22102089146 Med K5667 * ■' ., 'v. ■-. ■• ,-f ' ' • \ 'a ,• •>- J ■; ■ ,• f i V > 'J i % / . ,• V ‘ • « 'r J? i 'A 11" ,^< " • .' .x:a^- ''A ■ ♦ 4A . . i* ;_■ «5> v#v J. " i J‘.*r t. • ' .>m: , ■■ ; fV I', . ' • .r ' *. ; '/'’A- \ • v-'*/-,-i^^« /■■J J. . .V^': ■ ‘i'i^ f -«r'-x“ ■- it' ,' ^‘: V"'- • V"* ■■ ' ' ^ '1* '-fc ^:: : A',/ ■ I" !.-'.-Ai .' , «’ ■ i’'*-^r* '■ '■ , "S. -•* H , ' «v*C _ ■^' Ik. - Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.Org/details/b2806012x_0001 Figs 73—75 Coal-Tit. BTgs. 91 Pied Wagtail. Figs. 102 76—77 Marsh-Tit. 92 White Wagtail. 103 7&-81 Blue Tit. 93 Grey Wagtail. 00 0 T 82 Crp:sted Tit. 94 Blue-Headed Wagtail. 109 83-84 Nuthatch. 95—96 Yellow Wagtail. no 85-87 Wren. 97 — 100 Tree-Pipit. in— T13 88 90 Tree Creeper. lOI Meadow-Pipit. Rock-Pipit. Golden Oriole. Red-Backed Shrike WooDCHAT Shrike. Pied Flycatcher- Spotted Flycatcher. 1, .PL. II. e9 BRUMbV'a CLARKE, UTO-. LITMOS. HULL AND LONDON Figs. 32—34 Whitethroat. Lesser Whitethroat. 38—41 Blackcap. 42—44 Garden Warbler. 45 Dartford Warbler. 46—48 Golden-Crested Wren. ;. 49—51 Chiffchaff. 52 — 54 Willow-Warbler. 55 Wood-Warbler. 56 — 57 Reed-Warbler. 58—60 Marsh-Warbler. 61—62 Sepge- Warbler. 63 Gr.^sshopper Warbler * • ♦ 7I . 7^ .J 64 Savi’s Warbler. 65—67 H edge-Sparrow. 68 Bearded Reedling. 69 Long-Tailed Tit. 70 Dipper. 71—72 Great Tit. / '* ♦ t <1 • • -4^ • 'f tt I t, V I* »■ i ^ Y », 4 ■ • „ » *r 1 ' »• 1 » Figs, i — 4 Missel Thrush. 5 — 9 Song Thrush. 10 — 17 Blackbird. ■th Figs. 18 — 19 Ring Ouzel. 20 Wheatear. 21 — 22 Whinchat. 23 Stonechat. Figs. 24 Redstart 25 — 28 Redbreast 29 — 31 Nightingale. BRITISH BIRDS WITH THEIR Nksts ard Eggs IN SIX VOLUMES ORDER PASSERES (First Part) By ARTHUR G. BUTLER, Ph.D., F.L.S., F.Z.S., F.E.S., Corresponding Member of Various Foreign vSocieties Author ok “British Birds’ Eggs, A Handbook of British Oology” (Illustrated by the Author) “Favourite Foreign Cage-Birds” And numerous Scientific Works and Memoirs DEALING WITH VARIOUS BRANCHES OF ZOOLOGY ILLUSTRATED BY F. W. FROHAWK, M.B.O.U., F.E.S. V O L U E I . BRUMBY & CLARKE, Limited, Baker StreivT, Hull, and 5, Farringdon Avenue, London, E.C. historical \ medical WELLCOMF INSTITUTE LIPF -RY Coll welMOmec Call No. [ ^ CONTENTS. Those marked thus, * not being recognised as British Birds, are not figured. Accentor collar is - - - 133 Accentor modiilaj'is - - - - 129 Acredtila caudata - - - 145 Acroccphalus aquaticus - - - 121 Acrocephalus palustris - - - 112 Acroccphalus phragmitis - - - 117 Acrocephalus streperus - - - 108 * Acroccphalus hcrdqides - - - 116 * Ac don galactodes - - - 106 Alpine Accentor - - - 133 ^American Robin - - - 28 Ayithus canipestris - - - 199 *Anthus cervinus - - - 199 Anthus obsacrus - - - 205 Aiithus pratensis - - - 195 Antlms richardi - - - 202 '’^'Aritlms spipoletta - - - 205 Ajithus ttivialis - - - 191 Aquatic Warbler - - - 121 Barred Warbler - - _ 77 Bearded Reedling - - - 141 Blackbird - - - - - - 19 Blackcap - - - - - - 69 Black Redstart - - - 44 *Black-Throated Thrush - - - 27 *Black-Throated Wheatear - - 33 Blue-Headed Wagtail - - - 184 Blue-Tit - - - - 157 Certhia familiaris - - - 172 Chiffehaff- - - - 96 Chiclus aquaticus - - - 137 Coal-Tit - - - - 151 Crested-Tit - - - 161 Cyancetda suecica - - - 48 Hartford Warbler - - - 81 Daulias luscinia - - - 57 ^'Desert Wheatear - - - 33 Dipper - - - - - - 137 Erithacus rubecula - - - 52 Fieldfare - - - - - _ 14 Fire-Crested Wren - - - - 89 Garden Warbler - - - 73 Golden-Crested Wren - - - 84 Grasshopper Warbler - - - 123 *Great Reed-Warbler - - - 1 16 Great Tit - - - - - - 147 Grey Wagtail - Hedge-Sparrow 181 129 '^'Hypolais icterina - - - 107 *Icterine Warbler - - _ 107 Isabelline Wheatear- - - - 32 Resser Whitethroat - _ _ _ 65 Locustella luscinioides - - - 127 Loctistella neevia - - - 123 Rong-Tailed Tit - - - 145 Marsh-Tit _ 154 Marsh- Warbler - - 112 Meadow-Pipit - - - - 195 Missel Thrush - - - - 3 Motacilla alba - - - - 180 Motacilla flava - - - - 184 Motacilla lugubris - - - 176 Motacilla melanope - - - - 181 Motacilla rail - - - - 187 ^'Monticola saxatilis - - - 28 Nightingale - - - 57 Nuthatch - - - - - - 165 ^Orphean Warbler - - - 69 CONTENTS. Panurus biarmicus - - - 141 Song Thrush - - - - - 7 Parus atcr - . . - - 151 Stonechat . _ . - - 37 Parus ccerulcus - - - - - 157 Sylvia atricapilla - - 69 Parus cristatus - - - - - 161 Sylvia cinerca - - - - - 62 Parus major - - - - - 147 Sylvia curr2ica - - - - - 65 Parus palustris - - 154 Sylvia hortcnsis - - 73 Phylloscopus ncfus - - 96 Sylvia nisoria - - - - - 77 Phylloscopus sibilatrix - - 103 ^'Sylvia orphea - - - - - 69 Phylloscopus superciliosus - - - 92 Sylvia undata - - - - - 81 Pliylloscoptis trochilus - - 99 Pied Wagtail - - - . . 176 Tawny Pipit - - - - - 199 Pratincola rubetra 33 ^'Ticliodroma imcraria - - - 175 Pratincola rtcbicola - 37 Tree-Creeper . - - - - 172 Tree- Pipit . . . - - 191 Redbreast- - _ - 52 Troglodytes parvulus - - - 168 Red-Spotted Bluethroat - 48 ^'Turdus atrigularis - - 27 Redstart - - - - 40 Turdus iliacus - - - - - 1 1 *Red-Throated Pipit - 199 Turdus merula - - - - - 19 Redwing . _ . _ _ II ^Ttirdus migratorius - - - 28 Reed- Warbler - 108 Turdus musicus - - 7 Regulus cristatus 84 Turdus pilaris - - - - - 14 Regulus ignicapillus - _ _ 89 ^'Tirdus sibiricus - - 28 Richard’s Pipit _ 202 Ttirdus torquabis - - 25 Ring-Ouzel . - . _ _ 25 Turdus varius - - - - - 17 Rock-Pipit - - - - - 205 Turdus viscivorus - - 3 *Rock Thrush - - - - - 28 '•Wall-Creeper - - . . 175 Rufous Warbler - - 106 *Water-Pipit . . _ _ . 205 Rziticilla phcenictcrics - - - 40 Wheatear . . _ _ 29 Ruticilla titys - - - - - 44 Whinchat - - - - - - 33 White’s Thrush _ _ 17 Savi’s Warbler - - - 127 Whitethroat - - . _ . 62 Saxicola cenantlie - - 29 White Wagtail - - - _ _ 180 "’^'Saxicola deserti - - 33 Willow Warbler _ . 99 '^'Saxicola isabellina - - 32 Wood Warbler - - - _ 103 '^'Saxicola stapazbia - - - 33 Wren - . . . 168 Sedge- Warbler - - 117 ^Siberian Ground Thrush - - - 28 Yellow-Browed Warbler - - - 92 Sitta ccesia . _ - - - 165 Yellow Wagtail - - 187 ERR.\TA ET CORRIGEND.\. Plate I of Eggs — figs. 21 and 22 Stonechat ; 23 Wiuchat. Page 37, line three from bottom— yhr “ Whincliat,” read Stonechat. Page 41, line ten from ho\Xon\— before “lateral,” msert often. (The fact is that the movement is .some- times both lateral and vertical at the same moment.) Page 56, line two from top^/br “ become,” read became. Page 83, line six from bottom— yb;' “ is somewhat,” read is a somewhat. Page 1 19, line twelve from top— ybr “ .similiar,” read similar. BRITISH BIRDS, With their Nests and Eggs. ORDER PASSERES. This group of Birds has always been a favourite with me. as with most students of the feathered race. I have taken and preserved both nests and eggs of most of the British species, and have studied the habits of man}- of them in captivity, as well as in a wild state ; possibly for this reason, the task of preparing this portion of the present Work has fallen to my share, instead of that of some more erudite Ornithological writer. The Order Passeres (following the classification adopted b}- HoAvard Saunders in his admirable “ Illustrated Manual ”) includes seventeen families, the members of which are mostl}' suitable for aviary or cage-life ; of these the Turdida (Thrush- like birds), the Fr'uigillida' (Finches), and /llaitdidtc (Lark-like birds) find favour with the larger number of Aviculturists. The famih' Titrdidcc, the first on our list, has been sub-divided into three sub-families I.- Till'd ina' (Thrushes) in which the first plumage is spotted above and below. 2. — Sylviincc (Warblers) in which the young closely resemble their parents excepting in their paler or duller colouring. Voi.. I, H British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. 3. — Accaitorimc (x\ccentors) including our so-called “ Hedge-Sparrow,” birds which, though spotted after the maiiiier of true Thrushes when the}^ leave the nest, exhibit affinity to the Titmice in their strong straight subconical bills, rounded wings with short bastard-primar\- (the first feather in the wing), and strong scaled feet : the latter have the outer and middle toes united and the upper extremity of the tarsus is feathered. In their habits the Accentors seem to me more nearly to resemble the Tits than the Thrushes. Not onh’ do their quick jerk}' movements and acrobatic actions remind one of the former ; but, like the Tits, they are largely seed-eaters. The Thrushes of Great Britain are represented by eight genera: — Tiirdus (Thrushes so-called) ; Monticola (Rock-Thrushes) ; Saxicola (Wheatears) ; Pratincola (Chats) ; Riiticilla (Redstarts) ; Cyanccula (Blue-throats) ; Erithaciis (Redbreasts) ; and Dan Has (Nightingales). The more typical Thrushes are the largest members of the Sub-family ; they are bold, handsome, strongly-built birds, with a vigorous direct flight, at times somewhat sinuous but generally in a straight line. On the earth they proceed, either by running for short stages, with the head depressed and neck somewhat extended (but, at the end of each stage, assuming an erect and attentive posture, sometimes with a simultaneous elevation of the tail) ; or, if in a hurry, they clear the ground by long hops. Some of these are admirable songsters, and consequently are greatly sought for as cage-birds. Excepting in very severe weather. Thrushes are very shy of entering traps ; they also show considerable cunning in upsetting some forms of net- traps, especially that known to bird-catchers as the ‘Caravan’: indeed it is rare to find any but birds of the year caught by this ingenious contrivance. This fact is perhaps rather an advantage than othenvise to the trapper, for young birds not only become more rapidly reconciled to captivity, but naturally last longer, as song-birds, than those which have spent several years of their lives in freedom. All the typical Thrushes build open cup-shaped nests, the walls of which are strongly built, usually with a lining of mud, clay, or cow-dung, and in most cases with a thick outer lining concealing the mud : the eggs usually number from four to six and, more frequently than not, are of some shade of green marked with some shade of brown. A. G. butler. Missel Thrush. Family— TURD ID Ai. Subfamily— TURD INAL. The Missel Thrush. Turdns viscivonts, Linn. HIS, the largest of our resident Thrushes, breeds throughout the suitable districts of temperate Europe, from Norway southward to Spain, and even to Northern Africa. Eastward, its range extends through Turkestan to the North-western Himalayas and Lake Baikal in Siberia; it is resident in many of the milder regions, but the greater number winter in Southern Europe and Northern Africa, the Siberian birds migrating to Northern India, Persia, and Africa north of the Sahara. In Great Britain the Missel Thrush is generally distributed throughout England and Wales ; in Ireland also, since 1800, it has become tolerably common ; in Scotland its range has gradually extended northwards throughout most of the Hebrides; in the Orkneys it has appeared after easterly gales, bnt from Shetland it has not been recorded. The upper parts of the adult bird are greyish olive brown, slightly darker on the head, and slightly more golden on the lower back; the variation of tint is, however, barely perceptible; the under parts (excepting the chin and throat, which are white, and the cheeks which are bnffish white) are buff, strongly pronounced in young birds, but growing paler }^ear by year until, in old birds, it becomes bnffish white; the fore-chest and flanks are of a deeper buff, the cheeks and sides of neck indistinctly streaked with gre3’ish brown and a few spear-shaped spots; on the chin and throat the spots are more arrow-shaped, on the fore-chest black and spear-shaped, and on the remainder of the under parts fan-shaped; the upper wing-coverts are broadly edged at the tips with dull white, the flights are slat^'-grey, the primaries with Avhite outer edges, the secondaries externally suffused with bufflsh, and nar- rowE^ tipped with white; under wing-coverts and axillaries pure white; tail feathers smoky-gre}', narrowl}^ pale-edged towards the tips; bill dark brown, paler towards the base, especially on the lower mandible; legs pale brown; iris dark brown. 4 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. The Missel Thrush may be met with in almost any locality where trees are to be found, in woods, coppices, plantations, parks, pleasure-grounds, shrubberies, large gardens and orchards; in such places it makes its home and brings np its family. The nest is frequently bnilt either in the fork of a branch or on the top of a strong horizontal bough, but perhaps the favourite site is in the central hollow, formed by the branching off of the lichen-covered boughs of some old apple tree. In the experience of the writer it is rare to find this nest either in a very lofty or lowl}’ position, bnt on one occasion he saw it in a forked branch near the top of a tall elm tree in Hyde Park ; whilst, on the other hand, the late Mr. E. T. Booth once observed it in a small stunted bush within three feet of the ground. Instances of this bird building in bushes are, however, extremely rare. Most nests will be found at an altitnde of from ten to fifteen feet. The structure of the nest of the Missel Thrush is very solid, not nn- like that of the Blackbird. It is frequently placed upon a foundation of mnd, sheep’s wool and twigs. The outer walls are usually formed of twigs, roots, straws, and grasses, sometimes interwoven with wool and coarse moss; within this is a lining of mud or clay, brought in pellets and mixed with grass or roots. The inner lining is composed of finer grass, roots, and sometimes a little moss. When lichens abound on the tree where the nest is situated a few pieces are occasionally used to ornament the exterior, bnt one can hardly suppose that a bird which places its nest almost invariably in a conspicuons position, would make this addition with a view to concealment, although, by rendering the outer Myalls of its domicile more like the branch on which it rests, this result is, in a measure obtained. The number of eggs laid by the Missel Thrush varies from three to five, but fovir is the usual number. The colouring is rather suggestive of those of the Chaffinch, the ground colour being either pale greenish bine, yellowish green, or brownish flesh tinted, boldl}' speckled, spotted and often blotched with deep chocolate brown, and showing pearl grey or lavender underlying spots; in size they correspond very nearly with those of the Blackbird, bnt as regards their outline they more often give one the impression of being widest near the centre, than the eggs of that species. The pairing time of the Missel Thrnsh is early in February, and at this season, like most birds, they are exceedingly quarrelsome; the first nest is occasionally commenced before the end of the same month, but only in the South of England, where the bird is generally double-brooded; in my own experience its nidification extends from March to May, .-Ipril being the month when The Missel Thrush 5 most nests are to be found. If disturbed when sitting, the Missel Thrush is very noisy, but au}' attempt to interfere with the young is the signal for a perfect uproar; then too is the time to watch the perfect flight of this powerful bird as he sweeps round in wide circles, or, as the intruder stoops to examine the nest, flashes through the very branches close to his head, uttering wild guttural curses and shrieking out horrid oaths: well has this bird earned its titles of “Screech Thrush” and “ Holm screech.” The song of the Missel Thrush is wild, powerful and not without melody, although somewhat monotonous; it is uttered from early autumn until its nesting duties commeuce; and, wet or fine, from early dawn to dew}^ eve, its rich notes ma}’ be heard; in the wildest and stormiest weather, it tries to raise its voice above the uproar of the elements; on which account the well- known name of “Stormcock” has been be.stowed upon it. In the East Riding of Yorkshire it is called “ Charley Cock.” The food consists of berries, small fruits, seeds, snails, slugs, worms, larvae and insects. It is especially fond of the berries of the mountain ash, and after these it chooses those of the hawthorn or ivy; the berries of the mistletoe, to which it owes its name of Mistletoe Thrush, or Missel Thrush, are rarely eaten by it; during the autumn when grain is being sown, this bird eats it greedily, a fact which should be borne in mind by those who keep cage birds, many of whom labour under the delusion that because a bird is called “insectivorous” it should have no farinaceous food. As a matter of fact, many “insectivors,” when kept in the same aviary with seed-eating birds, swallow quantities of seed. Excepting when feeding, the Missel Thrush spends most of its time either in trees or shrubs, it is a somewhat shy bird, though bold in defence of its young, it having been known to drive predaceous birds from the vicinity of its nest by the impetuous and noisy attacks which it has made upon them. Moreover, it always seeks its food in the open fields, not skulking along under hedges and shrubs after the manner of the Song Thrush. In captivity it soon becomes tame and confiding, and if reared from the nest, it is quite as friendly and playful towards its owner as a Canary. In May, 1886, during a birdsnesting expedition in Kent, I came across a nest of the Missel Thrush containing two young birds, in an old apple orchard. With the assistance of the owner, upon whose shoulders I climbed, I succeeded in pulling nn’self up into the lower branches, when it was easy to climb to that which bore the nest: the question now was, how to get the 3’oung birds into nu' basket without injur\y however, as I leaned over the 6 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. nest, the youngsters quickly settled the difficulty by leaping out and fluttering to the earth, screaming loudly the while. What with the old and young birds together, the noise was something to be remembered. I reared both these birds without the slightest trouble, upon snails (dropped into boiling water, taken from their shells, and cut into small pieces,) small worms, and a paste made of oat-flour, known as “ fig-dust,” and fine pea- meal; as they grew older, however, they refused both worms and large snails, though they would readily swallow small living snails in their shells. They also ate both hawthorn berries and wheat greedily, subsequently ejecting the seeds of the former and the tough skin of the latter from the crop with considerable force, so that I have frequently found the ejected pellets several feet from their cage. These two birds proved to be unmistakably a pair, the male having a distinctly narrower head, slimmer build, more alert carriage and more master- ful disposition; indeed, after a time, he so tormented his companion, pulling out her feathers and scolding, whenever she approached him, that when a friend took a fancy to her, I gladly gave her away. As the male bird gained strength, I gave him, as staple food, a mixture of oat-flour, pea-meal, and Spratt’s food (crushed dog biscuit), moistened with sufficient water to form a crumb-paste; on this diet he lived, with the addition of an occasional insect or earthworm, and throve amazingly for nearly four years, never having a day’s illness, and always being ready for a frolic. If I put my finger into his cage he would put one foot on it and thus holding it down would flap his wings and hammer it with his bill; when I wished to move him from one cage to another, he never attempted to get away until I had grasped him firmly, then indeed he would kick a bit and utter his harsh guttural call. At length, in 1890, when my friend was three years and nine months old, I was persuaded to send him to a show, but, unhappily, he who had never tasted a particle of flesh was fed entirely on a mixture of finely minced raw beef mixed with breadcrumbs; the result may be imagined — he had in- cessant fits during the week of the show, was returned to me in a state of apoplex}^ and died in a fit about an hour after he reached home. Never give raw flesh to any but predaceous birds. Although hand-reared birds may make amusing pets, unless taught by a wild bird, they never learn the wild song; my Missel Thrush only .sang two notes, one high, the other low, its song was far behind that of the Ox-eye Tit for melody. There is not the least trouble in keeping and taming 1 ] Song Thrush The Song Thrush. 7 wild Thrushes. They sulk at first, but a few lively worms quickly induce them to feed. OUND throughout the Palaearctic Region, but rare in the extreme Bast, generally migrator}' in Western Europe, though resident in some countries; generally distributed throughout the British Islands, though of rare occurrence in the Shetlands. In England this bird is a partial migrant, great numbers travelling southward late in the autnmn but returning to their old haunts at the first sign of spring weather; nevertheless, a considerable number remains with us during the Avinter. The adult bird above is deep olive-brown, the wing coverts tipped with bright deep buff, under parts mostly white, the cheeks somewhat yellowish, streaked with brown ; the breast and sides ochraceous buff, boldly marked with fan-shaped black spots ; spots on the white ventral surface of the body more elongated, spindle-shaped and less nnmerons ; bill dark brown, paler at the base of the lower mandible; legs pale brown, iris brown. The female resembles the male, but has a slightl}' broader head. Nestlings differ from adults iu having the upper parts mottled with buff. Wherever there is cover, you may expect to see the Song Thrush, he is fond of shrubberies, hedgerows, and all places which afford partial conceal- ment. Watch him in the garden, you will see him running down a path, stopping after every few feet to look cantiously around; now he spies a large bush or evergreen upon a bed to right or left and suddenly darting under it commences to dig vigorously for worms ; presently he appears again upon another path running as before and again disappearing in like manner, he Fam ily— TURDIDy^i Subfamily — TURD INAL. The Song Thrush. Turdiis ifiiisiais, Einn. 8 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. rarely remains very long in the open, yet is less skulking than his cousin, the Blackbird. Sometimes the Song Thrush proceeds by a series of hops, but certainly not always. He frequently runs as above described, but never walks sedately after the manner of a Starling; even when seeking for worms in a meadow or on a grass-plot he hops, and so he does when crossing a flower bed; but on a path, I have rarel}' known this Thrush to move in any other way but by running. The nest of the Song Thrush is usually built low down in the fork of a young tree, a shrub, especially an evergreen, the lower branches of old yew trees are also frequently selected as a building site. Occasionally, a nest may be seen among matted creepers, or even in the upper twigs of a rude wattle fence forming the walls of a country cart-shed. In hawthorn hedges, on ivy- covered walls, among stunted willows by streams, in crevices of rocks, or at the roots of a tuft of heather it may also be met with. The formation of the nest is somewhat different from that of the other British Thrushes. Externally, it is somewhat similar, being formed of slender twigs, roots, grasses, dead leaves, and moss; but internally it has a lining of mud and rotten wood or cow dung, so neatly rounded and smoothed off, that it much resembles the interior of half a large cocoa-nut shell. This deep smooth cavity is pro- duced in the most simple manner, namely; by the hen bird squatting down and turning round and round in it whilst the lining is soft. The number of eggs laid by the Song Thrush varies from three to six, but five is the usvial number; where only three eggs are deposited, it is probable that the first nest has been taken and a second one built immediately. In such cases I have known the new home to be built and lined in two days, the first egg being deposited whilst the mud lining was still moist; but the Song Thrush rarely builds in less than three da}’S. In the case of this and all species at the beginning of the breeding season, a commencement of building operations is frequently made before the mother is nearly ready to la}'. A nest is started and pulled to pieces, or deserted in an unfinished condition ; this playing at building has given careless observers, or such as have not noted, year b}^ year, the building of nests by the same species, an exaggerated idea of the time required for the construction of bird-homes.'* The colouring of the eggs of Turdns musiais is greenish blue, with distinct deep brown (almost black) spots ; usuall}^ scattered sparsel}^ over the larger end, *Dixon nientioiis the fact of the Song Thrush, after being robbed of its first nest, building in succession no less than three perfectly constructed ne.sts within five days. The Song Thrush. 9 though sometimes over the whole surface, or only on the smaller end; spotless examples occur also, but rarely, though I have taken entire clutches without marking; on the other hand some eggs are heavily blotched, and one, which I have represented on Plate xxxvii. of my “ Handbook of British Oology,” has these blotches so arranged as to form an irregular half-zone towards the larger end. The form of the eggs of this species usually varies between a short pear- shape and a true oval; in size they differ a good deal, probably the largest eggs are deposited by the older birds. When sitting, the hen Song Thrush is not easily scared from her nest; possibly she may dread to uncover her very conspicuous eggs, and may hope that her protective colouring and absolute stillness will serve to protect them; so she sits close, her bill pointed upwards above one side of her castle, her tail cocked up over the other, until one may almost put one’s hand upon her; then suddenly she is gone like a shadow, usually without noise,* and the bright spotted eggs are exposed to view. Without doubt the comparative difficulty of flushing the Song Thrush does tend to its preservation : even a Naturalist, unless he is a bird-nester, often fails to notice the nest; though, when one has acquired eyes to recognize birds’ homes at a glance, it seems marvellous that so conspicuous an object, and one so common in well-wooded country, can fail to be observed. The Song Thrush is one of the earliest birds to sing and also go to nest ; in unusually mild seasons it will build as early as February, but March to August may be considered its breeding season. May and June being the months when nests of this bird are most abundant. The song of the Throstle or Mavis (as North countrymen call it) is very loud ; so much so, that in a room or conservatory its notes are almost unbearable ; in the open, however, they are cheerful and inspiring, though somewhat monotonous, each phrase being repeated at least four times in succession, and occasionally (more especially when the musician has hit upon something novel), as many as seven or eight times. To my mind the song is rather joyous and vigorous, than melodious : when heard at early dawn as one wakens, it pleases the first time, annoys the second, irritates the third, and finally becomes an intolerable nuisance: the Blackbird’s melody, on the contrary, is always welcome. As one lies in bed trying to .sleep, the whistle of the Song Thrush resolves itself into short sentences. I * Seeljohiu state.s that, wht'ii put off her nest “her liarsh cries and active motions, with tho.se of her mate, awaken the silent woods, and speak most plainly of the anxiet)' of the birds for their treasure.” I have not found this to be the ca.se, excei)tiii}^ where the young were almost ready to fl}-, and only when they have uttered a cry of alarm. VOL. I. C lO British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. remember one particular bird which bothered me for weeks ; in all weathers he would sit on a tree, within sight of my bedroom window, shouting as follows: — Deal d ivet, deal d ivet, deal d ivet, deal d ivet ; I do, (pronounced dough as if he were tr}'ing to sa}' k)wio with a cold), / do, I do, I do; Wild d do it? Wild d do it? Who' d do it? IfVio'd do it? Pretty diek, pretty diek, pretty diek, pretty diek?' and so on ad iiaiiseaiii. The food ^ of the Song Thrush, when at liberty, consists of insects and their larvae or pupae, worms, snails, berries, and seeds; in the spring and summer living food is preferred, but towards autumn and throughout the winter, berries and grain when procurable, are devoured, husks and hard kernels being ejected some five or ten minutes after the food has been swallowed; thus it is that woody seeds like that of the hawthorn are carried far from the parent tree, to spring up and make the unthinking wonder whence they came. In captivity the Song Thrush sings quite as well as in its native haunts, indeed, a good bird often continues his song from November to the end of Jiily; but if it is to reproduce the wild notes, it must be a vdld-canght bird; for a nestling, brought up by hand, either sings a fcAv short monotonons sing- song phrases; or, if it be a vigorous bird, brought up amongst other feathered companions, it shouts out the most deafening, though sometimes comical jumble of notes imaginable. experience of hand-reared birds as compared with those caught wild is also unfavourable to the former in other respects, I have found them vicious and domineering in an aviar}’, dirty and wasteful in a cage; they are always more wild than a cage-moulted trapped bird. The latter, after its first nioiilt, becomes gentle, confiding, and neither wasteful nor dirty; it has even been trusted in an aviar}^ with small Finches, and I have never seen it molest them. As to the cruelty of caging np wild birds, it is more fanciful than real, a bird does not sing when it is unhappy, much may, however, be said as regards the cruelty of rearing birds from the nest ; the parents’ anger and annoyance is the least part of it, the bungling method of feeding the young, often upon the most unsuitable food, is its worst feature. The best staple food for this, and all other insectivorous birds, is composed of stale household bread crumbled, mixed with half the quantit}" of preserved yolk of egg, preserved ants’ cocoons, and Abrahams’ food (or one of the many advertised egg foods), the mixture being moistened by the addition of potatoes, boiled the da}' before, and passed through a masher when required for use; on this mixture with the addition of a few insects, or worms, and Redwing. The Song Thrush. II a little fruit, I have kept Thrushes, and many other birds, in perfect health for years; grocers’ currants, which are often recommended, should be avoided, they have a tendency to irritate the intestines and often produce diarrhoea; thin slices of apple, over-ripe pears, sweet-water grapes, sweet oranges, or ripe strawberries and currants, when in season, are as good as anything. In an aviary Thrushes and many other so-called “soft-billed” birds will swallow seed whole, and it seems to agree wonderfully well with them, rendering their flesh firm and their plumage glossy ; but to feed a Thrush on bread and hempseed alone is the height of folly, and usuall}' results in the early death of the captive. This, like most of the British Thrushes, has been bred in aviaries, and, from experiments made during the last few years, it appears that they will even go to nest in comparative!