— LABORATORY OF ORNITHOLOGY LIBRARY —' | “GY Gitd of | : Aarjoru Ath ess | CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY ‘ornell University Library QL 684.13F24 ‘iin 3 1924 022 561 611 orm BIRD OBSERVATIONS NEAR CHICAGO DATE DUE GAYLORD PRINTED IN U.S.A. Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924022561611 Bird Observations Near Chicago by Ellen Drummond. Farwell Introduction by Mary Drummond With Ilustrations Privately Printed Copyrighted 1919 by John V. Farwell FOREWORD Ellen Drummond Farwell loved birds for many reasons, but especially because they seemed to her the spiritual in nature. To her their songs expressed the spon- taneous joy and gladness of a life, seem- ingly higher and freer in some respects than our own. During the last years of her life, as her duties and pleasures became more and more restricted, she spent some of her happiest moments observing the birds on our place and in the neighborhood. Once in the South and once abroad she made notes of what she saw. As Mr. Henry Oldys and some other trained observers, in reading these notes, felt that quite a number of bird lovers, old and young, would enjoy comparing their notes with these, and that in so doing some little additional knowledge might be re- corded, I decided at their suggestion to print a small edition for personal friends and a few others who might enjoy having them. Joun V. FARWELL. Ardleigh, January 20, 1919. Le CONTENTS Page Portword scsacaueiversn erase sas 5 Introduction .............00000- II Warblers Identified, Elmhurst and Lake Forest ........... awa 17 List of Birds that We Have Found Nesting in Ardleigh and Edgewood 19 List of Birds Observed at Augusta, Gis op tee BeKnee een eesaeeN 21 Number of Species Observed at One TMG: aeeieee bese eee ee ceea 23 General Observations ............ 25 Bird Observations in Europe....... 169 Notes Made from Collection of Birds in Illinois Building at the World’s AE ga pot iis wc anen whim aralanse der eae 185 Birds Observed at Savannah, Ga.... 189 Observations before July, 1896, were made generally in Elmhurst, after that generally in Lake Forest. [7] LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Portrait of Mrs. Farwell... . Frontispiece Opposite page Spotted Sand Piper «.sceese4. wae EF Nest of Meadow Lark .......4. 23 Ardleigh, scicx saa eukee wa tae es 25 Young Cincides osse eee eeeeinees _ 40 Nest of Indigo Bunting........... 62 Great Horned Owl (captive)...... oe. Voune PROEDES feces cn seawdeaee 779 Nashville Warbler .............. 142 Nest of Iield Sparrow so. 4.0.4 188 The photographs from which these illus- trations were made were taken by Henry Emerson Tuttle through whose courtesy they are used. [9] INTRODUCTION It is hoped that these ‘Bird Observa- tions” by Ellen Drummond Farwell may be welcomed by bird students, because of the accuracy and extent of their observa- tions and the possibility that they may supply some new data, particularly as to bird songs. By Mrs. Farwell’s personal friends they will also be welcomed as bringing back to them the thought of one whose mental ability, true Christian love- liness and nobility of character created a personality always uplifting and strength- ening in its influence. Partly through the influence of Mrs. Sara A. Hubbard, to whom many can trace their first interest in birds, and partly, it sometimes seemed, because of a kinship between the birds, ‘the least earthly of the animal creation, “Whose habitations in the tree-tops even, Are half-way houses on the road to Heaven,” and her own deeply spiritual nature, she turned more and more to bird study with much interest and pleasure. Like most [11] Introduction bird students, she soon formed the habit of jotting down her experiences and the “observations” are the result—kept, it need hardly be said—with no thought of their being seen by any but her closest friends and fellow bird lovers. For a number of years, in spite of long intervals of illness, these notes were kept, the last being entered not many days be- fore her death. It was a very curious fact that while the ordinary songs of the birds did not rouse her from her light morning sleep, an un- usual note would waken her at once; that, in the spring before her death, when all she could see and hear of the birds was from her bed, a Hermit Thrush should sing his lovely song near her window seemed like a special benediction. His song is rarely heard in this latitude and her joy in it was great. Her hearing was very acute and she knew all the common and most of the uncommon notes of the birds of this region. Mrs. Farwell was not only a bird student but a bird lover and this implied, with one like her, that, as much happiness came to her from the birds, so she must do for their happiness all in her power [12 ] Introduction. and so it was that she was one of the chief organizers of the Illinois Audubon Society (April, 1897), and served, either as director or vice-president, till her death. Must we not feel that her chief wish, in the publication of these notes, would be that they might help, in their measure, the cause of bird protection which was so near her heart, and for which she worked so earnestly and well? Mary DrumMmonp. Lake Forest, January 20, 1919. Lag Spotted Sandpiper Brooding Young ~ BIRD OBSERVATIONS WARBLERS IDENTIFIED Elmhurst and Lake Forest BAY-BREASTED, BLACK AND WHITE, BLACK-THROATED BLUE, BLACK-THROATED GREEN, BLACKBURNIAN, BLACK-POLL, CANADIAN, CAPE MAY, CERULEAN, CHESTNUT-SIDED, CONNECTICUT, GOLDEN-WINGED, MAGNOLIA, MOURNING, MYRTLE, MARYLAND YELLOW-THROAT, NASHVILLE, ORANGE-CROWNED, OVEN-BIRD, PARULA, Lag] Bird Observations PINE, PALM, REDSTART, TENNESSEE, WILSON’S, WATER-THRUSH, LOUISIANA WATER-THRUSH, YELLow, YELLOW-BREASTED CHAT. In Georgia. YELLOW-THROATED, HOODED. [ 18 ] LIST OF BIRDS THAT WE HAVE FOUND NESTING IN ARDLEIGH AND EDGEWOOD List begun in 1907, but including former years also Cae: yellow warbler, robin, blue jay, scarlet tanager, towhee, redstart, red-eyed vireo, great crested flycatcher, phoebe, wood thrush, flicker, red-headed woodpecker, cedar bird, chimney swift, indigo bird, brown thrasher, song sparrow, house wren. August 8, 1901. Saw first fall migrant, a young warbler, what species I could not decide. May 2 and 3, 1902. After a warm day, and a shower the night of May rst, I observed twenty-three new immigrants, fourteen of them warblers, in the two days. [19 ] LIST OF BIRDS OBSERVED AT AUGUSTA, GA. March 20, 1895 J UNCO, robin, chipping sparrow, white- throated sparrow, black and white creeper, tufted titmouse, mocking bird, cardinal, blue jay, downy woodpecker, flicker, chickadee, brown creeper, hermit thrush, field sparrow, sapsucker, towhee bunting, golden kinglet, brown thrasher, bluebird, vesper sparrow, goldfinch, yel- low-throated warbler, Carolina chickadee, loggerhead shrike, crow, gnatcatcher, , white-eyed vireo, ruby kinglet, turkey buz- zard, red headed woodpecker, mourning dove, swift, yellow-throated vireo, Phila- delphia vireo, kingbird, summer tanager, red-eyed vireo, wood pewee, myrtle warbler, hooded warbler, fish crow (?). [21] Arched Nest-of Meadow Lark 4 NUMBER OF SPECIES OBSERVED AT ONE TIME (Elmhurst) M4* 19, 1893. I saw and heard thirty-three species of birds. October 18, 1893. I identified sixteen species, an unusual number for this time of year. May 9, 1894. Fifty species, red-winged blackbird, bluebird, bobolink, indigo bunt- ing, catbird, cowbird, crow, flicker, gold- finch, rosebreast, grackle, bluejay, king- bird, ruby kinglet, meadow lark, shore Jark, Baltimore oriole, oven bird, robin, chipping, song, field, white-throated, white crowned and vesper sparrows, barn swal- low, swift, scarlet tanager, brown thrasher, olive-backed and wood thrushes, che- wink, black and white creeper, Blackbur- nian, black-throated blue, black-throated green, chestnut-sided, magnolia, myrtle, Nashville, pine, Tennessee, yellow and palm warblers, red-headed woodpecker, house wren, mourning dove, Acadian fly- catcher, sycamore warbler (?) redstart (fourteen warblers). May 10, 1894. Twelve species of war- [ 23 ] Bird Observations blers in two hours in the morning. On this day I saw three Blackburnians, one bay-breasted, one black-throated blue, two chestnut sided and a parula in one tree. Warblers very abundant this year. May 15, 1894. Eleven species war- blers. May 7, 1895. Eleven species warblers. [ 24 ] GENERAL OBSERVATIONS May 12, 1905, at Lake Forest, noted fifty-seven species Bee bobolink, indigo bird, cat- bird, cowbird, crow, Acadian fly- catcher, yellow- bellied flycatcher, chebec, phoebe, blue grey gnatcatcher, goldfinch, humming bird, jay, kingbird, ruby kinglet, nighthawk, Baltimore oriole, robin, sap- sucker, red-headed woodpecker, house sparrow, song sparrow, vesper sparrow, white-throated sparrow, swift, tanager, brown thrasher, grey-checked thrush, wood thrush, olive-backed thrush, Wilson’s thrush, towhee, red-eyed vireo,* yellow throated-vireo. (Warblers), black-throat- ed green, black-throated blue, black and white creeper, Blackburnian, Canadian, chestnut-sided, Cape May, magnolia, myrtle, Maryland yellow-throat, oven bird, orange-crowned,* parula, palm, Tennessee, Wilson’s, yellow, water thrush, redstart, house wren, whip-poor-will. May 15, 1906. Noted fifty-six species, Lake Forest. Catbird, house wren, brown * Not absolutely certain. Les: | Bird Observations thrasher, cowbird, red-wing, blackbird, grackle, Baltimore oriole, meadow lark, bobolink, robin, wood thrush, Wilson’s thrush, bluebird, towhee, blue jay, crow, swift, martin, chickadee, mourning dove, kingbird, phoebe, pewee, great crested fly- catcher, chebec, red-headed woodpecker, downy, sapsucker, flicker, chipping spar- row, field, vesper, song and house sparrow, indigo bird, rose-breasted grosbeak, gold- finch, tanager, red-eyed vireo, solitary vireo, yellow-throated vireo, coot, Virginia rail, Carolina rail, yellow, cerulean, black- throated blue, black-throated green, black and white creeper, chestnut-sided, redstart, oven bird, Blackburnian and Maryland yellow-throat warblers, also a Louisiana Water-thrush (probably a Louisiana), and whip-poor-will. [ 26 ] (Lake Forest) AY 18, 1901. Twelve species warblers. Bay-breasted, black and white creeper, Blackburnian, _ black- throated blue, Canadian, redstart, yellow, oven bird, ‘Tennessee, Louisiana water thrush, chestnut-sided and magnolia. May 12, 1904. Sixteen species war- blers, all in Lake Forest village. May 14, 1904. Saw from my window and porch 10 species warblers. Redstart, black throated blue, Blackburnian, magno- lia, yellow, Wilson’s, Canadian, black and white creeper, Tennessee, black-poll. May 14, 1906. Sixteen species, Black- throated blue, black-throated green, Black- burnian, black and white creeper, Cana- dian, chestnut-sided, magnolia, myrtle, Maryland yellow-throat, oven bird, Ten- nessee, yellow, Wilson’s, water thrush, Louisiana water thrush, redstart. May 14, 1907. Thirteen warblers, forty-nine species in all, beside some her- ons, probably black crowned night, and a vireo, probably red eyed. May 16, 1907. Sixteen warblers, four- teen of them on the ground on our place [27] Bird Observations (the mourning on F. D.’s screen porch). They have been tumbling and flitting about the lawn all day, rarely in the trees. Such a view of warblers I have never seen. They were all so wonderfully tame, and would feed within a few feet of us. It was a moderate day as to temperature, a light westerly wind and partly sunny. Species: Black and white creeper, bay breasted, Blackburnian, Canadian, chest- nut sided, Cape May, golden-winged, mag- nolia, Maryland yellow-throat, mourning, redstart, Wilson’s, yellow, oven bird, and in the Durand ravine, Louisiana Water- Thrush and orange crowned warbler. May 23, 1907. Saw eleven species, nine of them close to the house. They were on the roof a great deal, dashing af- ter insects. It was after twenty-four hours of heavy, wet weather. Black- throated blue and green, Connecticut (male and female), orange-crowned (seen against the roof plainly), redstart, mag- nolia, Maryland yellow-throat, Cape May, Grinnell’s water thrush, chestnut sided, yellow. This has been a cold,-late spring and warblers are very late in going through. The trees, too, are not yet in leaf, so one can see them very plainly. I [ 28 ] Bird Observations saw many individuals of most of the above kinds. May 27, 1907. Two Cape Mays, sev- eral redstarts, a Wilson, a chestnut-sided, a Canadian, and of course some yellow warblers all in our yard this morning; also at Mr. Day’s and here, the magnolia, black-throated blue and Blackburnian. May 28, 1907. This remarkable spring the warblers are still lingering and still mostly flying very low. Observed today the black throated green and blue, Cape May, Wilson’s, magnolia, yellow, redstart, Canadian, Maryland yellow-throat, pa- rula, a mourning (probably). 