w^ DX. v:Bffrav.^B-''S^i of\x r ^'ifyh^kl" FOR THE PEOPLE FOR EDVCATION FOR SCIENCE LIBRARY OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY the man claims our ~atthhtioh as mucn a?, or more Hian, tho biology of the birds. Jn addi- tion to this wo fiud a chapter of nearly 50 pages dpvotrd chiefly 'o two oontribnted papers on Ottor-huntius and Falconry. The result is a fairly larjfe voliuno, published at a fairly large pric:^. and containing a g.ood deal of hetero- geneous information, of which in (ho main it may bo said that to tho general reader muih of tho ornithological side will be wearisome, wliile the export uill find a great portion of the hook given up to matters which, though full of their own special interest, he had hardly expected to find in a work "on birds." The plates, how- ever, illustrating viirious kinds of birds, are ex- cellent ; the paper.= on Otter-hunting and Fal- conry are bright and inspiriting, and sufficient in tJiemselves to kindle a flame of enthusiasm in the brea.st of the uninitiat«l : while the study of a character at once so symp;ithetic. and c'xact as tliat nf the late Lord Lilford cannot fail to be of tho grealcst benefit to any reader. And to llKwe, and Ihc^y roust be many, to whom it is a pleasure to linger ovei- the srattorcd noles of a careful observer of tho fans of natural history whereby tjicy will gain both instruotion and delight this book may be fairly eonmiendcd. But it I'annot be regarded as » serious (nntri- bution cither (o ornitLology proper or loEcienre at large. This is not to .^ay that the notes Uiemsplves are at fault, or even useless: but they are notes only. ?iich as may he pigeon- jtiolcd or even gathcr»ti up into coherent form witJiin the pages of some soientifio journal, but such as shctild Dewer find their way into book form iml.il the time oiroes when they may serve their purpoee as illustrations of general prin- cipif f . A>. if- L f'-^ffZH^,', f3. /-^ ^. ?. LCL-yt.eJ^iL^^^t^ -^^h^'UL.i^o^it^A^ ^ /GOlSr LORD LILFORD ON BIRDS V S. \ \ L ORD LILFORD^ =^-^ ON BIRDS BEING A COLLECTION OF INFORMAL AND UNPUBLISHED WRITINGS BY THE LATE PRESIDENT OF THE BRITISH ORNITHOLOGISTS' UNION . WITH CONTRIBUTED PAPERS UPON FALCONRY AND OTTER HUNTING, HIS FAVOURITE SPORTS 1 EDITED BY AUBYN TREVOR-BATTYE M.A., F.L.S., ETC. MEMBER OF THE BRITISH ORNITHOLOGISTS' UNION AND ILLUSTRATED BY ARCHIBALD THORBURN London: HUTCHINSON & CO Paternoster Row -*> '•> ^9^3 PRINTED BV HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEV, LD. LONDON AND AYLESBURY. PREFACE Ornithologically this book falls into three natural divisions, each with its own particular appeal. The Mediterranean Journals with their lists of birds obtained or seen would be valuable, if only as models of careful work ; but beyond this, such a companion as their recorder must surely add delightful interest to any voyage in the narrow sea. None of the natural history has been left out ; the Editor has only ventured to remove (as not in any way material to the record) the greater part of the weather log, with purely personal or social references. Although the systematic position and the scientific names of some of the birds have changed since the diaries were written, they are easily recognisable by an ornithologist as they stand : it has therefore seemed well in the great majority of instances to leave them unaltered. The letters on his own countryside are, it is true, vi PREFACE almost entirely concerned with the small occurrences of every day ; but all our knowledge of the ways of living creatures has grown from careful records such as these, and the subject is one of unfailing interest ; if it begins with Gilbert White, it ends — where ? The same thought applies to the Aviary Notes ; how sure a welcome awaits these — the record at first hand of a master ' aviarist ' — is sufficiently brought home to us by the reflection that a periodical has been successfully run for years in this country, devoted to nothing else than an interchange of experiences among those who keep living birds. All the letters, unless it is otherwise stated, were written from Lilford Hall. They are not always given under order of dates ; it has often seemed better to group them about the leading subjects with which they are concerned. An opinion entitled to great respect was expressed to the Editor, that otter hunting and falconry. Lord Lilford's favourite sports, might need some introduction to the general reader ; that otter hunting is not, like fox-hunting, ' everybody's ' sport ; and that, indeed, the idea not uncommonly obtains that the otter is still barbarously despatched with the spear. Falconry, it was pointed out, was a still more restricted pursuit. The Editor has therefore ventured himself to write a short account of otter hunting, and has been fortunate in obtaining a PREFACE vii description of falconry from the pen of the Rev. Gage Earle Freeman.^ Nearly all of the pictures which illustrate this volume are studies of individual birds in the collection at Lilford. Our thanks are rendered to Mr. E. G. B. Meade-Waldo for his help in reading through the proof-sheets, and his kind interest in the preparation of the book. 1 Author of Falconry: its History, Claims, and Practice. We have much pleasure in quoting in this connection a passage we find in a letter written by Lord Lilford to Mr. Freeman in 1895 :— " You have done more to keep English falconers in the right way than any man now living. No such practical work as yours has been written on falconry this century." Lord Lilford's F.wourite Flower. LORD LILFORD'S PUBLISHED WORKS. Coloured Figures of the British Birds. The First Edition of this work, which was issued in parts by subscription, commenced in October, 1885, and the second in April, 1891. 'Edition' is really a misnomer; for when in 189 1 it was decided to admit a further set of subscribers (at rather a higher rate of subscription) only some eighteen (or so) of the plates had yet appeared. These were retouched and, in the opinion of many good judges, actually improved. Thenceforward the First and Second Editions were identical, running together and ending simultaneously. Notes 071 tlu Birds of Northamptonshire and Neighbourhood. This book was published in 1895. Some parts of it had already appeared in the form of communicated papers (see below) and some had been printed for private circulation. But besides these books Lord Lilford's literary labours include a variety of articles in the Zoologist, the Ibis, and elsewhere. Certain chance notes — e.g., in the Field — are omitted, otherwise the following list is believed to be complete : — In the Ibis. Under the name of the Hon. Thomas L. Powys. i860. Notes on birds observed in the Ionian Islands, and the provinces of Albania proper, Epirus, Acarnania, and Montenegro. Pages i-io, 133-140, 228-239. X LORD LILFORHS PUBLISHED WORKS Under the name of Lord Lilford. 1862. On the extinction in Europe of the common francolin {Fraticolinus vulgaris, Steph.). 352-356. 1865. Notes on the ornithology of Spain, 166-177, pi. V. {Ai/uila ncevioides). Ditto 1866, 173-187, 377-392, pi. X. (eggs of Aquila pennafa and Cyanopica cooki). 1873. Letter on Calandrella brachydactyla and Nidneiiiui hiidsoiiicus. 98. 1880. Letter on Lams aiidoui/ii s.nd other Spanish birds. 480-483. 1883. Letter on Otis tarda and other Spanish birds. 233. 1884. Rare birds in Andalucia. 124. 1887. Notes on Mediterranean ornithology, 261-283, pl- VIIL {Falco pji/iicus). 1888. Preface to Dr. F. H. H. Guillemard's "Ornithological notes of a tour in Cyprus," 1887. 94. 1889. -^ list of the birds of Cyprus. 305^350. 1892. Letter on Turnix nigricollis. 466. In the Zoologist. Under the name of the Hon. T. L. Powys. 1850. Occurrence of the smew {Mergiis albellus) in Northampton- shire. 2775. 1850. Nest and eggs of the rose-coloured pastor {Pastor roseus). 2968. 1851. Occurrence of the Caspian tern near Lausanne. 3209,3210. 1851. Note on birds entrapped at a magpie's nest. 3275. 185 1. Occurrence of black grouse and quails in Northamptonshire. 3278. 1852. Note on the kite and buzzard trapped at Blenheim. 3388. 1852. Occurrence of the black redstart near Oxford. 3476. LORD LILFORD'S PUBLISHED WORKS xi 1852. Occurrence of the ring dotterel {Charadrius hiaticula) near Oxford. 3476. 1852. Occurrence of the glossy ibis in Ireland. 3477- 1852. The shore lark {Alauda alpestris) breeding in Devonshire. 3707- 1852. Occurrence of the blue-throated warbler (Sylvia siiedai) in South Devon. 3709. 1852. Occurrence of the pratincole {Glareola forquata) in Devon- shire. 3710. 1854. Occurrence of various birds in Oxfordshire. 4165. 1854. Note on the late abundance of the spotted crake (Crex porrAina). 4165. 1855. Occurrence of the bittern and goosander in Northamptonshire, and of the red-throated diver in Plymouth Sound. 4762. 1855. Occurrence of Buonaparte's gull {Larus Buonapartii) on the Irish coast. 4762, 4809. 1861. Note on the alpine chough as observed in the Ionian Islands. 7352. (In Ibis II. 136.) 1877 1879 1879 1880 1880 1881 i88r 1882 1883 1883 Under the name of Lord Lilford. Purple gallinule in Northamptonshire. 252. Green shag in Northamptonshire. 426. Manx shearwater in Northamptonshire. 426. White-fronted goose in Northamptonshire. 66. Solitary snipe in Northamptonshire. 444. Ornithological notes from North Northamptonshire. 24, 61. Roseate tern on the Norfolk coast. 26. Ornithological notes from Northamptonshire. 16, 392. 26 Note on the ornithology of Northamptonshire. 425-429, 466-468, 502. xii LORD LJLFORD'S PUBLISHED WORKS 1883. Common scoter inland. 495. 1884. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire. 192-194, 450-455- 1885. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire. 181-183. 1885. Hoopoe in Northamptonshire. 259. 1886. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire and neighbour- hood. 465-471. 1887. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire and neighbour- hood. 249-254, 452-457. 1887. A puffin in London. 263. 1888. Magpies attacking a weakly donkey. 184. 1888. Pallas's sand grouse in Spain. 301. 1888. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire and neighbour- hood. 456-466. 1889. Hawks devouring their prey on the wing. 185. 1889. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire and neighbour- hood. 422-430. 1890. Large race of great grey shrike. 108. 1891. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire. 41-53. 1892. „ „ „ „ „ „ 201-210. 1892. Variety of Grus cinerea in Spain. 265. 1893. Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire and neighbour- hood for 1892. 89-97. 1893. Purple gallinules in Norfolk and Sussex. 147. 1894, Notes on the ornithology of Northamptonshire and neighbour- hood for 1893. 2 10-22 1. 1894 Pheasant nesting in a tree. 266. Proc. Zool. Soc, London, 1 881-1890. 1882. Exhibition of, and remarks upon, a skin of Emheriza ritstka, caught at Elstree reservoir. 721. 1888. Exhibition of a specimen of Aqitila rapax from Southern Spain. 248, LORD LILFORD'S PUBLISHED WORKS xiii Mammalia. In the Zoologist- 1884. Notes on Mammalia of Northamptonshire. 428. 1885. Dormouse in Northamptonshire. 257. 1886. Albino badgers. 363. 1887. A few words on European bats. 61-67. 1887. The bank vole in Northamptonshire. 463. 1890. Hedgehog v. rat. 453. 1891. The polecat in Northamptonshire. 342. 1892. The polecat in Northamptonshire. 20, 224. 1894. Barbastelle in Northamptonshire. 187. 1894. Barbastelle in Huntingdonshire. 395. For the above list the Editor is indebted to Dr. Paul Leverkiihn, C.M.Z.S., of the Scientific Library and Institution of H.R.H. The Prince of Bulgaria, Sophia. His compilation of Lord Lilford's papers was published in the Ornith. Monatsschrift des Deutschen Vereins s. SchiUze der Vogelwelt, XXL, 1896, No. 9, pp. 262-264. NOTE. The full title of Lord Lilford's well-known book, always spoken of as " Coloured Figures of the British Birds," and so referred to throughout this volume, is "Coloured Figures of the Birds of the British Islands." CONTENTS CHAP PAGE Lord Lilford's Published Works . . . . ix Introduction ........ i I. The Surroundings of Lord Lilford's Home. . 4 IL Local Observation. . . . . . .11 in. Ponds, Paddocks, and Aviaries .... 36 IV. Notes on Illustrations ...... 90 V. Otter Hunting, Falconry, and Shooting . . 98 VI. Notes from Mediterranean Journals . . . 146 VII. Tributes to Knowledge, Kindness, and Sympathies 247 .Appendix I ....... . 272 Appendix II . . . . . . . . 293 ILLUSTRATIONS Lord Lilford in his Study Frontispiece Fishing on the Nene Facing page 4 STUDIES OF BIRDS IN THE COLLECTION AT LILFORD HALL The tame Lammergeiers Facing page 32 The Pinetum Sankey and Grip Golden Eagle's nest in the Aviary Trained Goshawk on the fist . Hobby, with leash and block . Stanley's Crane Ruffs fighting Flamingoes in the Aviary pond The Great Skuas .... Greenland Falcon 58 82 94 114 132 170 184 196 214 234 CORRIGENDUM Page Sj. Five lines from foot: for "are pendulous, and have no aftershaft " substitute "are pendulous but single, having no aftershaft." LORD LILFORD ON BIRDS INTRODUCTION Thomas Littleton, fourth Baron Lilford, was born in 1833. In 1867 he was elected President of the British Ornithologists' Union, a position which he held until his death, in 1896. Such, in a word, is all that need be said here. For this is not a biography ; the personal history of the late Lord Lilford has already been written by one whose title to the task was clear. That picture, built on the intimate memories of a sister's affection, necessarily stands alone. But in the days of his travels and activity, and no less in those long years in the chair of an invalid, Lord Lilford acquired a large store of exact and absolute knowledge, which must needs have for inquirers in the same field a value too great to be missed. His, too, was a keen enthusiasm and a wide kindness of heart ; his constant daily endeavour was to encourage interest in living creatures and (quite humbly and simply) to help others through what he himself had learnt. The more widely could he have been helpful the better would 2 INTRODUCTION he have been pleased. It is in the certainty of this assurance that the letters have been contributed which herein appear. The present book is, then, of Lord Lilford as naturalist — as sportsman also, but primarily as naturalist — revealed in his own informal writings. Entrusted to the Editor's hands with words whose very graciousness was their command, it has been till now delayed ; yet a book of this kind may gain, perhaps, not lose, in the perspective that a few years give. Be this as it may, all pains bestowed upon his task are but an imperfect measure of the Editor's true admiration for and grateful memory of this most charming of naturalists and kindest of friends. We should not visit him at Lilford till we have been with him in the Mediterranean which was his inspiration, or we shall miss the key to his later interests. For this reason are given parts of his old diaries when abroad. The diaries were recorded on a yacht, the letters were written with crippled fingers which scarce could hold a pen. These strictly natural history extracts give necessarily but an imperfect impression of how the letters really ran. Though all spontaneous and unstudied, those who received them used to think them something more than clear : they seemed marked by a simple grace of diction which gave them a distinction quite their own. Our duty has been to pass on to others a naturalist's thought and work, and we have attempted nothing more. Yet, as one looks again over these pages, one cannot INTRODUCTION 3 but wonder how much they may also perhaps convey of Lord Lilford's character and personality to those who did not know him. One cannot tell ; he was too little self-conscious ever to pose, ever to attempt self-portraiture. There were no mannerisms, conceits, or eccentricities to seize upon for ' genius ' ; he was a sane, single-hearted, keen, accomplished English gentleman. In all the letters we have had before us he writes but one thing of himself, and with that one thing we will end : — " My life-history is soon summed up. I have, I fear, been an idler, devoted more to my own amusement than anything else, till I have learned, by physical suffering, the lesson that the real value of existence here below consists in the good that we may be able to do for others." ^ ^ To Mrs. Owen Visger. CHAPTER I The Surroundings ot Lord Liltord's Home The life and work of Lord Lilford was to so great an extent inseparably related to his home, that it seems necessary to give some idea of this from the point of view of a visitor. The nearest town to Lilford of any pretensions is Oundle, which lies on the Midland Railway, about half- way between Kettering and Peterborough ; for Lilford is in the north-west corner of Northamptonshire, on the borders of what was once Rockingham Forest. It is in the valley of the river Nene, which, rising near the Haddons, runs the length of the county, and crosses the junction of Lincoln, Norfolk and Cambridge to enter the Wash. "Ours," writes Lord Lilford (August 5th, i860) " is a deep, slow-moving, muddy, weedy stream, producing pike, perch, eels, roach, carp, tench, dace, bream, ruff, rudd, chubb, bleak and gudgeon, and very rarely a trout." ' 1 To the Rev. Canon Tristram. LORD LILFORD'S HOME 5 And again (January 23rd, 1889): " I never saw or heard of a barbel in any part of the Nene, certainly not in the neighbourhood of Lilford, as I own, more or less, some twelve miles of river and tributary brooks ; in my father's time the river was systematically dragged for the whole length of our domain in February and March, and I have bottom-fished every inch of it with every variety of bait at various times of year between 1840 and 1888, and never caught, seen, or heard of a barbel : in fact, I believe that our river produces every English river fish except barbel, grayling, and possibly one or two fishes of the family Salmonidie. Perch have perhaps increased in number in our river, but certainly diminished in average size very palpably. In my early fishing days we used to catch many of 2 lbs. and over, and 3-pounders were not very rare ; but it is quite exceptional now to catch a perch of 1 lb." ^ Northamptonshire is commonly spoken of as a flat and rather uninteresting county ; but about Lilford, at any rate, it is neither the one nor the other. If not conspicuously striking, it is characteristically English, and as such is full of charm. It is a rolling, almost a hilly country, and is closely wooded with singularly fine timber. With the botany of this neighbourhood we are not acquainted ; probably its botany is not very distinctive, though henbane grows there (and not only on rubbish-heaps). Bladderwort 1 To Dr. Albert Giinther. 6 THE SURROUNDINGS OF (Utricularia), too, is found in a backwater of the Nene ; and bladderwort, as a natural; trap for living organisms, gives interest to any stream. The park at Lilford, though not in reality very large, appears to be so ; for, by means of sunk fences cunningly set, it merges insensibly into the surrounding country. It supports some three hundred head of fallow deer. But the glory of the park is its growth of trees. One does not often see in the same area so many noble trees of different kinds as here. The elms — characteristic Northamp- tonshire trees — have attained magnificent proportions, and the chestnuts, ash, beech and oak are not far from being as fine as they can be. The box grows strongly at Lilford ; it appears to do there almost as well as on its native chalk hills. It forms a hedge on either side of the road that brings you to the gates, and gives a warm look to the coverts. But a visitor to Lilford, especially if he went late in May, would probably bear away with him the memory of the hawthorns more than all of these, and he would be right. In many places in England, in old park and forest lands, thorns with larger boles may be seen — old giants these, but commonlv stunted and going back. But very seldom do thorns run up so high as at Lilford, or fall over from the top so gracefully, or reach so low and far with the tips of their fingers, and with such a foam of bloom. A country like this, of hollow elms and old oak woods, is always a favoured one for tree-loving birds — though, alas ! LORD LILFORD'S HOME 7 they are not always protected with so strong a hand and such loving interest as here. The hawfinch, always a local and capricious bird in its choice of a breeding-place, was long waited for, but nested here at last. "Till the spring of the year 1870," Lord Lilford writes,^ " we only knew the hawfinch in the neighbourhood of Lilford as an occasional, and by no means a common, winter visitor. On April 4th of the year just named I observed some half-dozen or more of these birds haunting the old thorn bushes on our lawn ; they remained about for some days, but in spite of minute and protracted search in the most likely localities we could not discover that they attempted to nest with us, and they had all disappeared before the middle of April. A pair or more, however, undoubtedly bred not far off, for in July and August I constantly observed some of the species about our kitchen garden. In the very severe weather of December, 1870 and 1 87 1, we were visited by very large flocks of haw- finches ; ai:d since the date last named some of these birds have nested regularly about our pleasure-grounds, and have become only too well known to our gardeners and cottagers from their constant and serious depredations amongst the green peas and other vegetables." Curiously enough, as against the establishment of haw- finches there was a gradual falling off in the numbers of ' The Birds of Northamptonshire, i., 185. 8 THE SURROUNDINGS OF green woodpeckers, a bird to whose habits the district was well adapted. This is difficult to explain, but was possibly connected with a recurrence of very severe winters, which kill these birds in great numbers by preventing them from feeding on the ground, as they are much in the habit of doing. On the other hand, the lesser spotted woodpecker, in many parts of England regarded as rare, is at Lilford the commonest species of the three ; and Lord Lilford has this interesting note upon them : ' — " In the first sunny days of February, and sometimes even earlier, the loud, jarring noise produced by this species may be heard amongst the tall elms and other trees closely surrounding Lilford, often proceeding from two or three birds at the same moment, and continued at intervals from daylight till dusk. From long and close observation we long ago convinced ourselves that this noise is a call, and has nothing to do with intentional disturbance of insect food, as has often been supposed and stated ; nor is it produced, as we with many others formerly imagined, by the rapid vibration of the bird's beak in a crack of rotten wood, but simply by a hammering or tapping action which the human eye cannot follow. On a calm day, or with a light, favouring breeze, the sound then produced may be heard at a distance of quite half a mile, or even more." ^ The Birds of Northampton shire, i., 271. LORD LILFORD'S HOME 9 But, much as Lilford owes to its woodlands, it owes still more to the river Nene. This stream is a direct highway to and from the sea, and by it come many birds to visit or stay near Lilford's coverts and park. Some, flying high in air, follow it inland as a clue when they come from over seas. Perhaps the hobbies come that way : they appear in the Lilford woods about the middle of May, to lay their eggs in the old nests of the magpie or the carrion crow ; for the hobby is a wise little falcon, and waits for the clothing of the woods in leaf to make concealment sure. Probably the redwings and fieldfares also keep an eye on the river when they cross from Scandinavia in the autumn, and visit for food the Lilford thorns. Sandpipers and curlew also follow the Nene valley as they come south. The river brings in many wildfowl, and from time to time an individual or two of an uncommon species: thus, in January 1876 sixteen Bewick's swans came down near Lilford, and remained for several days ; while the tufted duck, pochard, scaup, and golden-eye are on the list of winter visitors. Apropos of the different behaviour of wildfowl on the wing, Lord Lilford writes : ' — " I noticed a peculiarity in the habits of this species (the gadwall) at the sunset flight : whilst the mallards would circle cautiously several times around their feeding- place before settling, the teal come dashing in over the ' The Birds of Northamptonshire, ii., 175. lo LORD LILFORD'S HOME tops of the reeds, and the shovellers drop in quietly in small parties, the gadwalls came straight over at a con- siderable height, and without any preliminary circumvolu- tion, always turned suddenly and came pouring in from the direction opposite to that of their first approach." These observations were made while sporting in Epirus. CHAPTER II Local Observation The letters which follow speak for themselves. They are instinct with the spirit of the old first-hand observers, the spirit of Gilbert White. Remarks on the weather, on the hay crop, on spring and autumn migrations are followed by observations on particular birds, the success of experi- ments with little owls, or encouragement to friends away abroad. He was indeed the good genius of every would-be ornithologist, generously giving, out of his great knowledge and experience, help and information on even the smallest points. Anybody who heard a new note, found a strange egg, saw a doubtful species ; anybody who had a new bird ' fad ' or a new bird ' cause ' came to him. To " write to Lord Lilford " seemed to such persons as inevitable as to others to " write to the Times." And for all his shrewdness of intellect, sense of humour, impatience with folly and gift of satire, ignorance, if the right endeavour underlay it, was never rebuffed. Such kindness brought him an increasing volume of chance correspondence ; 12 LOCAL OBSERVATION yet his letters were always promptly answered, unless he were absolutely ill in bed. It is wonderful now to look back on this, and having even a very sinall fragment of his correspondence before one, to reflect on the resolution such work, so minutely and conscientiously done, must have entailed. As was but natural, his most regular correspondents were those who, like himself, were keepers of birds, or naturalists travelling in his old haunts. ''July itth, 1888. " Birds of all kinds are numerous here this year, but at least two-thirds of a wonderful hatch of partridges are drowned. We have at least three times our usual — very small — number of swifts, and the small waders, lesser white- throats, willow wrens, chifFchafFs, sedge and reed warblers are in very great force. The meadows are swarming with landrails." ^ "July T,ist, 1888. " The finest hatch of partridges on record in these parts is virtually extinct, and a fiir hay crop has gone the same way. " Waders are passing over every night, and if the rain goes on for another week we shall have many snipes, spotted rails, whimbrels, and possibly a rufF or two. Black tern and green sandpiper have already appeared."" ' To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * To the same. LOCAL OBSERVATION 13 " October i^th, 1888. " I am exceedingly obliged to you for yours of the 13th, and the interesting information therein contained, as well as for the paper on the sand-grouse in the Spurn district. " I do not know of one of these wanderers having been killed in this county this year, but I have good authority for the appearance in this neighbourhood of three together, and two solitary individuals. The first of these passed over the head of my informant within fifteen yards, with its feet hanging from the weight of the clay adhering." ' '■'^Bournemouth^ October 3iiY, i888. " The first woodcock positively seen near Lilford was on October i8th, the first grev crow on October ist. Fieldfares, earlier than in any previous record, on September 29Ch. I have authentic information of a flock of some twenty felts in Cambridgeshire on September 5th. " 1 have heard of the great crested grebes breeding on several of the reservoirs in the southern division of our county for some years, and latterly on a large pond in the northern division, and also close to our frontier in Rutland." "~ "December i^th, 1889. " This has been a very peculiar autumn, in its average extraordinary mildness. We had snow and a few days of sharp frost in many places, but now foggy mornings, ' To John Cordeaux, Esq. ^ To the same. 14 LOCAL OBSERVATION and generally bright, sunny afternoons. I have not heard of any great number of woodcocks anywhere, but it has been a good autumn for visitors on the east coast. I have heard of redbreasted fly-catchers, ortolans, fire-crest, and several two-barred crossbills. There was a marvellous invasion of common crossbills in Portugal and Andalucia in September and October ; the King of Portugal told me that for three days they were passing over some pine woods on the coast where he was shooting, in tens of thousands, and a great many appeared in the Campo de Gibraltar at Seville and at Malaga, where they were previously ail but unknown. There was a great catch of hawks at Valkenswaard,* but L tells me that all were small birds. A BufFon's skua f was picked up near Lilford alive on November st and sent to me." ' "January dtk, 1891. " I have so far, by living upstairs in a room with double windows and a very big fireplace, managed to keep myself, a hoopoe, a Madeira blackcap, and one of the genus Turnix, J which ornithologists nickname the ' Andalucian > To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * Valkenswaard— a village in North Brabant — has long been a favourite place for the capture of hawks when on passage, by means of decoys and a bow-net. See article on Falconry later on in this book. t Bufifon's Skua (SUnorarius parasiticus). This bird belongs to a group of the gulls, known (from their livelihood being largely gained by pursuit and robbery of other gulls) as ' robber gulls.' Buffon's is a characteristic Arctic species. \ The quails. LOCAL OBSERVATION 15 hemipode,' in very fair good health. Burghley tells me the small fishes find it so cold in the water that they jump ashore, in proof of which he has brought me two baskets full for my piscivorous birds." ^ "■December \ith, 1891. " I should very much like to have your otter, but as my principal object in view is a mate and playfellow for my female, I fear it would break her heart to part with him again, so that I must decline your offer with many thanks. I hear of very few woodcocks (we never have many) here- abouts, and singularly few snipes. Our valley has been more or less under water since the middle of October. We have had a good many ducks, and, for us, an unusual lot of teal. No end of fieldfares ; a good many arrived in September, about six weeks earlier than usual." ^ '■'■February ilth, 1892. " You are doing better out of this country at present ; for after some ten days of lovely mild weather, with wood- pigeons cooing, rooks building, and thrushes in full song, on Monday last, 15th, we had a fall of six inches of snow on the level, and last night the thermometer in our kitchen garden registered 30 degrees of frost. The Campo de Gibraltar, Cork Woods, Sierra del Nino, Plaza de Levante, etc., are delightful, and I am very glad that you enjoyed your three davs there. 1 To the Rev. W. WiUimott. 2 To E. G. B. Meade- Waldo, Esq. 1 6 LOCAL OBSERVATION " I am very anxious to have some of the marsh owls alive ; they ought to be breeding now." " May i^th, 1892. " I have only been out of the house once since October last. I am told that most of our spring birds are here in very unusual numbers, and most of them earlier than usual. A pair, if not two, of little owls have taken their young off safely at no great distance. We have a great many hawfinches nesting close to the house, and a nest of long- eared owl and snipe (both deserted) have been found for the first time in my recollection in this immediate neighbourhood." ' '■'■May 2\5t, 1892. " I have not heard recently ot anv little owls * at a distance, and of no nests at more than two miles from this. I am told of two nests of tawny owls with the young still in them, and we have seven or eight barn owls sitting. Can you spare me any young long-eared .' I want to establish them at large here. " A nest of little woodpecker was found on our lawn yesterday ; the bird is common enough, but the nest is very hard to find. A kite was identified on competent authority about sixteen miles from us on the 2nd, and I hear of 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * The Little Owl {Athene noctua), a Continental species. Lord Lilford [see later] liberated at different times many of these birds. LOCAL OBSERVATION 17 a "gurt ork"* (not a great auk) recently seen at about the same distance in another direction." ' " September 6th, 1892. " These summer excursions and incursions of crossbills are very remarkable and unaccountable. The crossbill {curvirostra) is an exceedingly rare bird in this county, but the way in which hawfinches have colonised our neighbourhood is a caution and warning to gardeners. We always had, and I am glad to say, still have, great numbers of goldfinches in this district, where agriculture has never advanced since the Restoration." - " Oa/>6er lotk, 1893. " Your mention of the abundance of hawfinches at Rope Hill is to me very remarkable, as, although last year we had at least ten or a dozen nests about our lawn and pleasure grounds, this year we could not discover one, and the birds were, comparatively, vefy scarce at pea-time. " With the exception of redwings, which arrived about a fortnight earlier than usual, all our migrants are late ; but a great tide has set in during the last few days, and our beech trees are full of travelling woodpigeons, chaffinches, and some bramblings, whilst flock after flock of pipits, linnets, skylarks, starlings and peewits are passing to the S.W. up our valley." ^ 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. ' To the same. ' To the same. * Great hawk. 1 8 LOCAL OBSERVATION Note from " Aviary Record." "January loM, 1894: Green woodpecker (Gecinus viridis) * pulling out thatch from roof of schoolhouse, Lilford (Edwards)." "December iTik, 1894. " We have scarcely any hawfinches in our neighbour- hood this summer, and I have heard of very few during the autumn. Before 1870 we looked upon them as very irregular, but occasionally abundant winter visitors ; now they are sometimes extremely abundant breeders, and scarce after the month of September." ^ "January 26th, 1895. " Three little auks, one of them captured by a cat, were brought to me from this neighbourhood the day before yesterday ; two were picked up in the county, and one of them brought to me alive about October 13th ult., and I heard of another found just over our frontier in Beds about the same time. G. L tells me of two in the New Forest on Monday last. Doctor H told me of the ' auk-storm ' on the Yorks coast. " The only other remarkable birds that I have heard of as occurring recendy in Ithis neighbourhood are my bimaculated duck, or drake, on our decoy, on 21st ult., 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * The Green Woodpecker is less of a purely tree bird than our other woodpeckers, often seeking its food (ants, etc.) on the ground. This bird was probably looking for insects. LOCAL OBSERVATION 19 three smews on our river, near the house last week, and a waxwing female, shot at Brington on 21st inst." * ''April 2Sth, 1895. " We had not much snow here, but the glass went down to below zero on several nights. I did not hear of many dead birds found here, except starlings and a few fieldfares. " We seldom have many song thrushes after the beginning of November, but two came constantly to be fed. There is no doubt that this species has suffered more than any of our common birds. I have only once heard its song, and I only hear of some half-dozen nests about our pleasure grounds, as against a usual average of twenty- five to thirty. " I do not perceive or hear about any noticeable diminution amongst our blackbirds, but starlings and robins are remarkable for their comparative scarcity just now. " We had a great many fowl about the middle of the frost — mallard, wigeon, pochard, ten tufted ducks, a few teal, pintail, and three smews ; only one small lot of pinkfooted (.'') geese. The most remarkable ornithological occurrences were those of a great northern diver that was killed near Northampton in December, and is now in my possession ; eight whoopers * that remained here for ^ To John Cordeaux, Esq. * The Whooper Swan {Cyg/ius ferus), a winter visitor which breeds in Iceland. ao LOCAL OBSERVATION two days, March i6th-i7th, and a grey-hen killed on i8th idr' "May T,rd, 1895. " I cannot even hear of an occupied nest of owl of any sort hereabouts. It is true that almost all our favourite tawny owl trees were uprooted in the fall of March 24th, but we have some left, and plenty of the owls. Here three eggs is the rule, but I have known of four. "Our first swift appeared yesterday, and all our regular spring birds are now in, except turtle-dove, hobby, and nightjar. The clrl bunting is almost unknown in the county. I remember seeing several one summer between Southampton and Hamble, and used to see them at Hythe." ' "April 2ot/!, 1892. " I take it as most friendly and obliging of you to give me the very welcome news of the kites' nest in your county,* and I sincerely hope that your most praise- worthy efforts may be rewarded by your having the satisfaction of seeing some seven or eight kites circling in the air. I wish there was a chance of the return of this fine bird to its ancient haunts in the great woodlands 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. 2 To the same. * The Common Kite {Milvus ictinus), once the scavenger of London, is now only just not extinct in this country. Not many years ago several were wantonly slaughtered in a Welsh district, where now, as Mr. Phillips informs us, but a single bird remains. LOCAL OBSERVATION 21 of this country. I can just remember the days when it was still tolerably common." ^ "January J3//1, 1893. "I am much obliged to you for yours of nth, and am very glad to have your experience about the kites remaining in Wales through the year : this is not the case in Inverness-shire." ^ "January ^i\ih, 1895. " I do not think the kites would drive away the young during the year of their birth, but it is quite probable that they might object to the new building of a fresh pair within the limits of their hunting district. In my experience in Spain we seldom found a nest of red kite within a m.ile of another of the same species. The black kite, on the other hand, we often found in small scattered colonies of half a dozen nests, perhaps within a radius of 500 or 600 yards." ^ "April 25//%, 1895. "Thanks very much for yours of the 2ist. I am very glad that you enjoyed your visit to my beloved old haunts in Glentromie and Guich so much. We used to call the loch below the lodge, Loch'n Sheillach — the Lake of the Willows. I grieve to hear of four stuffed eagles. All our spring birds as yet arrived are pretty ' To E. Cambridge Phillips, Esq. * To the same. ' To the same. 22 LOCAL OBSERVATION well up to their average dates. We have a good many plovers' eggs here, and a good many from Green Bank. There are, I am assured, two pairs of redshanks nesting in Achurch meadow, but the eggs are as yet undiscovered.^ " That hill-fox hunting is not bad fun, and I hope that your party will kill all of them, and not send any cubs south for sale alive. I shall be very glad indeed if you can find a nest of goosanders * and send me one or two eggs ; don't take them all. I should very much like also some young mergansers alive. I suspect that you will have to watch very close to find a nest of goosanders among tree roots near water, or in a hollow tree.^ " Four golden plovers in full summer plumage, with black waistcoats, have been for some days haunting Achurch and St. Peter's meadow ; but these golden plovers do not lay till May, and of course the chances of their doing so are very small, f but whatever their intentions may be, they are evidently paired, and apparently 1 To Walter M. Stopford, Esq. ^ To the same. * The Goosander {Mergus /nerganser) and the Merganser (M. serrator) belong to the tooth-billed division of the ducks, i.e., their mandibles have a saw edge — a provision designed to enable them to catch the fish on which they feed. They nest on the lochs in the north of Scotland, where the former is by far the rarer bird of the two. t The Golden Plover (Cliaradrius pluvialis) nests on high moorlands and high, open hills. LOCAL OBSERVATION 23 unwilling to desert their friends the peewits. We have fine weather, with bright sun, but bitterly cold winds. " I hear that the damage done by the hurricane in Norfolk is a thousand times worse than here, and it is woeful enough here. " If your goosanders are not mergansers, do all you can to find a nest, as but few have been found in Great Britain. The mergansers breed in all suitable localities in the Highlands. " The first pheasant's egg in the pens yesterday ; but there have been ' wild ' ones for the last week or more. " Siskins ought to nest on Speyside. " The Bough ton keeper tells me of a sparrow-hawk taking a woodcock there on the 9th." ' "May 6M, 1895. " A pair of herons built a big nest in Piper's spinney just above Braunsea bridge, but they have not yet laid ! Well-regulated herons have young on wing before this. The last arrival in spring birds was a turtle-dove on the 3rd. All others are in except butcher bird, hobby and nightjar. There are no end of nightingales ; very few song thrushes ; numerous corncrakes ; a good sprinkling of cuckoos, tree pipits, chifFchafFs ; and more wood warblers than I ever knew of before."^ 1 To Walter M. Stopford, Esq. ^ To the same. 24 LOCAL OBSERVATION "June 24th, 1887. " I am exceedingly obliged to you for your very interesting letter, which reached me here yesterday, and for the very perfect nest and eggs of wood warblers that came safely to hand this morning. The only one of my people here who knows this bird assures me that there are two pairs within a short distance of this house (they are by no means common just hereabouts),* but that he cannot find a nest. We are not much troubled by collectors in these parts, probably because we have no heaths or commons, and, as far as is generally known, no ornithological specialities. " We have a fine crop of barn owls, but not quite so many tawnies as usual. What do you say about the male owls sitting in a wild state .? I have known of more than one instance of a tawny male, and scops, ditto, shot from the nest." ' "January 21st, 1896. " The black-throated diver recorded by me in last Field is the only unusual bird that has occurred to my knowledge in the district of late. We had thousands of fieldfares, and our usual number of redwings ; about our average of woodcocks (a very small one), hardly any snipe, and no wild-fowl except mallard, in any number. " The woodpigeon malady of diseased primary feathers ' To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * Because the \\'ood Warbler {Phylloscopui sibilatrix) is a beech- loving species. LOCAL OBSERVATION 25 was very noticeable here, but having devoured the few acorns, the survivors have left us for some time. Hawfinches and storm thrushes have been very scarce." ^ "■August zrd, 1888. " My falconer took two very young hobbies * yesterday from a big nest in a tall oak tree about 1 50 yards from that out of which he took three on July 28th in 1886 and 1887. The woodman averred that four young kestrels were hatched in, and flew from this year's nest about six weeks ago. These two young birds are the largest that I ever saw for their age ; they are entirely down-clad, except tips of tail and wing feathers. There was a woodpigeon's nest, with two small young, in the same tree as the hobbies." - "September 6th, 1891. " I have had a glimpse of what 1 believe to have been an osprey here, but I was at the moment engaged in a fight with a pike, and the bird disappeared behind some high trees, and I saw it no more." ^ " September ttk, 1892. " I only know positively of one brood of little owls hatched out this summer hereabouts ; we have every reason, 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. ^ To the same. ^ To the same. * The Hobby {Falco subbuteo). This little falcon is a summer visitor to Britain, arriving after the appearance of the leaf on the oak-trees, in which it usually nests. 