}' small cages. Family— TURD I DA'.. Subfamily— TURDINAi. HIS, the smallest British Thrush, breeds from the Arctic circle through- out the Palaearctic region, and winters in Western and Southern Europe and Northern Africa; it visits the Volga islands when on migration. West- ward it has straggled to the Canaries and Madeira. In Asia it has wintered in Persia, Turkestan and N.W. India, and in Siberia as far as Lake Baikal. Mr. Seebohm found it in the valley of the Petchora as far North as latitude 68°, he observes: — “The Redwing frequents the birch region and the upper zone of the pine region, occurring in limited numbers South of the Arctic circle in many places where these trees are found, in South Norway and Sweden, and on the Russian shoi'es of the Baltic. It is the most nortlierly The Redwing. 7'in'diis i/iacus, Lixx. 12 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. ill its range of any of the Thrushes, and occasionally wanders as far as Greenland.” To the British Islands the Redwing is a regular winter visitant, arriving on our Eastern coasts either towards the end of October or early in November; it is supposed to linger longest in the Hebrides, the last examples probably leaving ns during the month of April. The assertions which have, from time to time, been made, that this species has remained to breed in Great Britain, are not satisfactory, neither the birds or eggs having been secured as evidence of the fact. The Redwing, when in breeding plumage, is, next to the Blackbird, the most strikingly coloured of our Thrushes ; its upper surface is olive brown ; a clear creamy white eye-brow stripe extends backwards to the nape; wing- coverts with pale tips; the under surface is buff, gradually fading off into almost pure white on the belly ; the breast and throat broadly streaked with dark brown; the flanks and under wing-coverts chestnut red, spotted with deep brown. The sexes are very similar, the young, however, differ in having their upper and under surfaces spotted. In general appearance the Redwing is like a small Song Thrush, but its whitish eye-stripe and red flanks give it a very distinctive character; when seen from the front it has a curious resemblance to a frog. Soon after their arrival in this country Redwings may sometimes be seen, even in our suburban gardens, feeding at twilight upon the berries of the hawthorn. I remember on one occasion, chancing to look out shortly before dusk at my garden, I was puzzled to see the entire length of a thick hawthorn hedge which closed in the end of my plot of ground covered with moving shadows. I ran for a field glass and discovered that no less than thirty Redwings were fluttering up and down like huge moths in front of this hedge, eagerly snatching off and swallowing the berries. The following day I discovered that an unusually fine crop of haws had almost entirely disappeared.* Seebohm says that “ The favourite haunt of the Redwing is a sheltered valley down which a little brooklet runs, with trees scattered here and there, and tall hedgerows of thorn and hazel. They are very partial to small parks thickly timbered and studded with clumps of white thorn trees, with here and there a cluster of hollies or a dense shrubber}’, whither they repair at nightfall to roost.” * The bird.s were clearly tlistingui.shable with the glass as Redwings, not Fieldfares, the latter arrived some weeks later and found hardly a berr}’ left. The Redwing. •3 In wooded districts the Redwing usually builds in bushes or low-growing trees, but in more desolate regions a low fence, a hollow between stones, or a sloping bank serve as a nesting-site. The nest itself is a neat structure formed of plaited twigs, grass and reindeer-moss, plastered inside with mud or clay, and lined with fine grasses and root-fibre. The number of eggs varies from four to six, some writers giving the former, and some the latter, as the usual number. In colour they are pale green, either finely and closely streaked with reddish brown, like small specimens of some Blackbird’s eggs, or zoned with brown blotches; but, as with other Thrushes, eggs are some- times found of a uniform green colour. When the nest is approached, but especially when it contains young birds, the Redwing becomes much excited, flying angrily round the intruder and snapping its bill after the manner of its kind. It frequently produces two broods in a season. The food of the Redwing consists preferably of insects, worms and snails, but when frost and snow deprive it of these it feeds on various berries, more particularly those of the service tree and hawthorn; it is distinctly more insectivorous in its tastes than other Thrushes, nevertheless in confinement it thrives well upon the same soft food. One winter a bird-catcher brought me a bag, containing six Redwings and a Fieldfare which he had just caught. I would not, however, be persuaded to take the whole of them, but, selecting two of the Redwings (which fortunately proved to be a pair) and the Fieldfare, I sent the man aAvay. The Red- wings I turned loose in an unheated aviary with other British birds. At first the new-comers were somewhat wild, but they soon settled down in their new home. They never showed the slightest uneasiness at the season of migration, as I had been informed they would do, but early in the year assumed such rich colouring, that Naturalists who saw them in my aviary, expressed astonishment at the beauty of their plumage. Very early the male began to record his song, but usually in the morning only; in the evening its call- note — a soft plaintive whistle, which reminded me of that of the American Blue-bird, was all that I heard at that time; later, however, he began to sing out loud. As an aviary bird, I found the Redwing ornamental, and most inoffensive, but by no means lively; it would sit in one place on the earth without moving for half an hour at a time, still as a breathing statue — a frog in behaviour and appearance ; but, throw a spider or a smooth-skinned caterpillar into the aviary, and, like that Batrachian, it was instantly alert. In spite of VoL. 1. D u British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. its beauty I should imagine that the Redwing, if kept in a cage, would be intolerable; after two years I wearied of my pair, and sold them for a small sum to a friend, who immediately entered them for a show and carried off a first prize with them. Poor Redwings! I fear that their life after they left my home was not an enviable one. Although the breeding of the Redwing in Great Britain needs confir- mation, there seems to be no reason why it should not be possible, inasmuch as it has been proved that stragglers have remained with us throughout the summer. It has been known to nest in the Faroes. Family— TURDID.F. Stibfamily— TURDINAl. Thk Fieldfare. 'furdns pilaris, Linn. Respecting the Geographical distribution of this species, one cannot do better than quote Seebohm, he says: — “A regular winter visitant to the British Islands, the Fieldfare is commonly distributed over the cultivated districts, and as far on the uplands as the mountain farms extend. The arrival of Fieldfares in Scotland is usually noticed first in the eastern counties, as it is quite natural to expect it would be, for their path iii autumn is south and south-westwards. A few birds are said to be found on the Orkneys throughout the year, but they do not breed there. On the Hebrides the Fieldfare does not arrive till mid-winter, and is only found on the farms and pastures — in the little oases of cultivated land so sparingly scattered amongst the wide- stretching moorland wastes. In Ireland these birds also arrive late, and are found commonly distributed over those districts suitable to. their habits and needs — the cultivated tracts. Fieldfares have been said to have bred in the British Islands; but until definite proofs are forthcoming it is not safe to admit the truth of the statement, the birds being very liable to be confounded with Fieldfare The Fieldfare. J5 Missel-Thrushes by careless observers. The Fieldfare has a somewhat more southerly breeding-range than the Redwing. It breeds in the Arctic circle, extending up to, and occasionally beyond, the limit of forest growth, and in north-temperate Europe as far South and West as the basin of the Baltic, and throughout Siberia as far East as the watershed of the Yenesay and the Lena. Its occurrence iii Iceland is doubtful,* but it has been occasionally met with on the Faroes. It winters in Southern Europe, occurring ver}' rarely in the Spanish peninsula, but crossing the Mediterranean to Morocco, Algeria, Egypt, and Nubia. In Asia it winters in Turkestan and Cashmere; and one specimen at least has been obtained at Simla, in the North-West Himalayas.” The Fieldfare in breeding plumage is slaty-grey on the upper parts with the exception of the mantle which is chestnut browu, and the wings and tail, which are dark brown ; the head is streaked with black ; the throat and breast are rich golden brown, spotted and streaked with blackish brown; the flanks are similar, but more orange internally; the centre of the bell}^ is pure white and unspotted; the bill yellowish; feet black; iris deep brown. The female greatl}^ resembles the male, but the young on leaving the nest are spotted with buff on the back, though after the first moult they much resemble their parents. The Fieldfare’s season of migration varies somewhat in accordance with the milder or colder temperature of its breeding-hauuts ; in like manner its time of departure from our shores depends greatly upon the appearance of spring weather; there is no defined appointed time for its migration. Cold and scarcity of food in its native home represent the voice of Nature calling upon it to seek comfort in somewhat milder regions; then again, the return of warmth and living food remind it that the season of love is at hand, and the inherited habit of centuries teaches this bird to seek for the fulfilment of its hopes in the land of its birth; doubtless this is largely the cause of the so-called migratory instinct in all birds, the weaker and more sensitive to cold and hunger being the first to migrate ; therefore it is that the Redwing precedes the Fieldfare. It is easy to distinguish a Fieldfare from a Missel Thrush when it is on the ground, for, although it frequently associates with the latter bird, its grey rump, thrown into strong relief by the dark wings and tail, looks almost white. This species, however, is far less frequently seen upon the earth than our native Thrushes. Its favourite resort is a berry-laden hawthorn, upon which it will eat its fill unless disturbed, when with a clatter of chacks and chicks it shoots off in a straight line towards another of Nature’s restaurants. Among the birches and pines of Norway the Fieldfares breed in colonies, in * There seems, however, to be very little question that this species is an occa.sional Icelandic visitant. — .A.tLK. i6 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. the former the nests are said to be situated in a cleft between the trunk and a large branch, bnt further north these birds become less gregarious, and their nests are then situated in low bushes, heaps of firewood, on fences and similar places, after the fashion of our Blackbird ; whilst on the bare tnndras of Siberia they select a hollow under the grass}’ edge of a cliff or bank for a breeding-site, like the Ring-Ouzel. The nest is very like that of the Blackbird, externally it is constructed of coarse dry grass, sometimes interwoven with birch twigs and a little moss, plastered inside with mnd, and thickly lined with fine grass. The nnmber of eggs varies from three to seven, but usually from four to six ; according to Seebohm, they vary more than those of any of onr British Thrushes; but I think most of those which I have seen could be matched among the almost endless variations of our Blackbird’s eggs; their ground-colour is either paler or deeper green, blotched, mottled, and speckled with reddish brown, sometimes over the entire surface, but more frequently concentrated at the larger end. The markings of some examples (as with onr Blackbird) are indistinct, evenly distributed, in others they are few and rich brown upon a deep blue ground (a variety which I have not seen in eggs of the Blackbird ; though they are sometimes as blue as those of the Song Thrush). The food of this species consists in summer of worms, insects, as well as their larvse and pupss and small wild fruits; in winter, principally of berries, especially those of the hawthorn, also insects, snails and worms when procurable, and seeds of grain and grasses. The Fieldfare is a poor songster. He rarely sings excepting in the breeding season, and his performance consists of a wild warble, at times interrupted by chattering somewhat similar to that of the Starling. The example which I had for two years never sang at all, but occasionally uttered a harsh guttural sound like that of the Missel Thrush. As a cage bird the Fieldfare is most uninteresting, he soon becomes tame, and, if allowed to bathe, keeps his plumage in beautiful condition; but, excepting for show purposes, is only an expense: like all Thru.shes, he is a large eater, and therefore needs frequent attention. I parted with mine when I sold my Redwings, and have never wished to keep another. I fed him on the same food as my other insectivorous species, adding a few worms, snails, caterpillars, and berries when obtainable; he was always in perfect health, even when moulting, and never showed restlessness at the seasons of migration ; in fact, he was one of the steadiest and most apathetic birds I ever possessed. WHITE'S Thrush. White’s Thrush 17 His name has been corrupted to “ Felfer,” “ Felt,” “ Pigeon Felt,” or “Blue Felt ” by country folk. Family— TURD I DAL. Subfamily— TURDINAL. White’s Thrush. Turdiis varius, Pallas. This bird, also known as “ White’s Ground-Thrush ” and placed in the genus Geocich/a, is only an accidental straggler to our shores ; about a dozen examples having been obtained in the southern and midland counties of England and two in Ireland. Therefore, although, from the writer’s standpoint, it has no more claim to be called British, than any foreigner stranded on the British coast has to be called an Englishman, its claim to the title is stronger than in the case of the “ Black-Throated,” the “ Rock Thrush,” and many other species usually included in the British list on the strength of single examples which have come to hand. White’s Ground-Thrush is a native of South-central and South-eastern Siberia and of North China ; at the approach of winter it migrates to South Japan, South China, the Philippines and even to Sumatra. The first example obtained in Great Britain was shot in Hampshire in January, 1828 ; and, being supposed to be new to science, was named Turdus whitei by Eyton, in honour of White, of Selboume : thus the trivial name of White’s Thrush was first applied to it. The upper surface of this species is ochraceous brown, with black tips to the feathers ; the wing feathers are darker and tipped with buff ; the tail has foindecn feathers, the four central ones ochraceous brown, the others dark brown, all tipped with white ; the under surface is white, tinged with buff on the breast, and boldly spotted with black crescent-shaped markings : the bill is brown, the lower mandible paler ; the feet yellowish brown, the iris dark brown. The sexes are supposed to js British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. be alike. In size, this species rather excels the Missel-Thrush. The nidification of White’s Thrush was observed in 1872, at Niugpo, by the late Consul Swiuhoe : the nest was roughly built, and situated on a fork of a horizontal pine-branch ; its outside consisted of dead rushes, grasses, a few twigs, dead leaves and a little moss ; it was thickly plastered with mud, amongst which were fragments of some green weed ; the inside, like that of the Blackbird, was thickly lined with mud, covered with an inner lining of coarse rootlets and sedgy grass. Three eggs only were in the nest ; but the complete clutch would probably number four or five ; Mr. Seebohm, who secured the nest and two of the eggs for his collection, thus describes them : — “ They resemble those of the Missel- Thrush ; but the ground-colour is slightly paler, and the spots much finer, more numerous, and more evenly distributed.” The flight of White’s Thrush, unlike that of our common species, is said to be ” very undulating, like that of the Green Woodpecker, and low, often settling on the ground, and only making choice of a tree when it happened to pass under one, into which it rose almost vertically.” It is more strictly insectivorous than the true species of Turdus, living principally upon insects, their larvae and pupae, spiders, worms, and such mollusca as are found in moist situations. In China it is known to feed also on berries, especially those of the banyan ; nevertheless most of its food is obtained on the ground amongst decayed vegetation, in ditches, under bushes, or among the roots of trees. It is not known whether this species has any song ; its call-note is said to be “ a soft plaintive see, audible at a long distance,” and when on migration it some- times “ utters a melodious whistling cry.” As a cage-bird, White’s Thrush would probably prove an utter failure ; whether it sings or not, it can hardly be an industrious performer, moreover it would probably pass much of its time on the floor of its cage or aviary. Blackbird. The Blackbird. 19 Family— TURDIDyE. Snhfamilv— TURDINAi. The Blackbird. Turdi($ nierula, Linn. HIS handsome Thrush is generally distributed over nearly eveiy country of Europe and North Africa. In Norway at about 67° N. lat. it appears to reach its highest breeding range ; it also occurs in Asia Minor, Palestine, Persia, Turkestan, Afghanistan and Cashmere, being somewhat larger in the three last mentioned countries, and, on that account distinguished by Mr. Seebohm as a race to which he has given the name of Menila maxima. In Great Britain it is generally distributed and partially resident, but in the Shetland Islands it occurs only in the winter ; and, in the Hebrides its appearance is irregular, although on some of them it is recognized as a rare resident. In the southern counties in winter its numbers are largely increased by immigrants from the north. The adult male is entirel}^ glossy black in plumage ; the bill in young birds golden ochreons, gradually becoming deep orange with age, feet brownish black, iris hazel, edges of e}’elids golden yellow. The adult female, when young, is deep brown ; somewhat rufous on the throat and breast, which are streaked Avith smok}^ black ; the bill brown : as the bird grows older, the gape becomes more or less edged with ochre yellow, the black throat-streaks become more pronounced and the chin sometimes becomes whitish. In the nestling birds most of the feathers have pale shaft-streaks, and those of the upper parts have dark tips ; whilst those of the under parts have dark bars ; in other respects they resemble young hen birds : young males are said to be slightly more duskj^ than females ; but if such a difference exists, I never could satisf}" mj^self of the fact in the case of the young birds which, from time to time, I have hand-reared : the more active and pugnacious disposition and narrower crown would be far better guides in the selection of cock nestlings. Talking of pugnacity, it is pre-eminently a characteristic of the Blackbird, and especially at the pairing season : the Song-Thrush is combative enough, but the Blackbird Avill fight to the bitter end. I remember, on one occasion when in my garden, hearing a violent rustling and flapping of wings and supposing that some unfortunate Thrush or Blackbird had been seized b}' a cat, I slipped up as 20 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. quickly and quietly as possible to the scene of the disturbance ; there I saw two cock Blackbirds firmly clutching one another and tearing out feathers by the mouthful, violently flapping the while and so intent upon murder that, until I was almost within reach of them, they were not aware of my approach ; then just as I was meditating a double capture, they saw me, and simultaneously letting go of one another, flew off in opposite directions with loud chattering cries. Fighting is not the only sin of which the Blackbird is guilty ; some individuals of the species have ovivorous tendencies ; at a house where I was once staying, a pair of Blackbirds had built a nest on a trained plum-tree ; as usual, I had inter- ested myself in noting the time occupied in building and in the deposition of the eggs : on the third day the nest was completed and the hen settled down in it for the night. I rose early in those days, frequently taking a country ramble before breakfast ; that morning, before starting, I looked in the nest, and there was the first egg ; but, when I returned an hour later, the shell alone lay on the earth below the nest. Determined to discover the thief, if possible, I took a pair of opera-glasses upstairs that night, and, getting out of bed about 6 a.m., I waited and watched : presently I heard the cock Blackbird singing, and then he flew on to the end wall of the garden — “ Chink, cliinka chuck, chuck, chuck, chuck ; swee ; sivee." Out flew the hen and on to the nest went the old wretch, deliber- ately pecked and picked up the egg, and devoured the contents, dropping the shell as before. This trick was repeated again the following day, and then the hen deserted her nest. In all well-wooded districts the Blackbird is extremely abundant, and where wood and water are combined it is so common that, on one occasion, I came across nearly forty nests in the course of a single morning’s ramble. In suburban gardens it is also common, but not nearly so much so as the Song-Thrush : this can be easily proved, not merely by the numbers seen, for with so skulking a bird many might be overlooked ; but, by the relative number of nests built in such places in spring, and the largely disproportionate number of Thrushes trapped in winter. The nest of the Blackbird is built in the most diverse situations, such as hedges, shrubs, trees, faggot-stacks, holes in walls or rocks, niches in sides of gravel- or chalk-pits, or even in very low banks ; its favourite sites are perhaps in wattle fences overgrown with bramble or ivy, in evergreen shrubs, or on branches of fruit-trees trained against walls. It is a bulky cup- shaped structure, usually placed upon a foundation of twigs, dead leaves, rags, paper, sometimes a draggled quill feather or two, and mnd ; the form of the outside walls varies according to the position of the nest ; they are constructed of stalks of grass and The Blackbird, twigs intertwined and compacted with moss ; the inside of the cup plastered with mud in pellets, almost or entirely concealed by dead leaves, rootlets and fine grass : occasionally the mud plastering is entirel}- absent, but the only two nests having this peculiarity which I have seen, I met wuth on the same morning ; one of these I retained for my collection. The eggs are marvellousl}' variable, both in size, shape and colouring ; they number from four to six, but usually five. The following are some of the more distinct varieties which I have taken: — i. Greenish blue, precisely like some eggs of the Song-Thrush in tint ; but, when examined through a lens, showing verj' minute and indistinct reddish longitudinal dashes over the whole surface ; 2. Greyish olive, showing (under a lens) extremely fine dust-like brownish speckling, a few black dots near the small end, this form somewhat reminds one of some eggs of the Jay. 3. Large and broad, pale chalky blue, with indistinct rusty spots and dots scattered sparsely- over the entire surface, the larger half sprinkled with little rugosities. 4. Aluch elongated, pale blue, mottled all over with pale rusty reddish. 5. Short and broad, greenish bine, mottled and blotched all over with reddish-brown. 6. Very broad; pale chalk}' blue, speckled sparsely all over, and heavily blotched at both ends, with rust-reddish and gre3'ish lavender. 7. Similar, from same nest, but onl}' heavily blotched at the larger end. 8. Pale sandy brownish with very indistinct rust-reddish marbling all over : this is a small egg, evidently laid by a young bird. 9. Pale greenish blue sparsely but boldly spotted from the shoulder (or larger terminal third) and heavily spotted and clouded at the larger end with rusty brown leopard-like markings. 10. Pale greenish, so covered with indistinct reddish smears and speckles that the green is almost lost. II. Deep blue-green, boldly spotted wdth rusty brown, which collects into a large patch at the small end. 12. Flesh-whitish, densely speckled and marbled with rust red. 13. I also have a chalk}’ white egg, with faint indications (visible through a lens) of olivaceous mottling. This egg was given to me by a lady friend and was obtained by her from an ordinary nest, at Wateringbury, near Maidstone. Of the above (which I have selected for description from a picked series of forty-four in my egg-collection) Nos. i, 2, 3, 8, 12, and 13 are all rare varieties, not very characteristic of the species: possibly No. i, which is not unlike a very deep-coloured Starling’s egg, may, as Howard Saunders suggests, be the result of a union between the Song-Thrush and Blackbird, the fact that these two species do sometimes interbreed in a wild state being thoroughly well established. In the winter of 1894-5 a bird was caught in one of my traps which I firmly believe was a hybrid Thrush-Blackbird : when first captured it was ver}’ dirty, K VOL. I. 1 i British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. and I then supposed it to be an old hen Blackbird; but, after a good wash, its true colouring came out clearly ; the whole upper parts being deep smoky brown, the chin and throat white streaked with dull black ; the breast, in certain lights, showing traces of the true Song-Thrush spotting ; the bill deep orange with the basal half of the culmen black ; feet yellowish horn-brown. This bird, of which Mr. Frohawk made a careful sketch, became ver}^ tame in a few weeks and I should certainl}' have kept it up to the present time, had not a friend, who had given much attention to British cage-birds, visited me and asked me why I was keeping a hen Blackbird. I pointed out the orange bill, the extent of white on the throat, the heavy black streaking and ill- defined breast spots, and he admitted that he had never seen a similar hen Blackbird. Unfortunateh" I wanted the cage, in which I had kept this supposed hybrid, for lU}^ Mocking-bird (which I found too tyrannical for an aviar^') therefore I gave the Thrush its libert}^; but, on the following day, one of my neighbours was walking round my garden, when a bird in the adjoining plot began to sing a most marvellous song, which my neighbour characterized as neither like that of Blackbird or Song Thrush, but a combination of both. I have no doubt, as I told him, that 1113' recentlv liberated bird was the singer. The song of the Blackbird is qidte unlike that of aii}^ other British Thrush, clear, mellow and melodious, it is one of the finest productions of our feathered choir: it however varies wonderfulh" in merit in different individuals, and no two Blackbirds sing precisely alike. The finest singers are rarel}' heard, their per- formance is continuous, flowing, ever changing, somewhat reminding one of the Blackcap’s song; most Blackbirds, however, sing set phrases, more or less plaintive but always vigorous in character. Frequently', in the middle of its song, a Blackbird stops abruptly and ridicules its own performances, singing over the last phrase in a minor key and following it up with derisive caricatures ending in meaningless squeaks: some- times it pauses abruptly' and (perhaps for flve or ten minutes) repeats, at intervals its dismal ear-splitting call note — a shrill reedy hee^] or it will break off into its noisy go-to-roost rattle — “ Chink, chink, chink, chink, chink; chacka, chack- a-rack, chack, chack, chack, chack ; chuck, chuck, chitckC Passing through shrubberies The Blackbird. 