1908. A few myrtles and palms came in an early migration wave about the mid- dle of April as reported by Mrs. Moss and others. (I wasillin bed.) This was followed by a remarkable spell of con- tinued cold and northeast winds, from about April 23 to May 9, when very warm weather set in. This cold weather ended with several days of fierce northeast storm. No warblers were reported as far as I know in this period of over two weeks. I only saw one, (which I could not identify) and a water thrush, which I heard. [ 29 ] Bird Observations May 11, 1908. J saw eleven species and heard the water thrush. May 27, 1908. Noted fifty-one species of birds: Wood thrush, bluebird, robin, northern yellow-throated, redstart and yel- low warblers, Baltimore and orchard orioles, song, field, vesper and grasshopper sparrows, Dickcissel, goldfinch, scarlet tanager, redwing, yellow-headed blackbird, grackle, cowbird, flicker, red-headed wood- pecker, indigo bird, red-eyed vireo, war- bling vireo, barn and cave swallows, mar- tin, brown thrasher, catbird, house wren, blue jay, cedar bird, coot, bittern, black tern, bobolink, phoebe, kingbird, crested flycatcher, pewee, meadow lark, shore lark, kingfisher, swift, mourning warbler, mourning dove, rose-breasted grosbeak, veery, chewink, nighthawk, oven bird. May 13, 1909. Thirteen warblers. myrtle, magnolia, Tennessee, black- throated green, black-throated blue, black and white, Blackburnian, yellow, redstart, golden-winged, oven bird, chestnut-sided and Cape May. On May 14, 1909, four- teen warblers, same as preceding except myrtle and golden-winged, with parula, water thrush and Nashville added. [ 30 ] Bird Observations May 23, 1910. Noted eleven warblers from Kay’s balcony. May 22-23, 1910. First “rush” of warblers on our place; very cold May. June 5, 1910. Many migrant warblers still here. [31 ] AMERICAN BITTERN MM 14, 1906. Found one roosting in a thorn tree not one hundred feet from the house. He sat there as long as we wanted to study him, and we came as near as we liked, he following us all the time with his strange yellow eye. He sat like a ten pin on the branch, his neck and bill stretched straight up and a front view looking like this: Is aie his eyes looking perfectly round, not fore- shortened to an oval, a most curious and weird effect. He still sat there, immov- able, when we left. What protective col- oring. His stripes look like brown reeds, and his light colored bill looks like the tip of one. [32] COW BLACKBIRD April 3, 1894 (Elmhurst) "T HE cowbirds mingle a good deal with the grackles when migrating. They are easily distinguished from them by their smaller size and less conspicuous tails. The males have brown heads and necks and black bodies; the females are grey all over. They utter while flying a peculiar long whistling note, ending with a quickly repeated trembling note on a little higher key. It is rather a plaintive song —if it can be called a song—and is quite different from the scratching, cackling notes of most blackbirds. They only seem to practice this song a comparatively short time in the year, in April and May. I have also heard them utter a harsh rat- tle while flying, much like the rattled notes of the meadow lark. I think the females made this note but am not sure. May, 1906. The males make a noise just like the gurgle of water through a long necked bottle. [ 33 ] BLACK-THROATED BUNTING June 8, 1894 May 7, 1895 May 12, 1896 (Elmhurst) HE incessant chee-chee-chee-chee-chee of this bird may get monotonous when heard too often, but it is always a delightful sound to me. Its reedy quality attracts me; and it always means long June days and sunny prairies to me. It is essen- tially a denizen of the meadows. Few birds are more abundant or more promi- nent than these buntings are here. They mount on posts or tall grasses and shout at you energetically as you drive by, not in the least alarmed at your presence. In Lake Forest they are not so abundant. I only see a few birds out west. May 27, 1908. I saw two and heard two more when going out to Libertyville today. I have not seen or heard one since 1904. [ 34 ] BLUEBIRD March 2, 1893 March 3, 1894 T HE pair that built in my box in 1893 raised two broods. In 1894 they began building. May 3d, 1895, I have seen no sign of a bluebird up to this time —DMay 13—and no one else has seen one here either. It is most remarkable. May 28, still no bluebirds. July 14, heard one warble today, the first one of the season. The latter part of July, 1895, I saw a family of six birds. September, 1895, I heard one warble, the first one observed near our house this year, the others were seen on drives. [35] CARDINAL GROSBEAK OBSERVED this bird first at Harrow- gate, Tennessee, in April, 1894, and be- came very familiar with him in Augusta, Georgia, in March, 1895, and in other southern trips. But J had never seen him in our northern regions till today, April 4, 1902. A female has been seen with him by Emerson Tuttle, but I saw only the one bird, a male. He sang, and the song impressed me as very varied; the opening notes like a robin’s warble, then a few chords, a warble too, but with the double sound which the veery has, only, of course, bold and loud. His whistles always have inflection in them. April 15, 1909. Saw and heard a male cardinal at the Byron Smith’s. He sang frequently, a loud clear whistle. Mrs. Burnap reported that she saw him yester- day and two females were with him. June 5,1910. Acardinal woke me with his loud sweet whistle this morning. Never heard one on our place before. He was in the maple by my window. He sang several times. [ 36 ] Bird Observations June 19 and 26, 1910. Sang both these days; must be nesting near here. May 5, 1912. Heard today and many days after on our place. June 19 and 20. Again. L371 CATBIRD May 4, 1894 April 27, 1896 May 8, 1897 I THINK each year that I have learned all the catbird’s odd ways, but each spring as he returns he surprises me with some new vagaries either in song or be- havior. He seems to revel in the un- expected. May 30 1895. At 2:30 this morning I woke up and the first sound I heard was the soft singing of a catbird in the trees across the field. It sounded strange in the darkness of the night, and the strangest part of it was that he kept on singing in a broken, meditative sort of way for a full hour. By that time the first streaks of dawn began to appear, and the chorus of other birds drowned his voice. [ 38 ] CEDAR BIRD April 3, 1893 (Elmhurst) OT a common bird here. Much commoner in Lake Forest. August 9, 1901. Found a nest in a nearby elm containing four eggs; how late in the season! [39] CHICKADEE August 25, 1893 (Elmhurst) “THESE birds do not seem as plentiful here as the books report them in the east. The quality of their note, chick-a- dee-dee, is something like that of the che- wink’s call note, strident, but sweeter and of course much fainter and finer. The plaintive clear minor whistle of two notes, the first higher, the second a half note lower, I have also frequently heard. April 11, 1903. A note I did not rec- ognize at first I found to be that of this bird. It sounded like a blackbird in the distance. It was a decided cut-cut-ca-da- cut strongly emphasized at the end, and rather harsh, not contented as a hen gives it. [ 40 ] Young Chicadee CAROLINA CHICKADEE March 29, 1895 (Georgia) IKE our northern bird, but without the white edges to the tail. The note is described most accurately in Torrey’s Florida Sketch Book, four notes, very sweet. [41 ] COWBIRD M2 24,1905. Heard a loud rasping “ker-chee-e-e”’ in the woods, utterly unlike any note I ever heard a cowbird utter before. I felt sure it was some strange flycatcher note till I saw the bird. He uttered it many times, such a queer, grating sound. It never occurred to me it could be anything but a flycatcher till I watched the bird do it. [ 42] BROWN CREEPER Spring, 1893 October 13, 1893 April 3, 1894 S AW one in Lake Forest as late as May 13 in 1907. [ 43 ] AMERICAN CROSSBILL November 1, 1895 August 23, 1896 Y attention was attracted this after- noon by a flock of about twenty birds flying vigorously and directly _to- wards some spruce trees near me. They were uttering a clear, whistling chirp con- stantly as they flew. I was sure they were birds I was unfamiliar with, and when they settled on the tops of the spruces and I brought my glass to bear on them I was delighted to recognize this long-looked for species. There were a few bright colored males, but most of them were the plainer olive females and the striped young birds. They were exceedingly tame, and were busily engaged in crawling up and down the branches and crunching the cone seeds in their bills. They made a decided noise with their wings when they fluttered about, louder than that of an English sparrow. Their crossed bills and short tails are con- spicuous points. August, 1896. I saw a large flock to- day as I was sitting on the porch of our new house. I recognized them at once by the notes. Most of them were young birds. [44] & BLACK-BILLED CUCKOO M+" 19, 1902. I find this species much less common here than the yellow billed; saw one unmistakably this morning. | 45 ] YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO 1892 ead May, 1893 iach May 14, 1894 May 13, 1895 (Lake Forest) tease 29, 1901. Had a fine view of this bird ina bare tree. How rufous his wings are and his bill looks as if it were all yellow and not just the lower mandible, at least it looks so in the sun. No notes from this bird today. I wish I could tell his notes from the black-billed. Was it this bird that has been giving a low coo at intervals for several days? (July 