26 LOCAL OBSERVATION short of certainty, to believe that another lot have come ofF successfully. " I have a pair of young bearded vultures flying at hack.*"^ "June 14M, 1892. " I had no idea that there were even three pairs of ernes f now nesting in our islands ; but, three or thirty, I would subject people attacking them to losing their right hand, their left ears for an osprey, and their noses for a kite." " "February 20th, 1892. " You may be interested in hearing that we have a little owl {Athene) sitting on five eggs in a hollow tree not far off. I have turned out a great many of these birds during the past few years, and this is the fifth nest of which I have had positive information." ^ " December 1 -jth, 1 894. " T B was here for a few hours on Saturday, and told me of your redwing-killing kestrel. It is only curious to me that a ' raptor ' with such comparatively 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. ^ To the same. ' To E. Cambridge Phillips, Esq. * Young falcons, before being taken into training, are allowed to live at liberty so long as they will come regularly to take the food placed for them by the falconer. Thi.s is called flying 'at hack.' See article on Falconry later on. t White-tailed Sea-eagle {Haliaetus albicilla). LOCAL OBSERVATION 27 powerful feet as the kestrel does not more often pick up birds from the trees, bushes, and in air. Of course, we know that he takes a certain number on the ground. I have only twice in my life seen a kestrel go for a bird with apparently murderous intention : * in the first instance at a missel thrush, which baffled him entirely in a thick tree, and as I believe, scared him off by chatter ; in the second instance, curiously enough very near the same place, I was standing forward under a fence about up to my shoulder for partridges, and a covey rose at perhaps five hundred yards from me on a big pasture field, and were coming skimming the ground towards me, when one of the kestrels that I had noticed circling and hovering high in air, shut its wings and made a really grand stoop at these birds (they were hardly big enough to shoot), and put the whole lot except the old cock (who came on to me and met his fate) into some long grass and rushes. The stoop was so fine that I thought that I must have been deceived as to the stooper, but there was in fact no mistake whatever about it. " Do your redwings suffer from the kestrel in the air ? And do you notice any other birds taking the holly berries .'' We have very few hollies in this neighbourhood, and I cannot discover that any birds save redwings, and rarely other Turdi, even touch them." ' 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * The Kestrel or Wind-hover {Falco tiiinuncuhis), like the barn-owl, habitually feeds on mice and voles. 2 8 LOCAL OBSERVATION " Septemler 6th, 1891. " With regard to the hybridisation of pigeons. I received last spring, from a neighbouring parson, a bird that I believe to be one of the persuasion known as ' Antwerp carriers.' It was caught, unable to fly, near his house, and he, thinking it might have escaped hence, let me know about it, and eventually sent it over to me as a present. It has a metal ring round one leg, with a date, letter and number. After a few days I put this bird into the aviary with the Bolle's, the laurel and trocaz,* besides a male stockdove. This latter has paired with the carrier, and they are now taking turn and turn about on two eggs. I am very curious to see what the produce, if there is any, will be like. They have been sitting about six days." ' "January \^ih, 1893. " Are you quite satisfied that some of the birds imported by Mr. H did actually come direct to him from Asiatic Turkey ? In the only district in .Albania in which we found pheasants, their chief diet consisted of acorns, Indian corn, hips, privet berries, and of course insect food. " The variety, not only in size and weight but also in markings and in habits, between grey partridges from different parts even of our own islands, is indeed most ' To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * Pigeons : Columba bollii, C. laurivora .Ti:d C. trocaz (see later). LOCAL OBSERVATION 29 remarkable. In Northern Spain the common grey partridge ranges up to and breeds at 5000-6000 feet above the sea, and very rarely comes below 2000 feet. It is a small, dark-coloured bird with nearly black legs, and is by no means common, Caccabis rufa being the partridge of the country." ^ " /uiie 14M, 1892. " There is in my opinion no harm whatever in killing the old male bustards * at any time up to the end of IMay, and no excuse whatever for killing hens after March ; but supposing that every British officer from Gibraltar killed every bustard he shot at between September and May 31st, I do not think that it would materially affect the breed in Spain ; for Andalucia is constantly reinforced from Estremadura and La Mancha, and the natives really trouble very little about those birds, though they will shoot at them or at anything else, from the nest or not, when they get the chance. " If any real harm is done to the breed of bustards in Andalucia it is in the marisma, where almost every herdsman carries a gun and squirts at everything." ' ' To E. Cambridge Phillips, Esq. ^ To the same. * The Great Bustard {Otis tarda), once an inhabitant of open cultivated and uncultivated lands in Britain, now only an irregulat visitor to this country, is shot by ' driving ' on the Andalucian plains. 30 LOCAL OBSERVATION " March 12th, 1887. " Are you aware that, about the year 1 808, a gamekeeper of the name of Agars, then in the employ of W. Thos. St. Quintin, Esq., of Lowthorpe and Scampston Hall (Yorkshire), secured eleven great bustards, as the result of one shot from behind a stalking horse.''"' "September 22nd, 1895. " Three polecats were killed near this place early this year. I can remember them nearly as common as stoats, but of late years we seldom get hold of more than two in three or four years. No marten has been killed in this county to my knowledge for some ten or twelve years, or for some thirty before that. They used to be quite common some seventy years ago, in the forest of Rockingham." ' '■'■December 12th, 1895. "With regard to peregrines about Salisbury cathedral, I can only say that seven is a very unusual number to be seen together, but there is no impossibility about it. " I am glad to hear of the proposed arrangement on the spire in favour of our friends, the peregrines."^ "March 16//7, 1895. " I knew that a pair of peregrines occasionally bred upon the spire ot Salisbury cathedral, but I had no idea that they 1 To W. H. St. Quintin, Esq. ^ To the same. ' To the Rev. W. Willimott. LOCAL OBSERVATION 31 did so regularly, and am delighted to find that the good dean takes such a warm interest in them. It is remarkable that the red-throated diver at Northampton should have been considered as worthy of record in the 'Times and Standard, whilst the much rarer great northern diver (killed in the same neighbourhood) and given to me in November last, passed, so far as I know, without public record of any sort." ^ "December 26tk, 1894. " The only ornithological event of much interest that has recently taken place in this neighbourhood, to my knowledge, was the capture on our decoy, a few days ago, of a most lovely hybrid (male) between mallard and teal. I never before handled one of this cross." - "■March ^rd, 1891. " White and pied stoats are exceptionally rare here, but four out of some nine or ten of these little beasts, brought to me during the last few weeks, have been more or less white, one very nearly quite white ; all these varieties were of the gentler sex." ' 1 To the Rev. W. Willimott. 2 To the same. ^ To the same. Note. — Mr. Willimott writes, July wtk, 1896: "Lord Lilford corre- sponded with me off and on for some thirty years. I first had the privilege of meeting him when Robert Barr was falconer to the old hawking club, when he was fairly well and strong, and could ride as well as most of the party." — Letter to Hoif. Mrs. Dreiuiit. 32 LOCAL OBSERVATION "July yd, 1890. " Your young Cornish squire, as a protector of eagles and falcons, deserves to be known and appreciated far and wide. I rented a forest in Inverness-shire for several years, and looked upon the golden eagles which bred there annually, not only as my good friends on account of their destruction of blue hares, which are pestilential nuisances in stalking, but also on account of the wholesome dread they inspired in the breasts of the grey crows, which will follow and mob the sea-eagle, but sneak off the moor directly a golden is in sight. A young falcon was caught alive in October last on the Norfolk coast, in a shore net, and taken uninjured to a friend of mine, who sent her off at once to an ardent falconer friend in Herts ; the latter immediately took her in hand and flew her at rooks, at which she flew very well. In April last she sailed away and was lost, and mirabile dictu, was shot by Lord Coke in the park at Holkham, not more than a mile from where she was originally taken, within twenty-four hours after she was lost. Lord Coke, curiously enough, sent her body to my friend who had first received her alive." ' ^^Bournemouth, March nth, iSgo. " The bearded vulture * or Gypaetus is to be met with in all the sierras of Spain, but certainly does not breed ' To the Rev. W. Willimott. * The Bearded Vulture {Gyfaetus barbatus) ranges over lofty mountain chains from Portugal and Spain to the Himalayas. For an account of Lord Lilford's domesticated pair, see Presidential Address, P- 39- The tamk Lajimergeikrs, LOCAL OBSERVATION 33 in the neighbourhood of Valencia, which is more or less of a flat garden for miles. Poor Rudolph was always in such a tearing hurry that he never gave himself a chance of becoming really acquainted with the birds of Spain ; of course, as Gypaetus does not breed in colonies, never lays more than two eggs, and is by no means a wary bird, it can hardly be said to be ' common ' anywhere in Europe ; but my experience has been to the effect that a pair, sometimes two pairs, are always to be found breeding in Spain, not amongst, but very near to the many colonies of griffons. I believe that you will find that all the most birdy localities on the Danube, above Belgrade, are in the hands of private owners, who, however, especially in Hungary, are most civil and obliging to English naturalists. Let me know if you think I can be of any sort of use to you." ' ''April i^th, 1888. " I do not remember to have heard of golden eagles hatched in captivity, or, as far as I recollect, even of their laying eggs in those circumstances. The truth, as I am firmly convinced, is that in these large species of eagle, the birds are not really ' mature ' till they have com- pleted their fifth or sixth year, and in a wild state some never acquire the fully mature dress, though they may live for a hundred years ; and another curious fact is that a pair of old eagles that have bred and driven off 1 To Col. H. Barclay. 34 LOCAL OBSERVATION their young in one season, will often pass a year or two in the same locality, and use the nest as a resting-place, without any attempt at reproduction, and resume the process in another season. I must say that I have never seen anything more confirmatory of the passage of small birds on the backs of large ones, than the presence of enormous numbers of Motacilla flava* amongst several hundreds of freshly arrived storks in South Spain, in 1872. We saw this as we went by steamer down the Guadalquivir : the wagtails were scarce till we came down to the spot upon which the storks were drilling and consulting, and there the little birds were swarming." ^ "October ^th, 1889. " I had a letter two days ago from the Crown Prince of Portugal, describing a marvellous passage of crossbills over a sandy, pine-grown district on the coast of that country, where the bird was previously entirely unknown. He says that he and his companion shot a hundred and fifty, and were only deterred from shooting several thousands by the fact that they had butchered more than they wanted. By the same post I had a letter from Seville, telling me that there are now large numbers in that neighbourhood, where hitherto they have been, to say the least of it, very uncommon." " 1 To Dr. Albert Giinther. ' To the Rev. Murray Matthew. * The Blue-headed Wagtail. LOCAL OBSERVATION 35 " Decetnber \^th, 1889. " Did you shoot any of the Hierro ravens ? And do they in any way differ from the ordinary type ? " I presume that Hierro is the least-known island of the Canarian group ; from your account it would not be a very eligible residence for any length of time, but in my younger days I would have made acquaintance with those big Hzards,* or known the reason why." ' I To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * Laceria simoni. Simony's Lizard. — A very large lizard that is confined to a small rocky island — little more than a rock — off the coast of Hierro. There are two of these rocks, the Zalmones, on only one of which the lizard lives — viz., that farthest from the shore. Owing to almost continuous surf it is rarely possible to land. This lizard feeds on crabs. The Hierro raven i.s C. tingiianus, the Tangier raven. — E. G. B. M-VV. CHAPTER III *onds, Paddocks, and Avdaries ') As is well known, LilforJ was celebrated during the late peer's lifetime for one of the most remarkable — in some directions the most remarkable — collections of living birds in any private hands. Carefully as birds may be attended to (and the management of the Lilford aviaries was little short of perfection), it is inevitable that in a large collection losses and additions must make constant changes in the list. But Lord Lilford's presidential address to the members of the Northamptonshire Field Naturalists' Club, which follows here at length, so admirably describes the chief features of the collection at that date, that it needs but a few words of introduction. Lilford Hall is a dia:nified and comfortable-looking Jacobean house, built of grey Ketton stone, and a little raised above the river Nene. The hall door faces a gravel, balustraded sweep, which formed a favourite parade-ground of the ravens, Sankey and Grip. The south — the drawing-room side — looks on to a terraced lawn, where the falcons sat on their blocks, PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 37 grouped about an old cedar. Beyond this, and towards the right, stretch other lawns and shrubberies. Here was the long line of large aviaries devoted to waders, doves and other birds. Opposite these again, and partly sheltered by over- hanging trees and scrub, where Mantell's apteryx hid from daylight and laid its egg, was a large natural shallow pool, in which flamingoes waded and a few wildfowl swam. On the opposite side of the house the ground falls quickly to the river, and here, close to the wall, was the twisted beech tree in which the ravens made their nest ; and a little farther on, the summer enclosure of the elephantine tortoise which it took five men to lift. Directly behind the house is a wide courtyard, about which were situated a variety of living things. Here the Spanish bear lived in its corner ; and close by it the pair of bonxies, or great skuas ('robber gulls') shared a subdivided enclosure with great bustards and Bewick's swans. In another corner was the eagles' aviary, and near it a long glass-covered house, where the lemurs were, and long rows of cages containing beautiful and rare finches, blue jays, jay-shrikes, the grakles, and other birds described in the presidential address. On the same side, but away beyond the house, about two acres of ground had been completely enclosed, and were known as the Pinetum. It contained fine timber trees, shrubberies, grass, and water, and was entirely sur- rounded with a high iron fence and wire netting. This netting was made cat-proof and fox-proof, by splaying 38 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES the barbed wire top towards the outside, so as to throw back any marauding climber. The great glory of this large enclosure was the collection of cranes, for such a collection had almost certainly never been got together before. Also in this paddock were the pelicans. The water was divided into two areas by a grass-covered causeway which ran across it, and was a great sunning-place for the ducks. At the sides of this enclosure were aviaries which held several varieties of partridge and francolin, and others in which lived a wild cat and the large dormice. So much for the general situation of the birds' homes. We will now visit the collection itself under the only possible guide ; for no memory of visits to Lilford stands out like that of the gentle master of all ' our show ' (as he used to call it), wheeled about among his birds. Here one day he halted to point out, and very cautiously, a willow wren's nest in a thick shrub on the lawn, built most unusually at a height above the ground. Presently he called attention to a dark hole where the apteryx was hidden with her egg ; and soon he was nursing in his arms another apteryx, which had been taken from its hiding-place; for this bird is so strictly nocturnal that you would never see it at all were you not some- times to extract it from its chosen haunt. The following account of the Lilford collection was given by Lord Lilford, as his Presidential Address, on PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 39 the occasion of a visit (in February, 1894) from the members of the Northamptonshire Field Club. " It occurs to me that, as I have virtually recorded, in our Natural History Journal, all of importance that I had to communicate with regard to the occurrence of birds in Northamptonshire, and as, to my very great regret, I am (as I long have been) unable to occupy the presidential chair and address the meeting in person, it may interest and amuse some of those present to listen to a few notes upon some of the inmates of our vivaria at Lilford. "It is probable that some of those present have already visited Lilford, and to these I sorrowfully announce that my old raven, Sankey, whom they will remember as one of the most amusing of our living creatures, went blind some years ago, and died last year. His companion of later years. Grip by name, is quite as amusing, but not so familiar and sociable as the ' late lamented,' whose name he constantly repeats, and has apparently taken to himself Since the death of Sankey, Grip has had, as a mate, another raven, from Spain, and is rapidly instructing it in every sort of mischief and ' devilment.' One after- noon in November last, I heard these ravens making a very unusual clamour close in front of the house, and on looking out of the window, perceived that they had got hold of, and nearly killed a peregrine falcon ; I sent out a servant, who secured the falcon without difficulty. We found that it was an old wild bird suffering from a sort of asthma 40 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES known to falconers as the ' croaks,' and somewhat poor in flesh. I would willingly have tried to keep this falcon alive and restored it to liberty, but the ravens had injured it so severely that it was only common mercy to kill it. How or why it allowed itself to be seized and worried by its antagonists we can never know. " Our Spanish bear will also probably be remembered by any who have come to Lilford during the ten years that she has been here ; I am glad to say that she is still well, though occasionally subject to rheumatism, resulting from an injury to one of her legs on her journey to this place. In connection with this animal a rather amusing incident occurred some years ago : I was anxious to provide her with a companion of the other sex, and, having heard of several of these in the possession of a dealer, during my absence from home entered into nego- tiations for the purchase of a young male bear from Russia. The dealer in question accepted my terms without sending me a reply, and the next news of the matter that reached me at Bournemouth was a telegram from Lilford announcing the arrival there of a female bear, without any previous warning or advice of despatch. Upon this I telegraphed to the dealer, saying that the animal sent was of the wrong sex, and would be returned to him at once. It will hardly be believed that on receiving this message my enterprising friend sent off a second bear to Lilford without notice, and again a female, so that for one night there were three she-bears PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 41 on the premises ! My old bear is very good-tempered as a rule, but on one or two occasions has shown great fury to strangers, without any apparent cause. She is now so accustomed to solitude, as regards her own species, that I should hardly like to introduce a younger and weaker bear of either sex into her company. It is perhaps worthy of note that this bear is particularly fond of the leaves of the elm, but either wholly rejects or shows no liking for those of any other of our common trees. " Another four-footed lady at Lilford for whom I am anxious to find a mate, is the otter, caught some years ago when not half-grown, near Warmington, and now living in and about a small tank in our kitchen garden. " My collection of mammalia is small ; perhaps to the general public the most interesting of this order of animals, now living at Lilford, would be the ruffed lemur, from Madagascar, a beautiful nocturnal animal, allied to the family of monkeys, with fine, long, black and white fur. Two collared fruit-bats have been here for some years, but as these beasts spend the whole of the day hanging head downwards from the top of their cage, I can hardly expect that the ordinary visitor should care much about them ; their bodies are, roughly speaking, about the size of a moderate-sized common rat, the outstretched wings would measure about three feet, perhaps more, from point to point. This species breeds annually in the Zoological Gardens, whence I procured my specimens ; it is found 42 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES in Egypt, Palestine, and Cyprus, where it commits great ravages upon dates and other fruit. I have living specimens of the four European species of dormouse, but have nothing of any general interest to record about them, except that one species, known as the ' garden dormouse,' does not exhibit the drowsy^ tendencies of our common English dormouse or the two others of this family in the day-time, but is always remarkably active, and ready to bite and scratch whenever handled. We have during the last two years bred a good many of the exceedingly pretty striped mouse of Africa, known as the Barbary mouse, from a pair procured for me by a friend in Morocco. We have not taken the trouble to make special pets of any of these mice, but they are not only very tamable but also capable of a considerable amount of education : a lady who paid us a visit last year brought one of these little animals with her, and had taught it to sit up on a doll's chair, open a little cupboard, take sugar from a drawer, hold up and drink milk or tea from a teacup, sham dead at her command, and perform other tricks ; in fact, this mouse displayed quite as much intelligence, in his degree, as an average lady's lap-dog. " Although we have had many losses among the birds of prey, some of the oldest denizens of our aviaries are of this class ; in fact, the most ancient living creature in the collection is a white-tailed or sea eagle, taken from a nest in the south of Ireland in the early spring of 1854, PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 43 and therefore now very nearly forty years of age. It is only of late that she has shown any signs of old age, in a certain lack of activity that causes her to remain much upon the ground instead of perching ; but she is still in very fine plumage, and it would, I think, be extremely dangerous for a stranger to venture into her compartment. This species of eagle has been so persecuted and killed down in its former breeding-haunts in Scotland and Ireland that I may say with certainty that not more than three pairs, at the outside, now nest in the United Kingdom. A few stragglers visit our country irregularly on passage, probably from Norway, and meet with no mercy, being, with few exceptions, shot or trapped at once, and almost invariably recorded in the newspapers as * magnificent specimens of the golden eagle.' This golden eagle is far more common in Scotland than the sea eagle, but fortunately seldom travels to any very considerable distance from its mountain haunts. Northamptonshire is one of the few English counties that can lay claim to an occurrence of the golden eagle within its limits, whilst nearly every English county is guilty of the blood of the sea eagle. A very fine immature female of this latter species was killed at Oakley, near Kettering, in February 1 891, and I am acquainted with several other occurrences in Northamptonshire. In my opinion there is no sense or reason in the destruction of an eagle in our country but so long as 'British bird-collectors offer long prices for specimens slaughtered within the limits of the four seas, 44 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES every loafer with a gun will very naturally shoot every feathered thing that offers him a chance. " Mr. Cosgrave,* my chief in charge of the Lilford collections, assures me that the birds that afford, perhaps, most amusement to our numerous visitors are a black and a griffon vulture, that have been here since 1865 and 1 867, and were both taken in my presence from their respective nests in Spain. The former bird is a female, and for the last twelve or thirteen years has annually made a large nest and laid from one to three eggs. Since the griffon (of whose sex I am uncertain) has been in the same compartment with this black vulture, it has annually taken a share in making the nest, and displayed quite equal ferocity on the approach of human visitors. The first egg is generally laid during the first week of March. As I considered the pairing of these two birds, though extremely improbable, as not entirely impossible, I have once or twice left the eggs in the nest, but although assiduously incubated by both birds, they have invariably proved infertile. How- ever, for months after the eggs have been removed, the black vulture, when any one approaches the front of the * Clementina Lady Lilford writes : " Richard Cosgrave entered Lord Lilford's service as falconer and keeper of the aviaries in November 1893. His intelligence and his interest in birds, increa.sed by constant friendly intercourse with, and instruction from Lord Lilford, soon made him a most valuable and reliable assistant, and one whose unfailing devotion and trustworthiness were deeply appreciated by his employer." PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 45 compartment, goes through a variety of most grotesque antics that provoke the most stolid of visitors into roars of laughter, and must be seen to be believed in — at all events I should be extremely puzzled to do them adequate justice with pen and ink. During this performance of its companion the griffon vulture frequently assumes very absurd attitudes of defiance, possibly of admiration, but does not take any very active part in the ' show.' " We have two fine bearded vultures, or lammergeiers, one of which (with a companion that has died very lately) enjoyed complete liberty since its arrival here as a nestling till a few days ago, when I was obliged to have it caught up and confined, on account of very conspicuous breaches of decency about the roof of the house and our flower garden. I extremely regret this necessity, as the sight of these large birds soaring about the place, generally pursued by a cloud of rooks, was certainly unique in England, and afforded to me, who am well acquainted with the lammergeier in its native haunts, a constant source of interest and pleasant memories of localities that are still to a great extent unspoiled by man. These birds of mine were very tame and perfectly harmless ; indeed, with the exception of a few playful attacks on trousers, gaiters, petticoats and boots, I never heard of any malice on their part towards any living creature. Their natural food consists of carrion and garbage of all sorts, tortoises, and other small reptiles ; and I hold the many stories that are current on the Continent, of their carrying off 46 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES children, lambs and kids, as very nearly, if not entirely mythical. " Amongst the most beautiful of our recent acquisitions in raptorial birds is an adult white-bellied sea eagle from Australia : this is the first of its species that I ever possessed, and its strikingly contrasted plumage of pure rich grey and white render it a very great ornament to the collection. I have many other eagles of great interest to myself, but not calling for special notice in notes intended for a more or less public meeting. " Of my favourite birds, the owls, I have at this time of writing some twenty different species alive. I may mention, as special varieties amongst them, a very fine Nepaul wood owl, a South African eagle owl, and four Ural owls ; I believe these birds to be the only living representatives of their respective species now in England. " Whilst on the subject of owls I may add that for several years past I have annually set at liberty a considerable number of the little owl, properly so called {^Athene noctua)^ from Holland, and that several pairs of these most amusing birds have nested and reared broods in the neighbourhood of Lilford. It is remarkable that, although this species is abundant in Holland, and by no means uncommon in certain parts of France, Belgium and Germany, it has been rarely met with in a wild state in our country. I trust, however, that I have now fully succeeded in establishing it as a Northamptonshire bird, and earnestly entreat all present, who may have the PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 47 opportunity, to protect and encourage these birds ; they are excellent mouse-catchers, very bad neighbours to young sparrows in their nests, and therefore valuable friends to farmers and gardeners. The nest of this owl is generally placed either in a hollow tree at no great height from the ground, or in vacant spaces in the masonry of old buildings. The parent birds are very bold in defence of their young, and a neighbour of ours has had his hat knocked off by one of these little owls as he passed near the ash-tree in which there was a brood of young — a fact of which he was quite unconscious. I confess that when this story was originally told to me by a third person I had my doubts as to its truth, but last summer I had an opportunity of enquiring from the aforesaid neighbour, who assured me that not only was this story perfectly true, but that he had been again attacked last year, in a different locaHty, by a little owl, which no doubt had young ones in the roof of an old church hard by. These little owls are very easily tamed, if taken in hand whilst quite young, and, besides their taste for mice, are very efficient in the destruction of cockroaches and other beetles. *' I cannot help once more taking up a text that I have, I fear, worn almost threadbare already ; it is — never destroy or molest an owl of any sort. I consider all the owls as not only harmless, but most useful, and the barn, white, or screech-owl as perhaps the most serviceable to man of English birds. I think that farmers and game- 48 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES keepers have discovered that ui destroying owls they are murdering their best friends, but as long as women persist in disfiguring themselves by wearing owls' heads and wings as ornaments, and dealers will give a price for these birds to maice up into screens (for which they find a ready sale), so long will the idiotic destruction of owls continue. " To revert to the collections at Lilford, we have a large number of caged birds of many different species, amongst which I may specially mention as sweet singers, a blue rock-thrush that we took from the nest on the coast of Sardinia nearly twelve years ago, and two of a small dark race of blackcap from Madeira, that have passed five winters at Lilford, and are both singing in the room in which I am now writing. " I must not forget the very beautiful Indian birds commonly known as ' shama,' of which I have two. The natural notes of this bird are very varied and powerful, many of them extremely sweet, and they readily imitate the songs of other species, and indeed almost any other sound that they can compass. To those of you who care about birds, and are not acquainted with the shama, I may say that this bird is larger than a redbreast, to which it has a certain resemblance in shape ; but it has a tail longer in relative proportion than that of our common magpie. Roughly speaking, the upper parts of the plumage, head and throat, are glossy black, the breast of a tawny orange colour, and the long tail black and white. No PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 49 more charming cage-bird than this can be found ; but, alas, it is not very long-lived, and is very susceptible of cold and damp. " Another cage-bird worthy of notice from its rarity, beauty, and pleasant song, is the so-called ' Teydean ' chaffinch. The natural habitat of this species is strictly limited to a high zone of the Peak of Teneriffe ; it has never been met with elsewhere. I may briefly describe this bird as considerably larger than our common chaffinch, and of a general fine grey colour. " I have recently lost another bird of great interest from its rarity, and the locality from which it was forwarded to me : I allude to the chestnut-winged grakle {^zAmydrus tristrami). This bird, the only one of its species that has ever been seen alive in this country, is of a family allied to the starlings and crows, and was procured from the neighbourhood of the monastery of Mar-Saba, not far from Bethlehem. The monks protect and encourage these birds, which become quite tame, and nest in the caverns and fissures of the cliffs in the gorge of the ' Brook Kedron ' and similar localities in Southern Palestine. Mar-Saba is somewhat difficult of access, but is frequently visited by tourists in the Holy Land, to whom the bird to which I am referring is generally known as the golden-winged blackbird. Canon Tristram tells us that the male has a loud and melodious whistle ; but my bird was a female, and almost silent. " Amongst my most beautiful cage-birds I must note 4 50 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES two species of South American jay, the common blue jay of North America, the so-called ' blue robin ' from the same country, the green leaf-bird from South India, and a troupial from Brazil. " In what we at Lilford specially designate as the Aviaries I have a considerable variety of birds from different parts of the world. Amongst those most likely to arrest the attention of visitors unlearned in birds are a group of avocets, with their curiously delicate upturned beaks, their plumage of pure black and white, and their long grey legs and half-webbed feet. These pretty and interesting birds were formerly common in certain parts of England, and bred in considerable numbers upon the coast of Norfolk, but have now become scarce from the persecution of gunners and egg-stealers. My avocets were sent to me from Holland. We have also several sea-pies, better known perhaps as oyster-catchers, and a good many other small wading birds, such as curlew, godwits of both species, ruffs and reeves, redshanks and knots. The antics of the ruffs during May and June are most amusing. "As I believe that the breeding of the wood-pigeon in captivity is not a common occurrence, I mention that a pair of these birds nested and laid four times last year, in the compartment of the aviary nearest to the house at Lilford, and reared three young birds to maturity. I have a fine pair of the wood-pigeon peculiar to the island of Madeira (Columba trocaz), and many of the very beautiful crested doves of Australia, which breed freely in the bushes PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 51 of the aviary. Another very brilliantly plumaged bird of the pigeon family is the green and gold Nicobar pigeon ; but this bird has no attraction, except the brilliancy of its plumage ; it is sluggish, and often remains crouching under a bush for hours together. " Some fine purple porphyries, or water-hens, with red beaks and legs, are pretty sure to attract notice ; the birds of this family now in the aviary are from Cochin China. " We have four species of ibis : the brilliant scarlet ibis from South America, the black and white sacred ibis from the Upper Nile, the Australian ibis that very closely resembles it, and a small flock of the European glossy ibis. These last-named birds were sent to me from Spain ; and it may amuse some of you to hear that in the winter of 1892 I sent out a list of birds to an agent in Seville, who has for some years been in the habit of collecting live birds for me. In making out this list, I wrote opposite to the Spanish name of the glossy ibis (which is not in most seasons a very common bird in Andalucia), two Spanish words that might be liberally translated as meaning ' a good many.' My amazement may be imagined when I inform you that, in June 1893, I heard from my agent aforesaid that he had ninety-five of these birds awaiting my orders ! I told him that I did not want more than twenty or thirty at the outside, but he nevertheless shipped sixty of them from Gibraltar, all of which were landed alive and in good condition in London, and twelve of them forwarded to Lilford. These birds have a very 52 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES peculiar habit of taking the sun by elevating one wing to its full extent towards the sky and drooping the other to the ground, in an attitude that I have never seen in any other bird. " In the central division of the aviary are a small flock of Alpine choughs, very active and noisy birds, with black plumage, yellow beaks, and red legs. Many of this species have nested and laid eggs in their compartment, but in the few instances in which the eggs have been hatched out, the parent birds have entirely abandoned their young after the first or second day. I have had many of that beautiful sp-^cies, the red-legged or Cornish chough, but although they thrive well in complete liberty I have found it impossible to keep them in health in the aviary for any length of time. " Other most lively and amusing inmates of this part of the aviary are the nutcrackers — rare and irregular stragglers of the crow family to our country, but common enough in many of the forests of Central and Northern Europe ; these birds in their native haunts commence laying in March, whilst the snow still lies deep upon the ground. Whether from this or some other cause, it is comparatively speaking only of recent years that the eggs of the nut- crackers have become generally known to ornithologists, and I had offered a high price for the living bird to English and foreign dealers for thirty years before I could obtain even one of them. During the last few years I have been offered many more of these birds than I require. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 53 The seeds of various coniferous trees, especially those of Pinus cemb)-a, are the favourite food of the nutcracker. " The farthest division of the aviary, divided into three compartments, I have devoted principally to aquatic birds, amongst which a small group of flamingoes are perhaps the most remarkable, not only from the beautiful roseate colour of the upper parts of their wings, and their extravagantly long necks and legs, but also from the extraordinary and apparently unnatural positions that they constantly assume. On one occasion a damsel who visited the flamingoes with a large party, on seeing these birds, was heard to exclaim to her mother : ' Oh ! Ma, do just look at these great geese ; wouldn't they just make fine giblets .' ' We have never put the necks of these birds to culinary use, but the flesh of their bodies is tolerably good eating, and there is a tradition to the eff^ect that their tongues were considered as great delicacies by the epicures of old Rome. I have seen many acres of marsh thickly covered by flamingoes in Southern Spain, and the efl^ect of the rising or setting sun upon a dense flock of these birds on wing is indescribably beautiful, giving at a distance the efi^ect of a floating roseate cloud. "A pink-headed duck from India, in this part of the aviary, is one of the rarest birds in my collection ; during my forty years of live bird collecting I have only obtained three of this species. The present survivor is a female, and by no means a handsome or conspicuous bird. A small flock of marbled ducks from Spain are 54 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES worthy of notice as exceedingly rare in living collections, though common enough in Andalucia and North-west Africa. Perhaps the most beautiful of the web-footed birds in this portion of our aviaries are the Japanese teals ; but with these little ducks, as indeed with almost all others of the duck, family, we have been grievously disappointed in our hopes of nests and eggs ; in fact, in the case of the two last-mentioned species, I am not aware of the production of even a single egg. We have a fine pair of the blue wavy or white-necked goose from North America, and of the white snow-goose from the same country. " In the central aviary will be found two very beautiful species of small herons, the little and the bufF-backed egrets. My specimens came to me from Spain, but the latter bird is also very abundant in Egypt, and is con- stantly pointed out by the guides to British tourists as the sacred ibis of the ancient Egyptians, a bird that has for many years been almost unknown in Lower Egypt. These egrets are most adroit fly-catchers, and my birds feed themselves to a great extent on these pests during the summer months. I have at this moment a dominican gull that has been here for more than twenty years, and has reared several broods of young hybrids, produced by a cross with the common British herring gull. An Australian thick-knee, or stone curlew, is a very great favourite with us, from its tameness and quaint attitudes ; this is a handsome bird, considerably larger than the PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 55 thick-knee or stone curlew of this country, with a delicately contrasted plumage of various shades of brown and buff, and brilliant yellow irides. " In the courtyard, in a wired enclosure adjoining the domicile of the bear, are two of the great skuas {Stercorarius catarrhactes\ a dark-coloured bird of the gull family ; these birds were sent to me from the island of Foula, in Scotland, which island is, with the exception of one other locality in the same group, the only British breeding-place of this species. " A few years ago an enterprising youth at Birmingham issued a circular proposing the formation of a syndicate, whose members should invest various sums as shares in a fund to enable the advertiser to visit the Orkney and Shetland Islands to collect birds' eggs, the plunder to be divided according to the respective amount of sub- scriptions. The eggs of the great skua were specially mentioned, as likely to be the most valuable result of this looting adventure. In the interest of birds in general, and of this bird in particular, I at once sent the circular above mentioned with an indignant protest to the editor of the Times ; Mr. Wilson Noble, IVI.P. for Hastings, with whom I had no acquaintance or correspondence, did the same, and a strong leading article on the subject of the destruction of rare birds appeared in the "Times simultaneously with these communications. The result of all this was that the editor of one of the leading papers in Birmingham received an evening visit from 56 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES the author of the circular, who, in fear and trembling and dread of incarceration in the Clock Tower at Westminster, begged that his advertisement might be withdrawn from circulation, and confessed that it was only a scheme to obtain funds for a private holiday excursion to the North for egg collecting. " These skuas were sent to me in charge of a native of Foula, a small island that lies at some eighteen miles distant from the mainland of Shetland. This individual had never seen a tree worthy of the name till he took the train from Aberdeen on his way to Lilford ; and although he spoke excellent English, was evidently of pure Scandinavian descent, and to me, as a naturalist, more interesting even than the birds that he brought with him. The proprietor of Foula, who sent me these skuas, is very anxious to protect the breeding birds, but the high price offered for their eggs by unscrupulous collectors, often, I fear, proves too great a temptation to the tew inhabitants of this rocky and unproductive island. The old skuas, or ' bonxies,' as they are called in Shetland, are very powerful and courageous birds, and in defence of their young will attack, not only eagles and other birds of prey, but also any four-footed animal, and even human beings. They live principally by robbing other gulls of their prey, and, as I was assured by the Shctlander before mentioned, frequently catch and devour the smaller gulls themseh-es ; for this purpose their sharply curved claws are well adapted. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 57 " In the enclosure next to the skuas is a group of great bustards, from Spain, all birds of last year. This fine species, as most of you are probably aware, was formerly well known, and not uncommon, as a resident in various parts of England, notably in the open districts of Norfolk, Suffolk, the downs of Sussex, Hampshire and Wiltshire, and the wolds of Yorkshire ; but enclosure, high farming, and the increase of population have driven the bustards away, and in England nowadays we are only occasionally visited by a few stragglers, that very rarely escape the fate of all uncommon birds. In Spain the great bustard is still very numerous, and is not much molested by the natives, who do not esteem its flesh highly ; yet a young bustard is, in my opinion, excellent for the table, and even the old males, which not infrequently weigh 30 lb., can be made into first-rate soup. From the nature of the country that they inhabit, and their exceeding wariness, these birds afford most exciting sport. On this subject I cannot do better than refer any of those present who may be interested in sport or natural history to a work entitled I'Vild Spain by Messrs. Abel Chapman and W. Buck. "In conclusion of our round of inspection at Lilford, we next come to what no doubt will prove to ornitholo- gists the plum of the collection, in an enclosure in the park behind the house known as the Pinetum. Here we have a pond with various species of ducks and a 58 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES pair of crested pelicans, taking their pleasures thereon ; but the main interest centres in the large collection of that very graceful family, the cranes. Till within a month ago I was the proud possessor of specimens of all this family save one, the wattled crane of South Africa ; but, alas ! my three beautiful Stanley cranes all drooped and died within a week, leaving a lamentable gap in the beautiful group. The rarest of these cranes is the hooded crane from Japan (Grus monachus) ; and unfortunately the only individual of this species that I have been able to obtain broke a leg last summer, but is in perfect health ; this is not a very striking bird, either in colour or size, when compared with other cranes. In my opinion the very acme of bird beauty is reached by the Manchurian, or sacred crane of Japan, which is so commonly represented in Japanese paintings and embroidery ; and I think that the great white crane of North America comes as a very close second in elegance of shape and grace of movement. But all the cranes are beautiful — from the stately sarus of India, which reaches to a height of six feet, down to the demoiselle, of about the size of a thin goose. " Before leaving the Pinetum I must relate an occurrence in connection with birds, that amused me vastly at the time, and may raise a smile now. A visitor to Lilford, who evidently took a great interest in our birds, was just leaving, when he suddenly turned to his conductor and said : ' By the way, I saw in the papers The Pinetum. In Ihe foreground a Wattled and a Crowned Crane. Behind, from left to right, a Stanley and a Sams Crane, a Black Stork and African Pelicans. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 59 some time ago that Lord Lilford had given a very long price for an egg of the great auk. I trust that he was successful in hatching it.' To those present who are aware that the great auk has been virtually extinct in this world for some fifty years, the humour of this inquiry is apparent. " I have this moment received a telegram informing me that an egg of the great auk was sold by auction in London this afternoon for three hundred guineas." The greater number of the letters which follow were written to a correspondent, himself a most successful breeder of birds. Like Lord Lilford, he placed the owls among his first favourites, and had for years successfully bred the eagle owl of Europe [Bubo maximus), and had been also very fortunate with the snowy owl (Nyctea scandiaca) and many other species. Hence the constant references to owls. This gentleman was spending many successive winters in the Canary Islands, and because of his thorough and admirable work done there, came justly to be the acknowledged authority on the birds of those islands. But though their letters do not here appear, Lord Lilford had correspondents in many European countries, and men whom he set to find him birds. It is — not v,'ithout its side of pathos — delightful to think of this kind naturalist, sitting in his study (his hand, so to say, on the ornithology of Europe), spinning 6o PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES the threads which wove into such interesting and valuable results, the blue rock-thrush and the little Madeira blackcap singing by his chair the while. "June 2i,th, 1887. " I am glad to hear that some buzzards have flown, and hope that the Montagus * may do likewise. " I grieve to say that all the nests and young birds in my aviaries with one or two worthless exceptions came to grief this year. The Alpine chough hatched three young, but after feeding them assiduously for several days suddenly gave up all care of them, and my man failed in his efforts to bring them up by hand. The eagle owl's eggs were bad — went rotten as they do with me three times out of four. The tawny owl ate the only young one hatched. " I am much obliged for your offer of the young eagle owls, but I have no room for them. I will try to place them for you if you wish to dispose of them. I should think that the Duke of \V , who encourages eagles and almost all wild birds on his forest, would like to try the experiment of turning out these grand birds. * In reference to the nesting of the Common Buzzard {Buteo vulgaris) and Montagu's Harrier {Circus cineraceus) in Hampshire. Both these fine and interesting birds endeavoured, with varying success, through many years to bring off their young. But in spite of the most energetic efforts to protect them, it is found difficult to evade the collector of BrHish-\.2ik^n eggs. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 6i " The polecat ferrets are first-rate ratters, but are rather big for the job. I have not found them particularly savage. If your young badgers are not too old, you will find that by keeping a good-tempered young dog or two with them, and never allowing them to hide themselves up in the day, they will become as tame and playful as otters." ^ "June 2\th, 1888. " I congratulate you on your tame shrike : I lump together all the great grey shrikes, L. major, L. excubitor, L. nieridionalis, L. algeriensis, L. lahtona. All grey birds have a tendency to isabellinism under a hot sun and dry surroundings. T , S , D , and others would, if they could, make species of the sun and moon." " ''August 24M, 1888. " I am no ' chattist,' and do not know Pr. borbonica at all. I write entirely without book, and of course know nothing of the habits and voice of your bird,* but being a ' lumper ' am at present induced to look upon it as a good race, or sub-species of Pr. rubkola — quite as good though, as a species, as Parus britannicus, P. Cypriotes, and many more." ' I To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. ^ To the same. •* To the same. * A true stonechat {Fratincola dacotUe), pecuHaf to the island of Fuerteventura, in which island even it is very local. ^E. G. B. M-W. 62 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES "July 28//4, 1 888. " I have very great pleasure in offering for your acceptance two Lapp owls (6". lapponicum),* of which species I received ten young birds last night from Helsingfors, with two of »S'. uralense, eight S. ulula, and five S. tengmalmi. If these two last lots thrive, I could, and should be glad to send you one or two of each." ^ "July T,ist, i888. " Alas ! I wrote to you in the first exultation of the receipt of the owls that arrived late at night. I was not able on account of the incessant rain to get out to see them on Saturday, but seized an interval between showers on Sunday to be wheeled round to inspect them ; and am sorry to say that all of the Lapp owls have evidently been taken from the nests much too soon, and with one or two excep- tions, have one wing broken, besides a good deal of cramp and general debility. Two of them drowned themselves in a shallow pan ; of the eight left, I fear that I must lose one. The others are all flourishing and as tame as can be. " P.S. — It has not rained for nearly two hours, and I have just been to look round. The Lapps have, with one exception, improved immensely since Sunday on warm rats and rabbits. I do not know that any of these owls, 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * One of these Lapp Owls given me by Lord Lilford in i888 is still alive, September 1902, and in perfect health; it is a male, and has always had one stiff wing. These Lapp owls are the only individuals of the species that have ever been imported into Britain. — E. G. B. M-W. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 63 except Tengmalm's, have been seen alive in England before ; certainly S. uraknse has not. The hawk owls fly to hand, and feed thereon. I am quite certain that they might be trained to take young rabbits and rats." ' "August 2()tk, 1888. " These Lapps were evidently taken too young from the nests, and no doubt were hustled and crowded in panniers on their journey by pony and boat to Helsing- fors from the breeding-place. I believe that you will find a brail very useful ; we put brails on the whole lot when they first arrived, and all the survivors are very much improved.* My experience is rhat all these wood owls eat but little at a meal, comparatively speaking, but require a good deal of food before the first moult. I have a very rare and beautiful large wood owl from Nepaul {S. newarense) that came to me in the down three years ago, and is now one of the finest birds that I ever saw in captivity. During the first months of his sojourn here he would devour a whole full-grown rabbit during the twenty-four hours, but never more than two or three mouthfuls at a time ; now a small, young rabbit, or two or three little roach suffice him for the day, and I notice much the same thing with the downy owl (.S". perspicillatum) from S. America." ^ 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. ^ To the same. * A brail is a strip of leather with which falconers confine one wing of a hawk so that it cannot be moved. 64 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES ''April ibth, 1889. " The poor fellow who sent me the consignment of Scandinavian owls last year died about three months ago, and I heard this morning from his widow that all the owls in that part of Finland have failed this year, many old birds having been picked up dead, many young found dead in the nests, and endless rotten eggs in abandoned nests. In fact, I gather that out of fifty nests only one contained living young, and those in such a weakly state that the finder would not take them. I fancy this account refers chiefly to the hawk owl (5. funerea) and Tengmalm's (6". tengmalmi) and in a less degree to the Lapp owl {^S. lapponicum), but I have asked for further details." 2 " October 2nd, 1889. " I have had a long letter sent to me in Swedish by the widow of the poor fellow who procured the Scandina- vian owls for me last year, written to her by her cousin, who was the main agent in finding and forwarding the birds from Lapland. He attributes the failure of the owls this year to the death of small rodents and snipes, caused by the protracted snows. I imagine that by ' snipes ' he means small waders of all kinds, which of course would be prevented from nesting in the morasses of Scandinavia by snow lying on their usual feeding- grounds. It would seem that last year there was an 1 To E. G. B. MeadeWaldo, Esq. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 65 unusual abundance of all small rodents in those parts, though this writer does not specially mention the lem-^^ mings. I am sorry to hear of the death of your Lapp ; my two survivors are doing well. I believe that one of them, if it lives, will become pure white ; they have both developed a very curious note, some- thing like the rapid half bark, half growl of a little deep- voiced beagle puppy. My three-toed woodpecker * only lived for about a fortnight, though he fed on ants' eggs, hard-boiled egg and breadcrumbs, flies, gentles, etc., and tapped vigorously till the end. The grey- headed one was at the point of death, but has entirely picked up again ; he has been put into a large den, and liberally supplied with great clods of earth containing ants' nests. " I have had many hoopoes ; they became absurdly tame, but I do not think it possible to keep them through the winter in this country, except by letting them fly in a sanded room in a temperature of 70° — 80°. " I have two young rollers,t tailless but healthy, very jealous of each other and quarrelsome ; one of them is quite tame." ' 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * Picoides tridacfylus. A Continental species not on the British list. t The Roller (Coracias garrulus), a bird allied to the woodpeckers and kingfishers, is a straggling visitor to Britain. It is nearly the size of a jackdaw, and is wonderfully coloured in chestnut and many shades of clear blue. 5 66 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES "Bournemouth, February ii^th, 1889. " The quail is a partial resident in all countries in which it is found, certainly in the British Islands and Spain, Greece and North Africa. We have had some sharp spells of frost, then about ten days of bright, mild weather, birds singing and some of them nesting, then, during the last week, a tremendous snowstorm. Snow never lies here, but I hear of eight inches at Lilford and six in London ; and in Holland dams have burst and flooded great extents of country. Now we have a cold and pouring wet thaw. I heard of two whoopers yesterday at Lilford. The death of Rudolph, of Austria, is a very great loss to ornithology, and one of the most shocking tragedies I ever heard of. I knew him slightly. Every one is full of those never-to-be- sufficiently-condemned county councils, and the most shameful persecution of the Bishop of Lincoln. I fear that the Columba bollii * that you were good enough to give me are all cocks, as I do not hear of any sign of their pairing or nesting. In fact, two of them set upon and bullied the third to such an extent that they had to be separated. I have some interesting desert birds alive here in the shape of two thick-billed larks {Ramphocoris clot-bey') and an Algerian horned lark {Otocorys bilopha). They came from Oran to the Zoological Gardens with * Bolle's Pigeon {Columba bollii), a true wood-pigeon, confined to the virgin laurel forests of the Western Canary Islands, its natural food being solely the fruit of these trees. — E. G. B. M-W. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 67 some trumpeter bullfinches. If and are not kept in permanent quarantine or put into the presidio, pray greet them cordially and tell the former that he shall drink a bottle of old port that he knows of at Lilford for every courser that he brings to me alive. (I have only nine bottles left, but this need not limit his endea- vours.) What enemies beside man have the houbaras * in Fuerteventura .' Are there any predatory wild mammalia ^ " I had a sharpish touch of the enemy some two months ago, but am now fairly well. I have not been out of the house for more than ten weeks. I wish that you could send us some of the Canarian air in stone bottles at (.'') per dozen."' "April \6th, 1889. " Am greatly obliged for the female titmouse, and still more so for the two young bollii, which came to me from the Zoological Gardens this evening. I had already put a supposed pair of C. bollii into the aviary, where they seem to be perfectly happy and contented, but have as yet shown no signs of wishing to nest. The titmouse f 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * The Houbara Bustard (Otis iindiilaia) is an African species, which occasionally visits Andalucia. It is considerable smaller than the Great Bustard {O. tarda) (for which see Presidential Address, p. 39), and with one other, Macqueen's Bustard {O. macqueent), is distinguished by a ruffed neck. t Parus palmensis, a new species of blue tit, with a white breast, peculiar to the island of La Palma ; it is almost entirely contincd to the pine forest.— E. G. B. M-W. 68 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES has already been figured for the Ibis, to my mind most indifferently. The pair of Canarian chaffinches [F. tintillon) are real beauties, and very pleasant, cheerful birds ; if they thrive through the winter I think that there is little doubt but that they will nest." "/line ird, 1889. " I shall greatly value the eggs of courser* that you are good enough to spare to me. I should say you would find an old courser easier to keep alive than young ones. I presume that these birds feed principally upon coleopterous insects and small mollusca, and if so, would, I should think, readily 'train off' upon flies, cockroaches, and shreds of boiled or raw liver or other lean meat thrown to them upon sandy ground. F kept a courser alive from the end of August till November at Tangier on grasshoppers, after that on the larvae of beetles ; he kept the one alive from August 1851 till October 1859, when he was forced to leave Tangier, and found that it had died before his return thither in April i860. This bird laid thirty-two eggs, and supplied many European collectors, but not your present correspondent. " I have no doubt you are right about the male houbaras helping in the rearing of their young. I sup- pose that this sub-genus is not polygamous, as the great bustard, to a certain extent, certainly is. I am very * See note on p. 203. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 69 glad you have well established your new chat by finding its nest and eggs. Your new titmouse sounds a good thing also. " All the blue and ultra blue tits are rather difficult to keep ; but the best chance is to give them flies, mosquitoes, gnats, oven-dried ants and their eggs, and any sort of small caterpillar. Perhaps as good a plan as any would be to give them a growing tree or shrub with free access for the Aphides, upon which I think our tits principally feed in summer. The Spanish tits make very free with the cochineal bug. The best seed is crushed sunflower and reed seeds, but no seed is good for tits for a continuance." ' "Bournemouth, December i<)th, 1889. " I have three of Curruca heinekeni alive, sent home last year to me from Madeira by Dr. G . They are charming little birds, and all sing well. I have one of them here at my side as 1 write. Is it a fact that no one has seen a female of this race .'' You probably know the Madeira myth that these birds are hatched from every fifth egg laid by S. atricapilla. " Another race of Parus in such a limited group of islands as the Canaries is very singular and interesting. It is most kind of you to promise me some specimens of this and a male of T. palmensis — you have the best of good right to propose a scientific name for this new discovery. ' To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. 70 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES " I have a beautiful white-necked crane alive here, Grus leucauchen from Japan, and at Lilford one of the still more rare hooded cranes {Grus monachus) from the same country, the second that has come to Europe alive." ' " January isl, 1891. " We have had, and are still having, the most severe spell of frost and snow that I ever remember, the temperature varying from 10° to 26" of frost at night for the last three weeks, and on several occa- sions as low as 20° at noon. This will no doubt account for your wigeon, and probably for the large migration of buzzards also. I seldom read of more cold- blooded atrocity than what you tell me of the ancient Canarian and the sitting partridges. " My birds have been suffering dreadfully during the long frost, but, curiously enough, it is the northern birds that have suffered the most. 1 have lost four snowy owls, and have no male bird left. My nutcrackers are dying daily, yet all the Canarian survivors are flourishing. One of the laurels * has paired with a Bolle male and laid two eggs ; one was broken, but she now sits assiduously 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * Canarian Laurel Dove {Columba laurivora), a very fine wood- pigeon, found only in certain very precipitous forests in the islands of Gomera and La Palma (Canaries). It differs much from the true Wood Pigeon in its habit of spending most of its time on the ground. Its food consist principally of the fruit of the Til-tree {Orsodaphnce fxtens) and the vinatigo (JPersea indka). PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 71 on the other, and I have separated the BoUe and put him with the other laurel. I keep all the pigeons indoors in a temperature of from 50" — 6f, and so far they have done well. I may say the same of all the houbaras. " I think that the Teydean chaffinches (F. teydea) are very hardy, but I do not expose them to the open air in this fearful weather. My Madeira blackcaps are in full song, and the trumpeters * are all well. My wife's pet bullfinch was constantly bullied by his mate till a merciful Providence removed her. I then gave him a male F. teydea for company, and they have become fast friends and both as tame as birds can be. " This severe weather has driven no end of wildfowl in upon our eastern and southern coasts, but I hear of very {&\v varieties. Some great bags of woodcocks have been made in Ireland ; here we have nothing really uncommon." ^ "■April 20th, 1 89 1. "A bittern, one of four, in a sort of shed cage in our courtyard here, visible to frequent passers at all hours of the day, has twisted some straw into the semblance of a nest, and laid an egg, upon which she sits steadily, and allows herself to be stroked with perfect equanimity. She is one of two procured in 1889, and has apparently paired with a young bird of 1890, as her original com- 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * The Trumpeter Bullfinch {Erythrospiza githaginea). 72 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES panion got to be very nasty, and was always bullying the others." ' "April 2r)th, 1891. " You will be glad to hear that one of the bitterns sits steadily upon four eggs in courtyard." ° "May Mt, 1891. " The bittern now sits steadily upon five eggs." '" 'May list, 1891. " Alas, all the bittern's eggs were addled, and I am greatly disappointed. I have four bitterns, and, never dreaming of their laying, kept them in a sort of shed, previously inhabited by badgers, in our courtyard, where people are constantly passing with horses, carriages and dogs, that the birds might become tame."* "December i-Tt/i, 1891. " I have four little bitterns doing well, but in my eyes the gem of my live stock now is a great black woodpecker, in splendid condition and perfectly tame. Two broods of little owls were reared in this neighbour- hood last summer. Reeves's pheasants did excellently well in this county, but would not stay in my coverts, so I > To W. H. St. Quintin, Esq. * To A. Thorburn, Esq. ^ To the same. * To W. H. St. Quintin, Esq. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 73 gave up rearing them ; they are bad birds to bring up to a flushing point, and very fond of going back ; they wander immense distances in single file and run for "May T,rd, 1893. " I shall be much interested in hearing of any success with the water-shrews. I should suggest waiting till they have young, digging out the nest, and putting it with the young into a " live " mouse trap. " Do you care for any British bats alive ? " " "April 21st, 1893. " About harvest mice : I have kept many, and have five, recently received from Surrey, in the room from which I am writing. I have found that the best way to keep them for observation is in a large glass jar, such as they pickle snakes and fishes in at South Kensington. I put a perforated zinc top upon this and give reeds or straws for the mice to scramble up and amuse themselves with. It would be well to have a removable zinc bottom or tray to facilitate cleaning and feeding. The cage that Groom made for me was, if I remember rightly, not for mice but bats. I cannot say that I ever had much luck with my harvest mice, as they have a nasty habit of eating each others' tails, and, as 1 suppose, finding these palatable, 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. 2 To the Editor. 74 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES of killing and devouring one another. I have found this to be the case even when I had only a pair together. " The only animal of the shrew family that I ever attempted to keep was a Spanish trumpet shrew {Mygale pyrenaicum), and he declined all food, and died in a day or two ; but no doubt the thing is to be done, and I should suggest some arrangement of the nature of a small aquarium."^ ''April 2stk, 1893. " I do not think that any variety in food would alter the vicious propensity in the harvest mice ; I used to give my former captives of this species meal worms, flies, moths, beetles, besides their usual food of wheat, in grain and green, and every sort of garden produce. I may mention that my present lot were sent to me by my old friend F. H. Salvin (of whom you probably know something), from his place near Guildford. With per- forated zinc tops, I do not think you need fear any condensation in glass cases ; I only use the jar to have the pleasure of seeing the harvesters run up and down the stem's of seed and long grasses. " I think that your sexual theory in re harvest mice is very likely correct, but I do not pretend to pronounce positively." ° iTo the Editor. ^ To the same. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 75 "May ist, 1893. " Expect two ' Barbarians ' * to-morrow, they were bred here in October last. " I trust that the pink-foots at Hollcham will pull off a legitimate brood, but geese are given to illicit amours. A white-fronted female on my pond, in spite of having an apparently healthy male of her own species in com- pany, last year took up with a bean gander and brought three goslings into the world, but unfortunately only one of them survived the process of pinioning. He is a splendid bird now, all ' bean,' except a white- fronted patch, t At last we have a nice sprinkle of "■June 2-i,7-d, 1893. " You may be interested to hear that I received three young great black woodpeckers (P. marlius) last night, and that I have two last year's lammergeiers (Gyp: barbatus) flying about at complete liberty. We have, thank God,^^ 1 To the Editor. * Barbary mice {Mus barbarus). t Of the three species of wild goose mentioned here the Whitefronted (i.e. white forehead) Goose (A/iser albifrons) is a winter visitor to Britain. Its principal breeding quarters are in Arctic Russia. The Bean Goose {A. segetmn), which breeds also in Arctic Russia, and in Novaya Zemblya and in Scandinavia, likewise comes to us in winter. The third species of grey goose, to which reference is made by Lord Lilford as 'pink-foots,' is the Pinkfooted Goose {A. brachyrhynckus), which breeds in Iceland and Spitsbergen, but apparently not in the district named above. 76 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES had a steady, soft rain of some eight hours' duration in the past night, and there are signs of more to come." ^ "July 2nd, 1893. " Two of the young black woodpeckers are doing well on a diet of ants' eggs and wasp grubs, of which latter we have a superabundant supply this year. I have kept Gecinus viridis, G. canus, P. mariius, P. leuconotus, P. major, P. tridactylus, and the golden- winged pecker of N. America, but I cannot say that any have done really well with me except P. major and the last named. With all the others there is a great difficulty in training them ofF insect food, but P. major takes readily to various fruits, chopped meat, crushed hemp seed, and hard-boiled eggs. The young black wood- pecker only differs from the adult in having, in both sexes, the whole of the crown scarlet. A friend of mine came to us the other day direct from a visit to the Fames, and reported very full, breeding colonies. " My infirmities have prevented me from seeing the Zoological Gardens since 1884, but 1 hear woeful accounts of the condition of many of the living animals there. I fear that financial ' tightness ' has something to do with this. "Your story of Syrnium cinereum is most interesting.* 1 To the Editor. * This refers to the securing of a Great Grey Owl {Syrnium cinereum) in North-West Canada, by the simple ruse of hiding in the grass, squeaking like a rat, and throwing forward a brown cloth cap. The owl stooped at this, seized it, and was shot as it was carrying it off. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 77 I wish that you would publish it, or allow me to do so. I have no acquaintance with this species, but have a fine pair of his near relations (6". lapponicum) here since 1888." "July d,fh, 1893. " AH the woodpeckers mentioned in my last may be kept in fairly good health tor some months, especially if taken when adult, but they generally go wrong iji the moult. " There are many recorded occurrences of P. martius in our islands, but not one has been satisfactorily authenticated, and specimens are not infrequently to be found in Leadenhall Market, sent over with consignments of Scandinavian game, capercaillie, willow grouse, black- game, hazel grouse, etc. " I am very sure that your grey owl adventure, with date and locality, would be welcomed by the editor of the Zoologist, if not by him of the Ibis. At all events, if you do not care to send it yourself, I should be most happy to do so on your authority." ' '■'■August 20th, 1893. " Snipes at this time of year live to a great extent on gnats and other small flying insects, and the maggots that they find in the dung of cattle and sheep. I have very frequently found the fragments -of shells of mollusca in them at all times of the year. In my opinion a snipe is hardly eatable before November. 1 To the Editor. 78 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES " I have a common gull that was picked up in a perishing condition some three years ago, and now lives with flamingoes and other birds, in an enclosure with a circular stone basin through which a little stream of water constantly runs. I have never seen him on the basin except for washing purposes." ^ "October 2&th, 1893. " October 7th is very late for a hobby anywhere in British waters, still more so off Flamborough, as this little hawk is by no means common to the north of the Trent." * " I should be glad to have as many of the Archangelic cats f as you can possibly procure, and am prepared to pay a good price for them." - " Octo/ier lot/i, 1893. " I have only one Lapp owl now left, and he also looks droopy. The Ural's egg came to nothing." ^ I 1 To the Editor. * To the same. 3 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * Referring to a Hobby Falcon {F. siibHiieo) that had alighted on the rigging of a ship in which the editor was coming from the White Sea. t The domestic cat of Archangel is blue in colour and is shaped like the old Egyptian cat. It is also very distinct from our own in its ways. The Editor brought home from Archangel in 1893 three kittens of this kind, one of which is still (1902) thriving, and the mother of a numerous progeny, but not one of them resembles herself. Lord Lilford had one years ago in his rooms in Tenterden Street. t See p. 86. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 79 Note from " Aviary Record." "■October i~jth^ 1893: Lapp owl, Syrnium lapponi- cum, last survivor of ten from Finland in 1888, died." "August 16M, 1889. " I am sorry to say that my black shahin (F. peri- grinator) died a few days ago from a tumour on the breast-bone. She was moulting when I received her, and going on satisfactorily in that way. We never put her on the wing, as our country is so enclosed and full of high trees that if she raked off in pursuit of quarry she would hardly have found her way back, at all events in this summer-time. She was just a very small, very dark peregrinoid falcon, very docile and as tame and as playful as a kitten." ^ "April 25M, 1895. " The most remarkable additions to my live stock are two of the giant tortoises from Aldabra, the male weighing 346 lbs., a nice little covey of Madagascar francolins, ten of Tristram's grakles from Palestine, and, lastly, a very fine wild cat from Germany. " I am very glad to hear of the young pheasants in Teneriffe. Alfonso XIII. should give you the Grand Cross of Carlos III. I have heard nothing of any Scandinavian owls, except snowy, but I hear that, as usual in a lemming year, the fields are alive with rough- 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. 8o PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES legged buzzards. Merlins do now and then rest in trees. I know of one instance in Hants, and I believ'^e that in Norway they frequently do so." ' '•^December i-jth, 1891. " The only Canarian bird that I have lost of late is one of the trumpeter bullfinches two days ago, from some unknown cause, in very fair condition. The Laurivora shows no desire to nest : she is fairly tame. Two of the C. bollii have paired, nested, and laid an egg within the last ii^'N days, but my man tells me sit so irregularly that there is little chance of hatching. The surviving houbara is well, I am assured ; but as my hybernation com- menced at the time of my upset on October 25th, and lasts till May as a general rule, all my outdoor bird news is derived from others. " I should think that Reeves's pheasants would do admirably well in Palma. I know they are exceedingly hardy, as Pere David, the Jesuit missionary who did so much ornithology in North China, assured me that these pheasants haunted pine forests at 5000 and 6000 feet above the sea during the summer, living principally upon mountain berries and small fir-cone seeds, and only came down in the winter to the tea-gardens in the mountain districts. " I should think that you will enjoy your months in Morocco greatly, but I fear that you will have to go for 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 8i a long distance from Tangier to get any good shooting. Our Vice-Consul at Saffi knows something about falconry, and has many Arab falconer friends. From what he tells me, it seems that the Arabs only train two species of falcon — ' Nebli,' which I take to be the typical peregrine, and ' Buhari,' which must, I think, be F. punicus, not F. barbarus. I cannot make out that he is acquainted either with barbarus or the lanner {^F. fddeggi), both of which are common and breed in Morocco. " My own chief requirements in Morocco are the marsh owl {Phasmoptynx capensis) and the great horned owl (^Bubo ascalaphus) and, above all, the francolin {bical- caratus), in any numbers, alive. I have for some time been working hard to try and get some of these latter for the Comte de Paris, to turn down in his cotos in Andalucia, where I am sure that they would do well." ' "July iqth, 1892. " The most interesting events in my live-stock collection have been the birth of a Galago demidoffi* about two months ago, doing well ; the laying of eggs by some Australian peewits {Sarciophorus pectoralis), ditto by Madagascar bush-quails {Turnix nigricollis) ; the nesting of a pair of night herons, several eggs laid ; the death of many of my nutcrackers and of the laurel pigeon that you sent me last. (Female by dissection.) 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. * A little lemuroid animal. 82 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES " My surviving pair of trumpeters laid two eggs on floor of cage, and broke one of them, but are now nest- making in a box, and I hope mean business." ' Note from " 'Aviary Record." ^^ September \~lth, 1893 : Raven, ' Sankey ' (Corcus corax) taken from nest near Santander in May 1876, died." A mate for the survivor was obtained, with the following successful result : — "■April ird, 1894. " The ravens have a new nest and three eggs in the big beech tree at the west corner of the house." " Note from " Aviary Record.''' "■April 20th, 1894: Four ravens {Corvus corax\ hatched out at Lilford. Now about three days old." "April nth, 1895. " I have reason to fear that both of my ravens are males. They built a huge nest and lined it carefully. The smaller, younger bird was actually sitting in the nest for some time, but he (or she) was so terrified by the awful hurricane of March 24th that, having nearly full use of its wings, it went away to the 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. 2 To Walter M. Stopford, Esq. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 83 plantation near Cosgrave's house, and it was some time before it was caught and clipped. In the mean- time old Grip carried up a lot of stones and arranged them about the walls of the nest ; now, though they both keep about the tree in which the nest is, they seem to have given up all attention to their edifice." ' "February 2^rd, 1895. " The ravens have built a huge nest in the same place as last year, and are busily employed in lining it, though Cosgrave seems persuaded that the substitute for the deceased mother of last year is a male." ^ "June 2nd, 1896. " I am not quite sure if Aperyx oweni * has ever had an egg in this country before, or not ; I know that «/f. mantelli has done so. I should, however, think that ours is the first instance of an egg of zApteryx laid in this country in perfectly natural circumstances." ^ ^ To A. Thorburn, Esq. ^ To the same. ' To the same. * The Apteryx (Kiwi of the Maories) is a wingless bird peculiar to New Zealand. Itself no larger than a common fowl, it is related to the gigantic extinct Moa {Dhiornis). Its feathers, like those of the Emeu, are pendulous, and have no ' aftershaft.' It has a long, curved bill for probing the earth, and is strictly nocturnal in its habits, showing shrinking and resentment when disturbed in its hiding-place during the daytime. The bird in question laid its egg at the end of a burrow by the side of the garden pond where the flamingoes were. 84 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES "May 25M, 1889. " I turned down about forty little owls, about the house here and over a radius of some three or four miles in the neighbourhood, early in July last. Several were too young to feed themselves, or, rather, to find their own food, and we recaptured more than half of those originally put out. A very few were found dead. Several were constantly seen about ; during the summer and autumn of 1888 many disappeared entirely, but three or four were seen, and often heard, throughout the winter. On April 23rd, 1889, one of my keepers discovered a nest in the hollow bough of a high ash tree in the deer-park. The old bird would not move, but on being gently pushed with a stick, two eggs were visible. On May 10th two young birds about a week old could be made out, and on the 22nd, four or five, all of different sizes. The keepers tell me that it is impossible to see anything from the open end of the bough, but there is a cleft near the nest from which, in certain lights, the old bird and her produce can be partially seen. Her mate haunts a crab tree, at a short distance from the nest. This is encouraging, and I shall invest largely in little owls this summer, and adopt some- what different treatment. Similar experiments have been tried, to my knowledge, in Hants, Sussex, Norfolk and Yorkshire, but I do not know of a brood having been reared in a genuinely free condition in this country, till this lot of mine. The little owl will nest freely in PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 85 captivity, but generally the parents devour their young. One of my night-herons laid an egg this morning on the top of a box bush, trodden to a sort of flat form by a stork. Those night-herons have been here for three years, and I have great hopes of a brood." ^ "June 22nJ, 1893, " It would be interesting to know where the Scoulton gulls get their mice,* and of what species the latter are. " I envy your seeing the gadwalls and ' short-billed culloos ' t at such close quarters in their native homes. " y/ propos of the ferocity of owls, a cottager in this neighbourhood found a well-feathered young tawny on the ground below the nesting hole in April last, and carried it home to his cottage at a short distance. Two nights afterwards, as he was feeding this owlet, one of the old ones dashed at his head and clawed him nastily about the nose and eyes." ^ "June 2T,rd, 1893. " Last year we had a nest of little owls {^Athene noctua), of which I have turned out a great many, in an ash- stump about two miles ofF. The tenant of the farm was passing the place unawares one evening when the 1 To the Rev. Murray Matthew. ' To the Editor. * In this very dry summer the Brown-headed Gulls brought many voles to their nests. t The Thickknee or Norfolk Plover {CEdicnemus scolopax). 