23 at twilight, this good-night greeting may be heard on all sides; sometimes a little varied, bnt usually commencing with “ chink ” and terminating with chuck" \ at dawn it frequently leaves out the harsh chuck." The flight of the Blackbird is usually very direct, it may be seen passing over garden after garden with stead}" regular beat of wing, until perchance it nears some favourite tree, when its course is almost imperceptibly changed to an upward slant which lands it on its chosen branch ; when suddenly flushed from the nest, the flight is usually direct at first, but with a rapid swerving to right or left and a return to roost in some neighbouring cover. When it alights, the Blackbird throws its tail up almost at right angles to the body, stretches the neck and holds its legs wide apart ; this gives it a wonderfully alert and attentive aspect. In this respect it somewhat resembles Magpies, or Jays of the genus Cyanocorax, which always throw up the tail when they alight, but assume the attitude of attention as this appendage drops back to its ordinar}" level. Although usually a very skulking bird, seeking its food mostly under hedge- rows, in ditches, or among shrubs and bushes ; when it has young to feed the Blackbird may often be seen among Starlings and Thrushes upon our lawns, busily engaged in the pursuit of worms. In fields of turnip or cabbage it may also be seen seeking for worms and caterpillars ; for the common garden snail and slugs the Blackbird seems to care less than does the Song-Thrush, but the prettily banded hedge-snails it delights in : like all insectivorous birds, its favourite morsels are spiders, insects and their grubs. Mr. Frohawk tells me that, in the late autumn, he has watched a Blackbird slowly hopping down a garden path and carefully turning over every fallen leaf in its search for insect food. Unfortunatelv for the Blackbird’s peace of mind, it is not exelusively insectivorous ; it is also to some extent graminivorous and largely frugivorous, being especially fond of strawberries, in pursuit of which it often loses its life at the hands of the short- sighted fruit-grower ; it also devours a good many currants, gooseberries, cherries, and peas in their season, whilst the raspberry, blackberry and sloe are not despised. Late in autumn when the more pleasant fruits are becoming scarce, the Blackbird turns its attention to hips and haws, as well as the berries of the ivy and mistletoe. F^pon the earth the Blackbird proceeds by a series of hops, then a pause at attention and on again : in its actions it strongly reminds one of the Robin ; but it does not appear, like onr little Christmas favourite, to suffer from chronic epilepsy, fidgets, St. Vitus’ dance, or whatever it is which makes the latter give that absurd little duck every half minute, when sitting on a branch : no, the Blackbird is far too sedate for such frivolity. British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs, The Blackbird is especiall}' bold in defence of its young ; even when the nest contains eggs alone, I have known this bird to sit so close, that it has been caught upon the nest and ruthlessl}' killed by its heartless captor. To some creatures having the outward form of man, a few cherries, hastily swallowed and forgotten, are of more importance than months of woodland music : vmhappily* many such mere animals are trusted with firearms, and do their utmost to destroy the farmer’s and fruit-grow'er’s most useful and industrious assistants ; either not knowing, or not caring to know, that the birds are only taking wages in kind for the fruit which they have worked hard to save from the ravages of insect enemies. As a cage-bird, the Blackbird is without a rival among our Thrushes ; clean, lively, pleasing both in form and in his simple colouring, readily tamed, easily kept in health for years, it is no wonder that he is a general favourite : but, if he is to turn out a good songster, he must be caught, not reared from the nest. A hand-reared bird never sings the wild song, and hardly ever pleases with his per- formance ; indeed I have only known one bird (reported to be hand- reared, and fed upon sopped bread only) which really had an attractive song. Of the numbers which I reared when I first began to study aviculture, the best singer never got beyond six notes of a dismal psalm-tune. On the other hand, every trapped cock Blackbird, if properly fed, is sure to sing the true wild song sooner or later ; usually in the first spring after his capture. Like many other birds when first caught, the Blackbird often refuses to feed at all the first day ; and, if in good condition when caged, he may continue to sulk for a day or two longer ; but even a sulky Blackbird cannot resist the attractions of a lively mealworm, spider, or even earthworm, and when he once begins to eat, he will continue ; so that there is never much difficulty in inducing him to empty his pan of soft food. The latter, as already hinted previously, should be largely farinaceous, but with an admixture of yolk of egg and ants’ cocoons ; slices of apple or pear, and berries, as well as insects and worms, should also be given from time to time ; but meat never, if you value the health of your bird : if given, it will assuredly produce diarrhoea, resulting sooner or later in cramp, or fits. I tried it with fatal results, for several years. Ring-Ouzel. The Ring-Ouzel 25 Family— TURDIDFE. Subfamily— TURDINAi. The Ring-Ouzel. Ttirdjts Torquatus. — Linn. UPON the Continent of Bnrope this bird is a summer visitant to the more desolate portions of the pine districts ; it nevertheless breeds freely in the mountainons regions of the South. Eastward its range appears to be limited b}- the Ural Mountains. It winters in the lowlands and alpine districts of South Europe, in North Africa, Asia Minor, and Persia. In Great Britain it is rarely resident ; indeed during the winter it is usually the oiil}' British Thrush which is absent. Though in mild seasons it has been known to remain with ns up to Christmas, as a rule the Ring-Ouzel leaves us in September or October, returning in April to breed. Although far more abundant as a breeding species in the wild moors and mountainous districts of the North, it is known to have bred in rocky parts of Cornwall, Devon, Somerset, Hampshire, Kent, Suffolk, Norfolk, Warwick, Leicester, Gloucestershire, Mon- mouthshire, Wales, Herefordshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Derbyshire : in the wilder portions of Cornwall, Devon, Somerset and Wales it breeds freely. The general colour of the male Ring-Ouzel is a dark sooty brown inclining to black, with the exception of a broad white crescentic gorget ; the wing feathers edged externally with grey ; under wing-coverts and axillaries mottled with grey and white : bill yellowish, black at the tip ; feet brownish black ; iris dark brown. The female paler and browner than the male and with somewhat brownish gorget. Birds of the year have broad pale margins to the feathers of the under surface, the gorget in the male is brownish and in the female barely discernible. Nestlings have the feathers of the back and breast barred with black and pale brown, and the wing-coverts tipped with ochraceons buff. The nest of this species is not at all unlike that of the Blackbird, but it is somewhat looser in construction : externall}^ it is formed of dry bents and grass, frequently intertwined with twigs of heather or larch and compacted with dead leaves, moss and mnd ; inside it is lined with clay or mud, concealed b}' a thick inner lining of fine grass. It is almost always built on the ground, most frequently amongst ling on the sharp edge of an embankment ; also under furze, D 26 British Birds with their Nests and Eggs. or among heather upon steep declivities, very rarely in a low bush or tree. The eggs nninber from four to five, usuall}- fonr, and are extremely similar to those of the Blackbird and Fieldfare ; indeed, unless the collector takes them himself, I do not for a moment believe that he could be assured of their origin. I obtained eggs from two nests in Kent, in both cases flnshing the bird from them ; she flew off with harsh cries — “ chack-chack-chack ” after the manner of a Blackbird, but did not go far away ; probably had the nest contained young she would have flown round my head with lond cries after the manner of the Missel Thrush ; but I have rarely found birds so devoted to their eggs as to their young, unless they have actually commenced incubation. I found my second nest amongst a clump of heather growing under a furze bush, on the edge of a wild plantation bounding part of a large park at Tunstall, near Sittingbourne, on May 17th, 1879: the nest unfortunately only contained one egg. My first nest was found on the margin of an unreclaimed bit of heathery moorland in the Stock- bury Valley under a straggling tuft of ling overhanging the edge of a steep embankment at the side of a little frequented road, on May 24th, 1875 • nest contained two eggs. In both cases I omitted to take the nest, and conseqviently this is a desideratvim to my collection ; probably the birds continued to utilize them. The habits of the Ring-Ouzel are very similar to those of the Blackbird ; its flight is very similar and its trick of thi'owing up the tail as it alights, its method of searching for food, characterized by a shy, alert, almost nervous manner, and its harsh cr}^ uttered when the safety of its nest is threatened and at roosting time. Even its song bears some similarity to that of its ebony relative, though harsher in character and in some respects more nearly approaching that of the Song Thrush ; its habit of interrupting and criticizing its own performance is also eminently characteristic of the Blackbird ; its call-note is a thin piercing whistle, like that of our other Thrushes. The harsh gurrrk, characteristic of the Missel and Song Thrushes, can hardly be the true call note, since they certainly call to one another in the still more unpleasant whistled note above mentioned. The food of the Ring- Ouzel consists of worms, sings, snails, insects and their grubs, many kinds of berries, small fruits such as currants, gooseberries, blackberries, cherries, grapes and also plums. Seebohm says : — “ A true bird of the wilderness, it prefers the deepest solitudes that our land affords. Truly, indeed, the Ring-Oirzel’s home is a wild *This sound is usuallj- rendered by the word tak : but there is a thickness about the initial letter better represented by ch : the almost metallic flint splitting .sound which I render chink, in the account of the Black- bird, has been incorrectly written as "■ pink" ■. a Blackbird is as likely to say ‘■'■purple" as "pink." The Black Throated Thrush. 27 and romantic one. Yon will first make his acquaintance where the heath begins, where the silver birch trees are scattered amongst the rock fragments, and the gorse bushes and stunted thorn and bracken are the last signs of more lowland vegetation. The scenery gets wilder, but still the bird is your companion ; he flits from rock to rock before you, or, by making long detours, returns to the place whence you flushed him, uttering his loud, harsh, and discordant call-notes. The hills of Derbyshire are one of his favourite haunts ; almost on the ver}' summit of Kinder Scout, the highest peak of the High Peak, nearly two thousand feet above the sea level, the Ring Ouzels rear their young.” I cannot speak personall}^ as to the Ring Ouzel’s suitability for cage life ; so far as I have been able to judge, from the specimens occasionally exhibited at bird shows, it appears to be as easily tamed as our other Thrushes ; but it is possible that these specimens may have been hand-reared birds ; I certainly never heard one of them attempt to sing. There are several reasons for this dumb behaviour in captive birds ; some that will not sing at all in a cage, warble splendidly in an aviary ; then, insufficiently nourishing, or unnatural food may be the cause, the first from its lowering effect and the second by making the prisoner feel positively ill. Birds which are accustomed, when wild, to feed almost entirely on insects and fruit, are provided at our shows with a mess of finely grated raw beef and bread crumbs : on such hopelessly unnatural diet, it is no marvel, not merely that they feel disinclined to sing, but if they die before their term of punishment is completed. With the Ring Ouzel, in the writer’s opinion, the true British “ Thrushes,” so called, should terminate. Other species recorded as belonging to our fauna, in works upon the Birds of Great Britain, are : — Family— TURDIDAi. Subfamily — TURDINAt. The Black Throated Thrush. Turdus Atrigu/aris, — Temm. NTRODUCED, because one young male was shot near Lewes in 1868. 28 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. Family— TURDID.F. Subfamily— TURDIN^.. The Rock Thrush. Mon ticola Saxati/ is, — Linn. DMITTED, because one specimen was shot at Therfield, Herts., in 1843. So far as I can see, there is no more reason for admitting these birds to our list, than for excluding the following : — Family— TURDIDFE. Subfamily — T URDINxE. The American Robin. Turdus Migratorius. OBTAINED at Dover; but excluded, on the ground that it may have escaped from captivity. In these days of aviculture, even the rarest and least suspected birds may have reached our shores in this manner. Family— TURDlDyE. ' Subfamily— TURDIN^. The Siberian Ground Thrush. Turdus Sibiricus, — Pall. Some writers admit, and others exclude this species ; one example only having been obtained (on the authority of a dealer) between Guildford and Godalniing, in the winter of 1860-61. In other branches of Zoology, we should not necessarily regard a species as British, on the score of one or two examples having been obtained on our shores : the fact of their occurrence would be recorded, and possibly an illustration published, but subsequent works would not be considered incomplete which did not describe them as British. Wheatear The Wheatear. 29 Family— TURDIDyE. Subfamily— TURDINyE. The Wheatear. Saxicola yfinanthe, — LiNN. Although Howard Saunders associates the Wheatears with the “ Bush- chats,” he points out the fact that they differ in their longer tails and white rumps, and states also Dr. Sharpe’s belief that the members of the genus Pratincola are Flycatchers fMusdcapidoeJ : the habits and actions of Saxicola and Pratincola are certainly not exactly similar, although a general likeness in the distribution of colours on the head, gives one the impression of relationship between them. The Wheatear is a very remarkable bird in appearance, its head appearing to be far too large for its body : in stuffed specimens its whole character is invariably lost by the taxidermist, who produces an indentation, where none exists in life, just at the back of the skull ; illustrations also, being mostly taken from prepared skins, do not usually do justice to the bull-headed Robin-like aspect of the living bird. Occurring all over the Western Palaearctic Region from Greenland to Africa, and eastward through Siberia to North China, the Wheatear is also found in Kastern N. America and Behring’s Straits ; it is common, though local, throughout Great Britain, arriving early in March and departing in September ; but its luimbers increase as one travels northward, comparatively few pairs breeding in the southern comities. In winter it occurs both in North and West Africa, whilst Asiatic examples migrate to Mongolia, N. India and Persia, and American birds travel as far as the Bermudas. The male Wheatear in breeding plumage has the upper parts gre}^ the wings dark brown and black, the rump white, the two central tail-feathers black to near base, the others white, broadly tipped with black ; forehead and superciliary streak white ; lores and ear-coverts black ; under surface of body pale buff, slightly deeper on throat and breast ; but in old birds almost white, with throat and breast bnff; under wing-coverts and axillaries mottled with dark grey and white ; bill black, feet black, iris dark brown. The female is bnffish brown, darker above, the ear-coverts dark brown instead of black. In antnmn owing to the broad pale bnff borders to the new feathers, the male nearly resembles the female; but during the winter these borders seem to be partly lost and the colour (as with that in the phimage of many other bird.s) 30 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. grows in the feathers themselves without a further moult.* Young birds are spotted above and below, the feathers of the wings and tail being also edged and tipped with buff. The name Wheatear is derived from the words ivhitc and the Anglo-Saxon cers (rump); I believe the bird is still called “ ]Vhitus^'‘ b}' the peasantry in some parts of England; it is also known by the names of '^Static clatter" and “ Ctacharan ” (Little mason.) In Kent I have seen this bird but once, and then 011I3' on a wild neglected piece of grass-land close to a cultivated watercress stream ; in the side of a bank overhanging this stream was a hollow, probablj" the end of a mole burrow, which had been cut across to lengthen the bed of the stream ; and, in this hollow was the Wheatear’s nest ; nnfortimatel}'' she had not commenced to la^G In the same place a lad^- friend obtained eggs of this species the year before. In June, 1886, I saw a considerable number of Wheatears : the}' were flying about the broken cliffs between Yarmouth and Caister, where sand and patches of reed}' grass are commingled over irregular slopes and hollows ; an expanse desolate indeed in appearance, but the home of numerous rabbits, whose burrows in ever}' direction form traps for the heedless pedestrian. I looked in many a hole for nests, but my search was not rewarded. I thought of, and put into practice, the advise given in the following extract from Yarrell, 4th edition, to no purpose. “When the nest is in a rabbit-burrow it is not unfrequently visible from the exterior, but when under a rock it is often placed a long way from the entrance, and out of sight. It can nearly always be found with certainty, by watching the hen-bird; and Salmon says that on the large warrens of Suffolk and Norfolk its position is easily detected by the considerable number of small pieces of the withered stalks of the brake amassed at the entrance of the burrow. When the place of concealment, however, is beneath a rock or earth-fast stone, the nest is often inaccessible to the finder.” In addition to its favourite rabbit-burrow, the Wheatear utilizes heaps of stones, niches in walls, peat-stacks, or banks ; or even hollows partly sheltered by a large clod or stone, as building sites. The nest is a rather large and flattish structure, loosely formed of very fine dried grass, sometimes rootlets and a little moss, and lined with feathers and hair, or hair alone. The eggs are said to vary from four to eight in number, six being the usual clutch ; they are somewhat elongated, pale greenish blue, and (almost invariably) unspotted, but very rarely * In tlie case of the Indigo Bunting of N. America, the change from brown winter plumage to the bright blue and green of the breeding dress, is chiefly due to a gradual growth of the bright colouring in the feather.s, comparatively few feathers being shed ; I have the skin of a bird which died half through its spring change, showing the feathers in their transitional stage. The Wheatear. 31 there are a few very indistinct pnrplisli dots at the larger end. The Wheatear is largely insectivorous, capturing much of its food on the wing after the manner of the Flycatchers, it also eats larvae of various insects, spiders, small worms and molluscs, but in the autumn it also eats the wild moor- land fniits : it is a pretty sight to watch this bird perched upon a wall, its tail swaying up and down like that of a Wagtail : presently you see it jerk its head upwards and off it darts with graceful fluttering flight after some passing beetle or fly, which it captures without difficnlty. If you creep up to watch more closely, it waits until perhaps only a few yards intervene between you and it, then away it flits, somewhat after the fashion of a Wagtail, to some more distant rock. When searching for the nest in Norfolk and hoping that the bird would reveal its proximity by returning, after a short journey in one direction, to some previously occupied rock, we found that it still flew before ns from rock to rock ; it became evident that onr fruitless search could only be explained by the fact that we were too late upon the scene. The Wheatear first arrives in tbe south of England towards the end of March, the males reaching our shores a little earlier than the females, but they usually begin to build about the middle of April and the nest may be found from this time to about the middle of May, but although the species is double-brooded, the June nests seem less eas}' to discover, possibly they may be more carefully concealed, or the increased power of the sun makes stooping more irksome to tbe searcher. In August and September numbers congregate together, in preparation for their migration to the south ; at this season many are snared by the shepherds on the Sussex Downs and destroj^ed for food ; by the beginning of October most of the survivors have left the country. The song of this bird is a short, but not unpleasant warbling, but its call notes are less musical, resembling the sharp chink, chack, chack produced by the concussion of a flint and steel. In confinement the Wheatear or “ Clod,” as the London birdcatchers call it, soon gains confidence in the goodwill of its owner and flies up to the wires to take flies or mealworms from his fingers ; it is a peaceful law-abiding subject ; but when some favourite morsel has been snatched from under its ver}^ bill, it sometimes shows its anno3'ance b}' the sharp click of its mandibles, characteristic of most insectivorous birds. The first Wheatear I ever possessed was brought to me one evening by a small bird-dealer, who informed me that it had been caught that afternoon and that, if I did not care to give ninepence for it, he meant to kill and stuff it for one of his customers. Of course I bought it, turned it into u large flight cage in iiyv stud}' and hoped to reconcile it to captivity. Unlike 32 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. mail}' birds when newly caught, this Wheatear appeared to be quite at home at once, but I could not succeed in inducing it to eat anything but mealworms and house-flies ; berries it would not look at, and soft food it regarded with utter contempt : in three days it died. A second specimen was brought to me, about nine years later, by a friend who had already kept it for about a week, in a room with other British Birds. I turned it out with Wagtails and other birds in a large unheated aviary ; it took kindly to the soft food from the first, and ate a good maity cockroaches daily ; passed through the winter without mishap, came into full breeding plumage and commenced to sing in the spring : sometimes, but rarely, it sang on the wing ; it usually preferred to sit close to a wide casement, which is kept open during the mild weather, and warble at intervals. When a fl}" passed into the aviary, it had little chance of escaping ; the Wheatear, a Redstart and a Grey Wagtail were all after it at once, and the Redstart was generally the winner ; the Wheatear coming in second, and the Wagtail rarely getting a chance, in spite of its marvellous aerial acrobatic powers. Unfortunatel}’ this bird did not live many months ; before I had kept it a year it died suddenly ; although, the day previously, it had appeared to be in excellent health. Other species of Wheatears have been admitted into the British list, but their claim to this position is based upon the chance occurrence of one or two examples in this country. Whilst denying that this gives them a title to the name of Britisher, it may perhaps be as well to record their names : — Family— TURDIDAi. Subfamily — TURDIlVAi. The Isabelline Wheatear. Saxicola isabc/liua, — Rl^ PP. Admitted to be an English bird on the ground that a single female example was shot at Allonby, in Cumberland, on the iith November, 1887. Whinchat The Black Throated Wheatear, The Desert Wheatear, The Wh inchat. 33 Family— TURDID/F. Subfamily— FUR DIN At- The Black Throated Wheatear. Saxicola stapaziva, ViEILL. A SINGLE male specimen was .shot near Bury, in Lancashire, about the 8th Ma}’, 1875 ! it belonged to the Eastern race of the .species. Family- TURD ID Ai. Subfamily— TURDINAi. The Desert Wheatear. SaxicoUx dcserli, Rupp. A MALE was shot near Alloa in Clackmannanshire, on the 26th November, t88o, a female on the Holderness coast, Yorkshire, on the 17th October, 1885, and a second near Arbroath on the 28th December, 1887. Family— Tl ^RDII hF. Subfamily— TURDINFF. The Whinchat. Pratixicola riibetra, LiNX. BRICEDS in suitable localities throughout Northeni and Central Europe, its eastern boundary in European Russia being probabh’ the Ural Mountains; it winters in Southern Europe and Northern Africa, extending its range west- ward to L'antee and eastward to Abyssinia. It also occurs in Arabia, Asia Minor and Northern India : but in the Indian examples the relative length of the primaries is said to differ, and the birds themselves are larger than ours. In Great Britain the Whinchat is prett}* generalh’ distributed ; being abundant in certain localities, but absent from many districts of Scotland, and somewhat local in Ireland. Vo I,. I. G 34 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. The Whinchat above is blackish brown, the feathers edged with sandy buff, slightly redder on the upper tail-coverts ; wings dark brown, smaller coverts white ; two central tail-feathers dark brown, white at base ; other tail-feathers with the basal half white and the terminal half dark brown, with bnff margins; a clear white superciliary streak ; lores, ear- coverts and cheeks dark brown : chin white, continnons with a streak bounding the lower part of the cheek and sides of neck ; throat and breast reddish fawn colour, shading into bnff towards centre of bell}’ ; under tail-coverts also bnff; bill and feet black; iris brown. This bird is most commonly seen on broad open commons, heathery moiintain slopes, pastures (whence its local name of “ Grass-chat,”) meadows and wild briar-clad wastes ; it haunts both mountain and valley, hill and dale, and wherever vast tracts of furze-covered land exist, it may be confidently looked for: to this it owes its common nickname of “ Fnz-chat,” the only title, I believe, by which the London birdcatchers recognize it. In some districts it is also known by the name “ Utick ” on accoiint of its call note n-tic, n-tac or u-cliack. I first met with the Whinchat in fair numbers, about the . middle of May, amongst the gorse bmshes covering a wide expanse not far from Detling, on the road from Sittingbonrne to Maidstone. The birds were dotted about here and there on the topmost sprays of the gorse, whence every half minute or so they darted off after some insect, returning almost invariably to the same perch. Rvery few minutes one of them would flit off, warbling softly, to some distant bush, under which it would dive ; but when I imagined that its nest was there concealed, and walking straight to that point, began carefully to seek for it, I invariably found that there not only was no trace of a nest, either in or under the bush, but that the mischievons bird had simply passed through an opening and onwards, perchance in some new direction with the distinct purpose of misleading me, or else had sought some fresh article of diet below the shelter of that prickly cover. The Whinchat is very largely insectivorous, its food consisting chiefly of insects, their larvae and spiders ; it also eats small worms, small molluscs, and it has been known to feed upon growing corn : it is a great friend to the farmer, on account of its fondness for wireworms (the larvae of spring-back beetles) ; these it obtains in considerable numbers in the Spring when the land lies fallow ; and later, when the young turnips are opening, their first leaves, it is a great enemy to the destructive turnip fly. I have tried it with the turnip l:)eetle, but the offensive red ink flavour of this insect was too much for it, and it turned away in disgust after tasting the first sample : berries, which (I The Whinchat. 