31, 1901) or the black-billed? I could only see that it was a cuckoo, not a bittern as we first thought. He keeps this cooing up for hours; so different from his loud cow-cow-cow-ing. [ 46 ] ACADIAN FLYCATCHER." Mia 30, 1907. Watched two on the barn fence for a long time. They tilt their tails as the phoebe does, only it is a much more nervous and rapid motion than the phoebe’s. A wood pewee was on the same fence uttering his sweet wail many times, and I could compare the two to great advantage. The Acadian looked so small and green beside the pewee. His wings were so barred and his eye ring so noticeable. [47] GREAT-CRESTED FLYCATCHER , June 13, 1894 June 2, 1895 May 8, 1897 May 21, 1898 T HIS fellow just lit on a branch near me on the road to the spring for a minute, and then was off and away, and I saw no more of him this summer of 1894. In Lake Forest, June 2, 1895, I again saw him and heard him give his loud wild cry, but I have not yet had a satisfactory study of the bird. June 15, 1895. I had quite a good look at the great-crest today. The sulphur yel- low is so conspicuous underneath. May, 1906. When he flies he looks al- most as long as a cuckoo. [ 48 ] LEAST FLYCATCHER weeey 1893 May 12, 1895 | my four years of bird study (1895) I have only observed this little fellow twice; never have heard him utter a sound. [49] OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER RS. HUBBARD pointed this bird out to me once on a high oak in our yard. I do not know what year, perhaps about 1904 or 1905, but I had a poor study of him on that day. Today, May 13, 1907, I watched him as long as I wanted to in a most favorable situation. He was perched on the dead stub of a tree, on the bluff on the Buckingham place, and as the tree was below me he was nearly on a level with me. He is a powerful looking bird. Such a strong bill, and such vigorous move- ments as he had! He would dart at in- sects a great distance away, but always returned to the same stub at the top of the tree. I noticed that he always faced south, no matter at what angle he lit on the stub he always took his position facing me and turned his eye towards the sun, which was bright and hot, without blinking. It was the same when I went to the west of him: he still faced south, so it was evidently not done with the object of keeping an eye on me. Was it that he saw the insects better between the sun and himself, I wonder? [50] FLORIDA GALLINULE M** 18, 1902. We were walking in the McCormicks’ ravine when I chanced to see a bird sitting perfectly still on a high crotch of a maple. We all viewed it through our glasses as long as we wanted to. Saw the leaden black breast and the brilliant red patch above the bill. It never moved, except to turn its head now and then for, I should think, twenty minutes. It looked like a rail, but I had never heard of one such an extraor- dinary color. Finally John and John Case threw stones to make it fly, but it simply craned its neck over to look at them. ‘They banged the tree with a big stick, but it would not budge. Finally as we were turning to go it crept stealthily up the sloping branch of the tree, and settled itself in another position, where we left it, and hurried home to look up our remark- able bird. It uttered no sound of any kind. [51] BLUE-GREY GNATCATCHER April, 1894 (Tennessee) April 3, 1895 eorgia) April 26, 1896 (Lake Forest) May 5, 1897 (Lake Forest) N Tennessee when I saw this bird I heard nothing but the soft little mew it gives as it flutters around among the branches. But here in Augusta I have had a fine view of two of these tiny birds and heard the song many times. Such a sweet, varied, soft, little song, something like a goldfinch’s, but with almost as much vari- ety in it as a thrasher’s. It seems to me the faintest, tiniest little song and just suited to the size of the bird. April, 1896. There are several of these little birds around our new house as it is building. May 5, 1897. Saw a pair back of our garden. [52] GOLDFINCH January 14, 1901 AW and heard numbers of this species. [53] WILD GOOSE January 4, 1901 SAW a flock flying south and have seen them at intervals through December. 1 54 ] BONAPARTE’S GULL (Lake Forest) April 28 W HAT a little beauty this gull is! His black head, pearl grey wings, and flashing white under parts are a pleasure to see as he wheels and turns over the lake. He is one of the smaller gulls, and is very graceful in his movements. [55] EVENING GROSBEAK April 16, 1896 April 26, 1896 LOCKS of a dozen or fifteen of these handsome birds have been here (Lake Forest) since the first of the month. They are so tame it is easy to study them, and their call note, a loud, metallic whis- tle, without any inflection in it, proclaims their presence unfailingly. The note re- minds me of one of the notes of the tufted titmouse. The whistle is accompanied by a sort of rattling trill at intervals. They seem to have disappeared now (May 5). February 19, 1902. Saw a flock of fif- teen, seven males and eight females in Fannie Tuttle’s yard. They were on a bare spot on the ground under a maple, feeding on the maple seeds, apparently, and were so tame and close together that I had fourteen of them in the field of my glass at one time. The notes could be heard some distance away. The loud “peep, peep” reminded me of a little chicken’s peep, when it is very loud, and the little softer rattle sounded like the soft rolled R a chicken gives as it cuddles [56] Bird Observations under its mother’s wing. The loud ‘“‘peep” is more of a whistle than a chicken gives, but heard at a distance it reminds one of it. March 3, 1902. Saw a large flock. Counted fifty-two and some others escaped me. ‘There must have been sixty or seventy in the flock. They have been seen here constantly now for three weeks. _ March 23. Still here. April 4, 1901. Saw and heard many this morning. The rattled note reminded me of a car conductor’s whistle. April 15, 1902. Saw two full colored males and a number of females. April 11, 1909. Saw several males and females. Have been here all winter, but this was my first view of them. April 18. Still here; a large flock in the ravine near President Nollen’s house. May 6. Heard several. May 7. Saw seven grosbeaks and heard others. Seems remarkable that they are still here. It has been very cold up to May 5, when it was 86°; May 6, was over 70°. May 14, 1909. Still here. ee ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAK Spring, 1892 May 9, 1893 May 3, 1894 May 2, 1896 ‘THESE birds are regular in their com- ing, and are among our best known birds here, though they are never plentiful. The male is a beautiful singer, his sweet, melodious warble resembling a robin’s, only it is much more finished, sweeter, with a.softer and more oriole-like quality. He is one of our most constant and fearless singers during June. Later in the summer he is entirely silent. September 1, 1895. I heard one warble quite a long song, and as sweet in quality as his spring song. I have heard this bird sing exultantly as he soared in the air, after the manner. of a bobolink. Both male and female throw themselves in the air and turn graceful somersaults in pursuit of in- sects. The male utters a loud chirp which is very unmusical, like the squeak of a wheel which needs oiling. The grosbeaks were very common here in the spring and summer of 1895. One would hear six or [58 ] ' Bird Observations eight singing in the course of a morning walk May 15, 1901. Counted eight females and three males on Alcott school lawn. Miss Burt said that in the morning they counted thirty. [59 ] BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT HERON (Elmhurst) "THERE is a large and remarkable col- ony of these birds which nests in the Bryan’s place every year. They occupy the tops of the evergreens there, and the squawking clamor they make, especially towards evening, can be heard over here. They fly over our place every night about sunset, on their way to the creek for fish, uttering their loud “‘quauk”’ as they go; their white breasts gleaming in the light, and their wings “opening and shutting” with the regular flight which most water birds have. June 15, 1895. I visited this heronry this morning and found the remnants of egg-shells thickly scattered on the ground under the nests. They were as large as hen’s eggs, of a robin’s egg blue in color. [ 60 ] GREEN HERON M** 9, 1901. One sat ona small tree on the edge of our bluffs for about five minutes, and I viewed him through our big glass. He is a most curious and weird looking bird. His yellow iris and voracious looking bill give him an uncanny look. He hunched himself together and would then stretch his neck up to an in- credible height. He looked much larger flying than sitting on the tree. This is the second one I have identified here. I saw his legs and feet very plainly and they certainly looked a bright flesh pink, not olive as the books say. [ 61 ] INDIGO BIRD July 20, 1893 May 7, 1894 May 4, 1896 May 10, 1897 May 19, 1898 TRE blue of the indigo bunting is very different from that of the bluebird, darker and more metallic looking, but very brilliant in the sunshine. The light colored, thick bill is a distinguishing mark. Song a little like a goldfinch’s—sweeter, less jumbled together, more of a “‘set song.” May 12, 1903. Saw four birds on the lawn east of house, three of them high colored, the other blue but not so deep and brilliant. Close to them were two goldfinches and a white crowned sparrow, a beautiful company. All were eating dandelion seeds. May 30, 1907. Saw one male and two females eating dandelion seeds. What a reddish hue the lady birds have. é [ 62 ] Nest of Indigo Bunting JUNCO 1892 (Elmhurst) HE arrival of these flocks of slate colored snow birds is always a sign of approaching winter. They feed on the ground. They utter frequently a low t’sip, t’sip, and sometimes the whole flock will light on the lower branches of a clump of evergreens and keep up a continuous low, sweet, twittering, which is pleasant to hear at a season when there are so few bird notes. March, 1894. I watched one sitting quite high in a tree who threw his head back and sang with all his might. His song began quite like a canary’s, with some little runs and trills, but did not have the variety or brilliancy of that songster, as he soon relapsed into his customary sweet twittering. [ 63 ] KING BIRD May 20, 1893 (Elmhurst) JC INGBIEDS seem to fly out further AX in their flights after insects than other flycatchers. Their motions are very grace- ful and beautiful. [ 64 ] GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET 1892 March 26, 1893 March 21, 1894 December 2, 1894 September 29, 1895 (Elmhurst) ‘THE stripe of vivid orange on the head is always visible and not sometimes concealed as in the ruby-crowned. The note is exceedingly thin, scarcely audible at times. It is not at all shy and will often allow you to get within ten feet of him. The faint squeaking ‘‘zie” is usually re- peated three times. March, 1902. Have never heard any other sound from them except this zie- zie-zie. March, 1907. Heard a song I thought must be a warbler song, faint and uninter- esting in character, but new. Found sev- eral gold crests and one or two sang fre- quently. I followed