpolls, Mourning Dove, Mocking-bird, Robin. HOUSE WREN. Life-size. BROWN, OLIVE OR GRAYISH BROWN, AND BROWN AND GRAY SPARROWY BIRDS House Wren (Troglodytes aedon) Wren family Length 4.5 to 5 inches. Actually about one-fourth smaller than the English sparrow; apparently only half as large because of its erect tail. Male and Female Upper parts cinnamon-brown. Deepest shade on head and neck; lightest above tail, which is more rufous. Back has obscure, dusky bars ; wings and tail are finely barred. Underneath whitish, with grayish-brown wash and faint bands most prominent on sides. Range North America, from Manitoba to the Gulf. Most com- mon in the United States, from the Mississippi eastward. Winters south of the Carolinas. Migrations April. October. Common summer resident. Early some morning in April there will go off under your window that most delightful of all alarm-clocks the tiny, friendly house wren, just returned from a long visit south. Like some little mountain spring that, having been imprisoned by winter ice, now bubbles up in the spring sunshine, and goes rippling along over the pebbles, tumbling over itself in merry cascades, so this little wren's song bubbles, ripples, cascades in a minia- ture torrent of ecstasy. Year after year these birds return to the same nesting places : a box set up against the house, a crevice in the barn, a niche under the eaves; but once home, always home to them. The nest is kept scrupulously clean ; the house-cleaning, like the house-building and renovating, being accompanied by the cheer- iest of songs, that makes the bird fairly tremble by its intensity. But however angelic the voice of the house wren, its temper can put to flight even the English sparrow. Need description go further ? Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Six to eight minutely speckled, flesh-colored eggs suffice to keep the nervous, irritable parents in a state bordering on frenzy whenever another bird comes near their habitation. With tail erect and head alert, the father mounts on guard, singing a per- fect ecstasy of love to his silent little mate, that sits upon the nest if no danger threatens ; but both rush with passionate malice upon the first intruder, for it must be admitted that Jenny wren is a sad shrew. While the little family is being reared, or, indeed, at any time, no one is wise enough to estimate the millions of tiny in- sects from the garden that find their way into the tireless bills of these wrens. It is often said that the house wren remains at the north all the year, which, though not a fact, is easily accounted for by the coming of the winter wrens just as the others migrate in the autumn, and by their return to Canada when Jenny wren makes up her feather-bed under the eaves in the spring. Carolina Wren (Thryotborus ludovicianus) Wren family Called also: MOCKING WREN Length 6 inches. Just a trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Chestnut-brown above. A whitish streak, be- ginning at base of bill, passes through the eye to the nape of the neck. Throat whitish. Under parts light buff-brown. Wings and tail finely barred with dark. Range United States, from Gulf to northern Illinois and southern New England. Migrations A common resident except at northern boundary of range, where it is a summer visitor. This largest of the wrens appears to be the embodiment of the entire family characteristics : it is exceedingly active, nervous, and easily excited, quick-tempered, full of curiosity, peeping into every hole and corner it passes, short of flight as it is of wing, inseparable from its mate till parted by death, and a gushing lyrical songster that only death itself can silence. It also has the wren-like preference for a nest that is roofed over, but not too near the homes of men. 116 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Undergrowths near water, brush heaps, rocky bits of wood- land, are favorite resorts. The Carolina wren decidedly objects to being stared at, and likes to dart out of sight in the midst of the underbrush in a twinkling while the opera-glasses are being focussed. To let off some of his superfluous vivacity, Nature has pro- vided him with two safety-valves : one is his voice, another is his tail. With the latter he gesticulates in a manner so expres- sive that it seems to be a certain index to what is passing in his busy little brain drooping it, after the habit of the catbird, when he becomes limp with the emotion of his love-song, or holding it erect as, alert and inquisitive, he peers at the impudent intruder in the thicket below his perch. But it is his joyous, melodious, bubbling song that is his chief fascination. He has so great a variety of strains that many people have thought that he learned them from other birds, and so have called him what many ornithologists declare that he is not a mocking wren. And he is one of the few birds that sing at night not in his sleep or only by moonlight, but even in the total darkness, just before dawn, he gives us the same wide- awake song that entrances us by day. Winter Wren (Troglodytes Uemalis) Wren family Length 4 to 4.5 inches. About one-third smaller than the Eng- lish sparrow. Apparently only half the size. Male and Female Cinnamon-brown above, with numerous short, dusky bars. Head and neck without markings. Under- neath rusty, dimly and finely barred with dark brown. Tail short. Range United States, east and west, and from North Carolina to the Fur Countries. Migrations October. April. Summer resident. Commonly a winter resident in the South and Middle States only. It all too rarely happens that we see this tiny mouse-like wren in summer, unless we come upon him suddenly and over- take him unawares as he creeps shyly over the mossy logs or runs literally "like a flash" under the fern and through the tan- 117 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds gled underbrush of the deep, cool woods. His presence there is far more likely to be detected by the ear than the eye. Throughout the nesting season music fairly pours from his tiny throat; it bubbles up like champagne; it gushes forth in a lyrical torrent and overflows into every nook of the forest, that seems entirely pervaded by his song. While music is every- where, it apparently comes from no particular point, and, search as you may, the tiny singer still eludes, exasperates, and yet entrances. If by accident you discover him balancing on a swaying twig, never far from the ground, with his comical little tail erect, or more likely pointing towards his head, what a pert, saucy minstrel he is ! You are lost in amazement that so much music could come from a throat so tiny. Comparatively few of his admirers, however, hear the exqui- site notes of this little brown wood-sprite, for after the nest- ing season is over he finds little to call them forth during the bleak, snowy winter months, when in the Middle and Southern States he may properly be called a neighbor. Sharp hunger, rather than natural boldness, drives him near the homes of men, where he appears just as the house wren departs for the South. With a forced confidence in man that is almost pathetic in a bird that loves the forest as he does, he picks up whatever lies about the house or barn in the shape of food crumbs from the kitchen door, a morsel from the dog's plate, a little seed in the barn-yard, happily rewarded if he can find a spider lurking in some sheltered place to give a flavor to the unrelished grain. Now he becomes almost tame, but we feel it is only because he must be. The spot that decided preference leads him to, either win- ter or summer, is beside a bubbling spring. In the moss that grows near it the nest is placed in early summer, nearly always roofed over and entered from the side, in true wren-fash- ion ; and as the young fledglings emerge from the creamy-white eggs, almost the first lesson they receive from their devoted little parents is in the fine art of bathing. Even in winter weather, when the wren has to stand on a rim of ice, he will duck and splash his diminutive body. It is recorded of a certain little individual that he was wont to dive through the icy water on a December day. Evidently the wrens, as a family, are not far removed in the evolutionary scale from true water-birds. 118 LONG-BILLED MARSH WREN Life-size Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Long-billed Marsh Wren (Cistotborus palustris) Wren family Length 4.5 to 5.2 inches. Actually a little smaller than the Eng- lish sparrow. Apparently half the size. Male and Female Brown above, with white line over the eye, and the back irregularly and faintly streaked with white. Wings and tail barred with darker cinnamon-brown. Un- derneath white. Sides dusky. Tail long and often carried erect. Bill extra long and slender. Range United States and southern British America. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. Sometimes when you are gathering cat-tails in the river marshes an alert, nervous little brown bird rises startled from the rushes and tries to elude you as with short, jerky flight it goes deeper and deeper into the marsh, where even the rubber boot may not follow. It closely resembles two other birds found in such a place, the swamp sparrow and the short-billed marsh wren; but you may know by its long, slender bill that it is not the latter, and by the absence of a bright bay crown that it is not the shyest of the sparrows. These marsh wrens appear to be especially partial to running water; their homes are not very far from brooks and rivers, preferably those that are affected in their rise and flow by the tides. They build in colonies, and might be called inveterate singers, for no single bird is often permitted to finish his bubbling song without half the colony joining in a chorus. Still another characteristic of this particularly interesting bird is its unique architectural effects produced with coarse grasses woven into globular form and suspended in the reeds. Some- times adapting its nest to the building material at hand, it weaves it of grasses and twigs, and suspends it from the limb of a bush or tree overhanging the water, where it swings like an oriole's. The entrance to the nest is invariably on the side. More devoted homebodies than these little wrens are not among the feathered tribe. Once let the hand of man desecrate their nest, even before the tiny speckled eggs are deposited in it, and off go the birds to a more inaccessible place, where they can enjoy their home unmolested. Thus three or four nests may be made in a summer. 119 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Short-billed Marsh Wren (Cistotborus stellaris) Wren family Length 4 to 5 inches. Actually about one-third smaller than the English sparrow, but apparently only half its size. Male and Female Brown above, faintly streaked with white, black, and buff. Wings and tail barred with same. Under- neath white, with buff and rusty tinges on throat and breast. Short bill. ^0^ North America, from Manitoba southward in winter to Gulf of Mexico. Most common in north temperate latitudes. Migrations Early May. Late September. Where red-winged blackbirds like to congregate in oozy pastures or near boggy woods, the little short-billed wren may more often be heard than seen, for he is more shy, if possible, than his long-billed cousin, and will dive down into the sedges at your approach, very much as a duck disappears under water. But if you see him at all, it is usually while swaying to and fro as he clings to some tall stalk of grass, keeping his balance by the nervous, jerky tail motions characteristic of all the wrens, and singing with all his might. Oftentimes his tail reaches backward almost to his head in a most exaggerated wren-fashion. Samuels explains the peculiar habit both the long-billed and the short-billed marsh wrens have of building several nests in one season, by the theory that they are made to protect the sit- ting female, for it is noticed that the male bird always lures a visitor to an empty nest, and if this does not satisfy his curiosity, to another one, to prove conclusively that he has no family in prospect. Wild rice is an ideal nesting place for a colony of these little marsh wrens. The home is made of sedge grasses, softly lined with the softer meadow grass or plant-down, and placed in a tussock of tall grass, or even upon the ground. The entrance is on the side. But while fond of moist places, both for a home and feeding ground, it will be noticed that these wrens have no special fondness for running water, so dear to their long-billed relatives. Another distinction is that the eggs of this species, instead of being so densely speckled as to look brown, are pure white. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Brown Thrasher ( ' Harporbyncbus rufus) Thrasher and Mocking-bird family Called also: BROWN THRUSH; GROUND THRUSH; RED THRUSH ; BROWN MOCKING-BIRD ; FRENCH MOCK- ING-BIRD; MAVIS Length \ \ to 11.5 inches. Fully ?n inch longer than the robin. Mate Rusty red-brown or rufous above ; darkest on wings, which have two short whitish bands. Underneath white, heavily streaked (except on throat) with dark-brown, arrow-shaped spots. Tail very long. Yellow eyes. Bill long and curved at tip. Female Paler than male. flange United States to Rockies. Nests from Gulf States to Manitoba and Montreal. Winters south of Virginia. Migrations Late April. October. Common summer resident. " There's a merry brown thrush sitting up in a tree; He is singing to me ! He is singing to me ! And what does he say, little girl, little boy ? ' Oh, the world's running over with joy ! ' " The hackneyed poem beginning with this stanza that de- lighted our nursery days, has left in our minds a fairly correct impression of the bird. He still proves to be one of the peren- nially joyous singers, like a true cousin of the wrens, and when we study him afield, he appears to give his whole attention to his song with a self-consciousness that is rather amusing than the reverse. "What musician wouldn't be conscious of his own powers," he seems to challenge us, "if he possessed such a gift?" Seated on a conspicuous perch, as if inviting attention to his per- formance, with uplifted head and drooping tail he repeats the one exultant, dashing air to which his repertoire is limited, with- out waiting for an encore. Much practice has given the notes a brilliancy of execution to be compared only with the mocking- bird's ; but in spite of the name "ferruginous mocking-bird" that Audubon gave him, he does not seem to have the faculty of imitating other birds' songs. Thoreau says the Massachusetts farmers, when planting their seed, always think they hear the thrasher say, " Drop it, drop it cover it up, cover it up pull it up, pull it up, pull it up." Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds One of the shatterings of childish impressions that age too often brings is when we learn by the books that our "merry brown thrush " is no thrush at all, but a thrasher first cousin to the wrens, in spite of his speckled breast, large size, and certain thrush-like instincts, such as never singing near the nest and shunning mankind in the nesting season, to mention only two. Certainly his bold, swinging flight and habit of hopping and run- ning over the ground would seem to indicate that he is not very far removed from the true thrushes. But he has one undeniable wren-like trait, that of twitching, wagging, and thrashing his long tail about to help express his emotions. It swings like a pendulum as he rests on a branch, and thrashes about in a most ludicrous way as he is feeding on the ground upon the worms, insects, and fruit that constitute his diet. Before the fatal multiplication of cats, and in unfrequented, sandy locations still, the thrasher builds her nest upon the ground, thus earning the name "ground thrush" that is often given her ; but with dearly paid-for wisdom she now most frequently selects a low shrub or tree to cradle the two broods that all too early in the summer effectually silence the father's delightful song. Wilson's Thrush (Turdusfuscescens) Thrush family Called also: VEERY; TAWNY THRUSH Length'] to 7.5 inches. About one-fourth smaller than the robin. Male and Female Uniform olive-brown, with a tawny cast above. Centre of the throat white, with cream-buff on sides of throat and upper part of breast, which is lightly spotted with wedge-shaped, brown points. Underneath white, or with a faint grayish tinge. Range United States, westward to plains. Migrations May. October. Summer resident. To many of us the veery, as they call the Wilson's thrush in New England, is merely a voice, a sylvan mystery, reflecting the sweetness and wildness of the forest, a vocal "will-o'-the-wisp" that, after enticing us deeper and deeper into the woods, where we sink into the spongy moss of its damp retreats and become WILSON'S THRUSH. % Life-si/e. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds entangled in the wild grape-vines twined about the saplings and underbrush, still sings to us from unapproachable tangles. Plainly, if we want to see the bird, we must let it seek us out on the fallen log where we have sunk exhausted in the chase. Presently a brown bird scuds through the fern. It is a thrush, you guess in a minute, from its slender, graceful body. At first you notice no speckles on its breast, but as it comes nearer, obscure arrow-heads are visible not heavy, heart-shaped spots such as plentifully speckle the larger wood thrush or the smaller hermit. It is the smallest of the three commoner thrushes, and it lacks the ring about the eye that both the others have. Shy and elusive, it slips away again in a most unfriendly fashion, and is lost in the wet tangle before you have become acquainted. You determine, however, before you leave the log, to cultivate the acquaintance of this bird the next spring, when, before it mates and retreats to the forest, it comes boldly into the gardens and scratches about in the dry leaves on the ground for the lurk- ing insects beneath. Miss Florence Merriam tells of having drawn a number of veeries about her by imitating their call-note, which is a whistled wbeew, whoit, very easy to counterfeit when once heard. " Taweel-ab, taweel-ab, twil-ab, twil-ab!" Professor Ridgeway interprets their song, that descends in a succession of trills without break or pause ; but no words can possibly con- vey an idea of the quality of the music. The veery, that never claims an audience, sings at night also, and its weird, sweet strains floating through the woods at dusk, thrill one like the mysterious voice of a disembodied spirit. Whittier mentions the veery in " The Playmate" : " And here in spring the veeries sing The song of long ago." Wood Thrush (Turdus mustelinus) Thrush family Called also: SONG THRUSH; WOOD ROBIN; BELLBIRD Length % to 8.3 inches. About two inches shorter than the robin. Male and Female Brown above, reddish on head and shoulders, and shading into olive-brown on tail. Throat, breast, and underneath white, plain in the middle, but heavily marked 123 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds on sides and breast with heart-shaped spots of very dark brown. Whitish eye-ring. Migrations Late April or early May. October. Summer resident When Nuttall wrote of "this solitary and retiring songster," before the country was as thickly settled as it is to-day, it possi- bly had not developed the confidence in men that now distin- guishes the wood thrush from its shy congeners that are distinctly wood birds, which it can no longer strictly be said to be. In city parks and country places, where plenty of trees shade the village streets and lawns, it comes near you, half hopping, half running, with dignified unconsciousness and even familiarity, all the more delightful in a bird whose family instincts should take it into secluded woodlands with their shady dells. Perhaps, in its heart of hearts, it still prefers such retreats. Many conservative wood thrushes keep to their wild haunts, and it must be owned not a few liberals, that discard family traditions at other times, seek the forest at nesting time. But social as the wood thrush is and abundant, too, it is also eminently high-bred ; and when contrasted with its tawny cousin, the veery, that skulks away to hide in the nearest bushes as you approach, or with the hermit thrush, that pours out its heavenly song in the solitude of the forest, how gracious and full of gentle confidence it seems! Every gesture is graceful and elegant; even a wriggling beetle is eaten as daintily as caviare at the king's table. It is only when its confidence in you is abused, and you pass too near the nest, that might easily be mistaken for a robin's, just above your head in a sapling, that the wood thrush so far forgets itself as to become excited. Pit, pit, pit, sharply reiterated, is called out at you with a strident quality in the tone that is painful evidence of the fearful anxiety your presence gives this gentle bird. Too many guardians of nests, whether out of excessive hap- piness or excessive stupidity, have a dangerous habit of singing very near them. Not so the wood thrush. "Come to me," as the opening notes of its flute-like song have been freely trans- lated, invites the intruder far away from where the blue eggs lie cradled in ambush. " Uoli-a-e-o-li-noli-nol-aeolee-lee I " is as good a rendering into syllables of the luscious song as could very well be made. Pure, liquid, rich, and luscious, it rings out from the trees on the summer air and penetrates our home like a strain of music from a stringed quartette. 124 HERMIT THRUSH, s 5 Life-size. THE WOOD THRUSH HEARS THE CLICK OF THE CAMERA. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Hermit Thrush (Turdus aonalascbkce pallasii) Thrush family Called also: SWAMP ANGEL; LITTLE THRUSH Length 7.25 to 7.5 inches. About one-fourth smaller than the robin. Male and Female Upper parts olive-brown, reddening near the tail, which is pale rufous, quite distinct from the color of the back. Throat, sides of neck, and breast pale buff. Feathers of throat and neck finished with dark arrow-points at tip; feathers of the breast have larger rounded spots. Sides brownish gray. Underneath white. A yellow ring around the eye. Smallest of the thrushes. Range Eastern parts of North America. Most common in the United States to the plains. Winters from southern Illinois and New Jersey to Gulf. Migrations April. November. Summer resident. The first thrush to come and the last to go, nevertheless the hermit is little seen throughout its long visit north. It may loiter awhile in the shrubby roadsides, in the garden or the parks in the spring before it begins the serious business of life in a nest of moss, coarse grass, and pine-needles placed on the ground in the depths of the forest, but by the middle of May its presence in the neighborhood of our homes becomes only a mem- ory. Although one never hears it at its best during the migra- tions, how one loves to recall the serene, ethereal evening hymn ! "The finest sound in Nature," John Burroughs calls it. "It is not a proud, gorgeous strain like the tanager's or the grosbeak's," he says; "it suggests no passion or emotion nothing personal, but seems to be the voice of that calm, sweet solemnity one attains to in his best moments. It realizes a peace and a deep, solemn joy that only the finest souls may know." Beyond the question of even the hypercritical, the hermit thrush has a more exquisitely beautiful voice than any other American bird, and only the nightingale's of Europe can be com- pared with it. It is the one theme that exhausts all the ornithol- ogists' musical adjectives in a vain attempt to convey in words any idea of it to one who has never heard it, for the quality of the song is as elusive as the bird itself. But why should the poets be so silent ? Why has it not called forth such verse as the 125 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds English poets have lavished upon the nightingale ? Undoubtedly because it lifts up its heavenly voice in the solitude of the forest, whereas the nightingales, singing in loud choruses in the moon- light under the poet's very window, cannot but impress his waking thoughts and even his dreams with their melody. Since the severe storm and cold in the Gulf States a few win- ters ago, where vast numbers of hermit thrushes died from cold and starvation, this bird has been very rare in haunts where it used to be abundant. The other thrushes escaped because they spend the winter farther south. Alice's Thrush (Turdus alicice) Thrush family Called also: GRAY-CHEEKED THRUSH Length 7. 5 to 8 inches. About the size of the bluebird. Male and Female Upper parts uniform olive-brown. Eye-ring whitish. Cheeks gray ; sides dull grayish white. Sides of the throat and breast pale cream-buff, speckled with arrow- shaped points on throat and with half-round dark-brown marks below. Range North America, from Labrador and Alaska to Central America. Migrations Late April or May. October. Chiefly seen in migra- tions, except at northern parts of its range. One looks for a prettier bird than this least attractive of all tht thrushes in one that bears such a suggestive name. Like the olive-backed thrush, from which it is almost impossible to tell it when both are alive and hopping about the shrubbery, its plu- mage above is a dull olive-brown that is more protective than pleasing. Just as Wilson hopelessly confused the olive-backed thrush with the hermit, so has Alice's thrush been confounded by later writers with the olive-backed, from which it differs chiefly in being a trifle larger, in having gray cheeks instead of buff, and in possessing a few faint streaks on the throat. Where it goes to make a home for its greenish-blue speckled eggs in some low bush at the northern end of its range, it bursts into song, but except in the nesting grounds its voice is never heard. Mr. 126 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Bradford Torrey, who heard it singing in the White Mountains, describes the song as like the thrush's in quality, but differently accented : " Wee-o-wee-o-tit-ti-wee-o I " In New England and New York this thrush is most often seen during its autumn migrations. As it starts up and perches upon a low branch before you, it appears to have longer legs and a broader, squarer tail than its congeners. Olive-backed Thrush (Turdus ustulatus swainsonii) Thrush family Called also: SWAINSON'S THRUSH Length 7 to 7.50 inches. About one-fourth smaller than the robin. Male and Female Upper parts olive-brown. Whole throat and breast yellow-buff, shading to ashy on sides and to white underneath. Buff ring around eye. Dark streaks on sides of throat (none on centre), and larger, more spot-like marks on breast. Range North America to Rockies ; a few stragglers on Pacific slope. Northward to arctic countries. Migrations April. October. Summer resident in Canada. Chiefly a migrant in United States. Mr. Parkhurst tells of finding this "the commonest bird in the Park (Central Park, New York), not even excepting the robin," during the last week of May on a certain year ; but usually, it must be owned, we have to be on the lookout to find it, or it will pass unnoticed in the great companies of more conspicuous birds travelling at the same time. White-throated sparrows often keep it company on the long journeys northward, and they may frequently be seen together, hopping sociably about the garden, the thrush calling out a rather harsh notepuk ! puk ! quite different from the liquid, mellow calls of the other thrushes, to resent either the sparrows' bad manners or the inquisitiveness of a human disturber of its peace. But this gregarious habit and neighborly visit end even before acquaintance fairly begins, and the thrushes are off for their nesting grounds in the pine woods of New England or Labrador if they are travelling up the east coast, or to Alaska, British Columbia, or Manitoba if west of the 127 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Mississippi. There they stay all summer, often travelling south- ward with the sparrows in the autumn, as in the spring. Why they should prefer coniferous trees, unless to utilize the needles for a nest, is not understood. Low trees and bushes are favorite building sites with them as with others of the family, though these thrushes disdain a mud lining to their nests. Those who have heard the olive-backed thrush singing an even-song to its brooding mate compare it with the veery's, but it has a break in it and is less simple and pleasing than the latter's. Louisiana Water Thrush (Seiurus motacilla) Wood Warbler family Length 6 to 6.28 inches. Just a trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Grayish olive-brown upper parts, with con- spicuous white line over the eye and reaching almost to the nape. Underneath white, tinged with pale buff. Throat and line through the middle, plain. Other parts streaked with very dark brown, rather faintly on the breast, giving them the speckled breast of the thrushes. Heavy, dark bill. Range United States, westward to the plains ; northward to southern New England. Winters in the tropics. Migrations Late April. October. Summer resident. This bird, that so delighted Audubon with its high-trilled song as he tramped with indefatigable zeal through the hammocks of the Gulf States, seems to be almost the counterpart of the Northern water thrush, just as the loggerhead is the Southern counterpart of the Northern shrike. Very many Eastern birds have their duplicates in Western species, as we all know, and it is most interesting to trace the slight external variations that differ- ent climates and diet have produced on the same bird, and thus differentiated the species. In winter the Northern water thrush visits the cradle of its kind, the swamps of Louisiana and Florida, and, no doubt, by daily contact with its congeners there, keeps close to their cherished traditions, from which it never deviates farther than Nature compels, though it penetrate to the arctic regions during its summer journeys. With a more southerly range, the Louisiana water thrush does not venture beyond the White Mountains and to the shores of the Great Lakes in summer, but even at the North the same 128 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds woods often contain both birds, and there is opportunity to note just how much they differ. The Southern bird is slightly the larger, possibly an inch ; it is more gray, and it lacks a few of the streaks, notably on the throat, that plentifully speckle its Northern counterpart; but the habits of both of these birds appear to be identical. Only for a few days in the spring or autumn migra- tions do they pass near enough to our homes for us to study them, and then we must ever be on the alert to steal a glance at them through the opera-glasses, for birds more shy than they do not visit the garden shrubbery at any season. Only let them suspect they are being stared at, and they are under cover in a twinkling. Where mountain streams dash through tracts of mossy, spongy ground that is carpeted with fern and moss, and over- grown with impenetrable thickets of underbrush and tangles of creepers such a place is the favorite resort of both the water thrushes. With a rubber boot missing, clothes torn, and temper by no means unruffled, you finally stand over the Louisiana thrush's nest in the roots of an upturned tree immediately over the water, or else in a mossy root-belaced bank above a purling stream. A liquid-trilled warble, wild and sweet, breaks the still- ness, and, like Audubon, you feel amply rewarded for your pains, though you may not be prepared to agree with him in thinking the song the equal of the European nightingale's. Northern Water Thrush (Seiurus noveboracensis) Wood Warbler family Called also .