35 believe) the Whinchat has been credited with eating, and red or white ciirrants, it refused even to glance at. The nidification of the Whinchat commences early in May and I have seen nests of fresh eggs which were taken quite a month later ; bnt, in that case, the first nests had been robbed : although this species has been stated to be donble-brooded, the evidence in support of that belief requires confirmation ; the male bird certainly ceases to sing in Jnly; this, one would not expect to be the case, unless it had concluded its domestic duties. The nest is nsnally placed on the ground among grass or heather ; sometimes in the middle of a field or under shelter of a hedge, freqnentl}^ under a birze bush, either on the ground or just above it among the branching stems; it is a large and rather loose structure formed of bents, fibrous roots and sometimes a little moss, and is lined with fine dr\’ grass and hair. The eggs vary from four to six, the latter being the usual number ; they are greenish bine, in tint not unlike those of the Hedge Accentor, bnt generally of a less perfect oval, the larger, as well as the smaller extremity being some- what pointed ; they are finely speckled with reddish brown, the dots forming a pale zone round the larger end. The parents are very wary in discovering the position of their treasures, and will not approach the nest when they discover the presence of an intruder ; bnt, if by chance yon wander towards it, the}^ fly round }’our head in the greatest anxiety uttering a thin dismal cry, which to me sounded like the word fszva', varied at times by their call note zz-Z/c : I have also seen them drop on the grass and scramble along as if injured, apparently with the object of inviting pursuit ; a trick which, did they bnt know it, only renders the birdsnester more satisfied that he is on the right scent. The flight of the Whinchat is graceful and undulating, and during the breeding-season consists of short journeys from bush to bush, varied by aerial evolutions in pursuit of gnats or other small winged insects. Suddenly it swoops downwards as it perceives some tiny beetle on a grass stem, to which as it seizes its prey, it clings for a moment with fluttering wings, then darts away to the topmost spray of a whin bush, and watches with ever springing tail for another victim. To the novice in the stud}’ of bird life this active little fellow is a revelation. Seebohm says : — “ Although the Whinchat so often chooses a perch near the ground, it by no means .shuns the trees, and, especially towards the end of summer, it is seen with its }’oung brood high up amongst the branches. The bird does not show that partiality for walls and rocks which is so marked a feature of the Redstart or Wheatear. In the pastoral districts the Whinchat, 36 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. directl}^ after its arrival, frequents the fallows which are being worked for the turnip crops, and on these places is fonnd almost contiiinonsly until the neigh- bouring pastures afford it sufficient shelter. The Whinchats never roost in trees, but always on the ground. When they first arrive we find them at night on the fallows, bnt for the remainder of the season grass fields and turnip lands are frequented. In the wilder parts of its hannts the Whinchat roosts amongst the heath and the tangled undergrowth of gorse covert and brake. Another remark- able trait in the character of this bird is its activity in the dnsk of the evening, a time probably when some insect that forms its favourite food is abundant ; and its well known call notes nia}’ be heard long after the birds themselves are con- cealed from view by the falling shadows of night.” This species is not a resident bird, although a few instances have been recorded of its passing the winter in England. It arrives in the South of England about the middle of April, reaching onr northern comities a week or two later : late in September it again journeys southwards. My second captive Whinchat was given to me early in September, 1893, and I turned it into an aviary with other British birds and a pair of Rosa’s Parrakeet. I fonnd it very shy ; bnt nnfortnnately I was unable to keep it long enough to judge whether it was likel}" to overcome its want of confidence ; for, within a week, one of the Parrakeets caught it and crushed its skull, thus not onl}^ killing it bnt rendering it useless as a cabinet specimen. It took readily to the usual soft food mixture, commencing, like all soft-billed birds with the egg and ants’ cocoons and only eating the bread and potato when these failed ; it was especially keen on mealworms, probably not discovering any difference between them and its natural diet of wireworms, and it devoured a considerable number of small cockroaches ; flies and small moths it pursued and caught on the wing. It usually passed the night either on the earth or upon some twigs stuck into the earth. At times it uttered its thin piercing cry and its singular call-note ; bnt, at that season, I, of course, could not expect it to sing. When an\'one entered the aviary it flew cvildly from side to side ; but, at other times contented itself with keeping at a respectful distance, never showing aii}^ anxiety to escape, or even that restless impatience of captivity characteristic of the Hedge Accentor and many other small birds, when freshl}- captured. Stonechat. The Stonechat. 37 Family— Tl ^RDin.F.. Subfamil\ — 7Y RDlNyK. St()np:chat. Pral mcola nibicola, LlXN. INHABITS the central and milder parts of Northern Europe and southwards to Asia Minor, Palestine and North Africa; specimens have also been obtained south of Senegal. In Great Britain the Stonechat is resident and breeds locally in every comity of Great Britain and Ireland, as also in the Hebrides : in the Orkne}’ and Shetland Islands it is known to occur, but not to breed. The Stonechat is a veiw handsome little bird, especiall}' when in breeding plnmage. The male has the whole of the feathers of the upper surface (excepting those of the upper tail-coverts which are white) dull black fringed with tawiyv brown ; the head from a line above the eye and the throat velvet}'-black ; wings and tail blackish brown ; smaller wing-coverts, bases of inner secondaries and .sides of neck broadly white ; under parts tawny-rnfons, deepest on the breast and sides, almost white at centre of chest, but shading into buff on abdomen ; bill and feet eboiu’-black, iris dark brown. The female is altogether duller in colouring; the white wing-patch smaller, the tail-coverts reddish brown, the throat mottled with black. In winter the white on the sides of the neck becomes mottled with tawny, the secondaries have broad tawny borders and either whitish or tawii}- tips, the tail-feathers are also broadly bordered with buff ; the ear coverts, chin and throat feathers are also slightly tipped on the fringe with tawny or white, and the upper part of the white neck-patch is mottled with tawny. The nestling is spotted above and below, and does not show the dark throat, or white patches of the adult bird ; but, in other respects, resembles it in its winter plumage. Though so different from the Wdiinchat in pattern, this species resembles it greatly in form and in its habits ; it frecpients similar localities — wild heathery moorland, gorse-clad commons, nncnltivated broken ground, dotted with bush and bramble, with here and there loose stones, or bedded rocks moss-grown and venerable : in such haunts the Whinchat breeds, and there he may be seen poised on the topmost spray of the flowering furze with ever restless tail, anon darting from bush to bush with nndnlating flight, or hovering mothlike to seize some Voi,. l. II British Birds with their Nests and Eggs. ,vs fluttering insect. All attempts of the stranger to investigate its fainiW concerns are met by the Stonechat with alarm and resentment ; to anyone seeking the nest it is most confusing to hear the two parent birds cJiacking in different places, rarely in the same bush ; the male also from time to time uttering a c[ueer double note, in which he seems to proclaim himself a Wheatear.* The nest is frequently placed in some depression of the soil partly or wholh' concealed b}^ herbage, below a furze-bush, or shrub; so that one may look beneath the ver}^ cover where it is situated, and not perceive it ; it is always on the ground : its construction is loose, but tolerabl}^ neat, dr}^ grass or rootlets and a little moss being used for the outside ; finer grass, hair, feathers and sometimes wool, for the lining. The eggs var}- from four to six in number, and are not unlike those of the Whinchat ; but the}' are greener in tint, and usually much more heavil}^ zoned and spotted with red-brown ; the spotting sometimes covers a much larger area ; but frequently forms a suffused patch on the larger end, or a broad belt near the end ; occasionally it is barel}^ indicated : I once took eggs of the Spotted Fl3'catcher similarly marked, and which, but for their slightly paler ground-tint, might have been mistaken for eggs of this species. The song of the Stonechat is soft, low, irregular but rather pleasant to listen to ; it reminds me somewhat of the first efforts of the Indigo-Bunting of N. America, when that bird is “recording” his song. The call-note, which has nothing to do with his scolding, or complaining notes, is a sharp tsik, tsik, tsik, almost like the sound produced by striking two flints together. The Stonechat feeds on insects, their larvae, spiders, small worms, and during the winter on seeds : moths and butterflies it catches on the wing, and I was much interested, on one occasion, in watching it in pursuit of a Vapourer-moth, the circling onward flight of which seemed for some time to baffle it, though success at last rewarded its efforts to seize it. I have seen a House-Sparrow utterly nonplussed by the progressive gyrations of this little moth ; the difficulty of catching it being increased by the fact that, when pursued, it constantly rises higher and higher ; in the capture of such a moth onl}' a bird with the agilit}’ of a Flycatcher or Wagtail can hope for success. The flight of this species is short and undulating, its greatest efforts being made in pursuit of prey : when roosting or hopping, its tail is incessantly in motion : if terrified, this bird seems to prefer concealment to flight, always seeking the densest cover in the immediate neighbourhood, but sometimes revealing its whereabouts b}' uttering its alarm cry : even when the nest is approached, as already * Thi.s scolding note is best expressed by the words liucct-jiur, the terminal ;• having a vibrant .sound. The Stonechat. 39 hinted, the Stonechat is only seen M'hen flitting from bush to bush, but it is heard incessantly. I have only once had an opportunity of studying this species as an aviary bird. IVIr. E. P. Staines of Penge, an enthusiastic student of British cage-birds gave me a specimen, at the same time that he also brought me my Whinchat, in September 1893: I turned it into the same aviary, and although I kept it for over a year, it ultimately lost its life from a similar cause, a Rosa’s Parrakeet breaking one of its legs at the mid-tarsal or so-called knee-joint. I caged the bird up separately, after binding the limb np, but it only survived two days. In the aviary the Stonechat is gentle and extremeh' lively ; never quarrelling, but often obtaining a delicacy by superior activity ; thus I have seen it seize a spider from under the very bill of a Wagtail and carry it half across the aviary before the larger bird had solved the problem as to how it had disappeared : it was also very expert in catching white butterflies on the wing, though it frequently lost them through getting hold of their wings only. The Stonechat took to soft food without hesitation, and, many a time when the other inhabitants of the aviary were waiting for a fresh supph% I have seen him alight on the edge of the Parrakeet’s seed-pan and swallow canary and millet; possibly it was in this manner he got in the wa^- of one of these treacherous birds, and so lost his life. Of Cockroaches he was inordinately fond, jumping into the beetle-trap and flinging them out, or swallowing the smaller ones at a gulp : sometimes he would snatch out a large female by one leg and fling the body awa}', following it up and again catching at a second leg with the same action, until he had completely dismembered the body, which would then be swallowed entire : it is astonishing to see what large morsels can be gulped down by these little birds ! This bird often .sang in the early spring ; but, as in its wild state, its warbling ceased entirely before the end of June : it was fairE tame, but would not actual!}' take an insect from my fingers, always waiting until I dropped it, before attempt- ing to secure it : like all insectivorous birds, it was more keen on spiders than anything else, and the larger they were the better it was pleased. 40 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. I'a?inlv— Tl 'RDIDyK. Sub/ami h— Tl UU')IN/K. The Redstart. Ruticilla pluvnicunis, Linx. RE^EDS throughout Central Europe as far as the North Cape and in the i J Pine regions of Southern Europe ; where, however, it is rarely seen excepting on migration ; in winter it migrates to Northern xAfrica, the Canaries, Madeira, Senegal, Abyssinia, Arabia and Persia. It is pretty generall}^ distributed throughout Great Britain, though locally scarce ; its occurrence in the Orkneys and Shetlands and in Ireland is rare, and it is unknown in the Hebrides. The male bird in breeding plumage is very attractive, vaguely resembling the Robin in front and the Nightingale at the back. The upper surface is slaty grey, with rnfons-brown tips to the feathers ; the back of forehead and an irregular line over the eye white ; rump and upper tail-coverts chestnut red ; the two central tail feathers dark brown, the others chestnnt red ; wings sniok}' brown, secondaries with pale buff margins to the onter Avebs ; base of forehead, face, ear-coverts, chin and throat black ; chest and axillaries chestnnt red ; abdomen and flanks tawny bnff : bill and feet black, iris brown. The female is altogether dnller in colouring without the bright hues on the head and with the nnder surface paler. Both sexes in antninn have long white fringes to the feathers, giving them a greyish appearance which disappears in the Spring.* Nestlings are spotted both above and below and, but for their redder tails, might be almost mistaken for 3'onng Robins. The Redstart is a summer visitant to Great Britain nsnally arriving in April, though its advent is somewhat dependent on the state of the temperature. It goes to nest in May, and in September flits by night to its winter quarters. The favourite haunts of this species are ivy-grown rocks and rnins ; old walls round gardens and orchards ; plantations ; shrubberies ; scattered open wood- land with ancient timber ; groves of birch ; wild commons, on poor and rock}' ground strewn with bramble and brake. I first met with it in the Stockbnry * It i.s usualh' siippo.sed. that when the plumage of birds alters in the spring, it is done by casting the pale or dull tijjs ; but. judging from birds of various species which have died in the middle of their transfor- mation, I feel certain that in manj- cases the colouring grows in the feathers themselves. I have a Redstart before me in which the long fringes are partly buff and partly white, whilst the throat feathers are black excepting at the extreme tips. Redstart. The Redstart. 41 valley in Kent : I was examining a tall roadside hawthorn hedge for nests, when suddenly a small bird appeared, out of the field at the back, right in the centre of an open part of the hedge its tail quivering laterally', with a remarkable spring}^ action quite new to me : at first I wondered what this lovely little creature conld be ; and then, snddenl}-, its identity with the Redstart revealed its- self, and the next minute it turned and flitted away. The flight is irregular, jerky and not specially rapid, excepting when the bird is either startled or in pursuit of prey ; in the latter case I know of no bird of its size which can equal it in activity, or in its power of doubling ; the same may also be said of the male bird, when in pursuit of another of its own sex. The food of the Redstart cou.sists of insects and their larvae, spiders, centipedes and, towards autumn, of unripe corn and small fruits : most of its prey is captured in the air and no insect pursued b}' it has the least chance of escaping : it will stop in midflight and poise itself, fluttering in one spot whilst it seizes a sun-fly ; or, with equal ease, it will follow the wild zigzag wanderings of the small white butterfly : in pursuit of spiders, it will rise up and down, like the Humming-bird moth, before old moss-grown walls, searching every crevice for the lurking victims ; an unwary centipede, projecting its head in a tentative manner from behind a fragment of loosened bark, or rnnning hurriedly from the shelter of one boulder to another, is snatched up in a second and devoured ; if a small green caterpillar crosses a woodland path, the Redstart darts obliqnelv down as though hurled from a catapult, alights for one second with quivering expanded tail, and seizing its victim gives it a bang or two and swallows it. If, however, the caterpillar is a large one, the bird either remains on the earth until it has knocked it to a pulp, or carries it to a branch and there, holding it by tlie head, strikes it backwards and forwards across its perch : gnats and flies are caught and swallowed on the wing. It has been said that the action of the Redstart’s tail is vertical, not lateral ; l)ut certainly to 1113’ e}'e it is lateral and not vertical, and I have watched it in an aviarj' for an hour at a time : the action bears no resemblance whatever to that of either the Whinchat oi" Stonechat, but consists of a sudden lateral springiness with a slight expansion of the feathers. I repeatedly' called the attention of others to this abnormal tail-movement and every’one who saw it agreed with me that it was a vibrant wag. When the bird is at rest on a branch, every' thought of the little creature seems to be emphasized by' a jerk, or an expansion of the feathers. Nidification commences early^ in Mayq the site being just such as a Robin would .select ; a hole in a tree or wall, but sometimes a hollow gate post, or a 42 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. flower pot is chosen : it is usually not far from the ground. The nest itself is externally carelessly constructed of dry grass, rootlets, moss and sometimes a little wool, the interior being carefully lined with hair and feathers ; the number of eggs varies from five to eight, though rarely exceeding six ; in colour they much resemble those of the Hedge Accentor, but are slightly paler and more glossy. Although the Redstart usuall}' builds in holes and under cover, instances have been recorded of its forming its nest in an exposed situation ; thus in the “Zoologist” for 1888, pp. 352-3, the Rev. H. A. Macpherson says: — “ In June last, Mr. Bell of Liddell Bank, Dumfriesshire, an enthusiastic field naturalist, was kind enough to ask my friend iVIr. Baily and myself to spend a couple of days in birdsnesting with him on the Liddell. I was detained at home, but Mr. Baily went, and on his return reported the find of a Redstart’s nest built into an old nest of a Song-Thrush. There was no doubt about the owner- ship of the nest, for the hen bird was seen sitting on the eggs, two of which were taken.” “The Thrush’s nest measures about four inches across, and that of the Red- start two inches and one fifth inside measurement : the former was placed in a thorn bush, and was therefore open to the sky, though well concealed by branches above. I have seen a good many Redstarts’ nests, but I can only recall one instance in my own experience in which a nest of R. phocniciirus has been open to the sky. The nest in question was placed in a thick bush, and was surrounded by thickets.” The song of the Redstart is uttered either on the wing, or when perching ; it is both insignificant and monotonous, somewhat resembling that of the Wren, though much more feeble ; its call-note is ivhcct-tit-tit and its note of alarm a melancholy ivhect : when courting, like some other species, it records its song ; that is to sa}', it sings it in a whisper, omitting the louder notes. As an aviary bird, I have found the Redstart especially pleasing ; it is quite hardy, provided that plenty of insects can be supplied daih', it rapidly becomes very tame and confiding, and is a most ornamental addition to one’s feathered family. In September, 1893, Mr. Staines brought me a healthy example, which I turned out with the Stonechat and Whinchat into one of my unheated aviaries, disregarding utterly the reputed extreme delicacy, of this species. That winter the thermometer on several occasions registered ten or twelve degrees of frost, nevertheless the Redstart was not in the least disturbed by the cold, but seemed quite at home and happy. Every morning I put a “ Demon The Redstart. 43 beetle trap” into the a\'iary, and the Redstart was the first bird to rush in among the evil-smelling captives, seize one and fly off with it ; no sooner was the first swallowed than he was back again for another, and so on until he was sated : he was always actively flying about, and when I put in the saucer of soft food he invariably skimmed over it snatching up a fragment of yolk of egg, whilst the saucer was still in my hand. If I offered mealworms or spiders in my fingers it was always the Redstart who snatched the first, flying up to the wires and either poising with rapidly fluttering wings, almost like a Humming-bird, or clutching the wire work with his claws for one second, to ensure a correct aim at the daint}'. I found the Redstart rather fond of red and white currants in the earlv summer, and in the autumn thin slices of apple were pecked to pieces by it ; but white butterflies seemed to form its favourite morsels and the astounding manner in which it would swallow one after another (wings and all) was worth the attention of visitors to 1113' collection. One thing I specialR noted ; in common with every migrator}’ species which I have kept, the Redstart failed to show an}^ access of restlessness as the season of migration approached. Personall}^ I do not believe, for a moment, that aii}’ bird, properl}^ attended to in the matter of food, in an aviar}', is even aware that there is a season of migration. Aviculturists go at night and glare at their birds, with the moon lighting up their e}^es into balls of fire, and the frightened creatures bang about recklessly in their terror of the vague monster near their cages. The verdict is : — “ See the effect of the migrator}’ instinct ! ” There may possibly be an inherited desire in some birds to tra\'el at the approach of cold weather, but the true explanation of the so-called “ migratory instinct ” in birds is, to most of them, merely another name for short commons ; and, to the more delicate species, the added discomfort of chilly nights. It must also be borne in mind that, at all seasons of the year, birds in aviaries are extremely restless on bright moonlight nights, the clear white light with the black shadows which accompany it, seem to startle birds ; and, if yonr bedroom window is above an aviary, you will hear your captives thumping the wirework at the end of each flight, at all hours of the night : moreover the resident birds are quite as much given to this somewhat risky exercise as the migratory species. Diiring the winter of 1894-5 the temperature of my nnheated aviaries was unusually low ; on one night (when the cold outside was very intense, two degrees below zero, in fact) the thermometer registered twenty-one degrees of frost in the passage between these aviaries ; my Redstart, however, was as lively as before, and I hoped to keep him for many years in health ; but one night. 44 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. during his spring change of plumage, he erept into a log-nest and died : I am afraid that, in spite of abundant insect food, the eold of that winter was rather too mueh for him ; yet he was bright and active to the last day of his life, showing no symptoms of distressed breathing, or any other signs of impending dissolution. Family— Tl’RniDAL. Subfamily— TURDhW. F. ESPECTIXG the geographical distribution of the Black Redstart, Seebohm writes : — “ In the south it extends from Portugal through Algeria to Palestine. Northwards its range becomes more restricted, and apparently does not extend east of the valleys of the Dnei.ster and the Vistula or north of Holstein. In antumn stragglers have been known to occur in West Russia, Scandinavia, the north of England, Scotland, and Ireland, the Faroes (on the authority of Captain Feilden), and even, it is said, as far as Iceland. North of the Alps it is for the most part a migratory bird, though a few are known to frequent situations where open water is to be found during the wdnter. South of the Alps it is found throughout the year, its numbers being inereased during winter, its range at that season extending as far south as Nubia.” “As the Black Redstart ver}- rarely occurs in Norfolk, and has not been recorded from the Eincolnshire coast, it seems probable that the birds which visit our islands come from Holland, where it is exceeding!}' common, and follow the coast, choosing the shortest passage across the Channel.” This is an autumn and winter visitant to onr southern coasts, being most com- monly met with in Devon and Cornwall ; but whether it really remains to breed with ns has been questioned : eggs supposed to belong to this bird have, from The Hi.ack Redstart. Rut id l la ///it, Scop. Black Redstart The Black Redstart. 45 time to time been obtained in various localities, but in no case have the birds themselves been satisfactorily identified in connection with these eggs : thus an egg, believed by several eminent Ornithologists to be that of the Black Redstart, was passed round at a Aleeting of the Zoological Society in 1878, by the Rev. R. P. Barron, M.i\. ; he having obtained it with two others in Hertfordshire in 1876. This egg was sent to me for illustration in my “ Handbook of British Oology,” together with the remains of the nest ; Mr. Barron writing respecting it as follows “ The nest, I fear, is not very perfect, having been two years left in its place ; it was found in the middle of May, 1876, right inside the hollow trunk of a living elm-tree, at a distance of about seven or eight feet from the ground, in a projecting ledge of the inside wood, and within a few feet of a small lake. There were originally three eggs, of a slightly pinkish tint before being blown ; they had been forsaken ; the nest seemed to be lined with hair and hay. You need not, of course, return the egg or nest.” When I received this egg I was satisfied, from the distinctly unhesitating decision of well-known authorities, that it was a genuine Black Redstart’s ; by daylight, it then showed a scarcely perceptible bluish green tinge, which has since entirely faded : looking at it now in conjunction with the remains of the nest, I see no reason why it should not be a white egg of the common Robin. With regard to Mr. Stirling’s nests, he does indeed note that in one instance the hen was engaged in incubation ; but, as he does not appear to have secured her, and all his nests were found in hedges or thorn fencing, the nidification of this species in Great Britain must still remain unproved, so far as his observations are concerned. His account however is worth quoting : — (“ Birds of Sherwood Forest,” pp. 67, 68) ” My first acquaintance with it was the discovery, on May 17th, 1854, of a nest in a thorn hedge by the side of the road leading from Ollerton to Kdwinstowe. It was placed about four and a half feet from the ground, and was constructed of dry bents, intenningled with a little moss, and lined with hair. When I found it, it contained four eggs ; had it remained undisturbed, I have no doubt they would have increased to the usual number of six, as the female was on the nest. As it was, I appropriated them as a valuable addition to my collection. This, however, was not a solitary instance, for two years later, on May i8th, 1856, another nest was taken from the same hedge, near the place from which I had taken the previous one ; it contained one egg, which was brought by the finder to me. A third nest was taken the next day at Ollerton ; it was placed in the side of a cattle hovel, amongst the thorns with which the upright framework was interlaced, and was constructed of dr}^ grass VoL. I. I 46 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. onl}% and lined, as were the others with hair. The second nest had moss mixed with the grass, like the first.” I have eggs of the Yellow-Hammer which might easily be mistaken for those of the Black Redstart ; they are small for the species, being evidently deposited a yonng bird, and are pure white. Unless the female was distinctly identified on the nest before she slipped awa}% it is possible that she may have belonged to quite another species : white eggs occur now and again with many birds, and it is probable that the same hen would lay white eggs year after year. The Black Redstart in breeding plumage has the upper parts slate- greyish, the rump and upper tail-coverts chestnut ; wings brown, with the secondaries broadly bordered with white on their outer webs ; tail chestnut, with the two central feathers brown ; forehead, face, chin, throat, breast, axillaries and under wing coverts black ; belly and flanks buff ; bill black, feet blackish, iris brown. The female is much duller than the male, being smoky brown above and slightly paler below, the white margins to the secondaries sordid, the chestnut of rump and tail suffused with brownish. Nestlings are spotted above and below, but as soon as they acquire their adult plumage they resemble the female ; their full colouring not being attained until the second }"ear. In its habits the Black Redstart is very like the Robin, but especially in its frequent characteristic stoop, accompanied by an upward jerk of the tail, and its alarm note tek, tek, tek. It appears to court the neighbourhood of mankind, frequenting farmyards, orchards and gardens ; and, as recorded by Howard Saunders, “ Bven in London one frequented the grounds of the Natural History Museum, South Kensington, from November 1885 until the snow-fall of January 6th, 1886.” The nest of the Black Redstart is usually placed, like that of the commoner species, in holes in walls or clefts of rocks, but at other times on rafters in sheds and outhouses, or niches and shelves in old castles or summer houses. No particular effort is made to conceal it. The structure itself is externally rough and loose, like that of the Robin ; being composed of twigs, bents, rootlets and moss ; the lining is neat and well rounded, of hair and sometimes feathers and cobwebs. The eggs number from four to seven, but usually five ; they are as a rule pure glossy white, occasionally with a faint bluish tinge and more rarely still slightly brownish or minutely speckled at the larger end with brown. Now, although my egg, when exhibited, was at once pronounced that of the Black Redstart, it was, unfortunately, found in a nest built in a hollow tree, and it is believed that this species seldom, if ever, builds in such a situation. On the other hand there is no reason why some of the considerable numbers The Black Redstart. 