86 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES young were about half-grown, and the old bird came at him from behind and knocked his hat off. 1 may mention that we have a home-bred family of these little owls just now able to fly in our deer-park. " One of my Ural owls (S. uraknse') laid an egg this spring, but did not seem disposed to sit, so we put the egg into a nest of barn owl, containing five of the owner's eggs, but the Ural has, I am sorrv to say, ' gone scatt,' as they say in Devon. " I have a bittern in the aviaries sitting upon three eggs. " We have a return of almost overpowering, breeze- less heat ; no pleasure out of doors after 6 a.m. or before 5.30 p.m."' ^^ June 2i°th, 1894. " The most interesting addition to my live stock of late is a fine, healthy Hyrax capensis, first cousin to H. syriacus, the coney of Scripture, of Lev. xi. 5, Deut. xiv. 7, Psalm civ. 18, and Proverbs xxx. 26. The nearest ally of this small, rock-dwelling genus is the rhinoceros." - ''November i^f/i, 1866. " I have a very fine specimen of Falco norvegicus alive ; he was brought from Norway last year, and has moulted out very clean and fine ; it is the first of its species that I ever saw alive, and is most decidedly a ' To the Editor. ^ To the Rev. Murray Matthew. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 87 very different bird from either islandus or candicans. This falcon has much more of the peregrine about him in make and appearance." ' "February 26th, 1885. " Alas ! I fear that all personal locomotion, except that I can share with ' inert matter,' is out of the question, though I am, thank God, very fairly well in general health. I am quite out of the swim, ornitho- logically, and entirely dependent upon the compassion and sympathy of my birdy brethren for information. My old blue rock-thrush taken from the nest in the Strait of Bonifacio in May 1882 moulted in September last, very thoroughly, into a plumage much resembling, but rather an exaggeration of, a nestling bird, all the breast and flank feathers edged with dirty white, and the plumage of those parts unusually downy and thick ; within the last three weeks he has begun to moult again, and some few of the wing coverts are all broadly tipped with a slightly rusty white." - "April i6th, 1894. " The sparrow-hawk does good service by taking hard- billed birds, as Passer impudicus (Mihi), Damnabilis (Irby), Papisticus (Tristram), Sanguineus (agricols), and other grain-devourers." ^ ■^ To the Rev. Canon Tristram. 2 To the same. ' To the same. 88 PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES ^'August 26tk, 1894. " My most interesting live-stock acquisitions of late have been Hyrax capensis, a batch of Caccabis melano- cephalus from Aden, and a splendid Grus carunculata, the one species that was lacking in my collection of cranes."' " ^fay 20///, 1896. " I thank you very much for your most welcome congratulations on the important addition to our vivaria,* and the neat and suitable label for the recent acquisition, if I thought that your label would inspire an ornitho- logist's tastes, I would try and persuade the happy mother to attach it permanently to her infant, but there is another and sterner lady in temporary possession, who would, I am sure, reject any such suggestion." " " May 30M, 1896. "Thank you for yours of the 28th. I sent you no ' harpy ' in the usually accepted sense of the term, but a fine old white-bellied sea eagle (Haiiae/us leucogaster), sent to me some four or five years ago from Melbourne, with a younger bird of the same species, which still survives. I am very glad that, as cruel fate snatched her from me, she is acceptable to you. " I told Cosgrave on Friday to send you the remains of a burrowing-owl, bred here last year. I believe that ' To the Rev. Canon Tristram. ' To the same. • Birth of a grandson, May 8th, 1896. PONDS, PADDOCKS, AND AVIARIES 89 the present bird was shipped at Buenos Ayres, but about this I am not sure. In the meantime our grass lands are being regularly scorched up, and our trees given over to the caterpillar and cankerworm." ^ But in addition to his correspondence, Lord Lilford set himself the daily task of entering a register of the arrivals of new birds and the general progress of his collection. How carefully and fully this was done, when health per- mitted, will be gathered from Appendix I. It is the record for the first eight months of 1893. ^ To the Rev. Canon Tristram. CHAPTER l\ Notes on Illustrations The following letters to Mr. Thorburn relate to that artist's work for Coloured Figures of the British Birds. They show the infinite pains Lord Lilford took to have each plate, not only perfect as a representation of the bird in question, but perfect also as a reflection of the natural surroundings in which it lived. The beauty and fidelity of Mr. Thorburn's work may be seen in those volumes, and need no other tribute ; but it must have been a true pleasure to himself to have received such letters and to be thus assured of the high appreciation of this gifted and minutely critical judge. "Af'ri/ isM, 1888. " As regards the surroundings of the birds that you mention, the oyster catcher should be on a sea beach of shingle and sand, with indication of a flock of same species in the background ; the rufF and reeve on grassy marsh land with any marsh flowers that you may think NOTES ON ILLUSTRATIONS 91 suit the picture — marsh marigold, meadow-sweet, forget- me-not, etc. ; white-fronted goose, one of a flock — flat sea coast ; bernicle, I think, swimming — in foreground sea, high mountains in background ; whooper, flock on a wild highland loch ; Bewick's swan off a flat coast ; pufiin, a group in full summer dress on steep slope of short turf over sea ; cliff honeycombed with burrows — rabbits, sea pinks ; razorbill, a black clift or chalk cliff face, rows of birds — gulls indicated." "/ufy Ml, 1888. " The angle of eye in teal is rather too acute." "August loth, 1888. " Is not the toe or oyster catcher in the water — I mean the inner toe of right foot — a little too much fore-shortened, and ought not the !bill to be rather more yellow near the point .'' " " BounieiHOulh, Novcmba- lotli, 1888. " I have some floating ideas that I had rather not have mentioned at present of bringing out a quarto work of the birds of Spain. I should like to have about ten or twelve full-page plates of characteristic Spanish species as illustrations, namely bearded vultures, white-shouldered eagle, booted eagle, blue-winged magpie, Irby's titmouse, Andalucian short-toed lark, great bustard, black vulture, 92 NOTES ON ILLUSTRATIONS flamingo, marbled duck, and possibly one or two more ; and if my present idea takes shape should be most happy to entrust the illustrations to you. In any case I should be glad if you would make me a drawing of adult bearded vulture. Your sketches from the bird at Lilford would do admirably for attitude, but I should like to represent the deep tawny-red throat and breast of the wild bird. I want as much of a ' picture ' as you think the colourists are likely to reproduce satisfactorily — a single bird on a pinnacle of mountain limestone, looking over a wild rugged valley far below, with a snowy range in the far background, would I think do well." "January 2%th, 1889. "I do not remember at this moment if you took a sketch of my old white-tailed eagle at Lilford, or not ; if not it might be as well to defer finishing sketch of adult till you have an opportunity of taking her portrait, as she is thirty-five years old, and has always moulted out very clean ; alive or dead you could hardly have a more perfect specimen. "I do not know whether it would be possible tO' convey in a drawing the pearly bloom on the plumage of this bird — at all events I have never seen an attempt at it ; but you have succeeded so admirably with the flum bloom on a golden eagle and a buzzard that I am inclined to think that you would not be beaten by thi& peculiarity." NOTES ON ILLUSTRATIONS 93 ''April 11th, 1889. "The eagle is perfect with the exception of the iris, which should, I think, be a shade lighter in colour." ''May stfi, 1889. "The white-shouldered eagle {A. adalberti) should be represented on a dead top bough of Lombardy poplar or willow, in an open country with scrubby vegetation, cistus, rosemary, lentiscus, myrtle, and a belt of dark firs in extreme distance ; patches of yellow sand amongst the scrub, a distant rabbit, very intense blue cloudless sky. " The booted eagle {A. pennata) in pine forest on hillside, the trees bare of bough to a considerable height." " February \s,th, 1890. " I received your note of the 12th with the drawings last night. The mergansers are quite perfect, and I think that your sketch in your letter for their attitude will be excellent. I would put them on a fresh-water mountain loch, in preference to the sea. About the black guillemot — I think the best plan would be to figure the adult bird sitting in something of the attitude of your sitting sketch sent, but looking downwards instead of upwards, and a young bird (that is, one in the plumage that you have figured) flying off to a small flock in the background on the sea. You could put the old black bird on a great seaweed-covered stone close to the water at the foot of a cliff. 94 NOTES ON ILLUSTRATIONS " I enclose two little crakes [Crex parvd) just received from Spain, and should be glad to have a drawing for the book taken from it. The beak in the March-killed specimen should be green, with red at base ; irides pale currant red, legs and toes green, of a somewhat darker shade than beak. In the September bird the only difference is that the beak and legs are not so brightly coloured. The surroundings should be a very watery marsh ; in fact, you might make one of the birds swimming. In action these little birds exactly resemble our common water-hen, and jerk up their tails in walking and swimming just in the fiishion of that species." " May 2nd. " We are both delighted with your beautiful picture of the eagle, which has just arrived. You have not only admirably portrayed the characteristic aspect of the bird, but thrown an element of Highland poetry into the work that is not often attained, and it deserves all praise. I most gladly retain it, and shall always treasure it, for my heart is very often in the Highlands amongst the eagles and the wild deer." " AllgtiSt 2\St. " The colour of neck and breast of water-rail is, I think, now quite right. I presume that you took the colour of irides from authority ; I must confess that I never saw them so bright, and should have been inclined to say that reddish hazel-brown was the usual colour." o O NOTES ON ILLUSTRATIONS 95 " Felruary 19//?, 1892. " I fear that you will be sick of spotted eagles, but I write to say that I am sending you the Subborne specimen just as I received it last night from Messrs. Pratt of Brighton. It is one of the most beautifully marked of its species that I ever saw, and I shall be much obliged if you will make a careful drawing of it for the book. It would be well to put some life into it. I think as it had a water rat in its stomach when killed, I would put one in its talon in the drawing, and to give the bird an expression of seeing something far off after catching his vole. This I leave to you, only asking you to make the drawing in attitude quite unlike the bird at Cambridge." " J/oy iqfh, 1893. " The osprey drawing has only one slight defect, and is otherwise quite perfect : namely this, that the principal figure is rather too broad — thick — and gives to me a certain impression of heaviness. I do not know if you can alter this by not showing quite so much of the right wing, or ' drawing ' in feathers of lower belly, and showing more of the legs. I should be sorry to have this beautiful figure much altered, but you will understand me when I say that the aspect is too ' buzzardy.' The osprey is a particularly wide-awake bird in look and in fact." " August 1th. " The cream-coloured courser is quite perfect. A faint indication of strong rufous in the head of the distant 96 NOTES ON ILLUSTRATIONS falcon would indicate a lanner — the most probable falcon of the North African desert. " The great snipe is also excellent, but I should be glad if possible if you could show a little of the white on the wings and spread the tail slightly. " The irides in a black Montagu's harrier received alive on Saturday are dark, as in a true falcon, otherwise this drawing is quite perfect. " Barlramia is only a sandpiper in name ; it is a plover that in summer frequents the dry uplands and feeds on grasshoppers. 1 think it would be better to cut out the water and to make the surroundings a somewhat sunburnt grass prairie, indicating a second bird or two on wing or on foot in the far background." '■'■November 29//;. " I am sending you a good skin of storm petrel that I received some time ago in flesh from W. Eagle Clarke of the Edinburgh Museum. He especially wishes to call my attention and yours to the peculiar shape and elevation of the forehead, which he says has never been properly indicated in drawings. I should like to have this bird drawn in flight, in the trough ot a heavy rolling sea, unless you consider that too bold an attempt. If so it would perhaps be best to make him skimming the water with legs at their full length and toes extended ; in fact, -running on the water with wings extended. What I want to trv is the very striking effect of these little black birds against a deep blue ocean sea and foam." NOTES ON ILLUSTRATIONS 97 " December qtk. " The storm petrel drawing is lovely, and I can suggest no alteration. The brown snipe is equally good, but with regard to the proposed figure in the background, I would suggest putting the bird on both feet ; I like the attitude delineated, but certain captious subscribers have objected to some pictures on account of this one- legged attitude." " Bournemouth, January 20th, 1896. " I return the drawing of the grebe, which, good as it was before, is now, I think, much improved. Dabchick or little grebe was, I think, amongst the names I sent you, and I think that those two with horned and eared grebes would make a good set of four. I have a fair specimen (British) in Princes Street of eared grebe shot by Lord Clifton in my presence in Weymouth Bay in April 1876, but no doubt you will be able to obtain more fully adult birds. In the drawing of this species I should like to introduce nest and eggs. I have plenty of the latter, which when first laid are of the usual greenish- yellow white, but in Spain soon become very deep un- broken chocolate colour, from the constant covering with rotten weeds in a hot sun ; but, as I think of it, the eared grebe has never been known to breed in this country, so perhaps the dabchick's nest (which as the spring advances you will be able to study from nature in St. James's Park) would be the more appropriate for this work." 7 CHAPTER V Otter Hunting, Falconry, and Shooting A CONTEMPLATED article by Lord Lilford opeiis with the following words upon sport : — " The word sport is untranslatable, and I must confess that I find it almost equally indefinable, but I wish in the following remarks to show to what an extent the term is commonly abused or misunderstood. " To begin with the form of sport with which I am, or rather was most intimately acquainted — shooting, ' good sport ' is generally applied to a considerable bag ; and certainly, if the number of head slain in a day's shooting in itself satisfies the sporting inclination, the term is legitimately applied. But I contend that ' sport ' may be enjoyed in the highest degree in the pursuit of wild animals by fair means, without the attainment of success in the death of any beast, bird or fish, and that disap- pointment should only enhance the keenness of the real sportsman. Here I feel sure I shall meet with the assent of hunting men, but I am doubtful if mv brother gunners 98 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 99 and anglers will entirely go with me. I look upon fox and otter hunting, falconry and fly-fishing, as the highest kinds of sport to be enjoyed in this country, simply because in the first instance science is assisted by horse and hound ; in the second the falcon is reclaimed with infinite pains to serve man by its natural instincts ; and because in the third you can only rely for success upon your own skill and knowledge of the habits of the creatures to be captured. " Let me say at once that, with all due respect to the lover ot racing and athletic games, I look upon these as more or less excellent forms of amusement that do not legitimately come under what I hold to constitute ' sport ' in its true sense. " I quite admit that to watch a number of thorough- bred horses doing their best, and fairly ridden, is a 'joy for ever ' ; and a good match at cricket or football, or an evenly contested yacht or boat race are full of charm to the lookers on ; but in all these three there is lacking the interest of outwitting wild animals, with the odds against the pursuer, and this latter condition is, in my humble opinion, the one essential constituent of real ' sport.' " A great many gallant followers of foxhounds go out simply tor the excitement of a glorious gallop and plenty of jumping, not a few simply to display their horse- manship and cut down others ; and these objects are obtainable without hounds or fox. But the joy and pride of hunting is, to those who know the habits of the fox. loo OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING and delight in cultivating the natural instinct of the hound, in driving on a hot scent, and elaborately picking up a cold one — in fact in the exercise of the full powers of brain and instinct in biped and quadruped. The good or bad run depends almost entirely upon the qualities of fox and hounds. The best huntsman cannot make a bad fox run straight, and with the best of foxes bad hounds are use- less. All this is strikingly applicable to otter hunting, in which most delightful sport the object of pursuit has very long odds in his favour." While we are very far from saying or supposing that the last word has been spoken on sport in the abstract, or sport as it is carried on in this country, such a contribution to the question as this must needs be full of interest. It was written by one who was not only a singularly clear thinker, but was himself the best example of his own creed. Of all forms of English sport, none agree with the postulates of 'natural conditions' and 'fairness' in quite such an absolute degree as the sister sports of hunting, fishing, and falconry. The opinion which Lord Lilford held of fox hunting may be read in the tribute he has paid to it above. And, although the claims of otter hunting held his first homage, the foxhounds were ever welcomed by him with the heartiness of a true sportsman, and no one was more delighted than himself when they went away from his coverts on the line of a good stout OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING loi fox. But to otter hunting, ' the dearest joy of my heart after falconry,' as he called it, ^ he was early devoted, and he never swerved in his allegiance. In this ' most delightful sport,' as he truly wrote, ' the object of pursuit has very long odds in his favour.' And here, as there must needs be many to whom the opportunity of seeing otter-hounds at work has been denied, a few words upon this particular form of sport may not be out of place, and it is for these alone that they are written. Otters and Otter Hunting. The otter is said to be a ' nocturnal animal.' This must not be taken to mean literally that it is never abroad in the daylight, but that it seldom is. When the sun is dying behind the last turn of the shoulder of the hill, when the woof of whitening vapour begins to form over the withies, when the cattle cough in the chilling meadow lands and the peewits come dropping in silently over the gateway where the hay hangs caught by the high thorn hedge, then it is that the otter wakes from its sleep in the reeds, or under the roots of an oak or alder, and begins to move for food. Otters are great travellers, ranging very far up and down stream on their nightly quests. They swim very quietly, slipping into the water as if it were oil. Though you listen never so carefully, you do not hear much that ' Letter to the Editor. I02 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING tells you the otters are moving, excepting a whistled call which comes now and then from the reed-beds. Masterly as the otter is in the water, supreme as are its powers of swimming and diving, it no more cares for unnecessary hard work, in its hunting than other animals. When going up stream, especially if the current is swift, it frequently lands, and often cuts the bend of the stream by travelling across the land from corner to corner. A practised eye will easily notice these spots where the otter lands and runs up the bank ; for otters, like most other wild creatures, follow one another's lead. Causes which the eyes of human beings may not detect are no doubt answerable for the claims of one landing-place over another. It may be the set of the eddy from a half-sunk willow stub, the angle at which the bank rises, the chances of cover and concealment — any one or all of fifty points may determine the advantages of a particular landing-place ; but at all events, if otters are abundant, it will be paddled into a regular run. Here you will see the otter's footprints in the mud, the prints of four round toes like no other creature's track. This footprint is called by otter hunters, the ' seal.' Other signs, such as remains of digested food (in hunting parlance ' spraints '), will be noticed on hillocks of the grass or on stones which show themselves above the water. Although some streams are more favoured than others, there is probably not one in the country that is not visited at times by otters, and the attention of even unob- OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 103 servant persons is occasionally arrested by the spectacle of a partly eaten fish lying on the bank. The otter first begins to eat those parts about the head, except when dealing with an eel, when it commences with the tail end. Because of its cautious and secret manner of life, an otter will often continue to frequent a stream for a long time, and be unsuspected. Indeed many a stream has held otters from time immemorial, and yet no one has guessed this, until the coming of a pack of otter-hounds has ' shown the varmint up.' Even that omniscient person, the dusty miller, in spite of his peculiar oppor- tunities, was scarcely prepared to find in the thatch of his own outhouse one of its favourite sleeping-places. Yes, otters often choose strange quarters, and though their usual ' holts ' are drains, caves, rocks, holes under tree roots, and withy beds, we have known one to frequent an ivied tree, and have bolted another from under a barn floor. The hounds throw light on obscure points like these, and by attentively observing the behaviour of hounds much may be learnt. No spear is ever used in this hunting — that barbarism has long died out ; either the quarry goes scot free, or there is an honest kill by hounds. Every one is familiar from the engravings with the look of traditional otter- hounds. But alas, that picturesque animal, with his wiry coat, shaggy eyebrows, long ears and deep bell-like voice, is now in a minority in many packs. It is a pity that I04 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING it should be so, but his own failings have led to this result. He is generally a babbler, throwing his tongue without good reason, or without reason sufficiently good ; if tired, he insists on speaking to an old scent, and it is particularly exasperating when you want hounds to get on quickly, to have a particular individual hanging over a worn-out scent. Further, the rough coat of the otter- hound holds the water, so that he grows chilly sooner than the foxhound. On the whole, therefore, in spite of tradition, the old otter-hound has given place in these packs to the foxhound. It is a little difficult to enter foxhounds to otter, but, once entered, the foxhound proves himself second to none in reliability and patience, in pluck, in facing the water, and in enduring wet and cold. We are now ready for a morning's hunting, and by this we mean early morning, for the scent soon grows faint on the drying grass, and so the otter hunter must be up betimes. We will join the master at the kennels, and go with him and his hounds to the meet, five miles off, at Mill Bridge. A cold, clear rift is just beginning to widen in the eastern sky as we set off with the pack — twelve couple of good hounds, as fit as exercise and the most thoughtful care can make them. At the mill itself a small field is waiting, which includes one or two ladies. Most of them are dressed in the colours of the hunt. Everyone carries a long ash pole OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 105 tipped with metal. This pole is used as a help in getting over hedges and ditches, for sounding depths, and for ' poking about ' generally. The upper end of the pole is nowadays fitted with a small ring, in place of the old spear head. A few cheery " Good mornings," and hounds are moved off. Into the drenching dew of the meadows we go, and up the side of the stream. There are disappointments in otter hunting as in everything else, and there are even blank days. Red-letter days there are also, as that described by the late Mr. Collier in 1884, when his hounds, finding close to Lynd- hurst, took right away from the river and over the hills, and killed at the end of sixteen miles. We will, however, discuss no extreme instances, but take an ordinary typical day. It is not long before a hound opens, and immediately the whole pack rallies to him, and is soon feathering over a patch of grass, where it is evident an otter has come out and rolled. Then up the stream they go, first one hound and then another giving tongue, as they pick up from point to point a fairly good scent. They are ' hunting a drag,' or in other words, puzzling out the course followed by the otter in its wanderings of the previous night. This at least is the hope of all con- cerned, though it is of course possible they may be * running heel ' — drawing away from their otter instead of up to him. io6 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING But now there is a louder crash than hitherto, and the whole pack swings to the line. That is beautiful ; it is true music, the deep voices of the few rough ones just supplying what is wanted to make the perfect chord. Up the stream they go for a mile or more, now flashing through a reed-bed, now cutting the corners and over the grass, till at last — some in the water, some on the bank — they cluster like bees about a dark hole under the gnarled roots of a pollard oak. They have marked their otter home. The otter is found now, and there are a few minutes of breathing-time before the next move. Mean- time, to some one of experience falls the duty of taking up a position at the first shallow below the pool, while the shallows above are watched in the same way, and plans are laid for circumventing the quarry. A terrier may be used if there is one with the pack game enough for the task. But a simple and usually effective plan is for some of those present to stand in a group above the ' holt ' or ' hover,' and at a given signal to jump in unison. The vibration so caused is usually too much for the otter's nerves. He quickly moves. As soon as the otter is bolted, the watcher will need all his attention fixed on the water, for it swims so rapidly and silently that in less than even a foot of water it may easily pass unobserved. Until then, if he has an artist's eye, he may for those few moments linger over a picture that in itself is a pure delight. What is the most characteristic country for otter hunting OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 107 it is hard to say. Wales, Devonshire, Surrey, Hampshire, Northamptonshire, any country where streams are huntable, that is to say, not deep or with heavy water, is equally good for the sport. On the left of our present stream rises a bank of young wheat, fringed with grass and early flowers. Above this runs a line of woodland, bright green in its young dress, but softening in outline and dimming into blue shadows as it stretches away, till it turns the shoulder of the hill to form the rampart of another vale. But here, on this side of the river, all is flat. The water meadows lie here, runnelled in all directions by ' carriers ' — cuts where the water is guided for the irrigation of the land. Here and there the water-gates are closed and the little streams shut back ; and so in places the water floods over the edges and away among the grass roots, till there comes up a rank green swathe that makes the first early summer crop. Between the grasses the running water glistens and sparkles in the morning sun, and all across the water meadows stretches a web of rising mist ; here in lines of bluey whiteness, there in banks of smoke-like billows, curling up to lose themselves in vapour under the growing warmth. A little farther down, a backwater leaves the stream, and leads into a tract of grass and rushes that mark the position of an old duck decoy. It is many a year since the decoy was worked, yet some of the old screens still show themselves among the rushes, though the channels and pipes are silted up. It is a marvellously peaceful io8 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING spot. Girdled round with gnarled pollard oaks and gigantic silver poplars, it is a natural reserve for many kind of birds, and, excepting when the hounds come, it lies almost unvisited throughout the year. There is not a heronry here, but the place is constantly haunted by herons, and even now a pair of these magnificent birds, startled by the noise of the hunting, rise heavily and sail away. Here water-rails nest every year, and when you come down quietly in the evening you may hear their piping in the grasses, and perhaps catch sight of them running along the little tracks which they and the water- hens keep open, and looking as they run more like some small mammal than a bird. The paired redshanks also, who run along the cattle-rails, or fly calling incessantly in their resentment of intrusion, do much to give a sense of wildness to the scene. But now the otter is away, bolted from his hiding-place by the stamp of many feet. He is into the river like a flash, and the water is broken into waves and circles by the first rush of the hounds. Is he up or down .'' Down it is — a watcher at the shallow below tallies him as he glides over the stones in a foot of water, with no more disturbance than is made by a fish. It is indeed a beautiful sight to see the hounds. Now an old hound gives tongue as he swims, taking the scent ofi^ the top of the water from the bubbles that come up from the otter's coat. That is Woodman, an old OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 109 rough-coated dog, a little too prone to throw his tongue on a stale scent, but a good hound nevertheless. See how Bellman, that hound with the tan ears, is examining every stone that shows above the water. Our quarry is still going down stream, but has not been sighted again. Suddenly, at the point of a little spinney, the hounds leave the stream and dash ofF along a hedgerow. True enough the otter has landed, and is bent on making a point across country. He is viewed now and then, but close as the hounds are at times to his stern, they cannot do more than keep him moving, for he is running a line of stout old thorn trees. Now Into the stream he goes again. On we go ; speak to him, Bugler ! There is a shallow below which must be lined. A human chain is formed across it ; shoulder to shoulder stand some of the field (the younger ones generally, who have never had rheumatism), and endeavour to prevent him from going down. Twenty yards before he reaches them he leaves the water again, under cover of a bed of willow herb, and cutting a corner, runs right between the legs of the rector of the parish and is into the water again. He is now in heavy mill water, where we may leave him. For, once an otter reaches water such as this, he has it all his own way. He has but to float about, just keeping his nose above water, or coming up at intervals to breathe, and hounds can do nothing with him. And if they do not take him to-day ? What then ? This very night he will probably no OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING be ofF floating down on the top of the water, until he reaches the main river, and even perhaps the sea. But no good sportsman minds, so long as hounds are not too often disappointed ; the drag-hunt is the prettiest part of it, and many regret the kill. This outline of the otter and his ways has not been written for any of that company of light-hearted Englishmen who already know the joys of otter hunting. Of these forbearance is asked, with a description which does but imperfect justice to the sport they love. It will have been written, nevertheless, to little purpose, if it does not go to show those who are less fortunate, that here is a form of sport pre-eminently demanding patience, skill, and all the best qualities that true sport needs. Not alone in the mystery that veils the otter's movements, but in the natural conditions of the hunt, dwells an unique charm. The scent of the early morning, the dew that lies heavy on the grass and stars the spiders' webs, or whitens the long reaches of the river under the first spell of the sun ; the wildfowl that whip up from the small side streams, rise high overhead, and circle round lower and lower till they drop for rest at last into the quiet of the old decoy ; the gaunt grey heron, startled from the shallows, and croaking a hoarse protest as he labours off to other fishing-grounds ; the water itself — emerald here over beds of water star- wort, here broken into spinning, hissing foam-globes, or pressing smooth as melted glass between the gates of the OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING iii weir — all these and a hundred other joys of morning speak straight to the heart of the otter hunter, and cannot die from his memory for any vicissitudes of life. No wonder Lord Lilford should place this only second to the noble art of falconry itself. It appealed not only to his sporting instincts, but to that love which was in him for all that was beautiful and free. His letters are full of references to the otter and his ways. "_/?/«« IS/, 1893. " I am thankful to say that I am, and for a long time have been as well as I can ever expect to be, and was able about a fortnight ago to assist at an hour and a halt's otter hunt in my chair, from find to finish, of a dog otter, small, but very game, with the Bucks otter- hounds."^ '■'■June 2nd, 1896. " We had a kill with the Bucks otter-hounds at Barnwell Mill, on Saturday, and a lovely drag from a short distance above Shill Mill, right up to the Stone Bridge island. I grieve to say that this drag ended in the chopping of a small cub, upon which I had set my heart, hoping to secure him alive as a pet ; but the poor little beast lay fast asleep on the bank, when the hounds suddenly came upon him, instead of being, as I hoped, securely up the old lawn drain, whence we could 1 To E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, Esq. 112 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING easily have bagged him alive. However, he has a brother or sister left, and quite able to take care of itself. We killed the dam here on the I2th May after a fine hunt of about an hour." ' And again, in reference to scent in animals : — " Scent, in what we humorously call the lower animals, is, and must alwa\s remain a mystery. I once was otter hunting on a stream in South Devon. After a quick, short drag, we put down two otters from the roots of an old oak, overhanging the water. The larger otter took up stream, and I ran off as hard as I could go, to try and see him go over a shallow stickle, while the hounds followed the smaller otter down stream, for some ten minutes before they could be stopped. My gentleman just put his nose up in mid-stream opposite to me. I tallied him, but it was certainly more than a quarter of an hour before the hounds came tearing along the bank, on my side, quite mute ; immediately that the leading hounds reached me they opened with a crash, though the stream ran swiftly, and they were running down wind. This happened about 7 a.m., and we did not handle the other otter till after 5 p.m." - "April \2th, 1895. " Don't let them kill or injure their otter, but coax him or her into a pigsty or a byre, a bothy or a 1 To Hon. Mrs. Crichton. ^ To T. Buckley, Esq. OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 113 ' shielin wast,' and throw a sack over him. In the meantime I have, within the last few days, had very good news of otters hereabout." ' " April ze^th, 1895. " The otter-hounds had a grand day from Brocic Hall, near Weedon, on Tuesday — three-mile drag, two and three-quarter hours' swimming work, killing a dog otter of twenty-two pounds at the end of it." " " May 6th, 1895. " The otter-hounds were here on Saturday, but did not find till they got to Wadenhoe. The water is too high and too thick to do any good, and they could not hunt a bit. They met this morning at Elton Mill to draw up the Fotheringhay brook, and were to go to Stamford to-night." ' But hunting the otter, as we have already seen from Lord Lilford's own words, yielded one place in his estima- tion to falconry — ' the noble mysterie ' as he was wont to speak of it, using the phrase of an old writer. The allusions in his correspondence to the beautiful art of training falcons, are for the greater part of too technical a character for the general reader. We, therefore, attach but 1 To Walter M. Stopford, Esq. ^ To the same. ' To the same. 114 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING a single letter, which shows that, even in his captivity as an invalid, he was able to do a little at his favourite sport. "November ;}o//i, 1893. " I have not been able to hold a giui, to stand, or to walk a yard since January 1886, but I do, or did, see my young goshawk flv often during September and October last. She has bagged well over three hundred rabbits since August, when first on the wing. I should guess that it was a falcon that knocked down the pheasant that you tell of, if ' knock down ' is the correct term for the performance. We have had singularly few wild falcons here this year, probably owing to the scarcity of teal, but as you take in the Field you will probably see the account by me, of a very singular capture of a falcon close in front of the house here on 24th inst.* I have a very fine Iceland falcon, with alas ! a damaged wing- joint, flying as well as she can to the lure. I am able to watch this performance from my window." * The country round Lilford Hall, though suitable enough to the goshawk, is far too much enclosed, and too much wooded for successful flights with falcons after rooks, and in any case Lord Lilford, as an invalid, would not have been able to follow a flight. None the less he kept many peregrines, partly for old associations' sake, ' To the Rev. G. E. Freeman. * See Presidential Address, p. 39. TKAiNiiD Goshawk on Tnii fist. OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 115 and partly tor the joy of seeing them fly to the lure, in itself one of the most beautiful exhibitions that a man can wish to see. Lord Lilford says in one of his letters, that all that he knew of falconry he learnt from ' Dear old Clough Newcome's ' practice in the field. Mr. Newcome, of FeltweU Hall, Norfolk, the secretary of the Loo Club and the Old Hawking Club, was ' the ablest and most skilful amateur falconer of the present century.' * We will now pass on to a sketch of falconry from an able pen, designed to lead the unlearned, or unpractised, to a better understanding of ' the noble mysterie.' It is written by the Rev. Gage Earle Freeman, well known as an accomplished falconer, f Falcons and Falconry. Of falconry, Lord Lilford's favourite sport, very little indeed is known in the present day, and such knowledge as exists is confined to but a few sportsmen. Upon its antiquity I will say only a few words ; and, to give but two or three facts, I shall have to learn what I myself taught in Falconry, its Claims, History, and Practice, which was published in 1859. " Mr. Layard, in the second volume of his Nineveh, tells us that he found in the ruins of Kharsabad a bas- * Falconry (Badminton Library), by the Hon. G. I-ascelles, p. 339. t Mr. Freem.in wrote for many years on hawking matters in the Field, under the pseudonym of ' Peregrine.' ii6 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING relief, ' in which there appeared to be a falconer bearing a hawk on his wrist.' Aristotle, in his Animated Nature, says : ' When the hawks seized a bird they dropped it among the hunters ' ; and, in a work ascribed to Aristotle, we find : ' Hawks appear when called.' I find that I copied the following from Turner's History of the Anglo-Saxons, vol. iii., chip, vii., p. 65 : — ' Hawks and falcons were also favourite subjects of amuse- ment, and valuable presents in those days, when, the country being much overrun with wood, every species of the feathered race abounded in all parts. A King of Kent begged of a friend abroad two falcons, of such skill and courage as to attack cranes willingly, and seizing them to throw them on the ground.' Spelman, in his Glossarium Archceologicum «.iys that ' the art of falconry was invented more than a thousand years before ' ; he writing in 1629." I will conclude what I have to say concerning the antiquity of the sport by a short quotation from a passage I wrote so many years ago. It refers to the practice in Europe : " We may gather from all this that falconry was tolerably well established as a leading sport in Europe, and possibly in these islands, at a very early period of our history — between the fourth and sixth centuries perhaps ; England, however, being later than Germany in adopting it." So much for the facts concerning the antiquity. What was the spirit of those times with regard to the sport } May 1 quote myself once more } OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 117 " The love of this sport had now become a perfect passion — nay, a mania. Europe was inflamed with it. Monarchs, nobles and knights, disdaining the moderate draughts of its pleasures, drained them to intoxication, and lived for them, as for their fame. If a gallant were in prison he would carve falcons on the walls ; if in a court, or in a church, he would bear them on his glove ; if in the grave, they would be figured on his tombstone ; nay, his bride took a merlin to the altar on her wedding day. . . . Not to love hawking was a proof of the grossest vulgarity of disposition, and of many drops of churlish blood." And all this has passed into tradition. However, we must not forget that, in the last century, there was an unquestionable revival of the sport, in which the Old Hawking Club, of which Lord Lilford was a member, was conspicuous. One could wish the revival were on the increase, but that is hardly so. Lord Lilford would certainly not have wished the destruction of one sport for the sake of another. He was fond of shooting ; it could well go hand-in-hand with falconry. I have shot with him, and (though he was even then somewhat lame) it was a lucky grouse that escaped his gun. But it is time that something was said about the practice of falconry. Falconers divide the hawks which they train into two classes — viz., long-winged and short-winged hawks. Of ii8 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING long-winged hawks we have the following : — Peregrine ; jer- or gyr- falcon (these names include the Iceland, Greenland, and Norway falcons) ; lanner ; sacre ; Barbary falcon ; hobby ; merlin. Of short-winged hawks : — Goshawk and sparrow-hawk. I. — Long-winged Hawks. It may be well to say at once that falconers of the present day do not use the lanner, sacre, or the Barbary falcon (though the last kind, I should think, would be found excellent for partridges) ; and the gyr-falcon * is very seldom to be found in training now. Let us begin with the peregrine {Falco peregrinus), a bird to which I, at least, owe more than half the pleasure of my life, and one to which Lord Lilford was devotedly attached. Peregrines taken from their nests in the crag are called eyesses ; those caught in their after-life, in the bow-net, are haggards, if in the adult plumage ; if in the first plumage, red hawks. All hawks, in fact, are either eyesses or 'wild-caught.' Eyesses must be hacked ; this is quite necessary with the peregrine, and hardly less necessary with the merlin. What is hacking.