- NEW YORK WATER THRUSH ; AQUATIC WOOD WAGTAIL; AQUATIC THRUSH Length *, to 6 inches. A trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Uniform olive or grayish brown above. Pale buff line over the eye. Underneath, white tinged with sul- phur-yellow, and streaked like a thrush with very dark brown arrow-headed or oblong spots that are also seen underneath wings. Range United States, westward to Rockies and northward through British provinces. Winters from Gulf States south- ward. Migrations Late April. October. Summer resident. 129 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds According to the books we have before us, a warbler; but who, to look at his speckled throat and breast, would ever take him for anything but a diminutive thrush; or, studying him from some distance through the opera-glasses as he runs in and out of the little waves along the brook or river shore, would not name him a baby sandpiper ? The rather unsteady motion of his legs, balancing of the tail, and sudden jerking of the head suggest an aquatic bird rather than a bird of the woods. But to really know either man or beast, you must follow him to his home, and if you have pluck enough to brave the swamp and the almost impene- trable tangle of undergrowth where the water thrush chooses to nest, there " In the swamp in secluded recesses, a shy and hidden bird is warbling a song; " and this warbled song that Walt Whit- man so adored gives you your first clue to the proper classification of the bird. It has nothing in common with the serene, hymn-like voices of the true thrushes ; the bird has no flute-like notes, but an emphatic smacking or chucking kind of warble. For a few days only is this song heard about the gardens and roadsides of our country places. Like the Louisiana water thrush, this bird never ventures near the homes of men after the spring and autumn migrations, but, on the contrary, goes as far away from them as possible, preferably to some mountain region, beside a cool and dashing brook, where a party of adventurous young climbers from a summer hotel or the lonely trout fisherman may startle it from its mossy nest on the ground. Flicker (Colaptes auratus) Woodpecker family Called also: GOLDEN-WINGED WOODPECKER; CLAPE ; PIGEON WOODPECKER ; YELLOWHAMMER ; HIGH- HOLE OR HIGH-HOLDER ; YARUP ; WAKE-UP ; YELLOW-SHAFTED WOODPECKER Length 12 to 13 inches. About one-fourth as large again as the robin. Male and Female Head and neck bluish gray, with a red crescent across back of neck and a black crescent on breast. Male has black cheek-patches, that are wanting in female. Golden brown shading into brownish-gray, and barred with black above. Underneath whitish, tinged with light chocolate 130 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds and thickly spotted with black. Wing linings, shafts of wing, and tail-quills bright yellow. Above tail white, con- spicuous when the bird flies. Range United States, east of Rockies ; Alaska and British Amer- ica, south of Hudson Bay. Occasional on Pacific slope. Migrations Most commonly seen from April to October. Usu- ally resident. If we were to follow the list of thirty-six aliases by which this largest and commonest of our woodpeckers is known throughout its wide range, we should find all its peculiarities of color, flight, noises, and habits indicated in its popular names. It cannot but attract attention wherever seen, with its beauti- ful plumage, conspicuously yellow if its outstretched wings are looked at from below, conspicuously brown and white if seen upon the ground. At a distance it suggests the meadowlark. Both birds wear black, crescent breast decorations, and the flicker also has the habit of feeding upon the ground, especially in autumn, a characteristic not shared by its relations. Early in the spring this bird of many names and many voices makes itself known by a long, strong, sonorous call, a sort of proclamation that differs from its song proper, which Audubon calls " a prolonged jovial laugh " (described by Mrs. Wright as " Wick, wick, wick, wick!"), and differs also from its rapidly repeated, mellow, and most musical cub, cub, cub, cub, cub, uttered during the nesting season. Its nasal kee-yer, vigorously called out in the autumn, is less characteristic, however, than the sound it makes while associat- ing with its fellows on the feeding ground a sound that Mr. Frank M. Chapman says can be closely imitated by the swishing of a willow wand. A very ardent and ridiculous-looking lover is this bird, as, with tail stiffly spread, he sidles up to his desired mate and bows and bobs before her, then retreats and advances, bowing and bobbing again, very often with a rival lover beside him (whom he generously tolerates) trying to outdo him in grace and general attractiveness. Not the least of the bird's qualities that must commend themselves to the bride is his unfailing good nature, genial alike in the home and in the field. The " high-holders" have the peculiar and silly habit of bor- ing out a number of superfluous holes for nests high up in the Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds trees, in buildings, or hollow wooden columns, only one of which they intend to use. Six white eggs is the proper number for a household, but Dr. Coues says the female that has been robbed keeps on laying three or even four sets of eggs without interruption. Meadowlark (Sturnella magna) Blackbird family Called also: FIELD LARK; OLDFIELD LARK Length 10 to 1 1 inches. A trifle larger than the robin. Male Upper parts brown, varied with chestnut, deep brown, and black. Crown streaked with brown and black, and with a cream-colored streak through the centre. Dark-brown line apparently running through the eye ; another line over the eye, yellow. Throat and chin yellow ; a large, conspicuous black crescent on breast. Underneath yellow, shading into buffy brown, spotted or streaked with very dark brown. Outer tail feathers chiefly white, conspicuous in flight. Long, strong legs and claws, adapted for walking. Less black in winter plumage, which is more grayish brown. Female Paler than male. Range North America, from Newfoundland to the Gulf of Mexico, and westward to the plains, where the Western meadowlark takes its place. Winters from Massachusetts and Illinois southward. Migrations April. Late October. Usually a resident, a few re- maining through the winter. In the same meadows with the red-winged blackbirds, birds of another feather, but of the same family, nevertheless, may be found flocking together, hunting for worms and larvae, building their nests, and rearing their young very near each other with the truly social instinct of all their kin. The meadowlarks, which are really not larks at all, but the blackbirds' and orioles' cousins, are so protected by the coloring of the feathers on their backs, like that of the grass and stub- ble they live among, that ten blackbirds are noticed for every meadowlark, although the latter is very common. Not until you flush a flock of them as you walk along the roadside or through the meadows and you note the white tail feathers and the black crescents on the yellow breasts of the large brown birds that rise 132 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds towards the tree-tops with whirring sound and a flight suggest- ing the quail's, do you suspect there are any birds among the tall grasses. Their clear and piercing whistle, "Spring o' the y-e-a^r, Spring o' the year ! " rings out from the trees with varying in- tonation and accent, but always sweet and inspiriting. To the bird's high vantage ground you may not follow, for no longer having the protection of the high grass, it has become wary and flies away as you approach, calling out peent-peent and nervously flitting its tail (again showing the white feather), when it rests a moment on the pasture fence-rail. It is like looking for a needle in a haystack to try to find a meadowlark's nest, an unpretentious structure of dried grasses partly arched over and hidden in a clump of high timothy, flat upon the ground. But what havoc snakes and field-mice play with -the white-speckled eggs and helpless fledglings ! The care of rearing two or three broods in a season and the change of plumage to duller winter tints seem to exhaust the high spirits of the sweet whistler. For a time he is silent, but partly regains his vocal powers in the autumn, when, with large flocks of his own kind, he resorts to marshy feeding grounds. In the winter he chooses for companions the horned larks, that walk along the shore, or the snow buntings and sparrows of the inland pastures, and will even include the denizens of the barn-yard when hunger drives him close to the haunts of men. The Western Meadowlark or Prairie Lark (Sturnella magnet neglecta), which many ornithologists consider a different species from the foregoing, is distinguished chiefly by its lighter, more grayish-brown plumage, by its yellow cheeks, and more espe- cially by its richer, fuller song. In his " Birds of Manitoba" Mr. Ernest E. Thompson says of this meadowlark : "In richness of voice and modulation it equals or excels both wood thrush and nightingale, and in the beauty of its articulation it has no superior in the whole world of feathered choristers with which I am acquainted." 133 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Horned Lark (Otocoris alpestris) Lark family Called also: SHORE LARK Length 7.5 to 8 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Male Upper parts dull brown, streaked with lighter on edges and tinged with pink or vinaceous; darkest on back of head, neck, shoulders, and nearest the tail. A few erectile feathers on either side of the head form slight tufts or horns that are wanting in female. A black mark from the base of the bill passes below the eye and ends in a horn-shaped curve on cheeks, which are yellow. Throat clear yellow. Breast has crescent-shaped black patch. Underneath soiled white, with dusky spots on lower breast. Tail black, the outer feathers margined with white, noticed in flight. Female Has yellow eye-stripe; less prominent markings, espe- cially on head, and is a trifle smaller. Range Northeastern parts of North America, and in winter from Ohio and eastern United States as far south as North Carolina. Migrations October and November. March. Winter resident Far away to the north in Greenland and Labrador this true lark, the most beautiful of its genus, makes its summer home. There it is a conspicuously handsome bird with its pinkish-gray and chocolate feathers, that have greatly faded into dull browns when we see them in the late autumn. In the far north only does it sing, and, according to Audubon, the charming song is flung to the breeze while the bird soars like a skylark. In the United States we hear only its call-note. Great flocks come down the Atlantic coast in October and November, and separate into smaller bands that take up their resi- dence in sandy stretches and open tracts near the sea or wher- ever the food supply looks promising, and there the larks stay until all the seeds, buds of bushes, berries, larvae, and insects in their chosen territory are exhausted. They are ever conspicu- ously ground birds, walkers, and when disturbed at their dinner, prefer to squat on the earth rather than expose themselves by flight. Sometimes they run nimbly over the frozen ground to escape an intruder, but flying they reserve as a last resort. When the visitor has passed they quickly return to their dinner. If they were content to eat less ravenously and remain slender, fewer Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds victims might be slaughtered annually to tickle the palates of the epicure. It is a mystery what they find to fatten upon when snow covers the frozen ground. Even in the severe midwinter storms they will not seek the protection of the woods, but always prefer sandy dunes with their scrubby undergrowth or open meadow lands. Occasionally a small flock wanders toward the farms to pick up seeds that are blown from the hayricks or scat- tered about the barn-yard by overfed domestic fowls. The Prairie Horned Lark (Otocoris alpestris praticola) is similar to the preceding, but a trifle smaller and paler, with a white instead of a yellow streak above the eye, the throat yellow- ish or entirely white instead of sulphur-yellow, and other minor differences. It has a far more southerly range, confined to north- ern portions of the United States from the Mississippi eastward. Once a distinctly prairie bird, it now roams wherever large stretches of open country that suit its purposes are cleared in the East, and remains resident. This species also sings in midair on the wing, but its song is a crude, half-inarticulate affair, barely audible from a height of two hundred feet. American Pipit (Antbus pensilvanicus) Wagtail family Called also: TITLARK; BROWN OR RED LARK Length '6.38 to 7 inches. About the size of a sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts brown ; wings and tail dark olive- brown; the wing coverts tipped with buff or whitish, and ends of outer tail feathers white, conspicuous in flight. White or yellowish eye-ring, and line above the eye. un- derneath light buff brown, with spots on breast and sides, the under parts being washed with brown of various shades. Feet brown. Hind toe-nail as long as or longer than the toe. Range North America at large. Winters south of Virginia to Mexico and beyond. Migrations April. October or November. Common in the United States, chiefly during the migrations. The color of this bird varies slightly with age and sex, the under parts ranging from white through pale rosy brt>wn to a Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds reddish tinge; but at any season, and under all circumstances, the pipit is a distinctly brown bird, resembling the water thrushes not in plumage only, but in the comical tail waggings and jerk- ings that alone are sufficient to identify it. However the books may tell us the bird is a wagtail, it certainly possesses two strong characteristics of true larks: it is a walker, delighting in walking or running, never hopping over the ground, and it has the angelic habit of singing as it flies. During the migrations the pipits are abundant in salt marshes or open stretches of country inland, that, with lark-like preference, they choose for feeding grounds. When flushed, all the flock rise together with uncertain flight, hovering and wheeling about the place, calling down dee-dee, dee-dee above your head until you have passed on your way, then promptly returning to the spot from whence they were disturbed. Along the roadsides and pastures, where two or three birds are frequently seen to- gether, they are too often mistaken for the vesper sparrows because of their similar size and coloring, but their easy, graceful walk should distinguish them at once from the hopping sparrow. They often run to get ahead of some one in the lane, but rarely fly if they can help it, and then scarcely higher than a fence-rail. Early in summer they are off for the mountains in the north. Labrador is their chosen nesting ground, and they are said to place their grassy nest, lined with lichens or moss, flat upon the ground still another lark trait. Their eggs are chocolate-brown scratched with black. Whippoorwill (Antrostomus -vociferus) Goatsucker family Length 9 to 10 inches. About the size of the robin. Apparently much larger, because of its long wings and wide wing- spread. Male A long-winged bird, mottled all over with reddish brown, grayish black, and dusky white; numerous bristles fringing the large mouth. A narrow white band across the upper breast. Tail quills on the end and under side white. female Similar to male, except that the tail is dusky in color where that of the male is white. Band on breast buff instead of white. Range United States, to the plains. Not common near the sea. Migrations Late April to middle of September. Summer resident. 136 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds The whippoorwill, because of its nocturnal habits and plain- tive note, is invested with a reputation for occult power which inspires a chilling awe among superstitious people, and leads them insanely to attribute to it an evil influence ; but it is a harmless, useful night prowler, flying low and catching enor- mous numbers of hurtful insects, always the winged varieties, in its peculiar fly-trap mouth. It loves the rocky, solitary woods, where it sleeps all day; but it is seldom seen, even after painstaking search, because of its dull, mottled markings conforming so nearly to rocks and dry leaves, and because of its unusual habit of stretching itself length- wise on a tree branch or ledge, where it is easily confounded with a patch of lichen, and thus overlooked. If by accident one happens upon a sleeping bird, it suddenly rouses and flies away, making no more sound than a passing butterfly a curious and uncanny silence that is quite remarkable. When the sun goes down and as the gloaming deepens, the bird's activity increases, and it begins its nightly duties, emitting from time to time, like a sentry on his post or a watchman of the night, the doleful call which has given the bird its common name. It " Mourns unseen, and ceaseless sings Ever a note of wail and woe," that our Dutch ancestors interpreted as " Quote-kerr-kee," and so called it. They had a tradition that no frost ever appeared after the bird had been heard calling in the spring, and that it wisely left for warmer skies before frost came in the autumn. Prudent bird, never caught napping ! It is erratic in its choice of habitations, even when rock and solitude seem suited to its taste. Very rarely is this odd bird found close to the seashore, and in the Hudson River valley it keeps a half mile or more back from the river. The eggs, generally two in number, are creamy white, dashed with dark and olive spots, and laid on the ground on dry leaves, or in a little hollow in rock or stump never in a nest built with loving care. But in extenuation of such careless- ness it may be said that, if disturbed or threatened, the mother shows no lack of maternal instinct, and removes her young, carrying them in her beak as a cat conveys her kittens to secure shelter. 137 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Nighthawk (Cbordeiles virginianus) Goatsucker family Called also: NIGHTJAR; BULL-BAT; MOSQUITO HAWK: WILL - O' - THE - WISP ; PISK ; PIRAMIDIG ; LONG - WINGED GOATSUCKER Length 9 to io inches. About the same length as the robin, but apparently much longer because of its very wide wing-spread. Male and Female Mottled blackish brown and rufous above, with a multitude of cream-yellow spots and dashes. Lighter below, with waving bars of brown on breast and under- neath. White mark on throat, like an imperfect horseshoe; also a band of white across tail of male bird. These latter markings are wanting in female. Heavy wings, which are partly mottled, are brown on shoulders and tips, and longer than tail. They have large white spots, conspicuous in flight, one of their distinguishing marks from the whippoor- will. Head large and depressed, with large eyes and ear- openings. Very small bill. Range From Mexico to arctic islands. Migrations May. October. Common summer resident. The nighthawk's misleading name could not well imply more that the bird is not : it is not nocturnal in its habits, neither is it a hawk, for if it were, no account of it would be given in this book, which distinctly excludes birds of prey. Stories of its chicken-stealing prove to be ignorant rather than malicious slan- ders. Any one disliking the name, however, surely cannot com- plain of a limited choice of other names by which, in different sections of the country, it is quite as commonly known. Too often it is mistaken for the whippoorwill. The night- hawk does not have the weird and woful cry of that more dismal bird, but gives instead a harsh, whistling note while on the wing, followed by a vibrating, booming, whirring sound that Nuttall likens to "the rapid turning of a spinning wheel, or a strong blowing into the bung-hole of an empty hogshead." This pecu- liar sound is responsible for the name nightjar, frequently given to this curious bird. It is said to be made as the bird drops sud- denly through the air, creating a sort of stringed instrument of its outstretched wings and tail. When these wings are spread, their large white spots running through the feathers to the under side 138 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds should be noted to further distinguish the nighthawk from the whippoorwill, which has none, but which it otherwise closely resembles. This booming sound, coming from such a height that the bird itself is often unseen, was said by the Indians to be made by the shad spirits to warn the scholes of shad about to ascend the rivers to spawn in the spring, of their impending fate. The flight of the nighthawk is free and graceful in the ex- treme. Soaring through space without any apparent motion of its wings, suddenly it darts with amazing swiftness like an erratic bat after the fly, mosquito, beetle, or moth that falls within the range of its truly hawk-like eye. Usually the nighthawks hunt in little companies in the most sociable fashion. Late in the summer they seem to be almost gregarious. They fly in the early morning or late afternoon with beak wide open, hawking for insects, but except when the moon is full they are not known to go a-hunting after sunset. During the heat of the day and at night they rest on limbs of trees, fence- rails, stone walls, lichen-covered rocks or old logs wherever Nature has provided suitable mimicry of their plumage to help conceal them. With this object in mind, they quite as often choose a hollow surface of rock in some waste pasture or the open ground on which to deposit the two speckled-gray eggs that sixteen days later will give birth to their family. But in August, when family cares have ended for the season, it is curious to find this bird of the thickly wooded country readily adapting itself to city life, resting on Mansard roofs, darting into the streets from the house- tops, and wheeling about the electric lights, making a hearty sup- per of the little, winged insects they attract. Black-billed Cuckoo (Coccy^us erytbrophthalmus) Cuckoo family Called also: RAIN CROW Length 1 1 to 12 inches. About one-fifth larger than the robin. Male Grayish brown above, with bronze tint in feathers. Un- derneath grayish white ; bill, which is long as head and black, arched and acute. Skin about the eye bright red. Tail long, and with spots on tips of quills that are small and inconspicuous. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Female Has obscure dusky bars on the tail. Range Labrador to Panama ; westward to Rocky Mountains. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. " O cuckoo ! shall 1 call thee bird ? Or but a wandering voice ? " From the tangled shrubbery on the hillside back of Dove Cottage, Keswick, where Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy listened for the coming of this "darling of the spring" ; in the willows overhanging Shakespeare's Avon ; from the favorite haunts of Chaucer and Spenser, where " Runneth meade and springeth blede," we hear the cuckoo calling ; but how many on this side of the Atlantic are familiar with its American counterpart ? Here, too, the cuckoo delights in running water and damp, cloudy weather like that of an English spring; it haunts the willows by our river- sides, where as yet no "immortal bard" arises to give it fame. It "loud sings " in our shrubbery, too. Indeed, if we cannot study our bird afield, the next best place to become acquainted with it is in the pages of the English poets. But due allowance must be made for differences of temperament. Our cuckoo is scarcely a "merry harbinger" ; his talents, such as they are, certainly are not musical. However, the guttural cluck is not discordant, and the black-billed species, at least, has a soft, mellow voice that seems to indicate an embryonic songster. " K-k-k-k, how-kow- ow-kow-ow ! " is a familiar sound in many localities, but the large, slim, pigeon-shaped, brownish-olive bird that makes it, securely hidden in the low trees and shrubs that are its haunts, is not often personally known. Catching a glimpse only of the grayish- white under parts from where we stand looking up into the tree at it, it is quite impossible to tell the bird from the yellow-billed species. When, as it flies about, we are able to note the red circles about its eyes, its black bill, and the absence of black tail feathers, with their white "thumb-nail" spots, and see no bright cinnamon feathers on the wings (the yellow-billed specie's dis- tinguishing marks), we can at last claim acquaintance with the black-billed cuckoo. Our two common cuckoos are so nearly alike that they are constantly confused in the popular mind and very often in the writings of ornithologists. At first glance the 140 YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOOS THE DAY BEFORE LEAVING NEST. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds birds look alike. Their haunts are almost identical ; their habits are the same ; and, as they usually keep well out of sight, it is not surprising if confusion arise. Neither cuckoo knows how to build a proper home; a bunch of sticks dropped carelessly into the bush, where the hapless babies that emerge from the greenish eggs will not have far to fall when they tumble out of bed, as they must inevitably do, may by courtesy only be called a nest. The cuckoo is said to suck the eggs of other birds ; but, surely, such vice is only the rarest dissipation. Insects of many kinds and "tent caterpillars" chiefly are their chosen food. Yellow-billed Cuckoo (Coccy^us americanus) Cuckoo family Called also: RAIN CROW Length n to 12 inches. About one-fifth longer than the robin. Male and Female Grayish brown above, with bronze tint in feathers. Underneath grayish white. Bill, which is as long as head, arched, acute, and more robust than the black- billed species, and with lower mandible yellow. Wings washed with bright cinnamon-brown. Tail has outer quills black, conspicuously marked with white thumb-nail spots. Female larger. Range North America, from Mexico to Labrador. Most common in temperate climates. Rare on Pacific slope. Migrations Late April. September. Summer resident. " Kak, k-kuk, k-kuk, k-kuk ! " like an exaggerated tree-toad's rattle, is a sound that, when first heard, makes you rush out of doors instantly to " name " the bird. Look for him in the depths of the tall shrubbery or low trees, near running water, if there is any in the neighborhood, and if you are more fortunate than most people, you will presently become acquainted with the yellow- billed cuckoo. When seen perching at a little distance, his large, slim body, grayish brown, with olive tints above and whitish below, can scarcely be distinguished from that of the black-billed species. It is not until you get close enough to note the yellow bill, reddish-brown wings, and black tail feathers with their white "thumb-nail" marks, that you know which cuckoo you are 141 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds watching. In repose the bird looks dazed or stupid, but as it darts about among the trees after insects, noiselessly slipping to another one that promises better results, and hopping along the limbs after performing a series of beautiful evolutions among the branches as it hunts for its favorite "tent caterpillars," it appears what it really is : an unusually active, graceful, intelligent bird. A solitary wanderer, nevertheless one cuckoo in an apple orchard is worth a hundred robins in ridding it of caterpillars and inch-worms, for it delights in killing many more of these than it can possibly eat. In the autumn it varies its diet with minute fresh-water shellfish from the swamp and lake. Mulberries, that look so like caterpillars the bird possibly likes them on that account, it devours wholesale. Family cares rest lightly on the cuckoos. The nest of both species is a ramshackle affair a mere bundle of twigs and sticks without a rim to keep the eggs from rolling from the bush, where they rest, to the ground. Unlike their European relative, they have the decency to rear their own young and not impose this heavy task on others; but the cuckoos on both sides of the Atlan- tic are most erratic and irregular in their nesting habits. The overworked mother-bird often lays an egg while brooding over its nearly hatched companion, and the two or three half-grown fledglings already in the nest may roll the large greenish eggs out upon the ground, while both parents are off searching for food to quiet their noisy clamorings. Such distracting mismanagement in the nursery is enough to make a homeless wanderer of any father. It is the mother-bird that tumbles to the ground at your approach from sheer fright ; feigns lameness, trails her wings as she tries to entice you away from the nest. The male bird shows far less concern ; a no more devoted father, we fear, than he is a lover. It is said he changes his mate every year. Altogether, the cuckoo is a very different sort of bird from what our fancy pictured. The little Swiss creatures of wood that fly out of the doors of clocks and call out the bed-hour to sleepy children, are chiefly responsible for the false impressions of our mature years. The American bird does not repeat its name, and its harsh, grating " kuk, kuk," does not remotely suggest the sweet voice of its European relative. 