47 of this species which visit Great Britain when on migration should not remain to breed with ns. John Cordeanx, in the “Zoologist” for 1893, states that this species is a very frequent visitor at Flamborongh Head ; both in spring and autumn : in 1891, he says, they came in battalions, first some on April 6th and again a great rush on May loth and nth, scores of fine males being seen in hedges and gardens. Then again, in the volume of the same publication for 1894, G. W. Bradshaw records the fact that a male was shot at Ninfield near Bexhill, on April loth. It therefore seems far from improbable that the discovery of the nest by a lady in Dumfriesshire in 1889, an account of which was published in the “Zoologist” for 1890 by Mr. O. Hammond, was genuine; he says: — “ A lady, a near neighbour of mine, who is fond of observing birds, tells me that about the 12th of June last year, she found a nest of the Black Redstart about half a mile from Maxwelton, in Dumfriesshire. The nest was in a stone “ dyke ” (wall), by the side of a road on a high hill, called “ Crossford.” The young were hatched. She tells me that she often went to watch the birds, both with a field glass and without one ; that they let her get veiy^ near, that she is certain of their identity, and that the}'^ were Black, and not Common, Redstarts.” The food of this species consists of insects and their larvae, spiders, small Crustacea, and occasionally of small garden fruits : winged insects it captures in the air, after the manner of the commoner species, beetles, larvae and spiders it seeks for on the earth, especiall}' on ground which has been newly turned up. In captivity the usual soft food, with the addition of cockroaches, spiders, mealworms, or wireworms, will suffice ; but most small insects will be acceptable. The song of this bird is simple, but the few notes are full and rich : it is therefore not surprising, seeing how handsomely it is coloured, that it should sometimes be kept in cage and aviary. Although not infrequently exhibited at the bird-show of the “Omis” Society in Berlin, the Black Redstart seems to have rarely put in an appearance at an English exhibition : I have, however, seen it at the Crystal Palace Show. I can say nothing experimentally of this species : doubtless it would be easy to keep, and would make an engaging pet : but it ought to be turned loose in an aviary. Small insectivorous birds, when permanently kept in cages, rarely sing and usually die of apoplexy ; at least that is my experience, excepting in the case of the Skylark, Woodlark, Nightingale, and sometimes the Robin : the last mentioned generally singing more or less, even when caged, but rarely living long in close captivity. 48 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. So long as any part of yonr domain is infested with cockroaches, yon need never question the practicability of keeping Redstarts alive, no matter whether your aviary be warmed or unheated ; if yon can give them their daily beetle trap to forage in. Redstarts will live ; but, if possible, extreme frosts should be avoided. Family— TURDIDyF. S tibfam ily — TURDINyF. The Red-Spotted Bluethroat. Cyaneciila succica, Linn. Also known as the “Arctic Blue-throated Robin”; it is an occasional straggler to Great Britain, but chiefly to the southern and eastern coasts in autumn and spring ; it has, however, been recorded from Scotland.* Seebohm gives the following account of its distribution : — “ The Arctic Blue-throat breeds within the Arctic circle, or in the birch-regions at high elevations of more southerly climes, both in Europe and Asia ; in the latter continent it breeds as far south as the Himalayas, and occasionally crosses Behring’s Straits into Alaska. The European birds pass through Central and Southern Europe and Palestine on migration, and winter in North Africa as far south as Abyssinia ; whilst the Asiatic birds, with the exception of those individ- uals breeding at high elevations in the south, pass through Turkestan, Mongolia, and North China, and winter in Baluchistan, India and Ceylon, Burma, the Andaman Islands, and South China.” The male Bluethroat in breeding plumage has the upper surface brown ; the tail-coverts chestnut, the two central tail feathers dark brown, the remainder with the basal half chestnut and the outer half dark brown ; a white or pale buff superciliary stripe from the base of the upper mandible to some distance behind * .'\boiit sixteen or seventeen instances of its occurrence had been recorded up to 1877, but in September 1883, considerable numbers were observed on the ea.stern coast (chiefly in Norfolk) and a still greater number in 1884. Red-Spotted Bluethroat The Red-Spotted Bluethroat, 49 the eye ; the cheeks, chin, throat and gorget glossy cobalt blue, centred with chestnut, bordered with black, and then on the chest again bounded by a belt of chestnut ; remainder of under parts huffish white ; the wing coverts and axillaries yellower; bill black, feet brown, iris brown. The female is much duller, showing none of the blue or chestnut colouring of the male until old, when she sometimes more nearly resembles him in hues ; the band across her chest is dark brown. In the autumn much of the bright colouring is lost, the new feathers being broadly fringed with grey, but in the spring this bordering disappears. Young males resemble the female; but nestlings are streaked with blackish, and, excepting in the chestnut base to the tail, are not unlike young Robins. In its habits this species much resembles the Redbreast ; in Heligoland it is said to frequent potato-fields in the autumn, but in the spring to haunt the gooseberry and currant-bushes in gardens, or beds planted thickly with cabbages, just beginning to throw out fresh sprouts. In the north however it is essentially a marsh-loving bird. The Rev. H. H. Slater in his “Field notes in Norway” (Zoologist 1883) says of the Bluethroat : — “ Very plentiful on the Dovre Fjeld. At Fokstuen I might have shot twenty males any day, but the females were great skulkers, and seldom showed themselves. The note of this bird is remarkably varied, but may be recognized by the metallic ‘ ting ting ’ with which it usually commences its warble, which is just like a couple of strokes 011 a small high-toned triangle. It also has a peculiar hurried way of singing, as if it were anxious to get to the end of its song as soon as possible. At Hjerkiem it was very common also, both in the birch scrub and even in the dwarf willow and juniper scrub above the birch limit on the fells. I found a nest here with eight eggs, and sat down by it to blow one of them. The old birds at once came up and hovered angrily round me, often within a yard of me, though the eggs were not at all incubated, the female also quite forgetting her usual anxiety for concealment. Not only they, but every other Bluethroat within hearing of this excited couple, hurried up also, until I must have had about a dozen scolding within ten yards of me at once ; the moment I rose, however, they all vanished, like Roderick Dhu’s warriors, ‘ where they stood.’ The nest was made of the finest grasses, and placed in an open space in the birch wood, under a branch of trailing juniper.” The Bluethroat being, as already noted, an inhabitant of marshy land, it usually constructs its nest either in some chance cavity in the side of one of the many mounds or hummocks which abound on the irregular fjelds of Lapland and the tundras of Siberia, or in the more swampy parts of the forest. Naturally it VoL. I. K 50 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. is not easily discovered, unless b}' chance the incubating female is flushed from her eggs. The nest itself is of loose construction, fashioned somewhat like that of the Robin, the materials used being mostly dried grass and rootlets, the cup being neatly lined with hair : the five to eight eggs have a greenish ground tint and are finely speckled and marbled with rnfous-brown. The food of this bird consists of small worms, centipedes, spiders, insects and their larvae and small seeds of weeds ; the young are fed very largely upon mos- quitoes, which the parents capture on the wing, after the manner of Flycatchers. Seebohm gives the following full account of its song : — “ On its first arrival it often warbles in an undertone so low, that you fancy the sound must be muffled by the thick tangle of branches in which you think the bird is concealed, whilst all the time he is perched on high upon the topmost spray of a young fir, his very conspicuousness causing him to escape detection for the moment. His first attempts at singing are harsh and grating, like the notes of the Sedge-Warbler, or the still harsher ones of the Whitethroat ; these are followed by several variations in a louder and rather more melodious tone, repeated over and over again, somewhat in the fashion of a Song-Thrush. After this you might fancy the little songster was trying to mimic the various alarm-notes of all the birds he can remember ; the chiz-zit of the Wagtail, the tip-tip-tip of the Blackbird, and especiall}^ the ivhit-whit of the Chaffinch. As he improves in voice, he sings louder and longer, until at last he almost approaches the Nightingale in the richness of the melody that he pours forth. Sometimes he will sing as he flies upwards, descending with expanded wings and tail to alight on the highest bough of some low tree, almost exactly as the Tree- Pipit does in the meadows of our own land. When the females have arrived there comes at the end of his song the most metallic notes I have ever heard a bird utter. It is a sort of ting-ting, resembling the sound produced b}" striking a suspended bar of steel with another piece of the same metal.” It is curious that the Rev. H. H. Slater should have stated that the Blue- throat commences'' its song with the same metallic ting-ting; because, judging from the few birds I have kept which ' uttered metallic sounds, I should have expected the latter, and not Seebohm’s version, to be the case. Gatke in his “ Birds of Heligoland” observes :• — “ One would hardly believe that the home of so lovely a creature as the Bluethroat extended so far north as the coast of the Polar Sea, particularly as its beautiful azure blue and rusty orange dress gives one the impression of its being a native of tropical latitudes. As a matter of fact, its life is divided between its Arctic nesting stations and its winter quarters, The Red-Spotted Bluethroat. 51 which extend to the hot regions of central Africa and southern Asia. The migratory flights of this little bird between regions so widely separated have furnished the most interesting material towards a flnal solution of a hitherto open question, viz : What is the greatest speed attainable by a bird during its migration flight ? and have yielded the astonishing result of one hundred and eighty geographical miles per hour.”* Why one hardly ever sees this lovely bird in captivityt is a puzzle which I have never been able to solve ; not only are its plumage and song admitted to be well-nigh perfect, but it is itself naturally tame and confiding : Gatke says, for instance : — “ If, during one’s garden occupations, one pays no special attention to the bird, or pretends not to notice it, it will for hours long hop around near one, at twenty, fifteen, or even a less number of paces off, some- times in rapid, sometimes in more measured leaps, catching insects the while ; at each of its many pauses it gives a jerk with its tail, which it has raised above its wings, and looks around with clear, dark eyes. If, however, it becomes aware of being watched, it vanishes swift as lightning, in long bounds, under some shrubs or among some bushes, only, however, after a few moments, to again make its appearance as simple-hearted as before.” As regards the practicability of securing plenty of examples of this species, Gatke says: — “I remember one occasion, in May, 1845 1846, when there were some sixty of the most beautiful male birds of this species, all picked specimens, tying on a large flat dish in my cellar ; and I might easily have doubled that number had I accepted all that were offered me on the same day. Aeuckens obtained nearly as many, all these birds having been caught by boys, in nets.” There is therefore not the least reason why this bird should not be as readily procurable, and when reconciled to captivity, make as delightful an aviary pet, as the universally beloved Pekin Nightingale (Liothrix liiteusj : it ought to be quite as cheaply obtainable ; possibly the White-spotted Bluethroat may be purchasable from the Dutch dealers, but I never saw a specimen of a Bluethroat exposed in the shop of any bird-dealer, either in England or on the Continent. Dr. Gunther, the late keeper of the Zoological Department in the Natural History Museum, informs me that he has had several Bluethroats, but he found them verj^ delicate and difficult to keep alive : this may perhaps be the reason for the rarity of this species in the market. • This statement has since been called in question by scientific Ornithologists. t .-\n example of the Dutch race was exhibited at the Crystal Palace in February 1896 : it was somewhat knocked about; possibly freshl}- imported. 52 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. The Bluethroat is sometimes obtainable, for I know of two avicnlturists who have kept it ; Mr. Abrahams says that it has never come into his hands, but Mr. Dresser informs me that he has seen it offered for sale in the market of St. Petersbnrg. Family— TURDID^. Subfamily— TURDIN^. The Redbreast. Erithaciis rubcciila, DiNN. The Robin breeds throughout Europe northwards to the Arctic circle, east- wards across Russia to the Ural Mountains, southwards to the south of Spain, the west of Northern Africa, the Canaries, Madeira and the Azores. In autumn it migrates sonthM^ards to Southern Europe, the Sahara, Egypt, Palestine, Asia Minor, N.W. Turkestan and Persia. In Great Britain it is generally dis- tributed ; it has not however, hitherto, been known to breed in the Shetlands. Although called Redbreast the breast is rather tawny sienna than red. The adult male has the upper parts olivaceous brown, slightly more ruddy on the crown ; outer wing-coverts with the tip of the outer web buff ; primaries dark ashy grey, with brownish outer webs, secondaries narrowl}^ tipped with whitish ; a frontal band, the lores, ear-coverts, chin, throat, and breast tawny sienna, or orange chestnut ; belh^ pure white ; flanks and under tail-coverts sandy brownish shading off into huffish white ; tail below ashy : bill black, feet brown, iris almost black. The female has the frontal band, lores, and chin more smoky, and the throat of a duller, more sandy, hue excepting at the sides ; the crown of the head and the bill are also broader than in the male. Nestlings have all the small feathers of the upper and under surfaces ■ spotted in the centre with buff and tipped with blackish ; but birds of the year differ but little from their parents excepting that their colours are a little paler. Redbreast. The Redbreast. 53 The habits of this most confiding and familiar little favourite are pretty generally known to bird lovers ; it is fond of haunting the homes of mankind, but more especially in the winter-time, when it thereby has a chance of appeasing the pangs of hunger ; but many pairs remain to breed in holes and corners of garden, orchard or outhouse, and therefore are occasionally seen about one’s premises almost throughout the year. It would appear that at the pairing season each male Robin claims, and defends against all intruders of his own species, an area snfBciently large to provide food for his expected family, and many are the battles which are fought, even to the death, in the early spring. In the winter if yon care to try the experiment of putting out a trap baited with a livel}" mealworm, you may catch Robin after Robin without difficulty ; but, in the spring, should yon have a nest in your garden, you will see one pair only ; should a stranger appear, he is chased and attacked immediately ; woe be to him if he be the weaker bird, for even his death will not appease the rage of his opponent ; mutilation alone being satisfactory to his vengeful eye. The only time at which we miss the Redbreast about our homes is during the moulting season ; for then it retires to the seclusion of the woods and coverts of the country to change its clothing ; but no sooner has it donned its bright winter dress than it is with us again. At this season when we gladly welcome the reappearance of onr trustful little friend, and delight, when gardening, to watch it impudently hopping about within a foot of our spade, or even for the nonce alighting on it to peep into the earth we have just turned over,* the Latin races are capturing this charming bird in myriads and slaughtering them for food. Excepting when on migration the Robin rarely flies high or for great distances. The flight itself is widely'' undulatory ; the moment it alights and every half minute or so subsequently if it should have settled on a branch, it goes through a spasmodic little stooping action accompanied by a lowering of the head, flip of the wings and an upward jerk of the tail : on the earth it proceeds by long hops, with a pause and the characteristic epileptic stoop after every few hops. The building site of this bird varies almost endlessl}’, tany hollow into •When digging one daj’ in ni}- garden a Robin hopped between my feet alighting on the top of nn- spade, from which, a moment before, I had removed my foot, and there it sat peeping into the hole and then glancing sideways up in my face as if asking me to continue to turn over the earth; a feat which I could not accom- plish without disturbing the bird. t Mr. I'rohawk writes that a pair of Robins built on the bend of a gutter pipe to his house in 1894 and 1895, at a height of 20 feet from the ground: the pipe was slightly concealed b}' a few entangled spraj-s of Ampelojysis Vcitchii : the situation was identical each year. I 54 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. which it can stuff its nest seems to be welcome ; if built near the habitation of man, it may be placed in a corner of an outhouse, or a ledge in a dust- bin, in a watering-pot hanging on a nail, a quart pot hanging on a fence, a flower pot in a shed, in ivy on the house wall, in creepers on a fence, ' in the side of a bean-stack or pile of brush-wood : in all which situations I have found it ; in the country an old teapot flung into a plantation may be I chosen, or a slight depression in the ground below a tree or ivy-covered I stump, a cranny in a rock or a deserted chalk- or sand-pit, or a hole in a grassy bank : but the Robin’s favourite nesting-site is at the side of a wide public road bounded on either hand by a wood, from which a sloping irregular bank partly covered with ivy and bramble descends to the thorough- fare ; during the frosts of winter or during heavy rains a large flint or a fragment of rock is dislodged and rolls into the road leaving a hollow j| partly overhung by ivy or fern : such a site is tolerably certain to be occupied | the following spring, and each succeeding year, by a pair of Redbreasts. | I believe that of the many Robins which nest in onr gardens and houses, I not one pair in twenty has the pleasure of seeing its young leave the nest ; f nearly the whole of them fall victims to cats. As to the cat not eating Robins, that I have proved to be the wildest fiction; a mere rustic legend, no more true to fact than the reputed poisonous qualities of the slow-worm and newt. ^ The nest of this bird, when placed in holes, is a loosely built structure, * but is more compactly formed when situated in ivy or creepers ; the outer walls are made of fine roots, bast, or coarse dry grass, bents, and sometimes a few dead oak leaves intertwined with hair and moss ; the cup is neatly lined with fine grasses, fibre and hair : when built in holes moss is largely used and when placed in ivy the front wall is largely covered with dead oak leaves, giving it somewhat the appearance of a Nightingale’s nest. The eggs vary in number from four to seven, but there are rarely less than five or more than six ; in colour they are usually fleshy white, more or less mottled and spotted with sienna- reddish and red-brown ; sometimes the spotting is weak, and forms a mere rusty nebula at the larger end ; occasionally the eggs are pure white. The note of anxiety is a sharp tick, tick-a-tck, tek, tck ; but when the • young are out of the nest it is sometimes varied by a veritable croak, reminding one of the Nightingale ; a thin plaintive piercing note, a kind of tseet (the same as the distress note) is usually repeated at intervals for a short time before the bird sings. The song itself is sweet and clear but somewhat plaintive : Henry Stevenson, in his “ Birds of Norfolk ” thus poetically describes The Redbreast. 55 it : — “ Clear and sharp it sounds in the fresh morning air, whilst still the hoar frost hangs upon the trees, or glitters on the threads of endless gossamer. The sportsman hears it by the covert side as at midday he rests awhile, and seeks refreshment after all his toils ; and later still, as he “ homeward plods his wear}-^ way,” that simple note, in some mysterious manner, awakens recollections of the past, when the same sport was shared with dear and absent friends. Again, in the months of September and October, as the day declines and the evening “ draws in,” how we listen to him in our gardens and shrubberies now chattering his little mandibles as he jerks up and down on some projecting branch, now singing sweetly, or at short intervals waiting for, and answering some neighbouring songster.” It has been said that the Robin sings best in the autumn and winter, but this is not the case ; the song is best heard when Nature is asleep, yet is quite as charming in the spring, when he carols to his mate as she sits upon her dappled eggs ; yet he often wanders far away at this period and she, disconsolate and hungry, calls to him with her far-reaching melancholy tseet, until he reappears and brings some appetizing morsel to reward her patient toil : for it must not be supposed that Finches alone feed their hens upon the nest, many other birds do the same and often have I seen the Robin do so.* The food of the Robin is verj^ varied ; small worms, spiders, centipedes, insects and their larvae forming its staple diet during the open months, but it by no means despises currants and cherries, and during the winter it largely subsists upon berries, probably seeds of weeds, and all kinds of household refuse picked up in the farmyard, or purposely thrown out for him by those who love to see a little bright life about their homes during the desolate months of the year. As a cage-bird the Redbreast is a great favourite, but it is almost a sin to confine this trusting little fellow, and it is somewhat risky to turn him out into an aviar}^ ; for, although at various times I have kept Robins which never molested other birds, individuals have been known to prove dangerous companions to less active species. A friend of mine, who turned loose a Robin into his aviary, lost a Bullfinch, Goldfinch, and Linnet in a single night, the Redbreasted little ruffian having drilled a neat hole into the skull of each of them. My first experience of Robins in captivity was in the winter of 1886-7, • The .American Blue-])ird is most attentive in this respect, constantly and most nnselfishh' giving^ everj- insect to his wife, from the time of courtship until the young are hatched. The ordinary call-note of our Robin is a short sharp whistled note. 56 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. when I caught twelve and selected the three brightest for pets, letting the remainder fly. As usual, these birds readily become quite tame, taking worms, insects, &c. from my fingers; indeed one of them did so on the third day after its capture. It soon learned to know me so well that it would follow me from one end of its flight- cage to the other. I used to sit down and watch this bird and I made a note of the number of beats of the wing which were required to take it from one end of its little aviary to the other ; this I could only do accurately by ear, but the number hardly ever varied : I then calculated that, flying in the same manner, the Robin would have to flap its wings 9240 times to cover a mile. Two of these Robins died in the spring, one after eight, and the other after nine months confinement ; the third I gave away to a friend. In September, 1887, I again caged two Robins, the first of which became perfectly tame in about a week and would come at my call to take mealworms or earthworms from my fingers ; both died of a pnlmonaiy complaint in the spring of 1889, I having turned them into an nnheated aviary: it thus became clear that after eighteen months of comparative warmth, the Robin is unfit to cope with the severity of an Knglish winter. Since then I have had several of these charming little songsters, but I do not think I shall ever keep another ; I always feel that a bird which will of its own free will enter your house and remain for weeks (if you permit it) a willing captive, should not be “ cribbed, cabined or confined.” One autumn, after allowing a Robin to take possession of a greenhouse for a week, I was finally obliged to drive him out ; on account, not only of the disfigurement of my plants, but of his propensity to dig for worms in the flower-pots. f N IGHTINGALE. The Nightingale. 57 Fatuity — TURDIDyF. Sub f am ily— TURDIN^E. The Nightingale. Daulias luscinia, LiNN. OWARD SAUNDERS gives the following as the geographical distri- bution of this species ; — “ On the Continent, Northern Germany appears to be the highest authenticated latitude for our Nightingale ; south of which, except where systematically molested by bird-catchers, it is generally distributed throughout Central Europe. In such southern countries as Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey, it is very abundant in suitable localities ; breeding also in North Africa, Palestine and Asia Minor. Its north-eastern limit in Europe appears to be the valley of the Vistula ; and in Russia it is confined to the southern provinces.” The Nightingale visits Great Britain early in April but does not reach the more northern counties until later, it leaves ns again in August and September; it has not been known to occur in Ireland, its occurrence in Scotland is doubtful and in East Devon, Shropshire and South Yorkshire it is rare; its distribution is somewhat local, but in the woods of some of the southern counties it is very abundant. The colouring of this species above is russet-brown, the tail-coverts and tail being chestnut reddish. Below it is pale biiff, greyish on the breast and flanks and brownish on the axillaries ; under tail-coverts buff, deeper than on the centre of throat and abdomen. Bill brown above, pale horn-colour below ; feet brown ; iris hazel. The female has a broader crown and bill than the male, but resembles it in colouring. Nestlings are darker and have most of the feathers above spotted with golden-brown ; below they are barred with greyish-brown. The Nightingale is a bird of the woods, its favourite haunts are copses, plantations, shrubberies and all timbered land where trees rise amongst dense and tangled undergrowth ; but open forest is not suited to its somewhat timid and skulking nature. As one wanders on the outskirts of some of the almost L VoL. 1. 58 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs impenetrable Kentish woods, it is no unusual thing to see this russet coloured songster dart out from the covert, and after an irregular flight of a few yards disappear again amid the thick foliage. In its actions the Nightingale resembles the Robin, but it has none of the impudent confldence of that bird ; and, though very pugnacious, it is no match for the Redbreasted bird ; of which, indeed, I proved that it stands greatly in awe : — On one occasion I turned a Nightingale loose in an aviary in which a Robin was flying about and, no sooner did they catch sight of one another, than Bob flew straight for Philomel, who crouched on the ground in such abject terror, that I quickly snatched him up to save his life. (It was a male Philomel !) In a state of nature, when scared, the Nightingale always seeks concealment in some tangled cover of bramble, hawthorn, scrambling honeysuckle or shady evergreen, uttering the while its harsh croak of alarm, and clicking together its mandibles after the fashion of other insectivorous birds. On the rare occasions when one catches a glimpse of it, in some small clearing in wood or shrubbery, seeking for small worms, beetles, or spiders, its behaviour is precisely that of the Robin, the manner in which it jumps and jerks at the worm, and having gulped it down, stands for a moment with head erect and tail slightly raised ; then bobs, flicks its wings and throws up its tail, is in every respect a perfect facsimile of the Redbreast’s actions. Like most of the Thrush-tribe the Nightingale turns over dead leaves most industriously in the search for concealed insects. Such is my experience of this bird as seen in the Kentish woods ; but Henry Stevenson, speaking of it in Norfolk says : — “ Though frequenting the thick cover of our groves and shrubberies, the Nightingale is by no means a shy bird, at least on its flrst arrival, but sings fearlessly throughout the day in the most exposed situations. In my own garden, bordered on two sides by public roads, I have known one sing at intervals throughout the day, on the yet leafless branches of an almond tree, perfectly indifferent to the voices and footsteps of the passers by; and on the ist May, 1864, a most exquisite songster stationed himself on a small tree, in Mount Pleasant lane, close to the footpath, where groups of Sunday walkers, both morning and afternoon, stopped to listen to its ‘ sweet descants,’ and probably for the flrst time in their lives saw, as well as heard, a Nightingale.” This last sentence chimes in exactly with my belief. It is not often easy to discover the author of sweet Philomel’s discourses ; one needs to look long and carefully ; and perchance, at length, one finds that the singer which one has been seeking for in the undergrowth, is perched among the smaller branches of some lofty elm ; not that it always seeks so high a seat ; for, many a time, on a hot spring morning I have seen it in full song in a The Nightingale. 