them for some time. Description in Chapman’s Handbook ex- cellent. First time I ever heard this spe- cies sing. [65 ] RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET 1892 April 9, 1893 September 22, 1893 September 24, 1895 (Elmhurst) HE smallest birds—these and the golden crowned —in this part of the country except the humming birds and winter wrens. General coloring and habits much like some warblers, but they are smaller, and the shape is not so long and thin. The expression of the eye is quite different too, caused by a round yellowish mark around the eye, while the warbler’s eye markings are usually horizontal. This gives him a wide-eyed, surprised look. The ruby lifts his wings constantly in a restless way, more than the golden. The ruby spot on the head is plainly visible all the time in the spring in some individuals, and is not concealed at all. Kinglets are much hardier than warblers, coming earlier and staying later. I have heard the ruby utter a harsh, chattering, scold- ing series of notes, much like a house [ 66 ] Bird Observations sparrow, and quite loud. It is much like that of a winter wren. The song I have heard a number of times, a deliciously sweet fairy-like performance. April 24, 1902. Heard three different individuals singing this morning. All had the chattering notes, interspersed with a hurried louder whistle, very like the “‘cher-o-kee, cher-o-kee”’ of the Carolina wren. This part of the song could be heard some distance, though of course it was not as loud as the wren’s. April 16, 1903. Saw a kinglet with a gorgeous ruby crown, and supposed a fe- male must be near whose attention he was trying to attract, but I soon saw another male, also showing his ruby spot. There was a little sparring and then the one I had first seen flew away, his whole head look- ing like a living coal of fire. April 27, 1907. Heard five kinglets singing this morning as I walked to Julia Thompson’s. [ 67 ] ‘PRAIRIE HORNED LARK Autumn, 1892 June 28, 1893 (Elmhurst) SEE this beautiful bird here at inter- vals through most of the year. I heard one sing quite a sweet little warble from the top of the fence when the ground was covered deep with snow. They utter a number of notes beside this warble. They have a lonely sounding ‘“‘peep-peep” as they fly off from the road in scattering flocks, and they also utter some loud sweet notes, having a quality not unlike those of the meadow lark, though fewer in num- ber. The yellow under the bill varies greatly in different individuals. In the birds where the color is pale, the species is probably the “Prairie” variety, the others the ‘“‘Horned” simply. They are not at all shy, yet I have never observed them venture within the confines of a village. [ 68 ] HOODED MERGANSER April 28 (Lake Forest) SAw three in the lake; they dive like loons. The white back of the crest was most conspicuous, only it looked yel- low in the strong afternoon sunlight. They stay under water quite a while, and throw themselves down, when they start to dive, with the utmost vigor. [ 69 ] MOCKING BIRD March 21, 1895 (dugusta, Ga.) ‘THE song is so like that of the brown thrasher, and yet it is more varied, and seems to me to have less of the bold dash of that bird, and more sweet melody in it. But it introduces more cat-calls and uncouth noises, so that it is not as dignified a performance as that of the brown thrasher. April rst. On hearing the song more often it seems less attractive to me than the thrasher’s, though more remarkable. [ 70 ] RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH September 7, 1894 August 29, 1895 I NOTICE a great deal of variety in the coloring of the breasts of these birds. Some are as bright a bay as many robins, and others have only a pale yel- lowish-red wash over the white. Cai] WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH April 15, 1894 (Tennessee) I HAVE never yet seen these birds in Elmhurst (1895). I wonder why they are not here. The red-breasted I see every autumn. I enjoyed my one and only sight of this bird when I saw him in the Tennes- see woods. He is too marked a bird to be mistaken for any other, even on a first acquaintance. In 1896, in January, I saw these birds in Lake Forest. April, 1896. They are abundant here. [72] ORCHARD ORIOLE June 8, 1900 Ga" and heard this bird today after having watched for him for nine years of bird study. Found him in a tree near ‘Atteridge’s farm, a mature male. Song beautiful, full, vigorous, rich, finer than the Baltimore. May 11, 1903. I have seen two orioles in our grounds for two days, and this morning I saw three, two mature males and an immature male of the second year, really a handsomer bird than the others with his trim olive coat and jet black face. The orchard oriole has a very difficult song to describe, a full, flowing warble, interjected with the characteristic blackbird note of the orioles at frequent intervals, but it is not loud enough to spoil the beauty of the song. May 23, 1907. Saw a young male some days ago, in song, and today saw an old male in our yard. Cae GREAT HORNED OWL A PRIL 22, 1902. Saw him in the ra- vine back of the Henry Durand place (bird class). What a big fellow he is! And what remarkable ears or horns! A most weird looking bird. It is strange that in all my bird study I have seen so few owls. This and the screech owl are the only ones I am acquainted with. [74] Great Horned Owl (captive) WILSON’S PHALAROPE May 28, 1895 M®=:: HUBBARD and I spied two of these handsome birds in a_ small pond on the road to the spring. We had the most satisfactory study of them. They allowed us to come within about fifteen feet of them, and we watched them as long as we wanted to. There were two of them, both females, possibly, as these are described as the more brilliant of the two sexes. They were most conspicuous, striking birds, with their gleaming white breasts, black stripe through the eye, run- ning into chestnut on the neck and back, and the broad white stripe on the back of the head and neck. They were most un- concerned about our presence, and went on wading in the puddle and feeding in the water as calmly as if we had been miles away. One bird was very belligerent to the other one and drove it away numbers of times. There was another smaller bird with these two beauties, apparently of the same family, but it was striped with grey and brown on the back, and plain white underneath, a sparrowy looking creature. ore Bird Observations He was quite unconcerned while the fights were going on between the other two. He tallied exactly with the description of the immature phalarope, but how could he have been that at this time of the year? On the whole I never had a finer chance to study a new bird than I did this time. The phalaropes uttered no. sound except a plaintive ‘‘tweet, tweet,” now and then. L 7eJ ae Young Phoebes PHOEBE 1896 A PAIR nested on our west gable, before our Ardleigh house was fin- ished. July 6, 1901. This is the sixth year phoebes have nested on the house. I wonder if it is the same pair. Three years under the roof of the porch, twice under the porch, and once on the gable. This year they began nesting May 17th, began ae June 3rd, and the young flew July 6th. April 20, 1902. Phoebes began nesting on the top of the porch pillar, their fourth year on this identical spot. May 3rd. Began sitting. May 17th. One just hatched, four other eggs in nest. May 18th. All hatched. June 2nd. Five lusty birds flew out of the nest today. June 15th. The same pair (presumably) began to investigate the old nest again, and on the 17th I saw the female sitting. 1910. Phoebes still nesting on our house. This is the fifteenth consecutive year. [77] PINE SISKIN M* 20, 1907. A flock of sixty birds, counted through my glass, and with others I could not count scattered about, feeding on dandelion seeds, was what I saw at the Winter Club this afternoon. A number of goldfinches were with them, but the siskins were much more numerous. Their notes first attracted my attention, a great deal of goldfinch like chatter, but with a constant burr or buzz interspersed with it, that distinguished it from the familiar song of that bird. I could get quite near the birds, they seemed unsus- picious, and to have the same gentle, con- fiding natures that the goldfinches have. How striped they were! All over, just the yellowish bars on the wings to break the effect. I wish we could induce them to stay and eat up our dandelion seeds. May 14, 1909. A flock in the Granger's sit The burr in the notes very notice- able. [ 78 ] PIPIT June 28, 1893 May 28, 1895 Wie I first saw pipits running along the road I thought they were shore larks. Their movements and size are so like the lark’s. But a nearer view shows them to be very different. They appear dappled all over except on the lower breast, and they lack the black markings around the head which the lark has. [79] Laboratory of Ornitholegy 1159 Sapsucker Woods Road ; ‘varsity Gorell Univers! Ithaca, New York 14850 PURPLE FINCH October 1, 1895 April, 1896 He MAE RST has never yielded a single example of this bird, as far as I have yet discovered. I saw my first specimens in Lake Forest, John Ferry pointing them out to me. There was quite a flock of them feeding on the seeds of the ironwood trees. They were all in sparrowy dress, without the reddish hue they acquire later inthe year. Their manners resemble those of the grosbeak, and they reminded me of the way that bird twists about after food, and almost crawls over the branches like a parrot. They look like small edi- tions of the female rose-breasted. The thick bills and deeply forked tails of these finches aid in identifying them. In April, 1896, I saw them again in Lake Forest, this time the males had their rosy colors. May, 1900. Am sure I heard the song, so loud and melodious, a little like the warbling vireo’s; did not see the bird, but heard the song several times. April, 1901. Heard the song numbers of times and saw the birds, later heard [ 80 ] Bird Observations them various times and saw one male in fine summer plumage, and he really did look very purple in the sunlight. The song, when I first heard it, made me think of a warbling vireo, trying to sing like a goldfinch. Such a variety of notes, and yet the song was short. A few days later the song I heard was more flute-like, louder, and fuller—but still short. February 15, 1903. Saw a flock of about fifteen birds in our grounds. They were very silent. The males had a dusky purplish hue. There were several inches of snow on the ground, and it was still snowing. [81] CAROLINA RAIL M*x 8, 1905, in the pond west of Libertyville, there must have been many of them. May 15, 1906. One in marsh west of Convent Crossing, Lake Forest. Such a loud cackle of alarm as he gave, but looked as tranquil and tame as possible while he paddled about close to me. Wh don’t the books speak of his yellow bill, and of the Virginia’s red one? The two birds were both together there. Some of their loud explosive notes make me think of a chat. [ 82 ] VIRGINIA RAIL M* 15, 1906. Saw my first one in marsh west of track at Convent Crossing. He cack-ed and kuk-ed, and waded about very near me. His bill looked so red. No book speaks of a red bill, but this one certainly