142 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Bank Swallow (Clivicola riparia) Swallow family Called also: SAND MARTIN; SAND SWALLOW Length*, to 5. 5 inches. About an inch shorter than the English sparrow, but apparently much larger because of its wide wing-spread. Male and Female Grayish brown or clay-colored above. Upper wings and tail darkest. Below, white, with brownish band across chest. Tail, which is rounded and more nearly square than the other swallows, is obscurely edged with white. Range Throughout North America south of Hudson Bay. Migrations April. October. Summer resident. Where a brook cuts its way through a sand bank to reach the sea is an ideal nesting ground for a colony of sand martins. The face of the high bank shows a number of clean, round holes indiscriminately bored into the sand, as if the place had just received a cannonading; but instead of war an atmosphere of peace pervades the place in midsummer, when you are most likely to visit it. Now that the young ones have flown from their nests that your arm can barely reach through the tunnelled sand or clay, there can be little harm in examining the feathers dropped from gulls, ducks, and other water-birds with which the grassy home is lined. The bank swallow's nest, like the kingfisher's, which it resembles, is his home as well. There he rests when tired of fly- ing about in pursuit of insect food. Perhaps a bird that has been resting in one of the tunnels, startled by your innocent house- breaking, will fly out across your face, near enough for you to see how unlike the other swallows he is: smaller, plainer, and with none of their glinting steel-blues and buffs about him. With strong, swift flight he rejoins his fellows, wheeling, skim- ming, darting through the air above you, and uttering his char- acteristic "giggling twitter," that is one of the cheeriest noises heard along the beach. In early October vast numbers of these swallows may be seen in loose flocks along the Jersey coast, slowly making their way South. Clouds of them miles in extent are recorded. U3 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Closely associated with the sand martin is the Rough-winged Swallow (Stelgidopteryx serripennis), not to be distinguished from its companion on the wing, but easily recognized by its dull-gray throat and the absence of the brown breast-band when seen at close range. Cedar Bird (Ampelis cedrorum) Waxwing family Called also: CEDAR WAXWING: CHERRY-BIRD; CANADA ROBIN; RECOLLET Length 7 to 8 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Male Upper parts rich grayish brown, with plum-colored tints showing through the brown on crest, throat, breast, wings, and tail. A velvety-black line on forehead runs through the eye and back of crest. Chin black ; crest conspicuous ; breast lighter than the back, and shading into yellow underneath. Wings have quill-shafts of secondaries elongated, and with brilliant vermilion tips like drops of sealing-wax, rarely seen on tail quills, which have yellow bands across the end. Female With duller plumage, smaller crest, and narrower tail- band. Range North America, from northern British provinces to Cen- tral America in winter. Migrations A roving resident, without fixed seasons for migrat- ing. As the cedar birds travel about in great flocks that quickly exhaust their special food in a neighborhood, they necessarily lead a nomadic life here to-day, gone to-morrow and, like the Arabs, they "silently steal away." It is surprising how very little noise so great a company of these birds make at any time. That is because they are singularly gentle and refined; soft of voice, as they are of color, their plumage suggesting a fine Japan- ese water-color painting on silk, with its beautiful sheen and exquisitely blended tints. One listens in vain for a song; only a lisping " Tivee-twee-%e," or "a dreary whisper," as Minot calls their low-toned commu- nications with each other, reaches our ears from their high perches in the cedar trees, where they sit, almost motionless hours at a time, digesting the enormous quantities of juniper and whortle 144 CEDAR WAXWING-. s 7 Life-size. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds berries, wild cherries, worms, and insects upon which they have gormandized. Nuttall gives the cedar birds credit for excessive politeness to each other. He says he has often seen them passing a worm from one to another down a whole row of beaks and back again before it was finally eaten. When nesting time arrives that is to say, towards the end of the summer they give up their gregarious habits and live in pairs, billing and kissing like turtle-doves in the orchard or wild crab- trees, where a flat, bulky nest is rather carelessly built of twigs, grasses, feathers, strings any odds and ends that may be lying about. The eggs are usually four, white tinged with purple and spotted with black. Apparently they have no moulting season; their plumage is always the same, beautifully neat and full-feathered. Nothing ever hurries or flusters them, their greatest concern apparently being, when they alight, to settle themselves comfortably between their over-polite friends, who are never guilty of jolting or crowd- ing. Few birds care to take life so easily, not to say indolently. Among the French Canadians they are called Rfccollet, from the color of their crest resembling the hood of the religious order of that name. Every region the birds pass through, local names appear to be applied to them, a few of the most common of which are given above. Of the three waxwings known to scientists, two are found in America, and the third in Japan. Brown Creeper (Certbia familiar is americana) Creeper family Length *, to 5.75 inches. A little smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Brown above, varied with ashy-gray stripes and small, lozenge-shaped gray mottles. Color lightest on head, increasing in shade to reddish brown near tail. Tail paler brown and long; wings brown and barred with whitish. Beneath grayish white. Slender, curving bill. Range United States and Canada, east of Rocky Mountains. Migrations April. September. Winter resident. This little brown wood sprite, the very embodiment of vir- H5 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds tuous diligence, is never found far from the nuthatches, titmice, and kinglets, though not strictly in their company, for he is a rather solitary bird. Possibly he repels them by being too ex- asperatingly conscientious. Beginning at the bottom of a rough-barked tree (for a smooth bark conceals no larvae), the creeper silently climbs upward in a sort of spiral, now lost to sight on the opposite side of the tree, then reappearing just where he is expected to, flitting back a foot or two, perhaps, lest he overlooked a single spider egg, but never by any chance leaving a tree until conscience approves of his thoroughness. And yet with all this painstaking workman's care, it takes him just about fifty seconds to finish a tree. Then off he flits to the base of another, to repeat the spiral process. Only rarely does he adopt the woodpecker process of partly flitting, partly rocking his way with the help of his tail straight up one side of the tree. Yet this little bird is not altogether the soulless drudge he appears. In the midst of his work, uncheered by summer sun- shine, and clinging with numb toes to the tree-trunk some bitter cold day, he still finds some tender emotion within him to voice in a "wild, sweet song" that is positively enchanting at such a time. But it is not often this song is heard south of his nesting grounds. The brown creeper's plumage is one of Nature's most success- ful feats of mimicry an exact counterfeit in feathers of the brown- gray bark on which the bird lives. And the protective coloring is carried out in the nest carefully tucked under a piece of loosened bark in the very heart of the tree. Pine Siskin (Spinus pinus) Finch family Called also : PINE FINCH ; PINE LINNET Length 4.75 to 5 inches. Over an inch smaller than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male and Female Olive-brown and gray above, much streaked and striped with very dark brown everywhere. Darkest on head and back. Lower back, base of tail, and wing feathers pale sulphur-yellow. Under parts very light buff brown, heavily streaked. 146 BROWN CREEPER Life-size Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Range North America generally. Most common in north lati- tudes. Winters south to the Gulf of Mexico. Migrations Erratic winter visitor from October to April. Un- common in summer. A small grayish-brown brindle bird, relieved with touches of yellow on its back, wings, and tail, may be seen some winter morning roving on the lawn from one evergreen tree to another, clinging to the pine cones and peering attentively between the scales before extracting the kernels. It utters a call-note so like the English sparrow's that you are surprised when you look up into the tree to find it comes from a stranger. The pine siskin is an erratic visitor, and there is always the charm of the unex- pected about its coming near our houses that heightens our enjoyment of its brief stay. As it flies downward from the top of the spruce tree to feed upon the brown seeds still clinging to the pigweed and golden- rod stalks sticking out above the snow by the roadside, it dips and floats through the air like its charming little cousin, the gold- finch. They have several characteristics in common besides their flight and their fondness for thistles. Far at the north, where the pine siskin nests in the top of the evergreens, his sweet- warbled love-song is said to be like that of our "wild canary's," only with a suggestion of fretfulness in the tone. Occasionally some one living in an Adirondack or other mountain camp reports finding the nest and hearing the siskin sing even in midsummer; but it is, nevertheless, considered a northern species, however its erratic habits may sometimes break through the ornithologist's traditions. Smith's Painted Longspur (Calcarius pictus) Finch family Length 6.5 inches. About the size of a large English sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts marked with black, brown, and white, like a sparrow; brown predominant. Male bird with more black about head, shoulders, and tail feathers, and a whitish patch, edged with black, under the eye. Under- neath pale brown, shading to buff. Hind claw or spur con- spicuous. i47 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds flange Interior of North America, from the arctic coast to Illinois and Texas. Migrations Winter visitor. Without fixed season. Confined to a narrower range than the Lapland longspur, this bird, quite commonly found on the open prairie districts of the middle West in winter, is, nevertheless, so very like its cousin that the same description of their habits might very well answer for both. Indeed, both these birds are often seen in the same flock. Larks and the ubiquitous sparrows, too, intermingle with them with the familiarity that only the starvation rations of mid- winter, and not true sociability, can effect ; and, looking out upon such a heterogeneous flock of brown birds as they are feeding together on the frozen ground, only the trained field ornithologist would find it easy to point out the painted longspurs. Certain peculiarities are noticeable, however. Longspurs squat while resting ; then, when flushed, they run quickly and lightly, and "rise with a sharp click, repeated several times in quick succession, and move with an easy, undulating motion for a short distance, when they alight very suddenly, seeming to fall perpendicularly several feet to the ground." Another peculiarity of their flight is their habit of flying about in circles, to and fro, keeping up a constant chirping or call. It is only in the mating season, when we rarely hear them, that the longspurs have the angelic manner of singing as they fly, like the skylark. The colors of the males, among the several longspurs, may differ widely, but the indistinctly marked females are so like each other that only their mates, perhaps, could tell them apart. Lapland Longspur (Calcarius lapponicus) Finch family Called also: LAPLAND SNOWBIRD; LAPLAND LARK BUNTING Length 6. 5 to 7 inches. A trifle larger than the English sparrow. Male Color varies with season. Winter plumage : Top of head black, with rusty markings, all feathers being tipped with white. Behind and below the eye rusty black. Breast and underneath grayish white, faintly streaked with black. Above, 148 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds reddish brown with black markings. Feet, which are black, have conspicuous, long hind claws or spur. Female Rusty gray above, less conspicuously marked. Whitish below. ^0^ Circumpolar regions; northern United States; occasional in Middle States; abundant in winter as far as Kansas and the Rocky Mountains. Migrations Winter visitors, rarely resident, and without a fixed season. This arctic bird, although considered somewhat rare with us, when seen at all in midwinter is in such large flocks that, before its visit in the neighborhood is ended, and because there are so few other birds about, it becomes delightfully familiar as it nimbly runs over the frozen ground, picking up grain that has blown about from the barn, when the seeds of the field are buried under snow. This lack of fear through sharp hunger, that often drives the shyest of the birds to our very doors in winter, is as pathetic as it is charming. Possibly it is not so rare a bird as we think, for it is often mistaken for some of the sparrows, the shore larks, and the snow buntings, that it not only resembles, but whose company it frequently keeps, or for one of the other long- spurs. At all seasons of the year a ground bird, you may readily identify the Lapland longspur by its tracks through the snow, showing the mark of the long hind claw or spur. In sum- mer we know little or nothing about it, for, with the coming of the first flowers, it is off to the far north, where, we are told, it depresses its nest in a bed of moss upon the ground, and lines it with fur shed from the coat of the arctic fox. Chipping Sparrow (Spi^ella socialis) Finch family Calledalso: CHIPPY; HAIR-BIRD; CHIP-BIRD; SOCIAL SPARROW Length 5 to 5.5 inches. An inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male Under the eye, on the back of the neck, underneath, and on the lower back ash-gray. Gray stripe over the eye, and a 149 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds blackish brown one apparently through it. Dark red-brown crown. Back brown, slightly rufous, and feathers streaked with black. Wings and tail dusty brown. Wing-bars not conspicuous. Bill black. Female Lacks the chestnut color on the crown, which is streaked with black. In winter the frontlet is black. Bill brownish. Range North America, from Newfoundland to the Gulf of Mexico and westward to the Rockies. Winters in Gulf States and Mexico. Most common in eastern United States. Migrations April. October. Common summer resident, many birds remaining all the year from southern New England southward. Who does not know this humblest, most unassuming little neighbor that comes hopping to our very doors ; this mite of a bird with "one talent " that it so persistently uses all the day and every day throughout the summer ? Its high, wiry trill, like the buzzing of the locust, heard in the dawn before the sky grows even gray, or in the middle of the night, starts the morning chorus; and after all other voices are hushed in the evening, its tremolo is the last bed-song to come from the trees. But how- ever monotonous such cheerfulness sometimes becomes when we are surfeited with real songs from dozens of other throats, there are long periods of midsummer silence that it punctuates most acceptably. Its call-note, chip ! chip ! from which several of its popular names are derived, is altogether different from the trill which must do duty as a song to express love, contentment, everything that so amiable a little nature might feel impelled to voice. But with all its virtues, the chippy shows lamentable weak- ness of character in allowing its grown children to impose upon it, as it certainly does. In every group of these birds throughout the summer we can see young ones (which we may know by the black line-stripes on their breasts) hopping around after their parents, that are often no larger or more able-bodied than they, and teasing to be fed; drooping their wings to excite pity for a helplessness that they do not possess when the weary little mother hops away from them, and still persistently chirping for food until she weakly relents, returns to them, picks a seed from the ground and thrusts it down the bill of the sauciest teaser in the group. With two such broods in a season the chestnut feathers on the father's jaunty head might well turn gray. 150 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Unlike most of the sparrows, the little chippy frequents high trees, where its nest is built quite as often as in the low bushes of the garden. The horse-hair, which always lines the grassy cup that holds its greenish-blue, speckled eggs, is alone responsi- ble for the name hair-bird, and not the chippy's hair-like trill, as some suppose. English Sparrow (Passer domesticus) Finch family Called also: HOUSE SPARROW Length 6.}} inches. Male Ashy above, with black and chestnut stripes on back and shoulders. Wings have chestnut and white bar, bordered by faint black line. Gray crown, bordered from the eye backward and on the nape by chestnut. Middle of throat and breast black. Underneath grayish white. Female Paler; wing-bars indistinct, and without the black mark- ing on throat and breast. Range Around the world. Introduced and naturalized in Amer- ica, Australia, New Zealand. Migrations Constant resident. " Of course, no self-respecting ornithologist will condescend to enlarge his list by counting in the English sparrow too pes- tiferous to mention," writes Mr. H. E. Parkhurst, and yet of all bird neighbors is any one more within the scope of this book than the audacious little gamin that delights in the companion- ship of humans even in their most noisy city thoroughfares ? In a bulletin issued by the Department of Agriculture it is shown that the progeny of a single pair of these sparrows might amount to 275,716,983,698 in ten years! Inasmuch as many pairs were liberated in the streets of Brooklyn, New York, in 1851, when the first importation was made, the day is evidently not far off when these birds, by no means meek, "shall inherit the earth." In Australia Scotch thistles, English sparrows, and rabbits, three most unfortunate importations, have multiplied with equal rapidity until serious alarm fills the minds of the colonists. But in England a special committee appointed by the House of Com- Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds mons to investigate the character of the alleged pest has yet to learn whether the sparrow's services as an insect-destroyer do not outweigh the injury it does to fruit and grain. Field Sparrow (Spi\ella pusilla) Finch family Called also,- FIELD BUNTING; WOOD SPARROW; BUSH SPARROW Length -5.5 to 5.75 inches. A little smaller than the English sparrow. Male Chestnut crown. Upper back bright chestnut, finely streaked with black and ashy brown. Lower back more grayish. Whitish wing-bars. Cheeks, line over the eye, throat, pale brownish drab. Tail long. Underneath grayish white, tinged with palest buff on breast and sides. Bill reddish. female Paler; the crown edged with grayish. Range North America, from British provinces to the Gulf, and westward to the plains. Winters from Illinois and Virginia southward. Migrations April. November. Common summer resident. Simply because both birds have chestnut crowns, the field sparrow is often mistaken for the dapper, sociable chippy; and, no doubt because it loves such heathery, grassy pastures as are dear to the vesper sparrow, and has bay wings and a sweet song, these two cousins also are often confused. The field spar- row has a more reddish-brown upper back than any of its small relatives ; the absence of streaks on its breast and of the white tail quills so conspicuous in the vesper sparrow's flight, sufficiently differentiate the two birds, while the red bill of the field sparrow is a positive mark of identification. This bird of humble nature, that makes the scrubby pastures and uplands tuneful from early morning until after sunset, flies away with exasperating shyness as you approach. Alighting on a convenient branch, he lures you on with his clear, sweet song. Follow him, and he only hops about from bush to bush, farther and farther away, singing as he goes a variety of strains, which is one of the bird's peculiarities. The song not only varies in individuals, but in different localities, which may be one reason 152 FIELD SPARROW BABIES. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds why no two ornithologists record it alike. Doubtless the chief reason for the amusing differences in the syllables into which the songs of birds are often translated in the books, is that the same notes actually sound differently to different individuals. Thus, to people in Massachusetts the white-throated sparrow seems to say, " Pea-bod-y, Pea-bod-y, Pea-bod-y ! " while good British subjects beyond the New England border hear him sing quite dis- tinctly, " Sweet Can-a-da } Can-a-da, Can-a-da!" But however the opinions as to the syllables of the field sparrow's song may differ, all are agreed as to its exquisite quality, that resembles the vesper sparrow's tender, sweet melody. The song begins with three soft, wild whistles, and ends with a series of trills and quavers that gradually melt away into silence : a serene and restful strain as soothing as a hymn. Like the vesper sparrows, these birds sometimes build a plain, grassy nest, unprotected by over- hanging bush, flat upon the ground. Possibly from a prudent fear of field-mice and snakes, the little mother most frequently lays her bluish-white, rufous-marked eggs in a nest placed in a bush of a bushy field. Hence John Burroughs has called the bird the "bush sparrow." Fox Sparrow (Passerella ilica) Finch family Called also: FOX-COLORED SPARROW; FERRUGINOUS FINCH ; FOXY FINCH Length 6.5 to 7.25 inches. Nearly an inch longer than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts reddish brown, varied with ash- gray, brightest on lower back, wings, and tail. Bluish slate about the head. Underneath whitish ; the throat, breast, and sides heavily marked with arrow-heads and oblong dashes of reddish brown and blackish. Alaska and Manitoba to southern United States. Winters chiefly south of Illinois and Virginia. Occasional stragglers remain north most of the winter. Migrations March. November. Most common in the migra- tions. There will be little difficulty in naming this largest, most plump and reddish of all the sparrows, whose fox-colored 'S3 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds feathers, rather than any malicious cunning of its disposition, are responsible for the name it bears. The male bird is incomparably the finest singer of its gifted family. His faint tseep call-note gives no indication of his vocal powers that some bleak morning in early March suddenly send a thrill of pleasure through you. It is the most welcome "glad surprise" of all the spring. Without a preliminary twitter or throat-clearing of any sort, the full, rich, luscious tones, with just a tinge of plaintiveness in them, are poured forth with spontaneous abandon. Such a song at such a time is enough to summon anybody with a musical ear out of doors under the leaden skies to where the delicious notes issue from the leafless shrubbery by the roadside. Watch the singer until the song ends, when he will quite likely descend among the dead leaves on the ground and scratch among them like any barn-yard fowl, but somehow contriving to use both feet at once in the operation, as no chicken ever could. He seems to take spe- cial delight in damp thickets, where the insects with which he varies his seed diet are plentiful. Usually the fox sparrows keep in small, loose flocks, apart by themselves, for they are not truly gregarious ; but they may sometimes be seen travelling in company with their white- throated cousins. They are among the last birds to leave us in the late autumn or winter. Mr. Bicknell says that they seem in- disposed to sing unless present in numbers. Indeed, they are little inclined to absolute solitude at any time, for even in the nesting season quite a colony of grassy nurseries may be found in the same meadow, and small companies haunt the roadside shrubbery during the migrations. Grasshopper Sparrow (Ammodramus savannarum passerinus) Finch family Called also: YELLOW-WINGED SPARROW Length 5 to 5.4 inches. About an inch smaller than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male and Female A cream-yellow line over the eye ; centre of crown, shoulders, and lesser wing coverts yellowish. Head blackish; rust-colored feathers, with smaU black spots on back of the neck ; an orange mark before the eye. All other upper parts varied red, brown, cream, and black, with a drab Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds wash. Underneath brownish drab on breast, shading to soiled white, and without streaks. Dusky, even, pointed tail feathers have grayish-white outer margins. Range Eastern North America, from British provinces to Cuba. Winters south of the Carolinas. Migrations April. October. Common summer resident. It is safe to say that no other common bird is so frequently overlooked as this little sparrow, that keeps persistently to the grass and low bushes, and only faintly lifts up a weak, wiry voice that is usually attributed to some insect. At the bend of the wings only are the feathers really yellow, and even this bright shade often goes unnoticed as the bird runs shyly through an old dairy field or grassy pasture. You may all but step upon it before it takes wing and exhibits itself on the fence-rail, which is usually as far from the ground as it cares to go. If you are near enough to this perch you may overhear the ^ee-e-e-e-e-e-e-e that has earned it the name of grasshopper sparrow. If you persist- ently follow it too closely, away it flies, then suddenly drops to the ground where a scrubby bush affords protection. A curious fact about this bird is that after you have once become acquainted with it, you find that instead of being a rare discovery, as you had supposed, it is apt to be a common resident of almost every field you walk through. Savanna Sparrow (Ammodramus sandwicbensis savanna) Finch family Called also : SAVANNA BUNTING Length 5. 5 to 6 inches. A trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Cheeks, space over the eye, and on the bend of the wings pale yellow. General effect of the upper parts brownish drab, streaked with black. Wings and tail dusky, the outer webs of the feathers margined with buff. Under parts white, heavily streaked with blackish and rufous, the marks on breast feathers being wedge-shaped. In the au- tumn the plumage is often suffused with a yellow tinge. Range Eastern North America, from Hudson Bay to Mexico. Winters south of Illinois and Virginia. Migrations April. October. A few remain in sheltered marshes at the north all winter. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Look for the savanna sparrow in salt marshes, marshy or upland pastures, never far inland, and if you see a sparrowy bird, unusually white and heavily streaked beneath, and with pale yellow markings about the eye and on the bend of the wing, you may still make several guesses at its identity before the weak, little insect-like trill finally establishes it. Whoever can correctly name every sparrow and warbler on sight is a person to be envied, if, indeed, he exists at all. In the lowlands of Nova Scotia and, in fact, of all the mari- time provinces, this sparrow is the one that is perhaps most com- monly seen. Every fence-rail has one perched upon it, singing " Ptsip, ptsip, ptsip, %ee-e-e-e-e " close to the ear of the passer-by, who otherwise might not hear the low grasshopper-like song. At the north the bird somehow loses the shyness that makes it com- paratively little known farther south. Depending upon the scrub and grass to conceal it, you may almost tread upon it before it startles you by its sudden rising with a whirring noise, only to drop to the ground again just as suddenly a few yards farther away, where it scuds among the underbrush and is lost to sight. Tall weeds and fence-rails are as high and exposed situations as it is likely to select while singing. It is most distinctively a ground bird, and flat upon the pasture or in a slightly hollowed cup it has the merest apology for a nest. Only a few wisps of grass are laid in the cavity to receive the pale-green eggs, that are covered most curiously with blotches of brown of many shapes and tints. Seaside Sparrow ( ' Ammodramus maritimus) Finch family Called also: MEADOW CHIPPY; SEASIDE FINCH Length 6 inches. A shade smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts dusky grayish or olivaceous brown, inclining to gray on shoulders and on edges of some feathers. Wings and tail darkest. Throat yellowish white, shading to gray on breast, which is indistinctly mottled and streaked. A yellow spot before the eye and on bend of the wing, the bird's characteristic marks. Blunt tail. Range Atlantic seaboard, from Georgia northward. Usually winters south of Virginia. Migrations April. November. A few remain in sheltered marshes all winter. 