^ It is this : A hamper has arrived, from Scotland, let us say ; * Lord Lilford once had a Greenland falcon, which he much liked.— G. E. F. OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 119 it contains several peregrines just taken from the eyrie ; and, let us hope, only just taken. If they have been carried from the nest when they were little more than masses of white down, reared by the cragsman at his home for many days, and despatched to the falconer when some feathers have appeared, they will be simply worthless. They will, when trained, scream and fly round their trainer's head, looking to him only for food. What should be done is this : the young hawks must be left in the nest till they can nearly fly (I have known one that was found some distance from the nest, and was caught by the hand on the rocks), and then packed ofi^ at once. Care should be taken also that the journey be as rapid as circumstances admit. Then comes the hack ; a period of liberty for eyesses which lasts some weeks. The object is to teach them to fly, to expand and exercise the muscles of the wings ; to put them, in short, when the time is over, in very much the same position they would have been in, as far as strength and adroitness are concerned, had they not been captured. There are two ways in which the hack can be arranged : the first is as follows : — When the young hawks are able to leave the loft where they were placed, they find a large board to which meat is tied, and they readily feed. As day follows day, they go farther and farther from the house, but return to the board at feeding-times. 120 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING Should they be very forward when they are received, they are fastened to the blocks near the board until they thoroughly recognise it as the place where they will find food. When this happens, they are quietly released. It is considered essential, by those who adopt this form of hack, that the hawks should see as little of any human being as possible. The fear is that, should they recognise their feeders, they will scream and fly low. The second arrangement is this : The hawks are placed on a platform in the loft with straw, not hay, for their bedding. As soon as they can tear food for themselves, it is offered to them on lures, one lure for each hawk. The falconer whistles loudly while they feed. Presently they fly down to the floor to feed from the lures ; then the loft door is opened and they fly out, settling probably on the house or on the nearest tree. They soon go a couple of miles or so away, but return at feeding-times at the sight of the lures and the sound of the whistle. This was my own plan ; it was the plan of my old friend William Brodrick, whom I knew in 1850. I never had a case of screaming or low-flying, unless by accident I had received a bird taken from the eyrie when it was too young. Such a bird I should not keep for a day ; and no one ever saw one of my entered evesses fly low when ' waiting on,' or heard it scream. There is this obvious advantage, too, in this second plan — that the OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 12 r birds when taken up know the lure and the whistle. And, as for wildness — a good thing at this time — it is as necessary to use the bow-net for taking up these as it is in taking up those which have been fed from the hack- board. In either case, the eyesses, on being put into the loft, have been furnished with bells and jesses, the bell being somewhat heavier than that used when the training is over, which should be as light as possible. I myself am for a very long hack, even up to the point of danger of the birds being lost. Be bold, I say ; you had better have four good than five indifferent hawks. We now come to wild-caught hawks — i.e., haggards and red hawks, both ' passage hawks.' These are yearly taken in Holland, as I shall show at once by an extract from Reminiscences of a Falconer, an excellent work by my late friend Major Charles Hawkins Fisher, of the Castle, Stroud, Gloucester.* The extract shows the means of capture ; the place is in the neighbourhood of Valkenswaard, Eindhoven, Holland. " The method adopted is intricate and interesting, and can only be briefly deecribed here. The so-called ' huts ' are pits dug out, walled with sods, and roofed with sods and heather, so as to be very undistinguishable from the surroundings. The occupant, who is frequently by * They are taken in England also. Lord Lilford sent me a fine haggard caught on his own property in Northamptonshire. He named her Miss Hardcastle, because he hoped she would ^ stoop to conquer.' To my great sorrow she broke her swivel when in the process of training and I never saw her again. — G. E. F. 122 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING profession a cobbler, is provided with provisions, water and schnapps, and a sack of boots and shoes to mend. As his vision is but circumscribed he depends greatly upon a little living sentinel who lives in full sight of his hut in a little turf cabin or cage outside. This sentinel is the larger butcher-bird or shrike. " The moment he perceives any bird of prey, however far off, and however high (I am told beyond the power of human vision), he becomes highly agitated and calls and attracts the attention of the occupant of the hut. . . . In addition to this sentinel, the hawk-catcher is supplied with a pigeon, who lives in a little turf hut at the foot of a pole, to the top of which is attached a cord reaching to his hand. Another pigeon, similarly lodged, about one hundred yards from his hut door and close to a carefully concealed bow-net, working easily and well, also from inside the hut, completes his devices. The butcher-bird's actions denote the approach of the migrating hawk — species, age and sex unknown — and the hawk-catcher pretends to be able to determine the distance and quality of the approach- ing migrant, by the different intensity of the terror of the sentinel. When deemed sufficiently near, the hawk-catcher pulls the string of the pole-pigeon, and causes him to flutter forth from his shelter, but so that he can instantly regain it at need. This lure is frequently sufficient to attract the passing hawk (probablv sharp-set) from the clouds, and is often instantly followed bv the rush of the lofty and violent stoop — most grateful of all sounds OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 123 to the patient ear of the concealed cobbler. In a moment the lure pigeon is gone, safe once more in his little hut. The disappointed hawk wheels round, whereupon the cobbler pulls the other poor, devoted pigeon out of his shelter and leaves him exposed. Down comes the hawk very often (seeing nothing wrong) and kills, and soon begins to eat his prey. . . . The delighted cobbler takes a good hold of the cord or wire that throws the bow- net (a most clever contrivance) and with one masterly pull the hawk and pigeon are therein, from whence there is no escape." The hawk, whether ' passage ' or eyess, is now out of the bow-net, and in the falconer's hands for training. Taming, however, comes first. It is not my business in this little essay to say how this or that matter is accom- plished ; I have only to say what is done, and what must be done. A leash is supplied in the case of the eyess, who has worn jesses during hack ; leash and jesses to the wild-caught bird. Then comes carrying on the gloved left hand, the persistent persuasion to feed from it ; breaking to the hood ; accustoming the unhooded hawk to the presence of strangers ; jumping to fist from the screen or block ; flying some yards to the lure, a creance (a long string tied to the ground) having been fastened to the leash ; and ultimately flying at liberty to the falconer's call and lure. The hawk is ' reclaimed ' — I trust it is understood 124 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING that I am now speaking only of the peregrine — and is in a condition to fly game. We are on the moors, hoping soon to fly and kill a grouse. This quarry, as a rule, we attack only with the female bird — the ' falcon.' Yesterday we took out the old pointer who has helped us on many a day's game-hawking, but to-day we had only beaters- and markers. What was our plan yesterday } This, put shortly : — There were only two of us, and one falcon ; our time was short, and the moor close to the house. Old Don ranged well, but carefully ; a dead point — no hare thai; grouse to a certainty. The hawk is cast off; she rises in wide circles ; give her plenty of time : will she get any higher ? No ; well then, put up the grouse. Don knows his business, and up get the birds. Poor Don ! every one complains thdt we have spoilt him for shooting. The hawk, though high, was a considerable distance from the rise, but she answered to the ringing shout, " ho-ha, ha ! " and spun down upon the five birds which had risen. The distance was too great, however, to admit of her cutting one over at once ; the flight was something like a stern chase. A ' put-in ' t We feared it, and it was. In other words, the grouse had dashed into thick cover. But she ' waits on ' well above them. We and the dog rush on ; it is a considerable distance, but she is a fairly patient bird. Up gets one of the grouse ; he is- cut over at the first stoop, and the falconer, lifting the grouse on his gloved hand, the hawk being on the quarry,, lets his bird eat the head and neck, and some fresh and OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 125 tender beefsteak which he takes from his pouch. She was, in fact, ' fed-up,' for we had to go home. So much for yesterday. As far as to-day is concerned, we have been hawking, as I have said, without a dog, for this is what happened. Don was left at home. A pointer, as will be seen, is not necessary, but I strongly recommend a dog at heel, to put out birds which have been ' put in.' Well do I remember the want of one. The memory plagues me even now. A falcon was * waiting on,' and I could not find a grouse ; at last, up got a snipe, and there was a splendid ringing flight ; the snipe was soon out of sight in the sky, and the hawk, if I saw her at all, did not look bigger than a butterfly. At last, they came down ; the hawk had compelled her quarry to do that. It was a ' put in,' only a hundred yards or so from where I stood, in deep heather. I was soon on the spot, as far as I could make it out ; but I was alone, and the hawk was waiting above me ; she was most patient. Oh for a dog ! At that moment I would have half ruined myself for only the loan of a dog. I was on my hands and knees turning over the heather, and examining every hole; and this, perhaps, a dozen or twenty yards from where the snipe had hid itself; I could not mark the spot nearer. At last the hawk left me, and went home, not half a mile away ; she could stand it no longer. But this is a long digression. On the day I am writing about there was no dog, but I had markers and beaters. The moor was small. 126 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING and the ground very uneven, hilly in fact. The markers were placed on the high ground, the beaters were with me ; the falcon was waiting on. " Now, my lads, ofF with you ; get them up as fast as you can." They dash off; and in a moment, as it happened, a single grouse got up. The falcon was just above, but very nicely high. A shower of feathers, as if the grouse had been struck by small shot ; she is on it, waiting till I come up. We did not ' feed up ' this time, but killed another before we went home. The markers helped in that case ; the ' kill ' was out of my sight, and they let me know it had happened, and where it was, by throwing caps in the air and pointing, like signposts, to the place. But this is hawking on a small scale. On a larger moor, and with the assistance of professionals, six or eight hawks may be taken out on the cadge, and a whole day spent on the sport. 1 have spoken of eyesses and of wild-caught hawks. Falconers agree that for grouse, rooks, and certainly for heron, wild-caught birds are the better. A word, and but little more than a word, on partridge- hawking. The tiercel, or male bird, one-third smaller than the female, is certainly to be chosen for this sport. It is grouse-hawking in miniature as regards the size of the hawk used, that of the quarry, and the extent of land ranged over. It is very pretty sport, and is conducted in precisely the same way as that of grouse-hawking. Partridges are often ' put-in ' to ditches, or the bottom OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 127 of a thick hedge, and a small dog accustomed to the hawks, and one they know well, is necessary. Still, the majority of kills, if there is luck, take place in the open. But if one wished to make a man a falconer, he should be taken on to the moors. He would recollect many a good day's shooting to dogs, his own favourite pointers and setters ; how well they ranged, how thoroughly steady they were to points, and to ' down-charge,' how proud he was to show them to his friends. He might remember, too, his patience at the butts till the pack came over, and the splendid rights and lefts. No doubt this is very fine, hut you will show your friend something still finer. And, in writing this, I may in some trifling measure repeat what I have just written. You and he have been running over heather, you both have positively drunk the mountain-air ; fragrance, the very strength of a life-giving fragrance, has been the breath of your nostrils. More than that ! Up in the cloudless sky has circled the bird, who you know has watched your every movement, has waited for your help as patiently as you have waited for hers. She could have left you, and have been twenty miles away in almost as many minutes. She chose you before that. What will your friend think of this sport ^ How marvellously patient she is ! You pause ; the partridges lay close, but they are off now. One flash from above, the bright sun on her wings ; the shout that called her still ringing ! The leading old cock spins from the stroke of her foot ; she is 128 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING on him in the heather ; she looks for your approach, as proud as you are. People know nothing of the sport, or they would honour it. Could a man see spch a flis^ht as that I have just described and not do all he knew to become a falconer .'' Rook-hawking next. It is heron-hawking in minia- ture. In both, to carry out the sport properly, the ground must be free from trees. The quarry, whichever of these it may be, is looked for on the ' passage,' going for food, or returning with it. The falconer carries the falcon on his glove ; the leash, of course, has been removed, and she is held by the jesses ; she is hooded. When a rook comes fairly near — a hundred yards, if you like — the hood is removed, and the hawk cast off". Two are often flown at a rook ; two always at a heron. They have no mean quarry to attack, for a good old rook will shift from the stoop with very great dexterity, and the flight may be a very long one ; a good horse is necessary if the whole, or anything like it, is to be seen thoroughly. When there are a few trees on the hawking ground, it is well to carry a pistol, loaded with blank cartridge, to be tired immediately under the tree where the rook has taken refuge ; this will often, but not always, dislodge it. But one of the difficulties in rook- hawking is to induce the hawk to fly the quarry. Naturally, she very much dislikes the flavour of the flesh. A few falcons will take to rooks at once, but they are OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 129 the exception ; ' entering ' is the remedy. A rook is offered in a creance to a very sharp-set hawk, she takes it, it is killed at once, and the falconer adroitly fastens the greater part of a newly killed pigeon, still warm, under the rook's wing, having taken care to remove the pigeon's wings, and any feathers likely to betray the fraud. "If this is rook," thinks the falcon, "all I can say is that I have slandered the poor bird very much, and I shall certainly fly the first I see." Magpie-hawking is very good sport indeed. The falconers, ladies perhaps among them, should be on horse- back. Of course, the country must be free from woods, but there may be bushes and some hedges if the fields are large. There should be some few beaters with the party, so that the magpie may easily be driven out of the cover to which he has taken when pressed by the single tiercel, or cast of tiercels, which are after him. The crack of a whip is sometimes, but not often, enough to send him again into the open. But I must remember that space is limited, and that I have yet, amongst long-winged hawks, to say something of the merlin and hobby. The merlin {Falco cesalori) is the smallest of British hawks ; an exquisite little creature, a pet and a companion for ladies, a bird capable of showing the falconer excellent sport. It is very handsome, too, and the male, when in the adult plumage, has a beautiful blue back ; he would be worth having if he were only to be looked at. But these birds are 9 I JO OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING more than beautiful ; they may be made the companions of your walks, following on the wing, and coming to the glove when called. I have known a little male bird which had received a few mouthfuls of food in the morning and was then thrown out of the window, meet his master or mistress a couple of hours later, his presence being intimated by his settling on one of their heads ; then he would of course be fed, and would probably be carried on the glove till the walk was over. Taken from hack, or wild-caught, these birds are treated in the same manner as that described in the case ot the peregrine ; they become tame very soon, and I once had a fine wild-caught hen bird, which knew the lure, and followed me in the lields, one fortnight after she had been taken out of the birdcatcher's net. As to the quarry at which they are flown, they will take blackbirds, thrushes, ring-ouzels — any small bird, in fact ; their only fault, notwithstanding their extreme tameness, being a disposition to ' carry.' With most birds, however, this can be overcome, and the falconer will go up to his hawk with confidence that she will wait for him, content that he shall have the quarry just killed, and knowing that he will feed her from it. But the quarry for the merlin — there is only one of consequence — is the skylark. Here — and this has been often said — we have heron-hawking in miniature. In both, the ' ringing ' flight is the great matter. \r\ grouse-hawking, as we have just seen, the hawk comes OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 131 down from a height in "one fell swoop" — 'stoop' as we call it in these days ; in heron-, rook-, and lark- hawking, she goes up, hawk and quarry ' ringing,' till they are nearly, or quite, out of sight. A stranger to the sport would say, " We shall never see that bird again ! " But the fact is that you could probably see it in a few seconds. Well I remember, when I began falconry, William Brodrick scolding me for calling a merlin " out of sight." She was just disappearing in the sky, and to have lost her in those days would have made me melancholy for a week, so I whistled, threw up the lure, and she came. Such is the merlin. Then we have the hobby {Falco subbuteo). I only wish I could say anything complimen- tary of this hawk. There is a great beauty, no doubt ; but is there not an old adage, ' Handsome is that handsome does ' } The hobby to look at is the very perfection of a falcon ; the length of wing by which, amongst other signs, a falcon is known, is longer in proportion than that of any other member of the family ; the general appearance is, in fact, wonderfully- typical. The bird is a little larger than the merlin. They are migratoi-y and difficult to procure. Surely, considering their perfect form, they could fly ! They ought to beat a merlin, but they don't, nor, indeed, at all equal it. Lord Lilford told me that he had offered a good price for one that would fly larks well, but the difficulty is to get one that will fly them at all. There 132 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING is a mystery about the bird ; it might cry, as a certain lady cried : " The curse has come upon me." For, look at the difference between then and now ! We find Latham, whose Falconry was published in 1633, writing of the hobby in terms of enthusiastic praise. He says : " She will show herself a hawk to please a prince, for you may fly her twenty times in the after- noon when no other hawks will fly, but must be waited on." In short, he says that the hobby will flv par- tridges, quails, larks, and all in the most perfect manner. So much tor ' then ' ; ' now ' the very best merlin trainers can't make a hobby go iifty yards after a lark, nor, indeed, can they make her care for any quarry. Is there vet a chance .'' Will some one read up Latham and other old hawking books, try if they can extract a hidden hint, and give their whole mind to practice in the field ? I have now done with the long-winged hawks, except that I ought to add that falconers keep them on blocks, or on the screen, the former, in my opinion, being the better resting-place, as on the screen the feathers not infrequently get damaged. Like all hawks they must be often offered a bath. II. — Sfwrt-winged Hawks. There are two short-winged hawks, the goshawk and the sparrow-hawk. The goshawk is by far the larger bird, but thev resemble each other very much in other respects, except that the goshawk has stout legs and i ii> ifZ. Hobby, with leash and block. OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 133 feet, while the sparrow-hawk has slight ones. However, ornithologists have separated them very widely, neither genus nor species being the same. The goshawk is Astur palumbarius, and the sparrow-hawk Accipiter nisiis. They are separated, too, in their habits ; the goshawk, on the whole, preferring fur, and the sparrow-hawk confining itself to feather. The bow-perch is generally used for these birds instead of the block, though the latter is well enough suited for the sparrow-hawk. This perch is a simple contrivance ; it is made of a length of pliant wood, ash perhaps, and it becomes a ' bow ' by being bent, and for a bowstring, strong string, or what is far better, strong wire is used. The ends^ however, differ from those of an ordinary bow ; they should be a foot in length beyond the place where the bowstring is fastened, and this in order that they may be most thoroughly and firmly buried in the ground. A sub- stantial ring has been run up the wood before the bow was fashioned, it moves easily up and down, and to it the leash is fastened. Blocks and perches must, of course, be on grass, or well surrounded with straw when under cover, or the hawk, when bating, will injure Sts plumage. Goshawks may sometimes be procured by advertise- ments. The best come from Norway, but they are found also in France and Germany. England will have none of them now ; there was a time when it was their 134 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING home. Like other hawks, they may be taken as nestlings or they mav be wild-caught. Colonel Delme RadclifFe once warned me against having a hao^gard, but the bird in its first plumage, although wild-caught, is very good, and as a rule to be preferred to an eyess. In training, a hood, so contrived that food may just be seen through it (food and nothing else) can be used ; but the bird should be accustomed very soon to feed ' from the fist ' without it, and to endure the presence of strangers. This part of the business is a trying time to the falconer, for goshawks and sparrow-hawks have a fearful temper. It is only to be overcome by time and constant attention, the goshawk, at any rate, becoming at last very fairly amiable. As with other hawks, the entering to quarry is done by degrees : there is no greater mistake than hurry in the training. At first a dead rabbit, opened so as to show the flesh about the shoulder, may be given at the bow- perch : a couple of days after, the hawk being very sharp-set, a live rabbit in a short creance should be offered ; on it being taken, the falconer will kill it, and allow the hawk to feed from the shoulders as before — and so by degrees the bird will fly wild rabbits. Half a dozen may be taken in a morning's or afternoon's walk ; more in fact, but it is well not to repeat large numbers day after day. It was my custom at first to stab the rabbit at once, but I think there is a better plan. Have a man or boy behind you, carrying a dead rabbit, skinned OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 135 towards the head ; take this and pass the live one to him to be adroitly killed bv the usual neck-breaking process : allow the hawk to take a mouthful from the dead rabbit, and whilst she is eating lift her on the glove, holding the jesses firmly : she is then ready for another flight. Some goshawks will take hares, but if they are used for that quarry, they must not be allowed to fly rabbits ; if they are, they will look for the easier flight, and scarcely care for the more difiicult. The female bird only is used for hares and rabbits. The male will fly pheasants well, and indeed partridges, but he is hardly fast enough to be quite relied on for a strong full-grown partridge, at any rate in flight : he may drive his quarry into low cover where a dog may take it. A goshawk must be in ' yarak ' before she is flown. Unless this is so, leave her on her perch, for she will be of no use whatever. What therefore is yarak .'' I quote from my little book, How I became a Falconer. A goshawk in yarak is : " simply when she is in a good temper, decidedly hungry, and eager for quarry. She gives two or three screams at your approach, and probably bates towards you ; she sets out her feathers, making herself look large ; has a peculiar look in her yellow eyes — a sort of mixture of earnestness and amiability . . . beware of the opposite symptoms. It is no use taking her from her perch if she gives a chirping sound, very different from the scream ; if she has a wild eye, with contracted pupil ; 136 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING if she makes herself look small by closing all her feathers tightly round her." The short-winged hawks fly ' from the fist,' as it is called ; in fact, so does the merlin. In other words, they do not ' wait on ' ; any one who knew the goshawk would think the notion that she could do so a very comic one indeed. Carried unhooded, they at once see their quarry and dash after it. I have always liked the goshawk ; when she thoroughly knows you she is very friendly. I had one once — my close friend and companion — for more than nine years ; she died on my hand, of aneurism. I have mentioned this, I am sure, in other essays on falconrv, but it may be interesting in this place. She was wonderfully stuffed for me by Mr. Brodrick, and is in this house now, almost as lifelike as when she lived. I must now write a few lines about the sparrow-hawk. I don't think that Lord Lilford took much interest in this bird, though he was certainly fond of the goshawk : and indeed the sparrow-hawk is hardly one of the most in- teresting hawks. She requires an immense deal of patient attention, and when she is in flying order she must be flown often. The male (musket), as well as the female, may be made to fly blackbirds well, and blackbird-hawking is really an exciting sport. Two or three people should join in it, for the hedges must be well guarded and beaten, as it is necessary to drive out the quarry as soon as it is ' put in ' by the hawk. The sparrow-hawk, like the OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 137 goshawk, should be made to fly to the fist ; that is essential, especially with the former bird, but it is well also that they should understand some sort of lure ; one of these hawks may take its ' stand ' in a tree, and obstinately remain there : a lure will often bring it down when the ' fist ' has little attraction. The female bird will fly three- fourths-grown partridges, and will sometimes take an old one : water-hens, too, she will take, when they can be found far enough from water ; for landrails she was always famous, and a quail would be excellent quarry for either the male or the female bird. The sparrow-hawk, like the goshawk, may be broken to the hood, but it should be rarely used. The bird must be carried without it on days when she flies and when she does not. And just one hint as to carrying on the glove : it is absolutely necessary, day after day, but it must not be made a toil to the hawk : a little bit of food — the leg of a pigeon with the feathers off, for instance — should be in the right hand, so that when the bird becomes impatient and disposed to be cross, just a glimpse and a very small taste may be ofFered. As to the kind of food, one must be specially careful with both merlins and sparrow-hawks : even fresh and tender beefsteak, excellent with peregrines and goshawks, and very proper on occasion with the smaller hawks, must be given sparingly. Sheep's heart and birds should be the usual food. All hawks require castings two or three times in the week — i.e.., feather or fur with their food. 138 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING Perhaps a word or two should be said about disease and medicine. The croaks is a kind of cough : bruised peppercorn may be given in the castings. Inflammation of the crop. The food is thrown up. Give a little powdered rhubarb in the morning ; but there is little chance of recovery. Worms. River-sand with the meat and occasionally rhubarb. I wonder if our ancestors did better than this with their wonderful remedies ! The following is from the Gentleman s Recreation^ A.D. 1677 : " Take germander, pelamountain, basil, grummel-seed, and broom-flowers, of each half an ounce ; hyssop, sassafras, polypodium, and horse-mints, of each a quarter of an ounce, and the like of nutmegs ; cubebs, borage, mummy, mugwort, sage, and the four kinds of mirobolans, of each halt an ounce ; of aloes succotrine the fifth part of an ounce, and of saffron one whole ounce." This is to be " put into a hen's gut, tied at both ends." 1 hope it may be found agreeable. Moulting. This occurs once a year. The seventh feather in the wing is generally dropped first, and that not long after the middle or end of March. During moult the birds must be kept fat, or the new feathers will be poor ones. They are not flown at quarry, but should have some exercise. Moult is not over till the autumn. OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 139 Imping is the mending of a broken feather. A falconer will have hawk's feathers by him. He chooses one which belonged to a hawk precisely like, in every way, to the bird whose wing or tail he is about to imp. The imping needle is a short piece of steel wire filed into a triangular shape ; it is dipped in brine to cause rust and therefore adhesion. Suppose the third feather in the wing is broken ; take precisely the same feather from those you have in reserve ; be sure of the exact length in cuttinof : do that at an angle ; pass half the needle into the false feather, half into that of the bird you are imping, close tightly, and scarcely a mark of the junction will be seen. " My task is over," concludes Mr. Freeman. " It has been a pleasant one indeed. I am delighted at having had the pleasure and the privilege of contributing to this book, for Lord Lilford was, through a great number of years, my constant and most kind friend." But in addition to otter hunting and falconry, there were few forms of sport in which Lord Lilford had not graduated, and the following extracts from letters throw a pleasing light upon the genial spirit he brought to these pursuits. He writes, under date October 22nd, 1895 : " The cleverest retriever, and certainly one of the most charming and sympathetic companions of my early manhood, was a cross between collie and setter. For 140 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING nearly thirteen years she was always with me, and knew my little manners and habits better than any human being. I lost her one day, in Sardinia, about twenty miles from Cagliari, at a spot to which I had gone on wheels the previous evening. Old Nellie lay under our feet in the buggy in which we drove, so that she could not possibly have seen any landmarks, or stopped to sniff at any spots where other of her species had left their traces. We slept, the night of our arrival at the village, in an old tumbledown country house, Nellie under my bed. The next morning we sallied forth early, and for two or three hours had capital sport with Barbary partridges, quails, and a few hares. It was about the middle of October, very hot, and Nellie was thirsty. She disappeared about 1 1 a.m., and I whistled for and sought her in vain, the whole of the afternoon. My host of the R.Y.S. Schooner Claymore was anxious to leave Cagliari for Palermo on the evening of the day following, so I returned disconsolate to the yacht by 9.30 p.m. My good friend, knowing how I loved my Nellie, kindly consented to stay till the following morning. " I spent a miserable day, and turned in early. My host and our other companion went ashore to the opera ; I was conscious of the gig shoving off to bring them aboard about 1 1 p.m., and the next thing that I knew of was Nellie's jumping up into my bunk, and licking my hands. She had found her way back twenty miles through an unknown country, and evidently came straight down to- OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 141 the quay, and jumped into the yacht gig directly it came alongside. This could hardly be a case of scent. " This Nellie several times brought me two partridges together, and on one occasion a hare and a partridge. Here, in our shrubberies, Nellie would often ' tree ' a cat, and give me notice by a low bark, quite different from her usual note or ' mark ' at a rabbit in its burrow. If I took no notice, she would soon come to me with all her hackles up, and growl, wagging her stern all the time. I once knocked down a woodcock in pretty thick covert, and sent her to fetch it. She was a long time away, and came back without it, but she looked into my face, evidently anxious to tell me something. I tried her again, but she would not move till I pushed into the thorns myself, when she yapped with pleasure, and went gently ahead of me through the thick stuff, stopping at last and looking upwards, with her stern going. I looked up into the trees and bushes, but could see nothing for a time, till at last I caught sight of the tip of wing projecting from a broken stump at about four feet from the ground, and found my woodcock caught thereon. In this case, I feel sure that she had seen, not scented, the bird. Many a time she left me to go to a distance, and pick up a bird that she had watched till it fell, in many cases when I did not know of its being wounded. Peace to her ashes, and a truce to this long yarn." ' ^ To T. Buckley, Esq. 142 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING "October 20th, 1887. " I never enjoyed flighting in perfection except in Epirus and Tunis. Imagine, after a good day with the woodcocks, wading into water knee-deep ; birds around, mallard, gadwall, shoveller, teal, pintail, wigeon, pochard, tufters, golden-eye, with eagle owl booing from rocks close by, bitterns almost brushing one's face, snipe ' scaping ' in every direction, and woodcock flipping round like bats. " A neighbour of ours found an old hare, in a neat and well-used form in his strawberry bed. His garden was walled on three sides, to a height of perhaps fourteen feet, and on the fourth side to about three feet, with a drop on the outside of some five feet or more to a little stream, the opposite bank of which was about level with the foot of a low wall, and quite four feet from it at the narrowest part. At one end of this low wall was a little latched gate, opening upon a plank bridge over the stream. My friend, on first finding the hare amongst his strawberries, called a garden lad, posted himself at the gate, and told the boy to put the hare up. She came leisurely up to the little gate, but, on finding my friend there, turned, and tried the low wall in several places. On the approach of the boy, she at last jumped on to the wall, and tumbled headlong into the stream, in which there were only a tew inches of water. She scuttled along the bottom, and disappeared. The next afternoon she was again in her form, and, on being touched with a stick, hopped off OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 143 to the gate, stood on her hind legs, quietly pressed down the latch, and crossed the bridge. After this my friend virtually left her alone, only now and then taking a friend to let him see old Sarah open the gate. " I had a Siberian hare for two or three days in my rooms in Tenterden Street, who did battle with any one who attempted to touch him, and finally turned cat and housemaid out of the room." ' "September ^th, 1887. " One of the best pointers I ever owned 7iever failed, but would always poke up his first bird or coney ; if he was far ahead he would look round, and if I were not in shooting distance, would steal up, put up his birds, and then come crawling up to me, to be scolded. I never hit him, for he was perfectly conscious of his offence ; except with the first bird of the day, I never saw him make a mistake. In Scotland, on broken, hillocky ground, directly I had loaded and waved my hand to him he would run off down wind, and go clean out of sight, ranging rapidly towards me if he found the birds and thought I could not see him, as was very often the case. He would come tearing along his original down- wind line, and directly he saw me, wheel sharply round and point in the direction of the birds that he had found, wait till I came up to him, and would take me to the spot without any attempt to get the ' To the Rev. Murray Matthew. \ 144 OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING wind again, and an expression that said, as plainly as any words, that he was guided simply by memory. Up-wind he ranged not very wide, but in the most perfect form that I ever saw." '■ That Lord Lilford never wrote publicly upon sporting matters may perhaps have been due to his inherent fond- ness for all living creatures. Be this as it niav, in this direction he has committed little to writing beyond passing allusions in his diaries or letters. Thus on January iith, 1896: "Although, as you know, I was a very ardent gunner in my time, I would rather see a real good flight with a good hawk at any feathered quarry than take part in the slaughter of any number of tame-bred pheasants." - That ' tame-bred ' pheasants are no less difficult than wild ones to shoot, no one knew better than himself, or had more contempt for the absurdities that are written in the Press and elsewhere on this subject. The distinction he draws between the two forms of sport lay in the instinctive and unsportsmanlike shrinking from the idea of the non-natural culture of the pheasant. " With regard to rabbit shooting," he writes on March 3rdj 1891: "I fear that I cannot claim ever to ^ To the Rev. Murray Matthew. 2 To the Rev. G. E. Freeman. OTTER HUNTING, FALCONRY, SHOOTING 145 have been a really first-class shot at them or anything else ; but I did get a knack of killing them stone-dead, which seems to be rare nowadays. In the open, with a bunny going all he knew, there was no art in this ; but in thick cover, with the object cautiously hopping about, my view was always to hustle him into rapid flight, and seize the right instant to put the whole charge behind his ears. One seldom gets a shot in thick cover at rabbits at more than fifteen or twenty yards, and the main object should be not to blow them to pieces. For this sort of work I always preferred a twenty-bore. The right moment to fire came upon one by instinct, after some practice." ^ ' To the Rev. Murray Matthew. 