looked so. [ 83 ] LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE April 24, 1894 May 28, 1895 NEVER see this shrike here in num- bers, but it is a regular summer resi- dent, and in my drives over the prairies I usually see one or two individuals. May 28, 1895. We found five young shrikes, hardly able to fly, in a thorn hedge today. They were lovely little fellows, their plumage as soft as eiderdown, and they huddled close together, three of them on one branch, and looked as innocent of being members of a murderous race as if they were turtle doves. We found the re- mains of a small bird, supposably of a house sparrow, impaled upon a_ thorn near by their nest. The parent birds were nowhere visible, though we passed the place both morning and afternoon. [ 84 ] NORTHERN SHRIKE March 16, 1894 izes plumage of this bird seems dull beside that of the Loggerhead, with its clear pearl greys, black and white, which I see here so often in summer. I have seen this bird only once so far. It sat on a lonely tree by the roadside and uttered a curious low-pitched gurgling noise, unlike any other note I ever heard. [85 ] FOX SPARROW S ONG varies very much in different in- dividuals, always sweet, rich and me- lodious. March 24, 1902. Singing in our grounds. The song has a decided melody and form. The first note single, severa] others in couples, then something of a jumble, a pure whistle. A quiet repose about it, though. April 8, 1903. Watched one sing a long time. Such purity, such delicious sweet- ness of tone! Hardly any two songs alike, yet all about the same length, often ending with a little soliloquy, as it were, some- times a slightly chattered note or two. All the songs had form, and had a large range of notes. March 31, 1908. So many singing, if one starts the whole flock begins to sing. The Asso. hymn ‘“‘True hearted, whole hearted, faithful and loyal,” recalls the form if you accent strongly the heart both times and the ful in faithful. [ 86 ] GRASSHOPPER SPARROW June 21, 1895 HAVE heard the feeble insect-like trill of this bird several times, but have never been able to identify it till today. We were driving near Addison, and Edith Skeele and I heard the note and followed up the bird. He flew from one weed to another, singing with his head thrown back, and with an enérgy worthy of a better cause. His song is so weak, just a low trill, without any of the strident qualities of the chipping sparrow. It can only be heard a very short distance off. He is one of the smallest sparrows; the head showing the narrow median and the wider superciliary stripes very plainly; the wing tinged with yellow towards the front. E37] HOUSE SPARROW AY 29, 1902. A single pair are try- ing to nest on Frank F.’s house. This morning I was awakened at 4:15 by the squawking of one of the pair, presum- ably the male. After listening to its monotonous chirping for ten minutes I was impressed with the number of times it re- peated its note, and at what regular inter- vals it was uttered. I began to count the squawks, and counted one thousand one hundred twenty-seven of them with scarcely a variation in time or tone. Then it stopped for two or three minutes, began again, and this time I counted three hun- dred sixty chirps, when I grew tired of counting and went to sleep. At 6:30 when I awakened, the same bird was holding forth. [ 88 ] LARK SPARROW June 25, 1897 AW four or five of these birds in a field about six miles west of Lake Forest. They were singing when I first noticed them, a sweet song, something between a goldfinch and a vesper sparrow. ‘Their marked heads and white bordered tails (the latter almost as conspicuous as a mourning dove’s) make them easy to identify. They were very unsuspicious. June 28, 1897. Saw three more near Lake Forest. [ 89 ] SAVANNAH SPARROW AY 8, 1901. Saw two sparrows which I took to be this species, but am not quite positive. Song, a faint whirr, but too little of it to tell. The yellow in front of eye most marked, but one of the birds certainly seemed to have a spot on the breast like a song sparrow. (No such mark in the books.) Its breast was quite striped. [90] SWAMP SPARROW M*« I, 1903. First view of this bird after all these years of bird study. He was in a swampy place west of the Wal- den gate. How he did flirt his tail and bob about! As active as a wren or a water thrush, indeed the tilting of his tail was very much like the latter bird. Then he would drop down into the grass and run through it like a mouse. He is smaller and more conspicuously striped than most of the plain sparrows, and the chestnut on head and wings is very striking. I heard no song, only a small weak chirp. May 6, 1904. In our garden, a single bird, so restless and active. On first seeing it flit in and out of the bushes before I saw the colors, I thought it was a warbler. This bird chirped continually, not such a very weak chirp. April 24, 1905. In our garden again, two of them, chirping constantly, quite loudly. Such restless, active birds, and so pretty. There were decided streaks on this bird’s breast, not dark, very light, but plainly visible. April 29, 1906. Close to our front door in the bushes—tilting his tail as usual. [91 ] Bird Observations Colors so bright and rufous, such a chest- nut crown. A pretty fellow indeed. Ran like a mouse between bushes, and was very active, but not as shy as some I’ve seen. [92]. TREE SPARROW March 15, 1894 (Elmhurst) M Y first sight of this bird was as I was walking along the village road one windy morning. I knew him at once, he was so like the chippy, only he seemed warmer colored, and a little lighter. The reddish cap was very marked. He is a trim, aristocratic looking bird, much more so than the chippy, I think. March 16, 1894. Saw a large flock, they sang a great deal, a very sweet song, but somewhat thin, quite varied, something of the goldfinch quality. They trill like a canary. November 4. Saw spot on breast and two white wing bars, very distinct. [ 93 ] WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW April 17, 1894 (Tennessee) May 9, 1896 May 5, 1897 May 19, 1898 HEARD this species sing for the first time this morning, May 7, 1900. Again May gth saw a flock and many of them in song. A very sweet, rather plaintive song, opening with a few notes in quality like the vesper sparrows, but in form a little like the meadow lark’s, and ending with a few hoarse notes. ‘May 8, t901. Saw seven birds on one small tree, nearly all sang. Quite a va- riety in their songs as to the pitch of the notes, but all had the clear meadowlark whistles first, and then the lower, harsher notes. A peculiar and distinctive song. May 16, 1901. Waked up at 5 a. m. by an unfamiliar song. A clear, sweet whistle, just like this: Bird Observations No husky trill after it, yet I think it must have been the white crown. May 18. Several here still, and singing, the song as when I first heard it, not the whistle. [95] ROUGH-WINGED SWALLOW April 20, 1895 (Washington) SAW numbers of these birds out in the park, and watched some of them fly in and out of a nest hole in a high rocky bank. They are without the grey band across the breast which the bank swallow has, and are much the soberest of the fam- ily. They look so much shorter than the barn swallow, and gleam white and then brown as they fly in the sunlight. [ 96 J SCARLET TANAGER May 10, 1893 May 9, 1894 May 4, 1896 May 8&, 1897 I HAVE known the male of this species ever since I was a child, but have never known its song till May, 1894. Its warble is like the robin’s, but louder, more solemn, without the cheerful, everyday quality of the latter’s song. It intersperses its song at times with its call of ‘“‘chip- chirr,”’ which is such a marked and char- acteristic note. [97 ] SUMMER TANAGER April 9, 1895 (Georgia) I WAS walking home to the Bon Air today, and my attention was attracted by a curious clicking noise in a tree near by. It sounded like a chisel slipping on stone, not in the least like a whistle, or the trilling or warbling of most birds. I looked up and there was the summer tanager on a branch not far off. He is so handsome with his bright red plumage, though he does not look such a vivid scarlet as our tanager. He is smaller, too. He did not seem at all shy, and I had a fine chance of observing him. He uttered his clicking notes at intervals while he hunted about the tree for insects. They sounded like “kick-up,” “‘kick-up”’ to me, and sometimes “kick-a-poo,” the first notes higher than the others. They were not very loud. April 11, 1895. WHeard and saw him again today. This time he ran six or seven notes rapidly together, each with the sharp “‘click”’ to it. April 13th. Heard a tanager sing this [ 98 ] Bird Observations morning. I heard this song like a robin at a distance and was sure it must be the tanager, and sure enough there was his red coat among the branches. I do not recall any other bird who sings so much like a robin as he does. The cadence and inflection of the warble seem almost identical with that of the robin, yet the quality is different, and has something of the scarlet tanager’s individuality in it. I found, too, that the song is more broken than the robin’s, being repeated at inter- vals, instead of being an uninterrupted strain. April 16th. This tanager utters some- times a curious squawking note very like a woodpecker. It is loud, and uttered at in- tervals from the top of some tall tree, so that until I discovered the small red object sitting up in a high pine and watched his bill open and shut I would not believe that there was not some new and large species of woodpecker up there. [99 ] GREEN-WING TEAL May 27, 1895 ‘THE only wild duck I have ever seen around here, except the flocks one sees flying through the sky in the spring and fall. This solitary individual was in a marsh on the road to the spring. His chestnut head and neck, light back and breast, and the white crescent on his side just ahead of the wing, were his striking marks. [ 100 ] GREY-CHEEKED THRUSH May 12, 1896 HE absence of the yellow eye ring is the only way to distinguish this thrush from the olive-backed. It sings a low, sighing sort of a song, here, not its full song. May 12, 1896. I heard and saw one sing in this way. I have always thought these faint breathed notes, which I have heard so often issuing from the depths of some evergreen tree, came from the veery, but was undeceived today. It is a peculiar song, unlike any other, as if wet rubber were rubbed together; it rises a little and dies away, rises and dies away, in a sort of cadence—all as if it were singing under its breath. May roth. I saw a thrush which seemed to be the grey cheeked and which sang in the same way, but this and the occurrence of 1896 as noted above are doubtless cases of mistaken identity. No doubt both birds were veeries, which goes to prove that that bird varies a good deal as to his color- ing, and is by no means always so tawny. { ror ] HERMIT THRUSH Spring, 1892 April 3, 1893 October 11, 1893 March 22, 1894 bY Gone plentiful here during spring mi- gration, apparently not so much so in fall, and more shy in latter season. The olive head and back and decidedly rufous tail make it easy to distinguish from other thrushes. April 17, 1912. Was awakened at 5 a. m. by this thrush singing in a tree close to my window. Sang clearly about this number of notes: os ce ee eer to) I have often heard the bird in S. W. Har- bor, Me. This song was an unmistakable thrush song. It could not have been any- thing but the Hermit at so early a date. I did not see the bird, however, being ill in bed. I have not heard of its singing dur- ing migration in this locality before, neither had Mr. B. T. Gault, of Glen [ 102 ] Bird Observations Ellyn, to whom I wrote. But he feels, as I do, that I have made no mistake in being sure that it is a Hermit. [ 103 ] OLIVE-BACKED THRUSH April, 1893 April 28, 1894 August 30, 1894 PSESE thrushes are here in great numbers the first part of May, one of the commonest birds in the spring mi- grations. They come around the house constantly, in spite of the fact that there is almost no cover for them. I have studied them with great care, but find it difficult to be certain whether there are any gray-cheeked thrushes among them. The orbital ring does not seem very dis- tinct in many of them, and yet they all have some, which the gray cheeks are not supposed to have at all. They utter a loud snapping chirp when alarmed. I heard one singing a twittering song softly to himself once, the way the tawny thrush does. [ 104 ] TAWNY THRUSH (Veery) May 19, 1893 May 11, 1895 May 16, 1896 T HE first acquaintance I had with this thrush was in White Birch. It was singing softly to itself, in a twittering sort of way. I did not see it that day, but Mrs. Hubbard, who was with me, told me it was the Wilson’s thrush.