156 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds The savanna, the swamp, the sharp-tailed, and the song spar- rows may all sometimes be found in the haunts of the seaside sparrow, but you may be certain of finding the latter nowhere else than in the salt marshes within sight or sound of the sea. It is a dingy little bird, with the least definite coloring of all the spar- rows that have maritime inclinations, with no rufous tint in its feathers, and less distinct streakings on the breast than any of them. It has no black markings on the back. Good-sized flocks of seaside sparrows live together in the marshes; but they spend so much of their time on the ground, running about among the reeds and grasses, whose seeds and insect parasites they feed upon, that not until some unusual dis- turbance in the quiet place flushes them does the intruder sus- pect their presence, Hunters after beach-birds, longshoremen, seaside cottagers, and whoever follows the windings of a creek through the salt meadows to catch crabs and eels in midsummer, are well acquainted with the "meadow chippies," as the fisher- men call them. They keep up a good deal of chirping, sparrow- fashion, and have four or five notes resembling a song that is usually delivered from a tall reed stalk, where the bird sways and balances until his husky performance has ended, when down he drops upon the ground out of sight. Sometimes, too, these notes are uttered while the bird flutters in the air above the tops of the sedges. Sharp-tailed Sparrow (Ammodramus caudacutus) Finch family Length -5.25 to 5.85 inches. A trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts brownish or grayish olive, the back with black streaks, and gray edges to some feathers. A gray line through centre of crown, which has maroon stripes ; gray ears enclosed by buff lines, one of which passes through the eye and one on side of throat; brownish orange, or buff, on sides of head. Bend of the wing yellow. Breast and sides pale buff, distinctly streaked with black. Under- neath whitish. Each narrow quill of tail is sharply pointed, the outer ones shortest. Range Atlantic coast. Winters south of Virginia. Migrations April. November. Summer resident. Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds This bird delights in the company of the dull-colored seaside sparrow, whose haunts in the salt marshes it frequents, especially the drier parts; but its pointed tail-quills and more distinct mark- ings are sufficient to prevent confusion. Mr. J. D wight, Jr., who has made a special study of maritime birds, says of it: "It runs about among the reeds and grasses with the celerity of a mouse, and it is not apt to take wing unless closely pressed." (Wilson credited it with the nimbleness of a sandpiper.) "It builds its nest in the tussocks on the bank of a ditch, or in the drift left by the tide, rather than in the grassier sites chosen by its neighbors, the seaside sparrows." Only rarely does one get a glimpse of this shy little bird, that darts out of sight like a flash at the first approach. Balancing on a cat-tail stalk or perched upon a bit of driftwood, it makes a feeble, husky attempt to sing a few notes; and during the brief performance the opera-glasses may search it out successfully. While it feeds upon the bits of sea-food washed ashore to the edge of the marshes, it gives us perhaps the best chance we ever get, outside of a museum, to study the bird's characteristics of plumage. "Both the sharp-tailed and the seaside finches are crepus- cular," says Dr. Abbott, in "The Birds About Us." They run up and down the reeds and on the water's edge long after most birds have gone to sleep. Song Sparrow (Melospi^afasciata) Finch family Length 6 to 6.5 inches. About the same size as the English sparrow. Male and Female Brown head, with three longitudinal gray bands. Brown stripe on sides of throat. Brownish-gray back, streaked with rufous. Underneath gray, shading to white, heavily streaked with darkest brown. A black spot on breast. Wings without bars. Tail plain grayish brown. Range North America, from Fur Countries to the Gulf States. Winters from southern Illinois and Massachusetts to the Gulf. Migrations March. November. A few birds remain at the north all the year. Here is a veritable bird neighbor, if ever there was one ; at home in our gardens and hedges, not often farther away than the 158 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds roadside, abundant everywhere during nearly every month in the year, and yet was there ever one too many ? There is scarcely an hour in the day, too, when its delicious, ecstatic song may not be heard ; in the darkness of midnight, just before dawn, when its voice is almost the first to respond to the chipping sparrow's wiry trill and the robin's warble ; in the cool of the morning, the heat of noon, the hush of evening ever the simple, homely, sweet melody that every good American has learned to love in childhood. What the bird lacks in beauty it abundantly makes up in good cheer. Not at all retiring, though never bold, it chooses some conspicuous perch on a bush or tree to deliver its outburst of song, and sings away with serene unconsciousness. Its artlessness is charming. Thoreau writes in his "Summer" that the country girls in Massachusetts hear the bird say : " Maids, maids, maids, hang on your teakettle, teakettle-ettle-ettle." The call-note, a metallic chip, is equally characteristic of the bird's irrepressible vivacity. It has still another musical expression, however, a song more prolonged and varied than its usual per- formance, that it seems to sing only on the wing. Of course, the song sparrow must sometimes fly upward, but whoever sees it fly anywhere but downward into the thicket that it depends upon to conceal it from too close inspection ? By pumping its tail as it flies, it seems to acquire more than the ordinary sparrow's velocity. Its nest, which is likely to be laid flat on the ground, except where field-mice are plentiful (in which case it is elevated into the crotch of a bush), is made of grass, strips of bark, and leaves, and lined with finer grasses and hair. Sometimes three broods may be reared in a season, but even the cares of providing insects and seeds enough for so many hungry babies cannot altogether suppress the cheerful singer. The eggs are grayish white, speckled and clouded with lavender and various shades of brown. In sparsely settled regions the song sparrows seem to show a fondness for moist woodland thickets, possibly because their tastes are insectivorous. But it is difficult to imagine the friendly little musician anything but a neighbor. 159 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Swamp Song Sparrow (Melospi^a georgiana) Finch family Called also: SWAMP SPARROW; MARSH SPARROW; RED GRASS-BIRD; SWAMP FINCH Length 5 to 5.8 inches. A little smaller than the English spar- row. Male Forehead black; crown, which in winter has black stripes, is always bright bay; line over the eye, sides of the neck gray. Back brown, striped with various shades. Wing- edges and tail reddish brown. Mottled gray underneath, inclining to white on the chin. Female Without black forehead and stripes on head. Range North America, from Texas to Labrador. Migrations April. October. A few winter at the north. In just such impenetrable retreats as the marsh wrens choose, another wee brown bird may sometimes be seen springing up from among the sedges, singing a few sweet notes as it flies and floats above them, and then suddenly disappearing into the grassy tangle. It is too small, and its breast is not streaked enough to be a song sparrow, neither are their songs alike ; it has not the wren's peculiarities of bill and tail. Its bright-bay crown and sparrowy markings finally identify it. A suggestion of the bird's watery home shows itself in the liquid quality of its simple, sweet note, stronger and sweeter than the chippy's, and repeated many times almost like a trill that seems to trickle from the marsh in a little rivulet of song. The sweetness is apt to become monotonous to all but the bird itself, that takes evident delight in its performance. In the spring, when flocks of swamp sparrows come north, how they enliven the marshes and waste places ! And yet the song, simple as it is, is evidently not uttered alto- gether without effort, if the tail-spreading and teetering of the body after the manner of the ovenbird, are any indications of exertion. Nuttall says of these birds: " They thread their devious way with the same alacrity as the rail, with whom, indeed, they are often associated in neighborhood. In consequence of this perpet- ual brushing through sedge and bushes, their feathers are fre- quently so worn that their tails appear almost like those of rats." 160 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds But the swamp sparrows frequently belie their name, and, especially in the South, live in dry fields, worn-out pasture lands with scrubby, weedy patches in them. They live upon seeds of grasses and berries, but Dr. Abbott has detected their special fondness for fish not fresh fish particularly, but rather such as have lain in the sun for a few days and become dry as a chip. Their nest is placed on the ground, sometimes in a tussock of grass or roots of an upturned tree quite surrounded by water. Four or five soiled white eggs with reddish-brown spots are laid usually twice in a season. Tree Sparrow (Spi^ella monticola) Finch family Called also: CANADA SPARROW ; WINTER CHIPPY; TREE BUNTING ; WINTER CHIP-BIRD ; ARCTIC CHIPPER Length 6 to 6.35 inches. About the same size as the English sparrow. Male Crown of head bright chestnut. Line over the eye, cheeks, throat, and breast gray, the breast with an indistinct black spot on centre. Brown back, the feathers edged with black and buff. Lower back pale grayish brown. Two whitish bars across dusky wings; tail feathers bordered with grayish white. Underneath whitish. Female Smaller and less distinctly marked. /faflgr North America, from Hudson Bay to the Carolinas, and westward to the plains. Migrations October. April. Winter resident. A revised and enlarged edition of the friendly little chipping sparrow, that hops to our very doors for crumbs throughout the mild weather, comes out of British America at the beginning of winter to dissipate much of the winter's dreariness by his cheer- ful twitterings. Why he should have been called a tree spar- row is a mystery, unless because he does not frequent trees a reason with sufficient plausibility to commend the name to sev- eral of the early ornithologists, who not infrequently called a bird precisely what it was not. The tree sparrow actually does not show half the preference for trees that its familiar little counter- part does, but rather keeps to low bushes when not on the 161 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds ground, where we usually find it. It does not crouch upon the ground like the chippy, but with a lordly carriage holds itself erect as it nimbly runs over the frozen crust. Sheltered from the high, wintry winds in the furrows and dry ditches of ploughed fields, a loose flock of these active birds keep up a merry hunt for fallen seeds and berries, with a belated beetle to give the grain a relish. As you approach the feeding ground, one bird gives a shrill alarm-cry, and instantly five times as many birds as you suspected were in the field take wing and settle down in the scrubby undergrowth at the edge of the woods or by the way- side. No still cold seems too keen for them to go a-foraging; but when cutting winds blow through the leafless thickets the scattered remnants of a flock seek the shelter of stone walls, hedges, barns, and cozy nooks about the house and garden. It is in midwinter that these birds grow most neighborly, although even then they are distinctly less sociable than their small chippy cousins. By the first of March, when the fox sparrow and the blue- bird attract the lion's share of attention by their superior voices, we not infrequently are deaf to the modest, sweet little strain that answers for the tree sparrow's love-song. Soon after the bird is in full voice, away it goes with its flock to their nesting ground in Labrador or the Hudson Bay region. It builds, either on the ground or not far from it, a nest of grasses, rootlets, and hair, without which no true chippy counts its home complete. Vesper Sparrow (Pooccetes gramineus) Finch family Called also: BAY-WINGED BUNTING; GRASSFINCH; GRASS- BIRD Length 5.75 to 6.25 inches. A little smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Brown above, streaked and varied with gray. Lesser wing coverts bright rufous. Throat and breast whit- ish, striped with dark brown. Underneath plain soiled white. Outer tail-quills, which are its special mark of iden- tification, are partly white, but apparently wholly white as the bird flies. 162 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds Range North America, especially common in eastern parts from Hudson Bay to Gulf of Mexico. Winters south of Virginia. Migrations April. October. Common summer resident. Among the least conspicuous birds, sparrows are the easiest to classify for that very reason, and certain prominent features of the half dozen commonest of the tribe make their identification simple even to the merest novice. The distinguishing marks of this sparrow that haunts open, breezy pasture lands and country waysides are its bright, reddish-brown wing coverts, prominent among its dingy, pale brownish-gray feathers, and its white tail- quills, shown as the bird flies along the road ahead of you to light upon the fence-rail. It rarely flies higher, even to sing its serene, pastoral strain, restful as the twilight, of which, indeed, it seems to be the vocal expression. How different from the ecstatic outburst of the song sparrow ! Pensive, but not sad, its long- drawn silvery notes continue in quavers that float off unended like a trail of mist. The song is suggestive of the thoughts that must come at evening to some New England saint of humble station after a well-spent, soul-uplifting day. But while the vesper sparrow sings oftenest and most sweetly in the late afternoon and continues singing until only he and the rose-breasted grosbeak break the silence of the early night, his is one of the first voices to join the morning chorus. No "early worm," however, tempts him from his grassy nest, for the seeds in the pasture lands and certain tiny insects that live among the grass furnish meals at all hours. He simply delights in the cool, still morning and evening hours and in giving voice to his enjoy- ment of them. The vesper sparrow is preeminently a grass-bird. It first opens its eyes on the world in a nest neatly woven of grasses, laid on the ground among the grass that shelters it and furnishes it with food and its protective coloring. Only the grazing cattle know how many nests and birds are hidden in their pastures. Like the meadowlarks, their presence is not even suspected until a flock is flushed from its feeding ground, only to return to the spot when you have passed on your way. Like the meadowlark again, the vesper sparrow occasionally sings as it soars upward from its grassy home. 163 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds White-crowned Sparrow (ZonotricUa leucopbrysj Finch family Length i inches. A little larger than the English sparrow. Male White head, with four longitudinal black lines marking off a crown, the black-and-white stripes being of about equal width. Cheeks, nape, and throat gray. Light gray under- neath, with some buff tints. Back dark grayish brown, some feathers margined with gray. Two interrupted white bars across wings. Plain, dusky tail ; total effect, a clear ashen gray. Female With rusty head inclining to gray on crown. Paler throughout than the male. Range From high mountain ranges of western United States (more rarely on Pacific slope) to Atlantic Ocean, and from Labrador to Mexico. Chiefly south of Pennsylvania. Migrations October. April. Irregular migrant in Northern States. A winter resident elsewhere. The large size and handsome markings of this aristocratic- looking Northern sparrow would serve to distinguish him at once, did he not often consort with his equally fine-looking white- throated cousins while migrating, and so too often get over- looked. Sparrows are such gregarious birds that it is well to scrutinize every flock with especial care in the spring and autumn, when the rarer migrants are passing. This bird is more common in the high altitudes of the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains than elsewhere in the United States. There in the lonely forest it nests in low bushes or on the ground, and sings its full love- song, as it does in the northern British provinces, along the Atlan- tic coast ; but during the migrations it favors us only with selections from its repertoire. Mr. Ernest Thompson says, "Its usual song is like the latter half of the white-throat's familiar re- frain, repeated a number of times with a peculiar, sad cadence and in a clear, soft whistle that is characteristic of the group." " The song is the loudest and most plaintive of all the sparrow songs," says John Burroughs. " It begins with the words fe-u, fe-u, fe-u, and runs off into trills and quavers like the song sparrow's, only much more touching." Colorado miners tell that this sparrow, like its white-throated relative, sings on the darkest nights. Often a score or more birds are heard singing at once after the 164 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds habit of the European nightingales, which, however, choose to sing only in the moonlight. White-throated Sparrow (ZonotricUa albicollis) Finch family Called also: PEABODY BIRD; CANADA SPARROW Length 6.75 to 7 inches. Larger than the English sparrow. Male and Female A black crown divided by narrow white line. Yellow spot before the eye, and a white line, apparently run- ning through it, passes backward to the nape. Conspicuous white throat. Chestnut back, varied with black and whitish. Breast gray, growing lighter underneath. Wings edged with rufous and with two white cross-bars. Range Eastern North America. Nests from Michigan and Mas- sachusetts northward to Labrador. Winters from southern New England to Florida. Migrations April. October. Abundant during migrations, and in many States a winter resident. "/-/, Pea-body, Pea-body, Pea-body," are the syllables of the white-throat's song heard by the good New Englanders, who have a tradition that you must either be a Peabody or a nobody there; while just over the British border the bird is distinctly un- derstood to say, " Swee-e-e-t Can-a-da, Can-a-da, Can-a-da." " All day, whit -tie-ing, whit-tle-ing, whit -tie-ing," the Maine people declare he sings ; and Hamilton Gibson told of a per- plexed farmer, Peverly by name, who, as he stood in the field undecided as to what crop to plant, clearly heard the bird advise, "Sow wheat, Pev-er-ly, Pev-er-ly, Pev-er-ly." Such divergence of opinion, which is really slight compared with the verbal record of many birds' songs, only goes to show how little the sweet- ness of birds' music, like the perfume of a rose, depends upon a name. In a family not distinguished for good looks, the white- throated sparrow is conspicuously handsome, especially after the spring moult. In midwinter the feathers grow dingy and the markings indistinct ; but as the season advances, his colors are sure to brighten perceptibly, and before he takes the northward journey in April, any little lady sparrow might feel proud of the 165 Brown, Olive or Grayish Brown, and Brown and Gray Sparrowy Birds attentions of so fine-looking and sweet-voiced a lover. The black, white, and yellow markings on his head are now clear and beau- tiful. His figure is plump and aristocratic. These sparrows are particularly sociable travellers, and cor- dially welcome many stragglers to their flocks not during the migrations only, but even when winter's snow affords only the barest gleanings above it. Then they boldly peck about the dog's plate by the kitchen door and enter the barn-yard, calling their feathered friends with a sharp tseep to follow them. Seeds and insects are their chosen food, and were they not well wrapped in an adipose coat under their feathers, there must be many a winter night when they would go shivering, supperless, to their perch. In the dark of midnight one may sometimes hear the white- throat softly singing in its dreams. 166 GREEN, GREENISH GRAY, OLIVE, AND YELLOWISH OLIVE BIRDS Tree Swallow Ruby-throated Humming-bird Golden-crowned Kinglet Ruby-crowned Kinglet Solitary Vireo Red-eyed Vireo White-eyed Vireo Warbling Vireo Ovenbird Worm-eating Warbler Acadian Flycatcher Yellow-bellied Flycatcher Black-throated Green Warbler Look also among the Olive-brown Birds, especially for the Cuckoos, Alice's and the Olive-backed Thrushes; and look in the yellow group, many of whose birds are olive also. See also females of the Red Crossbill, Orchard Oriole, Scarlet Tanager, Summer Tanager. GREEN, GREENISH GRAY, OLIVE, AND YELLOWISH OLIVE BIRDS Tree Swallow (Tacbycineta bicolor) Swallow family Called also: WHITE-BELLIED SWALLOW Length 5 to 6 inches. A little shorter than the English sparrow, but apparently much larger because of its wide wing-spread. Male Lustrous dark steel-green above; darker and shading into black on wings and tail, which is forked. Under parts soft white. Female Duller than male. Range North America, from Hudson Bay to Panama. Migrations End of March. September or later. Summer resident. " The stork in the heaven knoweth her appointed times: and the turtle and the crane and the swallow observe the time of their coming." Jeremiah, viii. 7. The earliest of the family to appear in the spring, the tree swallow comes skimming over the freshly ploughed fields with a wide sweep of the wings, in what appears to be a perfect ecstasy of flight. More shy of the haunts of man, and less gre- garious than its cousins, it is usually to be seen during migration flying low over the marshes, ponds, and streams with a few chosen friends, keeping up an incessant warbling twitter while performing their bewildering and tireless evolutions as they catch their food on the wing. Their white breasts flash in the sun- light, and it is only when they dart near you, and skim close along the surface of the water, that you discover their backs to be not black, but rich, dark green, glossy to iridescence. It is probable that these birds keep near the waterways because their favorite insects and wax-berries are more plentiful in such places; but this peculiarity has led many people to the 169' Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds absurd belief that the tree swallow buries itself under the mud of ponds in winter in a state of hibernation. No bird's breathing apparatus is made to operate under mud. In unsettled districts these swallows nest in hollow trees, hence their name; but with that laziness that forms a part of the degeneracy of civilization, they now gladly accept the boxes about men's homes set up for the martins. Thousands of these beautiful birds have been shot on the Long Island marshes and sold to New York epicures for snipe. Ruby-throated Humming-bird (Trocbilus colubris) Humming-bird family Length 3.5 to 3.75 inches. A trifle over half as long as the Eng- lish sparrow. The smallest bird we have. Male Bright metallic green above ; wings and tail darkest, with ruddy-purplish reflections and dusky-white tips on outer tail- quills. Throat and breast brilliant metallic-red in one light, orange flame in another, and dusky orange in another, according as the light strikes the plumage. Sides greenish ; underneath lightest gray, with whitish border outlining the brilliant breast. Bill long and needle-like. Female Without the brilliant feathers on throat; darker gray beneath. Outer tail-quills are banded with black and tipped with white. Range Eastern North America, from northern Canada to the Gulf of Mexico in summer. Winters in Central America. Migrations May. October. Common summer resident. This smallest, most exquisite and unabashed of our bird neighbors cannot be mistaken, for it is the only one of its kin found east of the plains and north of Florida, although about four hundred species, native only to the New World, have been named by scientists. How does it happen that this little tropical jewel alone flashes about our Northern gardens ? Does it never stir the spirit of adventure and emulation in the glistening breasts of its stay-at-home cousins in the tropics by tales of luxuriant tangles of honeysuckle and clematis on our cottage porches; of deep- cupped trumpet-flowers climbing over the walls of old-fashioned gardens, where larkspur, narcissus, roses, and phlox, that crowd the box-edged beds, are more gay and honey-laden than their 170 KUBY-THROATKD HUMMING-BIRDS Life-size. Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds little brains can picture? Apparently it takes only the wish to be in a place to transport one of these little fairies either from the honeysuckle trellis to the canna bed or from Yucatan to the Hud- son. It is easy to see how to will and to fly are allied in the minds of the humming-birds, as they are in the Latin tongue. One minute poised in midair, apparently motionless before a flower while draining the nectar from its deep cup though the humming of its wings tells that it is suspended there by no magic the next instant it has flashed out of sight as if a fairy's wand had made it suddenly invisible. Without seeing the hummer, it might be, and often is, mistaken for a bee improving the "shin- ing hour." At evening one often hears of a "humming-bird" going the rounds of the garden, but at this hour it is usually the sphinx- moth hovering above the flower-beds the one other creature be- sides the bee for which the bird is ever mistaken. The postures and preferences of this beautiful large moth make the mistake a very natural one. The ruby-throat is strangely fearless and unabashed. It will dart among the vines on the veranda while the entire household are assembled there, and add its hum to that of the conversation in a most delightfully neighborly way. Once a glistening little sprite, quite undaunted by the size of an audience that sat almost breathless enjoying his beauty, thrust his bill into one calyx after another on a long sprig of honeysuckle held in the hand. And yet, with all its friendliness or is it simply fearlessness? the bird is a desperate duellist, and will longe his deadly blade into the jewelled breast of an enemy at the slightest provocation and quicker than thought. All the heat of his glowing throat seems to be transferred to his head while the fight continues, sometimes even to the death a cruel, but marvellously beautiful sight as the glistening birds dart and tumble about beyond the range of peace-makers. High up in a tree, preferably one whose knots and lichen- covered excrescences are calculated to help conceal the nest tliat so cleverly imitates them, the mother humming-bird saddles her exquisite cradle to a horizontal limb. She lines it with plant- down, fluffy bits from cat-tails, and the fronds of fern, felting the material into a circle that an elm-leaf amply roofs over. Out- side, lichens or bits of bark blend the nest so harmoniously with 171 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds its surroundings that one may look long and thoroughly before discovering it. Two infinitesimal, white eggs tax the nest ac- commodation to its utmost. In the mating season the female may be seen perching a posture one rarely catches her gay lover in preening her dainty but sombre feathers with ladylike nicety. The young birds do a great deal of perching before they gain the marvellously rapid wing-motions of maturity, but they are ready to fly within a week after they are hatched. By the time the trumpet-vine is in bloom they dart and sip and utter a shrill little squeak among the flowers, in company with the old birds. During the nest-building and incubation the male bird keeps so aggressively on the defensive that he often betrays to a hitherto unsuspecting intruder the location of his home. After the young birds have to be fed he is most diligent in collecting food, that consists not alone of the sweet juices of flowers, as is popularly supposed, but also of aphides and plant-lice that his proboscis-like tongue licks off the garden foliage literally like a streak of lightning. Both parents feed the young by regurgitation a process disgusting to the human observer, whose stomach involuntarily revolts at the sight so welcome to the tiny, squeaking, hungry birds. Ruby-crowned Kinglet (Regulus calendula) Kinglet family Called also: RUBY-CROWNED WREN; RUBY-CROWNED WARBLER Length 4.25 to 4.5 inches. About two inches smaller than the English sparrow. Male Upper parts grayish olive-green, brighter nearer the tail; wings and tail dusky, edged with yellowish olive. Two whitish wing-bars. Breast and underneath light yellowish gray. In the adult male a vermilion spot on crown of his ash-gray head. Female Similar, but without the vermilion crest. Range North America. Breeds from northern United States northward. Winters from southern limits of its breeding range to Central America and Mexico. Migrations October. April. Rarely a winter resident at the North. Most common during its migrations. 172 RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET. Life-size. Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds A trifle larger than the golden-crowned kinglet, with a ver- milion crest instead of a yellow and flame one, and with a decided preference for a warmer winter climate, and the ruby-crown's chief distinguishing characteristics are told. These rather confusing relatives would be less puzzling if it were the habit of either to keep quiet long enough to focus the opera-glasses on their crowns, which it only rarely is while some particularly promising haunt of insects that lurk beneath the rough bark of the ever- greens has to be thoroughly explored. At all other times both kinglets keep up an incessant fluttering and twinkling among the twigs and leaves at the ends of the branches, jerking their tiny bodies from twig to twig in the shrubbery, hanging head downward, like a nuthatch, and most industriously feeding every second upon the tiny insects and larvae hidden beneath the bark and leaves. They seem to be the feathered expression of perpet- ual motion. And how dainty and charming these tiny sprites are! They are not at all shy; you may approach them quite close if you will, for the birds are simply too intent on their busi- ness to be concerned with yours. If a sharp lookout be kept for these ruby-crowned migrants, that too often slip away to the south before we know they have come, we notice that they appear about a fortnight ahead of the golden-crested species, since the mild, soft air of our Indian sum- mer is exactly to their liking. At this season there is nothing in the bird's "thin, metallic call-note, like a vibrating wire," to indicate that he is one of our finest songsters. But listen for him during the spring migration, when a love-song is already ripen- ing in his tiny throat. What a volume of rich, lyrical melody pours from the Norway spruce, where the little musician is simply practising to perfect the richer, fuller song that he sings to his nesting mate in the far north! The volume is really tremendous, coming from so tiny a throat. Those who have heard it in northern Canada describe it as a flute-like and mellow warble full of intricate phrases past the imitating. Dr. Coues says of it : "The kinglet's exquisite vocalization defies description." Curiously enough, the nest of this bird, that is not at all rare, has been discovered only six times. It would appear to be over- large for the tiny bird, until we remember that kinglets are wont to have a numerous progeny in their pensile, globular home. It is made of light, flimsy material moss, strips of bark, and plant- Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds fibre well knit together and cosily lined with feathers, which must be a grateful addition to the babies, where they are reared in evergreens in cold, northern woods. Golden-crowned Kinglet (Regulus satrapa) Kinglet family Called also: GOLDEN-CROWNED GOLDCREST ; FIERY- CROWNED WREN Length 4 to 4.25 inches. About two inches smaller than the English sparrow. Male Upper parts grayish olive-green ; wings and tail dusky, margined with olive-green. Underneath soiled whitish. Centre of crown bright orange, bordered by yellow and en- closed by black line. Cheeks gray ; a whitish line over the eye. Female Similar, but centre of crown lemon-yellow and more grayish underneath. Range North America generally. Breeds from northern United States northward. Winters chiefly from North Carolina to Central America, but many remain north all the year. Migrations September. April. Chiefly a winter resident south of Canada. If this cheery little winter neighbor would keep quiet long enough, we might have a glimpse of the golden crest that dis- tinguishes him from his equally lively cousin, the ruby-crowned ; but he is so constantly flitting about the ends of the twigs, peer- ing at the bark for hidden insects, twinkling his wings and flut- tering among the evergreens with more nervous restlessness than a vireo, that you may know him well before you have a glimpse of his tri-colored crown. When the autumn foliage is all aglow with yellow and flame this tiny sprite comes out of the north, where neither nesting nor moulting could rob him of his cheerful spirits. Except the hum- ming-bird and the winter wren, he is the smallest bird we have. And yet, somewhere stored up in his diminutive body, is warmth enough to withstand zero weather. With evident enjoyment of the cold, he calls out a shrill, wiry %ee, %ee, ^ee, that rings merrily from the pines and spruces when our fingers are too numb to hold the opera-glasses in an attempt to follow his restless flittings Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds from branch to branch. Is it one of the unwritten laws of birds that the smaller their bodies the greater their activity ? When you see one kinglet about, you may be sure there are others not far away, for, except in the nesting season, its habits are distinctly social, its friendliness extending to the humdrum brown creeper, the chickadees, and the nuthatches, in whose company it is often seen ; indeed, it is likely to be in almost any flock of the winter birds. They are a merry band as they go ex- ploring the trees together. The kinglet can hang upside down, too, like the other acrobats, many of whose tricks he has learned ; and it can pick off insects from a tree with as business-like an air as the brown creeper, but with none of that soulless bird's plodding precision. In the early spring, just before this busy little sprite leaves us to nest in Canada or Labrador for heat is the one thing that he can't cheerfully endure a gushing, lyrical song bursts from his tiny throat a song whose volume is so out of proportion to the bird's size that Nuttall's classification of kinglets with wrens doesn't seem far wrong after all. Only rarely is a nest found so far south as the White Moun- tains. It is said to be extraordinarily large for so small a bird ; but that need not surprise us when we learn that as many as ten creamy-white eggs, blotched with brown and lavender, are no uncommon number for the pensile cradle to hold. How do the tiny parents contrive to cover so many eggs and to feed such a nestful of fledglings ? Solitary Vireo (Vireo solitarius) Vireo or Greenlet family Called also: BLUE-HEADED VIREO Length 5.5 to 7 inches. A little smaller than the English sparrow. Mate Dusky olive above ; head bluish gray, with a white line around the eye, spreading behind the eye into a patch. Be- neath whitish, with yellow-green wash on the sides. Wings dusky olive, with two distinct white bars. Tail dusky, some quills edged with white. Female Similar, but her head is dusky olive. United States to plains, and the southern British prov- inces. Winters in Florida and southward. Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds Migrations May. Early October. Common during migrations; more rarely a summer resident south of Massachusetts. By no means the recluse that its name would imply, the solitary vireo, while a bird of the woods, shows a charming curi- osity about the stranger with opera-glasses in hand, who has penetrated to the deep, swampy tangles, where it chooses to live. Peering at you through the green undergrowth with an eye that seems especially conspicuous because of its encircling white rim, it is at least as sociable and cheerful as any member of its family, and Mr. Bradford Torrey credits it with "winning tameness." "Wood-bird as it is," he says, "it will sometimes permit the greatest familiarities. Two birds I have seen, which allowed themselves to be stroked in the freest manner, while sit- ting on the eggs, and which ate from my hand as readily as any pet canary." The solitary vireo also builds a pensile nest, swung from the crotch of a branch, not so high from the ground as the yellow- throated vireo's nor so exquisitely finished, but still a beautiful little structure of pine-needles, plant-fibre, dry leaves, and twigs, all lichen-lined and bound and rebound with coarse spiders' webs. The distinguishing quality of this vireo's celebrated song is its tenderness : a pure, serene uplifting of its loving, trustful nature that seems inspired by a fine spirituality. Red-eyed Vireo (Vireo olivaceus) Vireo or Greenlet family Called also: THE PREACHER Length 5.75 to 6.25 inches. A fraction smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts light olive-green; well-defined slaty-gray cap, with black marginal line, below which, and forming an exaggerated eyebrow, is a line of white. A brownish band runs from base of bill through the eye. The iris is ruby-red. Underneath white, shaded with light green- ish yellow on sides and on under tail and wing coverts. Range United States to Rockies and northward. Winters in Central and South America. Migrations April. October. Common summer resident. 176 RED-EYED VIREO. 9 / 10 Life-size. Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds " You see it you know it do you hear me ? Do you be- lieve it ? " is Wilson Flagg's famous interpretation of the song of this commonest of all the vireos, that you cannot mistake with such a key. He calls the bird the preacher from its declamatory style: an up-and-down warble delivered with a rising inflection at the close and followed by an impressive silence, as if the little green orator were saying, " I pause for a reply." Notwithstanding its quiet coloring, that so closely resembles the leaves it hunts among, this vireo is rather more noticeable than its relatives because of its slaty cap and the black-and-white lines over its ruby eye, that, in addition to the song, are its marked characteristics. Whether she is excessively stupid or excessively kind, the mother-vireo has certainly won for herself no end of ridicule by allowing the cowbird to deposit a stray egg in the exquisitely made, pensile nest, where her own tiny white eggs are lying; and though the young cowbird crowd and worry her little fledg- lings and eat their dinner as fast as she can bring it in, no dis- pleasure or grudging is shown towards the dusky intruder that is sure to upset the rightful heirs out of the nest before they are able to fly. In the heat of a midsummer noon, when nearly every other bird's voice is hushed, and only the locust seems to rejoice in the fierce sunshine, the little red-eyed vireo goes persistently about its business of gathering insects from the leaves, not flit- ting nervously about like a warbler, or taking its food on the wing like a flycatcher, but patiently and industriously dining where it can, and singing as it goes. When a worm is caught it is first shaken against a branch to kill it before it is swallowed. Vireos haunt shrubbery and trees with heavy foliage, all their hunting, singing, resting, and home- building being done among the leaves never on the ground. White-eyed Vireo (Vireo noveboracensis) Vireo or Greenlet family Length *, to 5.3 inches. An inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts bright olive-green, washed with grayish. Throat and underneath white; the breast and 177 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds sides greenish yellow; wings have two distinct bars of yellowish white. Yellow line from beak to and around the eye, which has a white iris. Feathers of wings and tail brownish and edged with yellow. Range United States to the Rockies, and to the Gulf regions and beyond in winter. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. " Pertest of songsters," the white-eyed vireo makes what- ever neighborhood it enters lively at once. Taking up a resi- dence in the tangled shrubbery or thickety undergrowth, it immediately begins to scold like a crotchety old wren. It becomes irritated over the merest trifles a passing bumblebee, a visit from another bird to its tangle, an unsuccessful peck at a gnat anything seems calculated to rouse its wrath and set every feather on its little body a-trembling, while it sharply snaps out what might perhaps be freely constructed into " cuss- words." And yet the inscrutable mystery is that this virago meekly permits the lazy cowbird to deposit an egg in its nest, and will patiently sit upon it, though it is as large as three of her own tiny eggs; and when the little interloper comes out from his shell the mother-bird will continue to give it the most devoted care long after it has shoved her poor little starved babies out of the nest to meet an untimely death in the smilax thicket below. An unusual variety of expression distinguishes this bird's voice from the songs of the other vireos, which are apt to be monoto- nous, as they are incessant. If you are so fortunate to approach the white-eyed vireo before he suspects your presence, you may hear him amusing himself by jumbling together snatches of the songs of the other birds in a sort of potpourri; or perhaps he will be scolding or arguing with an imaginary foe, then dropping his voice and talking confidentially to himself. Suddenly he bursts into a charming, simple little song, as if the introspection had given him reason for real joy. All these vocal accomplishments suggest the chat at once; but the minute your intrusion is discov- ered the sharp scolding, that is fairly screamed at you from an enraged little throat, leaves no possible shadow of a doubt as to the bird you have disturbed. It has the most emphatic call and song to be heard in the woods; it snaps its words off very short. " Cbick-a-rer chick" is its usual call-note, jerked out with great spitefulness. 178 WARBLING VIREO. Life-size. Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds Wilson thus describes the jealously guarded nest: "This bird builds a very neat little nest, often in the figure of an inverted cone; it is suspended by the upper end of the two sides, on the circular bend of a prickly vine, a species of smilax, that generally grows in low thickets. Outwardly it is constructed of various light materials, bits of rotten wood, fibres of dry stalks, of weeds, pieces of paper (commonly newspapers, an article almost always found about its nest, so that some of my friends have given it the name of the politician) ; all these materials are interwoven with the silk of the caterpillars, and the inside is lined with fine, dry grass and hair." Warbling Vireo (Vireo gilvusj Vireo or Greenlet family Length 5.5 to 6 inches. A little smaller than the English spar- row. Male and Female Ashy olive-green above, with head and neck ash-colored. Dusky line over the eye. Underneath whitish, faintly washed with dull yellow, deepest on sides ; no bars on wings. Range North America, from Hudson Bay to Mexico. Migrations May. Late September or early October. Summer resident. This musical little bird shows a curious preference for rows of trees in the village street or by the roadside, where he can be sure of an audience to listen to his rich, continuous warble. There is a mellowness about his voice, which rises loud, but not altogether cheerfully, above the bird chorus, as if he were a gifted but slightly disgruntled contralto. Too inconspicuously dressed, and usually too high in the tree-top to be identified without opera- glasses, we may easily mistake him by his voice for one of the warbler family, which is very closely allied to the vireos. Indeed, this warbling vireo seems to be the connecting link between them. Morning and afternoon, but almost never in the evening, we may hear him rippling out song after song as he feeds on insects and berries about the garden. But this familiarity lasts only until nesting time, for off he goes with his little mate to some unfre- 179 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds quented lane near a wood until their family is reared, when, with a perceptibly happier strain in his voice, he once more haunts our garden and row of elms before taking the southern journey. Ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapillus) Wood Warbler family Called also: GOLDEN-CROWNED THRUSH; THE TEACHER; WOOD WAGTAIL ; GOLDEN-CROWNED WAGTAIL ; GOLDEN-CROWNED ACCENTOR Length 6 to 6.15 inches. Just a shade smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Upper parts olive, with an orange -brown crown, bordered by black lines that converge toward the bill. Under parts white; breast spotted and streaked on the sides. Whiti eye-ring. Range United States, to Pacific slope. Migrations May. October. Common summer resident. Early in May you may have the good fortune to see this little bird of the woods strutting in and out of the garden shrubbery with a certain mock dignity, like a child wearing its father's boots. Few birds can walk without appearing more or less ridiculous, and however gracefully and prettily it steps, this amusing little wagtail is no exception. When seen at all which is not often, for it is shy it is usually on the ground, not far from the shrubbery or a woodland thicket, under which it will quickly dodge out of sight at the merest suspicion of a footstep. To most people the bird is only a voice calling, " TEACHER, TEACHER, TEACHER, TEACHER, TEACHER .'" as Mr. Burroughs has interpreted the notes that go off in pairs like a series of little explosions, softly at first, then louder and louder and more shrill until the bird that you at first thought far away seems to be shrieking his penetrating crescendo into your very ears. But you may look until you are tired before you find him in the high, dry wood, never near water. In the driest parts of the wood, where the ground is thickly carpeted with dead leaves, you may some day notice a little bunch of them, that look as if a plant, in pushing its way up through the ground, had raised the leaves, rootlets, and twigs a trifle. 1 80 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds Examine the spot more carefully, and on one side you find an opening, and within the ball of earth, softly lined with grass, lie four or five cream-white, speckled eggs. It is only by a happy accident that this nest of the ovenbird is discovered. The con- cealment could not be better. It is this peculiarity of nest con- struction in shape like a Dutch oven that has given the bird what DeKay considers its "trivial name." Not far from the nest the parent birds scratch about in the leaves, like diminutive barn- yard fowls, for the grubs and insects hiding under them. But at the first suspicion of an intruder their alarm becomes pitiful. Panic-stricken, they become fairly limp with fear, and drooping her wings and tail, the mother-bird drags herself hither and thither over the ground. As utterly bewildered as his mate, the male darts, flies, and tumbles about through the low branches, jerking and wagging his tail in nervous spasms until you have beaten a double-quick retreat. In nesting time, at evening, a very few have heard the " lux- urious nuptial song" of the ovenbird; but it is a song to haunt the memory forever afterward. Burroughs appears to be the first writer to record this " rare bit of bird melody." " Mounting by easy flight to the top of the tallest tree," says the author of " Wake-Robin," "the ovenbird launches into the air with a sort of suspended, hovering flight, like certain of the finches, and bursts into a perfect ecstasy of song clear, ringing, copious, rivalling the goldfinch's in vivacity and the linnet's in melody." Worm-eating- Warbler (Helmintherus vermivorus} Wood Warbler family Length 5.50 inches. Less than an inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male and Female Greenish olive above. Head yellowish brown, with two black stripes through crown to the nape; also black lines from the eyes to neck. Under parts buffy and white. Range Eastern parts of United States. Nests as far north as southern Illinois and southern Connecticut. Winters in the Gulf States and southward. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. 181 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds In the Delaware Valley and along the same parallel, this inconspicuous warbler is abundant, but north of New Jersey it is rare enough to give an excitement to the day on which you discover it. No doubt it is commoner than we suppose, for its coloring blends so admirably with its habitats that it is probably very often overlooked. Its call-note, a common chirp, has noth- ing distinguishing about it, and all ornithologists confess to hav- ing been often misled by its song into thinking it came from the chipping sparrow. It closely resembles that of the pine warbler also. If it were as nervously active as most warblers, we should more often discover it, but it is quite as deliberate as a vireo, and in the painstaking way in which it often circles around a tree while searching for spiders and other insects that infest the trunks, it reminds us of the brown creeper. Sunny slopes and hillsides covered with thick undergrowth are its preferred foraging and nesting haunts. It is often seen hopping directly on the dry ground, where it places its nest, and it never mounts far above it. The well-drained, sunny situation for the home is chosen with the wisdom of a sanitary expert. Acadian Flycatcher (Empidonax virescens) Flycatcher family Called also: SMALL GREEN-CRESTED FLYCATCHER; SMALL PEWEE Length -5.75 to 6 inches. A trifle smaller than the English sparrow. Male Dull olive above. Two conspicuous yellowish wing-bars. Throat white, shading into pale yellow on breast. Light gray or white underneath. Upper part of bill black; lower mandible flesh-color. White eye-ring. Female Greener above and more yellow below. Range From Canada to Mexico, Central America, and West Indies. Most common in south temperate latitudes. Win- ters in southerly limit of range. Migrations April. September. Summer resident. When all our northern landscape takes on the exquisite, soft green, gray, and yellow tints of early spring, this little flycatcher, in perfect color-harmony with the woods it darts among, comes 182 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds out of the south. It might be a leaf that is being blown about, touched by the sunshine filtering through the trees, and partly shaded by the young foliage casting its first shadows. Woodlands, through which small streams meander lazily, inviting swarms of insects to their boggy shores, make ideal hunting grounds for the Acadian flycatcher. It chooses a low rather than a high, conspicuous perch, that other members of its family invariably select; and from such a lookout it may be seen launching into the air after the passing gnat darting downward, then suddenly mounting upward in its aerial hunt, the vigorous clicks of the beak as it closes over its tiny victims testifying to the bird's unerring aim and its hearty appetite. While perching, a constant tail-twitching is kept up; and a faint, fretful " Tsbee-kee, tshee-kee" escapes the bird when inac- tively waiting for a dinner to heave in sight. In the Middle Atlantic States its peeping sound and the click- ing of its particolored bill are infrequently heard in the village streets in the autumn, when the shy and solitary birds are enticed from the deep woods by a prospect of a more plentiful diet of insects, attracted by the fruit in orchards and gardens. Never far from the ground, on two or more parallel branches, the shallow, unsubstantial nest is laid. Some one has cleverly described it as "a tuft of hay caught by the limb from a load driven under it," but this description omits all mention of the quantities of blossoms that must be gathered to line the cradle for the tiny, pure white eggs. Yellow-bellied Flycatcher (Empidonaxflamventris) Flycatcher family Length 5 to 5.6 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Mz& Rather dark, but true olive-green above. Throat and breast yellowish olive, shading into pale yellow underneath, including wing linings and under tail coverts. Wings have yellowish bars. Whitish ring around eye. Upper part of bill black, under part whitish or flesh-colored. female Smaller, with brighter yellow under parts and more decidedly yellow wing-bars. e North America, from Labrador to Panama, and westward from the Atlantic to the plains. Winters in Central America. 183 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds Migrations May. September. Summer resident. More com- monly a migrant only. This is the most yellow of the small flycatchers and the only Eastern species with a yellow instead of a white throat. Without hearing its call-note, " pse-ek-pse-ek," which it abruptly sneezes rather than utters, it is quite impossible, as it darts among the trees, to tell it from the Acadian flycatcher, with which even Audubon confounded it. Both these little birds choose the same sort of retreats well-timbered woods near a stream that attracts myriads of insects to its spongy shores and both are rather shy and solitary. The yellow-bellied species has a far more northerly range, however, than its Southern relative or even the small green-crested flycatcher. It is rare in the Middle States, not common even in New England, except in the migrations, but from the Canada border northward its soft, plaintive whistle, which is its love-song, may be heard in every forest where it nests. All the flycatchers seem to make a noise with so much struggle, such convulsive jerkings of head and tail, and flutterings of the wings that, considering the scanty success of their musical attempts, it is surprising they try to lift their voices at all when the effort almost literally lifts them off their feet. While this little flycatcher is no less erratic than its Acadian cousin, its nest is never slovenly. One couple had their home in a wild-grape bower in Pennsylvania ; a Virginia creeper in New Jersey supported another cradle that was fully twenty feet above the ground ; but in Labrador, where the bird has its chosen breeding grounds, the bulky nest is said to be invariably placed either in the moss by the brookside or in some old stump, should the locality be too swampy. Black-throated Green Warbler (Dendroica -virens) Wood Warbler family Length 5 inches. Over an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Male Back and crown of head bright yellowish olive-green. Forehead, band over eye, cheeks, and sides of neck rich yellow. Throat, upper breast, and stripe along sides black. Underneath yellowish white. Wings and tail brownish olive, the former with two white bars, the latter with much 184 Green, Greenish Gray, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds white in outer quills. In autumn, plumage resembling the female's. Female Similar ; chin yellowish ; throat and breast dusky, the black being mixed with yellowish. Range Eastern North America, from Hudson Bay to Central America and Mexico. Nests north of Illinois and New York. Winters in tropics. Migrations May. October. Common summer resident north of New Jersey. There can be little difficulty in naming a bird so brilliantly and distinctly marked as this green, gold, and black warbler, that lifts up a few pure, sweet, tender notes, loud enough to attract attention when he visits the garden. "See-see, see-saw," he sings, but there is a tone of anxiety betrayed in the simple, syl- van strain that always seems as if the bird needed reassuring, possibly due to the rising inflection, like an interrogative, of the last notes. However abundant about our homes during the migrations, this warbler, true to the family instinct, retreats to the woods to nest not always so far away as Canada, the nesting ground of most warblers, for in many Northern States the bird is commonly found throughout the summer. Doubtless it prefers tall ever- green trees for its mossy, grassy nest; but it is not always par- ticular, so that the tree be a tall one with a convenient fork in an upper branch. Early in September increased numbers emerge from the woods, the plumage of the male being less brilliant than when we saw it last, as if the family cares of the summer had proved too taxing. For nearly a month longer they hunt incessantly, with much flitting about the leaves and twigs at the ends of branches in the shrubbery and evergreens, for the tiny insects that the warblers must devour by the million during their all too brief visit. 