10 CHAPTER VI Notes from Mediterranean Journals The extracts which follow are Lord Lilford's journals of cruises in the Mediterranean in the years 1874, 1878- 1879, and 1882. This does not, however, exhaust the voyages he made ; the absent links are, therefore, very kindly supplied as follows by one who was often his companion at sea, and in many ornithological days in Spain.' " 1869, April 20th. Lilford met me at Seville, having come from London. On the 23rd we drove very early to Algaba, a small pueblo east of Seville, and each killed our first great bustard. On the 26th we started by steamer at 5 a.m. for Coria, a town some few miles down the Guadalquivir, and thence drove with Manuel and his sons in a carro to the Palacio of the Goto del Rey, a wearisome journey, lasting till six in the evening ; the carro was a covered country cart with wooden wheels, which creaked without cessation, and the covering was so low we had to squat or lie on the poles, which formed the floor, a painful position. The Palacio was a ramshackle place, once a shooting bo.x of the Royal Goto, capable of accommo- dating eight sportsmen. Our cooking, etc., was done by Lilford's 1 Lieut.-Golonel L. Howard L. Irby, author of The Ornithology of the Straits of Gibraltar. 146 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 147 courier. Pan and a French bird skinner came with us. The mosquitoes were in such swarms that we had to burn dried rosemary, nearly suffocating ourselves. "Here we stayed till May ist, getting many, to us, new birds and eggs, among them the eggs and young of the Spanish imperial eagle. Some of these young eagles were brought to England and lived for many years at Lilford, one surviving to 1893. " We returned to Seville, as I had to return on the 6th to Gibraltar, where Lilford came on the 4th of June, staying there with me till the 13th, when he left for England in the P. and O. steamer Massilia. " 1872. In this year Lilford next visited Spain, when he and Lady Lilford arrived in the Poonah at Gibraltar, stopping there from February 6th till the 1 7th, when they left for Seville, where I joined them from March 29th till April 5th, when we went after bustard. "On May ist, 1876, Lilford, Dr. O'Connor and myself left Plymouth at 8 a.m. in the Zara, a three-hundred-ton schooner. With a very favourable wind we reached Santander in sixty hours, a very quick passage. " We remained in Santander harbour till May 23rd, daily going out after birds, amongst others getting a nest of young ravens, one of which became the celebrated 'Sankey.' On the 23rd we trained to Torre la Vega, thence driving to Unquera, sleeping there. We drove the next day to Potes, going through the Desfiladero, a grandly picturesque pass between Panes and Potes. We stayed in a posada at the latter place until June 13th, having got a good many birds, including great black and middle-spotted woodpeckers, seeing some capercaillie. "From June ist to 7th we had various, and alas! unsuccessful beats for bears, we saw their tracks, but never got a shot ; however, the scenery was magnificent and the country interesting, though so excessively steep and broken that you couldn't have found a spot level enough for a cricket pitch. "On June 13th we drove to Comillas on the coast, returning to Santander through Santillana, of Gil Bias fame, and Torre la Vega. We remained in Santander harbour on board the Zara till the 21st, 148 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES on which day we started for Bordeaux, but with adverse winds only got so far as Royau on the Gironde, thence going by rail to Bordeaux on the 25 th, leaving next day for Paris, where I left Lilford." January to June, 1874 Genoa '■'■January 2'ith, 1874. Went up to see the Museo- Civile on the Acquabola. The Marchese Giacomo Doria, who is curator, proposed to the municipality some five years ago to present his collections in various branches to that body, if they would find him house room for them and appoint him curator. They con- sented and gave him a villa, which he has arranged as a museum on a most excellent plan. The principal part of the collection is still in skins, but a considerable number of mammalia and birds are stuffed and mounted. Doria made large collections in Persia and Borneo, but the chief interest to me lies in the local collection, which is very rich is ornithology. The chief rarities in that MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 149 branch are Audouin's gull {Larus audouini)* E. aureola, the little bunting (£. pusilla), E. Ci£sia^ and the Eleonora falcon {Falco eleonora'),^ all killed in the neighbourhood of Genoa. The collection is also rich in bats (^Cheiroptera'), of which order Doria has met with fourteen species in this neighbourhood. He is an excellent fellow and most obliging, kindly presenting me with Salvadori's work on the birds of Italy, two numbers of Proceedings of this museum society, and some reptiles. He told me very many interesting facts : viz., the present abundance of the ibex in the Royal preserves near Aosta, the occasional visits to Genoa in large numbers of the rose-coloured starling and the nutcracker, and the abundance of a seal {^Phoca monacha) on the islet of Cervoli, south of Elba. In the gardens attached to the museum there are a few living animals ; for example a fine tiger, a puma, a Sardinian red deer, and a male and female moufflon, and an eagle which I take to be the spotted eagle {Aquila tiavia). He has a very fine male specimen of the francolin {F. vulgaris), which he obtained about four years ago from Sicily, where it formed part of a collection made * Audouin's Gull {Larus audouini), an extremely beautiful gull with a black-banded coral-red bill, and eyelids of the same colour. Lord Lilford (see later) recorded it from Vacca, off the S.W. point of Sardinia, its most westerly known breeding-place. When the Editor visited this little island in 1896 he found it much infested by rats. t La Marmora's, or the Eleonora Falcon {Falco ehonorce), is a member of the hobby group of falcons. It is an inhabitant of lands on the southern border of the Mediterranean, and Lord Lilford (see later) records it from Toro, near Vacca. I50 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES by a doctor in some village not far from Girgent: ; no one knows when it was killed. He assures me that the Greek partridge {^Caccabis gracd) is not very common in this neighbourhood, where the red-leg {Caccabis rufa) is the common species, while the common partridge {Terdix cinerea) * is not rare. My steward has found the two latter in some numbers in the market here, as well as the Barbary partridge (Caccabis peirosa) from Sardinia. Many gulls frequent the harbour, apparently all herring gulls (Larus argentatus) or their Mediterranean representative, f and the brown-headed gull {Lams ridibundus)." Spezi.a. "January 31^-/ — Februar)' ^rd. A great many gulls, chieflv the brown-headed gull, frequent the bay during the daytime ; they collect together about sunset, and fly out seawards, probably to some favourite rock, on which they pass the night. " February ^^d. We sailed from Spezia, and got, into Leghorn about daylight." * The group Cairalns, to which our Red-leg Partridge belongs, differs from Perdix (the Grey Partridge, of which our common partridge may be regarded as the type) in the presence of knobs (rudimentary spurs) on the legs of the males : and, generally, these partridges tend towards the true gallinaceous birds. t The Mediterranean Herring Gull, constantly referred to here as Larus kucophaus, is better known as L. cachinnans. It differs from our Herring Gull by having yellow, instead of flesh-coloured legs and feet, an orange-red ring round the eye, and a darker mantle. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 151 Leghorn. Pisa ^'February ^t/i. Drove to Pisa and back. " February ^th. Sailed for Naples." Birds seen between Leghorn and Pisa, February 4th " Tinnunculus alaudarius, Corvus frugilegus, Columba anas, Passer italice, Fringilla carduelis, Alauda cristata, Motacilla alba, Fringilla ccelebs." Birds seen at Sea " Larus argentatus, L. ridibundus, L. caniis, L. melayiocephalus, Puffinus (sp. ?), Uria (sp. ?), Tringa (sp. ?). Two small flocks of some sandpiper flying low towards the land, apparently coming from Corsica." Naples " We remained at Naples till March 4th, having had an accident to the yacht, and generally very cold wet weather. We stayed at Lady Holland's house, the Palazzo Mocella, and made as many excursions as the weather would permit. I hardly ever saw any country, except some parts of France, so entirely devoid of birds, saving the gulls in the port. Game of all sorts is scarce in the market and very dear, almost all the shooting being in private hands. The king has some fine shooting in the neighbourhood, particularly at Licola, where there is an immense quantity of wildfowl. The chief information on sport I had was from the Cavalier Mario Matuno, who is grand veneur to the king. He tells me that bears are still found in some parts of the Abruzzi, and that wolves are not uncommon in the mountains, red and fallow deer 152 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES in the preserves, and roe deer in all the large woods. Hares are pretty numerous, rabbits less so. The grey partridge is common in the plains, and in the hills Caccabis saxatilis is found ; this last appears to be the only species of its genus in this part of Italy ; the Barbary partridge is sent to the market from Sardinia. Wild boars are very abundant, and foxes, martens and porcupine more or less common in the country. " I shot two good specimens of the Adriatic black- headed gull (Larus melaKocephalus), one common gull (Z,. canus) immature, and one brown-headed gull (L. ridi- bundus) * from deck of yacht in the harbour." Other Birds seen about Naples " Accipiter nisus, Fringilla carduelis, F. serinus, F. Moris, Passer italics, Motacilla alba, M. boarula, Phyllcpneuste rufa, Eriihacus rubecula, Sylvia melanocephala, S. atricapilla. Troglodytes europaus. Anas crecca, A. boscas, Fulica atra, Podiceps minor." Birds seen in tlie Market at Naples " Garrulus glandarius, Fringilla cxlebs, F. chloris, F. serinus, F. carduelis, Alauda arvensis, Columba torquata, Saxicola rubicola, Perdix cinerea, Caccabis saxatilis, C. petrosa, Crex porzana, Scolopax rusticola, S. galliiiago, S. gallinula, Machetes pi/gnax, Liinosa melanura, Vanellus cristatus, Charadrius pluvialis, Anas boscas, A. sirepera, A. clypeata, A. crecca, Mareca penelope, Fuligida ferina, Mergus albellus." * The Brown-headed Gull {Larus ridibundus), sometimes called the Black-headed Gull — though its hood is chocolate-coloured — belongs to the group of hooded gulls, which include the Adriatic Gull (Z. melano- cephalus). The gulls which annually visit London belong to this species ; they nest on inland pieces of fresh water. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 153 '■'■February \oth. Bought a fine blue rock-thrush* and two hill mynahs t in Naples. In the king's aviary at Capo di Monte I saw several hybrids between common and golden pheasants. '■'■February l6th. Noticed many bats flying in bright sunshine about Pozzuoli. One that I knocked down with the carriage whip near the Lago d'Aguana proved to be Schreiber's bat {Vespertilio schreiberi), but we saw other species. Many lizards in sunny places, I think chiefly Lacerta muralis. " In one of the dark chambers of Pompeii I knocked down four specimens of V. schreiberi and a dead horse- shoe bat, I think Rhinolophus euryale, but the other bats devoured him. " There is a collection of birds and other animals at the University, but nothing very remarkable, and the specimens are crowded and badly arranged. There is a male Sicilian francolin. I made acquaintance with one of the professors, G. Palma, who has a small private collection. He showed me some gulls which present many charac- teristics of the Adriatic black-headed gull (Z. melano- cephalui) and the brown-headed gull (L. ridibundus), and are very puzzling. I cannot help thinking that they must be hybrids. He has a young pelican (Peiecanus crispus), % shot near Naples, which he considers P. omcrotalus. § * See Presidential Address, p. 39. t See Aviary Notes. J The Dalmatian Pelican. § The Common or Egyptian Pelican. 154 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES " March ^th. Went by train to Torre del Annun- ziata, whither I had sent the yacht a few days before for good air and water, as the men were suffering from want of these requisites at Naples. Sailed thence March 7th, with a fair breeze, which left us becalmed just off Capri. Crept along with occasional light breezes till the afternoon of March 9th, some miles south of Stromboli, when a very strong head wind met us blowing directly out of the Straits of Messina, with occasional fierce squalls. As wind and current were against us, we did not attempt to push through the Straits, but brought up in a little bay to the north of the Faro. Fierce squalls through the night. Came into Messina early on morning of March loth, where we remained till i6th. Very cold, wet, snowy weather, with occasional furious squalls of wind. " At Torre del Annunziata, M shot a good speci- men of Larus melanocephalus, getting the black head, and I a specimen of L. ridibundus in the same condition. We saw many ducks, and several flights of peewits going northwards. M reported swallows, but I saw none. I saw several skylarks at sea off Stromboli, and some cranes passed us at night. Many shearwaters * and a few gulls seen at sea. * The Shearwaters {Puffinus) are sea-fowl belonging to the Petrel family {Procellariidie). They lay their eggs in the end of underground burrows or of deep splits in the rock. The true Great Shearwater (/*. major) probably nests far south of the Equator ; the " big " shearwaters, to which Lord Lilford refers later as nesting, being P. kuh/i, and his "smaller" shearwaters probably the Manx Shear- water {P. angiorum), or P. yelkouan. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 155 Messina "■March nth. Went out to the Faro in the cutter.' Thousands of gulls, chiefly L. melanocephalus, also /.. argentatus, L. ridibundus and L. canus. Saw a very large shearwater, and a few terns,* the Sandwich tern, I think [Sterna cantiaca), near the Faro. Saw the first house martins. At the little salt lakes at the Faro, they stick up wooden herons as decoys ; it appears that the common and the purple heron {Ardea cinerea and A. purpurea) pass in great numbers in spring. Many of the L. melanocephalus, of which I shot three, have the black head nearly perfect, others show very little trace of it. " About Capo Sant' Andrea, saw the common kestrel {Falco tinnunculus), the blue rock-thrush {Monticola cyanea), black redstart (Ruticilla titys), kingfisher {Alcedo ispida), rock pigeon [Columba livid), and gulls. Between Messina and Taormina, saw several little gulls {Larus minutus), and two or three flights of cranes {Grus cinerea). Young R brought me off two bottles of lizards, appar- ently all of one species (L. viridis), but one (Gecko platydactylus ?). " Saw ten vultures going north at an immense height in the air." Taormina '■^ March 16th. A bright sunny morning. Sailed for Taormina, where we anchored. Beautiful scenery all * Popularly known as ' Sea-swallows.' 156 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES along the coast on both sides of the straits. Took cutter and went round to the caves and holes in the clifF, about Capo Sant' Andrea, where many pigeons are reported, but where few seem to exist. " We sailed for Catania about 1 1 a.m., light airs^ of wind and heavy swell, and did not get into Catania till about 6 p.m. The whole coast, with grand views of Etna, very fine indeed. The harbour of Catania is small and crowded, exposed to south winds, but pretty secure from all other quarters." Catania '■'■March i^th. Beautiful day. My 41st birthday;, they dressed ship for me. We went ashore and tried in vain to see the Biscari Museum, which is shut up at present. In the market a great many fish and some birds. Catania is a fine town, with wide streets well paved with lava, and an air of prosperity about it, and not so many beggars as usual in Italian cities. Went up to the old convent of the Benedittini, an immense building with some splendid marbles in the church and a fine library and small museum of antiquities. Curious picture (date 1536) ot a saint with a white-headed duck i^Anas leucocephala) and a common francolin {Francolinus vulgaris).* No artist's- name. Saint being fed by an angel." * The francolins are allied to the partridges. FrancoUnus vulgaris: is the Common Francolin of Europe. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 157 " In the market of Catania saw Fulica atra in some quantities, one Porphyria, Machetes pugnax. Anas boscas, A. querquedula, Mareca penelope, Fuligula rufina, Scolopax gallinago. A great many calan- dras in cages, and greenfinches, goldfinches, serins, and linnets in the live bird market. Not a great many gulls in the harbours. Great quantities of fish of many species in the market — mullet, tench, and eels from Lentini, and endless varieties of sea fish. In the gardens of the Benedittini convent were many Passer salickolus, Fringilla carduelis and F. Moris and many lizards ; I think L. muralis. They call the Porphyria ' Faccianu,' i.e. pheasant." '■^ March i()th. Went to see the Botanical and Zoo- logical Gardens ; at the latter there are a {qw beasts and birds. Tried fishing just out of the harbour and caught a few very small fish." '^ March 20th. Drove out to Nicolosi, about twelve miles ; the whole country a mass of lava, well cultivated ; olives, carobs, vines, oranges and lemons, wheat, prickly pear, lupins, etc. Round Nicolosi lies a frightful waste of black lava, with here and there scrub oaks, squills, and other shrubs, with a good deal of Spanish broom. We took mules and rode up to the Monte Rossi — an old crater, whence there is a splendid view of Etna and the whole plain of Catania. Very few birds." "March 2isi. Beautiful day. We took the cutter and went away to the mouth of a canal about eight or ten miles to the S.W. Fine sheets of water and marshes and sandhills. A great many birds. I cannot v/alk and M cannot shoot, so we did not do much." 158 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES " Saw the following birds : — Kestrel, marsh harrier, kingfisher common swallow, blackbird, song thrush, black-headed warbler, fan- tailed warbler, Cetti's warbler, sedge warbler, marsh warbler, white wagtail, yellow wagtail, skylark, crested lark, calandra, short-toed lark, Spanish sparrow, chaffinch, linnet, goldfinch, jackdaw, magpie, quail, spotted crake, Baillon's crake, water-rail, water-hen, coot, Kentish plover, greenshank, redshank, wood sandpiper, ruff", common snipe, jack snipe, curlew, wigeon, red-crested whistling duck, pochard, tufted duck. Sandwich tern, black-headed gull, herring gull, and several tringcz that I could not be sure about. We only shot i quail, I snipe, I spotted crake, i Baillon's crake and one Sandwich tern. Killed a snake, I think Trepidonodzis natrix var., without yellow mark at the back of head j several seen. Saw many lizards and a rabbit." ''March lyrd. Fine day. We took a carriage at 6.30 a.m., and drove to the Lake of Lentini, about fourteen miles, first across the great plain of Catania, cultivated and now flooded, to the river Simeto ; crossed by a ferry boat, then over about six miles of undulating stony hills. The lake is a great sheet of water with a thick fringe of high reeds. We got a boat which was of no use. Great quantities of fish, mullet and tench, jumping all about us. Did little, for the reasons before mentioned. We remained at and about Catania till March 30th, when we sailed for the mouth of the Pantani river, where we went ashore to shoot ; got boats upon the lake on the proper left of stream and penetrated some distance into the reed jungle at the northern end thereof." " Besides many of the birds before mentioned, saw golden plover, peewit, solitary snipe, bittern, common heron, teal, garganey, black redstart, green sandpiper, and cormorant. Heard poiphyrio and saw a MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 159 flock of wild geese and a few common wild ducks ; also a hare. Wc shot 3 snipes, i teal, t peewit, i golden plover, 2 spotted rails. Saw also common starling." "March 2-jth. On the Simeto river shot i bittern, 2 snipes, I golden plover." "March 2W1. Pantani. i curlew, i solitary snipe, 4 full snipes, 1 jack snipe, 4 spotted rails, i wild duck, i garganey, 2 black-headed gulls, I calandra, i quail." '■'■March loth. 13 coots, 2 garganey, 2 white-eyed ducks, 5 snipes, 2 waterhens." "March ^ist. 13 coots, i mallard, i white -eyed duck. Lost 2 mallards and 2 garganeys, besides some coots." Pantani di Catania " March 30//2. In a stack near the house where we hired out boats the cutter's crew found a quantity of snakes, chiefly Coluber natrix, which swarms all about the marshes, and I fancy one or two of the black variety of Laments atrovirens. Poland found a nest in the reeds, I fancy of sedge warbler {Schcenobanus), with three eggs." Catania. — Lentini, Agosta, and Syracuse " March 2>'^st. The yacht lay off and on all last night, and we landed at the same place to shoot ; lost several things in the dense reeds. I found a nest of a porphyrio * in a heap of growing flags, containing one egg. The nest is exactly like that of a common water-hen, or perhaps not quite so high - sided as some nests of that * The Porphyries are ' water-hens.' Many of them are coloured blue or bluish-purple, and have red legs, feet and bills. i6o MEDITERRANEAN NOTES bird. This porphyrio is very common, and is to be heard all day and night, but very seldom seen. I only caught a glimpse of one during the whole two days we spent amongst the reeds and flags. The most abundant ducks are now garganeys and white-eyed ; I also saw mallard, gadwall, pintail, shoveller, pochard, red-crested whistling and white-headed ducks. Marsh harriers * very common, one or two grey harriers which look like C. pallidus, no other birds of prey, except a {qw kestrels and an odd kite or two about the Pantani, magpies in swarms nesting in the tamarisks with which the reed marsh is dotted, ravens, hooded crows, and jackdaws. We saw great numbers of warblers (particularly Cetti's), yellow and white wagtails, coots in thousands, and great numbers of water- hens, water-rails, spotted and Baillon's crakes. The marshes are now drying and the snipes and other waders becoming scarcer and scarcer. Saw several bitterns, common herons and an occasional lesser egret; sandpipers [Totanus stag- natilis, T. hypoleucus, and T. glareola) common. Many curlews {Numenius arquatus and N. tenuir Osiris'). Heard a Scops owl calling near Lentini. One ot our boatmen * The harriers {Circus) are raptorial birds, which, though included in the Falconidcc:, may perhaps be regarded from their flight and certain superficial characters {e.g. arrangement of head-feathers) as intermediate between that family and the owls {Strigidie). As a rule they nest on the ground. The Marsh Harrier (C ceritginosus) is practically extinct with us as a breeding species, but the Hen Harrier {C. cyaneus) and Montagu's Harrier (C cineraceus) still nest in Britain. The Pallid Harrier {C. pallidus) is an inhabitant of South-eastern Europe. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES i6i had heard of francolins as an extinct bird by the name of Tretari ; he says no herons except the purple (^Ardea purpurea) and night heron {Nyctkorax griseus) nest about the Pantani. " Yacht went round to Agosta. We, after shooting, took mules and rode to Lentini, about eight miles through a pretty country. After great wrangling with our muleteers we got a carriage to Agosta, and, starting about 8 p.m., drove through what must be beautiful country by Carlen- tini and Villosmundo to Agosta, where we arrived about 11.30 p.m., nineteen miles from Lentini. Found the yacht and went on board. Beautiful, bright, hot weather and splendid moonlight nights. The country abounds in wild flowers, a small crimson stonecrop in some places being very conspicuous." Syracuse '■^ April 1st. We sailed from Agosta with a head breeze, which freshened up, and beat into the harbour of Syracuse. Agosta seems a dilapidated, wretched town, but the bay is splendid. Syracuse is, as all the world knows, a fine harbour, but not nearly so extensive, or I should say so well sheltered, as that of Agosta. A guide, one Valerio, came oft to us soon after we arrived, and I commissioned him to employ every one that he could lay hands upon to bring in birds, bats, lizards, snakes, etc." " April ^th. The villani sent out to collect began to come in, and brought a various assortment of snakes, 1 1 1 62 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES lizards, and bats. We took a boat up the Anapo river to the fountain of Cyane in the afternoon. Fine snipe marshes, but very little in them now. The papyrus flourishes all along the upper part of the river, which is a narrow, insignificant stream, swarming with mullet. The fountain of Cyane is the head-spring, a beautiful deep blue, clear pool. More arrivals of animals in the evening." " The collecting expeditions brought in three species of bat, Rhinoloplms bihastatus, and, I lielieve, R. euryale, possibly R. divosus and Vespertilio kuhli ; some Pyrgita pctronia alive, two or three species of snakes, Cohiber ?!aMx, and Zamenis atrovirens, and several species of lizards, one I believe Lacerta rmiraUs viridis (?) and another a Gecko, and Gougylus oceHatus, besides a great variety of beetles, centipedes, frogs, woodlice, etc., etc." "April e^th. The steward brought in a specimen of Vesp. schreibcri from the Greek tombs. Magpies nesting in papyrus on banks of Anapo. Villani brought off five rock-sparrows {Pyrgita petronia), alive, two of which soon died, also various reptiles." " April 6th. A man came with some hundred bats^ caught in a cave to the southward, almost all Rhinolcfhus euryale I think, perhaps some R. divosus, five or six Vesp. schreiberi, and one Vesp. murinus. Out at the Saline I shot one snipe and one little kestrel (Falco cenchris). Saw the western black-throated wheatear (Saxicola stapaziiia)* a few ducks, herons, a spotted crake, and some species of • The wheatears {Saxicola) belong to the thrush family, allying the thrushes with the chats. The Common \ATieatear {S. amifii/ie) of our downlands nests in rabbit holes or in stone walls. The Black- throated Wheatear {S. siapazina), a South European species, has very rarely visited us. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 163 plover (^Charadrius). M shot a greenshank, and a little ringed-plover in the bay." " A/ril -jth. A great concourse of villani on board bringing bats — Rhinolophiis egnoriiim, R. euryale, R. bihastatus, and birds alive — hoopoe, golden plover, spotted crake, the latter of which I kept ; some snakes, of which I kept three Zainenis atrovircns var. carhotiarius, three Goiigylus ocellatus. The lizards seem to like small snails, of which we find any quantity ashore, chiefly on the squill plants. At the Saline very few snipes left. I only shot six jack, two Spanish sparrows, one crested lark. Many kestrels about, F. tinnunculus and F. cenchris. Saw Saxicola eenanthe. Saw an egret (I think Ardea alba). Men ashore with a pair of common kestrels, and some more black snakes (Z. atrovirens). A kite {Milvus regalis), hangs about the shipping in the bay." " Jpril loth. Went with M to the Saline, or salt pans at the head of the bay ; birdy-looking places, but too many people about for much bird-life. In the afternoon to see the catacombs and old subterranean church, where, they say, St. Paul preached on his stay- here. These catacombs are of immense extent, and not half explored. They are all hewn out of the solid rock, I suppose by the early Greek colonists, but were afterwards used by the Christian inhabitants. " At the SaHne, a marshy flat to the proper right of the Anapo river, intersected with streams and ditches, we found two or three snipes, a good number of little ringed-plover (^-Egialitis curonica), of which we shot five, some common sandpipers {T. hypoleucus), of which we shot four, two snipes, and one spotted crake 1 64 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES {Crex porzana). Saw ii few common wild ducks, a red- shank, or two, Alpine swift, some sedge warblers, of which I shot one for identification, a great many larks {Alauda calandra and A. cri5tata\ etc. Saw a fine kite on shore of bay, several kestrels, some pipits (?) and a whitethroat, I think the lesser whitethroat. Found a Vesp. schreiberi in the catacombs. In some lemon groves, near the Orecchio di Dionisio, it seems that all the sparrows (P. salicicolus) of the neighbourhood come in to roost ; they kept streaming into this from all quarters for about an hour in thousands, and made a deafening noise, which ceased immediately for an instant or two upon the crack ot a whip, and then redoubled. A sparrow-hawk was soaring over them. A peasant brought a curious longicorn beetle,* found in hollow wood, and another beautiful young snake, which is, I fancy, Z. hippocrepis. E saw a hoopoe fly across our bows in the morning, and one was brought off to us alive, but badly wounded, at night, which M bought." '■'■April wth. We were induced by a report of quails having arrived, and the Syracusan nobility having gone in pursuit to the Isola Bianca, to go out to the Scala Grasca to try our luck, but we only found two or three paisani and had no sport. " On the way to the Scala we saw several common * Longuvrnes. A group of beetles characterised by the e.\treme lens'th of their antennas. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 165 and black-throated wheatears (S. a'uanthe and S. stapaztHii), which appear to have just arrived. Saw a male grey harrier (sp. ?), only two or three quails, evidently birds that have passed the winter here. Found several Gougylus ocellatus under stones in the wheat fields, also a large centipede. A peasant brought ofF a dormouse {^Myoxu5\ the same as the Spanish species, but too much damaged to be worth keeping. Another fine specimen of Z. atrovirens brought in the evening." '■''April i2th. Sunday. Drove out in the afternoon to the convent and Tornia degli Capucini. Immense extent of quarried rock, with a great variety of wild plants and ferns. '^ April lyh. Many bats brought off", chiefly R. ferrum eq, some V. schreiberi, two or three R. hihastatus, and one that I am not sure about, but think is V. rnegapodius. Round the bay we saw many kestrels (chiefly, I think, the lesser kestrel,* F. cenchris), some Alpine and common swifts, a hoopoe, two stone curlews, great flights of yellow wagtails, a small flock of stilts, a large flock of some diving duck, which looked like tufted,t but were too far off" to make out. Shot a common whitethroat." * This little falcon, much smaller than our Kestrel {F. tinnunculus), is very abundant in summer in Andalucia. Very many may be seen flying about the cathedral in Seville. t The Tufted Duck {Fuligula cristaia). 1 66 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES " April Ufth. M , at the Saline, found many wood sandpipers (7'. glareola), of which he shot five, two spotted crakes {Crex porzana), and one red-throated pipit i^Anthus cervinus). He reports many yellow wagtails, some with black, heads." '■'■April 1 6//;. Just off Muro di Porco saw a roller (Coracias garrulus), very tired, making in for the land. A yellow wagtail and a swallow came on board. Saw several of these, and many shearwaters. Scops owl brought on board." "April ijth. A turtle-dove came on board early, and rested a long time on our mainstay. Saw many cranes, common herons, and some little egrets bound northwards. Great many shearwaters off Malta. Steward reports many quails and small birds in the market, also a purple heron ; he brought off two Scops owls." Malt..\ " April I S//z. We went with Admiral Drummond and a large party on board the Antelope to Gozo ; picnicked at the Torre degli Giganti, an old Phoenician town much after the fashion of the Murhags in Sardinia. Made acquaintance with Mr. C. A. Wright, editor of the Malta Times, the ornithologist of Malta. He has a good collection of birds, all killed in the island. Got several birds from the market." MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 167 The only birds I saw and heard out in the country were, common bunting, swift, swallow, yellow wagtail, fantail warbler {Sylvia cisticola). Steward bought a fine white-backed rock-thrush {M. saxatilis) in the market. 1 saw nothing therein in the evening but quails, hoopoe, turtle-dove, common bunting, short-toed lark, and thick-knee. " Wright's principal treasures are a very fine specimen of the Eleonora falcon {Falco ekonora:), in, I should say, third year's plumage, very perfect and bright in colouring, a good specimen of Bartram's sandpiper and of the white-winged plover, also a fine Saxko/a leucocephala, killed not long ago. He has a few reptiles, amongst others, a curious, dark variety of Lacerta muralis, found in Filfola ; of this he gave me a specimen, as also a young snake, which he says is Coluber leopardinus, but I think it must be Z. hippocrepis. It seems that C. leopardinus and Zamenis atrovirens are the only two snakes of Malta. He gave me a bat, I think V. kuhii, but am by no means sure. V. murinus appears to be common. Wright gave me two good specimens of little stint." " Birds heard of, observed, and obtained from market at Valetta from April 17th to May 7th, 1874. Falco vespcrtinus. Monticola atruapilla. F. cenchris. Petrocincla saxatilis. Circus (Bruginosus. Ruticilla titys. C. pallidus. Saxicola stopazina. Sirix flammea. Sylvia cinerea. Scops gilt. S. curruca. Cuculus canorus. S. melanocephala. Merops apiaster. Phyllopneuste sibilatrix. Caprimulgus europceus. Budytes flavus. Cypselus apus. Alotacilla alba. Clielidon urbica. Calandrtlla brachydactyla Hirundo rustica. Emberiza miliaria. Muscicapa collaris. Passer salicicolus. Turtur auritus. Oriolus galbula. Ortygia coturnix. Coracias garrulus. 1 68 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES Crex forzana. Larus leucophsus. Glareola pratituola. Upupa epops. ^Egialitis fluviatilis. CEdicnemus crepitans. Himantopus candidus. Tri/igu temmincki. Totanns glottis. Scolopax major. T. glareola. Ardeola minor. T. hypokucus. Ardea purpurea. Fuffinus kuhli. Phcenicopterus rosetis. Tringa subarquata. Fuffinus anglorum. Muscicapa collaris. Palermo '■'■May 13//?. In the Universita is a fair collection of Sicilian birds, with a few mammals and several bats which were too high up to examine closely ; but I made out Dysopes rueppellii, V. ma-rinus, V. auritus, Barbastellus, and there are a good many other species. Professor Doderlein tells me that the fallow deer (C damn) is still found wild in some of the forests of Sicily, also the roebuck (C. capreolus), but the latter is rare. Wolves (of which there are specimens in the collection) are still found in the island. 1 noticed the dormouse ( Myoxus glis) and M. nitela, pine marten, polecat, and weasel {not the stoat), fox, badger, and porcupine. Amongst the birds the great rarities are three very fine specimens of Audouin's gull {Larus audouini), apparently fine adult birds, two slender-billed gulls {Larus tenuirostris), two cream-coloured coursers {Cursorius gallicus), and four common francolins {Francolinus vulgaris), about which Doderlein gives full particulars in his book. He tells MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 169 me that the hemipode {Turnix sylvatica)* is very common in certain parts of the south coast of Sicily. He showed me a falcon about which he was doubtful, which I consider undoubtedly a specimen of the true lanner (F. lanarius, Schlegel).+ It very much resembles some of those which I obtained the year before last from Mogador ; it was killed near Palermo. He gave me some interesting particulars of the ornithology of Ustica and Pantellaria, from the latter of which he has just returned. Marmora's warbler {Sylvia sarda) is very common there, and in Ustica a falcon breeds, which must I expect be F. eieomra. The lammer- geier [Gypaetus barbatus^ and griffon vulture {Gyps fulvus) are not uncommon in Sicily. Caccabis graca is the only- partridge, and the red-rumped swallow {Hirundo rufuld) is by no means rare. I had no time to go into the subject of bats and reptiles, and must, if possible, go again." '■'■ May i^ih. Saw many bee-eaters and some woodchats at the Favorita." '■^ May i6(h. Several swallows came about us in the gale, and a poor turtle-dove got knocked into the sea by our mainsail." " May ijth. During the day we had a wood shrike {Lanius rufus), a swift {Cypselus apus), some dozen of * One of a group of quails known as ' bustard-quails.' The hind toe is absent in this group. (See Presidential Address, p. 39.) t The Saker. (Gen/ma sacer or lanarius.) lyo MEDITERRANEAN NOTES common swallows, a house martin, a wheatear (^Saxkola cenanthe\ two wood warblers {Phyllopneuste sibilatrix), a garden warbler, a redstart (i?. phcenicurus), and several doves (JFurtur auritus) on board and about us. Many shearwaters about." CAGLIARf ^^ May i<)th. Fine morning with a south-west breeze. We went away to the Stagno de la Scaffa in the cutter, but could not get her about much, owing to want of water. Landed on the island. Found a very old friend, Antonio Fanni, whom I knew here in 1862, and engaged him and his boat for to-morrow. " A nightjar (^Caprimulgus europ^us) flew close past the yacht from the sea, and lit amongst the stones under the sea wall. We saw marsh harriers in abundance, kestrel, hoopoe, rose-backed shrike, many warblers (Sylvia melanocephala, S. cimrea, S. curruca), calandra and short- toed larks in great abundance. There were many quails, but it was almost impossible to flush them in the thick scrub on the island. We also saw common wild duck, thick-knee, turtle-dove, a few small waders, Larus leucophaus. Sandwich tern {Sterna cantiaca) and S. leuco- paria, and coots. Only shot i rabbit, 2 coots, 2 quails, 2 short-toed larks, i common bunting, and i young shag." " May loth. Fine inorning, strong wind. We went away to La Scaffii, took the boats, and went right away to the far end of the Stagno. Stanley Crane. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 171 "Saw black vulture,* flamingo, purple and squacco herons, red-crested whistling duck, and hooded crow, besides birds seen yesterday. Found many nests of the last-named in the tamarisks by side of river ; one con- tained two young, which we brought home ; only one flamingo seen. We shot two young L. leucophieus, and two coots. M found a nest of the short-toed lark with three eggs." "May list. Lowering gloomy day. We drove out to Ouarta to see the festa of S. Helena, the patroness of the village. There was a fear of rain, so the women were not nearly so gorgeously arrayed as usual at these festas. About seventy yoke of oxen decked with flowers and little holy pictures, lemons, etc., marched in the pro- cession of the saint. We were taken by the host, Signor L. Rossi Vitelli, into his house, and introduced to his wife and family ; all most civil. We saw the procession from his upper windows. It blew hard at night." " May 12nd. Gloomy, threatening day, with sirocco wind. I went off to La ScafFa about 9 a.m., got Antonio * The vultures of Spain — other than the Lammergeier — are three in number : the Black Vulture ( Vultiir monachus), a solitary, tree- nesting species, which lays but one egg; the Griffon Vulture {Gyps fulvus), which nests colonially on rocks, and lays one, or more rarely two eggs ; and the Egyptian Vulture {Neophron pennoptert/s), which nests in rocks, sometimes on disused nests of other large birds, and usually lays two eggs ; but in no species are these nesting situations invariable. 172 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES with his boat and went away to the isolotti. Found many- birds and eggs ; an interesting day, and no rain to speak of. I brought Antonio and his nephew on board. He tells me that all the stagni were once terra firma and cultivated, but that during some war in the time of the Pisan dominion, some one or other enemy let in the sea water and drowned the country. {Quien snbe '^) " On the isolotti we found a good many nests and eggs of the common tern. We took about sixty eggs of this species, and also eggs of the little tern. These are the two most abundant species. The sandwich tern is also common, but we found no eggs ot it. Saw one solitary black tern {Sterna Jissipes). Found several nests, of the common wild duck with eggs, one with young^ ones, and one nest of three eggs of the Kentish plover, too hard-sat to blow. Prince caught a young duck about half grown, and an old one on the nest. I saw the following species : — " Osprey, black vulture, marsh harrier, falcon,, kestrel, grey crow, calandra, skylark, short-toed lark, stonechat, common bunting, fantailed warbler, Kentish plover, coot, water-hen, wild duck, red-crested pochard, herring gull, Sandwich tern, common tern, little tern, black tern, flamingo, and cormorant. I shot 4 Sandwich tern, 4 common tern, 3 little tern, 2 herring gulls, 2. Kentish plovers, 2 wild ducks. The red-crested pochards- are in large flocks, and do not seem to be breeding; as yet. Prince caught the coots just hatched." MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 173 " May -ij^th. Rounded C. Spartivento about 2 p.m. Beautiful coast. Wind ahead, so we ran in and anchored behind Isola Rossa, in the Bay of Teulada, where we found a Neapolitan brigantine, full of passengers, bound to Boria and Algiers. The captain thereof asked me to go fishing with him ; I declined. He brought us off a few small rock fish, and I gave him a bottle of Monica- Sauterian wine from Old Cara. The Isola is a rocky Island overgrown with scrub. " Made out on the Isola Rossa a great number of rock doves, shags, Alpine swifts, common swifts, a peregrine falcon, one or two Eleonora falcons, some kestrels, and herring gulls," Vacca " May 25//;. Beautiful morning. Went away to the Isola Rossa between 5 and 6 a.m. Found and shot a good many birds. The yacht got under way about 7.30, and stood off and on for us. Went aboard about 9 a.m., and stood away with light head breezes round Cape Teulada. Bore away for the island of Vacca, about two or three miles from Cape Sperone. The yacht lay to and we went off to the island, a high black precipitous mass of apparently volcanic rock. Found a place where the two men could scramble ashore on the east side. Great ornithological success. On board again about 7 p.m. ; head wind, so ran about three miles up the Bay of Palmas towards San Antioco, 174 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES and anchored in a snug bay in about ten fathoms, and had a quiet night. Vacca is covered with ice plant on the steep parts, and at the top are flat places overgrown with coarse grass and other plants. On the south side the rock overhangs the sea ; the west side is quite precipitous, and weather-worn to an appalling extent." "■^ May 2^th. On the Isola Rossa, which is very rough, rocky, and overgrown with various bushes and grasses, we found a vast number of shags (Carbo desmarest'i), some young of which were still in the nests, on the east side of the island, which is steep and craggv, as is the north end. It slopes down to the south and west and there are many places where a landing can be effected. M reports a spring of fresh water. Besides the shags we saw peregrine falcon, kestrel, rock dove, Alpine and common swifts, rock martin [CotiU rupestris). blue thrush, and herring gull. The switts are in vast numbers, and there are a good many rock doves. We shot 3 adult and i young shag, i peregrine falcon, i kestrel, 6 rock doves, 3 Alpine swifts, and i rock martin, of which I only saw a pair with their nest under a shelf of rock, not very high but quite inaccessible. Jem Poland, who went ashore, reported many lizards and several empty gulls' nests. He brought away one egg of herring gull, which was too hard-sat to blow. M found and broke an egg which I suppose to have been a shag's. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 175 " Last night after dinner I was on deck and heard strange moaning sounds from the rock, which I attributed to wild cats or perhaps seals, but am now convinced that they proceeded from the big cinereous shearwater, of which, however, we did not see any about the rock. On nearing Vacca we could distinctly make out amongst hundreds of gulls a large number of Falco eleomvce ; of which more anon. The shags on and about the island were in incredible numbers, quite fringing the little rock of Vitello and sitting on every coign of vantage on the rock of the island itself. We saw a great', many shearwaters in the Bay of Palmas and four griffon vultures about Cape Teulapa. Two of the men went ashore at a cleft on the east side of the island. The Eleonora falcons kept swooping over us ; I got one, and M three (brought to bag), but I knocked down another, and he says he shot three more. Only one of those bagged was in the hobbyish plumage, all the rest were sooty. They found several big shearwaters {Pitffinus kuhli) on their nests under the debris in the aforesaid cleft, and caught three and got their eggs. Some swifts, but not in vast numbers. Several pigeons and one turtle-dove. We shot four F. eleonorie, five rock doves, and caught the three shearwaters mentioned before. The rock is inexpressibly wild and grand, and the multitude of birds makes it most interesting. Saw a very large seal close to us." 176 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES Vacca and Toro " May idth. Beautiful morning. Went off in the cutter again about 6 a.m. to Vacca ; did not find so many birds, but landed several of the men who brought off many eggs. The yacht got under way about 8.30 a.m., and stood down towards us with a light north-west breeze ; we went on board about 9 a.m. and ran down to the lee side of Toro (some seven miles perhaps). Toro is of an entirely different formation from Vacca ; it is higher and apparently composed of hard sandstone very much fretted and broken by weather ; the northern side slopes in a sort of succession of broken terraces to the sea. The eastern side is chiefly precipitous, with masses of sea-beaten rock at the foot of the steeps. The island is overgrown with a plant bearing a bright yellow flower. The western side, exposed to the blowing north-west wind, we did not explore. Owing to the height of the rock we did not reach many birds, but I had my greatest ornithological triumph. We got on board again about I p.m., and it immediately came on to blow very hard from the north-west, so we, being rather in want of supplies, ran on to the bay of Palmas, and anchored off San Antioco. I stayed on board and blew eggs. The wind fell, and we had a very quiet night, with occasional heavy showers. Additional Entry " On Vacca this morning we found that the Eleonora falcons had, to a great measure, left the rock, MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 177 and those we saw were shy ; I succeeded, however, in shooting two, one a splendid black bird, the other was one of yesterday's wounded birds, and unfortunately fell on a ledge to which the men could not clamber. The rock doves also made themselves scarce, and we only shot two. The men scoured the island, and brought off several dozen of herring gulls' eggs and twelve eggs of the great shearwater, with seven of the parent birds, caught on the nest about the cliffs at the south end of the rock. I saw many Alpine swifts, but not the swarm that was at Isola Rossa ; on the west side, which is very grand, a few kestrels ; shags really in thousands. The common swifts have a settlement on the low crags at the north-east end. I shot a very fine raven, one of two seen. The men brought down two young herring gulls. " On Toro we found a great many Eleonora falcons, but they flew so high, and were so shy, that I only got one, a beautiful specimen, very black. M and some of our boys having landed with some difficulty on the north side, Tait, James Hills, and I lay in the boat on the west side. I noticed several gulls on their nests on a weed-grown slope on the north-east side, not very high up, and directly they took wing I saw that they were not the herring gull (^Larus argentatus). One gave me a good chance, and I brought him down dead on the rock close to us ; Hills went to pick him up, and what was my delight when I found he was a splendid specimen of Lnrus audouini. I immediately sent Hills to the nests ; 12 178 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES he found six eggs, one nest containing two, and four others one egg each. The eggs are hke those of the herring gull, but considerably smaller. I fired several shots, but did not get another ; they are very shy and wary, and I only had No. 4 and 6 shot. There appeared to be a colony of, perhaps, eight or ten pairs in the particular spot mentioned. " We had seen a great many gulls at the north- west corner as we sailed up, but the wind and swell were so dead on that I did not care to go round there. The men brought off one voung gull alive, but I had told them that I did not want eggs of herring gull, so they did not take any. I noticed at least two pairs of Barbary falcons,* but they flew high about the precipices, screaming and chasing the Eleonoras and gulls, and did not give a chance. We saw no rock doves, no swifts, and few shags on Toro. The men reported many lizards, but caught none. On Vacca thev saw also manv lizards, and many snakes, but were afraid to handle them ; Jem Poland also reports on Vacca a small, dark bird, probably Sylvia sarda ; he found two empty nests built of grass in the scrub on that island. I told the steward to examine the crops of the falcons : he found in the dark bird the remains of some small, dark coleopterous insect, and in the hobby-coloured bird a yellowish, transparent-winged insect. * Falco barbarus, a small red-naped North African form of the Red Shahin (^F. babylonicus). MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 179 "On going off to Vacca in the morning, we found a great many shearwaters sitting on the water, amongst which were some of the smaller species, but we found no eggs of this bird. On Toro is none of the ice plant, which covers the slopes in Vacca. These Eleonora - falcons have a cry quite different from the peregrine or kestrel, and, indeed, from the hobby — a sort of hoarse chide, something like that of the true lanner (F. lanarius). The shearwaters, on being caught, make a sad, moaning noise, and sometimes throw up green, oily matter. I found the eggs of Audouin's gull almost all hard-sat, and had to make ghastly holes in some of them. The shearwaters' eggs were all fresh." Bay of Palmas " May ^-jth. We ran down to about our anchorage of Monday night last, a bay on the west side of the Bay of Palmas, where we found a number of coral fishers, Genoese and Neapolitans, who had run in there for shelter from the gale. They told us they dredge the coral in about fifty to sixty fathoms. The country round our little bay consists of low hills, with a thick growth of lentiscus and euphorbia. The white sand in the bay is most beautiful, and the water wonderfully clear; there is a small winter stream, now only a chain of shallow pools, with tamarisks and other shrubs growing about it ; some cultivation. Conversed with some native goatherds, who gave us some milk fresh from the nanny- i8o MEDITERRANEAN NOTES goats. We took our guns, but did nothing ; the hills are most grievous walking, being covered with loose and sharp-edged stones. " In this little bay, which I call Success Bay, we saw but little in the bird way ; one snake eagle {Circaetus gallicus)* a iz^^ blackbirds, linnets, goldfinches, many buntings, two or three ravens, a gull or two, and black- headed warblers were about all. W R , who had no gun, put up a pair of partridges. I got two small, young gulls from the coral fishers, taken, they say, on Toro, which I believe to be Larus audouini ; we bought also some red mullet, caught in this bay, and a fair bit of coral. One of the Sonde goatherds, on my asking about tortoises, said he had seen one that morning, and conducted me to a shallow pool in the little stream, where he soon grubbed out an emys with his hoe, which I pocketed. Some of the coral boys had a sparrow's nest, with eggs, and a nest of young blackbirds. I find almost all the herring gulls' eggs hard-sat, and very difficult to blow." " May 2%th. Very fine morning ; stood out for Toro about 10.30 a.m. with a light north-westerly breeze. Found a very heavy sea outside, which broke so. hard upon Toro that though M and I went off in the * The Snake Eagle (Circaetus gallicus) is common in Andalucia during the summer, but on the approach of winter, as the snakes and lizards, on which it feeds, retire, it migrates into Africa. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES i8i cutter I hardly liked to attempt landing any of our boys ; yet we had, for the very short time we were away, great success. We ran back with a fresh breeze to our anchorage of Monday 25th, i.e. the first bay on the west side of the Bay of Palmas, inside an old watch tower." " Off Toro we shot two very fine specimens of Larus audouini and a good dark Fako ekonorce, of which we saw a great many. The gulls (Z. audouini) do not make much noise, and their cry is not so hoarse as that of Z. kucophccus." Vacca. Toro. Sailing for Port Mahon " May i()th. About 6 a.m. we stood away for Vacca, with many volunteers in the cutters, to explore the island. Some success. Came on board again and went awav for Toro. Landed M and the captain, with many of the men. " On Vacca we got two F. eleonorte in the hobbyish plumage, fine specimens, and recovered by aid of a rope the remains of the specimen lost on the 26th ; this had been picked to pieces by the ravens. M shot a fine male raven, and the men got a nest of these birds containing three callow young. There were a good many Eleonora falcons and rock doves about on the south and south-west sides of the island. The men got a tin box full of lizards (Gougylus ocellatus) alive, and a shearwater and egg. Tait found the wing feathers of a common nightjar in a little cave. We bagged 2 F. eleonorte, 3 rock doves, i raven, i shearwater, and the young 1 82 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES raven and. lizards before mentioned. A large black snake reported, apparently in pursuit of a quail. On Tore we found a very great number of F. eleonorte^ more than 1 have seen together before, but Larus audouini had made himself scarce, and I am not quite certain that I clearly made out a single bird of that species ; the men, however, found six of its eggs, which I emptied with very great trouble, as they almost all contained young birds, dead and within a day or two of hatching. I repeatedly saw and had two or three very long shots at a beautiful Barbary falcon, but I only knocked out a wing feather or two. I think from the action of this bird that the nest is somewhere in the precipices near the extreme summit of the island on the east side. The men report thousands of green lizards, but could not catch any. We bagged five F. eleomrie, six eggs of Larus audouini and a young shag, cut over by Jem Poland with a boat's stretcher." " May 30M. The steward found the remains of some small bird in the crop ot one of the hobby-plumaged Eleonora falcons. The rest of those shot yesterday con- tained several species of beetles, dragon-flies, grasshoppers, and an animal something like a diminutive boiled shrimp. Saw a great many porpoises and a turtle." Port Mahon '■^ May 3 1 J/. Some flying fish seen off^ Cape Negro. In the harbour of Port Mahon saw kestrel, swift, swallow, herring gull, and heard quails." MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 183 ^'■'June 1st. Dull, gloomy day, strong south-west wind outside the island, which, however, we hardly felt in our sheltered nook here. I spent the greater part of the morning and a good deal of the afternoon in blowing herring gulls' eggs from Vacca, a very nasty job, as they were almost all either just ready to hatch or rotten. The Consul's interpreter tells me that he is the happy owner of the Isla del Ayre, some five miles from the entrance to the harbour, and that on said isla are many rabbits and a quantity of perfectly black lizards ; this we must investigate when the wind permits. Took the cutter in the afternoon, and rowed about the north side of the harbour into several little snug bays, where we found natives fishing with nets and lines, catching large round- banded fishes with the former and ' lisa ' with the latter." Isla del Ayre " June 2nd. Fine, bright, warm day. The Consul's interpreter gave us leave to go to his island, the Isla del Ayre, to the south-west, and shoot some rabbits. We had to row all the way to the island, some eight or ten miles, as there was no wind. Too much swell on the cliffs of Minorca to attempt shooting pigeons, of which we saw several. The Isla del Ayre is a jumble of rock overgrown in some places with samphire and thistles. Found the three lighthouse men, an Alavese, an Ivi^an, and a Mallorquin, very civil and intelligent. M shot some rabbits. 1 84 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES " We saw a kite {Milvus regalis) hanging about the north side of the harbour, many cormorants (I think Ph. carbo\ and herring gulls. About the cliffs and caves some rock doves, many swifts and kestrels. On the island a good many rabbits, some pied with white and some sandy, a pair of ravens, an eagle, which looked to me like Circaetus gallkus, a few rock doves, a gull or two, and some blue rock-thrushes. The lizards, which are shining glossy black above and blue beneath, seem to me to be the same variety of race of Lacerta mtiralis as that found in Filfla, Malta. The lighthouse men say that there are no snakes whatever on the island, and that many birds kill themselves against the light at passage times." Cahera " yune j^th. Fine morning. Just as I went on deck at 6 a.m. a breeze sprang up from the east-north-east, and we spun away round Cape Salinas to the lee of the island of Cahera, which is high and precipitous with wood and scrub in many places. " At the west of the island, a fine range of weather- worn limestone precipices, we saw very few birds ; a kite, two or three shags, some swifts, herring gulls (one of which was shot), a blue rock-thrush, and a large brown hawk, possibly an osprey, were about all. Saw a beautiful flying fish as we came off to the yacht. I noticed a great many of the smaller shearwaters at sea, which look very dark on the back compared to the others. Saw MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 1,85 three very large cetaceans out at sea and some stormy- petrels. The few goats we saw on Cahera appeared to be quite tame. It is said that there are wild goats on the island." IviZA " June ^th. Anchored in the Bay of Iviza. The town of Iviza stands on a rock of the north side of the bay in a rather good situation, but looks a poor place. A pretty amphitheatre of hills with fine cultivation in the valleys. We got away with a breeze from east-south-east ; very heavy sea till we got through the passage between Iviza and Formentera. Here we found the water perfectly smooth, and slipped merrily along past Vedra, a high and curiously shaped little island, into the Bay of San Antonio of Puerto Magus, and brought up about 4.30 p.m. in five fathoms close to the little village of San Antonio. I heard several quails calling. No rock doves, which I had hoped for. Beautiful warm evening. " Apparently a singular absence of birds all round the coast of Iviza. We saw nothing, but a very few yellow-legged herring gulls (L. leucophdeus), and a very few shearwaters. A good many flying fish." " yune 6th. A man of San Antonio assured me that on the islands Correjera and Bledas are many black lizards, which are not found on Iviza ; he also declares that there are no snakes at all in Iviza. Several tunny fish followed close under our stern for a long time ; one 1 86 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES of them was struck deep by Tait with the harpoon, but wrenched it out. Saw three or four stormy petrels." " 'June <^th. Started in the cutter about 4.30 a.m. for the Dehesa ; cloudy morning. We landed on the beach near where the pines begin, and wandered about amongst them with no result ; took boat and went down some three miles farther on. No sport. It came out very hot and we took a long siesta in the shade. " The paucity of bird life in the Dehesa is remark- able. We only saw about half a dozen rabbits, two or three kites, several woodchats, many buntings, crested larks, greenfinches, black-headed, passerine and fantail warblers, two or three kingfishers, and a ringed-plover. M saw some lizards, but could not secure any. Many sweet plants, myrtle, thyme, rosemary, lentiscus — and wild flowers in abundance, quantities of butterflies, and insects of all kinds. Not many lizards. Saw one large snake, I think Calopetta lacertina. I found a nest of common bunting with six, and a nest of black-headed warbler with four eggs. Quantities of shells." At Sea '•'■June \ith. Beautiful day. We had light airs of wind and calm all day, and made but little way. Passed the Columbretes island, which rather made my mouth water, as there are reported to be many snakes and no doubt many birds there. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 187 " Many porpoises, two sharks, and two turtles seen. Vast numbers of small, snake-like fishes drifting past us all day." November 1878 to May 1879 Plymouth " November i st. Arrived in Glowworm at Plymouth about 1 1 last night, after a fiir run from Lyming- ton Roads, which anchorage we left under steam and sailed about 8 a.m. yesterday. Saw some gannets* and a great many guillemots on our way. Fine, bright, frosty morning. I hear of three inches of snow at Lilford, and they sav there has been some on Dartmoor, and that woodcocks have come in in some numbers. T. shot the only one seen of this species in Oxon Wood on Monday last." " November 2nd. Fine moonlight night with slight haze, just the weather for woodcocks on migration." " November T,^d. A common gull (L. canus) has for some years frequented the garden of the Vicarage at Ivybridge, where Mrs. G feeds him, and has * The Gannet {Sula hissana) also called the Solan Goose, breeds, as is generally known, in great numbers on the Bass Rock and on Ailsa Craig. It is not a ' goose,' but is allied to the cormorants and the pelicans. It is only a winter visitor to the Southern Atlantic. 1 88 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES become quite tame. He sometimes disappears for several days ; I saw him this afternoon sitting on the top of one of the chimneys of the Vicarage. He does not seem specially to affect the little pond." At Sea " November ith. It fell calm early, so we got up steam and proceeded easily all day. Very fine and much warmer. We saw a great quantity of two species of porpoise, one of which Calmadv * shot dead with a No. 4 cartridge, but though we went about to pick him up, we could not find him, and I presume he sank. I shot a large shearwater. Saw large numbers of sea birds — gannets, gulls, shearwaters, guillemots, and two small dark-coloured skuas. " A migrating fieldfare, very tired, flew around us- several times, but would not come aboard." At Sea and Gironde " November %th. A good many lesser black-backed gulls and laughing gulls in the Gironde. Saw one flock of wigeon ; also crows, and some small birds, larks- or pipits, crossing the river." Pauillac " November ()th. Went ofi^ in the cutter to the- other side of the river, where we saw some mud * The Captain. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 189 creeks and backwaters, but almost entirely devoid of bird life. We landed on the He Philippe and found a beautiful bit of snipey, reedy ground, but we only saw two of the desired birds, and only one shot was fired, without result. Saw a itw fowl and other things." Santander " November 20th. Took cutter away up Ria de Cubas in search of woodcocks. Not much luck, as, though we found three, we only had a shot at and killed one. A good many fowl, and mud birds about, but very wide awake." ^'■November 21st. Fine morning. Spent the day at the harbour birds. The flat space inside sea at top of harbour is now all wet and swampy, and swarms with fowl of sorts." " November 22nd. Went and visited O'Connor's sands for dunlin with some success, then Rio de Cubas. Tried Bosque del Coronel : only saw one woodcock ; no shot at him." " November 2\th. Squally gusts from south-west but very warm. A flock of thirty wild geese seen." " November 26th. Wild windy morning, but fine overhead and very warm. Started in steam launch towing dinghy about 11.30 a.m. and proceeded up Curlew I90 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES Creek. Had several exciting chases after scoters,* but were unlucky in losing two that we knocked down, and also a fine male hen-harrier, at which I fired, but it fell into a piece of Indian corn near Maliano, and was not to be found. We lunched at Port Plover, and after- wards went away up Quarantine Creek. Very little sport, but good fun cruising about." " I^ovember 2%th. Left for the O'Connor sands, upon the north side of which the sea was breaking grandly, the wind having shifted to north-west. I shot a young herring gull and had one long crack at a great northern diver, who did not like it, dived, and as far as we were con- cerned, never came up again. We landed on the sands, and finding no birds thereon proceeded to the Venta de Soma and across the hill to the left of it. Found a beautiful-looking woodcock covert just behind the village, but no woodcock in the part of it that we tried. Met a don with a dog, who told us that there had been a vast number of woodcocks some days ago, but that he feared that this southerly wind had taken them all away. He directed us to a weedy lake just south of the village of Paredo, where he said there were some snipes. We went on there, and found several. I was tired and sat about, and only got two or three long shots. Calmady tramped the marsh boldly and had several shots, but * The scoters are sea ducks, although they come inland at nesting time. The birds referred to were probably the Common Scoter (CEdemia nigra). MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 191 somehow was out of form and only shot one jack snipe. Minna flushed two or three water-rails out of shot." " December ^th. Bright morning, heavy squalls of rain and hail. Went away in steam launch and dinghy down to sand-spit, shooting a scoter on the way. We were rather too late for the dunlins, as, when disturbed, they knew that the muds at head of harbour were bare, and made off there. We had two long exciting and eventually successful chases after a great northern and red-throated diver." " December ^ik. Went away as usual with steam launch and dinghy to the sand-spit, but found the dunlins, though in great numbers, unapproachable. Had the extraordinary luck to kill two great northern divers in three shots." ^'December i^th. Glowing morning. Got under way soon after 8 a.m. and steamed out. Got a north-east breeze for a few hours ; rainy squalls. Saw a grey phalarope sitting calmly on the waves after the fashion of a gull." VlGO " December i^th. Scenery very fine ; rugged granite mountains all around, with patches of fir and oak wood in places, and cultivation here and there. I was much reminded of the West of Scotland and Its lochs. We 192 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES went right away as far as we could get, some eight miles or so, to a little marsh below Villa Boa. We saw myriads of wild-fowl in the bay, but quite unapproach- able. Found a few snipes, but awkward to shoot. A nice alder tarn, most likely-looking place for woodcock, but saw none." ^^ January 2nd, 1879. Beautiful morning, but very red sunrise — a bad omen. The doctor and I went off after breakfast in cutter across the bay to a wooded point and wandered about through fine woods intersected at short distances by granite walls very wearisome to surmount ; not much undergrowth, but here and there patches of brambles and boggy springs. We only saw one wood- cock, which escaped us. The doctor had a shot at what he calls grouse-red-legged partridges. We cruised along the north shore after luncheon and shot a {qv^ water birds." " January ith. Strong wind in morning, rather better about II. Started in cutter, but it came on to blow and rain furiously, and we could not do much. Conversed with a native sportsman who lies up on one of the rocky islands ; he tells me that he sometimes gets a heavy shot at sleeping ducks wafted down to him by wind on tide. He knows of only five sorts of ducks — mallard, wigeon, teal, scoters, and mergansers. I noticed several peculiarities of the Gallician dialect — e.g., the ' g' strongly aspirated, as Vijo for Vigo, etc. He always addresses me as ' sinore ' instead of senor, and put many u's in place of o's." MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 193 '■'■January \'^th. Went off in cutter to north side of bay, landed near Cangas ; very pretty, but, in the way of shoot, quite unproductive country ; shores fringed with reefs of rock. " Saw great northern diver, sparrow-hawk. Vast flights of wigeon going out seaward, and two or three adult gannets in the bay." Lisbon *' January i\th. Went ashore about noon and up to see the Natural History Museum. Made acquaintance with Barboza du Bocage, who was most civil and did the honours of the collection. There are many interesting things, but the birds are dreadfully badly stuffed. Many comparatively common Spanish birds seem to be absent from, or rare in Portugal — e.g.^ Passer salicicolus, Capri- mulgus rujicollis. Bocage showed me a specimen, a very bad one, of the blackcap from the Azores, with a black hood, apparently very distinct from the common form, and a new triton, lately discovered in Portugal. The cream of the collection are the birds from the Portuguese African possessions." " January i^th. I never noticed gulls so tame as here, chiefly L. ridibundus, with a few L. fuscus, L. argen- latus, or L. leucophi£us!' '■'■January I'&th. Very fine bright morning. We waited for a pilot, who was engaged to come on board at 13 194 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 6 a.m., till nearly 8. Got another man, almost wholly unintelligible ; steamed a few miles up under the north hank. Dense fog came on that soon passed ofF. About 1 2 Saurin and I went off in the cutter up the river : a long, fruitless pull, as we found it quite impossible to get anywhere near land, immense flat muds stretching in all directions. It came on showery. We did at last manage to land on an island, where I had an ineffectual shot at a short-eared owl, the only thing I saw within shot. There are a vast number of wild-fowl and marsh birds, but no means of getting at them. Saw marsh harrier, merlin, short-eared owl, cormorant, wild duck, wigeon, shoveler, teal, spoonbill, (.'') egret, curlew, redshank, whim- brel, heron, dunlin, grey plover, meadow pipit, ringed- plover, skylark, crested lark, white wagtail, avocet, goose (sp. ?), snipe." " 'January i<^th. Very bright morning. Started in steam launch a long way up the river Tagus, landed on various islands, saw a great many wild-fowl and some snipes, but totally unapproachable. Met an old shooter in a little canoe, who told me that he had been shooting wild-fowl and catching eels with a bunch of worms for sixty years. He only had one teal." Cadiz " Februayy yd. Went away in cutter to the Tro- cadero, and some way up a creek on river towards Puerto Real. Great flats with salt pans, not many birds." MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 195 " February i^th. Bright morning, strong north- west wind. After breakfast and writing several letters we went ashore and found Juan Espinar and his brother Pepe waiting for us, the former having brought a mare from la Marismilla lent to me by the administrator. I mounted her, and with Pepe's horse set off for the Cara de la Marismilla, where I found Juan's daughter Maria now married to a carabineer, looking very pretty. We went on thence to the edge of the marisma, found some beautiful snipey-looking places, but did not see a single snipe, or anything else shootable within range except a few rabbits, at one of which the captain shot and missed. They all say that this is about the worst season for small game that they ever had. Last year the partridges and rabbits died of drought. There has been no cold this winter to send in snipes or woodcocks, and the Marisma is so full that nothing can be done. " Saw imperial eagle,* common kite, kestrel, raven, magpie, blackbird, song-thrush, chaffinch, serin, black- headed warbler, robin, pipits, white wagtail, red- legged partridge, whimbrel, flamingo, wild duck, etc." San Lucar de Barrameda " February 1 8//?. A white owl shrieks round the vessel every night. Heard chifFchafF in Alcazar gardens. Large flock of wild geese passed over at night." * Aquila adalberti, also called the White-shouldered Eagle. .\. tree-nesting eagle, generally distributed in suitable localities in VVestcin Andalucia. 196 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES '■'■February \-jth. Saw, for the first time this course, great bustard, crane, white stork, calandra lark, besides quantities of peewits, golden plover, curlews, and small waders, marsh harriers, ravens, etc., etc." Seville " February 22nd. Fine morning, very high wind. Took carriage, with T. and Saccone, the interpreter, to Coria del Rio. The road between San Juan and Triana is almost impracticable, a complete slough of despond — mud, water, and ruts, deep enough to bury a regiment. However, we arrived safely, and T. went off after snipes with Manuel's son and got thirteen, chiefly jacks. I went with old Manuel to his hut about a mile off, but my shooting was stopped by a tremendous squall of rain and wind, which forced me to shelter again in the hut, where T. eventually came, and we lunched. We started towards Seville about 4.30, and had to walk from San Juan to Triana. " Saw neophron and common kite. T. saw a good many snipes, but chiefly jacks. Old Manuel has four lanner's * eggs for me ; also a bottle of snakes and lizards in spirits. * The Lanner {Fako feldeggi). This falcon was formerly much used in falconry, and has been trained in England of late years with qualified success. It does not moult the striped feathers of the breast into ' bars,' as the peregrine does, but the longitudinal stripes of the immature bird remain longitudinal. FLAMiNt;oi;s in thk Aviakv pond. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 197 " Ruiz brought his cousin, Rafael Mena, of Malaga, to see me in the evening. This seems a very intelligent man ; he tells me that three more trumpeter bullfinches have turned up at Malaga, and that the cream-coloured courser has occurred there three times in his recollection. He knows of a young Gypaetus now in the nest." " February ij^th. Started in steam launch with T. and captain for Algaba ; arrived about 10 a.m. Took Perico, his brother-in-law, two sons, and two horses after bustards. Went a long way, only saw nine, and only got one long ineffectual shot. " Saw griffon vultures, bustards, cranes, storks, sand martins, kingfisher, Cetti's warbler, Bonelli's eagle, peewits, one snipe, great number of larks — calandras, skylarks, and crested. A very itw Cdandrella. Multitudes of kestrels T. shot a hoopoe." " February i^th. In steam launch to Algaba, picked up Perico and a pilot for Alcata del Rio, arrived about 10.30. Saw a great many bustards, but our only shots were at impossible distances." '^ Februaty iGth. Fine bright day. We took steam launch at 9 a.m., and proceeded to Coria. Met Manuel and son with a horse ; along river-side to Puebla, behind which village are many likely snipey places. We found a good many, but the full snipes were very wild, and those we killed were mostly jacks. The golden plovers afforded good sport. Bag : 12 golden plovers, 198 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 14 snipes, 2 peewits, i ringed plover, i green sandpiper, 2 thrushes. Saw serpent eagle." " February ^'jth. Another brilliant day. We went down in steam launch to San Juan de Alfarache, whither a carriage came to meet us, and took us on to Puebla. We beat much the same ground as yesterday, and had fair sport. Bag : 1 8 golden plovers, 1 6 snipes, 3 peewits. Saw stone curlews." " March %th. Perico came from Algaba with accounts of many bands of bustards thereabouts. Settled to go out thither to-morrow. " Started at 6.30 a.m. in a carriage to the Venta de Rio Palo, about a mile beyond Italica, on ' the road to Badajoz. Perico and others met us there. We found a great many bustards, but they came very high, and we only got one, a young male. Saw myriads of cranes on their way north, several hoopoes, stone curlews, etc., nothing new. Found old Manuel on board, with a very fine adult peregrine, a wigeon, and a pintail from the Isla." " March 1 2th. T. and I took cutter, and had a drive after fictitious bustards in the Isla Mayor, then on to the huts at entrance to La Corta, where we found Manuel's sons and Vincente Anchor^n. Went ashore and drove some cranes, of which we saw many. I got one, a long shot. Saw some bustards." MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 199 '■'■'March 13//J. Fine morning; to La Corta, Guadal- quivir. We got away in steam launch about 7 a.m., and were conducted down the main river and posted out in the open by Manuel and sons, who also took, up positions. The Algaba people drove the country from La Corta towards us. A great many cranes came over, but high, and none fell, in spite of several barrels from T. and captain. At last a large flock of bustards, apparently mostly, if not all, old males, came at us, and low. T. knocked down one, and one at which I fired two barrels, fell some way behind us and was found. It threatened rain, and thunder growled in the distance, but the weather held up. We had several drives, and altogether managed to bag eight fine old male bustards. Great sport, making up amply for all our previous disappoint- ments in the shooting line. " By far the majority of the bustards, of which there are a very great number, are old males, and fly quite low ; some of them have good beards already, and the necks puffy.* Saw a good many pintailed sand grouse, a few snipes, peewits, teal, and a small falcon, which I suggest was a lanner, $. None of the spring pajaros de marisma as yet. Cranes still in vast herds, trumpeting in every direction." '■'■March i^th. We found a good many bustards, * The male Great Bustard {Otis tarda) develops in the breeding season a tuft of bristly feathers at the base of the bill, and also a gular (throat) pouch which can, at will, be greatly distended. 200 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES and they came well except to me. We went a little way up the Brazo del Este, but had no luck whatever owing to muffishness. Several heavy showers, during the worst of which we sheltered in a shepherd's hut and lunched. As we were sitting in the boat at the huts, close to the yacht, after having given up shooting, a female bustard was weak enough to fly past ; she received four barrels from T., Frost, and self, and fell a victim. Saw many pintailed sand grouse." " March 1 5//z. We started about 7, and took much the same line as yesterday. Found a good many bustards, but again the shooters were at fault. I killed two, an old barbon, and a young male of last year, the only two which presented themselves to me. " Saw vast flocks of white storks. T. shot a fine male pintail and a mallard (of which we saw several) ; also a green sandpiper, one of three. Saw a few teal, not many cranes, and a good number of vultures." "March \-jth. Fine morning, wind veering north- east at daybreak, but glass going rapidly down. We took up the Brazo del Este, and made nearly the whole circuit ot the Isla Menor. We saw one or two large lots of bustards, but none of us had a shot at them, and the only animal bagged was a hare, shot by old Manuel. A great quantity of grifFon and Egyptian vultures and common and black kites about some dead horses in the marisma of Palacios. Every sign of rain MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 201 at nightfall. Saw a good many mallards and garganeys and some marsh birds, I think rufFs and black-tailed godwits." "March 18//;. Heavy rain. It was rather better in the afternoon, and T. went ashore with the captain, and shot two black-bellied sand grouse. They went again after dinner, and took one alive, with light and bell. T. had a shot at bustard, without result." Gibraltar ^"^ March lyrd. T. walked up to the signal station afterwards with M and saw Bonelli's eagle on her nest. " Went down to see Mr. V at the Waterport guard ; he is much vexed at this new prohibitory law about shooting in Spain. He goes out to-morrow to look after a Bonelli's * nest in some crags near Castellar. He tells me that the ospreys are already sitting at the east side of the rock." " March 2^th. Have heard Scops owls these last few days about the rock." " March 2<)th. It is remarkable that amongst hundreds of gulls at the slaughter place at the back of the rock * Bonelli's Eagle {Nisaetus fasciatus) is with the Booted Eagle {JVtsaefKS pennatus) representative in Europe of a small group of long-legged eagles. They are neat-looking and active birds; the former nesting on ledges of rock, the latter in cork and pine-trees in Morocco and Andalucia. 202 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES I did not see one herring gull. All L. fuscus, ridibundus, and, I think, a few melanocephalus, but cannot be quite c ertain." ^' April T^rd to April zyd. Between these dates I was kept on board by an attack of gout. The weather was very unsettled and showery, with cold winds." '^ April list. V took an egg of neophron from a nest of Circa'etus gallicus in cork wood ; this is the first instance I ever heard of of the former species breeding on a tree. " V and T. took a nest, with five eggs, of blue rock-thrush (tW. cyanus) from hole in wall in Charles V. rampart. "V caught a kite (M. regalii) on her nest, in a trap, and took two eggs in a tall pine tree." Malaga "April ic^th. Started in a carriage for a spot to the left of road to Torre Molinos, some three miles off, where M expected to find some crakes, but none were seen. The greater part of the flat country is covered with sugar canes, and almost all this part belongs to the Hesedias, who have a large sugar factory, iron foundries and cotton mills. We lunched at the house of their administrator, a very civil individual, from Estremadura, who gave me wonderful accounts of the number and variety of birds near Caceres. MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 203 " In the institute at IVIalaga the most remarkable things are an immature specimen of Larus audouini, without date (but Mena says undoubtedly killed near the town, probably seven or eight years ago), and a specimen of Cursorius gallicus * killed near the town. Mena tells me that he knows of two other occurrences of this species, and a fine specimen of the little bunting (^Emberiza fusil! a). " Mena had a skin of plover, which I bought, having little doubt that it is a specimen of Charadrius fulvus, the Asiatic golden plover, killed near Malaga, May 2ist, 1878. Several fine flamingos just brought in, and a great many eggs of Gyps fulvus ; I also bought Richards's pipit [Anthus richardi) and the pallid swift {Cypselus pallidus)." Alboran " April 26th. Beautiful bright day. Got up steam and started about 8 a.m. to explore the island of Alboran, some ninety miles south-east by east. I had often heard of the abundance of sea birds there, but a lighthouse has lately been built, and I had fears. We saw the back fins of several sharks and one or two shear- waters. We sighted the island and lighthouse about * The Cream-coloured Courser {Cursorius gallicus). These are desert birds, allied to the pratincoles, and through them to the true plovers. They are exceedingly active birds, both on the wing and on foot, and feed on insects, being especially fond of grasshoppers. 204 MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 2 p.m., and on getting within a few miles saw several small whales spouting and blowing all around us. We anchored on the south side of the island about 5.45 p.m., in eight fathoms sand and weed, and Ruiz, T., and I went off to a landing-place just below the lighthouse, speaking two of the inhabitants on our way, fishing, or rather setting a trot. One of these men told us that there were no birds but gulls (of which we could see a good many), and only one kind, now laying. " The island is, I should say, rather more than half a mile long, and apparently only some few hundred yards across. It is all low cliff, some fifty feet high, of a yellowish sandstone, with here and there big stones imbedded therein, and with many caves and fissures and flat reefs lying off it. The lighthouse stands close to the western end of the island. Several of the natives, or rather inhabitants of the lighthouse, came down to speak to us, and told us the lighthouse has only been built three years ; that there were four families, no spring of water, only one sort of gull (of which they had eggs), no rock doves, many seals, and sometimes a good many birds of passage, quails, turtle-doves, hoopoes, and larks.. T. and Ruiz landed to explore whilst I cruised round in the cutter. I saw herring and lesser black-backed gulls, and fancied that I made out Audouin's gull by its great length of wing, but I did not get a shot. Saw one turnstone, two or three common sandpipers and whimbrel, two or three redshanks and tv/o stilts, evidently on migra- MEDITERRANEAN NOTES 205 tion, and puzzled whither to go. T. and Ruiz appeared on the top of the clifF with a gull, which T. had shot, and I went roujid to wait for them at the landing-place, where they soon joined me. T. had bagged two fine specimens of Larus audotdni and a whinchat, and told me that he had knocked down two more of the gulls, which fell out at sea ; he had a shot also at a hawk, which escaped. Ruiz had taken three gulls' eggs, but certainly not those of L. aith. Night heron {Xyctkorax griseus), in aviary, laid first egg of season. March \itli. Me.