* Afterwards I saw the bird under an evergreen in our yard at Wheaton. May 11, 1895. I had a fine study of the veery in White Birch. The bird hopped about on the road not ten feet from us, and stayed there as long as Edith Skeele and I wanted to look at it. It is so much more delicately colored than any of the other thrushes—the back and tail a light fulvous brown, the throat without spots, and the spots on the breast very faint. The markings about the eye and down from the bill are also exceedingly faint, not dark as in the olive-back and Hermit. The upper breast has a wash of decidedly * See grey-cheeked thrush. [ 105 ] Bird Observations tawny color across it, changing to whitish lower down on the breast. The veery is never as abundant here as the other thrushes. May 16, 1896. I heard a veery give a loud, curious, whistle this afternoon, then a whining ‘‘whee-oo” several times, quite a different sound from any other note I ever heard from a thrush. May 11, 1897. I found two veeries this a. m., both very easy to approach. They seem less shy than other thrushes. One had almost no perceptible spots on his breast, in the other they were quite dis- tinct. Both uttered the peculiar complain- ing call. One made a series of odd whining clucks, then changed the key sud- denly to a low one, and then changed again, so that he had quite a variety, and confused me at first as to what bird it could be. June 26, 1911. WHeard a veery near Stone Gate. Nearly every summer a pair nests in the woods west of our house. I have never found the nest, but I have heard them singing or giving their peculiar whining calls all through June and July. [ 106 ] TUFTED TITMOUSE March 20, 1895 (Augusta, Ga.) HE notes of this bird resemble so closely those of the chickadee that at first one cannot tell them apart. In ap- pearance it bears a general resemblance to the cedar bird, but is smaller and less ex- quisitely colored. The titmouse has a clear whistle consisting of three, sometimes four, notes all on exactly the same key, and without inflection or variation, a simple, lain whistle, unlike the cardinal’s in this. t also has a more common note, a whis- tle of two quickly repeated notes, the sec- ond note about four notes higher than the first; the two are generally given four or five times in quick succession. All the tit- mouse’s notes seem to me to lack melody, and the pathos which is as characteristic of the chickadee’s whistle. They are emi- nently prosaic. The notes always remind me of a penny whistle. April 11th, Georgia. One feels as if there was always more to learn about the titmouse’s notes. This morning I heard [ 107 ] \ Bird Observations two or three notes squeaked out like a wheel of a barrow, and found it to be this versatile bird. [ 108 ] TOWHEE BUNTING Fi) dongs 11, 1904. I saw one bird, and on the 12th I saw two males over near the Stone Gate, and another when I reached home, presumably three birds—remarkably early migration. [ 109 ] PHILADELPHIA VIREO 1894 April 5, 1895 (Georgia) MALLER than the other vireos, except the white-eyed, or perhaps the war- bling, this bird looks more like the latter, except that it is yellower. The breast, especially, is perceptibly washed with yel- low on the sides. The song I have had a fine opportunity of hearing here in Georgia. It is quite unlike the other vireos, has more snap to it, beginning with a sharp ‘“‘whit-tee,” followed by some war- bled notes. This is repeated several times at quite short intervals, and then a new refrain is taken up. Altogether the song lacks the monotony of the red-eye’s entirely. Sometimes it begins with ‘‘whit- whit-whit” before the warble, each note sharp, and with the snapping quality of some of the white-eye’s notes. [ 110 ] SOLITARY VIREO M**" 18, 1901. Saw the second I have seen this spring. I rarely see more than one or two in a season and have never heard them sing. I think this is the most beautiful of all the vireos. [cren.] WARBLING VIREO June 12, 1893 May 9, 1894 May, 1895 May 12, 1896 A GREYER and slightly smaller bird than the red-eyed vireo. I first saw this bird sitting on its nest in a cottonwood tree, warbling sweetly as it sat there (the males sit as well asthe females). In 1893. The birds do not seem abundant around here. I have observed perhaps half a dozen this summer. June 21, 1895. Edith and I saw another nest today, this time in an apple orchard. The bird was plainly visible sitting on it. The nest looked as if it had cotton on the outside. The song of these vireos is a lovely, smooth, flowing warble, meander- ing in rhythm something as the grosbeak’s is. It is one of my favorite bird songs. It is soft and dreamy, quite unlike the energetic notes of the red-eye. { 792 | 4 WHITE-EYED VIREO April 1, 1895 (Georgia) HIS vireo is the last one of the vireos (except Bell’s) which I have learned to know. I have seen and heard sing, two of them this morning, and certainly they are the most extraordinary of the family as far as song goes. It is a curious sput- tering performance, resembling that of the catbird, ‘‘only more so.” This is the clown vireo, surely, and April Ist is an ap- propriate day to become acquainted with them. This species is as small as the war- bling vireo. [113 ] YELLOW-THROATED VIREO 1894 April 5, 1895 (Georgia) May, 1895 May 4, 1896 May &, 1897 May 12, 1898 W E found this vireo nesting on the road to the spring, the male and female alternating in sitting on the eggs. Edith Skeele and I watched them for an hour, and it was very interesting to see one slip silently off the nest as the other came up. The coloring of this bird is very beautiful. The song is shorter than that of the red-eyed, deeper in tone, and not quite so varied and flexible, but it is richer in quality, and louder. In general char- acter, however, it resembles the red-eye’s song more than that of any other vireo. (I have not yet heard the solitary sing.) But I think it is, if anything, more deliber- ate and repeated at longer intervals. I have only observed one pair of these birds in Elmhurst, but in Georgia I have had ample opportunity to study them. Every [114 ] Bird Observations morning I hear one singing among the oaks in front of the hotel, and it keeps it up for hours at a time. [ 115 ] BAY-BREASTED WARBLER May 10, 1894 May, 1895 May 29, 1897 T HERE is no mistaking this handsome warbler with his unusual coloring. of rich bay, cream and cinnamon. There is no other warbler in the least like it. May 24, 1894. Weard them sing their monotonous, saw-filing note, one of the poorest and weakest of the warbler songs. May 18, 1901. Saw several in the “chat woods.” No song. They were uncom- monly thick for bay-breasteds, which are usually a rare bird here in Lake Forest. Mrs. Hubbard and I must have seen at least four, probably more. [ 116 ] BLACK AND WHITE CREEPER 1892 August 30, 1894 August 25, 1895 O matter what other members of the warbler family fail to appear in the spring this one is always on hand. I suppose one reason one always sees him is that he is not at all shy, but allows a very near approach. I saw this bird in Ten- nessee and in Georgia when I was there, and in both places heard the thin, wiry song, a small, saw-filing sound, with the harshness taken out—one of the thinnest of bird notes. [117] BLACKBURNIAN WARBLER May 6, 1894 May 7, 1895 May 6, 1896 May 14, 1897 HE Blackburnian does not seem at all shy in spite of his flaming throat and black and white stripes which make him so conspicuous. ‘The song is not unusual, a little husky, and about the usual warbler length. I heard one May 24, 1894, which was a fine singer—for his kind—a jumbled succession of notes changing to another jumble four notes higher, rather longer than usual. May 12, 1894. Saw several of these birds together today. May 8, 1896. One sang a jumbled suc- cession of notes, about the usual warbler length, ascending in key, ending in an alter- nated, very high squeak. May 12, 1896. Heard one sing just this way again. May 18, 1901. Saw five males and three females over in the “‘chat woods,” and there must have been many more; none were singing. Err] Bird Observations May 17, 1902. Knew the song when I heard it today, a rising squawk at the end. Not a musical song. May 7, 1905. The squeak at the end gets very attenuated and fine, and very high pitched. First part of song sounded very like redstart’s. [119 ] BLACK-POLL WARBLER May 28, 1893 May 12, 1894 May 7, 1895 May 8, 1896 I NEVER like to see this bird appear because it means that the “warbler season” is nearly over, as it is usually about the last to come. This bird, though striped with black and white, as the black and white creeper is, is far less beautiful. The song is a little like the creeper’s, but is more hesitating, and lacks the ease of the creeper’s song. It is ‘‘saw-filing,” though, and unmusical. It sometimes sings so low that it might be mistaken for an insect, but at other times it is quite loud, though never heard at much of a distance. May, 1894. A closer analysis of the song gives it did-did-did, hesitating, un- musical, staccato, not a ‘“‘saw-filing”’ in time (that is, one note does not follow another as part of it, as in the song of the creeper and the bay-breasted; each note is sepa- rate). May 14, 1904. Seen against the grass what a brilliant bird a spring male is! { 120 ] BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER 1892 September 20, 1893 May 5, 1894 May 7, 1895 September 22, 1895 May 11, 1897 al ee plumage of all the warblers is smooth and beautiful, but that of this bird particularly so. It is the darkest of all the family. The female, though green, can easily be identified by the fleck of clear white on the wings. Its chirp is an