59 plantation of bircli trees grown for hop-poles, and among the briars and rank vegetation at their roots I have often sought and sometimes found its nest. The song of the Nightingale surpasses in melody and charm that of any other bird ; it commences usually with a long-drawn plaintive phwee, phwee, phwee, phwee, repeated from four to six times in succession, and followed by a rapid water-bubble chooka, chooka, chooka, chooka, chooka, chookee, and then perhaps a series of clear notes commencing tooey, too, too, too, tooti, more and more rapidly uttered and increasing in power ; sometimes the song commences with this tooey, yet more often with the complaining note : but, without the bird singing at one’s side, it is impossible to remember, much less to do justice to, this brilliant musician ; once heard, it can never be mistaken for anything else ; the Blackcap sometimes strives to copy the melody, and does it fairly well ; but he sings too loud, without the softness of sweet Philomel. On one occasion when out with Mr. Frohawk at twilight, on the skirt of a Kentish wood we heard a Song-Thrush and a Blackbird trying to outdo a Nightin- gale : it was all in vain, all three birds were perfect masters of their art ; the Thrush, by introducing part of the song of the Nightingale, much im- proved his own natural performance ; but the Blackbird scorned to copy, he swung out his full flowing phrases in grand style, and when he knew him- self beaten, in a royal rage he charged the tree in which the little russet songster sat, and drove it from its retreat ; but the Nightingale, nothing daunted, perched on a branch of another tree some fifty feet away, and then the concert recommenced ; never before or since have I heard any of these three species sing so superbly. The nest of the Nightingale is usually placed in a hole in the ground, less frequently in the forking base of a pollard partly overhung by rank grass and fern-fronds, rarely in bramble or hawthorn, a foot or more above the earth, but in such unusual positions I have only twice found it, its usual site is in a depression at the foot of a tree, pollard, or bramble-bush well concealed by ferns, grasses or other short undergrowth. On several occasions, however, I have found it fully exposed to the sky, among the drifted oak- leaves in a small clearing close to some blind keeper’s path : when thus situated, it appears to the casual pedestrian to be merely a round hole among the dead leaves ; but, to the experienced birdsnester, it is fully revealed at a glance. Curiously enough the rustics who, in a desultory fashion, have plundered and destroyed nests from their babyhood upwards, invariably over- look all nests which are merel}^ protected by their environment in this fashion, and express the greatest wonder that a townsman should instantly recognize 6o British Birds with their Nests and Eggs. as a nest that which they would have passed as a hole in the ground, or a bunch of leaves. The structure itself is loosely put together, the cup very deep ; the outer walls composed of coarse dry flattened bents, rushes, or even flue flags, lined with finer bents, root-fibre, and sometimes a little horsehair ; the whole of the outer wall is covered and concealed by dead oak-leaves. The eggs, which number from four to six, are brownish* olive ; rarely, with a red-brown zone round the broader extremity. Still more rarely, they are bluish green, mottled with reddish brown, and somewhat resemble eggs of the Bluethroat : but eggs of this type I have never found, and those with the red-brown zone only twice ; the colouring is doubtless protective, for the typical eggs look at first glanee much like oval pebbles at the bottom of a small hole in the earth. The call-note is said to be imte, ivate, cur-cur; but this always appeared to me to be a note of caution or anger ; the call to the female is either a piercing thin key-whistle like that of the Blackbird and Robin, to which she replies in the same manner, or a soothing tooey to which she does not reply, at least I never heard her ; but perhaps the fact that a human being was in dangerous proximity to her nest, may have made her cautious : the alarm note is a low guttural sort of croak. The song of the Nightingale com- mences soon after his arrival on our coasts and continues until the young are hatched, which is iisually in June, after this it is only heard in the evening after the arduous duty of providing for its family is completed for the day. As the young birds hear but little of the song which is their greatest gift, during the rearing season, it has been suggested that they may learn it while still in the egg ; but this idea seems to me far fetched, and most improbable ; at best the unborn ehick could barely be capable of appreciating sound for a day or two before hatehing ; but, what seems to me to elinch the matter, is the fact that, if taken from the nest when eight days old and hand-reared. Nightingales in confinement do not sing a note ; or such is my experience. I think it far more likely that the song is partly learnt when the father is at evensong and most other voices are hushed, for then the Nightingale’s melody sounds most impressive ; probably the finishing lessons are given in Africa, during our winter months. . It has been said that Nightingales do not bear confinement well, yet I have seen individuals which have lived for years in quite small cages ; I remember one which hung against the wall of a house exactly opposite our hotel bedroom The Nightingale. 6i window at Baden-Baden, about the year 1867; we were told that it had been caged for several years, and it sang grandly when we heard it. Many years later 1 saw one at an inn, at Selling in Kent, which had been caged for about eight years and still sang well. Hvery year many are exhibited at bird-shows, the same specimens being shown in successive years. I have also known an instance of this species breeding and rearing young in an aviary. The spring-caught Nightingales are those which are sold for songsters, those obtained on their autumn migration are said rarely to live ; I have, unhappily, never had a captured Nightingale. In June, 1887, I secured a nest of five birds nine days old, and (following the usual most misleading instructions) I fed them, amongst other things, on finely chopped raw-meat ; consequently they all suffered from violent purging, which carried off the two strongest. Guessing that the meat was the cause of this disaster, I at once changed their diet, and successfully brought up the three others upon a mixture of four parts pounded dog-bisciiit, four parts oat flour, two parts pea-meal, two parts yolk of egg, and one part ants’ cocoons, the whole well mingled with water into a moist paste. When about six weeks old, they began to quarrel about trifles, and pull out one another’s feathers ; therefore early in August, I placed them in three separate sections of a large aviary-cage with sliding wire divisions, and here they soon recovered their plumage. They were very tame, but, like most birds, objected to being handled; although this was frequently necessary, as they used to get their feet clogged with dirt, which they never attempted to remove for themselves. I now changed their diet again ; that upon which I had reared them proving too fattening, now that they were full-grown ; I knocked off three parts of the oat-flour and one of the pea- meal, substituting finely crumbled dry bread. Curiously enough these Nightingales would persist in sitting in the direct rays of the sun, the result of which was that two of them got heat-apoplexy and lost all interest in everything, appearing as if stuffed, neither moving nor eating. I gave them both a warm bath, after wliich one of them recovered, but the other died miserably about the end of August. It was said to have warbled a little before its attack, but I doubt it mj'self. My two remaining Nightingales became wonderfully confiding, and would come and pick caterpillars or mealworms out of the palm of my hand, but neither ever sang a note ; one died from a recurrence of sunstroke in August, 1888, and the other (a fine male bird) went off in a decline at the end of the same year. As pets, hand-reared Nightingales are neither so pretty, nor so charming, as Robins; their outline is pleasing, and their full intelligent eyes give them an alert appearance not belied b}’ their sprightly movements; but one wants VoL. I. 62 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. something more than a russet brown bird which only croaks or tooeys\ a Nightin- gale which sings is a joy for ever, but a silent Nightingale is a fraud. There are very few birds which sing their natural song when hand-reared, and the Nightingale is not one of them: whether the Robin is, I do not know; I tried to rear a nest of these once, but foolishl}^ gave them some chopped raw meat, which killed the entire half dozen in one day. The best mixture for successfully rearing all soft-food birds is as follows : — Four parts ants’ cocoons, three parts yolk of egg, one part dr}" bread-crumbs ; the whole mixed very moist at first, but given dryer as the birds get older : the young of Butcher-birds, Crows, &c., should have raw meat also, because flesh is to them a natural article of food. This species concludes the Thrush-like birds. {Turdina). Fa7nily— TURD I D^. Subfainily—SYL VIINFE. The Whitethroat. Sylvia cincrea, Bechst. Breeds abundantly in Scandinavia and Western Russia as far north as lat. 65°, and in the Ural Mountains up to lat. 60°, southwards throughout Europe to the Mediterranean. It winters in the Canaries and Northern Africa, passing through N.E. Africa on migration and extending its wanderings down the west coast to Damaraland. Eastwards it occurs in Asia Minor, where it is abundant in the nesting-season, in Palestine where it is partly resident, in Persia, Turkestan, and south-west Siberia. In Great Britain it is very common and generally distributed, being most rare in the extreme north of Scotland, and unrecorded from the Outer Hebrides. The adult male in breeding plumage has the head, neck and upper tail- Whitethroat, The Whitethroat. 63 coverts smoky grey, the remainder of the upper parts greyish brown, deepest 'on wings and tail, the wing-coverts and innermost secondaries broadly margined with rnfons ; the outer tail-feathers paler than the remainder, broadly bordered and tipped with white. Under surface white, shaded on the breast with vinous-buff and on the flanks with buff ; under wing-coverts and axillaries smoky grey ; bill dark brown, the lower mandible paler, feet pale brown, iris hazel. The female differs in the absence of the grey head and upper tail-coverts, and vinous breast. After its autumn moult the male resembles the female. Young birds are more rufous brown. The Whitethroat reaches us about the second week in April, though in mild seasons I have met with it earlier ; it takes its departure early in September. It is essentially a bird of the thicket, hedgerow, shrubbery or garden : in open spots overrun with blackberry, honeysuckle, stunted hawthorn, long rank grass and nettles you are almost certain to hear its cheerful little song or its harsh alarm note. Though rarely met with in dense woods, it abounds in those narrow strips of wood known in Kent by the names of s/iaivs and shaves; yet in lanes, and little frequented country roads where the hedges are untrimmed, and fringed at the bottoms with nettle and goose-grass, the Whitethroat is most in evidence ; here, among the nettle heads, the flimsy nest is often suspended ; not that the nest is always flimsy, for I have taken examples almost as stoutly built as that of a Sedge Warbler ; nor is the nest always situated in so apparently perilous a position as a bunch of nettles, for I have often taken it from the top of a clipped hawthorn hedge partly overgrown with ivy ; but it is most frequently found low down in bramble or dense but loose vegetation and more often than not near the foot of a thick hawthorn hedge. The nest is usually lightly constructed of dried stalks of plants and grasses with here and there knot’s of spider’s silk or sheep’s wool ; the lining is composed of fine bents and horsehair : it is generally ver^^ deep. Of ten nests in my collection, obtained during two consecutive years, two are interesting; one on account of its unusual size, the diameter of the interior of the cavity measuring nearl}’ three inches, and thickly lined with black hair ; the other has the walls rather tliickl}' edged with sheep’s wool intertwined with the grasses. The eggs, which usuall}^ number from four to five, rarely six, var}' a good deal in ground-tint and in marking ; the best known type is greenish, indistinctly mottled with greyish olive, the larger end zoned with spots and specks of slate- gre}’ and brown ; another not uncommon variety resembles the egg of the Garden Warbler excepting for a belt of scattered slate-grey spots towards the larger end, a third variety is stone grey with slightly darker mottling and looks almost like 64 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. a diminutive egg of the Pied Wagtail ; a fourth, somewhat larger, is similarly coloured, but spotted and splashed as if with ink ; then there is a dark mottled greyish form, almost like a small egg of the Titlark ; a pale ruddy variety with greyish mottling, reminding one of the Spotted Flycatcher’s egg, and a greenish white egg with scattered brown mottling speckled with blackish, and vaguely resembling some eggs of Passer; rarely its eggs are almost like enlarged editions of those of the Lesser Whitethroat, but with the surface between the blackish markings splashed and speckled with olive brown. The above are a few of the forms taken b}^ myself, and it would not be difficult to add to the list, indeed an assiduous collector never seems to come to the end of variation in this egg, either in size, form, ground-tint, or pattern ; I have one almost like that of the Dartford Warbler, but nearly spherical ; others which, had I not taken them my- self, I should have declared to be large eggs of the Sedge Warbler laid by an old bird, yet I took them from a most typical flimsy Whitethroat’ s nest, built in nettles ; they are almost large enough for eggs of the Garden Warbler. Many even of the best collections give a very poor idea of the modifications to which this bird’s eggs are liable, and the published descriptions seem, so far as I have been able to judge, to have been copied from one ornithological work into another, most authors speaking of specimens being pale buff, or huffish vdiite, spotted with yellowish brown and with violet-grey shell-markings : it would be rash to assert that such eggs never existed, but I must confess that I never saw anything approaching this variety among the hundreds which I have examined. This species is very largely insectivorous and its young are reared solely upon this diet, caterpillars, spiders, and crane-flies being its favourite articles of food ; in the early fruit season it also robs the raspberry canes and currant-bushes, and is not averse to elder- and blackberries ; early in August it is said also to eat the unripe milky corn. The “Nettle-creeper,” or “Jolly Whitethroat” as the rustics call this bird, has a short but clear and melodious song, and ma}' frequently be heard in the country lanes singing from the top of a hedge or one of the lower branches of a tree; sometimes yon may see him from simple exuberance of joy soaring upwards after the manner of a Pipit and presently flinging himself downwards to the hedgerow ; if you approach to watch him more closely he slips over to the other side of the hedge, rising and falling just ahead of you until convinced of your pursuit, when he wheels round and returns perhaps to the point from which he started ; near to which, perchance, his nest may be concealed. The call-note is a clear phweet-p/nved-p/nveef, but its alarm-note is a harsh hissing sound. The Whitethroat is well-known as a cage-bird and is not especially delicate. Lesser Whitethroat. The Lesser Whitethroat. 65 if supplied with plenty of insect food ; but, if this cannot be provided, he is un- able to stand an English winter in an unheated aviary, and without question an aviary, not a cage, is the only confinement to which any Warbler ought to be subjected : doubtless, like all these birds, the Whitethroat does in time become reconciled to the close imprisonment of a cage ; but no aviculturist, unless a great worshipper of bird-shows, would take much pleasure in watching its cramped movements in such an enclosure. The Whitethroat will sing freely in an aviary, but whether it ever does so in a cage I cannot say ; a male captured on its arrival in this country, probably would do so, in time ; but a hand-reared bird would be unlikely to give this satisfaction to its owner. It is therefore almost certain that caged Whitethroats are rarely kept excepting for the show-bench ; they would hardE be selected for their brilliant plumage, and their song would certainly be heard to the greatest advantage, to say the least of it, in an aviar}\ To keep so restless and sprightly a bird as the Whitethroat in close confinement, merely for the sake of the slight profit which it may bring to its owner in the way of prizes, is not only a cruelty, but a meanness, of which no real bird-lover, who took the trouble to reflect upon it, could well be guilty. Family— TURDIDA^. Subfam ily—S YL VIlNyF. HE European race of this species ranges northwards almost to the limit of forest-growth ; southwards it breeds throughout nearly the whole of temperate Europe, to Southern Europe it is chiefly a summer visitor, but Howard Saunders states that “ a few pass the winter to the east of Malaga.” The Lesser Whitethroat. Sylvia ciirruca, LiXX. 66 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. Its usual winter quarters are Northern and Central Africa, Arabia, Palestine, where it is also said to breed, and Persia. In Great Britain its distribution is decidedly local, being especially so on the east and west coasts and in Scotland, whilst in Ireland it is not known to occur. The adult male has the crown smoky grey, the nape, back and upper tail-coverts brownish slate- grey, the wings greyish brown with paler margins to the innermost secondaries, the tail-feathers dark brown excepting the outer ones, which are greyer and have white outer webs ; lores and ear-coverts dark brown. Under surface white, slightly tinged with yellowish brown on the breast and flanks ; bill dark slate- grey inclining to black, the under mandible with pale base : feet slate-grey ; iris pale brown. The female is slightly smaller and duller- coloured than the male. Young birds are browner, with better deflned pale margins to the wing-feathers ; bill and feet paler ; iris hazel. The Lesser Whitethroat reaches us late in April or early in May and usually leaves us again late in September, but stragglers remain nearly a month later, and Mr. Swaysland even obtained an example at Brighton in November. This species is more skulking in its habits than its larger relative, it frequents the margins of dense woods, copses, plantations, shrubberies, rural uncultivated hedges, especially those which border little frequented lanes and thickly planted gardens. When disturbed it either slips away into the dense scrub or flies up into the branches of some lofty tree where it hops restlessly from twig to twig uttering an excitable defiant note tsec, tsee, tsce, repeated rapidly nine or ten times ; if disturbed from its nest, however, its note is more like kek, kek, kek : the song is a rapid repetition of one whistled note ; it has been called a trill, but is too staccato to answer that description ; a few lower notes are sometimes added, but even these have a monotonous character. The nest is constructed at any time between April and June, but I have found more in May than in either of the other months ; it varies considerably in its height from the ground, being sometimes placed among the upper twigs of a tall hawthorn hedge, sometimes in brambles only a foot or two above the earth ; it is also occasionally found in furze-bushes ; but I took most of my nests either from hedges on the outskirts of woods, or in country lanes, the height from the ground being about four feet. Mr. Frohawk tells me that the Lesser Whitethroat, when building in shrubberies, very frequently The Lesser Whitethroat. 67 selects the snow-berry as a site for its nest : he also reminds me of the frequency with which those found by us at various times contained imperfect clutches ; a full clutch being the exception, and two to three eggs the rule. Although the bird itself is very shy, I have not observed that it makes any special effort to conceal its nest, and many a time when I have found it to contain only one egg, and have left it in the hope of subsequently securing it with a full clutch, I have found it torn out by some village clown. To take one egg from the nest of the Lesser Whitethroat is sufficient to ensure its desertion : even if a similarly coloured small marble is substituted, the only result is that the bird ejects the marble and then lets the enipt}^ nest alone ; I never knew her to lay a second egg after the first had been abstracted. Like the Wren, this little bird will run no risks ; if you interfere with her domestic arrangements, she will, for the time, give up housekeeping. The structure of the nest is much firmer, and, to my mind, neater than that of the Common Whitethroat ; a pretty little cup formed of stout bents and rootlets firmly interlaced with the twigs among which it is fixed and interwoven here and there with a little fine wool and spiders’ cocoons ; it is lined with fine bents, root fibre and a little horsehair. The eggs wary in number from four to five : when less than four are incubated, the nest is probably a second one and hurriedly constructed, the first having been tampered with. In colouring, the eggs vary much less than those of its larger relative ; indeed the difference in grotind- colour, is slight, varying from white to cream- colour, the markings diffused olive-brown, with underlying silver-grey or pale slate spots and overlying dots and lines of blackish brown : some specimens have the spots large and boldly defined, especially towards the rounded extremity where they frequently form an irregular zone ; sometimes the end of the egg enclosed by this zone is suffused with dirt}^ buff ; at other times the spots, though similarly disposed are small and scattered ; and, lastly, in some clutches the spots are rather small and sprinkled over the entire surface. Although I have found few birds so easily put off the nest before the completion of the clutch, no sooner has the hen commenced incubation than she becomes a very close sitter, only leaving her eggs at the last moment, when satisfied that her death-like inaction has failed to protect them from the intruder ; even then she does not move far away, but fidgets about in the scrub, scolding ; in this pastime she is frequentl}" accompanied b}^ the male bird which is usually within earshot, and promptly appears on the scene to investigate the cause of his consort’s ill temper. The food of the Lesser Whitethroat consists of small insects and their 6S British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. larvae, spiders, soft berries and small fruits, more particularly currants and cherries. Its flight is undulating. Mr. Blyth (Field Naturalist, Vol. I. p. 306) saj’s of the “ babillard or Lesser Whitethroat ” : — “He seems — to be always in such high spirits as not to know how to contain himself, taking frequently a long circuitous flight from tree to tree, and back again a dozen times, seemingly for no other purpose than mere exercise ; but he never mounts singing into the air like the Whitethroat.” Gatke speaking of it in Heligoland, says that “ Only solitary examples of this pretty little songster are met with on this island ; it is the earliest arrival among its nearer relatives during the spring migration, almost always making its appearance as early as the first days of April, even if the weather is still raw, and completes its migration by the middle of May. In the autumn, when it occurs still more sparingly, it may be seen from the latter half of September till towards the end of October, and at times also some- what later.” As a cage-bird the Lesser Whitethroat is not especially interesting ; nevertheless, if its song is not particularly attractive, I agree with Herr Mathias Rausch that it has the merit of zeal (Vide ‘ Geflederte Welt’ 1891, p. 342) “ inasmuch as, even in confinement, it sings the whole day long.” However, I have not personally had the pleasure of keeping a fully adult male of this little warbler. In June, 1887, I came across a nest of Lesser Whitethroats, evidently only about three days old ; and, so anxious was I to discover what they would be like in captivity, that I took the nest and attempted the difficult task of rearing them. With such young birds it was not only necessary to cover them up carefully with warm flannel every evening, after giving them their last meal ; but I had to turn out of bed at sunrise to give them their first breakfast ; no pleasant task at midsummer ! I persevered, however, feeding them regularly on moistened ‘ Abrahams’ Food ’ every hour, until they were old enough to require nourishment less frequently. Unhappily (as is often the case, even with the greatest care) they got very dirty : a flattened and pointed stick is a poor substitute for the parents’ bill. In consequence of the matting of their feathers, the two weakest died, probably from chill ; the two remaining birds were reared ; but, though unnaturally fat, from lack of proper exercise, they were incessantly clamouring for food ; yet they seemed healthy enough. About the third week of July, in the act of stretching forward to snatch some food which I offered, they fell dead from apoplexy : the moral of which is — do not overfeed youngsters because they cry. Blackcap. The Orphean Warbler. The Blackcap. 