\ican jays {Cyanocorax luxuosus). Two received from Jamrach. The first of the species ever seen alive by me. Active and very pretty birds, with a curious squeal, that reminds me greatly of the cry of the common buzzard. March 20th. Cinereous vulture {I'ultur monachus\ old Spanish bird, laid an egg. This bird was taken from a nest in a high pine tree in the forest near San Ildefonso, Old Castille, in June, 1S65 {Ibis, 1866, pp. 388, 389). March 27///. White-shouldered eagle i {Aquihi adalberti) died. I believe that this bird was the only male of three brought home by me from a nest in the Goto del Rey in 1869 ; but I have had several at various times since, and having been so much away from home, APPENDIX 1 279 and, when at home, so much shut up in the winters, I cannot feel quite sure. Bittern {Botaurus stellaris) began to ' boom ' on 20th inst. In April 1 89 1 two of this species made a nest in a cage in our court- yard, and laid five eggs, upon which one or other of the parent birds sat continually, but did not hatch. Woodpigeons {Columba palumbus). Pair in aviary have two eggs, and sit thereon. Mexican jay. One died, in apparent excellent condition. April lotk. Grey coly shrikes {Hypocolius ampelinus). A pair received from Bartlett. These birds {fide Bartlett) were received at Zoological Gardens, with others of same species, from the Persian Gulf They are remarkably tame. I can detect very little affinity in them to the shrike family, and only name them as above for want of a better name. Their favourite food is fruit, but they are also fond of meal-worms, and would, I feel certain, very much like house-flies, if we could find any. In fact, they are evidently of waxwing-flycatcher affinity. The picture of this bird in Ibis for 1868, p. 181, is much more slender in look than my birds, and their colour is mousey, not creamy, as in picture. April \ith. Woodpigeons in aviary have hatched both eggs. Military starling {Sturnella militaris) purchased last summer, died from abscess. April i6tli. Great bustard {Otis tarda) in aviary, picking up and swallowing feathers. April i8tk. Cinereous vulture laid another egg, rather better coloured than first. April igt/i. Hybrid bean + white-fronted goose {Anser segetuin, S-\-A. albifrons, ? ), bred on aviary pond last year with others, of ■which it is the sole survivor, is in very fine plumage. It has the lender neck and orange-coloured legs and feet of its male parent, with a small white frontal patch ; no bars on breast. April 20th. Goliath heron {cf. antea) received on approval from Jamrach as Ardea atricollis, to which it has no resemblance in plumage, and is much larger. 2 8o APPENDIX I Porphyrio {Porphyria, sp. ?) Three, supposed to be P. caruleus, received on approval from Jamrach. Said by him to have been pro- cured from Sicily, through a dealer at Marseilles. I cannot believe that these birds belong to that species, on account of their small size and the very dark plumage of their backs, and I was inclined to look upon them as the Australian black-backed porphyrio {P. rnela/iotus), but on the following day Jamrach sent down one of the latter species for comparison. This bird is con- siderably larger than the three others, and the shape of frontal shield differs much from theirs, so that at present I am much puzzled about species of latter. April 22?id. Chilian pintail {Dafila spinicauda) sits on eggs in sunk fence of pinetum. This nest is almost in the same spot as last year, and the bird on the nest was almost entirely hidden in a mass of dead leaves, with only her head and small portion of neck exposed, and very difficult to see. April 2yd. Australian native companion {Grus australasiana), one of four in pinetum, has lately developed the unamiable habit of driving away all the other cranes from their feeding bo.xes, though not apparently hungry himself. April 2^th. Senegal pies {Cryptorkina afro). One of two of this species received last year, with brilliant coral red beak, has changed the colour of that instrument to black, like that of its male, or companion. April 2^tk. Lesser kestrels {Fako ceiiihris). Four, apparently adults, received from Jamrach. Chinese laughing thrush (Lcucodioptron carwrum) received on approval from, and returned to, Jamrach. April 28M. Hooded crane {Grus monackiis), in pinetum, broke a leg. April 2()tk. Sardinian starling S {Sliirnus unicolor) has paired with the only common starling in the same compartment of aviary, and sits alternately with her on eggs in a box. May \st. For the first time heard the call note of double- APPENDIX 1 28 r spurred francolins ; very powerful and strident, somewhat resembling- that of guinea-fowl, but more prolonged and guttural. May 2nd. The white-fronted goose ? and bean goose $ having again paired this year, to-day hatched four of six eggs at aviary pond. May 2,rd. Pochard {Fuligula ferina) sits on six eggs in pinetum. May 6th. American peregrine or ' duck hawk ' ? {Falco anatiivt) received as a present from Major Ernest Anne, who informs me that it was taken on board ship at about 1500 miles off the coast of Canada. This bird is considerably smaller than an average Falco peregrinus of the same sex, and is very dark in colour. I am disposed to consider her as a bird of last year. May 6th. Bronze-winged pigeons {Fhaps chalcoptera), of which I have a pair, produce many eggs, but will not sit, so we put two into a nest of woodpigeons in aviary {cf. antea), removing the eggs of latter birds — a second sitting that I omitted to note in this book. May lofh. White-bellied sea eagles {Haliaetus leucogaster). Two very fine specimens, adult and immature, received from Melbourne as a present from Edward Marshall. May i6th. Five hybrids of spotted-billed and yellow-billed &ac\s {Anas pacilorhyiiiha, c?, and A?tas .xanthorhyncha ?) hatched out at aviary pond. May 11 th and i8//z. Ural owl {Syrniuni ura/cnse), one of two received from Russian Finland in 1888, laid an egg but made no nest and would not sit, so we transferred the egg to a nest in the park that contained four of barn owl {Strix flammea). May \^th. Ruffs {Machetes pugnax) all in splendid 'show,' are full of antics, pugnacious and very amorous. May 20th. Boobook owl {Nhuyx hoobook) received from Melbourne as a present from Edward Marshall. Madeiran woodpigeon {Columba irocaz), one of three now in the aviary received from Dr. Hicks of Funchal, made a slight nest under one of the box bushes, on the bare gravel, and laid one egg. 2 82 APPENDIX I Yellow-breasted bunting {Emberiza aureola), one of four purchased last year from Jamrach, laid an egg on floor of cage, without any attempt at making a nest. May 2<)tk. Seriemas {Cariama cristata). Two received from A. Thomson, head keeper at Zoological Gardens. May $Qi/t. Sardinian starling. A pair have hatched out three young in bo.x, old aviary. /une 2nd. Yellow-breasted bunting {cf. antea) has laid two more eggs, but will not sit. Jtine T,rd. Pink-headed drake {Anas caryophyllacea), one of pair purchased last year from Jamrach, died after pining for several days. These ducks, the only pair that were ever offered to me alive for sale, bore the winter very well, and in fact throve in all •ways till a few days ago. They are stupid and heavy birds, only interesting from their rarity and remarkable colour of heads. June ^fh. Trumpeter bullfinch {Erythrospiza githaginea) laid an egg- Sardinian starlings {cf. antek), three young, all dead from parental neglect. June dth. Common curlew {Numenius arquatus). Two young in down received from T. Mann, of Aigle Hill, Allonby, as a present. The smaller of the two died on the following day ; the other soon took greedily to a diet of earth-worms, chopped liver, etc., and became perfectly tame. June Zth. White-breasted gallinule {GalUnula phxnicura), received in a dying state from \V. Cross on 7th inst., died in its cage next day. Shamas {Cittacincla macrura). Two received from W. Cross. Common bittern laid first egg of this season. Long-eared owls {Asia otus). Three young received from a Mr. Adams, of the Lodge, Cockley Cley, Swaffham. June <)th. Common bittern has another egg and sits. Little owls {Athene noctua). Thirty received from Castang. June loth. Woodpigeons in aviary busy nesting for third time this year. APPENDIX I 283 fune \^th. Knot {Triiiga canutus). An egg that I am convinced is of this species laid in aviary. Larger white egret {Ardca sp. ?) died in fine condition. June \ith. Ditto. I have never been able satisfactorily to deter- mine the species of this bird, as the locality given by the vendor, West Africa, was most certainly incorrect. June 19///. Received a shama from Cross in place of one deceased. Received through F. Collier two Chilian eagles {Geranoaetus melannhuais) in immature plumage, said to have been sent from Bahia Blanca. These birds are so much smaller than any of their species that I have ever previously seen, that I sent them up to Bartlett to be assured about them. They are very fine, healthy birds in fairly good plumage and remarkably tame, agreeing amicably with a crowd of other raptores in western yard. June 22nd. Twenty-three little owls received from Castang. Three black woodpeckers {Picus martins) received from Jararach ; all young birds. Two pied woodpeckers {Pints major). The black woodpeckers are in very bad condition of flesh and plumage. One died on 25th inst., the other two I think will live ; they feed greedily on ants' eggs, but prefer wasp grubs to any other food that we can find for them, though they will not touch the developed imago of this insect. Jamrach assured me that he received them from Gratz. The pied woodpeckers, also young birds from the same locality, are the finest of their species that I ever saw, in perfect health and plumage and as tame as possible. June 22nd. Received four young scarlet ibis {Ibis rubra) from Jamrach. June 2yd. One of my northern nuthatches died. Sent to H. E. Dresser. Two young goshawks {Astur palumbarius) received from Mons. P. A. Pichot. These birds are male and female, and were, as I believe, taken from a nest in a forest near Rouen, whence I had received others. Jtine 2-]th. Madeiran pigeon laid an egg on the ground, found ■cracked. 284 APPENDIX I Jtine 2C)t/i. Two young ringed plovers {^gialitis hiaticula), one dead, received from Cumberland. June 2fith. Tawny eagle {Aguila rapax) and golden eagle {Aquila chrysaetus) from Abyssinia received on approval from Jamrach. I kept the tawny eagle, which is a fine bird of the light browrt race, very much resembling the most recently received of the two already here, and the light-coloured bird of Wolfs plate in the Ibis. Jamrach declared that this bird came to him from North Africa, probably Morocco. I returned the golden eagle, as I do not want one of that species ; this was a remarkably large, strong young bird with pure white tarsi. July \st. Australian maned goose i {Bernicla jubata) died ii> good condition. This bird was one of a pair purchased last year from Jamrach ; they had both done remarkably well in the new aviary, feeding chiefly on the grass growing therein. I suspect that the commencement of the moult was the cause of death. July 2,rd. Great bustard $ (Otis tarda) died after long weakness. This was one of a consignment received some years ago from Seville, and presented by me to W. H. St. Quintin ; it was injured when it arrived, and St. Quintin, after keeping it for a year or more, sent it back to me, rather than kill it, in October 1S90. It did well here, but was always weakly on the legs from an injury to the ribs, and probably to the vertebra, on the journey from Spain, though it fed well, moulted clean every year, and was impudently tame and pugnacious. Woodpigeons {;/. antek) have hatched out one young bird. July 6tk. Little bitterns {Ardetta minuta). Three very young,, received from Castang. July &tli. Australian crane (s sp. ?), id. July 2^tk. — Two great blue herons {Ardea herodias) sent on approval by Cross ; returned. Two caracaras {Polyborus brasiliensis) from Uruguay, received from O. V. Aplin. Pileated jay {Cyanocorax pileatus), id. Four long-eared owls (Asia otus) received from Mr. Adams, of Cockley Cley, West Norfolk. August \st. Tawny eagle {Aquiia rapa.x) {cf. ante^). Killed by white-bellied sea eagle {Haliaetus leucogaster), through the bars of the compartment in eagle yard. August 2nd. Redshank (Totanus calidris) received from F. Dyer of Ramsgate. Three black woodpeckers {Picus marlius) received from Jamrach. One Montagu's harrier {Circus cineraceus), melanic variety, received from Mons. P. A. Pichot, of Paris, with four others of the same species of ordinary type, which I left at Zoological Gardens. In the individual above noticed the whole of the plumage is of a uniform very deep brown, almost black, the irides of the same colour. I believe that all this lot of harriers were taken from nests in northern France. One honey buzzard {Pernis apivorus), white mottled variety, received from Mons. Pichot (as above). This bird was still unable to fly, and 2 86 APPENDIX I has developed into a very beautiful and charmingly tame pet, only showing a little restlessness at the autumnal migration time. August St/:. One nutcracker {Corvus caryocatactes) presented by Dr. A. Giinther. August gt/i. One lanner {Fako feldeggi) received from Consul Hunot, of Saffi, Morocco. One serpent eagle ( Circaetus gallicus), id. I presented both the last named birds to the Zoological Society. August loth. Diuca diuca, from Chili, received last year, identified by P. L. Sclater. Three porphyries (P. edwardsi), South China. Brown-headed gull {Larus ridibundus) pinioned by shot on Tich- marsh. August i2ih. Red-backed shrike {Lanius coUurio), young, received from Bazeley, of Northampton. August icjth. Thirteen little bitterns (Ardetta niinuta), from Holland, received from Castang. August 2ist. Six avocets {Avocctta recurvirostra), six redshanks {Totanus calidris), and black-tailed godwit {Limosa mehnurd), from Holland. Received by order of F. Blaauw. August 22nd. Three herring gulls {Larus argentatus), immature, from south coast, presented by Alex. Berens. August 2^th. Little kestrel {Falco cenchris), southern starling {Sturnus uniiolor), great bustard {Otis tarda), little bustard {Otis tetrax), glossy ibis {Plegadis falcinellus), marbled ducks {Anas angustirostris), from Andalucia, received, per Ochenden, from Gibraltar. August 30M. — Black-headed partridges {Caccahis melanocephald) received via Bartlett from Aden. White-shafted francolins {Fraiicolinus infuscatits), from Somali coast, id. Singed sand grouse {Pterocks exustus) received via Bartlett from Aden. APPENDIX 1 287 But there was already the collection of years before this record began to be kept in this particular form. Of the extent and variety of the Lilford Collection of living birds during the whole period of its existence some general idea may be gathered from the following list. It includes, not all, but the greater proportion of the birds new to the Aviaries between the date last given and the third week in March 1896 — a space of not three years. Mantell's apteryx Owen's apteryx . Greek partridge . Barbary partridge Black-headed partridge Bamboo partridge Common francolin Grant's francolin White-shafted francolin Double-spurred francolin Madagascar francolin . Guinea fowl Crested colin Scaly colin Chinese button quails Pintailed sand grouse Singed sand grouse . Madeiran woodpigeon Laurel pigeon . Bolle's pigeon . Spotted pigeon . Snow pigeon Grey headed fruit pigeon Carolina crake . American water rail . Ypacaha rail Apteryx mantel It. Apteryx oiveni. Caccabis saxatilis (Austria). Caccabis petrosa. Caccabis melanocephala (Aden). Bambusicola thoracica. FrancoUtnis vulgaris. Fraticolinus granti. Francolinus kucoscepkus. Francolinus bicakaratus. Alargaroperdi.x niadagascariensis. Nianida sp. ? Eupsychortyx cristatus. Callipepla squamata. Excalfactoria chinensis. Pterocles alchata. Pterocles exustus (Aden). Columba trocaz (hatched in Aviary). Columba laurivora. Columba bollii. Cobimba maculosa (South America). Columba leuconota (S. Himalayas ; hatched in Aviary). Columba o;vea1 (India). Forzana Carolina. Aramides cayennensis. Aramides ypacaha- 288 APPENDIX 1 Pectoral rail Blue water-hen . Green-backed Gallinul Allen's gallinule Martinique gallinule White-breasted gallinule Black-throated diver Fulmar Puffin Common gull . Sandwich tern . Stone curlew Great bustard . Green sandpiper Common sandpiper AustraHan wattled lapwing Avocet Knot Oyster-catcher . Black-tailed godwit Black-necked stilt Pratincole Sarus crane White-necked crane Wattled crane . Stanley's crane . Tufted umbre . Purple heron Great white heron 5quaccQ heron . Little egret Buff-backed egret Night heron Bittern Little bittern Tiger bittern Roseate spoonbill . Rallus pectoralis. . Porphyria edwardsi. . Porphyria smarcigdonotus. . Porphyria alleni. . Porphyria martinica. Gallinula phainicura. Colymbus arcticus. . Fulmarus glacialis. . Fratercula arctica. Larus canus. . Sterna cantiaca. CEdicnemus crepitans. Otis tarda. Tatanus ochropus. Tatanus hypoleucos. Sarciophorus pec tor a lis. . Avocetta recurvirastra. Tringa canutus. . HcBtnatopus ostrakgus. Limosa melanura. Himantopus nigricollis. Glareola pratincola. Grus aniigane. Grus leucauchen. . Grus carunculata (South Africa). Tetrapteryx paradisea. . Scopus umbretta (Bechuanaland). . Ardea purpurea. Ardea alba. . Ardea ralloides. . Ardea garzetta. . Ardea bubulcus. . Aycticorax griseus (Arabia). . Botaurus stellaris. . Ardeola minuta. Tigrisoma tigrinum. . Plataka ajaja. APPENDIX I 289 Spoonbill . South American white ibis Black-headed ibis Smew Gadwall . Garganey . Shoveller . Pink-headed duck Scaup Pochard . Golden Eye Tufted duck White-eyed pochard . Red-crested pochard Merganser Eider duck Maned goose Spur-winged goose . Cassin's snow-goose . Snow-goose Whooper swan . Bewick's swan . South American flamingo Flamingo . American darter Pygmy cormorant Marsh harrier . Montagu's harrier Goshawk . American sparrow-hawk Common buzzard Red-backed buzzard . Many-zoned hawk Chanting falcon Lammergeier , . Plaialea kucorodia. Eudocimus albus. . Ibis melatwcephala. . Mergus albellus. . Anas strepera. . Anas querquedtda. . Anas clypeata. . Anas caryophyllacea. FuUgula marila. . Fuligula ferina. Fuligula clangula. . Fuligula cristata. . Fuligula nyroca. Fuligula rufina. . Afergus serraior. . Soinateria mollissima. . Bernida jubata. . Pledropterus gainbensis. Chen hypoboreus. Chen albatus. Cygnus ferus. • Cygnus bewicki. . Phanicopterus ignipalliatus. . Phanicopterus roseus. . Plotus anhinga. Carbo pygmceus. . Circus icricginosus. Circus cineraceus. . Astur palumbarius. Accipiter fuscus. Buteo vulgaris (very dark variety ; Holland). . Buteo erythronotus (Patagonia). . Melierax polyzonus. . Melierax canorus. . Gypaetus barbatus (Switzerland and Almeria). 19 290 APPENDIX 1 White-shouldered eagle Imperial eagle Spotted eagle Golden eagle Black kite Common kite Barbary falcon Hobby . Peregrine . Lanner Merlin Cinnamon kestrel Common kestrel La Marmora's falcon American kestrel Australian peregrine Mediterranean peregrine Eagle owl Spotted eagle-owl Cape eagle-owl Burrowing owl . American hawk-owl Short-eared owl Long-eared owl Lapp owl . Tawny owl Ural owl . Spot-bellied owl Little owl . Masked owl South American liarn-owl Barn-owl . Black-headed caique Great blue-eyed cockatoo Red-faced parakeet . Orange-flanked parakeet Carolina parakeet . A(/uila adalberti (Southern Spain). . Aqiiila iniperialis. . Aquila ncevia. . Aquila chrysaetus. . Milvus migrans. . Milvus regalis. . Falco barbarus. . Falco subbuteo (Southern Spain). . Falco peregrinus. . Falco feldeggi. . Falco asalon. . Falco cinnamomina. . Falco tinnunctilus. . Falco eleonorcE (Morocco). Falco sparverius. . Falco melanogenys. . Falco pttnicus. . Bilbo maximus. . Bubo maculosus. . Bubo capensis. . Speotyto cunicularia. Syrnia funerea. , Asio brachyotus. . Asio otus. . Syrnium lapponicum. . Syrnium aluco. Syrnium uralense. Carine spilogastra. . Athene noctua. . Strix castanops (Australia). . S/rix guatemala. . Strix flavvma. Cdica melanocephala. Cacatua ophthalinica. . Platycercus novce-zealandicB. . Brotogerys pyrrliopterus. , Conurus cnrolinensis. APPENDIX I 291 Guira cuckoo . Indian black cuckoo Senegal touraco Toucan Green woodpecker Pied woodpecker Black woodpecker Brahminy mynah Hill mynah Purple-headed starling Long-tailed glossy starling Malabar starling Rose pastor Tristram's grakle Black-collared grakle , Blue-winged magpie Nutcracker Australian " chough '' Alpine chough . Blue hunting-pie Indian oriole Golden oriole . Red-winged hang-nest Hairy-headed drongo Regent bird Beautiful grass-finch . Gouldian finch . North Queensland grass-finch House-sparrow . Brambling Greenfinch Teydean chaffinch Brazilian finch . Mealy redpoll . Twite Crossbill . Pine grosbeak . Guira piririgua. Eudynamis orientalis. Corythaix persa. Pteroglossus wiedi. Gecinus viridis. Picus major, Picus martins. Teinenuchus pagodarum. Gracula intermedia. . Sturnus purpuracens. . Lamprotornis ceneus. . Sturnopastor malabaricus. , Pastor roseus. . Amydrus iristrami. . Graculipica nigricollis. Cyanopica cooki. . Niicifraga caryocatactes. Cocora.x nielaiwcephala. . Fregilus alpinus. Urocissa occipitalis. Oriolus indicus. . Oriolus auratus. . Agelaius phceniceus. Chibia hottentota. Sericulus melinus. . Poephila mirabilis. . Poephila gouldice. . Poephila cincta. . Passer domesticus. Fringilla monfifriiigilla. . Fringilla chloris. . Fringilla teydea. Guiraca cyanea. . Linota linaria. . Linota flavirostris. . Loxia curvirostra. . Pyrrhulo, ^nucleator. 292 APPENDIX I South American bullfinch Oryzoborus crassirostris. Woodlark . Alauda arborea. Snow-bunting . . Pkdrophanes nivalis. Lapland bunting Caliariiis lapponicus. Bearded reedling Panuriis biarinicus. Greater nightingale . Daulias philoinela. White-spotted blue-throat . Cyanecula suecica. Grasshopper warbler . . Locustella nxvia. Barred warbler . . Sylvia nisoria (North Germany) Blue robin . Cyanea wilsoni. Alpine accentor . Accentor collaris. Blue rock-thrush . Monticola cyanea. Pied rock-thrush . Monticola saxatilis. Giant kingfisher . Dacelo gigantea. Kingfisher . Alcedo ispida. Dusky bulbul . . Pycnonotus obscurus. Sulphury tyrant . Pyranga sulp/iurea. Crested jay-thrush . Garrulax leucolophus. White-throated jay-thrush Garrulax albogularis. Necklaced jay-thrush . . Garrulax picticollis. Striated jay-thrush Grainmatoptila striata. Interesting Hyurids. Fuligula rufina 4 F. ferina. Anns boscas + Mareca penelope. Anas boscas 4- A. querquedula. APPENDIX II Although the following extracts do not perhaps pretend to the interest of what has gone before, they seem worth giving, as showing how the ruling passion was never laid aside, never allowed to grow rusty, even amid apparently the most unfavourable surroundings. London itself was made by the enthusiasm of this naturalist a place of daily ornithological interest ; while, on every little trip into the country, he takes notes, even of the most familiar birds, with just as much care as though engaged on the exploration of an unknown land. Thus he records the observation of no fewer than thirty- one species of birds on a single drive from Windsor to Sunningdale. London November /\tli, 1881. Very waini, showery day. Went round to Den * in the morning, and did some work at my Birds of North- amptonshire. Had visits there from Verner and Gunther, who talked much of choughs {Fregilus graculus) observed near St. Davids, and say that they seemed to feed almost entirely on insects of the gnat {Tipuld) family. November ^th. Went in the morning to Zoological Gardens specially to see my Spanish bear, which is quite blind, but seems healthy (very different in looks from a young bear from Russia which • So Lovrl Lilford called his rooms in Tenlerdeii Street, at the time tlic meeting- place of the members of the British Ornithologists' Union. 393 294 APPENDIX II is in the same den) and the Beatrix antelopes {Oryx heatrix), which I received from Muscat through Col. Miles, and presented to the Society. The latter are both females, Ijeautiful animals, but one has unfortunately broken both horns, and lost an eye. In the Field of to-day is a notice from Mr. W. Tomalin of a black-throated diver {Cofym/ms arcticus) shot on Naseby Reservoir by a Mr. Kennall of Northampton, on October 25th, and sent to Mr. J. Gardner, 29, 0.\ford Street, for preservation. This requires investigation as to species. November %th. Colder and slightly foggy. I went to Gardner's to see the diver before mentioned, and found that it is a genuine black-throated diver {Colymbus arcticus). Went ^to Uen and found Paul Mollen there, not having been able to start last night for Holland on account of fog. G. Hunt writes that he and the keeper had killed eighty-one snipes and jack snipes in six days' shooting. Burton showed me a fine hybrid from Russia, between willow grouse {Lagopus saiiceti) and black game {Tetrao tetrix). November \oth. Very mild, fine day. Went round to Den, and hunted through many bird drawers in search of some missing skins, without success. Leopold called, and sat with me for some time. Received a long-expected box from Ruiz, containing many eggs of the marbled duck (Amu angustirostris), some doubtful, supposed to be those of pochard {Fuligiila ferina), a skin of black stork (Cico'iia nigra, juv.), and one of crested coot {Fit/ica crisiala). Tri-stram looked in, and lunched with me at Oriental ; gave me some interesting details of his last travels in Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor; the most startling fact being the discovery of a darter {Plotui) breeding on the Lake of Antioch. November 11//1. Mild, dull day. Went to Burton's, who holds out faint hopes that some of my missing bird skins may yet be there. Spent the greater part of the day at Den writing my notes for Birds of Northamptonshire. November i$th. Fine, mild day. Went to Burton's, and found the skin of Barbary falcon, about which my mind has been so APPENDIX II 295 much exercised. Irby paid me a visit al the Den. Dined at Zoological Club dinner at (jro.svenor Restaurant at 6 p.m. — Flower, Srlatcr, A. Newton, (liinther, Dresser, O. Salvin, Saunders, Grote, Holdsworth, Forbes, Dobson, Hamilton, another, Waterhouse, and self. Meeting afterwards at 1 1, Hanover Square. Tristram exhibited a very fine skin, and some eggs of the African darter {Plotus levaillanii) from the Lake of Antioch, Newton a specimen of rustic bunting {Emberiza rustled) shot in Yorkshire, and Sclater a stuffed glossy ibis {Plegadis falcinellus) shot last September in Hampshire. Several interesting papers read — one relating to a splendid humming- bird {Loddigesia iiiiral/ilis) from Peru, of which specimens were exhibited. November iSf/i. Thick, chilly fog. I went up by appointment to British Museum at 12, where Giinther met me, and showed me the groups of British birds, with nests and eggs, of which he is very justly proud. He also showed me an extraordinary tree-frog from South Americ.T, with perfectly developed young in a bag in its back. November i2>th. Fine bright day after heavy rain in the night. I went hunting for some pleasant cage bird in the Seven Dials district, but found nothing that particularly took my fancy. Sabin has a fine white blackbird and a young mocking bird {Aliiniis polyglottis). November 20th. Notice in Field of Stone Curlew {(Edicnemtis crepitans), shot at Gayton, near Northampton, October 28th. This is a rare bird in agro northantoniense. November 2yd. Very fine and bright. Paul Mollen called on his way back from Valkcnswaard to Lilford, bringing two ash-coloured shrikes alive for me, which have been used at tlie huts for catching the hawks. November 25M. The shrikes are very wild, but feed well. November 26th. Irby and Edward Acheson called at Den, and I went with former in a cab to Leadenhall Market. Castang has a young male Bonelli's eagle {Psettdaetusbonelli, ^, juv.), two, lanners {Fako fe/deggi), and a young night heron {Nyticorax griseus). Great quantities of capercaillie (Tetiao urogallus) in the market, also some black game 296 APPENDIX II {Tetrao tetrix), a few hazel grouse (Tetrao bonasia), and willow grouse {Lagoptis sa/iceti). Very few wild-fowl {Anatidce). November 26th. Received three snipes, five jack snipes, and a wild duck from Lilford. December Tth. Began corrections and addenda for Dresser's Birds of Europe. Received three snipes from Lilford. December i^th. Heard from G. Hunt that he had killed eleven wild ducks with one shot with the big gun which I gave him, also that there are hardly any fieldfares (Turdus pilaris) in the country. Leo sent a skin of hybrid, I think second cross between Reeves's {Phasianus reevesi) and common pheasant. This bird has a trace of white neck collar, I believe it is from Suffolk, a descendant of the old male Reeves's cock pheasant which I gave to Nat Barnardiston years ago ; this bird met his fate lately after propagating a numerous hybrid race. December -ioth. I received a letter from Rev. G. E. Morris, Rector of Middleton Scriven, near Bridgnorth, Salop, enclosing head and wing of a petrel picked up in that neighbourhood, about which he had written to the Standard {vide Standard, December 8th, 1881, p. 2), and which I think is not, as he supposes, the stormy petrel (Thalassidroma pelagica), but a young fork-tailed petrel {Thalassidroma leucorrhoa). December wth. I make out from Dresser's book that the petrel above mentioned is a specimen of Leach's or the fork-tailed petrel. Brighton December 2-i,rd. Went to Swaysland, who showed us a pair of fork-tailed petrels recently obtained near this place, also two birds which look like hybrids between greenfinch {Fringilla chloris) and brown linnet {Fringilla catiiiabina) ; of this Swaysland says he has obtained many specimens. He also had some good specimens of grey redstart {Ruticilla cairii), to my mind a very distinct bird from black redstart {Ruticilla titys), which often turns up here, and of which Swaysland had several specimens. APPENDIX II 297 December 26th. Young Walter Swaysland called in the evening to tell me that he had a dark-breasted variety of barn-owl {Sirix flammed) brought in alive. 1 had a long ornithological chat with him. Decemhei- 27///. Swaysland has a good many live birds in a com- partment at the end of the pier below the platform, which, in spite of very limited space, seem to flourish. I bought a pair of mealy red-polls {Liiiota linaria). December 29//?. Colonel Verner showed me a cinnamon greenfinch and cinnamon linnet, a red-breasted thrush {Turdus migraforius), nightingale, blackcap, and other birds. He went with us to see Booth's collection of stuffed British birds in the Dyke Road. It is a very fine one, most of the birds admirably well stuffed and mounted. His cases of golden (Aqtiila fiilva) and white-tailed eagles {Aquila albicilla) especially are beautiful. Booth has a lot of gannets (^Sula bassana) alive in his garden, one of which was bred there this year. G. Hunt tells of a bird seen at Wadenhoe by Quincey, which sounds more like a nutcracker {JVucifraga caryocatactes) than anything else. December ^oth. Received and corrected proofs of a fresh small portion of my notes on Northamptonshire birds for the Journal of our Natural History Society. London January yd, 1882. Went back to Den and found a large concourse of ornithologists. Seebohm showed us some beautiful skins from Astrachan and Siberia; one of the most interesting was a flamingo {P/uenicopterus antiquortwi) in down, from the Caspian. He also showed some beautiful specimens of the little partridge {Perdix barbatus) from North China. January 26th. My remaining butcher-bird died. Discovered an egg of glossy ibis {Plegadis falcinellus) amongst those received in the last box from Manuel of Coria. It was not mentioned in Ruiz's invoice and I had overlooked it, but old Manuel mentioned it in a letter received a few days ago. It was taken in the marisma. 298 APPENDIX II The two months following upon his cruise in the Mediter- ranean in this year, Lord Lilford spent partly in London, partly at Neuenahr, whither he went to take the waters. The first entry in the following extracts finds him just returned. Dover. London May ic^th. M S reports my bear at Zoological Gardens as being very ill. Letters from old Manuel announcing the finding of a lanner's nest in the Coto de Donana with three young birds and an egg. Female bird shot and found to be minus one leg. Country so dry that no flamingoes are to be found. Gave Dresser a pair of Audouin's gulls. London May 26th. Agreed to buy the great auk and egg of C for ^300. Irby tells me that Mcna has obtained Totamts stagnati/is near Malaga. Dresser has successfully blown the eggs of Melizophilus sardus. I sent the two snakes up to the Zoological Gardens. May 21th. Invested in a fireproof safe for the better preservation of the three great auk's eggs. George Hunt tells me that in March he killed 500 woodpigeons near Gidding in little over a week. Windsor and Sunningd.\le May T,\st. Drove up the Long Walk to Cumberland Lodge; the beeches in great beauty and rhododendrons in full ijloom, the young fern and many rabbits adding to the beauty of our drive to Sunningd.ile. Noticed the following birds : — Blackbird, song-thrush, missel-thrush, swallow, house-martin, sand-martin, swift, rook, jackdaw, nightingale, blackcap, lesser whitcthroat, chiffchafT, willow-wren, wood- wren, robin, wren, great tit, coal tit, starling, skylark, pied wagtail, yellow-hammer, stone-chat, stock-dove, chaffinch, common sparrow, tree-creeper, pheasant, heron, mallard. APPENDIX II 299 London June 1st. Went to Jamrach's, where I bought twelve roseate pastors and a laughing kingfisher. Principal things noticed : Splendid pair of Persian greyhounds, three Australian quails, and some jerboas. Neuenahr June T,rd. Birds observed between Flushing and Cologne : Marsh- harrier, kestrel, white wagtail, skylark, common sparrow, starling, carrion crow, peewit, common redshank, common heron, white stork, brown-headed gull, mallard, and cormorant. June ^th. Was able, thank God, to stroll round the garden with frequent rests, more than I have done in the walking way for many a day. Heard landrail and many nightjars at dusk. I notice that most of the sparrows about the east side of the Curhaus, where we are now located, are the tree sparrow {Passer montanus), which species, curiously enough, escaped my notice altogether last year. The birds seem just as abundant as in last summer, but more forward in their domestic arrangements. I did not hear so much song of nightingale, but saw a good many, and heard their churr in all directions. Several lesser whitethroats {Sylvia curruca) amongst the pea-sticks just under our windows ; they and the black redstarts are kept in a constant state of excitement by prowling cats, which affords excellent opportunities of observation. Saw a robin in Curgarten for the first time, the only birds of this species last year seen by me were in the hills. Many cuckoos. June 6f/i. Very fine hot day with south-west breeze. I wandered out after breakfast along the Acazien Allee and saw a good many birds, but there is so much more grass and covert of all sorts this year than last, and the breeze was so strong that it was bad for observation. I, however, added three additional species to list of birds seen here, as follows : — Saw a pair of hawfinches {Coccothraustes vulgaris) and a pair of bullfinches (Pyrrhula europcea), new to list, and heard a note often repeated which I have no hesitation in assigning to the grey-headed woodpecker {Gecinus can us). 300 APPENDIX II June 1th. Heard unmistakable note of nuthatch {Sitta, sp. ?) new to my Neuenahr bird list. June Ztk. Common wren {Troglodytes parvulus) singing lustily close to hotel this morning ; new to Neuenahr bird list. June <)tk. My bearded Stuhlknecht of last year told me that he knew of a nest of kite in the Wald with two eggs. June loth. 1 had a visit from a Neuenahr keeper, with whom I plunged recklessly into the tongue of the Fatherland, and got on fairly well. The sportsman did not seem to recognise the hobby = " Baumfalke " from my description, but knows the following Raptores : — kestrel = " Thurmfalka," goshawk = " Habicht," sparrow-hawk = " Sperber," kite = " Weier," buzzard and probably honey-buzzard = " Bussard," eagle- owl ="Uhu," barn-owl = "Katzuhle." He also knows Gecinus canus as "Grauer Specht," and told me that there are a good many gelin- notes = " Hazelhahn " in the Wald, and that he knew of a nest with seven eggs hatched ofif about a week ago. No blackgame= " Birkhaln " in this \Vald ; a few woodcock =" Waldschnepfe " breed therein; many roe = "Reh" and wild-boars = " Wildschwein." June \2th. My bearded Stuhlknecht brought me a mutilated jay = "Magen," which he said had been shot in the Curgarten, and insisted with some truth that it was a " Raubvogel " = bird of 'prey. Jujte i^th. Letter from G. Hunt, telling of catching some good trout in Troywell brook, and little ones in Wadenhoe eel-trap ; ailso of long-eared owl {Asio otus) at his reservoir, and green sand- piper {Tetanus ochropus) last month on the brook. Bartlett has secured the two Persian greyhounds for me {vide antei June ist, 1882). A young wild swine {Sus scrqfa) brought to our sitting-room at night by a wilder youth, who, as far as we could make out, said it was one of four taken in a pitfall this morning in the Hoh-Wald not far off. It appeared to me to be moribund. June i^th. Saw a young titys redstart about on his own account. June 16th. My younger Stuhlknecht of last year brought me a APPENDIX II 301 very fine specimen of long-eared bat {Fkcoius auri(us), and our waiter tells of a man at Altenahr who has two young " Uhus " {Bubo maximus ?) alive. Jime \'jth. Found that the "Uhus" mentioned above had been sold and sent to Bonn. Young swallows flying. Letter from Leo, with some details about his Egyptian birds ; the best things seem to be ^gialitis asiatka in breeding plumage, and a fiilcon doubtful but supposed to be F. barbartis. June \%th. Heard from G. Lascelles that the two young falcons from the Maddalena, which had reached him in wretched condition, were improving. Wrote to Castang, telling him to send down a lanner, hobby, and hawk, which he thinks is Saker, to Lilford. June ii.)th. Saw kingfisher {Akedo ispida), new to Neuenahr list ; also a woodpecker in Curgarten, which I am almost certain was Gecinus canus. June 2otk. Watched tree creepers {Certhia familiaris) feeding their young in nest at head of pollard willow. Saw some fifty little tits {Acredula caudatd) new to my Neuenahr list. This was apparently a collection of several families out for a lark together. June 22nd. Saw common sandpiper (Totanus hypokuius), new to my Neuenahr list. June 2ird. Saw grey wagtail {Motacilla sulphurea), new to Neuenahr list. Heard golden oriole, quail, and woodlark. Letter from G. Hunt announcing the finding of hobby's nest with three eggs in Geddington Chase, and the fact that the gamekeeper who found this one destroyed eggs and shot the old birds from another nest last year in Boughton AVood. June 2\th. Heard from Bartlelt that he had a hobby for me in good plumage, and from Paul MoUen that the hawks from Castang — viz., lanner [Fako feldeggi), hobby {F. subbuteo), and supposed saker (which is not what it is supposed to be) had arrived at Lilford, and that one of the African buzzards {Buteo deseriorum) was dead. 302 APPENDIX II Saw dipper {Cindus Mjuaticus) and heard many common green woodpeckers {Gecimis viridis), both new to my Neuenahr list. Jutie 25///. Letter from T. telling me of various casualties amongst birds at Lilford, which Paul MoUen had ignored. Notice in field from W. Tomalin of teal {Anas crecca) breeding at Ecton, Northamptonsh ire. June 21th. Letter from J. H. Gurney telling me that falcon brought by Leo from Nile is a puzzling specimen, more particularly so as it is not sexed, but he is inclined to consider it F. punicus. June iZth. Saw a large white-looking bird on wing far away in the direction of Apollinaris, which must, I think, have been a stork (Ciconia alba) or a large gull, either of which are new to my Neuenahr list. June 2()th. Letter from W. Tomalin, dated 28th, with more particulars of teal at Ecton {vide 25th inst. and for details to Book of Northamptonshire, vol. ii., under this date). Letters from G. Hunt telling me that the hobby's nest before mentioned in Geddington Chase "is in a straight grown oak, an old crow's nest about thirty feet from the ground and some two hundred yards from nearest track or riding " {vide June 23rd). June ■^oth. Letters from Paul Mollen telling me that the two gulls {Larus domiiiicanus and L. argentatus) in courtyard at Lilford had paired again this spring, nested, laid, and hatched out three young ones, two of which he has lost. He also says that he thinks that the supposed saker {F. sacer) from Castang is a Barbary falcon {vide June 24th). Two very young falcons brouglit to me alive from the Landskrone, so small that I cannot tell what they are. INDEX Accentor, Alpine, 276 Accentor collaris, 276 Accipitcr nisus, 133 Address, Presidential (Northants Field Club), 39 Aigialitis hiaticula, 284 Alboran Island, Observations around, 203, 223 Albufera, Observations around, 207 A mpelis garni his, 273 Amydrus tristrami, 49, 272-3 Anas aitgustirostris, 274 „ caryophyllacca, 282 „ nrcca, 302 Andalucia, Crossbills in, 14 „ Observations in, 219 Andalucian hemipode, 15 Aftscr aliifrons, 75 (note) ,, brachyrhynchiis, 75 (note) „ fcrits, 214 (note) „ scgetian, 75 (note) Antelopes, Beatrix, 294 Aptcryx, 37, 38, 83 Aquila adalberli, 195 (note), 278 Ardea, 283 „ cinerea, 274 „ goliath, 273 Ardetia minuta, 286 Astur palnmbarius, 133, 283 Athene noctua, 16, 85 Auk, Great, Egg of, 58-9, 298 ,, Little, 18 Avocets, 50, 286 Badgers, 5i Barbel, 5 Barcelona, Observations around, 211 Barclay, Col. H., Letters to, 33, 264 Bat, Fruit-, 41 Bats, 149, 153, 162 Bear, Spanish, 147, 293 „ Story of a, 40 Bee-eater, 241 (note). Bernicula jubata, 284 Bittern, 71, 72, 86, 279, 286 Tiger, 293-5 Blackbird, " Golden-winged," 49. Blackbirds, 19 Blackcap, Madeira, 14, 48 ,, Azores, 193 Bladderwort, 6 Blue bird, 276 Botaurus stellaris, 279 " Brails " (and note), 63 Bramblings, 17 Brazo del Este (Guadalquivir), Sport on, 218 Bubo ascalaphus, 285 „ cincrasceus, 274 ,, maculosus, 272 ,, maximus, 59 Buckley, T. Esq., Letters to, 112, 141 Bucks Otter-hounds, 1 1 1 Buffon's Skua, 14 Bulbul, 274 Bullfinch, 71 Black, 268 Bunting, Cirl, 20 „ Little, 149 ,, Yellow-breasted, 282 Bustard, Great, 30, 57, 146, 199 (note), 200, 279, 284-6 304 INDEX Bustard, Hoiibara, 67, 68, 71 Little, 275, 286 Bustard-quails, 169 (note) Bustards, Killing of, 29 Butcher-bird, 122 Buteo vulgaris, 60 (note) Buzzard, Common, 60 ,, Honey-, 266 (note), 285 „ Rough-legged, 80 Caccabis group (note), 1 50 ,, riifa, 29 ,, sexaiilis, 152 Cadiz, Observations around, 195, 213 Cagliari, Observations around, 170-73 Caliera, Observations around, 184 Carcaras, 285 Cat, Archangelic, 78 (and note) „ Wild, 214 Catania, Observations around, 1 57 Cereopsis tiovcc-kollanditB, 275 Chaffinch, Canarian, 68 ,, "Teydean," 49, 71 Chaffinches, 17 Charadriiis pliivialis. Note on, 22 Cheiroptera, 149 Chclidoit, 223 Chettiisia gregaria, 2 1 1 Chiffchaffs, 12 Choughs, Alpine, 52, 60 ,, Cornish, 52, 293 Circai'tus galliais, 180 (note), 286 Circus, 160 (note) ,, cineraccus, 60, 160 (note), 285 „ cyancus, 274-5 Cirl Bunting, 20 Cockatoo, Great Blue-eyed, 267 Collection, Ornithological, etc. — At Brighton, 297 ,, Genoa, 149 „ Lilford, 36-38, 287-92 „ Lisbon, 193 „ Malaga, 203 ,, Malta, 167 „ Naples, 153 „ Nice, 244 ,, Palermo, 168 Collection, Ornithological, etc. — At Pisa, 226 „ Valencia, 206 " Coloured Figures of the British Birds," ix, 90 Coluinba bollii, 66, 67, 80 „ laurivora, 70 (note) ,,