ex- tremely fine thin squeak. The song is low, hoarse, and without the vibrating quality. I never see this bird in flocks, as the Yel- low, Palm and Pine Warblers come some- times, but in small numbers it is a very regular visitant. May 11, 1894. The song is certainly like the opening notes of the black throated green’s in quality. May 18, 1901. I like his queer, coarse little song. It is usually three or four notes long. He is such a fearless fellow. He seems to prefer to work towards you rather than away from you in his tree peregrinations. [ 220] BLACK-THROATED GREEN WARBLER May 10, 1893 September 22, 1893 May 3, 1894 September 6, 1894 September 1, 1895 May 4, 1896 May 8, 1897 SOMETIMES think this bird is hand- somer than the Blackburnian, even, he is such a beauty, with his yellow sided head, green back and jet black V on his throat. In autumn this last is obscure or wanting, but the black stripes on side of breast are always plainly visible. The song is one of the most beautiful of all the warblers, more of a melody or tune in it, and with a sweetly deliberate quality in it. It has a lovely quaver in the middle notes, higher than the first and last. It is such a satisfaction to be able to identify this bird so unfailingly in the autumn, when so many of the family are so puzzling. { 122 ] CANADA WARBLER May 19, 1893 May 15, 1894 August 30, 1894 May 18, 1896 May 20, 1898 EVER a common bird here. It is one of the many dark-backed, yellow- breasted warblers but the back is bluish instead of the usual olive, and the crescent of spots on the breast differs from the cus- tomary stripes of many of the warblers. May, 1896. Heard its song, loud, jum- bled, slightly resembling the indigo bird’s; varies a good deal, often begins with a little whirr or snap. May 31, 1901. One has been singing at intervals all day here in our grounds. A bright, sweet little song, something of the red-eyed vireo’s flexibility in it. He seems to me to say “‘t’le’we, t’lee we, t’le’we, t’lee we, t’lit wit,” but it is a difficult song to put into syllables. It has a more liquid and a more uncertain sound than the busi- nesslike red-start’s. May 22, 1903. Has been singing for three or four days around the house. [ 123 ] Bird Observations There have been several here today. Song as above described, varies a good deal in loudness, is sometimes not loud at all. May 14, 1904. Two flitted close to me on our lawn for a long time. They usually appear singly, these birds, but this time these two males stayed together for an hour or two. May 18, 1906. Several have been here for several days. Ata distance one bird I heard certainly did sound a little like an indigo bird, but more liquid and less cer- tain in form. He began often with “‘chip- chip,’ twice or thrice repeated, and he often continued his song quite as long as the indigo does—it went on and on, as it were. May 24, 1908. One sang at frequent intervals all day yesterday and today. Did not begin with a whirr or snap once; not as loud or bright or long as some indi- viduals I have heard; uncertain quality very apparent, wavering, varied, no def- inite “form.” Bird seemed very shy. June 5. Two singing in my yard today, one been singing constantly for many days. They always stay here some time in migration. [ 124 ] CAPE MAY WARBLER May 18, 1893 May 12, 1894 May 7, 1895 May 12, 1896 May 20, 1898 pee individuals vary very much, I find, in the brilliancy of the coloring. The brighter ones are beauties, The orange-yellow neck and side of head give it the appearance of a yellow-headed bird, almost as much as the black-throated green warbler. The chestnut ear patches are almost lacking in many specimens. They seem to prefer orchards; they are very plentiful at times. Song not remark- able, a thin but rather sweet squeak, re- peated several times. May, 1897. The song impresses me as one of the thinnest and least musical of the warbler songs. May 7, 1905. What a study of one today, in the Joseph Durand ravine, just below us on a bare, small tree, a few feet away, as long as we wanted to watch him! He ran his bill industriously and faithfully up and down the twigs, eating bark lice [ 125 ] Bird Observations eggs; they could not have been insects. He kept at this as long as we watched him, ten or fifteen minutes. May 27, 1907. Many Cape Mays, male and female, have been in our yard since May 14th. This cold, backward spring prevents their going north. They seem to be a rather pugnacious bird, and are ex- tremely lively, darting out at other birds and driving them off. They have been feeding in the barberry blossoms, and along the branches. They have a thin, sharp chirp, like the click of two pebbles struck together, quite characteristic. May 19, 1908. Cape May’s have been thicker than I’ve ever seen them this year. It’s been cool and very wet, and a poor year for most warblers, but they seem to thrive. The females are abundant today, such dusky, striped birds. They feed so much on insects (supposedly) in the cen- ters of the barberry blossoms and reach away out on the ends of the branches to get them. [ 126 ] CERULEAN WARBLER May 5, 1896 May 8, 1897 May 16, 1898 I WAS attracted to these birds by their marked song. Several were singing in the tops of the trees in our place where our new house is building. The song is four repeated notes, then four more a lit- tle higher in key, ending with a sort of burr-r-r. It has something of the quality of the black-throated blue’s song. They all seemed to sing just alike, a quick, de- cisive song. The collar of grey blue across the throat is plainly visible on the white under parts (and the under parts are about all one sees of these dwellers in the tree tops). May 6th. UWHeard them again—the four notes repeated first are all on one key—the last ones a quick, upward, chro- matic run—ending in the burr-r-r. May 16th. Still here, incessant singers. June 18th. Still here. They must be resting here, it is so late. Heard numbers of them, and saw one on a comparatively low tree, the first good view I have yet [ rag | Bird Observations had. They were singing constantly and I find they vary the song a good deal. Some- times it is shorter, and only two notes at first, but it always has that upward run, and that sweet whirring sound, like a lit- tle wheel. It is unlike any other warbler song, I think. May 24, 1905. Heard one sing a song very like the red-start’s ‘‘shree-shree- shree” in form, but the voice was the soft, husky, wheeling song of the cerulean. He sang many times and never had the up- ward run once. May 21, 1908. Watched one sing for half an hour, song like the one of May 24, 1905. No upward run. This bird came very near and moderately low, yet the blue never looked bright, always dull and greyish. I wonder if the individual males differ much in brightness of color, for it seems as if the dulness of some birds was not only because I did not see them in a good light. [ 128 ] CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER M4" 18, 1901. Sawa female—never remember seeing one before. She is a pale edition of the male, just a touch of chestnut, and her yellow cap duller. The male sang, a song almost exactly like the yellow warbler in form, but lacking the piercing quality of that bird’s song. May, 1902. Heard a very full sweet song from this bird, quite loud, much more pleasing and rounder than the yellow. May 19, 1907. The song struck me as very like the yellow’s, but less piercing, and the finale had more of a twist to it. [ 129 ] CONNECTICUT WARBLER May 29, 1894 May 16, 1896 May 21, 1897 May 20, 1898 SAW this bird first on a low tree in the main street of Elmhurst. I followed the loud, ringing, wheedle-dee, wheedle- dee, wheedle- dee, supposing of course I should see a Maryland Yellow-throat, when what was my surprise to find it the Connecticut warbler. I watched it sing many times. The song is almost exactly like the Maryland. It is often repeated three times, sometimes only twice. Its ash-colored head and yellow breast and under parts, with no white on wings make it a sober bird. The ash terminating abruptly into yellow on the breast is the distinguishing mark, and the light ring around the eye enables one to identify it as a Connecticut and not a light-colored mourning warbler which it otherwise closely resembles. May, 1896. The loud ringing song at- tracted me again to this bird in Lake For- est this morning. It utters the first two [ 1301] Bird Observations notes without the third quite often. It is a remarkable song, heard at a long distance, but seldom uttered. It is a more vigorous and resonant song, than the yellow- throat’s, but the form of it very similar. It is a hard bird to see, for though it al- lows you to come quite close it keeps con- stantly in the thick foliage, usually in hedges, or the lower part of spruces. May 17. Have heard it again. On more familiar acquaintance it sounds more like “‘too-too-whit” than the syllables of the yellow-throat. Mrs. Hubbard is with me today, and has heard it too. May, 1897. A\ fine study of the bird, the best I ever had. How loud and strik- ing the song is! It seems less and less like the yellow-throat’s. He shakes his little body all over when he sings, wings and tail vibrate furiously, and he throws his head away back. He sings from a low branch and then dives down into a thicket and is quiet for a time. May 23, 1907. A Connecticut warbler stayed in the thicket south of our library window for a long time. I watched him through the long field glass. He stood for some minutes motionless on the ground, evidently watching some other agri Bird Observations birds in a tree. He looked like a little gnome or sprite against the dark back- ground, and when he faced me he looked like a spectacled brownie with his light eye rings. He’s a great bird to keep under cover and I never had such a long and satisfactory view of one before. [ 132 ] GOLDEN-WINGED WARBLER May 25, 1900 ROEND him after a long chase in the “chat woods” west of Fort Sheridan. The song first attracted me, and was many times repeated. An indolent, rather wheezy three, or usually four, notes, all on one note. Like the cerulean’s a little in quality only, or a little of the black- throated blue and green’s huskiness. A lazy song, very distinctive, not loud, often repeated. Syllables that recall it to me, “S’h, hush, hush, hush,” the last three slightly quicker than the first, but all drawled and insect-like. June 8th. The same bird still in the same place. Can he be nesting? Sang just as constantly as before. Had fine views of him, and was struck with the vividness of his yellow crown. May 14, 1901. Saw him in our own grounds and heard the song again. First description tallies exactly with the second impression, not always the case with bird songs. I have now seen this warbler three times this spring. He probably did not nest in the chat woods last year, as I never saw him after June 8th. [ 133 ] HOODED WARBLER April 16, 1895 (Georgia) I FOLLOWED the loud song of this warbler for a long time in the thick woods this morning before I discovered what bird it came from. It was a vigor- ous, rather short warbler song, sounding like the syllables in “Yes, yes, yes, I know it,’ with an upward inflection on the “I know.” There were a number of these