185 BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY YELLOW AND ORANGE Yellow-throated Vireo American Goldfinch Evening Grosbeak Blue-winged Warbler Canadian Warbler Hooded Warbler Kentucky Warbler Magnolia Warbler Mourning Warbler Nashville Warbler Pine Warbler Prairie Warbler Wilson's Warbler or Blackcap Yellow Warbler or Summer Yellowbird Yellow Redpoll Warbler Yellow-breasted Chat Maryland Yellowthroat Blackburnian Warbler Redstart Baltimore Oriole Look also among the Yellowish Olive Birds in the preceding group; and among the Brown Birds for the Meadowlark and Flicker. See also Parula Warbler (Slate) and Yellow-bellied Woodpecker (Black and White). BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY YELLOW AND ORANGE Yellow-throated Vireo (Vireo flamfrons) Vireo or Greenlet family to 6 inches. A little smaller than the English spar- row. Male and Female Lemon-yellow on throat, upper breast ; line around the eye and forehead. Yellow, shading into olive- green, on head, back, and shoulders. Underneath white. Tail dark brownish, edged with white. Wings a lighter shade, with two white bands across, and some quills edged with white. Range North America, from Newfoundland to Gulf of Mexico, and westward to the Rockies. Winters in the tropics. Migrations May. September. Spring and autumn migrant ; more rarely resident. This is undoubtedly the beauty of the vireo family a group of neat, active, stoutly built, and vigorous little birds of yellow, greenish, and white plumage; birds that love the trees, and whose feathers reflect the coloring of the leaves they hide, hunt, and nest among. "We have no birds," says Bradford Torrey, "so unsparing of their music: they sing from morning till night." The yellow-throated vireo partakes of all the family charac- teristics, but, in addition to these, it eclipses all its relatives in the brilliancy of its coloring and in the art of nest-building, which it has brought to a state of hopeless perfection. No envious bird need try to excel the exquisite finish of its workmanship. Hap- pily, it has wit enough to build its pensile nest high above the reach of small boys, usually suspending it from a branch over- hanging running water that threatens too precipitous a bath to tempt the young climbers. However common in the city parks and suburban gardens this bird may be during the migrations, it delights in a secluded 189 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange retreat overgrown with tall trees and near a stream, such as is dear to the solitary vireo as well when the nesting time ap- proaches. High up in the trees we hear its rather sad, persistent strain, that is more in harmony with the dim forest than with the gay flower garden, where, if the truth must be told, its song is both monotonous and depressing. Mr. Bicknell says it is the only vireo that sings as it flies. American Goldfinch (Spinus tristis) Finch family Called also: WILD CANARY; YELLOWBIRD ; THISTLE BIRD Length 5 to 5.2 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Male In summer plumage : Bright yellow, except on crown of head, frontlet, wings, and tail, which are black. Whitish markings on wings give effect of bands. Tail with white on inner webs. In winter plumage : Head yellow-olive ; no frontlet ; back drab, with reddish tinge ; shoulders and throat yellow ; soiled brownish white underneath. female Brownish olive above, yellowish white beneath. Range North America, from the tropics to the Fur Countries and westward to the Columbia River and California. Common throughout its range. Migrations May. October. Common summer resident, fre- quently seen throughout the winter as well. An old field, overgrown with thistles and tall, stalky wild flowers, is the paradise of the goldfinches, summer or winter. Here they congregate in happy companies while the sunshine and goldenrod are as bright as their feathers, and cling to the swaying, slender stems that furnish an abundant harvest, daintily lunching upon the fluffy seeds of thistle blossoms, pecking at the mullein-stalks, and swinging airily among the asters and Michael- mas daisies ; or, when snow covers the same field with a glis- tening crust, above which the brown stalks offer only a meagre dinner, the same birds, now sombrely clad in winter feathers, cling to the swaying stems with cheerful fortitude. At your approach, the busy company rises on the wing, and with peculiar, wavy flight rise and fall through the air, marking 190 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange each undulation with a cluster of notes, sweet and clear, that come floating downward from the blue ether, where the birds seem to bound along exultant in their motion and song alike. In the spring the plumage of the goldfinch, which has been drab and brown through the winter months, is moulted or shed a change that transforms the bird from a sombre Puritan into the gayest of cavaliers, and seems to wonderfully exalt his spirits. He bursts into a wild, sweet, incoherent melody that might be the outpouring from two or three throats at once instead of one, expressing his rapture somewhat after the manner of the canary, although his song lacks the variety and the finish of his caged namesake. What tone of sadness in his music the man found who applied the adjective tristis to his scientific name it is diffi- cult to imagine when listening to the notes that come bubbling up from the bird's happy heart. With plumage so lovely and song so delicious and dreamy, it is small wonder that numbers of our goldfinches are caught and caged, however inferior their song may be to the European species recently introduced into this country. Heard in Central Park, New York, where they were set at liberty, the European gold- finches seemed to sing with more abandon, perhaps, but with no more sweetness than their American cousins. The song remains at its best all through the summer months, for the bird is a long wooer. It is nearly July before he mates, and not until the tardy cedar birds are house-building in the orchard do the happy pair begin to carry grass, moss, and plant-down to a crotch of some tall tree convenient to a field of such wild flowers as will furnish food to a growing family. Doubtless the birds wait for this food to be in proper condition before they undertake parental duties at all the most plausible excuse for their late nesting. The cares evolving from four to six pale-blue eggs will suffice to quiet the father's song for the winter by the first of September, and fade all the glory out of his shining coat. As pretty a sight as any garden offers is when a family of goldfinches alights on the top of a sun- flower to feast upon the oily seeds a perfect harmony of brown and gold. 191 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Evening Grosbeak (Coccotbraustes vespertinus) Finch family Length 8 inches. Two inches shorter than the robin. Male Forehead, shoulders, and underneath clear yellow; dull yellow on lower back; sides of the head, throat, and breast olive-brown. Crown, tail, and wings black, the latter with white secondary feathers. Bill heavy and blunt, and yellow. female Brownish gray, more or less suffused with yellow. Wings and tail blackish, with some white feathers. Range Interior of North America. Resident from Manitoba northward. Common winter visitor in northwestern United States and Mississippi Valley ; casual winter visitor in north- ern Atlantic States. In the winter of 1889-90 Eastern people had the rare treat of becoming acquainted with this common bird of the Northwest, that, in one of its erratic travels, chose to visit New England and the Atlantic States, as far south as Delaware, in great numbers. Those who saw the evening grosbeaks then remember how beautiful their yellow plumage a rare winter tint looked in the snow-covered trees, where small companies of the gentle and even tame visitors enjoyed the buds and seeds of the maples, elders, and evergreens. Possibly evening grosbeaks were in vogue for the next season's millinery, or perhaps Eastern ornithologists had a sudden zeal to investigate their structural anatomy. At any rate, these birds, whose very tameness, that showed slight acquaintance with mankind, should have touched the coldest heart, received the warmest kind of a reception from hot shot. The few birds that escaped to the solitudes of Manitoba could not be expected to tempt other travellers eastward by an account of their visit. The bird is quite likely to remain rare in the East. But in the Mississippi Valley and throughout the northwest, companies of from six to sixty may be regularly counted upon as winter neighbors on almost every farm. Here the females keep up a busy chatting, like a company of cedar birds, and the males punctuate their pauses with a single shrill note that gives little indication of their vocal powers. But in the solitude of the north- ern forests the love-song is said to resemble the robin's at the start. Unhappily, after a most promising beginning, the bird suddenly stops, as if he were out of breath. 192 BLUE- WINGED YELLOW WARBLER. Life-size. Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Blue-winged Warbler (Helmintbopbila pinusj Wood Warbler family Called also: BLUE-WINGED YELLOW WARBLER Length 4.75 inches. An inch and a half shorter than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male Crown of head and all under parts bright yellow. Back olive-green. Wings and tail bluish slate, the former with white bars, and three outer tail quills with large white patches on their inner webs. Female Paler and more olive. Range Eastern United States, from southern New England and Minnesota, the northern limit of its nesting range, to Mexico and Central America, where it winters. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. In the naming of warblers, bluish slate is the shade intended when blue is mentioned ; so that if you see a dainty little olive and yellow bird with slate-colored wings and tail hunting for spiders in the blossoming orchard or during the early autumn, you will have seen the beautiful blue-winged warbler. It has a rather leisurely way of hunting, unlike the nervous, restless flit- ting about from twig to twig that is characteristic of many of its many cousins. The search is thorough bark, stems, blossoms, leaves are inspected for larvae and spiders, with many pretty motions of head and body. Sometimes, hanging with head downward, the bird suggests a yellow titmouse. After blossom time a pair of these warblers, that have done serviceable work in the orchard in their all too brief stay, hurry off to dense woods to nest. They are usually to be seen in pairs at all seasons. Not to "high coniferous trees in northern forests" the Mecca of innumerable warblers but to scrubby, second growth of wood- land borders, or lower trees in the heart of the woods, do these dainty birds retreat. There they build the usual warbler nest of twigs, bits of bark, leaves, and grasses, but with this peculiarity : the numerous leaves with which the nest is wrapped all have their stems pointing upward. Mr. Frank Chapman has admirably defined their song as consisting of "two drawled, wheezy notes swee-chee, the first inhaled, the second exhaled." '93 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Canadian Warbler (Syl-vania canadensis) Wood Warbler family Called also: CANADIAN FLYCATCHER; SPOTTED CANA- DIAN WARBLER Length*, to 5.6 inches. About an inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male Immaculate bluish ash above, without marks on wings or tail; crown spotted with arrow-shaped black marks. Cheeks, line from bill to eye, and underneath clear yellow. Black streaks forming a necklace across the breast. female Paler, with necklace indistinct. Range North America, from Manitoba and Labrador to tropics. Migrations May. September. Summer resident ; most abun- dant in migrations. Since about one-third of all the song-birds met with in a year's rambles are apt to be warblers, the novice cannot devote his first attention to a better group, confusing though it is by reason of its size and the repetition of the same colors in so many bewildering combinations. Monotony, however, is unknown in the warbler family. Whoever can rightly name every warbler, male and female, on sight is uniquely accomplished. The jet necklace worn on this bird's breast is its best mark of identification. Its form is particularly slender and graceful, as might be expected in a bird so active, one to whom a hundred tiny insects barely afford a dinner that must often be caught piece- meal as it flies past. To satisfy its appetite, which cannot but be dainty in so thoroughly charming a bird, it lives in low, boggy woods, in such retreats as Wilson's black-capped warbler selects fora like reason. Neither of these two "flycatcher" warblers depends altogether on catching insects on the wing; countless thousands are picked off the under sides of leaves and about the stems of twigs in true warbler fashion. The Canadian's song is particularly loud, sweet, and viva- cious. It is hazardous for any one without long field practice to try to name any warbler by its song alone, but possibly this one's animated music is as characteristic as any. The nest is built on the ground on a mossy bank or elevated 194 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange into the root crannies of some large tree, where there is much water in the woods. Bits of bark, dead wood, moss, and fine rootlets, all carefully wrapped with leaves, go to make the pretty cradle. Unhappily, the little Canada warblers are often cheated out of their natural rights, like so many other delightful song- birds, by the greedy interloper that the cowbird deposits in their nest. Hooded Warbler (Sytoania mitrata) Wood Warbler family Length *, to 5.75 inches. About an inch shorter than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male Head, neck, chin, and throat black like a hood in mature male specimens only. Hood restricted, or altogether want- ing in female and young. Upper parts rich olive. Forehead, cheeks, and underneath yellow. Some conspicuous white on tail feathers. Female Duller, and with restricted cowl. Range United States east of Rockies, and from southern Michi- gan and southern New England to West Indies and tropical America, where it winters. Very local. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. This beautifully marked, sprightly little warbler might be mistaken in his immaturity for the yellowthroat ; and as it is said to take him nearly three years to grow his hood, with the completed cowl and cape, there is surely sufficient reason here for the despair that often seizes the novice in attempting to distin- guish the perplexing warblers. Like its Southern counterpart, the hooded warbler prefers wet woods and low trees rather than high ones, for much of its food consists of insects attracted by the dampness, and many of them must be taken on the wing. Be- cause of its tireless activity the bird's figure is particularly slender and graceful a trait, too, to which we owe all the glimpses of it we are likely to get throughout the summer. It has a curious habit of spreading its tail, as if it wished you to take special notice of the white spots that adorn it; not flirting it, as the red- start does his more gorgeous one, but simply opening it like a fan as it flies and darts about. Its song, which is particularly sweet and graceful, and with Conspicuously Yellow and Orange more variation than most warblers' music, has been translated "Che-we-eo-tsip, tsip, che-we-eo," again interpreted by Mr. Chap- man as " You must come to the woods, or you won't see me." Kentucky Warbler (Geotblypisformosa) Wood Warbler family Length 5.5 inches. Nearly an inch shorter than the English sparrow. Male Upper parts olive-green; under parts yellow; a yellow line from the bill passes over and around the eye. Crown of head, patch below the eye, and line defining throat, black. Female Similar, but paler, and with grayish instead of black markings. Range United States eastward from the Rockies, and from Iowa and Connecticut to Central America, where it winters. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. No bird is common at the extreme limits of its range, and so this warbler has a reputation for rarity among the New England ornithologists that would surprise people in the middle South and Southwest. After all that may be said in the books, a bird is either common or rare to the individual who may or may not have happened to become acquainted with it in any part of its chosen territory. Plenty of people in Kentucky, where we might judge from its name this bird is supposed to be most numerous, have never seen or heard of it, while a student on the Hudson River, within sight of New York, knows it intimately. It also nests regularly in certain parts of the Connecticut Valley. " Who is my neighbor ? " is often a question difficult indeed to answer where birds are concerned. In the chapter, "Spring at the Cap- ital," which, with every reading of "Wake Robin," inspires the bird-lover with fresh zeal, Mr. Burroughs writes of the Kentucky warbler: " I meet with him in low, damp places, in the woods, usually on the steep sides of some little run. I hear at intervals a clear, strong, bell-like whistle or warble, and presently catch a glimpse of the bird as he jumps up from the ground to take an insect or worm from the under side of a leaf. This is his charac- teristic movement. He belongs to the class of ground warblers, and his range is very low, indeed lower than that of any other species with which I am acquainted." 196 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Like the ovenbird and comparatively few others, for most birds hop over the ground, the Kentucky warbler walks rapidly about, looking for insects under the fallen leaves, and poking his inquisitive beak into every cranny where a spider may be lurk- ing. The bird has a pretty, conscious way of flying up to a perch, a few feet above the ground, as a tenor might advance towards the footlights of a stage, to pour forth his clear, pene- trating whistle, that in the nesting season especially is repeated over and over again with tireless persistency. Magnolia Warbler (Dendroica maculosa) Wood Warbler family Called also: BLACK-AND-YELLOW WARBLER; SPOTTED WARBLER ; BLUE-HEADED YELLOW-RUMPED WAR- BLER Length 4.75 to 5 inches. About an inch and a half smaller than the English sparrow. Male Crown of head slate-color, bordered on either side by a white line ; a black line, apparently running through the eye, and a yellow line below it, merging into the yellow throat. Lower back and under parts yellow. Back, wings, and tail blackish olive. Large white patch on the wings, and the middle of the tail-quills white. Throat and sides heavily streaked with black. Female Has greener back, is paler, and has less distinct markings. Range North America, from Hudson Bay to Panama. Summers from northern Michigan and northern New England north- ward ; winters in Central America and Cuba. Migrations May. October. Spring and summer migrant. In spite of the bird's name, one need not look for it in the glossy magnolia trees of the southern gardens more than in the shrubbery on New England lawns, and during the migra- tions it is quite as likely to be found in one place as in the other. Its true preference, however, is for the spruces and hemlocks of its nesting ground in the northern forests. For these it deserts us after a brief hunt about the tender, young spring foliage and blos- soms, where the early worm lies concealed, and before we have become so well acquainted with its handsome clothes that we will instantly recognize it in the duller ones it wears on its return '97 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange trip in the autumn. The position of the white marks on the tail feathers of this warbler, however, is the clue by which it may be identified at any season or any stage of its growth. If the white bar runs across the middle of the warbler's tail, you can be sure of the identity of the bird. A nervous and restless hunter, it nevertheless seems less shy than many of its kin. Another pleas- ing characteristic is that it brings back with it in October the loud, clear, rapid whistle with which it has entertained its nesting mate in the Canada woods through the summer. Mourning Warbler (GeotMypis Philadelphia ) Wood Warbler family Called also : MOURNING GROUND WARBLER Length -5 to 5 *6 inches. About an inch smaller than the English sparrow. Male Gray head and throat; the breast gray; the feathers with black edges that make them look crinkled, like crape. The black markings converge into a spot on upper breast. Upper parts, except head, olive. Underneath rich yellow. Female Similar, but duller; throat and breast buff and dusky where the male is black. Back olive-green. Range "Eastern North America; breeds from eastern Nebraska, northern New York, and Nova Scotia northward, and south- ward along the Alleghanies to Pennsylvania. Winters in the tropics." Chapman. Migrations May. September. Spring and autumn migrant. Since Audubon met with but one of these birds in his inces- sant trampings, and Wilson secured only an immature, imper- fectly marked specimen for his collection, the novice may feel no disappointment if he fails to make the acquaintance of this "gay and agreeable widow." And yet the shy and wary bird is not unknown in Central Park, New York City. Even where its clear, whistled song strikes the ear with a startling novelty that invites to instant pursuit of the singer, you may look long and diligently through the undergrowth without finding it. Dr. Merriam says the whistle resembles the syllables " true, true, true, tru, too, the voice rising on the first three syllables and falling on the last two." In the nesting season this song is 198 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange repeated over and over again with a persistency worthy of a Kentucky warbler. It is delivered from a perch within a few feet of the ground, as high as the bird seems ever inclined to ascend. Nashville Warbler ( ' HelminthopUla ruficapilla) Wood Warbler family Length 4.75 to 5 inches. About an inch and a half smaller than the English sparrow. Male Olive-green above; yellow underneath. Slate-gray head and neck. Partially concealed chestnut patch on crown. Wings and tail olive-brown and without markings. female Dull olive and paler, with brownish wash underneath. Range North America, westward to the plains ; north to the Fur Countries, and south to Central America and Mexico. Nests north of Illinois and northern New England ; winters in tropics. Migrations April. September or October. It must not be thought that this beautiful warbler confines itself to backyards in the city of Nashville simply because Wil- son discovered it near there and gave it a local name, for the bird's actual range reaches from the fur trader's camp near Hud- son Bay to the adobe villages of Mexico and Central America, and over two thousand miles east and west in the United States. It chooses open rather than dense woods and tree-bordered fields. It seems to have a liking for hemlocks and pine trees, especially if near a stream that attracts insects to its shores ; and Dr. War- ren notes that in Pennsylvania he finds small flocks of these war- blers in the autumn migration, feeding in the willow trees near little rivers and ponds. Only in the northern parts of the United States is their nest ever found, for the northern British provinces are their preferred nesting ground. One seen in the White Mountains was built on a mossy, rocky ledge, directly on the ground at the foot of a pine tree, and made of rootlets, moss, needles from the trees overhead, and several layers of leaves out- side, with a lining of fine grasses that cradled four white, speckled eggs. Audubon likened the bird's feeble note to the breaking of twigs. 199 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Pine Warbler (Dendroica vigorsii) Wood Warbler family Called also: PINE-CREEPING WARBLER Length 5.5 to 6 inches. A trifle smaller than the English spar- row. Male Yellowish olive above; clear yellow below, shading to grayish white, with obscure dark streaks on side of breast. Two whitish wing-bars ; two outer tail feathers partly white. Female Duller ; grayish white only faintly tinged with yellow underneath. Range North America, east of the Rockies; north to Manitoba, and south to Florida and the Bahamas. Winters from south- ern Illinois southward. Migrations March or April. October or later. Common sum- mer resident. The pine warbler closely presses the myrtle warbler for the first place in the ranks of the family migrants, but as the latter bird often stays north all winter, it is usually given the palm. Here is a warbler, let it be recorded, that is fittingly named, for it is a denizen of pine woods only; most common in the long stretches of pine forests at the south and in New York and New England, and correspondingly uncommon wherever the woods- man's axe has laid the pine trees low throughout its range. Its "simple, sweet, and drowsy song," writes Mr. Parkhurst, is always associated "with the smell of pines on a sultry day." It recalls that of the junco and the social sparrow or chippy. Creeping over the bark of trees and peering into every crevice like a nuthatch; running along the limbs, not often hopping ner- vously or flitting like the warblers; darting into the air for a pass- ing insect, or descending to the ground to feed on seeds and berries, the pine warbler has, by a curious combination, the movements that seem to characterize several different birds. It is one of the largest and hardiest members of its family, but not remarkable for its beauty. It is a sociable traveller, cheer- fully escorting other warblers northward, and welcoming to its band both the yellow redpolls and the myrtle warblers. These birds are very often seen together in the pine and other evergreen trees in our lawns and in the large city parks. Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Prairie Warbler (Dendroica discolor) Wood Warbler family Length 4.75 to 5 inches. About an inch and a half shorter than the English sparrow. Male Olive-green above, shading to yellowish on the head, and with brick-red spots on back between the shoulders. A yellow line over the eye; wing-bars and all under parts bright yellow, heavily streaked with black on the sides. Line through the eye and crescent below it, black. Much white in outer tail feathers. Female Paler ; upper parts more grayish olive, and markings less distinct than male's. Range Eastern half of the United States. Nests as far north as New England and Michigan. Winters from Florida south- ward. Migrations May. September. Summer resident. Doubtless this diminutive bird was given its name because it prefers open country rather than the woods the scrubby under- growth of oaks, young evergreens, and bushes that border clear- ings being as good a place as any to look for it, and not the wind-swept, treeless tracts of the wild West. Its range is south- erly. The Southern and Middle States are where it is most abundant. Here is a wood warbler that is not a bird of the woods less so, in fact, than either the summer yellowbird (yellow warbler) or the palm warbler, that are eminently neigh- borly and fond of pasture lands and roadside thickets. But the prairie warblers are rather more retiring little sprites than their cousins, and it is not often we get a close enough view of them to note the brick-red spots on their backs, which are their distin- guishing marks. They have a most unkind preference for briery bushes, that discourage human intimacy. In such forbidding retreats they build their nest of plant-fibre, rootlets, and twigs, lined with plant-down and hair. The song of an individual prairie warbler makes only a slight impression. It consists " of a series of six or seven quickly repeated %ees, the next to the last one being the highest " (Chap- man). But the united voices of a dozen or more of these pretty little birds, that often sing together, afford something approach- ing a musical treat. 201 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Wilson's Warbler (Sylvania pusilla) Wood Warbler family Called also: BLACKCAP; GREEN BLACK-CAPPED WAR- BLER ; WILSON'S FLYCATCHER Length 4.75 to 5 inches. About an inch and a half shorter than the English sparrow. Male Black cap ; yellow forehead ; all other upper parts olive- green ; rich yellow underneath. Female Lacks the black cap. Range North America, from Alaska and Nova Scotia to Panama. Winters south of Gulf States. Nests chiefly north of the United States. Migrations May. September. Spring and autumn migrant. To see this strikingly marked little bird one must be on the sharp lookout for it during the latter half of May, or at the season of apple bloom, and the early part of September. It passes north- ward with an almost scornful rapidity. Audubon mentions hav- ing seen it in Maine at the end of October, but this specimen surely must have been an exceptional laggard. In common with several others of its family, it is exceedingly expert in catching insects on the wing ; but it may be known as no true flycatcher from the conspicuous rich yellow of its under parts, and also from its habit of returning from a midair sally to a different perch from the one it left to pursue its dinner. A true flycatcher usually returns to its old perch after each hunt. To indulge in this aerial chase with success, these warblers select for their home and hunting ground some low woodland growth where a sluggish stream attracts myriads of insects to the boggy neighborhood. Here they build their nest in low bushes or upon the ground. Four or five grayish eggs, sprinkled with cinnamon-colored spots in a circle around the larger end, are laid in the grassy cradle in June. Mr. H. D. Minot found one of these nests on Pike's Peak at an altitude of 1 1,000 feet, almost at the limit of vegetation. The same authority compares the bird's song to that of the redstart and the yellow warbler. Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Yellow Redpoll Warbler (Dendroica palmarum bypocbryseaj Wood Warbler family Called also: YELLOW PALM WARBLER *).'*, to 5.75 inches. A little smaller than the English sparrow. Male and Female Chestnut crown. Upper parts brownish olive ; greenest on lower back. Underneath uniform bright yellow, streaked with chestnut on throat, breast, and sides. Yellow line over and around the eye. Wings unmarked. Tail edged with olive-green ; a few white spots near tips of outer quills. More brownish above in autumn, and with a grayish wash over the yellow under parts. Range Eastern parts of North America. Nests from Nova Scotia northward. Winters in the Gulf States. Migrations April. October. Spring and autumn migrant. While the uniform yellow of this warbler's under parts in any plumage is its distinguishing mark, it also has a flycatcher's trait of constantly flirting its tail, that is at once an outlet for its superabundant vivacity and a fairly reliable aid to identification. The tail is jerked, wagged, and flirted like a baton in the hands of an inexperienced leader of an orchestra. One need not go to the woods to look for the restless little sprite that comes north- ward when the early April foliage is as yellow and green as its feathers. It prefers the fields and roadsides, and before there are leaves enough on the undergrowth to conceal it we may come to know it as well as it is possible to know any bird whose home life is passed so far away. Usually it is the first warbler one sees in the spring in New York and New England. With all the alertness of a flycatcher, it will dart into the air after insects that fly near the ground, keeping up a constant chip, chip, fine and shrill, at one end of the small body, and the liveliest sort of tail motions at the other. The pine warbler often bears it company. With the first suspicion of warm weather, off goes this hardy little fellow that apparently loves the cold almost well enough to stay north all the year like its cousin, the myrtle warbler. It builds a particularly deep nest, of the usual warbler construction, on the ground, but its eggs are rosy rather than the bluish white of others. In the Southern States the bird becomes particularly neigh- 203 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange borly, and is said to enter the streets and gardens of towns with a chippy's familiarity. Palm Warbler or Redpoll Warbler (Dendroica palmar urn) differs from the preceding chiefly in its slightly smaller size, the more grayish-brown tint in its olive upper parts, and the uneven shade of yellow underneath that varies from clear yellow to soiled whitish. It is the Western counterpart of the yellow redpoll, and is most common in the Mississippi Valley. Strangely enough, however, it is this warbler, and not bypocbrysea, that goes out of its way to winter in Florida, where it is abundant all winter. Yellow Warbler (Dendroica cestiva) Wood Warbler family Called also: SUMMER YELLOWBIRD ; GOLDEN WARBLER; YELLOW POLL Length 4.75 to 5.2 inches. Over an inch shorter than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male Upper parts olive-yellow, brightest on the crown; under parts bright yellow, streaked with reddish brown. Wings and tail dusky olive-brown, edged with yellow. Female Similar; but reddish-brown streakings less distinct. Range North America, except Southwestern States, where the prothonotary warbler reigns in its stead. Nests from Gulf States to Fur Countries. Winters south of the Gulf States, as far as northern parts of South America. Migrations May. September. Common summer resident. This exquisite little creature of perpetual summer (though to find it it must travel back and forth between two continents) comes out of the south with the golden days of spring. From much living in the sunshine through countless generations, its feathers have finally become the color of sunshine itself, and in disposition, as well, it is nothing if not sunny and bright. Not the least of its attractions is that it is exceedingly common every- where: in the shrubbery of our lawns, in gardens and orchards, by the road and brookside, in the edges of woods everywhere we catch its glint of brightness through the long summer days, and hear its simple, sweet, and happy song until the end of July. 204 YELLOW WARBLER 3 '5 Life-size Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Because both birds are so conspicuously yellow, no doubt this warbler is quite generally confused with the goldfinch ; but their distinctions are clear enough to any but the most superficial glance. In the first place, the yellow warbler is a smaller bird than the goldfinch; it has neither black crown, wings, nor tail, and it does have reddish-brown streaks on its breast that are sufficiently obsolete to make the coloring of that part look simply dull at a little distance. The goldfinch's bill is heavy, in order that it may crack seeds, whereas the yellow warbler's is slender, to enable it to pick minute insects from the foliage. The goldfinch's wavy, curved flight is unique, and that of his "double" differs not a whit from that of all nervous, flitting warblers. Surely no one familiar with the rich, full, canary-like song of the " wild canary," as the goldfinch is called, could confuse it with the mild "Wee- chee, chee, cher-wee " of the summer yellowbird. Another distinc- tion, not always infallible, but nearly so, is that when seen feed- ing, the goldfinch is generally below the line of vision, while the yellow warbler is either on it or not far above it, as it rarely goes over twelve feet from the ground. No doubt, the particularly mild, sweet amiability of the yellow warbler is responsible for the persistent visitations of the cowbird, from which it is a conspicuous sufferer. In the exqui- site, neat little matted cradle of glistening milk-weed flax, lined with down from the fronds of fern, the skulking housebreaker deposits her surreptitious egg for the little yellow mother-bird to hatch and tend. But amiability is not the only prominent trait in the female yellow warbler's character. She is clever as well, and quickly builds a new bottom on her nest, thus sealing up the cowbird's egg, and depositing her own on the soft, spongy floor above it. This operation has been known to be twice repeated, until the nest became three stories high, when a persistent cow- bird made such unusual architecture necessary. The most common nesting place of the yellow warbler is in low willows along the shores of streams. 