69 Family— TURDIDyE. Subfamily— S YL VIIN^Z. The Orphean Warbler. Sylvia or plica, Trmm. The existence of this species in Great Britain rests npon the authority of a female said by a bird-stnffer, Graham, of York, to have been shot near Wetherby, and npon a young bird caught in Middlesex, kept in captivity for nearly six months and then identified by the late Mr. B. Blyth. Nests and eggs supposed to belong to this species have also been taken. In spite of these facts, it seems to me that there is, at present, not sufficient evidence to justify the admission of the Orphean Warbler into the British list. As Mr. Seebohm remarks : — “ Under the most favourable circum- stances, even supposing no error to have crept into the history or identification of any of these occurrences, the Orphean Warbler can only be looked upon as a ver}'^ rare and accidental straggler to our islands. Family— TURDIDyE. Subfamily— S YL VIINrE. HIS delightful songster is generally distributed throughout Europe, breeding in every country from Scandinavia below 66° N. lat., and extending its range southwards to North Africa, south-eastwards to Asia Minor and Palestine, and also through the Caucasus to Western Persia. In the The Blackcap. Sylvia atricapilla, LiNN. VoL. I. N 70 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. ]\Iediterranean basin it has been obtained at all seasons. Its winter range is supposed to extend westward to Senegal and Gambia, and eastward to Nubia and Ab}’ssinia; in the Cape Verd Islands, Madeira, the Canaries and Azores it is apparently resident. In Great Britain this species is somewhat local, but pretty generally distributed. The general colouring of the upper parts of the Blackcap in breeding plumage is smoky grey, the upper part of the head jet-black ; the edges of the wing and tail feathers brownish ; under parts ash-grey, paler on the chin, the centre of abdomen, axillaries and under wing-coverts white ; bill dark horn brown, feet leaden grey, iris hazel. The female chiefly differs from the male in its rufous brown cap and generally somewhat browner colouring. The young male in its first plumage resembles the female, but acquires the black cap in the autumn without a moult. Both sexes of the adult birds are said to become somewhat browner after their autumn moult, but I have proved that the male retains its black cap throughout the year, a fact also attested by Mr. John Young (Vide Howard Saunders’ Manual p. 48.) Although partially resident in this country, most of the pairs which breed with us arrive from Africa about the middle of April, and leave us again in September. The Blackcap is a bird which delights in wild dense uncultivated land, almost impenetrable thickets, tangled hedges, plantations where hawthorn bushes alternate with straggling brambles, nettles, and honeysuckle vines ; even in badly kept gardens, where roses have run riot among the shrubs : in such spots it builds its neat and strongly constructed nest. In the clearings of the Kentish woods, where the removal of the trees has permitted the wild black- berr}% brion}^ convolvulus and many other things to sprawl over one another in profusion, rendering progression ruinous to clothing, I have often come across the nest of this bird : such clearings may either be on the outskirts or some distance within a wood. In the former case they are onl}^ separated from the main road by a hedge, or terminate in a steep bank running downwards to the thoroughfare ; in the latter case, they adjoin a rough cart road cut through the wood. Little accidental clearings, entered by ‘ blind ’* keeper’s paths, are also very favourite sites for the nest of this bird. The structure is very strongly built (though sometimes the walls are not very thick) and it is firmly attached to the stems of hawthorn, bramble, or other low- growing vegetation in which it is located. In form it is a neatly rounded * That is to saj', long disused and overgrown with moss and weeds. The Blackcap 71 cup, with walls externally composed of fine dry tough grass, more rarely with an admixture of straw, internally of fine grass, root-fibre and horsehair ; the outside is sometimes interwoven with a little moss and always strengthened and bound to the supporting twigs by woollen thread or silk from the cocoons of some spider or caterpillar ; in some nests, however, this thread is very scanty and can only be detected by carefully examining them with a lens, whereas in others it gives the outer walls a fluffy appearance to the naked eye. The eggs vary in number from four to five ; in size they are tolerably uniform, those of young birds being slightly smaller than those deposited by older individuals : in colouring they exhibit considerable variability ; so much so that the tyro, unacquainted with the bird itself, its habits, or its nest, might take specimens which, by comparison with imperfect illustrations, he would perchance identify as those of the Garden Warbler, Greater Whitethroat, Spotted Flycatcher and Titlark : even the experienced birdsnester unless aware of the different character of the structures formed by the two species might hesitate in deciding between some eggs of the Blackcap and those of the Garden Warbler. The ground-tint of the eggs is either chalky white, greenish white, pale buff, brownish buff, or flesh pink ; the surface is more or less densely spotted, blotched and streaked with soft greyish olive, earth-brown, smoky brown, or (in the pink eggs) dull mahogany red, giving the egg the appearance of having been smeared with blood ; above these again are sprinkled little spots and thread-like lines of black, or black-brown, often placed in the centre of a patch of the paler colouring which they serve to intensify. The flesh-coloured variety, which somewhat vaguely resembles the egg of the Spotted Flycatcher, is rare ; the only two nests purely of this type which I ever obtained, were probably the produce of the same pair of birds in succeeding years ; the two nests being situated near the top of the same rough hedge outside a small wood at Tunstall in Kent; the first I took on the 24th May, 1877, the second on the 29th May, 1878 : those of the later clutch are slightly larger and less pyriform than those of the previous year. Another variety, almost equally rare, has the ground-tint brownish buff, so densely mottled and blotched with brownish russet that, but for its minute black markings, it might almost be mistaken for some eggs of the Tree-Pipit. Both sexes incubate, but the male bird is more frequently seen on the nest than the female ; it is therefore probable that, as in the case of Doves, the hen sleeps on the nest and gives up her place to the cock, for day-duty, after he has finished his breakfast, only returning from time to time to enable him to feed. The nest of the Blackcap is not only built about a fortnight earlier than that 72 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. of the Garden Warbler; but, even when not tenanted, may be recognized as distinct from it, by its smaller, neater, and far more compact character ; the eggs also are frequently slightly smaller, and, even when somewhat like those of C. hortaisis, differ in the greater prominence of the small black markings on their surface. The food of this species consists of insects and their larvae, spiders, centipedes, small fruits and berries, more especially elder and service berries, though those of the ivy are also eaten by it ; the young are, however, principally fed upon small caterpillars. Although, on the Continent, it is said to feed upon ripe figs, my experience of it in confinement is, that it will not touch dried figs when cut open and placed with the soft food, but red or white currants it devours with avidity. Next to the Nightingale, the Blackcap is certainly our finest songster, and its powers of mimicry as well as its ventriloqnial gifts are superior to those of that most charming of all feathered vocalists ; its song is at one time full, rich and clear as that of a Blackbird, then soft and mellow, again brilliant and plaintive as a Robin’s notes, or rapid and almost shrill as those of a Wren ; it can copy deceptively the notes of many birds, even some portions of the Nightin- gale’s song, but it is almost too loud in its utterances to produce the latter in its purity. Among foreign songsters the only bird which reminds one somewhat of our Blackcap is the so-called “Pekin Nightingale” fLiothrix luteusj, a bird evidently far more nearly related to our Hedge Accentor. The song of the Blackcap may be heard from the highest branches of a lofty tree, from a low shrub, or even from the nest as it sits ; but after the young are hatched it ceases, the duty of finding food for its babes occupying the bird’s whole attention. When frightened this species scolds somewhat after the fashion of a Whitethroat, and, if flushed from its nest, it remains close by hissing angrily ; its call-note is said to be a repetition of the word tac or tec harshly uttered ; but it may be questioned whether this is really the call to its mate ; it seems more probable that it is merely a querulous observation, such as many of these Warblers indulge in at the approach of man : I am satisfied that its call is a soft whistle. In the autumn of 1894, I purchased a male Blackcap, which was procured for me by Mr. E. P. Staines, who kindly took the trouble to “meat it off”* for me. I turned it out into the same aviary with my Redstart and Wagtails, where it soon made itself at home; it used generally to roost upon a nail which had been driven into the wall, in the first instance, to support a log-nest. This bird * \ term applied to the process h}' which a wild-caught bird is induced to feed upon a soft mixture. Many aviculturists make the mistake of u.sing finely chopped raw meat mixed with bread-crumbs for this purpose, hence the term has arisen. [1 # - - ^ Wf^jt* Q^|^'4r 7 : ’■i.? '^r-- Ir- -■ »*& ► s V n’‘'» Garden Warbler. The Garden Warbler. 73 in due course became fairly tame ; it was tolerably quick at seizing spiders or mealworms and even earwigs, when these were thrown into the aviary. In the spring it began to record its song on one or two occasions, but I never heard it sing out. Eventually a Rosa’s Parrakeet bit one of its wings through, and a week later it died. Fa m ily — T URDID^. Subfamily— SYL VIINAl. The Garden Warbler. Sylvia horiensis, Bechst. More delicate than the Blackcap, the Garden Warbler does not arrive in this country until early in May, and towards the end of September it departs on its autumn migration. This species breeds locally throughout Europe, from about 70° N. in Norway, and 65° N. in Finland and Russia, to the shores of the Mediterranean, but it does not appear to winter in Europe ; it is not known to breed in Sicily or Greece, but Canon Tristram states that it does so in Palestine ; eastwards its range extends to lat. 59° in the Ural Mountains : its migration extends through Asia Minor and Egypt to the Sahara, Damaraland, the Transvaal and to the east of Cape Colony. Generally but very locally distributed over the greater part of England, but not recorded as breeding beyond Pembrokeshire and Breconshire in Wales, or in the western part of Cornwall ; probably pretty generally distributed in Scotland, although this has been questioned ; it has nevertheless been seen in most of the midland and southern counties from Banffshire downwards. In Ireland the Garden Warbler is both local and rare, but it has been recorded from Antrim, Fermanagh, Dublin, Wicklow, Tipperary and Cork. Gatke states that the Garden Warbler though quite common at Heligoland during both spring and autumn migrations, is less numerously represented than the Whitethroat. VoL. 1. o 74 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. The Garden Warbler in breeding plumage is olive-brown above, the wings and tail slightly darker, the flight feathers with narrow pale margins ; a slightly paler streak over the eyes ; under parts dull huffish white, purer on the belly, browner on the breast, flanks and centre of under tail- coverts. Bill deep brown, base of lower mandible paler, feet leaden grey, iris hazel, eyelid white. The female is very like the male but is slightly paler and probably has a somewhat broader head, but of this I am not certain. After the autiimn moult the adult birds become more olive above and more buff-coloured below. Young birds resemble their parents in winter plumage, but their secondaries have well-marked pale margins. The breeding season extends from the end of May to about the end of July. I have found this species breeding in considerable numbers in North Kent, occupying the same localities as the Blackcap, which was also fairly abundant ; I am therefore not prepared to endorse Seebohm’s statement that “ where the Garden Warbler is abundant the Blackcap seems always to be rare, and vice versa." In one sense, indeed, they do not breed together ; the Garden Warbler begins to build about a fortnight or three weeks later than the Blackcap, and by the time her first egg is deposited the earlier bird is hatching out or rearing her family. Although often heard in the woods, this species is less frequently seen there than either the Nightingale or Blackcap ; it is a shy skulking little bird frequenting the densest cover, the outskirts of woods where the undergrowth is thick and tangled, also the so-called “ shaws and shaves” of Kent, almost impenetrable copses and plantations, well-timbered gardens, nurseries, and shrubberies ; the fact that the Garden Warbler can be better recognised in the generally wider open spaces of the last mentioned haunts, having doubtless earned it the name of hortensis. The nest of this bird is usually situated in tangled blackberry, or low bushes, in copses or shrubberies ; but in kitchen gardens it may sometimes be seen in goose- berry bushes, or among well-covered pea-sticks : amongst the undergrowth in small woods and thickets it is by no means a rare object at the end of May or early in June ; though, of course, less common than that of the White throat : I have never found it at any great altitude, usually about two or three feet above the ground. The structure of the nest is externally somewhat looser and more slovenly than that of the Blackcap, but the cup is beautifully formed within ; the outer walls are formed of dry bents, or goose-grass and other fibrous plants ; sometimes mixed with a little moss and wool and lined with fine roots and horse- hair. The eggs vary in number from four to five and are tolerably constant in their colouring ; they are generally creamy, but sometimes pale greenish white, blotched and spotted with pale greyish olive or rufous brownish, with sometimes a The Garden Warbler. 75 few underlying spots of pearl grey, and a few blackish-brown snrface spots or hair- lines ; some examples are very faintly marked, with all the markings sinnons but arranged longitudinally and covering the whole snrface, others have somewhat bolder nebnlons patches of spots chiefly confined to the larger end, in others most of the markings run together into a vague smoky cap at the larger end, leaving the remainder of the egg almost white ; but the general effect of a crowd of Garden Warbler’s eggs impresses one with the conviction that they are extremely uniform in tone : some clutches contain small eggs, others large, according to the age of the parents ; their average size is abont the same as those of the Blackcap ; but the latter bird sometimes lays a much shorter and rounder egg than I have ever found in a Garden Warbler’s nest. The Garden Warbler sits somewhat closer than the Blackcap, only slipping off her eggs at the last moment and then diving down over the edge of the nest, so close to yonr hand that her wing will sometimes brnsh your fingers ; there is therefore no difficulty, apart from the different character of the nest, in making certain of the identity of any eggs which yon take yourself, and there is only one variety of the Blackcap’s eggs which conld by any chance be mistaken for the product of Sylvia hortensis. The song of the Garden Warbler is exceedingly pleasing, less rich and full than that of the Blackcap ; somewhat more plaintive, though rapidly enunciated ; in tone reminding one a little of an extra good Canary, yet without the shrieking notes which frequently mar the song of that bird. Excepting when rearing its yonng, this species sings frequently thronghont the day, but whether it sings again after the rearing of its single brood (I do not believe in the double- broodedness of this bird) I cannot say ; probably not : all I can positively state is that I have never heard it even as late as July, a month in which, occasionally, a late nest may be taken. The food of 5. hortensis in the spring and snmmer consists very largely of spiders, insects and their larvae, the caterpillars of the two smaller Cabbage butterflies fGanoris rapes and G. napij being favourite articles of diet and largely used for feeding the nestlings*. In the summer, however, currants and strawberries are not despised by the Garden Warbler, while in the antnmn frnits and berries seem to become its favourite food. The alarm note of the Garden Warbler is a kind of check, check, sometimes followed by a guttural sound. Speaking of the Garden Warbler, Stevenson • These larvje are eaten with avidity by all insectivorous birds ; whereas the caterpillars of the large Cabbage butterfly (G. Brassicce) seem to be offensive to nearly all. Why this should be the case, when one sees that all three caterpillars eat the same leaves, and produce very siii'iliar butterflies (which are eaten indis- criminately) is a poser. 76 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. observes : — “ I have rarely detected the song of this warbler in summer in close vicinity to the city, but in autumn, towards the end of August or beginning of September, a pair or two, with their little families (and the same may be said of the Blackcap and Whitethroat) invariably appear amongst the shrubs in my garden, betraying their presence by the same anxious cries so aptly described by Mr. Blyth, as ‘ resembling the sound produced by tapping two small pebbles together.’ This is evidently intended as a note of warning to the young brood, always care- fully concealed amongst the thick foliage, their whereabouts being indicated only by a rapid movement of the leaves, as they search the branches for berries and insects.” The call of the Garden Warbler to its mate is certain to be a soft sound ; but I have not specially noted it ; and, in all works on British Birds which I have studied the cry of alarm or warning is incorrectly stated to be the call-note : the same error is made with regard to many other species, not only of European but of foreign birds ; the harsh scolding chatter of the Pekin Nightingale having been stated to be its call note, probably because both sexes scold in unison ; whereas the actual call of that species consists, in the hen — of a single whistled note repeated five times, and in the cock — of a short measured song consisting of seven or nine notes. The Garden Warbler in confinement is certainly more sensitive to cold than the Blackcap : a friend of mine who is very fond of fishing, sometimes takes a fine net with him which he fixes up across the trout-stream ; by this means he has, from time to time, secured many interesting birds for stuffing (a proceeding with which I have no sympathy, for to my mind a live bird in the bush is far prefer- able to fifty dead birds in the hand). However, in September, 1888, he brought me two living birds, one of which was a male Garden Warbler. I turned these birds into a large cool aviary, among Waxbills, Mannikins and British Finches. The Garden Warbler seemed perfectly content, ate the usual soft food, as well as a few mealworms, caterpillars and spiders ; the frost did not appear to affect it unpleasantly, and, in the early spring, it sang heartily every day : in May its song became less frequent, it grew somewhat listless in its movements, yet continued to eat as freely as ever. One morning, in July, 1889, I found it dead, and dissection showed that its lungs were seriously affected. I should therefore recom- mend Aviculturists to keep this Warbler in a mild temperature during the winter months, and give it as much insect food as possible : it ought, moreover, to be kept in an aviary, so that it may be able to take plenty of healthful exercise.* * Mr. Staines, of Penge, gave me a second male in July, 1896, which is in perfect health at the time of penning this article. Barred Warbler. The Barred Warbler. 77 As an aviary bird, the Garden Warbler is well worth keeping ; it is active and at the same time capable of being tamed, although somewhat more shy than the Blackcap ; its song, though inferior to that of the latter species, is infinitely superior to that of any of the British Finches, yet that is not saying much for it, inasmuch as even the Robin’s plaintive little melody is purer in tone and more grateful to the ear than that of any of our Finches. Family-TURDID^. Subfamily — 6" YL VIIN^. The Barred Warbler. Sylvia nisoria, Bechst. Respecting the distribution of this rare species Seebohm writes: — “Besides South Sweden, it breeds in Germany east of the Rhine, Transylvania, South Russia, Persia, and Turkestan, as far east as Kashgar. It passes through South- eastern France, Italy, Turkey, Greece, Asia Minor, and North-east Africa, as it is said to pass through Nubia in spring and autumn, but has not been recorded from the Transvaal. Its alleged occurrence in China is probably an instance of mistaken identification.” The same author, writing in 1883, observes that “The only claim of the Barred Warbler to be considered a British bird rests upon a single example, shot more than forty years ago near Cambridge — but apparently not brought under the notice of Ornithologists until March, 1879, when Prof. Newton exhibited it at a meeting of the Zoological Society of London, a record of which may be found in the Proceedings for that year, page 219.” The record referred to by Mr. Seebohm runs as follows : — “ This specimen was formerly the property of Mr. Germany, for many years the highly-respected porter of Queen’s College, who in the course of a long life formed a considerable collection of birds, nearly all obtained by himself in and near Cambridge, and also stuffed by himself. At his death, more than twenty }^ears ago, it passed, with 78 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. many others of liis specimens, into the possession of an old friend of his, Mr. Elijah Tarrant, of whom Mr. John Robinson, an nndergraduate of Trinity Hall, bought it about a twelvemonth since. Up to this time no one seems to have known what the bird was, though some ingenious person had hazarded the sug- gestion that it was a variety of the Nightingale. Soon after it was seen by Mr. Frederick Bond, F.Z.S., who at once recognised it as Sylvia nisoria, and was good enough to advise its being shown to me.” Prof. Newton then proceeds to point out good and sufficient reasons for believing that this specimen actually was obtained in England. Apparently it was shot either in spring or early summer : it was skulking in dense foliage and was only shot with the greatest difficulty and then at so short a range that a good many of its feathers were knocked out. ^The taxidermist who stuffed it inserted a glass eye with a pale yellow iris, a clear proof that he must have seen the bird very soon after it was shot ; otherwise it is not probable that he would have selected a colour which is rare in the family. Had the occurrence of this single example been the sole argument in favour of regarding the Barred Warbler as British, I should have treated the species as a mere chance visitor to our islands, and practically ignored it ; but singularly enough, on the very year after the publication of Mr. Seebohm’s observation, three specimens were brought to the notice of Zoologists : the first of these, a young bird, was shot on August i6th, 1884, near Broadford in the Isle of Skye, by hlr. G. D. Lees ; the second, an immature female, on the 28th of the same month, by the* Rev. H. H. Slater, who observed it skulking in an elder-hedge by a potato-garden in some sand hills on the Yorkshire coast, he stated that the bird was very shy and difficult to see ; the third, another immature female, was shot by Mr. F. D. Power, of Brixton, on the 4th of September, from scrub at the base of Blakeney sandhills, Norfolk. The occurrence of three young examples in one year, almost seems to justify the conclusion that this Warbler, when on migration, may frequently visit ns ; but, owing to its disinclination to show itself in the open, may have evaded observation. In the last edition of Stevenson’s “ Birds of Norfolk,” edited by Thos. South- well, a member of the British Ornithologists’ Union, the latter gentleman speaks of an example of the Barred Warbler as having been shot at Blakeney after easterly winds on the loth September, 1888, and he says that this bird on dissection proved to be a male. The contents of the stomach consisted largely of earwigs. This would appear to be distinctly a fifth occurrence of the Barred Warbler upon the British coasts : scrub in the vicinity of sandhills seems to be the most ♦ This specimen is still in the possession of Mr. Robinson, who resides at Elterwater, Westmoreland. The Barred Warbler 79 likely haunt in which to seek the species, whilst August and September are the months most favourable for the search ; but it seems a thousand pities that these rare birds should not be captured alive, and their habits in captivity studied in detail. All that can be learnt from the stuffed skin of a Barred Warbler has either long been known, or can be equally well studied from skins already in our cabinets ; but really to know something of the nature and peculiarities of a bird, it must be studied, not only flying freely in its native home, but in a good sized aviary. Lord Lilford has set an example which might, with advantage to Ornith- ological science, be well followed by many other Naturalists, and especially those with means and leisure. When on migration the Barred Warbler reaches Heligoland in May and June, but Gatke speaks of it as by far the rarest of those belonging to Germany which are met with on that island; he says: — “The bird is never seen before the middle of May, and then only on warm, calm days, and in solitary instances ; nor can it be by any means reckoned as a regular annual summer visitant.” The adult male in breeding plumage is smoky grey above, the head, rump, upper tail-coverts and tail-feathers greyer ; the wings browner ; the wing-coverts, innermost secondaries, the feathers on the rump, the upper tail-coverts and the outer tail-feathers are margined and tipped with white, and have blackish subter- minal bar ; this is also sometimes the case with the forehead, lower back, and scapulars ; the two central tail feathers are indistinctly barred ; under surface greyish white, barred with grey, the breast, flanks, thighs, and under tail-coverts browner, the flanks somewhat heavily barred ; axillaries and under wing-coverts mottled with grey and white, bill dark brown, the lower mandible paler at the base, feet greyish brown, iris pale yellow. The female is very like the male, but slightly browner and with fewer transverse bars. In the autumn the colouring becomes browner and the bars on the feathers more pronounced. Young birds are browner than adults and are hardly barred at all excepting on the under tail- coverts. Although not unlike the Whitethroat in its habits and even in its song, the Barred Warbler is far more shy and skulking, rarely leaving the dense cover of briar and brushwood ; though not frequently met with in forests, it haunts planta- tions, copses, and tangled masses of thorn and blackberry, and from such retreats its song may be heard : this, though harsh in some of its notes, is said to be almost equal to that of the Garden Warbler and to include tones rich as those of the Blackcap. The call-note is described as resembling the syllable chek ; and the alarm note r-y-y-r-r, a harsh, warning cry. So British Birds with their Nests and Eggs. The food of the Barred Warbler does not materially differ from that of most other species of Sylvia; it consists largely of insects, with the addition of fruit and berries as soon as these are ripe ; it sometimes captures winged insects in the air after the manner of its congeners. The nest is usually placed in a thom-bush in thick cover, and as a rule very low down ; but one instance is recorded of its being built among the topmost twigs of a birch-tree at a height of twenty-five feet above the ground. It is a firmly built and somewhat bulky structure, roughly formed externally of bents and roots intermingled with plant stalks and compacted with spiders’ cocoons or vegetable down ; the inside is neatly formed, deep and beautifully rounded, the lining con- sisting of fine rootlets, horsehairs, and sometimes cobwebs. The eggs vary from four to six in number, but five is the usual clutch : they are dull huffish white marbled with grey, and are not unlike those of the Grey Wagtail, excepting that they are larger; sometimes, however, they are marbled with brown with underlying grey spots ; the colouring being massed especially on the larger end. Speaking of the song of this species, Herr Mathias Rausch, in the “ Gefiederte Welt” for July 30th, 1891, observes that “it is just as beautiful and rich in charming melodies as that of the Garden Warbler, for the most part fiute-like and full-toned, frequently indeed intermixed with somewhat rough guttural sounds, yet withal distinctly powerful and also more or less intermingled with snatches from the song of other birds. Also the song of this bird has a swing peculiar to it, which characterizes the species as an original songster.” “ Moreover if reared by hand or trapped when young, Barred Warblers, taught by good cage-birds, certainly often become admirable imitators of the song of other birds ; but, in the case of old wild-caught examples, this faculty is much less perceptible, and for this reason it is hardly fair to reckon them plagiarists.” Lord Lilford (Coloured figures oi Birds of the British Islands) evidently has not so high an opinion of the Barred Warbler’s vocal attainments ; he says : — “ I have three of this species caged at this time of writing ; in attitude, song, and general demeanour they very much resemble our Lesser Whitethroat, but are the least restless of any Warblers that I have ever kept in captivity.” An adult which lived for some months in the possession of Rev. H. A. Macpherson was a very shy but active bird. Dresser, in his “ Birds of Europe,” says — “ It is never seen sitting still, but appears always moving about. If disturbed, or it sees anything strange, it raises the feathers of its head, jerks its tail, and utters a harsh note. It creeps about amongst the bushes, hopping about from twig to twig without using its wings. Dartford Warbler. The Dartford Warbler. 8i It is quarrelsome, and drives intruders from the vicinity of its nest.” “ It sings from early in the morning, except during the heat of the da}% until late in the evening, and frequently sings when at some height in the air or fluttering from tree to tree.” Family— TURDID.E. Subfamily— SYL VIIN^E. The Dartford Warbler. Sylvia inidata, BoDD. Although this Warbler has been known to breed in Kent, I have never been able to be certain of having seen it, though I have sometimes suspected that nests which I have discovered built in furze-bnshes, might have been the work of this species : whoever the architect was, she slipped away so quietly into the dense, prickly cover on my approach, that I conld not even get a glimpse of her, and only knew of her whereabouts by the movement in the furze. Howard Saunders gives the following as the geographical distribution of this species : — “ Although as a rule a non-migratory species, the Dartford Warbler has been observed in Heligoland ; but it is unknown in Northern Germany, Holland, or Belgium. Rather rare in the Channel Islands, it is found throughout France in suitable localities, especially from the foot of the Western Pyrenees to Provence. In many parts of Portugal and Spain it is common, and I have watched it singing among the orange-gardens of Murcia ; while it nests in the sierras of the almost tropical south coast at elevations of from 4,000 to 3,000 feet. In Morocco and Algeria it is also resident, and it has been recorded from Lower Egypt, and Palestine ; but in Europe its Eastern range is not known to extend beyond Italy and Sicily, the bird seldom reaching Malta.” With regard to its distribution in Great Britain, this author sa}'s : — “ It is now known to breed in nearly all the southern counties, from Cornwall to Kent, V'OL. I. P 82 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. especial!