warblers in the woods but I only saw two. The song of the second was longer, and not so marked in its inflections, so that I did not recognize it as coming from the same species till I saw the bird. This is certainly one of the most striking of the warblers. The black hood, extending round both front and back of the neck and the back part of the head, encircles the brilliant yellow of the forehead and the part around the eye. The contrast makes the yellow appear more gorgeous than al- most any other bit of warbler coloring, except, perhaps, the throat of Blackburn’s warbler. L134] MAGNOLIA WARBLER Spring, 1893 May 8, 1894 May, 1895 May 17, 1896 May 11, 1897 HIS bird ranks close to the Black- burnian and black-throated green warblers in brilliancy. May 15, 1894. I heard the song, quite sweet, warbled, something like the first ‘‘whee-chee-tee” of the Maryland yellow- throat, but it is broken off, in fact the bird never seemed to finish it. It is not nearly as long as the yellow-throat’s song, but it is sweet and melodious. May 24th. It varies its song a good deal, but retains the broken off, interrupted effect, and is always musical ‘and sweetly warbled. July 14, 1905. S. W. Harbor, Me. Song ‘“‘whit-chee, whit-chee, whit-chee, wee-up,” the last very hurried and broken at the end, the whole sounding at a dis- tance as broken off and abrupt as the Acadian Flycatcher. Heard another song among the thick woods for days and days, [ 135 ] Bird Observations but could never see the bird. Was it the magnolia? It ‘said “‘whit-che-tee, wee-up,” over and over again. July 25, 1905. Female magnolia with insect in her bill chirped almost as loud and as harshly as a house sparrow, then changed to the usual warbler chirp, then to a faint “’tsip” like a kinglet. She changed back and forth in these various chirps many times. May, 1906. Lake Forest. Yes, I think that S. W. Harbor bird was the magnolia without a doubt. This one said ‘‘veni vidi, vici’”? over and over to me, in the same tone of voice. [ 136 ] MARYLAND YELLOW-THROAT May 13, 1894 May 21, 1897 ‘T HESE warblers keep in the dense thickets and evergreens, usually low down, so they are hard to see, but the song, as constant as the red-eyed vireo’s, betrays their whereabouts. The song, well described by ‘‘whee-che-tee,” three and sometimes four times repeated, is loud and seems to me to have more of the red-eyed vireo’s quality than the warbler songs usually have. It is a vigorous and marked song. Yet I have heard the Connecticut warbler sing exactly like it. May 14, 1906. This sang ‘‘wit-che-tee, wit-che-tee, wit-che-tee, wee-chee-hall-or- ee,” a little variation after each thrice re- peated wit-che-tee. May 20, 1907. Saw a female Mary- land yellow-throat today. Such a charm- ing little creature as she was, carrying her tail like a little wren. She had quite a tinge of reddish on her forehead, and the yellow of the under tail coverts was plain- ly visible. She stepped along in the grass with such a dainty air—she seemed as pretty and winning as the male. [ 137 ] MOURNING WARBLER May 27, 1898 (Lake Forest) AVE watched for this bird all these years and never seen him till today. The dark line around eye and back of it distinguishes it readily from the Connecti- cut warbler. No song heard. May 26, 1900. Saw a fine male, the breast markings very dark. Sang con- stantly, a pretty song, flexible, whistled, less in volume than the Connecticut war- bler, but reminding one a little of it. It was repeated three or four times always, the syllables seemed like ‘“‘hall-or-reé, hall-or-reé, hall-or-reé,”” and sometimes ending with a “‘whoit, whoit” on a lower key at the end. A slight resemblance to the oven-bird’s, and yet so much less loud and beating. It is louder at the end, though, than at the beginning. June 7, 1900. Heard him singing con- stantly in one place, but got a poor view of him. He was a regular will-o’-the-wisp and led me a chase. I never saw a bird seem so shy. [ 138 ] Bird Observations May 29, 1903. Saw him and heard the song constantly, quality as described, but form different, more monotonous, less of it and not three times repeated, just four or five liquid notes, not to be described in syllables. May 25, 1908. One sang for nearly an hour, and when I came back two hours later he was still singing in the same spot. The song was loud, and uttered with al- most no variation the entire time I listened to it. It was a rapid, rolling whistle, ‘‘hall- or-ee,”’ three or four times repeated, the liquid, rolling sound being very pro- nounced, a noticeable and attractive song. Saw the bird well and watched him sing. He is a shy bird, though, and keeps well out of sight. I must have followed him three-quarters of an hour before I caught a glimpse of him. May 27, 1908. Had good view of fe- male—hard to tell from male Connecticut —but the eye ring was not conspicuous nor consecutive. Throat was whitish in middle otherwise breast was a pure French grey color. Under parts quite yellow, a lovely bird. June 6, 1909. Have seen and heard the mourning warbler several times since [ 139 ] Bird Observations May 28th on our place, near the house. Singing constantly. June 6th. Sang nearly all day. [ 140 ] MYRTLE WARBLER April 3, 1893 September 20, 1893 April 22, 1894 October 11, 1895 May 5, 1897 April 17, 1898 HE earliest to arrive of the whole warbler family, and individuals either linger here or pass through up to the mid- dle of May. They also stay here some autumns till the end of November. The white tail feathers and yellow rump show plainly while flying. It is less restless than most of the warblers, and sometimes sits still on a tree. The chirp is loud, and ro- bust in tone, not a thin squeak. April 21, 1898. WHeard song for first time. Very varied, sweet, liquid, some- times quite long. This bird sang con- stantly while I watched him, and it seemed as if he changed his song dozens of times. Yet it is a genuine warbler song, recogniz- able as such at once. [141 ] NASHVILLE WARBLER September 25, 1893 May 9, 1894 May 10, 1897 May 13, 1898 Tee coloring of the Nashville is in plain washes without distinctive marks. Upper parts olive, head and sides of neck bluish ash, throat pure yellow shad- ing to lighter yellow underneath. It is the yellowest of the plain warblers. May 10, 1897. I heard its song, some- what jumbled, a little like a goldfinch, but I only heard it a few times. May, 1898. Had fine study of song. Description in Chapman’s book perfect. First note very high, repeated several times, second note lower and _ uttered rapidly like a chipping sparrow’s. Rather an insignificant and unmusical song. July, 1905. Heard a warbler—always invisible—for several weeks at S. W. Harbor, Me., sing over and over a never varying song—six notes all alike, then a rapid trill like a chippy. Was it the Nash- ville? It was not just like what I had [ 142 ] Nashville Warbler Bird Observations heard before, and I never saw a Nashville once at S. W. May g, 1906. Heard a song very like the above out my window, and looking out saw the Nashville, no doubt the Mt. Desert bird, but his song in migration is less pronounced and vigorous. [ 143 | ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER AY 16, 1907. Twice before I have identified this bird, only once to my own satisfaction, but today I had a fine, close study of him, or her, I think it was. Such a darkish, dull bird, and perceptible eye ring, especially top and bottom, a small darkish line through the eye. Side of head all washed with olive, not separated into dark and almost white by a horizontal eye line as in the Tennessee. [ 144 ] OVEN BIRD May 19, 1893 May 6, 1894 May, 1895 April 29, 1896 ALWAYS see the oven bird here in the village in the spring migration, and usually in the fall also, but in summer it takes to the thick woods, where its loud remarkable “‘whip-tee” can be heard rat- tled off with great energy at almost any hour of the day. In June, 1894, Edith Skeele and I found a young oven bird sit- ting serenely on a branch while the parent bird shouted in vigorous tones in the neigh- borhood. But the little bird was not at all afraid of us, and ate some large worms which we presented to it. [145 ] PARULA WARBLER May 10, 1894 (Elmhurst) May 11, 1897 (Lake Forest) 6 zie triangular patch of greenish yel- low is plainly seen on the back of this bird. The throat and breast are golden yellow, with a wash of grey across the lower throat, and the yellow ends rather abruptly in the white of the under parts. May 11, 1897. Only the second time I have seen this bird, and only one individual this time, and no song either time. May 28, 1907. Heard two sing. Song a little like the cerulean’s, but more rasp- ing, not so deliberate, a trill, with an up- ward break at the end. [ 146 ] PALM WARBLER May 5, 1894 May 6, 1895 September 29, 1895 May 7, 1898 HE chestnut on this bird’s head is almost as bright as that of the chip- ping sparrow and the line dividing this from the cheek quite as conspicuous only it is yellow. It is a very lively warbler, flirting its tail constantly, and running on the ground like a wren. It is remarkable how closely it resembles the Carolina wren when seen in this way. Lake Forest, May 4, 1901. Watched a palm warbler sing this morning, the first time I ever heard the song. It is some- thing between the chipping sparrow and the black and white creeper, a monotonous che-we, che-we, che-we. April 27, 1906. Saw three, and two at least were singing, a rather canary-like trill, not a noticeable song. It likes the fences along the roadsides—and flirts in and out tilting his tail constantly. [ 147 ] PINE WARBLER September 9, 1893 May 4, 1894 August 30, 1894 September 1, 1895 THE white wing bars are a distinctive mark in identifying this bird. They seem more plentiful in the fall than in the spring. In September, 1893, the whole village seemed to be full of them. Their note at this time was the typical warbler squeak, uttered very often. April 27, 1906, Lake Forest. The pine warbler does not seem to me as dainty and aristocratic a bird as most of his family. The one I saw today had very inconspicu- ous wing bars—hardly noticeable. [ 148 ] REDSTART May 13, 1893 May, 1894 May 7, 1895 April 30, 1896 May 9, 1897 "THE redstart is supposed to nest here but I seldom see it in summer, though it is always a common migrant in the spring. It always seems as if there were sO many miniature males and females in proportion to the brilliant old male birds. The song is very like many of the other warbler songs (how confusing they are!) but it is apt to end its zie-zie-zie with a break at the end, giving it a sharp, unfin- ished sort of termination. Sometimes they sing as a black and white creeper does, a sort of saw filing, but not so thin in quality. [ 149 ] TENNESSEE WARBLER September 7, 1893 May 8, 1894 September, 1894 May 6, 1896 May 14, 1897 Guce a plain little warbler compared with the gayer members of the family! It it so like the warbling vireo in color, only the line through the eye is more obscure. May 15, 1894. I saw this species sing frequently, a very loud song beginning with a sort of sawing two note trill, rather harsh and very staccato, but hesitating in character, increasing to a rapid trill almost exactly like a chipping sparrow’s.