205 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Yellow-breasted Chat (Icteria virens) Wood Warbler family Called also: POLYGLOT CHAT; YELLOW MOCKING-BIRD Length 7.5 inches. A trifle over an inch longer than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male and Female Uniform olive-green above. Throat, breast, and under side of wings bright, clear yellow. Underneath white. Sides grayish. White line over the eye, reaching to base of bill and forming partial eye-ring. Also white line on sides of throat. Bill and feet black. Range North America, from Ontario to Central America and westward to the plains. Most common in Middle Atlantic States. Migrations Early May. Late August or September. Summer resident. This largest of the warblers might be mistaken for a dozen birds collectively in as many minutes; but when it is known that the jumble of whistles, parts of songs, chuckles, clucks, barks, quacks, whines, and wails proceed from a single throat, the yellow-breasted chat becomes a marked specimen forthwith a conspicuous individual never to be confused with any other member of the feathered tribe. It is indeed absolutely unique. The catbird and the mocking-bird are rare mimics; but while the chat is not their equal in this respect, it has a large repertoire of weird, uncanny cries all its own a power of throwing its voice, like a human ventriloquist, into unexpected corners of the thicket or meadow. In addition to its extraordinary vocal feats, it can turn somersaults and do other clown-like stunts as well as any variety actor on the Bowery stage. Only by creeping cautiously towards the roadside tangle, where this "rollicking polyglot" is entertaining himself and his mate, brooding over her speckled eggs in a bulky nest set in a most inaccessible briery part of the thicket, can you hope to hear him rattle through his variety performance. Walk boldly or noisily past his retreat, and there is " silence there and nothing more." But two very bright eyes peer out at you through the undergrowth, where the trim, elegant-looking bird watches you with quizzical suspicion until you quietly seat yourself and 206 YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT Y 3 Life-size. Conspicuously Yellow and Orange assume silent indifference. " Whew, whew ! " he begins, and then immediately, with evident intent to amuse, he rattles off an inde- scribable, eccentric medley until your ears are tired listening. With bill uplifted, tail drooping, wings fluttering at his side, he cuts an absurd figure enough, but not so comical as when he rises into the air, trailing his legs behind him stork-fashion. This surely is the clown among birds. But zany though he is, he is as capable of devotion to his Columbine as Punchinello, and re- mains faithfully mated year after year. However much of a tease and a deceiver he may be to the passer-by along the roadside, in the privacy of the domestic circle he shows truly lovable traits. He has the habit of singing in his unmusical way on moon- light nights. Probably his ventriloquial powers are cultivated not for popular entertainment, but to lure intruders away from his nest. Maryland Yellowthroat (Geotblypis tricbas) Wood Warbler family Called also: BLACK-MASKED GROUND WARBLER Length 5.33 inches. Just an inch shorter than the typical Eng- lish sparrow. Male Olive-gray on head, shading to olive-green on all the other upper parts. Forehead, cheeks, and sides of head black, like a mask, and bordered behind by a grayish line. Throat and breast bright yellow, growing steadily paler underneath. Female Either totally lacks black mask or its place is indicated by only a dusky tint. She is smaller and duller. Range Eastern North America, west to the plains ; most common east of the Alleghanies. Nests from the Gulf States to Lab- rador and Manitoba; winters south of Gulf States to Panama. Migrations May. September. Common summer resident. "Given a piece of marshy ground with an abundance of skunk cabbage and a fairly dense growth of saplings, and near by a tangle of green brier and blackberry, and you will be pretty sure to have it tenanted by a pair of yellowthroats," says Dr. Ab- bott, who found several of their nests in skunk-cabbage plants, which he says are favorite cradles. No animal cares to touch this plant if it can be avoided ; but have the birds themselves no sense of smell ? 207 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Before and after the nesting season these active birds, plump of form, elegant of attire, forceful, but not bold, enter the scrubby pastures near our houses and the shrubbery of old-fashioned, overgrown gardens, and peer out at the human wanderer therein with a charming curiosity. The bright eyes of the male masquer- ader shine through his black mask, where he intently watches you from the tangle of syringa and snowball bushes ; and as he flies into the laburnum with its golden chain of blossoms that pale before the yellow of his throat and breast, you are so impressed with his grace and elegance that you follow too audaciously, he thinks, and off he goes. And yet this is a bird that seems to de- light in being pursued. It never goes so far away that you are not tempted to follow it, though it be through dense undergrowth and swampy thickets, and it always gives you just glimpse enough of its beauties and graces before it flies ahead, to invite the hope of a closer inspection next time. When it dives into the deepest part of the tangle, where you can imagine it hunting about among the roots and fallen leaves for the larvae, caterpillars, spi- ders, and other insects on which it feeds, it sometimes amuses itself with a simple little song between the hunts. But the bird's indifference, you feel sure, arises from preoccupation rather than rudeness. If, however, your visit to the undergrowth is unfortunately timed and there happens to be a bulky nest in process of con- struction on the ground, a quickly repeated, vigorous chit, pit, quit, impatiently inquires the reason for your bold intrusion. Withdraw discreetly and listen to the love-song that is presently poured out to reassure his plain little maskless mate. The music is delivered with all the force and energy of his vigorous nature and penetrates to a surprising distance. "Follow me, follow me, follow me," many people hear him say; others write the syllables, "Wicbity, wicbity, wicbity, wicbity"; and still others write them, " I beseech you, I beseech you, 1 beseech you," though the tones of this self-assertive bird rather command than entreat. Mr. Frank Chapman says of the yellowthroats : "They sing throughout the summer, and in August add a flight-song to their repertoire. This is usually uttered toward evening, when the bird springs several feet into the air, hovers for a second, and then drops back to the bushes." BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER. Life-size Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Blackburnian Warbler (Dendroica blackburni&J Wood Warbler family Called also: HEMLOCK WARBLER ; ORANGE-THROATED WARBLER; TORCH-BIRD Length 4.5 to 5.5 inches. An inch and a half smaller than the English sparrow. Male Head black, striped with orange-flame ; throat and breast orange, shading through yellow to white underneath ; wings, tail, and part of back black, with white markings. Female Olive-brown above, shading into yellow on breast, and paler under parts. Range Eastern North America to plains. Winters in tropics. Migrations May. September. Spring and autumn migrant. "The orange-throated warbler would seem to be his right name, his characteristic cognomen," says John Burroughs, in ever- delightful "Wake Robin" ; "but no, he is doomed to wear the name of some discoverer, perhaps the first who robbed his nest or rifled him of his mate Blackburn; hence, Blackburnian warbler. The burn seems appropriate enough, for in these dark evergreens his throat and breast show like flame. He has a very fine warble, suggesting that of the redstart, but not especially musical." No foliage is dense enough to hide, and no autumnal tint too brilliant to outshine this luminous little bird that in May, as it migrates northward to its nesting ground, darts in and out of the leafy shadows like a tongue of fire. It is by far the most glorious of all the warblers a sort of diminutive oriole. The quiet-colored little mate flits about after him, apparently lost in admiration of his fine feathers and the ease with which his thin tenor voice can end his lover's warble in a high Z. Take a good look at this attractive couple, for in May they leave us to build a nest of bark and moss in the evergreens of Canada that paradise for warblers or of the Catskills and Adiron- dacks, and in autumn they hurry south to escape the first frosts. 209 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange Redstart (Setoplnaga ruticilla) Wood Warbler family Called also: YELLOW-TAILED WARBLER Length 5 to 5.5 inches. Male In spring plumage: Head, neck, back, and middle breast glossy black, with blue reflections. Breast and underneath white, slightly flushed with salmon, increasing to bright salmon-orange on the sides of the body and on the wing linings. Occasional specimens show orange-red. Tail feath- ers partly black, partly orange, with broad black band across the end. Orange markings on wings. Bill and feet black. In autumn : Fading into rusty black, olive, and yellow. Female Olive-brown, and yellow where the male is orange. Young browner than the females. Range North America to upper Canada. West occasionally, as far as the Pacific coast, but commonly found in summer in the Atlantic and Middle States. Migrations Early May. End of September. Summer resident. Late some evening, early in May, when one by one the birds have withdrawn their voices from the vesper chorus, listen for the lingering " 'tsee, 'tsee/tseet " (usually twelve times repeated in a minute), that the redstart sweetly but rather monotonously sings from the evergreens, where, as his tiny body burns in the twilight, Mrs. Wright likens him to a "wind-blown firebrand, half glowing, half charred." But by daylight this brilliant little warbler is constantly on the alert. It is true he has the habit, like the flycatchers (among which some learned ornithologists still class him), of sitting pen- sively on a branch, with fluffy feathers and drooping wings; but the very next instant he shows true warbler blood by making a sudden dash upward, then downward through the air, tumbling somersaults, as if blown by the wind, flitting from branch to branch, busily snapping at the tiny insects hidden beneath the leaves, clinging to the tree-trunk like a creeper, and singing between bites. Possibly he will stop long enough in his mad chase to open and shut his tail, fan-fashion, with a dainty egotism that, in the peacock, becomes rank vanity. 210 BALTIMORE ORIOLE. % Life-size. Conspicuously Yellow and Orange The Germans call this little bird roth Stert (red tail), but, like so many popular names, this is a misnomer, as, strictly speaking, the redstart is never red, though its salmon-orange markings often border on to orange-flame. In a fork of some tall bush or tree, placed ten or fifteen feet from the ground, a carefully constructed little nest is made of moss, horsehair, and strippings from the bark, against which the nest is built, the better to conceal its location. Four or five whitish eggs, thickly sprinkled with pale brown and lilac, like the other warblers', are too jealously guarded by the little mother-bird to be very often seen. Baltimore Oriole (Icterus galbula) Oriole and Blackbird family Called also: GOLDEN ORIOLE; FIREBIRD; GOLDEN ROBIN; HANG-NEST; ENGLISH ROBIN Length 7 to 8 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Male Head, throat, upper part of back glossy black. Wings black, with white spots and edgings. Tail-quills black, with yellow markings on the tips. Everywhere else orange, shading into flame. female Yellowish olive. Wings dark brown, and quills mar- gined with white. Tail yellowish brown, with obscure, dusky bars. Range The whole United States. Most numerous in Eastern States below 55 north latitude. Migrations Early May. Middle of September. Common sum- mer resident. A flash of fire through the air; a rich, high, whistled song floating in the wake of the feathered meteor: the Baltimore oriole cannot be mistaken. When the orchards are in blossom he arrives in full plumage and song, and awaits the coming of the female birds, that travel northward more leisurely in flocks. He is decidedly in evidence. No foliage is dense enough to hide his brilliancy; his temper, quite as fiery as his feathers, leads him into noisy quarrels, and his insistent song with its martial, inter- rogative notes becomes almost tiresome until he is happily mated and family cares check his enthusiasm. 211 Conspicuously Yellow and Orange. Among the best architects in the world is his plain but ener- getic mate. Gracefully swung from a high branch of some tall tree, the nest is woven with exquisite skill into a long, flexible pouch that rain cannot penetrate, nor wind shake from its horse- hair moorings. Bits of string, threads of silk, and sometime? yarn of the gayest colors, if laid about the shrubbery in the garden, will be quickly interwoven with the shreds of bark and milk- weed stalks that the bird has found afield. The shape of the nest often differs, because in unsettled regions, where hawks abound, it is necessary to make it deeper than seven inches (the customary depth when it is built near the homes of men), and to partly close it at the top to conceal the sitting bird. From four to six whitish eggs, scrawled over with black-brown, are hatched by the mother oriole, and most jealously guarded by her now truly domesticated mate. The number of grubs, worms, flies, caterpillars, and even cocoons, that go to satisfy the hunger of a family of orioles in a day, might indicate, if it could be computed, the great value these birds are about our homes, aside from the good cheer they bring. There is a popular tradition about the naming of this gorgeous bird : When George Calvert, the first Lord Baltimore, worn out and discouraged by various hardships in his Newfoundland colony, decided to visit Virginia in 1628, he wrote that nothing in the Chesapeake country so impressed him as the myriads of birds in its woods. But the song and color of the oriole particularly cheered and delighted him, and orange and black became the heraldic colors of the first lords proprietors of Maryland. Hush! 'tis he! My Oriole, my glance of summer fire, Is come at last; and ever on the watch, Twitches the pack-thread I had lightly wound About the bough to help his housekeeping. Twitches and scouts by turns, blessing his luck, Yet fearing me who laid it in his way. Nor, more than wiser we in our affairs, Divines the Providence that hides and helps. Heave, ho ! Heave, ho ! he whistles as the twine Slackens its hold ; once more, now ! and a flash Lightens across the sunlight to the elm Where his mate dangles at her cup of felt. James Russell Lowell. 212 BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY RED OF ANY SHADE Cardinal Grosbeak Summer Tanager Scarlet Tanager Pine Grosbeak American Crossbill and the White-winged Crossbill Redpoll and Greater Redpoll Purple Finch Robin Orchard Oriole See the Red-winged Blackbird (Black). See also the males of the Rose-breasted Grosbeak, the Woodpeckers, the Chewink (Black and White); the Red-breasted Nuthatch, the Bay-breasted and the Chestnut-sided Warblers (Slate and Gray); the Bluebird and Barn Swallow (Blue); the Flicker (Brown); the Humming-bird and the Kinglets (Greenish Gray); and the Blackburnian and Redstart Warblers, and the Baltimore Oriole (Orange). CARDINAL. % Life-size. BIRDS CONSPICUOUSLY RED OF ANY SHADE Cardinal Grosbeak (Cardinal cardinalis) Finch family Called also: CRESTED REDBIRD ; VIRGINIA REDBIRD ; VIRGINIA NIGHTINGALE ; CARDINAL BIRD Length 8 to 9 inches. A little smaller than the robin. Male Brilliant cardinal ; chin and band around bill black. Beak stout and red. Crest conspicuous. In winter dress, wings washed with gray. Female Brownish yellow above, shading to gray below. Tail shorter than the male's. Crest, wings, and tail reddish. Breast sometimes tinged with red. Range Eastern United States. A Southern bird, becoming more and more common during the summer in States north of Virginia, especially in Ohio, south of which it is resident throughout the year. Migrations Resident rather than migrating birds, remaining throughout the winter in localities where they have found their way. Travel in flocks. Among the numerous names by which this beautiful bird is known, it has become immortalized under the title of Mr. James Lane Allen's exquisite book, "The Kentucky Cardinal." Here, while we are given a most charmingly sympathetic, delicate ac- count of the bird " who has only to be seen or heard, and Death adjusts an arrow," it is the cardinal's pathetic fate that impresses one most. Seen through less poetical eyes, however, the bird appears to be a haughty autocrat, a sort of " F. F. V." among the feathered tribes, as, indeed, his title, " Virginia redbird," has been unkindly said to imply. Bearing himself with a refined and courtly dignity, not stooping to soil his feet by walking on the ground like the more democratic robin, or even condescending 215 Conspicuously Red of any Shade below the level of the laurel bushes, the cardinal is literally a shin- ing example of self-conscious superiority a bird to call forth respect and admiration rather than affection. But a group of cardinals in a cedar tree in a snowy winter landscape makes us forgetful of everything but their supreme beauty. As might be expected in one of the finch family, the cardinal is a songster the fact which, in connection with his lovely plu- mage, accounts for the number of these birds shipped in cages to Europe; where they are known as Virginia nightingales. Com- mencing with a strong, rich whistle, like the high notes of a fife, " Cheo-cbeo-cheo-cheo," repeated over and over as if to make per- fect the start of a song he is about to sing, suddenly he stops, and you learn that there is to be no glorious performance after all, only a prelude to nothing. The song, such as it is, begins, with both male and female, in March, and lasts, with a brief in- termission, until September "the most melodious sigh," as Mr. Allen calls it. Early in May the cardinals build a bulky and loosely made nest, usually in the holly, laurel, or other evergreen shrubs that they always love to frequent, especially if these are near fields of corn or other grain. And often two broods in a year come forth from the pale-gray, brown-marked eggs, bearing what is literally for them the "fatal gift of beauty." Summer Tanager (Piranga rubra) Tanager family Called also: REDBIRD; SMOOTH-HEADED REDBIRD Length 7. 5 inches. About one-fourth smaller than the robin. Male Uniform red. Wings and tail like the body. Female Upper parts yellowish olive-green; underneath inclining to orange-yellow. Mange Tropical portions of two Americas and eastern United States. Most common in Southern States. Rare north of Pennsylvania. Winters in the tropics. Migrations In Southern States : April. October. Irregular mi- grant north of the Carolinas. Thirty years ago, it is recorded that so far north as New Jer- sey the summer redbird was quite as common as any of the thrushes. In the South still there is scarcely an orchard that does 216 Conspicuously Red of any Shade not contain this tropical-looking beauty the redbird par excel- lence, the sweetest singer of the family. Is there a more beauti- ful sight in all nature than a grove of orange trees laden with fruit, starred with their delicious blossoms, and with flocks of redbirds disporting themselves among the dark, glossy leaves ? Pine and oak woods are also favorite resorts, especially at the north, where the bird nowadays forsakes the orchards to hide his beauty, if he can, unharmed by the rifle that only rarely is offered so shining a mark. He shows the scarlet tanager's preference for tree-tops, where his musical voice, calling " Oricky-tucky-tuk," alone betrays his presence in the woods. The Southern farmers declare that he is an infallible weather prophet, his " WET, WET, WET," being the certain indication of rain another absurd saw, for the call-note is by no means confined to the rainy season. The yellowish-olive mate, whose quiet colors betray no nest secrets, collects twigs and grasses for the cradle to be saddled on the end of some horizontal branch, though in this work the male sometimes cautiously takes an insignificant part. After her three or four eggs are laid she sits upon them for nearly two weeks, being only rarely and stealthily visited by her mate with some choice grub, blossom, or berry in his beak. But how cheerfully his fife-like whistle rings out during the temporary exile ! Then his song is at its best. Later in the summer he has an aggravat- ing way of joining in the chorus of other birds' songs, by which the pleasant individuality of his own voice is lost. A nest of these tanagers, observed not far from New York City, was commenced the last week of May on the extreme edge of a hickory limb in an open wood ; four eggs were laid on the fourth of June, and twelve days later the tiny fledglings, that all look like their mother in the early stages of their existence, burst from the greenish-white, speckled shells. In less than a month the young birds were able to fly quite well and collect their food. 217 Conspicuously Red of any Shade Scarlet Tanager (Piranga erytbromelasj Tanager family Called also: BLACK-WINGED REDBIRD ; FIREBIRD; CAN- ADA TANAGER ; POCKET-BIRD Length 7 to 7. 5 inches. About one-fourth smaller than the robin. Male In spring plumage : Brilliant scarlet, with black wings and tail. Under wing coverts grayish white. In autumn : Simi- lar to female. Female Olive-green above ; wings and tail dark, lightly margined with olive. Underneath greenish yellow. Range North America to northern Canada boundaries, and south- ward in winter to South America. Migrations May. October. Summer resident The gorgeous coloring of the scarlet tanager has been its snare and destruction. The densest evergreens could not alto- gether hide this blazing target for the sportsman's gun, too often fired at the instigation of city milliners. "Fine feathers make fine birds " and cruel, silly women, the adage might be adapted for latter-day use. This rarely beautiful tanager, thanks to them, is now only an infrequent flash of beauty in our country roads. Instinct leads it to be chary of its charms ; and whereas it used to be one of the commonest of bird neighbors, it is now shy and solitary. An ideal resort for it is a grove of oak or swamp maple near a stream or pond where it can bathe. Evergreen trees, too, are favorites, possibly because the bird knows how exquisitely its bright scarlet coat is set off by their dark back- ground. High in the tree-tops he perches, all unsuspected by the vis- itor passing through the woods below, until a burst of rich, sweet melody directs the opera-glasses suddenly upward. There we detect him carolling loud and cheerfully, like a robin. He is an apparition of beauty a veritable bird of paradise, as, indeed, he is sometimes called. Because of their similar coloring, the tana- ger and cardinal are sometimes confounded, but an instant's comparison of the two birds shows nothing in common except red feathers, and even those of quite different shades. The incon- spicuous olive-green and yellow of the female tanager's plumage is another striking instance of Nature's unequal distribution of 218 Conspicuously Red of any Shade gifts; but if our bright-colored birds have become shockingly few under existing conditions, would any at all remain were the females prominent, like the males, as they brood upon the nest ? Both tanagers construct a rather disorderly-looking nest of fibres and sticks, through which daylight can be seen where it rests securely upon the horizontal branch of some oak or pine tree; but as soon as three or four bluish-green eggs have been laid in the cradle, off goes the father, wearing his tell-tale coat, to a distant tree. There he sings his sweetest carol to the patient, brooding mate, returning to her side only long enough to feed her with the insects and berries that form their food. Happily for the young birds' fate, they are clothed at first in motley, dull colors, with here and there only a bright touch of scarlet, yellow, and olive to prove their claim to the parent whose gorgeous plumage must be their admiration. But after the moult- ing season it would be a wise tanager that knew its own father. His scarlet feathers are now replaced by an autumn coat of olive and yellow not unlike his mate's. Pine Grosbeak (Pinicola enucleator) Finch family Called also: PINE BULLFINCH Length Variously recorded from 6.5 to n inches. Specimen measured 8.5 inches. About one-fifth smaller than the robin. Mate General color strawberry-red, with some slate-gray fleck- ings about head, under wings, and on legs. Tail brown; wings brown, marked with black and white and slate. A band -shaped series of markings between the shoulders. Underneath paler red, merging into grayish green. Heavy, conspicuous bill. J?emate Ash-brown. Head and hind neck yellowish brown, each feather having central dusky streak. Cheeks and throat yellowish. Beneath ash-gray, tinged with brownish yellow under tail. JZange British American provinces and northern United States. Migrations Irregular winter visitors; length of visits as uncer- tain as their coming. As inseparable as bees from flowers, so are these beautiful winter visitors from the evergreen woods, where their red 219 Conspicuously Red of any Shade feathers, shining against the dark-green background of the trees, give them charming prominence ; but they also feed freely upon the buds of various deciduous trees. South of Canada we may not look for them except in the severest winter weather. Even then their coming is not to be positively depended upon ; but when their caprice or was it an unusually fierce northern blast ? sends them over the Canada border, it is a simple matter to identify them when such brilliant birds are rare. The brownish-yellow and grayish females and young males, however, always seem to be in the majority with us, though our Canadian friends assure us of the irreproachable morals of this gay bird. Wherever there are clusters of pine or cedar trees, when there is a flock of pine grosbeaks in the neighborhood, you may expect to find a pair of birds diligently feeding upon the seeds and berries. No cheerful note escapes them as they persistently gormandize, and, if the truth must be confessed, they appear to be rather stupid and uninteresting, albeit they visit us at a time when we are most inclined to rapture over our bird visitors. They are said to have a deliciously sweet song in the nesting season, when, however, few except the Canadian voyageurs hear it. American Crossbill (Loxia curvirostra minor) Finch family Called also: RED CROSSBILL Length 6 to 7 inches. About the size of the English sparrow. Male General color Indian red, passing into brownish gray, with red tinge beneath. Wings (without bands), also tail, brown. Beak crossed at the tip. Female General color greenish yellow, with brownish tints. Dull-yellowish tints on head, throat, breast, and underneath. Wings and tail pale brown. Beak crossed at tip. Range Pennsylvania to northern British America. West of Mis- sissippi, range more southerly. Migrations Irregular winter visitor. November. Sometimes resident until April. It is a rash statement to say that a bird is rare simply because you have never seen it in your neighborhood, for while you are RED CROSSBILLS. 