}’ in Hampshire (including the Isle of Wight), Surrey and Sussex ; spar- ingly in the valley of the Thames ; perhaps in some of the hlidland Counties ; and, on the sole authority of Mr. C. Dixon, in the Rivelin valley, in the extreme south of Yorkshire. It has been observed in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk ; while in Suffolk a few probably breed.” Respecting its occurrence in Heligoland, Gatke says that only two instances are recorded, “ it having on one occasion been obtained by Reyners, and on the other observed by myself, on hlay 31st, 1851, hopping about in the thorn- hedge of a neighbouring garden at only a few paces distance. Unfortunately there being other gardens behind the hedge in question in which people were occupied at the time, I was unable to shoot the bird.” The adult male above is dark smoky brown, deeper and more slate-coloured on the head, wings dark brown, the coverts, inner secondaries, and primaries with pale brown outer margins ; tail dark grey, the two outside feathers with white outer margins and tips ; under surface chestnut reddish, shading into white at the centre of lower breast and abdomen ; under tail -coverts greyish ; bill deep horn brown, base of lower mandible yellowish ; feet pale brown, iris and eyelid saffron yellow. The female is smaller than the male and the underparts are paler. After the autumn moult the chin, throat, breast and flanks are spotted and streaked with white : birds of the year are paler above and whiter below than the female. The Dartford Warbler is an extremely restless, but at the same time a skulking bird ; Seebohm’s description of its habits can, I think, hardly be improved on ; he says ; — “ In summer the Dartford Warbler lives almost entirely in the furze bushes; hence its local name of Furze-Wren. In winter, though it may often be seen in its summer haunts, the necessity of procuring food prompts it to visit the turnip-fields, or to range along the coast. Its long tail and short rounded wings do not seem adapted to extensive flights ; but it has nevertheless been twice seen on Heligoland. It is seldom seen on the wing. At- Biarritz I found them frequenting the reeds on the banks of a small lake. The first sight I had of one was that of a little dark bird with a fan-like tail suddenly appearing amongst the reeds on the opposite side. Occasionally, as we walked on the bank of the lake, we heard a loud, clear, melodious pitch' -00 repeated once or twice amongst the reeds. The note was so musical that for a moment one might imagine that a Nightingale was beginning to strike up a tune. Now and then we saw the bird appear for a moment above the reeds, as if thrown up by a battledore ; but it dropped down again and disappeared as suddenly. I have very rarely seen so skulking a bird ; once only it flew up from the reeds, and perched in a willow near a large patch of furze-bushes. Like most other Warblers this bird is very The Dartford Warbler. 83 active, scarcely resting for a moment, except when warbling its hurried little song from the top of a furze-branch. In many of its habits it reminds one of Cetti’s Warbler. It flits up a furze-bush, dodging in and out amongst the side branches in search of insects, perches for a moment on the topmost spray ; but before yon have had time to get your binocular on to it, it has caught sight of your move- ment and drops down into the furze-bush as if shot.” The nest in Great Britain has always been found concealed amongst dense furze, but on the Continent and more especially in the south it is said to be placed in broom or heather ; the dead lower branches of the furze are selected as a building site. In character the nest is small, deep and flimsy ; it is formed principally of thin bents, interwoven with stems of goosegrass and moss, a little green furze, and wool. The eggs vary from four to five and are greenish or bufflsh white, mottled with olive and spotted with reddish brown ; the marking is more densely distri- buted over the surface than in eggs of the Greater Whitethroat, to which in other respeets they bear a slight resemblanee ; they however tend to be longer, and to my mind would be more aptly likened to very diminutive eggs of the Rock Pipit, or to some eggs of the Tree Sparrow. I do not think anyone well acquainted with British Birds’ eggs would ever confound those of the Dartford Warbler and Whitethroat. The breeding-season of this species is from April to Jul}q and two broods are reared in the year ; the second nest is said to be usually less compact than the earlier one ; this is constructed in June, when there is less necessity for a warm reeeptacle for the eggs. The food of the Dartford Warbler eonsists principally of insects, and Mr. Booth, in the “Zoologist” for 1887, states that it “generally feeds its young on the body of a large yellow moth” which he says the parent birds hunted for among the lower part of the stems of the foliage. I have little doubt the moth intended is one of the eommon Yellow-underwings fTriphcena ianthina, orbona, or pronubaj which I have frequently disturbed from furze-bushes in the day-time. In the autumn wild berries are also eaten. As this species is a fairly meritorious songster there is no doubt that it would be an interesting aviary pet ; its seolding note is somewhat harsh cha-cha, but its call-note is probably soft and pleasing like that of other Warblers. Its actions are sprightly, the tail being expanded as it alights ; its flight is rapid and undu- lating, but not powerful. There is not the least doubt that this species could be fed in confinement upon the mixture which I have recommeuded for other Insectivorous birds, supple- 84 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. mented by mealworms, caterpillars, moths, flies, cockroaches, earwigs, and spiders ; these last, which are rarely mentioned in works on British Ornithology, form a considerable portion of the diet of all Insectivorons birds ; they are not only easy to capture, easy of digestion (even seeming to have a beneficial effect npon birds when ont of health) bnt they are relished much more than any form of insect or its larvae, not exclnding mealworms : centipedes also are eaten with avidity, bnt not millipedes, and many birds refuse to touch woodlice or only kill and leave them. The Dartford Warblers which Montagu kept in confinement were taken from the nest and reared by hand. These birds “began to sing with the appearance of their first mature feathers, and continued in song all the month of October.” Family— TURDID.^. Siibfatnily — 5" YL VIIA'yE. The Golden-Crested Wren. Reguius crisfatiis, K. L. KoCH. Perhaps to the case of few species are the observations of Herr Gatke more applicable than to that of the Gold-crest when he saj's, speaking of the countless myriads of birds which pass over Heligoland on migration, and furthermore of this very species : — “The east-to-west migration of the Golden-crested Wren in October 1882, extended in one continuous column, not only across the east coast of England and Scotland, but even up to the Faeroe Islands. When one thinks of numbers of individuals such as these, which cannot be grasped by human intelligence, it seems absurd to talk of a conceivable diminution in the number of birds being Golden-Crested Wren. The Golden-Crested Wren. «5 effected through the agency of man. In one particular respect man no doubt does exert a noticeable influence on the numbers of bird-life, not however by means of net and gun, but rather by the increasing cultivation of the soil, which roots out ever}' bush and shrub, great or small, as a useless obstacle, and thus robs the bird of even the last natural protection of its nest. Having thus driven the poor creatures into distant and less densely populated districts, we complain that we no longer hear their merry song, unconscious of the fact that we are ourselves responsible for the cause.” This is a point which I have always insisted upon : no Act for the protection of wild birds, which does not forbid the wholesale grubbing of woods, and so-called “ waste land,” will ever prevent the diminution of bird-life in our Islands. The Gold-crest is generally distributed over Europe in Scandinavia northward to the Arctic Circle, and in Russia from Archangel and the Ural Mountains ; in the east, southwards to the Himalayas and China, and in the west down to the Mediterranean. Dixon (Jottings about Birds, p. 70) observes : — “ It is said that the Gold-crest, A^ cristatus (Koch) visits Algeria in winter, but I cannot find any conclusive evidence of the fact. It is said regularly to pass Malta on migration in spring and autumn.” In Great Britain it is generally distributed wherever coniferous trees occur, and breeds with us. Although the Gold-crest is the smallest British bird, its migratory pov'ers are inferior to none, and its capacity for resisting cold so great, that it remains with us even in our severest winters : it is a common error to suppose that size neces- sarily accompanies vigour, inasmuch as many of the tiniest birds are undoubtedly far more hardy than larger species : as an instance, I would call attention to the little Indian Avadavat, which I have proved to be indifferent to 21 degrees of frost ; whereas many of the larger parrots, at anyrate if recently imported, as some of my Waxbills had been, would have succumbed to a considerably higher temperature. The male Gold-crest is olive-green above more or less suffused with yellowish ; the crown of the head bright yellow in front shading into orange behind and bounded by a blackish streak, below which is a greyish white superciliary streak ; the wing and tail-feathers are greyish brown, the median and greater wing-coverts edged with white, the primary-coverts being blackish ; secondaries tipped with white ; under parts pale greyish-brown or greenish-buff, whiter on the abdomen ; bill blackish-brown, feet brown, iris hazel. The female is less brightly coloured than tlie male, the crown brown-yellow O VoL I. 86 British Birds with their Nests and Eggs. with narrower blackish streak. In the yonng the crown is slightly darker than the back, bnt shows no trace of yellow or black. In many illustrations this bird is represented with a well-defined crest ; bnt, so far as I have seen, the feathers of the crown seem to be erected very slightl}^ if at all ; though, when the little creature looks downwards, the feathers at the back of the crown project slightly above those of the nape. Possibly under great excitement the feathers of the crown would be partially raised as they are in many birds ; bnt whether, even then, they would stick up like the quills of the “ prickly porcupine,” as artists delight in representing them as doing, is, I think questionable. Mr. Frohawk, who has had considerable experience of the Gold-crest, tells me that in the antninn this species may frequently be met with singly, or in pairs ; bnt in the winter it is generally seen in flocks, and often in company of Long- tailed Tits. In the latter season it haunts pine-forests, as well as hedges ; bnt in the breeding season plantations of spruce and larch are its favourite resorts. The male sings continuously in the vicinity of its nest, and if disturbed the old birds creep about incessantly near to their home with quivering wings. Furthermore, Mr. Frohawk says that he has never known a Gold-crest to erect a crest; the feathers of the head are, however, somewhat expanded laterally so as to expose the golden stripe in its full beauty, this stripe being very narrow when the bird is in repose. Mr. Staines, of Penge, who has on several occasions attempted to keep the Gold-crest as a cage bird, confirms Mr. Frohawk’s opinion in all particulars : he has never seen the bird erect, though he has seen it expand its crest. Lord Lilford (Birds of Northamptonshire) says : — “ The call-note of the Gold- crest is peculiar and constantly repeated whilst the birds are on their excursions. In very cold weather I have found a family of perhaps a dozen of these little birds clustered together for warmth beneath the snow-laden bough of an old yev^- tree, to the under surface of which the uppermost birds were clinging by their feet, whilst, as far as I could see, the others clung to them and to one another, so as to form a closely packed feathery ball. I happened to notice this by chance, and, in the gloom of the overhanging boughs, thought it was an old nest, but on touching it with the end of a walking-stick, the supposed nest dissolved itself into a number of these minute creatures, who did not appear much alarmed, bnt dis- persed themselves on the adjoining boughs, and, no doubt, soon resumed their previous formation, which I was sorry to have disturbed. Although the nests of the Gold-crest are generally placed under the branches of a yew or a fir tree, we have twice found them in a thin fence at about five feet from the ground ; the materials The Golden-Crested Wren. »7 are soft moss and lichens, wool, a little grass, and a mass of small feathers by way of lining.* The eggs are of a yellowish- white, very closely spotted or clouded with pale rust-colour, and vary in number from six or seven to ten or more ; I once found twelve in a nest.” A nest in my collection, taken from the undersurface of a yew-branch and interlaced in the terminal feathery leaves, is formed almost entirely of moss, com- pacted with spiders’ silk and one or two small feathers ; the lining appears to consist wholly of small soft feathers. Some eggs which I have seen, were creamy white ; others, densely and minutely dusted all over with rusty-reddish ; others again, with a deeper rust red zone, or terminal nebula, at the larger extremity. The song of the Gold-crest is short, low, but pleasing ; though its call-notes are thin and almost as shrill as the notes of a bat. Dixon in describing the song calls it eulogistically “ a few notes of matchless melody.” This tiny bird haunts woods, shrubberies, plantations of fir, larch and other conifers, yew-trees in churchyards and cemeteries, copses, orchards and gardens. In its habits it greatly resembles the Tits, dropping from spray to twig, turning, twisting, closely examining every inch of its swaying perch for insect prey, and incessantly uttering its high piercing whistle ; then, gliding rapidly from the end of some feathery spray, it passes on to another tree and recommences its acrobatic performances. Like the Tits also, this little bird is wonderfully confiding : one autumn whilst standing on a balcony leading by steps into the garden of the house which I then inhabited, I heard the shrill note of this species just above my head and looking upwards saw a pair of Gold- crests clambering about over a jasmine which I had trained to cover a wire arch above the doorway ; they appeared to be quite indifferent to my presence not a foot below them. Stevenson, in his “Birds of Norfolk” after speaking of the well ascertained fact that thousands of these tiny birds in the autumn come to swell the numbers of oiir residents, observes : — “ Perhaps the most striking instance, however, of the migration of the Gold-crest, in large numbers, to our eastern coast, was witnessed by Captain Longe, of Great Yarmouth, on the morning of the 2nd of November, 1862. In a letter to myself at the time, he says ‘ As I was walking to Hemsby, about 7-30 when it was just daylight, about half a mile out of Yarmouth, on the Caister road, my attention was attracted to a small bush overhanging the marsh dyke, * Mr. A. T. Mitchell, has drawn attention to the fact that, in some parts of Ireland, the Gold-crest “builds commonly again.st the sides of ivy-covered trees. The nest is not su.spended under a branch of fir, as I have found it in England, and the nests here are badly and loosely put together.” Mr. J. Trumbull states that of seventeen ne.sts of the Gold-crest found in Co. Dublin, only four were placed beneath the surface of a branch. Mr. II. S. Davenport, has found half a dozen nests of the Gold-cre.st “placed against the sides of iv}’-clad trees.” The Rev. II. A. Macpherson has also pointed out that the Gold-crest occasional!}’ builds its nest in the middle of a furze-bush (Cf. Zool. 1895. pp. 385, 431, 448.; 88 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs which borders the pathway, by the continuous twittering of a small bird. On looking closely, I found the bush, small as it was, literally covered with Golden- crested Wrens. There was hardly an inch of twig that had not a bird on it, and even from m3' rough attempt at calculation at the time, I feel sure there were at least between two and three hundred. Most of them were either females or young birds, having a lemon-coloured crest ; they were perfectl}^ tame, and although I sat down on the other side of the ditch, within six feet, and watched them for some time, the}^ did not attempt to fl}" awa}^ ; but one or more would occasionally rise off its perch, hover like a butterfl}', and settle again in some other position. I went the next morning to look for them, but they were all gone. The wind had been easterl}^ with much fog.’ ” The food of the Gold-crest consists principally of insects, small spiders, &c. ; but it eats a few seeds and small berries : in captivit}' Abrahams’ food and bread- crumbs moistened, also boiled potato, cooked the previous da}% and finel}' chopped up with 3'olk of egg, would form a good staple diet ; small mealworms, ant’s larvae, small caterpillars, flies, and spiders being given when procurable. Although sometimes kept in quite small cages, this bird, to be properl}^ studied, should be turned loose in a moderately large aviar}’, planted with firs and 3^ews ; or at aity rate with a few pot specimens of these trees standing about ; but whether it be kept in cage or aviar}q a snugly lined box should be hung up in one corner to which it nia}' retire for warmth at night ; for, although the Gold- crest is undoubtedl}" a hard}' bird like the Tits, captivit}" at best deprives it of much of the free exercise which it takes throughout the da}^ when at liberty ; this, in conjunction with somewhat unnatural diet, less pure air, and the lack of companionship of aity of its own species, doubtless tend to weaken and undermine the constitution of this feathered mite. In 111}^ opinion a bird which is never seen singl}', but, at the ver\' least in pairs, should not be caged b}' itself ; solitar}' confinement nia}^ not be objectionable to a parrot ; but to a species which, when not breeding, is seen in faniil}^ parties, small companies, or even in countless iu}wiads, solitar}' confinement must be in the highest degree irksome : an aviary about eight feet square, devoted to a score or so of these fair}'-like little birds, would be “ a thing of beauty and a joy for ever.” i Fire-Crested Wren. The Fire-Crested Wren. 89 Family— I'URDlDAi. Subfamily— S YL VIIN^J-:. The Fire-Crested Wren. Regii/us ignicapillus, C. L. BrEhm. A NOT infrequent straggler to the British Isles, the Fire-crest may fully claim its title to a place in these pages. Of its geographical distribution Howard Saunders writes : — “ The Fire-crested Wren has a much less extended range north- ward than its congener, and although it appears to have straggled to the Faeroes, it is unknown in Scandinavia ; barely reaches Denmark ; and does not occur to the north-east of the Baltic Provinces of Germany. To some parts of the Rhine district it is rather partial in summer ; and, although local in its distribution, it breeds in France, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Central and Southern Germany, Greece, Turkey, and Southern Russia. In the Taurus Range of Asia Minor, it is more abundant than the Gold-crest. In the mountain-forests of Algeria, and in some parts of Southern Europe, the Fire- crest is resident throughout the year ; its numbers being augmented in winter by migrants from the north.” Herr Gatke says : — “ This species is a little smaller, and by reason of its black eye-streak, still somewhat more prettily marked bird than the preceding. It visits Heligoland almost as regularly as the latter, but invariably in very small numbers. In the spring it arrives somewhat sooner, and in the autumn somewhat later than R. jiavicafillus — and thus may be said in a sense to open and close the migration of the crested Wrens.” In England specimens of the Fire-crest have been obtained since 1832, when a cat slaughtered the first recognised specimen ; the following counties having at various times witnessed its destruction : — Cumberland, Durham, Yorkshire, Lanca- shire, N. Wales, Norfolk, Sussex, Kent, Hampshire, the Isle of Wight, Devonshire, Oxon, Cornwall, and the Scilly Islands. One specimen is said to have occurred in Scotland in 1848, and one was supposed to have been seen at Tralee in Ireland ; but both of these occurrences are considered to be open to doubt. In general appearance the Fire-crest greatly resembles the Gold-crest, but differs in its 3'ellowish frontal band, whiter superciliar}" streak, frequenth' more orange crown, a second black streak passing from the gape through the eye, and 90 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. a third moustacliial streak ; the sides of neck and the shoulders washed with sulphur yellow ; feathers of wings and tail brown, with yellowish-green edges ; the greater and median wing-coverts tipped with white and the primary coverts dark brown; under parts dull huffish white; bill blackish brown, feet dark brown, iris hazel. The female is duller in colouring than the male and has a paler crest ; young birds have the crown of the same colour as the rest of the upper surface, only acquiring the yellow colouring after the first moult. The habits, haunts and even the nest and eggs of this species are extremely like those of its near relative the Gold- crest ; the nest is similarly suspended and is usually formed of moss felted with spiders’ cocoons and thickly lined with feathers. If the branch in which it is placed chances to be covered with lichens, the Fire- crest utilizes these also in the outer walls ; in all probability this is done simply because the material is at hand ; not, as has been suggested, with any idea of imitating the surroundings of the nest, with a view to its concealment. That the use of that which is most easily obtainable, because nearest, does often greatly add to the difficulty of discovering a nest by the inexperienced collector, nobody will deny ; but to credit the little architect with deliberate design in the use of such material is, in my opinion, utter nonsense ; indeed I have seen the nest of a Chaffinch in a hedge rendered most conspicuous by a covering of lichen from the trunk of a tree a yard or two behind it, and a Wren’s nest built of coarse dead grass and standing out prominently from the mossy trunk of a tree : both of these nests are in my collection. Speaking of the habits of the Fire-crest, Seebohm says ; — “ Their presence is at once betrayed by their soft notes, a monotonous zit-zit, which is continually uttered as they are busily employed feeding on insects under the leaves of the overhanging trees, and becomes a rapid z-z-z-zit as they chase each other from tree to tree, or fly off in alarm at your movements. If you remain perfectly still they will sometimes come and feed close to you, occasionally two or three of them within a few feet of your head. It is very curious then to watch their movements. They twist in and out among the slender twigs, sometimes with head down and sometimes with feet up ; but by far the most curious part of the performance is when they come to the end of the twig and examine the under surface of the leaves at its extremity. They have nothing to stand upon ; so they flutter more like bees than birds from leaf to leaf, their little wings beating so fast that they look transparent, their bodies all the time being nearly perpendicular. Of course it is only on large-leafed oaks, and the shrubs that form the underwood in the garden, that you can examine them closely. In the pine-forest, when all The Fire-Crested Wren. 91 the branches for twenty feet are broken off for fuel, you require a glass to see them well.” (British Birds, vol. i, p. 459). Seebohm quotes the following from Dixon’s Algerian notes on this species : — ■ ” The trees are full of life. Here in close company with the rare Algerian Coal Tit, the Fire-crest is very common. It is seen in the tall cedar trees, and is restless and busy amongst the branches fifty feet above, exploring all the twigs in search of its favourite food. The Fire-crest is also almost as common in the evergreen-oak forests, searching the lower branches all amongst the lichens and tree-moss for insects ; and every now and then its brilliant crest glistens conspic- uously in the sunlight. Its note sounds shriller to me than a Gold-crest’s ; but I think it was quite as familiar and trustful as that other little favourite bird of mine. In its motions it puts you in mind of the Willow Wrens ; and when, as I have sometimes seen it, hanging with one leg from a drooping bough, picking out the insects from a bud, it looks precisely like a Tit. Although we were in these forests in May, the birds did not seem to have begun to breed.” Other writers, however, state that the note of the Fire-crest is “ not so shrill ” as that of the commoner species. The eggs, although averaging about the same number as those of the Gold- crest, are, I believe invariably, redder than even the most rusty eggs of that species, the markings usually covering their entire surface. Speaking of the nesting of this species Howard Saunders remarks : — “ In German}^ the branches of a fir-tree are almost invariably selected ; the nest being seldom found in pines or larches ; and the same trees are frequented year after 3^ear. In the above countr}' nesting does not begin before May ; but in the south of Spain the young are able to fly by the middle of that month. Insects and spiders constitute its food.” He continues thus : — “ In the Pyrenees, with excellent opportunities for observing the habits of both species, I noticed that the Fire-crest was much more restless and erratic in its movements, darting away suddenly after a ver}^ short stay upon the gorse-bush or tree where it was feeding, and being often alone or in parties of two or three at most ; whereas the Gold-crests, five or six together, would work steadily round the same bush, and, if I remained quiet, would stop there for many minutes.” Hewitson in the third edition of his “ Eggs of British Birds ” states that the “ Rev. E. H. Browne has watched this species during the summer, near his residence, at Bio’ Norton, in Norfolk, and has no doubt it breeds there.” The probabilit}" is that he was inereE^ misled by brightly coloured examples of the Gold-crest, not being aware of the true distinctive characters of the two species : at aii3' rate his supposition has not been confirmed. 92 British Birds, with their Nests and Eggs. In an aviary the Fire-crest might be associated with the Gold-crest and would require precisely the same treatment ; bnt it is not probable that many Avicnl- turists will have an opportnnit}^ of obtaining it in this country, Dr. Russ says that until recently it was supposed to be impossible to keep the European species of Regii/ns for any length of time, but recently they have been found in the care of a considerable number of aviarists ; he however considers their habituation to confinement difficult. In disposition they are particiilarly gentle, sociable and peaceable. Family— TURDID.F. Subfamily— SYL VlINAi. The Yellow- Brow ED Warbler. Phylloscopns supcrciliosus, Gme;l. Mr. Howard Saunders only mentions three examples of this pretty little species as having been obtained in Great Britain: bnt, in “the Zoologist” for December, 1894, Mr. J. E. Harting says: — “On October 8th, Mr. Swailes, an observant nurseryman, at Beverle}’’, hearing the note of a small warbler which was unfamiliar to him, shot the bird, and sent it for identification to Mr. F. Boyes, who pronounced it to be Phylloscopus supcrci/iosus, and on communicating this information, Mr. Swailes found and shot two others in the same locality. Mr. Boyes having reported this interesting occurrence in ‘The Field’ of October 27th, Mr. J. H. Gurney, in the succeeding issue (Nov. 3rd) announced that on Oct. ist one of these little birds was shot on the coast of Norfolk by a labouring man, who fired at it merely for the purpose of unloading his gun! As ten instances of the occurrence of this species in the British Islands have now been made known, its claim to be The Yellow-Browed Warbler. 93 regarded as a British bird, which for a quarter of a century remained doubtful, may now be said to be established.” * To Aviculturists Mr. Swailes is well-known as a successful breeder of British Birds in out-door aviaries. Touching the distribution of PJiylloscopus stcperciliosus, Seebohm writes: — “The breeding- range of the Yellow-browed Warbler is supposed to be confined to the pine- forests of North-eastern Siberia, from the valley of the Yenesay eastwards to the Pacific, and from the mountains of Take Baikal northwards to the Arctic circle. It passes through Mongolia and North China on migration and winters in South China, Assam, Burma, and North-east India. Tike some other Siberian birds which winter in South-east Asia, a few examples appear more or less regularly to take the wrong turning at Yeniseisk, and, instead of accompanying the main body of the migratory species, which follow the course of the Angora through Take Baikal into the valley of the Amoor, join the smaller stream of migration, which flows westwards into Persia and Hurope.” In the spring the adult bird above is olive-green, the rump and upper tail- coverts yellower ; wing-coverts, flights and tail-feathers brown, edged with olive- green, the median and greater wing-coverts broadly tipped with greenish-yellow, forming two distinct bands, the secondaries and several of the primaries tipped with yellowish-white ; a greenish-yellow superciliary stripe which becomes whitish behind the ear- coverts ; under-surface white, tinged with greenish-yellow, the axil- laries, under wing-coverts, and thighs yellowish ; bill dark brown, feet brown, iris hazel. After the autumn moult the colouring is brighter and yellower. Young birds are greener and have a less defined eye-stripe than adults. The home of this little bird is made in the pine-forests of' N.B. Siberia, where Mr. Seebohm found it very common, he describes its call-note as a plaintive wecst, whereas Gatke says “ This call has the sound of a somewhat long-drawn, softly intoned ‘ hjiiph,’ and somewhat approaches in character the call-note of Antlius pratensis.” f However, it was reserved for Mr. Seebohm to be the first discoverer of the nest of this interesting species on the 26th June, 1877 : — “ As we were walking along a little bird started up near us, and began most persistently to utter the well-known cry of the Yellow-browed Warbler. As it kept flying around us from tree to tree, we naturally came to the conclusion that it had a nest near. We searched for some time unsuccessfully, and then retired to a short distance, • One of the specimens recorded by Mr. .Swailes has, since, been ])resented by him to the Natural History Museum. t 1 should judj . A.i!$ : iSr is - ' ' ’ ' ^ .*•8 ■■ ' ■ ■ ■