3 /s Life-size. Conspicuously Red of any Shade going out of the front door your rara avis may be eating the crumbs about your kitchen. Even with our eyes and ears con- stantly alert for some fresh bird excitement, our phlegmatic neighbor over the way may be enjoying a visit from a whole flock of the very bird we have been looking and listening for in vain all the year. The red crossbills are capricious little visitors, it is true, but by no means uncommon. About the size of an English sparrow, of a brick or Indian red color, for the most part, the peculiarity of its parrot-like beak is its certain mark of identification. Longfellow has rendered into verse the German legend of the crossbill, which tells that as the Saviour hung upon the cross, a little bird tried to pull out the nails that pierced His hands and feet, thus twisting its beak and staining its feathers with the blood. At first glance the birds would seem to be hampered by their crossed beaks in getting at the seeds in the pine cones a super- ficial criticism when the thoroughness and admirable dexterity of their work are better understood. Various seeds of fruits, berries, and the buds of trees enlarge their bill of fare. They are said to be inordinately fond of salt. Mr. Romeyn B. Hough tells of a certain old ice-cream freezer that attracted flocks of crossbills one winter, as a salt-lick attracts deer. Whether the traditional salt that may have stuck to the bird's tail is responsible for its tameness is not related, but it is certain the crossbills, like most bird visitors from the far north, are remark- ably gentle, friendly little birds. As they swing about the pine trees, parrot-fashion, with the help of their bill, calling out kimp, himp, that sounds like the snapping of the pine cones on a sunny day, it often seems easily possible to catch them with the hand. There is another species of crossbill, called the White- winged (Loxia leucoptera), that differs from the preceding chiefly in hav- ing two white bands across its wings and in being more rare. 221 Consoicuously Red of any Shade The Redpoll (Acantbis linaria) Finch family Called also : REDPOLL LINNET; LITTLE SNOWBIRD; LESSER REDPOLL Length 5. 25 to 5.5 inches. About an inch shorter than the Eng- lish sparrow. Male A rich crimson wash on head, neck, breast, and lower back, that is sometimes only a pink when we see the bird in midwinter. Grayish-brown, sparrowy feathers show under- neath the red wash. Dusky wings and tail, the feathers more or less edged with whitish. Soiled white underneath; the sides with dusky streaks. Bill sharply pointed. female More dingy than male, sides more heavily streaked, and having crimson only on the crown. Range An arctic bird that descends irregularly into the northern United States. Migrations An irregular winter visitor. "Ere long, amid the cold and powdery snow, as it were a fruit of the season, will come twittering a flock of delicate crim- son-tinged birds, lesser redpolls, to sport and feed on the buds just ripe for them on the sunny side of a wood, shaking down the powdery snow there in their cheerful feeding, as if it were high midsummer to them." Thoreau's beautiful description of these tiny winter visitors, which should be read entire, shows the man in one of his most sympathetic, exalted moods, and it is the best brief characterization of the redpoll that we have. When the arctic cold becomes too cruel for even the snow- birds and crossbills to withstand, flocks of the sociable little red- polls flying southward are the merest specks in the sullen, gray sky, when they can be seen at all. So high do they keep that often they must pass above our heads without our knowing it. First we see a quantity of tiny dots, like a shake of pepper, in the cloud above, then the specks grow larger and larger, and finally the birds seem to drop from the sky upon some tall tree that they completely cover a veritable cloudburst of birds. Without pausing to rest after the long journey, down they flutter into the weedy pastures with much cheerful twittering, to feed upon whatever seeds may be protruding through the snow. Every Conspicuously Red of any Shade action of a flock seems to be concerted, as if some rigid discipli- narian had drilled them, and yet no leader can be distinguished in the merry company. When one flies, all fly; where one feeds, all feed, and by some subtle telepathy all rise at the identical in- stant from their feeding ground and cheerfully twitter in concert where they all alight at once. They are more easily disturbed than the goldfinches, that are often seen feeding with them in the lowlands; nevertheless, they quite often venture into our gardens and orchards, even in suburbs penetrated by the trolley-car. Usually in winter we hear only their lisping call-note; but if the birds linger late enough in the spring, when their "fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love," a gleeful, canary-like song comes from the naked branches, and we may know by it that the flock will soon disappear for their nesting grounds in the northern forests. The Greater Redpoll (Acantbis linaria rostrata) may be dis- tinguished from the foregoing species by its slightly larger size, darker upper parts, and shorter, stouter bill. But the notes, habits, and general appearance of both redpolls are so nearly identical that the birds are usually mistaken for each other. Purple Finch (Carpodacus purpureus) Finch family Called also: PURPLE LINNET Length 6 to 6.25 inches. About the same size as the English sparrow. Male Until two years old, sparrow-like in appearance like the female, but with olive-yellow on chin and lower back. Afterwards entire body suffused with a bright raspberry-red, deepest on head, lower back, and breast, and other parts only faintly washed with this color. More brown on back ; and wings and tail, which are dusky, have some reddish- brown feathers. Underneath grayish white. Bill heavy. Tail forked. Female Grayish olive -brown above; whitish below; finely streaked everywhere with very dark brown, like a sparrow. Sides of breast have arrow-shaped marks. Wings and tail darkest. Range North America, from Columbia River eastward to Atlan- 223 Conspicuously Red of any Shade tic, and from Mexico northward to Manitoba. Most com- mon in Middle States and New England. Winters south of Pennsylvania. Migrations March. November. Common summer resident. Rarely individuals winter at the north. In this "much be-sparrowed country" of ours familiarity is apt to breed contempt for any bird that looks sparrowy, in which case one of the most delicious songsters we have might easily be overlooked. It is not until the purple finch reaches maturity in his second year that his plumage takes on the raspberry-red tints that some ornithologists named purple. Oriental purple is our magenta, it is true, but not a raspberry shade. Before maturity, but for the yellow on his lower back and throat, he and his mate alike suggest a song-sparrow; and it is important to note their particularly heavy, rounded bills, with the tufts of feathers at the base, and their forked tails, to name them correctly. But the identification of the purple finch, after all, depends quite as much upon his song as his color. In March, when flocks of these birds come north, he has begun to sing a little ; by the be- ginning of May he is desperately in love, and sudden, joyous peals of music from the elm or evergreen trees on the lawn en- liven the garden. How could his little brown lady-love fail to be impressed with a suitor so gayly dressed, so tender and solici- tous, so deliciously sweet - voiced ? With fuller, richer song than the warbling vireo's, which Nuttall has said it resembles, a perfect ecstasy of love pours incessantly from his throat during the early summer days. There is a suggestion of the robin's love-song in his, but its copiousness, variety, and rapidity give it a character all its own. In some old, neglected hedge or low tree about the country- place a flat, grassy nest, lined with horsehair, contains four or five green eggs in June, and the old birds are devotion itself to each other, and soon to their young, sparrowy brood. But when parental duties are over, the finches leave our lawns and gardens to join flocks of their own kind in more re- mote orchards or woods, their favorite haunts. Their subdued warble may be heard during October and later, as if the birds were humming to themselves. Much is said of their fondness for fruit blossoms and tree buds, but the truth is that noxious insects and seeds of grain 224 Conspicuously Red of any Shade constitute their food in summer, the berries of evergreens in winter. To a bird so gay of color, charming of voice, social, and trustful of disposition, surely a few blossoms might be spared without grudging. The American Robin (Merula migratoria) Thrush family Called also: RED-BREASTED OR MIGRATORY THRUSH; ROBIN- REDBREAST Length 10 inches. Mate Dull brownish olive-gray above. Head black ; tail brown- ish black, with exterior feathers white at inner tip. Wings dark brownish. Throat streaked with black and white. White eyelids. Entire breast bright rusty red ; whitish below the tail. Female Duller and with paler breast, resembling the male in autumn. Range North America, from Mexico to arctic regions. Migrations March. October or November. Often resident throughout the year. It seems almost superfluous to write a line of description about a bird that is as familiar as a chicken ; yet how can this nearest of our bird neighbors be passed without a reference ? Probably he was the very first bird we learned to call by name. The early English colonists, who had doubtless been brought up, like the rest of us, on "The Babes in the Wood," named the bird after the only heroes in that melancholy tale; but in reality the American robin is a much larger bird than the English robin- redbreast and less brilliantly colored. John Burroughs calls him, of all our birds, "the most native and democratic." How the robin dominates birddom with his strong, aggres- sive personality! His voice rings out strong and clear in the early morning chorus, and, more tenderly subdued at twilight, it still rises above all the sleepy notes about him. Whether lightly tripping over the lawn after the " early worm," or rising with his sharp, quick cry of alarm, when startled, to his nest near by, every motion is decided, alert, and free. No pensive hermit of the woods, like his cousins, the thrushes, is this joyous, vigorous " bird of the morning." Such a presence is inspiriting. 225 Conspicuously Red of any Shade Does any bird excel the robin in the great variety of his vocal expressions ? Mr. Parkhurst, in his charming "Birds' Calendar," says he knows of "no other bird that is able to give so many shades of meaning to a single note, running through the entire gamut of its possible feelings. From the soft and mellow quality, almost as coaxing as a dove's note, with which it encourages its young when just out of the nest, the tone, with minute grada- tions, becomes more vehement, and then harsh and with quick- ened reiteration, until it expresses the greatest intensity of a bird's emotions. Love, contentment, anxiety, exultation, rage what other bird can throw such multifarious meaning into its tone ? And herein the robin seems more nearly human than any of its kind." There is no one thing that attracts more birds about the house that a drinking-dish large enough for a bathtub as well; and certainly no bird delights in sprinkling the water over his back more than a robin, often aided in his ablutions by the spattering of the sparrows. But see to it that this drinking-dish is well raised above the reach of lurking cats. While the robin is a famous splasher, his neatness stops there. A robin's nest is notoriously dirty within, and so care- lessly constructed of weed-stalks, grass, and mud, that a heavy summer shower brings more robins' nests to the ground than we like to contemplate. The color of the eggs, as every one knows, has given their name to the tint. Four is the number of eggs laid, and two broods are often reared in the same nest. Too much stress is laid on the mischief done by the robins in the cherry trees and strawberry patches, and too little upon the quantity of worms and insects they devour. Professor Tread- well, who experimented upon some young robins kept in cap- tivity, learned that they ate sixty-eight earthworms daily "that is, each bird ate forty-one per cent, more than its own weight in twelve hours! The length of these worms, if laid end to end, would be about fourteen feet. Man, at this rate, would eat about seventy pounds of flesh a day, and drink five or six gallons of water." 226 ORCHARD ORIOLE. 4 , s Life-size. Conspicuously Red of any Shade Orchard Oriole (Icterus spurius) Blackbird and Oriole family Called also: ORCHARD STARLING ; ORCHARD HANG-NEST Length'] to 7.3 inches. About one-fourth smaller than the robin. Male Head, throat, upper back, tail, and part of wings black. Breast, rump, shoulders, under wing and tail coverts, and under parts bright reddish brown. Whitish-yellow mark- ings on a few tail and wing feathers. Female Head and upper parts olive, shading into brown; brighter on head and near tail. Back and wings dusky brown, with pale-buff shoulder-bars and edges of coverts. Throat black. Under parts olive, shading into yellow. Range Canada to Central America. Common in temperate lati- tudes of the United States. Migrations Early May. Middle of September. Common sum- mer resident. With a more southerly range than the Baltimore oriole and less conspicuous coloring, the orchard oriole is not so familiar a bird in many Northern States, where, nevertheless, it is quite common enough to be classed among our would-be intimates. The orchard is not always as close to the house as this bird cares to venture; he will pursue an insect even to the piazza vines. His song, says John Burroughs, is like scarlet, "strong, in- tense, emphatic," but it is sweet and is more rapidly uttered than that of others of the family. It is ended for the season early in July. This oriole, too, builds a beautiful nest, not often pendent like the Baltimore's, but securely placed in the fork of a sturdy fruit tree, at a moderate height, and woven with skill and precision, like a basket. When the dried grasses from one of these nests were stretched and measured, all were found to be very nearly the same length, showing to what pains the little weaver had gone to make the nest neat and pliable, yet strong. Four cloudy- white eggs with dark-brown spots are usually found in the nest in June. 227 INDEX The figures in black-faced type indicate the page upon which the biography of the bird is given. Accentor, Golden-crowned (see Oven- bird), 1 80. Bellbird (see Wood Thrush), 123. Bird, Blue (see Bluebird), 99. Butcher (see Northern Shrike), 87. Butter (see Bobolink), 61. Cardinal (see Cardinal Grosbeak), 215. Cedar, 9, 19, 20, 21, 27, 29, 36, 144. Cow-pen (see Cowbird), 49. Grass (see Vesper Sparrow), 162. Grease (see Canada Jay), 79. Meadow (see Bobolink), 61. Meat (see Canada Jay), 79. Moose (see Canada Jay), 79. Myrtle (see Myrtle Warbler), 92. Peabody (see Vesper Sparrow), 165. Potato Bug (see Rose-breasted Gros- beak), 60. Thistle (see American Goldfinch), 190. Blackbird (see Rusty Blackbird), 46. and Oriole family, 6. Cow (see Cowbird), 49. Crow (see Purple Crackle), 44. Red -winged, 6, 21, 22, 23, 28, 30, 32, 36, 47- Rusty, 6, 22, 28, 30, 32, 36, 46. Skunk (see Bobolink), 61. Swamp (see Red-winged Blackbird), 47- Thrush (see Rusty Blackbird), 46. Blackcap (see Wilson's Warbler), 202. Bluebird, 14, 19, 20, 21, 22, 27, 28, 29, 30, 36, 99- Bobolink, 7, 22, 23, 28, 30, 31, 36, 01. Bull-bat (see Nighthawk), 138. Bullfinch, Pine (see Pine Grosbeak), 219. Bunting, Bay-winged (see Vesper Spar- row), 162. Cow (see Cowbird), 49. Field (see Field Sparrow), 152. Indigo, 8, 21, 22, 23, 29, 30, 31, 35, 101. Bunting, Lapland Lark (see Lapland Longspur), 148. Savanna (see Savanna Sparrow), 155. Snow (see Snowflake), 59. Towhee (see Chewink), 58. Tree (see Tree Sparrow), 161. Buntings, the, 7. Camp Robber (see Canada Jay), 79. Canary, Wild (see American Goldfinch), 190. Cardinal (see Cardinal Grosbeak), 215. Carrion-bird, Canadian (see Canada Jay), 79- Catbird, 12, 19, 20, 21, 22, 29, 30, 31, 36, 80. Catbirds, the, 12. Cedar Bird (see Bird, Cedar), 144. Chat, Polyglot (see Yellow-breasted Chat), 206. Yellow-breasted, 12, 19, 21, 22, 29, 30, 31, 36, 206. Chebec (see Least Flycatcher), 75. Cherry-bird (see Cedar Bird), 144. Chewink, 8, 21, 29, 30, 32, 36, 58. Chickadee, 14, 19, 20, 21, 27, 28, 29, 31, 35, 76. family (see Titmouse family), 13. Chip-bird (see Chipping Sparrow), 149. Chipper, Arctic (see Tree Sparrow), 161. Chippy (see Chipping Sparrow), 149. Meadow (see Seaside Sparrow), 156. Winter (see Tree Sparrow), 161. Clape (see Flicker), 130. Corn Thief (see Common Crow), 41. Cowbird, 7, 20, 21, 22, 28, 30, 31, 36, 49- Creeper, Brown, 13, 20, 21, 28, 35, 145. family, 13. Crossbill, American, 8, 19, 20, 28, 220. Red (see American Crossbill), 220. White-winged Red, 8, 19, 20, 28, 221. Crossbills, the, 7, 21, 35. Crow and Jay family, 229 Index Crow, Common, 6, 19, 20, 21, 22, 27, 28, 36, 41- Fish, 6, 19, 20, 21, 22, 27, 28, 36, 42. Rain (j^ Black-billed Cuckoo) 139 ; also Yellow -billed Cuckoo, 141. Rusty (see Rusty Blackbird), 46. Cuckoo family, 3. Black-billed, 3, 19, 20, 21, 28, 30, 31, 36, 139. Yellow-billed, 3, 19, 20, 21, 28, 30, 31, 36, 141. Devil Downhead (see White -breasted Nut- hatch), 84. Dove, Carolina (see Mourning Dove), 108. family (see Pigeon and Dove fam- ily), IS- Mourning, 15, 21, 22, 28, 36, 108. Turtle (see Mourning Dove), 108. Finch family, 7. Ferruginous (see Fox Sparrow), '153. Foxy (see Fox Sparrow), 153. Gold (see Goldfinch), 190. Grass (see Vesper Sparrow), 162. Pine (see Pine Siskin), 146. Purple, 8, 19, 20, 21, 23, 28, 29, 30, 32, 35, 223. Seaside (see Seaside Sparrow), 156. Swamp (see Swamp Song Sparrow), 1 60. Towhee Ground (see Chewink), 58. Firebird (see Scarlet Tanager), 218. Flicker, 4, 19, 21, 22, 27, 28, 30, 32, 36, 130. Flycatcher, Acadian, 5, 19, 22, 28, 31, 35, 182. Canadian (see Canadian Warbler), 194. Crested (see Great Crested Fly- catcher), 72. Dusky (see Phoebe), 71. family, 5, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23. Great Crested, 5, 19, 20, 22, 28, 30, 3i, 35, 72- Least, 5, 19, 20, 22, 28, 30, 31, 35, 75- Olive-sided, 5, 19, 28, 31, 36, 74. Say's, 5, 19, 22, 28, 72. Small Green-crested (see Acadian Flycatcher), 182. Sylvan (see Blue-gray Gnatcatcher), no. Tyrant (see Kingbird), 68. Wilson's (see Wilson's Warbler), 202. Yellow-bellied, 5, 19, 22, 28, 31, 35, 183. Gnatcatcher, Blue-gray, 14, 19, 20, 22, 29, 35, no. Gnatcatcher family, 14. Goatsucker family, 4. Long-winged (see Nighthawk), 138. Goldcrest, Golden-crowned (see Golden- crowned Kinglet), 174. Goldfinch, 8, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35, I90- European, 191. Crackle, Bronzed, 7, 19, 20, 21, 22, 28, 30, 32, 36, 46. Keel-tailed (see Purple Crackle), 44. Purple, 7, 19, 20, 21, 22, 28, 30, 32, 36, 44- Rusty (see Rusty Blackbird), 46. Grasel (see Chewink), 58. Grass-bird, Red (see Swamp Song Spar- row), 1 60. Greenlet family (see Vireo family), 10. Grosbeak, Blue, 8, 28, 36, 105. ' Cardinal, 8, 21, 27, 28, 29, 36, 215. Evening, 8, 28, 36, 192. Pine, 8, 20, 27, 36, 219. Rose-breasted, 8, 21, 28, 30, 31, 36, 60. Grosbeaks, the, 7, 19, 20, 21. Hair-bird (see Chipping Sparrow), 149. Halcyon (see Belted Kingfisher), 102. Hang-nest (see Baltimore Oriole), 211. Orchard (see Orchard Oriole), 227. Hawk, Mosquito (see Nighthawk), 138. Heron, Venison (see Canada Jay), 79. High-hole or High-holder (see Flicker), 130. Humming-bird family, 5. Ruby-throated, 5, 19, 21,28,30, 31, 35, 170. Indigo Bird (see Indigo Bunting), 101. Jay, Blue, 6, 19, 20, 21, 27, 28, 36, 104. Canada, 6, 20, 21, 22, 28, 36, 79. family (see Crow and Jay family), 6. Junco, 8, 21, 22, 27, 31, 35, 83. Kingbird, 5, 19, 20, 22, 23, 28, 30, 31, 35, 68. Kingfisher, Belted, 3, 20, 21, 23, 28, 30, 36, 102. family, 3. Kinglet family, 14. Golden-crowned, 14, 20, 21. 28, 32, 35, 174. Ruby-crowned, 14, 20, 21, 28, 30, 32, 35, 172. Lark, Brown or Red (see American Pipit), 135- family, 5. Field (see Meadowlark), 132. Horned, 6, 21, 22, 23, 27, 31, 36, 134- 230 Index Lark, Meadow (see Meadowlark), 132. Oldfield (see Meadowlark), 132. Pine (see Pine Siskin), 146. Prairie (see Western Meadowlark), 133. Prairie Horned, 6, 22, -27, 29, 135. Purple (see Purple Finch), 223. Redpoll (see Redpoll), 222. Shore (see Horned Lark), 134. Snow (see Snowflake), 59. Tit (see American Pipit), 135. Linnets, the, 7. Longspur, Lapland, 8, 22, 28, 35, 148. Smith's Painted, 8, 22, 28, 35, 147. Maize Thief (see Purple Crackle), 44. Martin, Bee (see Kingbird), 68. Purple, 9, 19, 21, 29, 30, 31, 36, 48. Sand (see Bank Swallow), 143. Mavis (see Brown Thrasher), 121. Maybird (see Bobolink), 61. Meadowlark, 7, 21, 22, 23, 27, 29, 30, 32, 36, 132. Western, 7, 21, 22, 23, 27, 29, 36, 133- Mocking-bird, 12, 19, 20, 21, 29, 36, 8l. Brown (see Brown Thrasher), 121. French (see Brown Thrasher), 121. Yellow, 206. Mocking-birds, the, 12. Nighthawk, 4, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 28, 30, 31, 36, 138. Nightingale, European, 125. Virginia (see Cardinal Grosbeak), 215- Nightjar (see Nighthawk), 138. Nine-killer (see Northern Shrike), 87. Nuthatch, Canada (see Red-breasted Nut- hatch), 85. family, 13, 21. Red-breasted, 13, 20, 28, 32, 35, 85. White-breasted, 13, 20, 27, 29, 32, 35, 84. Oriole, Baltimore, 7, 19, 21, 28, 30, 31, 36, 211. Brown-headed (see Cowbird), 49. family (see Blackbird and Oriole family), 6. Golden (see Baltimore Oriole), 211. Orchard, 7, 19, 21, 28, 30, 31, 36, 227. Red-winged (see Red-winged Black- bird), 47. Rusty (see Rusty Blackbird), 46. Ortolan, American (see Bobolink), 61. Ovenbird, 12, 21, 22, 23, 29, 30, 31, 35, 1 80. Pewee, Bridge (see Phoebe), 71. Small (see Acadian Flycatcher), 182. Pewee, Water (see Phoebe), 71. Wood, 5, 19, 20, 22, 23, 28, 30, 31, 36, 69. Phoebe, 5, 19, 20, 22, 23, 28, 30, 32, 35, 71. Say's, 72. Pigeon and Dove family, 15. Pipit, American, 12, 21, 22, 23, 28, 30, 35, I3S- Pipits, the, 12. Piramidig (see Nighthawk), 138. Pisk (see Nighthawk), 138. Pocket-bird (see Scarlet Tanager), 218. Preacher, the (see Red-eyed Vireo), 176. Raven, American, 6, 19, 20, 28, 36, 43. Northern (see American Raven), 43. White-necked, 44. Recollet (see Cedar Bird), 144. Redbird, Black-winged (see Scarlet Tan- ager), 218. Crested (see Cardinal Grosbeak), 215. (see Summer Tanager), 216. Smooth-headed (see Summer Tana- ger), 216. Virginia (see Cardinal Grosbeak), 215- Redhead (see Red-headed Woodpecker), 53- Redpoll, 8, 21, 22, 27, 35, 222. Greater, 8, 21, 22, 27, 35, 223. Lesser (see Redpoll), 222. Redstart, 12, 19, 29, 31, 35, 2IO. Reedbird (see Bobolink), 61. Robin, American, 14, 19, 20, 21, 22, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 225. Blue (see Bluebird), 99. Canada (see Cedar Bird), 144. English (see Baltimore Oriole), 211. Golden (see Baltimore Oriole), 211. Ground (see Chewink), 58. Redbreast (see American Robin), 225. Wood (see Wood Thrush), 123. Sapsucker (see Yellow-bellied Wood- pecker), 57. Shrike family, 9. erhead, 10, 19, 20, 21, 29, 36, Northern, 10, 19, 20, 21, 27, 32, 36, 87. Silktail (see Bohemian Waxwing), 88. Siskin, Pine, 8, 20, 28, 32, 35, 146. Skylark, European, 5. Snowbird (see Junco), 83 ; also Snow- flake, 59. Lapland (see Lapland Longspur), 148. Little (see Redpoll), 222. Slate-colored (see Junco), 83. 231 Index Snowflake, 8, 22, 27, 36, 59. Sparrow, Bush (see Field Sparrow), 152. Canada (see Tree Sparrow), 161 ; also White-throated Sparrow, 165. Chipping, 7, 19, 20, 22, 27, 28, 30, 35, M9- English, 7, 20, 22, 27, 28, 151. Field, 7, 22, 28, 30, 32, 152. Fox, 7, 20, 21, 22, 27, 28, 29, 32, 36, 153- Fox-colored (see Fox Sparrow), 153. Grasshopper, 7, 22, 28, 31, 35, 154. House (see English Sparrow), 151. Marsh (see Swamp Song Sparrow), 1 60. Savanna, 7, 22, 28, 32, 35, 155. Seaside, 7, 22, 28, 35, 156. Sharp-tailed, 7, 22, 28, 35, 157. Social (see Chipping Sparrow), 149. Song, 8, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28, 30, 35, 158. Swamp (see Swamp Song Sparrow), 160. Swamp Song, 8, 22, 27, 28, 30, 32, 35, 160. Tree, 8, 19, 20, 21, 22, 27, 31, 35, 161. Vesper, 8, 20, 22, 23, 27, 28, 30, 31, 35, 162. White-crowned, 8, 20, 21, 22, 27, 32, 36, 164. White-throated, 8, 20, 21, 22, 27, 30, 31, 36, 165. Wood (see Field Sparrow), 152. Yellow-winged (see Grasshopper Sparrow), 154. Sparrows, the, 7, 19, 21, 22. Starling, Orchard (see Orchard Oriole), 227. Red-winged (see Red-winged Black- bird), 47. Swallow, Bank, 9, 19, 22, 23, 29, 30, 35, M3- Barn, 9, 19, 21, 22, 23, 29, 30, 35, 106. Chimney (see Chimney Swift), 67. Cliff, 9, 19, 21, 22, 23, 29, 30, 31, 35, 107. Crescent (see Cliff Swallow), 107. Eave (see Cliff Swallow), 107. family, 9, 20, 22, 23. Rocky Mountain (see Cliff Swallow), 107. Rough-winged, 9, 19, 22, 23, 29, 35, 144. Sand (see Bank Swallow), 143. Tree, 9, 19, 22, 23, 29, 30, 35, 169. White-bellied (see Tree Swallow), 169. Swamp Angel (see Hermit Thrush), 125. Swift, American (see Chimney Swift), 67. Swift, Chimney, 5, 19, 21, 23, 28, 30, 3i, 35, 67. family, 4. Tanager, Canada (see Scarlet Tanager), 218. family, 8, 21. Scarlet, 8, 19, 28, 30, 31, 36, 2l8. Summer, 8, 19, 29, 36, 216. Teacher, the (see Ovenbird), 180. Thrasher, Brown, 12, 19, 20, 21, 22, 29, 30, 32, 36, 121. Thrashers, the, 12. Thrush, Alice's, 15, 29, 30, 32, 36, 126. Aquatic (see Northern Water Thrush), 129. Black-capped (see Catbird), 80. Brown (see Brown Thrasher), 121. family, 14, 19, 21. Gray-cheeked (see Alice's Thrush), 126. Golden-crowned (see Ovenbird), 180. Ground (see Brown Thrasher), 121. Hermit, 15, 29, 30, 31, 36, 125. Little (see Hermit Thrush), 125. Louisiana Water, 12, 21, 22, 23, 29, 30, 31, 35, 125. New York (see Northern Water Thrush), 129. Northern Water, 12, 21, 22, 23, 29, 30, 31, 35, 126. Olive-backed, 15, 29, 30, 32, 36, 127. Red (see Brown Thrasher), 121. Red-breasted or Migratory (see American Robin), 225. Song (see Wood Thrush), 123. Swainson's (see Olive-backed Thrush), 127. Tawny (see Wilson's Thrush), 122. Wilson's, 15, 21, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 36, 122. Wood, 15, 20, 21, 29, 30, 31, 32, 36, 123. Tit, Black-capped (see Chickadee), 76. Titlark (see American Pipit), 135. Titmouse Black-capped (see Chickadee), 76. Crested (see Tufted Titmouse), 78. family, 13, 21. Tufted, 14, 19, 20, 21, 27, 28, 29, 31, 35, ?8. Tomtit, Crested (see Tufted Titmouse), 78. Torch-bird (see Blackburnian Warbler), 209. Towhee (see Che wink), 58. Tree-mouse (see White-breasted Nut- hatch), 84. Tricolor (see Red-headed Woodpecker), 53- 232 Index Veery (see Wilson's Thrush), 122. Vireo, Blue-headed (see Solitary Vireo), 175- family, 10, 19, 21, 22. Red-eyed, 10, 20, 22, 29, 30, 31, 35, 176. Solitary, 10, 20, 22, 29, 30, 31, 35, 175-' Warbling, 10, 20, 22, 29, 30, 31, 35, 179. White-eyed, 10, 20, 21, 22, 29, 30, 3i, 35, 177- Yellow-throated, 10, 20, 22, 29, 30, 31, 35, 189. Wagtail, Aquatic Wood (see Northern Water Thrush), 129. Golden-crowned (see Ovenbird), 180. Wood (see Ovenbird), 180. Wagtails, the, 12. Wake-up (see Flicker), 130. Warbler, Bay-Breasted, n, 29, 30, 31, 90. Black-and-white Creeping, n, 20, 29, 30, 31, 64. Black- and-yellow (see Magnolia Warbler), 197. Blackburnian, II, 29, 31, 209. Black-masked Ground (see Maryland Yellowthroat), 207. Blackpoll, ii, 19, 20, 29, 63. Black-throated Blue, n, 29, 30, 31, 95- Black-throated Green, n, 29, 30, 184. Bloody-sided (see Chestnut-sided Warbler), 90. Blue-headed Yellow-rumped (see Magnolia Warbler), 197. Blue-winged, n, 20, 29, 193. Blue-winged Yellow (see Blue- winged Warbler), 193. Blue Yellow-backed (see Parula Warbler), 94. Canadian, II, 19, 22, 23, 29, 31, 194. Chestnut-sided, n, 29, 30, 31, 90. Golden (see Yellow Warbler), 204. Golden- winged, n, 29, 30, 31, 91. Green Black-capped (see Wilson's Warbler), 202. Hemlock (see Blackburnian War- bler), 209. Hooded, n, 21, 22, 29, 31, 195. Kentucky, n, 22, 196. Magnolia, n, 29, 30, 197. Mourning, n, 21, 22, 29, 198. Mourning Ground (see Mourning Warbler), 198. Myrtle, n, 21, 27, 29, 30, 92. Nashville, u, 29, 199. Warbler, Orange-throated (see Black- burnian Warbler), 209. Palm, ii, 22, 29, 204. Parula, II, 29, 30, 31, 94. Pine, ii, 20, 29, 30, 31, 200. Pine Creeping (see Pine Warbler), 200. Prairie, ii, 22, 29, 31, 201. Redpoll (see Palm Warbler), 204. Ruby-crowned (see Ruby-crowned Kinglet), 172. Spotted (see Magnolia Warbler), 197. Spotted Canadian (see Canadian Warbler), 194. Wilson's, 12, 19, 22, 23, 29, 31, 202. Worm-eating, 12, 20, 22, 29, 31, 181. Yellow, 12, 19, 20, 22, 23, 29, 30, 31, 204. Yellow-crowned (see Myrtle War- bler), 92. Yellow Palm (see Yellow Redpoll Warbler), 203. Yellow Redpoll, 12, 22, 29, 30, 31, 203. Yellow-rumped (see Myrtle Warbler), 92. Yellow-tailed (see Redstart), 210. Waxwing, Black-throated (see Bohemian Waxwing), 88. Bohemian, 9, 19, 20, 27, 36, 88. Cedar (see Cedar Bird), 144. family, 9. Lapland (see Bohemian Waxwing), 88. Whisky Jack or John (see Canada Jay), 79- Whitebird (see Snowflake), 59. Whippoorwill, 4, 19, 20, 21, 22, 28, 31, 35, 136. Will-o'-the-Wisp (see Nighthawk), 138. Woodpecker, Downy, 4, 19, 27, 28, 35, 55- family, 3, 21, 22. Golden-winged (see Flicker), 130. Hairy, 4, IQ, 27, 28, 36, 54. Pigeon (see Flicker), 130. Red-headed, 4, 19, 27, 28, 30, 32, 36, S3- Yellow-bellied, 4, 19, 27, 28, 30, 32, Yellow-shafted (see Flicker), 130. Wood Warbler family, 10, 19, 20, 21, 35. Wren, Carolina, 13, 21, 22, 27, 28, 29, 116. family, 13, 19, 21, 22, 35. Fiery-crowned (see Golden-crowned Kinglet), 174. House, 13, 20, 29, 30, 31, 115. Long-billed Marsh, 13, 22, 29, 30, 31, 119. 233 Index Wren, Mocking (see Carolina Wren), 116. Ruby-crowned (see Ruby-crowned Kinglet), 172. Short-billed Marsh, 13, 29, 30, 31, 120. Winter, 13, 21, 22, 23, 28, 31, 117. Yarup (see Flicker), 130. Yellowbird (see American Goldfinch), 190. Summer (see Yellow Warbler), 204. Yellowhammer (see Flicker), 130. Yellow Foil (see Yellow Warbler), 204. Yellowthroat, Maryland, 12, 19, 21. 22 23, 29, 30, 31, 207. 234 OF CALIFORNIA THE UNIVERSITY o THE LIBRARY Of o jo Aman 3Hi SANTA BARBARA CAT. NO. 23 012 THE LIBRARY OF vavaavg VINVS O OF CALIFORNIA t 40 Advuan 3Hi THE LIBRARY Of O THE UNIVERSITY O O OF CALIFORNIA o I NWT" I 1 SANTA BARBARA OF CALIFORNI/ jo Aavugn THE UNIVERSITY O 2 O THE LIBRARY OF o I SANTA BARBARA OF CALIFORNIA THE LIBRARY OF o AilS))3AINn 3H1 o THE LIBRARY OF o vavasva VINVS 8 o OF CALIFORNIA o THE UB8ARY Of o